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CARSON CITY DAILY APPEAL. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 26 1918 The Carson City Daily Appeal PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE NEVADA FRINTING COMPANY Entered as Matter of the Second Class at the Postoffice at Carson City, Nevada, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879 One year by Carrier One year by Mail TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION $12.00 9.00 Carson City Daily Appeal is the real live advertising medium of this section as evidenced by its carrying a larger amount of advertising than any paper in the city. NO COMPROMISE THERE CAN BE BUtf ONE ISSUE; THE SETTLEMENT MUST BE FINAL. THERE CAN BE NO COMPROMISE. NO HALFWAY DECISION WOULD BE TOLERABLE. NO HALF WAY DECISION IS CONCEIVABLE. From President Wilson's Mount Vernon address. t M M SOME LIBERTY LOAN SLOGANS "Wear your old clothes and buy Liberty bonds. Liberty bonds or German bondage. "Come across" or the kaiser will. The soldier gives; you must lend. Liberty bonds or German taxes. Buy over here to win over there. It's billions for defense or billions for indemnity. For Foch and freedom ; buy bonds. A bond slacker is the kaiser's backer- A man who won't lend is the kaiser's friend. The more bonds you buy the fewer boys Avill die. Let all get on the bond wagon. Be one of the millions to lend the billions. Dig up the coin and bury the I Inn. Buy bonds before it's verboten. Idle dollars are pro-German. Put the "pay" into patriotism. Bonds speak louder than words. If you can't fight, your money can. Freemen buy bonds; slaves wear them. no FOR A BROADER PATRIOTISM ANNOUNCEMENTS E. E. ROBERTS Republican candidate for the UNITED STATES SENATE General Election, November 5, 1918 fr fr "WHAT CAN YOU SAY TO GOD?" FRANK P. LANGAN fr Announces His Candidacy as a Non-Partisan Candidate for the . Office of JUDGE OF FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT t In an address in the senate the other day, in a reply to the recent talk of the German kaiser to the men employed by the Krupps, Senator McCumber of North Dakota recited the following scathing lines: You boasted the day, and you toasted the day, And now the day has come. Blasphemer, braggart, and coward all, Little you reck of the numbing ball, The blasting shell, or the white arm's fall, As they speed poor humans home. You spied for the day, you lied for the day, And worked for the day's red spleen. Monster, vho asked God's aid divine, Then strewed His seas with ghastly wine, Not all the waters of the Rhine Can wash thy foul hands clean. - You dreamed for the day, you schemed for the day, Watch how the day will go. Slayer of age, and youth, and prime (Defenseless slain for never a crime). Thou art steeped in blood as a hog in slime, False friend and cowardly foe. You have sown for the day, you have grown for the day, Yours is the harvest red. Can you hear the groans and the awful cries? Can you see the heap o"f slain that lies, And sightless, turned to the flame-split skies, The glassy eyes of the dead? You have wronged for the day, you have longed for the day. That lit the awful flame. 'Tis nothing to you that hill and plain Yield sheaves of dead amid the grain ; That widows mourn for their loved ones slain, And mothers curse thy name. But after the day there's a price to pay For the sleepers under the sod. And He you have mocked for many a day Listen and hear what He has to say : "Vengeance is mine, I will repay." What can you say to God? on GAUGING THE GERMAN FAILURE One eveninsr the head resident 'of Friendlv House tried to ioin in the singing of America which closed the session of the classes in 7 Knghsh at the University of Chicago settlement- He soon lound that the America of which he was singing "the land where the Pilgrims, pride" was not the America of these new Americans from overseas.'; That evening the visitor found a new song of patriotism and gained a view of a different America, an America broader in conception than the America of the Smith poem, a greater America, surely, an America that any native-born may revere and sing his admiration for with his hand clasped in the hand of another sort of Americftu, an American in soul and spirit, American in all except the accident of birth a patriotic song that Americans, wherever born may sing: GEO. W. KEITH fr Candidate for JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Orrasby County, Nev- J - If Thomas Nelson Page succeeds Walter Hines Page as ambas sador to the court of St. James, will that be turning over a new leaf? Chicago Daily News, If as Germany claims, its spy system was not adequate, it seems to be a reasonable conjecture that no system of that kind ever could i' Philadelphia Inquirer. - W. P. HARRINGTON X fr t (Incumbent) X , Democratic candidate for STATE SENATOR T A SSN A-f A ill 1 AT? AtVI AM t prove adequate- FOR SUMMER 4-1 W1rtW A record of achievement frfrfr frfr frfrfrfr frfrfrfr fr frfr frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr frfrfrfr frfrfrfrfrfr WILLIAM T. KING From the Financial World, New York" As the result of t he four years and more of the attempt of Kaiser "Wilhelm and his military party to conquer the world and dominate it, Germany is thus situated : Dead, 2,000,000; wounded, 4,700,000; permanently disabled and a charge upon the state, 2,000,000. Interest bearing war debt, $38,400,000,000. Commerce absolutely destroyed, 07 per cent of tonnage captured or interned. A permanent annual bond interest payment of $2,000,000,000 ; pension roll annually, $750,000,000; civil administration, $1,250,000, 000; total, $4,000,000,000. . Income of German people before the war. $11,000,000,000 an nually. Cost of after consequences of the war to German people nearly 40 per cent of their annual income Germany's rulers counted on such a large annual outlay, but figured with a fatalistic instinct that she would impose the entire burden on the nations she would conquer. Germany has failed, and when the German people wake up to the fact that they and not their enemies 'will have to pay, will the kaiser and his militarists hold triumphant military reviews on t lie Field of Mars. Past history of like atteinpts on a smaller scale to put the world under subjection answers in the negative. oo THE GAZETTE CORRECTED Boys' Sport Shirts . . . $ .75 Men's Sport Shirts . 75c to $1.50 Panama Hats . . $4.00 to $8.00 Radium Hose, White, Brown and Black, at 30c Per Pair. . , Pajamas . . . $1.50 to $2.50 Washable Four-in-Hands,25c to 50c Styleplus Suits, $21.00 and $25.00 Caps 50c to $2.00 The Emporium Co. r 44 4 4 44444444444444444 4 44 4 44 fr fr fr (Incumbent) Candidate for JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Ormsby County, Nev. WALTER J. HUNTING Non-Partisan candidate for STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS General Election, November 5, 1918 fr : ANNOUNCEMENTS ! The Appeal desires to correct the Reno Gazette in its statement that the great issue in the present campaign in Nevada is prohibition. It is nothing of the knd. The great issue in Nevada today is whether President Wilson and his war measures are to be upheld and supported. Whether Charles B. Henderson, who ever since his entrance into the United States senate has worked indefatigably and unceasingly for such legislation as will bring the war to asuccessful termination, is to be returned, or whether Ed Roberts, who has been notoriously weak in those matters, is to be promoted and permitted to carry on the tactics he has practiced as a member of the house of representatives; whether the present Democratic state officers, who have successfully carried Nevada over the top in all the big things that have tended to the winning of the war, are to be reelected and go on with their work, or whether they are to be rejected and thir places and duties turned over to untried and inexperienced men. These are the chief issues and issues that the people will vote ;on, and all the subtlety that the Gazette or any other Republican can command will not befuddle the situation. GEORGE BRODIGAN DEMOCRAT, FOR SECRETARY OF STATE Uote for Him Vote for Him J CHARLES L. DEADY fr fr Democratic candidate for SURVEYOR GENERAL General Election, November' 5, 1918 fr fr frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr '' CHARLES R. EVANS . fr fr fr Democratic candidate for f REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS General Election, November 5, 1918 fr f l44,4,,,!,4,44,4,,,','M',',,,v, frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr EDWARD A. DUCKER Announces his candidacy as a Non-Partisan candidate for the office of JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT fr t JOHN EDWARDS BRAY Non-Partisan candidate for STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS General Election. November 5. 191 S frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr JOHN M. CHARTZ t fr Democratic candidate for t t DISTRICT ATTORNEY frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr t W. E. BALDY ? f Republican candidate for DISTRICT ATTORNEY 'Of Ormsby Count', Nev. -.frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr GOD S TRUTH IS MARCHING ON" By Franklin K. Lane Germany may think in terms of man power and gun power for forty years and yet we cannot fear the ultimate worst, because we sing The Battle llymn of the Republic "God's Truth Is Marching On," and we believe it; it is a part of us; it is as real as our moun tains and our rivers. The only real blow thai we could suffer in this Avar, or any other, would be the destruction of this faith. It explains to us our history and those whom we oall our leaders. Where it comes from or whither it will lead us we have not stopped to in quire. Like the salt that savors the sea it has washed in from all lands. Man's spirit everywhere calls out that Justice shall be his, and Justice means understanding, and understanding means sym pathy, and sympathy means brotherhood, and brotherhood means democracy and so we come to the meaning of the great movement a part of which we are. The Prussian idea of some one you can tnfst is some one you can either fool or buy. Ohio State Journal. frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr4.frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr CHARLES B. HENDERSON Democratic candidate for the UNITED STATES SENATE General Election, November 5, 1918 fr frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfri- frfr t t t 7 fr fr Jk frfr frfrfrfr fr fr frfr frfr fr 4.frfrfr fr 4. frfr frfrfr fr frfr ED MALLEY Democratic candidate for STATE TREASURER General Election, November 5, 1918 ? Of Ormsbv County, Nev. .frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr t GEORGE GILLSON 2 t -. 1 .1" 1 ' J A - X Jm fr Republican candidate for STATE SENATOR From Ormsby County, Nev. frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr4'' fr fr fr Democratic candidate for MEMBER OF ASSEMBLY From Ormsby County, Nev. t $ I frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr W. E. WALLACE fr fr frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr.fr frfrfrfr frfrfrfrfrfrfr fr frfrfrfr frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr fr DAN E. MORTON t t fr Independent candidate for CLERK AND TREASURER t Of Ormsby. County, Nev. General Election, November 5, 1918 X frfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfrfr444444444444-4'4414