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CARSON CITY DAILY APPEAL. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 27. 1918 The Carson City Daily Appeal PUBLISHED EVERY .EVENING, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE NEVADA PRINTING 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 $12.00 9.00 some, less for others, according to their nAens and needs. It can be done. oo GOVERNMENT NEEDS HUNDREDS OF SKILLED WOMEN The Department of Labov-announces the following: Hundreds of skilled women are needed for immediate service in Washington, according to an announcement made by the District of Columbia office of the United States Employment Service of the Department or Labor. This office is already placing about 400 women' a week in'good salaried positions. . 1 Government demands call for 1,000 stenographers and typists at once. ANNOUNCEMENTS t"M"$ 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 BUT ONE ISSUE; THE SETTLEMENT MUST BE EINAL. THERE CAN BE NO COMPROMISE. NO HALFWAY DECISION WOULD BE TOLERABLE. NO HALF WAY DECISION IS CONCEIVABLE From President Wilson's Mount Vernon address. M Of M MMM H MM4 It is announced that the Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria is to marry Princess Antoinette of Luxemburg. We think the bride ought to know iif advance that even if we do not adhere to our pres ent plan of hanging the prince, he will certainly be out of money and without a job, a 61 she will certainly have to take in washing. Houston Post. 4"fr FRANK P. LANGAN Latest News In Appeal WHAT IS TO BE ANNIHILATED Admitting that "this cold and cutting scorn, this cool rejection. ' has a "more overwhelming and annihilating effect than all the official phrases which the man in the White House could have employed," the Khenisch-Westfalische Zeitung interprets President Wilson's answer to the Austrian proposals in this manner: The contents of Wilson's reply confirms the view we have already expressed, that Wilson will not depart from the conditions and war aims hitherto proclaimed, and the policy of annihilation can find absolute expression in him. "Destruction" and 'annihilation," says the New York World, are words that form part of the daily vocabulary of official and semi official Germany in all discussions of the war aims of the United .States and the Allies. The kaiser prefers "destruction," which ap pears in most of his utterances on the subject of peace. The Rhein-isch-Westfaliselie Zeitung, which is the organ of the Krupps, finds its most adequate expression in "annihilation;" but none of them ever ventures to tell the German people precisely what itis that the free nations at war with Germany are determined to destroy, to annihi late. . '. There are many elements of destruction., even of annihilation, in the American war policy which President Wilson has so often de fined and which the eoiftitry so ardently" supports, but they mean as much to the liberty and the free development of the German people as they do to the future of anybody else. .The German people are not going to be destroyed or annihilated. The German state is not going to he destroyed, unless it is destroyed by Germans themselves. There are extremists here and elsewhere who think peace means only vengeance, but. as President Wilson expressed it in his Liberty Loan speech of April fth, "to propose anything but justice, even handed and dispassionate justice, to Germany at any time, whatever the outcome of the war, 'would be to renounce and dishonor our .own cause. For we ask nothing that we are not willing to accord." What is to be destroyed, annihilated, is the prestige of German military power, its will to conquest, the program of German imper ialism, the system under which an autocracy can plunge the world into war whenever Avar suits its dynastic or its caste purposes. Each j of them is doomed, and there will be no end of the war until the Ger-i man armies have been so decisively beaten in the field that the les-i sons of this conflict will endure for centuries. It is to be no half-way j job, and that is the concise meaning of President Wilson's reply to j the Austro-Hungarian proposal. i The Berliner Tageszeitung, which is the organ of the junkers.) tells its readers that ""our motto must more than ever be 'Victory! or disaster!' ' That is merely a paraphrase of Bernhardi's familiar! "Weltmacht oder Xiedergang" world power or downfall. Hut so; far as junkertum is concerned, it is literally true. It is either victory 1 or disaster for Prussian autocracy, and the only doubtful issue is the I extent of the sacrifices that the German people will make at the! command 01 an autocracy that already has its back to the wall. 00 FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN SLOGANS War Pictures Coming Remarkable Views Straight from the Fighting Zone E. E. ROBERTS Republican candidate for the UNITED STATES SENATE General Election, November 5, 1918 Announces His Candidacy as a Non-Partisan Candidate for the Office of JUDGE OF FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT 'i rmtn w wtttt Candidate for I ifvT-t III 1 ' ' . V II I JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Ormsby County, Nev. W. P. HARRINGTON (Incumbent) Democratic candidate for STATE SENATOR A record of achievement WILLIAM T. KING 4 (Incumbent) Candidate for JUSTICE OF THE PEACE : Ormsby County, Nev. . The most remarkable set of war pictures which the country affords will be shown at Chautauqua by Henry Warren Poor, expert photographer and well known lecturer. Mr. Tour's collection has been secured In two trips to the war zone and through his particularly fortunate position as head of the Slide and Color Department of the great photographic firm of Underwood & CrV rwood. He is the first to see and select from the vast amount arriving af". week from Europe. lis lecture has been voiced by Eastern papers as one of the most ln- ttive and Interesting of the platform. The views shown Include trench ins, Pershing and "our boys," liquid fire, gas waves, Zeppelins, subma nnd how destroyed, shell exploding on lUieinis cathedral, methods of 'ullage, tanks; in fact, every new wonder of the great war. ANNOUNCEMENTS WALTER J. HUNTING Non-Partisan candidate for STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS General Election, November 5, 1918 0. J $ Aw&wwww.j. Ponds buy food for soldiers- I5uy Liberty bonds. Money means munitions. Buy Liberty bonds. Ponds builds tanks. Buy Liberty bonds. Bonds build airplanes. Buy Liberty bonds. Ponds build ships. Buy Liberty bonds. Liberty bond or Liberty bound, which will you have it ? Buy bonds and back the guns that hit the Huns. Bonds put the dam in Potsdam. Bar barbarism by buying bonds. The more bonds the fewer casualties. Save for your country or slave for the Hun. Every hundred dollar bond makes a I Inn dread more. Buying Liberty bonds puts 'U" in the U. 8. A. Your money should not be neutral ; enlist it in the Fourth loan- 00 it ! , . 1 1 GEORGE BRODIGAN DEMOCRAT, FOR SECRETARY OF STATE Dote for Him Dote for Him GOOD ROADS on Uncle Sam needs good roads more than ever before to carrv transportation. Liberty trucks are driven from factories to seaports. Material for -war wfTWris transported between towns and cities by motor trucks covering hundreds of miles each day. Full speed ahead is the thought in the mind of every man who is getting out war material and anxious to win the war. Merchants throughout the country are getting their supplies by motor trucks and in that way relieving the railroads of every possible burden. To eliminate delays of the great trurk trains there must lw more good roads. Puts, washouts, mud holes and generally run down roads are the trucks greatest enemy and the farmer can be the "man of the hour" in keeping the road along his farm in the best of condition. These roads should be put in 'condition before they become frozen. AVe must clear the way for transportation and "eliminate costly delays. Let's keep things moving. Washington Herald. ROBERTS A 50-50 PATRIOT '$ $ $ 3 3 $ ,$'$"$ HS-$ '"v v 1 t ' WILLIAM A. BURNS Democratic Candidate for STATE MINING INSPECTOR General Election, November ."; PUS CHARLES L. DEADY Democratic candidate for SURVEYOR GENERAL General Election, November 5, 1918 $ CHARLES R. EVANS Democratic candidate for REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS General Election, November 5, 1918 $ JJJ,,4,,i,'J'''-,4',S EDWARD A. DUCKER Candidate for the office of JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT JOHN EDWARDS BRAY .;. Non-Partisan candidate for STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS General Election, November 1918 .J.- . JOHN M. CHARTZ I Democratic candidate for t DISTRICT ATTORNEY W. E. BALDY ' Republican candidate for DISTRICT ATTORNEY A chart just issued by the National Security League, indicating how congressmen voted on eight of the big war measures that have come tip in the house, shows that on four of the measures Congress-' man Ed Poberts voted wrong. On the other four he voted right. But that's doing pretty well for Ed. His trouble was he did not get his ear to the ground early enough in the game to detect how .superlatively patriotic Nevada was and is. Railroad director McAdoo is criticised from certain quarters be cause the railway's balance sheets have shown a deficit. But these same specious critics refrain from stating that he is getting freight and troops at the point of embarkment on time. And that is the main thing these days. BUCOLIC PRESS Had not the censor with his penknife cut out the name of the town on a picture postcard mailed to Frank Elliott by Raymond G. Ingersoll from France his exact location would be known. AVarren, Ohio, Chronicle. . ' . on The American people are asked to save $0,000,000,000 more than last year for the war. The sum is vast beyond the power of the mind to grasp-but divide it by 100,000,000. It is only $G0 each ; more for Of Ormsby County, Nev. ..-.4..H CHARLES B. HENDERSON Democratic candidate for the UNITED STATES SENATE : General Election, November 5, 1918 Of Ormsby County, Nev. t GEORGE GILLSON 1 Republican candidate for STATE SENATOR From Ormsby County, Nev. V W. E. WALLACE Democratic candidate for MEMBER OF ASSEMBLY From Ormsby County, Nev. 4J4-4',f4'4''',i''S'i'! .44.4i44i4.-MMj. j,J''J' ED MALLEY Democratic candidate for STATE TREASURER General Election, November 5, 1918 ! t ! it 2 , DAN E. MORTON Independent candidate for CLERK AND TREASURER Of Ormsby County, Nev. General Election, November 5, 1918 -: 4- $ v V