Newspaper Page Text
CARSON CITY. NEVADA. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 28. 1918 The Carson City Dally 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 01 Congress ot iwarcn o, ioy 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 ot tnis 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 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. 4M M 4 CASH UP! him that he had no money to take advantage of Ins holiday. life plied for a furlough. His request Avas granted, and then it dawned oh wanted $100 to go to Paris. He was at his wit's end, there being no time to Avaste, when he recalled his mother s advice to apply to the Good Lord above in time of trouble. So he wrote and posted the following letter: Dear Lord Here I am after fighting ten months, in mud up to me neck. The work is somewhat unpleasant, but Ye'll be glad to hear that I have killed fifty Germans. Now, I'm a little tired and have me fur lough all right. Ask Tom McCarthy if Ye don't believe me. So. Lord, I ask Ye, in the name of all the Saints, for a small sum of $100. Shure, Ye'll never miss it, and if Ye send me the money, I'll never forget Ye ruT tacitv in me prayers. m 1 In due course of time this appeal reached the censor's office. which happened, in this particular locality, to be housed in the Y. M. C. A. quarters. The letter was passed around and aroused consid erable attention and interest, as Casey was known to be a brave and cheerful fighter, and hnallv the sum ot .( was raised- i his was sent to the applicant, without comment, iu a Y. M. C. -A. envelope The next day the following acknowledgement was received; Dear Lord I've received your $50, as per application for furlough motley, and I thank Ye. May your Shadow never grow less, hut f mke so bold as. to give Te a word of warding. fend the next money by the K- C.'sj Ye sent the lt by the VI M, C A., and they nipped half of it PAT CASEY. - - , , . . , , . .1 . r T ANNOUNCEMENTS By Oliver Opdyke of The Vigilantes The cream of the earth are the sons that you sent To battle the beast on the old continent, A gilt-endged investment each lad of the lot, You cannot go wrong if you give all you've got To back up their courage, to help them push through To bring them back home again, faithful and true, Why they'd be ashamed if you didn't respond So come on, cash up, buy a Liberty Bond! This miuute some boy out on God's frontier Is giving his blood for your safety here; He's breaking with strain to his finger tips Perhaps he's "going west" with your name on his lips; He's spending his soul in the holy cause, Can you for a few paltry dollars pause To question the deal or have interest conned? O, come on, cash up, buy a Liberty Bond! E. E. ROBERTS Republican candidate for the UNITED STATES SENATE General Election, November 5, 1918 4 4 44444444'444444 NO TALK OF PEACE 444444444444444444 FRANK P. LANGAN $ Announces His Candidacy as a Non-Partisan Candidate for the f t Office of TTTTTl TP SD TTT I TTTT-VT1T - T ' .--.- 4 JUDGE OF FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT 4 4 X flEO W KEITH War Pictures at Chautauqua Henry Warren Poor Brings Great War Lecture Illustrated with Underwood Photos From "Stars and Stripes." the official publication of the A. K. F. American doughbovs charge a German gun nest across the open field. Some fall, but the others press forward. They come to their objective at the point of the bayonet, only to find the beaten llun, with uplifted hands, crying "Kamerad." Hut with a gun or a knife concealed, ready to violate his plea of surrender. This is the true llun spirit; the spirit back of the kaiser and his court. With the power of the offensive passing from him, he is now merelv waiting for another chance to lift his hands with the cry of 'Kamerad !" or "Peace." Peace witli part of the loot still in his possession! Peace with only a thought of German gain or German victory through craft or deceit! Peace with the hidden knife readv for its sudden and treacherous thrust ! . Peace! In the A. E. F. there will be no thought of peace, no whisper of peace, no dream of peace until the Hun is beaten to the dust. The fighting lines sweeping their way forward through machine gun fire are not talking of peace. The fighting lines and the workers through the S. O. S. are not thinking of peace. Their single thought and dream is victory. They see -ahead, through the battle smoke, only a savage enemy to human ity whipped until lie is ready to quit and take up his share of the work for civilization. Let the weak-hearted who are dreaming of a compromise Let the pacifists, who are talking of "peace by agreement" Let the side-liners, who have "had enough of war" Let the secretly inclined pro-Germans, who think "this great tragedy should end without a decision" Let them one and all know once and for all that for the A. E. F. there is no such word as peace with the llun unbeaten. The man who talks ieace today, except through victory, is a traitor. ITe is only fit to face the firing squad. oo WE ARE WINNING, BUT WE HAVE NOT WON OUT YET When the Third Liberty Loan was launched April fith the clouds were dark and lowering and the star of the Allies was dim through the smoke of battle and the dust of defeat. For almost four years they had given way before the Huns; they had fought stub bornly and valiently, at times achieving successes that raised high Candidate for JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Ormsby County, Nev. -4-4 W. P. HARRINGTON (Incumbent) Democratic candidate for STATE SENATOR A record of achievement -: 4 4 4 4 A. WILLIAM T. KING (Incumbent) Candidate for JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Ormsby County, Nev. ; 4 4 Henry Warren Poor, expert photographer and lecturer of country-wide reputation, is bringing to Chautauqua the latest and most complete set of war pictures before the public. As head of the Slide and Color Department of Underwood & Underwood, he is in a particularly unique position to se cure the latest and best war photos being taken by this great firm. Under wood & Underwood furnish practically all the press pictures used In the United States. Sir. I'oor is the first to see and select from the vast amount arrivine each eek from Europe. He has been in the war zone twice of late and his lectures Chautauqua, illustrated with 150 of the latest views from the front, will be -f the most Instructive and interesting events of the entire Chautauqua WALTER J. HUNTING Non-Partisan candidate for STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS General Election, November 5, 1918 -' : 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 444 4 4 4 4 4 444 4 4 4 4 44 44 4 44 444 4 4 4 4 4 4 Their photographers are in every part of the war zone and j X TTrrrirT rff)rmrirr m ix. s GEORGE BRODIGAN DEMOCRAT, FOR SECRETARY OF STATE t t r ror turn "Vote for Him 'Vote fo 5.4.4.4.4,4,.. 4.44.44444444444 M-HH the hopes of democracy; then again obliged to give way until it looked after the "grand offensive" started March 21st by the Ger man as though the latter might make true their boast of "driving througlrto complete victory." They gained in Belgium, they gained in Flanders, they gained in Picardy, they gained along the Aisne, they gained along the Marne. The Huns were less than a dozen miles from Amiens; they were only forty-five miles from Paris; they had partially outflanked Verdun. Italy had seemingly not recovered from the terrible in vasion of the Austrians in the fall of 1917, and as far as the Allies were concerened. the situation in Russia seemed utterly hopeless. That was the situation the American people faced when the Third Liberty Loan drive was on. But the loan was oversubscribed and the stream of American men pouring into France increased week by week and month by month. Early in July the first temblor was felt in the great landslide that eventually will cover and smother out autocracy. The Ameri cans went on the battle line at Chateau Thierry and on July 18th the llun advance was halted for all time. Since then defeat after defeat has been the portion of the Cen tral Powers. On the western front' they have given way in Belgium, in Flanders, in Picardy, on the Aisne-Marne, in the St. Mihiel see tor, and, in the last day or two, in the Champagne district. No more wedges threaten the safety of Paris and the channel ports. The front line of battle has been shortened considerably over a hundred miles; thousands of square miles of territory have been regained and tne enemy lias sustained great losses in dead, wounded and prisoners, besides much needed supplies, guns and ammunition. At the beginning of the Fourth Liberty Loan drive the Huns are retreating from the North Sea to the Vosges mountains. They are fighting stubbornly, it is true, but nevertheless they are giving ground day by day. In Italy the Austrians have not recovered from the beating giv en them early in the summer by the Italians. In Palestine General Allenby is driving out the unspeakable Turk and from Macedonia comes the cry for help which the Central Powers cannot give- The war has been carried into Bulgaria and the Russian people are re sponding to the help offered them by the Allies. Now is the time to press for victory. A week's or a month's slacking now will mean added years of war. We who cannot fight must buy bonds, back up the administration, conserve food, work and pray. Today and for the next twenty days our duty is to buy bonds all wTe can afford, and then some that we can't afford. This is the Victory Bond Drive and we must go "over the top" with a rush and with the same spirit our boys are showing "over there." They are offering their lives; we are only loaning the dollars. on PAT'S COMPLATNT WILLIAM A. BURNS Democratic Candidate for STATE MINING INSPECTOR General Election, November 5, 1918 4 4 4 CHARLES L. DEADY Democratic candidate for SURVEYOR GENERAL General Election, November 5, 4 44444444&44444444444&444444$4444 4-4- 1918 CHARLES R. EVANS 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 . Democratic candidate for REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS General Election, November 5, 1918 4 4 4 t 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4$ 4 4 4 4$4 4 4 44 444 4 4 44 4$4$$44$ 4.4.4,4.4,4.4.4. 444.4.4. 4.4.4.4. 4444$444 4 4 444 44 4 44 4 ttMt EDWARD A. DUCKER Candidate for the office of JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT H 4444444 44 444 44 I W. E. BALDY 4 4 4 4 4 444 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 44 44 444 4 444444 4444 44 4 444 4 4 4 44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 JOHN EDWARDS BRAY Non-Partisan candidate for STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS General Election, November 5, 1918. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4.4, 4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4,4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4Hj.4. 4. 44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 44 4 4 4 44 4,4.4.4.4.4,4.4.4.4,4,4.4.4,4.4,4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4. t JOHN M. CHARTZ T Democratic candidate for V " 4 4"' DISTRICT ATTORNEY t X 4. Of Ormsby County, Nev. 44444444444' 4 444 444 4,4.4,4,4.4.4. 4,4,4. 4.4-3,4.4.4,4. 4.4.4.4. 4.4.4,4.4.4.44,4,4.4m.4.4.4,4.4,4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4,4.44.4 X 4- 4 Republican candidate for DISTRICT ATTORNEY Of Ormsby County, Nev. 4 A. t Of Ormsby County, Nev. 4. 4 4 4.4.4,4,4.4.4,4.4,4,4,4,4.4, 44,4.4,444.4 4.4.4.4.4.4. An Irish soldier, after eight months of hard active service, ap- $$,.fH$($$44$44 t CHARLES B. HENDERSON 4 4 Democratic candidate for the UNITED STATES SENATE 4 4 4 I General Election, November 5, 1918 8 44Mf,4.444444 .fHt4.t44444 I ED MALLEY X 4 t Democratic candidate for 4 4 t STATE TREASURER GEORGE GILLSON Republican candidate for STATE SENATOR From Ormsby County, Nev. 4 4 4 4 44444444444444444 General Election, November 5, 1918 X . 1 ' 44444444444444444444444'4 i W. E. WALLACE I t 4 4 Democratic candidate for 4 T I MEMBER OF ASSEMBLY From Ormsby County, Nev. 4 2 :444 4 444 4 44444 44444 44 4444 44444444 DAN E. MORTON 4 Independent candidate for CLERK AND TREASURER Of Ormsby County, Nev. General Election, November 5, 1918 4 4 4,44.44.4444