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CARSON CITY DAILY APPEAL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1918 Virginia & Truckee Railway General Offices, Carson City, Nev. A. M. ARDERY, Genral Manager S. C. BIGELOVV, H. L. GRIFFITHS, General Passenger Agent General Freight Agen. No. 6 No. 4 I No. 2 Mls April 13, 1918 No. 1 No. 3 No. 5 Motor Mixed Pass. Pass. Mixed Motor p. m. p. m. I a. m. p. m. a. m. a. m. 3 00 1:00 8.35 0 Lv Reno Ar 7.30 11.10 10.34 3 23 1:35 9.00 11 Steamboat 7.04 10.42 10.09 3 39 1:55 9.16 17 Washoe 6.51 10.25 9.57 3 48 2:15 9.50 31 Ar Carson City Lv 6.15 9.30 9.20 4.10 2:50 10.00 31 Lv Carson City Ar 6.05 9.00 a. m. p. m. 3:20 10.35 41 Mound House 5.40 8.20 4:00 11.07 50 Gold Hill 5.11 7.36 4:47 11.17 52 Ar Virginia Lv 5.00' 7.25 5j00 927 7 Franktown &40 JOl 1 9J7 No. 20 No. 18" No. 16 1 I No. 15 I No. 17 I No. 19 Motor Motor Mixed Mixed Motor Motor a. m. p. m. a. m. p. m. p. m. a. m. 7.50 4.20 10.00 0 Lv Carson City Ar 12.10 5.45 9.10 8.01 4.31 10.12 4 . Stewart 11.58 5.34 8.59 8.25 4.55 10.40 15 Ar Minden Lv 11.30 5.10 8.35 : WANI ANY OF THESE ! Patent Medicines Perfumes X Photographic Supplies Face Powders Toilet Soap Kodaks YES? Then get them from J. A. MULLER Druggist, Opposite P. O. i Daily Saturdays only Connecting at Reno and Mound House with Southern Pacific Co., and al Minden with daily auto stage for Woodfords and Markleeville, daily except Sunday with auto stages for Genoa, Walley Springs, Coleville, Topaz, Wel lington, Sweetwater and Bridgeport. Passengers for Masonic leave Minden Tuesdays and Thursdays, remain at Sweetwater over night, arriving at Masonic on Wednesdays and Fridays. Fire Insurance James M. Leonard, Agent Carson, Nevada AN EVIDENCE That you are careful of your personal appearance in a CREASE IN YOUR TROUSERS C3YS TAKE HOLD ill GOOD CLD AMERICAN WAY, SOLDIER SAYS Hardships Ignored, Wounded Man Tells Mother Don't Let Them Hinder Your War Work Cat son Valley Bank Bldg. Phone 5-6-1 For Your Cleaning, Pressing f and Repairing COME TO US WM. BRUNN The Tailor r"fH"i"l""l',H'l"i'"t".'r'i"t"i.; Subscribe tor the Appeal. The Call To Saue I V V M SAYINGS STAMPS ISSUED BY THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT The War Savings Plan, by which our Government expects to raise more than two billion dollars during the next twelve months, not only provides an opportunity for the millions of loyal Americans, whose meager income prevents their subscribing for Liberty Bonds, to lend their small savings to their country it has a much wider scope. It is an appeal t every man, woman and child of the nation, whether their income be measured in dollars or thousands of dollars, to limit their purchases to necessary commodities to SAVE and lend their savings to the Government. The Saving is as indispensable as the Lending The truth of this is apparent to every thinking person. The great war we are waging for freedora necessitates the putting of hundreds of thousands of men in the field and keeping them fed and clothed. It necessitates the production of ships and shells, guns and motor trucks and airplanes and hospital supplies. To produce these things will require the combined effort of most of the big industrial plants of the country, which are still making for you and your friends all the pleasant and comfortable luxuries you consumed before the war. You bought Liberty Bonds, of course, and you'll buy more next month. That is patriotic and highly commendable. But you are not doing enough when you draw money out of the bank and invest it in Government securities. You must do more. You must buckle down and make it your own personal daily business to help win the war. You must give up the things you don't need. The Government must have money a tremendous quantity of money and it must have the productive labor of millions of workers who are now making unnecessary articles for you and other Ameri cans who can afford to buy them. Get the Thrift Stamp Habit You, Mr. Business Man : When you go home tonight, take your wife a Thrift Card, with a dozen stamps attached, instead of a box of candy or a box of flowers. If she is the right sort, she will appre ciate it far more than she would candy or flowers. And you, Society Women : Give War Savings Stamps for prizes at your card parties for favors at your luncheons for wedding gifts and anniversary remembrances, or buy stamps with the money the parties ccst. Thrift Stamps and War Savings Stamps can be purchased at an postoffice or bank. W.S.S. SAVINGS STAMPS JSSUED BY THE. UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT For Your Country's Sake, Get the Thrift-Stamp Habit .... By Mrs. Hazel Pedlar Faulkner From a hospital somewhere ia Prance a wounded American lias writ ten to his parent: "We are going through hardships, but the boy are taking hold in the good old American way." What a message for those of us who have remained at home! What a challenge to the vast army of men and women who are in the home guard, carrying on in the thousand and one ways that the exigencies of war have brought upon us. "We are going through hardships." We can believe that when we re call the dauntless charges which our boys have been making over there, '' and the daily lengthening casualty lists which are resulting from their 1 fearless devotion to the task that is ' set before them. 4 We know they are going through the hundreds upon hundreds who are wounded, and who for the time be ing at least need care and attention. FIENDISH ENEMY ADDS TERRORS Of. course they are going through hardships, those boys from your nome and mine. Hardships are a part of war. They are the inevitable result of a state of war. And when war is waged by an enemy so skilled in all the fiendish deviltries in which the Germans have indulged they are the inescapable portion of every soldier participating. But hardships are not the part of the war these soldiers of ours are thinking most about. They are but the incidents in the day's work. ! "The boys are taking hold in the good old American way." i Could there be a better statement of their manner of facing what comes to them? Could there be a more def i inite course of action prescribed for those of us at home daring thesa days which test the mettle of our souls? The time for our message to the boys has come again. The Fourth . Liberty Loan is to- be our response : to this wounded soldier's challenge. ! MAKE YOUR ANSWER NOW , Are we going to take hold in the : "good old American way?" ! We have not had to go through hardships, ours have been an easier part. We have known little of sacri fice or deprivation. Compared with the offering of our boys, we have done nothing as yet. And now, here is the challenge sounded to us. The good old American way is all that is asked of us. What is that way? You must frame the answer, moth ers and sisters of the west. Yours is an important part in the reply which the nation will make to the boys overseas. There is not one of us who would not spare her son if she could yes, even spare some other mother's son the pain and hardship he must bear. We are not asked to do that. We could not, though we would. But we can make his part easier to bear, we can go with him through the hardships, by lending completely of our money. There is no longer need to explain what a Liberty Loan is. There is no more necessiw for pointing out reasons for participation in it. This if, the day when but to hear its call in to insure its heartiest support. September 28th is the date set for our concerted reply tnrougn tne Fourth Liberty Loan. Let us take hold in "the good old American way." What is the very most you can do to make that advance a smashing sue cess like the boys over there are making? PROFESSIONAL DR. C. R. VON RADESKY Physician and Surgeon Office: East Second St., near Carson SL Office Hours-. 1 to 3; 7 to 8 WARREN K. BALDY Attorney at Law Office: Carson Valley Bank B'ld't CARSON CITY - - NEVADA KAISER PLANNED TO RULE WORLD AFTER 6 MONTHS WARFARE Thought Theft of Iron and Coal Frem France, Land From Russia, Would Pay Bill PLATT & SANFORD Attorneys at Law Office: State Bank and Trust Building CARSON CITY - - NEVADA A. GRANT MILLER Attorney at Law Journal B'ld'g Practice in Ail Courts RENO .... NEVADA JAMES D. FINCH Clay Peterc' RENO - - - B'ldg NEVADA You Can Stop These Casualties Quickly The Brutal, Bloody Hun will be stopped when an overwhelm insr American Army lands in France and crushes him not be' fore. The Fourth Liberty Loan is the next step in getting that army across the Atlantic. BUY LIBERTY BONDS DON'T MAKE EXCUSES MAKE SACRIFICES (Editor: This is suggested standing feature for display alongside casualty lists.) as in Today fej Wear This ButtotI Planning world trade domination, It not actual world rule, as the outcome of a short six-months' campaign in Europe, Germany now finds herself outcast from among civilized nations, her people impoverished, her honor, irrevocably stained by the blood of Belgium, and facing a future of fathomless ignominy and disgrace. "I will make room for my growing people by taking some more of France and a few thousand square miles of Russia," said the Kaiser. "We will get the iron and coal in Northern France for manufactures which we will sell the conquered population of Russia, and this, besides indemnities, will more than pay for the war. Eng land will not dare come in, and our merchant fleets will soon crowd her from the world trade routes. "If the United States does not acquiesce, her manufacturers will get no more of our dyes and chemicals, her farmers no more of our ferti lizers. And we will also take away from her all South American com merce." GERMAN GRAVES GRIM ANSWER Xow, across the graves of a mil lion of, his young men, the Kaiser is beginning to see the sun set on the smallest of his ambitions. "Foch will never cross the Rhine," is now the German watchword.' German cities. shrieking beneath the visitation of allied and American airplane bombers cry out: "No more of this barbarity." Such cries are echoed in the ghostly laughs of thousands of Gotha and Zeppelin victims in London and Paris. The Rhine will be crossed, and Cologne and Berlin will wince be neath the shells of Allied truns. "Five million men in Fi ance," cries ' T America. "Remember Belgium and end the war in 1919." To America and her five million fighting men in France will come the greater glory of the world war. But that end will not be achieved with out the sacrifice of thousands of those men, nor without the most earnest and united support of those of us at home. Where we have given valiant efforts to war work here tofore, we must thrust our sholders desperately against the wheel of war preparations from now on. To no one person or class is it given to do a greater share in this war than any other person or class. Each must do his utmost. WEIGHT RESTS ON . AMERICAN FARMER I Vpon no one class tests a grentfr responsibility than upon the Ameri can farmer, who with his wives and sons and daughters constitutes one third of our population, lie has the firt and great responsibility of pro viding food for the nation at home, food for the fighting men abroad, and food for our allies in the battle nno and their civilian population. England, with millions of acres of parks and hunting grounds converted into farms can only raise crops to feed her people half the year. France, with every man in uniform, and nearly half her fields overrun by armies, does even less. With her giain fields extended by millions of acres of new land, Ameri ca is responding to the call and allied hunger will never be an ally to Ger many. Billions of dollars of Ameri ca's huge war loans are coming back to the farmer in payment for his grain and stock. The farmer, for his future honor and standing in the nation, must see that every penny of this sum he can spare is reinvested in war loans. The Fourth Liberty Loan, now upon ns, calls for but a portion of what America must spend in war efforts in the next few months. It must be sub scribed promptly and overwhelmingly. That "the man who is not for us is against us" is as true now as when It was written centuries ago. If YOU buy a fifty dollar bond when you COULD BUY a five hun dred dollar bond, you are not doing your full duty as an American. A. L HEER Attorney at Law Clice: 204 N. Virginia St., REND .... NEVAD4 CHARTZ & CHARTZ John M. Chartz Alfred Chartt Attorneys at Law Practice in all State and Federal Courts CARSON C1TV - - NEVADA SWEENEY & MOREHOUSE Attorneys at Law (Washoe Bank B'ld'g, Reno) Carson Valiey Back B'ld'g CARSON CITY - - NEVADA GEORGE B. THATCHER Attorney at Law CARSON CITY NEVADA DR. E. T. KREBS Physician and Surgeon Offices: Rooms 6 and 7, ui-slaiis. State Bank and Trust Com pany's Buikling THOMAS E. KEPMER Lawyer "crporation. Mining and Law Profit Criminal Defense FENO NEVADA Back Your Own With the Bond You Own. To Buy or Not to Buy Is Net tht J. M. FRAME Attorney at Law Office: 228 N. Virginia St.. Pooras 2 end 4 RENO NEVADA H. E. EPSTINE STOCK BROKER Member San Francisco Stock Exchange Code Book on Request t 356 Bush Street San Francisco, California ! Read news. the Appeal for all the war "Unalloyed" Dyes The dyes used in Hose of Luxite arc "unalloyed" not loaded with heavy metallic com pounds to give the hose a fclossy, heavy appearance. The soft, full-bodied shimmer cf Hose of Luxite is gained by the use of rich. ne-stitchcd materials, pure-dyed. That is -why its elegance and beauty last through repeated wash ings. And that is why we chose it for our store, and for your service. The wide range of styles and prices will suit every purse and purpose. Jos. Smyth Co. HABERDASHERS A Question Buy. V2