OCR Interpretation


Carson City daily appeal. [volume] (Carson City, Nev.) 1907-1930, October 30, 1918, Image 2

Image and text provided by University of Nevada Las Vegas University Libraries

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86076241/1918-10-30/ed-1/seq-2/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for

CARSON CITY DAILY APPEAL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, i9l3
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
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 m
the city.
NO COMPROMISE
THE SETTLEMENT
COMPROMISE. NO
THERE CAN BE BUT ONE ISSUE;
MUST BE FINAL. THERE CAN BE NO
HALFWAY DECISION WOULD BE TOLERABLE. NO HALF
WAY DECISION IS CONCEIVABLE. From President Wilson's
Mount Vernon address.
MM
pean military power, the destruction of Great Britain, and the defiance
nf the world, and those powers struck the blow on land and sea. They
struck it against nations wholly unprepared, at France first, and thcn
Great Britain who fought for two years with one hand while preparing
for war with the other hand.
No act has been too atrocious to be eliminated from their mode of
operation. They expected to win by terrorism. But a p'ghteous and in
dignant people, though fewer in numbers, held them back until this great
nation, tardy of action, slov in preparation, came into the conflict on
the side of. the allies. We know what would have been the result had
they succeeded an enslaved world, buffeted and kicked and abused by
the most despotic militarism the world has ever known. Their arrogance
did not leave the world in doubt as to their purpose. They had even de
clared it long before the blow was struck. A confiding world could not
believe that such an atrocious purpose could be possible.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
E. E. ROBERTS
General Electron, November 5, 191 S
Republican candidate for the
UNITED STATES SENATE
WILL YOU HOLD YOUR HEAD UP PROUDLY WHEN. THEY
nnivTis wnwrF.?
By Bruce Barton
I lifted the receiver of the telephone, and almost dropped it
again in surprise. For the voice was that of my good old friend,
and I supposed him far away in France.
"Yes, hack," he answered; and it struck me that his voice was
slow and older, as thousrh the weeks of his absence had been years.
"Hack, but not for special duty. There there is another reason."-!
And then 1 knew that he must be wounded.
AVounded while here at home I still pursued my ordinary
course AVounded to keep my children safe.
It came over me of a sudden, as it never had before, that I am
debtor to him to an amount that I never can repay.
They will all be coming back before long. Some wounded, some
grown strangely old. But most of them well and normal enough,
thank God.
And we will stand along the sidewalks to see them pass. How
shall we feel that day, I wonder.
Will their eyes say to us, "We were hungry for a bit of sweet,
and you did not think to send it.
"We were cold and you let the hut fires die; we were lonesome,
and the movies stopped because there were no funds to carry on.
AVill that be the message of their eyes to us?
Or shall we stand confidently in their presence, greeting them
as men who have nothing to repent.
As men who in their absence gave freely of wealth and thru
that there might be warmth and cheer and comfort over there?
They are coming back some day perhaps before we think.
And what will be the message of their eyes to you?
00
THE REASON
APPEALS TO OKLAHOMA VOTERS TO AID SUFFRAGE
An appeal to the voters of Oklahoma for the woman suffrage
amendment which they are to vote on election day has been framed
by President Wilson in the form of a telegram to the Democratic and
Republican Mate chairmen of that state.
The president states, in his telegram, that "it is my deliberate
judgment that adoption of this amendment is a necessary part of the
program of justice and reconstruction which the war has convinced
the nations of the world that they should undertake in the interest of
justice and peace."
oa
"SOUTHERN DEMOCRATS"
t
FRANK P. LANGAN
k . tT 1-1
5 Announces tns anamacy as a .Non-Partisan Candidate for the
Office of X
4.
JUDGE OF FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
4'4.4,t f .. Q $ ft j. 4 1 j. . .I. j
That responsibility for the defeat of the Suffrage amendment
must rest on the Southern Democrats was clearly disclosed in the
analysis of the negative votes. Washington dispatch.
Including such well-known Southern jJemocrats as senator I'en-
n -l i L I . T - - - - i -f .- 1 A .
rose oi Pennsylvania; senator uuuge ui lassjicuuseiis ; oni.tiur
AVeeks of Massachusetts ; Senator AVadsworth of New York, and Sen
ator Brandegee of Connecticut, not to mention less noted Southern
Democrats elected as Republicans from other Northern states. San
Francisco Star.
APPLICATION FOR PATENT
APPLICATION FOR PATENT
S GEO. W. KEITH
t
Candidate for
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE I
i
Ormsby County, Nev.
W. P. HARRINGTON
(Incumbent)
Democratic candidate for
STATE SENATOR
A record of achievement
Notice of Application for United States
Patent
Serial No. 010S69
United States Land Office, Carson
City, Nevada.
October 17, 1918.
Notice is hereby given that in pur
Notice of Application for United States
Patent
Serial No. 010870
United States Land Office, Carson
City, Nevada.
October 17, 1918.
Notice is hereby given that in pur
K-
WILLIAM T. KING
(Incumbent)
Candidate for
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
Ormsby County, Nev.
The reason why Nevada will, on November 5th, return Charles
B. Henderson to t he United States senate to aid and support Presi
dent AVilson during the war and the impending peace negotiations, is
made very clear by the able speech which Senator Pittman made in
the senate on October 10, 1918. The senator performed a real ser
vice to the country by showing that the Republican party, through its
tioor leader, Senator Lodge, had attacked President Wilson's reply
to Germany's plea for peace because that party is not in accord with,
and is opposing the president's program to bring about an everlast
ing world-wide peace, and that such opposition very seriously in
creased the difficulties of negotiating such a peace.
Senator Pittman 's comprehensive analj'sis of the position of the
Republican leaders strongly emphasizes that the urgent necessity for
retaining the present unity of organization and action in the field of
diplomacy is equally as great as the necessity for the continuation of
such unity of action in the field of battle. AVe have this unity among
our army and naval forces in France and without it in our diplomatic
machinery at Washington the sacrifices and accomplishments of our
boys at the front may easily be lost because of mere partisan consid
erations and opposition to the president. In this connection, the
senator, among other things, said:
Mr. President, the opposition of any statesman of the " senator's
great ability and learning to the efforts of the president of the United
States, upon whom the duty devolves to successfully conduct this war
and bring about a lasting peace, would have its effect, but when that
statesman is the leader of the Republican party in the United States
senate, and by virtue of that position in the United States, and the min
, ority leader on the great Foreign Relations committee, his opposition be
comes a matter of grave concern to all of the people of our country. He
cannot obstruct the carrying out of the principles and policies of the
president of the United States, but if he were the leader of a Republican
majority in the United States senate, he could block the consummation
of such world policies. i
It is true that the president of the United States is vested with sole
authority to direct the army and navy of the United States. He has the
sole jurisdiction to conduct foreign and diplomatic negotiations. He is
the chief executive officer of our government, upon whom devolves the
duty of formulating treaties and agreements with other governments, but
these treaties do not become operative until ratified by the United States
senate. Would a Republican United States senate, under the leadership
of Senator Lodge, ratify treaties embracing the president's program, or
would they substitute for it a program formulated by the senior senator ...
from Massachusetts?
This is but one of a hundred illustrations that might be made to
prove the necessity of a united government in time of war. This is the
people's war and it is to the interest of every citizen of the United
States to see that the president of the United States is upheld in every
particular in his humane policies that have been approved and adopted by
all of our allies. Our people do not distrust Woodrow Wilson. He is
loved, trusted and respected not only by all c4 the people of the United
States, but by the suffering peoples of the governments of our allies.
He is recognized throughout the world today as the predominant states
man of the age."
The people are not concerned about partisan political considera
tions at the present time. On the contrary, they are interested in
winning the war and securing a permanent, world-wide peace and
they will, therefore, support their war president by electing Senator
Henderson and other able and trusted senators throughout the coun
try, to the end that there may be no partisan division in the councils
during the pending peace negotiations. A vote for Senator Hender
son is a vote for President AVilson, his principles, policies and the ac
tion he will take in behalf of the people of this and other countries
during the impending peace conferences. Arote for him.
oo
GERMAN "JUSTICE" IN PEACE
The German nation asks a "just peace," an "honorable peace,"
one that will not bring about their disintegration, but were the con
ditions reversed and they in the saddle what kind of a peace would
they deal out to their opponents, taking their past actions as a cri
terion? Senator McCumber aptly stated the ease in the United
States senate the other day when he said:
They had schemed for forty years the destruction of their neighbors.
They had robbed France of two of her provinces in 1871, and made her
pay in damages for the privilege of being robbed. With the memory of
the seizure of Silesia from Austria, of Schleswig from Denmark, of
Alsace-Lorraine from France,' the time bad come for the conquest of
Belgium, the domination of Serbia and Rumania, the great Mitteleurop-
suance of the Act of Congress approv- Tu finei !i CW eS j a??rV"
cd May 10, 1872, the Mound House .May 10, 1872, the Mound House
Plaster Company and B. W. McCaus-! flatter Company and B. W. McCaus
land, by their attornev-in-fact, P. A. : land. ' their attorney-in-fact P. A.
ri;ci, .w- ntAff;, aa ; ; English, whose postoffice address is
care of George D Smith Carson City, ; ot oeorge n f J-" 4.4.4.4.4...i
pvaHa. ha matte amplication for a -evaaa, nas maae application ior a; .
United States patent for the Excelsior j J;,nited States Pat?nt J.T the KeBan. I
Mining Claim, being the southwest 1 P'er Mining Claim, being west half j WATTTP T TinvTTwr t
quarter (SWtf) of section twenty-four HVW quarter (SEl4) t WALTER J. HUNTING
(24), township sixteen (16) north, range and. ft ??,f lhW of s?utheast luar-
twenty (20) east, M. D. B. & m, in t".IE) th.t- funVst T t Non-Partisan candidate for t
Mound House Mining district, Loh ' 1SVX?seSt,on ty (30), and north f c W
countv, Nevada, expressly excluding 1,alf of northeast quarter (NEtf)? eTT1)pt,TWTt.vnPvm ennnnm
from said application the southeast .f northwest quarter (NVVtf) of sec- STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS
quarter (SEJ4) of the southwest quar-! V,0" thirty-one (31), township sixteen
ter (SV4) of said section twenty-fourth) noruV range twenty-one (21) j r'n.ol PW.; vu. r. mio
(24), net area applied for being one .???1'. Al- ' m fiouna nouse ,.v.wl
AYiiiiiug UI3LIICI, CAjriC35i) CALlUUlIlg - V
from said application the east half 4-4''4.4i4.4
(EJ4) of southeast quarter (SEJ4) of f .4.4..4....4.4.4..4.
hundred twentv (120) acres.
SHOBER J. ROGERS, Register.
Date of first application, Oct. 17, 1918
TOR RENT
Two front bedrooms; private en
trances. Enquire at this office ol7-lw
tion thirty, net area applied for being
one hundred (100) acres.
SHOBER J. ROGERS, Register.
Date of first application, Oct. 17, 1918
GEORGE BRODIGAN
'DEMOCRAT, FOR
SECRETARY OF STATE
"Vote for Him 'Vote for Him
WILLIAM A. BURNS I
I
Democratic Candidate for
STATE MITITOa TTffRPP.nTrtP 1
.
General Election, November 5, 1918
.
HMHHHHM
EDWARD A. DUCKER
Candidate for the office of
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT
MM
CHARLES L DEADY
Democratic candidate for
SURVEYOR GENERAL
General Election, November 5, 1918
i
CHARLES R. EVANS
I
tUSrtt.BS.ttIM J.AT1VJS lit UUIiUKJSSS
Democratic candidate for
V
t
- ?
?
4.4.4,4.4.4.4.4,4,4,4.4.4, 4,4.4.4.4,4,4,44.44.4,4,4.4.4,44,4,4,4,4.4,4,4,4,4,4,4.44,4,4,
General Election, November 5, 1918
Non-Partisan candidate for
JOHN EDWARDS BRAY
STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS
General Election, November 5, 1918
w. ebaldy
4.
Republican candidate for
DISTRICT ATTORNEY $
4.
Of Ormsby County, Nev. 1
CHARLES B. HENDERSON
Democratic candidate for the
UNITED STATES SENATE
General Election, November 5, 1918
t ED MALLEY
t
t '
t General Election, November 5, 1918
Democratic candidate for
STATE TREASURER
t JOHN M. CHARTZ j
Democratic candidate for
I DISTRICT ATTORNEY t
4 4
Oi Ormsby County, Nev.
't
GEORGE GILLSON
Republican candidate for
STATE SENATOR
t
From Ormsby County, Nev.
i
44.4.4.4.4i4.4,4i4,4.4.4h4
W. E. WALLACE
Democratic candidate for
MEMBER OF ASSEMBLY
From Ormsby County, Nev.
-H 4. 4141 414,4.4.4. 4.4.4.4.4.4.4.44-4'4-
X DAN E. MORTON f
Independent candidate for
I CLERK AND TREASURER
4,
Of Ormsby County, Nev.
General Election, November 5, 1918
!
t
4,4,4,44,4,4,4.4,4.4,4,4,4,4.4.4,4

xml | txt