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CARSON CITY DAILY APPEAL, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1918 MMM I DX. W. E. TAYLOR t JESSIE H. TAYLOR Optometrists i Eyes Examined and Fitted. Glasses ANY LENS DUPLICATED Thoma-Bigelow Building, Reno, Nev. T Of Personal Mention 11. K. Looke, lonopah attorney, was an arrival from the south on last even ing's train. Francis Murray, son of Mrs. Irene Murray, has returned to San Clara, mi lea (ft lea AMOUNT PLEDGED, $137.13 fa The VICTORY GIRLS who have pledged and matched a SER VICE STAR: fa fa fa Each day the new members will added in this list. be Bernice Harris Gwendolyn Rogers Justine Rogers Lillian Bonafous Ellen McDonald Dorothy Harrington Jessie McKenzie Marguerite Hagmeyer Beatrice Pyne Grace Sprague Verla Meyers Ethel Regan Claire Regan Ada Grover Ruth Castle Mary Rochon Catherine Law Edna Riehl Blanche Sweetland Martha Bath Irene Bath Ellen Burk Anna Maude Stern Claire Gifford Jeanne Cavell Ruth Slade Marjorie Noteware Annie Twaddle Willadma Lee Mary McCarran Margaret McCarran Norine McCarran Marie Wood Zelma Kitzmeyer Nina Kitzmeyer Mildred Hesse Merle Peters Clara Dickson Bernice Hoopes Dorothy Mackey Martha Patterson Leona Patterson Anna Louise Shaughnessy Frances Shaughnessy Norrine Dickerson Lorraine Randall Elvira Howard Theresa Peterson Anita Peterson Marjorie Ligon Elizabeth MulLr Gertrude Mae Lewis Mildred Baxter Dorothy O.Leary Frances Marie Walsh Edme Peterson Alyce Russell Doris Kane Doris Dodson Kathleen Peterson, Susan Blackwell Frances McEachin Mary Ouillette Gladys Trimmer Marie Norton Bernice Johnson Doris Johnson Pearl Manfrina Rose Graham Clara Hill Dorothy Karnes Erma Eason Mary Shaughnessy Alice Sweeney Aida Andreoni Nellie Andreoni Ruth Cliff Helen Smith Viola King Jeanne Bonafous Catherine Shay IKi INI fS MAUDE H. GILLSON, Ormsby County Executive of the Vic tory Girls' Division, United War Work Campaign. ( CARSON VALLEY BANK, Treasurer. This space is donated by E. J. Walsh to the Victory Girls. where he is attending school, after a couple of weeks' visit in Carson. Ed Regan, former Carson resident, but now living in Reno, was a visitor in this city yesterday afternoon. Miss Rita Keyser, who returned to Yerington last Sunday to take up her work in the public schools of that city, where she has charge of the kinderfar ten class, proned her parents late yes terday that she would be home on this evening's train. New cases of influenza have broken out and the schools have been closed again. RENO SCHOOLS TO BE CLOSED ANOTHER WEEK The school hoard of Reno has order ed the schools of that city closed an other week as a precaution against the spread of Spanish influenza. The public schools of the riverside city opened Monday, but many parents refused to allow their children to at tend. Monday evening the board of health and the school board met and took the matter up." The health bosrd showed statistics to prove that the epidemic had passed in Reno, but the school board did not view it in the, same light and vesterdav afternoon ordered the public schools closed for another week Many protests have been lodged with the Reno health board against the re opening of the theaters and cafes, oo TAPS SOUNDED FOR ANOTHER NEVADA BOY Fred Vollmer of Silver Peak is in j receipt of a message from the war de partment stating that his son. Rudolph, j who was taken ill in France with in- , fluenza, had died October 25th. He was . t i : ! a mcmijcr ot a macnine gun uananun and was inducted into the service last spring. Harry, another son of Mr. Vollmer, who also joined the colors last spring, died at a training camp on the coast soon after leaving his home in Gold- field. Tonopah Times. COYOTE SKINS A VALUABLE FUR The despised coyote has lived to see the day when his pelt is sought in the fur markets of the world as one of the prizes of the trapper's back. The skin of the prairie wolf that sev eral years ago was worth only now brings a price from $8 up to $15, according to the quotations in the fur buvers' list. Several years ago this fur was a drug on the market OO No More Platinum Needed A wire received this morning from R. T. Baker, director of the U. S. mint, states that the needs of the government for platinum have been fully met and no more platinum will be purchased from depositors. Announcement: To help meet the needs of the government, Wrigley's has' discontinued the use of tin foil as a wrapping f or EMg Hereafter all three WRIGLEY flavors will be sealed in air-tight, pink-end packages. So look for URBGLEVS in the pink sealed wrapper and take your choice of fla vor. Three kinds to suit all tastes. Be SURE you get The Flavor I c GOES 30 MILES TO GET MORE TANLAC Throws Walkinz Cane Away Beine Relieved of Rheumatism Gains Fif teen Pounds. "When I first started on Tanlac I was so crippled up with rheumatism that I had tcr use two walking sticks in order to get about at all. But, after taking four or five bottles, every pain was gone, and I have actually gained fifteen pounds besides." The above statement was made by William Choate, 34 West Riverside Ave., Spokane, Wash., recently. Kheumatism, he continued, was only one of "many troubles Tanlac re lieved me ot. l nao sunereu trom a bad stomach for twelve or fifteen years. I couldn't eat scarcely any thing but what gas would form and al most cut off my breath, and bring aw ful faint weak feelings over me. There was a terrible hurting in the pit of my stomach, and if I ventured to eat any thing except the lightest food it would almost put me out of commission.' "This was my condition a little over a year ago when I made my mother and brother over in Iowa a visit. Soon after I got there my troubles got worse My kidneys started bothering me. had awtul pains in tne small ot mv Mack, and constantly had headache Then started in a siege of rheumatism wnicn i win never lorgtt. i was laiu up for six months and was flat on my back for several weeks hardly able . to move. It started in my legs, then got in my arms, and the pain was something awful, from the tips of my fingers t my toes. "When I Mid get up I was in such had shape 1 had to use two canes in order to get about at all and this is the fix I was in when I got Tanlac. I read the statement of a man in the pape one day, that fit my case exactly, and decided to see if it would do me anv good. Well, to make a long story short Tanlac simply did wonders for me Before I finished my second bottle. I threw my canes away, and could walk as good as anyone. And eat; why, I never had such an appetite. All the sourness left my stomach, my backache and headaches disappeared and I havn't had a touch of rheumatism to this good day. One of those lottles of Tanlac I drove thirty miles to get. our local druggist being out at the time, and I would do so again under the same cir cumstances. It's a real pleasure for me to recommend Tanlac, and I will gladly tell anyone personally what it has done for me." Tanlac is sold in Carson City by Charles L. Kitzmever. Latest telegraph and new in the Appeal. reliable local SEALED TIGHT-KEPT RIGHT WRIGLEY'S- Lasts! mm NO YOUNG MEN IN AN ENGLISH VILLAGE By United Press VILLAGE OF POTT EX END, HERTFORDSHIRE, Eng., Nov. 4, by mail. The English countryside is to day just a quaint and peaceful and beautiful as ever. But it has lost its young men. On the village green last night the countryfolk gathered at sundown as they have done for centuries. The duck pond in the middle of the green ; the Red Lion Inn (200 years old) tight in a hedgewall on the south; the squat lit tle church steeple just, over the hedge on the north; and the heathery moor to the west all were just as they were j before the war, except. There were no young men. They who came together on the green were women, girls, children, old men and ccasionally a man of 50. Two sober-faced young women were pushing baby carriages. A motherly woman of 60 presided at the lar in the Ked Lion (the bar was i perhaps four feet long in a room about j six feet square.) On the right was an- j other brown-walled room with a bare! table in the center. A dozen old men we're smoking and sipping their ale. At the head of the table sat a soldier, home on leave. The innkeeper's daughter was bang- ing a tin-panny piano in the tiny par- lor. She played to an empty room and to a soldier's picture above the in- strument. The Inn is a squat little place, most- Amount Enlistment Roll Richard Barber Kenneth Raycraft Harvey Dickerson Osborne Buck Cyril Collins William Harrington Owen McCabe Wayne Deady Fred Hagmeyer Fred Millard Edwin Kelley Harold Kelley Robert Green Hugh Lamb Maurice Quill Earl Fordham Leale Peters Vernon Lovell Udell Miller Walter Hunting Gordon Hunting Rodolph Malo Laurence Kearney Edward Patterson Fred Harris Leonard GifKJfd Leno Andreoni Herbert O'Leary Tom Brady James McCreery Merle Van Meter Franklin Riley Richard Savage Wilson Russell Steve Belli JACK GRAHAM Victory Pa H. KELLEY, Local Director H. This space Vulcanized under internal pressure to in sure even cord strain distribu tion. And locked firmly to the rim by four unstretchable steel cables. 1 j ll VJ?A 1EDERA G RdTires DOUBLE CABLE BASE M M f NOTICE 1 fca fca n X Positively no goods ex- T changed or sent on approval X during the present epidemic. GRAY, RELD, WRIGHT CO. Carson City, Nev. -- grown to roof and manv barreled chimneys (the kind you used to see in jour .Monier Loose book, with storks .Mother s.anding on them). The t,veen the brick shingles cracks be are stuffed with moss. A wooden tablet nailed to the wall of the village church by the door dis plays the "Roll of Honor." Under neath on a little wooden shelf a few sprays of flowers tell their story, It was a Hertsfordshire regiment, with its quota from Potten End, that was nracticallv wiued nut at r.Juu j From the common this morning one ' could see squads of Women's Land j Army girls, in khaki, shocking wheat in the hedge-framed fields. j Behind, the roofs and chimneys of ! the village were just visible over the masses of trees, shrubs and hedges j which form the basis of every English j w as one, perhaps two, three or four ; was one, perhaps two.thrce or four Wedged to Date, $217.50 fcs (a fe of Ormsby County, pledged to earn and give for our Fighters at the Front Edward Harris Stanley Smith Alden Hunting Joe Rochon : Marvin Randall Harry Shay John Evans Kenneth Buck Frances Murray Orel Peters Clarence Burk John Savage Joe Bonafous William Ileyser 'LeRoy Fothergill Vernon Trimmer Edward Malley Harold Royce Sidney Case Edgar Norton Raymond Regan Harold Berger Douglas Vaughan Charles Kitzmeyer George Meyers Maute Esser Daniel McKnight Harry Sweetland Harry Vonderhyde Charlie Paparella James Clancey Bill Ligon Edwin Hill Herbert Smith Lester Smith CARL MANTHEY IBs m W. J. HUNTING, County Director contributed by the Red Arrow Oarage None mm We have in stock and can furnish the following sizes in Federal Cord Tires: 37x5,36x412,35x5,35x412,34x412,34x4 In The following sizes: and 30x3. Save money and your cars by storing them with us. A radiator or pump frozen and bursted would cost you more than the winter's storage. Rate: Five Dollars per Month Red Anon Garage and Auto Go. Carson Citv. " cha never be filled. A crowd of girls was blackberrying among the brambles and bracken on the moor. Lovers' Lane, smooth and grassy be tween high hedge walls, was empty. A tiny girl in gingham and a bit of a boy with vellow curls were marcbintr. hand in hand, into its far end. oo Paper Suggests Chandler Already the fight for speakership of the assembly has been started, and on the ground that the "early bird catches the worm." the Ely Record has pro posed the name of one of the White Pine delegation. Charles S. Chandler, for the position. What we want to know above all other things. is how Mr. Chandler stands on the prohibition question. Free Press. Returned to Reno 111 According to the Reno papers Mrs. Bessie Etnier, who has been assisting in the care of pneumonia patients in this city, returned to her home in Reno yesterday, and is now under the care of a physician. WOOD AND COAL Orders for wood and coal now re ceived. Prompt delivery. Thone 1511. f7-tf JOHN RUBKE. FOR RENT Two front bedrooms; private en trances. Enquire at this office ol-lw Subscribe for the Appeal. and Auto Co. Better Fabrics: 33x4, 32x4, 32x3i2, 31x4, 30x3y2 Nev.. Phone 1S1 empty chairs, many of which would Cord t z t