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CARSON CITY DAILY APPEAL, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1919 The Carson City Daily Appeal PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY. THE NEVADA PRINTING COMPANY T. D. VAN DEVORT Editor and Manager Entered as Matter of the Second Class at the Postoffice.at Carson City, Nevada, -- under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879 - TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION $12.00 9.00 One year by Carrier One year by Mail Carson Citv Dailv Anneal 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. YOUNG JOHN D. the "Washington Herald thus describes m John D A HINT .TO CONGRESS ABOUT THE PAPER SITUATION Rumors and reports have been prevalent recently that a shortage of paper might eause the newspapers of the.country to decrease their advertising space, cut down the size of their journals and limit their news columns to the barest '. possible description of the happenings throughout the world. The ,Miner, for its own sake as well as for that of all the legiti mate newspapers, and news-dispensers of the United States, ventures the suggestion to congress, whose next session convenes on Decem ber 1st, that for the enlightenment of the country, the stamping out of alien propaganda, and the nourishment of the patriotic newspapers of his country, one of the first acts of congress should be the elimina tion of all newspapers printed in foreign languages. suen a measure, wnne drastic in its errectswui really work no hardship on foreigners. In place of several tf6usand newspapers printed for the. benefit of a comparatively small percentage of our population, we might have that small percentage of readers who can not read English engaged in learning American ideals and supporting American institutions, by the simple expedient of -compelling -every newspaper to be printed in English. i- The law, if adopted, would compel the immediate cessation of (hundreds of Bolshevik publications; would, hasten .the education of those whom we hope to become assimilated in Jhe United States' pro gram of development; and last, but not least,, would allow the paper Chalmers Six t iiiuiuki mm A writer in Rockefeller, Jr.: "Younsr John D. Rockefeller appeared at the first session of the Industrial Conference with his hair brushed up and in a way unusual to him. "As he sat there he looked more the part of a radical than any- nn in the rnnm "I first saw him in the corridor to the conference room in con- manufacturers toontmue their services to the legitimate newspapers Versation with Sam Gorapers, but Gompers was doing most of the who are already groaning under the strain of increased costs of paper talking and making it emphatic bv frequent fist blows on young supplies and allow the news of the world, without distortion, to be Rockefeller's chest. ' , ( 'VYoung Rockefeller is about 40 years old, but he looks 55 or even a bit older. He is stooped, has care lines in his face and a tired look to his eye. , j "He would impress anyone with any experience in observing that ' he has inherited a lot of trouble with all his money and that he would be willing to make a fresh start in the matter of a fortune. j "He has all the natural courtesy of his father, but is more free and open in his manner and conversation The car with the Ramshorn Hot Soot Motor. If you are in terested in a good car at a reas onable price come in and see us. We are also agents for the Chev rolet, Maxwell and Reo cars. Chalmers Chevrolet . Maxwell .... . $857 .$1,160 ! r.:.ei2l ssivise .Stetd VOICE PRODUCTION AND ARTIS TIC SINKING MM X Cumn&Piiipps Plumbers an? Tinners Cooking, Heating and X Gas Stoves On Hand CARSON STREET t Next to Capital Garage T 'PHONE 4 36 t 4 "He does not seem to be afraid of saying something as is the im pression jn being in the presence of the older Rockefeller. "Young John D. will impress anyone as being a man who says 'No' a good deal. "He is typical of a New York type of super-business man with a set jaw and clear eye and who makes quick decisions in big figures. "I am told that he is a better business man than his father even in his active days, that he has a sense of humor which his father has nto, and that he is eyerf something ot a wit. publishel as freely in the future as it has been in the past The time for Americanism, above everything else, has arrived, and it is time for congress to put its foot down on anything which is a breeding place for foreign anarchistic preachings. The Miner believes that the foreign press could constitutionally be suppressed for a period, say while the present, paper shortage is on, and the 90 odd per cent of the population be supported in their belief in American aims and ideals by decreeing that none but English-reading newspapers shall be published. Tonopah Miner. THE BETTER WAY Of all the schemes for getting rid of debts, national and other wise, paying them off is still the best. Toronto Globe. oo If some gentlemen fought as strenuously for the right to work as for the right to strike the nation wouldn't be so badly off. Indian apolis News. Sinor Arturo Salvini (Arthur A. Borrows), late principal tenor, Royal Italian and Royal English Grand Opera companies, London, Eng., La. Scala theater, Milan, and principal theaters throughout Italy and Europe,, begs to announce that he has opened a studio in Reno for tuition in the above art. Pupil of Francesco Lamperti and Fran cesco Ronconi. Should a sufficient number of pupils desire tuition Mr. Borrows will visit Carson City for one day each week. Ad dress Mariner's Music House, or Sher man Clay & Co., Reno. 027-tf COAL IN ANY QUANTITY A CASUAL GLANCE AT THE LINE-UP From the New York Globe Republican There never was a cause so good that it had no disingenuous camp-followers, nor one so bad that at least a little virtue did not shine out amid the muck. Nor is the league of nations necessarily a moral issue so mucJi as it is an intellectual issue. Even a" complete list of its proponents and antagonists would furnish only a slight clue to the division of civic virtue in the country.. Nevertheless, there is food for thought in even such an imperfect roll-call as that following, which pretends to be nothing more than a list jotted down at random. Any reader may make his own list. This is only one: FOR THE LEAGUE AGAINST THE LEAGUE The Manchester Guardian,' The London Post, Maj. Gen. Edgar Jadwin, U. S. A., Count von Brockdorff-Rantzau Herbert Hoover, The former kaiser, Jan Smuts, George Sylvester Viereck, Robert Cecil, William Randolph Hearst, Andre Tardieu, Gabrielle D'Annunzio, Mr. Taft, Gen. von der Goltz, . ' Herbert Asquith, ' Lenine, Premier Venizelos. Trotzky, William Allen White, Bela Kun, Frank Vanderlip, Emma Goldman, Bernard Baruch, The I. W. W., . Sir George Paish, Carranza, George W. Wickersham, Ludendorff, : A, Lawrence Lowell, Hindenburg, Oscar Strauss, Helfferich, Theodore Marburg, Justice Cohalan, ' - Charles M. Schwab, Victor L. Berger, Elihu Root.'. , Elihu Root. (spring of 1919) (summer of 1919) "FIGHTING PRESIDENT WILSON" 112 II llij pi ml CbotF hi We are prepared to furnish best grades of coal in any quantity. Orders left with Chas. Taylor or Clarence Ruedy will receive prompt -attention. HOBART ESTATE CO., By W. H. Keyser. Phone 841 ml-tf WANT ANY OF THESE Patent Medicines Perfumes Photographic Supplies Face Powders Toilet Soap Kodaks YES? Then get them from J. A. MULLER x X I Druggist, Opposite P. O. SANCH FOR SALE See Bath For " the moving -of furniture, house hold goods, trunks, machinery etc w Phone 941. j6-tf DO I The latest the Daily v '"I am fighting. President Wilson,'.' says Senator Lodge in an in-J -terview printed yesterday. "That I am willing to acknowledge.", J This is frank and truthful; . Senator Lodge is fighting President . "Wilson, and he has lost sight of everything else. The total cost of the - war directly and indirectly has been estimated at $338,000,000,000 4 and the number of dead at approximately 10.Q00,000, and responsible statesmen are everywhere agreed that if civilization does not prevent ! "war, war will destroy civilization; but all this has only an academic t interest to Henry Cabot Lodge. -What .he is concerned about is fight . ing the president of the United States. In order to hglit the president it is necessary to hght the treaty I X of peace; it is necessary to add to the political turmoil and confusion T of Europe; it is necessary to keep the United States and the rest of if the belligerents in a state of war indefinitely and delay every meas- .ure of reconstruction. To Senator Lodge this is merely incidental to i the duty of fighting President nilson. New York World. I TheGreasingProblem l OF YOUR CAR SOLVED A PAINFUL TOPIC "So you've heen to Washington?" "Yes," replied the dignified old gentleman. Pay a visit to our garage and let demonstrate the us Simple and practical. A time and money saver. It is now standard equip ment on White motor cars and trucks the best recommendation we can give. f THE PLAGUE OF CARBON AND ITS CUBE 'Did you see the senate in session?" "Oh, yes." . u .... , "What did you think of it?" Sir. you must excuse me. I have too much respect for General I George ashmgton and the gentlemen who signed the declaration of independence to answer that question." Birmingham Age-Herald. THE QUESTION NOW The question now for the oppressed classes is not whether one can afford a car; it is whether one can afford to have a private road. 'I Colliers. - MAINE'S KNOWLEDGE New York officials allege that liquor is being shipped in there from Maine. Maine has been prohibition for so long she knows how I to handle the question. Detroit' Free Press. , , tielp tite Greater Carson C!ub arata No device ever put on the market has so conclusively demonstrated its use fulness to the motorist as the ESTA WATER AUXILIATOR. Carbon de lays on the road and in the work shop are entirely eliminated by its use, to say nothing of the measured efficiency ; obtained from the motor and the sav ing of fuel and annoyance. The prin ciple is as old as the hills, but no mas- . tcr mind has, previous to this time, cient article. Many makeshifts have been able to put into practice an effi been discarded, many more will appear, but none will accomplish the results that the ESTA WATER AUXILATOR will. I I f I ff I I I I I V ff ff ff ff ff f ff R4 R3 a to Agents for fnl id Tu&nes ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff :: 1 1 ff :: ff ; I :: ff :: . ff :: ff YOTJ WANT Then subscribe Appeal. Telegraphic news news: for Subscribe for the Appeal. Improved 100 acres irrigable, with water from government irrigation proj ect, on Swingle Bench, tweivt miles west from Fallon, Nevada. Best loca tion for orchard in state. Good crop every year. Five large Percheron mares ; registered Duroc-Jersey hogs; farm machinery, etc Will be in Carson City for a few days only. Over Muller's drug store. j3-tf C. V. EGGLESTON. Ktad the Appeal for the latest hap penings, both at home and abroad. Read the Appeal world events. for the latest in 1 Vfliat Do You Itnow AHout Ibis ? 1 PRICES IN RENO HIGH THEY SAY Copied from Reno Gazette of Wedhesday, February 12, 1919 CARSON CITY, Feb. 12. What some members of the joint com mittee on ways and means and claims of both houses assert is a surpris ing condition relative to the comparative cost of food products in Reno and Carson was presented by the committee's investigation of the cause of the deficiencies existing in various state departments, to take tare of which a bill carrying an appropriation of over $59,000 is pending in the assembly. , When Warden Henrich appeared before the joint committee to ex plain the deficiency existing in the prison fund he produced data show ing that cost of material used in conducting the affairs of the prison had advanced 40 per cent during the two-year period for which the ap propriations made by the legislature of 1917 wi re made. The warden purchased his supplies from Carson City merchants. Dr. J. J. Sullivan, superintendent of the State Hospital for Mental Diseases, was before the committee Monday and proved to the satis faction of the members of the committee that prices on supplies for his institution kad increased 100 per cent during the last two years. Dr. 3tillivan explained to the committee that he purchased his supplies in Reno. i "I cannot see any reason for the difference in prices in Reno and Carson on the same commodities," said one member of the committee yesterday. '"If anything prices in Reno should be a shade lower than in $ Carson. In all probability the prices charged the individual consumers f in Reno would be somewhat h'gher than those charged Dr. Sullivan be ll cause he buys in bulk, while the individual consumer buys at retail prices." - GUESS MY PRICES MAKE A HIT EVEN IN RENO A. G. Meyers efl moi mm and Auto Company MACHINE SHOP AUTO OVERHAULING REPAIRING OPPOSITE STATE CAPITOL PHONE 151 T. L. Hawkins, Sec-Treas. Gee. A. Cole, President Imported and Domestic Cigars Pipes, Smoking Tobacco, Cigarette? , Everything for the Smoker of Taste Pure Goods and Courteous Treatment PHONE 6 3 H. J.- Vaughan PHONE G 3 Tobacconist-Newsdealer-Billiard Parlor All San Francisco Dailies--Hot Butterkist Pop Cora Daily Peanuts and Confection, Fresh Opposite Post Off ice Telephone 63 Fke tasoraece James M. Leonard, Agent Causa VtSey Bzsk Bldj. Phosc 561 Carson, Nevada Up to the Minute News In Appealj tMtMtMMtMMMHMMMMMHMIIMHMIMM