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CARSON CITY DAILY APPEAL, MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1920 rrti - r" rV " I a A 1 1 me down into the cellar-1 11 show you how to iix your gas meter LJie arSOIl LIEVv UCLliV rXDDeai so it won't register."-Oregon (111.) Republican. HO AUDIENCE PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE NEVADA PRINTING COMPANY T. D. VAN DEVORT Editor and Manager Entered at. Matter of the Second Class at the Postoffice at Carson City, Nevada,! under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879 i One year by Carrier One year bj Mail TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION 112.00 9.00 Bobby eame running into the house all out of breath and ap parently very much excited : "Mamma" "-Why, Bobby, what in the world is the matter?" "I fell off the porch." "You fell off the porch t Why, darling, I didn't hear you cry." "I didn't cry There wasn't anybody to. cry to." 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 ia the -city.- ...... NOTICE Or HEARING APPLICA . -. TION TO SELL SEAL PROPERTY VTHEY LIE IN UNMARKED AND UNHALLOWED GRAVES" The "keynote" speech of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge at the Republican national convention, which was largely devoted to a bitter and partisan attack on President Wilson and his policies, in-' dicates the plane upon which the Republican party proposes to' pitch the approaehing campaign. As pictured by Representative Alben W. Barkley, Democrat of Kentucky, Democrats are prepared to meet these personal as saults unon the resident and Representative Barkley says the country has but to remember how Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln and other great presidents were maligned, in order to take such attacks at their real worth. -' Bepresentatice Barkley recalls that traducers of Lincoln went even further than present-day critics of President Wilson. Lincoln, he says, was called "the baboon at the other end of Pennsylvania avenue," and his administration waa described as "weak and vacil lating;" he was accused of "treachery,"' of having sacrificed the : ivhonor and dignity "of the nation, and was called by. some of his critics as "imbecile." "But where today are the traducers of Washington ; where are those who maligned Jefferson; where are the defamers of the char acter of 'Old Hickory' Jackson; where are those who, with leering look and sinister smile, sought to besmirch the record of Abraham Lincoln!" asks Representative Barkley. "They lie in unmarked and unhallowed graves. They have all descended into the stillness of deep oblivion from which they will never emerge." Representative Barkley and other Democrats believe that the best and most convincing argument to such attacks is the fact that " many presidents, and particularly "war presidents," have had their motives misunderstood and maligned in their day, and that history has given imperishability to their names. Further along this line, Representative Barkley says: ' "The figure of Washington grows more imposing as the years go by, and each year pilgrims by the thousands tread softly near his tomb. Jefferson's memory and his great deeds are enshrined in the hearts of a grateful posterity. The heroic courage of Jack-" . son as soldier and statesmen inspires each new generation of Amer ican patriots. And the tragic career of Abraham Lincoln gives hope to every struggling boy in this fair land, and in his honor we build monuments and cities. "It is not my task to assign to Woodrow Wilson the place which he will occupy among the great statesmen of America and the world. Impartial history will perform that duty. No word of mine can add to the fullness of his stature. No word or act of yours can detract from it. But if I may be permitted to indulge in a prophecy, it is not difficult to foresee that those who now snap at his heels like hungry jackals- will take their places among the forgotten register . of the nation's malcontents, while he will stand with Washington, i Jefferson, Jackson and Lincoln as one of the few great figures of ithis era. . '' ' ' j ; I ''Let me in conclusion adopt as a fitting motto for the Demo cratic party and its great president a sentence uttered by the great Lincoln in his famous debates with Douglas over the senatorship from Illinois. When complaint was made that the course he was v pursuing would defeat him for that high office, he uttered this im mortal sentence: 'I am not bound to win; but I am bound to be right.' In being right, he lost the senatorship, but he gained the presidency and a premiership among the world's great statesmen. In being right, Woodrow Wilson has lost the support of a narrow, partisan and slothful Republican congress, but he will have gained a prize infinitely greater in value and in honor, a high place among , the meager list of the world's real statesmen and benefactors." o CONSISTENCY . Ia tit District Court of the State of Nevada, Ia and for the County of Ormsby. In the Matter of the Estate of Flora If. Rogers, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that John H. Gies, Mortgagee and the Administrator of the estate of Flora N. Rogers, de ceased, having filed in this Court his edition oravinc for an order of sale of all the real property of the estate of said deceased, towit: Mock il ot Phillips Addition. Carson City. Nevada, the hearing of the same has been set by said Court for the 8th day of June, A D. 192a at ten o'clock. A. M, at the Court Room thereof in the building at the northwest corner of South Carson and Sixth Sts- in Carson City, Ormsby County, Nevada, and all persons inter ested in said estate are notified then and there to appear and show cause, if any they have, why said order should not be made to sell so much of said real es tate as may be necessary to pay ex penses of administration, to satisfy the mortgage lien of said John H. Oies and to pay other allowed claims. Dated this 17th day of May. 192a DANIEL E. MORTON, Clerk. By J. W. LEGATE, Deputy. Senator Harding voted in the senate for constitutional prohibi tion, but against the resolution making the District of Columbia bone-dry. The distinction is apparently obvious. WILL SWALLOW THE DOSE We had hoped that a man of undoubted courage, vision and exe cutive ability would be chosen, but'we have instead Warren Gama liel Harding, one of the senate group which controlled the conven tion. It would be hypocritical for the Tribune to pretend that it is satisfied with this result. New York Tribune. Despite its cry the Tribune will swallow the dose concocted by the senate crowd at Chicago and from now on until election day, in order to be "regular," will "point with pride" to the "wonder ful record" of Mr. Harding, trying to make its readers believe what it does not itself believe. IF ELECTED WILL BE SEVENTH PRESIDENT FROM OHIO If Senator Warren O. Harding is elected next November he will be the seventh president Ohio has given the union. Virginia heads the list with eight. All the Ohio presidents were Republicans. Here are the Ohio presidents: Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, William II. Taft. From 1869 to 1881, twelve years, Ohio had the honor of being represented continuously by its sons in the White House. That was during the successive terms of Grant, Hayes and Garfield. o MR. ROOT'S PROBLEM Elihu Root, distinguished international lawyer, labors abroad to put the League of Nations into successful operation, while Elihu Root, arch politician, discredits it in the hope of restoring party har mony. For which of the acts will he prefer to be remembered in history? -Springfield Republican. TAINTING; SCHEDULE K Schedule K will never look quite so sacred again, now that the head of the American Woolen company has been indicted for pro fiteering. Springfield Republican. . , o A FITTING SUBSTITUTE A young couple went to a minister's house to bet married. After the ceremony the bridegroom drew the clergyman aside and said in a whisper : "I'm sorry I have no money to pay your fee, but if youll take INSURANCE ANNUAL STATE. MENT NOTICE Attention of Property Owners Residing Ia Concrete Sidewalk Distnct No. 1, Embracing All Sidewalks on West Side of Carson Street Between Georgia Street on North and Wash, ington Street on South: Concrete sidewalk district No. 2, em bracing all sidewalks on the north and south sides of King. Musser, Proctor and Telegraph streets between Carson street on east and Minnesota street on west. Concrete sidewalk district No. 3, em bracing ail sidewalks on the north side of Musser street, on the north and south sides of Proctor, Telegraph, Spear and Robinson streets between Carson street on the west and Plaza street on the east, Is called to City Ordinance No. 157. An ordinance establishing concrete sidewalk districts, compelling the lay ing of concrete sidewalks and other matters properly connected therewith, which has never been repealed or re voked and is still in full force and ef fect and must be complied with. By order of the city trustees. DANIEL E. MORTON, City Clerk. Ey J. W. LEGATE, Deputy. j2-3t INSURANCE ANNUAL STATE. MENT I Of the Hartford Accident & Indemni ty Co., Hartford, Connecticut, for the Year Ending December 31, 1919: Paid-up capital $1,000,000.00 Gross assets 9,659,768.89 Liabilities, except capital 7,130,892.25 Net surplus 262,598.67 Premiums Other sources Income $8,042,640.55 446,015.02 Total income, 1919 .$8.48,655.57 Expenditures Paid policy holders $275225571 Dividends None Other expenditures 3,358,787.52 Of the Beneficial Life Ins. Co., Salt Lake City, Utah, for the Tear Ending December 31, 1919: Capital (deposited) .$ 200,000.00 Assets 2,901,204.26 Liabilities, exclusive of cap- ital and net surplus 2,571,833.62 - Income Premiums $ 790,134.94 Other sources 180,379.79 Total income, 1919 Expenditures Losses Dividends Other expenditures .$ 970,514.73 .$ 263,268.03 20.968.81 305,663.73 Total expenditures, 1919 .$6,111,043.23 Business, 1919 Risks written $ I Premiums thereon 8,042,640.55 Losses incurred 3,611,108.00 Nevada Business Amount of risks written....$ Premiums received 3,657.38 Losses paid 10.910.00 Losses incurred 10,910.00 Amount of policies in force December 31. 1919. J. COLLINS, Lee, kW becretary. Total expenditures, 1919 .$ 589.900.57 Life Insurance Business, 1919 Risks written ; 45,906717.00 Premiums thereon 175,472.14 Losses incurred on new risks 13,250.00 Nevada Business Risks written None Premiums received, renew als..$ 5,747.08 Losses paid None Losses incurred None AXEL. M. C. OHLSON. Jlw Secretary. See Bath For the moving of furniture, house hold goods, trunks, machinery, etc Phone 941. j6-tf The APPEAL Reaches Those Who Buy CpRINTER'S INK widens the world of every business If a business i managed well, Publicity is the next great factor in tts success . . MORAL: Advertise and Then Adver tise Again. A. Go Meyers ..Carson City, Nevada.. Groceries .Ha r d'w ar e. ..Cr o c k e r y PRICES ARE RIGHT QUALITY HIGHEST Two Uses at Once from Single Sockets Two-Way Pings can be screwed into year electric light sockets, giving two outlets in place of one. Use both outlets for light, or one for light and the other for heat or power. Wonderfully convenient for ironing, toasting, percolating coffee, operating sewing machine or connecting way pph Knee without removing the light. Every home needs three or more. I .- Imported and Domestic Cigars Pipes, Smoking Tobacco, Cigarette? , Everything for the Smoker of TastePure Goods am Courteous Treatment PHONE 6 3 H. J. Vaughan PHONE 6 3 Tobacconist-Newsdealer-Billiard Parlor All San Francisco Dailies--Hot Butterkist Pop Corn Daily Peanuts and Confection, Fresh Opposite Post Office Telephone 63 Wood, Coal 8i Feed Yard When you want Coal that burns and leaves no clinkers Phone 1-5-1-1 We will supply your wants JOHN RUBKE CARSON, NEVADA DRUGS... KODAKS and PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES FACE POYYTDER TOILET SOAP HASS CANDIES ptZ y. A. Mullet H CI W. L TAYLOrt ; JESSE 1 MM -0;tatrist$:: Eyes Examined and Glasses;; Fitted. - ANY LENS DUPLICATED ; ; Thoma-Bifelow Bwldinjc, Ret. Nev. iHIIIIIII'"MMIItMM , ! Dr. W. T. McLain I I ...Optometrist... ! Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted Carson St., Opp. Postoffice X Latest telegraphic news in the Appeal..