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Reno Gazette-Journal from Reno, Nevada • Page 4

Location:
Reno, Nevada
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

RENO EVENING GAZETTE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 19 PAGE IP Reno Evening Gazette PublUhod bj the Ren Evening Qasette Company KMOom: QUe Bulldm. Center Street. Reno. Nevada. manhood of the land, and their known corruption of politics, but the stress of war has elevated the ideals of the Amercian people.

The saloon is waste. It is a financial expense no longer to be endured. It is an institution that has no part in a nation struggling for its very Wm Iters of i existence. The. third week of the quarantine intof the University of California, class of' 1S17.

Reno starts today with Indications that it will probably be the last. The board of health has agreed to allow the Its owners and attaches will be better off in other in essential fields of industry. Vote' the saloon from the state. Vote YES on the initiative bill. Mr.

and Mrs. Al Newman entertained a large number of their friends at an enjoyable party Saturday" evening at their home on West Sixth street. Punch churches to hold open-air meetings, starting Wednesday, and who knows but some open-air social affairs may be held, especially if the weather remains good. Ensign Welles Hollister Newlands, was served early In the evening and VOTE FOR JUDGE DOWNER FOR CONGRESS games and singing patriotic songs followed. At midnight a delicious supper i Kianuiiruurw i ii i iim hi id Moniuiir i THE MAN you vote tomorrow to send to theleis G.

xewiands, and Miss Janet house of representatives will be one of those who mompson or Oakland, have announced their engagement, according to will shaDe this country's course in the constructive Coast papers, and are to be married period that will follow the peace that is soon to be in the' near future. Miss Thompson is well known In San Ftancisco and Ber PHONES BUSINESS OFFICE 311 EDITORIAL ROOM 312 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION 9m snth. by carrier I 'Toe month, by mall II months, by mall .04 rear by mall 6.0 PIWARD A reward of 110 wilt be paid tor Information leading to arreet and conviction of persona stealing the Oastetto from be premises of a subscriber. Entered at the Toetoffice at Reno. Nevada, aa second olacs amtter.

MRMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS TEMBEH AMERICAN NKWHPAPER PU BLISH ERS ASS'N MEMBER OF THE A3SOCIATED PRESS The Associated Pres la exclusively entitled to the uae for republication of ail news dispatches credited to it or not Mherwlse credited in this paper and also the locai news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are jrxj-u- in-rru-tj-i rmyuyuu EASTERN REPRESENTATIVES BRYANT, GRIFFITH BRTJNBON. INC 25 Fifth Ave. New York. People's Qas Bonding, Chicago.

HI. 2fl Devonshire Street Boston. Mass. CALIFORNIA REPRESENTATIVES BARANQER-WEAVER Merchants' Exchange Ban rranciaoa, 1 South Spring Los Angeles. was served the following guests: Messrs.

and Mesdanies Frank Glen, Paul Conradt, Frank Hyatt, Mesdames Frosig, Gladding Bagley, Misses Gladys Frosig, Cecil Frosig, Ruth Frosig, Hazel Gladding, Mamie McCabe, Hitchir son, Margaret Burke, Louise Newman and Doris Glen, Messrs. Burke, Gladding, Kolster, Frosig, Homer Glen and several others. Miss Josephine Williams is here from the ('oast, where has been taking a course in business college. She expects to return to San Francisco as soon as the influenzaepidemicis over. I Have Read the Charges Awwn keley.

She graduated from Miss Burke's school, and followed this with a postgraduate course at the University of, California, where she is now at school. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. YV.

Thompson. Ensign Xewiands is a sonof Mrs. James Newlands of Fan Francisco. His father is a nephew of Senator Newlands-. -He is a graduate UUCl 111 1 CI I CI tVlCllVCo Against Me.

DAILY FASHION WELL SEALED AGAINST COLD A THE CANDIDATES TO SUPPORT ilmey Me Fake! declared. It is in the house oi representatives inai the great measures must arise that are to provide for the millions of laborers set loose by the cancellation of war orders. Are you going to send a man to Washington who knows nothing about law, about economics, about internataional relations, a man who, untried and inexperienced in public life, must take an obscure place, among 431 other representatives! Of course you are not going to do anything of the kind. On the contrary, you are sure, because you are a Nevadan and above all an American, to vote for Judge S. S.

Downer, for you know Judge Downer, or your neighbor knows him and.you are personally aware that he is the kind of man who, whether it is among 431 or a thousand, will naturally be looked to as a leader, for his knowledge of legislation and of facts is well known, not only in his own state, but throughout the great Western part of this, country. Nevada owes it to the nation to send that kind of a man to the national house of representatives. Judge Downer served for years as district attorney and as district judge! in Colorado and when he came to Nevada fourteen years ago he'at once took a leading place at the bar of the state. He has not confined his attention solely to his profession of the law and has been a live citizen in every way, always doing his utmost, qufetly and with no ostentation, to advance the interests of his state. His counsel has been sought in all great public questions and never in vain.

He is a public spirited citizen in every way. Vote for S. S. Downer for representative in congress. BILL KELLY ON MALTED MILK BY BETTY BROWN To the fashional le ludy who can af- roru one ot the fascinating new sealskin capes and muffs to match the fuel shortage has no terrors.

There EASY DIPLOMACY When soldier boys have their winning, the diplomats will have an inning; but they will have a job so easy that they may all grow fat and sleazy; for it will be a treaty simple without a secret dit or dimple. We'll say: "Oh kaiser fierce and sporty, your hands are red, your eet are warty; go find useful occupation; for you fire fired from your 'high station; go haw fcme wvod stack swne clover; your days as autocrat are over." Then the common, plain Teutonics, down your guns and knives and doimicks; quit being brutes and aggrandizers; behave yourselves, and tan your kaisers." When soldier boys the peace terms tender of unconditional surrender, it won't require much diplomacies to pound sense Into Prussian attics. The treaty will -be plain, specific, and not in empty words prolific. There'll be no bandying nor swapping, nor any chance, unwhipped, of stopping. Our diplomats plainly make it, ami junkerdom will have to take it.

CLEM BRADS HAW. BIDDY BYE'S GOOD FORM is a long, close -hugging point in the back, and at the sides, it is quite wide enougn to meet the generous muff. lo complete the remarkably charming effect of this fur freation, is the chic bit ot u. seal cap, with two fluffy pompoms of skunk fur. Help Wilson win the war.

Vote for IF I WERE GUILTY OF THE OFFENSE FERREL CHARGES AGAINST ME HE W01LD PROSECUTE ME CRIMINALLY AND NOT PERSECUTE' ME IN THE NEWSPAPERS. AS A MATTER OF FACT I HAVE MADE NO STATEMENTS TO THE EFFECT THAT MY OPPONENT IS PR0 GERMAN TO ANY ONE NOR DO I HAVE TO HIDE BEHIND A WOMAN'S SKIRTS. Charles- R. Evans for congress. Politi cal Advertisement.

Stewart for Assembly. Adv. o31 t3 1 It is bad manners and bad business etiquette for two employes of the same office to dis cuss the personal affairs of fellow workers or of their employer. Almost every worker is in possession of some EIGHT OF. the most prominent attorneys in the state of Nevada, men whose legal opinions are sought by discriminating citizens and the largest business organizations, have signed an opinion that under the provisions of the initiative act no one is prohibited from keeping liquors for personal use, that wines may be made and kept for home use anywhere in the state, that' alcohol and wines may be used for sacramental purposes, and that extracts for cooking containing alcohol are not prohibited by the act.

f. In opposition to this the saloon keepers are publishing a statement from our old friend, Bill Kelly, formerly a tax collector in this state, in direct contradiction to the opinion of there eminent attorneys. Annealincr to Kellv unon important points in it private information as a result 'of his work, but that -ek should be regarded CliaffeyE.EiI Candidate for Sheriff as a trust, not to be betrayed. It is also bad manners to inquire as to the wages or the particular duties of ---1 THIS IS the last day that the Gazette can address the voters of Nevada before the election takes place. The campaigns of the different candidates have been finished and the facts with regard to very political office are before the men and women who constitute the citizenship, and who must decide the issues.

It would be wrong not to elect a Republican legislature, as the people know, and it is reasonably certain that the state senate and assembly which will meet at Carson City in January will both be Republican by a strong, working majority. It will be one of the most important legislatures that, has convened in Nevada since that of 1866, for it will be called upon to pass legislation made necessary by the inimineuey of peace. The nation will have its own laws, it is true, but every state will be under the necessity of adoptiyg regulations that will facilitate the transition from a state of war to peace conditions and remove the perils that would otherwise folloV the return of millions of men and women from war work to the paths of normal industry. To carry into the effect the laws that a Republican legislature will pass, the state must have Republican Vote for Tasker L. Oddie for governor because in his previous service in that high office he showed his sympathies with labor and his knowledge of needs, a sympathy and knowledge that will be especially required at this time, for it is labor tlMt will feel the greatest effect of the change from war to peace unless it ban a friend like Tasker L.

Oddie in the governor's clriiir, Vote for. Augustus Tilden for lieutenant-governor. The principal duties of his office are to preside over the state senate and it is certain that the senate will be Republican beyond any question. The presiding officer of a Republican state senate should be a Republican because it is the presiding officer who appoints the committees and they are the smaller bodies that perform the main work of legislation. Mr.

Tilden is an able lawyer and a brilliant speaker. He has been district attorney of Ksmeralda county for one term. His qualifications for the office arc unquestionable. For secretary of state, Mrs. Louise Spencer Ellis should receive the vote of every citizen.

Her long residence in the state and her labors in behalf of every. public movement have made her widely known. She is especially qualified for the office of secretary of state because of her experience as secretary of the Nevada Agent Syndicate, in which capacity she has organized hundreds of corporations in Nevada, and the principal duties of the secretary of state are to record such corporations. For state treasurer, the Republican party has nominated William E. Pructt, a business man of Urge experience, whose knowledge of the work of 'the office is compIeteand who has the confidence of his fellow citizens.

Vote for him. Parker Liddell, the Republican candidate for surveyor-general, ought to receive the vote of every man and woman in Nevada. He is a mining and civil engineer, received his training at the state university and has always been a loyal Nevadan. His knowledge of his profession is thorough and his service in the assembly has fitted him especially for a public office where acquaintance with the relation of the position to the laws and the people is necessary. Mr.

Liddell should unhesitatingly receive your vote. For attorney-general, there is only one candidate whom the people should consider and that is (ieorgc S. (irecn, a Nevada-born man who has achieved distinction at the bar and whose knowledge of his profession is second to none. George Green is known everywhere and everybody who knows him knows him to be the kind of man. who should be elected.

Vote for him. feliow workers. I 6V cfntntorv nnt law, make one smile Don't forget Charles R. Evans, demo- i cratic candidate for congress. Politi r.

fw Vote for Stewart. Acrv. o-t t3. I lie Statement Take' care of your health by protecting your feet with a pair of our cold and wet-proof shoes for Men, Women and Children. Let us send you by mail a pair of our Murtson last shoes, the easiest and best wearing shoes on earth.

Delivered to your home, postal charges paid. handling a bunch of voters at the right time and his opinion on the ins and outs of certain phases of "practical politics" has never gone unappreciated, but when it comes to settling the law of the land. Kelly's opinion, we respectfully submit, would make a burro smile. Bill, by the way, announces gravely that malted milk is an intoxicating beverage. Did Bill ever drink any of it? Is it possible that our old friend Bill has been unable to take a drink of malted milk, even, without being intoxicated? The wets are making themselves even more ridiculous in the finale of their campaign, which has been ridiculous from the first.

HIS APPEAL FALLS TO THE GROUND Mrs. Sadie D. Hurst Republican Candidate for the ASSEMBLY WITH GERMANY on her last legs, the kaiser making all his preparations to flee into Switzerr II Yd 4w Solicits the support of the voters of Washoe County who believe in state and national prohibition. lauu, me iuiumi; ariuj iu mc cat iu.i-tn.ui-, defeat after defeat and -not a single associate left to the German nation in this war, the recent appeal of Presideut Wilson to the people to vote for Democrats lest Germany would think America did not stand, back of him, falls to the ground. No one need care what Germany or Germans think, now, if they ever had to.

Germany is beaten to a finish. SM0.tt. ENDORSED BY THE CLUB WOMEN OF RENO NOT A MEMBER OF THE WOMAN'S PARTY LOOK OUT for the campaign lie. This is the day it is usually started, when too late to contradict. Donit believe any new sensations sprung today or tomorrow morning.

ST. PIERRE'S BOOTERY NEVADA'S MOST POPULAR SHOE STORE A LITTLE HUMOR NOW AND THEN 3 1. And do not foriret Andv J. Stinson for inspector If You Want Dry State- of mines. His honest, faithful service, his close at- Too Experienced to Believe "Do you think Bacon wrote the Shakespeare plays Reno.Nevada, November 4, 1918.

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: In the. Gazette of Saturday afternoon Sheriff FerreJ publishes an announcement to the effecf that a certain woman of Reno had repeated a statement in circulation to a the effect that he (Sheriff Ferrel) was pro-German, and that this woman had stated thai his "political opponent" (C. E. Bull) had made a similar statement in a conversation with her. I have every reason to believe that I am the' woman to whom Sheriff Ferrel refers.

Mr. Bull never made any such statement to mev On the contrary when I questioned him concerning such a rumor.about Sheriff Ferrel he declined to discuss the matter but told me' I would haveto obtain such infor- matron from others. Sheriff Ferrel questioned me about this matter at great length and I repeatedly informed him that Mr. Bull had not charged him with being a pro-German, that Mr. Bull had not questioned his (FerrePs) loyalty, or anything to that effect.

jmake, this as a matter of justice to Mr. Bull, whom I believe has been placed false position. replied Mr. Stormington Barnes. "I don't propose IN THE SECOND JUDICIAL.

'DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA. IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF WASHOE. NO. 13765 DEPT. No.

2 In ths matter of the estate of Lewis Folsom, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned was on the ninth day of October, A. D. 191S, apopinted and qualified by the above-entitled court as executrix of the estate of Lewis D. Folsom, deceased.

All persons having claims against said estate are required to file the same with the proper vouchers and statutory, affidavit attached, with the clerk of the-court within three months from the date of the tent ion to the demands ot his position ana jus unfailing justice in all his dealings, commend him to all voters. The men under ground must be protected and Andy Stiuson's work shows that he can to encourage any theory, that 'may compel me to change the credit line on all my advertising matter." Washing ton Star. Vote YES on the Initiative Bill. IN THE SECOND JlTDlCLAiTljIti i CwcuT uf ihb; STATU OF NEVADA TM aP FOR THE COUNTY OP WASHOE. In the matter of the' estate of Peter iider, Notice is given that trie undersigned was, on the 4th day of September A.

D. 1918. appointed and qualified by the above entitled court as administrator oi ihft estate ot Peter C. Wilder, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are required to file the same with the proper vouchers and statutory- affidavit with the Clerk of the Court within three months from the date of the first publication of this notice.

he trusted to furnish this protection at all times. He has the complete jconfidence of miners and muie-owncs alike. THE STATE WILL GO DRY Significant "I love the ground you walk on," he said. And a little later inquired: "Does your afther own this property?" Kansas City Journal. first tmbiication of this notice.

Dated October Pth. A. D7 MARY E. FOLSOM. Executrix of the Estate of -Lewis D.

Folsom. Deceased. John. S. Orr.

Attorney for the -Estate. O10-1T-24-31-N7 Not That Way NOTICE TO CREDITORS "Didn't the late P. T. Uarnnm say the public likes to IN THE SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT watea September 4th. A.

D. 118. M. JACOBSEN, Administrator of the Above Estate. F.

E. Brockllss. Attorney for the Estate be humbugged?" I.OUHT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF "Yes. he didn't mean the way the Prussians have tried to do it." Washington Star. Better.

Be Careful its' SPITE of their resistance to the demands of the nation that all iwastc must be abolished, the saloons must close their doors in Nevada. The people haev willed it. The state will go dry. Nevada's record of state and individual sacrifices must not be compromised by the selfish cry of eight hundred liquor dealers that they, alone, be exempted from contributing to the Avar effort of America. All others have responded to the call for the WASHOE.

NO. 13C47 DEPT. NO. 1 In the matter of the estate of Lucius Blakeslee. deceased.

Notice is hereby given that the undersigned was, on the 14th day of August, I.N1 fHB SKCOb IfjDICIAT DISTRICT COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA. IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF WASHOE. NO.mOfi bEPT. NO. 1 "I'm going to get a divorce.

My wife hasn't spoken In the matter of the estate of B. A. A. It. 1918, appointed and qualified by the above, entitled Court as Executor and to me for six months." rneips, deceased.

Notice is hereby e-lvin that the under "Better be careful, you'll never get another wife like that." Boston Transcript. signed was. on the ninth dav of September. A. D.

1918. annointed and qualified by the above, entiOort as executrii of the estate of B. A. Phelps, deceased. AH persons having clflims against said estate are required to file the same wih the proper vouchers anil statutory affi Executrixes of the estate of Lucius A.

Blakeslee, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are required to file the same with the proper vouchers and statutory affidavit attached, with the Clerk of the Court within three months from the date of the first publication 'of this notice. Dated 14th day of August. A. D.

1918. FRED E. WALTS. r. CARRIES HUMPHREYS.

j. MABEL H. HUGHES, reutor" and Executrixes of the Estate t.f Lucius Blakeslee. Deceasei1-. S.

Orr. Attorney for the Estate.1 davit attached, with the Clerk of the Court within thrp months from the dace MRS. JOSEPHINE BARNES, utmost saving in food and man power all except the liquor dealers, -who still place their personal interests above the interests of the country. The people haVe supported their industry long enough. With easy tolerance the people have indifferently, ignqred lhe saloons' wastQ of money, thfir imon The tonth ami Why He Needed It t'Coul4 you let me have a dime?" asweO, the beggar.

f.f""I sneered the man, "you have a wife and ten children at home?" No, -replied hebegga r. am trying to raise, pay the innallment on my Liberty bond." of th first this notice. 643 Nevada Stceei uatea-September. A. D.

CELIA PHELPS. Moors Political Advertisement..

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