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CALIFORNIA STATE LIBRARY Anaheim VOLUME XXX. Dr. A. W. Bickford OFFICE OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. Telephone Central. Residence near Christian Church. Telephone 671. ANAHEIM, CAL. HERBERT JOHNSTON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and Residence: Corner of Broadway and Los Angeles St. ...Telephone 656... Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., evenings. DR. IDA MENGES BOYD. DENTIST Metz building, Anaheim. feb24 DR. F. H. HOUCK DENTIST. OFFICE NEXT DOOR to P. O. (Federman Block, up stairs.) HOURS 9 to 5. ANAHEIM CAL. jy15tf S. G. WILSON, M. D. Office and Residence: Over H. A. Dickel's Store. CENTER ST., Anaheim. Paul A. Derge. Graduate in Pharmacy. DRUGS, MEDICINES, UP PIANOS shine for tone and durability with a brilliancy unexcelled, and at prices that defy competition. We buy in large quantities direct from the Eastern factories so we save you the wholesalers' profit. We also give you the benefit of our low rent. We are agents for the famous Mathushek Piano manufactured by MATHUSHEK. SON of New York, one of the oldest pianos on the market, and for seventy-five years has stood the test of artists and music conservatories all over the United States and Europe, until it has earned the reputation it enjoys today as strictly high-grade and unexcelled by any piano manufacturer. It is the only piano manufactured that has a duplex or double-sounding board, which must be heard to be appreciated. Call and see them. PYNE MUSIC CO., Cor. 5th and Main Sts., Santa Ana, Cal. Anaheim Bakery, PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR. FRESH BREAD CAKES & PIECES CONFECTIONERY, ETC. Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cypress S S. G. WILSON, M. D. Office and Residence: Over H. A. Dickel's Store. CENTER ST., - ANAHEIM. Paul A. Derge. Graduate in Pharmacy. DRUGS, MEDICINES, Perfumes and Toilet Articles. BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN TOWN MEDICAL HALL, KOLL BLOCK. PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE. G. S. EDDY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. OFFICE—First door East of Boston Bakery. Residence—The Witte residence on Center St. opposite Catholic Church. CALLS ANSWERED AT ALL HOURS. ANAHEIM CHARLES BAUER Blacksmithing and Wagon-Making Hart block, Center street, Anaheim. A share of the public patronage is solicited, and all work guaranteed. HORSESHOEING a SPECIALTY MEAT MARKET JOHN KELLENBERGER, Prop. Having purchased the butcher business formerly conducted by Velt Bentz, I desire to say to my friends and the public generally that I have entirely overhaul and renovated their premises, and will in future carry on the business as a first-class market. The best of meats will be kept constantly on hand, as well as Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausages, etc. A share of the public patronage is respectfully solicited. JOHN KELLENBERGER. FRITZ RUHMANN'S Germania Halle. BACKS' NEW BUILDING LOS ANGELES STREET Keeps on hand a Large and complete stock of liquors, wines and cigars. Cold beer always on draught Roman Wisser Favorite Saloon. Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigars Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT. SUMMONS. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE County of Orange, State of California, Sayings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim a corporation, plaintiff vs. Johann The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. SUBSCRIPTION - $1 50 Per Year. Six months.....$1 00 Three months.....75 Payable invariably in advance. Transient advertising rates, $1 per inch per month. The GAZETTE is issued every Thursday morning. Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter. Pacific Coast Steamship Co. The Company's elegant Steamers SANTA ROSA and CORONA leave Redondoat 11 a.m. and Port Los Angeles at 2:30 p.m. for San Francisco via Santa Barbara and Port Harford. August 1, 5, 9, 13, 17, 21, 25, 29. September 2, 6, 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30. October 4. and every fourth day thereafter. Leave Port Los Angeles at 5:45 a.m. and Redondo at 10:45 a.m. for San Diego. August 3, 7, 11, 15, 19, 23, 27, 31. September 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 28. October 2. and every fourth day thereafter. Cars connect via Redondo, leave Santa Fe depot at 9:53 a.m., or from Redondo Railway depot at 8:10 a.m. Connect via Port Los Angeles, leave S. P. R.R. depot at 1:35 p.m. for steamers north bound. The steamers COOS BAY and BONITA leave San Pedro for San Francisco via East San Pedro. Ventura. Carpenteria. Santa Barbara. Joalta. Guadalupe. Port Harford. Capernaum San Simeon. Monterey and Santa Cruz at 6 p.m., August 2, 6, 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30. September 3, 7, 11, 15, 19, 23, 27, October 1, and every fourth day thereafter. Cars connect with steamers via San Pedro, leave S. P. R.R. (Arcade depot) at 5:03 p.m. and Terminal Ry. depot at 5 p.m. Sunday at 1:35 p.m. For further information obtain company's folder. The company reserves the right to change steamers, sailing dates and hours of sailing without previous notice. W. PARRIS, Agt., 124 W. Second St., Los Angeles. GOODALL. PEKINS & Co., Gen. Agts., San Francisco. RAILWAY TIME TABLE. Time of Arrival and Departure of Trains. SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD. Trains on the Southern Pacific pass Anaheim as follows: To Los Angeles. From Los Angeles. Daily...7:52 am Daily...9:49 am Daily...4:22 pm Daily...6:03 pm Pass Loara Station: To Los Angeles. From Los Angeles Daily...7:56 am Daily...9:45 am Daily...4:27 pm Daily...5:59 pm Los ALAMITOS TRAINS. Leave for—Arrive from— Sugar Factory...7:52 a.m 6:03 p.m. Alamitos trains do not run on Sundays. NEWPORT BEACH RAILWAY. Daily Schedule. Leave Anaheim. Arrive Anaheim 9:49 a.m...7:52 a.m 6:03 p.m...4:23 p.m. All trains connect at Santa Ana with Newport trains. SANTA FE ROUTE TIME TABLE Effective July 1st, 1900. THE REPUBLICAN COMMERCIAL POLICY. The Republican commercial policy one of resolute justice. It demands that lowly peoples of Asia an open door for the commerce of the world; tariffs to be adjusted to the needs of the people but to be the same for all the world regardless of "spheres of influence" which robber nations may quire. And what is demanded from other countries accorded to others. The trade of the Philippines is open to all the world on the same terms that it is open citizens of the United States. Philippine tariff is imposed for the benefit of the Filipinos, not the Americans, and our late enemy, Spain, m trade there as freely as our own poor. This is that,"greedy commercialism of which Mr. Bryan's platform deceptively speaks as being extended the price of liberty. Why it is lax with the spirit of liberty, liberality or equality. Already our administration at Washington has warned the nations of rope that, in dealing with China, United States must be reckoned with not as an applicant for territory or sphere of influence but as a nation rightful demanding for its own commerce with it is willing to accord to the community of other nations. And, paralyzing fear to all naming pamby and white livered statesmans European nations know without doubt that, so long as the Republic party is in power, the army and most of the republic stand back of its demands to insure compliance with it. If this were a world of punctilious courtesy and tireless regard among nations for the rights, privileges prosperous comfort of commercial petitors a policy based upon "the suasive power of a high and honor example," might serve but inasmuch as it is not such a world the "power example" requires the re-enforcement of a defined will and resolute aggressive that we may not only stand firm what we ought to have but reach and take it. It will be vain to look at new Democracy for that purpose resolution which characterized the Democracy. Word has gone out to all the speeches and writers who are to aid in man- Favorite Saloon. Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigars Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center St., Aaheim LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT. SUMMONS. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE County of Orange, State of California, Savings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim, a corporation, plaintiff, vs. Johann Graumann, Keda Graumann, his wife, defendants. Action brought in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, and the complaint filed in the office of the Clerk of said County of Orange. The people of the State of California send greeting to Johann Graumann, Keda Graumann, his wife, defendants: You are hereby directed to appear and answer the complaint in an action entitled as above, brought against you in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, within ten days after the service on you of this summons—if served within this County; or within thirty days if served elsewhere. And you are hereby notified that unless you appear and answer as above required, the said plaintiff will take judgment for any money or damages demanded in the complaint, as arising upon contract, or will apply to the Court for any other relief demanded in the complaint. Given under my hand and the seal of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, this 8th day of June, A.D. 1900. W. A. BECKETT, Clerk. [SEAL OF THE SUPERIOR COURT.] Richard Melrose, attorney for plaintiff. jy19-2m LITTLE GEM BARBER SHOP Frank Dyer, Prop. First-Class Tonsorial Artists. Shop 1 door east of McCollum's cyclery. We keep constantly on hand the best of Hair Restorer, Dandruff Cures, and other articles found in a well-appointed barber shops. A share of the public patronage solicited GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT. TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK. HUSMANN BROS SANTA FE ROUTE TIMETABLE Effective July 1st, 1900. The Southern California Railway Passenger trains leave Anaheim Station as follows for points named: San Francisco—5:05 pm, 5:54 pm, 18:10 pm. Los Angeles—7:55 am, 10:15 am, 5:05 pm. Santa Ana—9:55 am, 5:54 pm, *2:50 pm. Riverside and San Bernardino—9:55 am, 5:54 pm, 18:10 pm. San Diego—9:55 am, *2:50 pm. Coronado—7:55 am. Redondo, Santa Monica, Long Beach and San Pedro—7:55 am, 10:15 am, 5:05 pm. San Jacinto and Temecula—9:55 am. Pasadena—7:55 am, 10:15 am, 5:05 pm. Redlands—9:55 am Escondido*2:50 pm. Failbrook*9:55 am. Chicago, New York. St. Louis, Denver. Kansas City and points East—5:05 pm, 5:54 pm, 18:10 pm. Trains marked with a * are daily except Sunday. Trains marked with a t are Sunday only. All others daily. To Passengers for Newport Beach. Inasmuch as the Santa Fe morning train does not connect with Southern Pacific train leaving Anaheim at 9:49 a.m., passengers cannot reach Newport via that route. JOSEPH BACKS, Undertaker and Embalmer DEALER IN Furniture and Bedding Repairing Done. ONLY FIRST-CLASS RESTAURANT! IN TOWNIn Connection with Boston Bakery. S. KISTLER, PROPRIETOR. Word has gone out to all the speeches and writers who are to aid in man Mr. Bryan's campaign to drop all charges of 16 to 1, and to reserve thunder for the bogey of imperialism with a side shot now and then to other bogey the bad, boggy bank man. Ing committed his party to the 16 policy Br. Bryan has no further use that issue and will have none unlawful American people should be fouled so enclined he might persevere, find himself in the preside chair. Once in a position of authority and power his first hard work would reduce our financial system to zero in an attempt to force the issue of coinage upon the country. He pledged his party to just that he himself believes in it and the way to keep him from it is to keep at home. The purpose of the free party is too plain to be obscured. Republicans will not permit it to be scured. The trick of moving hands and earth to commit a political pass a definite policy and then apply hushness of mummies to all the soldiers and writers that the people may beguiled into thinking that they has been dropped is too transparent piece of political jugglery to work side of a Spanish-American republic where every toy diverts the attention. It was an edifying spectacle in sas City to note the enthusiasm which delegates from states in the american union which have disframed voters by wholesale, for no other reason than the color of their skins, given the declaration that all men are free and equal and that governers derive their just powers from the sent of the governed. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1900. THREE ROUTES FOR ANAHEIM One Northwest to Brookshurst and West to Centralia; the Other to Katella and West Through Clairt; Third to Olive, Yorba and Oil Wells. Three rural delivery routes for Anaheim and vicinity! That is what the Postoffice Department, through Hon. J. C. Needham, Congressman from this district, presented to our citizens on Saturday. Major John B. Jeffrey, special agent of the Postoffice Department, on that day approved the routes, and his official endorsement is speeding on to Washington—it ought to be pretty near there now. This was Major Jeffrey's second visit. On the preceding Saturday he came to look over the routes informally, and was driven over portions of them. Several "tangles" engaged his attention. On the Brookshurst section line, where the route from this city and that from Fullerton conflicted, he placed the territory in the Anaheim district, cutting it out of Fullerton. The reasons for this were as follows: (1) that the names of the subscribers along that section line (Mrs. Browning, Victor Browning, Mr. Blackfan, W.C. Eymann, A. H. Cargill, Mr. Dahlman and Charley Allgeyer) have all been receiving their mail from Anaheim for many years past, and at no time had they ever obtained their mail from any other place; (2) their names were first attached to a petition for rural free delivery circulated by Frank Eastman in the Anaheim district; (3) through false representation on the part of one Daniels, who circulated the Fullerton petition, these people were subsequently prevailed upon to sign for "a box" on the Fullerton route, Daniels making the false statement that unless they received their mail from Fullerton, it east corner of Section 6); thence south one-half mile; thence west three and one-half miles (here locate United States collection box No. 3 where route crosses west line of Section 11); thence south one-half mile (here locate United States collection box No. 4 at south-west corner of Section 9); thence west one-half mile; thence south one-half mile; thence east one mile; thence north one-half mile; thence east seven miles to Anaheim postoffice (locate United States collection box No. 5 at south-west corner of Section 7). Total length of route, 25 miles. Area covered, 21 square miles. Population to be served, about 940; 235 houses on route. J. K. Eastman, carrier. ROUTE NO. 3. Description of Rural Free Delivery Route No. 3 at Anaheim, Orange county, California: Starting at Anaheim, thence south on Los Angeles street to South street; thence east to East street; thence north to Santa Ana street; thence east to west line of Section 13, Township 4 South, Range 10 West; thence north to Olive road (here locate United States collection box No. 1); thence east and across Olive bridge; to Olive; thence north one-half mile to San Bernardino county road; thence northeast to river bridge (here locate United States collection box No. 2 where route leaves San Bernardino county road); thence north to Southern California railway; thence west along railway to Yorba (here locate United States collection box No. 3 at Yorba); thence west to Block 34; thence north to Santa Fe oil wells, forming loop (here locate United States collection box No. 4 at oil wells) and returning to south, line of Block 34; thence in a westerly direction to Placentia avenue; thence southwest to northwest corner of Section 12, Township 4 South, Range 10 West; thence south to Center street; thence west to Anaheim post-office. Length of route, 25 miles. Area covered, 25 square miles. Population to be served, about 1000; 178 houses on route. Clarence Lincoln, carrier. Substitutes—Wm. F. Middleham and Arthur Sheldon. This rural free delivery has been operation in Carroll county for months, one-third of which was fruited telling results, because of the station encountered. Yet in that latter service was almost self-suicing. Offsetting the cost of the service by the saving effected in the diminance of the star routes and fourth-class offices, and by the increase of revenues resulting from the set net cost was only $236. The office have the best of reasons for expectant snug profit to the government after close of the first year, to arise from increased postal revenue in the country. For the first quarter that revenue crease was 23.5 per cent, a surplus advance, considering that for five years the average annual increase in the aggregate revenues of the free delivery post offices (producing per cent of all postal revenues) is a fraction over 8 per cent. Figures leave no room for argument the superintendent says. "They conclude that rural free delivery as a system of the postal service effect phenomenal increases in postal revenues of the future." THE WORKINGMAN'S SHARE Some of Mr. Bryan's partisan vociferous in declaring that the Kinley prosperity is for the cap rather than for the man who works living. It will be hard to convince truth of this the working man who not able to get work before McKinley and his party took charge of the government but is now not only regretted but has to refuse employ that he can not accept. If the attitude of the Remainder Republican commercial policy is absolute justice. It demands for only peoples of Asia an open door to commerce of the world, tariffs adjusted to the needs of those but to be the same for all the regardless of "spheres of influence" which robber nations may accrue what is demanded from others is led to others. The trade of the lines is open to all the world upwards of the United States. The nine tariff is imposed for the sake of the Filipinos, not the Americans and our late enemy, Spain, may there as freely as our own people. This is that, "greedy commercialism," which Mr. Bryan's platform deprives speaks as being extended at price of liberty. Why, it is laden with the spirit of liberty, liberality and unity. And our administration at Washington has warned the nations of Ecuador, in dealing with China, the United States must be reckoned with, an applicant for territory or spheres ennumerated but as a nation rightfully holding for its own commerce whatilling to accord to the commerce of nations. The paralyzing fear to all namby-pal and white livered statesmanship, we can know without being that, so long as the Republican is in power, the army and navy republic stand back of its just needs to insure compliance therewiths were a world of punctious easy and tireless regard among nations for the rights, privileges and serious comfort of commercial commissions a policy based upon "the perverse power of a high and honorable mole," might serve but inasmuch as not such a world the "persuasion" and "high example" re-enforcement of a deterrent will and resolve aggressiveness may not only stand firmly for we ought to have but reach out make it. It will be vain to look to new Democracy for that purposeful intention which characterized the oldocracy. And has gone out to all the speakers writers who are to aid in making Eymann, A. H. Cargill, Mr. Dahlman and Charley Allgeyer) have all been receiving their mail from Anaheim for many years past, and at no time had they ever obtained their mail from any other place; (2) their names were first attached to a petition for rural free delivery circulated by Frank Eastman in the Anaheim district; (3) through false representation on the part of one Daniels, who circulated the Fullerton petition, these people were subsequently prevailed upon to sign for "a box" on the Fullerton route, Daniels making the false statement that unless they received their mail from Fullerton, it would not be delivered to them at all, because, as he falsely stated, the Anaheim route would not be formed; (4) these subscribers, on learning of the falsity of Daniels' statements—on being assured that the Anaheim route would be established, and that mail for them would be delivered from the postoffice of which they had been patrons for years—immediately rescinded their names attached, through misrepresentation, to the Fullerton petition, and adding they would refuse to receive boxes upon that route. When these matters were laid before the Postoffice Department at Washington, a special order was issued placing the subscribers referred to in the Anaheim route. On Saturday, the 17th Major Jeffrey officially endorsed and recommended the approval of that route. At Olive route No. 3 from this city conflicted with that from Orange. The difficulty was soon adjusted by an amicable arrangement, leaving the town of Olive on the Anaheim route, and cutting out of the Anaheim route four miles of territory previously included in its boundaries. At Garden Grove the lines of Anaheim route No. 2 ran too close to those of the Santa Ana route and the lines of the former were withdrawn half a mile. The boundaries of the three routes as finally approved are as follows: ROUTE NO. 1. Description of Rural Free Delivery Route No. 1 at Anaheim, Orange county, California: Starting at Anaheim postoffice, thence west on Center street to Lemon street; thence south to South street; thence east to Los Angeles street; thence south to north line of Section 22, Township 4 South, Range 10 West; thence west to half section line; thence south to center section; thence west along half section line to Neff's northwest corner; thence south to Katella schoolhouse (here locate United States collection box No. 1); thence east one mile; thence south one mile; thence west one mile; thence north one mile to schoolhouse; thence west one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thence south one mile; thene had has gone out to all the speakers writers who are to aid in making Bryan's campaign to drop all men of 16 to 1, and to reserve their order for the bogy of imperialism and a side shot now and then to that bogy the bad, bogy bank man. Hav committed his party to the 16 to 1 by Br. Bryan has no further use for issue and will have none until, if American people should be fatuity so enclined, he might, peradveniently find himself in the presidential election. Once in a position of authority power his first hard work would be reduce our financial system to chaos and attempt to force the issue of free wage upon the country. He has used his party to just that thing, himself believes in it and the only one to keep him from it is to keep him home. The purpose of the free silvery is too plain to be obsured and publics will not permit it to be obstructed. The trick of moving heaven earth to commit a political party to finite policy and then apply the necessity of mumness to all the speakers writers that the people may be filled into thinking that the issue been dropped is too transparent a political jugglery to work out of a Spanish-American republic every toy diverts the attention. It was an edifying spectacle in Kansas City to note the enthusiasm with which delegates from states in the American union which have disfranchised voters by wholesale, for no other reason in the color of their skins, greeted declaration that all men are created equal and that governments give their just powers from the confluence of the governed. MICA AXLE GREASE food for everything that runs on wheels. Sold Everywhere. Made by STANDARD OIL CO. This Paper not to be taken from the Library. Gazette. 1900. NUMBER 44 A LESSON FOR CALIFORNIA. Intelligence Applied to the Cultivation of the Soil Will Make the Fertile Valleys of the State Yield a Tenfold Reward. W. H. Mills has written from the Paris Exposition a very interesting letter upon the subject of the lesson furnished this State by the rapid commercial advancement of Germany. Nothing more interesting has come to the people of the State from the pen of this gifted writer, and what he says should be perused attentively by all. Whatever Mr. Mills takes occasion to write about is worthy the thoughtful consideration of intelligent people, and the subject in hand is in no whit a deviation from the rule. There is nothing more remarkable in history, he writes to the San Francisco Post, than the rapid rise of German commerce, and there is nothing more apparent on the horizon of the future than the early approach of German commercial supremacy. The German exposition is a complete disclosure of the value of science applied to production and commerce. In the first instance the natural basis of exchange relation between nations has been carefully studied. The relative efficiency of labor, the relative economy of production, the possession of natural resources are things which lie at the very foundation of commerce. If a nation is to produce objects useful to all other nations it must first ask itself whether the production of these things is more economic within its borders than elsewhere. It must discover the controlling factors and be able to direct them. In the second instance, it must understand the wants of other peoples. In the next instance, it must master the problems of transportation and adjust its fiscal policies to the highest economy of production. Without doubt Germany has made annual output of the timber from the forest exceeds in value that of the cultivated land. In traveling through Germany the mind is constantly tantalized with what California would have been, if within the past fifty years a policy analogous to that of Germany had been pursued. For illustration, if the land owners of the Sacramento valley had planned trees, the destructive force of the north winds, which annually destroy a large percentage of the wheat crop, would long since have disappeared. Droughts would have been unknown, and yet the areas occupied by the trees would have been so inconsiderable as to have cut no figure in the annual loss. On the other side, if 10 per cent of the land in the Sacramento valley had been devoted to tree culture, the annual output of these artificial forests would have been vastly greater than the annual value of the cereal crops which are alternately destroyed by north winds and droughts. I am by no means unmindful of the derision with which this statement will be received in certain quarters; but no Californian familiar with the physical aspect of this State, acquainted with its agricultural methods, thoroughly versed in the vicissitudes of its crops, acquainted with the history of success and failure, cognizant of the statistical facts relating to these things, can travel through Germany and not understand the existence of this distinction: That whereas, the German nation is creating a country, modeling it strictly in accordance with the intelligence of man, the people of California are destroying their country and are urging it on the downward grade toward sterility and aridity. Between these two things there is the distinction between destruction and creation, and in its latest analysis it reaches the basis of the difference between intelligence and ignorance; between education and the want of schooling; between the control and direction of the university and the domination of thoughtlessness and ignorance. Some of Mr. Bryan's partisans are famous in declaring that the McKinley prosperity is for the capitalist rather than for the man who works for him. He will be hard to convince of the truth of this the working man who was able to get work before McKinley, his party took charge of the government but is now not only regularly employed but has to refuse employment at the can not accept. The attitude of the Republican Party toward the capitalist is friendly it because the capitalist can set the workingman to work and also because party knows that industry cannot without capital. If men are sometimes idle it is because there is no one to hire them. And there is no one to hire them because men who have money do not care they can employ it so that it will safe from confiscation or loss and will turn a profit on the investment. There is no possible way of legislating employment directly into the hands of laboringmen, except to the limited extent in which labor is employed on government work, and this is a mere thing as compared to the whole army labor engaged in employment. Labor can not set itself to work, because it has not the capital, and it cannot capitalize itself without organizing that end, a possibility to which the Republican party is not at all adverse at which can be consummated only by new growth in fragrance and a slow development of executive ability combined with confidence in each other's integrity and capacity. Meanwhile the only way to help labor employment is to make it possible for capital to be profitably employed, but capital cannot turn a wheel unless lends a hand, so the workingman secure of a share in whatever prosperity comes to capital. If he does not always get his full share it is because he not effectively organized to secure it. Government can not possibly give it to him. And so, fellow laborer, if a Bryanite undertakes to tell you that he is in favor of helping labor without helping capital, ask him how he is going to do? Ask him how he is going to keep capital idle and labor employed? Ask him how he is going to make industry profitable to labor and unprofitable to capital? These questions will stump him for here is no way to set men to work without setting capital to work, and no way of setting capital to work in productive industry without setting labor in work. Not a pick can be stuck into the ground until there is a man on the ground to do it. These are plain and homely truths, but they will bear thinking over while he is about his work and if thought ever often and seriously they will go on to make capital and labor friends, not enemies. If a nation is to produce objects useful to all other nations it must first ask itself whether the production of these things is more economic within its borders than elsewhere. It must discover the controlling factors and be able to direct them. In the second instance, it must understand the wants of other peoples. In the next instance, it must master the problems of transportation and adjust its fiscal policies to the highest economy of production. Without doubt Germany has made the broadest study of the various necessities of the nations of the earth. It has ascertained what other peoples want, and addressed itself seriously to questions relating to its ability to supply these wants. It has discovered the law of commercial relation, and thereby avoided the penalties of ignorant violation, and reaped the advantages of intelligent observance. It has required but a brief examination of the exhibits from all parts of the world to prove that California is the richest country in natural resources under the sun. Her future industrial and commercial development will depend upon the scientific commercial education of her people. Industry and commerce have their laws of success. These must be discovered and obeyed, if success would be commanded; otherwise success, if it is achieved at all, will be the result of accident. The industrial and commercial development of California will have its original impetus in the universities of the State. It is not alone, however, in commercial matters that Germany is manifesting superiority. It is true that her commerce is spreading throughout the world, succeeding everywhere by observing the law of success. Her one commercial city, Hamburg, has risen from the obscurity of a small seaport to the third place in commercial importance in the world. It requires no introspection of prediction to declare that it will be the first place within the next twenty years. But this is not all. The line of demarkation between civilization and barbarism is drawn between the destruction and the creation of the natural resources of a country. When the forests of a country are destroyed and destructive climatic changes ensue, the people inhabiting that country are still in the chains of barbarism. I have examined the exhibits of the nations of the earth, as shown in this great exposition; but more than that, I have visited Germany and investigated its forestry policy and its agricultural methods. It will hereafter be one of the delights of memory to recall the splendid manifestation of intelligence which preserves, creates and directs climatic forces, and not only conserves, but constantly improves the fertility of cultivated areas. When the productive capacity of a field increases with its cultivation, the productiveness of the future is provided for. You can form no conception of the reverence you feel for a forest, when you realize that it enriches labor, the relative economy of production, the possession of natural resources are things which lie at the very foundation of commerce. If a nation is to produce objects useful to all other nations it must first ask itself whether the production of these things is more economic within its borders than elsewhere. It must discover the controlling factors and be able to direct them. In the second instance, it must understand the wants of other peoples. In the next instance, it must master the problems of transportation and adjust its fiscal policies to the highest economy of production. Without doubt Germany has made the broadest study of the various necessities of the nations of the earth. It has ascertained what other peoples want, and addressed itself seriously to questions relating to its ability to supply these wants. It has discovered the law of commercial relation, and thereby avoided the penalties of ignorant violation, and reaped the advantages of intelligent observance. It has required but a brief examination of the exhibits from all parts of the world to prove that California is the richest country in natural resources under the sun. Her future industrial and commercial development will depend upon the scientific commercial education of her people. Industry and commerce have their laws of success. These must be discovered and obeyed, if success would be commanded; otherwise success, if it is achieved at all, will be the result of accident. The industrial and commercial development of California will have its original impetus in the universities of the State. It is not alone, however, in commercial matters that Germany is manifesting superiority. It is true that her commerce is spreading throughout the world, succeeding everywhere by observing the law of success. Her one commercial city, Hamburg, has risen from the obscurity of a small seaport to the third place in commercial importance in the world. It requires no introspection of prediction to declare that it will be the first place within the next twenty years. But this is not all. The line of demarkation between civilization and barbarism is drawn between the destruction and the creation of the natural resources of a country. When the forests of a country are destroyed and destructive climatic changes ensue, the people inhabiting that country are still in the chains of barbarism. I have examined the exhibits of the nations of the earth, as shown in this great exposition; but more than that, I have visited Germany and investigated its forestry policy and its agricultural methods. It will hereafter be one of the delights of memory to recall the splendid manifestation of intelligence which preserves, creates and directs climatic forces, and not only conserves, but constantly improves the fertility of cultivated areas. When the productive capacity of a field increases with its cultivation, the productiveness of the future is provided for. You can form no conception of the reverence you feel for a forest, when you realize that it enriches labor, the relative economy of production, the relative economy of natural resources are things which lie at the very foundation of commerce. If a nation is to produce objects useful to all other nations it must first ask itself whether the production of these things is more economic within its borders than elsewhere. It must discover the controlling factors and be able to direct them. In the second instance, it must understand the wants of other peoples. In the next instance, it must master the problems of transportation and adjust its fiscal policies to the highest economy of production. Without doubt Germany has made the broadest study of the various necessities of the nations of the earth. It has ascertained what other peoples want, and addressed itself seriously to questions relating to its ability to supply these wants. It has discovered the law of commercial relation, and thereby avoided the penalties of ignorant violation, and reaped the advantages of intelligent observance. It has required but a brief examination of the exhibits from all parts of the world to prove that California is the richest country in natural resources under the sun. Her future industrial and commercial development will depend upon the scientific commercial education of her people. Industry and commerce have their laws of success. These must be discovered and obeyed, if success would be commanded; otherwise success, if it is achieved at all, will be the result of accident. The industrial and commercial development of California will have its original impetus in the universities of the State. It is not alone, however, in commercial matters that Germany is manifesting superiority. It is true that her commerce is spreading throughoutthe world,succeeding everywhere by observingthe lawofsuccess.HeronecommercialcityHamburghasrisenfromtheobscurityofasmallseaporttothethirdplaceincommercialimportanceintheworld.itrequiresnointrospectionofpredictiontodeclarethatitwillbethefirstplacewithinthenexttwentyyears. But this is not all. The lineofdemarkationbetweencivilizationandbarbarismisdrawnbetweenthedestructionandthecreationofthenaturalresourcesofacountry.Themostprominentofthese Societiesisthatcallingitselfthe“Fruit Forcing Association.”MostoftheearlyfruitsconsumedinParisareraisedunderglassandagaintsalls.Thepresidentofthisassociation.attheheadofthiscommittee.isthelargestindividualfruitgrowerinFrance。它wasa genuinepleasuretoexplaintohimthenaturalcapacitiesofourcountryforfruitproduction,anditwasapleasingrewardtodfindthatheunderstoodthefullcommercialsignificanceofthefaptspresented.Hedeclaredthatfruit-raisingunderglasshadbeenfoundtobemore nearlyscientificandmoreeconomicthangrowingfruitintheopenfields;thatintheformerthecultivatorhadcontrolofthefactorsofsuccess,而inthe latteramajorofthesefactoriesarelefttochance。Whenthenaturalconditionsunderthewhichtraitisraised These questions will stump him for here is no way to set men to work without setting capital to work, and no way of setting capital to work in productive industry without setting labor to work. Not a pick can be stuck into the ground until there is a man on the ground to do it. These are plain and homely truths, that they will bear thinking over while one is about his work and if thought ever often and seriously they will go on to make capital and labor friends, not enemies. Which is the real imperialist the man who, with a rod of iron, rules the concession that nominates him, who will have things his way or no way at all, who persistently and blindly adheres to lost cause in spite of the advice of friends and foes alike (and especially the advice of the experienced leaders of his party), or the man who sometimes yields his opinion in deference to the will of the people or conforms to the best judgment of the most prominent and experienced men in his party? There is no question as to the autocratic dominion of the Kansas City convention by Mr. Bryan, and the charge has been made that, in the Porto Rican tariff matter, Mr. McKinley acquiesced, in opposition to his own views, in the views of the strong men of his party backed by the action of the American congress. Which of these men manifested the spirit of a bull-headed, rule or ruin imperialism? LET US REMOVE THE DOUBT In your mind as to what plano to buy. Take our word for it and get a YOSE. It's a grand instrument at a popular price. The people who make it are good for every promise they make regarding it, and we are good for our endorsement. HUNDREDS OF YOSE PIANOS are in use in this locality. You cannot make a mistake in buying one. Sold on easy terms and all questions answered promptly and gladly. Write for prices. GEO. J. BIRKEL, aug2 1500 FOURTH ST., SAN DIEGO, CAL. Shake Into Your Shoes Allen's Foot-Face, a powder. It cures painful, snarting, nervous feet and ingrowing nails and instantly takes the sling out of corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's foot-face makes tight or new shoes tech easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callosus and hot ticks, aching feet. Try it today sold by all druggists and shoe stores. By mail for six in stamps. Trial package free Address: Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.Y. Money to Loan. In sums to suit. Apply to F. A. Backs, Jr., Secretary Building and Loan Association, Anaheim, Cal. Is Baby Thin this summer? Then add a little SOOTT'S EMULSION to his milk three times a day. It is astonishing how fast he will improve. If he nurses, let the mother take the Emulsion. soc. and $1.00; all druggists.