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anaheim-gazette 1901-02-28

1901-02-28 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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Anaheim VOLUME XXXI. DR. C. P. HEBERT DENTIST With Dr. Menges of Santa Ana has opened an... OFFICE IN THE METZ BLOCK... (up stairs) Office days, Fridays and Saturdays. HERBERT JOHNSTON, M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and Residence: Corner of Broadway and Los Angeles St. Telephone 666... 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., evenings. G. S. EDDY, M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Telephone, Main 75... OFFICE—Center street, opposite City Hall. 10 A.M. to 11 A.M. 2 P.M. to 4 P.M. 7 P.M. to 8 P.M., evenings. Residence—Corner Center and Palms streets. ANAHEIM - CAL. S. G. WILSON, M.D. Office and Residence: Over H. A. Dickel's Store. CENTER ST., - - ANAHEIM. Dr. A. W. Bickford OFFICE OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. Telephone Central. Residence near Christian Church. Telephone 671. ANAHEIM, - - CAL. DR. F. H. HOUCK DENTIST. Remember... I carry the finest stock of stationery, books and confectionery in Anaheim. Being agent for all Newspapers, Periodicals and Magazines, you can save money by subscribing through my agency. Joseph Helmsen Anaheim Bakery, PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR. FRESH BREAD CAKES & PIES CONFECTIONERY, ETC. Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cypress Sts SUBSCRIBE FOR THE ANAHEIM GAZETTE OLDEST PAPER IN ORANGE COUNTY Subscription $1.50 Per Year. Send For Sample Copy. The Weekly Gazette. COLONISTS' RATES. Santa Fe Brought Over 1000 People on First Dr. A. W. Bickford OFFICE OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. Telephone Central. Residence near Christian Church. Telephone 671. ANAHEIM, CAL. DR. F. H. HOUCK DENTIST. OFFICE NEXT DOOR to P.O. (Federman Block, up stairs.) HOURS 9 to 5. ANAHEIM CAL. Paul A. Derge. Graduate in Pharmaoy. DRUGS, MEDICINES, Perfumes and Toilet Articles. BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN TOWN MEDICAL HALL, KOLL BLOCK. PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE. GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop FOR A. FIRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT. TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK. HUSMANN BROS. 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 PALACE MEAT MARKET F. W. Fleischmann, PROPRIETOR. Best Meats the Market Affords Always on Hand. Also keeps on hand Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, Etc. Meats delivered to all parts of the city free of charge. Shop on East Center St. Roman Wisser Favorite Saloon. Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigare Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim CONFECTIONERY, ETC. Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cypress Sts SUBSCRIBE FOR THE ANAHEIM GAZETTE OLDEST PAPER IN ORANGE COUNTY Subscription $1.50 Per Year. Send For Sample Copy. 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. 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. Dally...7:52 am Dally...9:49 am Dally...4:22 pm Dally...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—{ Sugar Factory } Arrive from—10:34 a.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. 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 Dec. 27, 1900. Trains on the Santa Fe Route will pass Anaheim for points named as follows: To Los Angeles—7:55 am; 9:57 am; *12:04 pm; 4:50 pm. To San Diego—9:35 am; *2:50 pm. To Riverside and San Bernardino—*11:45 am; 5:44 pm. To Redlands—*11:45 am. To San Jacinto; Perris and Temecula—*11:45 am. To Santa Ana—9:35 am; *2:50 pm; 5:54 pm. To Escondido—*2:50 pm. To Fallbrook—9:38 am; To Redondo—7:55 am; *4:50 pm. To Chicago, Denver, Kansas City and all points East—4:50 pm; 5:54 pm. Trains marked with a * are daily except Sunday. All others daily. J. H. CLABAUGH, Agent. JOSEPH BACKS, Undertaker and Embalmer DEALER IN Furniture and Bedding Repairing Done. C. R. HANSEN & CO., Employment Agents, 123%–125% W. Second St., Los Angeles, Cal. San Francisco office: 104 Geary St. Established 1870. Ranch, Dairy and Orchard Help. Also carefully selected Male and Female help of all descriptions and nationalities furnished promptly, free to employer. NEWS AND OPINIONS COLONISTS' RATES. Santa Fe Brought Over 1000 People on First Excursion. The cheap rates, $47.00 from New York; $30.00 from Chicago; $27.50 from St. Louis and $25.00 from Missouri River points, via Santa Fe Route, to any point in California, are very popular. These excursions leave the East every Tuesday until April 30. Tickets are good on tourist sleepers and reclining chair cars. You may deposit the price of a ticket with J. H. Clabaugh, the local Santa Fe agent, and he will make all arrangements for a ticket for your eastern friend. Use Allen's Foot-Ease in Your Gloves. A lady writes: "I shake Allen's Foot-Ease in my gloves and rub a little on my hands. It saves my gloves by absorbing perspiration. It is a most dainty toilet powder." We invite the attention of physicians and nurses to the absolute purity of Allen's Foot-Ease. Dr. W. C. Abbott, editor of the Chicago Clinic says: "It is a grand preparation! I am using it constantly in my own practice." All drug and shoe stores sell it, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le pl Colonist Tickets Will be sold to California via the Southern Pacific every Tuesday, February 12, to April 30, 1901, from Chicago, $30.00; St. Louis, Memphis or New Orleans, $27.50; Kansas City, St. Joseph, Omaha, Council Bluffs, Sioux City, $25.00, and at correspondingly low rates from other points. Use these rates to come to California. Demand for labor never greater. Great opportunities—horticulture, agriculture, viticulture, mining, stockraising. Wonderful oil development. Prospects better than anywhere else. Send to nearest Southern Pacific Agent for printed matter and full information. feb21-2t T. A. DARLING, Agent. A Few Pointers. The recent statistics of the number of deaths show that the large majority die with consumption. This disease may commence with an apparently harmless cough which can be cured instantly by Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs, which is guaranteed to cure and relieve all cases. Price 25c and 30c. For sale by all druggists. Cheap Railway Rates. $30 from Chicago to California points; $47 from New York; $27.50 from St. Louis; $25 from Missouri River Points via Santa Fe Route, every Tuesday until April 30. Now is the time for you to surprise your friends; bring them out to see California at her best. Deposit the price with J. H. Clabaugh Santa Fe agent (you may send some spending money, too if you want to) and the tickets and money will be delivered to them without any more trouble to you. f21-2 Also keeps on hand Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, Etc. Meats delivered to all parts of the city free of charge. Shop on East Center St. Roman Wisser Favorite Saloon. Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigare Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT. L. GUNTHER. PIONEER BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. Corner Adele and Los Angeles Sts. J.M.Griffith Company A CORPORATION LUMBER DEALERS Near railroad Depot, Anaheim, keep constantly on hand Doors, Blinds, Windows Mouldings, Posts, Shakes, shingles, Lath, Hair Plaster of Paris. C. F. GRIM, Agent. ONLY FIRST-CLASS RESTAURANT! IN TOWNIn Connection with Boston Bakery. S. KISTLER, PROPRIETOR. FOR SALE. MODERN BUILT RESIDENCE Of 5 rooms, pantry and bath, barn, garden; situated on best residence street in the city. Cheap. Apply at this Office. DEALER IN Furniture and Bedding Repairing Done. je15 C. R. HANSEN & CO., PhONE M. 383. Employment Agents, 123%-125% W. Second St., Los Angeles, Cal. San Francisco office: 104 Geary St. Established 1876. Ranch, Dairy and Orchard Help. Also carefully selected Male and Female help of all descriptions and nationalities furnished promptly, free to employer. NEWS AND OPINIONS OF NATIONAL IMPORTANCE THE SUN ALONE CONTAINS BOTH Daily, by mail, $6 a year Daily and Sunday by mail, $8 a year ....THE.... Sunday Sun is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the world. Price 5c a copy. By mail, $2 a year. Address THE SUN, New York. RICHARD MELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW And Notary Public. Special attention given to Probate Matters. Center Street, Anaheim. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Harriet J. Terry, deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN BY THE undersigned. Executor of the last will and testament of Harriet J. Terry, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to the said Executor at the office of Richard Melrose, Center street, Anaheim, California, the same being the place for the transaction of the business of said estate in the County of Orange. Dated this 20th day of February, A. D. 1901. WILLIAM W. TERRY, Executor of the last will and testament of Harriet J. Terry, deceased. RICHARD MELROSE, Attorney for Executor. F. BACKS, UNDERTAKER And Dealer in FURNITURE Wall Paper, Cornices, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass Sewing Machine Supplies, E. Gor. Los Angeles & Chartres S. Send your LACE CURTAINS to THE Santa Ana Steam Laundry Every facility for doing the best work. E. W. McCollum, Agent, Anaheim Napoleon Hart ....DEALER IN THE FINEST BRANDS OF WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARETS CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM Bottled goods of superior quality for family WIELAND BEER. Give me a c ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1901. ARID LANDS FOR SETTLERS. A Few Acres Would Generously Support a Family—Rural Homes for the Citizens of the Congested Metropolis. If the leading minds of the country were asked to seriously discuss the topic: "What is the greatest question in the United States awaiting solution?" it is probable that a very few men living east of the Mississippi would think of "national irrigation" in this connection. To most of such the subject is new and unstudied. It will bear study; it will bear the most searching scrutiny; and the more studied the more it is seen to be a question of exceptional breadth and of truly great possibilities and far-reaching importance to the nation. The query that many Eastern people are now making is: What is this irrigation problem before Congress? Is it a legitimate one for the Government to consider? Is it one whose support will be a benefit to the country? In short, is it a question of really national import? Its Western advocates, regardless of political affiliations, claim that it is the most important national question to-day. Eastern legislators, regardless of party, are inclined to smile broadly at this assertion. If the internal history of the American Republic is studied carefully, however, the conclusion will be reached that national irrigation, properly wrought out, is likely to shortly come to the front as one of the most important national questions of the day. It embodies, in its free home enactments. What other proposition is before the country upon which labor and capital can better unite and which they can support, hand in hand, without clash or jealousy? Every labor union in the United States which has discussed the question has unanimously supported it; every combination of capital, of whatever sort, which has considered it, has given it unqualified endorsement. The opening of the vast area of Western lands by irrigation would provide cheap homes, certain of returning the owners a comfortable livelihood. It would create a valuable and growing market for every kind and description of manufactured product and would thus be favored by all classes of manufacturing and commercial interests in the country. It would insure cheaper living in the West, which would result in the opening of numberless mining properties whose grade of ore is not sufficiently high to warrant development under present wage conditions. It would create a demand for transportation which would bring to its support every railroad interest. Can any proposition ever before the American people claim the support of a greater diversity of interests than the irrigation and reclamation of the vast and waste areas of arid land under an honest policy, which would insure their settlement in small tracts by genuine home-builders? Guy Elliott Mitchell. Telegraphers' Grip. "I have lost my grip." This phrase is applied by men to all kinds of failures. One of the technical extensions of FREE DELIVERY From All Sections of the Country Come Requests for the Establishment of This Branch of the Service. Postmaster Littlefield is in receipt of a report upon the institution of rural free delivery during the past two years has proved to be the most salient, significant, and far-reaching feature of postal development in recent times. We have had other striking advances, but they have been along lines already well settled. The fast-mail service carried to the highest obtainable point, is only the logical outgrowth of the constant struggle for the quickest dispatch. The admirable railway postoffice is only the culmination of the incessant effort to save time, obtain the straightest line, and secure the least handling. The frequent and rapid distribution in great cities, now outstripping the telegraph in local use, is but the perfection of concentrated organization. All these and the many other improvements of method which keeps pace with general modern progress are the natural developments of an established system. But to undertake the personal and daily delivery of the mail at the individual and isolated farmhouse on the remote country road marks what in this widely extended land amounts to a new departure in postal service. It is essentially a new conception. We have long been familiar with the application of the constantly improving machinery of distribution to centers of population. The volume of business and of mail has rendered it practicable and profitable. But the vast extent and the more limited requirements of the agricultural regions have seemed to forbid their inclusion under the same principle. Its Western advocates, regardless of political affiliations, claim that it is the most important national question to-day. Eastern legislators, regardless of party, are inclined to smile broadly at this assertion. If the internal history of the American Republic is studied carefully, however, the conclusion will be reached that national irrigation properly wrought out, is likely to shortly come to the front as one of the most important national questions of the day. It embodies, in its truest sense, the question of home-building; and the American people have been, up to the present time, essentially a nation of home-builders. In no country in the world is the desire for home building so strong. The wish to own and have live in homes has led thousands of Americans to endure trials and hardships, and brave dangers almost beyond conception. This controlling wish of the American people has conquered a continent. The hardy pioneer, with his family and his earthly belongings stowed in his wagon looking for a home has accomplished this. The locomotive has only followed the prairie schooner. Now, what has this to do particularly with irrigation? Simply that the opportunity for home building under the old order has disappeared. New, cheap, homes, within the means of the hardy settler, are under favorable conditions, no longer available. The opening here and there of a strip of good land to settlement, such as Okalahoma, and the following rush of immigration, attests to this and also to the fact that the country is still full of home-seekers. Where, then, will they now turn? The new homes of the future must be found on irrigated lands. There are according to accepted Government reports, some 74,000,000 acres of rich Western land capable of irrigation if the Western waters are properly conserved. Irrigation is not an experiment in the United States, and there is no question raised as to the feasibility of this reclamation, but irrigation development in a private way has reached its limits. But, since under irrigation yields are very large, a few acres of this land would generously support a family, so that with the lands irrigated rural homes would be provided for millions of citizens, waiting and anxious to go upon them. The advocates of the national irrigation policy urge that the government should, where possible, build storage reservoirs to catch the flood Its Western advocates, regardless of political affiliations, claim that it is the most important national question to-day. Eastern legislators, regardless of party, are inclined to smile broadly at this assertion. If the internal history of the American Republic is studied carefully, however, the conclusion will be reached that national irrigation properly wrought out, is likely to shortly come to the front as one of the most important national questions of the day. It embodies, in its truest sense, the question of home-building; and the American people have been, up to the present time, essentially a nation of home-builders. In no country in the world is the desire for home building so strong. The wish to own and have live in homes has led thousands of Americans to endure trials and hardships, and brave dangers almost beyond conception. This controlling wish of the American people has conquered a continent. The hardy pioneer, with his family and his earthly belongings stowed in his wagon looking for a home has accomplished this. The locomotive has only followed the prairie schooner. Now, what has this to do particularly with irrigation? Simply that the opportunity for home building under the old order has disappeared. New, cheap, homes, within the means of the hardy settler, are under favorable conditions, no longer available. The opening here and there of a strip of good land to settlement, such as Okalahoma, and the following rush of immigration, attests to this and also to the fact that the country is still full of home-seekers. Where, then, will they now turn? The new homes of the future must be found on irrigated lands. There are according to accepted Government reports, some 74,000,000 acres of rich Western land capable of irrigation if the Western waters are properly conserved. Irrigation is not an experiment in the United States, and there is no question raised as to the feasibility of this reclamation, but irrigation development in a private way has reached its limits. But, since under irrigation yields are very large, a few acres of this land would generously support a family, so that with the lands irrigated rural homes would be provided for millions of citizens, waiting and anxious to go upon them. The advocates of the national irrigation policy urge that the government should, where possible, build storage reservoirs to catch the flood Its Western advocates, regardless of political affiliations, claim that it is the most important national question to-day. Eastern legislators, regardless of party, are inclined to smile broadly at this assertion. If the internal history of the American Republic is studied carefully, however, the conclusion will be reached that national irrigation properly wrought out, is likely to shortly come to the front as one of the most important national questions of the day. It embodies, in its truest sense, the question of home-building; and the American people have been, up to the present time, essentially a nation of home-builders. In no country in the world is the desire for home building so strong. The wish to own and have live in homes has led thousands of Americans to endure trials and hardships, and brave dangers almost beyond conception. This controlling wish of the American people has conquered a continent. The hardy pioneer, with his family and his earthly belongings stowed in his wagon looking for a home has accomplished this. The locomotive has only followed the prairie schooner. Now, what has this to do particularly with irrigation? Simply that the opportunity for home building under the old order has disappeared. New, cheap, homes, within the means of the hardy settler, are under favorable conditions, no longer available. The opening here and there of a strip of good land to settlement, such as Okalahoma, and the following rush of immigration, attests to this and also to the fact that the country is still full of home-seekers. Where, then, will they now turn? The new homes of the future must be found on irrigated lands. There are according to accepted Government reports, some 74,000,000 acres of rich Western land capable of irrigation if the Western waters are properly conserved. Irrigation is not an experiment in the United States, and there is no question raised as to the feasibility of this reclamation, but irrigation development in a private way has reached its limits. But since under irrigation yields are very large, a few acres of this land would generously support a family, so that with the lands irrigated rural homes would be provided for millions of citizens, waiting and anxious to go upon them. The advocates of the national irrigation policy urge that the government should,where possible,build storage reservoirs to catch the flood Its Western advocates,regardlessofpoliticalaffiliation,claimthatitismostimportantnationalquestionto-day.Easternlegislator,regardlessofparties,areinclinedtosmilebroadlyatthisassertion. IftheinternalhistoryoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoshortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelyto Shortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.IttemobilityoftheAmericanRepublicisstudiedcarefullyhowever,theconclusionwillbereachedthatnationalirrigationproperlywroughtoutislikelytoShortlycometocethefrontasoneofthemostimportantnationalquestionsoftheday.Ittemobility ofthedomainandthegroundsareencounteredwhenfirstopposedandevenwhenCongressauthorizedtreatmenttherewas reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitariesevenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,thatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehended.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat oppositionwhen firstopposedandevenwhenCongressauthorizedtreatmenttherewas reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitariesevenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,thatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat oppositionwhen firstopposedandevenwhenCongressauthorizedtreatmenttherewas reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitariesevenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat oppositionwhen firstopposedandevenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmenttherewas reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitariesevenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat oppositionwhen firstopposedandevenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmenttherewas reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitariesevenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat oppositionwhen firstopposedandevenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmenttherewas reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitariesevenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat oppositionwhen firstopposedandevenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmenttherewas reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitariesevenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat oppositionwhen firstopposedandevenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmenttherewas reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitariesevenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat oppositionwhen firstopposedandevenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat oppositionwhen firstopposedandevenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentitledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnotasformableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetryingit.It took time and experienceto develop and enforce morejuicefirst,painfulpeople who live outside citiesand townsareentledtoshareinadvancemilitaries evenifthecostexceedsreturn,andsecond,t hatthe barrierunbalancedexpenseisnot as formableawasapprehened.Rural deliveryhasnowbenefitedas too costlyandburdensometowindescendantsgreat opposition when firstopposed和evenwhenCongress authorizedtreatmentthere was reluctancetrying它.takes it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to take it.to 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knowledge of ruling markets和 voting prices is diffused,and produces with his quicker movement is less difficult than driving in any city street。A more accurate knowledge of ruling markets和 voting prices is diffused,and produces with his quicker movement is less difficult than driving in any city street。A more accurate knowledge of ruling markets和 voting prices is diffused,and produces with his quicker movement is less difficult than driving in any city street。A more accurate knowledge of ruling markets和 voting prices is diffused,and produces with his quicker movement is less difficult than driving in any city street。A more accurate knowledge of ruling markets和 voting prices is diffused,and produces with his quicker movement is less difficult than driving in any city street。A more accurate knowledge of ruling markets和 voting prices is diffused,and produces with his quicker movement is less difficult than driving in any city street。A more accurate knowledge of ruling markets和 voting prices is diffused,and produces with his quicker movement is less difficult than driving in any city street。A more accurate knowledge of ruling markets和 voting prices is diffused,and produces with his quicker movement is less difficult than driving in any city street。A more accurate knowledge of ruling markets和 voting The advocates of the national irrigation policy urge that the government should, where possible, build storage reservoirs to catch the flood waters of the Western streams and thus provide for the reclamation of these lands. The Newlands bill, now before the House Irrigation Committee, and its counterpart, the Hansbrough bill, on the Senate side, provide for the setting aside of the proceeds from the sale of public lands in the arid States and Territories as an "arid land reclamation fund," to be used for building such reservoirs, and that the cost of such construction shall be put upon the land reclaimed by them, and the land then offered for sale by the government in small tracts, to bona fide settlers, upon easy terms. Who will come to the support of such a policy? More people and a greater diversity of interests than supported the homestead act, and such legislation would be even more popular than Nasal Catarrh quickly yields to treatment by Ely's Cream Balm, which is agreeably aromatic. It is received through the nostrils, cleanses and heals the whole surface over which it diffuses itself. Druggists sell the 50c. size; Trial size by mail, 10 cents. Test it and you are sure to continue the treatment. Announcement. To accommodate those who are partial to the use of atomizers in applying liquids into the nasal passages for catarrhal troubles, the proprietors prepare Cream Balm in liquid form, which will be known as Ely's Liquid Cream Balm. Price including the spraying tube is 75 cents. Druggists or by mail. The liquid form embodies the medicinal properties of the solid preparation. The Russians. An Englishman in Russia says that "we may dislike Russia as we will and perhaps must, but there is no denying that the men and women of Russia are good lookers." The men are "tall and well built." The "women, especially those of the upper classes, have a grace and fascination that is all their own." The writer adds: "I am tired of bearing English people say that this is all show and that if I knew them better I should be greatly disappointed. Behind good looks and refined manners I have found the depth and sincerity of the Scotch combined with the wit and humor of the Irish." A warning — To feel tired before exertion is not laziness — It's a sign that the system lacks vitality, and needs the tonic effect of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Sufferers should not delay. Get rid of that tired feeling by beginning to take Hood's Sarsaparilla today. With all these results clearly indicated by the experiment as thus far rural free delivery is plainly held. It cannot be abandoned without being extinguished. It is a service in which there can be backward step. Those who enjoy advantages will not consent to under them, and every new route will demand from contiguous territory the same privileges. We are therefore fronted with the problem of growing extended the delivery service on whole area of the country where physically feasible or whereulation is not so sparse as to unreasonable. A project of such prehensive and colossal character seems formidable and deterred while its difficulties are not to ACTION OF FREE DELIVERY Reactions of the Country Come for the Establishment of this Branch of the Service. Over Littlefield is in receipt of on the institution of rural artery, issued by the Postoffice at Washington. From it the following extract: A extraordinary extension of rural artery during the past two years to be the most salient, sigand far-reaching feature of development in recent times. And other striking advances, have been along lines already added. The fast-mail service, the highest obtainable point, is logical outgrowth of the struggle for the quickest discharge of admirable railway postly the culmination of the inport to save time, obtain the utline, and secure the least. The frequent and rapid discharge of great cities, now outstriptelegraph in local use, is but tion of concentrated organization these and the many other events of method which keeps general modern progress are real developments of an estabslem. Undertake the personal and every of the mail at the indilial isolated farmhouse on the retry road marks what in this extended land amounts to a new in postal service. It is essa new conception. We have be familiar with the application instantly improving machinery nutrition to centers of population. Some of business and of mail has it practicable and profitable. Most extent and the more limitements of the agricultural ave seemed to forbid their inunder the same principle. derestimated, they are shown, when exammined in the light of practical tests, to be far from insurmountable. We are now carrying the post-office to the door of about 31,000,000 of people massed in towns and cities. The task before us is the more complicated work of carrying the post-office to the door of about 21,000,000, scattered over 1, 000,000 square miles of territory. Its magnitude is not to be underestimated. England, France and Germany make rural free delivery, their postmen going on foot. But England contains 50,867 square miles, France 204,092, and Germany 208,830. We are already covering with rural delivery a larger area than England, all effected within the past two years. By the end of the current fiscal year we shall have one-sixth of the 21,000,000 to be served. What has already been substantially accomplished is certainly capable of six-fold expansion. On the 1st of July, 1899, there were 391 rural-delivery routes in operation. Within the fiscal year, under an appripation of $450,000, this number was increased to 1,214. On the 1st of July, 1900, the appropriation of $1,750,000 became available, and on the 15th of November, 2,614 routes had been located and established, 61,979 miles in aggregate length, covering 66,842 square miles, divided among 44 states and territories, and serving a population of 1,801,524. The number of applications pending at that date and awaiting action or under investigation was more than 2,100—nearly enough to double the existing service—and every day brings more. The close of the present fiscal year will see about 4,300 routes in operation. Carrying the mail daily to the doors of not less than 3,500,000 residents of the rural districts. The actual results where the expeperience has been tried are eminently encouraging. Perhaps the most interesting and instructive of all the tests thus far made is that which was applied to Carroll county. Md. Instead of a RISING ISSUE IN CALIFORNIA. Wise Laws Necessary to Regulate the Ownership of Irrigating Water. Monopoly in the San Joaquin Valley.* The rising issue in California is the question of the control of water to the end that it may serve to support a great, free people under the highest social and industrial conditions. The foundation principle which underlies this issue cannot be better stated than in the following quotation from the latest platform adopted by the National Irrigation Congress: "The waters of all streams should forever remain subject to public control, and the right of the use of water for irrigation should inhere in the land irrigated, and beneficial use be the measure and the limit of the right." Short of the acceptance of this great doctrine—acknowledged in all other arid lands, ancient and modern—there can be no lasting peace and no progressive development. Worst of all, there can be no real economic freedom for ourselves or future generations. This thing is absolutely vital to our civilization. The society which accepts the water merchant, permitting him to sell melting snows and running brooks upon his own terms, chooses to be bond rather than free. Although speculation in water has assumed large and ominous proportions in this State, California has not yet said she would wear the yoke, nor is it to be assumed that she can possibly consent to do so, when the issue shall have been fully debated and finally passed upon. The trend of public thought throughout the country is clearly toward public irrigation works. Three parties have so declared themselves in recent national platforms, while the National irrigation movement has of late years adopted this attitude in the most uncompromising terms. It should not be assumed, however, that the principle of united ownership of land and water undertake the personal and every of the mail at the indial isolated farmhouse on the retritory road marks what in this extended land amounts to a new in postal service. It is essence a new conception. We have familiar with the application instantly improving machinery relation to centers of population. Some of business and of mail has it practicable and profitable. A vast extent and the more limitements of the agricultural have seemed to forbid their inunders the same principle. It was taken for granted that the old go for the mail instead of going for the man. The plan pacing the country road and the name, as well as the city street solid block, within the Governnancies of communication, grows of a recent realization of what delivery in rural communities has regarded as too costly and home to be admissible. On these the movement encountered position when first proposed, when Congress authorized the sent there was reluctance in it. It took time and experience to pop and enforce the more just fact, that the great body of peolive outside cities and towns tried to share in advance mail, even if the cost exceeds the and second, that the barrier of seceded expense is not as formidable as apprehended. The delivery has now been sufified to measure its effects. The state and direct results are clearrent. It stimulates social and correspondence and so swells total receipts. Its introduction viably followed by a large india in the circulation of the press periodical literature. The farm is brought into daily contact the currents and movements of business world. A more accurate edge of ruling markets and varyces is diffused, and the producer, is quicker communication and information, is placed on a surer st. The value of farms, as has known in many cases, is enhanced. Roads become indispensable, and improvement is the essential condition of the service. The material measurable benefits are signal and breakable. The movement exercises a wider keeper influence. It becomes in the social and economic tensions of American life. The dispotion to leave the farm for the town is ailar effect of our past conditions. This tendency is checked, and may materially changed, by an advance conveys many of the advantages own to the farm. Rural free delivery brings the farm within the range of the intellectual and communal and monontony which have the bane of agricultural life are only mitigated. It proves to be of the most effective and powerful educational agencies. Wherever it ends the schools improve, and The close of the present fiscal year will see about 4,300 routes in operation, carrying the mail daily to the doors of not less than 3,500,000 residents of the rural districts. The actual results where the experience has been tried are eminently encouraging. Perhaps the most interesting and instructive of all the tests thus far made is that which was applied to Carroll county, Md. Instead of a fragmentary undertaking, it was determined to extend a complete service covering the entire county, and accompaired by all the measures of retrenchment on the one hand and of full facilities on the other, which would give a fair illustration of what was practicable. Carroll county covers 453 square miles. The experiment began by the discontinuance of 63 of the 94 fourth-class post-offices in the territory and of 33 star routes, and by the substitution of a free-delivery service with 4 complete postal wagons and 26 rural letter carriers in their own conveyances. So radical an innovation, involving the displacement of a number of officials, naturally at the outset excited some antagonism; but the service proved so satisfactory and advantages of universal delivery were so great that the opposition speedily subsided, and there is now an undivided sentiment of cordial approval and support. The inauguration of the change was followed by an immediate and marked advance in the quantity of mail. The increase the first quarter in the number handled was about 40 per cent. With the means of transmission brought to the door more letters were written, but there was a special augmentation of the volume of newspapers, circulars, and postal cards. The other facilities of the post system were employed in liberal measure. In the first quarter of rural free delivery, as compared with the last quarter preceding, the increase of registered letters was 57 per cent, and of money orders 40 per cent. These facts signify the enlarged use of the instrumentalities of the postal system when placed within convenient reach. Augmented revenues follow. The increased receipts in Carroll county during the first quarter were $1,501, or 23 per cent. As the normal increase is only about 8 per cent in the populous centers, and less than 3 per cent in rural sections, the figures attest the efficacy of rural delivery in swelling the revenues. The saving effected in the discontinuance of fourth-class offices and star routes amounted for the quarter to $2,805. Add to this the increase in receipts, and we have a credit account which very nearly balances the cost of rural delivery, thus showing that the service is well-nigh self-sustaining. This is doubtless a favorable case and probably exceptional. Yet like results appear in other localities where the experiment has been tried. A county service has been established in Washington county, Tenn., and in Washington county Pa. In the former, with some Continued on Fourth page. The disposition to leave the farm for the town is similar effect of our past conditions. This tendency is checked, and may materially changed, by an advance conveying many of the advantages of the town to the farm. Rural free delivery brings the farm within the range of the intellectual and commercial activities of the world, and the nation and monontony which have been the bane of agricultural life are likely mitigated. It proves to be one of the most effective and powerful educational agencies. Wherever it extended the schools improve, and civic spirit of the community feels new pulsation. The standard of influence is raised, enlightened interstate public affairs is quickened and our citizenship follows. The benign influences of our free institutions diffuse themselves widely and plausibly, but the arm of the government is directly felt at few points. Mails attest the visible presence service of the government, and not among the merits of the rural free delivery is its creation of the satisfy conviction in the farmer that he lives with the townsman the manifest antiques of which the government is direct minister. He feels that the organized and helpful agency of his country comes to his door, and the act is to stir his conscious pride and stimulate his loyalty and patriotism. With all these results clearly indicated by the experiment as thus far tried, rural free delivery is plainly here to be. It cannot be abandoned where it has been established, and it cannot be contained without being extended. As a service in which there can be no backward step. Those who enjoy its advantages will not consent to surrender them, and every new route creates demand from contiguous territory for same privileges. We are thus contented with the problem of gradually extending the delivery service over the whole area of the country where it is physically feasible or where the population is not so sparse as to make it reasonable. A project of such comprehensive and colossal character may formidable and deterrent; but while its difficulties are not to be un- This picture is the trade mark of SCOTT'S EMULSION, and is on every bottle of SCOTT'S EMULSION in the World, which now amounts to many millions yearly. This great business has grown to such vast proportions, First:-Because the proprietors have always been most careful in selecting the various ingredients used in its composition, namely; the finest Cod Liver Oil, and the purest Hypophosphites. Second:-Because they have so skillfully combined the various ingredients that the best possible results are obtained by its use. Third:-Because it has made so many sickly, delicate children strong and healthy, given health and rosy cheeks to so many pale, anaemic girls, and healed the lungs and restored to full health, so many thousands in the first stages of Consumption. If you have not tried it, send for free sample, its agreeable taste will surprise you. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409 Pearl Street, New York, 500 and $1.00; all druggists.