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anaheim-gazette 1901-06-06

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JUDGE HUBBELL'S ADDRESS. Eloquent Oration at the Memorial Day Exercises on Thursday. Ladies and Gentlemen:—A generation has passed away since the Union soldier took up arms to defend his nation's honor and her life. In the full vigor of youth and health and hope, he left the pursuits of peace and personal ambition to dedicate his life to his country's needs. He endured the horrors of war—the prison pen, the fatigue of forced marches, the storm of shot and shell, privations, sickness and death. Bravery unparalleled, heroism unprecedented, sufferings indescribable. His only hope of reward was the consciousness of duty done. His only inspiration, the preservation of his country. His creed was loyalty; his religion was patriotism; his sacrifice was himself. The world has never seen a more transcendent example of exalted heroism. CIVIL LIBERTY. The civil war was a tremendous struggle for the destruction of human bondage and the perpetuation of free institutions. Constitutional liberty was involved. For this cause thousands died on the field of battle; they found unremembered graves in the cypress swamps of Mississippi; they received the baptism of fire in the Wilderness and a halo of glory at Lookout Mountain. On every battlefield they poured out their crimson flood "like water, without knowing whether it would fertilize a land of bondage or of freedom." "On Father's eternal camping-ground Their silent tents are spread, And glory guards with solemn round The bivouac of the dead." Thousands came home, wrecks of humanity, maimed, wounded, diseased. But they came with shouts of joy and songs of glory. They had lived to see the Union saved, and in that "their eyes had seen the glory of the coming of the Lord." But their songs of victory were short, with every recurring year, the roster of heroe dead has grown with frightful rapidity. Soon the Grand Army of the Republic will be only a memory—but a sacred and a holy memory: Its roster will contain the names of men whose memory will be revered as long as civil liberty shall last. Thousands of others survived the ravages of war and are with us yet. They are here today—our grandest inspiration to loyalty and patriotism—our most priceless legacy of heroism and glory. These men, whose history inspires us regards the physical, mechanical and intellectual force of nations, we find nothing to compare with the United States." OUR PRODUCTIVE ENERGY. But it is not alone in accumulated wealth that we excel. Our productive capacity is greater than that of any other nation. Our manufactures exceed those of Great Britain in the ratio of 14 to 9, and are greater than those of any other four nations combined and are equal to one-half of the entire output of all Europe. We live better than any other people. In his dictionary of statistics, Dr. Munhall says that the American people consume more of the world's products than are consumed by 277,000,000 people on the basis of Englishmen, and more than one-half as much as are consumed by all the world excluding Great Britain. In this country the distribution of wealth is more general than it is in any other nation. I do not say this distribution is entirely just, but it is more so than anywhere else, and possibly influences are already at work to render it less so. With grave solicitude we may watch the concentration of wealth here and note its effect upon our national character. GENERAL INTELLIGENCE. Education and general information are more widely diffused here than elsewhere. One-half of all the newspapers in the world are published in the United States, and the circulation of newspapers here is larger than the combined circulation of all those of Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia. Dr. Munhall also says: "The census of 1890 showed that eighty-seven per cent. of the total population over ten years of age could read and write. It may be fearlessly asserted that in the history of the human race no nation ever before possessed 41,000,000 instructed citizens." It is also shown that we annually write 110 letters per capita, while Great Britain writes but 60, Germany 53, France 39, and Italy 16. We are a nation of readers, writers and thinkers. Riches of literature garnish the abodes of labor. The school house is our citadel of hope, and mental activity, the salvation of our people. Germany with her boasted system of compulsory education expends fifty cents per capita, per annum, on her common schools, the United States $2.50. INVENTIVE GENIUS. Since the close of the civil war inventions have been made in the United States which are the wonder of the were assumed and responsibilities in it curred of which we had never dreamed. We were amazed at our own power and embarrassed by our legacies of war. Whether these legacies will make for good or ill, the future must disclose. At Manila, an untired navy fought the most remarkable battle of naval warfare. The morning sun, breaking through the purple mists of the mountain crests, streamed over Manila Bay and revealed a ruined squadron in Spanish ships. Viewed from one hemisphere, the sun on the horizon was rising sun; viewed from the other hemisphere it was a setting sun. The mightiest problem ever given to statesmen for solution is that of proving future results that it was a rising sun. In less than three years, we have, foreign relations, become the dominant power on earth. How long will it last? What dangers and what benefits are involved? THE SHADOW OF THE TRUST. But during the same time, while our attention was directed to foreign affairs an internal evil arose that may well cause apprehension. I am not alarmist, I have no sympathy with socialism; but it is the part of wisdom to point out plain facts and prepare me meet unfavorable conditions. There is no question that corporate power paralyzing individual energy. Colossal combinations threaten the liberty of industrial activity. The trust is now coming arrogant and oppressive. Not content with appropriating our avenues of trade and commerce attempts to dictate the policy of government. It defies the will of nation of freemen expressed at the ballot-box and tries to prevent the construction of an isthmian water-water Admitting that it cannot carry crops to market, it prevents others from doing so by charging prohibitive freight rates from the orchard to the water. It has adopted a system that violates the law with impunity, disregards individual rights and treats with derision; the just claims of the producer. The strongest argument ever made in behalf of government ownership public utilities has been made by railway corporations during the six months. Their policy has caused more chists than were ever made by the petariat. I do not believe in government ownership of public utilities. I have quarrelled with a corporation as such. Corporation is a person in law should have its rights protected and crimes punished just as is the case with any other person. But when, by But their songs of victory were short with every recurring year, the roster of heroic dead has grown with frightful rapidity. Soon the Grand Army of the Republic will be only a memory—but a sacred and a holy memory: Its roster will contain the names of men whose memory will be revered as long as civil liberty shall last. Thousands of others survived the ravages of war and are with us yet. They are here today—our grandest inspiration to loyalty and patriotism—our most priceless legacy of heroism and glory. These men, whose history inspires us and whose presence honors us, have been spared, by the grace of God, to see their land restored to national greatness. God grant that they may live long years yet to see the grandeur of the land they saved and enjoy the bounty of their country’s love. COUNTRY, HOME AND FLAG. The citizen-solder of the civil war offered himself a living sacrifice upon the blood-red field of battle in order that he might preserve his country, his home and the honor of his flag. And he did it because, for him, country, home and flag stood for civil and constitutional liberty. He did it because country, founded on justice and freedom, is essential to the existence of the home; because home, holiest spot on earth, is the corner-stone of free government and essential to human progress; and because the flag represents the Anglo-Saxon ideals of liberty. He made the sacrifice because he understood what Drake meant when he said: "When freedom from her mountain height Unfurled her standard to the air She tore the azure robes of night And set the stars of glory there." He understood that the "azure robes of night" spelled out the "tyranny of kings," and that the stars of glory were "freedom's standard." Proudly and lovingly he learned to call it "Old Glory." A NIGHTMARE OF HISTORY. Slavery had raised up in our land apostates to liberty, apostles of discontent and lagards in the ceaseless march of free institutions. They believed in bondage for their neighbors—liberty for themselves. They believed in contrasts. Black bondage spelled white freedom. To preserve the institution of negro slavery they were willing to destroy a free government. To do this "they framed iniquity and universal murder into law." They made loyalty a crime and treason a virtue. They defied our laws and repudiated our Constitution. Yet they held their cause just and defended it with heroism—the heroism of fanaticism. The present generation cannot realize that such conditions ever existed. It seems like the nightmare of an impossible history. Both North and South, it is today, a matter of congratulation that this political frenzy was overcome. "With malice toward none but with charity for all," we blot out forever the horrid picture of rebellion and paint a nation saved—a people redeemed—a country blessed by prosperity, and a citizenship inspired by patriotism and united by the bonds of love and sectional harmony. A STORY OF HEROISM. We are all familiar with the achievements of the boys in blue. With a thrill of patriotic pride, we saw the rebel charge at Gettysburg repulsed. With anguish we saw our boys strike the enemy at Cold Harbor and roll back in blood. We saw them streaming back from the Wilderness, the Union saved, and in that "their eyes had seen the glory of the coming of the Lord." But their songs of victory were short with every recurring year, the roster of heroic dead has grown with frightful rapidity. Soon the Grand Army of the Republic will be only a memory—but a sacred and a holy memory: Its roster will contain the names of men whose memory will be revered as long as civil liberty shall last. Thousands of others survived the ravages of war and are with us yet. They are here today—our grandest inspiration to loyalty and patriotism—our most priceless legacy of heroism and glory. These men, whose history inspires us and whose presence honors us, have been spared, by the grace of God, to see their land restored to national greatness. God grant that they may live long years yet to see the grandeur of the land they saved and enjoy the bounty of their country's love. COUNTRY, HOME AND FLAG. The citizen-solder of the civil war offered himself a living sacrifice upon the blood-red field of battle in order that he might preserve his country, his home and the honor of his flag. And he did it because, for him, country, home and flag stood for civil and constitutional liberty. He did it because country, founded on justice and freedom, is essential to the existence of the home; because home, holiest spot on earth, is the corner-stone of free government and essential to human progress; and because the flag represents the Anglo-Saxon ideals of liberty. He made the sacrifice because he understood what Drake meant when he said: "When freedom from her mountain height Unfurled her standard to the air She tore the azure robes of night And set the stars of glory there." He understood that the "azure robes of night" spelled out the "tyranny of kings," and that the stars of glory were "freedom's standard." Proudly and lovingly he learned to called it "Old Glory." A NIGHTMARE OF HISTORY. Slavery had raised up in our land apostates to liberty, apostles of discontent and lagards in the ceaseless march of free institutions. They believed in bondage for their neighbors—liberty for themselves. They believed in contrasts. Black bondage spelled white freedom. To preserve the institution of negro slavery they were willing to destroy a free government. To do this "they framed iniquity and universal murder into law." They made loyalty a crime and treason a virtue. They defied our laws and repudiated our Constitution. Yet they held their cause just and defended it with heroism—the heroism of fanaticism. The present generation cannot realize that such conditions ever existed. It seems like the nightmare of an impossible history. Both North and South, it is today, a matter of congratulation that this political frenzy was overcome. "With malice toward none but with charity for all," we blot out forever the horrid picture of rebellion and paint a nation saved—a people redeemed—a country blessed by prosperity, and a citizenship inspired by patriotism and united by the bonds of love and sectional harmony. A STORY OF HEROISM. We are all familiar with the achievements of the boys in blue. With a thrill of patriotic pride, we saw the rebel charge at Gettysburg repulsed. With anguish we saw our boys strike the enemy at Cold Harbor and roll back in blood. We saw them streaming back from the Wilderness, the Union saved, and in that "their eyes had seen the glory of the coming of the Lord." But their songs of victory were short with every recurring year, the roster of heroic dead has grown with frightful rapidity. Soon the Grand Army of the Republic will be only a memory—but a sacred and a holy memory: Its roster will contain the names of men whose memory will be revered as long as civil liberty shall last. Thousands of others survived the ravages of war and are with us yet. They are here today—our grandest inspiration to loyalty and patriotism—our most priceless legacy of heroism and glory. These men, whose history inspires us and whose presence honors us, have been spared, by the grace of God, to see their land restored to national greatness. God grant that they may live long years yet to see the grandeur of the land they saved and enjoy the bounty of their country's love. COUNTRY, HOME AND FLAG. The citizen-solder of the civil war offered himself a living sacrifice upon the blood-red field of battle in order that he might preserve his country, his home and the honor of his flag. And he did it because, for him, country, home and flag stood for civil and constitutional liberty. He did it because country, founded on justice and freedom, is essential to the existence of the home; because home, holiest spot on earth, is the corner-stone of free government and essential to human progress; and because the flag represents the Anglo-Saxon ideals of liberty. He made the sacrifice because he understood what Drake meant when he said: "When freedom from her mountain height Unfurled her standard to the air She tore the azure robes of night And set the stars of glory there." He understood that the "azure robes of night" spelled out the "tyranny of kings," and that the stars of glory were "freedom's standard." Proudly and lovingly he learned to called it "Old Glory." A NIGHTMARE OF HISTORY. Slavery had raised up in our land apostates to liberty, apostles of discontent and lagards in the ceaseless march of free institutions. They believed in bondage for their neighbors—liberty for themselves. They believed in contrasts. Black bondage spelled white freedom. To preserve the institution of negro slavery they were willing to destroy a free government. To do this "they framed iniquity and universal murder into law." They made loyalty a crime and treason a virtue. They defied our laws and repudiated our Constitution. Yet they held their cause just and defended it with heroism—the heroism of fanaticism. The present generation cannot realize that such conditions ever existed. It seems like the nightmare of an impossible history. Both North and South, it is today, a matter of congratulation that this political frenzy was overcome. "With malice toward none but with charity for all," we blot out forever the horrid picture of rebellion and paint a nation saved—a people redeemed—a country blessed by prosperity, and a citizenship inspired by patriotism and united by the bonds of love and sectional harmony. A STORY OF HEROISM. We are all familiar with the achievements of the boys in blue. With a thrill of patriotic pride, we saw the rebel charge at Gettysburg repulsed. With anguish we saw our boys strike the enemy at Cold Harbor and roll back in blood. We saw them streaming back from the Wilderness, the Union saved, and in that "their eyes had seen the glory of the coming of the Lord." It is also shown that we annually write 110 letters per capita, while Great Britain writes but 60, Germany 53, France 39, and Italy 16. We are a nation of readers, writers and thinkers. Riches of literature garnish the abodes of labor. The school house is our utile or hope, and mental activity, the salvation of our people. Germany with her boasted system of compulsory education expends fifty cents per capita, per annum, on her common schools, the United States $2.50. INVENTIVE GENIUS. Since close to the civil war inventions have been made in the United States which are the wonder to earn them better than here. Since close to the civil war they have nearly doubled. The purchasing power of money in which they are paid has increased. Necessities are cheaper now than then. Homes are better furnished and rights of workingman are better respected. Are these conditions about to change? We must remember that national safety and progress depend upon the prosperity of the working-man. Our people are happier, better clothed, better fed, and better paid than any other on earth. Let us remain so. DISINTERESTED TESTIMONY. It is claimed that England is best governed nation. I therefore ask you to listen to the testimony of an Englishman. I quote from Mr. James Bryce M.P., perhaps greatest publicist of our day: "In England lot of laborer has been hitherto a hard one; incestant field till with rheumatism at fifty andthe workhouse at endofthe vista; whilethe misery massedin such cities as London,Liverpooland Glasgowis only two well known.InThe great townsofGermanythere is constant distressand increasingdiscontent.InItalythe conditionofthe rural populationofLombardyandVeneziaaswellasofthe southern provincesseemstogrowworseandillsherstatesmenwithalarm.ContrastanyofthecountrieswiththeUnitedStateswheremokingclassesarewellfed,clothedandlodgedasthelowermiddleclassesinEurope,andthefarmerswhottilltheirownlands,muchbetter;whereagoodeducationiswithinreachofthepoorest;whereopportunitiesforgettingoninonewayoranotheraresoabundantthatno need fearanyphysicalillbutdiseaseortheresultsoftheirownintemperance.InConnecticutandMassachusetts,theoperatorsinmanyamufacturingtownleadalifefareasier,farmorebrightenedbyintellectualcultureandbyamusementthanthatoftheclerksandshop-keepersofEnglandorFrance。它isimpossiblenottofeewarmed,Cheered,iinvigoratedbythesenseofsuchmaterialwell-beingallaroundone.impossiblenottobefievedbythebuoyancy和hopefulnessofthepeople." Such isthe testimonyofa culturedobservantandintelligentEnglishman.ThepencilofaKaphaelcouldnotportray,northe eloquenceofa Burkedescribethemarvelousadvanceinmaterial,moralandspiritualconditionswhichwehaveexperiencedsincethe It has adopteda systemthatviolateslawwithimpunity,disregardsindividualrightsandteachesdisspectforlaworirrevenenceforveiwrights. Anarchyistheworstpossibleexceptslavery.Awithwingedfoot,thegraspdesecretelysignedpoliciesofforeaterwillbealonebotheimpossiblenottobefievedbythebuoyancy和hopefulnessofthepeople." Will“go”until she drops,andshe’sdoing ratherafinething.oftenthefutureshowsherthatlaylayingthefoundationforyearunhappiness。Whenbacktowhenthereisirregularityoranywomanilllilien,thefirstdutyawoweowstoherselfistofinda cureforailments。 A STORY OF HEROISM. We are all familiar with the achievements of the boys in blue. With a thrill of patriotic pride, we saw the rebel charge at Gettysburg repulsed. With anguish we saw our boys strike the enemy at Cold Harbor and roll back in blood. We saw them streaming back from the Wilderness, the gory wreck of the battle. We saw Hooker lead his army up Lookout Mountain and when the night had settled down, we saw the Union camp-fires gleaming from the crest of Missionary Ridge. On a hundred fields of glory they hurled themselves against a cyclone of passion and a whirlwind of fury which drenched the land with fraternal blood. And what was the object of this carnival of blood? How many realized the magnitude of the Federal victories? The civilized world looked on and admired and wondered, but failed to see the stupendous effects of these mighty sacrifices. For— "The hand that rounded Peter's dome And groaned the aisles of Christian Rome Wrought in a sad sincerity—He built better than he knew." And so these men were building better than they knew and it took a generation to realize it. They laid the foundation of a nation with the mightiest possibilities—a nation upon which the sunlight of progress has fallen like the "smile of God in benediction." Without the sacrifices of the Union soldier, the possibilities of earth's best people would have been destroyed; God's chosen children would have gone astray; civil liberty would have been an echo of the past and man's grandest heritage from his God would have been wasted. Without those sacrifices, slavery would have become dominant and freedom would have become a ghost in the realms of tyranny. OUR COUNTRY'S GROWTH. In 1808, we were a third-rate power. Our resources were undeveloped and our possibilities were unsuspected. The civil war made us a nation, gave us self-confidence and secured our territorial integrity. This laid the ground work for the most marvelous development of the ages. We have passed from the poorest to the richest nation. Our wealth is almost double that of Great Britain and our indebtedness is only one-fifth of hers. We are not only the richest nation of the present, but our wealth exceeds that of any nation of the past. Dr. Munhall says: "If we take a survey of mankind in ancient or modern times asance. In Connecticut and Massachusetts, the operators in many a manufacturing town lead a life far easier, far more brightened by intellectual culture and by amusements than that of the clerks and shop-keepers of England or France. It is impossible not to feel warmed, cheered, invigorated by the sense of such material well-being all around one, impossible not to be infected by the buoyancy and hopefulness of the people." Such is the testimony of a cultured, observant and intelligent Englishman. The pencil of a kaphael could not portray, nor the eloquence of a Burke describe the marvelous advance in material, moral and spiritual conditions which we have experienced since the close of the civil war. By preserving the integrity of the Union and maintaining the existence of civil liberty, the Union soldier rendered it possible for this progress to be made. ANOTHER WAR. In 1898, we were startled by the necessity for engaging in a foreign war. Again we drew the sword in behalf of human liberty. The highest earthly consideration justified the war. Many of the veterans of the civil war were again in the ranks. But most of our soldiers were sons of sires who opposed each other on the bloody fields of the rebellion. They were grandsons of heroes who won imperishable glory at Lexington and Bunker Hill, and Long Island and Monmouth and Chad's Ford; who starved and froze at Valley Forge and witnessed the triumph of liberty at Yorktown. The Spanish war was won for human rights before a gun was fired. The sons and grandsons of the Revolution were invincible by any force which Tyranny could send against them. They achieved the crowning glory of our generation because they welded into an indissoluble Union all the sections of our great country and wiped out forever the spirit of sectional hate. Thus the greatest barrier to national progress was removed. For a generation this unholy sentiment had existed between the North and the South. "But today the mist of uncertainty has been swept away by the sunlight of events, and there, where doubt obscured before, stands in bold relief, commanding the admiration of the whole world, the most glorious type of united strength and sentiment and loyalty known to the history of the nations." When Wheeler and Lee and Shafter, side by side, drew the sword in defense of the flag, "men who had hated each other at the ballot-box, learned to love each other on the battle-field." WAS IT A RISING SUN? While the result of the Spanish war was never in doubt, the responsibilities entailed were unforeseen. A new era dawned for America. New relations A certain farmer is telling things about a Rockland shipment. "The shipmaster," he says, "bought a cow of a man down my way; critter—nothin the matter with But it seems the captain's wife day thought the milk tasted and segested that p'raps she'd eaten spruce boughs; said the tasted like spruce. And what do but go out in the pasture to the cow, to see what she did eat cow was layin down, chewin he and he went elong and run his in her mouth to see what she wink. Then he was mad. He put on the cow and started off with He met a neighbor, who says, 'are you goin with the cow?' 'G take her back to the feller than her to me. He's cheated me.'" The Shipmaster's Cow. A certain farmer is telling things about a Rockland shipment. "The shipmaster," he says, "bought a cow of a man down my way; critter—nothin the matter with But it seems the captain's wife day thought the milk tasted and segested that p'raps she'd eaten spruce boughs; said the tasted like spruce. And what do but go out in the pasture to the cow, to see what she did eat cow was layin down, chewin he and he went elong and run his in her mouth to see what she wink. Then he was mad. He put on the cow and started off with He met a neighbor, who says, 'are you goin with the cow?' 'G take her back to the feller than her to me. He's cheated me.'" not believe in government ownership of public utilities. I have no deal with a corporation as such. A nation is a person in law and has its rights protected and its punished just as is the case with other persons. But when, by the laws of privileges, its methods be tolerable, the corporation must explain if the people turn to government ownership of public utilities. Simply a choice of evils. But I do believe it will be necessary to esocialism or to longer bear with the existing intolerable conditions. Some day an aroused public will see that existing laws forced and no other remedy will aid. Anglo-Saxons, we have ever had resistance for law and order, a high level for vested rights and an exalted set for established institutions. The trust is teaching us that we been wrong; that law is only to be used when invoked in behalf of operations; that vested rights are accrued when they are vested in a land that established institutions be reverenced only when they established by a combination. We have heretofore, been taught capital and labor are friends and interdependent and useless one but the other. But the trust is being us that labor is a slave and a taskmaster. We have no sympathy with any person, orientation or institution which by right or by example teaches disreference for law or irreverence for vested crimes. Archery is the worst possible evil, not slavery. And if anarchy comes winged foot, the grasping, selfish, insisted policies of corporate interests will alone be to blame for it. He will not come, or, if so, only as resort. A people of such material, and intellectual well-being as the United States will protect its interests critically and it will do so by due legal reasons. But if, by any means, corporeal interests are powerful enough to enforce government or control courts in injury of the people, then the body may be more drastic. I trust of us may ever witness a repetition of the horrors of 1793. But, who can what an exasperated people may Girl With Grit "I go" until she drops, and think I'm doing rather a fine thing. Very soon the future shows her that she was using the foundation for years of happiness. When the back aches, then there is irregularity or any other usually ill, then the first duty a woman is to herself is to find a cure for her patients. The Blue and the Gray are brothers. Let us extend to each the tribute of our tears—"tears which virtue sheds on glory's grave." Praise for the Blue. regret for the Gray, and love for both. Let us as one family mourn the loss of our common kindred. Bring here nature's richest and sweetest floral gifts and strew them upon the graves of each. To those who wore the blue, our hearts turn with a wealth of love and gratitude. Let every widow's tear and orphan's cry become a diamond in the glorious crown of their immortality. To them we can appropriately address the words of Mr. Webster to the survivors of Bunker Hill: "All is peace and God has granted you this sight of your country's happiness ere you slumber in the grave forever." He has allowed you to behold and to partake the reward of your patriotic toils; and he has allowed us, your sons and countrymen, to meet you here and in the name of the present generation, in the name of your country, in the name of liberty, to thank you. An Animated Parcel. Duncan Ross, the Scotch athlete, brought to New York with him some years ago a valuable bull terrier, famous for the blue ribbons he had won in India. Mr. Ross lived across the Harlem river, but his business took him dally to the lower part of New York. Invariably he was accompanied to his office by the bull terrier. As it was known that he always came down town on the elevated railroad, his friends wondered, knowing the embargo placed upon dogs, how he procured transit for the bull terrier. Their repeated questioning finally persuaded him to reveal the secret, and he invited them all to the office one evening just as he was starting for home. He took out of his desk a stout piece of wrapping paper and, opening it out flat, spread it on the floor. Then he whistled to the dog, and the bull terrier walked to the center of the paper and curled up in a limp lump. Mr. Ross then produced a piece of stout cord and made a very neat parcel of his pet and tucked it under his arm. "I have carried this parcel up and down town for two years," he said, "and no one has ever had the faintest suspicion of its animated contents. Clive is so well trained that he never makes a sound or moves a muscle. I leave a little opening at one end of the package, so that he has plenty of air." STOPPING IN FRONT OF A BARRON. "Why?" queried his partner. "I cannot pass," the other explained, waving his hand toward the entrance of the place. "Oh," remarked his friend, "don't let that feeling worry you. You know, I'm somewhat accustomed to shoving the queer." And he took man with a thirst by the arm and carried him on down the street—Memphis Scimitar. A Fast Bicycle Rider Will often receive painful cuts, sprains or bruises from accidents. Bucklen's Arnica Salve will kill the pain and heal the injury. It's the cyclist's friend. Cures chafing, chapped hands, sore lips, burns, ulcers and piles. Cure guaranteed. Only 25c. Try it. Sold by W. P. Turner, druggist. Well Enough. "Didn't I tell you to let well enough alone?" said the doctor to the convalescent who had disobeyed and was suffering a relapse. "Yes, doctor," whined the patient, "but I wasn't well enough."—Detroit Free Press. The first photographic portrait taken was of Mrs. Dorothy Draper in 1839 by her brother, Dr. John Draper. Ireland sends annually 44,000 tons of eggs, some 640,000,000 in round numbers, to England alone. Bronx river, New York, derives its name from Jonts Bronx, who settled in that region in 1839. OVER THE LINE. Procrastination is the Thief of Health. Nature is a very wise and careful mother but she is dumb. She speaks by signs. The man or woman who does not heed her signs or fails to understand them must pay the penalty. Some day there will be a step over the line beyond which Nature's warnings cease and her penalties begin. For instance there is a man who for years never knew he had a stomach, it performed its work so perfectly. Some day after eating he has a little sour or bitter rising in the throat. He does not heed it. Later he feels an uncomfortable fullness after eating, a distress in the region of the stomach and perhaps he is uncomfortable enough to wonder whether he ought not to "do something" for himself. But he does not get any farther than stopping in front of a barroom. "Why?" queried his partner. "I cannot pass," the other explained, waving his hand toward the entrance of the place. "Oh," remarked his friend, "don't let that feeling worry you. You know, I'm somewhat accustomed to shoving the queer." And he took man with a thirst by the arm and carried him on down the street—Memphis Scimitar. A Fast Bicycle Rider Will often receive painful cuts, sprains or bruises from accidents. Bucklen's Arnica Salve will kill the pain and heal the injury. It's the cyclist's friend. Cures chafing, chapped hands, sore lips, burns, ulcers and piles. Cure guaranteed. Only 25c. Try it. Sold by W. P. Turner, druggist. Well Enough. "Didn't I tell you to let well enough alone?" said the doctor to the convalescent who had disobeyed and was suffering a relapse. "Yes, doctor," whined the patient, "but I wasn't well enough."—Detroit Free Press. The first photographic portrait taken was of Mrs. Dorothy Draper in 1839 by her brother, Dr. John Draper. Ireland sends annually 44,000 tons of eggs, some 640,000,000 in round numbers, to England alone. Bronx river, New York, derives its name from Jonts Bronx, who settled in that region in 1839. HOW STRENGTH IS RESTORATION People as a rule have a severe idea of the manner in which they must eat to live. But they consider that when the stomach gestive and nutritive tracts are out of object eating, which is tilted to the body cannot be pertained. Only part of the food converted into nutrition and but partly nourished. Yet they required to do as much daily as being fully nourished. The rest wasting of the flesh, loss of weight goes hand in hand with loss of energy and general debility. When eased stomach is cured by "Gallical Discovery," the food is digested assimilated and in the form of digestion restores the strength and body; the proof of this being in the pounds and ounces of life which are rapidly regained. way in which physical strength made is by food, digested and lated. When they find it hard to eat for the kind you have given me to my case," wrote Carrie J. Wharton, want, Spottsylvania. "When I wrote to spring I was in state of health." up all hope of ever With Grit "go" until she drops, and think is doing rather a fine thing. Very in the future shows her that she was giving the foundation for years of happiness. When the back aches, there is irregularity or any other manly ill, then the first duty a woman to herself is to find a cure for her ments. The use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prevention in cases of womanly disease insure a prompt restoration to sound with. It regulates the periods, stops healthy drains, heals inflammation ulceration, and cures female weakness. It makes weak women strong, and women well. Black women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce, by letter, free of charge. All respondence absolutely private and confidential. In his thirty years and of medical practice Dr. Pierce, assed by his staff of nearly a score of musicians, has treated and cured more than half a million women. Address R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Will drop you a few lines to-day to let you that I am feeling well now. writes Miss Stephens, of Belleville, Wood Co., West. I feel like a new woman. I took several lessons of 'Favorite Prescription' and of the Golden Medical Discovery." I have no headnow, and no more pain in my side; no longing-down pain any more. I think there no medicine like Dr. Pierce's medicine." Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical iser, in paper covers, is sent free on script of 21 one-cent stamps to pay exesise of mailing only. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. A Few Words about Pain-Killer prominent Montreal clergyman, the Rev. James Dixon, Rector St. Judes and Hon. Canon of at Church Cathedral, writes: "Permit me to you a few lines to strongly recommend my Davis' Pain-Killer. I have used it with fraction for thirty-five years. It is a preparawhich deserves full public confidence." Little Willy is a bright boy and a saucy boy. His apt answers have often turned away wrath and often turned it upon him strongly. The other day his father was reprimanding him for some misdeed, and Willy was answering very saucily. The father became very angry and, seizing the youngster by the collar, said: "See here, young man, you must not talk like that to me. I never gave my father impudence when I was a boy." Willy was not feazed at all. With a cherubic smile he looked into papa's eyes and said, "But, papa, maybe your father didn't need it." "Twas all off. Willy escaped punishment, while papa retired to another room.-Albany Journal. wondering. He becomes sleepless, loses flesh, and has other warnings of the development of disease but he still tries to work. Some day he collapses, drops down perhaps at his task and when he comes to himself in bed he is seriously ill. He is paying the penalty for his heedlessness of Nature's warnings. Whenever there are undue fullness after eating, sour or bitter eructations, belchings, and kindred symptoms it is the sign that disease is fastening on the stomach and digestive and nutritive tracts. Disease unless checked is always progressive, and it is only a question of time in such cases, when the health and strength will be seriously undermined. TAKE NO RISKS. The wise man or woman will take no risks but will attend to the first symptoms of disease of the stomach. Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery which has cured thousands of people who were suffering from the most aggravated forms of disease of the stomach and its allied organs of digestion and nutrition may be relied on quickly and permanently to cure such diseases in their earlier stages. Its action is prompt and efficient. Its effects are lasting. The whole body being fully nourished is built up with sound flesh, not with flabby fat. "For about two years I suffered from a very obstinate case of dyspepsia," writes R. E. Secord, Esq., of 13 Eastern Ave., Toronto, Ontario. "I tried a great number of remedies without success. I finally lost faith in them all. I was so far gone that I could not bear any solid food on my stomach for a long time; felt melancholy and depressed. Could not sleep nor follow my occupation (tinsmith). Some four years ago a friend recommended your 'Golden Medical Discovery.' After a week's treatment I had derived so much benefit that I continued the medicine. I have taken three bottles and am convinced it has in my case accomplished a permanent cure. I can conscientiously recommend it to the thousands of dyspeptics throughout the land." felt clear, and I was perfect down under the strain of losing constantly. I was not able to physician attend me, but had great deal in your books of w Medicine had done for others, you and got your advice. Be bottles of 'Golden Medical II' and the first dose I took I f When I had finished taking the tles the spitting up had entire; and my head was much better; say it has yet made an entire ce as it required more than that I was so very bad, but I bel medicines are just what you h "I carefully read the books you and shall always speak a good 'Golden Medical Discovery ever I have a chance." You can publish this if you worth while. It might induce else to try your medicine who as I did. It was by the touch of others that I was induced th shall always rely upon your feel safe to do as you tell me." Dr. Pierce's Golden Medi-ery cures diseases of the stoe other organs of digestion and It cures through the stomach which seem remote from that which have their origin in dis- stomach and its allied organs. If the dealer offers a sub "Golden Medical Discovery," that the sole motive of subst enable him to make the little paid by the sale of less merite arations. GIVEN AWAY. Dr. Pierce's Common Sem- Adviser containing more than large pages and over 700 illu sent free on receipt of stamp pence of mailing only. Send stamps for the cloth-bound only 21 stamps for the book covers. Address Dr. R. V. Falo, N.Y. Toasting - broiling baking - ironing anything that can be done with a wood or coal fire is done better, cheaper and quicker on a WICKLESS Blue Flame Oil Stove Heat is not diffused throughout the house—there is no smell, soot, or danger, and the expense of operating is nominal. Made in many sizes; sold wherever stoves are sold. If your dealer does not have it write to nearest agency of STANDARD OIL COMPANY The Shipmaster's Cow. certain farmer is telling mean things about a Rockland shipmaster. the shipmaster," he says, "bought a man down my way; good order—nothin the matter with her. It seems the captain's wife one thought the milk tasted funny and segested that p'raps she'd been spruce boughs; said the milk used like spruce. And what does he put out go out in the pasture to watch cow, to see what she did eat. The cow was layin down, chewin her cud, he went erlong and run his finger her mouth to see what she was eat-Then he was mad. He put a rope the cow and started off with her. met a neighbor, who says, 'Where you goin with the cow?' 'Goin to her back to the feller that sold to me. He's cheated me, and I THE UNITED MINES MINING CO. OF WILMINGTON, DELAWARE. Executive offices: Santa Ana, Orange County, Cal. MINES MINING CO. OF WILMINGTON, DELAWARE. Executive offices: Santa Ana, Orange County, Cal. OFFICERS GILES OTIS PEARCE, President and General Manager; RAY BILLINGSLEY, Treasurer, Secretary and General Counsel. Capital stock, $400,000; 400,000 shares, Par value, $1 per share. THIS Company owns at Manvel Camp, San Bernardino County, in the New York mount-sin-lee'd, (two miles from It.) track, all of 22 full claims to-wit; MINES AND MINING CLAIMS—The Old Shoes the Red Bur, the Patsy Boller, the Harmony, the Sundance, the Central [3], the Polka Dot the Bulls Eye, the Full Moon, the Half Moon, the Meteor, the Coined Money, the Fellowship, the Little Giant, the Lookout, the Jason, the Blackhawk, the Lone Star the Lucky Boy and Sixteen to One. And also the undivided one-tenth of the Good Hope group of mines and claims—12 in number. The product of the veins are values in ores of Gold, Silver Lead and Copper. Every vein from surface shows gold in good values present in nearly every assay of surfa e rock, as from $2.50 to $9.00 per ton of ore in place as exposed by surface outcropping. DEVELOPMENTS—The Old Shoes claim 76 foot shaft and vein 65 feet across the vein sample shows values $2.06 per ton in Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead. All ready for three shift working*. Plenty of ore in sight below. The blackhawk claim 55 tons are out, values in Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead about $6.00 per ton. The Good Hope claim, 20-foot add-face and sheath, about 60 tons are out, average of $4.00 per ton in Gold. The Lone Star claim opened well, showing ore of values, Gold $19, and 6 oz Silver per cent with a per cent of 16—Bismuth. This is Bismuth 300 pounds to the ton, and Bismuth is worth about $2.50 per pound, or $55 per ton ore. (Bonanza here, but ore will have to go to special smelters and refineries.) There are in Treasury funds of this Company yet: 304,000 shares of the Capital Stock, and for sale, 55 per cent of which is held at par value, $220,000, and a special rate is made on 100,000 shares if taken soon, and there are very few promotion shares available to prompt or immediate investors. (We are told by experts that our combine has a prospective valuation of $250,000.) Persons interested in getting into and investing in a "cracker jack," good investment should immediately write for rather private information available to them, and state how much cash they have got in hand to come in with. Do not delay as working money is wanted now. Address: Giles Otis Pearce, P. O. Box 61. Office: Rooms 2 and 3, upstairs, 114 Fourth st., Santa Ana, Cal. What do you want of any cheap Jim Crow cutlery when the Jordan 'AA A1' brand of fine English cutlery can be bad for a very little more. Do not be deceived. Insist upon having the Jordan 'AA A1' brand and bowl till you get it. For sale by leading dealers everywhere je10 Bicycles and Sporting Goods. A full stock of bicycle supplies. Bicycle repairing of all kinds promptly done. All work guaranteed. Also agent for the Santa Ana Steam Laundry. I run a laundry wagon that will call for and deliver your laundry. Southern Pacific Company. San Francisco and Los Angeles Limited- Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures the diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition, the food eaten is properly digested and assimilated, the body is adequately nourished, and thus its strength is restored. "I will express my thanks to you for the kindly advice you have given me in regard to my case," writes Miss Carrie J. Wharton, of Dunavant, Spotsylvania Co., Va. "When I wrote to you last spring I was in a terrible state of health. Had given up all hope of ever being better. I spit up my food all the time and it seemed sour as vinegar. I would have a bad sick headache every other week; in fact, my head never felt clear, and I was perfectly broken down under the strain of losing my food constantly. I was not able to have a physician attend me, but had read a great deal in your books of what your medicine had done for others, so I wrote you and got your advice. Bought two bottles of 'Golden Medical Discovery' and the first dose I took I felt better. When I had finished taking the two bottles the spitting up had entirely stopped and my head was much better. I do not say it has yet made an entire cure of me, as it required more than that for me, as I was so very bad, but I believe your medicines are just what you have said of them. "I carefully read the books you sent me and shall always speak a good word for the 'Golden Medical Discovery' whenever I have a chance." "You can publish this if you think it worth while. It might induce some one else to try your medicine who was suffering as I did. It was by the testimonials of others that I was induced to try it. I shall always rely upon your advice and feel safe to do as you tell me." Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It cures through the stomach diseases which seem remote from that organ but which have their origin in disease of the stomach and its allied organs. If the dealer offers a substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery," remember that the sole motive of substitution is to enable him to make the little more profit paid by the sale of less meritorious preparations. GIVEN AWAY. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser containing more than a thousand large pages and over 700 illustrations, is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send 31 one-cent stamps for the cloth-bound volume or only 21 stamps for the book in paper covers. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Bicycles and Sporting Goods. A full stock of bicycle supplies. Bicycle repairing of all kinds promptly done. All work guaranteed. Also agent for the Santa Ana Steam Laundry. I run a laundry wagon that will call for and deliver your laundry twice a week. Laundry coming in as late as 9 o'clock Thursday morning will be delivered to you Saturday at 5 o'clock. E. W. McCOLLUM. Indeed, every one knows the Jordan AAAI Cutlery most, must of necessity like it the best. Southern Pacific Company. San Francisco and Los Angeles Limited—"THE OWL." Between Los Angeles and San Francisco daily. Leave Los Angeles 5:00 pm., arrive San Francisco 8:55 am., Leave San Francisco 5 pm., arrive Los Angeles 7:45 am. The Sunset Route offers unexcelled advantage for winter travel, and an unequalled train service. Sunset Limited, season November to April. This is the most magnificent train in America, restituled throughout, illuminated with Pintsch gas and heated by steam. Every train is made up as follows: One commuter car, container bath-room, barber-shop, cafe, library and smoker; one compartment car with lavatory in each compartment, and parlor for the special use of ladies, and a ladies maid in attendance; as many double drawing-room, tension sleepers as may be necessary, with toilet annexes, one dining-car, meals served a la carte. 1900 — SUNSET EXCURSIONS — 1900 Through Tourist Sleepers from Los Angeles: To Washington, D. C., via New Orleans, 2 p.m.; Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. To Chicago, III., via El Paso 2 p.m.; Tuesdays. To Occonnetti, Ohio, via New Orleans, 2 p.m.; Fridays and Sundays. OGDEN ROUTE EXCURSIONS. To St. Paul, via Sioux City, 11:40 am; Thursdays. To Chicago, Mondays; Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. Leave Los Angeles 11:40 am. SHANTA ROUTE EXCURSIONS. To Portland, St. Paul and Minneapolis, Monidays, 10:20 pm. First and second-class tickets for sale at Anaheim at Los Angeles prices, and baggage checked through to any point in the United States, Canada or Mexico. Our local train service is unexcelled for comfort. Day coaches are equipped with the celebrated Scarritt seats, luxuriously upholstered, and passengers for Los Angeles are loaded right in the center of the business part of the city—at First street or commercial street—within a block of the large wholesale houses. Our connection at Mojave for the famous gold mining camp of Randsburg is superb; good hotel at Mojave and elegant stage coaches through to the city of gold. Fare from Anaheim to Randsburg, $7.55. Family communition tickets for sale between Anaheim and Los Angeles, and other local points at greatly reduced rates. Limit six months. For further information, call at the Southern Pacific depot at Anaheim. T.A. DARLING, Agent G.W.LUCK, Asst. Gen Pass., Agt., Los Angeles, 261 South Spring St. Money to Loan From $5,000 to $10,000 in sums to suit on real estate or approved security, Apply to Richard Melrose. deco-23tf