anaheim-gazette 1902-07-10
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PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
ON AFFAIRS OF STATE
Two Great Epochs in the History of This Government, But Each Generation Has Its Tasks
President Roosevelt delivered the Fourth of July oration at Pittsburg to an audience composed of 100,000 people. His eloquent words were in part as follows:
You have just listened to the reading of the great document which signalled our entry into the field of nations 126 years ago. That entry was but the promise which had to be made good by the performance of those men and their children and their children's children.
Words are good if they are backed up by deeds, and only so. The declaration continues to be read with pride by us year after year, and stands as a symbol of hope for the peoples of all the world because its promise was made good; because its words were supplemented by deeds; because, after the men who signed it and upheld it had done theirs, the men who came after them, generation by generation, did their work in turn.
The Declaration of Independence had to be supplemented in the first place by that great instrument of constructive and administrative statesmanship—the Constitution under which we now live. The document, promulgated in 1778, under which Washington became our first President, supplemented, necessarily supplemented, the declaration of 1776. We showed in the Revolution that we had a right to be free; we showed when we constructed the more perfect union of the old Confederacy that we knew how to use that right as it needed to be used. And then came again upon the nation the days of iron need. There came again the days that demanded all that was best, life itself, of the bravest and truest of the nation's sons. And with Sumpter's guns awakened our people and America, until the carnate genius of peace sprang to her feet with sword and with shield, a helmeted queen among the nations, and when the thunder of guns called the nation's children they sprang forward to do the mighty deeds, which, if left undone, would have meant that the words to which we have listened to today would have been as meaningless platitudes.
speaking broadly and generally, peace has come. Our army has received its reward. And what was the reward of our army? The reward of the consciousness of duty well done. Our soldiers have fought, have toiled, have struggled, so that when victory came they might turn over the government to the civil authorities. Victory came.
Today the proclamation of peace and amnesty has been promulgated, and at the same time our generals have been notified that the civil government is supreme in the islands. Does not that speak well, O my brethern, for our army, for our troops, that the troops of this people should war, hoping for a triumph which is to put the power into the hands of the civil authorities?
By law we are allowed an army at a maximum of 100,000 men and a minimum of 60,000 men. While this war has gone on we have steadily reduced that army until now, by orders promulgated, its limit is 66,000, and, as a matter of fact, we have two or three thousand actually under arms. That speaks well for our institutions. It speaks well for the triumphs of the policies with which, as a nation, we have been identified during the past four years, and, men and women of the United States, it shows how slight was the warrant for the fears expressed by those of little faith as to what would follow authorizing even the small army that was authorized. Nobody of our citizens deserves franker and more generous recognition at the hands of the country than the officers and enlisted men who wear the United States uniform, for there is nobody of our citizens which gives more disinterested services with less thought of a material reward proportionately in any way to them.
And now, my fellow-citizens, I speak of the task which has culminated there in Cuba and the Philippines as being one of the tasks which this generation had to face. It is only one. We have great problems at home to face. I am speaking of the great industrial centers, not merely of America, but of the world. A million people stand grouped in a small radius around the spot where we now are. The growth of your cities within this radius has been one of the most striking phenomena of the day, and therefore you are brought face to face with those problems which affected our entire civilization at the opening of this new century.
ELECTRIC LINE TO SAN FRANCISCO
H. E. Huntington Talks of Connecting That City with Los Angeles by Electric Cars.
Should plans now in embryo be carried into effect, electric railway transportation for passengers between Los Angeles and San Francisco will be a certainty within five years. Ways and means for perfecting details are being considered. The proposed enterprise has been studied thoroughly in part, estimates of the probable cost have been roughly made, and it only remains for the capital necessary to give the command for attacking the enterprise. Preliminary orders have been issued.
It is known that Henry E. Huntington for some time has had agents in the field who are examining the country in the territory between Los Angeles and San Francisco. Huntington representatives will remain out for a long time to come. Preliminary surveys have been made and others are being planned at this end.
Henry E. Huntington is convinced of the practicability of his idea. He has studied his subject thoroughly. The Huntington-Hellman syndicate or electric railways is chartered to construct and operate between Santa Barbara on the north and San Diego on the south, the total mileage planned at this time being about 500 miles on double track. This work is expected to be completed before 1907.
Huntington and his associates have constructed and nearly equipped the most extensive car-building plant west of the Missouri river, excepting the largest Southern Pacific shops in California. This plant already is turning out cars, and it is being provided with facilities to build and repair sleeping cars. Sleepers to and from San Francisco by trolley are a probability in this next few years. The run, it is calculated, will be made in about eight hours.
According to present talk the service will be express schedule, with no stops en route. Such a car will carry about thirty persons and at about $12.5 each, including sleeper fare, will earn $360 gross each way and at an expense that will include only the pay of one conductor, one brakeman and a porter.
The estimated cost of the proposed line is about $20,000,000.
True to Her Instincts.
Auctioneer—I'm offered only $5 for this magnificent work of art. Who'
then came again upon the nation the days of iron need. There came again the days that demanded all that was best, life itself, of the bravest and trueest of the nation's sons. And with Sumpter's guns awakened our people and America, until the carnate genius of peace sprang to her feet with sword and with shield, a helmeted queen among the nations, and when the thunder of guns called the nation's children they sprang forward to do the mighty deeds, which, if left undone, would have meant that the words to which we have listened to today would have been as meaningless platitudes.
Those were the two great epochs in the nation's history—the epoch of the founding of the Union and the epoch of its preservation; the epoch of Washington and the epoch of Abraham Lincoln. Those two generations had the greatest tasks to do, but each generation has its tasks, and woe to the generation which regards the deeds of the mighty men of the past as an excuse for failing to do in its turn the work that it finds ready to hand. The great deeds of those who have gone before us must ever serve, not as a reason for action on our part, but as the keenest of spurs to drive us forward on the path of national greatness and justice. We have had our tasks to do in the past four years, or rather we have had, as every generation must have, many tasks to do, tasks affecting us abroad, and one of those tasks, being done as it has been, has signalled our entry into a larger world. And now, my fellow-citizens, I speak of the task which has confronted those in Cuba and the Philippines.
It is most appropriate that, on this Fourth of July, the anniversary of the birth of the nation, it should be our good fortune to have promulgated the declaration establishing peace in the Philippines and the acknowledgment to the army of the praise so richly duur our fellow-Americans who wear the uniform of the United States for all that they have done in the tropic islands during the past four years.
We said Cuba should become a free republic, and we kept our word. To have turned Cuba over to the hands of its own people immediately after the withdrawal of the Spanish flag would have meant ruin and chaos. We established a government in the island; we brought peace and order; we began to provide for the payment of the Cuban troops who had fought against the misrule of their oppressors; we instituted a public school system modeled upon that which has been so potent a factor in our national being. We cleaned the cities in Cuba for the first time in their history. We changed them from being the most unhealthy to being among the healthiest cities of the civilized world. We instituted a system of or derly justice to succeed one of irresponsible and arbitrary despotism, so that any man, rich or poor, weak or strong can take appeal and know that he would prove his rights. And then, when in the fullness of time we felt they could walk alone, we turned over the government to them, and now the beautiful Queen of the Antilles has started on her course as a free republic.
In Cuba and the Philippines as being one of the tasks which this generation had to face. It is only one. We have great problems at home to face. I am speaking of the great industrial centers, not merely of America, but of the world. A million people stand grouped in a small radius around the spot where we now are. The growth of your cities within this radius has been one of the most striking phenomena of the day, and therefore you are brought face to face with those problems which affected our entire civilization at the opening of this new century.
The tremendous rush of our industrial development, which has brought in its train so much that is good, and also, of necessity, brought somewhat of evil. The very intensity of the progress that has been made has meant that new and infinitely difficult problems have arisen which we must strive to solve as best we may. Under our form of government, with its great decentralization of power, some of those problems must be solved through the work of private individuals working by themselves; others by the association into organized bodies of groups of private citizens, and others yet through the various governmental agencies of municipality, state and nation.
One of the most important departments of the civilized government is the department of justice. Think what it means. The department of justice—justice; that means that each man, rich or poor, strong or weak, shall have his rights, and shall not be allowed to do wrong to his fellows. And you here of this city have a right to feel proud of your representative in the Cabinet, the man under whom we can guarantee that the department of justice will be such in fact as well as in name. When it comes to practice, the ounce of performance outweighs the ton of promise, and under Mr. Knox there has been very much more than an ounce of performance.
Oh, my fellow-countrymen, as we face the infinitely-difficult problems let us keep in mind that though we need the highest qualities of intellect in order to work out practical schemes for their solution, yet we need a thousand times more what counts for many, many times as much as intellect—we need character. Character, that compound of honesty and courage and common sense, will avail us more in the long run than any brilliancy on the stump or any advices to means and methods. The brilliancy is good. We need the intellect, the best intellect we can get; we neeen the best intelligence; we need still more, character. We need common sense, common honesty and resolve courage.
We need what Mr. Knox has shown—the character that will refuse to be hurried into any unwise, precipitant movement by any clamor, whether historical or demagogic, and on the other hand, the character that will refuse to be frightened out of the movement which he thinks it right to undertake by any pressure, still less by any threat.
Much can be done along the line of supervision and regulation of the great
According to present talk the service will be express schedule, with no stops en route. Such a car will carry about thirty persons and at about $12.50 each, including sleeper fare, will earn $360 gross each way and at an expense that will include only the pay of one conductor, one brakeman and a porter.
The estimated cost of the proposed line is about $20,000,000.
True to Her Instincts.
Auctioneer—I'm offered only $5 for this magnificent work of art. Who make it $6? Make it $5.50 then. Be pardon madam, I didn't catch what you said. Did you say $5.50?
Mrs. Shoppas (coldly)—No, sir, I say $5.49.—New York Truth.
Mr. Asbury Peppers.
"No man," said the anarchist boarder,"can make any progress toward wealth merely by work."
"In other words," said Asbury Peppers,"you think a man who remains hand will never be ahead."—Cincinnati Enquirer.
A Cause For Sorrow.
Newspaper Proprietor—I can remember berthe time when there was no Sunday paper with more than 4 pages,and no we give our subscribers 40 and sometimes more.
One of the Subscribers—Sad isn't Boston Transcript.
The Scotch of It.
Jink—My dear MacFuddle, it's very thing you want! Charming house—lovely spot! Cheap too. But our great drawback—you can't get any water there!
MacFuddle—Oh, that doesn't matter!—Punch.
Then He Would Understand.
"What is a continuous performer like, pa?" "Just notice your mother asking for money,my son."—New York World
Not Far From It.
He claims to be a southern planter.
He doesn't look like one."
He is, though. He is a Mobile wertaker."—New York Journal.
A Real Heavyweight.
"How stout Aunt Josephine is!" "Yes. She tells me she can't skip in reading a dull novel."—Chicago Record.
A Sustaining Diet
These are the enervating days, when as somebody has said, men drop by sunstroke as if the Day of Fire had dawned. They are fraught with danger to people whose systems are poorly sustained. And this leads us to say,the interest of the less robust of our readers,the full effect of Hoo Sarsaparilla is such as to suggest that propriety of calling this medicine sounds thing besides a blood purifier and tooth-say,a sustaining diet. It makes much easier to bear the heat,assure refreshing sleep,and will without doubt avert much sickness at this timeof year.
Wanted to Sell.
Five-foot Killifer cultivator. Check for cash.Apply to R.Fossick.may
In our national being. We cleaned the cities in Cuba for the first time in their history. We changed them from being the most unhealthy to being among the healthiest cities of the civilized world. We instituted a system of or derly justice to succeed one of irresponsible and arbitrary despotism, so that any man, rich or poor, weak or strong, can take appeal and know that he would prove his rights. And then, when in the fullness of time we felt they could walk alone, we turned over the government to them, and now the beautiful Queen of the Antilles has started on her course as a free republic among the nations of the earth.
But there is one thing—our policy toward Cuba has not yet met with its entire fruition. It will meet with it. The course of the last few years has made more evident than ever before that this nation must in time come to have pecuniary interests on the Isthmus connecting the two Americas, and in the waters and among the islands adjacent thereto. Nationally, we cannot occupy the position toward these regions that we did toward others where our interests are far less, and this is doubly true now that Congress, with great wisdom, has provided for the building of an interoceanic canal. Cuba must occupy a peculiar relation to us in the field of international politics. She must, in the larger sense, be a part of the general political system in international affairs in which this republic stands as the head. She has assented to that view and in return this nation is bound to give her especial economic privileges not given to other nations.
I regret that a measure of reciprocity with Cuba is not already embodied in statute or in treaty; but it will be just as sure as fate.
And now, a word as to the Philippines. There are yet troubles in the Moro country, the country of the Mohammaden tribes; but in the Philippines, among the Filipinos, among the people who have been in insurrection, peace now reigns.
It may be, I think, unlikely, but it is possible here and there, some seemingly dead coal of insurrection may be for the moment fanned into a live piece of ember and burst into fitful flame. If so, that flame will be stamped out. But
FACTS ABOUT ANAHEIM
Sketch of the industries and Resources of this Most Beautiful Part of California.
The City of Anaheim, with a population of 2500, is situated in the northern part of Orange county, in Southern California, 12 miles from the ocean, 4½ miles from the foothills, and 148½ feet above sea level. It is 27 miles from Los Angeles, the second largest city in the State of California.
The climatic conditions are the most favorable for out-door life to be found in Southern California. The temperature is extremely uniform, seldom rising above 90 degrees in summer, or falling below 32 degrees in winter. The abundance of sunlight and the absence of sharp frosts and cold winds make it a place especially acceptable to those desiring to escape the severe climate of the east.
The country is very attractive. It is practically level, with just sufficient slope from the hills to afford adequate drainage. The roads are level, well graded, and well kept, affording excellent opportunities for cycling and driving. The soil is a rich sandy loam which never bakes, making it a very easy ground to work; thus lending itself readily to the cultivation of berries, nuts, oranges, etc.
The variety of products, and the possibility of procuring small tracts of land at low figures, and on easy terms, make our section of the county very attractive and advantageous for truck raising, or for farming on a small scale. The following are a few of the products: oranges, lemons, walnuts, grapes, peaches, apricots, sugar beets, berries and vegetables of all kinds.
Anaheim is the possessor of a Building and Loan Association, Water company, two railroads, fruit cannery and drier, large oil industry, ostrich farm, bank, several adequate commercial houses, two hotels and two newspapers. The city also owns its water and lighting plant.
FACTS ABOUT ORANGE CO.
The census bureau has issued a bulletin on agriculture in California which we quote from extensively in another part of this issue. One of the interesting features of the report
AUDITOR HALL'S BALANCES
Apportionment of Money to the Various Funds—Bolsa Ditch Fund Overdrawn.
County Auditor Hall has drawn off his balances, showing the following distribution of the county money to the various funds:
County school fund... $11,489 13
Current expense fund... 14,100 34
County state school fund... 8,797 93
Court house and jail fund... 2,096 43
County park fund... 499 62
General unapportioned fund... 11,072 11
Hospital fund... 4,153 27
High school fund... 1,588 79
Interest and sinking fund... 7,133 23
Library school fund... 995 01
Salary fund... 11,298 77
State redemption fund... 127 21
Special school fund... 2,144 72
State school fund... 1,127 20
Separate school fund... 87 69
School fund... 5,394 45
Swampland fund... 2,192 73
Teachers' institute and library fund... 2 73
Anaheim irrigation fund... 88 44
General road fund... 4,306 18
Anaheim road district fund... 590 30
Buena Park road dist. fund... 463 34
Delhi road district fund... 222 04
Fullerton road district fund... 850 98
Garden Grove road district fund... 1,137 32
Laguna road district fund... 166 73
Newhope road district fund... 302 98
Newport road district fund... 401 93
Olive road district fund... 440 88
Orange road district fund... 552 54
San Juan road district fund... 132 97
San Joaquin road district fund... 363 17
Silverado road district fund... 142 50
Trabuco road district fund... 184 67
Tustin road district fund... 667 60
Westminster road dist. fund... 1,111 75
Yorba road dist. fund... 291 84
Alamitos road district fund... 584 90
El Toro road district fund... 600 26
Anaheim school district fund... 1,257 14
Bolsa school district fund... 1,034 68
Buena Park school dist. fund... 535 74
Anaheim high school district fund... 489 49
Fullerton high school district fund... 310 87
La Habra school dist. fund... 300 73
Laurel school district fund... 345 58
Magnolia school district fund ...653 39
Ollinda school district fund ...67 02
Orange school district fund ...124 46
Orangethorpe school district fund ...99 45
Peralta school district fund ...426 48
Placentia school dist. fund ...10 10
Santa Ana city school district fund ...459 85
Total ... $104,358 50
The Bolsa ditch fund is overdrawn to the amount of $7.29; the Chico ditch fund $68.87 and the Willows ditch fund $61.50, making a total of $365.30, which,
SHERIDAN'S HANDOUT
SPRUNG TWO ACES OF DIAMONDS CONKLING IN A JACK POT.
Very Much Embarrassed When His tention Was Called to the Error—Little General Wanted the Story Quiet, but It Was Too Good.
"I was in a poker game," writes correspondent of the Washington Sentinel. "In the winter of 1879, when Senk Conkling and General Phil Sheridan were players. It was a four hand game, and John Chamberlin was other player. This game at Chamlin's was always for a $5 limit at first with the understanding that alongward morning, after a couple of warm up, anybody could suggest the removal of the limit if he waits to. The way Conkling and Sheridan bluffed each other that night was a tion. Both men seemed to strike luck altogether as an element in their good natured play against each other and as both of them caught fine holes occasionally when engaged in this war of bluffing neither of them could get an exact line on the other; any was better than a play to study faces at the show downs. Conkling having all the success during the last part of the night, and it was furious Little Phil softly utter dark woolly things under his breath time after time. Conkling would have a hand consisting of nothing at all having scared Sheridan out or proclaiming a gorgeous set of fours or a full hand such times as Sheridan, deciding the senator was bluffing, would him."
"Bite him, Sheridan," Chamberlain would say amusedly on these occasions and Sheridan would tell Chamberlain go to the Dickens and call for an deck of cards.
"We started the last round of pots with a new deck. Sheridan had the first mess himself, and after gone around and none of the three could open it Sheridan opened it self. Neither Chamberlin nor any right to stay on our hands was left between Sheridan and Chamberlain who staid. Conkling took cards and turned his little pair threes. Sheridan dished himself three cards and bit his cigar hard he saw his hand. He made a $5 draw Conkling out, and the senator raised him $25. It passed between with these $25 bets until there nearly $800 in the pot, both men tinizing each other pretty carefully."
True to Her Instincts.
Neuer—I'm offered only $5 for significant work of art. Who'll $6? Make it $5.50 then. Beg madam, I didn't catch what Did you say $5.50?
Opps (coldly)—No, sir, I said New York Truth.
Mr. Asbury Peppers.
Man, said the anarchistic "can make any progress to health merely by work."
Other words," raid Asbury Pepper think a man who remains a will never be ahead."—Cincinnati.
A Cause For Sorrow.
Saper Proprietor—I can remem time when there was no Sunday with more than 4 pages, and now your subscribers 40 and someore.
Of the Subscribers—Sad, isn't it in Transcript.
The Scotch of It.
My dear MacFuddle, it's the thing you want! Charming house spot! Cheap too. But one sawback—you can't get any waistbend—Oh, that doesn't matunch.
San He Would Understand.
What is a continuous performance?
Notice your mother asking me may, my son."—New York World.
Net Far From It.
Claims to be a southern planter."doesn't look like one."
Is though. He is a Mobile uner."—New York Journal.
A Real Heavyweight.
Stout Aunt Josephine is!"
She tells me she can't even reading a dull novel."—Chicago
A Sustainning Diet
Are the enervating days, when body has said, men drop by the ice as if the Day of Fire had.
They are fraught with danpeople whose systems are poorly fed. And this leads us to say, in interest of the less robust of our that the full effect of Hood's wrilia is such as to suggest the duty of calling this medicine sometimes besides a blood purifier and tonic sustaining diet. It makes it easier to bear the heat, assures ing sleep, and will without ever much sickness at this time.
Wanted to Sell.
Root Killifer cultivator. Cheap. Apply to R. Fossick, may-8-tf
FACTS ABOUT ORANGE CO.
The census bureau has issued a bulletin on agriculture in California which we quote from extensively in another part of this issue. One of the interesting features of the report is the paragraph giving the number of farms and acres of farming lands in the five Southern California counties. The pre-eminence of Orange county is apparent:
Counties: No. farms. Acres.
Los Angeles: 6577. 895,663
Orange: 2888. 590,436
Riverside: 2340. 477,097
San Bernardino: 2350. 219,182
San Diego: 2698. 899,419
But it is in the acreage of irrigated lands that Orange county takes easy precedence over the other counties of Southern California:
Counties: Acres.
Los Angeles: 85,644
Orange: 41,549
Riverside: 32,947
San Bernardino: 37,877
San Diego: 10,022
The area of Orange county is 780 square miles; that of Los Angeles, 3880; that of Riverside, 7008; that of San Bernardino, 20,055, and that of San Diego, 8400 square smiles.
Orange county thus contains one-fifth the area of Los Angeles; yet its irrigated lands approach in area to one-half those of its neighbor to the north.
Riverside embraces nine times its area, yet it irrigates 9000 more acres, or a fourth more than the belauded county on the east.
San Bernardino is 25 times its size, yet its irrigated acres exceed those of this jumbo county by nearly 4000, approximately ten per cent.
San Diego is eleven times its size, yet it irrigates 25,000 acres more than the county on the south—300 per cent is the former's irrigated area as compared with that of the latter—almost the irrigated area of San Diego and Riverside combined.
Orange county possesses the finest system of irrigation, the most secure water rights, that exist in Southern California. That is what we have said many a time and oft. These figures prove it. It is the handsomest and most productive county that lies outdoors and is settling up faster than any other in the State.
How About It?
The supervisors having failed to appoint two members of the county board of education as they should have done, the duty devolved upon Superintendent Greeley, who promptly reappointed Messrs. J. J. Zielian of Tustin and B.F. Beswick of Garden Grove.
The Same Old Story
J. A.-Kelly relates an experience similar to that which has happened in almost every neighborhood in the United States, and has been told and retold by thousands of others. He says:
"Last summer I had an attack of dysentery and purchased a bottle of Chamberlain's Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which I used according to di-
Anaheim is the possessor of a Building and Loan Association, Water company, two railroads, fruit cannery and drier, large oil industry, ostrich farm, bank, several adequate commercial houses, two hotels and two newspapers. The city also owns its water and lighting plant.
FACTS ABOUT ORANGE CO.
The census bureau has issued a bulletin on agriculture in California which we quote from extensively in another part of this issue. One of the interesting features of the report is the paragraph giving the number of farms and acres of farming lands in the five Southern California counties. The pre-eminence of Orange county is apparent:
Counties: No. farms. Acres.
Los Angeles: 6577. 895,663
Orange: 2888. 590,436
Riverside: 2340. 477,097
San Bernardino: 2350. 219,182
San Diego: 2698. 899,419
But it is in the acreage of irrigated lands that Orange county takes easy precedence over the other counties of Southern California:
Counties: Acres.
Los Angeles: 85,644
Orange: 41,549
Riverside: 32,947
San Bernardino: 37,877
San Diego: 10,022
The area of Orange county is 780 square miles; that of Los Angeles, 3880; that of Riverside, 7008; that of San Bernardino, 20,055, and that of San Diego, 8400 square smiles.
Orange county possesses the finest system of irrigation, the most secure water rights, that exist in Southern California. That is what we have said many a time and oft. These figures prove it. It is the handsomest and most productive county that lies outdoors and is settling up faster than any other in the State.
IN OLD AGE the question of health becomes mainly a question of nutrition. If the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition are kept in a healthy condition there will be a well-nourished body,and little liability to disorders of the liver bowels or such other disorders as may result in nutrition and lack of exercise.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs which are caused by the diseased condition of the stomach. By enabling the perfect nutrition of the body increases the vital power and promotes a vigorous old age.
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies, which would give me relief for a short time only. My trouble would return as bad as ever. I consulted you in July, 1900, and by your advice commenced using Dr. Pierce's remedies. I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery three vials of the Pelita salt syrup course of the Extract of Smart-Weed," as you advised.
I have not had any return of my trouble since using your medicines. Am now seventy-one years old and I never had anything to relieve me so quick. I think Dr. Herc's medicines the greatest on earth. Should I ever have appeared on my troubles please my doctor for your advice and thanks to Almighty God for restoring me to health through your hands."
Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." There is nothing "just as good" for diseases of the stomach,
Total $104,358 50
The Bolsa ditch fund is over drawn to the amount of $7.29; the Chico ditch fund $68.87 and the Willows ditch fund $61.50, making a total of $365.30, which deducted from the total, leaves the net total of $103,993.20.
Cures Sciatica
Rev W. L.Riley LL.D., Cuba,新 York writes: "After fifteen days of exerculating pain from sciatic rheumatism, under various treatments,我 was induced to try Ballard's Snow Liniment,the first application giving my first relief,and the second entire relief.I can give it unqualified recommendation." 25c,$0c and $1 at J.P.Hatzfeld's.
Wanted to Buy.
A good horse.Must weigh about 1300.Apply to R.Fossick.may-8-tf
SCANT CONSOLATION
The Pessimist—The longer I live in the world the worse it seems to get.
The Optimist—Oh well,不让 a little thing like that worry you.Perhaps it will be better after you get out of it.
IN OLD AGE the question of health becomes mainly a question of nutrition. If the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition are kept in a healthy condition there will be a well-nourished body,and little liability to disorders of the liver bowels or such other disorders as may result in nutrition and lack of exercise.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs which are caused by the diseased condition of the stomach.BY enabling the perfect nutrition of the body increases the vital power and promotes a vigorous old age.
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs which are caused by the diseased condition of the stomach.BY enabling the perfect nutrition of the body increases the vital power and promotes a vigorous old age."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs which are caused by the diseased condition of the stomach.BY enabling the perfect nutrition of the body increases the vital power and promotes a vigorous old age."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases ofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhicharecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhich arecausedbythedisheddementofthestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreasesthevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesofthe stomachandotherorganswhich arecausedbythedisheddementof-thestomach.BYenablingtheperfectnutritionofthebodyincreases.thevitalpowerandpromotesavigorousoldage."
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes in Mary Aaron of Eola Parkside Mo., "I tried different remedies which would give me relief for a short time only.I trouble would return as bad as ever.I consulted you in July,1900,and by your advice commenced using Dr.Pierce's remedies.I took two bottles of the Golden Medical Discovery cures diseasesof_thestomach.BYenabling_the_perfect_nutrition_softened_to_the_stomach_and_reduced_to_the_australia_for_exposure_to_the_rise_of_the_mushroom_on_the_goal_afternoon,_taking_the_pair_of_you._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fairly_found_to_the_mushroom._W.W.fearily_founded_to_the_mushroom_.W.W.fearily_founded_to_the_mushroom_.W.W.fearily_founded_to_the_mushroom_.W.W.fearily_founded_to_the_mushroom_.W.W.fearily_founded_to_the_mushroom_.W.W.fearily_founded_to_the_mushroom_.W.W.fearily_founded_to_the_mushroom_.W.W.fearily_founded_to_the_mushroom_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.W.fearily_founded_TO_MUSHROOM_.W.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w.w
The supervisors having failed to appoint two members of the county board of education as they should have done, the duty devolved upon Superintendent Greeley, who promptly reappointed Messrs. J. J. Zielian of Tustin and B. F. Beswick of Garden Grove.
The Same Old Story
J. A. Kelly relates an experience similar to that which has happened in almost every neighborhood in the United States, and has been told and re-told by thousands of others. He says: "Last summer I had an attack of dysentery and purchased a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which I used according to directions and with entirely satisfactory results. The trouble was controlled much quicker than former attacks when I used other remedies." Mr. Kelly is a well known citizen of Henderson, N.C. For sale by all druggists.
WAR CLAIM OF ILLINOIS
SPRINGFIELD, Ill., July 5.—Governor Yates received today a warrant for $1,005,129.29, principal and interest. due the State of Illinois from the United States government for advances made by the State in equipping troops during the Civil war.
The Perfect Liver Medicine
Mrs. M. A. Jolley, Noble, O. T., writes: "I have used Herbine for a number of years, and can cheerfully recommend it as the most perfect liver medicine and the greatest blood purifier. It is a medicine of positive merit and fully accomplishes all that is claimed for it." Malaria cannot find a lodgment in the system while the liver is in perfect order, for one of its functions is to prevent the absorption of fever-producing poisons. Herbine is a most efficient liver regulator. 50c at J. P. Hatzfeld's.
SLIGHT INEQUALITY
All men may be made out of dust, but some men have a lot more of the dust than others.
Repulsive Features
Blackheads, pimples, greasy faces and muddy complexions, which are so common among women, especially girls at a certain age, destroying beauty, disfiguring and making repulsive features which would otherwise appear attractive and refined, indicate that the liver is out of order. An occasional dose of Herbine will cleanse the bowels, regulate the liver and so establish a clear, healthy complexion. 50c at J. P. Hatzfeld's.
Everybody Knows About Pain-Killer
A Household Medicine
A Safe and Sure Cure for Cramps, Coughs, Bruises, Diarrhoea, Golds Burns, Sprains and Strains.
Gives instant relief.
Two sizes, 25c. and 60c.
Only one Pain Killer, Perry Davis'.
THE CLEANSING AND HEALING CURE FOR GATARRH
Ely's Cream Balm
Easy and pleasant to use. Contains no injurious drug.
It is quickly absorbed.
Gives Relief at once.
It Opens and Cleanses The Nasal Passages.
Always Inflammation.
Heals and Protects the Membrane. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Large Size, 60 cents at Drugs or by mail; Trial Size, 10 cents by mail.
"I was a sufferer from chronic diarrhea for five years," writes Mrs. Mary A. Aaron, of Rolla, Phelps Co., Mo. "I tried different remedies, which give me relief for a short time only. My trouble would return as bad as ever. I consulted you in July, 1900, and by your advice commenced using Dr. Pierce's remedies. Two bottles of the 'Golden Medical Discovery,' three vials of the Pellets, and some of the 'Extract of Smart-Wedd,' as you advised. I have not had any return of my trouble since using your medicines. Am now seventy-one years old and I never had anything to relieve me quick." I think Dr. Pierce medicines the greatest on earth. Should I ever have any return of my trouble shall use your medicine.
My thanks to you for your advice and thanks to Almighty God for restoring me to health through your hands."
Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." There is nothing "just as good" for diseases of the stomach, blood and lungs.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pelleta, the best laxative for old people. They cure constipation and billiousness.
STILL HOPE FOR HIM
She—Oh, George, I saw a dream of a bonnet today.
He—Then please don't wake me.
She Didn't Wear a Mask
But her beauty was completely den by sores, blotches and pimples she used Bucklen's Arnica cream. Then they vanished, as will tensions, fever sores, boils, ulcerations bangles and felons from its use. Liberty allowed for cute, corns, burns, scars.
Cure guaranteed. 25c at Hatzfeld's.
Santa Fe Beach Rates
The Santa Fe is now selling trip tickets every Saturday and at greatly reduced rates to the long beaches: Redondo, Long East San Pedro, Terminal Island Lina Island. The Santa Fe is line to all these points. Most trains and best service. In full information at Santa Fe or Anaheim.
The Santa Fe does not buy you of flour or a new pair of pants dress, but it does offer you the service and most frequent Angles or any other point near its lines. You can go to Los Angeles on the Santa Fe and return to your business in the dinner, and thereby save 25 cents. As to rates they are as low as the lowest. For family 25 rides mutation tickets, good for 60 days rate is $6.65. For individual tickets $8.80, good during the month which ticket is sold. For full information in regard to rates, routes, any point, call on or address J.J. baugh, Santa Fe agent at Anaheim.
Modern Preachers.
ARE THEY TO BE TRUSTED AND BELIEVED?
The only value of the question in the headline is to bring home the fact that of all classes of testimony, that offered by the clergy would be most promptly accepted without doubt or cavil. The clergy stand for truth and right, and thousands follow them living up to the wreck restored to rugged health by the use of the "Discovery," it is impossible to shut the door of hope on any one however weak he may be. It is the record of such cures which has given Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery a pre-eminence among all preparations for the cure of diseases of the organs of respiration.
"I desire to send you this brief, unsolicited testimonial," writes Rev. Joseph H. Fesperman, of Barium Springs, Iredell Co., N.C. "In 1898, one of my daughters was suffering on account of a severe cough, hectic fever, wasting of flesh and other symptoms of diseased lungs. I promptly gave her Dr. R. V. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery with gratifying success, and she now enjoys excellent health. This experience caused me to recommend Dr. Pierce's medicines to my neighbors, who, without exception, used them with favorable results. This being true, I hereby heartily endorse your medicines."
It can be truly said of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery that it always helps and almost always cures. Ninety-eight per cent. of all who use "Golden Medical Discovery" are perfectly and permanently cured. The remaining two per cent. though not cured acknowledge appreciable benefit. They cough less, eat better, sleep better and feel better for the use of the "Discovery."
THE IMPORTANT POINT.
While extreme cases of disease are cured by the use of "Golden Medical Discovery," the important point is not to neglect the slight cough. From such neglect fatal results have come to many thousands. It is useless to try the mere "cough medicine," or palliative, which soothes but does not cure. The one thing desirable is to be cured quickly and permanently, and it is in such cures that the "Discovery" proves its value.
"I took a severe cold which settled in the bronchial tubes," writes Rev. Frank Hay, of Nortonville, Jefferson Co., Kansas. "After trying medicines labeled 'Sure cure,' almost without number, I was led to try Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. I took two bottles and was cured, and have stayed cured. When I think of the great pain I had to endure, and the terrible cough I had, it seems almost a miracle that I was so soon relieved. That God may spare you many years and abundantly bless you is the prayer of your grateful friend."
Men or women suffering from disease...
ATTENTION-FRUIT GROWERS!
Do you Fertilize?
LIME-LIME-LIME
Fertilizer for Fruit and Vegetables!
REFUSE LIME CAKE for sale at 50c a ton at Sugar Factory, Los Alamitos. Crop doubled and trebled. See E. KOSSERT, Anaheim, for particulars regarding the practical results of its use by himself and neighbors.
LOS ALAMITOS SUGAR FACTORY
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SUBSCRIBE FOR
THE ANAHEIM GAZETTE
OLDEST PAPER IN ORANGE COUNTY
Subscription $1.50 Per Year Send For Sample Copy
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