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anaheim-gazette 1902-07-31

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Anaheim VOLUME XXXII. DR. F. H. HOUCK DENTIST. OFFICE NEXT DOOR to P. O. (Federman Block, up stairs.) HOURS 9 to 5 ANAHEIM CAL. jy1541 G. S. EDDY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Telephone, Main 75... OFFICE—Center street, opposite City Hall. 10 A.M. to 11 A.M. Office Hours 2 P.M. to 4 P.M. 7 P.M. to 8 P.M., evenings. Residence—Corner Center and Palm streets. ANAHEIM CAL. HERBERT JOHNSTON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and Residence: Corner of Broadway and Los Angeles St.. Telephone 666... 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. Office Hours 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., evenings. Dr. A. W. Bickford OFFICE OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. Telephone Central. Residence near Christian Church. Telephone 101. ANAHEIM, CAL. Boston Bakery FRESH BREAD, PIES AND CAKES. IF YOU WANT TO SELL YOUR PROPERTY OR TRADE it for Los Angeles realty; or if you want to buy a place in Los Angeles or surrounding country, list with Wm. Schwenckert REAL ESTATE AND GENERAL BUSINESS AGENRoom 215 Henne Bldg, No. 122 West Third St., Los Angeles A Specialty made of Orange County Prope SEE ME FOR THE BEST PROPOSITIONS IN FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE, or write and I will Agent AACHEN & MUNICH FIRE INSURANCE CO. of Germany, and the AETNA LIFE & ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO. of Hartford. Fullerton Machine Shops J. F. HILTSCHER & CO., Proprietors Gasolene Engines Sold and Repaired Estimates Furnished on Pumping Plants Agents for the M. and E. Gasoline Engines WE GUARANTEE OUR WORK Telephone MAIN 54 will bring us Anaheim Bakery, PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR. Dr. A. W. Bickford OFFICE OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. Telephone Central. Residence near Christian Church. Telephone 101. ANAHEIM, - - CAL. Boston Bakery FRESH BREAD, PIES AND CAKES. . . . Ice Cream and Confectionery S. Kistler, Proprietor W. P. Turner, Pharmacist DRUGS, MEDICINES, Perfumes and Toilet Articles. BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN TOWN MEDICAL HALL, KOLL BLOCK. PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE. FRITZ RUHMANN'S Germania Halle. BACKS' NEW BUILDING LOS ANGELES STREET Keeps on hand a Large and complete stock of liquors, wines and cigars. Cold beer always on draught GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT. TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK. HUSMANN BROS. CITY MEAT MARKET F. W. Fleischmann, PROPRIETOR. Best Meats the Market Affords Always on Hand. Also keeps on hand Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, Etc. Meats delivered to all parts of the city free of charge. Roman Wisser Favorite Saloon. Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigars Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT. LM Griffith Company Anaheim Bakery, PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR. FRESH BREAD CAKES & PI CONFECTIONERY, ETC. Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cyprus NO SACRIFICE OF ANY ESSENTIAL COMFORT AND THE COST OF AN EASTERN TRIP LESSENED BY USE OF TOURIST SLEEPING CAR PERSONALLY CONDUCED MONDAYS, THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS. Santa Fe The best and up-to-date Livery turnouts City Livery Stables EDWARD A. ZEUS, Proprietor. ATTENTION-FRUIT GROWER Do you Fertilize? LIME-LIME-LIME Fertilizer for Fruit and Vegetables REFUSE LIME CAKE for sale at 50c a to Sugar Factory, Los Alamitos. Crop dou Roman Wisser Favorite Saloon. Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigare Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT. J.M. Griffith Company A CORPORATION LUMBER DEALERS Near Railroad Depot, Anaheim, keep constantly on hand Doors, Blinds, Windows Mouldings, Posts, Shakes, Shingles, Lath, Hair Plaster of Paris. C.F. GRIM, Agent. F. BACKS, UNDERTAKER And Dealer in FURNITURE. Wall Paper, Cornices, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass Sewing Machine Supplies, Etc. Chr. Los Angeles & Chartres Sts. Napoleon Hart. ...DEALER IN THE FINEST BRANDS OF... WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS CENTER STREET, -ANAHEIM. Bottied goods of superior quality for family use WIELAND BEER. Give me a call. RICHARDMELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW And Notary Public. Special attention given to Probate Matters. —Center Street, Anaheim.— West, Bell & Tipton--- Attorneys&Counselors-at-law. HELMSEN BLOCK Center St. -ANAHEIM, Cal RAILWAY TIME TABLE. Time of Arrival and Departure of Trains. SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD. Trains on the Southern Pacific pass Anaheim as follows: To Los Angeles. Daily.....7:52 am Daily.....9:49 am Daily.....4:22 pm Daily.....6:08 pm Pass Loara Station: To Los Angeles. Daily.....7:56 am Daily.....9:48 am Daily.....4:27 pm Daily.....5:59 pm LOS ALAMITOS TRAINS. Leave Anaheim—Arrive Anaheim— 9:35 am 8:00 am 2:07 pm 11:37 am 5:50 pm 4:30 pm Daily except Sunday. TUSTIN BRANCH. Leave Anaheim Arrive Anaheim 9:49 a.m. 4:22 p.m. Daily except Sunday. NEWPORT BEACH RAILWAY. Daily Schedule. Leave Anaheim Arrive Anaheim 9:49 a.m. 7:52 a.m. 6:08 p.m. 4:22 p.m. All trains connect at Santa Ana with Newport trains. Santa Fe Time Table Effective June 1, 1905. Trains on the Santa Fe Route leave Anaheim for points named as follows: To Los Angeles—7:56 am 9:57 am*11:49am 5:05 pm To San Diego—9:35 a.m. 8:07 pm To Redlands—11:31 am To Riverside and San Bernardino—11:31 am 5:54 pm To San Jacinto, Perris, Temecula and Elsinore*11:31 am. To Santa Ana—9:35 am*,3:07 pm,.5:54 pm. To Pasadena and Azusa—7:55 am,.9:57 am*, *11:49 am,.5:05 pm. To Escondido*2:07 pm. To Fallbrook*9:35 am. To Redondo—7:55 am,.9:57 am*.*11:49 am. To Chicago, Denver, Kansas City and all points East—3:06 pm,.6:54 pm. Trains marked with a are daily-except Sunday. All others daily. Do you Fertilize? LIME-LIME-LIME-Fertilizer for Fruit and Vegetables REFUSE LIME CAKE for sale at 50c a to Sugar Factory, Los Alamitos. Crop doubled and trebled. See E. KOSSERT, Anah for particulars regarding the practical results of its use by himneighbors. LOS ALAMITOS SUGAR FACTO The Weekly Gazette Established 1st SUBSCRIPTION,- 91 50 F Six months....Three months....Payable invariably in advance Transient advertising rates,$1 per month. The GAZETTE is issued every morning. Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice matter. Notice to Credit Estate of C.A. STREHLE, D.E. Notice is hereby given by the signed, administrator of the estate. Strehle, deceased, to the creditors persons having claims against the ceased, to exhibit the same, with sary youchers, within four months first publication of this notice, to the administrator, at the office of Richard Center street, Anaheim, California being the place for the transact business of said estate in the Orange. Dated this 20th day of June, A.D. Administrator of the estate of C.deceased. Richard Melrose, attorney for trator. JOSEPH BACO Undertaker and Embroiderer in Furniture and Bee Repairing Done. The Pure Bred Percheron ALEXIS SECO will make the season of 1902 at JOHN HAHN'S LIVERY STATE ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA TERMS FOR SEASON-$10. Usual ileges. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. THURSDAY. JULY 31, 1902. PROPERTY OR TRADE you want to buy a place y, list with enckert BUSINESS AGENT best Third St., Los Angeles ge County Property POSITIONS IN ANCE, or write and I will call. ANCE CO. of Germany, and the CO. of Hartford. (Chartered in 1850) ine Shops O., Proprietors and Repaired umping Plants Gasoline Engines GUARANTEE OUR WORK Bakery, ROPRIETOR. Editorial Note and Comment The turning down of the one-armed veteran Truman Reeves by the Kelly machine at San Bernardino foredooms inevitable defeat for Kendall, Kelly's man for member of the state board of equalization, who went into a conspiracy to defeat and disconcert this gray-haired veterans of the war. Reeves is state treasurer and is a candidate for renomination. His residence is San Bernardino. In the convention four years ago he had the solid backing of his home county, and in a fair test at primaries would undoubtedly have similar support this year. But Kelly, who is Jim McFadden's side partner in the petty political machine that has attained a sickly growth in the two counties infested by them and their followers, seems, like McFadden, to have an antipathy to old soldiers and it seems they "must go," if McFadden and Kelly control. We have already seen how McFadden made a special trip to Washington to hold up Senator Perkins and Congressman Needham in a plot to turn out a disabled veteran from the Santa Ana postoffice. That he succeeded in accomplishing his purpose—albeit it was after the adjournment of congress, at a time when the senate was debarred from investigating the case is infamy unspeakable. It is at large in the last national campaign, in an interview states that be yond a doubt Governor Henry T. Gage again would be the Republican nominee for the gubernatorial chair. Being interested in the political situation, he has made it a point to keep a close watch on the sentiments of the people during his travels throughout the state and has found Gage exceptionally strong in all sections. Fully 90 per cent of the San Francisco delegation will be Gage men, an equal percentage of the delegates from south of the Tehachapi are for Gage, those from Sacramento solid for renomination and those from the central and northern portions of the state almost all pledged to support the popular candidate. He looks for Gage to be nominated on the first ballot with an overwhelming majority. "The enthusiasm for Gage today," Mr. Barrett says, "is much stronger and much more earnest than in the previous campaign. The people of the state, that is, the solid, thinking, people, realize that in Gage they have a fearless and upright man and as efficient an executive as the people of the state have ever chosen. It is these proven qualities that explain the loyalty of the people and will be the means of his triumphant, glorious and victorious march on election day." AMERICA IN THE LEAD OF ALL N More Advantages for All in th the Free and Home of the Bra Anywhere Else on Ear BY FRANCIS E. CLARK, [CONTRIBUTED TO THE GAZI] In bringing this series of an end I am again inclined to have given America her lead nations and what will keep her largely in the lead in the future. In the last article we can conclude that it was because was the paradise of the complete, because the poor man had and the peasant's son could rise as the millionaire's son, if not but this, though true, is no should be said, and in this close I wish to review an old truth from its very familiarity we are forget. America is not only of democracy, but the land of and so long as this is true its secure, but no longer. We are apt to underrate our inheritance from the faction it has always been our trusted possession. Where it always shining, men forget that the heavens. Those who have lived in a free land forget would be to live under a tyranny how quickly such a tyrant blight every fair prospect. I can do nothing more than to remind my younger that with a great price they tainted their freedom, that her inheritance born of centuries o have an antipathy to old soldiers and it seems they “must go,” if McFadden and Kelly control. We have already seen how McFadden made a special trip to Washington to hold up Senator Perkins and Congressman Needham in a plot to turn out a disabled veteran from the Santa Ana postoffice. That he succeeded in accomplishing his purpose—albeit it was after the adjournment of congress, at a time when the senate was debarred from investigating the case—is infamy unspeakable. It is perhaps well for Mr. Needham that he is now in another district. Assuredly he had heard of it had he come before the people of this district for re-election. Quite probably he would have heard something “drap.” Mayhap he will yet hear of it up his way. That Perkins will have a “crow to pick” with the old soldiers, is sure as shootin’. But if the displacement of the Santa Ana veteran was infamous, by what term of reproach must Kelly’s action toward Reeves be characterized? I want that my veteran friends in Orange county should know all about it. When the Republican state central committee met to call the state convention Kelly was the loudest shouter in the state against what he termed the scheme of Gov. Gage to have the state committee advise that delegates to the state convention be appointed by county committees, instead of the usual way of electing them at primary elections. The chairman of the state central committee is a veteran, and had such instructions been given to pack the convention by county committees favorable to the Governor, Gage could easily have ended the campaign then and there. What was the Governor’s answer? That he did not wish a renomination except from a convention of delegates regularly chosen at primary elections held in all the counties. The state committee so recommended and primary elections are now in course of being held in all the counties in conformity therewith—all except San Bernardino. In that county Kelly has put into practice the atrocious scheme by him untruthfully attributed to the Governor with respect of the state convention. The San Bernardino delegation to the state convention will be “packed,” the only one in the entire state with that stain upon it. Packed for what purpose? So that Kelly may lend his feeble assistance to an effort to defeat the Governor, who stood in his way in his attempt to displace a faithful Republican have an antipathy to old soldiers and it seems they “must go,” if McFadden and Kelly control. We have already seen how McFadden made a special trip to Washington to hold up Senator Perkins and Congressman Needham in a plot to turn out a disabled veteran from the Santa Ana postoffice. That he succeeded in accomplishing his purpose—albeit it was after the adjournment of congress, at a time when the senate was debarred from investigating the case—is infamy unspeakable. It is perhaps well for Mr. Needham that he is now in another district. Assuredly he had heard of it had he come before the people of this district for re-election. Quite probably he would have heard something “drap.” Mayhap he will yet hear of it up his way. That Perkins will have a “crow to pick” with the old soldiers, is sure as shootin’. But if the displacement of the Santa Ana veteran was infamous, by what term of reproach must Kelly’s action toward Reeves be characterized? I want that my veteran friends in Orange county should know all about it. When the Republican state central committee met to call the state convention Kelly was the loudest shouter in the state against what he termed the scheme of Gov. Gage to have the state committee advise that delegates to the state convention be appointed by county committees, instead of the usual way of electing them at primary elections. The chairman of the state central committee is a veteran, and had such instructions been given to pack the convention by county committees favorable to the Governor, Gage could easily have ended the campaign then and there. What was the Governor’s answer? That he did not wish a renomination except from a convention of delegates regularly chosen at primary elections held in all the counties. The state committee so recommended and primary elections are now in course of being held in all the counties in conformity therewith—all except San Bernardino. In that county Kelly has put into practice the atrocious scheme by him untruthfully attributed to the Governor with respect of the state convention. The San Bernardino delegation to the state convention will be “packed,” the only one in the entire state with that stain upon it. Packed for what purpose? So that Kelly may lend his feeble assistance to an effort to defeat the Governor, who stood in his way in his attempt to displace a faithful Republican and much more earnest than in the previous campaign. The people of the state, that is, the solid, thinking, people, realize that in Gage they have a fearless and upright man and as efficient an executive as the people of the state have ever chosen. It is these proven qualities that explain the loyalty of the people and will be the means of his triumphant, glorious and victorious march on election day.” The effort to connect the name of County Clerk Beckett with that of Jim McFadden, in a political way, is absurd and falls flat. The charge could only have been made by one unfamiliar with the status of political affairs in this county. I presume that Beckett has McFadden's personal friendship—I don't know and don't care. Many people at the county seat know Jim, and they tell me that personally he is not such a bad fellow. But to say that Beckett is his creature—that is monstrous. In fact the boys at the courthouse have very little to do, politically, with McFadden, who in some way or another has come to be known as whatever you call a boss—oh, perish the thought! I call him a lobster. True, his nearness to Perkins has given him a neckhold upon Federal appointments down this way, as well as changing the Garden Grove and Westminster postoffice routes from Anaheim, the correct geographical route, to Santa Ana, which was permitted to steal it away from us solely that the receipts of its postoffice might be increased to the point necessary to give it a free city delivery of its mails. When it comes to Federal matters in Orange county, Jim approaches the whencefulness of the it. But there were a dozen combinations in the last county convention which he knew nothing whatever about. But I'm digressing. About Billy Beckett, there is no more independent and self-reliant man in Orange county, as he is one of the best liked and most popular. So far as relations with McFadden are concerned, Beckett's opponent is more amenable to the charge, for he is secretary of the New Yorkers' society and Jim McFadden is its president. This is the last opportunity I shall have previous to the primaries to say a word about this popular official. Beckett has held the office of county clerk one term. He is entitled to another, and I hope his friends will rally to his support and give him a good vote in this section of the county. MADE A GREAT DIFFERENCE. We are apt to underrate their inheritance from their cause it has always been our tioned possession. Where they always shining, men forget their heavens. Those who have lived in a free land forget would be to live under a tyrant blight every fair prospect. I can do nothing more than to remind my youngest that with a great price they tained their freedom, that her inheritance born of centuries ooof millenniums of conflict lands, of the mass against thiefthe freedom and the spirit of oppression privilege and caste; even after all these centuries mon right of every human being organized only in a few favored. THE RULE OF THE TITLE Sometimes I bear a more lightly of this heritage of evanlcan, and it makes me shudder“If this measure does not said a fanatic reformer she speaking of some ephemeral was advocating,“I would not under the yoke of the Turk words received with pleasure” by his equally faice. Of course he did not know rule of the Turk is; if he had not have spoken of it so flippy. A young friend of mine w Macedonia could enlighten me. This man's father was then in a Macedonian commune "mayor" of the little town, taey. An enemy conceived a gruntthe family for some reason,cause it was somewhat moros than its neighbors; and denounced the family to authorities, and accused connected with the Macedonian mittee of revolutionists, who from being the truth. But to get at the truth is no concern of Turkish officials she father of my friend rose from half a dozen officials. It to be a friendly visit,and it as a mark of honor,mysther ordered a feast to be present his son, who had some as a cook,to prepare it. The best chickens were choicest vegetables gather family stores drawn upon limited extent.The office their feast apparently,and tice it, and then rewarded by pointing their loaded them,and cooly informingand three sons that they woners. Without any further exp officers marched them over dangerous roads to a prize from their home,and their trial or process of law or justice,waited for their buy their escape.For many months these official robbed with perfect freedom from by any higher power. In that county Kelly has put into practice the atrocious scheme by him untruthfully attributed to the Governor with respect of the state convention. The San Bernardino delegation to the state convention will be "packed," the only one in the entire state with that stain upon it. Packed for what purpose? So that Kelly may lend his feeble assistance to an effort to defeat the Governor, who stood in his way in his attempt to displace a faithful Republican from his office so that Kelly might get it for himself; to have revenge upon Reeves, who would not assist him in his unholy quest for office, and, last but not least of all, to assist in the organization of a "machine" to place him, at some time in the future, in this identical office which he covets—the collectorship of the port of San Francisco. The interests of this one-armed soldier are cast aside—Kelly's wishes must be obeyed, in San Bernardino. What the great Republican party will say about it in state convention assembled remains to be seen. The initial step in the progress of this prancing desert politician, in his desperate game to get "that office," is the trotting out of one Kendall for nomination as member of the state board of equalization. On an even contest between this wily politician and the veteran, there can be no doubt Reeves would lay this scheming band of job-chasers in the shade. But he is not to be given this chance, it seems. His own delegation is packed against him, and, like Alexander, he will have to make room for another man—that is, he will if the Republicans of the state think as this San Bernardino push does. Kelly has been in Orange county, attempting to stack the cards for his man, and incidentally himself; with what progress will doubtless soon appear. W. J. BARRETT, ex-president of the Pacific Coast Commercial Travelers' Association and presidential elector Beckett's opponent is more amenable to the charge, for he is secretary of the New Yorkers' society and Jim McFadden is its president. This is the last opportunity I shall have previous to the primaries to say a word about this popular official. Beckett has held the office of county clerk one term. He is entitled to another, and I hope his friends will rally to his support and give him a good vote in this section of the county. MADE A GREAT DIFFERENCE. Secretary Shaw, the humorist of the present administration, tells this story: "I stopped off at Syracuse not a great while ago and listened to two men talking about the tremendous business development of this country in which everybody was sharing. One of them was making the point that the general prosperity was for the benefit of the entire community. "Look at this great railroad, with its four tracks running east and west," he said. "It is a highway of empire, carrying each day to the Atlantic or the Pacific the product of the factory, the mine and the loom. Wipe it off the map and everything comes to a standstill and we become involved in a common ruin." "Just then the Empire State express came rushing along and a red-hot cinder struck the speaker in the eye. "D—— these engines!" said he, "I wish there was not a railroad in the country."" Cures Sciatica Rev W. L. Riley, LL.D., Cuba, New York, writes: "After fifteen days of exerculating pain from sciatic rheumatism, under various treatments, I was induced to try Ballard's Snow Liment, the first application giving my first relief, and the second entire relief. I can give it unqualified recommendation." 25c, 50c and $1 at J. P. Hatzfeld's. A. H. Stutsman has been appointed to the office of court commissioner for Orange county. 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. Without any further expo officers marched them over dangerous roads to a prison from their home, and they trial or process of law on justice, waited for their buy their escape. For many months these official robbery with perfect freedom from by any higher power. The prisoners were almost merely enough bread and given them to keep the bfluttering, so that the spoil not lose their booty. My friend, a tall stranger some young fellow, with the title of youth, became well-created. He could stand three of starvation no longer to the barred window of hut, he shook it and belled that his captors at his noise, gave him a little. After a long time when had well-nigh died from he had received their prairie health wrecked, ruined, they were released that they had been denied authorities by an utterly evil agade, who had not received mayor's hands the offices sired. Such hideous reonly possible in any law liberties of people guarded, but it of almost rence. Yet we sometimes lightly of our liberties, slow evolution of the agree the inheritance of the race, as if they were a mere concern. FINLAND'S SAD In Finland today, soldiers are quartered in clean barracks built by their own sons are consonate into remote sections of minions to live for man come back. If they ever thoroughly Russianized, of their lives behind ties and sympathies for Yet there is no redress native except exile and I know another young Gazette. JULY 31, 1902. NUMBER 40 AMERICA IN THE LEAD OF ALL NATIONS More Advantages for All in the Land of the Free and Home of the Brave Than Anywhere Else on Earth BY FRANCIS E. CLARK, D. D. [CONTRIBUTED TO THE GAZETTE.] In bringing this series of articles to end I am again inclined to ask what has given America her lead of all the nations and what will keep her increasingly in the lead in the future. In the last article we came to the conclusion that it was because America was the paradise of the common people, because the poor man had a chance, and the peasant's son could rise as high as the millionaire's son, if not higher. But this, though true, is not all that should be said, and in this closing article I wish to review an old truth which from its very familiarity we are apt to forget. America is not only the land of democracy, but the land of the free; and so long as this is true its future is secure, but no longer. We are apt to underrate the value of our inheritance from the fathers because it has always been our unquestioned possession. Where the sun is always shining, men forget that it is in the heavens. Those who have always lived in a free land forget what it would be to live under a tyranny, and how quickly such a tyranny could blight every fair prospect. I can do nothing more important than to remind my younger readers that with a great price they have obtained their freedom, that it is an inheritance born of centuries of struggle, of millions of conflict in many garia who has been drawn as a soldier, but has conscientious scruples against serving. Because of these and his objection to military duty he has been thrown into prison, his health is broken and if he ever gets out he will be a wreck of his former self. Still another Bulgarian whom I recently saw in Sophia had just been summoned to answer for having escaped the universal draft by going to America when a boy, years ago. He had in the meantime graduated at Harvard college, had become a scholar, a poet, and a speaker of marked force; but on his return to his native land, which he had hoped to benefit by devoting himself to uplifting her, he is confronted by this menace which hangs over every male child born in the countries of great standing armies, and must either waste years of his life in serving in the ranks, or else pay a ruinous fine. AMERICANIZING THE WORLD. These concrete cases show what it is to live in a land that is not a land of the free, and indicates the priceless value of our liberties. These cases, too, show another reason for the tremendous pull which the magnet, America, exerts on the rest of the earth, and accounts in no small manner for what Mr. Stead calls the "Americanization of the world," an "Americanization" in which the free institutions of Canada have their share as well as the free institutions of the United States. The conclusion, then, of this series of articles concerning America and the rest of the world may be summoned up in a sentence or two. We have some things to learn and some things to teach; to shut our eyes to the lessons that others teach, and merely to let the eagle scream, is to become a race LOCAL JOTTINGS OF INTEREST Valuable Maps Secretary of State Curry has issued a sheet of maps that is of great value. It consists of six outline maps of the state done in colors showing all political subdivisions. It presents clearly the senatorial, congressional, railroad, equalization and assembly districts. It also contains a diagram of San Francisco showing the senatorial, assembly and congressional districts lying within that county. These diagram maps were compiled by Mr. Curry, and are accurate and valuable. They will prove great conveniences. At a glance they disclose the boundaries of all the political districts of the state. Mr. Curry has our thanks for his kindness. Sugar Campaign The Chino sugar factory will begin the campaign on Saturday next August 2d. Beet slicing will continue until December. Harvest began on Monday in the districts of Los Angeles and Orange counties. The beets in these counties are earlier than on the Chino ranch, and will be fit for harvest generally before the Chino beets. Last week the machinery and pipes were thoroughly tested and every irregularity corrected. Cards were sent out notifying all employees when to report for work, and there will be no recall of that notice. Mr. Hache, agricultural superintendent, went over all fields and reported them in good condition. Republican Caucus A caucus of Republicans of West An- We are apt to underrate the value of our inheritance from the fathers because it has always been our unquestioned possession. Where the sun is always shining, men forget that it is in the heavens. Those who have always lived in a free land forget what it would be to live under a tyranny, and how quickly such a tyranny could blight every fair prospect. I can do nothing more important than to remind my younger readers that with a great price they have obtained their freedom, that it is an inheritance born of centuries of struggle, of millenniums of conflict in many lands, of the mass against the class, of freedom and the spirit of democracy against privilege and caste, and that, even after all these centuries, this common right of every human being is recognized only in a few favored lands. THE RULE OF THE TURK. Sometimes I hear a man speak lightly of this heritage of every American, and it makes me shudder. "If this measure does not prevail," said a fanatic reformer the other day, speaking of some ephemeral reform he was advocating, "I would rather live under the yoke of the Turk." And his words were received with "loud applause" by his equally fanatic audience. Of course he did not know what the rule of the Turk is; if he had, he would not have spoken of it so flippantly. A young friend of mine who lives in Macedonia could enlighten him. This man's father was the chief man in a Macedonian community, the "mayor" of the little town, as we would say. An enemy conceived a grudge against the family for some reason, perhaps because it was somewhat more prosperous than its neighbors; and this enemy denounced the family to the Turkish authorities, and accused it of being connected with the Macedonian committee of revolutionists, which was far from being the truth. But to get at the truth is the smallest concern of Turkish officials, and soon the father of my friend received a visit from half a dozen officials. Supposing it to be a friendly visit, and accepting it as a mark of honor, my friend's father ordered a feast to be prepared, and sent his son, who had some reputation as a cook, to prepare it. The best chickens were killed, the choicest vegetables gathered, and the family stores drawn upon to an unlimited extent. The officers enjoyed their feast apparently, and did full justice to it, and then rewarded their hosts by pointing their loaded revolvers at them, and coolly informing the father and three sons that they were all prisoners. Without any further explanation the officers marched them over rough and dangerous roads to a prison far away from their home, and there, without trial or process of law or pretense of justice, waited for their prisoners to buy their escape. For many weeks and months those official robbers held them with perfect freedom from punishment by any higher power. The conclusion, then, of this series of articles concerning America and the rest of the world may be summoned up in a sentence or two. We have some things to learn and some things to teach; to shut our eyes to the lessons that others teach, and merely to let the eagle scream, is to become a race of conceited bigots; and a continental bigot is the worst of all, for there is more room for his bigotry and conceit to swell. But, if we have much to learn, we have more to teach, and the best thing we can give the world is the example of a free, democratic God-fearing people that shackles and throttles the military spirit which has the Old World in its grasp, and gives free play to the full development of every man according to his own chosen lines of activity and usefulness. Thus will America continue to lead the world and teach the world, to be hope, in centuries to come, of unborn generations. San Bernardino People Kick Riverside Enterprise From the newspaper comment it would seem that the people of San Bernardino county are not very well pleased with the Kelly-Kendall program for "fixing" the delegations to the state and district conventions and arranging them to be used for personal political ends more than as an expression of popular wishes. The Redlands Review has published a strong editorial denduncuing the scheme which has been copied approvingly by a number of the papers with remarks of their own emphasizing the revolt. The nomination of a ticket to be voted for all over the county says the Review giving Needles and Barstow and Ontario a chance to say who shall go from Redlands is not right. It is fully understood that such a nomination is equivalent to an outright appointment. And the appointment of delegates by any fifty men, when almost as many thousand should have a voice in their selection is a "push" method which should not be countenanced. Speaking further of the Kelly program, the Review says: The men who did it were themselves ashamed of it. They wanted to appoint the delegates to the state convention, because they were afraid their plans might go wrong if they left the matter to the public, and yet they tried to hide the fact that they practically did appoint these delegates by throwing over their action the filmsiest kind of a subterfuge in the shape of a "nomination to be ratified at the primaries." They were not allowed to appoint straight out. That thing was once done by the Republicans in this state and it raised such a howl of protest that it was never attempted again. The American voter will not "stand for" that sort of a proposition. The Review does not think it is the right thing to throw that one-armed veteran, Truman Reeves, out in the cold, and that is exactly what Monday's work may mean. It does not mean that Mr. Reeves will surely be traded off, because such action may not be for the tremendous pull which the magnet, America, exerts on the rest of the earth, and accounts in no small manner for what Mr. Stead calls the "Americanization of the world," an "Americanization" in which the free institutions of Canada have their share as well as the free institutions of the United States. The conclusion, then, of this series of articles concerning America and the rest of the world may be summoned up in a sentence or two. We have some things to learn and some things to teach; to shut our eyes to the lessons that others teach, and merely to let the eagle scream, is to become a race of conceited bigots; and a continental bigot is the worst of all, for there is more room for his bigotry and conceit to swell. But, if we have much to learn, we have more to teach, and the best thing we can give the world is the example of a free, democratic God-fearing people that shackles and throttles the military spirit which has the Old World in its grasp, and gives free play to the full development of every man according to his own chosen lines of activity and usefulness. Thus will America continue to lead the world and teach the world, to be hope, in centuries to come, of unborn generations. San Bernardino People Kick Riverside Enterprise From the newspaper comment it would seem that the people of San Bernardino county are not very well pleased with the Kelly-Kendall program for "fixing" the delegations to the state and district conventions and arranging them to be used for personal political ends more than as an expression of popular wishes. The Redlands Review has published a strong editorial denduncuing the scheme which has been copied approvingly by a number of the papers with remarks of their own emphasizing the revolt. The nomination of a ticket to be voted for all over the county says the Review giving Needles and Barstow and Ontario a chance to say who shall go from Redlands is not right. It is fully understood that such a nomination is equivalent to an outright appointment. And the appointment of delegates by any fifty men, when almost as many thousand should have a voice in their selection is a "push" method which should not be countenanced. Speaking further of the Kelly program, the Review says: The men who did it were themselves ashamed of it. They wanted to appoint the delegates to the state convention because they were afraid their plans might go wrong if they left the matter to the public, and yet they tried to hide the fact that they practically did appoint these delegates by throwing over their action the filmsiest kind of a subterfuge in the shape of a "nomination to be ratified at the primaries." They were not allowed to appoint straight out. That thing was once done by the Republicans in this state and it raised such a howl of protest that it was never attempted again. The American voter will not "stand for" that sort of a proposition. The Review does not think it is the right thing to throw that one-armed veteran, Truman Reeves, out in the cold, and that is exactly what Monday's work may mean. It does not mean that Mr. Reeves will surely be traded off, because such action may not be for the tremendous pull which the magnet, America, exerts on the rest of the earth, and accounts in no small manner for what Mr. Stead calls the "Americanization of the world," an "Americanization" in which the free institutions of Canada have their share as well as the free institutions of the United States. The conclusion, then, of this series of articles concerning America and the rest of the world may be summoned up in a sentence or two. We have some things to learn and some things to teach; to shut our eyes to the lessons that others teach, and merely to let the eagle scream, is to become a race of conceited bigots; and a continental bigot is the worst of all, for there is more room for his bigotry and conceit to swell. But, if we have much to learn, we have more to teach, and the best thing we can give the world is the example of a free, democratic God-fearing people that shackles and throttles the military spirit which has the Old World in its grasp, and gives free play to the full development of every man according to his own chosen lines of activity and usefulness. Thus will America continue to lead the world and teach the world, to be hope, in centuries to come, of unborn generations. San Bernardino People Kick Riverside Enterprise From the newspaper comment it would seem that the people of San Bernardino county are not very well pleased with the Kelly-Kendall program for "fixing"the delegations to the state and district conventions and arranging them to be used for personal political ends more than as an expression of popular wishes. The Redlands Review has published a strong editorial denduncuing the scheme which has been copied approvingly by a number ofthe papers with remarks of their own emphasizing the revolt. The nomination of a ticket to be voted for all over the county says the Review giving Needles and Barstow and Ontario a chance to say who shall go from Redlands is not right. It is fully understood that such a nomination is equivalent to an outright appointment. And the appointment of delegates by any fifty men, when almost as many thousand should have a voice in their selection is a "push" method which should not be countenanced. Speaking further of the Kelly program, the Review says: The men who did it were themselves ashamed of it. They wanted to appointthe delegatestothestateconventionbecausetheywereafraidtheplansmightgowrongiftheyleftthemattertothepublic,andyettheytrueltyhidethelacthefactualthattheypracticallydidappointthedelegatesbythrowingovertheiactionthefilmsiestkindofasubterfugeinthenshapeofa“nominationtoberatifiedattheprimaries." They were not allowed to appoint straight out. That thing was once done by the Republicans in this state and it raised such a howl of protest that it was never attempted again. The American voter will not "stand for" that sort of a proposition. The Review does not think it is the right thing to throw that one-armed veteran, Truman Reeves, out in the cold, and that is exactly what Monday's work may mean. It does not mean that Mr. Reeves will surely be traded off, because such action may not be fortheremendouspullwhichthemagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertsontherestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnosmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestofTheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestofTheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestofTheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestofTheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,andaccountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,Americaexertson-therestoftheearth,和accountsinnoSmallmannerforwhatMr.Stead称的,themagnet,AmerICAEXERSISTONTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHELAWYRARESTOFTHENOWINGFROMTHENOWINGFROMTHENOWINGFROMTHENOWINGFROMTHENOWINGFROMTHENOWINGFROMTHENOWING 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ALSSELLeALSSELLeALSSELLeAlSSELLeAlSSELLeAlSSELLeAlSSELLeAlSSELLeAlSSELLeAlSSSLSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelLeAlSSSelleAlSSSelleAlSSSelleAlSSSelleAlSSSelleAlSSSelleAlSSSelleAlSSSelleAl their least apparently, and did full justice to it, and then rewarded their hosts by pointing their loaded revolvers at them, and coolly informing the father and three sons that they were all prisoners. Without any further explanation the officers marched them over rough and dangerous roads to a prison far away from their home, and there, without trial or process of law or pretense of justice, waited for their prisoners to buy their escape. For many weeks and months those official robbers held them with perfect freedom from punishment by any higher power. The prisoners were almost starved, merely enough bread and water being given them to keep the breath of life fluttering, so that the spoilsmen should not lose their booty. My friend, a tall, strapping, hand-some young fellow, with the lusty appetite of youth, became weak and emaciated. He could stand the slow process of starvation no longer; and, going to the barred window of their prison hut, he shook it and bellowed so for bread that his captors at last, tired of his noise, gave him a little more. After a long time, when the father had well-night died from the treatment he had received, their property gone, their health wrecked, their home ruined, they were released, and learned that they had been denounced to the authorities by an utterly unworthy renegade, who had not received from the mayor's hands the office that he desired. Such hideous revenge is not only possible in any land where the liberties of the people are not safeguarded, but it of almost daily occurrence. Yet we sometimes speak and think lightly of our liberties, which in the slow evolution of the ages have become the inheritance of the Anglo-Saxon race, as if they were a matter of small concern. FINLAND'S SAD CASE. In Finland, today, dirty Russian soldiers are quartered in the beautiful, clean barracks built by the French people for their own home guard, while their own sons are conscripted and sent into remote sections of the Czar's dominions to live for many years, and to come back, if they ever do come back, thoroughly Russianized, the best years of their lives behind them, and homes and sympathies forever sundered. Yet there is no redress and no alternative except exile and the knot. I know another young man in Bulgaria to hide the fact that they practically did appoint these delegates by throwing over their action the fittest kind of a subterfuge in the shape of a "nomination to be ratified at the primaries." They were not allowed to appoint straight out. That thing was once done by the Republicans in this state and it raised such a howl of protest that it was never attempted again. The American voter will not "stand for" that sort of a proposition. The Review does not think it is the right thing to throw that one-armed veteran, Truman Reeves, out in the cold, and that is exactly what Monday's work may mean. It does not mean that Mr. Reeves will surely be traded off, because such action may not be necessary, but it does mean that Mr. Reeves will be thrown down hard if he has to be done. It is understood already that the delegation is to be traded to Senator Smith of Kern in return for some Kern county votes which Mr. Smith says he can deliver to Mr. Kendall. Mr. Smith does not know anything about the needs of this end of this congressional district, but that does not matter provided he has some votes to swap. It Dazzles the World No discovery in medicine has ever created one quarter of the excitement that has been caused by Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. Its severest tests have been on hopeless victims of consumption, pneumonia, hemorrhage, pleurisy and bronchitis, thousands of whom it has restored to perfect health. For coughs, colds, hay fever, asthma, croup, hoarseness and whooping-cough it is the quickest, surest cure in the world. It is sold by all druggists, who guarantee satisfaction or refund money. Large bottles 50c and $1. Trial bottles free at J. P Hatzfeld's. Use Allen's Foot-Ease in Your Gloves. A lady writes: "I shake Allen's Foot-Ease into my gloves and rub a little on my hands. It saves my gloves by absorbing perspiration. It is a most dainty foilet powder." We invite the attention of physicians and nurses to the absolute purity of Allen's Foot-Ease. Dr. W. C. Abbott, editor of the Chicago Clinic says: "It is a grand preparation! I am using it constantly in my own practice." All drug and shoe stores sell it. 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, New York Go to E. W. McCollum for bicycles, bicycle supplies and bicycle repairing. Our repair shop is in charge of one of the best bicycle men on the coast. Try us on repairs. Sporting goods of all kinds, baseball goods, lawn tennis goods, footballs, boxing-gloves and ping-pong, the latest fad. Santa Ana Steam Laundry Agency 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 6 o'clock. E. W. McCollum. Harvesters have been hard work for several weeks throughout La Habra valley and foothill sections. F. Tuffree finished heading 300 acres of grain for his brothers on the Borromeo ranch, which is being threshed. This season's crop is heavy, running from 100 to 115 pounds to the sack. Many wagons have been busy all week hauling the sacked grain to local store-houses. Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Benchley, accompanied by Will and Frank Benchley, Mr. and Mrs. George Amerige and Archer Fay, left last week for a month's vacation at the head of Kern river, in Tulare county. DeWitt Montgomery, who was expected to take charge of the Placentia school next term, arrived home this week from San Francisco. He has decided to return to Gridley, where he has accepted the position of principal of the high school at a better salary than his home school offered. Mrs. Condez, mother of eight small children, all of whom were living in a tent on the Toombs place in Placentia, died last week and was buried in the Catholic cemetery. The father is doing what little he can for the motherless children, but they are wrathfully poor and there is some talk of the local people extending aid to the children. STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, LUCAS COUNTY. FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F.J Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toombs county and state atoresaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE Hundred Dollar for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence this 6th day of December A.D. A.W.GLEASON. Nolary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F.J Chenney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists. 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best.