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anaheim-gazette 1904-10-13

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Anaheim VOLUME XXXIV. Started Up The latest improved Electric Power Clipper at Palace Livery Stable J. Hahn, Prop. Tel. Main 97. Los Angeles St., Anaheim PETERS' DIAMOND BRAND SHOES O.S.DAVIS DISTRIBUTER ANAHEIM. Agent for Luzon Water Proof and Orchard Chief Shoes New Crop of Rubber Boots Just Arrived FOREIGN POLICY OF PARTY NEITHER SECTIONAL NO RACIAL IN GENEROUS DESIGN Senator Fairbanks Refers to Reco of Republican Party in His Letter of Acceptance The foreign policy of the admini tration has been conservative, just an firm, and has made for the advan cement of peace. We favor the adjustment of inter national disagreements by appeal to re sion, rather than to arms. The development of the country du ing the last forty-four years is a con plate vindication of the virtue and eff eacy of a protective system. The Republican party is direct an rational. It does not strike down good and bad alike. It is as insistent upon the protection of capital employed in wholesale enterprise as in preventing its use in contravention of the public interests. We should not relax our vigilance in upholding the integrity of our currency so long as a considerable element o our country are at war with it. The President's course in Panam merits the most generous approvals. He dealt with a delicate and difficult situation clearly within our national rights. Luzon Water Proof and Orchard Chief Shoes New Crop of Rubber Boots Just Arrived Cheap for Cash at DAVIS THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ANAHEIM OFFICERS: W. F. BOTSFORD, PRESIDENT JOHN HARTUNG, VICE PRESIDENT AND CASHIER FRANK SHANLEY 2ND VICE-PRES. O. ZEUS, ASSISTANT CASHIER DIRECTORS: PETER WEISEL, A. S. BRADFORD, FRANK SHANLEY. Drafts sold direct on all European Countries Palace Meat Market W. E. HOUK, Proprietor. Beef, Mutton, Pork, Fresh and Salted Meats, Hams, Bacon, Sausage, Lard. Prompt attention given to all orders. Telenhone Main 5 CENTER MARKET Carries a choice line of Fresh and Salt Meats Phue Main 123 Center Street, ANAHEIM C. F. MARTIN, Proprietor The Republican party is direct and rational. It does not strike down good and bad alike. It is as insistent upon the protection of capital employed in wholesale enterprise as in preventing its use in contravention of the public interests. We should not relax our vigilance in upholding the integrity of our currency so long as a considerable element of our country are at war with it. The President's course in Panama merits the most generous approval. He dealt with a delicate and difficult situation clearly within our national rights. The administration in the Phillipines has been dictated by a broad sense of duty. It has not been subversive of our national ideals, but has been in conformity with the best tradition of the republic. Republican policies are as broad as our country's needs. They are neither sectional nor racial in their generous design. PRAISE FOR MR. ROOSEVELT. The convention did well in its hearty commendation of the administration of President Roosevelt. This is sharply challenged by the opposition. We accept the issue with confidence. The President assumed the responsibilities of Chief Executive with a pledge to carry out the policy of his beloved and lamented predecessor. He kept the Cabinet of President McKinley, composed of statesmen of eminent ability, in whom the country placed entire confidence. He carried forward the uncompleted work faithfully and successfully. The pledge has been kept scruppely; the promise has been fulfilled. Peace and good order have been maintained. Domestic and foreign trade have increased and relations of amity have been preserved with foreign powers. The foreign policy of the administration has been conservative, just and firm, and has made for the advancement of peace. Time and events have given us a larger place in international affairs. While we have enlarged our foreign commerce, we have increased our prestige abroad, not with the sword, but with the peaceful agency of enlightened diplomacy. Thirty treaties have been concluded and proclaimed and stand to the credit of the administration. Some of these are of far-reaching importance. Among the number are the Hay-Pauncefote treaty, superseding the Clayton-Bulwer convention, which stood in the way of the construction of an Isthmian canal: the Panama Canal treaty, the Alaskan boundary treaty and commercial treaties with China and with Cuba. Events in the far East suggest the wisdom and necessity of a continuance of the present foreign policy. We have maintained exact neutrality between Russia and Japan. At the beginning of the war between them they assented to the suggestion made by the administration, limiting the zone of hostilities. This tends to preserve the open door in the Orient, so important and so much desired in the expansion of our commerce. It is the policy of the administration, predicated upon the soundest Carries a choice line of Fresh and Salt Meats Phne Main 123 Center Street, ANAHEIM C. F. MARTIN, Proprietor Anaheim Bakery, Peter Syre, Proprietor Fresh Bread, Cakes and Pies Confectionery, Etc., Wedding Cakes a Specialty LOS ANGELES and CYPRESS ST. ANAHEIM, CAL. ...Bird V. Beebe. Agent for Studebaker Carriages and Wagons, Oliver and Canton Clipper Plows, Killefer, Canton and Iron Age Cultivators, Harness, Robes and Whips. AGENT FOR Cleveland, Columbia, Crescent Bicycles ANAHEIM, CALIORNIA. Heim Weekly Gazette ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1904. REIGN POLICY OF PARTY HER SECTIONAL NORTHCIAL IN GENEROUS DESIGN Fairbanks Refers to Record Republican Party in His Letter of Acceptance Foreign policy of the administration has been conservative, just and has made for the advance peace. For the adjustment of internal agreements by appeal to rearer than to arms. Development of the country durest forty-four years is a complication of the virtue and effluvious system. Republican party is direct and it does not strike down good alike. It is as insistent upon action of capital employed in enterprise as in preventing contravention of the public would not relax our vigilance in the integrity of our currency as a considerable element of duty are at war with it. President's course in Panama is most generous approval, with a delicate and difficult clearly within our nationalted to arbitration. The administration of President McKinley did well to aid in the creation of The Hague tribunal, and President Roosevelt is entitled to great credit for being the first to invoke its jurisdiction in the settlement of the Plous Fund cases. Our relations with the world were never better. We have avoided all entangling alliances, and, in the language of the eminent Secretary of State, "we are without an ally and without an enemy." GOOD POINTS ON IRRIGATION. The application of the proceeds of public land sales to the reclamation of irrigable portions of our arid and semi-arid public domain meets my cordial approval. Through the enlightened policy thus established under the present administration, the long-deferred hopes of the struggling settlers of the great arid and semi-arid West will be realized in the up-building of substantial communities in places hitherto waste or comparatively unproductive. At the same time, a vast area of the public domain will be opened, upon which the industrious home seekers, now residing in overcrowded Eastern centers, may find homes. The sum of more than $20,000,000 now available in the reclamation fund, to which additions are constantly being made, guarantees under wise administration great progress in the work of irrigation and the settlement of the arid region within a few years. THE FARMER A TRUE AMERICAN TYPE Theodore Roosevelt's Estimates Truthfully Given—Man on the Farm an Ideal Citizen. GET IN THE RACE NOW And Win One of the Seven Prizes--All Worth Striving For Conditions of Prize Contest Every new subscription to the Gazette for one year at $1.50 entitles the contestant to 200 votes; on old subscriptions or those in arrears, a vote for every cent turned in will be allowed. Vote will also be counted on new advertising not under contract at present at the rate of a cent a vote. Job printing will likewise be included on the same basis as advertising. The prizes will be classed and awarded as follows: 1. To the contestant receiving the greatest number of votes during the term of the contest will be awarded the elegant $50 Regent piano, an instrument which no one should hesitate to strive for. 2. It has been decided by the management of the contest to change the Salt Lake City trip from the most popular young ladies employe to the contestant receiving the second greatest number of votes during the contest, or giving the contestant the privilege o THE FARMER A TRUE AMERICAN TYPE Theodore Roosevelt’s Estimates Truthfully Given—Man on the Farm an Ideal Citizen. It remains true now as it always has been that in the last resort the country districts are those in which we are surrey to find the old American spirit, the old American habits of thought and ways of living. Conditions have changed in the country far less than they have changed in the cities, and in consequence there has been little breaking away from the methods of life which have produced the great majority of the leaders of the Republic in the past. Almost all of our great Presidents have been brought up in the country and most of them worked hard on the farms in their youth, and got their early mental training in the healthy democracy of farm life.—Roosevelt at Bangor, Me., August 27, 1902. The countryman—the man on the farm, more than any other of our citizens today, is called upon continually to exercise the qualities which we like to think of as typical of the United States throughout its history—the qualities of rugged independence, masterful resolution, and individual energy and resourcefulness. He works hard (for which no man is to be pitied), and often he lives hard (which may not be pleasant); but his life is passed in healthy surroundings, surroundings which tend to develop a fine type of citizenship. In the country, moreover, the conditions are fortunately such as to allow a closer touch between man and man, too often, we find to be the case in the city. Men feel more vividly the underlying sense of brotherhood, of community of interest—Bangor, Me., August 27, 1902. The man who tills his own farm, whether on the prairie or in the woodland the man who grows what we eat and the raw material which is worked up into what we wear, still exists more nearly under the conditions which obtained when the “embattled farmers” of 76 made this country a nation than of any others of our people.—Roosevelt at Sioux Falls, S. Dak., April 6, 1903. The true welfare of the nation is dissolubly bound up with the welfare of the farmers and the wage worker—of the man who tills the soil and the mechanic, the handicraftsman the laborer. If we can insure the prosperity of these two classes we need not trouble ourselves about the prosperity of the rest, for that will follow as a matter of course.—Roosevelt, at opening of the Pan-American Exposition, May 20, 1901. The success of the capitalist and eslarity, but a plain business proposition. Every new subscription to the Gazette for one year at $1.50 entitles the contestant to 200 votes; on old subscriptions or those in arrears, a vote for every cent turned in will be allowed. Votes will also be counted on new advertising not under contract at present at the rate of a cent a vote. Job printing will likewise be included on the same basis as advertising. The prizes will be classed and awarded as follows: 1. To the contestant receiving the greatest number of votes during the term of the contest will be awarded the elegant $500 Regent piano, an instrument which no one should hesitate to strive for. 2. It has been decided by the management of the contest to change the Salt Lake City trip from the most popular young lady employe to the contest receiving the second greatest number of votes during the contest, or giving the contestant the privilege of choosing between this trip and the Woodbury business college scholarship. This change is made in order to avoid confusion among the contestants. 3. A scholarship of the Brownsberger Business College of Los Angeles, will be presented to the contestant bringing in the most new yearly subscriptions to the Gazette. 4. The contestant receiving the second greatest number of all votes cast during the term of the contest will be given their choice between a Woodbury business college scholarship and a trip to Salt Lake City and return: 5. A trip to the Grand Canyon of the Colorado over the Santa Fe route, will be awarded to the contestant having the third greatest number of votes. 6. The trip to San Francisco and return via the Southern Pacific will go to the one receiving the fourth greatest number of votes. CUT OUT GOUPON And bring it in with a New Subscription and it entitles you to 100 VOTES In addition to the amount of the subscription. This coupon will run for only a limited time. The Gazette's prize contest is beginning to arouse interest and enthusiasm at a rapid rate. All the contestants have started out in earnest soliciting subscriptions 'and' are meeting with very encouraging results. A number of new subscribers have been added to the Gazette's already large subscription list. It will continue to increase every day of the contest. The beautiful $500 Regent piano, furnished by Fitzgerald Music & Piano Co., of Los Angeles, has been placed in one of the handsome and artistically decorated windows of Stern Bros. store for inspection by the general public. It continues to attract the attention and admiration of all passersby. The fortunate contest receiving the greatest number of votes will be awarded this elegant instrument, pretty cover and stool. All will be delivered at home of the party with a clear title to same absolutely free. The contest will not be unduly prolonged. It is the intention of the management to draw, the contest to a close sometime during December, which will be a very appropriate time to award the various prizes. Now is time for the contestants to put their friends to work in their behalf. Miss Amelia Backs has entered contest this week. Miss Backs, regarding what a grand opportunity is off for getting such a valuable piano as Regent, for nothing more than an fort, concluded to take advantage of the exceptional proposition. Miss Backs there are six contestants in race. A prize will be awarded according to their standing at the end of the contest. Contestants getting merchants business men to sign up for future plying are entitled to the full amount votes. In this manner, the contest should be able to secure a large number of votes easily. The issuing of tickets to merchants has been declared off for numerous reasons. One of principal reasons is that it would not be fair to our contestants, therefore we have decided not to issue tickets good for votes given away by the merchants to their customers as stated in last week's per. It is the aim and intention of management to conduct the contest as fair, a basis as possible to each one of the contestants. Any of the contestants whose names appear below are at liberty to investigate their vote at any time, but may not be given information as to how rival stands, except as the ballots are counted and the result published each week. The votes of all the contestants have taken a considerable jump from their standing at last week, and will give each week. It will also be noticed that the position of the contestants has changed somewhat. Watch this video increase from now on. There is plenty of time for any one enterer in contests who desires to do so but it better come to know now wherethe contestants haven't so many vole- A Matter of Health There is a quality in Royal Baking Powder which makes the food more digestible and wholesome. This peculiarity of Royal has been noted by physicians, and they accordingly endorse and recommend it. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. Gazette. 13. 1904. NUMBER 51 HONEST, RIGHT, IS ROOSEVELT NOT REGARDED AS "UNSAFE" BY THE PEOPLE Ringing Words of Senator Platt of Connecticut at State Convention — Beloved by the Nation Senator O. H. Platt, in his speech as temporary chairman of the Connecticut Republican state convention on September 13th, said: Theodore Roosevelt was not nominated as the standard-bearer of the Republican party either by the efforts of designing and managing politicians or to please capitalistic Wall street. He was nominated in obedience to the express will of the people—nominated with the accclaim of the people. No man can ever be nominated for President of the United States by acclamation in whom the people do not heartily, thoroughly and enthusiastically believe. It only waits for November to show the overwhelming extent of this confidence. Sneers will not belittle him, denunciations will not frighten him, for he has already won his place in a safe and sure stronghold—the hearts and homes of the American people. He came to the discharge of presidential duties under most fearful and trying circumstances. He has trod The Weekly Gazette. ESTABLISHED 1870 SUBSCRIPTION 1.50 Per Year Six months... $1.00 Three months... 50cts Pavable invariably in advance. Transient advertising $1 per inch per month The Gazette is issued every Thursday morning. Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter. RAILWAY TIME TABLE. Time of Arrival and Departure of Trains. June 8, 1904. SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD. Trains on the Southern Pacific pass Anaheim as follows: To Los Angeles. Daily... 7:52 am Dally... 9:49 am Daily... 10:52 am Dally... 10:10 am Daily... 4:06 pm Dally... 6:14 pm Pass Loara Station: To Los Angeles. Daily... 7:56 am Dally... 9:45 am Daily... 10:56am Dally... 10:06 am Daily... 4:10 pm Dally... 6:10 pm LOS ALAMITOS TRAINS. Leave Anaheim ... Arrive Anaheim ... Daily*... 9:35 am Daily*... 8:00 am Mon.Wed.Fri.2:37 pm * Except Sunday. TRAINS TO NEWPORT BEACH Leave Anaheim ... Arrive at Newport Daily... 6:14 pm Daily... 6:53 pm Leave Newport ... Arrive Anaheim Daily... 7:05 am Daily... 7:53 am Santa Fe Time Table Effective June 11, 1904. Trains on the Santa Fe Route leave Anaheim for points named as follows: To Los Angeles-7:55 am. 9:50 am.. 12:00pm.. 5:20 pm. To San Diego-9:20 a.m. 2:50 m. To Santa Ana-9:20 am.; 2:50 pm., 5:54 p.m. To Riverside and San Bernardino-*11:35 am.; 5:54 p.m. To Redlands-*11:35 am. To San Jacinto and Hemet-*11:35 am. To Escondido-*2:50 pm. We Print Anything from a visiting card to a full-sheet poster, and have a complete line of New Job Type at The Gazette, The Up-To-Date Job office in town, with which to do the work in a satisfactory manner. Gazette for one year at $1.50 old subscriptions or those in will be allowed. Votes not under contract at prescribing will likewise be in order to avoid confusion. The prizes will be classed by the greatest number of votes awarded the elegant $500 no one should hesitate to management of the contest to the most popular young lady the second greatest number of contestant the privilege of Woodbury business college in order to avoid confusion. Roger Business College of Los Angeles bringing in the most second greatest number of all that will be given their choice of scholarship and a trip to Colorado over the Santa contest having the third return via the Southern Pa. fourth greatest number of votes easily. A prize will be awarded each contestant getting merchants or less men to sign up for future printable entitled to the full amount in In this manner the contestants will be able to secure a large numb-votes easily. Issuing of tickets to merchants been declared off for numerous reasons. One of the principal reasons it would not be fair to outside contestants, therefore we have decided issue tickets good for votes to be away by the merchants to thgir owners as stated in last week's parit is the aim and intention of the element to conduct the contest on a basis as possible to each one of contestants. Of the contestants whose names below are at liberty to investi-lheir vote at any time, but none are given information as to how a stands, except as the ballots are used and the result published each vote of all the contestants have a considerable jump from their voting of last week, and will grow week. It will also be noticed that position of the contestants have and somewhat. Watch the votes here now on. He is plenty of time for any one to the contest who desires to do so, he is better to come in now while contestants haven't so many votes with the acclaim of the people. No man can ever be nominated for President of the United States by acclamation in whom the people do not heartily, thoroughly and enthusiastically believe. It only waits for November to show the overwhelming extent of this confidence. Sneers will not belittle him, denunciations will not frighten him, for he has already won his place in a safe and sure stronghold—the hearts and homes of the American people. He came to the discharge of presidential duties under most fearful and trying circumstances. He has trod where the wisest and bravest might have feared to tread, In the footsteps of the illustrious and beloved McKinley. He has gone forward along the pathway of duty without hesitation, without flinching, strong in rectitude, honest in purpose, with lofty courage and unimpeachable wisdom. If the Democratic party chooses to make Roosevelt, the man, the issue in this campaign, we welcome that issue without fear. Every citizen of the United States, from the professional politician to the schoolboy in his teens, knows that in the heart of Theodore Roosevelt, the President, there is one overshadowing purpose, and that is to do what Roosevelt, the man, believes to be honest, right and true. What has he done that was not honest and right and true? In the interest of all that makes for American honor, let us have a President who has but one guiding principle, and that to do what he believes to be right, for the honor of his country, for the upholding of its people, for the glory of its name. Would they have the people think him unsafe? No man is unsafe whose life is clean and pure and noble, and who walks in one path only, the path where duty seems to him to point. In all that represents American manhood, American character, American programs, American welfare, Theodore Roosevelt stands forth today our most conspicuous example. It was because the Republicans of the United States recognized this that they demanded with one voice that he should be called to further duty and further service, in that most exalted of all places, in that most responsible and wearing of all positions, the presidency of the United States. Unsafe? Who have been his advisers? Who stand as his supporters and admirers? Let me name three of them—three whom all men honor, all men trust—Elihu Root, John Hay, William H.Taft. Is the man unsafe who selects such advisers? It matters little that the man who has figured as chief adviser of the Democratic candidate has advertised that he is now playing a farewell engagement. Even Democrats would be glad to know that their candidate, if elected, would find as worthy and capable advisers. Unsafe? The man the American people want for President is the man to whom evasion is unknown, who does not hesitate until he is lost, who does not parley with opportunity, but who does the right thing at the right time, and does it with his might. Such a men of oak” are men in health, men whose are made of the sound materials. childhood is the time to lay foundation for a sturdy cone that will last for years. Lytt’s Emulsion is the right mitt’s Emulsion stimulates growing powers of children, them build a firm constitution for a sturdy construction. Send for free sample. TT & BOWNE, Chemists, 5 Pearl Street, New York, and $1.00; all druggists. French Walnut Crop Report of Victor H. Morgan, Vice Consul-General, Marseilles, Sept. 14th, 1904: Advices which have reached me indicate that this year’s walnut crop will be early, the fruit being already almost ripe. Its color, however, will depend upon weather conditions during the latter part of this month. While the kernels promise to be healthy, the total yield will be small, the prolonged dry weather having caused a great falling of the nuts. It is estimated that the total quantity available for exportation to the United States will not exceed 12,000 bales. At this time these are expected to be procurable, at points of cultivation, at from 80 francs ($15.44) to 85 francs ($16.40) per hundred kilos (220 lbs.) The crop of small walnuts, on the other hand, will be abundant, and the “Chabertes” shelled are expected to open at 120 francs ($23.16) per 100 kilos (220 lbs) at place of growth. The following freight rates are quoted to me, on walnuts from this port to New York: Walnuts in shells, $8.51 per ton; walnuts, shelled, $7.50 per ton; Loading charges $0.193 per ton extra. Unsafe? The man the American people want for President is the man to whom evasion is unknown, who does not hesitate until he is lost, who does not parley with opportunity, but who does the right thing at the right time, and does it with his might. Such a man the Republican party presents in the person of President Roosevelt. Nor would we fail to commend as one worthy of enthusiastic support for the second place on our ticket, Senator Charles W. Fairbanks, a man of spotless character, in the prime of life, full of the vigor of matured manhood, with a record that vouches for his capacity to deal with whatever problem he may be called upon to solve. Able, judicious, forceful, beloved by the people of his own state and respected and trusted throughout the land. Like the Republican party, he faces the future, not the past. Nasal Catarrh quickly yields to treatment by Ely’s Cream Balm, which is agreeably aromatic. It is received through the nostrils, cleanses and heals the whole surface over which it diffuses itself. Druggists sell the 50c. size; Trial size by mail, 10 cents. Test it and you are sure to continue the treatment. Announcement. To accommodate those who are partial to the use of atomizers in applying liquids into the nasal passages for catarial troubles, the proprietors prepare Cream Balm in liquid form, which will be known as Ely’s Liquid Cream Balm. Price including the spraying tube is 75 cents. Druggists or by mail. The liquid form embodies the medicinal properties of the solid preparation.