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anaheim-gazette 1905-10-12

1905-10-12 · Anaheim Gazette · page 2 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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WALLOP BROTHERS Large White Beans 12lbs...25c Small " " 8 lbs...25c Pink Beans 8 lbs...25c Coil Oil 5 gal...55c Shoulders ...8c-10c California Cheese...121c Mixed Line 4 oz spices...5c Large Prunes 4lb...25c Small Prunes 10lbs...25c Pioneer Sapolio...6 for 25c Sunshine Cereal food...5c 11b pkg Russian tea, 50c, 4lb pkg Russian tea, 26c, regular 70c tea Sioux Soap 8 for 25c, regula Tom Boy Soap... Tar Soap... Poppy Milk, regular 15c, Diamond Brand Cream, 100c Kilfyre, regular $3 fire ex $1 50 Green Olives, A1... Mincemeat... Potted Chicken and Turkey Mixed fine Baking Powder (Regular 25c lines Regular 15c lines... We are now in our new room in the Odd Fellows building, and have an up-to-date stock of Groceries right prices. Malthoid Roofing Is backed by 21 years of successful experience In the manufacture of roofing material. It is made by the largest concerns in the country. FOR SALE AT L. E. MILLER' In the manufacture of roofing material. It is made by the largest concerns in the country. FOR SALE AT L. E. MILLER CENTER MARKET Carries a choice line of Fresh and Salt Meats Phne Main 123 Center Street, ANAHEIM MARTIN & KLEM Palace Meat Market F. W. FLEISCHMAN, Prop. Beef, Mutton, Pork, Fresh and Salt Meats, Hams, Bacon, Sausage, Prompt attention given to all orders. CITY MARKET In New Odd Fellow's block The Best of Fresh Meats Constantly on Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausage F. W. Fleischman, In New Odd Fellow's block The Best of Fresh Meats Constantly on Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausage F. W. Fleischman, Anaheim Beer on Tap THE PEERLESS A. FUHRBERG, Proprietor Fine Wines, and Cigars ANAHEIM, Cal BANNER WITH LESS WORK You can thoroughly clean your home and household utensils, including washing, at a cost of Ten cents a month. Send for free booklet THE J. K. ARMSBY COMPANY, SAN FRANCISCO BRO'S. IRRIGATION AND HOME BUILDING. A common and natural error of those interested in the great work of irrigation is the belief that there is little further need of popular instruction on the subject. The practical steps have been taken. The great campaign of education which those of us who were participants remember so well, the struggle to awaken and stir to activity the national sense of need of opportunity, has been carried to a successful close. The irrigation Act stands upon the statute books of the nation, and not a hand would be raised today to strike it thence. Subject only to such amendment as may render it more effective, it outlines a national policy that is to bless and fructify through generations. The splendid fund has been accumulated and additions to it are being made automatically through the wise provisions for its replenishment. The engineer corps are in the field, surveys are being made, dams are rising, ditches are being opened and already the wilderness is becoming a storehouse of natural treasure. What need, then, that the friends of irrigation should take note of the hour, should continue their efforts, should meet, as they have done today here, to take council together as if there were still a hostile or ignorant public sentiment of the west united across each $5,000 a year as a way to make the necessary effort to spread the facts abroad by the provision of institutions, studying the interests, studying the internal fate of the west, so means to increase the wealth, the popularity prosperity of the country to them, that irrigation from the sphere of the earth that of the men of affluent rose from the rank of an idealist's dream to the national policy undertakenance of and fortified by law. It would be strained had not now the interest in the working out of a decent scheme at whose presided and whose nurtured by their care. The work still to be done, a work that will prove its necessity as beneficence when all of gathered here have passed earth's activities, is the ted presentation of the gation, of the need of it unexplored possibilities to national growth visual life, until this made a permanent part mon stock of knowledge possession of a band or or a picked body of specialists, but as generalized as the familiar reaping that have been man since immemorial It is now used in the country. KILLER'S one of Salt Meats TIN & KLEMENT Market N, Prop. fish and Salted Sausage, Lard Telephone Main 5 RKET block constantly on Hand Sausage Prop. dams are rising, ditches are being opened and already the wilderness is becoming a storehouse of natural treasure. What need, then, that the friends of irrigation should take note of the hour, should continue their efforts, should meet, as they have done today here, to take council together as if there were still a hostile or ignorant public sentiment to conquer and a road to be hewn to the national desire? In truth, the work of education is just begun. How slow, how necessary it is, how fatal any intermission in the stress and purpose of it, we may see by a glance today at another section of the country where another subject holds every mind in thrall and thrills every heart with terror. Nothing has been more conclusively established, to the satisfactory of science and by undeniable tests than the fact that yellow fever is not a contagious disease; that it can be communicated from one person to another only by the carrier mosquito. Both the manner and the time of this demonstration were such as to strike with force the average common mind, to which the conclusions of science penetrate but slowly. The whole nation was interested in the sanitary redemption of the City of Havanna, brought under our control as one of the results of a war that smites upon the imagination as can no event less dramatic or universal. The skirmishers of the medical corps wore the clothes and slept in the beds of yellow fever victims with perfect immunity so long as they were protected by netting. Others, surrounded with every precaution, isolated from all possible contact with the disease, contracted it in a most virulent form when exposed to the mosquito infection alone. The case was closed; and the sole method by which yellow fever can be carried from point to point and from individual to individual has been as conclusively pointed out as any facts tion to national growth, vidual life, until this made a permanent part mon stock of knowledge possession of a band or or a picked body of so specialists, but as generalized as the familiar reaping that have been man since immemorial to repeat, reiterate, rebeat in upon the slow face of the popular imagination the value and portance of this work conventions as this means that they retain their relationship. And that we full value for our ancient truths and tion to the life of today stantly recurring assaual difference and imperfusion are indispensable. THE RECLAMATION OF O Of all the actual activities of our time, o aims that workers and their kind have in view take precedence of the of those vast spaces of now closed to produce None is better worthy and resources set at We are already entered of the severely practicalulative rage has wrought measure of disenchanted dustries and ideas are nowed by a people g cautious and skeptical. block constantly on Hand Sausage Prop. Telephone Main 55 ESS rietor ine Wines, Liquors and Cigars R LYE fected by netting. Others, surrounded with every precaution, isolated from all possible contact with the disease, contracted it in a most virulent form when exposed to the mosquito infection alone. The case was closed; and the sole method by which yellow fever can be carried from point to point and from individual to individual has been as conclusively pointed out as any facts of physical science. Yet at this moment ineffective quarantines are established by terror-stricken communities; villages and stations on the railroads of the south are surrounded by armed guards, and the attempt by force to pass these lines would undoubtedly be met by murder. So slowly does even the most dazzling and impressive fact make its way and find lodgment in the common comprehension, so as to become a principle of action. A campaign of education is never complete until its subject has taken a place in the universal apprehension with the daily phenomena of nature. THE CAMPAIGN OF IRRIGATION EDUCATION. How this campaign was begun, many of us still remember, and it is right that the people should not now forget. The first work in spying out the land for irrigation, in investigating its possibilities, and above all in getting its merits before the people, was done by the railroad companies. At first three, and a little later five of the great systems the west united and furnished $5,000 a year as a working fund take the necessary inquiries and thread the facts abroad. It was the provision of these corporaly studying the interest and welof the west, searching for to increase the tillable area, health, the population and the versity of the country tributary term, that irrigation first passed the sphere of the bookmen to of the men of affairs; that it from the rank of a theory and realist's dream to that of a nanal policy undertaken in pursuof and fortified by a national It would be strange if they not now the intensest interest in working out of the magnifischeme at whose birth they died and whose infancy was buried by their care. The work still to be done, therea work that will go on and its necessity as well as its incidence when all of us who are ordered here have passed beyond it's activities, is the unintermitrepresentation of the value of irrin, of the need of it, of its still explored possibilities, of its relatio to national growth and indil life, until this shall have a permanent part of the comstock of knowledge; not the session of a band of enthusiasts wicked body of scientists and alists, but as generally dissemil as the familiar plowing and that have been done by since immemorial time. It is being established upon a rational basis for industrial propagandas and economic theories. A glowing prospectus is no longer sufficient enticement for a liberal investment nor a people mad to rush upon the sword point of poverty or disgrace for some abstract theory. It is a time of taking inventories; of the presentation and scanning of credentials. What is of avail, what effective, what rational, what consistent with the permanent facts in the life of man for the building of this nation, of this social and industrial state, in which our partnership is at the same time one of the deepest sentiments and the intensest practicability? Those large policies only will finally approve themselves and be wrought into the fabric of the nation that are based upon the homely facts, the clamorous needs of the millions for whose happiness and prosperity only any state has a right to exist. In such selection, tested by actual values and by potentialities, irrigation has almost first claim upon the common thought. For by it the boundaries of man's heritage are to be enlarged, the volume of the food supply, man's first necessity, may be almost indefinitely expanded, the total sum of the world's available wealth and common comfort may be expanded, and at the same time the conditions of the individual laborer, of the family, of the home, may be so bettered as to counteract those tendencies that are commonly admitted to be threatening in the development national growth and individual life, until this shall have been a permanent part of the common stock of knowledge; not the mission of a band of enthusiasts seeking body of scientists and realists, but as generally disseminated as the familiar plowing and farming that have been done by since immemorial time. It is repeat, reiterate, reinforce and rein upon the slow yielding surplus of the popular thought and imagination the value and the importance of this work that such intentions as this meet and thus they retain their right to lead up. And that we may receive value for our rediscovery of ancient truths and their application to the life of today, these constantly recurring assaults upon inference and imperfect comprehension are indispensable. THE RECLAMATION OF OUR DESERTS. In all the actual or suggested varieties of our time, of all the wide range of workers and lovers of kind have in view, none will precedence of the reclamation those vast spaces of our country closed to productive activity. It is better worthy of the labor resources set at its disposal. Are already entered upon an era severely practical. The specific rage has wrought a certain cure of disenchment. Inies and ideas are being win- d by a people growing more virtuous and skeptical. Values are man's first necessity, may be almost indefinitely expanded, the total sum of the world's available wealth and common comfort may be expanded, and at the same time the conditions of the individual laborer, of the family, of the home, may be so bettered as to counteract those tendencies that are commonly admitted to be threatening in the development of the race and the rearing of a higher civilization. It is therefore an issue of paramount value that is to be discussed here and that will be carried from this spot and by means of these addresses and discussions to every corner of the country. THE CONQUEST OF ARID AMERICA. What the friends of irrigation propose is something more definite and not less impressive than that which has carried the great explorers, discoverers, adventurers of the world through innumerable perils. The discovery of America could by no means meant as much to the world of the century of Columbus as the addition to our heritage of homes and means of maintenance for ten million people not now endowed with an acre of soil. Yet that would be but a mean and insufficient measure of what may easily be accomplished. The miracle is within reach. From the dregs and debris of a continent are to be called forth the elements of wealth and maintenance of societies. By merely taking advantage of conditions that nature freely offers, by Good Health to the Children Children especially are fond of dainties, and the housekeeper must look carefully to their food. As good cake can be made only with good eggs, so also a cake that is healthful as well as dainty must be raised with a pure and perfect baking powder. Royal Baking Powder is indispensable in the preparation of the highest quality of food. It imparts that peculiar lightness, sweetness and flavor noticed in the finest cake, biscuit, doughnuts, crusts, etc., and what is more important, renders the food wholesome and agreeable to young and old. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK.