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anaheim-gazette 1905-11-09

1905-11-09 · Anaheim Gazette · page 2 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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WALLOP BROTHERS When in need of a good tea or coffee give us a call. We have just received a complete line of Chase & Sanborn's high grade coffee and Tetley's India and Ceylon tea; which places us in a position to suit any taste. We carry a complete line of Staple and Fancy Groceries, Wash Tubs, Buckets, and Wash Boards Malthoid Roof Is backed by 21 years successful experience In the manufacture of roofing material. It is by the largest concerns in the country. FOR SALE AT 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 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 Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausage F. W. Fleischman, In New Odd Fellow's block The Best of Fresh Meats Constantly Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausage F. W. Fleischman, Anaheim Beer on Tap THE PEERLESS A. FUHRBERG, Proprietor Fine Wines 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. or coffee give us used a complete high grade coffee lon tea; which any taste. Proceries, Etc. Wash Boards Roofing 21 years of experience Material. It is now used in the country. AT SECRETARY SHAW ON THE TARIFF Takes the Producers Side of It, and Says that it is Not a Burden. Secretary Shaw's great speech at Portsmouth, O., taking the side of the producer and holding that those who pay tariff duties are well able to afford it, is full of interest to Southern California readers. Secretary Shaw was on the coast last year, and is well remembered by those who heard his speeches. In part his Portsmouth speech is as follows: "The democratic party always expresses sympathy for the unfortunate consumer, but never has a word of congratulation for the fortunate producer. If any of you young men ever heard a democratic orator or editor congratulating the American people because there is constant enjoyment, or because wages are good, or because prices generally are high, write me about it. Such a thing never has happened. "They are equally sympathetic with the poor taxpayer. They never congratulate the people because they are able to pay these taxes. Neither do they congratulate those he paid, not for the cigs the treasury as duty up ars which he consumes per month. That cost." "We collected last eign-made laces and $19,000,000; on jewelry stones, $2,000,000; on furs, $1,000,000; on glass and glassware, in the homes of the rich on foreign liquors, champagnes, etc., con by the rich, $11,700,000 tobacco and cipars, $1 foregoing include wha editor congratulating the American people because there is constant enjoyment, or because wages are good, or because prices generally are high, write me about it. Such a thing never has happened. "They are equally sympathetic with the poor taxpayer. They never congratulate the people because they are able to pay these taxes. Neither do they congratulate those who receive these taxes when disbursed by the government. I don't know how I contribute toward the support of the government, but I know some who contribute vastly more than I. "A short time ago a man returning from Europe, by some lapse of memory or otherwise, omitted to enter a diamond necklace. Treasury officials in Europe had telegraphed his purchase, and when his attention was called to it he promptly entered the necklace and paid $28,000 duth. That cost me nothing. "I went down one morning awhile ago and met an incoming steamer at quarantine. Unexpectedly I met a friend who married his wife in my state. I noticed him making entry of the things he had purchased abroad. A few days later I examined the record and found he had paid $5,400 on the things he and his wife had brought over in their trunks. That cost me nothing. "A few years ago a lady of wealth and refinement associated a few friends with her and incorporated a public art gallery. This entitled her to the free entry of pictures and statuary, but she had to give bond that they were not for private use or for sale. I learned that her manner of making the gallery public was by inviting a few personal friends from among the public to visit her collection once or twice a year. I wrote her a kind letter asking for the rules and regulations of her gallery. She saw her attorney, and, on his advice, paid $194,000 in $19,000,000; on jewelry stones, $2,000,000; on furs, $1,000,000; on glass and glassware, in the homes of the rich on foreign liquors, champagnes, etc., by the rich, $11,700,000; tobacco and cipars, $1 foregoing include what department classifies voluntary use and luxury being derived thems. Then, in addedlected on foreign cloths, dress goods, flax flax and hemp manual almost exclusively by do, $50,000,000. The on every other item.$500,000 duty on perf INTERNAL REVENUE "We collected du fiscal year in internal 000,000. This is coentirely on intoxicatio tobacco. Unless you toxicating liquor in tobacco in some form contribute 5 cents per support of the gover" "Now, what do we money? We spent it We spent $21,000,000 erection of public b cities and towns i Who got the money quarried the marble those who cut the st transported them, t them in place, those iron and the coal to those who rolled steel, those who ma those who drove th felled the trees and ed the lumber, tho it, and those who fa those who put it in their portion. The went for public bu labor and labor spe So the west got it." that they were not for private use or for sale. I learned that her manner of making the gallery public was by inviting a few personal friends from among the public to visit her collection once or twice a year. I wrote her a kind letter asking for the rules and regulations of her gallery. She saw her attorney, and, on his advice, paid $194,000 in duty on her collection. She can now invite whom she pleases and exclude whom she will. That cost me nothing. "I was down at Tiffany's, in New York, some time since, and asked to see their most expensive dinner plates. They showed me some worth $3,000 a dozen. They were the best they happened to have in stock at the time. The duty on these plates was over $1,000 a dozen. That cost me nothing. I did not buy any. "A lady of wealth returning from Europe a couple of years ago, brought with her $76,000 worth of articles of personal and household adornment, and paid nearly $32,000 duty on them. She came again a few months ago and paid over $11,000 more. I hope she will go again this year. It cost me nothing. "I was the guest not long ago on the private car of a friend. He tendered me a cigar. I do not smoke. But, as the treasury department collects the duty on foreign cigars, I recognized the name, and remarked that it was a very fine cigar. He replied 'Yes, I import my own cigars.' He then told me that Royal Baking Powder Saves Health and Saves Money. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK aid, not for the cigars, but into treasury as duty upon the cigarette he consumes, about $100 month. That cost me nothing. We collected last year on form-made laces and ribbons over 100,000; on jewelry and precious items, $2,000,000; on foreign dresses, $1,000,000; on foreign-made mats and glassware, found chiefly in the homes of the rich, $3,900,000; foreign liquors, like French champagnes, etc., consumed chiefly in the rich, $11,700,000; on foreign coffee and cipars, $1,000,000. The going include what the treasury affort to get it. It will be a sorry day if the government ever ceases to collect from the wealthy and well-do and distribute a pittance of their wealth into the channels of trade and usefulness, to the blessing of every industry between the seas. "We spent in the last fiscal year $1.42 per capita on the navy. But we have something to show for it. The other day the set up a target 21 feet long and 17 feet wide. There it stands. Over here, a mile distant, is a battle ship. It is moving ten knots an hour, rocking slightly over the waves and rolling slightly on jewelry and precious ties, $2,000,000; on foreign dress $1,000,000; on foreign-made clothes and glassware, found chiefly the homes of the rich, $3,900,000; foreign liquors, like French compagnes, etc., consumed chiefly the rich, $11,700,000; on foreign acco and cipars, $1,000,000. The going include what the treasury department classifies as articles of ordinary use and luxuries, $72,000, being derived therefrom in custsumes. Then, in addition, we collected on foreign-made carpets, thus, dress goods, flannels, cotton, and hemp manufactures, used most exclusively by the well-to- $50,000,000. The same is true every other item. We collected $10,000 duty on perfumery. INTERNAL REVENUE $233,000,000. We collected during the last final year in internal revenue $233, $1,000. This is collected almost freely on intoxicating liquors and acco. Unless you consume insignaling liquor in some form or acco in some form, you scarcely attribute 5 cents per capita to the support of the government. Now, what do we do with this money? We spent it in many ways. We spent $21,000,000 last year in the section of public buildings in 100 cities and towns in forty state. Who got the money? Those who married the marble and the granite, those who cut the stone, those who transported them, those who laid them in place, those who mined the iron and the coal to smelt the iron, those who rolled the structural steel, those who made the nails, and those who drove them, those who rolled the trees and those who saw the lumber, those who planed and those who fashioned it, and those who put it in place, all got their portion. The $21,000,000 that went for public buildings went to labor and labor spent it for food. To the west got it. Then the farmer ING of every industry between the seas. "We spent in the last fiscal year $1.42 per capita on the navy. But we have something to show for it. The other day the set up a target 21 feet long and 17 feet wide. There it stands. Over here, a mile distant, is a battle ship. It is moving ten knots an hour, rocking slightly over the waves and rolling slightly from the recoil of the gun. Three motions. They reach down into the hold of the vessel and take a cartridge weighing three-quarters of a ton, swing it up 40 feet, put it into the gun and fire it; reach down and get another cartridge, swing it up and fire it; and from this moving vessel, out of ten shots, they put nine 13-inch holes through that target, one mile away, in five minutes by the watch. It used to take five minutes for each shot, and then they put ten smaller holes through the same target in two minutes by the watch. It is worth $1.42 to tell that. "There is not a battle ship made by the hand of man that can live five minutes within a mile of that kind of markmanship. I am willing that the world shall know that we are spending some money on a navy and have a navy to show for the money spent. So long as the world knows we have such a navy, we will never have use for a navy." "I THANK THE LORD!" cried Hannah Plant, of Little Rock, Ark, "for the relief I got from Bucklen's Arnica Salve. It cured my fearful running sores which nothing else would heal, and from which I had suffered for 5 years." It is a marvelous healer for cuts, burns and wounds. Guaranteed at Hutchinson's drugstore; 25c. California's Vernal Autumn. California is different from the rest of the country and October California's Vernal Autumn. California is different from the rest of the country and October work in the garden is one of the most striking illustrations of this fact. The early rains have fallen. The soil, even of the most neglected gardens, is mellow and fragrant and full of the microbes of the garden fever which entered the blood of mankind when Adam first poked a sharp stick into the leaf mould of Eden. Neither immunity nor attenuation has resulted from thousands of generations of inoculation; on the contrary susceptibility and virulence heighten with advance of civilization and are now relieved only by deep thrusts of gleaming steel, while pothering with a stick satisfied Adam. The more delicious the weather, the more friable the earth, the more winning the call to growth, which appeals to all human senses, the higher runs the gardening fever. In this respect October is the eastern May, and in some seasons even deciduous fruit trees are deceived by it and burst into bloom. Could there be clearer declaration of vernal conditions in the California autumn?—E. J. Wickson in Sunset Magazine.