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anaheim-gazette 1912-05-02

1912-05-02 · Anaheim Gazette · page 7 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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State Should Be Consistent If California Wants Protection She Should Not Send Free Traders to Congress By the lawmakers of the nation, by the federal government and by that great body of press representatives assembled in Washington, California is judged largely by the Californians in the senate and in the house of representatives. For this reason it is important that this, like any other state, should be consistent in its requests and its demands, to say nothing of its attitude on principles and legislation. It happens that California is represented by Congressman S. C. Smith of the eighth district and Congressman Kent of the second, and it is certain that no state in the union has selected a pair of men so absolutely opposed in opinion; entertaining views so greatly at variance or exerting their efforts in directions so diametrically in conflict. Even with allowance made for California's vast expanse of territory and its tremendous coast line there is scarcely room for all the claims, representations and assertions that have been made by Congressman Smith and Congressman Kent. In this situation the whole state of California suffers, and while it may be sometime before either congressman will be called to account, there is time, inclination and opportunity to compare the relative standing of Smith and Kent. To pin William Kent down to any definite group of principles has been proven an impossibility. Elected by the voters of a rich agricultural district, dependent largely upon the culture of products easily affected by fighting fighter. His attitude on pending questions, dictated from a sick bed, is given in the following extracts from a letter he wrote to C. C. Chapman of Fullerton, one of the candidates for delegate on the Taft ticket: "I still have a very deep interest in the affairs of your portion of the state both because I am still your accredited representative in congress and because of the momentous consequences that wait on any serious reduction of the duties on your great products. To me, it is incomprehensible that any considerable portion of the people or the press of Southern California, including Los Angeles, should, under the banner of insurgency or progressiveism, join in the outcry against substantial protection to all the industries of the country. It should be clearly understood by the people there that here in congress the acid test of insurgency is, "Do you favor a low tariff?" Other things may be talked about and urged on occasions but there is absolutely no other line of legislation on which the insurgents pretend to be united and working to a common end. "You must have observed that insurgency is now confined almost exclusively to the great corn and wheat states of the middle west. Under the teachings of the Cummins school these grain farmers show signs of carrying out Blaine's prediction of thirty years ago and joining with the cotton states in bringing about practical free trade." FREMONT Defeat Santa Ana Anaheim who athletic contests lerton and Plum Wednesday last 21 and 11, the school journey secured another to the good wives and his winners. The meet was ternoon, April. The juniors seized the 50 yard took the field at the eight event. Joe Elliott who represents three events a score enough coveted trip to guests of a Low under whose d run off. In the senior class of Anaheim Santa Ana sec Catalina camp. Following is in the seniors: 100 yard dash (S.A.) first, Pattenet (A.) third. 50 yard dash first, Paulus second. 220 yard dash Paulus first, Net third. 352 yard dash tent (S.A.) first Brown third. High jump, Paulus first, Wond Martenet third. Broad jump— on the whole state of California suffers, and while it may be sometime before either congressman will be called to account, there is time, inclination and opportunity to compare the relative standing of Smith and Kent. To pin William Kent down to any definite group of principles has been proven an impossibility. Elected by the voters of a rich agricultural district, dependent largely upon the culture of products easily affected by experimental tariff changes, Kent created a small stir in Washington by voting with democrats, free traders and all other factions that play to the galleries. A few months prior to the expiration of his term of office, and while the voters of the Sacramento valley were preparing to hang his hide in patches on the fences of the second district, Congressman Kent created a great deal of disappointment by announcing that he would not run again. He left to his constituents an unwelcome heritage in the shape of a fight to prevent the adoption of schedules favoring free wool and free sugar, providing for the reduction on foreign olive oil and threatening citrus and deciduous fruits. Then, to add insult to injury, he appeared as a candidate for delegate to the republican national convention on the Roosevelt ticket. Congressman Smith, who has been seriously ill for many months, and who may never resume his seat in the house, is nevertheless an untrir- GROCERIES We carry a complete stock of Staple Groceries and Canned goods; also fresh vegetables and fruit. Always fresh and first class H. A. DICKEL H. A. DICKEL Buy Lots in Zeyn Tract NOW More than a fourth of these fine residence lots have been sold. Sidewalks and curbs will be completed and the streets graded and oiled in about one more month, when prices of remaining lots will be advanced. Best building restrictions in the city. To cash purchasers we will loan money to build if desired. Secure a lot for your home before prices are raised. SEE P. H. KRICK AT Office: 113 East Center St. Residence, 315 North Los Angeles Street. ANAHEIM - CALIFORNIA FREMONT BOYS WIN Defeat Santa Ana in Athletic Track Meet Anaheim wins another hard-fought athletic contest. After defeating Fullerton and Placentia at Fullerton on Wednesday, last by a score of 62 to 21 and 11, the boys of the Fremont school journeyed to Santa Ana and secured another first place, thanks to the good work of Walter Paulus and his winning team. The meet was called Saturday afternoon, April 20, at Lincoln park. The juniors started the meet with the 50 yard dash and the seniors took the field next, and so on during the eight events listed. Joe Elliott and Harry Clabaugh who represented the juniors at the meet succeeded in getting placed in three events although they did not score enough points to secure the coveted trip to Catalina Island as guests of a Los Angeles newspaper, under whose direction the meet was run off. In the senior division Walter Paulus of Anaheim and Joe Brown of Santa Ana secured the trips to the Catalina camp. Following is a list of the events in the seniors: 100 yard dash—Time 11 sec. Brown (S.A.) first, Paulus (A.) second, Martenet (A.) third. 50 yard dash—Time, 6 sec. Brown first, Paulus second, Martenet third. 220 yard dash—Time, 25 3-5 sec. Paulus first, Brown second, Martenet third. 352 yard dash—Time, 50 sec. Philent (S.A.) first, Paulus second and Brown third. High jump, height, 4 ft. 11 in: — Paulus first, Woodruff (G.G.) second, Martenet and Brown tied for third. Broad jump—17 ft. 10 1-2 in. WOMEN OF TO-DAY Knicker. Preachers say that faith is dying out. Bocker. I've noticed that I have to invent new excuses for my wife all the time. Certain suffragettes advocate the abolition of the corset, but the average woman objects to reform in that shape. A young widow has one important advantage over the inexperienced maid—she can act as her own chaperon. Trumps. What is the punishment of bigamy? Grumps. Having two wives. A girl's idea of a fine figure depends whether it is her own or a man's. If her own, it refers to her endowment by nature; if a man's it may have reference to his bank account. London women are wearing patches—under the eye and not over it. With all due respect to the judgment of Mr. Carnegie, every man will reserve the right to discover the prettiest girl in the world. Before marriage her eyes "spoke volumes." After marriage her eyes read him like a paragraph of one-syllable words. Latest fashion demand: The gown and flesh should melt together. Just wait till next summer; they will. ANTIQUITY OF BREAD That very respectable and useful couple—bread and cheese—have "or so long been closely associated that BUY BIG ARIZONA RANCH Bakersfield Men Acquire Holdings of Late Col. Green Tucson, Ariz., April 29.—H. E. Jastro and W. S. Tevis of the Boquillas land and cattle company, of Bakersfield, have just closed a deal in Fairbank, Ariz., for the range and cattle of the Greene cattle company. The consideration is $400,000. The sale includes the San Rafael Del Valle grant of the Greene cattle company, the last holding in Arizona of the late Col. William C. Greene, once known as the copper king, comprising 17,474 acres in Cochise county, besides fifty smaller ranches on the O. R. range, along the San Pedro river, and in the Huachuca mountains to the Sonora line. The transfer includes a range sixty miles long in Sonora as well and many thousands of cattle. The Californians will now have a land area in this one range greater than that of several eastern states. It is ninety miles in length, and varies from three to twenty miles in width, starting near Benson, Ariz., and continuing into Mexico. The Boquillas company also acquired 2000 head of cattle running on the Arizona side of the big range, a dairy herd of 162 cows, 158 cow ponies, all ranch buildings, stores and property of the Greene company. H. K. Street will be manager of the estate. MAP OF NORTH AMERICA How many people would guess that the Atlantic end of the Panama canal is on the west coast of Panama and that the Pacific end is on the east coast? Look at the map and see how the east coast of the Before marriage her eyes "spoke volumes." After marriage her eyes read him like a paragraph of one-syllable words Latest fashion demand: The gown and flesh should melt together. Just wait till next summer; they will. ANTIQUITY OF BREAD That very respectable and useful couple—bread and cheese—have so long been closely associated that one might have supposed them to have been born about the same time, and to have been brought up in each other's company throughout all the ages. It would seem however, that bread can boast of much more honorable antiquity than its sister cheese—which, so far as one can discover, is a comparatively modern invention. There is, of course, nothing to prove that the ancient Britons did not make cheese, but if they did they failed to leave behind them even so much as a portion of the rind. The history of bread, on the other hand, can easily be traced back to the earliest times, both in this and other countries. In Switzerland in particular, abundant proof has been forthcoming from time to time that the art of baking was quite well understood by our prehistoric ancestors, excavations conducted on the site of some of the numreous lake dwellings of that country showing that both milling and baking must have been recognized occupations even so far back as the Stone Age. Stone, in fact, was indispensable to both processes, and not only have stones for milling and baking ovens been discovered, but bread itself in large quantities has been disinterred. NO REASON FOR IT When Anaheim Citizens Show the Way There can be no just reason why any reader of this will continue to suffer the tortures of an aching back, the annoyance of urinary disorders, the dangers of serious kidney fills when relief is so near at hand and the most positive proof given that these ills can be cured. Read what an Anaheim citizen says: Mrs. Fred Dyckman, 112 N. Lemon St., Anaheim, Cal., says: "For a long time I was subject to attacks of backache. Any work which required stooping caused my back to pain me intensely and I was also af- MAP OF NORTH AMERICA How many people would guess that the Atlantic end of the Panama canal is on the west coast of Panama and that the Pacific end is on the east coast? Look at the map and see how the east coast of the Isthmus becomes a west coast. Although there is nothing new in the publication of a map of the continent of North America, it is worthy of note that the United States geological survey has just issued a large map of North America, 28 by 38 inches, in three colors. This is probably the most accurate general map of its character that has yet been published and is particularly well adapted for school work. It is on a scale of 158 miles to 1 inch, which is sufficient to show in considerable detail the major geographic divisions, such as states and provinces. Colorado thus extends 2 1/2 inches east and west and Cuba 4 1/2 inches the longest way. The map is sold by the Director of the Geological Survey, at Washington, D.C., at the nominal price of 20 cents a copy, or at a discount of 40 per cent in case as many as 25 maps are ordered. This wholesale rate covers simply the cost of paper and printing. Tin is one of the minerals in workable d eposits of which the United States is lacking. Our production in 1910 was valued at only $23,447, according to the United States geological survey, while our importations were worth $33,913,255. We need one or two large tin mines. Mrs. Fred Dyckman, 112 N. Lemon St., Anaheim, Cal., says: "For a long time I was subject to attacks of backache. Any work which required stooping, caused my back to pain me intensely and I was also afflicted with headaches and dizzy spells. I knew that my kidneys were disordered, as the kidney secretions were unnatural. A relative who had used Doan's Kidney Pills with good results, advised me to try them and I procured a supply at Mullinix's drug store. I found prompt relief and after I had taken the contents of three boxes, I felt better in every way. I cannot speak too highly of Doan's Kidney Pills." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan's—and take no other. STOPPED IN TIME Little Willie, who for some months had invariably ended his evening prayer with "Please send me a baby brother," announced to his mother that he was tired of praying for what he did not get, and that he did not believe that God had any more little boys to send. Not long afterward he was carried into his mother's room very early in the morning to see the twin boys, who arrived during the night. Willie looked at the two babies critically and then remarked: "It's a good thing I stopped praying when I did." Dickenson GARAGE Agent for OAKLAND of Auto Supplies pair Work. California ANAHEIM STEAM LAUNDRY Fitted with the most up-to-date machinery for turning out the best work on short notice and at moderate prices. Patronize home industry, especially when you get just a little bit better service here than you can get anywhere else. ANAHEIM STEAM LAUNDRY J. E. FISHER & CO., Props. SOUTH LEMON STREET Anaheim, Cal. ANAHEIM Cigar Factory ARNOLD & SON, Props. West Center St., Anaheim. Manufacturers of The Anaheim Eagle and Rosebud Cigars. We make a Specialty of Private Box Trade. LUMBER, CEMENT, BRICK ARDEN PLASTER MILL WORK Beveled Well Curbing C. GANAHL LUMBER COMPANY CHAS F GRIM. Manager THE NATIONAL MARKET No. 107 W. Center St. W. M. COOPER, PROPRIETOR. The Best of Beef, Mutton and Pork, Sausage, Ham, Bacon and Lard. The patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. For First-Class Fumigating You should get a man who knows how. I have had the experience and can deliver the goods. H.J. Westerman North Olive Street, ANAHEIM CALIFORNIA AUTOMOBILES STODDARD-DAYTON STUDEBAKER { E-M-F 30 FLANDERS 20 AUTOMOBILES STODDARD-DAYTON STUDEBAKER { E-M-F 30 FLANDERS 20 KISSEL KAR Demonstration at Your Pleasure P. J. Weisel & Co. Anaheim and Placentia. SALE DATES May 3-4-9-10-11-12-13-14-15-16-17-18-19-21-22-2527-28-29-30 June 1-2-6-7-8-13-14-15-17-18-19-20-24-25-27-28-29 July 1-2-3-15-16-22-23-28-29-30-31. August 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-14-15-16-22-23-24-29-30-31 September 4-5-6-7-8-11-12. Excursions ROUND TRIP Boston $110.50 Chicago 72.50 Council Bluffs 60.00 Denver 55.00 Houston $60.00 Kansas City 60.00 Memphis 70.00 New Orleans 70.00 New York $108.50 Omaha 60.00 St. Louis 70.00 St. Paul 73.50 Back East Many other points in addition to the above. Good for return until October 31, 1912. You can stop over at Grand Canyon— Yosemite Valley—Petrified Forest— Indian Pueblos— May I send you folders telling of these places— Phone—call or address me for information J. H. Clabaugh, Agent. PHONES, PACIFIC 217 HOME 1751 Summer Excursions East--1912 SALE DATES April 25, 26, 27 (St. Paul and Minneapolis only). May 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 12, 1s, 14, 15, 16, 17, Summer Excursions East--1912 SALE DATES April 25, 26, 27 (St. Paul and Minneapolis only). May 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 12, 1s, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 29, 30. June 6, 7, 8, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 24, 25, 27, 28, 29. July 1, 2, 3, 15, 16, 22, 23, 28, 29, 30, 31. August 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 22, 23, 24, 29, 30, 31. September 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12. Going limit 15 days. Return limit, October 31, 1912. FARES: Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, $55.00 Omaha, Kansas City, Dallas, Houston, $60.00 St Louis, Memphis, New Orleans, $70.00 Chicago $72.50 St. Paul, Minneapolis $73.50 New York, Philadelphia, Montreal, $108.50 Toronto $95.70 Washington, Baltimore $107.50 Boston $110.50 Proportionately low fares to many other points Liberal stopover privileges. Choice of routes. Block signal protection. April 30 California Raisin Day. Eat California Raisins C. W. Pendleton, Agent BOTH PHONES Southern Pacific