anaheim-gazette 1920-07-29
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HARDING SPEECH OF ACCEPTANCE A NEW KEYNOTE
Republican Nominee at Notification Ceremonies Discusses Problems Confronting Nation
"HOLD HERITAGE AMERICAN NATIONALITY UNIMPAIRED"
Advocates Party Responsibility as Distinguished from Dictatorial and Autocratic Personal Rule—In Referring to League of Nations, Says We Do Not Mean to Shun a Single Responsibility of This Republic to World Civilization—Favors Protective Tariff, Merchant Marine, a Small Army, Woman Suffrage and National Budget.
MARION, OHIO (Special).—Warren G. Harding was officially notified of his nomination as the Republican candidate for the presidency. His speech of acceptance is, in part, as follows:
Chairman Lodge, Members of Notification Committee, Members of National Committee, Ladies and Gentlemen: The message which you have formally conveyed brings to me a realization of responsibility which is not underestimated. It is a supreme task to interpret the covenant of a great political party, the activities of which are so woven into the history of this republic, and a very sacred and solemn undertaking to utter the faith as aspirations of the many millions who adhere to that party. The party platform has charred the way, yet, some-
It gives to a military alliance the right to proclaim America's duty to the world. No surrender of rights to a world council or its military alliance no assumed mandatory; however a pealing, ever shall summon the son of this republic to war. Their supremacy sacrifice shall only be asked for America and its call of honor. There is a sanctity in that right we will not delegate.
Disposed as we are, the way is very simple. Let the failure attending assumption, obstinacy, impracticability and delay be recognized and let us find the big, practical, unselfish way to do our part, neither covetous because of ambition nor hesitant through fear, but ready to serve ourselves, humanity and God. With a senate advising as the constitution contemplates, I would hopefully approach the nations of Europe and of the earth, proposing that understanding which makes us a willing participant in the consecration of nations to a new relationship to commit the moral forces of the world, America included, to peace and international justice, still leaving America free, independent and self-reliant, but offering friendship to all the world.
It is folly to close our eyes to outstanding facts. Humanity is restive, much of the world is in revolution, the agents of discord and destruction have wrought their tragedy in pathetic Russia, have lightened their torches among other peoples, and hope to see America as a part of the great red conflagration. Ours is the temple of liberty under the law, and it is ours to call the sons of opportunity to its defense. America must not only save herself, but ours must be the appealing voice to sober the world.
It must be understood that toll alone makes for accomplishment and advancement, and righteous possession is the reward of toll, and its incentive. There is no progress except in the stimulus of competition.
We are so confident the present day insufficiency of transport the withering hand of eration that we emphatically oppose to govern. We want to expedite and make sure the most prepared.
A state of inadequate facilities, mainly chase failure of government losing millions to agriculture industry. It is American people with little less than a peril that present day problem that spirit of encouragementistance which commits relieve such an emergency.
Gross expansion of credit have depreciated as expansion and increased credited the coins of inflated in haste, we deliberation. We deal in reckless finance...wrong honesty.
In all sincerity wevention of unreasonable challenged profitterial moral force and the government and people aye, it is timely, to go law is not the sole economic ills.
Let us call to all thrift and economy, rifice if need be, drive against extravagance to a recommittal to ing, to that prudent life which is the public.
New conditions, w ing growth and ex trial development
The chief trouble today is that the world war wrought the destruction of healthful competition, left our storehouses empty, and there is a minimum production when our need is maximum. Maximums, not minimums, is the call of America. It isn't a new story, because war never fails to leave depleted storehouses and always impairs the efficiency of production. War also establishes its higher standards for wages, and they abide. I wish the higher wage to abide, on one explicit condition—that the wage earner will give full return for the wages received.
I want, somehow, to appeal to the sons and daughters of the republic, to every producer, to join hand and brain in production, more production, honest production, patriotic production, because patriotic production is no less a defense of our best civilization than that of armed force. Profitering is a crime of commission; underproduction is a crime of omission. We must work our most and best, else the destructive reaction will come.
The menacing tendency of the present day is not chargeable wholly to the unsettled and fevered conditions caused by the war. The manifest other peoples, and hope to see America as a part of the great red conflagration. Ours is the temple of liberty under the law, and it is ours to call the sons of opportunity to its defense. America must not only save herself, but ours must be the appealing voice to sober the world.
It must be understood that toll alone makes for accomplishment and advancement, and righteous possession is the reward of toll, and its incentive. There is no progress except in the stimulus of competition.
Warren G. Harding
The chief trouble today is that the world war wrought the destruction of healthful competition, left our storehouses empty, and there is a minimum production when our need is maximum. Maximums, not minimums, is the call of America. It isn't a new story, because war never fails to leave depleted storehouses and always impairs the efficiency of production. War also establishes its higher standards for wages, and they abide. I wish the higher wage to abide, on one explicit condition—that the wage earner will give full return for the wages received.
I want, somehow, to appeal to the sons and daughters of the republic, to every producer, to join hand and brain in production, more production, honest production, patriotic production, because patriotic production is no less a defense of our best civilization than that of armed force. Profitering is a crime of commission; underproduction is a crime of omission. We must work our most and best, else the destructive reaction will come.
The menacing tendency of the present day is not chargeable wholly to the unsettled and fevered conditions caused by the war. The manifest other peoples, and hope to see America as a part of the great red conflagration. Ours is the temple of liberty under the law, and it is ours to call the sons of opportunity to its defense. America must not only save herself, but ours must be the appealing voice to sober the world.
It must be understood that toll alone makes for accomplishment and advancement, and righteous possession is the reward of toll, and its incentive. There is no progress except in the stimulus of competition.
WARREN G. HARDING
New conditions, growing growth and experimental development, can forward-looking progeny farmer had a high millions to feed in and heard the cry food and answered an appalling task never encountered.
Contemplating that the individual farm organized buyers of his distributors of his buys, I hold that he only be permitted to join in co-operative with just measure of their arduous toll.
Our platform is of renewed concern sential and elemental both appreciation pledge effective practice. We will tion which again and desirable the oition of comparatively cultivated cilate the caring farm and orchard able waste under pressure.
America would like discouragement either through the glect or its parapractices. A Reption will be common gard for agriculture; utilization of farmers justly complained by the American farm—highly ranked ties and fully shared fortunes of America.
Becomingly assoc ject are the police reclamation, so oural expansion, a development of the West. It is our own enlarge federational partiality, all America.
I believe the bfect a necessary, and reveal businernment business departments show businesslike and active effort though ployes, who are work or not essen
joined in a becoming warning of our devotion to this republic. If the torch of constitutionalism had not beer dimmed, the delayed peace of the world and the tragedy of disappointment and Euorpe's misunderstanding of America easily might have been avoided. The Republicans of the senate halted the barter of independent American eminence and influence which it was proposed to exchange for an obscure and unequal place in the merged government of the world. Our party means to hold the heritage of American nationality unimpaired and unsurrendered.
The world will not misconstrue. We do not mean to hold aloof. We do not mean to shun a single responsibility of the republic to world civilization. There is no hate in the American heart we have no envy, no suspicion no aversion for any people in the world. We hold to our rights and mean to defend, aye, we mean to sustain the rights of this nation and our citizens alike, everywhere under the shining sun. Yet there is the concord of amity and sympathy and fraternity in every resolution. There is a genuine aspiration in every American breast for a tranquil friendship in the world.
One may readily sense the conscience of our America. I am sure I understand the purpose of the dominant group of the senate. We were not seeking to defeat a world aspiration. We were resolved to safeguard America. We were resolved then, even as we are today and will be tomorrow, to preserve this free and independent republic.
In the call of the conscience of America is peace, peace that closes the gaping wound of world war and silences the impassioned voices of international envy and distrust. Heeding this call and knowing as I do the disposition of the congress, I promise you formal and effective peace so quickly as a Republican congress can pass its declaration for a Republican executive to sign.
It is better to be the free and disinterested agent of international justice and advancing civilization with the covenant of conscience than be shackled by a written compact which sons and daughters or the republic to every producer, to join hand and brain in production, more production, honest production, patriotic production. because patriotic production is no less a defense of our best civilization than that of armed force. Profiteering is a crime of commission; underproduction is a crime of omission. We must work our most and best, else the destructive reaction will come.
The menacing tendency of the present day is not chargeable wholly to the unsettled and fevered conditions caused by the war. The manifest weakness in popular government lies in the temptation to appeal to grouped citizenship for political advantage.
It would be blindness of folly to ignore the activities in our own country which are aimed at destroy our economic system, and to commit us to the colossal tragedy which has destroyed all freedom and made Russia impotent. This movement is not to be halted in throttled liberties. We must not abridge freedom of speech, the freedom of press, or the freedom of assembly, because there is no promise in repression. These liberties are as sacred as the freedom of religious belief, as inviolable as the rights of life and the pursuit of happiness. We do hold to the right to crush sedition, to stifle a menacing contempt for law, to stamp out a peril to the safety of the republic or its people, when emergency calls, because security and the majesty of the law are the first essentials of liberty. He who threatens destruction of the government by force or flaunts his contempt for lawful authority, ceases to be a loyal citizen and forfeits his rights to the freedom of the republic.
No party is indifferent to the welfare of the wage earner. To us his good fortune is of deepest concern, and we seek to make that good fortune permanent. We do not oppose but approve collective bargaining, because that is an outstanding right. But we are unalterably insistent that its exercise must not destroy the equally sacred right of the individual, in his necessary pursuit of livelihood. Any american has the right to quit his employment, so has every American the
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ANAHEIM GAZETTE
WHITE BUS LINE, INC.
NEW SERVICE—EFFECTIVE MAY 10th
Between Santa Ana and San Diego
Cars will operate DAILY as follows:
Leave SANTA ANA—9 a.m. Arrive SAN DIEGO—12:45 m.
Leave SAN DIEGO—3 p.m. Arrive SANTA ANA—6:45 p.m.
Thirty-minute service between Santa Ana, ANAHEIM and Los Angeles via Fullerton, Brea, La Habra and Whittier
Leave ANAHEIM for LOS ANGELES—6:30 a.m. and half-hourly until 8:30 p.m. Then 9:30, 10:30 and 11:30 p.m.
Leave ANAHEIM for SANTA ANA—7:30 a.m. and half-hourly until 9:30 p.m. Then 10:30 and 11:30 p.m. and 1 a.m.
Leave LOS ANGELES—6 a.m. and half-hourly until 8 p.m. Then 9, 10 and 11:30 p.m.
ANAHEIM DEPOT—South Lemon Street, rear Valencia Hotel. Phone 520.
LOS ANGELES DEPOT—Union Stage Depot, Fifth and Los Angeles Streets. Phone Pico 3850.
Gross expansion of currency and credit have depreciated the dollar just as expansion and inflation have discredited the coins of the world. We inflated in haste, we must deflate in deliberation. We debased the dollar in reckless finance, we must restore in honesty.
In all sincerity we promise the prevention of unreasonable profits. We challenged profitering with all the moral force and the legal powers of government and people, but it is fair, aye, it is timely, to give reminder that law is not the sole corrective of our economic ills.
Let us call to all the people for thrift and economy, for denial and sacrifice if need be, for a nation-wide drive against extravagance and luxury, to a recommitual to simplicity of living, to that prudent and normal plan of life which is the health of the republic.
New conditions, which attend amazing growth and extraordinary industrial development, call for a new and
NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS OF THE SAVINGS, LOAN AND BUILDING ASSOCIATION OF ANAHEIM.
Notice is hereby given that, in pursuance of a resolution and order of the board of directors of the Savings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of California, unanimously adopted at a regular meeting of said board, duly held on the 7th day of June, 1920; at the office of said corporation in the City of Anaheim, State of California, a meeting of the stockholders of said corporation is hereby called for and will be held at the office of said corporation at No. 251 North Lemon Street, in said City of Anaheim, (said place of meeting being at the principal place of business of said corporation and at the building where the board of directors usually meet), on Tuesday, the 7th day of September, 1920, at 8 o'clock p.m. of that day, for the purpose of considering and acting upon the proposition to increase the capital stock of said corporation from five equity in distribution of the burden.
I believe the negro citizens of America should be guaranteed the enjoyment of all their rights; that they have
New conditions, which attend amazing growth and extraordinary industrial development, call for a new and forward-looking program. The American farmer had a hundred and twenty millions to feed in the home market, and heard the cry of the world for food and answered it, though he faced an appalling task amid handicaps never encountered before.
Contemplating the defenselessness of the individual farmer to meet the organized buyers of his products and the distributors of the things the farmer buys, I hold that farmers should not only be permitted but encouraged to join in co-operative association to reap the just measure of reward merited by their arduous toll.
Our platform is an earnest pledge of renewed concern for this most essential and elemental industry, and in both appreciation and interest we pledge effective expression in law and practice. We will hall that co-operation which again will make profitable and desirable the ownership and operation of comparatively small farms intensively cultivated, and which will facilitate the caring for the products of farm and orchard without the lamentable waste under present conditions.
America would look with anxiety on the discouragement of farming activity either through the government's neglect or its paralysis of socialistic practices. A Republican administration will be committed to renewed regard for agriculture and seek the participation of farmers in curing the ills justly complained of, and aim to place the American farm where it ought to be—highly ranked in American activities and fully sharing the highest good fortunes of American life.
Becoming associated with this subject are the policies of irrigation and reclamation, so essential to agricultural expansion, and the continued development of the great and wonderful West. It is our purpose to continue and enlarge federal aid and not in sectional partiality, but for the good of all America.
I believe the budget system will effect a necessary, helpful reformation, and reveal business methods to government business. I believe federal departments should be made more businesslike and send back productive effort thousands of federal employees, who are either duplicating work or not essential at all.
"Our vision includes more than a chief executive. We believe in a cabinet of highest capacity, equal to the responsibilities which our system contemplates, in whose councils the vice-president, second official of the republic, shall be asked to participate."
I believe the negro citizens of America should be guaranteed the enjoyment of all their rights; that they have earned the full measure of citizenship bestowed; that their sacrifices in blood on the battlefields of the republic have entitled them to all of freedom and opportunity, all of sympathy and aid that the American spirit of fairness and justice demands. I believe there is an easy and open path to righteous relationship with Mexico. It has seemed to me that our undeveloped, uncertain and infirm policy has made us a culpable party to the government misfortunes in that land. Our relations ought to be both friendly and sympathetic. We would like to acclaim a stable government there and offer a neighborly hand in pointing out the way to greater progress. I believe in law enforcement. If elected I mean to be a constitutional president, and it is impossible to evade the law, when our every committal is to orderly government.
The four million defenders on land and sea were worthy of the best traditions of a people never warlike in peace and never pacifist in war. They commanded our pride, they have our gratitude, which must have genuine expression. It is not only a duty, it is a privilege to see that the sacrifices made shall be requited and that those still suffering from casualties and disabilities shall be abundantly aided and restored to the highest capabilities of citizenship and its enjoyment.
The womanhood of America, always its glory, its inspiration and the potent uplifting force in its social and spiritual development, is about to be enfranchised. In so far as congress can go, the fact is already accomplished. By party edict, by my recorded vote, by personal conviction, I am committed to this measure of justice. It is my earnest hope, my sincere desire, that the one needed state vote be quickly recorded in the affirmation of the right of equal suffrage, and that the vote of every citizen shall be cast and counted in the approaching election.
And to the great number of noble women who have opposed in conviction this tremendous change in the ancient relation of the sexes as applied to government I venture to plead that they will accept the full responsibility of enlarged citizenship and give to City of Anaheim, State of California, a meeting of the stockholders of said corporation is hereby called for and will be held at the office of said corporation at No. 251 North Lemon Street, in said City of Anaheim, (said place of meeting being at the principal place of business of said corporation and at the building where the board of directors usually meet), on Tuesday, the 7th day of September, 1920, at 8 o'clock p.m. of that day, for the purpose of considering and acting upon the proposition to increase the capital stock of said corporation from five hundred thousand dollars divided into five thousand shares of the par value of one hundred dollars each, to one million dollars divided into ten thousand shares of the par value of one hundred dollars each.
The amount to which it is proposed to increase the capital stock is one million dollars.
By order of the board of directors. Dated June 7, 1920.
FRED A. BACKS, Jr., Secretary of the Savings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim.
6-24-11t
CERTIFICATE OF TRANSACTING BUSINESS UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME.
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS:
That I. Joe E. Walter, of Anaheim. Orange County, California, do hereby certify that I am transacting the business of conducting a general garage and automobile accessory and repair shop at No. 335 East Center Street in the City of Anaheim, Orange County, California, under the name and style of J. E. Walter & Co.
That I am the sole owner and proprietor of said business;
That my full name is Joe E. Walter, that my place of residence is No. 120 Kroeger Street, in the City of Anaheim, Orange County, California.
WITNESS my hand this 23rd day of June, 1920.
JOE E. WALTER.
STATE OF CALIFORNIA. COUNTY OF ORANGE. ss.
On this 23rd day of June, 1920, before me, Homer G. Ames, a Notary Public in and for said county personally appeared Joe E. Walter known to me to be the person whose name is subscribed to the foregoing instrument, and he acknowledged to me that he executed the same.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal this 23rd day of June, 1920. (Notarii 1 Seal) HOMER G. AMES,
Notary Public in and for the County of Orange, State of California.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
PROFITION; UNDISCUSSION; EST. ELSE HERE.
The presupposition is that the document pertains to a historical newspaper page, likely from the 1920s, given the style and layout of the text.
I believe the budget system will effect a necessary, helpful reformation, and reveal business methods to government business. I believe federal departments should be made more businesslike and send back to productive effort thousands of federal employees, who are either duplicating work or not essential at all.
I believe in the protective tariff policy and know we will be calling for its saving Americanism again.
I believe in a great merchant marine. I would have this republic the leading maritime nation of the world. I believe in a navy ample to protect it and able to assure us dependable defense. I believe in a small army, but the best in the world, with a mindfulness for preparedness which will avoid the unutterable cost of our previous neglect. I believe in our eminence in trade abroad, which the government should aid in expanding, both in revealing markets and speeding cargoes. I believe in establishing standards for immigration, which are concerned with the future citizenship of the republic, not with mere man-power in industry. I believe that every man who dons the garb of American citizenship and walks in the light of American opportunity, must become American in heart and soul.
I believe in holding fast to every forward step in unshackling child labor and elevating conditions of women's employment. I believe the federal government should stamp out lynching and remove that stain from the fair name of America. I believe the federal government should give its effective aid in solving the problem of ample and becoming housing of its citizenship.
I believe this government should make its Liberty and Victory bonds worth all that its patriotic citizens paid in purchasing them. I believe this did not take long. Then came emergency must be revised to the needs of peace and in the interest of
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Charles R. Johnson, deceased.
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned. Executrix of the last will of Charles R. Johnson, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to file them with necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to the said executrix, at the office of Wm. P. Webb, Jr., Odd Fellows' Bldg., Anaheim, Orange County, California, which said office the undersigned selects as her place of business in all matters connected with said estate of Charles R. Johnson, deceased, within 10 months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 10th day of July, 1920.
LUELLA MAY JOHNSON.
Executrix of the Estate of Charles R. Johnson, Deceased.
NOTICE OF EQUALIZATION
Notice is hereby given that the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim will sit as a Board of Equalization at the City Hall on MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1920, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, and will continue in session from day to day until the returns of the Assessor have been rectified.
EDWARD B. MERRITT,
City Clerk.
t3
the effects, but is reported as doing nicely.
The Stewart Fruit company is making preparations to enlarge its packing house at Center and Atchison streets. Its business has outgrown the present building, and it is necessary to increase the capacity before handling next year's crop of oranges.
Anaheim Gazette, per year, $1.50 payable in advance.
WHY
Everybody Eats at the
Dew Drop Inn
Cafe
Excellent Service and
Good Eating
A. KLUEWER, Prop.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
COUNTY OF ORANGE, STATE
OF CALIFORNIA
Action brought in the Superior Court
of the County of Orange, State of
California, and the Complaint filed
in the office of the Clerk of said
County of Orange.
EDNA A. SWANSON, Plaintiff, vs.
EDWARD W. SWANSON, Defendant,
W. F. HEATHMAN, Attorney for Plaintiff.
The People of the State of California
COUNTY OF ORANGE, STATE OF CALIFORNIA
Action brought in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, and the Complaint filed in the office of the Clerk of said County of Orange.
EDNA A. SWANSON, Plaintiff, vs. EDWARD W. SWANSON, Defendant.
W.F. HEATHMAN, Attorney for Plaintiff.
The People of the State of California Send Greetings to Edward W. Swanson, Defendant.
You Are Hereby Directed to Appear and answer the Complaint in an action entitled above, brought against you in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, within ten days after the service on you of this Summons, if served within this county, or within thirty days is served elsewhere. And you are hereby notified that unless you appear and answer as above required, the said plaintiff will take judgment for any money or damages demanded in the complaint, as arising upon contract, or plaintiff will apply to the Court for any relief demanded in the complaint.
Given under my hand and the seal of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, this 30th day of March, A.D., 1920.
(saal)
J.M.BACKS,Clerk.
5-20-10t
CERTIFICATE OF BUSINESS UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME
I, Louis William Baggott, do hereby certify that I am now engaged in the business of buying, selling and dealing in gasoline, distillate and lubricating oil under the fictitious name and style of "Orange County Oil Co."; that my principal place of business is located at Anaheim, Orange County, California, R.F.D.No.2, Box 110; that am the sole owner and proprietor of said business and my name in full is Louis William Baggott, and my place of residence in Anaheim, Orange County, California, R.F.D.No.2, Box 110.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 16th day of July, 1920
LOUIS WILLIAM BAGGOTT.
(seal)
State of California,
County of Orange,
ss.
On this 16th day of July, 1920, before me, Roger C. Dutton, a Notary Public in and for said County, personally appeared Louis William Baggott, known to me to be the person whose name is subscribed to the foregoing in-
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 16th day of July, 1920
LOUIS WILLIAM BAGGOTT.
(seal)
State of California,
County of Orange, ss.
On this 16th day of July, 1920, before me, Roger C. Dutton, a Notary Public in and for said County, personally appeared Louis William Baggott, known to me to be the person whose name is subscribed to the foregoing instrument and acknowledged to me that he executed the same.
WITNESS my hand and official seal.
(Notarial Seal) ROGER C. DUTTON.
Notary Public in and for the County of Orange, State of California.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Lavinia H. Russell, deceased.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, by the undersigned, administrator of the estate of Lavinia H. Russell, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to file them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to the said administrator at his place of business, at the law offices of Roger C. Dutton in the Mullinix Bldg., No. 104 East Center Street, in the City of Anaheim, in the County of Orange, within ten months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 21st day of June, 1920.
H. A. HAWLEY,
Administrator of the Estate of Lavinia H. Russell, Deceased.
ROGER C. DUTTON,
Attorney for Admnistrator.
Anaheim Gazette per year, $1.50, payable in advance.