anaheim-gazette 1920-10-14
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AMERICAN WOMEN
DOING FULL SHARE
FOR THE COUNTRY
Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, Wife of
Repubilian Nominee, Praises
Her Sex.
DISCUSSES HIGH LIVING COSTS
Deolares in an Interview That
Present High Prices Can Be
Reduced by Votes.
By Estelline Bennett.
Mrs. Coolidge sat in a day coach on
a slow local train between Boston and
Northampton and talked about her
husband, her children, the high cost of
living and the domestic problem. The
conductor and the brakeman stopped
as they went through the car to talk
to her. She had made friends with
them in her frequent journeys back
and forth to keep in touch with her
children in school in Northampton and
her husband at his duties in the state
capitol. She knitted diligently as she
talked. During those trips she knits
all the winter stockings and sweaters
for her two boys—John, aged fourteen, and Calvin, twelve.
"Too many people are afraid of work," she thinks is the fundamental reason for the high cost of living and the much discussed domestic problem.
"I think the only thing the women
of the country can do now," she said,
with the quiet conviction of one who
THE LAST GREAT WAR FOR AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE
President Wilson has formally refused to carry out the provisions of the merchant marine act instructing him to give notice to foreign nations that certain sections of existing commercial treaties have been terminated. In so doing he not only committed a new act of presidential usurpation, but gives to the people of the United States the strongest possible argument against the creation of a league of nations under the authority of which an autocratic executive might in future defy the acts of Congress, and perhaps use the armed forces of foreign powers to coerce the representatives of the American people into policies sacrificial of American interests.
The suggestion has been made that there is no peril in the league of nations covenant as brought home from Paris by President Wilson, because Congress would always stand in the way of any betrayal of the interests of the American people by the executive whose agents would represent us at Geneva. But President Wilson proves by his action that an executive sufficiently autocratic may defy the will of an American Congress, on the ground that the covenant of the league of nations is a law superior to any act of Congress.
It will be recalled that this is the second notable exert of President Wilson to defy the authority of Congress in a matter affecting American as against alien interests. The Underwood tariff act contained a provision providing for discriminatory duties in favor of goods entering American ports in American bottoms. President Wilson refused to execute this provision of the law.
Action of this sort is the revival of pretension to executive power which has in England lost kings their thrones and even their heads. The right to nullify the laws of the nation assumed by an official specifically
He has erected all offices and sent hit officers to harass our outlaws; substance."
"He has refused to our Constitution acted by our laws, giving their acts of pretense."
The spirit of "76th of Americans, animating paring to march to November 2nd and wgreat war for America."
COUNTY RECORD
Official figures for Presidential election Thursday by Countrys Backs. The total reeled 153, the largest ever Orange county.
Total figures for follows:
Republican, 15,855
Democratic, 5,259
Independent, 176.
Non-Partisan, 122
Prohibition, 1,022
Progressive, 35.
Socialist, 266.
Declined to state.
MOTORISTS TO
Chaos in state and city schools will by motorists in. Don't stop giving st rides.
This fact has been officials of the Southern California officers and by the officer of Los Angeles to the club, it a serious fact.
Children everywhere rides along the s
There must be a reason for their staying. It was suggested to Mrs. Coolidge, and she thought possibly there were several. She thought the type of maid had something to do with it. Her's both have been American women old enough to have a sense of responsibility to their work and intelligent enough to respond to reasonable courteous treatment.
"A good many women who keep only one maid have trouble in their households because both mistress and maid, but chiefly the mistress, are afraid of work. A woman expects one maid to do the cooking and scrubbing and everything else and still be dressed up in black dress with white cap and apron, ready to answer the doorbell any minute. It isn't humanly possible. I always answer my doorbell myself. I do it for two reasons. In the first place, there is no one else, and, in the second, I like to greet my friends at the door myself."
Have Hema Orchestra.
Mrs. Coolidge is of medium height, with brown hair, hazel eyes that hold a good deal of merriment and a very quick sense of humor. At home she and her children have a little orchestra. Mrs. Coolidge plays the piano. John the violin, and Calvin, after considerable discussion, in which he favored a bass drum, compromised on a banjo-mandolin. They play hymns and war songs usually—the hymns they learn in the Congregational church and Sunday School of Northampton. They avoid difficult and unfamiliar music because the object of the orchestra is entirely recreational and not educational. That is a part of Mrs. Coolidge's educational policy—that children should work when they work and play when they play and keep the two separate. That was why she sent her boys to the public schools of Northampton when they were five years old.
Every morning when she is in Northampton, Mrs. Coolidge takes her Boston bag and goes to market. If the neighbor next door is going Mrs. Coolidge goes with her in the car. Otherwise she walks. She has no domestic policy. She buys, she says, "what the family need and can afford."
Action of this sort is the revival of pretension to executive power which has in England lost kings their thrones and even their heads. The right to nullify the laws of the nation assumed by an official specifically sworn to execute the laws and to no other function, is one which the most autocratic governments of Asia do not invest in a monarch.
It seems particularly unfortunate that this act of usurpation is committed by President Wilson against the interests of his own country and in favor of the commercial interests of foreign lands. Coulped with all the other evidences of alien sympathy and spirit, this formal declaration by President Wilson that the protest of a foreign nation, voicing the selfish demands of shipping interests, carries more weight with him than a solemn enactment of the chosen representatives of the American people, only tends to compression that Woodrow Wilson is the best President of the United States Europe ever had.
The suggestion of impeachment is made—but impeachment is unnecessary. Only five months more of Woodrow Wilsonism is in prospect. The great and solemn impeachment will come on November 2nd when the people of this country go to the polls to set the seal of their disapproval on the record of an executive, who has, to quote the Declaration of Independence "ocmitted a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object (which) evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism." To further quote the Declaration:
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
timely interest to native ex-service men and youths of California, who have passed the age of eighteen, is the news that the super-dreadmaught, California, now nearing completion at Mare Island, California, will carry a full complement of enlisted men who are native sons.
The Marine Recruiting Station, at Sixth and Main Sts., Los Angeles, is permitted to enlist a limited number of men for duty in the Marine Detachment on board the U. S. S. California. This quota may be filled by any of the recruiting stations in the smaller towns throughout Southern California operating under the headquarters at Los Angeles.
Vacancies in the Marine Detachment are filling up so rapidly by native sons that it is confidently expected the California will sail upon her initial cruise with a full quota of boys from this State. It is believed that this cruise will be to Panama, South America, the Hawaiian Islands, the Philippines, China, Japan, Alaska, and the West coasts of Canada and the United States.
The most particularly attractive feature of the Marine Corps is the opportunity for wide travel and study of foreign countries which its organization permits. From Pekin China, to Haiti and Santa Domingo, in all the important insular possessions of the United States, a Marine Detachment is on duty. The home stations of the Corps as all at points bordering the ocean and in the most desirable locations. Every opportunity is afforded Marines to visit and explore new territory while on cruises, and the education derived from these observations is the most broadening and the best chance in the world for one who is stirred with the real spirit of adventure.
Harry D. Riley reports the sale of a car to A. C. Hunter of Fullerton.
Judge J. S. Howard and his son Jimanie leave today for a two weeks outing at Gilman Springs. The judge will return in time to participate in the closing days of the campaign.
FOR SALE—Sliced Beet Pulp $4.00 per ton at Silo. $1.00 per ton less to our own Beet Growers.
LOS ALAMITOS SUGAR CO.
He has erected a multitude of new offices and sent hither awarness of officers to harass our people and out their substance."
"He has refused his assent to laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good."
"He has congined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our Constitution and unacknowledged by our laws, giving his assent to their acts of pretended legislation."
The spirit of '76 still lives. Millions of Americans, animated by it, are preparing to march to the polls on November 2nd and win this the last great war for American independence.
COUNTY REGISTRATION
Official figures for the November Presidential election were announced Thursday by County Clerk J. M. Backs. The total registration was 25,153, the largest ever recorded for Orange county.
Total figures for each party are as follows:
Republican, 15,853.
Democratic, 5,259.
Independent, 176.
Non-Partisan, 122.
Prohibition, 1,022.
Progressive, 35.
Socialist, 266.
Declined to state, 2,424.
MOTORISTS TOO GENEROUS
Chaos in state reform institutions and city schools will be brought about by motorists in California if they don't stop giving strange children free rides.
This fact has been conveyed to the officials of the Automobile Club of Southern California by state reform officers and by the chief probation officer of Los Angeles County. According to the club, it is not a whim, but a serious fact.
Children everywhere are begging rides along the streets and roads in the southern counties, say motorists.
Haiti and Santa Domingo, in all the important insular possessions of the United States, a Marine Detachment is on duty. The home stations of the Corps as all at points bordering the ocean and in the most desirable locations. Every opportunity is afforded Marfines to visit and explore new territory while on cruises, and the education derived from these observations is the most broadening and the best chance in the world for one who is stirred with the real spirit of adventure.
KATELLA YOUNG ADY
ASSAULTED BY MEXICAN
Fourteen-year-old Boy Lands In Jail On A Criminal Charge.
Gabriel Alviroz, a Mexican boy 14 years old, is in custody at Santa Ana onuspicion of criminal assault, as the result of an alleged attack upon Alice Zahl, the daughter of a prominent rancher of the Katella district. The boy was turned over to the sheriff's office, after infuriated residents were said to have threatened him with violence.
The girl was reported to have gone to the home of a neighbor about dusk for some milk. The Mexican boy was said to have gone there on a similar errand about the same time.
The girl exhibited some timidity about returning home alone as the result of meeting young Alvartez, and she waited until he had gone.
The boy waited in a walnut grove a short distance from the neighbor's home and when she came along he leaped out and attacked her, she later declared.
The frightened girl fought with all her strength and finally managed to escape from her alleged attacker. When she reached home she was considerably scratched about the head and face and was in a highly hysterical condition.
Soon after she gave the alarm the boy was located and for a time mob action on the part of the incensed ranchers of the district was feared. He was finally taken to Santa Ana and put in the custody of the probation officer there.
The boy was a member of a walnut picking crew camping in one of the Katella walnut groves. The girl came here about a year ago from the East with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar.
by motorists in California if they don't stop giving strange children free rides.
This fact has been conveyed to the officials of the Automobile Club of Southern California by state reform officers and by the chief probation officer of Los Angeles County. According to the club, it is not a whim, but a serious fact.
Children everywhere are begging rides along the streets and roads in the southern counties, say motorists, and it is hard to refuse them.
But motorists should figure the consequences of such an act, points out the Auto Club, for not only is the driver of the car responsible for the safety of those riding with him, but he is also liable for heavy damages if a strange child is hurt while in his machine.
Further than this, however, the truancy officers report that free rides are given by motorists do more than any other one thing to encourage "ditching" from schools and class-rooms. It is just as dangerous to give a child a free ride as it is for him to steal a ride on the back of a truck.
Boys and girls who succeed in escaping from state reform schools are often helped in this by motorists who give them free rides along the road, says the Auto club. It enables the children to evade the vigilance of the officers sent to capture them.
Auto stealing is likewise encouraged by the practise, say theft bureau officials, because boys given a free ride to a certain destination will be tempted to steal an automobile in which to get back to the city from when ce they came.
NATIVE CALIFORNIANS FOR MARINE GUARD ON NEW SHIP
Something that will be of more than
Soon after she gave the alarm the boy was located and for a time mob action on the part of the incensed ranchers of the district was feared. He was finally taken to Santa Ana and put in the custody of the probation officer there.
The boy was a member of a walnut picking crew camping in one of the Katella walnut groves. The girl came here about a year ago from the East with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Zahl.
M.W. Salscheider
133 N. Los Angeles St.
Sole Agent
For Anaheim for
K.B.L.
The Famous
Kidney, Bladder
and Liver Specific
Manufactured by the
La Rue Medicine Co.
Of Los Angeles; Calif.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
First Church of Christ, Scientist,
corner of Philadelphia and Chartres streets. Sunday service at 11 a.m.
Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. A meeting Wednesday at 7:45 p.m., at which testimonials of healing are given.
Free reading room in the First National Bank building, rooms 304 and 305; open daily from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Sundays and legal holidays, where the Bible and authorized Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed or purchased if desired. The public is cordially welcome.
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
Anaheim Union Water Company, location of principal place of business, 303 East Center Street, Anaheim, California.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: That at a meeting of the Board of Directors held on the 21st day of August, 1920, assessment No. 56 of $5.00 per share was levied on the capital stock of the corporation payable at once to the Secretary of the company at Anaheim, Orange County, California.
Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 15th day of October, 1920, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction and unless payment is made before will be sold on the 5th day of November, 1920, at one o'clock p.m. to pay assessment together with cost of advertising and expenses of sale.
L. J. SHERIDAN, Secretary of ANAHEIM UNION WATER CO.
Northern California Fair
Riverside, Oct. 13 to 19, 1920
The Big Agricultural Display of the State this Year
AT LIVE STOCK SHOW
Exhibition of Blooded Horses, Cattle, Swine, Sheep, Goats and Rabbits
Conservative Agricultural Display in which all sections of Southern California
State this Year
GAT LIVE STOCK SHOW
Special Exhibition of Blooded Horses, Cattle, Swine,
Sheep, Goats and Rabbits
Intensive Agricultural Display in which all sections of Southern California
are represented in Exhibits.
Industrial Display
Largest Tent available will be devoted Entirely
to Industrial Exhibits
Goat Show in the United States
Cultry Show--Rabbit Show--Dog Show
Dairy Exhibit, Educational Demonstration
Senior Agricultural Department. Indian Exhibit. Daily Educational Proth Moving Pictures in all departments. Women's and Fine Arts Display
Great Racing Program
Horses in the West this year. 115 Harness Entries and Running Events.
of Racing. Free Amusement Features day and evening. Athletic Events.
Daily Aerial Exhibitions.
50c. Special Railroad Rates. Free Auto Camp.
Fordson
TRADE MARK
Fordson
TRADE MARK
farm Tractor
Fordson tractor on the farm will enable you to get your work done
on. Plowing, drilling, harvesting, all are done quickly and when they
are done with the Fordson.
Fordson is a compact, easily handled and most economical tractor.
Work in the field or power machinery, it is quick, efficient and economical. It can do more work in a day with the Fordson, and because of the
work that can be done, it is a money maker. It is an all-round
power to be used successfully during the entire year.
not only sell Fordsons, but
stock of parts and employ
mechanics to give service
parts of Fordsons.
and talk-it over with us.
made by Henry Ford & Son and
GEORGE DUNTON
Ford and Fordson
Sales and Service
Angeles and Cypress Sts.
Phone 263-J Anaheim, Cal.