anaheim-gazette 1921-09-22
Searchable text
THE PROBLEM OF
UNEMPLOYMENT
It is said that there are more than six million unemployed in the United States. That statement must be accepted with reservations, or explanations. Twice in the recent history of this country the unemployed have constituted a considerably larger percentage of the total population—in 1894 and 1914. The number of unemployed in the country in 1894 was between three and four millions. The population of the United States was then nearly twenty millions less than it is today. But the percentage of potential wage earners in the total population is greater today than in 1894 or 1914. This fact in no small part accounts for the exaggeration of unemployment that has come down to us as a heritage of the Wilson administration, under the operations of the same sort of tariff law that paralyzed American industry in 1894 and 1914.
It might be said that at the height of the world war we had more than four million unemployed. That is to say, that many men were withdrawn from the channels of private business and called to the battle field, to military camps, and to naval service. A half million more people were working directly for the government, in excess of the normal number of civil employees required. Many hundreds of thousands more were withdrawn from normal to abnormal occupations based upon war necessity.
This shifting of wage earners from ordinary to extraordinary fields of service made necessary the enlistment in ordinary employment of a vast army of new workers; persons who had heretofore been dependents. Hundreds of thousands of others who had not before considered it necessary or desirable to work for wages, took places in the ranks of productive and along with the rest of the people.. The demagogues and theorists are busy with lying appeals to passion and prejudice of the sort that brought Russia to her present plight, with industry paralyzed and the people so impoverished that charity has to come from other lands to prevent wholesale starvation.
The argument is now made by those more anxious to promote their own present popularity than in solving the grave problems confronting the American people, that the remedy for existing conditions is to continue taxes on business enterprise on a scale without justification in common sense except that of war necessity; to carry on crusades of business baiting; to refuse protection to American industry; to resist readjustment of production costs upon a more economical basis. Those who engage in such demagogy at this time are the meanest and most dangerous enemies of the wage earner and of the whole people. No factory was ever started up by the demagogue who stands outside its deserted doorways and shakes his fist at it. Men cannot be compelled to do business for nothing or at a loss; the political demagogue himself would not pursue his calling except for the money there is in it.
It was William McKinley who said that "in this country we all go up and down together." Never was a truer thing said. When industry languishes, the wage earner is unemployed. The only way to get business going is to start the factories; the only way to start the factories is to quit baiting industry and begin boosting it. The time has come when men in politics and public life should cease to be ashamed or afraid to face the facts as they are and quit trying to play to the hatred of business which demagogues have aroused. For men in politics and public life are going to be judged by sentiment and handling of older and method."
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This shifting of wage earners from ordinary to extraordinary fields of service made necessary the enlistment in ordinary employment of a vast army of new workers; persons who had heretofore been dependents. Hundreds of thousands of others who had not before considered it necessary or desirable to work for wages, took places in the ranks of productive and distributive industry.
With the return of four million men from military and naval service, and a half million more from public civil service, to private pursuits, there has naturally been a vast displacement of wage earners. If private payrolls were as big today as they were five years ago, still the artificial inflation of the number of workers would create a huge army of the "unemployed," although as a matter of fact the greater number of those not now working are either people who a few years ago would not have been wage earners, or whose places have been taken by the industrial recruits taken on by necessity during the war.
That there is industrial depression is true. We have passed through an orgy of governmental extravagance, and many political tendencies have been at work toward the prostration of business enterprise, as well as many downward trade tendencies due to the necessity of deflation following financial and industrial inflation. There are lines of industry and business which are "flat." Yet, despite the industrial chaos created by the war and its aftermath, there is, comparatively speaking, a much smaller number of unemployed in the country today than there was in 1914, after President Wilson had been in office sixteen months and the present tariff law had been in operation less than a year.
Of the six millions listed as the unemployed, not a few are out of work voluntarily, some refusing to accept the lower wages which many industries consider necessary to existence in an era of lowering prices and of keen competition based upon lower costs from across the seas. Some have no desire to return to a status of employment, except upon the terms and conditions prevailing during the war, and being members of families where there are other wage earners, not having to do so. If there were six millions unemployed in the United States, things said. When industry languishes, the wage earner is unemployed. The only way to get business going is to start the factories; the only way to start the factories is to quit baiting industry and begin boosting it. The time has come when men in politics and public life should cease to be ashamed or afraid to face the facts as they are and quit trying to play to the hatred of business, which demagogues have aroused. For men in politics and public life are going to be judged by the people, not by what they say their purposes are in any given program, but by the actual results in the revival of industry. Lenine and Trotzky assure the world that all they have done is in love of the laboring men and in hatred of capital, but if these worthies did not keep millions of bayonets between themselves and the starving Russian people short work would be made of a regime which promised the people bread and has given them a shower of rocks.
We repeat: The solution of the problem of unemployment is to get the wheels turning again in American industries; the way to get those wheels going is to cease playing demagogical politics and to encourage gather than to discourage productive enterprise. The American people had real, not blood-bought or tax-bought prosperity by that process before Mr. Wilson turned on "the new freedom" and they can have it again by a return to sane, wholesome constructive policies based upon justice and reason rather than upon prejudice, malice and class selfishness.
Pass a tariff law safeguarding American industry promptly; lift from the shoulders of the American people and of American productive industry every ounce of taxation not absolutely necessary; use the power of government to foster rather than fight business enterprise and 1922 can be made the most prosperous year in American industry, with unemployment—the most terrible form of public taxation—confined to those who do not wish to work.
LARGE GRAIN ELEVATOR FOR NEWPORT HARBOR
Another opportunity, besides the proposed ship feeder line to San Pedro, is opening for Orange county's harbor at Newport bay, according to H. E. Wahlberg, farm advisor, who announced that the Californie farm buys thing said. When industry languishes, the wage earner is unemployed. The only way to get business going is to start the factories; the only way to start the factories is to quit baiting industry and begin boosting it. The time has come when men in politics and public life should cease to be ashamed or afraid to face the facts as they are and quit trying to play to the hatred of business, which demagogues have aroused. For men in politics and public life are going to be judged by the people, not by what they say their purposes are in any given program, but by the actual results in the revival of industry. Lenine and Trotzky assure the world that all they have done is in love of the laboring men and in hatred of capital, but if these worthies did not keep millions of bayonets between themselves and the starving Russian people short work would be made of a regime which promised the people bread and has given them a shower of rocks.
We repeat: The solution of the problem of unemployment is to get the wheels turning again in American industries; the way to get those wheels going is to cease playing demagogical politics and to encourage gather than to discourage productive enterprise. The American people had real, not blood-bought or tax-bought prosperity by that process before Mr. Wilson turned on "the new freedom" and they can have it again by a return to sane, wholesome constructive policies based upon justice and reason rather than upon prejudice, malice and class selfishness.
Pass a tariff law safeguarding American industry promptly; lift from the shoulders of the American people and of American productive industry every ounce of taxation not absolutely necessary; use the power of government to foster rather than fight business enterprise and 1922 can be made the most prosperous year in American industry, with unemployment—the most terrible form of public taxation—confined to those who do not wish to work.
LARGE GRAIN ELEVATOR FOR NEWPORT HARBOR
Another opportunity, besides the proposed ship feeder line to San Pedro, is opening for Orange county's harbor at Newport bay, according to H. E. Wahlberg, farm advisor, who announced that the Californie farm buys thing said. When industry languishes, the wage earner is unemployed. The only way to get business going is to start the factories; the only way to start the factories is to quit baiting industry and begin boosting it. The time has come when men in politics and public life should cease to be ashamed or afraid to face the facts as they are and quit trying to play to the hatred of business, which demagogues have aroused. For men in politics and public life are going to be judged by the people, not by what they say their purposes are in any given program, but by the actual results in the revival of industry. Lenine and Trotzky assure the world that all they have done is in love of the laboring men and in hatred of capital, but if these worthies did not keep millions of bayonets between themselves and the starving Russian people short work would be made of a regime which promised the people bread and has given them a shower of rocks.
We repeat: The solution of the problem of unemployment is to get the wheels turning again in American industries; the way to get those wheels going is to cease playing demagogical politics and to encourage gather than to discourage productive enterprise. The American people had real, not blood-bought or tax-bought prosperity by that process before Mr. Wilson turned on "the new freedom" and they can have it again by a return to sane, wholesome constructive policies based upon justice and reason rather than upon prejudice, malice and class selfishness.
Pass a tariff law safeguarding American industry promptly; lift from the肩膀 of the American people and of American productive industry every ounce of taxation not absolutely necessary; use the power of government to foster rather than fight business enterprise and 1922 can be made the most prosperous year in American industry, with unemployment—the most terrible form of public taxation—confined to those who do not wish to work.
LARGE GRAIN ELEVATOR FOR NEWPORT HARBOR
Another opportunity, besides the proposed ship feeder line to San Pedro, is opening for Orange county's harbor at Newport bay, according to H. E. Wahlberg, farm advisor, who announced that the Californie farm buys thing said. When industry languishes, the wage earner is unemployed. The only way to get business going is to start the factories; the only way to start the factories is to quit baiting industry and begin boosting it. The time has come when men in politics and public life should cease to be ashamed or afraid to face the facts as they are and quit trying to play to the hatred of business, which demagogues have aroused. For men in politics and public life are going to be judged by the people, not by what they say their purposes are in any given program, but by the actual results in the revival of industry. Lenine and Trotzky assure the world that all they have done is in love of the laboring men and in hatred of capital, but if these worthies did not keep millions of bayonets between themselves and the starving Russian people short work would be made of a regime which promised the people bread and has given them a shower of rocks.
We repeat: The solution of the problem of unemployment is to get the wheels turning again in American industries; the way to get those wheels going is to cease playing demagogical politics and to encourage gather than to discourage productive enterprise. The American people had real, not blood-bought or tax-bought prosperity by that process before Mr. Wilson turned on "the new freedom" and they can have it again by a return to sane, wholesome constructive policies based upon justice and reason rather than upon prejudice, malice and class selfishness.
Pass a tariff law safeguarding American industry promptly; lift from the肩膀 of the American people and of American productive industry every ounce of taxation not absolutely necessary; use the power of government to foster rather than fight business enterprise and 1922 can be made the most prosperous year in American industry, with unemployment—the most terrible form of public taxation—confined to those who do not wish to work.
LARGE GRAIN ELEVATOR FOR NEWPORT HARBOR
Another opportunity, besides the proposed ship feeder line to San Pedro, is opening for Orange county's harbor at Newport bay, according to H. E. Wahlberg, farm advisor, who announced that the Californie farm buys thing said. When industry languishes, the wage earner is unemployed. The only way to get business going is to start the factories; the only way to start the factories is to quit baiting industry and begin boosting it. The time has come when men in politics and public life should cease to be ashamed or afraid to face the facts as they are and quit trying to play to the hatred of business, which demagogues have aroused. For men in politics和public life are going to be judged by the people, not by what they say their purposes are in any given program, but by the actual results in the revival of industry. Lenine和Trotzky assure the world that all they have done is in love of the laboring men和in hatredof capital,但if these worthies did not keep millionsof bayonets between themselvesandthestarvingRussianpeopleshortworkwouldbemadeofaregimewhichpromisedthepeoplebreadandhasgiventhemabrotherowittishtowork.
LARGE GRAIN ELEVATOR FOR NEWPORT HARBOR
Another opportunity, besides the proposed ship feeder line to San Pedro, is opening for Orange county's harbor at Newport bay, according to H. E. Wahlberg,farm advisor,who announced thattheCalifornie farm buys thing said.Whenindustrylanguished,thewageearnerisunemployed.Theonlywaytogetbusinessgoingistostartfactories;theonlywaytostartfactoriesisstorthestorythatalltheyhavedoneisinloveofthelaboringmenandinhatredofcapital,但iftheseworthiesdidnotkeepmillionsofbayonetsbetweenthemselvesandthehatredofbusinesswhichdemagogueshavearoused.Formeninpoliticabetweenthemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliethenemy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliet Henmy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliet Henmy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliet Henmy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliet Henmy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliet Henmy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliet Henmy.Theacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandthefriendliet Henmy.TheacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandThefriendliet Henmy.TheacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandThefriendliet Henmy.TheacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandThefriendliet Henmy.TheacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandThefriendliet Henmy.TheacademicianwouldablebeneaththemastreeandThefriendliet Henmy.TheacademicianwouldablebeneathThe friendship.like this one was written on paper with ink.
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voluntarily, some refusing to accept the lower wages which many industries consider necessary to existence in an era of lowering prices and of keen competition based upon lower costs from across the seas. Some have no desire to return to a status of employment, except upon the terms and conditions prevailing during the war, and being members of families where there are other wage earners, not having to do so. If there were six millions unemployed in the United States, using that term in the sense that it would have been proper to use it before the war, it is evident that visible conditions in the country would be far worse than they are today. There would be a much greater depletion of savings accounts, there would be starvation, wholesale eviction of tenants and there would be soup houses and bread lines as there were seven years ago. In short, there would be a situation so acute that no one would be in doubt of the truth of the statement that the American people are now as bad off industrially as they were midway of the other two peace periods of complete Democratic control of government the people have experienced since the civil war—under Presidents Wilson and Cleveland and their industry destroying tariff laws.
The present moment is, like mid-summer of 1894, haying time for the demagogue. There are all too many parasitic politicians, who make a profession of flattering and inflaming and misleading the people, especially the wage earners. These adventurers, careless of consequences to their country, are now engaged in blaming the prostration of industry not upon the hang-over of war time demoralization and the demagogue legislation and administration which has brought it about, but upon the owners of industry who, as a matter of fact, are suffering
LARGE GRAIN ELEVATOR FOR NEWPORT HARBOR
Another opportunity, besides the proposed ship feeder line to San Pedro, is opening for Orange county's harbor at Newport bay, according to H. E. Wahlberg, farm advisor, who announces that the California farm bureau federation is making plans for establishing a large terminal grain elevator at some southern California port within the next few months.
This project, should it be located on Newport harbor, would be a big incentive to further development of the harbor resources, and would undoubtedly be a big thing for the entire district. Wahlberg has advised the farm bureau directors of developments of the plan, and believes that every effort should be put forward to bring the new institution to Orange county's port. He plans to take the matter up further with the farm bureau members and feels sure they can be counted upon to exert their influence in this direction. Similar efforts, it is believed, could be expected from Riverside, San Bernardino and Imperial valley grain growers, from the fact that Newport harbor is nearer all those points by several miles than any other port.
"If we go after it, I believe we can bring the grain elevator to Newport, harbor," Wahlberg said. "I believe Newport harbor is nearer the great majority of the grain acreage than San Pedro, and this would effect quite a saving to growers in hauling charges. But Los Angeles has already made a bid for the elevator and we'll have to get busy."
"The terminal grain elevator project is the outgrowth of the increasing most terrible form of public taxation—confined to those who do not wish to work."
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
The people... The wars are busy passion and that brought light, with in-depth insights to come present wholesale made by those their own on solving the longing the Ameri-mery for ex-continue taxes on a scale common sense; to carry baiting; to american industry of produc-conomical balance such demise and of the wage people. No up by the outside its de-akes his fist atelled to do at loss; the himself would except for theley who said all go up and was a rye languishes, employed. The is going is to only way to quit baiting it. The nation in politics decrease to be the facts as to play to the demagogues in politics and are judged by sentiment among growers for the bulk handling of grain, in preference to the older and more expensive sacking method."
The new Orange County Harbor association has interested itself in bringing the elevator to Newport harbor and invites the co-operation of all who may be able to help in any way. D. Eyman Huff, of El Modena, is president of the organization and R. L. Bisby, of Santa Ana, is secretary, with offices in the W. H. Spurgeon building.
A FINE BIT OF SENTIMENT
Blaine, Washington, is just at the border of the line separating this country from Canada. It is doubtless the longest completely unfortified national boundary line in the world. No military posts are maintained at strategic points on the line. No armored ships patrol the great lakes, which form part of the boundary. If a river winds back and forth across the border the use of its waters is fairly apportioned by friendly agreement. So also the possibilities of developing power from the two great boundary streams.
For more than a century these conditions have existed, although several times conflicts of interest have for a time caused serious friction between the two nations. But never was there thought of war or preparation for it. Until the world war made it necessary as never before for nations to protect themselves from undesirables, travel between the two countries was almost as free as between states of this union or provinces of Canada. This condition was conclusive proof that it was not necessary for great nations to fight or prepare for it unless they wished to. They could compete in business without going to war over it.
In commemoration of more than a century of peace at the longest and boys of high school age will be linked together under the organization known as "H-Y club." One week a month will be set aside when all groups of the grammar schools and all of high school age shall meet for special programs and activities. By the aid of the map of Orange county the secretary challenged the committee with the growing need of the boyhood of the county.
The rapid growth of Orange county, revealed in no better way than through the increasing registration in the schools at this season of the year, reveals the fact that Orange county has increased in population at least one-third in the past three years.
One way suggested of meeting the growing needs of boyhood and to administer the enlarging program of the association more effectively was by placing a man with the headquarters in Anaheim, and another man with headquarters in Orange, who would give their afternoons and evenings to the promotion of the program of these centers, a unified program for the whole country, built to meet the needs of growing communities.
The secretary also mentioned plans for educational entertainment in the county association work this year, community activities, camps and outings, etc. The report of the financial committee showed the association to be able to meet all obligations to date.
Following the secretary's report the members present spent considerable time in the discussion of his outline, endorsing the growing program and emphasizing the need of facing the large task which confronts them throughout the county. A hearty welcome was accorded T. P. McKee, who comes as the associate secretary to the headquarters of Santa Ana.
BIRD WATER TROUGHS
With 23,000 bird water troughs them uninteresting ta sober-minded folk like him.
The questions asked were fair enough—by no means trick questions that is—for they were in regard to well-known men, documents and events constantly discussed in very recent years by the press, and many of the replies revealed not that the boy or girl interrogated knew nothing about things which by assumption ought to be familiar to everybody not illiterate, but the he or she had vague and often widely inaccurate ideas regarding them.
In schools where there already is systematic class room instruction in current events much better records were made.
There is no need to be discouraged, either as regards our schools or as regards our youth, merely because most of the schools as yet do not have a course in current events or because our youth study what they are told to study, and hence have little to say, for instance, about the Knox resolution, and that little absurdly wrong.
That the schools should give more attention to the teaching and the learning of contemporaneous history may be—probably is—true. To do it, however, would be at a cost as regards the teaching and learning of other things in the students' scanty time—a cost that deserves more consideration than these investigators seem to have given it.
It is easy to say that everybody ought to know, and know correctly, about the Knox resolution, and that nobody should be left to labor under the illusion that Charles E. Hughes is President Harding's private secretary. But, after all, if ignorance like that is serious, the nation is indeed in a bad way, for it exists pleniously, out of schools as well as in them. In neither place as a matter of fact, is such ignorance fatal or even alarming.
In commemoration of more than a century of peace at the longest and only complete unfortified international boundary in the world a monument has just been unveiled at Blaine, Washington, with appropriate ceremonies and addresses. It was a fine bit of sentiment and in time other and similar monuments may be erected along the border, where the peoples of the two countries may conveniently assemble in honor of the ever lengthening period of peace. Though undefended this boundary is nowhere unprotected. It is protected by the friendly sentiments of the two great nations.
Y. M. C. WORK OUTLINED
FOR COMING YEAR
County Organization Has Meeting at Santa Ana
Interest in the work being accomplished among the boys of Orange county by the Y. M. C. A. was quickened following the meeting of the "Y" committee in the dining room of the First Baptist church, Santa Ana.
In outlining the program for the coming year's work Secretary G. S. Chessum, speaking before the assembled members, first called attention to the value of the past year's work and the friendly spirit it had fostered between them and the boys of the county. The advisability of continuing the program was stressed.
By means of slides the men present were able to see the features of the winter's program for the Y. M. C. A. boy groups. A few things emphasized, which will be fundamental in the coming year, are as follows:
First—That a carefully planned application blank shall be filled out by each member of a group.
Second—That the leader of the group will not only be registered with the county office, but also with the international office.
Third—That group insignias, based on a composite chart of the members of each group, will be awarded by a county committee or that individually members present spent considerable time in the discussion of his outline, endorsing the growing program and emphasizing the need of facing the large task which confronts them throughout the county. A hearty welcome was accorded T. P. McKee, who comes as the associate secretary to the headquarters of Santa Ana.
BIRD WATER TROUGHS
With 22,000 bird water troughs being manufactured under a patent granted to Father Henry Eummelen, of St. Joseph's church, Santa Ana, for distribution to all parts of the country, the Audubon Utility Manufacturing company, of Santa Ana, is directing its activities toward the institution of a manufacturing plant in that city.
Father Eummelen is a bird fancier and maintains an aviary at his perish home. Constant observation of the feathered creatures in their method of drinking and eating has resulted in the development of feeding and watering troughs that are declared by bird men to be far superior to anything yet offered to the public.
The secret to the water trough is a water container in the shape of an electric light globe. The water is contained in globe an is attacher to one end of a small trough, the water level being constant. The container holds water sufficient for eight days, assuring fresh water all the time. The trough cannot be fouled. The feed trough operates on the same principal. The water trough retails at $2.
"We have had orders for several thousand of the water troughs and this without any attempt to secure them," declared Dr. V. A. Rossiter, a member of the company. "Samples have been shown to a few proprietors of big bird stores in Los Angeles and San Francisco and from the orders we have been receiving it is apparent that these men have been recommending our product."
"We are now having 22,000 of the water troughs manufactured by Crelin and company in Los Angeles. These will go out to bird stores and as samples for developing a demand for them.
"We expect that when these are put out, orders will develop faster and in large numbers. It is our expectation in time to substitute a factory here for the manufacture of our production. The feeding trough as yet is not being manufactured to any great extent."
It is easy to say that everybody ought to know, and know correctly, about the Knox resolution, and that nobody should be left to labor under the illusion that Charles E. Hughes is President Harding's private secretary. But, after all, if ignorance like that is serious, the nation is indeed in a bad way, for it exists pleniously, out of schools as well as in them. In neither place as a matter of fact, is such ignorance fatal or even alarming. It does not prove stupidity or even indifference; it only proves—what needed no proving—that human being remember what interests them and have knowledge that relates directly to their personal business and pleasures.
RIGHT PAYMENT
Nine-year-old Charles carried letters from the lawyer next door to his best girl. Every time he took one the lawyer gave him a dime. But one day he decided to reward him a little better. He started to fish two dimes out of his pocket. "I guess these letters are worth 20 cents," he remarked facetiously.
"Yes, sir" Charles agreed, soberly, that's what I get—a dime from you and one from her."
But he didn't know what there was about his speech to make the fellow grin so happily—Indianapolis News.
A WORD WITH WOMEN
Valuable Advice for Anaheim Readers
Many a woman endures with noble patience the daily misery of backache, pains about the hips, blue, nervous spells, dizziness and urinary disorders, hopeless of relief because she doesn't know what is the matter.
It is not true that every pain in the back or hips is trouble "peculiar to the sex." Often when the kidneys get congested and inflamed, such aches and pains follow.
Then help the weakened kidneys. Don't expect them to get well alone.
Doan's Kidney Pills have won the praise of thousands of women. They are endorsed right in this locality. Read this woman's convincing statement:
Mrs. Mae Stone, 238 Whiting Ave., Fullerton, Cal., says: "My kidneys were weak and I felt dull and languid. Frequent headaches and dizzy spells made me miserable and my back was
which will be fundamental in the coming year, are as follows:
First—That a carefully planned application blank shall be filled out by each member of a group.
Second—That the leader of the group will not only be registered with the county office, but also with the international office.
Third—That group insignias, based on a composite chart of the members of each group, will be awarded by a county committee, or that individual record cards, showing the progress of each boy, as well as the entire group, will be kept by each leader.
The business was transacted following a dinner prepared and served by the ladies of the Baptist church, where the wives of the "Y" board were hosts to their wives and friends. The tables were arranged in the form of the triangle so closely associated with the history of the organization, and seated around the three sides were: J. A. Cranston, chairman of the committee; Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Tedford, Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Davis, H. W. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene, Griset, F. D. Plavan, of Santa Ana; Mr. and Mrs. Hargrave, of Yorba Linda; Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Beebe, of Anaheim; Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Campbell, of Orange; Messrs. D. Meyers, Blake and H. Anderson, Secretary G. S. Chessum and wife and Miss Adelaide Proctor, of Orange; Secretary A. J. Raitt and wife, from the Fullerton district; secretary T. P. McKee and wife, of the Santa Ana district; Miss Kathleen Owens, office secretary of Y. M. C. A.
Following a presentation of the program of each group, the secretary called attention to the plan this year whereby all groups of boys of grammar school age in a given community will be linked together in an organization known as a "Three C league," while all groups in a community of
"We are now having 22,000 of the water troughs manufactured by Crellin and company in Los Angeles. These will go out to bird stores and as samples for developing a demand for them.
"We expect that when these are put out, orders will develop faster and in large numbers. It is our expectation in time to substitute a factory here for the manufacture of our production. The feeding troughs yet are not being manufactured to any very great extent."
The troughs are so arranged that they can be attached to a bird cage with ease.
TESTS OF KNOWLEDGE
Mr. Edison having made questionnaires a favored indoor sport for reformers and investigators of various kinds, it was inevitable that one group or another of them would find out what the fine flower of American youth, the students in our public schools and colleges, know about "current events." It has been done by or for The Review of Reviews, and now the answers made by some 200,000 young men and women to a set of carefully prepared quilts have been turned over to Julius H. Barnes, of the Institute for Public Service, and from them he draws the conclusion that our seats of learning are doing very far from what they should for the development in their students of an intelligent interest in what is going on in the world around them.
The conclusion probably is true, these institutions being of mortal mold, and there is no doubt that among the answers studied by Mr. Barnes there abound those seemingly proving either that these youngsters do not read the papers at all or that they confine their reading to parts of and pains follow.
Then help the weakened kidneys. Don't expect them to get well alone.
Doan's Kidney Pills have won the praise of thousands of women. They are endorsed right in this locality.
Read this woman's convincing statement:
Mrs. Mae Stone, 238 Whiting Ave., Fullerton, Cal., says: "My kidneys were weak and I felt dull and languid. Frequent headaches and dizzy spells made me miserable and my back was weak and lame and often ached. I tired easily and had no energy. One of the family advised Doan's Kidney Pills, and they soon restored my energy, the backache left and I was free from headaches and dizziness."
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Millburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
Success Oil Company, 118 West Sycamore Street, Anaheim, California:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that at a meeting of the Directors held on the 6th day of September, 1921, an assessment of seven (7) mills per share was levied on the capital stock of the corporation payable on or before the 12th day of October, 1921, to the Secretary of said Company at room 305 Union Oil Building, Los Angeles, California.
Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 12th day of October, 1921, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction and unless payment is made before will be sold on the 31st day of October, 1921, to pay the delinquent assessment together with the cost of advertising and expenses of sale.
CARL H. BRUECKNER,
Secretary of the Success Oil Company
118 W. Sycamore St., Anaheim, California.
9-15-4t
Straight Ahead
LET'S GO
Big businesses and financiers are putting up buildings as fast as materials can be delivered to them. More Commercial buildings and factories are under construction today than ever before.
Those who reason and study conditions know now is the time to build.
Does the fact that these men are spending billions of dollars for new buildings at this time mean anything to you Mr. Home Builder? We believe it does, and our recommendation is that you select from our Photographic Plan Service the home you will want to build and arrange to have it built at the earliest possible time while materials are available.
You can't make money by waiting. Now is the time to build.
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FULLERTON ANAHEIM PLACENTIA
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Before you build! We can furnish all the material you want for your new house and will make you the lowest possible price.
Adams - Bowers Lumber Co.
Successors to Griffith Lumber Co.
GET OUR ESTIMATE
Before you build! We can furnish all the material you want for your new house and will make you the lowest possible price.
Adams - Bowers Lumber Co.
Successors to Griffith Lumber Co.
H. M. Adams A. C. Bowers E. L. Bowers
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131 West Center Street
FARM WANTED—Wanted to hear from owner of a farm or good land for sale reasonable. L. Jones, Box 551, Olney, Ill.
Say It With FLOWERS
FARM WANTED—Wanted to hear from owner of a farm or good land for sale reasonable. L. Jones, Box 551, Olney, Ill.
SUMMONS
In the Justice's Court of Anaheim Township, County of Orange, State of California.
J. R. Nipp, Plaintiff, vs. H. L. Schaefer, Defendant. Summons (Copy) C. C. P. Secs. 844-845.
The People of the State of California send Greetings to; H. L. Schaefer, Defendant.
You are Hereby Directed to Appear before me at my office, at No. 152 S. Los Angeles Street in the City of Anaheim, in said Township, and answer the complaint in an action entitled as above, brought against you in the Justice's Court of Anaheim Township, County of Orange, State of California, within five days after the service on you of this summons—if it is served within the city and County, township or city in which this action is brought; but within ten days if it is served out of said township or city but in the County in which the action is brought; and within twenty days if served elsewhere.
And you are hereby notified that unless you so 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 said Plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint.
Given, under my hand this 3rd day of May, 1921.
J. S. HOWARD,
Justice of the Peace of said Township.
ROGER C. DUTTON,
Attorney for Plaintiff,
Anaheim, Calif.
7-7-t10
Say It With FLOWERS
Howard E. Gates
FLORIST
Phone 121
Cor. W. Center and Illinois
Phone 368-M
ANAHEIM SANITARY DAIRY
Fresh Milk. Morning and Evening Delivery.
Quarts, 15c. Pints, 8c
Frank Tausch & Co
The reliable insurance firm. For real service, see us. Fire, automobile, compensation, plate glass, health and accident.
Office, 306 First Nat'l B'k Bldg.
Office Phone 94. Res. 342-W.