anaheim-gazette 1924-10-23
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HENRY FORD SIZES'UP
RACE FOR PRESIDENT
Henry Ford doesn't talk often but when he does, millions listen. Some may not agree with what he says but multitudes follow him because they feel that he knows what he is talking about.
Here is his judgment on the presidential campaign in a recent issue of the Ford International Weekly the Dearborn Independent. Read it, think it over and you will agree with him.
"The present political campaign offers three distinct attitudes for the people's thought.
"One is an attack on industry and every form of success, on the theory that big business means the money power.
"Of course it does not.
"Another attitude attacks a dead administration, but not the present one, and raises the slogan of "Honesty in government," as if all the radicals were in one party and all the saints in the other.
"Of course they are not.
"The third attitude is that of continuing straight along the common sense road of American progress, extending the usefulness and prosperity of the American shop, enlarging the advantages of the American home, holding fast the established ideals of American liberties.
"This third attitude will win.
"Though it happens to bear a partisan name, republican, Calvin Coolidge is really the leader of the true third party, which is the American party."
FORM THE WATER HABIT
The human body is two-thirds water. It is therefore essential that every person should drink the proper amount of water—not too much and not too little.
"LEST WE FORGET"
Robert M. La Follette is the same La Follette he was in 1017. If he is right now, he was right then.
The Vierleks, the Villards, the Bergers, the whole crew of open and secret sympathizers with our enemies, the paid propagandists and the alien plotters against us, whose here he was then, are all cheering him today.
If Senator La Follette was a patriotic American in 1917, then Woodrow Wilson, Theodore Roosevelt and every gallant boy who died for us across the sea were not. If La Follette was right, then every man of us who believed in the cause of America was a weak and deluded simpleton.
Argue, if you like, that the war was not the knightly crusade we thought it was. But America was on the firing line. Her fate as a nation was at stake. Her youth, her ideals, her every hope of a free existence were in the balance. He who was not with her was against her.
La Follette, where was he? Barking at our heels, ready with words of comfort for our enemies and none of encouragement for us. His heart was alien to us. His voice and his power were used to hamper our every effort. He has never excused his actions nor repented them. He asks his reward now, for the confidence of the millions of Americans who believed in 1917 that Senator La Follette was wrong and America was right.
If we are to confess our utter disillusionment and must reward those who were against us, why not put the laurel crown on the head of Eugene Debs? He did not sulk, he did not whimper, he did not hide behind the power of an exalted office, he frankly and freely told us that no word of his would help us toward military victory. We put him in jail, he suffer progress. It is upon w mothers of the American this duty devolves. Women that the children of today citizens of tomorrow.
Have you ever looked up parsed the records of the and Democratic parties on affecting women and children. It cured me of any notion entertained that it made life which political party power.
I found that the record great parties in state legion the protection of women also shows that the rule in the Democratic states is lo while the rule in normally states is liberal hours of shows that twelve states rest in seven and eleven are normally states. It shows that of fif which have laws regulating of women at night, fourteen publican. It shows that of states which have minimum women, eleven are Republican shows that only six states do not provide mother and that five of these are Democratic.
For these reasons, my belief that the future of the women dren of America is safer in of the Republican party. reasons, I feel that the be can be made of my vote in is to cast it for Coolidge a
SALES VALUES REST
"This third attitude will win.
Though it happens to bear a partisan name, republican, Calvin Coolidge is really the leader of the true third party, which is the American party.
FORM THE WATER HABIT
The human body is two-thirds water. It is therefore essential that every person should drink the proper amount of water—not too much and not too little.
Many persons have the dry habit. It may come from wrong methods of living, or result from hurry, rapid eating, pressure of business and so forth. Such folks may contend that they have no craving for water, therefore do not need it. Yet water is as necessary to life as air.
It is, however, possible to drink too much water. What is the proper amount? It has been determined by dietitions that in order to get the best results from water drinking, one should form a habit of taking a certain amount at stated times. Take a glass of cool water immediately on rising in the morning. This will refresh and make up for the moisture exhaled while breathing during sleep.
The theory of waterless meals was strongly favored until comparatively recently. It was believed that drinking water while eating diluted the gastric juices, rendering them incapable of performing their natural function. The best dietitions now advocate the drinking of at least one glass with each fthe three meals, one between breakfast and luncheon and another between luncheon and dinner. Then, the last thing before retiring take another glass. For the ordinary day this will suffice. If extra heat or unusually hard work demands, drink more.
The proper temperature of the water is an important factor. Water chilled to a pleasant coolness is wholesome and delightfully palatable, but ice water, where the temperature is sufficiently low to make the teeth ache, is a positive menace to digestion and health.
RAILROAD BROTHERHOODS
WANTS PROFITS
The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers owns three million dollars worth of coal mines in West Virginia. The union miners have been on strike since April, over the corporation refusing to pay the union price for mining. President Stone, also manager of the mine, says that in paying the union labor scale they lose 13 cents millions of Americans who believed in 1917 that Senator La Follette was wrong and America was right.
If we are to confess our utter disillusionment and must reward those who were against us, why not put the laurel crown on the head of Eugene Debs? He did not sulk, he did not whimper, he did not hide behind the power of an exalted office, he frankly and freely told us that no word of his would help us toward military victory. We put him in jail, he suffered in silence, and then we turned him out on the world, broken in health and ready for the grave.
Better, far better, he, than La Follette.
Seven years have not changed America. We are as proud today of the chivalrous millions who flung their lives into the scale as we were then. If they were heroes then, they are none the less today.
Wilson and Roosevelt are in their graven. The golden lads who died in France are still sleeping in the faith thatunt them there. The men who went away and, happily, came back again, still believe they did their duty. Nothing has changed, or can change our faith in America and the right-southernness of her cause.
And La Follette is unchanged too. It is the La Follette of 1917 who asks us not to forget and forgive, but to justify.
SILVER REACHES HIGHEST
Combined buying from China; India Europe and Japan has advanced silver to 70 cents an ounce, the highest price since 1922.
An international convention was held during the past week at Sacramento, in which silver producers organized to promote larger monetary uses of silver in all parts of the world.
Production of silver for 1924 is estimated to be twelve million ounces below that of last year. Total production in our country for 1924 may reach sixty-two million ounces.
Silver movements in London for the first seven months of 1924 total 33,-347,409 ounces refined bullion against 22,278,773 ounces last year. Of this amount, 25,530,879 ounces were from our country.
Silver and copper production will probably steadily increase in the United States for the next decade.
WOMEN SEE REAL CAMPAIGN ISSUES
Never before has the countrys presidential campaign wished as they are today. A lot of staples than of average versally higher prices for products, and a business trend dffies stampede.
And yet it is normal there was no stable Europe for the American farm surplus. The American business planning the war reparations, a been opened and credit for buying American food for further war. Farmers not sell their live stock, ton, or alfalfa and who in have several years' crops will profit by the better for they can sell every have.
The farmer with no enfee contract was "deflated" from credible war over capital was almost every other owned business. A vast loan scheme, that would have rest of the country for the benefit, was proposed. It been no kindness to keep it of impossible farm value or otherwise; further higher taxes would have no farmer forever.
The farmer was given better than Shylock loansizing gifts; tariff protetcled he raised, and free access to markets for everything he the American financial expatiions plan opened the expihe buyers came. He wore 1924 crops for a billion dollar than last year.
Agitators and penny dreeers and politicians have so little the word and though malcy. But the farmer who where before he bad only pockets, knows that it was munistic mouthings or pocembe, but sober businesses restored the sales value of products.
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
RAILROAD BROTHERHOODS
WANTS PROFITS
The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers owns three million dollars worth of coal mines in West Virginia. The union miners have been on strike since April, over the corporation refusing to pay the union price for mining. President Stone, also manager of the mine, says that in paying the union labor scale they lose 13 cents a ton, without allowing anything for the capital invested, and so their capital is dead.
The retort of President Lewis of the Mine Workers is in effect that it is the owner's affair whether he can manage his property so as to make any money after meeting the miner's demands. Back in 1919, Mr. Stone himself testified in favor of the Plumb railroad plan, and said "It is a question whether capital is entitled to any return." Friend Lewis brings it back to him in implying the miner's right to render the Brotherhood's three million dollar investment unprofitable.
No human instinct is more deeply rooted than that of acquiring property. Believing that property owning is right, the Brotherhood fought and saved to get it. With more seasonal work, with more competition, with vastly greater numbers of inharmonious units, with less social standing, and with poorer pay, the miners are now where the Brotherhood was a generation ago. But they have hope. Just now, the union miner is doing what the Brotherhood did, in declaring that capital or thrift has no rights until he gets his. The union miner will soon be like the union Brotherhood, a firm believer in the fight to get and hold and receive profit on savings and investments in property.
Silver movements in London for the first seven months of 1924 total 33,-347,409 ounces refined bullion against 22,278,773 ounces last year. Of this amount, 25,530,879 ounces were from our country.
Silver and copper production will probably steadily increase in the United States for the next decade.
WOMEN SEE REAL
CAMPAIGN ISSUES
There are forty million children in the United States ranging in age from the babe in arms to the boy or girl just too young to vote.
Our government is the finest example of representative government the world has ever known. I want the United States to continue to be the best country for these children to live in, a place where they will have the greatest opportunity for education, protection of health and morals, a place where they can grow to the highest type of men and women.
It is largely the responsibility of the twenty-nine million women voters to go to the polls on November 4th and through their vote not only register their own convictions, but by so doing insure the future safety and welfare of these forty million children.
If the laws enacted are not such as to insure the safety and welfare of children, it will be because women have either voted for the wrong candidates or failed to vote against them. When we begin to realize that we can have no business which is so important as the business of having good churches, good schools and a government that stands for honor and integrity, we will be getting somewhere.
Progress will falter unless American women cast their votes and throw their weight on the side of enlightened malice. But the farmer who where before he had only two pockets, knows that it was munistic mouthings or poocome, but sober business restored the sales value of products.
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
Anabelm Union Water Co-operation of principal place on 303 East Center Street. Ana-bella formula.
Notice is hereby given meeting of the Board of held on the 3rd day tember, 1924, assessment $5 per share was levied on total stock of the corporation at once to the Secretary of Pany at Anabelm, Orange California. Any stock upon assessment shall remain the 1st day of November, 1924 delinquent and advertised public auction and unless made before, will be sold day of December, 1924 at P. M., to pay for delinquents together with costing and expense of sale.
ANAHEIM UNION WORK
L. J. SHERIDAN
4t.
NOTICE TO CREDIT
No. 17,277
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT STATE OF CALIFORNIA AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
In the Master of the CHARLES WILLIAM B also known as C. W. BLATTE ceased.
Notice is hereby given enlisted, Executor of the Charles William Blattner, as C. W. Blattner, deceased.
progress. It is upon women, the mothers of the American race, that this duty devolves. Women realize that the children of today are the citizens of tomorrow.
Have you ever looked up and compared the records of the Republican and Democratic parties on legislation affecting women and children? I have. It cured me of any notion I may have entertained that it made little difference which political party was in power.
I found that the record of the two great parties in state legislation for the protection of women and children shows that the rule in the regularly Democratic states is long hours, while the rule in normally Republican states is liberal hours of labor. It shows that twelve states compel one day's rest in seven and that these 12 eleven are normally Republican states. It shows that of fifteen states which have laws regulating the work of women at night, fourteen are Republican. It shows that of the twelve states which have minimum laws for women, eleven are Republican. It shows that only six states in the Union do not provide mothers' pensions and that five of these are regularly Democratic.
For these reasons, my belief is firm that the future of the women and children of America is safer in the hands of the Republican party. For these reasons, I feel that the best use that can be made of my vote in November to cast it for Coolidge and Dawes.
SALES VALUES RESTORED
Never before has the country faced a presidential campaign with conditions as they are today. A larger crop of staples than of average years, universally higher prices for farm products, and a business tranquility that
creditors of and all persons having oldms against the said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers within ten months after the first publication of this notice to the said Executor at 706 North Lemon Street, Anaheim, County of Orange, California, which the undersigned selects as a place of business in Orange County in all matters connected with the said estate, or at the office of L. A. Lewis, 1228 Citizens National Bank Building, Los Angeles, County of Los Angeles, California, or to file them with the necessary vouchers within ten months after the first publication of this notice in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange, at Santa Ana, California.
Dated September 5, 1924.
O. A. BLATTNER,
Executor of said Estate.
L. A. Lewis, Attorney, 1225 Citizens National Bank Building, Los Angeles, California.
9-11-5t.
Money of the United States, all the above described real estate, or so much thereof as will be sufficient to satisfy said decree for principal interest and all costs.
Given under my hand this 8th day of September, A.D., 1924.
SAM JERNIGAN, Sheriff.
Tipton and Callor, Anaheim, California, Attorneys for Plaintiffs
Sept 11-3t.
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SALES VALUES RESTORED
Never before has the country faced a presidential campaign with conditions as they are today. A larger crop of staples than of average years, universally higher prices for farm products, and a business tranquility that keeps stampsede.
And yet it is normal. For years there was no stable European market for the American farm surplus. Under the American business plan of settling the war reparations, a market has been opened and credit is available for buying American food instead of for further war. Farmers who could not sell their live stock, grain, cotton, or alfalfa and who in many cases have several years' crops on hand will profit by the better conditions for they can sell every thing they have.
The farmer with no enforcible war contract was "deflated" from an incredible war over capitalization. So was almost every other over capitalized business. A vast loan or gift scheme, that would have taxed the rest of the country for the farmers benefit, was proposed. It would have no kindness to keep up the fiction of impossible farm valuations, by loan or otherwise; further doubt and higher taxes would have ruined the farmer forever.
The farmer was given something better than Shylock loans or pauperizing gifts; tariff protectorclon on what he raised, and free access to the world markets for everything he used. When the American financial experts reparations plan opened the export market the buyers came. He will sell his 1924 crops for a billion dollars more than last year.
Agitators and penny dreadful writers and politicians have sought to be little the word and thought of Normanley. But the farmer who has money, where before he had only holes in his pockets, knows that it was not communistic mouthings or political buncombe, but sober business sense, that restored the sales value of his farm products.
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
Anahaim Union Water Company, location of principal place of business, 303 East Center Street, Anahaim, Cali-
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IN THE SUPERIOR COURT:
In and for the County of Orange, State of California
Sale Under Foreclosure of MortgageW. S. Pomeroy and Jennie Pomeroy, Plaintiffs vs.
Louis Perry Dunlap, John Doe and Richard Roe.
Under and by virtue of a decree of foreclosure and order of sale duly made and entered In the Superior Court, of the County of Orange, State of California, on the 5th day of August, A. D., 1924 and a Writ of Execution for the enforcement of judgment requiring sale of property under foreclosure of Mortgage issued out of the said Superior Court on the 2nd day of September A. D., 1924 in the above entitled action, in favor of W.
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DELINQUENT NOTICE
Office of the Anahiem Eucalyptus Water Company, Anahiem, Orange County, California. Notice.
There is delinquent upon the following described stock, on account of assessment No. 17, levied on the 7th day of July, 1924, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows:
Cert. No. of Amt No. Shares Due
Andrew F. Tolty ... 24 1 $3.00
E. F. Wickersheim ... 422 1 3.00
Ben Baxter ... 147 2½ 7.50
Roscoe C. Sawyer ... 387 10 30.00
Albert O. and Gertrude
E. Nelson ... 402 5 15.00
I. J. and Kate
Owens ... 424-428 5 15.00
And in accordance with law and
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
Anahaim 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 3rd day of September, 1924, assessment No. 63 of $5 per share was levied on the capital stock of the corporation payable at once to the Secretary of the company at Anahaim, Orange County, California. Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 1st day of November, 1924, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction and unless payment is made before, will be sold on the 15th day of December, 1924, at one o'clock P.M., to pay for delinquent assessments together with cost of advertising and expense of sale.
ANAHEIM UNION WATER CO.
L. J. SHERIDAN, Secretary.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
No. 17,277
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
In the Matter of the Estate of CHARLES WILLIAM BLATTNER, also known as C. W. BLATTNER, deceased.
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, Executor of the Estate of Charles William Blattner, also known as C. W. Blattner, deceased, to the Louis Perry Dunlap, John Doe and Richard Roe.
Under and by virtue of a decree of foreclosure and order of sale duly made and entered in the Superior Court, of the County of Orange, State of California, on the 5th day of August, A. D., 1924 and a Writ of Execution for the enforcement of judgment requiring sale of property under foreclosure of Mortgage issued out of the said Superior Court on the 2nd day of September A. D., 1924 in the above entitled action, in favor of W. S. Pomeroy and Jennie Pomeroy, Plaintiffs, and against Louis Perry Dunlap, et al., defendants a copy of which said decree of foreclosure duly attested under the seal of the said Superior Court on the 2nd day of September, A. D., 1924, and to me delivered on the 3rd day of September, 1924, together with said writ annexed thereto, whereby I am commanded to sell at public auction for cash in lawful money of the United States, the following and in said decree, described real estate:
Situated in the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California, and more particularly described as follows, to-wit: Lot Nine (9) of the "Sunrise Tract" as shown on a map recorded in Book 3, Page 38 of Miscellaneous Maps, Records of Orange County, California, subject to an agreement that no house shall be erected thereon which shall cost less than $1000. Note. The above described lot is subject to the rights and easements of the Anaheim Union Water Company, and its successors, described in a deed from the Los Angeles Vineyard Society to said County, recorded in Book 4, page 624 et seq. of deeds, records of Los Angeles County, California. Together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any wise appurtaining.
Public notice is hereby given that on Thursday, the 2nd day of October, A. D., 1924 at 10:30 o'clock A. M. of said day. I will sell at the south door of the Court House, in the City of Santa Ana, at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash. In Lawful lowing described stock, on account of assessment No. 17, levied on the 7th day of July, 1924, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows:
Cert. No. of Amt
No. Shares Due
And in accordance with law and order of the Board of Directors, made on said-7th day of July, 1924, so many shares of each parcel of said stock may be necessary will be sold at the office of the Anaheim Eucalyptus Water Company, Anaheim, Orange County California, on the 8th day of September 1924 at the hour of 8 o'clock p.m. of said day to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the costs and advertising and expense of sale.
Anaheim Eucalyptus Water Co.
M. E. BEEBE, Secretary.
TIME TABLE
A. T. & S. F. RR..
In effect February 17, 1924.
Trains to Los Angeles
*No. 79 ... 6:08 a.m.
No. 71 ... 11:28 a.m.
†No. 73 ... 4:50 p.m.
*No. 75 ... 8:52 y.m.
Trains to San Diego
No. 78 ... 1:56 a.m.
$No. 72 ... 10:04 a.m.
No. 74 ... 3:46 p.m.
No. 76 ... 6:47 p.m.
*Through sleepers to Denver, Kansas City, and Chicago.
$Through sleepers to Chicago and Grand Canyon connection.
†Houston, Galveston, Texas; and New Orleans; and Phoenix connection.
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