anaheim-gazette 1925-11-12
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CORNER PHILOSOPHY
The more dishwashing a wedding ring sees the longer it seems to last.
An Anaheim man says the reason money talks is that there is a woman's head on every coin.
The corkscrew is mute evidence that the day of the pull has passed.
Man comes into this world naked and with nothing on him, but in a short time everybody has something on him.
A writer asks what has become of the old-fashioned cook? She started a fire with gasoline.
Balloon trousers and balloon tires are all right. It's balloon heads that are all wrong.
It is estimated that cuss words have been added to our language by every alarm clock.
The proper test of man is sympathy. If he laps it up he is a two-by-four.
A normal man is one who thinks every old maid would have been glad to get him.
Man or monkey doesn't matter. What interests the benedict is whether he is man or worm.
Tis always best to stop and pray before you claim the right-of-way.
Horse sense is becoming as scarce as horses.
Money is a small matter with most of us—especially after the taxes are paid and the fuel box replenished.
The trouble with a good many boys is that they insist on doing as father did, instead of as father says.
The reason there are so many failures among marriages is that there are so many marriages among failures.
What the country really needs is less woman, "is to have the apple trees ready for the settlers when they come."
His first nursery was in West Virginia, and then he wandered into Ohio and Indiana, planting his seeds and planting apple trees in the wilderness. More than 100 nurseries were set out in the forests of the two middle western states by this strange wanderer.
With an axe, hatchet and a hoe, he would seek a favorable spot near a river, prepare the ground and plant thousands of apple, pear and peach seeds. Then he would build a brush fence around the infant nursery to keep out prowling beasts. Often he would set out the homely herbs which later proved so useful to the settlers.
Although he dressed in crude and queer-looking garments, Johnny Apple-seed was of prepossessing appearance and was a man of intelligence. The Indians venerated him as a great medicine man and he roamed through the wilderness unharmed, living simply on nuts and berries, and traveling without weapons. During the War of 1812 he performed important service for the western settlers, frequently warning them of the approach of hostile Indians. Once he brought troops to relieve the siege of a blockhouse in the wilderness.
He lived quietly in a backwoods cabin during his declining years, and his death was announced in congress in 1847, when he was characterized as "an old man who has done more for the West than any other man of his era."
Tree Cropping or Timber Mining
Forestry is concerned with the growing of successive tree crops on the same area. Most of our American lumbering has been timber-mining, removing the virgin timber and then abandoning the land as valueless. There are in America today nearly 100,000,000 acres of cut-over timberland standing barren and idle, producing nothing. This is an economic burden which will become more acute as the years go by.
Timber mining is particularly serious in California and other Pacific coast states. Most of the timberland here is best suited for growing tree crops. The prosperity of this region depends upon the timber industries. If we remove woman, "is to have the apple trees ready for the settlers when they come."
His first nursery was in West Virginia, and then he wandered into Ohio and Indiana, planting his seeds and planting apple trees in the wilderness. More than 100 nurseries were set out in the forests of the two middle western states by this strange wanderer.
With an axe, hatchet and a hoe, he would seek a favorable spot near a river, prepare the ground and plant thousands of apple, pear and peach seeds. Then he would build a brush fence around the infant nursery to keep out prowling beasts. Often he would set out the homely herbs which later proved so useful to the settlers.
Although he dressed in crude and queer-looking garments, Johnny Apple-seed was of prepossessing appearance and was a man of intelligence. The Indians venerated him as a great medicine man and he roamed through the wilderness unharmed, living simply on nuts and berries, and traveling without weapons. During the War of 1812 he performed important service for the western settlers, frequently warning them of the approach of hostile Indians. Once he brought troops to relieve the siege of a blockhouse in the wilderness.
He lived quietly in a backwoods cabin during his declining years, and his death was announced in congress in 1847, when he was characterized as "an old man who has done more for the West than any other man of his era."
Tree Cropping or Timber Mining
Forestry is concerned with the growing of successive tree crops on the same area. Most of our American lumbering has been timber-mining, removing the virgin timber and then abandoning the land as valueless. There are in America today nearly 100,000,000 acres of cut-over timberland standing barren and idle, producing nothing. This is an economic burden which will become more acute as the years go by.
Timber mining is particularly serious in California and other Pacific coast states. Most of the timberland here is best suited for growing tree crops. The prosperity of this region depends upon the timber industries. If we remove woman, "is to have the apple trees ready for the settlers when they come."
His first nursery was in West Virginia, and then he wandered into Ohio and Indiana, planting his seeds and planting apple trees in the wilderness. More than 100 nurseries were set out in the forests of the two middle western states by this strange wanderer.
With an axe, hatchet and a hoe, he would seek a favorable spot near a river, prepare the ground and plant thousands of apple, pear and peach seeds. Then he would build a brush fence around the infant nursery to keep out prowling beasts. Often he would set out the homely herbs which later proved so useful to the settlers.
Although he dressed in crude and queer-looking garments, Johnny Apple-seed was of prepossessing appearance and was a man of intelligence. The Indians venerated him as a great medicine man and he roamed through the wilderness unharmed, living simply on nuts and berries, and traveling without weapons. During the War of 1812 he performed important service for the western settlers, frequently warning them of the approach of hostile Indians. Once he brought troops to relieve the siege of a blockhouse in the wilderness.
He lived quietly in a backwoods cabin during his declining years, and his death was announced in congress in 1847, when he was characterized as "an old man who has done more for the West than any other man of his era."
Money is a small matter with most of us—especially after the taxes are paid and the fuel box replenished.
The trouble with a good many boys is that they insist on doing as father did, instead of as father says.
The reason there are so many failures among marriages is that there are so many marriages among failures.
What the country really needs is less concrete in the driver's head and more on the roadbed.
To the two sure things, death and taxes, add detours.
About the only difference between jail and marriage is when you're in jail you sometimes get time off for good behavior.
There's a reason for the affinity between a colored man and a chicken. One is descended from Ham and the other from eggs.
One reason why babies cry is because they're afraid they'll grow up to look like their parents.
It's a pity that Eve didn't have something like evolution to blame it on when she raised Cain.
There would be happiness enough to go around if folks would only split their portions a bit.
The young lady who lost her garter remarked: "It isn't the cost of stockings, but the upkeep that bothers me."
Man formerly broke the horse; now the auto breaks the man.
Women used to complain that they had nothing to wear, and now they worry because they have hardly anything to take off.
Did you ever hear tell of a banker who would loan money to a fellow on his reputation for being a good loser?
Couples madly in love are always crazy to get married, but they never realize it until after it's too late.
Accident in Fullerton this week. A man lost control of his car. He couldn't keep up the payments.
Some people never will wake up and find themselves rich, simply because they never will wake up.
The trouble with human rights seems to be that they overlap.
LIFE'S LITTLE PROVERBS
An open car gathers no women.
All's fair in love and war and the checkroom line.
Early to bed and early to rise, impairs the digestion and ruins the eyes. He who laughs last is dumb.
It's a poor shoe that can't keep body and sole together.
Most of our American lumbering has been timber-mining, removing the virgin timber and then abandoning the land as valueless. There are in America today nearly 100,000,000 acres of cut-over timberland standing barren and idle, producing nothing. This is an economic burden which will become more acute as the years go by.
Timber mining is particularly serious in California and other Pacific coast states. Most of the timberland here is best suited for growing tree crops. The prosperity of this region depends upon the timber industries. If we remove our virgin timber, and do not grow new crops of trees in its place, we are bound to face economic disaster.
Applied forestry is then answer. Forestry practice, properly applied, means a continuous yield and permanent industries. Timber mining means a short period of prosperity, followed by financial distress or even bankruptcy. This has been proved in other regions of the United States. California should heed the lesson and avoid similar disaster. Tree cropping will give a steady flow of wealth for the business and professional men and women of the future. Before we can have applied forestry on the broad scale that is needed, our public must become "forest wise" and "fire conscious," and demand that the necessary steps be taken.
Big Ad Campaign Boosts California
A most extensive and costly campaign of advertising in eastern papers and magazines to encourage travel to California this winter has been launched by the Santa Fe railroad, according to James B. Duffy, general passenger agent, who has returned to Los Angeles from a conference with the principal traffic officials held at Topeka.
"California Hotel Rates Are Reasonable," is the caption of a big advertisement being run in 187 of the leading national magazines and newspapers, stated the passenger official. The ad further states that travelers to California "will find just the accommodations you want at rates that are right; modest inns, great resort hotels or rent a rose garden bungalow."
"The tourist travel to California this winter is going to be heavy," said Mr. Duffy. "In fact, it already is setting in, and the present cold spell in the Great Lakes region and Middle West will encourage many to start to the coast carlier perhaps than usual. The California Limited arrived Thursday in three sections; Friday four sections were required to handle the big travel, and on Saturday five sections of the limited rolled in from Chicago."
The passenger official stated that arrangements are being made for taking care of a constant increase in passenger travel to California from now on. Special equipment is being lined up.
In addition to the campaign of advertising, using full page ads in the most widely circulated magazines, hav-
Some people never will wake up and find themselves rich, simply because they never will wake up.
The trouble with human rights seems to be that they overlap.
LIFE'S LITTLE PROVERBS
An open car gathers no women.
All's fair in love and war and the checkroom line.
Early to bed and early to rise, impairs the digestion and ruins the eyes.
He who laughs last is dumb.
It's a poor shoe that can't keep body and sole together.
Lack of money is the root of all evil.
Scarcity of clothes makes a woman.
He who gives up goes down.
No house is large enough for two grouches.
Flattery is the best cure for a stiff neck.
Johnny Appleseed to Receive Memorial
Johnny Appleseed, well known to tradition and history in the Middle West, once characterized by John Sherman as "one of the most striking figures this republic has produced," is to have late recognition of his services to America. The Chamber of Commerce at Fort Wayne has instructed a committee to locate and mark his grave with a suitable memorial, so that it may be pointed out to the public as the resting place of a unique middle western pioneer.
Most of the knowledge of Johnny Appleseed rests on tradition. It is known that he was born in Springfield, Mass., in 1775, and it is said that he left his native state and wandered into the wilderness because of disappointment in love. He was in the valley of the Potomac in 1739 and in western Pennsylvania in 1800. He gathered a great quantity of apple seeds from the elder presses in Pennsylvania and floated down the Ohio in a strange craft with bags of seeds. He was on his way west to make the wilderness bloom with apple blossoms.
"My mission in life," he told a pioneer
END ARMED OCCUPATION
On the very day that the treaty of Locarno was signed, the last French troops marched out of the Ruhr. Germany's great industrial region is now completely in the hands of its owners again for the first time in nearly three years.
So ends the great adventure entered upon so gaily by the sword-rattling Polnarek. When Germany failed in some obligations assumed under the Versailles treaty, he conceived no remedy but armed force. Deferred payments, in kind and cash, were to be collected by armies. But all that his armies succeeded in doing was to enrage the Germans, retard industrial production in Germany and interfere with the normal process of collection. France got less with her armies than she had got without them.
Sword-rattling gave way to reason and conciliation. Germans, being human, responded. The present outlook is that Germany will meet her obligations willingly and fully, as agreed upon under the Dawes plan. And France now plans to withdraw her troops from the Rhine. It looks like a new era. That way lies hope. The other way could only lead to further war.
Public School Most Important Business
Mrs. Snow Urges All to Participate in Education Week
"The public school is the community's biggest and most important business enterprise in which every citizen is a stockholder," declared Mrs. J. Edmund Snow, president of the fourth (Orange county) district Parent-Teacher Association, in urging the different organizations in the county to participate in the programs arranged by the school authorities for observing American Education Week. November 16 to 22.
During American Education Week parents will be given an opportunity to learn for themselves how the schools are operated, to judge results and to inspect the equipment, she remarked. Stressing the need of every parent taking a decided interest in this national event, Mrs. Snow added that perhaps the greatest of the functions of American Education Week is the demonstration of the schools to the people by drawing into them the citizens of every community, whether small or large, setting before them the processes of modern education, the equipment required to attain and maintain the highest degree of efficiency, and the justice of giving to every child, whether in the city or country, equal educational advantages.
Continuing along this line, she suggested that small school districts give equal importance to the observance of the event as the large districts.
In this connection, she took occasion to commend the fine spirit shown by Huntington Beach, where, according to advice received, the community as a whole is making elaborate preparations to observe American Education Week.
She also called attention to the following list of questions submitted by the United States Bureau of Education, in connection with the coming event:
Has your child's teacher had adequate preparation for her work?
Is your child's teacher paid a living and a saving wage?
How many new teachers are needed
Service Resumed Quickly After Fire
Though Southern California is unusually fortunate in respect to catalysms of nature, storms, floods, fire and earthquakes sometimes leave in their wake ruined telephone plant and communities without means of telephonic communication. Under these distressing conditions, the restoration of the service to the stricken communities is the first consideration, and the promptness with which telephone communication is established depends on the extent and availability of the resources at the command of the telephone company.
The other day, Manager Beard of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company told of a happening at Portland, Oregon, recently which was a demonstration of how the Associated Bell Telephone Companies are equipped to handle situations of this kind. A fire ruined two busy downtown exchanges, putting nearly 15,000 telephones out of commission. Half an hour after the fire was extinguished orders for replacement equipment had been received by the Seattle branch, and in about an hour were being speeded on their way to Portland. Four hours later 45,000 pounds of central office equipment were loaded on an express car attached to a fast passenger train at San Francisco and reached Portland the next evening. A force of 250 men pounced on this material on its arrival and worked night and day, so that four days after the fire one exchange, caring for 6000 subscribers, was able to resume service, and the second exchange was soon after restored to its normal capacity. To accomplish this result, material was rushed into Portland also from other points in the states of Oregon and Washington.
PETITION IS FILED
Mrs. Mary E. Hainlin of Anaheim and Mrs. Emma O. Nagel of Huntington Park have filed a petition in Superior court for letters of administration over the estate of their late father, James Owen of Anaheim, who left cash and property valued at $75,000. The estate includes $8000 in cash in an Anaheim bank and real estate valued at $50,000. The two daughters are the heirs. Attorney Will Hays of Los Angeles represents them.
Mary L. Johnson
MARCELLING AND SHAMPOOING
819 SOUTH CLAUDINA
PHONE 1054 ANAHEIM
COLORADO OUTLOOK GOOD
Immediate results are promised by those members of the United States Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation who have been touring Southern California and other portions of the Pacific Southwest, on an impartial and exhaustive investigation of the Colorado river in its relations to the welfare of the states riparian thereto
In this connection, she took occasion to commend the fine spirit shown by Huntington Beach, where, according to advises received, the community as a whole is making elaborate preparations to observe American Education Week.
She also called attention to the following list of questions, submitted by the United States Bureau of Education, in connection with the coming event:
Has your child's teacher had adequate preparation for her work?
Is your child's teacher paid a living and a saving wage?
How many new teachers are needed in your school district each year, and why?
How many children in your city are attending school part time?
How many new school buildings are needed?
Is efficient use made of the school plant?
Is the school board, individual board members, or committees attempting to do the things the superintendent is employed to do?
Are playgrounds provided so that the children need not play in the streets?
Are there evening schools in your city, and how well are they attended?
Is the compulsory school attendance law enforced?
Is provision made for health instruction?
What are the plans of your superintendent of schools for the improvement of the schools?
We're just "plain folks"~and not hard to approach.
Many people would rather face a blizzard than a banker.
And some bankers are just that cold
"If a Shall He THIS question, we is a pertinent business man of to How Can I The answer is agents of the Anaheim housewives. Women learned the futility They know exactly stand and how to the limit.
That’s why wo through advertising check up on what in the way of speed It tells them where just how much to p To reach and appeal to her tha In Anaheim th Go through any and note the item too the bulk of o
We're just "plain folks"—and not hard to approach.
Many people would rather face a blizzard than a banker.
And some bankers are just that cold and impersonal that perhaps the folks are justified.
There's a different atmosphere at the Bank of America. We're conservative—but also considerate, human and helpful in our attitude toward everyone.
Smiles, handshakes, cheerful advice and information, are just a part of our everyday service.
BANK OF AMERICA
COMMERCIAL—SAVINGS—TRUST
ANAHEIM BRANCH
E. E. SMITH, Manager
Combined Resources
Bank of America & Commercial National Trust
& Savings Bank
AFFILIATED IN OWNERSHIP THROUGH AMERICOMMERCIAL CORPORATION
41 MILLION DOLLARS
24 BANKING OFFICES
in Southern California
Transmit Pictures Through Telephone
Photographs Now Carried Over the Pacific Wires
Transmission of pictures over telephone wires from coast to coast on a commercial basis has been started, and one more dream of mankind's conquest of time and space became a reality.
Manager Beard of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company announced that commercial offices for the new method of transmitting pictures through a telephone circuit devised by engineers of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company and the Western Electric Company, were opened today in New York City, Chicago and San Francisco. These are the only machines completed and ready to handle the transmission of pictures at this early stage in the development of the art, Mr. Beard said.
Now that a photograph can be sent over a pair of wires in just a few minutes more time than it takes to play a phonograph record, following are a few of the possibilities:
A sensational occurrence—the story of which can be told in pictures—comes to pass in New York City. Photographs are made and taken to the New York office, and less than an hour later, by actual time, the pictures are available to Chicago and San Francisco papers. Taking into consideration the difference between Eastern and Pacific time, the pictures would be available in San Francisco at 6 a.m. when they were delivered at the New York office at 8 a.m. So the new device may make it possible for people upon the Pacific coast to view pictures in their afternoon papers at an earlier hour than the photographs were taken.
A known criminal may escape from the scene of his latest crime in Chicago. An hour later his photograph and fingerprints may be in the hands of the authorities on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts.
A business man may wish to identify himself and his signature in a strange city. His photograph and a photograph of his handwriting can be on hand in an hour's time.
Pictures of President and Mrs. Coolidge leaving church in Washington, D.C., were sent to San Francisco by the new process on March 2, as the first public demonstration of transmission across the continent. The first news event in which the process was used was the inaugural ceremony, March 4, and the first catastrophy of which the pictures were sent by telephone wire was the recent Middle Western tornado.
The earliest process resulted in reproductions at the receiving end showing visible parallel lines of varying width. Since then the telephone engineers have perfected the process so that the pictures are practically indistinguishable from direct photographic prints.
Walnut Pruning Demonstrations
The annual series of walnut pruning demonstrations has been scheduled for Monday and Tuesday, November 16 and 17, to be held as follows:
Tustin, November 16, 10 a.m.
Capistrano, November 16, 2 p.m.
Anaheim, November 17, 10 a.m.
Fullerton, November 17, 2 p.m.
The locations of these demonstrations will be announced later.
The world seems to be divided into the better class and the bitter class.
“If a Man Dies
shall He Live Again?”
HIS question, which Job asked 3000 years ago,
is a pertinent one, but it doesn’t bother the business man of today as much as the question—
How Can I Get More Business?
The answer is by reaching the purchasing points of the Anaheim homes, and that means the sewives. Women are good buyers. They have learned the futility of “just shopping around.” They know exactly what the family purse will end and how to stretch the elastic budgets to limit.
That’s why women are so open to suggestion through advertising. Advertising enables them to pick up on what the various stores are offering the way of specific articles, prices and values. Sells them where to go for what they want and how much to pay. BUT——
To reach and sell the family buyer, you must deal to her through the paper she reads.
In Anaheim that means The Anaheim Gazette.
Go through any issue of The Anaheim Gazette note the items of interest to women. Note, the bulk of advertisements directed to women
To reach and sell the family buyer, you must deal to her through the paper she reads.
In Anaheim that means The Anaheim Gazette.
Go through any issue of The Anaheim Gazette note the items of interest to women. Note, the bulk of advertisements directed to women advertisements placed by concerns who year after have found their advertising in The Anaheim Gazette increasingly profitable to them.
The women of Anaheim and Northern Orangeenty naturally turn to The Anaheim Gazette for price on where and what to buy. No newspaper America has a more loyal, more enthusiastic or more worth-while feminine following.
Among the women—as well as the men—The Anaheim Gazette has the BUYERS.
The Anaheim Gazette
Anaheim's Greatest Salesman of Merchandise