oc-plain-dealer 1922-02-24
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The Orange County Plain Dealer
An Independent Newspaper, Issued Every Afternoon Except Sunday
R. W. ERNEST, Manager
PAUL V. HESTER, Editor
Subscription rate—In No. Orange-co: Per yr. $2; six months $1.25
Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., as second-class matter
Popular fiction in courtship days:
"I never loved anyone but you!"
When a tragedy happens, it is always easy to show how it could have been avoided.
One may blacken another's eye, and be arrested and fined for it. But one may blacken another's reputation and go scot free.
There is more hope for the man who is looking for work than for his brother-man who is looking for a position or for employment.
China brought a big pile of soiled men to the Arms Conference. But it goes home well pleased with its package of clean laundry.
Yap is only a tiny islet. And yet, at one time, it was ruled like unto a gigantic package of menacing TNT in the international situation.
The lower house of congress, without "Uncle Joe" Cannon as a member, will be almost as insipid as would be "Hamlet" staged without any Hamlet.
One of the signs that the millennium is close at hand would be St. Paul and Minneapolis voluntarily consolidating, with each of them giving up its name.
Love has been love and its old sweet song has been the most entrenching of melodies to fond hearts from Adam and Eve, in the morning of the world, to George Uptodate and Miss Ruby Redd of A. D. 1922.
A little deep, sincere, open-minded thinking is a far more valuable mental exercise than much shallow, rutty, prejudiced so-called thinking. This
HECKLING ON TREATIES BAD TACTICS
There is evident intention, among certain opponents of the Arms Conference treaties in the Senate, to employ every obstructive device and to harry the proponents of these compacts. Such methods are regrettable. They do no credit to those who employ them.
There should be free, full, fair discussion of the treaties all will concede. It is proper to inquire into and to bring out in relief, in reasonable measure, the deliberations of the Arms Conference and the construction that various delegations gave the treaties as they were being formulated. But to make these inquiries narrow and colored with prejudice is not in order. The world too long has languished for the exceedingly hopeful outlook for the preservation of just peace which these treaties hold out. Mankind should not be denied this boon nor should ratification be delayed unduly.
INCOMES ENORMOUS FOR SIXTY-FIVE PERSONS
Sixty-five persons in the United States had incomes, in 1919, ranging from $1,000,000 to more than $5,000,000. There were 4939 persons whose annual income each ran from $100,000 to $1,000,000. These 5000 persons had by far the largest incomes, individually, of the 5,332-760 persons who filed income tax returns in 1919. The grand total of incomes of all who reported was nearly $20,000,000,000! Nothing in these figures to indicate that Americans are an impoverished people.
The vast majority of incomes, however, are in moderate figures—each
Love has been love and its old sweet song has been the most entrancing of melodies to fond hearts from Adam and Eve, in the morning of the world, to George Uptodate and Miss Ruby Redd of A. D. 1922.
A little deep, sincere, open-minded thinking is a far more valuable mental exercise than much shallow, rutty, prejudiced so-called thinking. This outstanding quality of a real thought is freedom—freedom from prejudice or passion; freedom from bigotry; freedom from all that is narrow and constricted. Real thought soars on tireless, unshackled pinions through the upper ether.
Village Gossip
Bob Strain, Fullerton city councilman, was good and sore yesterday afternoon when he came over to Anaheim and got stuck in the mud at the alley west of Lemon-st., between the Cole Auto agency and Stanley's garage. It didn't help matters that his old friend, John Tuffree, stood on the sidelines and made some rather pointed suggestions as to the best way to get out.
"It's a good thing you're not an Anaheim councilman or we'd let you stay," was hurled at Strain.
After long and ineffectual efforts, a low car from the Stanley garage affected a rescue.
The quagmire, which has existed for many moons, has proven most disheartening to Adams & Dohm, proprietors of the garage at the rear of the Cole agency. For some time after each rain, and that has been much of the time this winter, it has been practically impossible to get in or out of the garage with the result that these men, known to be excellent mechanics, have had to stand idle.
A factory enterprise for Wintersburg today was in prospect with the organization of the Ulrich Tubing Drainage company, a stock company with a capitalization of $15,000, and with Wintersburg and Smeltzer capital in control. It is said the stock is being absorbed rapidly by residents of those communities.
Frank Ulrich, proprietor of the Wintersburg blacksmith shop, is the organizer and president and manager of the new enterprise.
The company will erect a building and install beside a modern machine and blacksmith shop a plant for manufacturing tube drainers, an oil well accessory invented by Ulrich.
Ulrich secured the patent several years ago and tests have shown the equipment effective in the elimination of waste of oil in drilling. It also makes working around an oil well cleaner. The drainer is placed at the bottom of the tubing and automatically permits oil that comes to the surface under present methods to flow back into the well. It also has the same effect in case the pump sands-up or the cage bursts.
WISE AND WITTY SAYINGS IN BRIEF
Truth is so constantly being withdrawn from circulation that the visible supply is low.
Folks who know nothing are always telling it.
Success is 99 per cent determination.
Any man is well educated who can make his own living.
Give me the man who looks for work instead of for a situation.
Anaheim’s New Shoe Store
In the New Post Office Building
A STORE OF QUALITY AND LOW PRICE
FEATURING
Anaheim's New Shoe Store
In the New Post Office Building
A STORE OF QUALITY
AND LOW PRICE
—FEATURING
RED GOOSE SCHOOL
We Are Specializing
Friedman-Shelby
Solid Leather
Shoes for All the Family
The highest standard of ein shoes for the school
girl. A Red Goose Showell. But wears better
stand the test that a schdemands from any shoe.
From $2.75 and u
EVERY SHOE A NEW
Each and every pair of
our stock is absolutely
style, and the new low-leNone of our shoes were p
on the high market.
Men’s Dress Shoes ....
Women’s Low Shoes, $4.9
Solid Leather Work ...
Whether you need shoes just now, or not—come in and get acquainted with the new modern shoe store located here for your advantage.
indsay's Shoe St
The Leading House for High Class Shoes
Clementine - Next to Post
BERLIN PROFESSOR CREATES MILLINERY
NEW YORK, Feb. 24. — They are going to take Mahomet to the mountain. The Tired Business Man will have Art brought to his very tiredest door here in Manhattan. On the suggestion of a downtown broker that more business men of means would be willing to speculate in the work of American artists if the artists' products were more available to them during business hours, nine men are open to a gallery to be hung with the work of Americans only, at 41 Broad street, in the heart of the downtown commercial district. "People are just beginning to realize in this country that artists cannot live on hyacinths" explained Frank M. Moore, one of the leaders in the movement. "I was talking this over with a business man. He told me that if the artists didn't do all their exhibiting way up town where he and his friends never got a look at it, they might get interested enough to invest in the pictures. The Downtown Art Gallery is the result."
Ice rink tea parties are the correct thing this season. Maybe it's the effect of the war—as they tell us everything else is—but anyway, we certainly have increased our tea-drinking most tremendously in these past few years; and this winter, it is quite the thing to see steaming tea cups regaling ice-skaters.
The first radio telephone broadcasting station in America to operate on a purely commercial basis will be erected shortly as a result of a permit granted to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company to erect a gigantic station on the roof of its building here. It will distribute news, programs of music, advertising matter, and so forth, to all who contract for this service on a commercial basis. The building on which the station is to be erected is 350 feet high and the towers supporting the antennae will be 100 feet higher still.
BERLIN PROFESSOR CREATES MILLINERY
It takes a professor to create millinery in Berlin. This spring hat is the creation of Professor Haas Heye who is the foremost millinery creator in the German capital.
IS ALL MODESTY GONE?
Even secular magazines are becoming openly antagonistic to the modern dance. Take this quotation from the Pathfinder:
"It has come to be a common thing for a young man to meet a young lady in good society, invite her to dance, step immediately on the ballroom floor, clasp her in a tight embrace, place his cheek against hers and begin a series of gyrations, twistings, wiggling, wobbling and tddling to the moaning, jerky strains of the orchestra, which a few years ago would have brought the blush of shame to a hardened sinner and would have caused the arrest of both if seen by a policemen. The young lady, who would slap a man's face if..."
The first radio telephone broadcast station in America to operate on a purely commercial basis will be erected shortly as a result of a permit granted to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company to erect a gigantic station on the roof of its building here. It will distribute news, programs of music, advertising matter, and so forth, to all who contract for this service on a commercial basis. The building on which the station is to be erected is 350 feet high and the towers supporting the antenna will be 100 feet higher still.
"Sally", Florence Ziegfeld's musical comedy production at the New Amsterdam Theatre, has broken a lot of records with the passing of its sixty-first week of performance. In sixty consecutive weeks it has been seen by 964,000 persons, which means standing room as well as every seat filled at practically every performance. This surpasses the attendance of any musical comedy in the history of the theatricals, they say. Admittance receipts are over $2,000,000. The three stars, Marylinn Miller, Leon Errol and Walter Catlett, earning over $440,000. The chorus girls have averaged $55 a week, and the government has taken in $200,000 in taxes.
It is confusing when one tries to be conscientious and dutiful and patriotic and all that, to be told so many conflicting things one must do. Take the thrift campaign, for instance. Just when I got all agitated to the point of deciding that I could get along without a spring hat in order to live up to its precepts, the National Prosperity Bureau came along and insisted that we couldn't get back to normalcy and prosperity if we refused to spend any money. They point out that if we don't buy things, no one will be employed to make them; which sounds reasonable. And if no one is employed to make them—well, we all know the rest of the story. But now, what shall I do—buy a new hat and credit it to my patriotism on the "busy factory wheels' side of the ledger, or go without it and credit it to the thrift side? And let the unemployed go hang, I suppose.
Man is going to have a difficult time hereafter being impressive here in New York where he becomes joe-
First radio telephone broadcast station in America to operate on a purely commercial basis will be erected shortly as a result of a permit granted to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company to erect a gigantic station on the roof of its building here. It will distribute news, programs of music, advertising matter, and so forth, to all who contract for this service on a commercial basis. The building on which the station is to be erected is 350 feet high and the towers supporting the antenna will be 100 feet higher still.
"Sally", Florence Ziegfeld's musical comedy production at the New Amsterdam Theatre, has broken a lot of records with the passing of its sixty-first week of performance. In sixty consecutive weeks it has been seen by 964,000 persons, which means standing room as well as every seat filled at practically every performance. This surpasses the attendance of any musical comedy in the history of the theatricals, they say. Admittance receipts are over $2,000,000. The three stars, Marylinn Miller, Leon Errol and Walter Catlett, earning over $440,000. The chorus girls have averaged $55 a week, and the government has taken in $200,000 in taxes.
It is confusing when one tries to be conscientious and dutiful and patriotic and all that, to be told so many conflicting things one must do. Take the thrift campaign, for instance. Just when I got all agitated to the point of deciding that I could get along without a spring hat in order to live up to its precepts, the National Prosperity Bureau came along and insisted that we couldn't get back to normalcy and prosperity if we refused to spend any money. They point out that if we don't buy things, no one will be employed to make them; which sounds reasonable. And if no one is employed to make them—well, we all know the rest of the story. But now, what shall I do—buy a new hat and credit it to my patriotism on the "busy factory wheels' side of the ledger, or go without it and credit it to the thrift side? And let the unemployed go hang, I suppose.
Man is going to have a difficult time hereafter being impressive here in New York where he becomes joe-
Chiu is convinced that the American mind and the American method are all too literal. Chiu is attached to the Chinese legation in Washington, and he decided that it would be worth his while to study American prisons. With that object in view, he suggested to Sheriff Nagle, whom he knew well, that he would like to go to Sing Sing, in the guise of a prisoner and suggested that the sheriff arrest him. He did—all too thoroughly. He put Chiu in a cell without argument. Then he handcuffed him. Then he took him out and joined him up with a lot of crooks and sent him to Sing Sing that way. Chiu protested but the protesting got him nothing. He went to Sing Sing and he spent the night there, not at all as he had planned in any particular. The American sense of humor, he assures his friends, is sadly overrated.
Lagourgue does painting. Phone 596W.
Great Sh
Women’s One Strap Kid House Slippers
Made with Turn Soles, suitable for street or house wear, all sizes
One Dollar a Pair
GIRLS’ PATENT JAZZ
OXFORDS $4.98
—Made of fine patent colt, plain toe, low heel, with flexible soles.
On sale at $4.98
—All sizes, 2½ to 7.
A wonderful o low price. Oxford patent or kid lea
Shoe Store
Price Building
OF QUALITY, STYLE AND LOW PRICES.
FEATURING
GOOSE SCHOOL SHOES
hhest standard of excellence
ties for the school boy and
A Red Goose Shoe looks
But wears better. They
the test that a school child
dels from any shoe.
From $2.75 and up.
RY SHOE A NEW SHOE
and every pair of shoes in stock is absolutely new—in and the new low-level price.
If our shoes were purchased high market.
Dress Shoes ...$4.95
Men's Low Shoes, $4.95, 6.50 up
Leather Work ...$4.95 up
Shoe Store
Class Shoes
xt to Post Office
Made of fine patent colt, plain toe, low heel, with flexible soles.
On sale at ...$4.98
All sizes, 2½ to 7.
SPECIAL FOR MEN
Tan or Black Calf English or Blucher. All Sizes. Special ...$3.98
GIRLS' NEW LOW FALL MODELS
In Patent Leather, brown calf and Black kid, pumps and ox fords; low heels...$3.98 $4.98
INFANTS' SHOES
Full lines of kid and patent button Shoes; also patent strap slippers; sizes 2 to 5. Price ...$1.48
MEN'S BIKE STYLE SHOE
Made of soft chrome tan leather, and best grade Oak Soles
$2.35
OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS TO 9 O'CLOCK
Kafateria S
109 West Center
Poet's Corner
DRESS
By EDGAR A. GUEST
Sometimes I wear my dinner clothes,
sometimes I don the evening coat.
Again I'll wear my very best to meet
and talk with men of note;
Then when the Spring returns once
more and for my care the garden calls,
I don my oldest pair of shoes and
robe myself in overalls;
But whether I be richly dressed or
shabby garb adorns my frame,
The man I am is altered not—that
which is I remains the same.
Last night my friends wore evening
dress, this morning should we
chance to meet
And were he garbed in dirty rags
with shabby shoes upon his feet,
I still should hall him as my friend,
should stop and talk with him
awhile.
And thrill to hear his cheery voice
and glory in his merry smile;
For this is true, that clothes are worn
according to convention's plan.
But friends are friends, however garbed,
and all that matters is the man.
I've seen some men in evening dress
who did not grace their raiment fine,
And I have heard philosophy from
men who stood and herded swine
So little thought I give to clothes,
I care not how a man be dressed.
The only thing that counts with me
is what is underneath his vest.
If he be honest, kind and true, then
he may dress the way he will—
In broadcloth or in overalls, a kindly
man is kindly still.
SUN OF THE WEST, GOOD NIGHT
Sun of the West, good night, good
night;
Orb of a splendid day;
Slowly you sink from my eager sight
Into the far away.
And night comes down and the shadows dare
To creep from the depths of their hidden lair;
Safe till the dawn may they linger there—
Sun of the West—goodnight.
Sun of the West, good night, good
night;
Ages may come and go;
And you swing on in celestial flight
Nor reckon on things below;
But I know naught of my destiny—
Tomorrow my fragile bark may be
Far adrift on a troubled sea—
Sun of the West—good night.
—Griff Crawford in Kansas City Star.
6 Swift's white Soap 25c. Edmison's Grocery.
Material and Workmanship of the Highest Standard is the Tittman's Policy.
This Policy is rigidly enforced—nothing but the best of materials are used in this shop. All of Tittman's sole leather is Oak Tanned, tanned by the old fashion method, giving it twice the durability of ordinary tanned leather. Shoes properly repaired, are shoes re-made. I wish to say that we make a specialty of women's work. Reasonable prices. All kinds of shoe findings. Try
This Policy is rigidly enforced—nothing but the best of materials are used in this shop. All of Tittman's sole leather is Oak Tanned, lined by the old fashioned vat method, giving it twice the durability of ordinary tanned leather. Shoes properly repaired, are shoes re-made. I wish to say that we make a specialty of women's work. Reasonable prices. All kinds of shoe findings. Try us once and you will always be our customer.
East Side Shoe Shop
313 East Center Street
Shoe Offer
Se Slippers
street $1.00
Pair
Women's Black Kid Lace Boots
Mostly smaller sizes to size 5, of black kid with Cuban heels. Many of these shoes have been priced until recently as high as $8.00. While they last
Two Dollars a Pair
500 PAIRS
Women's Low Shoes
on Sale at $2.98
A wonderful offering at this low price. Oxfords or Pumps in patent or kid leathers, low heels.
BOYS' FALL BOOTS
Full line of new shoes for boys and youths at prices that can't be beaten; black and tan blucher and English styles. Also Boys' Bikes.
Prices from $1.98 to $4.48
on Sale at $2.98
—A wonderful offering at this low price. Oxfords or Pumps in patent or kid leathers, low heels. A splendid assortment to choose from. Every size in the lot, only $2.98
Mary Janes in Patent Kid Leather
Women's sizes,
2½ to 7, go for $2.69
Misses' sizes,
11½ to 2, for for $2.48
Children's sizes,
sizes 5 to 11 $1.98
Infants'
sizes $1.48
Men's Work Shoes
—A big assortment of styles that we are sure will please. Munson army lasts with soft toes and bellows tongue; all solid leathers $2.48, $3.48, $3.98
Scuffer Play Shoes
—Black calf button, brown calf lace, nature toes, brown elk and light colored elk scuffers, button or lace; shoes that will stand the strain
5½ to 8 $1.98
8½ to 11 $2.48
11½ to 2 $2.79
CHILDREN'S SHOES $1.98
—Children's Patent Leather and Kid Shoes with hand-turned soles; made over foot-form lasts; sizes to 8; extra good values.
Sale price $1.98
MEN'S FALL BOOTS—WONDERFUL VALUES
—Men's Blucher and English styles, mahogany and tan calfskin; also gunmetal button shoes $4.98
MEN'S ARMY SHOES
—Goodyear welted canvas lined, extra heavy soles; an extra value;
all sizes; only $4.98
eria Shoe Store
109 West Center Street, Anaheim
OTHER STORES:
Los Angeles, Long Beach, Pasadena, Santa Ana, San Pedro.