oc-plain-dealer 1923-03-26
Searchable text
NOBLE REDWOODS GIFT TO THE NATION
A notable proffer has been made by William Kent, former Congressman, amplifying his manifestation of public spirit when he donated Muir Woods National Monumental Park, Mr. Kent has offered the national government extensive acreage of redwoods bordering the Muir Park and including the famous Mt. Taimalpais Railroad. Mr. Kent makes this generous gift on the one condition that the railroad and the redwood forests always shall be maintained for the benefit of the people.
This is a form of giving which other persons of wealth well might emulate. Great natural scenic wonders and beautiful playgrounds of nature should be for the people all the time. These endowments of the Creator should not be held as exclusive property, from which the masses of the people would be barred. They should be common property, maintained for the pleasure, comfort inspiration and health of the multitudes.
In its giant redwoods, California has one of the noblest wonders that nature has bestowed upon the world Travelers come from the far corners of the earth to gaze in wonder and awe upon these monarchs of the forest. These trees should be persecuted. They should be held in trust by a vigorous government as a perpetual endowment and heritage for all of the people, all of the time.
ARIZONA MAY SWITCH TO PACT SUPPORT
That Arizona, which would benefit us stupendously from the Boulder City dam project, should eventually halt that great enterprise, is hard to understand. It is intimated, in news dispatches from Phoenix, that the Arizona Legislature may be called together in extra session, and that ratification of the Colorado River pact, which failed by a marigold narrow, may be accepted soon in the lower house of the legislature. Phoenix ratification was defeated by a tie vote—22 to 22; while in the
Mrs. Art Smiley says no girl should git married unless she's makin' at least $15 a week. No buddy kin talk as convinced about the failure of prohibition as feltter that spends nineteen of his time huntin' a drink.
The automobile is producing profound changes in the social, as well as the economic life of the nation. Many families, virtually live on the streets and highways, and get their social relations on the high road, at high speed. Much less time is spent in the home, consequently there is much less formal entertaining indoors than formerly.
Renting trolley rides by the week is the latest experiment in one of our Hudson river suburbs. Up in Peekskill, anyone may now ride all day long every day if 1.5 secs fit for $1 a week. The weekly passes are
THRIFT
The reports bank savings and pleasing. Prosperity and they show that grace that exceeds there is grown wise.
The saving from the Auction show an increase in the savings of the country we have salute 009; not included posited in them and the building them. What binds the individual more than 2,000 now total about
The statistics which in recent years have regarded medium for sale protection of more impervious. Porty lions are members Life Insurance write three-quarter business that they wrote telling more thieves.
The sensible getting down tips and insurance can reason not of inflation w 1920 is followed about the auto high. The saluted There is
PACT SUPPORT
That Arizona, which would benefit us stupendously from the Boulder Canyon dawn project, should even temporarily halt that great enterprise, is hard to understand. It is intimated, in news dispatches from Phoenix, that the Arizona Legislature may be called together in extra session, and that ratification of the Colorado river pact, which failed by a margin very narrow, may be accepted soon. In the lower house of the legislature at Phoenix ratification was defecated by a tie vote—22 to 22; while in the Senate the vote was 0 to 9. Change of just a few votes—and it is rumored that several legislators may turn to support the pact—would make ratification complete.
Arizona should not stand in the way of its own progress. This mammoth enterprise would be of almost incalculable material advantage to that state, indeed, of all the states in the Colorado Basin. Arizona perhaps would keep the greatest material benefit. Therefore it should be swift to concur in the compact which would launch the great enterprise.
Sympathy is often bestowed upon those who are more deserving of $ reprimand.
Renting trolley rides by the week is the latest experiment in one of our Hudson river suburbs. Up in Peekskill, anyone may now ride all day long every day if 15 sees fit for $1 a week. The weekly passes are transferrable, so the whole family may take turns riding. Ordinarily one ride in Peekskill costs ten cents. It will be a simple way of solving the lodging problem if one is low in funds and can sleep on route over Peekskill's hilly streets.
Spring has come officially and traditionally on Manhattan Island. The sheep are frolicking over the sward of Central Park. That flock of sheep is out one touch' of the bucolic here and we watch for its appearance as woods people watch for arbutus. Shepherd Thomas Donivan his flock and his collie, Prince, had their first gambol of the season this week, when the day was mild enough for them to stay out for two hours.
"Say it with Flowers and Your Easter Message will live
Lilies of Emmaculate loveliness, flowering plants that perpetuate their joyous message, cut flowers in every variety.' All most appropriate tokens of Eastern-tide await your selection at
THE FLOWER SHOP
120 No. Los Angeles St.
Your Easter message in flowers may be sent anywhere
We are members of The Florist Delivery Ass'n.
Santa Fe
California
NOTICE OF PRESS
NOTICE is laid on the half day undisputed, Suited of the City of Los Angeles Clerk of the Trustee for damage and loss of the work of flowers in said City's pot allergy treaty of Lot 4 and in the Villa Traffic line of Lot 7 Block "T", in action of intention of Trademark owner admitted by Santa Fe California
Santa Fe
California Limited
(exclusively first class)
and four other daily trains
east
via the Santa Fe
No other line penetrates a
region of so much beauty,
history, mystery and romance.
Climbs up of the old and unusual—human interest everywhere along the route.
The crowning feature is
Grand Canyon
National Park.
Through Pullmans are
operated via the Canyon
Fred Harvey dining car
all the way
Tickets to and from Europe via all
Trans-Atlantic lines
for reservations or details
C. A. WALKER
Agent
A. T. & S. P. RY. Co.—Coast Lines
Anaheim, Calif.
Telephone 217
GRAND CANYON LINE
COMMENTS OF THE PRESS
WHAT EDITORS ARE SAYING
THRIFT OF AMERICANS GRATIFYING—New York Herald
The reports on life insurance and bank savings are at once astonishing and pleasing. The indicate more than prosperity and wealth in the nation. They show that, with all the extravagance that exists among the foolish, there is growing thrift among the wise.
The savings figures, which come from the American Bankers' Assn., show an increase of $1,500,000,000 in the savings accounts of the banks of this country. The American people have saluted away $18,000,000,000, not including what may have deposited in the postal savings system and the building and loan associations. What is equally encouraging, the individual accounts have grown more than 2,000,000 in numbers and now total about 29,000,000.
The statistics on life insurance, which in recent years has come to be regarded more and more as a medium for saving as well as for the protection of dependents, are even more impressive than the bank figures. Forty large companies which are members of the Association of Life Insurance Presidents and which write three quarters of the life insurance business of this country, report that they wrote last year policies totalling more than six and a third billion.
The sensible American evidently is getting down to hard pan. Such savings and insurance figures as these can mean nothing else. The period of inflation which had its peak in 1920 is followed by sober thought about the future. Wages are still high. The saloon is happily eliminated. There is money in the work-
REVIVAL AT WHITE TEMPLE THIS WEEK
Palm Sunday was observed yesterday morning at the White Temple by a service of victory. Dr. Gelsinger gave the congregation a surprise at the very start by announcing that the Sunday school had enrolled 18 new scholars at the preceding hour and that this made 163 new scholars in recent weeks and assured the White Temple school a high rank among the Sunday schools of So. Cal.
"We do not have our attention fixed upon numbers, however, either in the ordinary work of the church or in this evangelistic campaign. Our aim is rather to get more fully in line with the total program of Christ for today. What we need to do is take Christ's teaching and spirit seriously, with all their implications, and bring the power of Christianity to bear on the life of the whole community."
He warned the people that it would be easy to go through such a series of meetings as they are now holding and get very little out of them. That often happened, he said, in such services. He urged his people to pray that they might get a clearer vision of God, a firmer grasp upon Christian truth and a larger goodwill towards men here and everywhere.
The choir sang unusually well under the direction of Dr. H. H. Young and is manifesting a great interest in its work under his leadership. Mrs. Eugene Durfee sang with much feeling and understanding Guodou's "There is a Green Hill Far Away."
The meeting took on special interest as it marked the first appearance of Dr. Wyckoff in the present campaign, although not his first appearance in Anaheim, for he preached at the White Temple some few weeks ago. He was given a cordial welcome by the pastor and congregation and was seen in the hearts of all the people.
TEACHERS PAID TO TRAVEL
Herkley (Cal.) Gazette
School teachers, as is well known, are great travelers. But often their travels are pursued under difficulties—chiefly financial, Tulsa, Oklahoma, is solving that problem with neatness and dispatch. Tulsa pays a teacher her regular monthly salary every third summer if she spends the vacation traveling.
There are certain moderate and reasonable conditions to be met. The teacher must submit to the superintendent an outline of her proposed trip and what she expects to get out of it in an educational way. Also there is provision for giving the schools of some of the benefit of it afterwards. The teacher must make a written report presenting especially the educational features that can be used in making up library travellogs for the school children. All sorts of experiences, clippings, pictures etc., go into those travellogs. A copy of the report remains as the permanent possession of the schools. The teachers are encouraged, but not required, to prepare lectures or informal talks on what they have seen for pupils or community gatherings.
Since this plan was adopted, says the Tulsa superintendent, twenty per cent of the city's teachers have traveled, visiting nearly every part of North America and many countries of Europe. They have broadened their experience; and the schools and the whole community get the benefit. Tulsa, evidently, is going to know the world pretty well before many years, thanks to this simple, sensible and comparatively inexpensive system.
Comedy Plus Drama In New Ray Movie
A new Charles Ray—humorous whimsical and magnetic as ever, but with a full flowering of dramatic ability to move audiences deeply that few have known to exist—was revealed at the United Theater on Sunday, when the star's second production for United Artists, "The Girl I Loved," swept across the screen with striking effect.
In this photoplay Ray appears in the guise of one of America's most famous figures, the poet James Whitcomb Riley in young manhood. Riley had a tragic love affair in youth which he related in the verses from which this film-drama is made, and Rey has not only translated the facts and their implications into a series of thrilling incidents, but acted them with great power.
In the prelude to the main story there is seen the familiar Charles Ray. The setting is rural Indiana in 1940-50. There, as the boy Riley unfolds from youth to maturity, are scenes of happy rustic life in which the star is a humorous, buoyant and appealing figure. These pictures of a once typical but now parsing American era are delightful for their quality and amusing types their very human episodes and a fine fidelity to the historic characteristics of the period.
Correct this sentence: "Let the girls have their new frocks." said Mother; "I don't need anything this spring."
He then described how Christianity took up this lame man and healed his troubles. He said that he had been present several times at the Angus Temple in Los Angeles and heard a little woman with "bad theology, and worse metaphysics and very little cratistical power but with a passion to bring the gospel to human need, preaching to many broken and crippled lives."
He had gone away, he said, each time feeling that the need that had come out to this So. Calif. temple was not physical so much as spiritual and he said that Mrs. McPherson's healing methods and results were anything but what some persons were.
on the 15th day of March, 1922, the undersigned, Superintendent of Streets of the City of Anaheim, received from the Clerk of the Board of Trustees of said City a certain assessment-roll consisting of a certified copy of the report, assessment and plat accompanied by same made by the commissioners appointed by said Board of Trustees to assess benefits and damages and have general supervision of the work of laying out and opening in said City of Anaheim, of a 18-foot alley from the southernly line of Lot 8 and Lot 9 of Block "B", in the Villa Tract, to the Northerly line of Lot 7 and Lot 8, in said Block "B", in accordance with Instruction No. 161 of the Board of Trustees of said City, passed and adopted July 18, 1922, as said report, assessment and plat was finally confirmed and adopted by said Board of Trustees.
Notice is further given that all sums levied and assessed in said assessment-roll are due and payable immediately and that payment the said sum is to be made to said superintendent of Streets within thirty (30) days from the date of the first publication of this notice, which said notice was first published on the 15th day of March, 1922.
All assessments not paid before the expiration of said thirty days will be declared to be delinquent and thereafter the sum of five per cent upon the amount of each delinquent agreement, together with the cost of advertising each delinquent assessment, will be added thereto.
Dated this 15th day of March, 1922,
Or E. STEWARD,
Superintendent of Streets of the City of Anaheim.
Pub. March 18, 18, 17, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27,
Business College
Park Term, New Going Day School
North School
Enter any land or Night
POSITION FOR ALL GRADUATES
Av. Lafrere Cateauque
CHALLENGE BUTTER
For Vegetables
Challenge is as sweet and delicately flavored as the fresh spring vegetables you use. This better butter adds nourishment as well as flavor to all foods.
CHALLENGE CREAM AND BUTTER ASS'N.
Ask your dealer for CHALLENGE BUTTER
BREAK 'EM UP QUICK
COLD, GRIP, INFLUENZA
CAPSULES [Joyner]
No Spice or Salt Packing Deposit: $50 per Recommended and sold by Heying's Pharmacy
Ask for list of JOYNER REMEDIES
Revival at White
Each Night Except Saturday Begins
MONDAY, MARCH, 26TH, 1923
Subscription Rate—In No. Orange-co. Per Yr. Sb. Six Months $4.75
Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., at second class matter.
PANTOMIME by J. H. Striebel
AN EYE FOR AN EYE
trying to make out. "We better leave discouragement into victory and the healing of the body to the physician's hope? If it isn't, it is not worthy of clams and hospitals," he said "they our support. He said that he was will do a better job of it and besides sure that the church needs to re-that is not the main reason for the cover felth in its gospel and courage coming of Christ. He came to heal for its task and to give itself with the burts of sin and to bring men more blondon to its great mission, and women to God."
The speaker then raised the question: Is the church of today able to either label came to nothing because meet the spiritual need of the time? The people couldn't understand one is it able to turn human defeat and another.
For Your Health
For Your Health
Chiropractic
YOU HAVE TRIED THE REST NOW TRY THE BEST
AFFECTIONS of any of the following parts may be caused by NERVES implanted at the spine by a subluxated vertebra:
BRAIN
EVES
EARS
NOSE
THROAT
ARMS
HEART
LUNGS
LIVER
STOMACH
PANCREAS
SPLEEN
KIDNEYS
SMALL BOWEL
LARGE BOWEL
GENITAL ORGANS
THIGHS AND LEGS
Examination Free
Dr. Leota P.Anderson
CHIROPRACTOR
Office Hours: 10-12 A.M.; 1-5 P.M.; Mon., Wed., Fri., 7-8 P.M.
Telephone: 413
204 Fisher Bldg.
Anaheim, Calif.
SPECIAL NOTICE
SPECIAL NOTICE
The San Francisco Savings and Loan Society
(The San Francisco Bank)
Incorporated February, 1864
Assets over $84,000,000.00
Beginning April 1st., 1923, interest will be credited on deposits
QUARTERLY
JANUARY · APRIL · JULY · OCTOBER
and will earn interest Quarterly instead of Semi-annually as heretofore
INTEREST WILL BE CREDITED
APRIL 1st, 1923
AT THE RATE OF 4¼% PER ANNUM