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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1924 June

oc-plain-dealer 1924-06-17

1924-06-17 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 3 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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NEW EXHIBIT COUNTY MEDDED Orange-co should be represented with an entirely new exhibit when the Los Angeles C. of C. moves into its new home next spring, in the opinion of J. Fred Ahlborn recently appointed Orange county industrial and publicity agent. Ahlborn presented his recommendations in written form to supervisors today. He said that the exhibit should express the present day agricultural and industrial possibilities of the country to replace the present exhibit, which he described as antiquated. The recent industrial surveys taken in Orange-co cities should be made a part of the exhibit, Ahlborn urged. He urged supervisors to circulate eastern manufacturers with propaganda showing the advantages of Orange-co from an industrial standpoint. ACCIDENTAL DEATH A verdict of accidental death was returned this morning at Seal Beach at an inquest into the circumstances surrounding the death late Saturday night of Syriac Callahan, 4-1-2 years old, of Long Beach. Testimony was to the effect that the girl strayed from her mother. The motorman of the electric car testified it was impossible to stop before hitting the little girl who apparently, did not see the car. Her legs and one arm were severed. AT COMMUNITY HOSPITAL Mrs. R. B. Wiman, Placentia, is a patient at the Community Hospital. Percy Richards went to his home in Orange today. Mrs. Everett McDonald is announcing the arrival of an 8-1-2 pound son this morning. Mrs. R. Kerns of Orange is a patient. WHEELER IN TILT WITH WILLEBRANDT WASHINGTON, June 17.—A sharp tilt between Sen. Burton K. Wheeler, Dem. of Mont., and Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, the assistant attorney general in charge of prohibition enforcement enlisted a session of the Wheeler-Brookhart investigating committee today. Mrs. Willebrandt won on the stand as a witness for the department of justice when Wheeler charged that various governmental agencies were "kicking prohibition enforcement around as a football." Cypress Center Treats Buena Park The community of Buena Park will be the guest of Cypress Farm Center at a picnic at the Orange County Park tomorrow. Barnyard golf, dancing and other amusements are making the day a festival occasion. The reason for this lies in the fact that Cypress Farm Center lost a membership and attendance contest recently conducted between the two centers, and although there were but a few points difference Cypress found that they were the losers and had to entertain the other crowd. The communities of the two sections are assisting in the effort to make it a gala day. PEASE-KOLBERG CO. AWARDED $5203 A judgment of $5203 in favor of Pease-Kolberg Co., Orange, against E. L. Garretson, paving contractor, and bondsmen was on record today. A motion for non-suit against the National Bank of Orange and Cashler J. R. Porter of the bank was granted. The plaintiff claimed to have furnished cement and other material to the contractor in connection with Orange paving. Classified Ads Bring Results BASEBALL TODAY AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia-St. Louis game postponed, rain. New York 000 301 201—7 13 2 Cleve....221 000 00x—5 8 2 Pennock, Jones and Schang; Uhle, Shaute and Walters. Washn. 503 100 003—12 16 0 Chicagoc .004 011 000—6 12 4 Zachary, Marberry and Ruel: Cvengros, Lyons, Blackenship, McWeeny and Crouse. Boston ....000 101 011—4 10 1 Detroit ....001 109 23x—7 12 0 Ehmke and O'Neill; Dauss and Bassler. NATIONAL LEAGUE (Frist game:) Pitts .....010 000 102—5 9 0 Boston .....020 000 000—2 6 1 Kremer and Schmidt; Yeargin and O'Neill. Chicago .....000 12 030—6 4 1 Phila.....000 030 001—5 12 5 Keen and Hartnett; Glazner, Couch and Wilson. (Second game:) Pitts .....000 000 000—6 1 Boston .....010 000 00x—1 9 2 Meadows and Schmidt; McNamara and O'Neill. Cinel..nooo 000 201—4 7 4 Brookn.....nooo 104 00x—5 11 1 Benton, May, Shehan and Hargrave, Wingo: Osborne and Taylor St Louis 110 010 000—3 7 0 New pork 010 040 00x—4 10 2 Sotheron, Sherdell and Gonzales; Bentley and Snyder. VENTURA MAN DIES OF HEART TROUBLE Ward Crandall, 65, a resident of Ventura, died late last night in an auto at the Union Oil Co. lease at Richfield, while visiting with F. M. Farnsworth of Bellflower, an oil worker, employed there. Crandall was spending the evening with Farnsworth, and went to the car about 10 o'clock. About 11 o'clock Farnsworth found him dead. A physician was summoned, and said that he had succumbed of heart trouble. The body was taken to the Seale funeral parlor in Fullerton. CHECKER PLAYERS Mrs. R. H. Wilman, Placentia, is a patient at the Community Hospital. Percy Richards went to his home in Orange today. Mrs. Everett McDonald is announcing the arrival of an 8 1-2 pound son this morning. Mrs. R. Kerns of Orange is a patient. Classified Ads Bring Results Wrestling! Orlando vs. Pete MILLER vs. SAUERS 195 lbs. 200 lbs. FAIRYLAND THEATRE Wednesday, June 18—8:15 p.m. Police Gazette Rules—2 best out of 3 falls. TICKETS ON SALE at United Cigar Stand, 123 W. Center and Kern Cycle Shop, 146 W. Center, Anaheim. ADMISSION—$1.00, Tax 10c—Total $1.10. Reserved, $1.50, Tax 15c—Total $1.65. Ladies FREE to all but ringside. CHECKER PLAYERS MEET LONG BEACH A combined team of Anaheim and Orange community checker players shortly will have one of the contests of their lives when they meet a team of the Long Beach club at Long Beach. The date has not yet been set. Long Beach club is at it most of the time and contains some crackerjack performers, according to an Anaheim shark. HOT WEATHER MENU The monthly business meeting of the Ladies Aid of the Christian Church, will be held at two o'clock tomorrow at the tabernacle. The meeting was called a week earlier. The ladies announce for their dinner tomorrow the following menu: cold meats, salad, mashed potatoes and gravy, green beans, ice cream and cake. PIGGLY WIGGLY AC Over the World 144 West Center Street JELL-WELL—In the Red Package; per package...10c JERSEY CORN FLAKES—Large package...7½c CERTO—For Making Jelly; 8-oz. Bottle...33c Armour's Grape Juice, pt.30c | Libby Sweet Relish, 10-oz.16c JELL-WELL—In the Red Package; per package...10c JERSEY CORN FLAKES—Large package ...7½c CERTO—For Making Jelly; 8-oz. Bottle ...33c Armour’s Grape Juice, pt.30c GOLDEN WEST Peanut Butter, 1 lb...23c Canada Dry Ginger Ale...25c Tillamook Cheese, lb...35c Uneeda Biscuit ...5c Minute Tapioca ...14c Ascot Sardines, 1-4s...9c Alber’s Olive Mince...10c GROGAN MEDIUM Olives, No, 1 ...20c Wax Paper, 36-ft. roll...5c PALM SWEET Pickles, 9 oz. can...17c Bananas 3lbs. - 25c RED CHERRIES 2 pounds for...25c Libby Sweet Relish, 10-oz.16c GOLDEN MEDAL Mayonnaise, 3½-oz...12c Libby Pork & Beans, No 2 10c Kaoma Cleanser ...5c Gold Dust, small ...8c LA FRANCE Laundry Tablets ...6c P & G Soap, 10 bars for .45c Silk Life Soap, per bar, 12½c Guest Ivory, carton of 12 bars ...50c Cocoa Almond Soap, bar.6½c Fancy Grape Fruit 3 for - 10c PEACHES — Extra Fancy— 2 pounds for...25c NEW TESTAMENT GOODNESS TOPIC Dr. James Allen Geissinger spoke upon "New Testament Goodness" yesterday morning at the White Temple, Text: Third Epistle of John, Verse II. He said in part, "I was recently thinking of the familiar statement that our church was raised up to spread Scriptural holiness throut our land." Now I have heard a good deal about holiness in my time as you all have. I have listened to addresses upon the subject and I have read many books on the question and listened to many testimonies and in all honesty I must say to you that the ordinary conceptions of holiness do not appeal to me strongly. I don't like to think that the business of my life is to spread that throut the land. Holiness is so often merely a theological something and unreal. It is often bigoted and narrow. It is frequently exclusive and full of religious pride. Many so-called holiness people are full of prejudice and bad tempers. The bloom of life has been rubbed off for them. You do not think of them as being saints, or Christ-like but as being fanatical and self-satisfied. I do not say that these people are holy people. They only think they are and none of us care for them. But what we are to spread thru the land is Scriptural Holness. Now that adjective is all important. I started in then to try to find out what the New Testament had to say along this line and it is amazing how full its teaching is. There is the picture of goodness, of religion, of holiness, given us in the Parable of the Good Samaritan. There is Paul's summing up of it all in 1 Cor. 13. There is the statement about our Lord "He went about doing good." He himself tells us that a really good man will not hesitate to do a work of mercy on the Sabbath day, such as pulling an ox out of the ditch. Then in Galatians Paul gives us a long list of fruit of the Spirit. The more you study the New Testament idea of goodness too more attractive it seems. It is not a goodness remote from reality or from human need. It is not an ineffective goodness nor a goodness that has become paired and wan. It has the bloom of life upon it and the beauty of the out of doors. It trusts God. It hopes all things. It has beating at the heart of it a love that never falls and never wearles. It is a goodness anchored to God. It believes that all things work together for good to those who love God. It does not believe that evil is the mightiest thing in the world. It believes in God and the will of God that is getting itself done. This past week all Californians and many others were shocked by the suicide of Peter Clarke MacFarland, a man who had lived a beautiful life among us. His last letter indicates that the light of hope had gone out of his heart. Dr. R. F. Horton tells us what a battle he has always had with the spirit of despondency. The real goodness believes that there is away out and that we must never become discouraged however dark things may seem to become. Goodness is the one invincible thing in the world and we need to get that conviction in our minds. One good boy ought to save the whole One good man ought to make whole community better. Sometimes we speak of lost ground spiritually. We fess that we are not who once were in our Christian Well that is a sad confession make. But it isn't true as often try to make out the lease is due to the low cost of life in the community Church. It is due to our inner condition. If the cost of the church is not what it should be we ought to raise it higher level. The text is very comprehensive. It says that wherever you man with a bit of goodness you find God has been He is of God. God's inspiration upon the man and we should glad to own it, both for the of the man and for the goodness in general. That the way we usually do. We erally begin to try to find to offset the man's good trumping all we can against or by ascribing the lowest priority to him. We do that public officials and private neighbors. But if we follow the text we would that God is doing business the man in question. We need to cultivate the of appreciating good when we see it all from God. Our business is to spread goodness. That is the great task the church to make bad men and good men better and no greater or more satire work than that. We can that by nagging or by faulting nor by any form of censure. We can do it by insisting others by a real goodness or... "The Box With the Stead "Pay While Using" DOWN SMALL WEEKLY or MONTHLY PAYMENTS ON BALANCE (Without Interest) Do not put off buying that Refrigerator now, take advantage of our easy payment plan. Over 500 In Use in North There's A Reason! Read These Specifications: ALL HARDWOOD CONSTRUCTION INSULATED BY DEAD No. 42-E "DU GOOD SIZE FAMILY F HOLDS 70 POUNDS OF WITH LARGE FOOD COM Read These Specifications: ALL HARDWOOD CONSTRUCTION INSULATED BY DEAD AIR SPACE SAME AS THERMOS BOTTLE 13 THICKNESSES OF WALL ELASTIC PACKING AROUND ALL DOORS AIR-TIGHT WATER TRAP NON-RUSTABLE SHELLS POSITIVE LOCKS POSITIVE AIR CIRCU-LATION PROVEN We Have Been Selling BALDWIN REFRIGERATORS for 13 years. "Ask Your Neighbor" No. 42-E "DU GOOD SIZE FAMILY F HOLDS 70 POUNDS OF WITH LARGE FOOD COM LOW; WHITE ENAMEL F —Read General Specifications Other Top Icer Models as $1.00 Down Without Interest No. 0 AN ESP NARROW SIGNED LIMITED FRIGERA ENOUGH FAMILY STROUP-BA FURNITURE 221 EAST CENTER ST. PHONE 1 MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1924 GIRL HURT, HOLD ANOTHER AUTOIST Miss Opal Stevenson, 21, 925 French-st, Santa Ana, was in the Community hospital there today with a broken jaw and facial lacerations while George Wright, whom police said was a young rancher of Orange, was being held in the city jail at Orange on an open charge pending an investigation by authorities of a report to the effect that Wright was under the influence of liquor when his car crashed into a parked car occupied by F. R. Duckham on Fourth-st, Santa Ana, yesterday afternoon. City Marshal Jamison and Motorcycle Officer George Peterkin of Orange began the chase of the Wright car in Orange, they said. The chase extended to Fourth-st, Santa Ana, where the crash occurred. The impetus gained from the Wright car shot the Duckham car to the other side of the street, over the curb and into a lawn, it was reported. The force of the collision was declared to have thrown Miss Stevenson through the windshield. She was found under the car. At the start of the chase Peterkin fired a shot which grazed Wright, it was reported, with the result, according to officers, that the driver thought himself so mortally wounded that it was useless to take him to jail. Parachute jumping is more dangerous from a few hundred feet than from several thousand. COUNTY AIDS ANTI-TUBERCULOSIS CAMP County supervisors today pledged support to a "preventiorium" camp for treatment of children in the first stages of tuberculosis or threatened with the "white plague" because of undernourishment. Unofficially the supervisors pledged $1000 at the urging of Mrs. Amelia A. Meagher, public health nurse, and Mrs. C. D. Violett of Garden Grove. Plans for a site are already under way, supervisors were told but no selection has been made so far. There are about 20 children ready for entrance, Mrs. Meagher said, and she estimated $1000 would maintain the camp two months. A permanent camp is the ultimate aim, to be developed along the line of the one at San Diego, the public health nurse said. All interested in establishment of the camp are invited to a meeting of the Orange-co Tuberculosis Ass'n Monday evening at the office of Dr. J. L. Wehrly, 620 Main-st, Santa Ana, Mrs. Meagher said. "BOY BOOTLEGER" HELD TO HI COURT Clyde "Skeet" Dorsten, whom Orange officers have described as "the boy bootleger" was held to superior court after preliminary hearing on a charge of possessing liquor, before Justice G. M. Morrison of Seal Beach. Bond was set at $100. With the Steady Cold Wave with the Steady Cold Wave" BALDWIN REFRIGERATORS 18 Styles $16.75 and up in Northern Orange County No. 2-A "FAMOUS" Suitable for a large family; holds 80 pounds of ice and has two large food compartments. Easy to clean; round corners throughout interior; white enamel lined. Read general specifications elsewhere in advertisement. This model priced at— Other 3-door front icers as low as $28.50 $56.00 $1.00 Down Without Interest 2-E "DUNSMOR" 2-E "DUNSMOR" ZE FAMILY REFRIGERATOR; POUNDS OF ICE; TOP ICER GE FOOD COMPARTMENT BETE ENAMEL FINISH. General Specifications Elsewhere in this ad. Top Icer Models as Low as $17.75 Down out est $36.75 No. 07341 "The Vermonter" AN ESPECIALLY TALL AND NARROW REFRIGERATOR DESIGNED FOR THOSE HAVING LIMITED SPACE, YET THIS REFRIGERATOR IS LARGE ENOUGH FOR THE AVERAGE FAMILY $28.00 $1.00 Down Without Interest UP-BARNES COMPANY ENTER ST. PHONE 194 ANAHEDM CHEERFUL CREDIT EXTENDED