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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1924 July

oc-plain-dealer 1924-07-30

1924-07-30 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 10 of 10 · OCR glm-ocr
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PAGE FOUR Plain Dealer An Independent Newspaper Issued Every Afternoon Except Sunday PAUL V. HESTER - Editor and Publisher Subscription Rate—In N. Orange-co., per year, $3; 6 months $1.75 Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., as second class matter DAILY GREETING TO OUR READERS Lack of courtesy, of sympathetic kindness in little things, is surely the bane of average daily life. We see it, feel it, suffer from it everywhere. It is culpably palpable in the highest council of the Nation as in the humblest household.—Mary Clemmer Ames. PRINCESS TAKES JOB IN FACTORY A princess of the royal blood—granddaughter of the King of Sweden—is working incognito in a Chicago factory. She is doing hard work for $18 a week. She is working and living as do the factory girls. She is a Y. W. C. A. worker when at home in Sweden. She is making the experiment to fit herself better for social work among industrial employees. This is the way to learn to appreciate the lot of those who toll hard in factories—to whom life holds little that is bright and attractive. Even a Princess can sense the trials and hardships of a working girl, and when she undergoes these trials and hardships herself, on the same terms and in the same circumstances as the factory worker. An experience such as this young Princess is getting in enlightening and should be of use. It will make her more sympathetic, more appreciative, when she returns home and resumes her good work along social lines. It is proverbial that "one-half the world does not know how the other half lives." This Swedish Princess has taken the practical way to learn how "the other half lives." It would be well too, for those who toil to realize and appreciate the life of those, who in palaces or in fine dwellings where opulence END WORLD AERIAL TRIP WHERE IT BEGAN Announcement from Washington that the world flight would end at Seattle, instead of the Clover Field, Santa Monica, whence it started, caused keen disappointment here. Spirited efforts will be made to induce President Coolidge to overrule the decision of General Patrick, chief of the Army Air Service, in favor of Seattle. From Clover Field the interpid aviators started, At Clover Field their historic journey should end. This fully and completely would end the journey around the world. This would be the fair and sentimental thing. Clover Field is entitled to this distinction. The memorable flight will not be wholly ended, technically, until the aviators reach Clover Field. Back to the place of beginning is the logical plan. It is to be hoped that official Washington may review the matter this way. Extensive preparations have been made to welcome the daring flyers back, at Clover Field. Southern California should have the honor of going down in history as the spot where this epochal flight began and ended. Every city and town in this section well might join in urging official Washington to reverse the decision for Seattle as the ending place and decide in favor of Clover Field. AT THE SIGN OF THE 4-LEAF CLOVER Whenever you see this "good luck" PAN GAS sign — DRIVE IN! Fill your tank with PAN-GAS—take aboard PAN-AM oils and greases—let the courteous PAN AMERICAN service men relieve you of all the details of tire service—water for your car—air from the Mattman-Sinclair Air-o-Meter—and a cash register receipt that makes keeping car records a simple matter. 23 Pan American Service Stations in Los Angeles PAN-GAS Pan-Am Oils and Greases PAN-AMERICAN PAN-GAS THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF. THERE'S A REASON FOR HIS GOING UP SO FAST HIGHER WHEAT PRICES CROP SHORTAGE AND SPECULATION WHOS WANTS IN THE DAYS EAMON DE VALERA In releasing Eamon De Valera from the jail in which he been confined since last year, the Free State is freeing him whose control of the extra publican forces is unique and whose opposition to the tent regime in Ireland has a source of grave difficulty the Free State up until the time. De Valera is a scholar sonality, upright, stiff and —in some respects a Satire. He is a tall, dark, spartan sombre appearance, with marked features and a somewhat harsh and volce. His temper is decisive temper of the disciplinary gogue. As "president of the public" he had no hesitation speak with firm authority head of a state. De Valera was born York, near the site of the Central, in 1882. His father a Chillian Spaniard, his country girl from Countyrick. Returning to Ireland Eamon De Valera was born in Limerick and Clare, greatly brilliantly from Blackrock in 1904, and eventually a professor of science at man Catholic Theological nary of Maynooth, and a fessor of higher mathematics a normal college. He was a friend of Peter MacDonagh, who were ex-1916. Himself a Gaolie en he took his part in the Easter Week, 1916. He in command at Boland's a week, surrendered exp be shot, but was instead to penal servitude for life. He escaped from Lincoln February, 1919, and came country by the uncle During his abs ARAGRAPHS BY ROBERT QUILLEN Friends are people who like in spite of what you are. So live that you need never ask editor to leave out the story. It is rank flattery when a wife uses a bald husband of infidelity. There's one consoling feature out our national debt. We owe no ourselves. Most of the children who ride half fare are strangely large in their age. A soft answer may turn away with but it doesn't turn away a drier. After all, the only real difference between the girls of this generation and the girls of the last generation is one generation. Progressives seldom get anyere, but they make the convatives advance at times. The easiest way to avoid changing tires on a runbaked highway to be a pretty girl. So many out-of-door men smoke does, and that is all right if they will stay out-of-doors. Peace is a season during which immer doughboys outgrow their fire to lick a first sergeant. It doesn't count as a sure enough lie when an old bachelor asked his opinion of a new boy. Paddock and the other boys like fast time, but they should be a colored bootlegger pacing cop. ABE MARTIN DINNER STORIES Jane was not exactly pleased when nurse informed her of the arrival of a rival in the form of a baby brother, and at first she refused altogether to have anything to do with him. This rather pained her mother, and she determined to give the small girl little jobs to do for baby now and then in order that Jane should feel that she was not in any way ousted by his advent. "Jane," said mother one morning, "watch baby brother fall asleep. I'll be back in a few minutes." Before a few minutes were up a resounding roar startled the mother. As she hurried towards the sound, Jane came running to meet her, and her tone was not altogether one of grief as she panted: "Mamma, he failed all right, but he wasn't asleep." Betty, four, went to the hospital to have her tonsils removed at the same time as her 5-year-old playmate, Bobby. Their parents took them to the same hospital, the hospital from which Betty's mother had returned just the preceding month with a baby brother for Betty. "Aren't hospitals nice to you?" Betty's aunt inquired upon the little girl's return. "No! No! Not a single bit nice," came the quick rejoinder. "They're just awfully stingy—didn't give either me or Bobby a single new baby when we came home." SUNSHINE PELLETS BY DR. W. F. THOMSON "There’s no use in talking." Said the mother of eight; "Smallpox’ll get ’em, If you don’t vaccinate." Peace is a season during which older doughboys outgrow theirire to lick a first sergeant. It doesn't count as a sure dough lie when an old bachelor asked his opinion of a new boy. Paddock and the other boys like fast time, but they should be a colored bootlegger pacing cop. To subject a patient to prolonged and expensive treatment for syphilis, the diagnosis of which is based on a single "Positive Wassermann," without clinical support, is not in medicine, considered good practice. Three-fourths of our alliments are cured automatically: 1. e., by substances which nature has placed within our tissues for that purpose. Therefore, he who assumes credit for the cure of disease appropriates that which does not always belong to him. TAGGART'S DEPENDABLE USED CARS CHEVROLET $550 Touring CHEVROLET $550 Coupe CHEVROLET $525 Truck CHEVROLET $425 Touring CHEVROLET $250 Touring CHEVROLET $175 Touring CHEVROLET $125 Touring FORD $425 Sedan FORD $125 Touring FORD $100 Touring BUICK $175 Touring DODGE $125 Touring HUPMOBILE $275 Touring OAKLAND $150 Roadster We also sell New Chevrolets. OPEN EVENINGS These cars all offer splendid value at prices asked and can be purchased on very easy terms. F. P. TAGGART USED CAR DEPARTMENT 102 North Los Angeles St. No! No! Not a single bit nice, came the quick rejoinder. "They're just awfully stingy—didn't give either me or Bobby a single new baby when we came home." SUNSHINE PELLETS BY DR. W. F. THOMSON "There's no use in talking," Said the mother of eight; "Smallpox'll get 'em, If you don't vaccinate." You have to diet to get the bust out of robust. If we'd eat a little less and walk a little more we'd live a little longer. It is that which we take or do just before we get well that gets the credit for the cure. We seldom consider, When planning a tour, Whether the water en route Is tainted or pure. Pollen extracts, administered in July, protect against September hay fever. The functions of our bodies are governed by natural and very definite laws; those who assume to correct faulty functions must know these laws. Imagine taking your broken watch to a physician! Yet there are those assuming to treat the ills of human kind who know no more about the human body than a physician knows about a watch. As a matter of fact, The most of our ills Plead self limitation In spite of our pills. ASK FOR HORlick's The ORIGINAL Malted Milk Safe Milk For Infants, Insalids, Children, The Aged Rich Milk, Malted Grain ext in powder form, makes The Food-Drink-Fr All Ages, Digestible—No Cooking. Alight Lunch always at hand. Also in Tablet form. Avoid Imitations = Substitutes FOREIGN SECURITY All Issues — All N Bought · Sold · WE OFFER (Sub) 50 Bellview Units 10 Monolith com. 20 Monolith pfd 50 Moreland pfd 1000 Sespe L & P 1500 Calwin Oil ... 50 Lincoln Units 10 Poster & Kleiser pfd 10 Vanderbilt Ull 500 Marine Oll ... 100 Samson Tire ... 100 Pacific Stores 50 Maj. El. com. 500 Calitroleum 10 King's Fd Pro 20 Glimore ... 1000 Port Lobos ... 10 Snowolene Of WILL BUY (Sub) Union Mtg. Star Moreland Tr. E. G. Julian Com Bandi Julian pfd. Multn Casa Bianca 1Richa Glmore Oil Twin Lincoln Mtg Ujulliae We are active in all Leonards & Established 1 ROBERT KE Resident Man Capital Fully Paid Resources $300 Santa Ana Br 228-229 Spurgeo Phone $289 WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1924 WHOS WHO IN THE DAYS NEWS EAMON DE VALERA In releasing Eamon De Valera from the jail in which he has been confined since last August, the Free State is freeing a leader whose control of the extreme Republican forces is unquestioned and whose opposition to the present regime in Ireland had been a source of grave difficulties to the Free State up until his capture. De Valera is a scholastic personality, upright, stiff and narrow—in some respects a Savonarola. He is a tall, dark, spare man of sombre appearance, wits strongly marked features and a measured, somewhat harsh and metallic voice. His temper is decidedly the temper of the disciplinary pedagogue. As "president of the Irish Republic" he had no hesitation to speak with firm authority as the head of a state. De Valera was born in New York, near the site of the Grand Central, in 1882. His father was a Chilian Spaniard, his mother a country girl from County Limerick. Returning to Ireland at two, Eamon De Valera was brought up in Limerick and Clare, graduating brilliantly from Blackrock College in 1904, and eventually becoming a professor of science at the Roman Catholic Theological Seminary of Maynooth, and also professor of higher mathematics at a normal college. He was a friend of Pearse and MacDonagh, who were executed in 1916. Himself a Gaelic enthusiast, he took his part in the Rising of Easter Week, 1916. He fought in command at Boland's Mills for a week, surrendered expecting to be shot, but was instead sentenced to penal servitude for life. He escaped from Lincoln jail in February, 1919, and came to this country by the underground route. During his absence from Catholic Theological Seminary of Maynooth, and also professor of higher mathematics at a normal college. He was a friend of Pearse and MacDonagh, who were executed in 1916. Himself a Gaelic enthusiast, he took his part in the Rising of Easter Week, 1916. He fought in command at Boland's Mills for a week, surrendered expecting to be shot, but was instead sentenced to penal servitude for life. He escaped from Lincoln jail in February, 1919, and came to this country by the underground route. During his absence from Ireland he was elected president by the Dail Eireann. He broke away from the party of Michael Collins and Arthur Griffith during the negotiations of the Anglo-Irish treaty and strongly opposed its ratification. In the Dail Eireann he headed the opposition and consistently insisted that the Irish Republic still was in existence. When the Free State was created he turned his energies against the new system, carrying through the island the battle cry "The republic must be carried on" until he was captured. While nature, unaided, takes care of our alliments in 75 per cent of cases, she does need expert assistance in the remaining 25 per cent. E'er the days of July pass, Cut the weeds and mow the grass; Lost is he who hesitates 'Til the ragweed pollinates. For dire epidemics Are frequently spread By the guy with a sneeze And a cold in his head. When touring the country, In our filivers of tin, We often get fever From the well at the inn. Swimming Diving IS RECOGNIZED TO BE THE MOST Healthful AND VITALIZING OF ALL SPORTS A FEW MORE PUPILS WANTED TO JOIN CLASSES. SEE H. MADLENER, 306 NORTH ILLINOIS (1 block north and 1 block east of Five Points) or PHONE 1059W. THERE ARE NO UNEDUCATED MEN Thomas Huxley defined education as the instruction of the intellect in the laws of nature, under which name he included not merely things and their forces, but men and their ways; and the fashioning of the affections and of the will into an earnest desire to move in harmony with these laws. "It is important to remember that, in strictness, there is no such thing as an uneducated man," he said (in an essay, A Liberal Education). "Take a supreme case. Suppose that an adult man, in the full vigor of his faculties, could be suddenly placed in the world, as Adam is said to have been, and then left to do as he best might. How long would he remain uneducated? Not five minutes. "Nature would begin to teach him, through the eye, the ear, the touch, the properties of objects. Pain and pleasure would be at his elbow telling him to do this and avoid that; and by slow degrees the man would receive an education which, if narrow would be thorough, real and adequate to his circumstances, though there would be no extras and very few accomplishments. "And if to this solitary man entered a second Adam, or better still, an Eve, a new and greater world, that of social and moral phenomena would be revealed. Joys and woes, compared with which all others might seem but faint shadows, would spring from the new relations. "Happiness and sorrow would take the place of the coarse monitors, pleasure and pain; but conduct would still be shaped by the observation of the natural consequences of actions; or, in other words, by the laws of the nature of man. "To every one of us the world was once as fresh and new as to Adam. And then, long before we were susceptible of any other mode of instruction, nature took us in hand, and every minute of waking life brought its educational influence, shaping our actions into rough accordance with nature's laws, so that we might not be ended untimely or by too gross disobedience. "Nor should I speak of this process of education as past, for any one, be he as old as he may. For every man the world is as nim who has the eyes to see them. "And nature is still continuing her patient education of us in that great university, the universe, of which we are all members." AND VITALIZING OF ALL SPORTS A FEW MORE PUPILS WANTED TO JOIN CLASSES. SEE H. MADLENER, 306 NORTH ILLINOIS (1 block north and 1 block east of Five Points) or PHONE 1059W. FOREIGN SECURITIES All Issues — All Nations Bought - Sold - Quoted WE OFFER (Subject): 50 Bellview Units $ 3.00 10 Monolith com. 9.75 20 Monolith pfd 7.75 50 Moreland pfd 6.75 1000 Sespe L & P .22 1500 Calwin Oil .. .07 50 Lincoln Units 9.25 10 Foster & Kleiser pfd ... 82.50 10 Vanderbilt U 82.50 500 Marine Oil .... 2.40 100 Samson Tire .. 3.25 100 Pacific Stores 4.75 50 Maj. El. com 2.50 500 Callitroleum .87½ 10 King's Fd Prd 7.00 20 Gilmore ..... 21.00 1000 Port Lobos .. .13 10 Snowolene Oil 13.00 WILL BUY (Subject) Union Mtg. Star Motors Moreland Tr. E. G. B. Julian Com Bandini Julian pfd. Multnomah c. Casa Blanca 1 Richfield cons Gilmore Oil Twin Bell Lincoln Mtg Ujullan Pump We are active in all markets Leonards & Co. Established 1915 ROBERT KELLY Resident Manager Capital Fully Paid $100,000 Resources $300,000 Santa Ana Branch 226-229 Spurgeon Bldg. Phone $899 BETTER BUILT HOMES—Not merely houses 5000 Rafters a day —one man’s work at the Pacific Mill Imagine a machine that does the work of twenty carpenters. The ingenious machine illustrated above cuts, bevels, notches and finishes rafters with absolute accuracy at the rate of 5,000 per day. It is but one of many machines in the Pacific mill that cuts and prepares lumber in order to save carpenter labor on the job and provide the finest workmanship. In our book of 125 plans, a complete explanation of the ready-cut system is given. Before you place your order call and get our prices on erection of a home of any size. H. L. BRISCOE Phone 663W Res. Phone 584J 120 No. Los Angeles St., Anaheim, Calif. PACIFIC READY-CUT HOMES PERFECT PLANS GUARANTEED MATERIALS SYSTEMATIZED METHODS PRODUCED BY WESTERN AMERICA'S LARGEST HOMEBUILDING ORGANIZATION