oc-plain-dealer 1924-08-29
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PAGE FOUR
THE ORANGE COUNTY
Plain Dealer
An Independent Newspaper Issued Every Afternoon Except Sunday
PAUL V. HESTER Editor and Publisher
Subscription Rate—In N. Orange co., per year, $2; 6 months, $1.75.
Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., as second class matter
DAILY GREETING TO OUR READERS
Tongues cannot always speak;
O God! in this loud world of noise and clatter,
Ease us this once a week,
To let the sown seed grow—not always scatter.
—Spectator.
GREATER THRIVING IN PROSPECT
The economic welfare of the United States and Europe are linked. Herbert C. Hoover, Secretary of Commerce, in a recent address at Sacramento, stressed the fact that the reparations settlement in Europe should redound to the economic benefit of the United States. Mr. Hoover predicts a great era of constructive progress and thriving in this country.
Secretary Hoover is one of several men of expert knowledge who confidently prophesy that better times are in near prospect. The reflex impulse of the reparations settlement soon should be felt in this country. All the indications point to steady improvement in economic affairs. The political campaign is not demoralizing business, industry or finance. There are no issues in the campaign which would have derangement upon the economic system. The summer lull is giving way to greater activity. The autumn should see business and industry in healthy swing, with labor employed, with retail business active, and with plenty of money in healthy circulation.
Good behavior among nations, is as essential as among individuals, to cultivate good will and fellowship. The nation that tries to get a quarrel usually is accommodated.
NOTABLES ON A SIMPLE VACATION
Henry Ford, Thomas A. Edison, Harvey Firestone—where on earth are there three busier men than they? All three of them are at the head of stupendous interests. And yet they find time and have inclination to play. Every summer they take a vacation—a real vacation. They go to the woods and wilds. They rough it. Just now they are leisurely touring
Good behavior among nations, is as essential as among individuals, to cultivate good will and fellowship. The nation that tries to get a quarrel usually is accommodated.
NOTABLES ON A SIMPLE VACATION
Henry Ford, Thomas A. Edison, Harvey Firestone—where on earth are there three busier men than they? All three of them are at the head of stupendous interests. And yet they find time and have inclination to play. Every summer they take a vacation—a real vacation. They go to the woods and wilds. They rough it. Just now they are leisurely touring New England and will probably go into the Canadian forests. They stopped in Vermont and had an enjoyable visit with President Coolidge. On the way to the Coolidge homestead they stopped at a village hotel, registered as other guests, had the same fare, and took simple rooms without baths.
This is the way to rest. This is the proper method of resting. This is the way to forget care, to become young—to stay young; to foster health and to enjoy life as it should be enjoyed. Each and every person should have a vacation at least once a year. And this vacation should be genuine. It should mean a complete cessation of work and thought of work. It should be a real playtime. If men of great affairs can find time to rest, so can men of small affairs.
One of the chief toys of living is the good one may do for others.
Workers for good are infinitely more useful than prophets of evil.
Great care should be exercised this year in choosing members of Congress. The people should make sure of wise, able and faithful representation both in the House and in the Senate.
Hills Bros Coffee grew up with the West
Hills Bros Coffee grew up with the West
OKLAHOMA was still a territory, the Roosevelt Dam was not even a hazy dream, and Custer’s famed Last Charge was but two years old when Hills Bros. Red Can Coffee was born, in 1878. So you see, Hills Bros. and the tradition of the West as the home of wonderful coffee grew up together.
To reassure yourself that this coffee tradition is in safe keeping, break the vacuum seal of a tin of "Red Can." Release that rare aroma! Then brew a cup and lift it to your lips. What flavor! Any wonder Red Can is The Recognized Standard?
With all its high quality, Hills Bros. Coffee is not high-priced. It is economical to buy—and economical to use. Hills Bros., San Francisco.
HILLS BROS COFFEE
In the original Vacuum-Pack which keeps the coffee fresh.
No fair man would object running the washing machine the sight of so much suds depressing.
Our idea of an educated one who understands what formation bureau tells him.
There is much good sense nation that can be happy if of "how-to-be-happy" book.
One slow but sure way duce fat is the way the American wants his earnest A philosopher is a man doesn't drink coffee and fore doesn’t care what happes Brazil.
The next small country murders any of our repreent tites shall receive at least harsh notes.
(Protected by Associated E Inc.)
THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF.
THE LANDING FIELD
RUSSIAN REDS
CZARS, SAYS EMMY
MAN, ANARCHY
The soviets were pergreat lie on the world,
said that the Russian
free, declared Emmafamed anarchist, in and
The Hague.
Miss Goldman, who
ed from the United Stats
radical activities, ass
the bolsheviki had built
state which was us capias militaristic as the
the Romanoffs. "Whaism is supreme in H,
least there is freedom
ganda, whereas in R,
opinion approved by t
ment was allowed
every other utterance
pressed.
"The bolsheviki, like
anity, are tramping to
the principles of comprofessing communism
church tramples on the
Christianity.
"The first task of the
tionary anarchists show
annihilation of state anism.
"As soon as the danew revolution breaks,
Russians will be ready
against the suppression
terance now prevailing in
happy country."
SUNSHINE BELLEE
Oh, show us the hay to
For a good night's almedicine.
Rough, hard food mawhite teeth.
When recreation is antary surroundings, the
weighs the gain.
I long to be happy
And healthy to bo
ARAGRAPHS
BY ROBERT QUILLEN
A happy ending for most films atop.
The most fun about gardening when your neighbor borrows an hoe.
Potato bugs have their uses. Keep one from worrying out Europe's troubles.
Fernaps it's progress, but the driver kills 40 where the last killed one.
We can't go all the way with In Pollette, but we'd like to be part of his hair.
Age of 12: "How many people in jail!" Age of 60: "How many people are in jail!"
The wonder is that a moving lasts so long, the way the hurl furniture at it.
The heavy muscles seen in the probably wouldn't seem insane behind a plow.
Well, election year is a good thing. It reminds us that we have farmer class.
About half of us now seem enged in an effort to keep the rest from going to hell.
About the only farmers who ruined now are those who are crumpled their new fenders.
At any rate you can't blame it the other driver's carelessness on you run into debt.
People may be scrappy, but they are not blindly vindictive; they still have a few kings.
Who remembers when we used 't pity a bachelor? A Ford car 'I destroy th' odor o' liquor.
An Irishman and his wife were at the theater for the first time. The wife noticed the word "asbestos" printed on the curtain.
"Pafth, Pat, and what does 'asbestos' on the curtain mean?"
"Be still, Mag, don't show your ignorance. It is the Latin for 'welcome.'"
According to a Census Bureau estimate the Indian population of the United States has increased in 20 years from about 270,000 to more than 344,000.
Try a Classified Ad for results.
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WHO'S WHO IN THE DAYS NEWS
JOHN C. WALTON
Undismayed by legislative impeachment from the highest state office of Oklahoma, John C. Walton is well on his way to a political comeback. Announcing his candidacy for the Democratic senatorial nomination, he gained the nomination over four opponents at the primary election. He is now getting his forces organized for the fall campaign.
Walton was born 43 years ago on a farm near Indianapolis, Ind., to which place his father had immigrated from North Carolina following the Civil war.
At the age of seven his parents went to Fort Smith, Ark., and engaged in the hotel business. Walton received his education at the public schools and business college in that city.
Later in life after having engaged for several years in the railroad business, chiefly as a locomotive engineer, during which time he spent four years in Mexico, he received the bachelor of science degree in engineering from Christian Brother College at St. Louis, Mo. and settled about 17 years ago in Oklahoma City as the head of the Walton-Macintosh Engineering and Construction Co., in which business he achieved an enviable success.
Two years thereafter he was nominated by the Democrat party and elected mayor of Oklahoma City. In a non-partisan conference at Shawnee, Okla., in September, 1921, Walton was proposed as a candidate for governor, and on February 2, 1922, he was unanimously chosen by a second convention of the farming and laboring elements of the state in the city of Shawnee.
Following a short and tempestuous term in the governor's chair, Walton was impeached and removed from office last November, the charges against him involving corruption in office will be known soon so mental telepathy, but apathy is everywhere apical with it.
We don't know so much mental telepathy, but apathy is everywhere apical with it.
We spend all our leisure And our money abroad But there's health and pleasure In the old fishin' rod At small cost. Fido can munize against hyde That also protects W your purse.
The Dick Test detects ability to scarlet fever Schick Test, diphtheria-ability to either is easily to immunity.
Mother sweeps her dust And thus inhales a mill Then all winter mother The beater.
At any rate you can't blame it the other driver's carelessness when you run into debt. People may be scrappy, but they are not blindly vindictive. They still have a few kings.
According to a Census Bureau estimate the Indian population of the United States has increased in 20 years from about 270,000 to more than 344,000.
Try a Classified Ad for results.
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USED CAR DEPARTMENT
203 North Los Angeles St.
nominated by the Democriteia party and elected mayor of Oklahoma City. In a non-partisan conference at Shawnee, Okla., in September, 1921, Walton was proposed as a candidate for governor, and on February 2, 1922, he was unanimously chosen by a second convention of the farming and laboring elements of the state in the city of Shawnee.
Following a short and temperuous term in the governor's chair, Walton was impeached and removed from office last November, the charges against him involving corruption in office, wilful neglect of duty, incompetency and moral turpitude.
In 1905 Walton married Miss Madeline Orick at Fort Worth, Texas. They have two children.
DENVER STORIES
"Darling," he cried, passionately, "I will lay my fortune at your feet."
"Oh, but you haven't got a large fortune!" she whispered.
"No; but it will look large beside those tiny feet." He won her.
Some people never miss an opportunity for contradiction Which fact recalls the story of the woman who was traveling through "Wild Wales."
"My, ain't them mountains high!" exclaimed a fellow passenger.
The contradictory one looked out of the window to see the summits of the lofty hills, and sniffed: "Only the tops of them is," she protested.
Some merry stories are told in the New York editorial rooms—to the great amazement of young reporters—of the "expense accounts" that have been turned in by certain globe trotting journalists.
One man, returning from the Balkan wars, put into his account the chartering of a steamer and the purchase of a silk flag to indicate his neutrality and keep his house from being bombarded. The story also goes that another man turned in this account:
To purchase of one horse, 1200 francs; sold horse at 400 francs; to loss on sale, 800 francs; total expense, 2000 francs.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1924
MILLY VIEW
RUSSIAN REDS OUTCZAR
CZARS, SAYS EMMA GOLDMAN, ANARCHIST
The soviets were perpetrating a great lie on the world when they said that the Russian people were free, declared Emma Goldman, famed anarchist, in an address in The Hague.
Miss Goldman, who was deported from the United States for her radical activities, asserted that the bolsheviks had built up a new state which was as capitalistic and as militaristic as the Russia of the Romanoffs. "While capitalism is supreme in Holland, at least there is freedom of propaganda, whereas in Russia only opinion approved by the government was allowed expression, every other utterance being suppressed."
"The bolsheviks, like Christianity, are tramping under foot the principles of communism by professing communism just as the church tramples on the spirit of Christianity.
"The first task of the revolutionary anarchists should be the annihilation of state and militaryism.
"As soon as the dawn of the new revolution breaks, $100,000 Russians will be ready to join against the suppression of free utterance now prevailing in that unhappy country."
SUNSHINE PRIMES WITH WILLOWSON
Oh, show us the hay to bed us in. For a good night's sleep beats medicine.
Rough, hard food makes strong, white teeth.
When recreation is amid insultary surroundings, the cost outweighs the gain.
I long to be happy
And healthy to boot!
COMMENTS of the PRESS
What Editors Are Saying
IS FREE VERSE, PASSING?—Glendale Record
It is new predicted that there is to be a return to the old forms of poetry. Let us hope so. A writer in The Measure says the free verse movement is the result of the popularity of Walt Whitman, and the popularity of Whitman is the result of what he had to say and how he said it.
The watchword of the modern poet is "move on", but Art in moving on swings back and completes a circle.
It was but a few years ago the discovery was made that rhyme and meter as applied to poetry are unnecessary and arti-quated, but now even some of the most insurgent verse librists are turning back to the old and more conventional forms.
It is true that having something to say is of more importance than the manner of saying it, but we have always connected poetry with form, meter and rhythm as well as truth. Some of the modern poetry is good, but the free verse movement has given so many with nothing to say a chance to say it.
NARROW MINDS A NECESSITY
The human mind can be efficient at all only by picking out what to attend to and ignoring everything else—by narrowing its point of view.
William James, subscribing to this view, decided that it is a necessity laid upon us as human beings to limit our view.
In mathematics we know how this method of ignoring and neglecting qualities lying outside of a certain range has been adopted in the differential calculus. The calculator throws out all the 'infinitesimals' of the quantities he is considering. He treats them (under certain rules) as if they did not exist.
Just so an astronomer, in dealing with the tidal movements of the ocean, takes no account of the waves made by the wind, or by the pressure of all the steamers which day and night are moving their thousands of tons upon its surface.
Just so the marksmans, in sighting his rifle, allows for the motion of the wind, but not for the equally real motion of the earth and solar system.
Just so a business man's punctuality may overlook an error of five minutes, while a physicist, measuring the velocity of light, must count each thousandth of a second.*
The mould on the biscuit in the store-room of a man-of-war vegetates in absolute indifference to the nationality of the flag. The direction of the voyage, the weather, and the human drama that may go on on board; and a mycologist may study it in complete abstraction from all these larger details. Only by so studying it, in fact, is there any chance of the mental concentration by which alone he may hope to learn something of nature. On the other hand, the captain who in manoeuvring the vessel through a naval
Oh, show us the hay to bed us in,
For a good night's sleep beats medicine.
Rough, hard food makes strong,
white teeth.
When recreation is amid insatiable surroundings, the cost outweighs the gain.
I long to be happy
And healthy to boot;
But what of the dust
On the uncovered fruit?
Inoculation against typhoid fever beats four weeks in the hospital with it.
We don't know so much about mental telepathy, but muscular apathy is everywhere apparent.
We spend all our leisure
And our money abroad;
But there's health and there's pleasure
In the old fishin' rod.
At small cost, Fido can be immunized against hydrophobia.
That also protects Willie and your purse.
The Dick Test detects susceptibility to scarlet fever and the Schick Test, diptheria. Susceptibility to either is easily changed to immunity.
Mother sweeps her dusty rugs.
And thus inhales a million bugs;
Then all winter mother hugs The beater.
"IS THE BIBLE INFALLIBLE?"
WILL BE THE SUBJECT OF A LECTURE BY
J. C. WATT, of Los Angeles
LECTURING UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE INTERNATIONAL BIBLE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION
SUNDAY, AUGUST 31st, at 7:30 p.m.
MOOSE HALL 135 W. CENTER
ALL CORDIALLY INVITED NO COLLECTIONS
Fannie Hurst
W. W. Jacobs
Sinclair Lewis
Phyllis Duganne
Sinclair Lewis
Phyllis Duganne
John Galsworthy
Names like these are trademarks of genius to lovers of good fiction. If you like short stories, here is the greatest treat in weeks.
Other Features:
Held for $1,000,000 Ransom
A true adventure with handle in the heart of dark China, and first full details of the harrowing experiences that were encountered.
The Last of the Savages
An account of the camera expedition headed by Jesse L. Larky which discovered a tale of mannish habitation on the west coast of Mexico.
In the Footsteps of Magellan
Fascinating travel article by the always entertaining Fresh G. Carpenter.
Care of the Body
The most popular and most widely read digestion on health published in the West.
All in Next
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