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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1924 October

oc-plain-dealer 1924-10-02

1924-10-02 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 4 of 8 · 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 Every real and searching effort at self improvement, is, of itself, a lesson of profound humility. For we can not more a step without learning and feeling the waywardness, the weakness, cacillation of our movements, or without desiring to be set upon the Rock that is higher than ourselves.—W. E. Gladstone. SPORTSMEN SERVING A GOOD PURPOSE Some are disposed to sneer at men who make a career of sports, like baseball or auto racing. This, these critics say, is a wasting of life. But is it? The public must be entertained. Millions of hard-working men and women, in this enormous age, must have relaxation or break under the strain of complex, exacting modern conditions of living. Those who afford wholesome diversion surely are serving a good purpose. Men and women on the stage, on the screen, in basebalt, in auto racing, in other clean, wholesome amusements and sports, are serving a very good mission in the world, just as are humorous writers, cartoonists and better type of novelists. This age must have diversion or it would go mad. The people could not keep up the strenuous pace, if they were not entertained and relaxed. Think of the professional sportsman and entertainer in this light. America doubtless will go right on leading the world ineronantic achievements. CO-OPERATION IN CIVIC CO-OPERATION IN CIVIC WORK OF SOUTHLAND A promising move to bring about closer co-operation among civic-promotion organizations of Southern California has been started. At the invitation of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, representatives of thirty-five cities gathered in Los Angeles to discuss ways and means of promoting teamwork among these promotional organizations. The discussions and the purposes met with such general favor that other meetings are probable, to effect something concrete and helpful. Inauguration of a broad policy of constructive co-operation among all the cities of this section, on the promotional principle of "all for each and each for all," would stimulate progress. Team-work of this kind is needed. This section would grow and thrive and flourish abundantly, if the settled policy of all its municipalities and counties was based upon co-operative helpfulness. There should be no rankling jealousies or bitter rivalries among these sister communities. They each and all are working toward a common destiny, each in its own sphere, and all affected by the same general conditions. Their interests are interwoven and interdependent. When one thrives they all feel, in some measure, the thriving. The problems of one are the problems of them all, in some aspect and in some measure. Don't Forget That The Ever-Ready Truck & Transfer Co. Is still able to do your hauling of any description CONTRACT HAULING A SPECIALTY Get Our Price O. J. LINNARTZ, Prop. Residence 211 E. Sycamore St. PHONE: 209-M You Can Now Try Nuxated Iron At My Expense I First Compounded This Remarkable Remedy For My Own Neighbors And Their Praise Of, It Has Spread So Rapidly That Now Over Four Million People Use It Annually—Read My Unusual Offer Below. You Can Now Try Nuxated Iron At My Expense I First Compounded This Remarkable Remedy For My Own Neighbors And Their Praise Of, It Has Spread So Rapidly That Now Over Four Million People Use It Annually—Read My Unusual Offer Below. Years ago, I began to wonder at the great number of my own friends and neighbors who were all ways sailing, complaining and doctoring, without ever seeming to get any better. Both working men and their wives frequently all tired out in the evening, and a great many were weak, nervous and run-down. One had pains in the back and thought he had kidney trouble. Another had pains around the heart, palpitations and dizziness, and was sure he was suffering from heart disease. Still others had severe headaches, lasting spots before the eyes, tender spots long on the spine and a great variety of alarming symptoms. For years I made a special study of this condition, consulting a great number of doctors and chemists. An immense num- bursy showed that three people out of four you meet lack 1004 iron in their lack of iron in the blood is the greatest devitalizing weaknesses. It is the your blood that enables you to get enrichment out of your food. Without nothing you eat does you any good, our heart, lungs and kidneys and all your internal organs get their nourishment from the blood stream, and when the blood lacks iron and is thin, pale and watery, you may suffer from the symptoms of a great number of old diseases when the rest and true nature of all your trouble is a lack of iron in the blood. In the old days people often took metallic iron, which some physicians claim is not absorbed at all. In compounding this NOTE: The above company is known to be thoroughly reliable. Over 4,000,000 pounds daily by itself usually, and it has been used and highly recommended by former U.S. Senators, Members of Congress, Judges of U.S. Courts and many physicians. NUXATED IRON ENRICHES THE BLOOD-GIVES YOU NEW STRENGTH AND ENERGY Plain Dealer Want Ads Bring Results Cut out trial coupon and go to any drug- gist and get your first trial package of Nuxated Iron; then see how long you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two 5-grain tablets of Nuxated Iron three times a day after meals for two weeks, then test your strength again and see how much you have gained. An astonishing number of nervous, run- down people who were silling all the while, have greatly improved their health and increased their strength, energy and endurance simply by taking this newer form of iron. Trial Coupon Fill in this coupon with your name and address and take it to any dugstant in your city. Deposit with him in price of one pound full-size bottle of rich in iron who possessed great strength, force and ease in your blood that enables you to get enrichment out of your food. Without anything you eat does you any good, our heart, lungs and kidneys and all your internal organs get their nourishment from the blood stream, and when the blood lacks iron and is thin, pale and watery, you may suffer from the symptoms of a great number of old diseases when the rest and true nature of all your trouble is a lack of iron in the blood. DAE HEALTH LABORATORIES New York City Name: Address: (Fill in your name and address above) Will pay the dugstant the full amount hereafter upon receipt of the coupon and wrapper. DAE HEALTH LABORATORIES New York City Name: Address: (Leg Sore) ARE CURABLE. If you suffer Leg Soren or Varicose Ulcer I will send you absolutely PRI- copy of my famous book that how to be rid of these trous- for all time by using my remi- able painless treatment. It is ferent from anything you we heard of, and the result ot a 35 years specialist. Simply do your whitttier address to Dr. J WHITTIER Suite 708, 421 11th Street, Kansas City, Mo. THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF. THE GREAT OPEN SPACES EMPTY FURNACE EMPTY COAL BIN VERY EMPTY "INTERALLIED LOANS FOR REAL OBLIGATIONS, CANNOT BE CANCELLED, SAYS BARUCH" Now that the subject of Gre reparations has been disposed for a while, the nations of rope are confronted once with the thought of paying debts to the United States. When last heard of, interdebt were to be the next it the international program of cussion. In anticipation, Bernard Baruch was asked recently by authoritative statement of the situation and what the outlook and Mr. Baruch-pointed to his title on Interallied Debt "These Eventful Years" which just been published by the clopedia Britanica Co. Mr. Baruch was chairman the War Industries Board, member of the Supreme Economic Council, economic adviser for American Peace Committee American delegate on Economic and Reparation clauses, and the author of "Making of the economic and Reparation Secrets of the Peace Treaty." In his title, he says in part: Hindered Reparations Settlement "The whole subject of the interallied debts, other than between Great Britain and United States, was in January 1924, held up pending the moment of the reparation process France, followed by Italy, pically said to the other note that unless Germany pays or sums of money it cannot, or not pay its indebtedness to nations. "Because of inability or ingress, the only understated reached on interallied debt been an agreement to fund British debt to the United States It was the general understand..." RAGRAPHS ROBERT QUILLEN leading role is a bank roll. few things are constituted if they hurt business. "masher," however, never far without some cootiness. Its mobilization day seems running into extra innings. Other way to eradicate the issue is to quit appealing to it. faddists remind us at that there is too much "nut" criticism. might be worse. Flappers are their hair shingled, but haven't all yet begun to use them. He cleans his own ash he thinks he is a great help in the house. difference between boxing prize-fighting is that prizes do better boxing. husband has the last word, something like this: "All buy the darned thing." Finally scientists invent new better ways to do everything say "Please remit." the wicked old days you be a good host without anything about first aid res. A DRY NATION? YES!! THEN WET FOR CONSTABLE PLUM HE RAIDS HOME BE PALACE ALike HE PLAYS NO PAVORITES BOND'T DRINK HIMSELF! Lester Mopps has been out of school for nigh on two years an' he can't even play a saxophone. No matter how much money a woman's got she can't look up-to-date unless she's got th' nerve. John Ruskin was wont to attack all and sundry with a savage merriment which even his best friends at times resented. Once he wrote a friend hoping that a fierce criticism written by him of his friend's picture would make no difference to their friendship. To which the friend had the wit to reply: "Dear Ruskin—Next time I meet you I shall knock you down, but I hope it will make no difference to our friendship." TAGGART'S WHO'S WHO IN THE DAYS NEWS MAJOR GEN. MALIN CRAIG The retirement of General Willard Holbrook as chief of cavalry of the United States army caused the appointment of Major General Malin Craig to fill the vacant post Gen. Craig recently returned from service in the Philippines. The new chief of cavalry was born in St. Joseph, Mo., August 5, 1875. He was graduated from the U.S. Military Academy in 1898, was an honor graduate from the Infantry and Cavalry school in 1904, from the Grand Army Staff college in 1905, and Army War College in 1910. Gen. Craig served through the Spanish-American war from June, 1898, China Relief Expedition from June to October, 1900, was aide-de-camp to Brig. Gen. Barry in the Philippines 1900-1, to Gen. Bell 1902-4, and was again in the Philippines 1907-9. On Oct. 5, 1917, he arrived in France and was appointed commander of the 166th brigade infantry, 83rd division 4th army corp, A.E. F., July 20, 1918, remaining in France in various commands until the close of the war when he returned to the United States and was made director of the General Staff College, Washington, D.C. In 1920-21 Gen. Craig commanded the District of Arizona, and Sept. 1, 1921, was made commander of the Cavalry School at Fort Riley, Kan. He had been made brigadier general of the National Army in 1918; and the regular army April 28, 1921. France expressed her appreciation of General Craig's services during the world war by decorating him as commander of the Legion of Honor and with the Croix de Guerre with two palms. He was made a Companion of Bath by the British, commander La Couronne between 'Great Britain and United States,' was in January 1924, held up pending the amendment of the reparation program France, followed by Italy, pally said to the other nation that unless Germany pays or sums of money it cannot; or not pay its indebtedness to nations. "Because of inability or ingress, the only understand reached on interallied debts been an agreement to fund British debt to the United State It was the general understanding that Belgium's indebtedness the Allies and to America will be paid from German reparations. "The Franco-Italian power however, seems simply equitable to saying that until their debtor pays them they French and Italians) will not CANNOT) pay their creditors. "While it is perfectly true the more Germany pays to Allies the more they will have of which to pay their debts self-evident truth has no relevance to the inherent ability of these ties to pay their outstanding gations. "The point is often raised if Germany's debt is scaled down why should not the debt of these lies, one to another, be likewise. There would be force in that argument if urgens that Germany be let off less than she is able to pay if Germany's ability to pay of her own resources is fixed roughly, $10,000,000,000, taxpayers of America will know why France, out of own resources cannot pay she owes American (almost 000,000,000). "It will be very severe if the Germans to have to pay they justly should; it will allow very difficult for the debtor to the creditor nations; but then and burdens upon the citizen the creditor nations are justvere and burdensome." Mr. Advertise Choose a New Circulation is the first ple read it circulation TAGGART'S DEPENDABLE USED CARS CHEVROLET $550 TOURING ... $135 CHEVROLET $650 SEDAN ... $275 CHEVROLET $400 TOURING ... $250 CHEVROLET $175 TOURING ... $150 BUICK ... $175 OAKLAND ... $150 ROADSTER ... $200 FORD ... $125 FORD ... $175 ROADSTER ... $50 NASH 21 ... $450 TOURING ... $150 TRUCK ... $500 CHEVY, TRUCK ... $500 CHASSIS ... 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 803 North Los Angeles St. YOU CAN YOU MAY BUT Will You VOTE ON Tuesday, November 4, 1924 In Order to Do So You Must Register ON OR BEFORE SATURDAY October 4th, 1924 If You Have Not Done So Since January 1, 1924 THE PEOPLE DO NOT GOVERN WHEN THEY DO NOT VOTE October 4th Last Day to Register Registration books for November 4, 1924, election are now open. All who have not registered since January 1, 1924, or who have moved since registering, should register now. October 4, 1924, is the last day. INTERALLIED LOANS ARE REAL OBLIGATIONS, CAN'T BE CANCELLED," SAYS BARUCH Now that the subject of German reparations has been disposed of a while, the nations of Europe are confronted once more with the thought of paying war debts to the United States. When last heard of, inter-allied debts were to be the next item on international program of dismission. In anticipation, Bernard M. Baruch was asked recently for an authoritative statement of the situation and what the outlook is; Mr. Baruch pointed to his arrears on Interallied Debts in these Eventful Years" which has not been published by the Encyclopedia Britannica Co. Mr. Baruch was chairman of War Industries Board, member of the Supreme Economic Council, economic adviser for the American Peace Commission; American delegate on Economic and Reparation clauses, and is author of "Making of the Economic and Reparation Sections the Peace Treaty." In his arragee, he says in part: Undered Reparations Settlement The whole subject of the interallied debts, other than those between Great Britain and the United States, was in January, 1924, held up pending the settlement of the reparation problem. Finance, followed by Italy, practically said to the other nations that unless Germany pays certain sums of money it cannot; or will pay its indebtedness to other nations. Because of inability or unwillingness, the only understanding reached on interallied debts has an agreement to fund the British debt to the United States. Was the general understanding correct? COMMENTS of the PRESS What Editors Are Saying WHICH IS MORE PRECIOUS, BOOTLEG OR HUMAN LIVES? Fullerton Tribune Bootleg liquor killed John R. Marshall, local blackamith. Doctors may report that muriatic acid and a sunshot wound had a lot to do with it, but they were merely instruments. It was bad, vile rotten liquor, "bootleg" that made him blind for days, that turned Marshall from an ordinary lawabiding, peaceful citizen, a steady workman, a good husband and provider, into a law-breaker, a home-breaker, and caused him to take his life. There is no such thing as "good bootleg." It is all bad. It is just a question of relative badness. Marshall got some that was worse than most kinds. As a result of his libations his eyesight was affected. His wife nursed him faithfully through that affliction. But she left him when he ill-treated one of her two step-sons. Later, when he was tossing in the agony of muriatic acid poisoning, she returned to him. She watched unceasingly by his bedside, and played an epic part in the fight to bring him back to life. The family became reconciled, but the effect of the insidious poison could not be entirely counteracted. Marchall is dead. Marshall is dead, but what of those who killed him? Those who supplied him with the vile bootleg which led to his death are responsible, morally at any rate. They killed him in substance almost as if they had handed him the fatal poison. Under the Eighteenth Amendment it has become unfortunately a most common thing to scoff at the law, to make a joke of this "bootleg" business. It is only when a tragedy like this one happens close to home, that the thinking citizen can be aroused to a realization of the terrible effects of poison booze. The Tribune knows the facts about this case. There is nothing over-stressed in the above. It is true and reveals a serious condition of affairs. What is going to be done about it? WHAT DO YOU SEE IN A HANDFUL OF GARDEN SOIL OR A RUSTY NAIL The Tribune knows the facts about this case. There is nothing over-stressed in the above. It is true and reveals a serious condition of affairs. What is going to be done about it? WHAT DO YOU SEE IN A HANDFUL OF GARDEN SOIL OR A RUSTY NAIL There are numbers or cultivated persons to whom the material world is altogether contemptible; who can see nothing in a handful of garden soil, or a rusty nail, but types of the passive and the corruptible. To modern science, these assumptions are as much out of date as the equally venerable errors, that the sun goes around the earth every four-and-twenty hours, or that water is an elementary body. As Huxley put it, "The handful of soil is a factory thronged with swarms of busy workers; the rusty nail is an aggregation of millions of particles, moving with inconceivable velocity in a dance of infinite complexity yet perfect measure; harmonic with like performances throughout the solar system." If there is good ground for any conclusion, Huxley held, there is such for the belief that the substance of these particles has existed and will exist, that the energy which stirs them has persisted and will persist, with assignable limit, either in the past or the future. "Surely as Heracleitus said of the kitchen with its pots and pans, 'Here also are the gods.'" "Little we have, even yet, learned of the material universe, that little makes for the belief that it is a system of unbroken order and perfect symmetry, of which the form incessantly changes while the substance and the energy are imperishable," he avers. The horror of "materialism" which weighs upon the minds of so many persons appears to depend, in part, Huxley points out, upon the pusky accidental connection of some forms of materialistic philosophy with ethical and religious tenets by which they are repelled; and partly, on the survival of every ancient superstition concerning te nature of matter. Huxley explains that this superstition, for the tenacious vitality of which the idealistic philosophers who are, more or less, disciples of Pito and the theologicals who have been influenced by them, are responsible, assumes that matter is something not merely inert and prishable, but essentially base and evil-natured, if not actively amonstistic to, at least a negative dead-weight upon, the good. Mr. Advertiser! Choose a Newspaper BY THESE FACTS.... Circulation is the first and last test if a newspaper's power. Do enough people read it to make it columns productive? The average net circulation of the Plain Dealer is 3500, and more than ninety-five FACTS..... Circulation is the first and last test of a newspaper's power. Do enough people read it to make it columns productive? The average net circulation of the Plain Dealer is 3500, and more than ninety-five per cent of this is in Anaheim trade radius. Coverage There are approximately 2400 dwellings in Anaheim. The city circulation of the Plain Dealer is 2050. On the six auto routes and in adjoining town 1450 copies of the Plain Dealer are distributed daily. Reader Interest Ask any of your friend and neighbors which is Anaheim's leading newspaper. Lineage The experience of other advertisers is a sound guide. The Plain Dealer consistently cares the most lines of paid advertising, local and national display, legal and classified. It is the first choice of the advertiser who must make every cent of his publicity investment count. Canny dvertisers concentrate on the medium that gives the largest retu, most readers and best results. In Northern Orange County at medium is the — Plain Dealer Largest Circulion — Best Advertising Medium Newsy Newspaper