oc-plain-dealer 1924-10-14
Searchable text
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, $3; 6 months $1.75
Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., as second class matter
DAILY GREETING TO OUR READERS
Were you building a monument to remain for ages,
how majestic and substantial would be its construction?
How much more august and solemn is life!
—Richard S. Storrs.
REALTY BUSINESS BIG FACTOR IN STATE
Real estate brokerage business in California has reached enormous proportions. Thanks to the elevating of standards of the business, through local organizations, through the wholesome general influence of the California Real Estate Association, and through individual dealers, the buying, selling and renting of real estate through licensed agents is on an honorable basis, deserving the confidence of the public. Step after step, of recent years, has been directed toward lifting the business to a better status. The latest requirements, insisted upon by representative real estate men, as individuals and as organizations, provides for an examination by the State Real Estate Commissioner, at his discretion, before a license is issued. Furthermore, realty brokers must give a bond, which is a protection to clients.
In a state growing and developing as rapidly as California the services of realty brokers and salesmen are indispensable. This puts realty transactions on responsible basis, and brings buyer and seller into closer, more businesslike relationship, to their mutual advantage.
Realty dealers assist greatly in developing the state. They are intelligent, wideawake, effective boosters. They are instrumental in bringing many desirable new residents into the community. They promote improvements, public and private. They aid every civic betterment. Public spiritedness is the very life of their activities. The realty business deservedly holds very high rank among the recognized factors of state development.
This puts reality transactions on responsible basis, and brings buyer and seller into closer, more businesslike relationship, to their mutual advantage.
Realty dealers assist greatly in developing the state. They are intelligent, wideawake, effective boosters. They are instrumental in bringing many desirable new residents into the community. They promote improvements, public and private. They aid every civic betterment. Public spiritedness is the very life of their activities. The realty business deservesly holds very high rank among the recognized factors of state development.
Heavy rains at this time, would cause some damage in some parts of the state. But the benefits would greatly overbalance the damage.
INDIVIDUAL WORK FOR WORLD PEACE
Just, enduring peace for the world must come from individual effort and influence, adjusted and attuned to the great cause of peace promotion. Peace must come from unified effort and influence of millions, in the mass. But millions of persons are no more nor less than so many individuals. Collectively, their influence is great. But the big influence which emanates from millions is integrally composed of millions of individual influences and these individual influences react upon the mass influence.
It is well frequently to think of the influence and the efforts of the individual, in fostering peace. A great deal depends upon the way in which individuals regard foreigners. If foreigners are hated and suspected merely because they are foreigners, this prejudice stands in the way of fostering peace. For racial or national hatreds are barriers to the attainment of lasting peace.
When you hate a foreigner merely because he is a foreigner, you are cultivating feelings that breed wars.
233 E.
Center St.
Anaheim
Chaffees
WINE CASH BREWERY
248 W.
Center St.
Anaheim
WEDNESDAY
PINEAPPLE, lg. can sliced 20c
SPINACH 3 for 10c
Fancy Burbank Potatoes, per cwt. $2.10
Fancy Cauliflower 10c
Leaded Glass and Mirrors
SPINACH ... 3 for 10c
Fancy Burbank Potatoes, per cwt. $2.10
Fancy Cauliflower 10c
Leaded Glass and Mirrors
We can give you prompt delivery on all kinds of leaded glass and mirrors and at a cost as low as can be obtained any place.
Santa Ana Art Glass Works
Orange County's Only Exclusive Glass Dealers
C. M. SCOTT, Proprietor
Phone 591-W 1204 E. Fourth St.
DANCING
With—
CLIFF ARNOLD
AND HIS
AMERICAN LEGION ORCHESTRA
Special Wednesday Nite Dances
LEGION HALL, SANTA ANA
DANCING EVERY WED., FRIDAY AND SAT. NIGHT
NEW FLOOR — NEW DECORATIONS — NEW MUSIC
AUTUMN'S FIRES
Now Autumn's fires burn lily along the woods.
And day by day the dead fall and melt.
And night by night the monstera blast.
Walls in the keyhole, telling it pass'd
O'er empty fields, or upland tudes.
Or grim, wide wave; and now power is felt
Of melancholy, tenderer in moods
Than any joy Indulgent Sun dealt.
—William Allingha
Well, anyway, it's about fifty proposition; some of customs are about as art as some of our complexions.
THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF.
THE STOVE LEAGUE FUEL WILL SMELL
When Fans "Fire Up" for Their Winter Sessions
BRIBERY
THROWING CHARGES
QUEER GAMES
OODW'S
STATEMENT
DREYFUSS'
STATEMENT
CROOKED
STUFF
BLACK
SOX
AFPAIR
WHOS WILL IN THE DAYS?
Glacomo de Mauro
Commendatore Glacomo,
tino, who is slated at Raleigh,
ceed the universallyPrince Gelasio Caetan,
ambassador of Italy auton at the end of the
year, is one of the ablesof King Victor Emmanuel,
matic service and beard,
which is familiar to t
and proprietors of a m
the biggest newspaper,
United States, for he
spent a considerable
of his diplomatic o
the Far Orient, was f
charge de-affaires first
and then in Japan, was
some intrigue against h
political circles at Rome,
dismissed on a fallacioand compelled to earn n
hood in the Orient by w
American daily newspaper,
a few years, through th
fall of his enemies at
was restored to the o
service, promoted to the
Minister Plenipotentiary,
while filling that office.
Sister Known in U
The new ambassador
will be pleasantly rememWashington as the charm
of that Count Albert v
then counselor and chai
fires of the Germany ee
America.
Italy's new ambassador
United States speaks
without any trace of focent. or he spent his b
London, where his father
counselor of embassy.
Naples in 1868, he endiplomatic service in H
won his spurs at Berne
ing out successfully the
cate negotiations that ee
found the solution for t
what bitter Italo-Helver
troversies that had bee
there for some time. In
was promoted to by first
of legation in Egypt h
years later succeeded h
as minister and diploma
ARAGRAPHS
By ROBERT QUILLEN
Relatives are people who won how you manage to get by. It is the right to vote that men right for, not the task of voting. At this rate it will soon be a supplement to call a boy a "sissy." Here femininity won't win at in the House if it won't in a set car.
Do live that you can run for vice without whining about mudrowing.
Common sense is that indefinite utility possessed by people who see with you.
You can judge a man by the company he keeps, or you can see him by the wife that keeps.
Are women qualified for places authority?" queries an editor, dad; he knows.
Doman's waist line moves up down; man's expands in a zonal line only.
There can be honesty in politics in honesty. Frequently there are politics in honesty. And some men feel overworked. Use they take all day to hang a two-hour job.
Nations trust God in time of Now if they will only trust another in time of peace. Why another disarmament connee? Can't nations scrap their delete planes without that?
Is easy to recognize Sunday, please have the tank filled in.
ABE MARTIN
NAELLY VIEW
"STUDY OF RELATIVE VALUE OF SERVICE NEEDED IN U.S. INDUSTRIAL LIFE"
"The elimination of industrial disputes calls for our making a beginning of the study of the relative value of services," declares ex-Gov. James Hartnerr of Vermont, successor of Herbert Hoover as president of the American Engineering Counell.
“This country has reached the stage in its development in which all interests must take a broad national view,” he continued in a recent address.
“National team work will increase the wealth to be divided and reduce the cost of production.
“We have been so tardy in taking the broad view of our problems of industry that we must not be discouraged if the battle continues after we have started to improve our way of dealing.
"We have retained too long the habit of thought and action that was acquired during the days of simple animosities that can not be greatly reduced in this generation, but this constitutes neither bask nor reason for us to continue inactive."
SUNSHINE PELLETS
BY DR. W. F. THOMSON
If you use hair tonics
And wear a hot hat,
You'll soon be bald—
You can bet on that.
Ever notice how many efficiency experts break appointments with their doctors?
Minor cuts are ports unguarded.
Where pirate microbes swarm ashore;
But we'd hang 'em to the yard arm.
If we'd use precaution more.
Order is what your telephone line is usually out of.
is easy to recognize Sunday.
have the tank filled in
of asking for five gallons.
progressive movements 'have
ing in common with the reaceary element except an apperue Americanism is the tolerthat permits all to interpret
ericanism in their own way.
there is no other way to
be the silver dollar popular, it
yet be necessary to denounce
let's not have too much talk
grass tacks. If representatives
less brass there would be less
correct this sentence: "I heard
story about her," said the
hip; "but I hope it isn't true."
protected by Associated Editors,
Inc.
AUTUMN'S FIRES
Now Autumn's fires burn slowly along the woods,
day by day the dead leaves
fall and melt,
night by night the monitory
blast
is in the keyhole, telling how
it pass'd
empty fields, or upland solitudes,
rim, wide wave; and now the
power is felt
melancholy, tenderer in its
moods
in any joy Indulgent Summer
dealt.
—William Allingham.
Well, anyway, it's about a fiftfly proposition; some of our
items are about as artificial
some of our complexions.
Class Ad is best little salesman.
EAGLE MIKADO
The YELLOW PENCIL with the RED BAND
EAGLE PENCIL CO. NEW YORK USA.
You can bet on that.
Ever notice how many efficiency experts break appointments
with their doctors?
Minor cuts are ports unguarded;
Where pirate microbes swarm
ashore;
But we'd hang 'em to the yard arm
If we'd use precaution more.
Order is what your telephone line is usually out of.
To obtain the danger index of camp malaria, multiply the number of "carriers" by the number of mosquitoes and divide between doctors.
PILES
Cuprable without surgical operation. No hospital. All rectal diseases treated in the office.
Send for Free Booklet. Office hours 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., except Saturdays and Sundays. Open Wednesday Nights, 7 to 8.
G. W. Fuller.M.D
718 Black Building
Cor. Hill and 4th Street
Los Angeles, Calif.
WHOS WHO IN THE DAYS NEWS
GLACOMO DE MARTINO
Commendatore Glacomo de Martino, who is slated at Rome to succeed the universally popular Prince Gelasio Caetania as the ambassador of Italy at Washington at the end of the present year, is one of the ablest members of King Victor Emmanuel's diplomatic service and bears a name which is familiar to the editors and proprietors of a number of the biggest newspapers of the United States, for his father spent a considerable portion of his diplomatic career in the Far Orient, was for a time charge de-affaires first at Pekin and then in Japan, was through some intrigue against him in political circles at Rome suddenly dismissed on a fallacious pretext and compelled to earn his livelihood in the Orient by writing for American daily newspapers. After a few years, through the downfall of his enemies at home, he was restored to the diplomatic service, promoted to the rank of Minister Plenipotentiary and died while filling that office at Tokyo.
Sister Known in U.S.
The new ambassador's sister will be pleasantly remembered at Washington as the charming wife of that Count Albert von Quadt, then counselor and chargé d'affaires of the Germany embassy in America.
Italy's new ambassador to the United States speaks English without any trace of foreign accent, or he spent his boyhood in London, where his father was then counselor of embassy. Born at Naples in 1868, he entered the diplomatic service in 1891 and won his spurs at Berne by carrying out successfully the very delicate negotiations that eventually found the solution for the somewhat bitter Italo-Helvetian controversies that had been raging there for some time. In 1906 he was promoted to by first secretary of legislation in Egypt and four years later succeeded his father as minister and diplomatic agent.
COMMENTS OF the PRESS What Editors Are Saying
COOPERATION FOR FAST SHIPPING—Fresno Republican
It is gratifying to note that shipping interests this year are showing an ernest desire to eliminate as much car shortage as possible and thereby facilitate the movement of perishable products to all markets. Evidence of the feeling of all concerned is obtained in the early action taken.
In previous years many of the difficulties that arise may be attributed to the fact that no one gave the car supply situation any amount of serious consideration until a shortage appeared. Then it was too late to remedy conditions.
This year shippers and railroad heads began to plan early for the movement of crops and to prepare for the movement of cars east and west in a real effort to prevent congestion at one end and a dearth at the other.
All interests believe there will be a car shortage this year, but if all observe the recommendations that have been made the general opinion seems to be that there will be less trouble than ever before.
The Interstate Commerce Commission has taken cognizance of the situation and is lending its assistance, evidenced by the circular letter it issued just a day or two ago to shippers. Reports from its service bureau indicate that the railroads are trying to do their part and stress is laid on the necessity of full co-operation at shipping and receiving ends to insure the greatest benefits and the minimum of delay.
To railroads, the movement of perishables is always a problem. They must be moved quickly when they are ready and additional rolling stock is required that would not be needed if shipments could be distributed over any great length of time.
There is no question that the facilities of railroads are taxed to the utmost to move perishables and they always will be because of the volume they have to move and the short time given them in which to do it. It is therefore all the more important that shippers and receivers play their part and give the railroads their fullest co-operation.
THE RACE CALLED LIFE
OF EVERY event in our life we can say only for one moment that it IS; for ever after, that it WAS.
"Every evening," Arthur Schopenhauer goes on, "we are poorer by a day. It might, perhaps, make us mad to see how rapidly our short span of time ebbs away; if it were not that in the furtherest depths of our being we are secretly conscious of our share in the meexhaustible spring of eternity, so that we can always hope to find life in it again."
THE RACE CALLED LIFE
OF EVERY event in our life we can say only for one moment that it IS; for ever after, that it WAS.
"Every evening," Arthur Schopenhauer goes on, "we are poorer by a day. It might, perhaps, make us mad to see how rapidly our short span of time ebbs away; if it were not that in the furtherest depths of our being we are secretly conscious of our share in the inexhaustible spring of eternity, so that we can always hope to find life in it again."
Considerations of this kind lead us to embrace the belief that the greatest WISDOM is to make the enjoyment of the present the supreme object of life; because that is the only reality, all else being merely the play of thought, Schopenhauer observed.
"On the other hand," he wrote (in "The Vanity of Existence," an essay), "such a course might just as well be called the greatest FOLLY; for that which in the next moment exists no more, and vanishes utterly. Like a dream, can never be worth a serious effort.
"The WHOLE foundation on which our existence rests is the present—the ever fleeting present. It lies, then, in the very nature at the bottom of most of the vagaries of what we call 'artistic tempo' possibility of our ever attaining the rest for which we are always striving.
"We are like a man running downhill, who cannot keep his legs unless he runs on, and will inevitably fall if he stops; or, again, like a pole balanced on the tip of one's finger; or like a planet, which would fall into its sun the moment it ceased to hurry forward on its way. Unrest is the mark of existence."
"IN A WORLD where all is unstable, and nought can endure, but is swept onward at once in the hurrying whirpool of change; where a man, if he is to keep erect at all, must always be advancing and moving, like an acrobat on a rope—in such a world happiness is inconceivable." Schopenhauer, professional pessimist, decided.
"How can it dwell where, as Plato says, continual Becoming and never Beling is the sole form of existence?
In the first place, a man never is happy, but spends his whole life in striving after something which he thinks will make him so; he seldom attains his goal, and when he does, it is only to be disappointed; he is mostly shipwrecked in the end, and comes into harbor with masts and rigging gone. And then, it is all one whether he has been happy or miserable; for his life was never anything more than a present moment always vanishing; and it is over."
500 BIZ. CARDS $2.00
1000 FOR $3.75
GOOD PRINTING FOR LESS AT THE BENTON PRESS
117 E. 4th St., Santa Ana
FREE!
A PAIR OF 5-FOOT ADJUSTABLE
STILTS
TO ADVERTISE
LAC-LAX
DELICIOUS CANDY LAXATIVE
While they last, a pair of strong, adjustable, brilliant red Stilts will be given FREE with each 50¢ box of LAC-LAX, the perfect candy Laxative.
This unusual offer is just another proof of our belief that "its greatest advertising are the folks who have used it." Only a limited number of Stilts on hand.
Jackson Drug Co.
237 East Center Street Anaheim, California