oc-plain-dealer 1924-11-04
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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, $2; 6 months $1.75
Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., as second class matter
DAILY GREETING TO OUR READERS
To be a Christian is not merely to serve Christ and love Christ—it is to let Christ live in you and serve you. God has come in Jesus Christ, looking for us, and trying to find us in order that He may give us something better than material blessings—that He may give us character, opportunity, joy, faith, hope, love, and all the elements of a divine manhood.—Lyman Abbott.
GALLANT FIGHTERS FOR PEACE NOW
The impression sometimes gains ground that officers and men who do the fighting in wars become hardened, bloodthirsty and hold human life cheap. This is far from the truth. Some of the most ardent advocates of peace are officers and men who participated in the World War—or, here in America who participated in the War with Spain and the Civil War. They know the horrors of warfare. Being men of tender impulses, they abhor slaughter of human beings and all the anguish that war imposes.
Appearing before the World Peace Congress to plead for peace were two gallant officers who opposed each other in the World War—a French general and a German general. Their personal experiences of war horrors made them ardent pacifists. These two general officers are: General Verraux of France, who commanded a division in the World War; and General Von Schoenaich of Germany, who was active on the Romanian front during the war. They both advocate complete general disarmament, to save the world from greater calamities of war in future. General Verraux said that "future war, with gas and germs, will wipe out European civilization if permitted to break out." General Verraux urged a general strike against war, even a strike of generals.
peace were two gallant officers who opposed each other in the World War—a French general and a German general. Their personal experiences of war horrors made them ardent pacifists. These two general officers are: General Verraux of France, who commanded a division in the World War; and General Von Schoenaich of Germany, who was active on the Rumanian front during the war. They both advocate complete general disarmament, to save the world from greater calamities of war in future. General Verraux said that "future war, with gas and germs, will wipe out European civilization if permitted to break out." General Verraux urged a general strike against war, even a strike of generals.
General Von Schoenaich was equally pronounced in his hostility to warfare.
This confirms the opinion expressed by President Coolidge that the world is much nearer to universal and lasting peace than it realizes. When prominent and influential army officers become fervent advocates of permanent peace, and even go so far as to urge a strike against war, the cause of peace is being promoted tremendously.
A warless world would indeed be a blessed world.
Yes, the average person will be glad to have the campaign ended and the election over.
There is no proof of unduly large campaign funds raised in behalf of any of the party organizations. More ado has been made about this than the facts warrant.
California is an important state in this national election, as it has been in every election in the last twelve years. This state has decided the Presidency. It may do so again this year.
To Walter Johnson belongs the distinction not only of winning a game in a world series, but of winning the deciding game.
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A. W. ANDERSON
M. W. MARTE ET HARDWARE
151 West Center Anaheim, Calif.
THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF.
WHO SAID NOBODY LOVES A FAT MAN?
TAXI MISTER?
AT YOUR SERVICE SIR!
CARRY YOUR GRIP SIR?
THE U.S.VOTE
THE BEST OF ADVICE
DESERT WISDOM
Would you know so about the Arab mind The proverbs of Arabia.
The calamities of one turn to the benefit of another.
That is one of them, another:
Man amasses; Time dislikes Who has ever summed better?
Here is more Arab wisdom My debtor is a worse person than I am.
In business the middle beat.
He who repents of a one who has not sinned.
Patience is the key of the greedy mouth of the ness is not filled except earth of the grave.
Do no good and thou a no evil.
No religion without courage There are no faults in we want badly.
If thou canst not take by the head, then take by the tail.
Life, like a fire, be smoke, and ends in ashes.
A rich miser is poorer poor man.
One lie in the Sultan will keep out 20 truths.
Love is the companion ness.
Is thy mother-in-law some? Divorce her daundress The highest government erning anger.
Night is the para cowards.
There is no peace unenmity.
To abstain from riches.
ARAGRAPHS
By ROBERT QUILLEN
friends are people who forgive anything except great success. Homes are still useful, however, people who don't like to quarrel in public. Quarrelsome men usually have wry heads of hair. There are bald women.
It isn't too much talk about reason that keeps people from march, but too little. Example of anticlimax: They named a big day; their wives sit along.
When you go hunting for reacaries, just poke around in the soft snaps.
In the old days, a "loud speak" was a drummer, whom the latter served first. Some people talk without apparent strain, and some have aitation of cleverness. The objection to a neighborhood is good is that it attracts so many people who are not. Usually feels overworked if dreaming keeps him eight hours on a two-hour job. You can't tell the wise from the Irish when you hear them talk-baby talk to a sweetie. The objection to most high-w literature is its pompous way saying something everybody knows. Character is something you are yourself. In making a repulsion you have a lot of voluntarily help.
A feller kin scheme around an'git out o' goin' t' war, but he can't sidestep th' terrible seven or eight years follerin' one. Hain't it awful t' excitedly rip open a special delivery letter only t' find that our insurance lapses in a few days?
SUNSHINE PELLETS
BY DR. W. F. THOMSON
An imp of old Satan,
Spreading diseases;
A nasal explosion—
That's what a sneeze is.
Bad teeth, bad health.
Better an open gate than an open grave.
To promote good health, keep feet and country dry.
He who chews 'is baby's food for it chooses unwisely.
WHO'S WHO IN THE DAYS NEWS
A. W. McLEAN
In view of the fact that the state of North Carolina is usually Democratic by from 50,000 to 100,000 votes in every important election a victory for A. W. McLean of Lumberton, Democratic nominee for governor of that state, is practically assured.
McLean is a prominent banker, farmer and lawyer. He served as assistant secretary of the treasury under Woodrow Wilson and also served some time as a director of the war finance corporation under appointment by Wilson.
He is a native of North Carolina. He was born in Robeson co., April 20, 1870. He is a graduate of the University of North Carolina and following his matriculation opened law offices in Lumberton. His first political experience was as attorney for Robeson co. Six years after beginning his law practice he became president of the Lumberton bank. He has been active in Democratic political circles since 1892. He served on various national committees and subcommittees and was chairman of the national campaign committee in 1912 and 1916.
POEMS THAT IVE
LIFE
All in the dark we grope along,
And if we go amiss
We learn at least which path is wrong.
And there is gain in this.
We do not always win the race
By only running right.
We have to tread the mountain's base
Before we reach its height.
But he who loves himself the last
And knows the use of pain.
Though strewn with errors all his
Keeping everlastingly at it ensues you to find the drug seein a drug store.
Motives are mixed. A man may
because he is getting better
because the liquor is getting
seasonal.
Judgment Day should come
morrow, a lot of men would
and out word: "Sorry; in conference."
Otherlock Holmes needed a
tale to make him dopey, but a
dod detectives seem to have been
on that way.
Oblessed are the meek. How an
important man suffers when the
table won't share his good opinhimself!
Correct this sentence: "You're
long, Honey," said the husband;
my friends would call if I didn't
receive a drop."
MARKETS CLOSED
OHICAGO, Nov. 4—The board
trade and all other markets
we were closed today in observace of election day.
NEW YORK, Nov. 4—New York
stock and curb exchanges and
other markets were closed for elecon day today.
Health and Diet Advice
By Dr. Frank McCoy
Author of "THE FAST WAY TO HEALTH"
EVOLUTION OF DIET
(Continued)
The fashionable table, set out in all its magnificence, is no doubt a beautiful and tempting shrine at which to worship, but behind the dishes I often fancy I see the demons of rheumatism,
gout, fever, pains, headache and innumerable other disorders lying in ambush. It will nearly always be found that the partakers of these beautiful feasts are sufferers from various diseases, and that the root cause of each and every one of these diseases is very much the same, namely: inharmonious conglomerations and mixtures of food and the eating of excessive amounts, rather than any specific article of food in itself.
In the following article I propose to discuss the different classifications of foods and their use in the body, in the particular way which I think will be the most benefit to the reader. I have studied every form of diet cure and philosophy; from the apple diet as first advocated in the Garden of Eden, to the present day vitamine idea, and have devoted a large part of my life to this work. As the various phases of dietetics are presented, you will, no doubt, be impressed with the apparent simplicity of the instructions. However, if the simplicity of instructions should alarm you in any way, rest assured that, although put before you in plain, matter-of-fact terms, they really represent the gleanings from much valuable knowledge, with all the chaff removed.
The explanation is that in all my writings and lectures on the subject of food, I have always attempted to put forward the simple truths and facts as they have been proven to me and I have never thought it wise to burden the student with masses of incomprehensible rules on dietetics. It is well enough known that no truth, simple though it may be, can really be considered as a truth by any individual until such individual has actually lived and experienced it.
THE BEST OF ADVICE
BY CLARK KIHNHAE
DESERT WISDOM
Would you know something about the Arab mind Then read the proverbs of Arabia.
The calamities of one nation turn to the benefit of another.
That is one of them. This is another:
Man amasses; Time disperses.
Who has ever summed up life better?
Here is more Arab wisdom:
My debtor is a worse payer even than I am.
In business the middle way is best.
He who repents of a sin is as one who has not sinned.
Patience is the key of glory.
The greedy mouth of covetousness is not filled except by the earth of the grave.
Do no good and thou shalt find no evil.
No religion without courage.
There are no faults in a thing we want badly.
If thou canst not take things by the head, then take them by the tail.
Life, like a fire, begins in smoke, and ends in ashes.
A rich miser is poorer than a poor man.
One lie in the Sultan's head will keep out 20 truths.
Love is the companion of blindness.
Is thy mother-in-law quarrelsome? Divorce her daughter.
The highest government is governing anger.
Night is the paradise of cowards.
There is no peace until after enmity.
To abstain from desire is riches.
COMMENTS of the PRESS
What Editors Are Saying
FIFTEEN MILES AN HOUR FOR SAFETY—Minneapolis Journal
St. Paul is experimenting with a fifteen-mile-an-hour speed limit in the busy district as a preventative of motor accidents. The results of the plan will be watched with interest in Minneapolis. So far the daily toll of mishaps has been shortened, though the fact that the slowing down of the traffic has not yet been entirely accomplished and the closing of fthe loop district to ordinary motor traffic during the legion convention postpone definite conclusions.
Most traffic experts believe that congestion problems will be solved in part by speeding up the traffic under close regulation. In the main arteries of New York and Chicago for example, the driver is expected to make thirty or thirty-five miles an hour when the "go" signal is given.
But the St. Paul experiment is purely a safety proposition, and doubtless involves greater congestion. The narrowness of many of the downtown streets creates a much more dangerous situation than exists here, especially at crossings and a safe rate of speed is lower than here. The need for safety is certainly more imperious than the need for less congestion.
GLEANINGS FROM THE BOOK OF LIFE
AN ENEXHAUSTIBLE FORTUNE
It seemed to Robert Louis Stevenson as if a great deal were attainable in a world where there are so many marriages and decisive battles, and where we all, at certain hours of the day, and with great gusto and dispatch, stow a portion of victuals finally and irretrievably into the bag which contains us.
"And it would seem also, on a hasty view, that the attainment of as much as possible was the one goal of man's contentious life." And yet, as regards the spirit, this is but a semblance. We live in an ascending scale, when we live happily, one thing leading to another in an endless series.
"There is always a new horizon for onward-looking men, and although we dwell on a small planet, immersed in potty-business and not enduring beyond a brief period of years, we are so constituted that our hopes are unaccessible, like stars, and the term of hoping is prolonged until the end of life."
"To be truly happy is a question of how we begin and not how we end, of what we want and not of what we have. An aspiration is a joy forever, a possession as solid as a landed estate, a fortune which we can never exhaust and which gives us year by year a revenue of pleasurable activities. To have many of these is to be spiritually rich."
"Life is only a very dull and ill-directed theatre unless we have some interest in the piece; and to those who have neither art nbr science, the world is a mere arrangement of colors, or a rough
A rich miser is poorer than a poor man.
One lie in the Sultan's head will keep out 20 truths.
Love is the companion of blindness.
Is thy mother-in-law quarrelsome? Divorce her daughter.
The highest government is governing anger.
Night is the paradise of cowards.
There is no peace until after enmity.
To abstain from desire is riche.
A bankrupt and a usurer do not long disagree.
He who eats alone coughs alone.
No sin in which one persists is evenial and no fault for which one asks pardon is mortal.
Govern the rabble by opposing them.
A fraud is not perfect unless it be practiced on clever and cunning persons.
God deliver us from the man of one book.
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 Blvd., Cor, Hill and 4th Sts., Los Angeles, Calif.
WEDNESDAY
SPINACH, 3 for... 10c
CAULIFLOWER... 10c
Russett or Burbank Spuds, per lug 70c
Serving by Growing
Every time an installer signs for a telephone instrument at the stock room counter and starts out for the home or office of a new subscriber, where he is to connect it with the Bell System, he is serving you.
Each new telephone added to the system puts you in potential contact with the users of this new instrument. Every new installation anywhere increases the scope of your service; makes your telephone more valuable to you.
Since the invention of the telephone in 1876, many improvements in equipment and operating methods have combined to increase the value of telephone service to the individual subscriber. Not only has it been made possible to hear clearly over the telephone, and at far greater distances, but also to be promptly connected with a larger number of subscribers—for the telephone serves by growing.
The number of Bell System telephones is growing at the rate of about three quarters of a million a year—a fact which at once illustrates the increasing value of telephone service to existing subscribers and its increasing acceptance by the public as indispensable to modern life.
The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company
BELL SYSTEM
One Policy One System Universal Service