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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1924 November

oc-plain-dealer 1924-11-26

1924-11-26 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 4 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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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 M. 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 He not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever an man soeth, that shall he also reap.—Galatians 6:7. RESTRICTION OF OPIUM IN PROSPECT Some good may come from the international conference for the suppression of opium smoking in the Far East, even though an impasse was reached in the Geneva meeting because of Japan's attitude. It is encouraging to know that great powers are in mood to negotiate for the restriction of production of opium in China and for transporting opiates out of that country. This is a great moral move. It is probable that eventually the production and the traffic in opium may be curtailed. The moral sentiment of the world should back this vigorously. The great evil from use of opiates is too well known. It is out of place in this twentieth century. Intelligence teaches that it would be fatal to any race to let the use of narcotics become common and unrestricted. It is to be hoped that the temporary failure of the international opium conference may end in agreement and success for restriction. The deepest emotion finds expression in silence. Carol singing at Christmas is one of the most beautiful and heart stirring features of the Yuletide observance. Cultivate the simplicity of life. Thereby lies solid satisfaction. The simple life is the happiest life. Increased taxes are met by the taxpayer with a grimace when he feels that the increase is not warranted. Why can't a man be a great artist without wearing freakish, long hair? Carol singing at Christmas is one of the most beautiful and heart stirring features of the Yuletide observance. Cultivate the simplicity of life. Thereby lies solid satisfaction. The simple life is the happiest life. Increased taxes are met by the taxpayer with a grimace when he feels that the increase is not warranted. Why can't a man be a great artist without wearing freakish, long hair? SAVED—All that's hardest and most tiring in your week's washing and ironing Washing—Everything washed beautifully clean, with rain-soff water and pure soap. Ironing—All the heavy table and bed linens—flat pieces of every kind daintily ironed, and neatly folded. Soft pieces such as knit underwear, woolens, bath towels, stockings, fluffed, ready to use. Outer garments returned dry, ready for dampening and ironing at your leisure. ROUGH DRY Everything returned dry with flat work ironed Try it this week—you'll like it. It will save you many hours of wor and worry. Its cost is very moderate. Phone today, and we'll send a representative for your bundle. WM. GILMORE, Anahaim Agent, Phone 129 THE SANITARY LAUNDRY 225 West A. W. Cleaver, Prop. PHONE Santa Fe Ave. FULLERTON 26 travel service Santa Fe train and trip details arranged wherever you wish to go The furthermost advance in transportation facilities to mid-continent and Atlantic Seaboard points—with choice of daily trains. Pullmans to the rim of Grand Canyon—the all year National Park. Fred Harvey Dining Cars and Station Hotel service—a distinctive Santa Fe feature. PARAGRAPH By ROBERT QUILLEN Conservative: Anybody who doing very well, thank you. He who fights and runs awaits to write memoirs of the frighten. It isn't always advisable to natural. Some go to jail for it. One thing dad is almost certain to get for Christmas is an ovation draft. Still, the intelligentisa always has less influence than the weeledasia. A good party man, if elected usually stands up for his priests. Even if he couldn't lift pounds he glows with pride when she tells him how strong he is. Mediocrity isn't so bad. The higher you climb the better tar you are. Darning needles may be found even yet, but not in a modern hope chest. What tiresome rot people run in an effort to qualify for the intelligentisa. Perhaps the greatest so-called wrong class of people. As to religious liberty, whence there isn't much liberty left, the isn't much religion left. Jesus taught love, and he have always done their most tormenting hating in the name of religion. A husband may howl when bills come in, but his vanity piles when his wife is the best dress woman at the party. The old-fashioned girl persists in sections where she has quirked boys to deal with being brave enough to tell WITH THE SCC COURTESY Thanksgiving The officers and directors of the Southern Counties Gas Company are grateful for another year of progress and continued development. They are grateful for the growth and prosperity that has come to Anaheim and to the fifty other cities and communities served by the company. They appreciate the privilege of rendering a necessary service in a hundred thousand homes of Southern California and of being able to contribute to the health and happiness of those they serve. Southern Counties Gas Company District Administration 218 E. CENTER ST. PHONE 160 THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF. NOT A CHANCE "SOVIET LEADERS FIGHT LIGION AS 'OPTUM' AP THE PEOPLE," SAYS CORREL REPONDENT A modest little Irishman probably knows more about the inside than any living authority, arrived in York recently. He is Capt. K. McCullagh, whose dispatch the New York Herald for the time proved the definite Christian policy of the Bolsheviks. He is here to talk with American authorities on Russia and its future. "Some of my friends wrote he said, "that there seemed some tendency on the part of the religious bodies in country to temporize with the sheviki or to attempt to work them. We had the same tenure in England. But from my first-hand knowledge of conventions Moscow and the policies leaders of the Soviet I know these persons are committed grave error. In view of their factly authenticated documents and propaganda which they prepared to show to America who are interested it is little of sacrilege for any organ aspiring to the title of ruler to support the present government in any way." Trial Story Stirred With Capt. McCullagh's account of the trials of the prelates of Russian Orthodox and Church churches stirred the world were instrumental in saving lives and the liberties of a few of the unfortunate clerics. "The persecution of the arch Tikhon and of Arei Seplak," he said, "were made bursts of feeling. The symptoms of a definite and policy followed out by the Soviet to live up to to, 'Religion is the opium people.'" "Nor is that motto a mere copy of empty words. I have copies of the speeches of vik leaders and formalations of policy in which mand the eradication of BRAGRAPHS ROBERT QUILLEN servative: Anybody who is very well, thank you. who fights and runs away to write memoirs of the fray. don't always advisable to be in. Some go to jail for it. thing dad is almost certain for Christmas is an overthe intelligentisa always has influence than the wellasia. good party man, if elected, stands up for his princelna if he couldn't lift ten he glows with pride when he him how strong he is. miority isn't so bad. The you climb the better target needles may be found wet, but not in a modern chest. it tiresome rot people read effort to qualify for the intentsia. naps the greatest social rite is to gossip about the class of people. to religious liberty, where much religion left. was taught love, and men always done their most biting in the name of rehusband may howi when the come in, but his vanity pears his wife is the best dressed at the party. old-fashioned girl persists actions where she has quaint shinned boys to deal with. ABE MARTIN DINNER STORIES The bright young bookkeeper was always eager to render assistance to his chief. One day his chief walked to his desk, laid down a letter without address and without a signature, and asked him what he would suggest doing with it. The bookkeeper read it through and then gave an answer that at least showed his willingness to be helpful. "Well, we'll have to send it back to him and ask him who he is." An amusing story is told concerning Dr. W. B. Pope, once a famous Wesleyan professor of theology, and his son, Sam. The son was preparing for the bar. Occasionally he tried his prentice hand at proaching the gospel in village chapels. One Sunday morning his father said to him: "Sam, I'm not feeling at all well today. You will have to preach for me this morning. Sam demurred. The father insisted and suggested that he had two hours to make a sermon, and if he could not do it in that time he was not fit to be a barrister. Sam went away to the study. Then he went off to chapel. Unknown to him, his father followed and found a seat hidden behind the pulpit. He heard the sermon and then hastened home again. "Well, Sam," said he on his son's return, "I've heard you preach, and a poor thing you made of it. I thought you could have done better than that." "You think the sermon was not very good?" the son inquired. "Good?", the old man replied. "I think it was one of the worst sermons I have listened to!" "Well, father," said Sam, "I thought it was a poor thing myself, but I turned over a big pile in your study, and it was the best I could find." Plain Dealer Classified Ads produce results. Try this medium. CASH BUYERS Cleaning and few of the unfortunate clerics. "The persecution of the arch Tikhon and of Arche Septak," he said, "were new burgers of feeling. The symptoms of a definite anomaly or religious feeling for people. These are not prudent for their own use." propaganda is of such a nature that it cannot be printed hardly be referred to in company. The obscene blues heaped upon everyone, shrined in the Christian hood beyond anything the world ever known of this sort." Capt. McCallagh left the day after the famous letter was made public with disastrous results on the campaign of the labor movement. He is sure of the feilty of the document, and heard of it and of the sound which it came before it lished. He says there are documents that might have made public at the same time. Surprised at Result "One surprising result campaign," he said, "is compatriots in England, large Irish vote, seems voted with the long hat servatives. Many of these industrial districts as they have been supporting the government. The Irish insane are devout people, however know something of what shevists have done to realize that when the definite cohesion between Moscow and some labor leaders was revealed left that party. Every one realized the position into which the party had been thrown, and then waste their votes them to the party that led the traditional enemy for generations, the union, 'resolute government coercion.' The Irish are able to have a high ophion of Baldwin and the firmer which he has held his part behind the Irish settlement the treaty." At a select resort the good deal of civic spirit apparatus, and organizer company. One night when most members were at a dinner a slight blaze broke out alarm was promptly answered caretakers at the english tributed hats, and the lass was manned. A stranger thinking of buying watched the outfit go. Had it not been for typhoid prophylaxis, during the world war, typhoid fever would have killed more men than bullets did. In the steam heated office, We yawn and we sligh; When humidity's low And temperature's high. A bad pill for a bad ill makes nobody well. Don't count your calories till they're cooked. Poor Willie moans— His breathing's jerky, The doctor said: "Too much turkey." Scarlet fever is a dangerous disease; the establishment of artificial immunity in the susceptible child constitutes "safety first." Health and Diet Advice By Dr. Frank McCoy Author of "THE FAST WAY TO HEALTH" FOOD COMBINATIONS STARCHES (Continued). Min is able to live on both carnivorous food and herbivorous, and it seems to be one of the greatest secrets of dietetics to know that although man may subsist on either tiger's food or cow's food, the tiger food and the cow food should not be mixed together at the same meal. Another important point to be remembered in connection with the use of starch is that each starch has a different cell structure from the rest and is therefore not advisable to use two kinds of starch at the same meal, but it is much better to take as much as may be necessary of only one kind. Strong seasoning, spices, condiments, pickles, etc., should not be used with starchy foods, as too much gastric juice is secreted if these are eaten and while their use might be advisable or excusable with proteid foods, when used with starches the acid state of the stomach which they produce, directly interfere with the starch digestion. The following specimen meals will give you sootht idea of the different forms in which starch may be taken and combined with other foods: 1. Baked potato, cooked spinach; string beans, raw celery. 2. Boiled rice, cooked cucumbers, cucumber and lettuce salad. 3. Whole wheat mush, salad of raw grated carrots on lettuce. 4. Corn bread, cooked asparagus, raw cabbage. NOTE:—Whole wheat crackers or muffins may be used in a limited quantity with either protid or starchy foods by those in good health. This seems to be an exception to the general rule regulating the use of proteids and starches. (To be continued) WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26 1924 COMMENTS of the PRESS What Editors Are Saying WETS UTTERLY ROUTED ON NOVEMBER 4th —Congressional Election Returns Show Substantial Gains for Prohibition The cause of nullification received a staggering blow on November 4th. The organized foes of the constitution announced before the election that they would largely increase their congressional strength. When the votes were counted, it was found that their already pitiful minority had been reduced in both the House and the Senate. The checking of the Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals of the Methodist Episcopal Church shows as a result of the elections 319 dry votes in the House of Representatives 111 wet votes and 5 which it is impossible to classify with certainty. In the Senate there will be 73 dry votes, 21 wet votes and 2 vacancies. Gains were registered by the Drys in the Senatorial elections of Kentucky, Tennessee, Massachusetts, and West Virginia. In Illinois and Delaware the Nets suffered sharp defeats where they hoped for victories. In Kentucky, Senator Stanley, who gratuitously and foolishly insisted upon putting himself into prominence as opposed to prohibition and similar measures, was defeated by a man hitherto unknown in national politics, but who announced unqualified support of the dry law. Kentucky, a southern state with a normal remocrative majority of 40,000, refused to approve the effort of Senator Stanley to cater to the anti-constitutional prejudices or big city democracy. Counties of that state which had never voted anything but Democratic went against Stanley. During the campaign Senator Stanley evidently realized the folly of his previous course and brought dry Democrats of national prominence to his assistance, men whom Kentuckians thoroughly respect, but they could not pull Stanley across. The Senator's political career, which right have progressed surely and quietly to an honorable termination now serves only as a monument to the folly of misrepresenting the patriotic sentiment of a typically American community. In West Virginia a thoroughly informed friend of prohibition was elected to the Senate. In Tennessee the commander of a brigade in the Worl War, one of the famous Thirtieth, first through the Hindenberg line, a dry, and a patriot through and through, was elected. But it was in Massachusetts that nullification received its most staggering blow. In 1922 the voters of the state, confused by misleading propaganda failed to approve a state prohibition law, to support the Volsd act, the majority against it being very large. In this elecch a referendum on a state prohibition law received a majority in a short period of time, clear-thinking voters had perceive the essential disloyalty, the hypocrisy, and the bad logic of the line and beer propaganda and they registered their demand that a state of Massachusetts take its position in support of the Unit States in opposition to the lawless and despairful leaders fight religion as 'optum' af the people," says Correspondent. "A modest little Irishman, who probably knows more about Russia from the inside than any other foreign authority, arrived in New York recently. He is Capt. Francis Cullagh, whose dispatches to New York Herald for the first time proved the definite antitrist policy of the Bolsheviks is here to talk with American authorities on Russia and to leece. "Some of my friends wrote me," said, "that there seemed to be one tendency on the part of some religious bodies in this country to temporize with the Bolshiki or to attempt to work with them. We had the same tendency England. But from my own first-hand knowledge of conditions Moscow and the policies of the leaders of the Soviet I know that these persons are committing a grave error. In view of the perfectly authenticated documents and propaganda which I am prepared to show to Americans who are interested it is little short saecriflege for any organization springing to the title of religions support the present Russian government in any way." Trial Story Stirred World Capt. McCullagh's accounts of the trials of the prelates of the Russian Orthodox and Catholic churches stirred the world and were instrumental in saving the lives and the liberties of at least a few of the unfortunate clerics. "The persecution of the Patriarch Tikhon and of Archbishop Sapiak," he said, "were not sporadic bursts of feeling. They were symptoms of a definite and basic policy followed out by the leaders of the Soviet to live up to the motives." Religion is the opium of the people." Nor is that motto a mere string of empty words. I have with me copies of the speeches of Bolshevik leaders and formal declarations of policy in which they demand the eradication of all religious leaders. new of the unfortunate elicera. "The persecution of the Patriarch Tikhon and of Archbishop Poplak," he said, "were not sporadic bursts of feeling. They were symptoms of a definite and basic policy followed out by the leaders of the Soviet to live up to the motto: 'Religion is the opium of the people.'" "Nor is that motto a mere string of empty words. I have with me copies of the speeches of Bolshevik leaders and formal declarations of policy in which they demand the eradication of all religion or religious feeling from the people. These are not propaganda. They are their own statements for their own use. The propaganda is of such a nature that it cannot be printed and can hardly be referred to in decent company. The obscene blasphemies heaped upon everything enchirred in the Christian heart are beyond anything the world has ever known of this sort." Capt. McCullagh left England the day after the famous Zenovleff letter was made public with such disastrous results on the election campaign of the labor government. He is sure of the authenticity of the document, as he had heard of it and of the source from which it came before it was published. He says there are other documents that might have been made public at the same time. Surprised at Results "One surprising result of the campaign," he said, "is that my compatriots in England, the very large Irish vote, seems to have voted with the long hated Conservatives. Many of them, in the industrial districts as they are, have been supporting the labor government. The Irish in England are a devout people, however, who know something of what the Bolchevists have done to religion. So that when the definite connection between Moscow and some of the labor leaders was revealed they felt that party. Every one realized the hopeless position into which the Liberal party had been thrown, and rather than waste their votes they gave them to the party that has been the traditional enemy of the Irish for generations, the party of union, 'resolute government' and cooperation. The Irish are beginning to have a high opinion of Stanley Halldwin and the firmness with which he has held his party in line behind the Irish settlement and the treaty." At a select resort the men had good deal of civic spirit; bought apparatus, and organized a fire company. One night when most of the members were at a dinner party, a slight blaze broke out. The alarm was promptly answered, the streetkers at the enginehouse distributed hats, and the hose reel was manned. A stranger who was thinking of buying a house watched the outfit go by and Yes, You Can Have Goodyear Tires Maybe you haven't got a corner on all the money in the world. You can have Goodyear Tires, just the same. We have Goodyear Tires for everybody, every car, and every purse. Our stock and our prices prove it. You make a mistake if you deny yourself the best. HERE ARE OUR PRICES FOR GENUINE GOODYEAR CORDS IN A FEW POPULAR SIZES 30x3½ Clincher Tires from $7.75 to $12.50 32x4 Str. Side Cord, from $15.00 to $21.00 38x4 Str. Side Cord, from $15.20 to $21.65 32x4½ Cord $26.00 33x5 Cord $32.00 Fred W. James Phone 470 223 No. Los Angeles St. GOOD YEAR