oc-plain-dealer 1924-12-15
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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
Spend yourself—spending will enrich you. Pour out your life—the emptying will fill it higher.—C.C.Ha!
BETTER PAY FOR PROHIBITION OFFICERS IS BOTH EXPEDIENT AND DEMANDED BY JUSTICE
The Congress of the United States could do nothing that would greater serve the cause of law enforcement than to arrange that prohibition officers be properly compensated for their arduous and dangerous service.
The prohibition agent must be intelligent and of good character; he must represent the United States with dignity and discretion in all circumstances; he must never turn his back in the face of flying bullets but he must never use his weapon except in the direst necessity; he is gassed by smoke screens, in danger of death by flying automobiles, menaced by trained dogs; he must work all day and be ready for evening service at some lawless cafe or dancing hall. He is misrepresented and abused by men who eat regularly and sleep warmly every twenty-four hours and he may not open his mouth in defense of himself; there is no time for that.
No other men in the United States today are serving the country in places of such danger and hardship. It is comparable to war service and as usual with war service, it is rewarded principally by ingratitude.
When the prohibition agent leaves his wife and children in the morning he knows and they know that he may not be alive when evening comes. And for this he is paid an initial salary of $1640.00 and must advance his own expenses. It is not astonishing that some agents have yielded to the temptation to clothe threadbare children by adding to this income in reprehensible ways. On the contrary, the astonishing thing is that for every agent who has gone wrong, there have been ten
No other men in the United States today are serving the country in places of such danger and hardship. It is comparable to war service and as usual with war service, it is rewarded principally by ingratitude.
When the prohibition agent leaves his wife and children in the morning he knows and they know that he may not be alive when evening comes. And for this he is paid an initial salary of $1640.00 and must advance his own expenses. It is not astonishing that some agents have yielded to the temptation to clothe threadbare children by adding to this income in reprehensible ways. On the contrary, the astonishing thing is that for every agent who has gone wrong, there have been ten who have manifested an honorable fidelity unsurpassed in the country's history.
The country needs men of a high grade to enforce the prohibition law, men worth much more than prohibition agents are now being paid. Most of them now in service are worth more, a great deal more. Congress should see to it that the men who stand between the homes of the United States and the greatest domestic enemy are at least paid sums which will mean that they are their families are well fed, decently cloth-ed and adequately safeguarded against the distress which inevitably comes to any agent's home when he is injured or ill.
Simple humanity demands it; justice demands it; honor demands it.
DROUGHT IS BROKEN IN ENHEART-ENING WAY
Here is something to write boostfully to the folk "back yonder." They have been told, among other false tales, that California was drying up; that there was not enough water for domestic purposes; that water for household use was being sold from barrels, peddled from door to door. These falsehoods fell flat, of course, among those who have been to California and who are conversant with conditions out here.
Write them now the truth about the drought. Also stress the fact that this year—as in all years—enough rain falls in the lowlands, and enough snow in the highlands to keep things going; that there is no scarcity of water for domestic purposes; that droughts are very rare; and that many seasons of abundant rains succeed a cycle of dry years. Tell them about the copious rains that have soaked the state, and the deep snows that have fallen, even this early, on the mountain heights. Tell them that the drought is broken; that if they come to California, they would not have to buy water for household use from a peddler's barrel, but might set a bucket out in the open and gather enough from the clouds. Make light of the falsehoods—but impress the truth about conditions here.
CULTIVATE MENTAL DISMISSAL
A business executive who has the reputation of getting a great deal of work done in the time he spends in his office, attributes this faculty largely to what he calls the power of mental dismissal. Poise, he thinks, is essential to a full working day without strain.
When big things are at stake it is natural for a business man or anyone else to carry the matter at issue in the mind so that it comes to the fore when other matters are under consideration and other decisions are to be made, and unless one makes an effort to control his thoughts this kind of mental laxity will grow.
The habit of worrying is one of the worst enemies of concentration and mental efficiency, and this power of dismissal is a good thing for everyone to cultivate. An eninent psychologist has said that it is almost impossible to overwork the mouth in defense of himself; there is no time for that.
No other men in the United States today are serving the country in places of such danger and hardship. It is comparable to war service and as usual with war service, it is rewarded principally by ingratitude.
When the prohibition agent leaves his wife and children in the morning he knows and they know that he may not be alive when evening comes. And for this he is paid an initial salary of $1640.00 and must advance his own expenses. It is not astonishing that some agents have yielded to the temptation to clothe threadbare children by adding to this income in reprehensible ways. On the contrary, the astonishing thing is that for every agent who has gone wrong, there have been ten who have manifested an honorable fidelity unsurpassed in the country's history.
The country needs men of a high grade to enforce the prohibition law, men worth much more than prohibition agents are now being paid. Most of them now in service are worth more, a great deal more. Congress should see to it that the men who stand between the homes of the United States and the greatest domestic enemy are at least paid sums which will mean that they are their families are well fed, decently cloth-ed and adequately safeguarded against the distress which inevitably comes to any agent's home when he is injured or ill.
Simple humanity demands it; justice demands it; honor demands it.
DROUGHT IS BROKEN IN ENHEART-ENING WAY
Here is something to write boostfully to the folk "back yonder." They have been told, among other false tales, that California was drying up; that there was not enough water for domestic purposes; that water for household use was being sold from barrels, peddled from door to door. These falsehoods fell flat, of course, among those who have been to California and who are conversant with conditions out here.
Write them now the truth about the drought. Also stress the fact that this year—as in all years—enough rain falls in the lowlands, and enough snow in the highlands to keep things going; that there is no scarcity of water for domestic purposes; that droughts are very rare; and that many seasons of abundant rains succeed a cycle of dry years. Tell them about the copious rains that have soaked the state, and the deep snows that have fallen, even this early, on the mountain heights. Tell them that the drought is broken; that if they come to California, they would not have to buy water for household use from a peddler's barrel, but might set a bucket out in the open and gather enough from the clouds. Make light of the falsehoods—but impress the truth about conditions here.
CULTIVATE MENTAL DISMISSAL
A business executive who has the reputation of getting a great deal of work done in the time he spends in his office, attributes this faculty largely to what he calls the power of mental dismissal. Poise, he thinks, is essential to a full working day without strain.
When big things are at stake it is natural for a business man or anyone else to carry the matter at issue in the mind so that it comes to the fore when other matters are under consideration and other decisions are to be made, and unless one makes an effort to control his thoughts this kind of mental laxity will grow.
The habit of worrying is one of the worst enemies of concentration and mental efficiency, and this power of dismissal is a good thing for everyone to cultivate. An eninent psychologist has said that it is almost impossible to overwork the mouth in defense of himself; there is no time for that.
No other men in the United States today are serving the country in places of such danger and hardship. It is comparable to war service and as usual with war service, it is rewarded principally by ingratitude.
When the prohibition agent leaves his wife and children in the morning he knows and they know that he may not be alive when evening comes. And for this he is paid an initial salary of $1640.00 and must advance his own expenses. It is not astonishing that some agents have yielded to the temptation to clothe threadbare children by adding to this income in reprehensible ways. On the contrary, the astonishing thing is that for every agent who has gone wrong, there have been ten who have manifested an honorable fidelity unsurpassed in the country's history.
The country needs men of a high grade to enforce the prohibition law, men worth much more than prohibition agents are now being paid. Most of them now in service are worth more, a great deal more. Congress should see to it that the men who stand between the homes of the United States and the greatest domestic enemy are at least paid sums which will mean that they are their families are well fed, decently cloth-ed and adequately safeguarded against the distress which inevitably comes to any agent's home when he is injured or ill.
Simple humanity demands it; justice demands it; honor demands it.
DROUGHT IS BROKEN IN ENHEART-ENING WAY
Here is something to write boostfully to the folk "back yonder." They have been told, among other false tales, that California was drying up; that there was not enough water for domestic purposes; that droughts are very rare; and that many seasons of abundant rains succeed a cycle of dry years. Tell them about the copious rains that have soaked the state, and the deep snows that have fallen, even this early, on the mountain heights. Tell them that the drought is broken; that if they come to California, they would not have to buy water for household use from a peddler's barrel, but might set a bucket out in the open and gather enough from the clouds. Make light of the falsehoods—but impress the truth about conditions here.
CULTIVATE MENTAL DISMISSAL
A business executive who has the reputation of getting a great deal of work done in the time he spends in his office, attributes this faculty largely to what he calls the power of mental dismissal. Poise, he thinks, is essential to a full working day without strain.
When big things are at stake it is natural for a business man or anyone else to carry the matter at issue in the mind so that it comes to the fore when other matters are under consideration and other decisions are to be made, and unless one makes an effort to control his thoughts this kind of mental laxity will grow.
The habit of worrying is one of the worst enemies of concentration and mental efficiency, and this power of dismissal is a good thing for everyone to cultivate. An eninent psychologist has said that it is almost impossible to overwork the mouth in defense of himself; there is no time for that.
No other men in the United States today are serving the country in places of such danger and hardship. It is comparable to war service and as usual with war service, it is rewarded principally by ingratitude.
When the prohibition agent leaves his wife and children in the morning he knows and they know that he may not be alive when evening comes. And for this he is paid an initial salary of $1640.00 and must advance his own expenses. It is not astonishing that some agents have yielded to the temptation to clothe threadbare children by adding to this income in reprehensible ways. On the contrary, the astonishing thing is that for every agent who has gone wrong, there have been ten who have manifested an honorable fidelity unsurpassed in the country's history.
The country needs men of a high grade to enforce the prohibition law, men worth much more than prohibition agents are now being paid. Most of them now in service are worth more, a great deal more. Congress should see to it that the men who stand between the homes of the United States and the greatest domestic enemy are at least paid sums which will mean that they are their families are well fed, decently cloth-ed and adequately safeguarded against the distress which inevitably comes to any agent's home when he is injured or ill.
Simple humanity demands it; justice demands it; honor demands it.
DROUGHT IS BROKEN IN ENHEART-ENING WAY
Here is something to write boostfully to the folk "back yonder." They have been told, among other false tales, that California was drying up; that there was not enough water for domestic purposes; that droughts are very rare; and that many seasons of abundance can succeed a cycle of dry years. Tell them about the copious rains that have soaked the state, and the deep snows that have fallen, even this early, on the mountain heights. Tell them that the drought is broken; that if they come to California, they would not have to buy water for household use from a peddler's barrel, but might set a bucket out in the open and gather enough from the clouds. Make light of the falsehoods—but impress the truth about conditions here.
CULTIVATE MENTAL DISMISSAL
A business executive who has the reputation of getting a great deal of work done in the time he spends in his office, attributes this faculty largely to what he calls the power of mental dismissal. Poise, he thinks, is essential to a full working day without strain.
When big things are at stake it is natural for a business man or anyone else to carry the matter at issue in the mind so that it comes to the fore when other matters are under consideration and other decisions are to be made, and unless one makes an effort to control his thoughts this kind of mental laxity will grow.
The habit of worrying is one of the worst enemies of concentration and mental efficiency, and this power of dismissal is a good thing for everyone to cultivate. An eninent psychologist has said that it is almost impossible to overwork the mouth in defense of himself; there is no time for that.
No other men in the United States today are serving the country in places of such danger and hardship. It is comparable to war service and as usual with war service, it is rewarded principally by ingratitude.
When the prohibition agent leaves his wife and children in the morning he knows and they know that he may not be alive when evening comes. And for this he is paid an initial salary of $1640.00 and must advance his own expenses. It is not astonishing that some agents have yielded to the temptation to clothe threadbare children by adding to this income in reprehensible ways. On the contrary, the astonishing thing is that for every agent who has gone wrong, there have been ten who have manifested an honorable fidelity unsurpassed in the country's history.
The country needs men of a high grade to enforce the prohibition law, men worth much more than prohibition agents are now being paid. Most of them now in service are worth more, a great deal more. Congress should see to it that they Bobbing hair saves time.
Not to European compositors The President's Butler is spelled with a capital.
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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, Anaheim Agent, Phone 129
THE SANITARY LAUNDRY
225 West A. W. Cleaver, Prop. PHONE
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Don't Forget That The Ever-Ready Truck & Transfer Co.
Is still able to do your hauling of any description
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Residence 211 E. Sycamore St.
PHONE 209-M
THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF.
BUT WILL HE?
JUST KEEP ON WITH THIS AND YOU WILL BE ALL RIGHT
DEPRESSION HOSPITAL
YESSIR YESSIR
Economy Just Lets
Doc Coolidge
CONVALESCENT BUSINESS
GET EM RED HOT!
INFLATION
HOT DOGS
THE BEST OF ADVICE
IN SUPPORT OF AN OLD SAYING
If you have been following series of presentations of the verbs of the various peoples, probably have noticed that there is a distinct flavor to maxims of each people, they have a common foundation. All there is only one wisdom wasdiscovered long ago.
Note the similarity in spite the proverbs of India, to this column is devoted today those of other races. (The Number five of the series).
Time flies, words last.
Who will praise the groom? His own mother.
Anything that blossoms also decay.
A small leak will sink ship.
Depend on others and will always repent.
An open enemy is better a secret friend.
Where there is a surfeit words there is a famine of infense.
Two quarrel and a third ply by it.
Personal experience is better follow than the scriptures.
There are as many charges as there are individuals.
The crow was killed by storm; he died by my curse the owl.
Where the corpse is, there the vulture be.
All are ready to be partn a man's success, none in his fortune.
One woman is wealth to another is ruination.
The tongue is a sword; tongue kills and the tongue where there are no trees.
HOT DOGS
RAGRAPHS
by Robert Quillen)
is small choice. War: peace; smoopers.
in psychology is silent, and in "home."
guard dies, but never party leadership.
lies the head of the post-who voted with the Procisman: Demanding the paying for it on the installing in now it finds them.
is something pathetic in a man's snort when he hears rubbing hair saves time.
European compositors: President's Butler is spelled capital.
Christmas card can ex-much love as a gift, but it does.
One good thing about bloomers, we don't have t' worry any more about petticoat rules. Eggs is like autos—th' minute we pay less than th' top price we git into' cheap construction.
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WHOS WHO IN THE DAY'S NEWS
JESSE HOUGHTON METCALF.
The man who will step into the senate March 4 as Rhode Island's new member in the upper house, started life as a wool sorter on the Waskuck Mills near his home to learn the wool industry. His apprenticeship served he went to Yorkshire College, England, to study textile manufacturing.
Now, a multi-millionaire, he is devoting his time to politics and many charities and philanthropies.
He is Jesse Houghton Metcalf.
Metcalf was born in Providence, R.L., Nov. 15, 1860. He is a Republican. Although he has held many minor appetitive offices his election to the senate gives him his first real important post.
He has made many important gifts to charitable and educational institutions. The beautiful Memorial Hall, a part of the Rhode Island School of Design, is one monument to his philanthropic spirit.
SUNSHINE PELLETS
BY DR. W. F. THOMSON
Spare the brush and spoil the teeth.
Healthy employees are an asset; sick ones, a liability.
When there's a pain in the abdomen, an ice bag beats a pill bag.
It's more important to live for one's country than to die for it.
Tardy to bed, tardy to rise, causes a headache and reddens the eyes.
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HEALTH & DIET ADVICE
By Dr. Frank McCoy
Author of "THE FAST WAY TO HEALTH"
COOKED NON-STARCHY VEGETABLES—NOT GOOD
(Continued)
COOKED CABBAGE is also a great gas producer, apparently due to some sulphur compounds which it carries in excessive quantities. Although raw cabbage can be used by most people, it seems that the cooking develops this sulphur compound in some manner, and there is no way that I know of preparing the cabbage by cooking where this gas forming condition is not produced.
How combinations with non-starchy vegetables should be used.
The rule governing this is:
"One or more non-starchy vegetables may be used with any single article of food; that is, there is no food material with which non-starchy vegetables do not mix."
The following sample menus will suggest different ways in which they may be used:
1. Broiled beefsteak, cooked spinach, and salad of tomatoes and cucumbers.
2. Baked potato, asparagus tips, cooked cucumbers, and raw celery.
3. Roast mutton, summer squash, beet tops, raw cabbage.
4. Pint of raw milk, cooked spinach, sliced tomatoes.
5. 2 ozs. pecan nuts, small baked carrots, cooked carrot tops, baked apple.
6. Soup of potatoes and spinach, cooked oyster plant, slice cucumbers.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1924
COMMENTS of the PRESS
What Editors Are Saying
INDUSTRIAL AGE IS VINDICATED—Berkeley Gazette
It was a brave fight against modern industrialism that was made by Frank Way, alias "Home-made Way," of Grand Rapids, Mich.
Way wearied of a mechanical age that makes everything by machinery, with a vast, interwoven system of quantity production that makes a million articles all exactly alike and a million men all equal human cogs in the economic machine. So he refused to use store goods. In his little shop he produced all his own manufactured goods. He made all his own clothing, including his hats and shoes. He bought food, but he made his own false teeth to eat it with.
Yet there is failure in Way's concession to food grown by others. He had to buy it because he could not raise it himself. Some of the food he needed grew in different climates and soils; and besides, he was so busy making shirts, hats, shoes, cooking utensils, etc., that he had little time for food-production.
It can't be done. This complex industrial is no accident. It grows not only out of industrial invention and power but out of human nature and human needs. Society is interdependent, and the more society develops and increases its needs, the more it becomes. All men together can produce more and better things for each of them than any man can produce by himself, for himself, and they can do it in less time. The personal touch is best, but comfort and leisure are gained.
BUY AMERICAN-MADE GOODS—Santa Ana Register
The managing director of the National Retail Dry-Goods Association would like to see less emphasis placed on imported goods. He believes Americans should have enough pride in their own manufacturers not to prefer imported articles merely because they are imported. We are not a "mongrel race," he suggests, and therefore he doesn't see any good reason for mongrel merchandise.
There is a reason for many kinds of imported goods. It is found not so much in their cheapness—the tariff generally takes care of that, if nothing else does—as in the fact that many kinds of foreign products are different from anything produced in this country, and so have the attraction of novelty.
Foreign goods, however, are said not to constitute more than 5 per cent of the merchandise sold in American stores. And it that 5 per cent plays an unduly large role in American trade, perhaps it is because merchants themselves so often seem to have undue reverence for the magic word "imported." The public would be less disposed to regard the imported article as necessarily superior to the domestic if such an attitude were less encouraged by the stores.
care of that, if nothing else does—as in the fact that many kinds of foreign products are different from anything produced in this country, and so have the attraction of novelty.
Foreign goods, however, are said not to constitute more than 5 per cent of the merchandise sold in American stores. And if that 5 per cent plays an unduly large role in American trade, perhaps it is because merchants themselves so often seem to have undue reverence for the magic word "imported." The public would be less disposed to regard the imported article as necessarily superior to the domestic if such an attitude were less encouraged by the stores.
HIDDEN CAPACITIES
"According as a man's mental energy is exerted or relaxed will life appear to him either so short and petty and fleeting that nothing con possibly happen over which it is worth his life to spend emotion:
"That nothing really matters, whether it is pleasure or riches or even fame, and that in whatever way a man may have failed he cannot have lost much—
"Or, on the other hand, life will seem so long, so important, so monotonous and so full of difficulty, that we have to plunge into it with our whole soul if we are to obtain a share of its goods, make sure of its prizes and carry out our plans. . .
"A man is great or small, according as he learns to the one or the other of these views of life." Schopenhauer concluded.
"Every man," he observed, "takes the limits of his own field of vision for the limits of the world. This is an error of the intellect as inevitable as that error of the eye which lets us fancy that on the horizon heaven and earth meet."
This is an explanation, he felt, of why everyone measures us with his own standard.
BILLY WHISKERS
BY FRANCES TREGO MONTGOMERY
Eerybody was excited about the disorder Nannie and caused in the farmhouse where she was imprisoned.
The outcome of it all was that the farmer and his son had to stay all night and sleep with their guns beside them, as Mrs. Woodberry was so wrought up and excited that she would not stay in the house without some man to guard them. And while Mrs. Woodberry went to bed with fear and trembling and the hired girl slept on the lounge in her room too afraid to go to her own room in the attic, the boys fell asleep wondering if it was Nannie that had made all the mess in the house, and little Nannie herself was continuing on her way rejoicing at her happy release.
In the big three hundred by two hundred foot studio room of the Emmanuel Company's place the stage was being set for a scene where all the animals were to appear in characters like those seen on the billboards and the one Nannie was now hurrying to Chicago to see, scarcely stopping to cat or sleep, she was so afraid she would arrive too late.
After much mopping of fore-commotion behind him. Turning to look, he saw three of his men trying to hold a lily white goat which was struggling in their arms. And as he looked it escaped the men straight for the stage and with one bound was up on it and liking Billy's nose and frisking around him like mad. Of course you all know that this goat was none other than Nannie.
She had easily found her way to the studio. Arriving there, she had seen the big gate-like door that gave entrance to the studio yard standing, open and no one being about she had run in. Once in, she looked about and saw one of the big doors open which gave into the larger studio rooms so she ran up to it. And luck would have it that this door led right into the studio where the play in which Billy was acting was being staged for the final production.
Having seen the picture on the billboards, she recognized the one on the stage as the same, so knew just where to look for Billy. Consequently when once she saw him, no twenty men could have stopped her. Thus it was that Mr. Dates held back his
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in the house, and little Nannie herself was continuing on her way rejoicing at her happy release.
In the big three hundred by two hundred foot studio room of the Emuunenn Company's place the stage was being set for a scene where all the animals were to appear in characters like those seen on the billboards and the one Nannie was now hurrying to Chicago to see, scarcely stopping to eat or sleep, she was so afraid she would arrive too late.
After much mopping of foreheads and loud calling for the keepers to bring on the animals that were to take part in the play and to be sure and have them in place when the camera man began to wind off the film. Mr. Dates was about to call "Shoot!"—which in studio language means to begin to grind off the films—when there was and saw one of the big doors open which gave into the larger studio rooms so she ran up to it. And luck would have it that this door led right into the studio where the play in which Billy was acting was being staged for the final production.
Having seen the picture on the billboards, she recognized the one on the stage as the same, so knew just where to look for Billy. Consequently when once she saw him, no twenty men could have stopped her. Thus it was that Mr. Dates held back his final word "Shoot!" for twenty seconds. Then he called it out in a loud voice, and Nannie was taken in the picture along with Billy and the rest of the animals. Instead of Nannie spoiling the picture, she added much to it.
(So Nannie not only got her husband back but shared his fame in the picture.)
For the convenience of our Patrons we will remain open until 9 o'clock every evening until Xmas.
Lane's Chain Stores Co., Inc.
138 W. Center St. Anaheim, Calif.