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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1925 January

oc-plain-dealer 1925-01-03

1925-01-03 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 4 of 8 · 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 N. Orange-co., per year, $3; 6 months $1.75. Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., as second class matter DAILP GREETING TO OUR READERS Better is a little with righteousness, than great revenues without right.—Proverbs 16.8. AMERICA STRONG IN AIR, NEEDS MORE CRAFT In material, design and general efficiency America's naval air service is superior to that of other nations, but lacks in number of machines. This is the assertion of Secretary of the Navy Wilbur and Rear-Admiral Moffett, chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics. This assurance is welcome. A great deal has been said recently about the inadequacy of America's air defense. The inadequacy, it seems, is more apparent than real. Increased number of airships is the need of the times. In building up the air service solely for defensive purposes the national government has its opportunities for using airplanes in useful services of peace. There is the postal service. It has been demonstrated that mail can be successfully carried by airship. Carrying mail by air can be and should be expanded greatly, so that all parts of the country may benefit therefrom. Airships to patrol the national forests during the dry season would be of great usefulness. The air service could be utilized in works of peace, and at the same time maintain efficiency should its service be required in defending the country against hostile attack. In strengthening the air service, the cardinal aim should be, at all times, merely to establish effective national defense, not to give the impression, in any quarter of the world, that it has any hostile, offensive designs against any country or any people on earth. Appreciate worth in the living. Give them flowers before REFUTE FALSE REPORTS ABOUT SOUTHLAND False publications about this Southland persist throughout the east, and even so far west as Colorado. There is a public-spirited task before residents of this section. There should be systematic refuting of these falsehoods. Each and every resident of this section can and should have a park in this. Write letters! Write often. Write where these refutations will do most good. Write to relatives and friends in other states. Tell them the truth. Ask them to join in refuting these slanderous prevarications. It seems that these libels are premeditated, malicious and widespread. It is passing strange that responsible newspapers would give currency to such reports without investigating them. It would be easy enough for any wide-awake newspaper to check up on these reports. If this were done, none of the reports would be published by any newspaper that sticks to the truth or that is disposed to be fair. A great deal of good can be done by personal correspondence by individual citizens. When you write your relatives or friends, they know you would not deceive them or misrepresent conditions here. When you convince them that a grave injustice is being done this state and section, you may enlist their earnest support in denying these falsehoods. It is regrettable that those who slander a state and community cannot be called to account legally for their misrepresentations. It should be a punishable offense to slander a state or a community. A BRANCH OFFICE OF Sears' Motor Vehicle Registration Service HAS BEEN OPENED AT Hushman's Super Service Station LOS ANGELES AND BROADWAY, ANAHEIM, Phone 10873 WHERE YOU CAN SECURE YOUR 1925 LICENSE PLATES Applications now being received. Bring in your 1924 certificates. We will secure your plates for you. Avoid the inconvenience, crowds and annoyance of going to Los Angeles for your 1925 License for Pleasure Cars, Commercial Cars or Trucks. SERVICE FEE ON PLEASURE CARS AND COMMERCIAL CARS, ONLY 50 cents. PARAGRAPH (By Robert Quillen) It does to be square. Look through the word parallels. The idea was to wash Veterans' Balm Lice, not family linen. Human in also judged by the seams in clothes up with. In every tenth door is padlocked it is a city of the first or second choice. The lack of prosperity is below. The suckers had a good time. These who broadcast bedtime stories know little about a man's bedtime. Well, you can still distinguish the sexes by the way a man catches a match. Possession is nine parts of law and 99 per cent of what tercets the lawyer. One reason why the booth giving business is crowded is cause the jails aren't. The illiterates deserve but half portion of pity. Only 10% of the stuff is fit to read. "Heard thinking" is what majority is doing if you happen belong to the minority. Nothing so quickly increases the needs of Government Departments as a Treasury surplus. When people were less cultured they didn't print freak pictures a restaurant wall and call its meadow. LOS ANGELES AND BROADWAY, ANAHEIM, Phone 10873 WHERE YOU CAN SECURE YOUR 1925 LICENSE PLATES Applications now being received. Bring in your 1924 certificates. We will secure your plates for you. Avoid the inconvenience, crowds and annoyance of going to Los Angeles for your 1925 License for Pleasure Cars, Commercial Cars or Trucks. SERVICE FEE ON PLEASURE CARS AND COMMERCIAL CARS, ONLY 50 cents. Sears' Motor Vehicle Registration Service Main Office, 1016 So. Flower St., Los Angeles. Established Three Years ARE YOUR HEADLIGHTS LEGAL? Come in and I will tell you. Open Evenings Official Station No. 169 A. Bevillard ESTABLISHER 1912 ANAHEIM IGNITION DEPOT 218 So. Los Angeles St. Phone 489 Anaheim THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF. THE SHADOW! HOBART CHRISTMAS TREE DISASTER WHO'S WHAT IN THE DAYS NEVER LEONARD KRASSIN Leonard Krassin, first Asador of the Union or RSoviet Socialist Republics, accredited to France, was as the harbinger of revolution in Paris. For Krassin comFrance not only as the repretative of the Union of Soviealist Republics, a Goverrecognized de jure by Geritaly, Great Britain and Fbut also as the agent of a munist institution which cothe Union of Soviet Socialispublies and constantly conto overthrow those Governwhich have recognised it. Is Diplomat and Politic Krassin, by documents in possession of the WashState Department, is shown a striking example of an oidentified with both the wand the invisible Government Soviet Russia—as example of interlocking of official and legal posts. In the first plais a member of the All-R Central Executive Committe the Russian Soviet Republithe Union he is also a memthe Central Executive Commihe is on the People's Commior Cabinet Ministers—the eign Trade Commissar, also missar for Finance. But Krassin holds positions as well as officials, according to available ments, a member of the "IleCentral Executive Committe the Russian Communist which directs the Communislation thruout the world. he was appointed to the post he had been charged b "Ikkl" with the duty of the Government officials and matic representatives of dicountries in Europe and recently was sent abroad for purpose of impressing uporest of the world the fact Russia was turning towards RAGRAPHS (By Robert Quillen) to be square. Look at the word puzzle. less what to wash Veterans' lush, not family linen. can in also judged by the its keep up with. twenty-tenth door is padlocked, only of the first or second chief of prosperity is yet The suckers had a good roll who broadcast bedtime know little about a modfis bedtime. ABE MARTIN DINNER STORIES Isaac and Moses dined in a restaurant that was new to them, and were pained seriously by the amount of the check. Mosos began to expostulate in a loud voice, but Isaac hushed him with a whisper: "Sht I haf the spoons in my pocket." A character around the water front in a Kentucky town, agreed to maintain a savings account, made one deposit, and there the matter rested. The head of the bank met him one day and proceeded to take him to task. "Now look here, Slim, you promised to put $5 in our bank every month. You haven't done so. You could easily do it." "I pose I could, boss," responded the culprit easily. "Trouble with you banking gemman is another business that has doubled an trebled since th' saleons closed is th' business o' printin' bonds for towns an' cities. Th' cross-words puzzles ought't be a great education for th' folks that can't say nothin' but fine and dandy. SUNSHINE PELLETS BY DR. W. F. THOMSON For school inspection means protection against the things that need correction. On holidays we celebrate In divers ways—intemperate. We sing of peace—good will to men— And then, By George, get full again. Jersey cows and sleeping porches have cured more tuberculosis than has man made medicine. Every Day Los Angle For school inspection means protection against the things that need correction. On holidays we celebrate in divers ways—intemperate. We sing of peace—good will to men—and then, By George, get full again. Jersey cows and sleeping porches have cured more tuberculosis than has man made medicine. Better endure the torture of the damned than be caught in the tentacles of that octopus, morphine. We know not why the av'rage man both stuff his stomach all he can; Then puff and blow and grunt and wheeze And charge it off to Bright's disease. Swat the house fly in the Autumn, Swat the scoundrel on the wing! Every egg she lays in August Means a million in the spring. HEALTH & DIET ADVICE By Dr. Frank McCoy Author of "THE FAST WAY TO HEALTH" CHILDREN'S DIET (Continued) Milk is an ideal food for the growing child and with the addition of orange juice it would be possible for the baby to grow a strong adult without any other food ever being added. The older baby is kept on a milk diet, the stronger you will find its nutrition when it is finally given other foods. Cow's milk contains bone-building properties than even mother's milk, but must milk in the raw state and not pasteurized. The milk may be used slightly by placing the nursing bottle in a pan of warm water which has been removed from the fire. The water must be much a temperature that the hands may be placed in it without burning. If the water is steaming hot, that the hands cannot placed in it, the milk will become pasteurized and the organic will become precipitated and changed into useless minerals with the body cannot use. People who object to using pasteurized milk, because it is devilized, often heat the raw milk to a higher temperature than that which is used in pasteurizing, and frequently destroy the good in the raw milk. If after the end of two years, it seems advisable to give child other food than milk, begin by giving a bottle of milk x a m., and another feeding three hours later at nine a.m. A may then be given some time between twelve and one o'clock, one kind of starchy food and the choice of one or two non-vegetables. At this age the child's teeth are not sufficiently developed for perfect mastication, so it is best to mince vegetables up slightly, or run them through a food grinder, before cook-No milk should be added to this meal, but a small amount cream or butter may be served with the minced vegetables. (To be continued) SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1925 COMMENTS of the PRESS What Editors Are Saying RADIO DEVELOPS MARVELS—San Bernardino Sun Now here are the transatlantic radio pictures. What next? The rapidity with which radio is developing taxes one's imagination. Just what will be next? The country may well halt and ponder as to what is in store for it through radio, for radio may eventually revolutionize many industries. Secretary Hoover has informed Congress that he does not at this time advocate new legislation on radio operations for the reason it is impossible to conceive what the developments of the newest industry will be even in a brief period. Newspapers in New York reproduced photographs sent from London a few hours before. Had the new telephonic process, now being perfected, been in operation the same photographs could have been sent to cities on the Pacific coast. And at that there is apparently nothing to halt development of the radio that would make possible transmission of the pictures the entire distance from London to Los Angeles or New York, and, as the process is carried further, to smaller cities. It is time that someone qualified informs the Nation what are the reasonable expectations of the development of radio. Many business enterprises may hinge on what radio will do. Large investments in contemplation may be for naught in the space of a few months or few years through newer processes that radio will bring. It is reasonably certain that the pocket radio will come. What the country needs to know, and know at once, is whether a person with a pocket radio will be able to talk with others, wherever they be, with a pocket-radio.The telephone companies need to know this. The newspapers need to know whether it is within the realm of possibility that radio development will make radio news and advertising as convenient or more so than the reading of the printed page. The newspapers do not thing so, but are they entitled to such an assurance under the speed with which the radio is developing? That it is possible to transmit electric power by radio is known but are the power corporations justified in the theory that the expense of radio-transmitted power is always to be prohibitive? In addition to the transmitting of words and pictures, scientists say that it is probable that we will be able to see 10,000 miles away and watch the happenings in distant lands. A new world is surely opening and if it is possible for scientists to speculate as to just what are the possible or probable ramifications of this discovery, a grateful people" will listen. WISDOM OF THE JAPANESE The philosophy of the Japanese makes it highly honourable to commit hera-kiri. This act of disembowelling is performed as an expression of regret for an error, as a reproach to some other person, or atonement for wrongs done by others—friends or kinmen. A custom at such variance with Occidental beliefs suggests that there is little in common between the philosophy of the Nipponese and our own. Yet a reading of the proverbs, the common wisdom of Japan, shows that this is by no means true. Here are some Japanese proverbs: Virtue carries a lean purse. He who hunts two hares, leaves one and loses the other. South DaThe mile is longer to him who is tired. When all men praised the peacock for his beautiful task, birds cried out with one consent, "Look at his legal and written voice!" There is more delight in hope than in enjoyment. The reason why parents love the younger children best is a country cause they now have so little hope that the elder will do well. Going downhill no one is old. Those discontented with their fate will accuse even the state senof partiality. He who wants little seldom goes wrong. George Bernard Shaw has been quoted here before. His play marand, more particularly, the prefaces to his plays, afford a boundful supply of mental meals. Here is a Shavian repast for the thoughtful selected from the various of his writings: Virtue consists, not in abstaining from vice, but in not desiting it. in the Angeles Times GREAT Limerick Contest Free Cash Prizes Daily! is taking Southern California by storm! Have you cashed in every day a different unfinished limerick is printed in the Los Times. All you have to do is to write ONE LINE to complete limerick. It's easy and lots of fun. For the best line $25 is paid DAY; second best, $5. everybody can write limericks. The contest is open to all. You have to subscribe. Look for tomorrow's limerick, think of a time, and send it in. Try as often as you wish. Your friends and fans are winning. So can you! Particulars are Published Daily in the Times