oc-plain-dealer 1925-01-24
Searchable text
Growth of Anaheim Shown by Census
Total for 1910 was 2,263
Per year 1920 was 5,525
Today Estimated at 12,000
Mail your Plain Dealer to eastern friends it may bring them to Anaheim, fastest growing city in Orange County.
PRICE Three Cents Per copy $3 year in No. Orange-co.
ATTEMPT TO P
STILL BIGGER CROWD AT REVIVAL
Larger Tent Filled for Bulgin's Sermon on "Unpardonable Sin"
About 2500 people, the biggest crowd yet, flocked the big tent at Wilhelmina and Claudina-sts, last night to hear Dr. E. J. Bulgin preach on "The Unpardonable Stars Seen"
Astronomers Get Vuable Data
NAVAL, OBSERVATORY,
MARE ISLAD, Calif., Jan. 24.
Persons so plant potatoes hide thimbs in an attempt to cure cord and carry on other life's activities under certain movement of the moon upon data furnished in almanac, will be able work more accurately in its future as result of today's lapse of the sun, according Captain T. J. J. See, U. S.J., well known scientist.
Dr. See declared observations made today during the eclipse wod furnish extremely valuable data to compliers of almanac and that information as to the movements of the sun at moon previously unknown may be revealed.
85 CARLOAD OF FRUIT SHIPPED
Anaheim Orange - Lem Assn. Makes Refund of $47,000 Cash
Representing 15 cents per lb the largest refund the organization has ever made, more than $47,000 in checks is being mailed to grower members today by Anaheim Orange & Lemon Ace.
Larger Tent Filled for Bulgin's Sermon on "Unpardonable Sin"
About 2500 people, the biggest crowd yet, flocked the big tent at Wilhelmina and Claudina-sts, last night to hear Dr. E. J. Bulgin breach on "The Unpardonable Sin." Altho the seating capacity has been more than doubled thru more economical arrangement of benches in the tent, almost twice as large as the former, nearly all the seats were taken last night and Bulgin suggested that if the crowds continue to grow that "we pass a resolution for a larger tent."
"We have had the devil and all his impes to light, but the Lord is blessing the revival just the name."
The choir sang many old-time selections, and Mrs. O. Lee Shoemaker sang a solo, "Die Out in Me" for which she was highly commended by Dr. Bulgin. She is to sing for Mrs. J. S. Norvell at the Christian Church Sunday afternoon, at which time a duet is also to be sung by Mrs. Walter Ross and Mrs. W. D. Pemberton.
Bulgin said that he was in receipt of a letter asking him if a preacher should mix in politics. He answered that a preacher should represent all classes and never engage in political mudsliding nor personal abuse; that everyone has a right to his own opinion in politics. Nevertheless, he said, always take your religion into politics but never your politix into religion. Politics needs religion; religion doesn't need politics so much.
Mrs. Norvell and her daughter who is a prominent Los Angeles physician and son-in-law were introduced. Mrs. Norvell gave a short talk, and then led in prayer. She said the Lord was giving the evangelist the hearts of the people and that she was glad to see Christian people coming together as one regardless of their denomination. She urged that Christian women bring an unseated friend with them when they come to hear her at the Christian Church Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Norwell, one of the greatest women speakers of the Baptist denomination, has addressed audiences of 9000 and converted 450 at a single meeting.
Bulgin said he had been asked to give his strongest arguments that Christ is God, that there were men attending his meeting who recognized Him as a great and good man, but not as the Son of God. He replied that Christ said that He was the Son of God and if that were not true He is the most spectacular point of this most remarkable drama of modern history was seen in New York City at 9:11 for a period of 30 seconds when the dead blackness of the moon, coming between the sun and the earth blotted the sun from view and turned day into night. As the crescent of the sun disappeared from view, faint lights began to twinkle. They were scientists said, from the planet Venus, Mercury and Jupiter.
Directly above the screensafter appeared the star Akair. To the Anaheim Orange - Lemons Assn. Makes Refund of $47,000 Cash
Representing 15 cents per hour the largest refund the organization has ever made, more than $47,000 in checks is being mailed to grower members today by Anaheim Orange & Lemon Assn.
The refund is as large in lars as that made last year, is made also in cash and not stock, Manager G.W. Sandilah points out.
Citrus fruit shipments from Northern Orange-co held up this week, with 85 cars moved Placentia with 28 cars and Fullton with 27 were the heaviest shippers.
The Anaheim Citrus Fruit A is the only one still shipping navels in the district, and it probably finish next week. The association shipped only two this week, but its total will practically as large as that of its competitors.
Promoter Heavily Insured; Probe C
EXCELSIOR SPRINGS.
Jan. 24—Inquiry all the information possible on Henry dyer, colorful, oft-reputed miller oil promoter, supposed have been killed in Denver, Co. Jan. 6, was received from She Youngblood of Lurkin, Tex., Sheriff John Clark of Clay-co. A body supposed to have bethat of Hyder and identified by relatives was buried here 10 by his brother, Win. Hyder One of the losses of the cler First National Bank of Excelsior Springs in $11,000 loaned Henry Hyder.
Lufkin, Tex., authorities cated they were evacuating oil promoter there.
Hyder is said to have bheavily injured life so repo to have mice- and lost a dozen fortune.
Sheriff Youngblood's telegraph said that detectives working the case there stated for a Hyder is alive. He said it interested in the case in Te would ask for the exhumal of the body.
The body came from Den in a steel casket.
The Excel Springs undertaker made a statement of identity but did not cou... take the body out of caske.
Hyder'r wife lives in Los Angeles. Insurance policies among ing more than $25,000 made out in her favor.
Christian Church Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Norwell, one of the greatest women speakers of the Baptist denomination, has addressed audiences of 9000 and converted 450 at a single meeting.
Bulgin said he had been asked to give his strongest arguments that Christ is God, that there were men attending his meeting who recognized Him as a great and good man, but not as the Son of God. He replied that Christ said that He was the Son of God and if that were not true He is the biggest liar and fraud that the world has ever known; that He demonstrated His right to the claim by his miracles, death and resurrection; and that the world needs a Christ and in all history there is none other than Jesus of Nazareth that fills the bill.
He also said that a good moral man cannot be saved except through Jesus Christ. The moral man tries to work to be saved; the saved man works because he is saved. If a man is moral you will find that somewhere back in his life he owes it to the teachings of the Word of God. Christianity is not a lot of negativity, but one great big positive. He that hath the Son hath life, and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life. The great trouble with the world today is that they have humanized God, defied man and minimized sin.
Another question which he had been asked was: Is the human intellect capable of grasping eternity? The human mind cannot begin to comprehend eternity. The New Testament word for eternity is "ages of the ages and ceaseless ages." Eternity is behind us, eternity is in front of us. There never was a time when God was not, and there will never be a time when He will not be, and yet you are spending the fleeting moments in Anaheim in bitterness and wrangling when you're going out into eternity without God.
Carter sang two solos, "Golden Bells" and "Sometimes I Grow Homesick for Heaven." Because of his wonderful rendition of the former he is known throut the South as "The Golden Bell Singer of the South."
Dr. Bulgin's sermon tonight is for men only, and boys 14 years and up, with a special invitation to men of secret orders. The subject is: "The Man of Calvite."
Article No. 21
Instructions for Sunday and Monday, Jan. 25-26
By Dr. Frank McCooy
Take your morning exercises before an open window, and add this one to those already taken:
Standing
Hands clasped behind neck—bend to the left and then to the right—keeping the knees stiff. Bend forward and then backward—keeping the knees stiff. Twist body to the right as far as possible—then to the left as far as possible—keeping the hip motionless and the knees stiff.
For Sunday, Jan. 25
Breakfast
One Egg—Coddled or Poached
One Waffle Baked Apple
Lunch
Tuna Salad
Made with canned tuna on tomato and lettuce
Dinner
Roast Mutton or Broiled Manton Chops
Cooked Carrots
For Monday, Jan. 26
Breakfast
Orange Juice
One-half Glass Water
Lunch
Buttermilk
Browned Belgian Hare
Cooked Spinach and Asparagus
Raw Cabbage (no dressing)
Your evening exercises to follow by a shower or spoon bath.
The bathing is quite important as it assists in nudging, thru the pores, the total material you are throwing in large amounts as you reduce I find that people who overweight usually do not have a healthy skin as the millions of pores of the skin are flaky and do not function properly You breathe out poisons these pores in much the same way as the smoke goes out chimney. The pores are likely millions of chinnneys—the elimination of gascous solid matter in a vaporary form If they were closed entirely you would die in about five minutes from the retained pores in the system. So wake up pores up and make them strand clean by at least two shirts or sponge baths daily.
READING NEWSPAPER IN NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY
THE ORANGE COUNTY
Plain Dealer
FULL REPORT OF INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE—FIRST LEASED WIRE IN ANAHEIM
Anaheim, California, Saturday January 24, 1925
Partly cloudy, tonight with moderate te
NO PROVOKE VIOLENCE
CARLOADS OF FRUIT SHIPPED
Sheim Orange - Lemon assn. Makes Refund of $47,000 Cash
presenting 15 cents per box, largest refund the organiza- as ever made, more than 10 in checks is being mailed lower members today by the Sheim Orange & Lemon Ass'n.
APPOINTMENT OF STONE BLOCKED
Charge Attorney-General "Persecuting" Sen. Burton Wheeler
WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.—In one of the most tempestuous sec- ret sessions of its history the sen- ate this afternoon blocked con- firmation of Atty. Gen. Harlan F. Stone as a associate justice of the CITY HALL
BULLETIN
BOOT LEGGERS
U.S.A CLU
NEIM ORANGE - LEMON ASSN. MAKES REFUND OF $47,000 CASH
presenting 15 cents per box, largest refund the organizasas ever made, more than 20 in checks is being mailed
wider members today by the NEIM Orange & Lemon Ass'n.
refund is as large in dollars that made last year. It
also in cash and not in Manager G. W. Sandilands out.
US fruit shipments from NEIM Orange-co held up well week, with 85 cars moved.
Tatia with 28 cars and Fuller-with 27 were the heaviest cars.
ANAHEIM Citrus Fruit Ass'n only one still shipping in the district, and it will finish next week. This action shipped only two cars week, but its total will be really as large as that of any competitors.
MEMOTER HEAVILY INSURED; PROBE ON CELLSIOR SPRINGS. Mo., 14-19 Inquiry for all the intention possible on Henry Hycolorful, oft-reputed million-dollar promoter, supposed to been killed in Denver, Colo., was received from Sheriff Blood of Lurkin, Tex., by Jeff John Clark of Clay co.
Body supposed to have been of Hyder and identified here relatives was buried here Jan. by his brother, Wm. Hyder.
Of the losses of the closed National Bank of Excelsior banks in $1,000 loaned to Hyder.
Lurkin, Tex., authorizes indictment they were investigating an omission there.
Is said to have been by injured life reported have maced and lost a hair fortune.
Sheriff Youngood's telegram that detectives working on case there stated for sure is alive. He said those usted in the case in Texas ask for the exhumation body.
Body came from Denver casket caskel. The Excelsior undersaker made a state of identity but did not, of take the body out of the derer'r wife lives in Los An Insurance policies amounting more than $25,000 out in her favor.
CHARGE ATTORNEY-GENERAL "PERSECUTING" Sen. Burton Wheeler
WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.—In one of the most tempestuous secret sessions of its history the senate this afternoon blocked confirmation of Atty. Gen. Harlan F. Stone as a associate justice of the supreme court after it was charged that he was "persecuting" Sen. Burton K. Wheeler, Democrat, of Montana.
The fight was waged by Senators Wm. F. Borah, Republican, of Idaho; Thos. J. Walsh, Democrat of Montana, and Thos. J. Heflin, Democrat of Alabama after the latter had provoked the battle by attempting to denounce the attorney general in public.
The secret session lasting an hour, was characterized by a series of attacks on Stone, all of which were based on reports that the attorney general planned to obtain an indictment against the Montana senator in the courts of the District of Columbia. This reported activity led Senators Borah, Walsh and Heflin to bitterly flay the attorney general. They were joined in this stand by Senators Overman, Democrat of Norte Carolina, Caraway, Democrat of Arkansas and Norris, Republican of Nebraska.
Under the flow of denunciation administration senators sat silent, portending only against efforts to carry the fight out into a public session. Borah denounced the attorney general as attempting to "infringe the rights of Anglo-Saxon law" by attempting to try Wheeler before a District of Columbia jury. He told the senate that Wheeler was entitled to a trial "by his peers and that there were "no peers" in the Dist. of Columbia because of the lack of suffrage here.
While supporting Borah's stand, Sen. Walsh attacked the administration for "attempting to force confirmation of Stone." He also denounced the attorney general for attempting to again indict Wheeler.
It was later learned that the angry senators charged Stone with seeking to base the new indictment upon a letter written Edwin Booth, former solicitor in the interior department by Gordon Campbell, a Montana mining man for whom Wheeler had once appeared as counsel in western litigation. In the letter, Campbell was said to have proposed a division of western oil lands.
WILLIAM HUPP DIES
William Hupp, $1, died this morning at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Charles Jacoby, $24 E. Center-at. Mr. Hupp was a native
GEISSINGER LONG TIME "PACIFIST"
The attack made on City Attorney William P. Webb, Jr., while he lay on a sick bed; is not the first outburst of the sort from J.A. Geissinger.
Indeed, Geissinger has been a rank "pacifist" for years and his pacifism was one of the principal reasons for his removal from the pastorate of the First Methodist church of Long Beach, one of the largest and strongest congregations there.
Reports to this effect were definitely confirmed yesterday in Long Beach, when J.R. Williams, Commissioner of Public Safety of the city at time, the fall of 1917, declared that Geissinger had appeared before the Long Beach Defense Council to explain a pacific mass meeting under his auspices, held at the Municipal Auditorium, and other things.
The speaker who was featured at this gathering was one Rev. William E. Biederwolff, who made himself so obnoxious to soldiers.
RECALL OF DO YOU TO Messrs. Grafton,
Candidates of the
The campaign of J.A. Geissinger, and unparalleled for calumn politics!
The extreme limite Geissinger made a morJr., a war veteran who is seriopride appendicitis, complicatsufferings and privatiDo you stand for
the only reason you can clilmen Metcalf, Knippe demonstrated they hail.
For ten days you lenge to stand on a
the public that you than the facility of t
What have you right to know.
HAWLEY FUNER
MONDAY AFTERNOUR
Funeral services for Mr. A. Hawley will be at 2 p.m. day from the Backs, Campbell funeral parlor,
Leusinger of the Immigrant byterian church of Los Angeles
affiliating. Interment is at the Loma Vista cemetery bearers will be William Iett, Frank N. Gibbs, A.M.
PORTO'S BOND
SET AT $1000
Loporto, rancher from home near Lemon Heights, sheriff took a large liquor was held to answer to the court on a charge of "manuring" following his preliminary hearing before Justice K. E. Loporto's bond has fixed at $1000.
REGIME
BREAKFAST
Orange Juice
One-half Glass Water
LUNCH
DINNER
Broiled Belgian Hare
Ked Spinach and Asparagus
Raw Cabbage (no dressing)
Four evening exercises to be observed by a shower or sponge bath.
The bathing is quite important as it assists in eliminating thru the pores, the toxic material you are throwing off large amounts as you reduce find that people who are weight usually do not have healthy skin as the millions of the skin are flabby do not function properly. breathe out poisons thrust the pores in much the same as the smoke goes out the tunnel. The pores are liter-millions of chimneys for elimination of gaseous and matter in a vaporary form. they were closed entirely would die in about four minutes from the retained polis in the system. No wake the fires up and make them strong clean by at least two showers or sponge baths daily.
WILLIAM HUPP DIES
William Hupp, $1, died this morning at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Charles Jacoby, 924 E. Center-st, Mr. Hupp was a native of Germany, but until a year ago had for some time been a resident of Anaheim. However, this time he had been here but about three months. He is survived by two daughters, Mrs Jacoby and Mrs Prank Gross of Anaheim, and two sons, Chris Hupp of Jonesboro, Ind., and Charles Hupp of Logansport. Ind. He was a member of the German Lutheran church of Logansport and the body will be sent there for interment, it is said. Arrangements are in charge of Backs, Terry, and Campbell.
DIES OF PNEUMONIA
William Hanson, 58, a native of Denmark, died of pneumonia last night at Colonial-apts. Decent is survived by his widow, and five daughters, Miss Blanche Hanson, a teacher in the Placenta schools; Mrs. H. R. Brooks of Britt, Iowa; Mrs. F. W. Rafath and Mrs. O. C. Peterson, of Junction City, Ore.; and Mrs. Dave Peterson of Albert Lea, Minn. Mrs. Rafath is expected to arrive tomorrow to accompany the widow with the remains to Junction City, for interment. The body is in charge of Backs, Terry & Campbell.
NEW ANAHEIMER
Charles Patchett, of Birmingham, England, nephew of Alfred Bayliss has arrived in Anaheim to make his home.
Patchett sailed from Southampton Jan. 5, arriving at New York Jan. 14, after a trip of less than six days, including docking. From New York he took train via New Orleans.
J. A. Chitty for orange trees.
204 Bush: phone 671-M.-Adv.
Hear Dr. McGarrah talk at Presbyterian Church on Church Building.
Reports to this effect were definitely confirmed yesterday in Long Beach, when J. R. Williams, Commissioner of Public Safety of the city at the time, the fall of 1917 declared that Gelissinger had appeared before the Long Beach Defense Council to explain a pacifistic mass meeting under his auspices, held at the Municipal Auditorium, and other things.
The speaker who was featured at this gathering was one Rev. William E. Blederwolff, who made himself so obnoxious to soldiers, sailors and other patriotic citizens that the government, lacking confidence in his patriotism, refused to sanction further speaking engagements in connection with wartime drives. Blederwolff, also, because of his activities at that time, found his evangelistic work petering out, and gave it up entirely.
Gelissinger on Thursday, therefore, vented on Webb spleen against the Legion which has been accumulating for years.
Former Police Chief Cole of Long Beach also was seen. According to Cole, Gelissinger was careful always to keep just within the law, altho his pacifism was notorious there.
At the public mass meeting referred to, Blederwolff is said to have explained an incident of knocking down the flag as an accident. The trampling of the flag under foot, however, was never satisfactorily cleared up in the minds of the servicemen and others, and hundreds of soldiers, marine and sailors, at one of the railway stations, were so incensed that the evangelist and Gelissinger might have been lynched, but for the efforts of Williams who was determined to preserve order, regardless of whether the pacifists were guilty or not.
The mass meeting was only one of several incidents in which Gelissinger showed his colors clearly. The congregation became so divided and sentiment reached such a pitch against him that he was obliged to resign and seek another field.
Then he came to Anaheim where, when the occasion offered, he showed the same stripes as before.
J. A. Chitty for orange trees.
204 Bush: phone 671-N.-Adv.
HAWLEY FUNER
MONDAY AFTER
Funeral services for Mr. A. Hawley will be at 2 p.m. day from the Backs, Campbell funeral parlor Leasingger of the Immunary byterian church of Los Angeles affecting. Interment is in the Loma Vista cemetery bearers will be William Lettt, Frank N. Gibbs, A. M. H. Renner, William T. Wailer L. E. Miller.
AGED WOMAN DIRECTOR
Mrs. Theodore Oswald,
Fullerton resident, died the noon at the family residence West Whiting-ave. She Oswald by whom she is also survived by a Mrs. W. J. Wickersheim,
sons, A. J. Oswald and W.
She was a member of the gellical Church of Anaheim body is at McAulay and funeral parlors pending mentions.
Nothing New Method
The reported plan to house" things general "steal the meeting" of forcement advocates at tent at Claudina and mina-sts next Monday which was nipped in when Mayor Metcalf will his challenge for a public vote and announced that would be limited to older residents of similarities in the past.
The last big revival put the present very small campaign being conducted Dr. E.J.Bulin was thus by Brown and Curry many years ago.
Following their victorious polls at a wet-and-dry crowd of drunken men into the big brown
COUNTY
aler
IN ANAHEIM
Progress of Anaheim as Told by Building
Year Permits Total
1923 828 $2,269,271
1922 675 1,413,045
1921 664 1,253,870
1920 362 379,950
1919 174 464,500
Partly cloudy tonight and Sunday with moderate temperature.
27th YEAR—No. 108
LENCE FAILURE
THING BUT MUD
SERVICEMEN CHECKED BY COOL HEADS
Charge U. S. A. Club in Studied Attempt to Induce Action
Despite the fact that American Legion members were deeply resentful of the cowardly attack made by J. A. Geissinger, spokesman for the U. S. A. club, thru the
RECALL CANDIDATES,
DO YOU APPROVE?
TO Messrs. Grafton, Franzen, Mathis, Miller and Stock,
Candidates of the U. S. A. Club:
The campaign of the U.S.A. Club, thru its spokesman,
J. A. Geissinger, and its organ, The Bulletin, have been unparalleled for calumnies in all the history of Orange-co. politics!
The extreme limit came Thursda evening when J. A. Geissinger made a most cowardly attack upon Wm. P. Webb, Jr., a war veteran of whom all Orange-co. might well be proud, who is seriously sick following an operation for appendicitis, complicated by peritonitis and induced by his sufferings and privations on the battlefield.
Do you stand for that kind of a campaign? Is that the only reason you can give the voters for ousting Councilmen Metcalf, Knipe, Hasson and Slaback, men who have demonstrated they have backbone and principle.
For ten days you failed to take notice of an open challenge to stand on a platform with Mayor Metcalf and tell the public that you had some better reason to be elected than the facility of the U.S.A. club for throwing mud.
What have you to say about it? The public has a right to know.
HAWLEY FUNERAL MONDAY AFTERNOON
Funeral services for Mrs. Helen Hawley will be at 2 p.m. Monday from the Backs, Terry & Campbell funeral parlors, Rev. Geissinger of the Immanuel Presbyterian church of Los Angeles officiating. Interment is to be in the Loma Vista cemetery. Pall bearers will be William H. Wickett, Frank N. Gibbs, A. Nagle, O.
ENTERS PLEA OF NOT GUILTY
C. L. Schroeder, formerly of Fullerton, pleaded not guilty to a charge of embezzlement, preferred by his former employer, J. J. Lilley, when he was arraigned in justice court at Santa Ana and posted bond of $250 to assure his presence when his preliminary Charge U. S. A. Club in Studied Attempt to Induce Action
Despite the fact that American Legion members were deeply resentful of the cowardly attack made by J. A. Geissinger, spokesman for the U. S. A. club, thrue the U. S. A. club organ, upon City Atty, Wm. P. Webb, Jr., first commander of Anaheim Post, American Legion, who is very sick following an operation for appendicitis, caution of cool heads for constraint has prevailed.
A deputy sheriff was on guard last night at Geissinger's house.
Law enforcement advocates today cautioned servicemen to control their passions and under no circumstances to countenance violence.
U. S. A. club leaders who have repeatedly charged law enforcement advocates with lawlessness and violence, have been making a studied effort to provoke just such action," declared a prominent citizen today.
"It has come to me that the U. S. A. club hopes to create some excuse for a report that violence is expected here so that an appeal can be sent of the governor for troops and declaration of martial law. This, of course, would be a last desperate move for political effect.
"The U. S. A. Club leaders, of course, know that law enforcement advocates are not guilty of lawlessness and cannot point to a single instance of this kind.
Their desperate efforts to provoke it by unexamined calumnies from Geissinger's pen are ample proof of the patience and long-suffering of supporters of Anaheim's first dry council.
Sentiment is growing daily in favor of the retention of Councilmen Metcalf, Knife, Hasson and Slaback in office and election of Turton, dry candidate, to succeed G. J. Stock, last of the old wet political ring.
More and more are voters beginning to realize the injustice of the attempt to unseat the four dry councilmen whose record for law enforcement and good business judgment cannot be questioned even by the leaders of the clique which has never recovered from its defeat by a vote of nearly two to one last spring.
That the U.S.A. club is desperate is evidenced by the unparalleled mud-slinging which has featured its campaign to oust the four dry councilmen. Nothing approaching it has ever been known in Orange-co politics.
"The attempt to recall the four dry councilmen has proven the most foolish political move ever seen in Anaheim," according to one of the historians quoted in the article.
HAWLEY FUNERAL MONDAY AFTERNOON
Funeral services for Mrs. Helen Hawley will be at 2 p.m. Monday from the Backs, Terry & Campbell funeral parlors, Rev. Reusinger of the Immanuel Presbyterian church of Los Angeles officiating. Interment is to be in the Loma Vista cemetery. Pall-bearers will be William H. Wlekitt, Frank N. Gibbs, A. Nagle, O. J. Renner, William T. Wallop and E. Miller.
AGED WOMAN DIES
Mrs. Theodore Oswald, old-time Fullerton resident, died this afternoon at the family residence, 145 West Whiting-ave. She and Mr. Oswald by whom she is survived had been married 59 years. She also survived by a daughter, Mrs. W. J. Wlekersheim, and two sons, A. J. Oswald and W. Oswald. She was a member of the Evangelical Church of Anaheim. The body is at McAulay and Sutters funeral parlors pending arrangements.
ENTERS PLEA OF NOT GUILTY
C. L. Schroeder, formerly of Fullerton, pleaded not guilty to a charge of embezzlement, preferred by his former employer, J. J. Lilley, when he was arraigned in justice court at Santa Ana and posted bond of $250 to assure his presence when his preliminary hearing is called.
Schroeder is accused by Lilley of collecting $200 for the Orange County Brick & Tile Co., but of appropriating it for his own use.
SEND BODY EAST
The body of Miss Mary DeGuelle, 25, will be put aboard the U.P. for Montrose, Colo., tomorrow by Backs, Terry & Campbell. Miss DeGuelle was employed at the local telephone office, and was popular in young people's circles. She died at the home of her uncle, W. H. Dale, 527 East Cypress-st., who plans to accompany the body to Montrose for interment.
Nothing New in Campaign Methods Adopted by Wets
The reported plan to "rough-house" things generally and "steal the meeting" of law enforcement advocates at the big tent at Claudina and Wilhelmina-sts next Monday evening, which was nipped in the bud when Mayor Metcalf withdrew his challenge for a public debate and announced the meeting would be limited to talks by the dry councilman, reminds older residents of similar tactics in the past.
The last big revival preceding the present very successful campaign being conducted by Dr. E. J. Bulgin was that held by Brown and Curry nearly 10 years ago.
Following their victory at the polls at a wet-and-dry election, a crowd of drunken men marched into the big Brown and Curry tent where a revival service was being held, paraded through the alles, insulting and knocking over worshipers, threatened to drop the tent on their heads and generally persecuted one of the most disgraceful exhibitions of the kind ever witnessed in an American community.
Ringleaders of that mob included city officials—the city government at that time was saturated—and policemen looked on without turning a finger during the riot. Dry forces had to call in Sheriff Lacey, who headed a squad of deputies and removed stars from a number of the rioters.
Ringleaders of that mob are now on the board of directors of the U.S.A. club, which is attempting to recall Anaheim's first dry council.
judgment cannot be questioned even by the leaders of the clique which has never recovered from its defeat by a vote of nearly two to one last spring.
That the U.S.A. club is desperate is evidenced by the unparalleled mud-slinging which has featured its campaign to oust the four dry councilmen. Nothing approaching it has ever been known in Orange-co politics.
"The attempt to recall the four dry councilmen has proven the most foolish political move ever seen in Anaheim," according to one of the biggest business men in the city today.
"It was certainly foolish to begin with, as there was never any good reason to oust these men whom I am convinced have given a most businesslike administration. Certainly the U.S.A. club has greatly damaged its efforts by the high-handed tactics, including boycott and misrepresentation.
"Anaheim is in good shape to go ahead. Bank resources are ahead of a year ago. Orange prices are $2 a box over a year ago. Unemployment is much less than a few months ago. Postal receipts are highest on record. School attendance is breaking all records. Fewer houses are for rent than a month ago. The New York stock exchange indicates the greatest prosperity in the history of the country."
"Everything is set for a prosperous year but it won't be if the four dry councilmen are recalled. I regard the recall as a dangerous precedent, to be resorted to only in cases of malfeasance in office.Certainly nothing like that has been shown in the case of the four dry councilmen. In the remote event of their removal Feb. 3, who thinks for a moment that law enforcement advocates will lay down?
"What is sauce for the goose is sause for the gander. Should the high-pressure methods being resorted to by the U.S.A. club result by any chance in its nosing out defeat for the dry cause now, certainly no one could blame law enforcement advocates from coming back with another recall disc(Continued on Page Two)
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