oc-plain-dealer 1925-02-18
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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 Anabeim, Calif., as second class matter
DAILY GREETING TO OUR READERS
Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you;
not as the world giveseth, give I unto you. Let not your
heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.—John 14:27.
If the lyrre within accords ever so imperfectly with
the divine diapason, what a delicious calm there is in selfpossession, in the feeling of a harmonious equilibrium
between all the powers of our being! What freedom
within us thenceforth, and how rich and beautiful the
world appears to our serone and unembarrassed gaze!
When the heart is fervid, and full of pious cestacy, how
enchanting are the aspects of nature, which reveal God
so sweetly in His wonderful works!—Madame Sweetchine.
AGRICULTURAL MAN IS FARM HEAD
President Coolidge has named a man from the West and a
man of extensive practical knowledge of farming as Secretary
of Agriculture. William K. Jardine is president of the Kansas Agricultural College. He was born on a ranch in Idaho
and has lived in the West—in the midst of the great farming
region of the country. He is a student of agriculture, besides
having had years of practical experience on the farm. President Coolidge considered a great number of names before
making the appointment. He chose Mr. Jardine because of
his extensive knowledge of his farm-problems; because he is
in accord with the views and policies of the President in dealiging with the farm situation; and because he is especially versed
in the problem of farm distribution and marketing. This is
the first cabinet appointment Kansas has had.
President Coolidge has completed his cabinet appointments.
He has chosen men of conspicuous abilities. Those of the present cabinet who will be retained with the administration which
begins on the fourth of March in Mr. Coolidge's own right also
are exceptionally able men. Mr. Coolidge will have a group
of advisors worthy to be compared with the ablest cabinets of
ILLUSTRIOUS NAMES
We are told that there is nothing new under the sun, but three cases that are now on the dockets in eastern courts would seem to be something new. Foreigners coming to this country with long and unpronounceable names find them a handicap and naturally wish to change them. Well and good, but the labels they select in many cases are the names of great and illustrious Americans. Objections have been made to this custom by people answering to these illustrious names. The plea is made that presumably every foreign name means something and that the English translation should suffice and that an illustrious name is an asset, not to be adopted at will.
It is interesting to note the rulings in these cases. A Masachusts judge in his decision says that an old and historical name may not be adopted by a naturalized citizen and a New Jersey court has gone so far as to rule that no name may be adopted by a naturalized citizen that would hide the "race, extraction and nativity" of the person in question. His decision was that a man by the name of Witsenhouses might easily change it to Witsen, but not to Whitman, as had been proposed. Similarly, Schedlin could become Schetlin, but not Shetland.
If this idea is carried any further, what shall we call the gentlemen of color who have heretofore answered to the name of George Washington?
Heise's Delicious Fresh Cakes . 23c up
Just like home.made
CHAFFEE'S COFFEE CAKES, 2 for .....25c
CINNAMON ROLLS, per dozen .....15c
PAN BISCUITS, per dozen .....15c
EAT BROWN BREAD, per loaf .....12c
PILLSBURY PANCAKE FLOUR (self-rising) per pkg. 15c
15th National Orange Show
SAN BERNARDINO—FEBRUARY 19 — MARCH 1, 1923
Opening for the First Time in its own Magnificent New Home
Dedication Ceremonies, Thursday evening, February 19th
U.S. Department of Agriculture Display
First Time Ever Shown in Southern California
An Electrical Demonstration of Interest
MUSICAL ORGANIZATIONS GF
NATIONAL FAME
Both Bands and Orchestras
SANTA MONICA BAND
MILLIONS OF ORANGES
LEMONS AND GRAPEFRUIT
GOOD, CLEAN ENTERTAINMENT FOR EVERYONE
INTERESTING BY-PRODUCTS DEPARTMENT
HUNDREDS OF DEMONSTRATIONS
GORGEOUS FEATURE EXHIBITS
WONDERFUL DECORATIVE EFFECTS
SPLENDID MUSICAL PROGRAMS
A GREAT AUTOMOBILE SHOW
AN INDUSTRIAL DISPLAY OPERATIC SINGERS, BALLESTROLLING MUSICIANS
NEARLY ONE-QUARTER MILLION PERSONS VISITED THE ORANGE SHOW LAST YEAR
CALIFORNIA'S GREATEST MIDWINTER EVENT
SAN BERNARDINO—FEBRUARY 19 — MARCH 1, 1923
THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF.
NO FAKE HERE!
ROME TAX
HELP!
ATWOOD SPEAKS
TO ORANGE MEET
According to announcement from C. N., Newman, secretary of the So. Cal.'s farm bureau city department, an important discussion of citrus problems will be presented at the annual citrus growers institute in connection with the National Orange Show San Bernardino Tuesday, Feb. The theme will be "Economy Lessons from the Citrus Industry." J. A. Priser, manager of Pacific Orange Growers Assn., has been scheduled to talk on "Pest Control in Station to Quality Production." Willard Smith, director of the California Fruit Growers change, will discuss "Wind Injury in Relation to Quality Productive W. M. Meritz, superintendent Howes Realty Corp., and chair of the afternoon session.
Many growers from Orange are planning to see the Orange show and to attend the insti Tuesday, Feb. 24th. The meet will be held at the Elks club San Bernardino.
The evening session will feature a splendid talk on Rural Tion by Mr. Albert W. Atwood, nationally known as the financial Kor of the Saturday Evening Mr. Atwood is in California and present time investigating tion problems and the status cooperative marketing.
The following program for day has been arranged:
Morning Session: J.. D. Culson, manager Limonelra Co., cem man.
2:30 a.m., Address of Wel—Samuel W. McNahb, may San Bernardino.
9:45 a.m., Economic Lea from the 1924 Lemon Crop—Ramsey, California Fruit Grox Exchange.
10:30 a.m., Economic Lea from the 1922-24 Orange Ca Dan C. King, California Growers' Exchange.
11:15 a.m., Quality and tity Production and Their tion to the Successful Mar of Citrus Fruits... C. C. T president, California Fruit ers Exchange.
Afternoon Session: W. M. Sunt Howes Realty Co., cha
RAGRAPHS
By Robert Quillen)
The fast thinkers become
He who hesitates is
tors seem greatest to
who haven't kept the pace
boys set.
The only species that has
without sex appeal is the
numbers no longer awake
things. Think how many laws
easier to locate executives
er. The area of the golf
is smaller.
To dislike a chap who likes
it? Well, there's your
plan.
ABE MARTIN
POEMS THAT LIVE
LINES
(Book I: 25)
Swains in numbers
Break your slumbers.
Saucy Lydia, now but seldom,
Ay, though at your casement
nightly.
Tapping loudly, tapping lightly,
By the dozens once ye held them.
Ever turning.
Night and morning.
Swung your door upon its hinges;
Now, from dawn till evening's
closing.
Lone and desolate reposing,
Not a soul its rest infringes.
Serenaders,
Sweet invaders,
Scanter grow, and daily scanter,
Singing: "Lydia, art thon sleeping?
Lonely watch thy love is keeping!
Wake, O wake, thon dear enchanter!"
Lorn and faded.
You, as they did.
Woo, and in your turn are
slighted;
Worn and torn by passion's fret,
You, the pitiless coquette.
Waste by fires yourself have
lighted.
Late relenting.
Left lamenting—
"Withered leaves strew wintry brooks!"
Ivy garlands greenly darkling.
Myrles brown with dew-drops speakling.
Best beseech youth's glowing looks!"
Horace Quintus Flaccus.
SUNSHINE PELLETS
BY DR. W. F. THOMSON
Labor shortage: A condition that leaves only a dozen men to watch the widow genius flip hot cakes.
That chap who says eloquence is a lost art should hear the average man when the furnace goes out.
The full flower of duplicity will appear when German salesmen wax enthusiastic about their newly-discovered near-beer.
Correct this sentence: "The ladies gush over him," chuckled the great artist's wife, "but it merely amuses me."
Sly they are, these beauty foxes,
Who sell us mud in fancy boxes.
Too many of the 1925 model families are of the two passenger type.
An ounce of precaution beats
A man really needs suspense is the secret voice persuades a woman to think she the man's fault.
Champion high explosive is by mixing remarks concern one another's relatives. Body has yet found a barber the nerve to say, "It needs pooping rather badly, ma'am." You've noticed that few people trouble tuning out the sta
ge Show
MARCH 1, 1925
ent New Home
February 19th
MIONS OF ORANGES
SAND GRAPEFRUIT
CLEAN ENTERTAINMENT FOR EVERYONE
HOSTING BY-PRODUCTS DEPARTMENT
ADDREDS OF DEMONSTRATIONS
GORGEOUS FEATURE EXHIBITS
PERFUL DECORATIVE EFFECTS
BLEND MUSICAL PROGRAMS
GREAT AUTOMOBILE SHOW
INDUSTRIAL DISPLAY
ELECT SINGERS, BALLET COLLING MUSICIANS
ORANGE SHOW LAST YEAR
ER EVENT
MARCH 1, 1925
That chap who says eloquence is a lost art should hear the average man when the furnace goes out.
The full flower of duplicity will appear when German salesmen wax enthusiastic about their newly-discovered near-beer.
Correct this sentence: "The ladies gush over him," chuckled the great artist's wife, "but it merely amuses me."
Ask for Horlick's The ORIGINAL Malted Milk Safe Milk For Infants, Inselide, Children, The Aged Rich Milk, Malted Grain ext. In powder form makes The Food-Drink for All Ages. Digestible—No Cooking. Alight Lunch always at hand. Also in Tablet form. Ask for "Horlick's," at all Fountains. Avoid Imitations — Substitutes
HEALTH & DIET ADVICE
By Dr. Frank McCoy
Author of "THE FAST WAY TO HEALTH"
GOOD PROTEID FOOD (Continued)
EGGS—Eggs are undoubtedly one of the most valuable forms of food from which protein or muscle-building material can be obtained and they can be taken in such a variety of ways that even those who are attempting to use a vegetarian diet usually add eggs and in this way are able to keep up the protein intake sufficiently to remain well. Eggs are more easily digested when cooked slightly soft and are harder to digest when used in their raw state or cooked hard enough to become leathery. The poorest way to prepare eggs is by frying, as cooking in this manner renders them more indigestible.
Most people will find that they are able to use somewhere be-tween one and two eggs daily, and the best average for the week is probably ten or twelve eggs. A very large amount of white of egg may be used if the yolk is eliminated, as this yellow part of the egg contains a large amount of sulphur and fat, which will cause digestive disturbances if used in excess.
POACHED EGGS AND MILK—To each four ounces of milk, add one egg. Pour in dry frying pan and cook over a slow fire. Bring the milk up over the yellow of the egg with a spoon, so that the yellow will cook as quickly as the white. Sometimes you will find it advantageous, after the cooking has continued for two or three minutes to hold the frying pan under a broiler, so that the egg and milk will cook on top as much as on the bottom. This may be served poured over Melba toast with butter and salt added, if desired.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1925
WOOD SPEAKS ON ORANGE MEN
Bidding to announcement of Cal.'s farm bureau citrus plant, an important disqualification institute in connection with the annual citrus show at Bernardino Tuesday, Feb. 24. Gene will be "Economic from the Citrus Industry." Prizer, manager of Piacenza growers Ass'n has been invited to talk on "Pest Conclusion to Quality Production." Willard Smith, director on California Fruit Growers Expo, will disguse "Wind injury" to Quality Production." Merz, superintendent of Realty Corp., and chairman afternoon session.
Growers from Orange co.anning to see the Orange land to attend the institute day, Feb. 24th. The meeting is held at the Elks club in Bernardino evening session will feature condid talk on Rural Taxa by Mr. Albert W. Atwood, newly known as the financial editor of the Saturday Evening Post. Atwood is in California at the time investigating tax problems and the status ofrative marketing.
A following program for the has been arranged:
Warning Session: J.D. Culbert-manager Limoneira Co., chair10 a.m., Address of Welcome Samuel W. McNabb, mayor or Bernardino.
15 a.m., Economic Lessons the 1924 Lemon Crop—H.J. User, California Fruit Growers' Exchange.
15 a.m., Quality and Quant-Production and Their Relation to the Successful Marketing Citrus Fruits—C.C. Teague,ident, California Fruit Grow-Exchange.
Afternoon Session: W.M. Mertz, Hewes Realty Co., chairman.
COMMENTS of the PRESS
What Editors Are Saying
WORRYING ABOUT FUTURE'S FOOD—San Bernardino Sun
A professor of the University of Wisconsin says the world's food supply is failing short, in the sense that it is increasing at a much slower rate than the population. This may contain a moderate of consolation for farmers, who now find a poor market for crops because of over-production. If they can hang on for a century more they may find themselves "sitting pretty" in an over-populated world, assuming the "beaming millions" are able to earn enough money with which to pay for food. Those who teem in China and India, the teemiest spots on earth, are not able.
Facing this problem of inability to buy food because of low earning capacity, the statistical prophet—the he was talking to a statistical society—expressed the opinion that food would have to be standardized and the moving about of population from country; to country stopped. Man would have to be handled like a coop of chickens, each unit in its own coop and fed standard rations. Apparently he visualizes a highly communistic social order, with garments able to dictate what the ground shall yield, what the factories shall produce, what the people shall wear and eat and where they shall live. This is not a specially alluring prospect for those of us who expect to be here a century hence.
He arrives at this conclusion in a purely statistical way. In 1800 there were 850,000,000 human beings in the world he says—this gives China and India far fewer than now, with no great change in living conditions to cause it—and in 1900 there were 1,600,000,000. If we go on doubling every century we shall in time have to build projecting platforms from the earth's surface for people to roost upon. One of the troubles with statistical prophecy is that it gets us into all sorts of absurd situations. One of the benefits of a shortage of food would be better health. We eat too much and die too soon. But if we eat less and live longer we would but hasten the congestion of population, making the civil still worse. If Mr. Edison will perfect that machine for talking with the dead we would like to use it a few centuries hence to talk back to earth and say "I told you so."
GLEANINGS FROM THE BOOK OF LIFE
A HIDDEN POWER THAT RULES US ALL
What scientists and farmers and stock-breeders have known for several thousand years has lately begun to be discovered genetically; that heredity dominates, to a large extent, every living thing.
More particularly, the sum of tendencies to act in a certain way, which we call "character," is often to be traced through a long series of progenitors and collaterals.
It is becoming more and more apparent to the masses that it is extremely uncivilized of a socially civilized people to believe that hurling criminals into earthly reproductions of Hell is a better way of ridding them of wrongful desires that treating them as if they were sick persons, victims of the mental diseases of their ancestors.
But while this new urge to blame heredity for everything is permeating the land, it should be remembered that in a large proportion of cases, crime and pauperism have nothing to do with heredity; but are the consequences, partly of circumstances and partly of possession of qualities, which under different conditions of life, might have excited catechm and even admiration.
Economic Lessons of the 1924 Lemon Crop—H. J. Jay, California Fruit Growers Exchange.
Economic Lessons of the 1922-24 Orange Crop—C. King, California Fruit Growers Exchange.
Quality and Quant Production and Their Relation to the Successful Marketing Citrus Fruits—C. C. Teague, Ident, California Fruit Growers Exchange.
Afternoon Session: W. M. Mertz, Hewes Realty Co., chairman.
General Topic: Some Control-Factors Affecting Quality.
Pest Control in Response to Quality Production—J. Prizer, manager Placentia Drive Growers Assn.
Processing Fruit and Relation to Possible Carrying Quality of Citrus Fruits. A. E. Nelson and Mr. Gardner, California Fruit Growers Exchange.
The Relation of the Three Departments of the College Agriculture to the Citrus Industry. Prof. R. W. Hodgson, division of sub-tropical horticulture, University of California.
Evening Session: 8:00 p.m., Annual Taxation. Albert W. Atwood, financial editor, Saturday evening Post.
The most economical little salesman is a Class Ad in this paper.
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