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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1925 February

oc-plain-dealer 1925-02-21

1925-02-21 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 4 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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PAGE FOUR THE ORANGE COUNTY Plain Dealer An Independent Newspaper Issued Every Afternoon Except Sunday PAUL V. HESTER Editor and Publisher Subscription Rate—In Orange County... per month 50¢ Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., as second class matter DAILY GREETING TO OUR READERS Love, joy, peace, long suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance; against such there is no law.—Galatians 5:22, 23. There is many a thing that the world calls disappointment; but there is no such word in the dictionary of faith. What to others are disappointments, are to believers intimations of the will of God.—Anonymous. WET JUDGES AND DRY LAWS Satisfactory enforcement of the prohibition law will never come to this country until the executive and judicial branches of the government support the law as loyally as it has been supported by the Congress. Government is largely by administration. Wet judges do not enforce dry laws. Theoretically a judge opposed to prohibition may administer the affairs of his court with such honesty and intelligence as to contribute to law enforcement and observance. Theoretically—yes. Practically—no. At least, not once in a thousand cases. One of the great dangers to this country is the gradual establishment in courts of a system of judicial license which will be in effect a nullification of a congressional statute. A bad judge is hard to get out. Terms are long, even when they are not for life. No wet candidate has a right to ask any member of a Congress which is overwhelmingly dry to recommend his appointment. He has no right to ask a dry President to make such an appointment. He has no right to ask a dry Senate to confirm it. We need prohibition not only with Congress behind it, not only with the President behind it, but with every judge, every United States Commissioner, every United States marshal, and every other federal officer behind it. establishment in courts of a system of judicial license which will be in effect a nullification of a congressional statute. A bad judge is hard to get out. Terms are long, even when they are not for life. No wet candidate has a right to ask any member of a Congress which is overwhelmingly dry to recommend his appointment. He has no right to ask a dry President to make such an appointment. He has no right to ask a dry Senate to confirm it. We need prohibition not only with Congress behind it, not only with the President behind it, but with every judge, every United States Commissioner, every United States marshal, and every other federal officer behind it. The more that is learned about Abraham Lincoln, the greater does his character appear. CALIFORNIA'S CHANCE IN REFORESTING California has wonderful opportunities to achieve the remarkable in reforesting. This state seems to be backward in grasping the possibilities that lie before it. It may be the natural inclination to postpone doing this obviously wise thing until conditions become desperate. In so far as the timber supply is concerned, conditions right now are desperate thruout the country. California is better off in this perhaps, than any of the states. It has a gigantic footage of uncut timber. But, like the other states, it is losing much timber each year by the normal cut. Considerable loss, too, is entailed by forest fires. It would be far sighted wisdom to begin at once to restore the forests of California. Even though the beginning were on a comparatively small scale, let it be a beginning—an actual beginning. Then let the volume of planting of forest trees increase steadily, from year to year. Make the planting systematic. Let no year pass without considerable volume of planting. WITH COURTESY "First in War, First in Peace And First in the Hearts of his Countrymen" Monday, Feb. 23rd Gas Office Closed in honor of George Washington, "the First American" PARAGRAPHISM (By Robert Quillen) Our theory is that Lot's wife turned back to get her kodak. An educated man is one who realizes how much he doesn't know. Funny people! Afraid of oysters, but willing to take a chance on hooch. The office grouch confesses that all he got for Christmas was drunk. Still, a man could obey all of realize how much he doesn't nuisance. A Yankee is a man who wishes he could go to Florida and sell real estate. You can't tell what church man belongs to by the hymn he sings when he gets drunk. After all, there wasn't much in Adam to praise except his originality. Nurial is better in his way, but any good American can beat him running up expenses. Still, it is probable that nothing in the world is wholly selfish except a tape worm. Description: "He attracted much attention as a walking stile in a hick town." Fundamentally man is just portable stomach supporting infallibility complex. The old-timers had a regular breakfast room, also, but it was called a kitchen. Man's inhumanity to makes countless thousands worse if the label is genuine. of his Countrymen" Monday, Feb. 23rd Gas Office Closed in honor of George Washington, "the First American" Southern Counties Gas Company District Superintendent 238 E. CENTER ST. PHONE 166 FOG —IS— Pierced BY EL CAMINO FLOODLITE Reflectors and Blue Daylight Bulbs Positively no automobile headlights will penetrate dense fog better than this combination. Be safe. WEST BROS. 119 No. Lemon Street, and Los Angeles and Chestnut Streets, Anaheim THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF. THE CHERRY TREE MORAL— Still There for Those Who Care to Use It SATURDAY CHURCH Will the pastors or those church announcements kindle voices by 3 o'clock Friday on ment column is made up and afterward are regretfully be Dealer is anxious to print appreciate this co-operation. PLACENTIA RIBLE CLASS Round Table Clubhouse, Place tia, 9:15 Sunday Morning. Charles E. Fuller, teacher. Special meeting Sunday moing. Nationally renowned immeuel Male Quartet and Saxophon club of Los Angeles will furni the music. Mr. Legerts, a v fine missionary speaker, will of the needs of the Bolshevian dians of South America; Mr. Hills of Los Angeles will sing. 1 a.m. plans will be made the coming evangelistic campato be held in March. Sunduservices will be one of the ever held by the Bible class. FIRST CHRISTIAN Cor. Helena and Broadway, Rev. L. L. Myers, pastor. Morning—Prelude; Processal; prayer; response; CommunHymn 187; offertory solo (lected), Mrs. Pemberton; H. No 1; announcements; authosermon, "Warming at the Doe Fire"; Invit. Hymn No. 120. Evening—Prelude; Processal; prayer; Response; Hymn offertory solo, "Close to T (Briggs), Mrs. H. D. McGarlar Hymn 19; announcements; them; sermon, "Binding Broken-Hearted"; Invit. H. 154. EVANGELICAL CHURCH W. Center and Helena. G. G./Schmid, minister. German sermon at 9:20; tue "A Pillar of Salt." Sunday School at 10:15. Worship and sermon at lte theme, "The Character of Je AGRAPHS (By Robert Quillen) COMMENTS of the PRESS What Editors Are Saying MR. LINCOLN'S RUGGED NICKXAMES—San Diego Union A correspondent humorously comments on Abraham Lincoln's common title of "The Rail-Splitter"—asking, among other things, how many rails Lincoln is supposed to have split, what became of them, and whether or not we suppose that rail-splitting was the most characteristic and important of Lincoln's pre-presidential occupations. Furthermore, asks our friend, might it not be possible to find a "more respectable title, or a more distinguishing title," for the great American who saved the Union? To this last question we can return a free affirmative. It might not be easy to create a fully significant and fully just title for this great American, but certainly it could be done. It would be a waste of time to do it, though, for it would be soon forgotten—and rightly. The names given Lincoln, the outstanding hero of the American legend, are not carefully created names, judiciously considered and approved by any selective methods by our best minds. They are the names and titles that arose with the times, naturally: "Honest Abe," "the Liberator," "the Railsplitter" and the rest of them, came into being because this President was a figure of heroic proportions and also a very human man. They are not invented titles; they are nicknames. Because men respected him, they singled out from his fellows; and because he was human they nicknamed him. And nicknames are not chosen so much for accuracy as for their flavor of the picturesque. "The Rail-splitter" does as well as any of them, and rather better than some. It is a rugged sort of title. It pictures a man of bodily power—no pulling intellectual, no pensive aristocrat. It pictures a direct and forceful man, for the axe is a direct and forceful sort of implement. The man who wields an axe does not strike random blows, does not dissipate his energy. The man who splits rails in the old primitive way, is an able man—he musthew to the line", and when his day's work is done he has something tangible to show for it. After all, the hewers of wood and drawers of water have time to think; and when one of them also possesses in high degree the ability to think, his apprenticeship with the axe does not lessen his power. When the young Lincoln was doing the rough, exacting labor of the frontier country, his mind was not packed with the crowding burdens of trivial details. While his body labored, his mind was free. While he was working, he was also thinking, and his thoughts went beyond the small schenlings by which men live by their wits devise the means of taxing society for their livelihood. Who shall say, indeed, that rail-splitting was not typical of the Lincoln who became America's national hero? It was honest work. It was necessary work. Yet it was work that gave opportunity for long hours of thought, in a working day that began at sunrise and closed at dusk; and it was work that gave the man's thought the background of a direct, homely contact with the labors and small triumphs of everyday life. EVANGELICAL CHURCH W. Center and Helena. G. G. Schmid, minister. German sermon at 9:20; the "A Pillar of Salt." Sunday School at 10:15. Worship and sermon at 11:theme, "The Character of Jesus His Gratitude." This will twentieth and final sermon series. Christian Endeavor meeting 6:45 p.m., in three sections. Sermon at 7:30 p.m.; the "Eph-pha-that—Be Opened," attitude toward truth and G-termines the value of these Special music in charge H. Elaner, director of music. CHURCH OF THE NAZAR Corner North and Claudia Rew. Pietteher Galloway, pastor. The pastor will preach to row morning from the stair "The Book of Books and Its Lect." His subject at the service will be, "Come, I Reason Together." Special will be rendered. The Sunday school, which at 9:45, is under the direct David Swanson. The Young Peoples' society Junior society meet at 6 o'clock. Prayer meeting Wednesday. Choir practice Friday night. The public is cordially to attend these services. MION LUTHERAN CHURCH Corner Emily and Chartter H. G. Schmelzer, pastor Sunday school, 8:45. English services, 9:45. German services, 10:45. Wednesday, Lenten service, 7:80. Friday, choir practice at PLACENTIA PRESBYTE CHURCH G. A. Manshart, pastor Sunday school at 9:45. Morning worship at 11:30. Christian Endeavor at 6:30. Evening worship at 7:30. Studies in the Presbytery class, "Good Citizen Subject for the morning," "Sons of God," Present sense." For the evening Call and Man's Refusal." The Girls' Glee club will the Sunday school. Week-day services: Monday evening, meeting Sunday school council. Tuesday evening, meeting finance committee. Wednesday evening, meeting. Thursday evening, choreal salutation. Follette Motor Sales Co. 328 West Center St. Anaheim, Cal. Maxwell and Chrysler Sales and Service Our Moto is "Service and Satisfaction" AUTO LACQUERING BODY BUILDING LET US REFINISH YOUR AUTOMOBILE SYM-LAC SYSTEM A lacquer enamel finish with a guarantee against wear and check for one year—all old paint removed to the metal—a beautiful finish that is unbelievably tough and durable. Car finished in three to five days. Ford, Star, Chevrolet (open models).....$17.50 Ford, Star, Chevrolet (coupes).....$20.00 Ford, Star, Chevrolet (sedans).....$25.00 ALL OTHER CARS Open 5 passenger.....$32.50 Couches .....$40.00 Open 7 passenger.....$38.50 Sedans .....$45.00 ANAHEIM ENAMEL & SIGN WORKS 136 ELM STREET ANAHEIM, CALIF. SATURDAY CHURCH NOTES Will the pastors or those in charge of the Sunday service announcements kindly bring in their copy for their service 3 o'clock Friday afternoon, as the church announces column is made up at that hour and those brought in board are regretfully but necessarily left out. The Plainer is anxious to print all church news possible and will initiate this cooperation. ACENTIA BIBLE CLASS Table Clubhouse, Placeen 9:15 Sunday Morning. Music E. Fuller, teacher. Special meeting Sunday morning nationally renowned Immanuel Quartet and Saxophone of Los Angeles will furnish music. Mr. Legerts, a very missionary speaker, will tell needs of the Boisphonian In-land of South America; Miss of Los Angeles will sing. At an plans will be made for evening evangelistic campaign held in March. Sunday's service will be one of the best held by the Bible class. FIRST CHRISTIAN Mr. Helena and Broadway, Rev. L. L. Myers, pastor. Evening—Prelude; Procession-prayer; response; Communion 187; offertory sole (selection); Mrs. Pemberton; Hymn; announcements; anthem; "Warming at the Devil's"; Invit. Hymn No. 120. Evening—Prelude; Procession-prayer; Response; Hymn 116; Memory solo "Close to Thee" (song); Mrs. H. D. McGarland; 19; announcements; anthem; sermon "Binding the Ten-Hearted"; Invit. Hymn EVANGELICAL CHURCH W. Center and Helena, G. G. Schmid, minister. German sermon at 9:30; theme, Pilgrar of Salt. Sunday School at 10:15. Church and sermon at 11:15; note, "The Character of Jesus—This will be the PRELUDE, "Melody of Hope" d Eleone Chorus, "Steadily Marching On" Palmer Anthem, "Jesus Meek and Gentle" Tease Sermon, "What Do Men Live By?" Postlude, "March" Scottson-Clark THE FREE METHODIST Bycamora and Claudina-st. J. C. Rose, Pastor Sunday school at 10 a.m.; Edna S. Rose, superintendent. Preaching at 11 a.m. Preaching at 7:30 p.m. Prayer and class meeting Wednesday evening at 7:30. M. K. WHITE TEMPLE James Allen Geissinger, D. D., minister. Sunday school at 9:30 a.m.; Geo. M. Tedriek, superintendent. Preaching services at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Prayer service Wednesday evening at 7:30. Epworth leagues at usual hour. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL Buena Park S. F. Hilgenfeld, Pastor 9:45 Sunday School, F. Bastidy, Supt. Classes for everyone Morning service at 11 o'clock Christian Endeavor 6:30; Evening sermon 7:30. CHURCH OF THE FIRST SPIRITUALIST ASS'N OF ANAHEIM (N. S. A. Auxiliary) K. P. Hall, 325 West Center St. Lecture and messages Sunday evening at 7:30. Mrs. Nellie Allen Crandall is with the congregation. MAXWELL SPIRITUAL Corner Sycamore and Olive St. Rev. Maxwell pastor; phone 359. Lecture and messages Monday evenings at 7:30. Thursday evenings at 7:30. Club class Wednesday afternoons at 8:30. Messages Wednesday afternoon at 8. Everybody welcome. UNDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH OK THE LORD (Holiness) Eleanor Heughman, Asst. Pastor Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.. A large Bible Class well-instrusted Come, bring your Bible Preaching 11 a.m. by the assistant pastor; and 2 p.m. Elise Richards. Praise service 6:30 p.m., led by Robert Wallace. Evangelistic services 7:30 p.m., by the assistant pastor. Bible study Wednesday, 7:15. Prayer meeting Friday evening 7:15. All cordially invited to attend. CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS will hold services on Sunday mornings at 10 a.m., and Relief Society meeting at 2 p.m.on Tuesday. Place of meeting the W.O.W. hall on the corner of Chestnut and Lemon St.. All are cordially invited to attend. CATHOLIC CHURCH Rev. P. Brown Services Sunday morning at 7:21, 8:30 and 10 o'clock. GERMAN BAPTIST Rev. M. Leuschner, Pastor West Broadway and Lemon. Sunday school opens at 9:45 o'clock; divine service at 10:45 and evening worship at 7:30 o'clock. On Wednesday evening prayer service is held. PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH Ralph V. Steelhead, pastor Olinda. Bible school at 9:30. Preaching by the pastor, 10:45. Y. P. S. meeting at 6:30. Evening evangelistic service at 7:30. Wednesday evening prayer meeting at 7:30. Everybody welcome at these services. Come and worship with HEALTH & DIET ADVICE By Dr. Frank McCoy Author of "THE FAST WAY TO HEALTH" GOOD PROTEID FOODS (Continued) CREAM CHEESE is the kind sold commonly in stores under such names as "Cream Cheese," "Full Cream Cheese," "York State Cheese" etc., and it is the most wholesome that can be purchased next to cottage cheese and Neufchatel. This cheese, like all others, should be eaten in place of meat and not in addition to it, because of its concentrated food value should always be used with non-starchy and salad vegetables. It is one of the most indigestible of all the proteids when it is cooked in any way, and should not be cooked with macaroni, spaghetti, or any meat dish, such as crabs, lobsters, etc. GELATIN is a food substance which is a form of proteid, and of great value to the body as a food. It is especially valuable for those who have a tendency to have nosebleed and for women who are habitually subject to profuse menstruation, as it supplies a form of proteid which makes the blood coagulate more easily. It is a good plan for anyone in good health to use some gelatin two or three times weekly. It may be prepared from packages of dried gelatin and added to a salad, or used as a dessert in the form which is most commonly sold under the trade name of "Jello." A small amount of whipped cream may be added if desired. FROG'S LEGS are a wholesome proteid food if prepared by broiling, but should never be fried, as the particles of meat are so small as to be rendered indigestible because of being coated with the fat from frying. Oakland "Sixes" Oakland "Sixes" One of the best Light Six Cars made —DUCO FINISH —4-WHEEL BRAKES —L-HEAD MOTOR WONDERFUL RIDING QUALITIES Harry L. Turton 142 South Los Angeles St. USED CARS 1924 Ford Touring 1923 Ford Touring 1923 Hudsons 1923 Oakland Tour. 1922 Buicks ny other makes. SEE THEM AT 250 NORTH LOS ANGELES ST. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA HARRY L. TURTON