oc-plain-dealer 1925-03-18
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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 Orange County... per month $0.95
Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., as second class matter
DAILY GREETING TO OUR READERS
Be ye not as the horse, or as the mule, which have no understanding; whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle. I will instruct thee in the way which thou shalt go. Psalm 32:9-8.
In Heaven, the seat of intelligence, all intellectual needs will be satisfied. This I believe, this I hope. Only this can I comprehend existence; for in this world-shadow of that other, it is but the shadow of happiness we see. Eugenie de Guerin.
MANY TOURISTS COMING THIS SUMMER
That there will be increased summer tourist travel to Southern California this year is assured. Railroad officials predict it, based upon their inquiries and reservations. And the All-Year Club of Southern California has business-like inquiries some sixteen per cent. in excess of the inquiries made in 1923, which was the banner season for summer travel to this section. Officials of this club argue convincingly that the general prosperity throughout the country will impel more persons than ever before to take summer vacations. With the mildness and delightfulness of California summers well advertised, great numbers will come, by railroad, by automobile and by steamship via the Panama Canal. The Automobile Club of Southern California has many inquiries from persons planning to come this spring and summer, on vacation trips.
The lure of this Southland is strong upon the country. It is known, far and wide, that this is one of the most delightful regions on earth in summer—that, with few exceptions, summer days here are mild, glorified and cloudless days and with wealth of flowers and verdure and with melody-of birds, with hundreds of miles of splendid highways to beckon seekers
eral prosperity throughout the country will impel more per sons than ever before to take summer vacations. With the mildness and delightfulness of California summers well advertised, great numbers will come, by railroad, by automobile and by steamship via the Panama Canal. The Automobile Club of Southern California has many inquiries from persons planning to come this spring and summer, on vacation trips.
The lure of this Southland is strong upon the country. It is known, far and wide, that this is one of the most delightful regions on earth in summer—that, with few exceptions, summer days here are mild, glorified and cloudless days and with wealth of flowers and verdure and with melody of birds, with hundreds of miles of splendid highways to beckon seekers after pleasure and recreation.
There is very good reason to look forward with optimism to a lively summer in this section, with many desirable visitors here, and with a goodly demand, no doubt, for homes here. For it is an established fact that each tourist season finds many visitors so charmed with this section that they buy homes here and arrange to make this their place of abode.
The number of marriages between boys and girls who are mere children of immature years, is startling. Here is a problem for the social reformer.
Justice should prevail among nations, as among individuals. International courtesy should be the rule, not the exception. Good will among nations must be fostered by good manners among nations.
To avoid winter colds—
Keep your home at an even temperature. Cold corners, draughty hallways, cool bedrooms or chilly bathrooms result in frequent colds.
A Humphrey Radiantfire Gas heater will give you that steady, even temperature which every home should have.
Investigate these heaters today.
Southern Counties Gas Company
NEW YORK STOCKS
Bought, Sold, Quoted; Orders executed on the New York Stock Exchange, Fast Service, immediate settlement.
Consult us when seeking gilr edge investments.
WE WILL BUY
Peoples Fid & Thrift 100 Bellview Oil $3.85
Sampson Tire & Rubber 1 Dunciger Unit 29.00
White Star No. 1 256 Daley's Common 7.0
Casa Blanca No. 2 5 Foster & Kletser pfd 25.00
Santa Fe Dome No. 1 20 Fin. Sec. Units 25.00
Californians 3 Hamilton No. 3 17.50
Yankee Units 15 Imperial Cotton 5.00
West Refining 22 Imperial Cotton pfd 15.50
Durant Motors 5 Jullan 6-2 Units 6.00
Hays Huntsville 20 Lincoln Mtg.eom 1.75
Star Motors Escrow 50 Monolith com. 8.00
Sun Realty 1 O'Donnell Gill Unit 35.00
Pickwick Corp 8 Peoples Fin & Thrift Cheap Texcal Oil 10 Petitfills Conf. 40.00
Moreland Truck 55 Pacific Store Units 3.00
West Auto Pfd. 8 Southwest Mtg. 35.00
Sun Oil 50 Union Finance Pfd. 7.00
Citizens Mtg. 12 Vanderbilt Units 48.00
Elliott Pete 100 West Auto com. 11.75
Sec. Land & Disc. 200 Citrus Salt Co. 60
Doble Steam 200 El Puerta Mining 1.00
West Chemicals 7 Kinwall Motors 50.00
Monolith Units 10 Fifty-Fifty Units 20.00
Di Giorgio 2 Pac. States Sec. 65.00
Rickenbacker Motors 500 Southern Glass .85
AND MANY OTHERS
MONEY LOANED—We will advance without delay
50% of the value of your securities for $3,6 or 12 months, simple interest; no red tape.
COMBS & RUST
SECURITIES
211 Spurgeon Bldg., Phone 539 SANTA ANA
Above offerings subject to prior sale or withdrawal.
Errors Excepted.
THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF.
BECOMING A STAR BOARDER FAST
BY GRAVY
I BELIEVE I'M
LOSING MY
APPETITE!
FURTHER
TAX REDUCTION
INDICATIONS
FEDERAL
INCOME TAX
OUR
INCOME
PARAGRAPHS
(By Robert Quillen)
The most annoying laws, however, are in-laws.
Still, a law might be constitutional and yet be idiotic.
The hardest lap on the journey to fame is that from Page 7 to Page 1.
American reaction to law: Howling about it; accepting it; forgetting it.
About all a bookkeeper gets for long and faithful service is bent.
Very rich men who prefer shabby clothes always live in some distant town.
Life becomes more humane, anyway. Once girls pinched their cheeks to get that glow.
Freedom is a state of mind, the reward of reconciling yourself to tyranny.
Description: He is the kind of man who answers advertisements to get free samples.
Nothing less than an amendment could have made a fruit jar a drinking cup.
Poverty has compensations. The fewer spare bedrooms, the fewer relatives you can entertain.
A village is a place where everybody knows everybody so well it isn't worth while to snub anybody.
The world moves, and each year there are fewer people who know how to spell Hohenzollern.
Warm-water makes the skin chap; hot water makes the meek
ABE MARTIN
In overheated rooms, either deli-cient or excessive moisture has a deleterious effect upon the health of the occupants. A temperature of about 70 degrees and a relative humidity of about 65 per cent is the proper proportion for comfort and good health.
To your children teach the truth. Lest they learn from foul-mouthed youth.
"Lookin' up from a drink 'll wrinkle th' forehead," writes Miss Fawn Lippincut, in "Milady's Corner." In th' Weekly Slip Horn. "Oh, he's worth considerable money. He's got a grown daughter that hain't workin'," we heard a feller say t'day.
POEMS THAT LIVE
TO SIGH, YET FEEL NO PAIN
To sigh, yet feel no pain;
To weep, yet scarce know why;
To sport an hour with beauty's chain,
Then throw it idly by;
To kneel at many a shrine,
Yet lay the heart on none;
To think all other charms divine,
But those we just have won;
This is love, faithless love,
Such as kidleth hearts that rove.
To keep one sacred flame.
Warm water makes the skin chap; hot water makes the meek chap.
Well, congressmen need more money. They say hooch prices in Washington are outrageous.
For that matter, age cannot wither nor custom stale a flivver.
The most humane way to kill murderers would be to try them in three days. The shock would do it.
"Where are the radicals of yesterday?" asks a magazine writer. They are standing put, but they are called reactionaries now.
Correct this sentence: "I'm idling," said the wife, "but I keep on preparing fine meals for John." (Protected by Associated Editors, Inc.)
Coughs, colds and sore throats. Brooms that stir the dust float.
These and more the doctor notes in passing.
A Class Ad will bring you results.
PE-RU-NA
FOR STOMACH CATARRH
Tablets or Liquid Sold Everywhere
TO SIGH, YET FEEL NO PAIN
To sigh, yet feel no pain;
To weep, yet scarce know why;
To sport an hour with beauty's chain,
Then throw it idly by;
To kneel at many a shrine,
Yet lay the heart on none;
To think all other charms divine,
But those we just have won;
This is love, faithless love.
Such as kidleth hearts that rove.
To keep one sacred flame,
Through life unchill'd, unmoved.
To love in wintry age the same
As first in youth we loved;
To feel that we adore,
Even to such fond excess,
That, though the heart would break with more,
It could not live with less;
This is love, faithful love.
Such as saints might feel above.
— Thomas Moore.
H. R. Wildman, Dentist. P. & M.
Building. Pullerton. Phone 352.
LEGAL NOTICE
ELECTION NOTICE FOR ORANGETHORPE SCHOOL DISTRICT
Notice is hereby given to the voters of Orangethorpe School District, County of Orange, State of California, that an election will be held on Friday, the twenty-seventh day of March, 1925, for the purpose of electing one trustee to the school board of said district.
The polls will be open at the Orangethorpe schoolhouse in the Orangethorpe district from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. on the date of said election.
BOARD OF SCHOOL TRUSTEES
Publish Mar. 11, 18, 25, 1925
ELECTION NOTICE FOR MAGNOLIA SCHOOL DISTRICT
Notice is hereby given to the voters of Magnolia School District, County of Orange, State of California, that an election will be held on Friday, the twenty-seventh day of March, 1925, for the purpose of electing one trustee to the school board of said district.
The polls will be open at the Magnolia schoolhouse in the Magnolia district from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. on the date of said election.
BOARD OF SCHOOL TRUSTEES
Publish Mar. 11, 18, 25, 1925.
COMMENTS of the PRESS
What Editors Are Saying
PEDESTRIAN'S PROTECTION—San Francisco Chronicle
It is a practice followed by pedestrians in some sections of the state when on the highways to walk on what might be termed the wrong side of the road—in other words, to face the traffic instead of moving with it. By this means they can see danger approaching and kidnap it, instead of having it take them unawares from the rear, when the sudden short of horn warns them it is a case of jump, and jump quickly, or get bumped.
The idea has worked out so well that Assemblyman S.L. Heisinger of Selma wants it written into the state laws. Doubtless it would avoid confusion and prevent many accidents, provided of course, the pedestrians obey it. But when they see so many automobiles ignoring the rules of the road and driving on any side that strikes their fancy, they may be inclined to do the same thing. If all automobile drivers would obey the laws to the letter there would be no necessity for making rules to guide pedestrians.
ANOTHER SUPERSTITION IS DISCARDED
One by one the old superstitions pass. For many centuries heart wounds were regarded as necessarily fatal. Now surgeons know that this vital organ is not outside their province.
More important than anything that could happen in Hollywood Palm Beach, Broadway or any of the other popular centers of news interest, is the modest announcement of the Harvard surgeon, Cutler, Levine and Beck, that certain cases of mitral stenosis, or stricture of the mitral valve of the heart, can be relieved by surgery.
"The road to the heart," says a graphic writer, "is only 2 or 3 centimeters in length in a direct line, but it has taken surgery nearly twenty-four hundred years to travel it."
The pioneer into uncharted places usually proceeds at his own peril only; he pays the penalty for failure with his own person. The surgical pioneer, however, literally takes the lives of others in his hand.
Daring, under such circumstances, must be fortified with wisdom and stamina.
It is not to be wondered, then, that many parts of the body remain untouched so long by the surgeon's hand.
Today no large part of the body remains free from surgical approach. The abdomen, thorax and cranium have already been invaded by the trained surgeon with eminent success in the relief of a variety of maladies. Blood vessel and nerve surgery has been developed to a high degree of skill.
3 centimeters in length in a direct line, but it has taken surgery nearly twenty-four hundred years to travel it."
The pioneer into uncharted places usually proceeds at his own peril only; he pays the penalty for failure with his own person. The surgical pioneer, however, literally takes the lives of others in his hand.
Daring under such circumstances, must be fortified with wisdom and stamina.
It is not to be wondered, then, that many parts of the body remain untouched so long by the surgeon's hand.
Today no large part of the body remains free from surgical approach. The abdomen, thorax and cranium have already been invaded by the trained surgeon with eminent success in the relief of a variety of maladies. Blood vessel and nerve surgery has been developed to a high degree of skill. Plastic formations are being made in various parts of the body—every day or so we read in the newspapers that an actress has had her weight cut down 64 pounds on the operating table; a war veteran has had a lost ear replaced; a child has been given a new walking apparatus.
This progress has called not only for great resourcefulness of hand and mind, but also for personal bravery.
So it is in other lines of endeavor. What man most fears is the unknown. The pioneer must be a man of courage. He must defy tradition and forget history. This is particularly true in science.
The improver of natural knowledge absolutely refuses to recognize authority as such. For the scientist, said Huxley, scientificism is the highest of duties; blind faith the one unpardonable sin.
"The man of science has learned to believe in justification, not by faith, but by verification."
"Science commits suicide when it adopts a creed."
Put it down that nature magically suits the man to his fortunes, by making these of the fruit of his character.
EAST
excursions
NEARLY EVERYWHERE THIS SUMMER
Very low round trip fares to all destinations—Return limit October 31st
—HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES—
Attlethus, Ga. 8109.35
Baltimore 141.56
Birmingham, Md. 98.61
Boston, Mass. 153.50
Buffalo, N.Y. 120.62
Chicago 86.00
Cincinnati 106.30
Cleveland 106.56
Dallas, Texas 72.00
Denver, Colo. 64.00
Detroit 105.62
Hallifax, N.S. 187.12
Houston, Texas 72.00
Indianapolis 99.24
Kansas City 72.00
Louisville, Ky. 101.78
Memphis, Tex. 85.15
Minneapolis 87.50
Montreal, Que. 144.42
New Orleans 85.15
New York City 147.40
Omaha 72.00
Philadelphia 144.92
Pittsburg 119.76
St. Louis 81.80
AND MANY OTHER DESTINATIONS
Visit the Folks Back Home
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