YoreAnaheim the Anaheim newspaper archive
Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1925 April

oc-plain-dealer 1925-04-09

1925-04-09 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 4 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
Scanned page
Scan of oc-plain-dealer 1925-04-09 page 4
Searchable text
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 50c Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Calif., as second class matter DAILY GREETING TO OUR READERS Be gladly affectioned one to another with brotherly care; in some preferring one another; recompense no man evil for evil. Provide things honest in sight of all men. Do not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.—Romans 12.10, 17, 21. FAVORS INTENSIVE ADVERTISING W. J. Black, passenger traffic manager of the Santa Fe railroad points out that California must face the fact that Florida is in the field to contest our hitherto undisputed right to be called the recreation center of the nation, and he urges that all California cities, in their advertising, stress the point that this is the only all-year recreation state in the union, since this is a distinction of which Florida cannot boast. "California must watch her step," says Mr. Black, "and it is up to every organization, commercial and civic, to join with the railroads in fostering attractions for tourists and in advertising the advantages and possibilities of this state throughout the east. "Florida this year has attracted large travel and business and that state is setting in about where California began twenty-five years ago; but, mark my word, she is a competitor now, and the people down there are alive to the situation and are making large investments in hotels and increased facilities for every form of sport and amusement. "However, California is the only all-year round resort country on the globe and it is the business of the organizations to help keep the state properly and everlastingly before the people you wish to attract here." When it rains it is God's smile for California. The only thing the matter with wheat is—speculation. Prosperity that is actual, steady and sustained is far preferable to the bubblish kind that so quickly passes. ABE MARTIN POSTOFFICE Tell Binkley started for Winton C'day t' sea th' preside which don't sound altogether reasonable. Aunt Tildy Bea who owned th' only copper ap butter kettle in tthis town many years, passed away I'd gracefully as an investigation. PARAGRAPH (By Robert Quillen) Mixed type means "pl." a terra cotta complexion bearna hair. People are queer, and dod-beat's scorn for the may be genuine. And it may be that some tricts send men to Congress get rid of them. "I still have faith in him usually means: 'I hope to back my ten.'" So far, every perfect law by faultless men has been oded to the letter. California is blessed dom above other states. chips most of her prunes. for every form of sport and amusement. "However, California is the only all-year round resort country on the globe and it is the business of the organizations to help keep the state properly and everlastingly before the people you wish to attract here." When it rains it is God's smile for California. The only thing the matter with wheat—speculation. Prosperity that is actual, steady and sustained is far preferable to the bubblish kind that so quickly passes. Some of those who write enthralling romances are any thing but romantic in their own proper persons. Protect the forests! The dire effects of disastrous forest fires last year is seen in the destructive floods which come out of the arcs that were burned over in 1924. HEALTH AND DIET ADVICE By Dr. Frank McCoy Author of "THE FAST WAY TO HEALTH" UNCOOKED SALAD VEGETABLES—(Continued) No method has ever been discovered whereby the organic tisue building minerals can be separated from vegetable food and put in a bottle or into tablets, although many manufacturers put out remedies which they claim contain these blood building vitamins and organic salts. If a salad of the succulent, leafy vegetables is used each day by a person who has reached maturity, he will find he is getting enough of the raw vegetables to keep up the supply of minerals in the body, in addition to that which is found in smaller quantities in cooked food. The child's desire to eat raw vegetables seems to be a most natural one, and children should be encouraged to partake more plentifully of all uncooked foods than would be necessary for the adult. It is surprising how rapidly a child's health will improve after being placed on a diet containing plenty of salads and non-starchy vegetables, in place of the mushy, starchy food to which it has been accustomed. For the maintenance of perfect health, these raw vegetable foods are indispensable at all times, instead of being recommended only in such obscure diseases as rickets, beriberi, scrofula, etc., as is generally done. The following is a list of those raw salad vegetables which can usually be found on the market. You will observe that I do not include fruits in this list, as they must be considered apart from vegetables in their combinations with other foods. GOOD—Celery, spinach, asparagus, cucumber, parsley, small beets, small carrots, small parsnips, small turnips, lettuce, oyster plant, mallow, nasturtium leaves and fowers, endive, alligator pear, ripe olives. NOT SO GOOD—Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, cabbage, watercress, Swiss chard. NOT GOOD—Onions, garlic, leeks, chives, radishes, pickles. (To be continued.) Pioneer Shingles make safe roofs A safe roof must be more than fire resistant. It must also withstand the beating sun, extreme cold and heavy rains and winds. Flawless fire resistance is only a part of the function of Pioneer Yosemite Asphalt Shingles. Crushed stone, laid on asphalt, makes them 100% efficient. They prevent leakage that spoils plaster—eliminate seepage, that slowly warps and rots the very framework of the structure, and protect mansion and cottage alike. There is a specified type for every kind of roof and for re-roofing they go right over the old roof. Lumber, hardware and building material dealers sell them in red, green, blue black and golden brown. Pioneer Paper Co., Inc. Established 1869 Pioneer Manufactures A Complete Line of Roofing and Buildings Paper LOS ANGELES San Francisco Santa Pierdana Pioneer YOSEMITE ASPHALT SHINGLES Applied by Kelly Picneer Shingle Co. Owen Picneer Shingle Co. % Kelly Roofing Co. Phone Santa Ana 2141 110 W. 3rd St. Phone Santa Ana 107 SANTA ANA THE PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIF. TUBBY This Leaves Us In the Dark By WIN CHESTER RUN OVER TO MRS JONES AND BORROW SOME MATCHES - THE ELECTRIC LIGHTS ARE OFF AND ILL HAVE TO LIGHT THE GAS MRS JONES ONLY HAD TWO MATCHES LEFT AN SHE GAVE ME THEM BOTH BUT I LOST ONE WELL, HURRY AND GIVE ME THE OTHER SO I CAN MAKE A LIGHT I STRUCK IT T SEE IF I COULD FIND THE ONE I LOST SEPARATE MAN, 71 FROM WOMAN, 48 BRIEFS LONDON—The Hon. Desmond N. Ponsonby, 10 years old son BANDIT SON O HARNESS M SEPARATE MAN, 71, FROM WOMAN, 48 An age that has past can't successfully join in marriage a new generation with its different methods of living, Judge R. Y. Williams decided when he granted a divorce to George Koenig, 71, of La Habra, from his 48-year-old wife, Mrs. Luelia W. Koenig, who had instituted the proceedings with a separate maintenance suit. For when they were married two years ago, Mrs. Koenig brot two adult daughters and other relatives into the home to live. Koenig was shocked, he admitted, when tho he was accustomed to retiring at 9 p.m., one of the daughters entertained her suitor by playing jazz records at 11 o'clock and Koenig, a religious man, couldn't sleep. Likeewise, it was his custom, he added, to read the Bible at meal time. His chagrin became marked, he added, when he noticed the children snickering. "I just stopped reading right there," he told the court, "and called them down. I said 'Mo. tner this isn't right,' but she got angry. Yes, sir, one time she poured hot coffee down my neck." Koenig also said he protested when his wife insisted he make out a will naming her the beneficiary. He is deaf and uses a large trumpet to facilitate hearing. The young folks took advantage of him, he further testified, and made fun of him "behind his back." Tho he bought a 175-pound sack of sugar for the family when he became married, it disappeared in seven months, so the man, who made it apparent he had accumulated considerable property by frugal living, started keeping an account of everything that was purchased, he told the court, exhibiting the diary. Under terms of the court decision Koenig is to keep his property and Mrs. Koenig hers. BRIEFS LONDON—The Hon. Desmond N. Ponsonby, 10 years old son of Lord Bessboro, died instantly as the result of a fractured skull sustained when his pony bolted and threw him in Stansted Park, Emsworth. PARIS—Lady Sholto Douglass heiress to $40,000,000 left by George Dorpeaal, a Dutch merchant prince, has announced her engagement to Prince Burhanedin, son of the former Sultan of Turkey, Abdul "the damed" Lady Douglass divorced the nephew of the Marguls of Queensbury last October. ROME—Premier Mussolini received in audience Thomas V. Lamont, Amreican financier. SACRAMENTO — The Saylor bill, carrying an appropriation of $25,000 for the construction of fire trails and lookout stations in Alameda and Contra Costa counties, was passed by the assembly today. Only three votes were cast against the measure. NEW YORK — Published reports of the engagement of Lillian Gish, motion picture actress, whose financial and heart affairs recently received an airing in the courts, to George Gene Nathan, dramatic critic, were scoffed at by both of the principal[s] today. BANDIT SON OF HARNESS MEN NEW YORK, April lives working quietly to past of Gerald Chapman, er-bandit now under control murder at Hartford, C. identified him as Georgeson of an Irish harness. Cahpman gave that man convicted in 1907 of ceny in the first degree. Later he was sent to where he served a three year term. George Chartress, al-Chapman, lived with an Catherine Connors, afterther mother died in youth. A brother andwere tak care of by thiGorge ad his younger headstrong and inclined trouble, detectives learn. The sister, who as a gtenesely nervous, also has from the good graces of and her present where unknown. The brother started mechanic, buteducated h is now a teacher in a L.N.Y., school. He is ma little money that the au now 75, has saved, will to the good brother upon George the black shee mentioned during family tions and the sister also out of their life. Page School Aims To Solve Causes Of World Discord Says Johns Hopkins It is the organic iron in your blood that takes up oxygen from your lungs. This oxygenated organic iron unifies with your digested food as it dissolves into water and blood, unites with coal or wood, and by doing it creates tremendous power of energy. Without sufficient organic iron in your blood your food merely passes through your body without being any good. People like the iron in your blood and the iron in phyllis and apples may be bad from drugrist under the name of oxidized iron." In tablet form only, millions of people are using Nuzated iron with great benefit, their experience proving that it increases the strength and endurance of weak nerves and deep veins in many cases, two weeks' time. MARRIAGE LICENSE A marriage license was issued at Santa Ana yesterday to Kennith Kneesche, 22, Long Beach, and Marion Mozler, 18, Placentia. ATLANTA, Ga.—On petition of five creditors, W. F. Brandt today awa appointed receiver for the "Knights of the Flaming Sword," a fraternal order organized by Col. William Joseph Simmons, shortly after he relinquished control of the Ku Klux Klan. EL CENTRO—Parker Singh, Hindu lettuce grower, who killed Victor B. Sterling and John B. Hager at Calipatria last week will be tried for murder here on June 1. Countrywide interest has been manifested in the Walter Hines Page School of International Relations which it is proposed to establish at the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, sometime before the opening of the school year next fall. Dr. Frank J. Goodnow, president of Johns Hopkins, has outlined the character and scope of the proposed institution, for which $1,000,000 is now being sought to establish an initial endowment fund. The Page School, Dr. Goodnow says, is designed to search scientifically the underlying causes which determine the public policies of States, rather than to merely study technical rules of diplomatic intercourse. "Until these causes are determined and set forth in a way that will command the confidence of governments and their people," says the university president, "natural policies will have to be adopted not only without an adequate knowledge as to their wisdom, but also without a comprehension as to their connection with or effect upon the policies of other States." The primary purpose of the school will be the training of investigators and teachers in this special field. "In order to emphasize vanced character of the students done in the School, those to the teaching staff cases be persons who are in their respective subject voted to research," Dr. explains. "The main embezzle be laid upon investigate stimulating the students in research and upon训训 in the methods to be enr that research is to be enr results." It is expected, the John head states, that not only school itself through pupils its findings make valuable buttons to existing knowl international relations, but trained body of investigators will be developed on the work after they School. "The School will not be School,' but its work willarily promote the cause With understanding will lease from the errors that unnecessary international ion and discord. As tha the Johns Hopkins Unclares, never nor liberal-will set you free." COMMENTS of the PRESS What Editors Are Saying WALTER CAMP'S PERSONALITY—New York Times Walter Camp had a fine and engaging personality, but his fame came to him chiefly as one highly typical of his era. His span of life covered the rise and the final glorification of college athletics. This last he both shared and directed. As player, coach, writer, exemplar and champion of clean and honorable sporting contests, he made himself an enviable reputation. He had long stood first as an authority on the rules and strategy of football. With that game his name was earliest and longest associated, and no one contended more stoutly than he for the highest standards in the selection and conduct of college teams. In later years his interests, as is well known, broadened, and he became a sort of general athletic inspirer and oracle. Instead of training college undergraduates, he set about the physest culture of millions of men and women among his fellow countrymen. With that amazing inclination of Americans to be all doing the same thing at the same time, Walter Camp's simple home exercises, often with musical accompaniments and latterly with the aid of the radio, have been gone through daily with a kind of religious fervor by incredible numbers. That great benefits thereby resulted to many cannot be questioned. But it took a man of insight and even genius, thus to bring a whole nation, as it were, under his athletic regime. He lived in the Age of Athletics, and Walter Camp was its prophet. Providence is refuting the falschoods told about California's water supply. There is abundance of water for the year. 'Lightning Gas' You know, a lot of people that see some particular product well advertised, arrive at the conclusion that the product in question is no better than any other brand of said product, and in many instances, their conclusion is undoubtedly correct, but then again, hundreds of thousands of people do themselves a great injustice by using inferior quality goods when they could be BANDIT SON OF HARNESS MAKER NEW YORK, April 9—Detectives working quietly to trace the past of Gerald Chapman, the "super-bandit" now under conviction of murder at Hartford, Conn., have identified him as George Chartress, son of an Irish harness maker. Cahpman gave that name when convicted in 1907 of grand larceny in the first degree. Later he was sent to Sing Sing where he served a three and a half year term. George Chartress, alias Gerald Chapman, lived with an aunt, Miss Catherine Connors, after his father and mother died in his early youth. A brother and sister also were taken care of by ts hunt. Gorge ad his younger sister were headstrong and inclined to get into trouble, detectives learned. The sister, who as a girl was intensely nervous, also hasD dropped from the good graces of the family and her present whereabouts are unknown. The brother started life as a mechanic, but educated himself and is now a teacher in a Long Island N.Y., school. He is married. The little money that the aunt, who is now 75, has saved, will be given to the good brother upon her death. George the black sheep, is never mentioned during family conversations and the sister also has passed out of their life. You know, a lot of people that see some particular product well advertised, arrive at the conclusion that the product in question is no better than any other brand of said product, and in many instances, their conclusion is undoubtedly correct, but then again, hundreds of thousands of people do themselves a great injustice by using inferior quality goods when they could be using the best, if they heeded the advertisement they read. Heres the point we want to bring out. Did you ever have a headache and have you not been reading for years about Aspirin Tablets being a cure for headaches and never paid any attention to it until one day a friend insisted that you take a couple of tablets and in ten minutes your headache was gone and you just thought to yourself how foolish you were not to have tried Aspirin long before. And so it is with you and "LIGHTNING GAS" and while your motor may not have a headache today as sure as you continue to use fuel that promotes carbon trouble, sooner or later your Motor is going to be more or less sick. Do you know why your old bus does not develop the power it did when it was new? Nothing else but sticky valves and carbon trouble. Do you know why "$32 1-8" per cent of the gas you put in your tank goes out your exhaust without having ever fired? Nothing in the world but carbon in the gasoline you buy. Now what we want every reader of this piece of advice to do, is at your first opportunity, drive into a "JULIAN STATION" at the Orange county stations listed below, have your tank as close to empty as you can, and fill up on "LIGHTNING", because if there is another brand of gasoline in the world today in the class of "LIGHTNING" we don't know it, and the actual results you will get from only one trial, we know will sell you on it. We feel we can safely say to every motorist, that even at the advanced price of three cents a gallon, "LIGHTNING" will show you thirty-five per cent more value than the gasoline you are now using, even if that gas happens to be our own "DEFIANCE" which we are also marketing at the same price as all other standard gasolines. Remember that until April 14th you may fill up on "LIGHTNING" at 18 1-2 cents, but from then on, it will cost you three cents a gallon more, but we are not doubtful about your being satisfied to pay the advance after using "LIGHTNING". We feel we can safely say to every motorist, that even at the advanced price of three cents a gallon, "LIGHTNING" will show you thirty-five per cent more value than the gasoline you are now using, even if that gas happens to be our own "DEFIANCE" which we are also marketing at the same price as all other standard gasolines. Remember that until April 14th you may fill up on "LIGHTNING" at 18 1/2 cents, but from then on, it will cost you three cents a gallon more, but we are not doubtful about your being satisfied to pay the advance after using "LIGHTNING" just once. All we ask is to try it out, and if you are not converted, never drive into a "JULIAN STATION" again. "We'd say we're pretty sure of our stuff!" and the big kick is, "LIGHTNING" is a secret known to us alone, and should make "JULIAN PETE" quite a few million iron men. Julian Petroleum Corporation Julian Station No. 66 DEL GIORGIO & SONS Beighton Way and Whittaker Buena Park Julian Station No. 67 JACK GOLDEN Second and Grand Buena Park Julian Station No. 95 CRUZON & LUTHER 401 West Fifth St. Santa Ana Julian Station No. 98 J. A. HART & SON Hazel and Central Sta. La Habra Julian Station No. 98 J. D. KOPSHO 428 So. Los Angeles St. Anhelm Julian Station No. 54 ROY ROSEBROOK S.E. Cor. Garden Grove and Lincoln Anaheim Julian Station No. 53 E. B. McKENZIE Cecil Place, Newport Blvd. COSTA MESA