anaheim-daily-herald 1921-05-25
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Opinions By The People
Anaheim Daily Herald: I wish to take this opportunity to thank you for the support you gave the Baby Welfare Exhibit in the way of publicity. Without the help so freely extended us by the press of Anaheim and neighboring towns, the Baby Contest would not have attracted nearly the attention it did.
I would also like to extend on behalf of the committee, our thanks to the Chamber of Commerce and to Mr. Fraser in particular, under whose auspices the show was given; to the different merchants who loaned us furniture and music, to the doctors and nurses who so freely gave their time, to the exhibitors for their flame displays, and to the hostesses who were a great help in keeping the mothers interested while waiting their turn. With your help we hope to be able to make this feature an annual affair.
You're very truly,
H. D. NEWKIRK.
BUENA PARK NOTES
Mrs. C. E. Ritter entertained her hunt; Mrs. William Ashmore at a luncheon on Tuesday. The Rev. and Mrs. William Ashmore have been missionaries in China for a number of years and have been spending the winter with their son, Dr. Frank Ashmore of the Park. The table, on Tuesday, was set with cover and napkins brought from the Orient, and the enjoyable hour will linger long in the memory of all those present.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Martin announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Margaret, to Mr. James W. Naylor. The guests present were Mrs. Howard Haggarty, Mrs. John Robertson, Mrs. Frank Ashmore, Mrs. Arthur Byers, Mrs. Harrold Covey, Mrs. Albert Messerschmidt, The out of town guests were Mrs. Julia Cann, Stoneborough, Pa.; Mrs. Alice Stevenson, Pittsburg, Pa.; the Misses Hazel, Sadie and Leila Thrasher of Corona; Mrs. Marion Elliott and Miss Harriet Gould of Los Angeles.
Mr. and Mrs. Millo Mathews and son, Russell, have motored to the Schofield ranch on the Centralia
DEMOGRAPHY EXPOSED
WASHINGTON commotion has been democrats of the nation by the knowledge of the late W. formerly chairman democratic committees of the inside of convention and camp in the first nomination of Woodrow Wilson.
It is the under the sensational McCombs always limit of ingratitude President Wilson will be ventilated many hitherto sup more or less signcess of the Will be exposed for th
The book is to in book form and syndicates in serial stallments. Those the manuscript contains tellam McCombs to him by Woodroth that he must win name from the B Other chapters of conversation with fusal to undertake except the nomination.
In one of the co financing of Bernard Baruch and Wall street maga checks in blank the organization, Wilson, and the written in for whi McCombs is most clam of William ing the campaign office, and after government servls as an arch enemy ministration. Unpressed, those who students here ins further demoralize the Wilson demob McCombs, who from a broken heed ment he received
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ANAHEHM CALIF.
We could not love tree, Columbia, so well loved we not petroleum more.
ORANGE NEWS ITEMS
American Legion members will remember dead comrades with floral tributes on Memorial Day when the graves of soldiers of the world war in the local cemeteries will be decorated by the members of Orange Post 132.
Plans for assembling flowers at the Legion hall on Sunday, May 29, to be made into wreaths and bouquets have been perfected.
Committees will have charge of decorating the graves on the morning of Memorial Day.
Announcement was made for the Legion to occupy the new club room hall at its next meeting. Plans for furnishing these rooms are being developed by the executive committee.
The Legion has voted to invite the local post of the G. A. H. to use the new club rooms as a meeting place. The Legion Auxiliary was also extended the use of the new club room.
Miss Ida Mae Cadwell of Los Angeles and Mr. Roy Criddle of Santa Ana called Sunday afternoon at the Roy Barker home. They with the Barkers formed a motor party to Long Beach and were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. Criddle.
Los Angeles - Anaheim
Los Angeles-Anaheim
Passenger Service
Discontinued
—Owing to lack of patronage, it is found necessary
to discontinue the Los Angeles-Anaheim passenger
service operated by this company.
—Last car will leave terminals May 31st, and service
will be withdrawn on and after June 1st, 1921.
—For the convenience of our patrons in this district,
agencies will be maintained as in the past and our
representatives will be prepared to handle any and
all transportation matters—the sale of tickets,
checking baggage, etc., direct from here to local and
transcontinental points beyond Los Angeles.
Southern Pacific Lines
S. F. WILLARD, Agent
Phone 123 Anaheim, Calif.
DEMOGRATIC PARTY EXPOSED IN BOOK
WASHINGTON, May 25.—Unusual commotion has been caused among democrats of the Wilson administration by the knowledge that the slurs of the late William F. McCombs, formerly chairman of the national democratic committee, have completed arrangements for the publication of the inside of the democratic convention and campaign which resulted in the first nomination and election of Woodrow Wilson.
It is the understanding here that the sensational disclosures of what McCombs always regarded as the limit of ingratitude on the part of President Wilson and his advisers will be ventilated in great detail and many hitherto suppressed incidents of more or less significance in the success of the Wilson democracy will be exposed for the first time.
The book is to be published both in book form and also by newspaper syndicated in serial from many installments. Those who have seen the manuscript say that the opening chapter contains a facsimile of the telegram McCombs declares was sent to him by Woodrow Wilson, declaring that he must withdraw the latter's name from the Baltimore convention. Other chapters of the book detail his conversation with Bryan and his refusal to undertake any combination except the nomination of Wilson.
In one of the campaigns he details the financing of the campaign by Bernard Baruch and shows where the Wall street magnate signed many checks in blank for the expense of the organization, formed to put over Wilson, and the amounts were later written in for whatever was needed. McCombs is most bitter in his criticism of William Gibbs McAdoo during the campaign, during his term of office, and after his withdrawal from government service, and marks him as an archenemy in the Wilson administration. Unless the book is suppressed, those who are close political students here insist that it will still further demoralize the remnants of the Wilson democracy.
McCombs, who is said to have died from a broken heart, due to the treatment he received from the Wilson ad-
The Crittenden bill, known as the "Marshall Plan," investigation carrying $200,000 to bring back to the next session a definite plan for state wide irrigation and power development.
The Breed bill appropriating $450,000 for the Davis-Farm school.
The Powers' bill, providing for inspection of imported cold storage meat and protecting the local cattle men from competition with Australian frozen meat.
The George Lee bill, appropriating $10,000 for schools for migratory laborers.
The Rush bill, appropriating $50,000 for a live stock show in San Francisco.
The Rush bill, providing for sanitary inspection of slaughter houses.
The Stevens bill, regulating the sale of imported eggs, powdered egg and egg products.
The West bill, appropriating $10,000 to investigate the Davis farm school with the idea of recommendion to the suggested separation of Davis and Berkeley.
The Harris bills, clarifying laws relating to co-operative marketing associations and stabilizing their securities.
Rigdon's bill, appropriating $50,000 for lion, coyote and bob cat control.
Rigdon's bills against adulteration of seeds.
Sater's bills, appropriating $25,000 annually for county fairs.
Besides the above there were numerous recommendations and resolutions for cheaper freight rates and other remedial measures.
DAWSON, Yukon Territory.—The fur catch in the MacPherson district is reported to be exceptionally heavy this year. Marten has been very plentiful and the Indians are paid $45 a skin. Mink is worth $10, muskrat $2.50 and weasels $2.
FARM BUREAU IS NOW PLANNED
(Farm Bureau Bulletin)
Sentiment in Orange county in favor of a farm home department to the Farm Bureau is becoming very strong and the following incident will suggest one line of investigation for such a department.
A farm woman who was growing weary with the walking she was forced to do because of the inconvenient arrangement of her living-room, kitchen, cellar and other rooms, calling for her presence most of the time of every day, made an odd experiment. It was certainly a thoroughly up-to-date and scientific one. She wore for a length of time a pedometer which would give her an absolute record of the distance walked each day. The results were amazing. We should doubt them had we no proof.
This woman, doing ordinary housework on a farm walked twelve miles a day when she was doing only her average daily stunt of housework; on days when there were extras on hand, such as Thanksgiving, Christmas, or threshing, the pace climbed up to between 15 and 18 miles. Totaled up, she covered an average of 400 miles in a month and in five years—hold your breath!—circumscribed the globe right in her own home!
Farmers' wives of Orange county, take up the project and save your time and strength by improved household equipment and better system in your work. Get together in the home department and work out your own problems.
VANCOUVER, British Columbia.—A. M. Dollar, of the Canadian Robert Dollar Company, is now in England for the purpose of purchasing two more big freighters to add to the fleet the company already operates on the Pacific.
Observing the seventh day won't save the world unless it also obeys the first part of the command: "Six days shall thou labor."
Most people quit the vicinity of one who swears. Mule drivers take advantage of this trait to hurry the modest jar-heard on their way.
written in for whatever was needed.
McCombs is most bitter in his criticism of William Gibbs McAdoo during the campaign, during his term of office, and after his withdrawal from government service, and marks him as an archenemy in the Wilson administration. Unless the book is suppressed, those who are close political students here insist that it will still further demoralize the remnants of the Wilson democracy.
McCombs, who is said to have died from a broken heart, due to the treatment he received from the Wilson administration is said to have enjoined his sisters, to whom he left the manuscript, to secure the publication of his memoirs as a vindication of his memory and on no account to permit their suppression or abridgment.
The date for the publication, as now fixed, will be early in the summer, possibly before July 1.
TRIPLETS CAUSED GREAT EXCITEMENT
BERLIN.—(By Mail).—After discussing earnestly pro and con for several weeks, whether a woman could bear triplets—two in January and the third in March—the German scientific world awoke today to find it had been victimized. Instead of being confronted with a new scientific wonder, they had merely "fallen for" a false report of the statistics bureau, according to which a workman's wife, already mother of 10 children, had borne two children on January 18 and the third on March 9.
The statistics bureau was likewise an innocent victim of the woman. It now appears that the woman, in expectation of becoming a mother soon, had notified the bureau of the birth of twins. This false notice, made in January, was given apparently so she could obtain extra food and milk cards.
Then, in March, when her one child was actually borne, the mid-wife, in accordance with the law, notified the proper authorities. This one child, incorrectly regarded by the statistics bureau as a delayed triplet, was duly recorded in the records, whereafter this strange "phenomenon" became public.
Thereupon learned gynecologists wrote serious articles for the press about this new wonder. Some of them held it for entirely possible; others were a bit skeptical; but most of them agreed that it was possible—the more so since they had the word of the statistics bureau that such a thing had really happened.
FARMERS GRATIFIED OVER RECENT WORK
DAWSON, Yukon Territory.—The fur catch in the MacPherson district is reported to be exceptionally heavy this year. Marten has been very plentiful and the Indians are paid $45 a skin. Mink is worth $10, muskrat $2.50 and weasels $2.
Observing the seventh day won't save the world unless it also obeys the first part of the command: "Six days shalt thou labor."
Most people quit the vicinity of one who swears. Mule drivers take advantage of this trait to hurry the modest jar-heard on their way.
THE U.S. CHAIN TREAD
One of the few tires of which it may be said that they deliver economy year in and year out and tire after tire.
The U.S. Chain Tread gives sufficient traction on all ordinary road surfaces. It is probably the handsomest, and by all odds the most popular, of the whole U.S. Fabric Tire line.
Economy ride
If you could get together all the car owners you know, you'd probably find that their tire experiences had been much the same.
Most of them have taken their fling at "job lots" "discontinued lines" and
FARMERS GRATIFIED
OVER RECENT WORK
IN THE LEGISLATURE
SACRAMENTO, May 25. — California farmers are said to be well pleased with the 44th legislature.
Without trading and with no organized lobby the agricultural interests of the state were able to have passed over 40 farmer measures, among which are about a dozen of major importance.
The rural districts, however, have two big fights ahead. One is to take the Johnson hydro-electric bill to the people and the other to beat the Boggs' re-apportionment bill when it comes up at the special session in the fall. These two campaigns, those who claim to speak for the rural districts say, will be vigorously prosecuted.
Here are some of the more important bills passed by the legislature touching on the interests of the farmers:
The Jones' bill, fathered by the Federation of American Farmers, providing for grain grading, making it optional with buyer or seller to buy grain on a grade basis.
The Barnard bill supported by the Farm Bureau, licensing warehouse.
Economy ride
If you could get together all the car owners you know, you'd probably find that their tire experiences had been much the same.
Most of them have taken their fling at "job lots," "discontinued lines" and "surplus stocks." Soon or late, nearly all settled back on quality first as the one sound assurance of tire value.
As soon as a man forgets the cut-price tag, and comes to the dealer who concentrates on a full, completely sized stock of U. S. Tires—he learns what it means to get fresh, live tires—not once in a while but every time.
Not merely in the big cities, but in his own home town.
United States
Chas. H. Mann, 210 S. Los Angeles, Anaheim
McMahan Auto Co., 129 N. Lemon, Anaheim
Anaheim Auto Co., 128 S. Los Angeles, Anaheim
S. R. Walter, Anaheim Vul. Wks.
IT'S not a bit of trouble to have plenty of good things to eat on hand all the time, when you use Calumet Baking Powder.
Mix up a batch of biscuits—or the finest kind of cake—it's all the same. There is never but one result—the sweetest and most palatable of foods.
There is not as much worry over baking costs either. Because Calumet costs less—when you buy it—the price is moderate.
—the Kind Mother Uses
CALUMET BAKING POWDER
It costs you less when you use it—because you don't use as much of it—it has more than the ordinary leavening strength.
You get more out of the flour, sugar, eggs, shortening, etc., because there are no failures—no waste.
Received highest awards World's Pure Food Exposition, Chicago, Paris Exposition, Paris, France.
The largest selling brand in the world. Pound can of Calumet contains full 16 oz. Some baking powders come in 12 oz. instead of 16 oz. cans. Be sure you get a pound when you want it.
Calumet Doughnut Recipes
4 cups of pastry flour, 3 level teaspoons Calumet Baking Powder, ½ teaspoon of salt, 1 cup of sugar, 2 eggs, beaten together, 2 tablespoons of melted butter, 1 cup of milk.
Then mix in the regular way.
AUTO TOPS
Seat Covers, Plate Glass,
Quarter Curtains, Trimmings
EARL FARRIS
Phone 668 226 S. Los Angeles
AUTO TOPS
Seat Covers, Plate Glass,
Quarter Curtains, Trimmings
EARL FARRIS
Phone 668 226 S. Los Angeles
"In every section, however remote, you find a dealer in fresh, live U.S. Tires."
Any rides on U.S. Tires~
Not merely for the heavy car, but for the medium and light-weight car—a full selection of size, tread and type.
Your U.S. Tire dealer can give you this service because of the service be-
Many rides on U.S. tires—
Not merely for the heavy car, but for the medium and light-weight car—a full selection of size, tread and type.
Your U.S. Tire dealer can give you this service because of the service he gets from his neighboring U.S. Factory Branch. There are 92 of these Branches. Each gets its share of U.S. Tires, so that the dealer is always supplied with fresh, live stock.
U.S.Tiressell as fast as they are made.
There is no over production. No surplus piled up waiting for a "market."
Wherever you buy a U.S. Tire—you buy a tire of current production, as full of life and value as the day it left the makers.
United States Tires
States Rubber Company
Angeles, Anaheim
Lemon, Anaheim
Los Angeles, Anaheim
Anaheim Vul. Wks., 156 S. Los Angeles, Anaheim.
M. Anton, Anaheim
G.B. Daniels, Anaheim
Charles Treulieb, Cypress