anaheim-daily-herald 1921-06-10
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VOL. VIII.
TEN PAGES
Order From
J. F. DUNN
Representing
Wiley B. Allen ©
249 E. Center, Anaheim
Graduate Nurse
WANTED by State Graduate
Nurse any kind of cases.
Phone 1479R. SANTA ANA
Private Lessons N. W. Russell
10.a.m to 10 p.m. Manager
Modern Dance Studio
RUSSELL & BRASHEAR
Pressel's Hall, Anaheim
The most beautiful ball-room in the city.
Private and class instruction by expert teachers for ladies and gentlemen. Special attention to children in spring, toe and ballet dancing.
PAINTING APERING
ROY A. TAYLOR
All Work Guaranteed
210 N. Los Angeles St., Anaheim
BAY CITY LOOKING FOR A BIG MOVIE INDUSTRY SOON
SAN FRANCISCO, June 10.—San Francisco bids fair to get her share of the movie industry in this state, if the increasing numbers of companies coming here “on location” is any indication.
Announcements by a number of companies in Los Angeles recently that they are coming here to make large portions of their films gives San Francisco the hope that a number of the companies may eventually establish themselves here. Although San Francisco itself experiences more foggy days than does its unloved sister Los Angeles, it is pointed out that the climate in the Santa Clara valley is as much given to sunshine as Los Angeles, with the added feature of a great deal more vegetation in the hills and mountains. It is also claimed that a greater variety of natural scenes are afforded here.
The Famous Players-Lasky company is due to take pictures on the C. Frederick Kohl estate at Burlingame estate this week. Roy Stewart has made one picture in Martin county, and plans to make another. Geo. Medford, of the Lasky company, is expected here with a company this week. Allen Holubar has practically completed plans for his next feature, with Dorothy Phillips, which, he says, will be taken entirely in San Francisco and environs. The filming of a number of plays at the Pacific Studios
PAINTING APERING
ROY A. TAYLOR
All Work Guaranteed
210 N. Los Angeles St., Anaheim
—Phone 26—
COWS
Frequently die but if they are insured in the HARTFORD you recover full value. See BERGER
109 East Center St., ANAHEIM
Burglars
I will insure you against them and pay you for every article that is stolen.
See me at my office C. C. BERGER
109 E. Center Street or Phone No. 1
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Bessica F. Raiche, M.D.
Specializing OBSTETRICS And Diseases of Women
217-218 First National Bank Bldg.
Phones: Office 649J; Res. 647M.
Phone 80 Examination Free
DR. G. A. NETH
Chiropractic and Electric Treatments Licensed Drugless Practitioner
120 West Center Street, Anaheim, Cal
Office hours: 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Evenings, Mon., Wed., Fri., 7 to 8
—Phone 413—
A. C. FOY
ROBBER DISCARDED THE "SECOND BEST" OF TULARE MAN
TULARE, June 10.—R. L. Barker not only had his house burglarized by a burglar: He also had his feelings hurt. Barker got dressed up and went out for the evening. When he returned he took off his "Sunday go to meeting clothes, and decided to lay out his second best suit for work the next day. On looking around he found that the trousers to the "second best" had mysteriously disappeared. Further search revealed the fact that Mrs. Barker's watch and chain were missing, as well as a 50-cent piece which had been lying on the dresser.
The next morning Barker thought of some papers he had left in a trouser's pocket, and thinking that they might have fallen out while the thief was enroute, thus giving him a clue as to the direction, he began to lock around in the road. He found several of the papers scattered about and while looking for the rest of them he spied his trousers under a nearby culvert, where they had been hastily thrown away.
"They are good enough for me," said Barker, weilding a whiskbroom. "These must be very prosperous days in the burglary trade when a burglar will take a watch and 50-cent piece."
Phone 80 Examination Free
DR. G. A. NETH
Chiropractic and Electric Treatments
Licensed Drugless Practitioner
120 West Center Street, Anaheim, Cal
Office hours: 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Evenings, Mon., Wed., Fri., 7 to 8
—Phone 413—
A. C. FOY
DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC
Room 204 Fisher Bldg.,
133½ W. Center St., Anaheim, Cal.
DR. CHAS. S. O'TOOLE
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Hours 10 to 12; 2 to 5
Phones. Office 569; Res. 546
Rooms 206-207 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg.
Anaheim, California
JOHNSTON-WICKETT CLINIC
Clinic Bldg., Anaheim
Dr. H. A. Johnston
General Surgery
Dr. W. H. Wickett
General Surgery
Dr. J. A. Jackson
X-Ray and Radium
Dr. W. M. Cole
Internal Medicine
Dr. H. D. Newkirk
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Dr. R. D. Alkman, Assistant
Dr. H. van de Erve
Pathology
Dr. J. Robinson
Diseases of Children
Dr. A. H. Galvin
Orthoepedcis
J. S. Ward, Ph. G.
Pharmacy
It is understood that the 1920 crush of cotton seed will provide enough genuine olive oil to last the country three years.
"AVENGING SPIRIT"
IS RETURNED TO SCENARIO WRITER
SACRAMENTO, June 10.- "The Avenging Spirit" has left the office of Secretary of State Frank Jordan, and gone back home to Los Angeles.
"This is no place for 'Avenging Spirits'." Jordan wrote. His statement was somewhat in the nature of rejection slip, for the spirit in question was the name of a movie scenario which had been sent him by an enterprising author.
Hundreds of scenarios monthly have been sent to Jordan under the mistaken impression that Assemblyman Baker's "copyright" bill has gone into effect.
The measure which has been signed by the governor, does not go into effect until August. It protects the scenario writers from unscrupulous motion picture companies. Eventually there will be a "copyright bureau" attached to Jordan's office—"Eventually—but not now."
R. P. M.: Very technical; meaning "revolutions per minute." Gauges the power of a motor and the failing power of an empire.
NEW YORK,
auskies will have
keepsie June 2
the biggest noisy year.
If the California winning the row will make three greatest classics of the football championship and ship in a row wagon coast state some for a decade.
The coast was the feats on the home laughed at by the crowd about "trick water starters" and the formia team came handful of men and its own soll it met ordinary victory.
Wise followers of the California team chance for the tractor when they looked onanced team that was turned out just as well formia won, not three brilliance, but a consistent wirk of the world.
The California crew in the Poughkeepsie anything but an easy prestige of the coern waters.
The world's champion had most of its cockouts out by losing to Prilm
ANAHEIM DAILY HERALD
TEN PAGES
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1921
Many Industries Tied To Tobacco
By GARRET SMITH
"GOT a match?"
How many times a day is that question asked in these United States? How many more times is the question unnecessary because most pockets are kept well supplied with the useful little article? Anyhow, hasmuch as it is estimated that there are 30,480,609 tobacco users in the country, we would guess that the answer to that question would run into the hundreds of millions.
But the match business is only one of a dozen or more allied industries which derive large revenues directly or indirectly from the tobacco trade and would suffer heavily if national prohibition of tobacco cultivated the famous shade-grown tobacco of New England. Once high grade wrapper stock could be grown only in the West Indies. Then it was discovered that the same result could be obtained in this country by covering vast fields of the plant with canopies of thin sheeting which admit the necessary heat of the sun but modify its direct rays. There is used in New England for this purpose every year 30,000,000 yards of cotton cloth.
Then building contractors and impossible to estimate the amount spent every year along this line. The printing and paper blanks for the coupons is a big item. The other expenses involve big annual sums fog cutlery, silverware household utensils, soap, perfume and other toilet articles — everthing. In fact, from razor blades to grand pianos.
Speculation in these coupons may become a big business by itself. There are numerous regularly published coupons on
THIS IS GREAT YEAR FOR CALIFORNIA IN ATHLETICS
NEW YORK, June 10—Eight young muskies will have a chance in Poughkeepsie June 22 to make California the biggest noise of the collegiate year.
If the California crew succeeds in winning the rowing championship it will make three victories in the biggest classics of the season.
A football championship, a track race and can be counted upon to paddle a hard race.
Columbia perhaps will be the hardest to beat. The New York university has one of the best crews of the season. Cornell and Syracuse also can be conputed on for a good performance as they aare both being primed for that one race.
AH GO WAY TAKES KEY TO BACK DOOR
BERKELEY, Cal., June 10.—Ah Go Wry was in Chinese cook for a sorority house in Berkeley. Ah Go Wry was a good and a highly respected cook.
impossible to estimate the amount spent every year along this line. The printing and paper blanks for the coupons is a big item. The other expenses involve big annual sums fog cutlery, silverware, household utensils, soap, perfume and other toilet articles — everything, in fact, from razor blades to grand pianos.
Speculation in these coupons must become a big business by itself. There are numerous regularly established coupon exchanges whose proprietors have made big fortunes in a few years.
The prohibition of tobacco would also knock a good-sized hole in the receipts of the United States government. The internal revenue receipts from tobacco for the fiscal year 1920 amounted to $295,800,355.44. Customs duties provided an additional $25,000,000 in round figures, making the total revenue return to the government $520,000,000.
It is this interlocking of the tobacco business with so many other interests and the vast amount of financial loss that would be involved in the abolition of tobacco that is one of the most serious aspects of the proposal to prohibit the sale of tobacco, a proposal, however, which has little support by public sentiment if the newspaper editors of the country are correct in their estimate of that sentiment.
In a poll of the editors made recently by the Tobacco Merchants' Association of the United States, through the Press Service Company of New York City, 95 per cent of the 7,847 editors who replied expressed the opinion that the people of their communities were opposed to any law against tobacco. As these editors represent some 80,000,000 readers the results form a pretty general test of national opinion.
SATURDAY IS RICE DAY IN CALIFORNIA
California, Rice day is next Saturday, June 11. On that day housewives are asked to buy five pounds of rice and to feature rice on their menus.
The day is being promoted to increase the consumption of rice and to assist an industry which has grown from zero to a $20,000,000 business according to the Rice Association of California.
Governor Stephens has officially declared June 11 California Rice day.
"Rice is one of California's many wonders," say officials of the rice association. "It has been a great success."
NEW YORK, June 10—Eight young auskies will have a chance in Poughkeepsie June 22 to make California the biggest noise of the collegiate year.
If the California crew succeeds in winning the rowing championship it will make three victories in the biggest classics of the season.
A football championship, a track championship and a rowing championship in a row would give the Pacific coast state something to crow about for a decade.
California's victory over Ohio state football team, of course, was the cause of great jubilation on the coast, but the recent achievement in winning the track and field crown from the very best in the east, probably meant much more.
The coast was tired of having their feats on the home track and field laughed at by the east with snickers about "trick watches, pet judges, starters" and the like, so when California team came east with a bare handful of men and beat the east on its own soil it meant more than an ordinary victory.
Wise followers of athletics figured the California team as having a great chance for the track championships when they looked over the well balanced team that was being sent. It turned out just as was expected. California won, not through any individual brilliance, but through the consistent wirk of the whole team.
The California crew which is to row in the Poughkeepsie regatta will have anything but an easy time to uphold the prestige of the coast on the eastern waters.
The world's champion navy crew had most of its cockiness knocked out by losing to Princeton in an ear-
AH GO WAY TAKES KEY TO BACK DOOR
BERKELEY, Cal., June 10.—Ah Go Wry was in Chinese cook for a sorority house in Berkeley. Ah Go Way was a good and a highly respected cook, but he suddenly decided to live up to his name, and went away.
The sorority girls mourned the loss of a good cook and tried their own intelligent hands in the kitchen, without, rumor hath it, any great success. Then a few days later someone discovered that when Ah Go Way went away he took the back door key with him. The key had been attached to a heavy chair.
It looked queer to the girls, and by evening the incident had grown to large proportions. Hence taxis were hastily summoned and a few minutes later a bevy of beautiful girls dashed into the police station and asked Police Officer Henry C. Hoar to keep their jewels and valuables for them at the police station until morning.
They also asked him to see what he could do about the door. They had never thought anything, they said, of leaving the key always beside the back door while Ah Go Way was there. They didn't want anyone to lose the key so that a girl "queeing" late couldn't sneak in the back way. But when Ah took the manaced key—Ah was looked at in a different light. The officer went to the sorority and boarded up the back door. The girls heaved a sigh of relief, but still, they would feel better, they say, if Ah's name was "Ah Stay Away" instead of Ah Go Way. But Ah is apparently a good Chinaman, for he hasn't been seen around the place since, and nothing is missing.
MONTREAL, Quebec.—Gold prospects in northern Ontario surpass those of every known field on the North American continent, according to T. W. Gibson, deputy minister of mines for Ontario, addressing the twenty-third annual meeting of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy.
CALIFORNIA, Rice day is next Saturday, June 11. On that day housewives are asked to buy five pounds of rice and to feature rice on their menus.
The day is being promoted to create the consumption of rice and assist an industry which has grown from zero to a $20,000,000 business according to the Rice Association of California.
Governor Stephens has officially declared June 11 California Rice day.
"Rice is one of California's many wonders," says officials of the rice as sociation. "It has a wonderful food value — four times that of potatoes — as a cereal, a vegetable, a desert. It is wholesome, nutritious and economic."
TOP-WORKING WILL BE SHOWN GROWERS
(Farm Bureau Bulletin)
Farm Bureau field demonstrations will be given next week at Garden Grove and Yorba Linda to show how off-type or drone trees may be top-worked to good fruiting wood.
The selection of pedigree buds will be explained by a bud specialist.
At the request of a number of citrus growers, two more top-working demonstrations will be staged on Thursday, June 16th. C. S. Milliken of the Fruit Growers Supply Co., who has charge of the bud selection department, has been urged to make a return engagement. The best methods of budding will be explained and shown in actual practice.
Citrus men are especially invited to attend. The location of these meetings are: Thursday, June 16, 10 a.m. Allen brothers, Garden Grove, one mile north, and at 2 p.m. Murray Horne, Yorba Linda.
In the spring a young man's fancy sadly turns to thoughts of new tires for the fitney.
Men who do their own shaving will not be surprised by a trade journal's announcement that the razor business is dull.
Y HERALD
MEMBER
UNITED PRESS
NEWS SERVICE
JULY 10, 1921
NO. 175
Excelsior Creamery Co.
“Watch Us Grow”
We wish to announce to
the milk consumers of Anaheim that we carry the
largest and most up-to-date
line of dairy products in
Orange county.
Phone Us Your Order
Phone
177 Anaheim 177
Phone Us Your Order
Phone
177 Anaheim 177
Bathing
Caps—
25c
and upwards
HEYING'S PHARMACY
"ON THE CORNER"
Anaheim California
"It Pleases Us To Please You"
WHEN THE DESSERT IS
REACHED
at the end of a dinner here, the diners always have that feeling of complete satisfaction that comes with a perfect meal, flawless service and attractive appointments. If you haven't yet taken dinner here you have much to learn about the pleasures of the
WHEN THE DESSERT IS REACHED
at the end of a dinner here, the diners always have that feeling of complete satisfaction that comes with a perfect meal, flawless service and attractive appointments. If you haven't yet taken dinner here you have much to learn about the pleasures of the table.
J.C. HOFFMAN PROP. PHONE 415
NEW-ANAHEIM-BAKERY
136 N. LOS ANGELES ST. & RESTAURANT
THE FINEST PASTRIES & BAKERY GOODS IN THE CITY
—If you are anticipating a home of your own, you will want lighting fixtures to add to the decorations. If you are building a home to rent you will want fixtures, good, but more simple. Perhaps we could help you on your selections Come in, we might make you a price where you can afford to build.
Holland Electric Co.
119 No. Los Angeles St., Phone 402 Anaheim, Cal.
There Is no Better Investment Than A Ranch in the Vicinity of Anaheim