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Publications Anaheim Daily Herald 1921 June

anaheim-daily-herald 1921-06-22

1921-06-22 · Anaheim Daily Herald · page 3 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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Dr Scholl's Foot Comfort Week June 18 to 25 Come to this store and learn all about it. Think what it will mean to you to be free from corns, callouses, bunions, tired aching feet, weak arches or flat foot tendencies. Comfortable, healthy feet are well worth having—worth taking care of. Neglect now may cause you no end of misery in the years to come. Make it a point to call at our store any time. We carry a complete line of Dr Scholl's Foot Comfort Appliances Our Foot Comfort Department is in charge of a Graduate Practicedist, a Foot Expert who knows feet as well as shoes. He is trained in Dr. Scholl's Method of Foot Correction and can relieve you of all bothersome foot troubles. Let Our Foot Expert Advise You Thousands and thousands of people suffer torture from their feet because they don't realize the cause and how quickly and easily complete relief can be had. Come in and talk over your foot troubles with our Foot Expert. This service is free—no obligation. Examination and Advice Free. Not Necessary to Remove Stockings. As a Special Feature We Are Offering Women’s Comfort Shoes Both in oxfords, 1 straps and high shoes—rubber Examination and Advice Free. Not Necessary to Remove Stockings. As a Special Feature We Are Offering Women’s Comfort Shoes —Both in oxford, 1 straps and high shoes—rubber heels, values to $7.50 Reduced to $385 The S. Q. R. Store “Home of Queen Quality Shoes” Willys Knight Sedan OVERLAND Touring ...$ 853.00 Roadster ...$ 853.00 Coupe ...$1195.00 Sedan ...$1475.00 WILLYS-KNIGHT Touring ...$2145.00 Roadster ...$2145.00 Coupe ...$2850.00 Sedan ...$3050.00 A. H. SITTON NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY DISTRIBUTOR Phone 73 J Fullerton Highest CASH Paid for A. H. SITTON NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY DISTRIBUTOR Phone 73 J Fullerton Highest CASH Paid for Valencia Oranges Immediate Shipment Pepper & Miller Packing House, Olive, Calif. Phone 161W Orange Evenings call Bert Leihy, 303 Orange; A. J. Miller, 260J, Santa Ana —Your satisfaction is our success; that is our motto. We can repair anything that looks like a body, fender or a radiator. Remember we guarantee our work. ANAHEIM AUTO SHEET METAL WORKS S. A. BEISERT, Prop. FENDERS LAMPS TANKS 307 E. Center St., Anaheim Boy Scouts Meet FRANK SACKETT, Editor. The Boy Scouts of Troop One Anaheim held their weekly meeting last night at the Fremont School building. The meeting was in charge of Scout Bill Reed and his assistant, Granville Waters, and many interesting things took place during the evening. Scout Jack Mattis, Jim Fitzgibbons and Billy Utter gave a very good demonstration in First-Aid. And Scouts John Shay, Earl Dahlman and Frank Sackett gave short talks on the betterment of the troop. Scout Executive Elmer Heldt was present and nine scouts passed their second class test. Those passing the test were Scouts Elmer Clabough, Frank Sackett, William Seltz, Granville Waters, Bill Reed, Jack Mattis, Billy Utter, Jim Fitzgibbons and Harold Mann. These second class scouts are going on a three day hike in the very near future. A Troop orchestra is being organized and we will have every instrument from a drum to a saxaphone. Mr. Lewis, the man who has charge of the scout equipment in Anaheim was present and being on our troop committee he was asked to make a speech and won great applause from the scouts. THREE MEN HELD ON SUSPICION DRIVING WHILE INTOXICATED Earl Bybee, Harry Williams and L. E. Webster, all of Ontario were arrested at Orange Tuesday by Constable Holt on suspicion of transporting liquor and of driving an automobile while intoxicated. The three men were in a truck on which had been loaded the fixtures of a restaurant which Bybee was intending to open in Huntington Beach. A five gallon jug of wine, which the trio had in the truck became broken, according to Constable Holt, and its contents were scattered in the REHEARING GRANTED IN RATE MATTER BY COMMISSION Rehearing of the petition of citrus growers of California for lower freight rates was scheduled before the interstate commerce commission in the near future, the hearing probably to be heard in Los Angeles. The date will be announced later. The commission has ordered the case of the growers reopened, which will give them another opportunity to present facts showing that the general incase in rates is unjust. The growers maintain that the rate is arbitrary and against the interests of shippers of perishable commodities. A conference of fruit men with railway managers arranged for July 1 is believed to have had its influence in the decision of the commission to re-open the case. A former petition for a rehearing recently was denied by the commission. It is understood that the conference will be held regardless of the action of the national rate adjusting body. G. Harold Powell, general manager of the California Fruit Growers' exchange, following the receipt of notice that the rate case had been reopened, stated that shippers desire to test before the commission the reasonability of the present rates on the merit of the rates themselves, rather than accept any reduction the railroads may voluntarily offer. The directors of the citrus league recently refused to accept a reduced rate offered by the railroads on condition that the shippers boycott water transportation. The cut offered was the equivalent of 10 per cent of $1.92, the present rate on oranges and the same per cent of $1.66½, the present rate on lemons, with minimum carloads on oranges of 36,000 pounds and 34,000 pounds on lemons. The present water rates are 80 cents on oranges and 72 cents on lemons. NOTED MAN DEAD. Captain Frank L. Fernald, builder of the famous battleship Maine, which was destroyed in the harbor of Havana in 1898 and precipitated the war with Spain, and who during the past year was a resentful Orange died in Chicago March 30th. arrested at Orange Tuesday by Constable Holt on suspicion of transporting liquor and of driving an automobile while intoxicated. The three men were in a truck on which had been loaded the fixtures of a restaurant which Hybee was intending to open in Huntington Beach. A five gallon jug of wine, which the trio had in the truck became broken, according to Constable Holt, and its contents were scattered in the street. A fourth member of the party is said to have driven off with the truck before the arrest was made. It is thought that he went on to Huntington Beach. EASTERNERS COME MAKE ANAHEIM HOME Dr. and Mrs. Shipman and Master William, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Clairmont of Worcester, Mass., arrived Sunday afternoon at the Valencia and are guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Hamilton, of North Palm St. and Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton of the Valencia Hotel. They made the trip in six weeks stopping in several places to visit. They came by way of Salt Lake, Arrowhead Trail, and Bristow on the Lincoln Highway. The only trouble they had with their cars was one puncture. Roads are very good they say and a wonderful trip was enjoyed. They expect to make their home in Anaheim. SHIPMENTS CITRUS FRUITS EXCEEDS PAST TWO YEARS Orange shipments from California for the citrus year starting November 1, 1920, at this time are in excess of the record to this date in 1918, 1915 and 1920, and lemon shipments are less those of 1920 by nearly half, 123 carloads less than in 1919 and nearly double those of 1918, according to figures announced today by George Shattuck, manager of the Golden West Citrus association at Tustin. According to the figures given out by him, orange shipments for this ber 1, 1920, at this time are in excess of the record to this date in 1918, 1915 and 1920, and leach shipments are less those of 1920 by nearly half, 123 carloads less than in 1919 and nearly double those of 1918, according to figures announced today by George Shattuck, manager of the Golden West Citrus association at Tustin. According to the figures given out by him, orange salpiments for this season to date total 34,741 cars, as against 14,100 to this date in 1918, 29,947 in 1919 and 27,891 in 1920. The shipments include navels and valencias, the latter going into market about May 1. The number of carloads of lemons shipped this year to date does not compare so favorably with records for 1920 and 1919, but the market situation is better so far as competition with foreign grown lemons is concerned. Where the California shippers today face competition of only 58,000 boxes of foreign lemons, this date in 1919 there were 202,400 boxes of for-boxes in 1919, 237,850 boxes in 1918, f182,400 boxes in 1917, 147,900 boxes in 1916 and 241,700 boxes in 1915. Shipments of lemons from California to date total 7076 cars while the total to this date in 1920 was 1507, in 1919 it was 7189 and in 1918 it was 3888 cars. Prices on lemons for the past few weeks have been very satisfactory and will make it possible for the growers to receive an average return that will encourage them in the industry. Hundreds of boxes of lemons were dumped in creek beds during the early part of the fruit year, when there was no demand for the fruit and it could not be sold at any price. Bill got the point too quickly BILL PROBABLY read up. IN THE KID'S SCHOOL-BOOK. ANYHOW HE GAVE ME ALL. THE LATEST NEWS ON BEES. HOW THEY FIT AROUND. AVOIDING THE SKUNK Cabbage. AND ONLY PICKING ON. THE QUALITY FLOWERS. WHERE THE NECTAR Grows. BRING HOME THE BACON. TURN IT INTO HONEY. AND SEAL IT UP WITH WAX. TO PRESERVE IT FOR. A LIGHT SNACK LATER ON. AND BILL SAYS. "AIN'T NATURE Wonderful." AND I SAY, "Yeh." BUT JUST BUZZ IN. TO GRAB SOME HONEY. FROM THE BEES, AND SEE. WHAT HAPPENS." Bill admits. BEES HAVE THEIR MAIN POINTS. SO THEN I PULL. THE GOOD OLD PACKAGE. WITH THE FOUR-PLY WRAPER. INCLUDING GLASSINE PAPER. ALMOST LIKE BEESWAX. THAT SEALS IN THE FLAVOR. OF THOSE WONDERFUL TOBACCOS. AND BILL helps himself. FREELY AND SAYS, "Quite So." NOBODY EVER GETS STung. ON "SATISFY" cigarettes." OPEN your Chesterfield package at the top only. Don't tear off that glassine wrapper. It's put there to keep those wonderful tobacco always firm and fresh, in exactly the right condition for smoking. Another reason why Chesterfields always satisfy. Satisfy Chesterfield CIGARETTES LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co. Which one of your neighbors gets the best mileage out of his tires? EVERY once in a while you hear a motorist say as he kicks a rear tire with an admiring foot, "there's a lucky tire!" Give him a chance and he'll tell you all about it. And then you'll find that what he calls "luck" is simply his first experience with a quality standard tire. It all comes to this—buy a U. S. Tire anywhere in this country and you get definite, predictable value for your money no matter what weight car you drive. The man who has been guessing his way through "overstocks," "discontinued lines," "job lots" and the like, will find it refreshing to talk with the local U. S. Tire dealer who is concentrating on a full com- It all comes to this—buy a U.S. Tire anywhere in this country and you get definite, predictable value for your money no matter what weight car you drive. The man who has been guessing his way through "overstocks," "discontinued lines," "job lots" and the like, will find it refreshing to talk with the local U.S. Tire dealer who is concentrating on a full, completely sized line of U.S. Tires. For the first time he will hear some straight quality tire facts—and get the difference between chance and certainty in tire buying. The U.S. Tires he sees in stock are fresh, live tires. They come direct to the dealer from his neighboring Factory Branch. There are 92 of these Branches established and maintained by the U.S. Tire makers. Giving your dealer a continuous moving stock of new, fresh tires built on the certainty of quality first every time United States Tires Rubber Company Lemon, Anaheim Los Angeles, Anaheim Angeles, Anaheim Anaheim Vul. Wks., 156 S. Los Angeles, Anaheim. G. B. Daniels, Anaheim Charles Treulieb, Cypress M. Anton, Anaheim