anaheim-daily-herald 1921-11-07
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EYER AND KETCHELL
FIGHT FOUR FAST
ROUNDS TO DRAW
By BILLY DARNLEY
Johnny Meyer, the fighting fireman
from Glendale, and Young Stanley
Michell of Montana battled their way
through four rounds of milling that
dered on the sensational at last
day's weekly fistic doings at the
Arks Fistic Farm. Both boys put
a tough, hard battle to a draw,
Michell probably had the shade in the
last three rounds, at least he scored
ceasedly with his peculiar shift with
hits and lefts to Meyer's body. But
the fourth the Glendale boy had the
Montana lad missing like a gate post
was scoring consistently with a
short, snappy left that worried Ketchell continually. While both boys fought hard and fast and landed some telling blows, there was too much cleverness displayed on both sides to put over the old-time honored K. O.
Big Jack Iman came through with another K. O., the second one in two nights, when he put Earl Little down and out in the second round by a terrific right jolt square on the jaw. The Arizona scrapper was out for fully ten minutes and the first thing he said on coming to was, "How many were killed in the crash?" The bell saved Little in the first round when Iman floored him by a blow under the heart. Little showed great gameness in coming back for that second round and made Jack hustle to put over the crusher.
The star bout of the night was the fracas between Joe Chaney, the Whitier flash, and Albert Leo of Anaheim. Joe started in by making a monkey
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Kustiner's
ANAHEIM
Filling Station For Sale
Now Netting $600 a Month
Will sell it together with a 3 year lease for $2,500 and invoice of accessories; or will sell for $2,500 and most of the accessories.
ADDRESS: X. Y. Z., ANAHEIM HERALD OFFICE
Watch Watch Watch
For Next Saturday’s Special
At Heying’s Pharmacy
The following popular sellers will be offered for Saturday:
Woodbury’s Soap, reg. 25c, Saturday
Djer-Kiss Powder, reg. 60c, Saturday
Phenolax wafers, reg. 30c, Saturday
Ponds Creams, reg. 25c and 65c, Saturday
Listerine Tooth Paste, reg. 50c, Saturday
Rubbing Alcohol, new permanent price, pint
All Chewing Gum, reg. 5c, Saturday
Thermos Kits, Fibroid, complete, reg. $3.25, Saturday
Thermos Lunch Kit, metal complete
Woodbury's Soap, reg. 25c, Saturday
Djer-Kiss Powder, reg. 60c, Saturday
Phenolax wafers, reg. 30c, Saturday
Ponds Creams, reg. 25c and 65c, Saturday 24c and
Listerine Tooth Paste, reg. 50c, Saturday
Rubbing Alcohol, new permanent price, pint
All Chewing Gum, reg. 5c, Saturday 3 for
Thermos Kits, Fibroid, complete, reg. $3.25, Saturday
Thermos Lunch Kit, metal, complete, reg. $3.50, Saturday
"Our Own" Cold Tablets, reg. 25c, Saturday 2 for
"Our Own" Cascara Health Tablets, Laxative, reg. 25c, Saturday, 2 for
Nyal Huskies, very best cough relief, reg. 25c, Saturday
Highland Linen Stationery, per box
Voile Linen Finish Envelopes, 5 in. heavy weight, reg. 15c, Saturday
Angelus Linen Tablets, unruled, reg. 15c, Saturday
Hair Nets, cap or fringe, single mesh, Saturday 3 for
Hair Nets, cap, double mesh, Saturday 2 for
—TOBACCO SPECIALS—
All 20c Cigarettes, per carton $
All 15c Cigarettes, per carton $
All 17c Tins Tobacco, each $
All 10c Cigars [50s], per box $
[Revenue Tax Extra]
A fair sized Velour Powder Puff Free with any 25c Talcum.
Cut this "Ad" from the paper and pin it to your Saturday's shopping
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Ketch-boy boys some mucaples to O. with two down a ter. The fully he out of Leo in the first round but Leo evidently didn't relish the idea so in the second round he started after the lad with the poet's name and with an avalanche of rights and lefts soon had the Whittier boy "punched drunk." It was short lived, however, and in the third round Caaney came back to life and once again started into making a monkey out of the local boy which he accomplished to his heart's content. In the fourth round he made Leo look foolish by his cleverness.
Another good brawl was the Clarence Rubidoux and Young Burton go. Ruby looked a sure winner in the first and second rounds when he connected repeatedly with a straight left and shot over a right cross for good measure. But in the third the scrappy little darky slipped over a snappy right hander that put the Riverside mixer on the canvas for nine counts. From then on the tide of battle turned in favor of the "Son of Ham" and he was rewarded at the call of time by being handed the palm of victory to the cheers of the crowd.
Young Frankie, a youthful citizen of Placentia, upheld the dignity of that village by trouncing Paul Darden of Huntington Beach. Both lads scored knockouts and put up a rattling good bout that was out of the ordinary for a curtain raiser.
ARMAMENT CONFERENCE FORMS BASIS FOR SUNDAY SERMON
Dr. J. A. Geissinger spoke fast evening at the White Temple upon "Tae Will to Hate, and the Will to Love," taking for his text Mark 12:31: "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself."
His sermon was a plea for good-will between nations and for international co-operation. He said that co-operation is on the increase. "We have moved from the family to the clan, from the clan to the nation, from the single nation to the alliance of nations. We need to go now to a federation of the world. And we can do that only by willing to do it. Limitation of armament is but trimming the claws of the war-beast. I am in favor of doing that. But I am also in favor of killing the beast outright. War is to the national government goes to pay for wars, past and future and for the upkeep of the war-machine, while but 1 per cent goes to education.
"But this is not all that alarms us. Science and invention have made war too hideous to think about. Chemists tell us that a poison gas has been invented that can wipe out a city like New York in a few moments and make it unliveable, in spite of any known means of defense or prevention. While financial methods have been devised by which a war of almost any magnitude can be financed, mortgaging the future for generations. A few men at the center can lay monstrous plans for the exploitation of the earth in the interest or national greed and mobilize every man, woman and child in the nation.
"The disarmament conference faces many hard problems. The whole world center has shifted to the Pacific basin. Japan comes out boldly and says she needs more natural resources, even though that may mean taking over territory that does not belong to her. The United States has gone in for an imperial policy that calls for stations, stepping stones, right up to the front door of Japan. Europe is prostrate. A new way of living together must be worked out.
"But back of all other questions is the one that has to do with our own spirits. It is the question of the will to power, the will-to possess. Back of all questions of war is selffightness. That must be eradicated if the world's to be made warless.
"Some people cry out 'Why doesn't God stop war.' The answer is 'God can't stop war.' Man is a free will. The Scriptures make the matter of God's relation to war very clear. As the text puts it: "God's will is that we should love our neighbor as ourselves. And the Scriptures go farther and show that man can frustrate God at every step. Behold I stand at the door and knock, if any man will open unto Me I will come in and sup with him.' God is blocked at the threshold of man's will. All that God can do is to make man suffer if he will go to war and God has surely done that. His disapproval is written in blood. War is a matter of man's will and the first thing that we must do is to get rid of the will to war."
His sermon was a plea for good-will between nations and for international co-operation. He said that co-operation is on the increase. "We have moved from the family to the clan, from the clan to the nation, from the single nation to the alliance of nations. We need to go now to a federation of the world. And we can do that only by willing to do it. Limitation of armament is but trimming the claws of the war-beast. I am in favor of doing that. But I am also in favor of killing the beast outright. War is not necessary. We can get rid of it," he said.
"Today is being observed as a day of prayer by twenty-six nations that their representatives may find a way to make ours a warless world," he continued. "That is really the ultimate purpose of the disarmament conference, though President Harding has warned us not to expect too much. The conference which meets in Washington next Saturday has been called by the president of the United States, but back of that call was a public opinion demanding that something be done to relieve the world of war.
"That public opinion has been made by facts. The awful toll of war, for instance. We were told during the war that 10,000,000 youths had fallen on the battle field. We know now that the number was almost 20,000,000. And counting the decreasing birth rate and the increasing death rate it is estimated that the war has cost almost 90,000,000 human lives. As many people as live in continental United States."
"Then we have learned that 92 per cent of all the money we pay in taxes
"For several generations we have had it dinned into our heads that back of all things is a fundamental selfishness and that war is a profound necessity. That is the most monstrous lie the Devil has ever inspired scientists and publicists and philosophers to tell. It is not so. History has made it strikingly clear that self-interest is a disintegrating force. There is no cohesion in it. It breeds distruct and suspicion and fear and hatred and war and anarchy and chaos. Alexander worked on that principle and so did Caesar and so did Napoleon and so did the kaiser but there was not cohesiveness enough in their structures to hold them together. Their failures should warn us.
"Jesus Christ was born in a manger in an obscure village in the smallest province of the Roman Empire in the time of the second Caesar. He built his rule on good-will. He taught men that love is the greatest power in the world. That good-will is the cement of society. That selfishness leads to chaos. 'A new commandment I give unto you that you love one another.' He had no offices to offer. No material rewards. He had no coffers bursting with gold. He could offer only toll and hardship and a cross. But his dominion has spread from land to land. His pierced hands tonight wield a mightier scepter than any Caesar ever held.
"In 1855 David Christy wrote a book entitled 'Cotton is King.' He argued that the southern planters need cheap cotton and that meant slavery was necessary. So he said the New England manufacturers need cheap cotton and as almost every one in the United States was wearing cotton cloth slavery was fundamentally necessary and there was no use to be sentimental about freedom or the rights of black man or the moral low. God's answer to that voice from hell was the first fun fired for liberty in the Civil War. The event proved that Cotton was not King. Love is king. God-will is king.
"Selfishness cannot wreck God. It cannot wreck the universe. It can only destroy human lives and wreck the works of man's hands. And this selfishness can be eradicated. War can be done away with.
'Henry Van Dyke is said to be the finest interpreter of the poetry of product plus a fine profit. We price you on the same'
for Saturday only
19c
48c
23c
24c and 48c
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3 for 10c
ay $2.90
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$1.65
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15c
$4.50
ny 25c Talcum.
urday's shopping list.
nacy
sentimental about freedom or the rights of black man or the moral low.
God's answer to that voice from hell was the first fun fired for liberty in the Civil War. The event proved that Cotton was not King. Love is king. God-will is king.
"Selfishness cannot wreck God. It cannot wreck the universe. It can only destroy human lives and wreck the works of man's hands. And this selfishness can be eradicated. War can be done away with.
"Henry Van Dyke is said to be the finest interpreter of the poetry of Alfred Tennyson. He visited the poet just before his death and as he was about to leave Mr. Tennyson handed his friend a photo of himself. Dr. Van Dyke immediately handed it back to the poet and asked him to write across the back of it the lines by which he would like best to be remembered. The poet took up a pen and wrote:
"Love took up the harp of life and smote on all the chords with might.
Smote the chord of self that trembling passed in music out of sight."
Tennyson was right. He knew modern philosophy and he was deeply read in the material sciences. He was a firm believer in the philosophy of evolution. And sweeping his thought across the ages he saw that selfishness must be struck out of life. Love alone can save life. Hate cripples the heart that harbors it. We live only as we love and that is as true of nations as of individuals.
O. Christian men and women, do you not see how vital is the gospel of Christ. Unless men and women are Christianized there is no hope for this old world at all. Men must have Christ."
S. H. Bungay, formerly at the Liberty Garage in Anaheim, has opened a Liberty Garage in Placentia. He reports that business is excellent. The only drawback, he points out, is that all of his time must be spent in Placentia, which prevents him from seeing as much of Anaheim as he would like.
Monday, November 7, 1921.
You should pay less for your paint than Jones pays
JONES wants his house painted pearl gray. You want olive green or bungalow brown. It costs more to make pearl gray. Why then should you pay the same price as Jones—in other words help pay his painting cost?
Each kind and color of Certain-teed paint is priced according to the cost of making that particular product plus a fair and uniform profit. We price these goods to you on the same basis.
Certain-teed paints and varnishes are highest quality—made only from the best ingredients—carefully ground and mixed under a formula which is printed on every label. There are no secret ingredients in Certain-teed. The Certain-teed policy means lower prices for everyone—each customer pays for what he gets—and it's always the best. We have the right Certain-teed Paint or Varnish for everything inside and outside your house. See us before you buy any paint.
GEORGE B. PECK
GEORGE B. PECK
202 West Center Street, ANAHEIM, CAL.
Certain-teed
ARNISH • ROOFING • LINOLEUM • OIL CLOTH & RELATED PRODUCTS
Armistice Day
Decorations
Friday, November 11
Doll the old car up and put her in the Santa Ana Parade.
You'll want Gates Flowers and Greens at the following Special Prices:
CHRYSANTHEMUMS
White Pompons, $5.00 per 100 Sprays.
Pink Pompons, $6.00 per 100 Sprays.
Yellow Pompons, $7.00 per 100 Sprays.
Large Flowered Type, $1.50 per dozen.
Ten Foot Plumosus Strings, $9.00 per dozen.
Smillax Strings, $4.50 per dozen.
Pampas Plumes, $1.50 per dozen.
We can only promise to fill orders received by 6 p.m. Wednesday
Howard E. Gates
FLORIST
120 N. Los Angeles St.
The Six Men
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Valencia Hotel