anaheim-daily-herald 1921-12-13
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B.F. Spencer
166 West Center St.
Phone 27
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OBSERVATION
By
CHARLES KUCHEL
One often hears men say that if they had bought land here a decade ago and held it until now they would be on Easy street. This is perhaps true, because this section has made wonderful progress during the intervening period. But relatively the same conditions exist today, and, in truth it may be said that the opportunity to gain wealth here is far more tempting today than at any time during the past twenty years. This is in great part due to the fact that men of means from the east and middle west are being attracted to this famed section. These men are in the main wealthy and come here with a view of combining business with pleasure. These people are seeking new homes amid the fragrant perfume of the orang blossoms, while the salubrious climate (it is not to be denied) instills an added charm to the new home-seekers.
Many residents stand sponsor for the statement that the climate of this valley forms a 95 per cent asset of the section's manifold advantages. There is no doubt but that many people from the snow belts are migrating westward for no other reason than to escape the inclement climatic conditions that prevail beyond the Rocky mountains. These oncoming multitudes, it must follow, have caused, and will continue to create, a brisk demand for land holdings.
California, which ten years ago, ranked as the twelfth state in the union, as to population, now is rated as being the eighth from the numerical viewpoint. It is plainly to be seen that while thousands of people have come to the Pacific Coast in the past decade, these numbers will be augmented materially in the time to come through the favorable endorsement given the state by these happy and contented new Eastern folk.
Southern California has gained tremendously in population, the influx of people coming in middle western other reasons its vision of a see visability of own Or for that many range County, as is aptly termed Golden West.
It follows as would be wise for to secure homet city is certain mercial future, ly said, Southe tined to be the world and Anab sition to gather many people whi the state. Lyin between the most possibilities as limitless. Men are assured of their investment offers an inviting enterprises.
The idea of h lice force enterte a while, but tha To have ten or so men, toting gum tions might be g dency to imperil nocent bystander.
Speaking of the going round neighboring town ing on the curb tion, was accost fellow, who step "It looks like ra
The old resid other chew of t young man, and said he allowed "Who are you from," asked the found friend.
"Oh, I'm a to"
The Angelus Hotel Fourth and Spring Sts Los Angeles
European Plan "Just around the corner from everything"
In the heart of the Los Angeles business and shopping district and convenient to the theatre and Interurban Station. Reasonable Rates.
The Angeles Cafe is one of the most desirable places to dine in Los Angeles.
Los Angeles
European Plan
"Just around the corner from everything"
In the heart of the Los Angeles business and shopping district and convenient to the theatres and Interurban Station.
Reasonable Rates.
The Angeles Cafe is one of the most desirable places to dine in Los Angeles.
H. J. TREMAIN, President.
A. J. ARROLL, Manager.
IF YOU ARE GOING TO BUY A Tractor
Get our price and terms on THE "WALLACE"
Pease-Kolberg Co.
Orange Cal.
Phone 2J
J. D. GUY
General Building CONTRACTOR
All Kinds of Brick and Cement Work—Bungalows a Specialty
Plains and Satisfaction
Estimates My Furnished Motto
Phone 576 R.
Res. 900 E. Center, Anaheim
Exact Printing
Little Touches of Correctness
HAVE YOU ever considered the quality
Vaudeville Will Feature Bazaar at High
The Anaheim Union High School bazaar, heralded as the biggest in the history of the school, will be held in the cafeteria building Friday afternoon and night. The sale will begin at 1:30 o'clock and continue until 10:30. Everything to be sold at the bazaar has been made by students and members of the faculty.
One special feature of the bazaar is the vaudeville at 3:30 and 8:30. This production will be staged under the direction of Miss Lucile Bickley.
There will be sixteen shops in the cafeteria building. The largest one will be that of the science department. In the botany section, with Helen Jordan in charge, flowers will be sold. A soda fountain will be the main feature of the physics and general science section. James Tuma, in charge of the English department shop, will offer for sale football pillows, megaphones, pennants, and books of school yells and songs.
Novelty dolls, toys and Christmas trees will be found in the shop of the history department of which Margaret Briscoe will have charge. Louise Schmidt, directing the French shop, will offer perfumes and sachets for sale. She will also have charge of the "Sodolitas Hilara" booth, which will typify the goddess of grain, Ceres. Oatmeal cookies, marshmallows covered with chocolate, puffed rice and other grain products will be sold here. The Spanish booth, which is also in Miss Schmidt's section, will be in the nature of a cabaret and Spanish dishes such as tamales, will be sold.
Jazz whistles and horns, Christmas tree decorations will be found in which Cecil Fox Articles furnish will be sold by L. garet Dauser. will be found bed and candle stick ervising the foot home-made candies different kinds.
The sewing ship direction of Pau sets, linen hand and dresser scarf. The articles for made by the mschool sewing class supervise the amats, coat hang and shopping ba.
"Hot dogs," pebe sold at the box department. All these sales. Ye submit a large cards and orders other small print Henry Hodges wof this booth. A feature the exlematics depart will have charges.
Eleven big ac splitting comedy for the vaudevill high school drai holding rehearsal for several week teur actors are touches for their
Yearly Inventory Sho Be Mäde by Every
Farming is a business, and like other business men the farmer should know which way he is going financially. To drift along year after year not knowing whether he is going toward success or failure is not the practice of successful business men, and it should not be the practice of farmers.
listing can be book or on loose persons can do especially in bad places where man One person can pieces of proper in turn to be seen the other.
Exact Printing
Little Touches of Correctness
HAVE YOU ever considered the quality of your work from the standpoint of careful type composition and efficient proofreading? The reputation of this house for good printing has been established through accuracy and attention to the little details. Send your printing here and we will do it right.
Anaheim Daily Herald
Phone 540
JOB DEPARTMENT
The pile of stones still to be broken was a very large one, thought the stone-breaker as he gazed at it disconsolately between his bites at a large sandwich of bread and cheese. A minister came along and gave him a cheery "Good morning," remarking afterward that he had a deal of work to get through yet.
"Aye," said the eater, "them stones are like the ten commandments."
"Why so?" inquired the genial parson.
"You can go on breaking 'em," came the reply, "but you can't never get rid of 'em."
Wise is the woman with dark hair who does not make light of it.
Farming is a business, and like other business men the farmer should know which way he is going financially. To drift along year after year not knowing whether he is going toward success or failure is not the practice of successful business men, and it should not be the practice of farmers.
To gauge progress by an increase in cash in hand or to measure loss by additional debts incurred without taking into account decreases or increases in the value of all property owned, often leads to false conclusions. The storekeeper is well aware of this, and his annual "stock taking" is nothing more or less than the making of an inventory or list of property, without which he lacks accurate information concerning his profits and losses. Inventories are not difficult to make, and the United States department of agriculture has found that they are of great value to any farmer who is striving to better his condition. They overcome obstacles and place his business affairs on a secure basis.
Make Inventory When Convenient
There is no best time of the year to make an inventory for everybody and under all circumstances. Each one must decide for himself the date most convenient. In deciding, however, the most important consideration is to select a time of the year before the season's work in the field begins. It will save estimating large quantities of farm produce on hand if the inventory is taken as late in the spring as possible before field work begins.
Although any day will do, it is generally found best to select the first day of some month, and a fairly good guide in any section will be the date upon which tenants customarily change farms. The best inventory date may vary from January 1 in the cotton belt, to April 1 in New England and other northern states, and for special farms special dates are often required.
If no list of the farm property has ever been made, it is well to start preparations by going over the farm, field by field, and building by building, taking each item as it is found. In this way nothing is missed. The listing can be on book or on loose persons can do especially in bad places where man One person can pieces of property in turn to be sold the other. The praising can be if desired, by lying under each separate page most part they will in doors as the other into the property.
All property in the head of reserve may be subdivided tangible property tangible. The property must be praised. The fact a face value, wittions ordinarily needs no appraisal property may be following head other permanent stock, cattle, machinery and farm supplies, financial items in cash in bank, notes receivable meant debts own.
Don't Over
In no case shall—bills and accounts—be omitted for Liabilities are sources. When their valuations the work is fini valuations, adding each payment the total where they may ed to attain a abilities are sum manner. When itities is subtract resources the re present worth net valuation to property after ad for, or in other of capital investness at inventory.
EVATIONS
—By—
CHARLES KUCHEL
that if decade would perhaps make intersame truth it might to tempt the great men of the west and secmain a view measure, homes the oribrious instills home-
for of this set of tages, peoporating than to condiRocky multi caused, brisk ago, in the rated numerto be people just in years will timeole enthese Easterned treflux of
people coming in major part from the middle western states. For these and other reasons it does not require the vision of a seer to perceive the advisibility of owning real estate here. Or for that matter, anywhere in Orange County, as this prolific district is aptly termed the Gem of the Golden West.
It follows as a corollery that it would be wise for people already here to secure homes of their own. This city is certain of a substantial commercial future. As has been previously said, Southern California is destined to be the playground of the world and Anaheim surely is in a position to gather within her limits many people who are yearly coming to the state. Lying as it does midway between the mountains and the sea its possibilities as a thriving city are limitless. Men who buy acreage here are assured of the utmast safety for their investment, as this community offers an inviting field for legitimate enterprises.
The idea of having a volunteer police force entertained some people for a while, but that plan has passed on. To have ten or a dozen embryo police-men, toting guns (while their intentions might be good) may have a tendency to imperil the safety of the innocent bystander. Blowing bubbles.
Speaking of the weather, a story is going the rounds about a man in a neighboring town who, while standing on the curb at a street intersection, was accosted by a dapper young fellow, who stepped up and remarked: "It looks like rain."
The old resident, after taking another chew of tobacco, turned to the young man, and with a cynical smile, said he allowed it wouldn't rain.
"Who are you and where're you from," asked the old-timer of his new-found friend.
"Oh, I'm a tourist—fact is I've just been here three days," replied the ten-dfoot.
"Ha—Ha—I thought so," cluckled the old towneman." The only people here who know anything about the weather are tourists and d——n fools."
"Yep—I guess that's right, pal." replied the young man. "I'm a tourist."
A county officer was employed to smoke out a bootleger and turned in a bill for $105 for services rendered. The hooch hound was convicted and fined $100. Sending the boys to the mill.
During the past fifteen years not a single piece of property here has been sold to the state for delinquent taxes. While a very small per cent of taxes sometimes remain unpaid after the last Monday in November, these sums are paid in a short time thereafter. Looking pleasant.
Admiral Benson told at a dinner a story about an English general, "This general, like many others," he said, "had his line broken by the Germans, and was accordingly given a title and sent home. Well, after the general got home he built himself a very fine house in Sussex. He was showing an American over the house one day, and he said when the inspection finished: 'Yes, this place of mine is perfect—perfect. Only one thing is lacking, and that's a name. I can't think of a good name for it. Can you help me?' The American, thinking of the old gentleman's war record, chuckled and said: 'Why not call it "The Retreat"?'
Some men refuse to work because they are afraid that they might acquire the habit.
The death of Edward T. Marshall occurred at 9 o'clock Sunday night at his home in East Wilshire avenue. He had been ill since September and had grown steadily weaker in spite of all that could be done for him. He was born in Northampton. It years ago but lived since childhood, making his home for many years in South Dakota and living for a time in Oregon. His residence in Fullerton covered a period of about 18 montas. He is survived by his widow. Funeral services will be held in the McMahay church Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock under direction of Fullerton lodge of Odd Fellows, after which the body will be sent to The Dalles, Oregon, where he formerly resided and where some of his people now are. He had been connected with the Odd Follows for over 40 years, being at the time of his death a member of a lodge in South Dakota.
The Men's Gospel team of the Methodist church held services at the county hospital Sunday afternoon. Their program embraced a song service and brief talks by most of the eight or ten men composing the team. The audience liked what they heard so well that they asked their visitors to come again.
Miss Evelyn Garrigan was operated on for the relief of tonsil trouble at the Fullerton hospital Monday morning.
Election of officers will be one of the duties to engage the attention of the White Shrine at their regular monthly meeting Wednesday night.
According to Mrs. M. H. Johnson of 401 East Wilshire avenue, her uncle William Cole, who fell sixty feet from
Will Feature
at High School
School in the
held in
afterbegin
until
at the
arts and
zaar is
This
other chew of tobacco, turned to the
young man, and with a cynical smile,
said he allowed it wouldn't rain.
"Who are you and where're you
from." asked the old-timer of his newfound friend.
"Oh, I'm a tourist—fact is I've just
tree decorations and other novelties
will be found in the music booth of
which Cecil Fozier will have charge.
Articles furnished by the wood shop
will be sold by Laura Scholtz and Margaret Dauser. Among these articles
will be found book-ends, clothes racks
and candle sticks. Ruth Kahly, supervising the food booth, will sell jelly,
home-made candy, fruit cake and many different kinds of pastry.
The sewing shop will be under the direcion of Pauline Houts. Luncheon sets, linen handkerchiefs, rag dolls and dresser scarfs will be sold here.
The articles for this booth have been made by the members of the high school sewing classes. Doris Eden will supervise the art booth at which ten mats, coat hangers, decorated baskets and shopping bags may be bought.
"Hot dogs," pop corn and candy will be sold at the booth of the commercial department. Alta Chritton will direct these sales. Ye Printe Shoppe will submit a large variety of Christmas cards and orders for calling cards and other small printing jobs will be taken. Henry Hodges will be superintendent of this booth. A shooting gallery will feature the exhibition of the mathematics department. Robert Gibbs will have charge of the gallery.
Eleven big acts, all full of side-splitting comedy, have been arranged for the vaudeville show. Miss Bickley, high school dramatic coach, has been holding rehearsals for the performance for several weeks and now the amateur actors are putting on the final touches for their acts.
Inventory Should'
by Every Farmer
listing can be done in memorandum book or on loose sheets of paper. Two persons can do this better than one, especially in barns, tool houses and places where many articles are found. One person can search out the various pieces of property, calling each item in turn to be set down on the list by the other. The classifying and ap-
Dr. Bingham
is Director of Research, Carnegie Institute of Technology. Hescored his Comparison on a Phonograph Comparison Card. It will help you select your Christmas phonograph. Come in. Get one.
Or, mail the coupon.
too woo
Get a Phon
and C
DR.W.V.B.
a scientific
graphs. He w
Inventory Should be by Every Farmer
listing can be done in memorandum book or on loose sheets of paper. Two persons can do this better than one, especially in barns, tool houses and places where many articles are found. One person can search out the various pieces of property, calling each item in turn to be set down on the list by the other. The classifying and appraising can be done at the same time, if desired, by listing the items coming under each class of property on separate pages or sheets, but for the most part they can be best done with doors as the items are being copied into the property book, if one is used.
All property owned comes under the head of resources or assets. These may be subdivided into physical or tangible property, and financial or intangible. The value of the physical property must be estimated and appraised. The financial property has a face value, which under any conditions ordinarily met with on the farm needs no appraisal. The physical property may be grouped under the following heads: Land, buildings, other permanent improvements, work stock, cattle, swine, sheep, poultry, machinery and tools, farm produce, farm supplies, growing crops. The financial items include cash on hand, cash in bank, accounts receivable, and notes receivable. By receivable is meant debts owing to the farm.
Don't Overlook Debts Owed
In no case should a list of liabilities — bills and accounts owed by the farm — be omitted from the inventory. Liabilities are an offset to the resources. When all the items with their valuations have been entered the work is finished by summing up the valuations. This is best done by adding each page separately and carrying the totals to the last page where they may be conveniently added to attain a grand total. The liabilities are summed up in the same manner. When the sum of the liabilities is subtracted from that of the resources the remainder is the net or present worth. By this is meant the net valuation to the owner of the farm property after all debts are accounted for, or in other words the net amount of capital invested in the farm business at inventory date.
Tuesday, December 13, 1921.
a derrick in the Oilinda oil fields last week and sustained severe injuries, is getting along very nicely as also is her brother, Ed Ryan, who sustained a broken arm when cranking his Ford to hasten to the ascend of Mr. Cole's accident.
"Finnerty, I've a terrible toothache; it has me that crazy that I don't know whether I'm a steam pump or a jumping jack."
"Sorry," replied his friend, "but why don't you do what I do when I have a toothache?"
The afflicted man caught at the suggestion.
"What's that?" he asked.
"I go home to my wife," explained Finnerty, "and she puts her arms around my neck, smoothes my forehead, and kisses me till I forget all about it. Why don't you try it?"
"I will, Finnerty," assented the sufferer; "is your wife home now?"
Buy Him a PIPE for Christmas
There is no satisfaction quite like that which a smoker derives from a good price.
We are headquarters for smoker's supplies at all times and right now are offering our stock of—
Pipes at Half Price
Remember we give United Cigar Coupons with purchases at this store.
UNITED CIGAR STORE
J. N. RUSHTON, Mgr.
Coliseum Club.
W. Center St.
PHONOGRAPH COMPARISON CARD
How to score:
The original performance of the living artist is the standard by which all reproducer
times must be recorded.
Comparison Number 1 and Comparison Number 9 are mental comparisons with the
original performance of living artists. Listen to the music going forward up nomore.
Mark on "X" for the phonograph which best succeeds in producing the effect
in comparison. Decide, are direct comparisons between the national
phonograph. Determine which phonograph gives the most realistic representation of
each kind of voice or instrument. That is, which phonograph has most successfully
made you feel you were listening. Mark on "X" for that phonograph.
If two phonographs seem to be equal, give both as "X".
At the conclusion of the comparison, total the number of "X" credits you have
given each phonograph.
Phonograph No. 1 Phonograph No. 2 Phonograph No. 3 Phonograph No. 4
1 Impressions of Realism, i.e., which
phonograph best succeeds in giving you the
impression that you are listening to the real liveing artist.
2 Bass Voice Recordings X
3 Soprano Voice Recordings X
4 Piano Recordings X
5 Cornet Recordings X
6 Violin Recordings X
7 Banjo Recordings X
8 Playing Records made
for other phonographs X
9 Emotional Reaction, i.e., which phonog
raph best succeeds in making you experience
the same emotions or mood changes, which you
would receive when listening to living artists.
Total 0 0 0 9
wonderful?
let a Phonograph Comparison Card
and Compare for yourself!
DR. W.V. BINGHAM, eminent research scientist, made
a scientific comparison between four prominent phonogragraphs. He wanted to determine which was the best.
Get a Phonograph Comparison Card and Compare for yourself!
DR. W.V.BINGHAM, eminent research scientist, made a scientific comparison between four prominent phonographs. He wanted to determine which was the best. The Phonograph Comparison Card, above, shows the result. Phonograph Number 4 made a clean sweep of all 9 tests. That phonograph was
The NEW EDISON
This marvelous victory is easily explained. The New Edison is the only phonograph which has proved there is no difference between its RE-CREATIONS of music and the original music.
But, if you wish to reassure yourself completely,—do what Dr. Bingham did. Listen to Frieda Hempel, as she sounds on the ordinary phonograph; then hear the New Edison RE-CREATE her voice. Compare, in the same way, with other artists who have made both Edison RE-CREATIONS and talking-machine records. Score each result,—on a Phonograph Comparison Card. You will discover that Miss Hempel is indeed Miss Hempel on the New Edison, while on the talking-machine, she is something entirely different.
The New Edison, because of its perfect realism, brings you the true beauties of every kind of vocal or instrumental music.
Compare, compare, compare! We will gladly supply you with a Phonograph Comparison Card. If you can't come in, send the coupon,—today!
Dunham & Knipe
with
Danz Piano Co.
162 West Center Street, ANAHEIM
Bring or Mall This Coupon
Please supply me, free, with a Phonograph Comparison Card, and give me the details of your Christmas Budget Plan.