anaheim-gazette 1914-12-24
Searchable text
A Merry Christmas
AND A
Happy New Year 122 West C
SANTA ANA GIRL
BRUTALLY ASSAULTED
Victim Gagged to Stifle Her Cries—Man Makes His Escape
Cora Kelly, aged 18 years, of Santa Ana, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Kelly, has related to the police how she was knocked down by a burly ruffian at her home on Monday morning, bound and gagged and found an hour and a half later by her mother, who had returned home from work at a packing house on the railroad tracks.
She claims that her assailant was the same man who had accosted her on the night of June 9, last, when she put him to flight by hitting him with her sulcase.
The Kelly girl says that she was in a front room of her home on the morning in question. Hearing a noise in the kitchen, she went there and found a masked man who leveled a revolver at her.
"I've got you now," said the man, at the same time making an attempt to hit her with his gun. Miss Kelly struck the revolver from the man's hand, at the same time reaching for a sharp carving knife.
Her assailant, however, according to Miss Kelly's story, was too quick for her. He grabbed up the revolver from the floor, at the same time grappling with the girl. A struggle ensued in which the girl sustained two slight cuts on one of her hands. This is the last that the girl remembers having occurred until she was found by her mother.
Miss Kelly, according to the mother's story, was lying in the bathroom, her feet against the door. The girl's feet and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied, a stocking full and hands were tied.
SAN DIEGO ROAD RACE
TO BE CLASSIC EVENT
Fast Drivers are Entered and Sensational Time is Looked for by Autolists
Earl Cooper, Eddie Rickenbacher, Harry Grant and Eddie O'Donnel are entered in the San Diego road race. These four great pilots are to figure in the southern classic on four of the fastest cars even sent over a road race course. The entry list, according to Manager A. M. Young, will total thirty and the purse of $12,500 is to be fought out to a finish by the men who have made road racing famous on many fast courses.
Of course Cooper will drive Stutz No. 8. This is the car that was such a sensation at Corona until it was put out of the race almost on the last lap. Rickenbacher will drive his Peugeot, the fast French motor that won second place at Indianapolis May 30. Harry Grant will pilot his Sunbeam, the car that was enveloped in flames on the Corona course after the sensational accident which almost cost Grant his life. Eddie O'Donnel will drive the Duenberg with which he won third place at Corona.
This makes an entry list that is hard to beat. In addition to this Huntley Gordon will enter the Gordon Special. Arthur Klein will drive the Klein-King, A. A. Cadwell will start with the Marmon and a number of other private owners are now tuning their cars for the battle royal on January 9. The course is one that is most attractive because of the long stretch over which the men can drive at top speed.
Every effort is being made to make the course faster. There is a possibility of a new world record in spite of the fact that the turres are somewhat dangerous. Grant says he can drive the Sunbeam during the entire 300 miles without a change of goats.
mantic epics and t Vorgil. He will teach art of the Roman classical and political or Rome of two thousands.
PUBLIC HEALTH DEPARTMENT
Strict Sanitation Laws
Systematic Inspection And Slaughter
The Board of State petitioned to establish of public health laws posed this inspec dairies, bakeries, sewer farms and markets. If the district dished an inspective charge, presumably geo. At least, a has circulated the medical physicians, and has matured of thirty-eight Orange county to eight.
The petition read: "We, the undersiders and members of Medical Society, satisfied opinion that we ceasily for some reason body to pass such necessary, and official whose duty forces the same."
The adoption of is rendered necessary contrary to the position at present no longer county's suppl slaughter meat; food products. The meat inspection ad
Her assailant, however, according to Miss Kelly's story, was too quick for her. He grabbed up the revolver from the floor, at the same time grappling with the girl. A struggle ensued in which the girl sustained two slight cuts on one of her hands. This is the last that the girl remembers having occurred until she was found by her mother.
Miss Kelly, according to the mother's story, was lying in the bathroom, her feet against the door. The girl's feet and hands were tied, a stocking had been stuffed in her mouth as a gag and a cloth tied around her head to keep the gag in place.
The girl describes her assailant as being a man of short and stocky build. She is positive that the man is the same who accosted her on the night of June 9, when she hit him with a suitcase she was carrying and succeeded in escaping from him to the house of an uncle who lives nearby. The occurrence is said to have taken place on Washington avenue.
Miss Kelley was alone at her home when the man entered, both her father and mother being at work and the children being away at school.
A. A. Mills of this city, chairman S. M. Davis of Santa Ana and H. B. Littie of Huntington Beach, transportation committee of the Associated Chambers of Commerce, appeared for that body before the railroad commission in the Bullock block, Los Angeles on Tuesday when the Santa Fe railway company had its hearing in the matter of raising passenger rates on its lines in Southern California. The Associated Chambers is strongly against the proposed increase in rates.
State Senator John N. Anderson and Assemblyman Joe C. Burke, both of Santa Ana, went to Los Angeles on Friday to attend a meeting of Southern California legislators. The meeting was held at the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, which body called the senators and assemblymen of this end of the state together to discuss proposed legislation.
J. L. Birnbaum a real estate dealer of Orange, was painfully hurt north of Fullerton Friday morning when the automobile which he was driving skidded and turned over. In the car with him were Mrs. Birnbaum and his daughter Otta, and Milton, his son. The car turned over on its top but Mrs. Birnbaum and the two children were able to crawl from underneath. They escaped with minor bruises, while Birnbaum, who was plinned under the upturned car for fifteen minutes before help arrived, sustained a number of severe bruises although he is not seriously hurt.
ANDERSON PLANS NEW SALRY ACT
State Senator John N. Anderson of Santa Ana, believes that some change should be made whereby the responsibility for fixing salaries and help of county offices should be taken off the Gordon will enter the Gordon Special Arthur Kleem will drive the Klein-King, A. A. Cadwell will start with the Marmon and a number of other private owners are now tuning their cars for the battle royal on January 8. The course is one that is most attractive because of the long stretch over which the men can drive at top speed.
Every effort is being made to make the course faster. There is a possibility of a new world record in spite of the fact that the turms are somewhat dangerous. Drent says he can drive the Sunbeam during the entire 300 miles without a change of goars. If he can do this he has a first class chance to take first honors in a race in which the Sunbeam should be sent into the front rank early. In the fight for the large purse.
VAUDEVILLE, PRIZE-FIGHTS KILLED DRAMA IN ROME
Learned Professor to Give Lectures at University of California on "The Classical Epilep"
The story of how prizefights and vaudeville were the death of legitimate drama in ancient Rome two thousand years ago is to be told in a course on "Greek and Roman Comedy" to be given at the University of California by Professor Henry W. Prescott of Chicago. (He has just been appointed Sather Professor of Classical Literature for the half year beginning January 11, when a flood of new students will pour into Berkeley.) The legitimate drama always had a hard time at Rome. To write or act wasn't the thing—warfare and politics were the proper occupations for men of parts. But it was the custom to give a play as part of a religious festival, three or four times a year. Occasionally when a great man died a play was presented—as a part of the wake as it were. One of the most notable writers of such plays was Terence—not from the Emerald Isle, but a negro slave from Carthage. As some modern author managers borrow their plots from French or German playwrights, so this famous early plagiarist stole his plays bodily from the Greek writers of comedy.
The Roman comedies were usually acted of a morning, in an outdoor theatre, and everybody was welcome. In the prologue which the negro playwright Terrence prepared for a revival of one of his plays, he tells how the previous performance was utterly ruined because the whole audience got up in the middle of it and went off to see a rope dancer.
To keep his audience from being stolen by the superior charms of the mimes—the vaudeville skit of the period—Terrence's most famous rival Plautus, tried to "play to the galleries." This he did by injecting all manner of up-to-date Roman gags into the plays he borrowed from Greek writers. But even though Plautus had special knowledge of how to please an audience, having been a stagehand and an actor himself, his places where food stored or offered interest of the public spotifyably body to pass such necessary, and official whose duty force the same."
The adoption of is rendered necessary contrary to the point at present no range county's super slaughter meat, food products. The meat inspection and inspection of meat products designed foreign shipment itself with abattoir for local consumption quantify, if we wish against eating these loos animals or from abscess, lumen eased conditions; provide its own meat produced from may speedily bode from having been hands, handled in exposed or exposed milk medium for the under ordinal chances of becoming By inaugurating an spection city on in the years between reduced its infant testimal diseases for 100,000 population orders of over 600 oak in the United States to infected milk and causes typhoid infestation with bacillus type transmitted to consisting largely cow."
These are but a few to which we are eno of proper inspection Our restaurants, and other sources present their separate
ANDERSON PLANS NEW SALRY ACT
State Senator John N. Anderson of Santa Ana, believes that some change should be made whereby the responsibility for fixing salaries and help of county offices should be taken off the shoulders of legislators. He says that he has not devised a plan for such a change, but he proposes to take the matter up with experts at Sacramento soon after the legislature opens.
Anderson states that he is not satisfied to take the recommendation of a grand jury, as he feels that its investigation of salaries and help is not thorough. He thinks the responsibility should be placed upon somebody within the county.
The state senator said that he expects to introduce a bill that will empower one or more stockholders to maintain an action against a corporation falling for an unreasonable time to declare dividends. He says such a law will prevent officers keeping a corporation alive merely to provide themselves with fat salaries.
Switzerland's lot since the war began has been a hard one. The cost of maintaining the army in a state of mobilization is estimated at fully $400,000 a day. The loss to the hotel keepers in three months is figured at $25,000,000. The hotel keepers probably suffer more than any other class, especially as they had lean years in 1912 and 1913 owing to bad weather. They had looked forward to 1914 as likely to make up all deficits. The few tourists who remained after the war cloud appeared were frightened away by the panic among the Swiss bankers, which caused the refusal of letters of credit and even foreign money. At present many of the big hotels are closed, and the number of guests in those which remain open is almost negligible. Living conditions in Switzerland have changed very little. There is a shortage of coal and petrol, but food prices have probably increased not more than 10 per cent.
To keep his audience from being stolen by the superior charms of the mimes—the vaudeville skit of the period—Terrence's most famous rival Plautus, tried to "play to the galleries." This he did by injecting all manner of up-to-date Roman gags into the plays he borrowed from Greek writers. But even though Plautus had special knowledge of how to please an audience, having been a stagehand and an actor himself, his plays could not stem the tide of interest in vaudeville and in gladiatorial combats. Within a few decades the attempt to write Latin plays was given up. Not a single really original and creative Latin playwright had been developed—only adaptors of Greek plays—but nevertheless their work throws a flood of light on what life was like in ancient Rome.
So full of local hits were the comedies written in Greece that much of these plays is wellnigh incomprehensible today. There were no newspapers when the Peloponnesian war was fought; so Aristophanes took the place of the Oppers, Bud Fishers, Tads, and Goldbergs then not invented, in hitting off for popular consumption the humors of Athenian politics and the foibles of contemporary great men.
"The Follies of the Fifth Century B.C." would have been an appropriate general title for the comedies of Aristophanes (if he had known it was B.C.). Slap stok humor, song, dance, then knockabout farce, song, dance, all burlesque the famous statemen, soldiers, and writers of his day—that was the receipt of Aristophanes for comedy, much as it remains the receipt for many modern constructors of burlesque.
To make people understand what sort of people the Greeks and Romans were is the real object of Professor Prescott's teaching at Berkeley. His classroom is to be thrown open to those who know no Latin and less Greek as well as to those classically trained. And so that the general public too may come, as well as the students, he is to lecture at eight on Tuesday and Thursday evenings each week, from January to May, on "The Classical Epic." with contrasts drawn between the Greek folk epics and previous performance was utterly ruined because the whole audience got up in the middle of it and went off to see a rope dancer.
To keep his audience from being stolen by the superior charms of the mimes—the vaudeville skit of the period—Terrence's most famous rival Plautus, tried to "play to the galleries."
This he did by injecting all manner of up-to-date Roman gags into the plays he borrowed from Greek writers. But even though Plautus had special knowledge of how to please an audience, having been a stagehand and an actor himself, his plays could not stem the tide of interest in vaudeville and in gladiatorial combats. Within a few decades the attempt to write Latin plays was given up. Not a single really original and creative Latin playwright had been developed—only adaptors of Greek plays—but nevertheless their work throws a flood of light on what life was like in ancient Rome.
So full of local hits were the comedies written in Greece that much of these plays is wellnigh incomprehensible today. There were no newspapers when the Peloponnesian war was fought; so Aristophanes took the place of the Oppers, Bud Fishers, Tads, and Goldbergs then not invented, in hitting off for popular consumption the humors of Athenian politics and the foibles of contemporary great men.
"The Follies of the Fifth Century B.C." would have been an appropriate general title for the comedies of Aristophanes (if he had known it was B.C.). Slap stok humor, song, dance, then knockabout farce, song, dance, all burlesque the famous statemen, soldiers, and writers of his day—that was the receipt of Aristophanes for comedy, much as it remains the receipt for many modern constructors of burlesque.
To make people understand what sort of people the Greeks and Romans were is the real object of Professor Prescott's teaching at Berkeley. His classroom is to be thrown open to those who know no Latin and less Greek as well as to those classically trained. And so that the general public too may come, as well as the students, he is to lecture at eight on Tuesday and Thursday evenings each week, from January to May, on "The Classical Epic." with contrasts drawn between the Greek folk epics and previous performance was utterly ruined because the whole audience got up in the middle of it and went off to see a rope dancer.
To keep his audience from being stolen by the superior charms of the mimes—the vaudeville skit of the period—Terrence's most famous rival Plautus, tried to "play to the galleries."
This he did by injecting all manner of up-to-date Roman gags into the plays he borrowed from Greek writers. But even though Plautus had special knowledge of how to please an audience, having been a stagehand and an actor himself, his plays could not stem the tide of interest in vaudeville and in gladiatorial combats. Within a few decades the attempt to write Latin plays was given up. Not a single really original and creative Latin playwright had been developed—only adaptors of Greek plays—but nevertheless their work throws a flood of light on what life was like in ancient Rome.
So full of local hits were the comedies written in Greece that much of these plays is wellnigh incomprehensible today. There were no newspapers when the Peloponnesian war was fought; so Aristophanes took the place of the Oppers, Bud Fishers, Tads, and Goldbergs then not invented, in hitting off for popular consumption the humors of Athenian politics and the foibles of contemporary great men.
"The Follies of the Fifth Century B.C." would have been an appropriate general title for the comedies of Aristophanes (if he had known it was B.C.). Slap stok humor, song, dance, then knockabout farce, song, dance, all burlesque the famous statemen, soldiers, and writers of his day—that was the receipt of Aristophanes for comedy, much as it remains the receipt for many modern constructors of burlesque.
To make people understand what sort of people the Greeks and Romans were is the real object of Professor Prescott's teaching at Berkeley. His classroom is to be thrown open to those who know no Latin and less Greek as well as to those classically trained. And so that the general public too may come, as well as the students, he is to lecture at eight on Tuesday and Thursday evenings each week, from January to May, on "The Classical Epic." with contrasts drawn between the Greek folk epics and previous performance was utterly ruined because the whole audience got up in the middle of it and went off to see a rope dancer.
To keep his audience from being stolen by the superior charms of the mimes—the vaudeville skit of the period—Terrence's most famous rival Plautus, tried to "play to the galleries."
This he did by injecting all manner of up-to-date Roman gags into the plays he borrowed from Greek writers. But even though Plautus had special knowledge of how to please an audience, having been a stagehand and an actor himself, his plays could not stem the tide of interest in vaudeville and in gladiatorial combats. Within a few decades the attempt to write Latin plays was given up. Not a single really original and creative Latin playwright had been developed—only adaptors of Greek plays—but nevertheless their work throws a flood of light on what life was like in ancient Rome.
So full of local hits were the comedies written in Greece that much of these plays is wellnigh incomprehensible today. There were no newspapers when the Peloponnesian war was fought; so Aristophanes took the place of the Oppers, Bud Fishers, Tads, and Goldbergs then not invented, in hitting off for popular consumption the humors of Athenian politics and the foibles of contemporary great men.
"The Follies of the Fifth Century B.C." would have been an appropriate general title for the comedies of Aristophanes (if he had known it was B.C.). Slap stok humor, song, dance, then knockabout farce, song, dance, all burlesque the famous statemen, soldiers, and writers of his day—that was the receipt of Aristophanes for comedy, much as it remains the receipt for many modern constructors of burlesque.
To make people understand what sort of people the Greeks and Romans were is the real object of Professor Prescott's teaching at Berkeley. His classroom is to be thrown open to those who know no Latin and less Greek as well as to those classically trained. And so that the general public too may come, as well as the students, he is to lecture at eight on Tuesday and Thursday evenings each week, from January to May, on "The Classical Epic." with contrasts drawn between the Greek folk epics and previous performance was utterly ruined because the whole audience got up in the middle of it and went off to see a rope dancer.
To keep his audience from being stolen by the superior charms of the mimes—the vaudeville skit of the period—Terrence's most famous rival Plautus, tried to "play to the galleries."
This he did by injecting all manner of up-to-date Roman gags into the plays he borrowed from Greek writers. But even though Plautus had special knowledge of how to please an audience, having been a stagehand and an actor himself, his plays could not stem the tide of interest in vaudeville and in gladiatorial combats. Within a few decades the attempt to write Latin plays was given up. Not a single really original and creative Latin playwright had been developed—only adaptors of Greek plays—but nevertheless their work throws a flood of light on what life was like in ancient Rome.
So full of local hits were the comedies written in Greece that much of these plays is wellnigh incomprehensible today. There were no newspapers when the Peloponnesian war was fought; so Aristophanes took the place of the Oppers, Bud Fishers, Tads, and Goldbergs then not invented, in hitting off for popular consumption the humors of Athenian politics and the foibles of contemporary great men.
"The Follies of the Fifth Century B.C." would have been an appropriate general title for the comedies of Aristophanes (if he had known it was B.C.). Slap stok humor, song, dance, then knockabout farce, song, dance, all burlesque the famous statemen, soldiers, and writers of his day—that was the receipt of Aristophanes for comedy, much as it remains the receipt for many modern constructors of burlesque.
To make people understand what sort of people the Greeks and Romans were is the real object of Professor Prescott's teaching at Berkeley. His classroom is to be thrown open to those who know no Latin and less Greek as well as to those classically trained. And so that the general public too may come, as well as the students, he is to lecture at eight on Tuesday and Thursday evenings each week, from January to May, on "The Classical Epic." with contrasts drawn between the Greek folk epics and previous performance was utterly ruined because the whole audience got up in the middle of it and went off to see a rope dancer.
To keep his audience from being stolen by the superior charms of the mimes—the vaudeville skit of the period—Terrence's most famous rival Plautus, tried to "play to the galleries."
This he did by injecting all manner of up-to-date Roman gags into the plays he borrowed from Greek writers. But even though Plautus had special knowledge of how to please an audience, having been a stagehand and an actor himself, his plays could not stemthe tideofinterestinvaudevilleandingladiatorialcombats.AndsoitbemostremediateofthepartywillbeandWilliamWinterattheresidenceofthechildren.MarshallandRoyandFloridaPalms.willbeperhomelidayswiththeretorypromisestoaChristmasdinnerfeatures.AChristianswasalsobadwasspentbyallMr.andMrs.Wilsonplonerestationsoareheldinhighcircleoffriends.BirdV.VebewebusinessvisitoronJohnHartungwinterattheresidenceofthebankfraternityEdgarJ.FurturFirstNationalbankthreataflectionforbutisnowfullyreleasedLargoBayhaYorbaonSaturdaymission.RalphCoxoftheportsbusinessgoodeofrepairworkonh
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
KERN CYCLE CO.
122 West Center St.
Anaheim, California
PUBLIC HEALTH INSPECTION
DEPARTMENT SUGGESTED
Strict Sanitation in the Markets and Systematic Inspection of Dairies And Slaughter Houses
The Board of Supervisors is to be petitioned to establish a department of public health inspection. As proposed, this inspection will be of dairyes, bakeries, slaughter houses, sewer farms and meat and vegetable markets. If the department is established, an inspector will be put in charge, presumably a veterinary surgeon. At least, a veterinary surgeon has circulated the petition among the physicians, and has secured the signatures of thirty-eight physicians of Orange county to it.
The petition reads as follows:
"We, the undersigned, physiicians and members of the Orange County Medical Society, are of the unqualified opinion that there is urgent necessity for some systematic inspection and supervision of dairyes, abattoirs, sewerage farms, bakeries, meat and vegetable markets, and all other places where foodstuff is prepared, stored or offered for sale, and in the interest of the public health we respectfully petition your honorable body to pass such ordinances as may be necessary, and to appoint a county official whose duty it shall be to enforce the same."
The adoption of such ordinances is rendered necessary by the fact that, contrary to the popular opinion, there is at present no supervision over Orange county's supply of milk, locally slaughtered meat, vegetables or other food products. The U.S. government meat inspection act provides for the
Happy New Year
UNION Brewing
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Griffith Lumber Company
Wishes You a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year
CHRISTMAS PARTY
A Happy Home Coming at Jacob Winter's Residence
A happy home coming and merry
These are but a few of the dangers to which we are exposed from a lack of proper inspection of meat and milk. Our restaurants, bakeries, groceries, and other sources of food supply all present their separate problems.
CHRISTMAS PARTY
A Happy Home Coming at Jacob Winter's Residence
A happy home coming and merry Christmas party will occur tomorrow at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Winter in this city when their son-in-law and daughter and their two little children, Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Turner, and Roy and Florence Turner of the Palms, will be present to spend the holidays with them. Other members of the party will be Miss Lena Will and William Winter, also of the Palms, Albert Winter and Miss Esther Meyer of Fullerton will also be present.
Mr. Turner is engaged in the banking business at the Palms and William Winter conducts a mercantile establishment at that place. The reunion promises to be most pleasant, a Christmas dinner being one of the features. A Christmas tree for little ones was also had and a pleasant time was spent by all.
Mr. and Mrs. Winter, are among the pioneer residents of this section and are held in high esteem, by a large circle of friends.
Bird V. Beebe was a Los Angeles business visitor on Saturday.
John Hartung was in Los Angeles Saturday on business connected with the banking fraternity of that city.
Edgar J. Hartung, cashier of the First National bank has had serious throat affection for several days past, but is now fully recovered.
"Largo" Bayha was in town from Yorba on Saturday on a brief business mission.
Ralph Cox of the Central Garage reports business good, he having plenty of repair work on hand all the time.
HIGH TIDES DO DAMAGE
Balboa Beach suffered considerable damage last week resulting from the unusually high tides which washed the beach town.
The sea washed up over the pike, and into the city, and many of the buildings were damaged. The constant pounding of the waves broke things to pieces badly, and some five or six of the houses have been washed into the bay, particularly the smaller buildings. One or two of the larger cottages have been moved from their foundation, and the water cut the bay wall away. In fact, it is stated that the bay and sea all appear to be one now, and the water surged through the town and up over the beach.
The pier is reported to be still holding, but the long walk along the beach between Newport and Balboa is gone and the sea played havoc with the property long the beach.
The damage at Long Beach resulting from high tides is estimated at $50,000.
LOS ANGELES WANTS PRESIDENT WILSON AS GUEST
President Please; Secretary Daniels, Invited, Says Acceptance of Both Is Likely
WASHINGTON, Dec. 18.—Representative Stephens, with I. B. Dockweiler and W. H. Booth, as a committee of the Chamber of Commerce,
THURSDAY, DEC. 24
A Merry Christmas
AND A
Happy New Year
For High-Grade Pianos
and Musical Instruments
Schmidt & Knirsch
Successors to
C. T. WEIBER & COMPANY,
126 W. Center St.
Pacific Tel. 228
The Seal of Public Approval
Has been placed on all our
Wines and Liquors
and Bottled Beers
Fisher Wine Co.
119 North Los Angeles Street.
Free City Delivery. Home 182. 8 198
Has been placed on all our
Wines and Liquors
and Bottled Beers
Fisher Wine Co.
119 North Los Angeles Street.
Free City Delivery. Home 182. 3 198
Germania Halle
A SPLENDID LUNCH EVERY DAY. BEST BRANDS OF WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS FOR THOSE DESIRING THEM. COLD BEER ALWAYS ON TAP. YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF KENTUCKY DEW WHISKEY.
Famous San Diego Beer
J. D. Heitshusen
Eagle Bar
HESSEL & HESSEL, Prop.
The Best in Wet Goods
117 E. Center St. ANAHEIM
Exchange Bar
WM. STARK, Prop.
Choicest of Wines
Liquors and Cigars
Anaheim Union Brewing
Beer on Draught
Courteous Treatment
120 W. Center St. ANAHEIM
Favorite Saloon
Are You One of Our Customers?
If Not, Why Not?
For address:
Bever Company
DAMS, Manager
and Yards:
heim, near Southern Pacific Depot
ACE LIKE HOME"
ted to be still holdalk along the beach
and Balboa is gone
and havoc with the
beach.
Long Beach resultees is estimated at
WANTS PRESILSON AS GUEST
Secretary Daniels,
acceptance of Both
likely
Dec. 18.—Represenwith I. B. Dockbooth, as a commitber of Commerce,
yesterday presented a formal invitation to President Wilson to visit Los
Angeles when he goes through the
Panma Canal next spring. President
Wilson was much pleased and said
his itinerary was not completed. Later
the committee extended a like invitation to Secretary of the Navy Daniels: Secretary Daniels practically
assured the committee that the President and himself would visit Los Angeles and San Diego en route to San
Francisco.
Deputy Sheriff Oliver Schumacher
of Placentia was in town a day or two
ago on legal business. Schumacher is
a terror to the hobo element, and he
is doing good work in keeping the
Weary Willies "hiting the grit."