anaheim-gazette 1915-10-07
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MERCHANTS AND MANY GUESTS AT FESTIVE BOARD
Continued from page 1
er, upon a requisition duly authorized. He says the system works to the entire satisfaction of the taxpayers.
Formery it cost the city $16,500 a year to collect and incinerate their garbage. During the present administration competitive bids were called for and the city not gets the work done for $10,000, a saving of over $6000 for this one item. Mr. Pinkerton claims their license system is all right. The home merchant helps keep up the city and the city protects them. Peddlers who dispense wares in competition to the home merchant are charged a heavy license.
Prof. E. W. Hauck, in one of the best addresses ever made before a local audience, spoke of the great good of cooperation. He believes in patronizing the home merchant. Prof. Hauck's logic was convincing and his able address was listened to with wrap attention by all those present.
He used the Anaheim high school as a parable. The school is a grand accomplishment of cooperation. The people within a certain area had banded themselves together to build the educational institution, and its advantages were many. And its influence extends beyond its boundaries because children living outside the district attend the school. The same should apply to the citizen. He should not tended address, and said he felt a good deal like the distinguished Japanese who recently attended a banquet in San Francisco. When called upon for an address the Japanese said, "The shorter the spoke, the least tire," and his auditors realizing the lateness of the hour and the force of the Japanese's meaning, gave hearty applause and the evening's speechmaking was concluded.
A male quartetts, composed of H. W. Braden, H. E. Cunningham, E. E. Angell and E. C. Cunningham, sang "Sweet and Low" in a capital manner. In response to a hearty encore they sang "In Absence." The quartette received unstinted applause. Their singing was pronounced of a high order of merit.
Mr. Cannon during the evening rendered several selections of classical composition upon the piano, much to the delight of the large audience.
E. E. Angel lead the assemblage in singing "America" and the meeting dispersed.
The banquet was prepared by the Oyster Loaf Cafe, to which ample justice was done.
DECLARES HE WAS CROWDED OFF HIGHWAY
Fullerton Man Victim of Road Hog Near Pomona
Declaring that he was deliberately crowded to the side of the road and then swiped by another machine which sped away without offering assistance, R. J. Neal, of Fullerton, reported to the Pomona police what he declared appeared to be a deliberate attempt to wreck his machine, which turned turtle and was badly smashed up.
Neal was caught by the windshield Deep cuts were inflicted upon one hand and one leg by pieces of glass, and he was bruised on both legs.
Directly reversing of Secretary of Commerce that revival of America not due to war order of commerce has no statement concluding that "surveying it may justly be said conflict has been owed to American industry.
The same statistical admissions of our farms, forests miles across the ocean back in a manufacture costly enhanced prize wise come to recognize allowing many new tropics, of South Far East, to find rope, and of paying fax and skill to transform ticles of daily need.
This attitude now department under the democratic administrative republicans have coined the foundation of every democratic state have shipped mates bought it back in man at a vastly increased doing exactly that ent tariff law, until intervened and served wal to cut off foreign.
Probably nothing of the department serve more to embody cratic party in the than this statement...
He used the Anaheim high school as a parable. The school is a grand accomplishment of cooperation. The people within a certain area had banded themselves together to build the educational institution, and its advantages were many. And its influence extends beyond its boundaries because children living outside the district attend the school. The same should apply to the citizen. He should not only be a mere six cubic feet of statue, but his influence for good should spread out beyond the confines of his own sphere. He owes a duty to his fellowman. He then is a good citizen, worthy of emulation.
Prof. Hauck said our schools and rural mail routes are fundamental principles acting as a magnet, giving our environs the benefit of our achievements along those lines, and likewise helping us by having our neighbors come in closer touch with our commercial life.
Mr. Shepherd of Whittler made a brief and instructive talk on "Service." Give the best that is in you to your employer and the world will be better therefor. Should you have an idea pass it to others; it may seem inconsequential to you but mean much to others. Mr. Shepherd narrated a case where two trustees took a stroll at an unusual hour and found a servant asleep on the job. That was poor service. The employee was made jobless. But in another instance, a public school official visited the schools at different hours of the day and upon several different days. By so doing he found faulty ventilation in the school rooms, which through his investigations, were subjected to changes for the better for the pupils. That was good service.
Mr. Lewin of Los Angeles gave an interesting treatise on the best method of conducting a store. Kindness and courteous treatment to patrons should at all times be borne in mind. People, and especially children, going into a store for small favors, should be shown the same courteous treatment as those who call to make purchases. These small favors leave a good impression upon the minds of people and have a beneficial effect. People will pass several good stores to go to one further along the street, solely because at one time or another they have been shown courteous treatment there. Mr. Lewin said that the merchandise trade, especially the crowded to the side of the road and then swiped by another machine which sped away without offering assistance, R. J. Neal, of Fullerton, reported to the Pomona police what he declared appeared to be a deliberate attempt to wreck his machine, which turned turtle and was badly smashed up.
Neal was caught by the windshield Deep cuts were inflicted upon one hand and one leg by pieces of glass, and he was bruised on both legs.
Neal was going toward Pomona on the Valley boulevard, and had just passed the Brea Canyon road, when the other machine came from the opposite direction. Seeing that this machine would pass very close to him if they continued as they were going, Neal ran nearer the side of the road. The other machine kept veering across and crowding him further and further until they came together. The shock sent his automobile over and he was pinned beneath. By the time he managed to get out he saw the other machine disappearing in the direction from which it had come.
He was not able to get the number and the only clue the officers have is a cap from one of the wheels. Neal was badly cut and bruised, but no bones were broken.
MRS. HARRY SMITH
SUES FOR DAMAGES
Widow of Fireman Killed in Yorba Wreck Asks $7500 of Railroad
Mrs. Madaline Smith, widow of Harry Smith the Santa Fe fireman, who lost his life as a result of the Yorba wreck, has brought suit against the railroad company for $7500 damages. The complaint filed in Los Angeles declares that the switch crew that was at work at Olinda on the day that the oil car broke loose and ran down the branch line on to the main track at Richfield, was negligent in failing-to see that the brakes of the oil car were properly set. The oil car met the passenger train head-on a mile from Richfield.
Four deaths resulted from the wreck, and over thirty people were injured. The express messenger was burned to death in his car. The engineer and fireman received injuries from which they died within a few days.
Mrs. Smith is the first to bring suit as a result of the wreck. She sues as administratrix of the estate of every democratic party in the state than this statement knowledging the vital manufacturing goods department points events that followed by war of the aniline Germany and the war from the same source “tremendous impound expansion of domestics.” The department might made its acknowledgement long list of commodities supplied largely from off by the war “widened impulse to domestic manufactures.” In the acknowledge they exist, the department have made a complete expression of opinion so far, for it says that love that the cost of warring countries so lowered as a result of there will be danger to the holding of new gained.” In view of department’s opinion found erroneous so past, there will be little part of the business United States to accept of the department against the return of conditions which they admits were unfortunate country and which led to overthrow.
Upon the close of of men will return to and the removal of bargo will release a manufactured article Germany because of that country’s meauses These are facts which will be compelled even along with other admirable made.
SUBMARINE
People, and especially children, going into a store for small favors, should be shown the same courteous treatment as those who call to make purchases. These small favors leave a good impression upon the minds of people and have a beneficial effect. People will pass several good stores to go to one further along the street, solely because at one time or another they have been shown courteous treatment there. Mr. Lewin said that the merchandise trade, especially the wares of women, is divided into different branches: Anything of necessity would be bought at the nearest store for convenience sake. But when something out of the ordinary is wanted costing a sum of money larger than is usually expended, Mr. Lewin said a woman will go to at least three different stores to inspect articles before buying. This is one of the peculiar idiosyncrasies of nature that is hard to explain. But the fact remains that courteous treatment must be shown them in every instance.
Clerks in stores should form advertising clubs for their enlightenment, as much good comes from an interchange of ideas. They would then be in better shape to give their employers better service.
W. H. Skillman, president of the Fullerton board of trade, was called upon for remarks. He said he came unprepared to make a speech, but took occasion to thank the Anaheim association for their kind invitation to the banquet. He stated that the Fullerton association was ever ready to cooperate with the local organization in working for the good of both.
Capt. F. J. Ahlborn was called upon and responded briefly in a happy speech for the city's welfare. He said he has been attending public meetings here for the past 14 years and is every ready to help laudable enterprise for the upbuilding of the city. Capt. Ahlborn was not prepared to make an ex-
CALIFORNIA OIL THE BEST
A statement by Assistant Engineer Hunt of the Packard Motor company, quoted in an eastern oil journal, is of particular interest to Pacific coast motorists and automobile dealers.
Mr. Hunt says that he is inclined to favor a motor oil made of western asphalt base, rather than an oil of eastern paraffine base crude.
It would seem that the prejudice in favor of Pennsylvania oils which has existed among many motorists is being shown up as an exploded theory, as the weight of engineering opinion now favors oils made from California, or asphale base crude.
The Automobile club of Southern California is preparing to revise its maps of the county and post all the roads. This club has rendered valuable aid to all motorists in posting roads over the South and membership in it insures automobile drivers of all courtesy on the roads as well as giving valuable service in providing information on all subjects of interest to the motoring public.
August F. Gutzman and Carl Heinze, both of this city, both born in Canada, have applied for final naturalization papers.
As a crown is the best three balls are the backers, so the badge of a cer is a handful of cotton submarine, clad in her waterproof suits, sailor stands on the receive them, and to e waste rolled in a neat on is that the steel walls of a submarine nally. The steel seats submarine officer be door or before sitting oil from the knob or unconscious gesture lying up the trousers to bagging. Jovial you lieutenants say that sweat oil on a submarine say that before filling with meat they mechanize oil from them with the waste.
Work was begun last Newbert protection design construction of a levee 40 feet wide at the high, on the west bank tide water. By this level of several thousand acres lowland southeast Beach will be prevented will cost $8000. En Kellogg says it will be two months.
AN ADMISSION FROM
WASHINGTON
Directly reversing the statements of Secretary of Commerce Redfield that revival of American industry was not due to war orders, the department of commerce has just given out a statement concluding with the assertion that "surveying the whole field, it may justly be said that the world's conflict has been of unmeasured value to American industry as a whole."
The same statement contains practical admissions of the soundness of the protective tariff principle. The department's bulletin says: "In a more or less uncomfortable way, we have suddenly been brought to recognize the unwisdom, the folly, of shipping vast amounts of the crude material of our farms, forests and mines 3,000 miles across the ocean, and buying it back in a manufactured form, at a costly enhanced price. We have likewise come to recognize the absurdity of allowing many natural products of the tropics, of South America, of the Far East, to find their way to Europe, and of paying foreign intelligence and skill to transform them into articles of daily need in our lives."
This attitude now taken by a department under the control of a democratic administration is exactly what republicans have contended for from the foundation of the party. During every democratic administration, we have shipped material abroad and bought it back in manufactured form at a vastly increased price. We were doing exactly that under the present tariff law, until the European war intervened and served as a protective wal to cut off foreign imports.
Probably nothing that has come out of the department of commerce will serve more to embarrass the democratic party in the coming campaign than this statement expressly ac-
every democratic administration, we have shipped material abroad and bought it back in manufactured form at a vastly increased price. We were doing exactly that under the present tariff law, until the European war intervened and served as a protective wal to cut off foreign imports.
Probably nothing that has come out of the department of commerce will serve more to embarrass the democratic party in the coming campaign than this statement expressly acknowledging the vital importance of manufacturing goods at home. The department points to the course of events that followed the cutting off by war of the aniline imports from Germany and the supply of potash from the same source, with the resulting "tremendous impulse given to the expansion of domestic manufacture." The department might as well have made its acknowledgment apply to a long list of commodities heretofore supplied largely from abroad but cut off by the war "with resulting tremendous impulse to the expansion of domestic manufacture.
In the acknowledgement of facts as they exist, the department seems to have made a complete confession. In expression of opinions it does not go so far, for it says that it "does not believe that the cost of production in the warring countries of Europe will be lowered as a result of the war, or that there will be danger from that source to the holding of new markets already gained." In view of the fact that the department's opinions have been found erroneous so many times in the past, there will be little disposition on the part of the business men of the United States to accept the mere opinion of the department as a guarantee against the return of exactly the same conditions which the department now admits were unfortunate for this country and which the war alone served to overthrow.
Upon the close of the war, millions of men will return to active industry and the removal of the shipping embargo will release a vast quantity of manufactured articles now held in Germany because of the destruction of that country's merchant marine. These are facts which the department will be compelled eventually to admit, along with other admissions reluctantly made.
SUBMARINE BADGE
Regardless of how the measure was passed through the legislature, and regardless of the fact that fundamentally it is a political scheme to perpetuate in office the men who favored it, the proposed non-partisanship is un-American, and can not live. If the politicians take away from us the right of party organization, they might with equal reason take away from us the right to belong to any religious or fraternal organization we choose.
The first proposition on the ballot October 26th will be that which proposes non-partisanship. Vote against it.
A hobo who told Deputy Marshal Carrillo of Fullerton to go to a hot place, did not reckon on the swiftness of the officer's legs. Joe chased him half a mile or so, caught him, and he is now serving a 30-day sentence in the road camp.
When You Tell Your Dealer
San Diego
Quality Beer
All That The Name Impiles
Office Phones: Home 753-1 Bell Sunset 341-J.
Res. 125 E. Broadway, Cor. Claudina
Phones: Pac. 341-M; Home 753-2 Bells
J. W. TRUXAW, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Hours 11-12; 2-4; 7-8
German American Bank Building
Cor. Center and Los Angeles Sts.
Anaheim, Cal.
Drs. Johnston, Beebe Clark and Davis
PHYSICIANS and SURGEONS
Offices at Anaheim Sanitarium
Hours 1-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Phone Pacific 200
Phone Home 221
J. JANSS, M. D.
Physioian & Surgeon
598 W. Center St., Anaheim
Office Hours, 3 to 4 and 7 to 8 P.M.
Both Phones
H. P. Hendricks, M.D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Special Attention to Surgery and Obstetrics
Office: Odd Fellows Bldg., Anaheim.
Hours 11-12; 2-5; 7-8
Sundays by Appointment
Phone Pacific 441
F. C. SPENCER
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Notary Public
Nagel Block, East Center Street
Anaheim, Cal.
Calkins&Son HAY
AND GRAIN
Our Prices Are Right
Phone Sunset 387
and the removal of the shipping embargo will release a vast quantity of manufactured articles now held in Germany because of the destruction of that country's merchant marine. These are facts which the department will be compelled eventually to admit, along with other admissions reluctantly made.
SUBMARINE BADGE
As a crown is the badge of kings, as three balls are the badge of pawnbrokers, so the badge of a submarine officer is a handful of cotton waste. When the half dozen officers of a modern submarine, clad in their black leather waterproof suits, come aboard a sailor stands on the tiny gangway to receive them, and to each he hands his waste rolled in a neat ball. The reason is that the steel doors and steel walls of a submarine sweat oil eternally. The steel seats sweat oil. The submarine officer before opening a door or before sitting down wipes the oil from the knob or the seat with an unconscious gesture like that of pulling up the trousers to keep them from bagging. Jovial young submarine lieutenants say that even the dishes sweat oil on a submarine trip. They say that before filling their plates with meat they mechanically wipe the oil from them with their balls of oily waste.
Work was begun last week by the Newbert protection district upon the construction of a levee 5000 feet long, 40 feet wide at the base and 6 feet high, on the west bank of the river at tide water. By this levee the overflow of several thousand acres of valuable lowland southeast of Huntington Beach will be prevented. The levee will cost $8000. Engineer H. Clay Kellogg says it will be finished within two months.
Is your preference he will know that you are a buyer who selects the best market affords and one who seeks satisfaction which is always given by this famed brew.
If you do not know how deliciously good San Diego Beer is, place your next order for this brand for your home or sample it at your cafe.
At all Live Dealers
IROQUOIS BOTTLING COMPANY
1344 Willow Street
Los Angeles Calif.
Both Phones
Hotel Bar
Removed into temporary quarters in west room of Fisher Bldg.
Finest of wines, liquors, and cigars. Anaheim beer on draught.
JOHN ZIEGLER, Manager
The First National Bank
Paid up Capital $50,000. Surplus and Undivided Profits over $65,000
Originally organized as a State Bank in 1893.
"The Old Reliable Bank"
Officers and Directors
C. E. HOLCOMB, President. EDGAR J. HARTUNG, Cashier,
FRANK SHANLEY, Vice-President. H. L. USTICK, Asst. Cashler.
A. S. BRADFORD, Vice-President. M. C. GOFF, Asst. Cashler.
SAMUEL KRAEMER
Our resources, advice and efficient service are at the disposition of our friends and customers at all times, and we assure you that any business entrusted to our care will receive prompt and careful attention.
4 Per Cent Interest Paid on Time Certificates.
BETTER DO YOUR BANKING BUSINESS WITH
"The Old Reliable Bank"
Melilotus-Indica Bean Sacks
Hay, Grain, Wood, Coal, Seeds, ICE
and Poultry Supplies
Halley & McClellan
290 N. Los Angeles St. Pac 317 Home 294
Beall Sacks
Hay, Grain, Wood, Coal, Seeds, ICE
and Poultry Supplies
Halley & McClellan
290 N. Los Angeles St. Pac 317 Home 294
Electric Power Is The Cheap Power
Because Cost of installation is less; labor for operating is saved;
less floor space is required; friction and wear and tear are reduced
to a minimum; repair bills are obviated; injury to building by vibration is eliminated; there is no loss in the shafting and pulleys; no
energy lost in getting started; always ready; always reliable; service
is always perfect.
Southern California Edison Co.
There is nothing so refreshing as a glass of
Anaheim Beer
"Once Tried, Never Denied"
Delivered to all parts of the city
Home 1264 Phones: Pacific 30
UNION
BREWING CO.
Good Place to Buy—
G-O-O-D L-U-M-B-E-R
C. GANAHL LUMBER COMPANY
Anaheim. Cal.
Sunset 20 and 362 Home 1053
Good Place to Buy—
G-O-O-D L-U-M-B-E-R
C. GANAHL LUMBER COMPANY
Anaheim, Cal.
Sunset 20 and 362 Home 1053
City Meat Market
Schneider Bros., Props.
We use Anaheim Beef and Provision Company's meats which we guarantee.
All our meat is U. S. Inspected
GIVE US A TRIAL ON PRICE AND QUALITY
PALACE MARKET.
Best the market affords fresh meats, hams, etc.
WM. SCHUMACHER, Prop.
CLEAN UP!
—LET THE—
Anaheim Laundry Company
do your laundry work and it will be done right and at RIGHT prices.
South Lemon St. Both Phones