anaheim-gazette 1916-01-20
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FALKENSTEIN PREPARING TO REMOVE HIS STORE
Will Conduct an Exclusive Ladies' Emporium in the Cassou Block
William Falkenstein is preparing for a big innovation in his department store. When the Cassou building is completed he will move into it, and will conduct an exclusive women's store, carrying nothing but goods suitable for ladies. The big stock of menswear which he now carries will be closed out in the meantime.
A room in the Cassou block 50x135 feet will be constructed especially for his store in accordance with plans furnished by him. It will be one of the largest and elaborately fitted-up store rooms in the county, and Mr. Falkenstein expects to have one of the most complete and up-to-date ladies' emporiums in the Southland. Everything in ladies wear will be kept in stock. The store room will be modern in every respect. In the front will be a 20-foot marble tile lobby, and these will also be a rest room, fitting rooms, trimming and dressing rooms.
Mr. Falkenstein expects to go to New York in due time to purchase a stock of goods for the new store. He will buy the largest and most complete stock of dry goods and ladies ready-to-wear garments and articles ever brought to Orange county. In the meantime he is closing out at a sacrifice all of his men's clothing and furnishing goods. He expects the new building to be ready about the first of June.
PRICES ADVANCING
"Spuds" otherwise known as potatoes, and sugar, two table essentials, are the center of market quotations just now. Spuds are going up, while its application. Tests are now being conducted by the bureau of Entomology with a view to preventing this evil. New methods of analysis have also been perfected for use in examining some of the samples collected in accordance with the provisions of the law. Many field tests have been made to determine the efficacy of various ingredients entering into the composition of insecticides, and studies have been made of the action of naphthalene, sodium fluoride, pyrethrum powders, tobacco powders, vegetable oils, etc., on insects when used as dusts, sprays, or fumigants.
ASSOCIATION INCREASING ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN
Large Sums Being Spent in Backing Sunkist Oranges
An idea of the good work being done with regards to publicity and advertising Southern California's oranges by the Exchange advertising staff and other officials may be gathered from the following article taken from The Produce News, Chicago:
The men in charge of the advertising of the California Fruit Growers' Exchange are past masters in the art of publicity. They talk Sunkist, think Sunkist and even dream Sunkist. Every man in the force firmly believes that the day will come when the children will be taught to cry for Sunkist. The boosting game is getting well under way and the coming year will be a publicity record breaker.
The same systematic organization methods used in standardizing packing and marketing their brand are being followed in the publicity campaign. Every angle has been covered and each detail dovetailed into another and on to make a complete chain. Every fruit stand, every retail and on up to the fancy grocer is given the benefit men and growers products. The supermarket is reasonably help materially walls of narrow, which has marked for many years.
WATER-SOAKING TO Now Dishonest De Out of Ordinary Inspectors of the riculture, in giving to the heavy traffic the holiday season it is the practice to add fresh water to such a way as to give size of the oysters, brought in contact for several hours with a considerable quantity and will increase its portion to the amount it drinks. As oysters by the pint or quart their size due to their enables the dealer to quart measure with oysters. In order size, oysters must water or water themalty. They will of the salt water grown to increase nor will oysters in any extent from fresh water if they main for only the sary to cleanse them.
If 4 quarts of oil of fresh water are container and the stand for several baskets a marked change in the contents of the naked eye there w
PRICES ADVANCING
"Spuds" otherwise known as potatoes, and sugar, two table essentials, are the center of market quotations just now. Spuds are going up, while sugar is on the downward grade.
The raise in potato prices is due to shipments from California to other states. Not in recent years has there been such a demand for the local product as now, especially for this time of year.
Texas is drawing heavily on California for potatoes, and Idaho is not shipping many out because of the cold weather, which prevents them from loading.
The recent rains have been a great benefit to vegetables and prevented serious damage to the crops. Vegetable men say that if the rain had not come a severe freeze could not have been prevented, which would have ruined a good many vegetable crops. Cauliflower, celery and lettuce were probably the largest benefactors.
The cold weather, according to vegetable men, has not helped green wax and lima beans and egg-plant and last week wholesalers raised their quotations for the best stock to 10 and 12 cents a pound.
Onions are soaring. Boiling and pickling onions were also advanced. Dealers claim that present quotations are the highest that the market has known for years, and from all indications are liable to go even higher. Stocks are low, both here and in other parts of the country, and the demand throughout the past three months has been unusually heavy.
BETTER INSECTICIDES
As a result of the insecticide act of 1910, farming communities in particular are now receiving a much higher grade of insecticides and fungicides. than formerly, according to the annual report of the insecticide and fungicide board just issued by the department. The improvement in the quality of these articles, says the report, encourages their use by farmers and is of great assistance in combating plant diseases and insect pests.
As an instance of the effect of the same systematic organization methods used in standardizing, packing and marketing their brand are being followed in the publicity campaign. Every angle has been covered and each detail dovetailed into another and on to make a complete chain. Every fruit stand, every retail and on up to the fancy grocer is given the benefit of a service department, the equal if not superior to that of the National Biscuit Co. when it launched the famous Uneeda biscuit several years ago.
Experienced window display men cover the retail trade regularly, teaching modern methods in displaying and selling fruit. These demonstrators are working under broad instructions. The dealer is taught how to display all lines of fruit to bring out color effects, since the consumer's eye does more actual selling than any talk of a salesman. While helping the retailer to sell fruit they are quietly winning his permanent confidence in the Sunkist brand so that in the end his repeat orders will soon make up the original service cost. Every large market is having the benefit of this educational dealer service.
The latest feature is a specially designed lipped glass orange cup with a ribbed glass fruit extractor in the center. The letters Sunkist are molded in the sides. The dealer secures these for $c each and sells for 10c. Pages 1nth Saturday Evening Post, Feb. 19, as well as in other largely circulated publications, will stimulate the demand, which will be supplied by the retailer at 10c each because of the charge of 16c if ordered from the Exchange branch office. The campaign will be directed to "drinking an orange," now considered the proper method in all up-to-date cafes as well as modern homes. Incidentally, the consumer will consume practically double the quantity when this habit becomes fixed. The extractors will earn a double profit all around since none can use one of them without being reminded of the Sunkist brand. Over 100,000 will be put out this season is the latest estimate.
The advertising of the orange cup or extractor is well designed. A dainty woman's hand is shown in the act of quickly pressing all the juice from the half of an orange into the glass cup, which looks clean and inviting. In the background appears a California ornate will be taught to cry for Sunkist. The boosting game is getting well under way and the coming year will be a publicity record breaker.
The same systematic organization methods used in standardizing, packing and marketing their brand are being followed in the publicity campaign. Every angle has been covered and each detail dovetailed into another and on to make a complete chain. Every fruit stand, every retail and on up to the fancy grocer is given the benefit of a service department, the equal if not superior to that of the National Biscuit Co. when it launched the famous Uneeda biscuit several years ago.
Experienced window display men cover the retail trade regularly, teaching modern methods in displaying and selling fruit. These demonstrators are working under broad instructions. The dealer is taught how to display all lines of fruit to bring out color effects, since the consumer's eye does more actual selling than any talk of a salesman. While helping the retailer to sell fruit they are quietly winning his permanent confidence in the Sunkist brand so that in the end his repeat orders will soon make up the original service cost. Every large market is having the benefit of this educational dealer service.
The latest feature is a specially designed lipped glass orange cup with a ribbed glass fruit extractor in the center. The letters Sunkist are molded in the sides. The dealer secures these for $c each and sells for 10c. Pages 1nth Saturday Evening Post, Feb. 19, as well as in other largely circulated publications, will stimulate the demand, which will be supplied by the retailer at 10c each because of the charge of 16c if ordered from the Exchange branch office. The campaign will be directed to "drinking an orange," now considered the proper method in all up-to-date cafes as well as modern homes. Incidentally, the consumer will consume practically double the quantity when this habit becomes fixed. The extractors will earn a double profit all around since none can use one of them without being reminded of the Sunkist brand. Over 100,000 will be put out this season is the latest estimate.
The advertising of the orange cup or extractor is well designed. A dainty woman's hand is shown in the act of quickly pressing all the juice from the half of an orange into the glass cup, which looks clean and inviting. In the background appears a California ornate will be taught to cry for Sunkist. The boosting game is getting well under way and the coming year will be a publicity record breaker.
The same systematic organization methods used in standardizing, packing and marketing their brand are being followed in the publicity campaign. Every angle has been covered and each detail dovetailed into another and on to make a complete chain. Every fruit stand, every retail and on up to the fancy grocer is given the benefit of a service department, the equal if not superior to that of the National Biscuit Co. when it launched the famous Uneeda biscuit several years ago.
Experienced window display men cover the retail trade regularly, teaching modern methods in displaying and selling fruit. These demonstrators are working under broad instructions. The dealer is taught how to display all lines of fruit to bring out color effects, since the consumer's eye does more actual selling than any talk of a salesman. While helping the retailer to sell fruit they are quietly winning his permanent confidence in the Sunkist brand so that in the end his repeat orders will soon make up the original service cost. Every large market is having the benefit of this educational dealer service.
The latest feature is a specially designed lipped glass orange cup with a ribbed glass fruit extractor in the center. The letters Sunkist are molded in the sides. The dealer secures these for $c each and sells for 10c. Pages 1nth Saturday Evening Post, Feb. 19, as well as in other largely circulated publications, will stimulate the demand, which will be supplied by the retailer at 10c each because of the charge of 16c if ordered from the Exchange branch office. The campaign will be directed to "drinking an orange," now considered the proper method in all up-to-date cafes as well as modern homes. Incidentally, the consumer will consume practically double the quantity when this habit becomes fixed. The extractors will earn a double profit all around since none can use one of them without being reminded of the Sunkist brand. Over 100,000 will be put out this season is the latest estimate.
The advertising of the orange cup or extractor is well designed. A dainty woman's hand is shown in the act of quickly pressing all the juice from the half of an orange into the glass cup, which looks clean and inviting. In the background appears a California ornate will be taught to cry for Sunkist. The boosting game is getting well under way and the coming year will be a publicity record breaker.
The same systematic organization methods used in standardizing, packing and marketing their brand are being followed in the publicity campaign. Every angle has been covered and each detail dovetailed into another and on to make a complete chain. Every fruit stand, every retail and on up to the fancy grocer is given the benefit of a service department, the equal if not superior to that of the National Biscuit Co. when it launched the famous Uneeda biscuit several years ago.
Experienced window display men cover the retail trade regularly, teaching modern methods in displaying and selling fruit. These demonstrators are working under broad instructions. The dealer is taught how to display all lines of fruit to bring out color effects, since the consumer's eye does more actual selling than any talk of a salesman. While helping the retailer to sell fruit they are quietly winning his permanent confidence in the Sunkist brand so that in the end his repeat orders will soon make up the original service cost. Every large market is having the benefit of this educational dealer service.
The latest feature is a specially designed lipped glass orange cup with a ribbed glass fruit extractor in the center. The letters Sunkist are molded in the sides. The dealer secures these for $c each and sells for 10c. Pages 1nth Saturday Evening Post, Feb. 19, as well as in other largely circulated publications, will stimulatethe demand,whichwillbesuppliedbytheretailerat10ceachbecauseofthechargeof16ciforderedfromtheExchangebranchoffice.Thecampaignwillbedirectedto"drinkinganorange,"nowconsideredthepropermethodinallup-to-datecafesaswellasmonthekindofdresswaterandincreaseinexactproportionwatertheydrinkoffoamedium-sizedoycreasedtothesize.Theadditionoflowers theirfoodvotersareadultateraleoftheFoodandDrivetablesthatfoodissubmergedwithitsoastorjuriouslyaffectstrength."
WEALTH RUNNER
The refusal of thie ment to allow thie water powers,run thie strangest feature conduct.
How many people 687,000 available per in thie United States cent of this vast vaultized,the rest runnethow many know tion of storage danger source of wealth ed to 200,000,000 hazy times that being
As a result of the insecticide act of 1910, farming communities in particular are now receiving a much higher grade of insecticides and fungicides than formerly, according to the annual report of the insecticide and fungicide board just issued by the department. The improvement in the quality of these articles, says the report, encourages their use by farmers and is of great assistance in combating plant diseases and insect pests.
As an instance of the effect of the law in raising the general standard of insecticides and fungicides, the report gives some statistics in regard to interstate shipments of lead arsenate, Paris green, lime sulphur solution, and Bordeaux mixture, either alone or in combination with insecticides. All of these preparations are in common use as sprays. In the fiscal year ended June 30,1912, 98 per cent of the samples of Bordeau mixture and Bordeaux mixture combined with insecticides collected failed to comply with the provisions of the law. In 1914 this percentage had fallen to 49. During the same period the percentages of samples of lime sulphur solution which did not comply with the law was reduced from 94 per cent to 27 per cent; lead arsenate from 60 per cent to 20 per cent; and Paris green from 28 per cent to 19 per cent.
In the year ended June 30,1915, the board collected 1,117 samples, of which 118 were turned over to the attorney general with recommendations that proceedings be instituted for alleged violations of the law.
In addition to regulatory work, the chemists of the board have done much work in connection with the properties of the various lead arsenates, and have ascertained that in many cases the injury done to foliage by di-lead arsenates is due to decomposition by salts contained in the waters used for this habit becomes fixed. The extractors will earn a double profit all around since none can use one of them without being reminded of the Sunkist brand. Over 100,000 will be put out this season is the latest estimate.
The advertising of the orange cup or extractor is well designed. A dainty woman's hand is shown in the act of quickly pressing all the juice from the half of an orange into the glass cup, which looks clean and inviting. In the background appears a California orange armch. Every feature of the ad is suggestive, and far sighted jobbers will secure supplies of the extractors early enough in advance to supply the retailers.
The Exchange advertising this season is remarkable for its scope. Every feature appears to have been devised by one hand and all are linked together to develop a permanent result. This is in sharp contrast to other campaigns of the past where the publicity men have made a splendid temporary showing, though today their work has been forgotten. By utilizing its present highly organized and developed distributive system to place its extractor into the hands of the consumer at nearly cost, the Exchange has solved one of the most serious problems in a permanent advertising program.
The 1915-16 advertising campaign covers pages in colors in 10 leading journals and 485 newspapers, giving a total circulation of 25,000,000. An average of 25 insertions will be used, making the campaign a 500,000,000 circulation proposition—by far the greatest campaign ever attempted for any fresh fruit. Every orange grower in California and Florida must share in the results more or less, so that this campaign in the last analysis shows a broad public spirit and blazes the way for the apple men, the peach
At a meeting of the committee at Santa bid of the Palmer for ornamental light. The posts are to be iron posts and th unit. The post and same kind as that corner of Third and
WATER-SOAKING OYSTERS TO INCREASE SIZE
Now Dishonest Dealers Make Selects Out of Ordinary Sized Bivalves
Inspectors of the department of agriculture, in giving special attention to the heavy traffic in oysters during the holiday season, have found that it is the practice of some dealers to add fresh water to shucked oysters in such a way as to greatly increase the size of the oysters. The oyster when brought in contact with fresh water for several hours will drink or absorb a considerable quantity of the water and will increase in size in exact proportion to the amount of water which it drinks. As oysters are usually sold by the pint or quart, any increase in their size due to the addition of water enables the dealer to fill the pint or quart measure with a smaller number of oysters. In order to increase the size, oysters must be soaked in fresh water or water that is only slightly salty. They will not drink enough of the salt water in which they are grown to increase materially in bulk; nor will oysters increase in bulk to any extent from being washed in fresh water if they are allowed to remain for only the few minutes necessary to cleanse them.
If 4 quarts of oysters and 1 quart of fresh water are placed in a 5 quart container and the mixture allowed to stand for several hours, there will be a marked change in the appearance of the contents of the container. To the naked eye there will appear to be 5 men and growers of other perishable products. The success of the campaign is reasonably assured. It will help materially to break down the walls of narrow, jealous prejudice which has marked the fruit industry for many years.
Friday morning the committee, consisting of Col. S. H. Finley, G. W. Minter and F. P. Nickey, decided to offer the Palmer contract to the property owners. Palmer's bid was to install the system for seevnty ornamental lights on Fourth street between Ross and Mortimer and on Main street from Second to Sixth for $9,920. This will bring the cost to $1,234 per front foot.
The proposal will be put into a contract, which will be passed among the property owners for their signatures. When all have signed the work of construction will commence.
Numerous bids were received by the committee. Some were for copper-jacketed posts, some for cast iron, some for concrete. Bids also varied as to the lamp to be furnished. A feature of the light that has been accepted is a reflector that throws the light downward.
PHYSICAL EXAMINATIONS IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS
New Jersey Mothers Strenuously Object to a Recent Arbitrary Ruling
In New York city the health department is demanding that "each pupil at the time of his or her admission to a public school, or free school supported in whole or in part by funds obtained from direct taxation," shall be examined "in the absence of all clothing" by a "duly licensed physician authorized to practice medicine in the state of New York.
We must confess that we do not like this sort of business. It is not exactly compatible with our ideas of freedom. We are foolish enough to presume that most parents in America are still wise enough and good enough as parents to look after the welfare of their own children. Most parents have about as much sense as most doctors. Of course, we must admit that there
grown to increase materially in bulk; nor will oysters increase in bulk to any extent from being washed in fresh water if they are allowed to remain for only the few minutes necessary to cleanse them.
If 4 quarts of oysters and 1 quart of fresh water are placed in a 5 quart container and the mixture allowed to stand for several hours, there will be a marked change in the appearance of the contents of the container. To the naked eye there will appear to be 5 quarts of dry oysters, for the container will be full and there will be little or no water in sight, it being on the inside of the plum, succulent looking oysters. The average purchaser has no means of detecting the addition of water. The chemist, however, by determining the amount of water in the oyster and comparing it with the amount that an oyster normally contains, can readily detect the adulteration.
The practice of incerasing the bulk by the addition of water is not confined to shucked oysters. Some dealers float the oysters for several hours while yet in the shell in fresh water or water that is much less salty than the water in which the oysters were grown. During the process of floating, the oysters drink in the fresh water and increase in weight and bulk in exact proportion to the amount of water they drink or absorb, and thus a medium-sized oyster may be increased to the size of a select.
The addition of water to oysters lowers their food value, and such oysters are adulterated under section 7 of the Food and Drugs act, which provides that food is adulterated if "a substance has been mixed and packed with it so as to reduce or lower or injuriously affect its quality or strength."
WEALTH RUNNING TO WASTE
The refusal of the national government to allow the development of our water powers, running to waste, is the strangest feature of our national conduct.
How many people know that of 61,687,000 available potential horsepower in the United States, only ten percent of this vast water power is utilized, the rest running to waste?
How many know that by construction of storage dams this water power source of wealth could be increased to 200,000,000 horse power or thirty times that being at present used?
It seems to us that it is a system of putting the whole public at the mercy of doctors who happen to get into certain offices. We are not entitled to be thus delivered, and our children, also to doctors who are not of our own choosing. And we have the knowledge that all medical knowledge up to the present date is more or less experimental and speculative. The science
the money he had secured from them.
"It is right that you should pay back what you defrauded them out of, said the judge, "but that should not be a consideration in making disposition of a criminal case. The idea of making a collection agency out of a court does not appeal to me at all."
January 21 was set for further showing in Kinkade's behalf. Attorney Davis presented a petition from those who received the checks and from neighbors of Kinkade at Hemet, asking that probation be extended to Kinkade. For a time Kinkade worked at Villa Park for J. B. Handy, whose name was forged to the two checks.
TWO AUAOS COLLIDE ON STATE HIGHWAY
Two or Three Persons Cut and Bruised But None Seriously
Two automobiles came together on the boulevard just north of the city limits Friday with a crash that damaged both cars seriously and sent two or three people to the hospital for repairs. No one was seriously injured, only minor cuts and bruises being sustained. Both drivers claim the other was wholly responsible for the accident, and damage suits are threatened.
Sherman Foster, with Fred Hart, Frank Burchard and George King all of Orange, wered riving north in a Regal car and met a Locomobile touring car coming south at the curve near the sugar factory. Mr. Foster stated that the Locomobile was traveling so fast that the driver didn't dare keep to the outside edge of the curve He cut in and locked wheels with
How many people know that of 61,687,000 available potential horsepower in the United States, only ten per cent of this vast water power is utilized, the rest running to waste?
How many know that by construction of storage dams this water power source of wealth could be increased to 200,000,000 horse power or thirty times that being at present used?
The development of this 61,687,000 horse power from water now running to waste is equivalent to use of 340,000,000 tons of coal annually, worth at the mine $680,000,000.
If you had that pile of coal or that water power going to waste would you burn the coal or utilize the water power?
Is it not time a start was made by the enactment of fair and practical legislation to encourage its development?
HE SPOKE TOO FAST
No doubt the doctor spoke rashly. An inquisitive niece, seeing him return from the funeral of a wealthy patient, innocently inquired:
"Uncle Tom, do you attend the funerals of all your patients who die?"
"Good heavens, no," said the doctor, "Do you think I have nothing to do but go to funerals."
LIGHTS FOR SANTA ANA
At a meeting of the citizen's lighting committee at Santa Ana Monday the bid of the Palmer Motor company for ornamental lights was accepted. The posts are to be twelve-foot cast iron posts and the lights the single unit. The post and light are of the same kind as that on exhibition at the corner of Third and Sycamore streets.
It seems to us that it is a system of putting the whole public at the mercy of doctors who happen to get into certain offices. We are not entitled to be thus delivered, and our children, also to doctors who are not of our own choosing. And we have the knowledge that all medical knowledge up to the present date is more or less experimental and speculative. The science of medicine is not yet an absolute science. The findings of doctors are at variance. One finds this, another that, and it is seldom that any two are agreed. The chances, therefore, are that neither one may be correct, and to have compulsory inspectors and then compulsory treatment—for unless the findings of the inspectors are heeded the children cannot be returned to the schools—is not only unscientific, but it is outrageous.
WANTS PROBATION
J. W. Kinkade's physical condition was used as an argument Friday by Attorney W. W. Davis in an effort to get probation for Kinkade, pleading guilty to forgery. Medical testimony showed that Kinkade should be operated upon for gall stones, and that another operation is needed to restore the man's sight, which is dim. Deputy District Attorney Koepsel is resisting the plea for probation said that these operations could be performed at the penitentiary.
"I am not inclined to give you probation," said the court. "You deliberately cashed these 'two forged checks,' knowing that you were breaking the law."
Kinkade said that if he got probation he would pay back to the Olive storekeeper and the Orange merchant
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
Assessment No. 1
Pacific Mausoleum Company, a corporation, organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of California, with its principal place of business and office in the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California.
Notice is hereby given that at a regular meeting of the Board of Directors, held on the 5th day of June, 1915, an assessment of five (56) cents per share, or five percent on each one dollar, was levied upon the subscribed capital stock of this corporation, payable immediately in United States gold coin, to the Secretary of said Company, at its office in the Masonic Temple Building, City of Anaheim, State of California.
Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the first day of February, 1916, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before, will be sold on Friday the 18th day of February, 1916, to pay the delinquent assessment, together with the costs of advertising and expenses of sale.
By order of the Board of Directors.
L. F. POMEROY,
Secretary.
Office: Room 9, Masonic Temple Building, Anaheim California. 12-30-4
Prince Albert is such friendly tobacco
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Get on the right-smoke-track soon as you know how!
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PRINCE ALBERT
the national joy smoke
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Men, get us right on Prince Albert! We tell you this tobacco will prove better than you can figure out, it's so chummy and fragrant and inviting all the time. Can't cost you more than 5c or 10c to get your bearings!
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Buy Prince Albert everywhere tobacco is sold—in toppy red bags, 5c; tidy red tins, 10c; handsome pound and half-pound tin humidors—and in that classy crystal-glass pound humidor with sponge-moistener top that keeps the tobacco in such great trim!
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY
Winston-Salem, N.C.
For further show-half. Attorney edition from those checks and from at Hemet, extended to Kinnekade worked at Handy, whose two checks.
DEATE HIGHWAY
Cut and Bruised seriously
Same together on north of the city crash that damnily and sent two the hospital for seriously injurious bruises being claim the othersible for the accidents are threatenwith Fred Hart, George King all living north in a Locomobile tour at the curve cry. Mr. Foster mobile was traveler didn't dare edge of the curveed wheels withthe windshield and was taken to the sanitarium for surgical attention. They declare a woman passenger in the Locomobile received a fractured collar bone and was also taken to the sanitarium. Also they say the driver and the lady both refused to give their names.
The driver of the Locomobile was R. P. Daniels of San Diego. His car was so badly damaged that it had to be taken to the soap for repairs. Mr. Daniels declares that the man from Orange was responsible for the accident. He states that he was coming toward Anaheim from Los Angeles and met the Regal car which was traveling at a high rate of speed. When he noticed the reckless driving of the Regal he attempted to turn off the boulevard into Lemon street, but was struck by the Orange car before he could get off the road. He threatens to prosecute the driver of the Regal for reckless driving.
All the patries to the accident were reticent at first, but it appears nobody was seriously hurt.
PEANUT OIL
Production of oil from the peanut is being tried by some cottonseed oil mills in the United States, according to commerce reports. The short cotton crop this season and soaring prices for cotton seed have offered the prospect of a curtailment of the season unless some change were made. Several oil mills in North Carolina are reported to have been successful in the experiment of substituting peanuts for the customary raw material.
Figures given show that the peanut yields between 50 and 60 gallons of oil to the ton, comparing favorably with the yield from cotton seed. The strength in ammonia of the cake is also an important element favoring the peanut.
SOME RAIN
The late Congerssman W. W. Wedemeyer used to tell a story of rain in the Klondike. He was going up the Yukon on a government junket, and the sky drizzled all the way. At one landing a dejected looking "sourdough" stood on the wharf awaiting the boat "I say, partner," asked Wedemeyer, "how long has it been raining?" "Dunno," was the reply, "I've only been here seventeen years."
Mrs. F. McBride of Olinda received from her husband, Frank McBride, now in Chank, India, a beautiful piece of tapestry, made in India and very rare. Her boys received gold spoons each engraved with a picture of Rangoon, India. Some time ago Mrs. McBride received from her husband an embroidered table cover 44 inches square.
Hay for sale in carload lots or less. Storage room 413 East Center street, Anaheim. Both phones: Home 123; Sunset 249-W.
Sunset 20 and 362 Home 1053
City Meat Market
Schneider Bros., Props.
DEALERS IN
FRESH AND SMOKED MEATS
Butter, Cheese, Sauer Kraut, and Pickles
Oysters in Bulk
Patronize Home Industry—
We sell Anaheim Beef & Provision Company's meats.
Willard
You Can't Go Wrong
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