anaheim-gazette 1918-12-12
Searchable text
FOOD VALUE OF
THE HUMBLE
PEANUT
MORE BODY FUEL TO THE POUND
THAN IN ROUND BEEFSTEAK
NEW AND DIFFERENT RECIPES TO
UTILIZE THIS VALUABLE
FOOD-PRODUCT
The housewife who is overlooking the possibilities in peanut butter, during these days of meat conservation, is missing a good chance of supplying her family with a food possessing a high protein and a high energy value at a low cost.
Peanut butter was used first as food for the sick; later it appeared on the home table as a side dish. Of late years, it has come into its own and its value as a supplier of protein and fat in the diet is now well recognized.
The larger part of that now used is made in peanut butter factories, but many still prefer to mane in the home what they use. An ordinary food chopper is used for the purpose—salt may be added to the nuts before or after grinding.
Peanut-Butter Recipes
Remember when planning your recipes that peanut butter possesses 950 calories per pound.
Peanut-Butter Omelet
4 eggs.
gar until it forms a hard ball when dropped in cold water. Pour over the beaten egg white and beat until stiff. Add the peanut butter the last thing. Spread between the layers of simple 1 egg cake or spronge cake. Serve with a fork.
NEW USES FOR DAIRY PRODUCTS
Realizing that increased knowledge of the value of milk as a food and ways to use it more extensively in the diet will help to meet the war-time food situation, the management of the National Dairy Show at Columbus requested the Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Education, Food Administration and Children's Bureau to install an exhibit covering these points. This exhibit, supplementing the work of the children's year, proved to be one popular with the crowds.
Graphic exhibits showing the value of milk were in the booths, while hourly demonstrations were given, with lectures dwelling on the fact that milk is essential to the diet. The cheapness of milk as a food compared with other staple foods was constantly impressed. One quart of milk is equal in fuel value for the day's work or play to any one of the following animal foods:
3-4 pound lean beef.
8 eggs.
3 pounds fresh codfish.
2 pounds chicken.
4-5 pound pork loin.
3-5 pound ham.
3 pints oysters.
Appetizing recipes in which milk formed the basis were put together before the crowds by the demonstrators in the booths:
eBlow are some of them:
Corn Chowder
The larger part of that now used is made in peanut butter factories, but many still prefer to man in the home what they use. An ordinary food chopper is used for the purpose—salt may be added to the nuts before or after grinding.
Peanut-Butter Recipes
Remember when planning your recipes that peanut butter possesses 950 calories per pound.
Peanut-Butter Omelet
4 eggs.
4 tablespoons milk.
6 tablespoons peanut butter.
1 tablespoon salt
Mix peanut butter with the milk. Separate the whites and yolks of the eggs and beat well. Blend milk with the beaten yolks and fold in the beaten whites. Brown the omelet and fold. Serve on a hot platter with a cream or tomato sauce.
Peanut-Butter Loaf
2 cups bread crumbs.
1 cup cooked rice.
½ cup chopped stuffed olives.
¼ teaspoon celery salt.
½ cup peanut butter.
1 teaspoon onion juice.
2 teaspoons salt.
2 eggs.
½ cup milk.
Mix the ingredients and form into a loaf. Bake until brown. Serve with a tomato sauce.
Scalloped Rice With Peanut-Butter Sauce
Make a peanut sauce as follows:
2 cups milk.
2 tablespoons flour.
6 tablespoons peanut-butter.
2 teaspoons salt.
2 teaspoons onion juice.
2½ cups cooked rice.
Blend the flour and the peanut butter with a little cold milk. Add to the hot milk with the seasonings. Cook until it thickens. Put a layer of rice in a baking dish and cover with a layer of the peanut sauce. Repeat until the dish is full. Bake in an oven for 20 minutes.
Peanut-Butter Salad Dressing
½ cup sour cream.
2 tablespoons peanut butter.
2 tablespoons vinegar.
1 egg.
½ tablespoon sugar.
½ teaspoon salt.
¼ teaspoon mustard.
1-8 teaspoon paprika.
Mix and cook in a double boiler until thickened.
Peanut-Butter Sandwich Cream
1 cup milk.
1 tablespoon flour.
Appetizing recipes in which milk formed the basis were put together before the crowds by the demonstrators in the booths:
eBlow are some of them:
Corn Chowder
1 can corn.
4 cups potatoes cut in ¼ in. slices.
1½ in. cubs fat salt pork.
1 sliced onion.
4 cups scalded milk.
8 common crackers.
3 tablespoons butter.
Salt and pepper.
Baked Rarebit
1 pound soft, mild cheese.
1-3-4 teaspoon salt.
1-3 teaspoon paprika.
1 cups butter.
1½ cup milk.
2½ cups stale bread crumbs.
3 eggs.
Oyster Rarebit
1 cup oysters.
2 tablespoons butter.
½ pound soft, mild cheese cut in small pieces.
Few grains cayenne.
¼ teaspoon salt.
2 eggs.
Stuffed Prune Salad
Use large prunes which have been steamed and pitted. Fill cavity with cream or cottage cheese. Sprinkle with finely chopped nuts. Serve on lettuce leaves with mayonnaise.
Cottage Cheese Loaf
1 cup cooked rice (dry and flaky).
1 cup cottage cheese.
½ cup ground peanuts.
1 cup bread crumbs (or more).
1 tablespoon chopped onion.
1 tablespoon savory fat or drippings.
¼ teaspoon soda.
1 cup strained tomato.
BAN LIFTED
Holiday business is no longer under taboo. The busier, the better, is now the spirit of the government.
The State Council of Defense announces that all of the requests made heretofore to restrict Christmas buying are called off, from Washington.
The restrictions had for their object the conservation of labor in the stores and in delivery systems, and the avoidance of congestion on transportation lines busy with hauling troops, material and supplies necessary in the war.
In Russia the opposition to any government They dissolved the body chosen by of the bayonet received popular sures,—on the col liberately decide general have no gernment, and tha of their own kid pressed all new been deemed uncles. They have free speech. The decrees with a the despotism of More recently stroyed product incentive to lab property only m to theft and mu civilists have de diet who does not wing of the soo They have there in a country alreation rations be doctrine that tha the best methodment. Those w are to be denied stated that man liberately killed enment in ord mand for foods
In Germany wcialists, those w most headway w government at the same method to any election. people to express form or measure do not want ad They declare tha represent shall with governing must be reduce these are the p and elsewhere used to talk ab "people's rule," unselfish and a they are reveal to quote the w rison protesting these banbittl, autocracy for a prey however, l or interest in
1½ cup sour cream.
2 tablespoons peanut butter.
2 tablespoons vinegar.
1 egg.
1½ tablespoon sugar.
1½ teaspoon salt.
1¼ teaspoon mustard.
1-8 teaspoon paprika.
Mix and cook in a double boiler until thickened.
Peanut-Butter Sandwich Cream
1 cup milk.
1 tablespoon flour.
1 tablespoon water.
1 egg.
1 teaspoon salt.
1¼ teaspoon paprika.
2 tablespoons vinegar.
1½ cup chopped stuffed olives.
1 cup peanut butter.
Heat the milk in a double boiler. Blend the flour, water and peanut butter to a smooth paste, add salt and paprika and the egg beaten slightly. Mix with the hot milk and cook for five minutes in the double boiler. Add the chopped olives and vinegar. Cool and spread on sandwiches.
Make only the quantity needed for immediate use, as this sandwich cream does not keep well.
Peanut-Butter Cookies
½ cup corn syrup.
½ cup sugar.
4 tablespoons shortening.
8 tablespoons peanut butter.
¼ cup milk.
2 eggs.
1 teaspoon salt.
1 teaspoon vanilla.
3 teaspoons baking powder.
2½ cups rice flour.
2½ cups wheat flour.
Peanut-Butter Cake Filling
½ cup corn syrup.
1 tablespoon vinegar.
¼ teaspoon salt.
2 tablespoons peanut butter.
The white of 1 egg.
Cook the corn syrup with the vineHoliday business is no longer under taboo. The busier, the better, is now the spirit of the government.
The State Council of Defense announces that all of the requests made heretofore to restrict Christmas buying are called off, from Washington.
The restrictions had for their object the conservation of labor in the stores and in delivery systems, and the avoidance of congestion on transportation lines busy with hauling troops, material and supplies necessary in the war. But the armistice has brought a change.
The Council of National Defense has telegraphed to the state council as follows:
"As one of the steps essential to the rapid establishment of normal after-the-war conditions, the Council of National Defense should and hereby does, lift its ban in connection with holiday buying, in the desire to give a natural impetus to the re-employment of those normally engaged in the production of holiday material and in the holiday trade. The council is further impelled to this decision by reason of the necessity now confronting us to get our military forces and munition factory workers back to the ordinary pursuits of life with the least possible shock in making the change."
KELLY STILL IN LIMELIGHT
While President Wilson stood on the bridge of the George Washington in New York harbor waiting for the vessel to begin her journey to France, an aviator sailed overhead, making his machine cut all the daring stunts known to a reckless aviator. A dispatch from New York says the birdman was Lieut. Fred Kelly, the famous Orange county athlete, and that he was given two weeks' post duty at Camp Hazelhunt as punishment for his reckless exhibition, Nothing slow about Kelly."
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PRODUCTS
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APPRECIATIVE
Santa Ana, Dec. 4.
Editor Gazette: District Board No. 1, Southern District, deeply appreciates the publicity given all Selective Service activities by your paper. This co-operation has materially assisted this board in handling the various matters coming under its supervision, and in behalf of the board, I desire to thank you for the same.
Respectfully yours,
C. D. BALL,
Member of Board.
SOCIALISM; TRADING NEW AUTOCRACIES FOR OLD
The socialist mind,—of course not all the socialist minds are in the socialist party,—is inherently autocratic. It is opposed to government by the people as stubbornly as are the royal autocrats of earth. It believes that government should first be made as pervasive and powerful as possible, and then that the exercise of the power thus created should be wielded by individuals or groups entirely without regard to those not belonging to the particular cabal, gang or party in power. We do not have to go abroad to observe this tendency of the socialist mind. But the best examples are found in Russia and in Germany.
In Russia the socialists in power are opposed to any government created by the people. They have refused from the beginning to give the people a chance to express their wishes relative to any governmental form or policy. They dissolved the only legislative body chosen by the people at the point of the bayonet. They have never received popular sanction of their measures,—on the contrary they have de-
pilation just made from reports of state chairmen of the seven states of the Twelfth Federal District. The record distribution of the loan is considered largely one of the results of this comprehensive campaign, as well as the total subscription which is practically double that of any former loan.
In addition to over-subscribing the district quota by 15%, citizens of the Twelfth district contributed more than a half million dollars to put through the advertising campaign planned by George A. VanSmith, manager of publicity for the second, third and fourth loans. With this money more than 5000 advertising pages were paid for in the newspapers of the district. These pages were sent out in mat or plate form by the San Francisco office.
The preference of newspapers and committees of the district for advertising copy prepared by the general publicity committee in San Francisco, over copy prepared by national headquarters is shown by the use of three and one half times as many pages of district copy as national copy. Both displays were submitted on the same basis.
According to the reports, President Wilson is shown to be the best ad writer or the most popular subject. Full pages carrying his Liberty Loan statement were used more times than any other advertisement. The President Abraham Lincoln page was second. This copy carried a likeness of the immortal Lincoln with the phrase "That these dead shall not have died in vain," and the drawing showed Americans at a Hun barb wire entanglement. Copy making use of the Stars and Stripes was third in popularity while the prize winner of the district advertising copy contest was fourth. Atrocity copy was sixth.
other state who may be dragging down child and women labor, squeezing the providers for families, not protected as they are in this state. To buy the products of a sweat-shop is to taint yourself with responsibility for such a labor condition. Every product bearing the slogan "Made in California," gives assurance that that product is produced under sanitary conditions, at a wage promoting the ambitions of our boys and protecting the virtues of our girls. It means your money's worth from any angle from which you choose to view it.
LAW MAKERS MEET TO DISCUSS FUTURE WORK
Members of the Legislature Will Gather at Santa Ana Saturday
Legislators of Southern California, excepting Los Angeles county, are to hold a meeting in Santa Ana at 10:30 o'clock Saturday, December 14.
The meeting has been called by State Senator Lyman M. King of Redlands, who is firmly of the opinion that the assemblymen and state senators from this end of the state who are not from Los Angeles ought to get together for a preliminary conference before going to the meeting to be held in Los Angeles, to which all Southern California legislators are invited.
In years gone by it has been custom for all Southern California legislators to meet at the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce some time in December previous to the meeting of the legislature the first Monday in January. It has generally been found that the Los Angeles legislators work close together, while the outsiders without organization are unable always to make their weight effective. The meeting to be; held in Santa Ana will probably bring about a better an-
In Russia the socialists in power are opposed to any government created by the people. They have refused from the beginning to give the people a chance to express their wishes relative to any governmental form or policy. They dissolved the only legislative body chosen by the people at the point of the bayonet. They have never received popular sanction of their measures,—on the contrary they have deliberately decided that the people in general have nothing to do with government, and that this is the function of their own kidney. They have suppressed all newspapers which have been deemed unfriendly to their policies. They have completely suppressed free speech. They have enforced their decrees with a tyranny which makes the despotism of the Czar seem liberal.
More recently, having entirely destroyed production by removing every incentive to labor, since possession of property only makes the holder liable to theft and murder, the bolshevik socialists had decided that no one can eat who does not attach himself to that wing of the socialist party in power. They have therefore seized all the food in a country already reduced to starvation rations because of the bolshevik doctrine that theft, rather than toil, is the best method of national enrichment. Those who are not bolsheviks are to be denied the right to eat. It is stated that many people have been deliberately killed by the socialist government in order to decrease the demand for foodstuffs.
In Germany we find the extreme socialists, those who seem to be making most headway toward the seizure of government at this time, employing the same methods. They are opposed to any election. They do not wish the people to express their views as to the form or measures of government. They do not want a constituent assembly. They declare that only the class they represent shall have anything to do with governing the country; the rest must be reduced to serfdom. And these are the people who in Germany and elsewhere throughout the world, used to talk about the necessity of the "people's rule," and profess the most unselfish and altruistic motives. Now they are revealed as those who would, to quote the words of a German garron protesting against the methods of these banbitti, merely substitute one autocracy for another; the new autocracy however, lacking in the efficiency or interest in popular welfare which best examples are found in Russia and in Germany.
The President Abraham Lincoln page was second. This copy carried a likeness of the immortal Lincoln with the phrase "That these dead shall not have died in vain," and the drawing showed Americans at a Hun barb wire entanglement. Copy making use of the Stars and Stripes was third in popularity while the prize winner of the district advertising copy contest was fourth. Atrocity copy was sixth.
THE CALIFORNIA PESSIMIST PROVEN WRONG
You have learned to deny yourself luxuries, to conserve your necessities, and to eat inferior bread, and you can thank our returning workmen that you did not have to eat crow and bow to the most vicious slavery—the slavery of the mind. Coupled with a patriotic purchasing of products produced at home, you have the additional assurance that you are buying the best products that can be produced. Our raw materials are the highest grade and our labor conditions are upon such a high plane that inferior workmanship is a commercial impossibility in California. Price and quality being equal, insist that you be supplied a California product in preference to an article manufactured outside the state. Business depression is always predicted by commercial pessimists who see in any unusual activity a waste of energy. Depression was predicted to follow the recent Panama-Pacific International Exposition. But it did not materialize.
Commercial extinction for San Francisco was predicted following the great fire. San Francisco is still here stronger than ever. No American soldiers have shown greater initiative, or narder fighting qualities, than the citizens contributed by the state of California. These men are going to bring back that same force augmented by a worldly experience. They have the right to demand much of us, and it behooves us not to be short in our response to them. We must prove to them that we have had the courage to hold together our political and commercial structure, so that they may come back as good, or better, than they left.
The mingling of tears of sympathy and joyous gratitude fill the need of the moment. But that time must come when the prosaic necessities of life will intrude, and the hum of factories will be joyous music to ears attuned to the screaming of shells. We must be able to lead each man to his particular advertisement. The President Abraham Lincoln page was second. This copy carried a likeness of the immortal Lincoln with the phrase "That these dead shall not have died in vain," and the drawing showed Americans at a Hun barb wire entanglement. Copy making use of the Stars and Stripes was third in popularity while the prize winner of the district advertising copy contest was fourth. Atrocity copy was sixth.
In years gone by it has been the custom for all Southern California legislators to meet at the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce some time in December previous to the meeting of the legislature the first Monday in January. It has generally been found that the Los Angeles legislators work close together, while the outsiders without organization are unable always to make their weight effective. The meeting to be held in Santa Ana will probably bring about a better understanding among the assemblymen and senators who will go to Sacramento in January.
Assemblymaff Walter Eden of Santa Ana was asked to make arrangements for the meeting that is to be held in Santa Ana. He promptly accepted the designation of Santa Ana as the place of meeting. Through the Chamber of Commerce, entertainment will be offered the visitors. Possibly a dinner at noon and a ride over the surrounding country will be featured.
A movement is on throughout Southern California to encourage all firms and individuals to give War Savings Stamps and Thrift Stamps as Christmas and holiday gifts instead of money.
In furtherance of this scheme, state headquarters of the National War Savings Committee for California (south) has sent to 20,000 business firms in nine southern counties, copies of a letter by State Director G. A. Davidson, setting forth the great advantages of this idea to all parties concerned, and enclosing pledges and samples of W. S. gift folders.
Mr. Davidson points out that employees will be grateful for such a gift, that it will aid in putting Southern California over the top in her War Savings quota and that stamps are better than money because they earn money. Already hundreds of firms have responded to this appeal by signing the pledge to purchase a certain number of stamps for firm employees for Christmas and returning these to headquarters at 320 Title Insurance building, Los Angeles.
In order that the giving of these patriotic gifts may not rob the season of its Merry Christmas cheer, the committee has arranged to supply W. S. S. folders or stamp containers, which are arranged in convenient sizes to hold the stamp. These folders have decorations of Christmas and patriotic designs attractively mingled and appropriate cerses are printed beneath. In this manner the gift has all the appeal of the holiday time.
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE
The advertising and publicity campaign for the Fourth Liberty Loan was the greatest ever put on in a single month in the West, according to a com-
mber of people who in Germany and elsewhere throughout the world used to talk about the necessity of the "people's rule," and profess the most unselfish and altruistic motives. Now they are revealed as those who would, to quote the words of a German garrison protesting against the methods of these banbitti, merely substitute one autocracy for another; the new autocracy however, lacking in the efficiency or interest in popular welfare which within the borders of Germany characterized the old.
The worst foes of freedom are not the personal autocrats, from whom nothing but tyranny is to be expected, but the bloodthirsty, greedy, envious, intolerant leaders of mobs, who, with mouth-filling phrases about the liberty they demand for themselves but refuse to others, waste the opportunities for public service which public responsibility brings, and discredit to that extent the whole cause of popular government. The bolshevik advertisers are here and everywhere throughout the world. Not all of them are preaching their hateful doctrines from the store boxes and the barrel heads. Some of them are on the college rostrum and in high places of public responsibility. Some are in earnest and some are dishonest; the effect in both cases is the same. Mumbling about democracy,—every advance agent of tyranny has professed love of the people,—they prepare the way for autocracy. They love the people,—but they predicate this affection upon the presumption that they, and they alone, are the people.
Let us bring forth our dollars and spend them. Let us give the lie to the vicious propaganda of depression following the war. Let us drive the cowards among capitalists from their ambush and compel them to establish new industries, to take the place of those destroyed or weakened. Let us augment and develop those institutions that we now have for providing em-polyment. Let us not tolerate lowering the wage of the working man because of his necessities. A country running full blast is not worried about the cost of doing business. Remember that you, Mr. and Mrs. Consumer, pay the bills. You have the right to demand that production be carried on within your community; that your dollar may return again unto you many times; that you wage earners be given necessary employment under the protecting laws that you have so carefully built up in the state of California.
It is your glorious privilege to live in this wonderful state. It is your moral duty to support it by every means within your power—and your greatest power is your spending power. It is within your power to smite the profiteer within the jurisdiction of this state of California, but you have not that power over a profiteer in an-building, Los Angeles.
In order that the giving of these patriotic gifts may not rob the season of its Merry Christmas cheer, the committee has arranged to supply W. S. S. folders or stamp containers, which are arranged in convenient sizes to hold the stamp. These folders have decorations of Christmas and patriotic designs attractively mingled and appropriate cerses are printed beneath. In this manner the gift has all the appeal of the holiday time.
The National War Savings Committee has arranged to handle these folders and will supply them to any firm in the number required to meet its needs at wholesale cost, 35 cents a dozen. While this is not a necessary adjunct of giving the stamps, it is an added attraction. Stamps pledged in this way may be bought any time before Christmas, but it is requested
may be dragging down labor, squeezing the wages, not protected as late. To buy the pro-op is to taint your utility for such a laxity product bearing on California," gives that product is pro-utility conditions, at a time ambitions of our virtues of our money's worth in which you choose.
EET TO FUTURE WORK
Legislature Will Ana Ana Saturday Southern California, Angeles county, are to Santa Ana at 10:30 December 14.
has been called by Ian M. King of Redford of the opinion that and state senators of the state who areoles ought to get preliminary conference meeting to be held which all Southern states are invited.
It has been the custom California legislators some time in to the meeting of the first Monday in generally been found les legislators work while the outsidersation are unable al-air weight effective. held in Santa Ana about a better an-that all business concerns wishing to take part in this patriotic demonstration will send their pledges in as early as possible, since the time is so short. New Year's bonuses may also be given in this manner, and this suggestion is meeting with great response.
TONS OF DATES FOR SAILORS
Tons of dates, the crop grown by the United States Department of Agriculture in the date-testing gardens at Indio and Mecca, Cal., will be supplied to the Navy Department for the use of crews on board destroyers. In supplying these dates to the Navy Department the specialists' of the Department of Agriculture will obtain valuable data on the keeping qualities of the varieties being tested, as well as on the effect of the different maturation processes and methods of packing used in preparing the dates for shipment—information that will be valuable to the rapidly developing date industry in the southwest. The dates, a confection rich in sugar, the department specialists say, are of great value as a concentrated food.
The pdeliminary hearing of William Oliver, who shot Morales at Anaheim Landing on election day, will be held before Justice Cox of Santa Ana on Tuesday, December 17, at 2 o'clock. Oliver was at large until last Friday, when he was arrested by the sheriff at the Anaheim dump.
SONG OF THE FLU
I am the flu,
The Spanish flu;
The same old flu,
That you once knew;
'Cept before
OFFICE PHONES
HOME 753-1 SUNSET 341-J.
Res. 125 E. Broadway, Cor. Claudina RESIDENCE PHONES
PACIFIC 341-M HOME 753-2
J. W. TRUXAW, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
HOURS 11-12; 2-4; 7-8
GERMAN AMERICAN BANK BLDG.
Cor. Center and Los Angeles Sts.
ANAHEIM, CAL.
J.C.Osher,D.D.S.,M.D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT—ORAL SURGERY—GLASSES FITTED
SUITE 1 CENTRAL BLDG.
PHONE SUNSET 337
Dr. G. A. Neth
General Drugless Practitioner
SUITE 4, CASSOU BLDG., ANAHEIM
Our treatments are especially advantageous for ailments of the Nerves and pains in the muscles and joints. Acute or chronic diseases of the various organs often yield with surprising alacrity to our modalities. Fees reasonable.
VICTOR CEMENT AGENCY
GIBBS LUMBER
East Broadway
ANAHEIM CAL.
Anaheim Cash Market
SONG OF THE FLU
I am the flu,
The Spanish flu;
The same old flu,
That you once knew;
'Cept before
You called me "grippe"—
I'm here again,
Another trip.
I am the sneeze,
That comes with the flu;
The same old flu,
That you once knew;
A quick, jerky sneeze,
Cast on the breeze—
I scatter germs
On whom I please.
I am the germ,
That comes with the sneeze;
The quick, jerky sneeze,
Cast on the breeze;
I squirm and I wiggle,
I laugh and I giggle—
A victim! Ha, ha!
I swoop like an eagle.
Envoy
Alas, my race is almost run.
A few more victims, then I'm done;
I'll pack my "grippe" and back to Spain,
But don't forget, I'll come again.
GRIFITH LUMBER CO.
SEE US FOR YOUR BUILDING MATERIAL
In Any Amount, Large or Small
South Los Angeles St. H. M. ADAMS, Mgr.
CITY MEAT MARKET
117 W. Center St.
ED. W. SCHNEIDER Proprietor
We have always on hand choice meats
CITY MEAT MARKET
117 W. Center St.
ED. W. SCHNEIDER Proprietor
We have always on hand choice meats of all kinds. New York count oysters and new kraut.
Phone Your Orders Early.
Home 1053 PHONES Sunset 20
Good Place to Buy—
G-O-O-D L-U-M-B-E-R
C. GANAHL LUMBER COMPANY
Anaheim Cal
ANAHEIM FEED and FUEL CO.
DEALERS IN
Wood, Coal, Hay, Grain Seeds and Flour
PUBLIC WEIGHING SCALES
Phones: Pacific 317, Home 294
R. W. McClellan, W. D. Grafton, Props.