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Publications Anaheim Gazette 1921 March

anaheim-gazette 1921-03-24

1921-03-24 · Anaheim Gazette · page 5 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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The S. Q. R. Store Queen Quality SHOES Buy Your Shoes By This Trademark It Means Fashion, Full Value and Real Satisfaction in Footwear If You Wear on Easter, a New Pair Of QUEEN QUALITY SHOES —You may feel sure that you are smartly and correctly shod. The styles being shown in the shoes of this familiar make are par- If You Wear on Easter, a New Pair Of QUEEN QUALITY SHOES —You may feel sure that you are smartly and correctly shod. The styles being shown in the shoes of this familiar make are particularly attractive and there are to be noticed various modish touches which add to individuality in footwear. The S. Q. R. Store The Florsheim Shoe A man said to us: "I want Florsheim Shoes. I know what they are. I have worn them so long and had so much sat- A man said to us: "I want Florsheim Shoes. I know what they are. I have worn them so long and had so much satisfaction that I can't see the sense in taking a chance on something I don't know, just to save a couple of dollars. I call that false economy—it doesn't pay in the long run. That's why I come here for Florsheim Shoes, and pay what they are worth. I get all that I pay for every, time." By All Means Get a Fit. F. A. YUNGBLUTH Home of Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes. Arthur Pence, who is now living at Orange, last week purchased a Dodge car of C. H. Mann. The S. Q. R. Store is making a special offer on the yearly subscription to the "Delineator" this week. This opportunity will be given for a short time only. Jesus Sierra, who disturbed the peace of North Los Angeles street Saturday evening, was given ninety days in the county jail by Judge Howard Monday. Next Sunday is Easter, and it is expected there will be a wonderful display of new spring millinery at the churches, provided the weather man gives us an ideal summer day, which he probably will. C. C. Wilson, who resides on the boulevard between Santa Ana and Anaheim, has reported to the police and sheriff's office the theft of a suit of clothes, a pair of shoes, a shirt stud, a diamond stick pin and a pearl-handled revolver. All of the articles were taken from Wilson's home late Saturday evening during his absence from the house, he told authorities. Jack Abbott, who is a student at U.S.C. won second honors as a javelin thrower in the contest between his university and Stanford last week. David Browne of Los Angeles, ran into Dr. J. W. Utter's car Sunday and reduced it to a wreck. Fortunately nobody was in the car at the time Browne was arrested charged with driving a car while intoxicated. He was on his way up from San Diego. B. F. Porter was in town this week transacting business at the water office. Considerable improvement is reported in the condition of J. W. Duckworth. He was taken from the sanitarium to his home Monday, and chances for his speedy recovery are exceedingly bright. A three-story hotel and four-story apartment house are now being considered by enterprising citizens. This will relieve the housing situation to a small extent. A conservative observer made the statement a day or two ago that Anaheim's population would be two thousand greater than it is if houses and business rooms could have been furnished all who desired them. Tommy Gregg and little daughter Ila were seriously ill two or three days last week, having been poisoned by eating canned olives. Investigation revealed that the tin had been eaten off the can. Mrs. Gregg fortunately ate sparingly of the olives and was not affected. Sicilian competition and America's lack of a protective tariff of sufficient size to make lemon growing profitable are having the effect locally of eliminating several lemon groves and in the setting out instead of avocado trees, which it has been demonstrated thrive in the Yorba Linda coll. At the present time the eight-year-old lemon trees in Austin Marchard's big grove are being cut down and the entire place will be planted to avocados and a large part of the Wheeler grove has also been changed to an avocado orchard. Jack Abbott, who is a student at U.S.C. won second honors as a javelin thrower in the contest between his university and Stanford last week. David Browne of Los Angeles ran into Dr. J.W. Utter's car Sunday and reduced it to a wreck. Fortunately nobody was in the car at the time Browne was arrested charged with driving a car while intoxicated. He was on his way up from San Diego. Elections will be held for both the high school and grammar school trustees tomorrow. H.M. Adams and A.H. Wiltman are the retiring members of the high school board. Mr. Adams is again a candidate but Mr. Wiltman refuses to run. City Trustee Charles H. Mann has filed nomination papers and will be on the ticket. L.F. Pomeroy is the retiring member of the grammar school board, but he declines to be a candidate for re-election. J.M. Gunnett and E.H. Metcalf have filed papers and will make the race for the vacancy. Plans for a three story hotel to be erected by F.G. Elsonhauer at the southwest corner of Center and Clementine streets, have been completed, and work will begin at once. It is to be of brick and tile, with plate glass front both on Center and Clementine streets. The lower floor is divided into four store rooms, fronting on Center street. The second and third floors will contain fifty rooms for hotel purposes. The corner store room is to be occupied by the Anaheim Pharmacy. Superintendent W.T. Wallop, Secretary to Sheridan and members of the board of directorate of the Anaheim Union Water Company, accompanied a large party of Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino county people on a tour of inspection of conservation work up the river yesterday. The Anaheim party left the water office at 7 o'clock, and joined delegations from the Santa Ana Valley Irrigation Company, the Riverside Water Company and the San Bernardino Water Company, the whole making up quite a large party. Baskets of grub were taken along, as they expected to make a day of it. Monthly and yearly prizes for the best butter fat production will be awarded by the dairy department of the Orange County Farm Bureau, it is having the effect locally of eliminating several lemon groves and in the setting out instead of avocado trees, which it has been demonstrated thrive in the Yorba Linda coll. At the present time the eight-year-old lemon trees in Austin Marshard's big grove are being cut down and the entire place will be planted to avocados. The Clinberg grove is now being planted to avocados and a large part of the Wheeler grove has also been changed to an avocado orchard. Mrs. Martha Barham, widow of Richard M.Barham, for many years one of the most prominent women in Los Angeles, died at her home in that city Friday night. Mrs. Barham and her husband were residents of Anaheim in the early days, coming here from Sonoma County in 1873. After residing here nine years they moved to Los Angeles. Mr. Barham died in 1914. Considerable indignation is expressed over the action of certain peace officers of Santa Ana, Orange and Fullerton in slipping into Anaheim without invitation and making wholesale arrests at the carnival last Wednesday night. No one regrets that the gamblers who conducted skin games were arrested and compelled to pay the penalty, but the action of these good officials from our neighboring towns only stimulates the opinion of some of our citizens that peace officers in other sections of the county are more solicitous for the welfare of Anaheim than they are for their own communities—in short, that they can always see an infraction of the law here that might pass unnoticed at home. Conducting a game of chance in Santa Ana, Orange or Fullerton might not have been such a heinous offence. FOR SALE—Alkalita hay in the field. Clean and cut since the rain Ready today. One mile north and three-fourths mile west of Garden Grove. Phone 35 M., Garden Grove. E.M.Dozler. The S.Q.R. Store is making a special offer on the yearly subscription to the "Delineator" this week. This opportunity will be given for a short time only. The Whittler State School baseball team defeated the Anaheim high school team on the local grounds Monday by a score of 12 to 9. A.J.Gamber has sold his grocery and storage business to J.M.Witchao of Indiana, and will retire in a few months. Mr.Gamber established the business at the corner of Chartres and Los Angeles streets nearly a year ago. He has not yet decided what he will engage in. Captain Eddie Rickenbacher was given a dinner at the Fullerton Club Saturday by the Quality Motor Company, agents for the Sheridan car. Rickenbachea is vice president of the Sheridan Company. Elizabeth Pickering, of Yorba Linda, aged 3 years, died Thursday from eating toadstools which had been gathered in mistake for mushrooms. Her father, Arthur Pickering, her little sister Caroline, and two dinner guests, Arthur Bemis and Walter Milhouse, were all dangerously ill for several days, but are reported recovering. San Juan Capistrano Farm Center boasts the largest membership in a pig club of any Orange county community, thirteen high school students and seven from the grammar school taking part in the feeding contest Twenty pure-bred pigs from the Diamond Bar Ranch at Spadra were purchased for the contestants by the pig club committee Aaron Buchheim. W.J.Callis and David Ross, and then sold to the club members. Mr.Buchheim and Mr.Ross each presented a sack of ground barley to every con- Mrs.H.Hospital man has several backs W.R.with Arnett,their Howard pearcing Fadden of venusthe coorand Buass assault their w Major Anaheim county data for old Major storlesse past w written helm ing an beat k west,a among other ganizings rangeed walk building The sidewa Monthly and yearly prizes for the best butter fat production will be awarded by the dairy department of the Orange County Farm Bureau, it is announced, the records of J. W. Sden the department's cow tester, being used as the basis for judging the relative merits in each case. Six hundred grade and pure-bred cows are now represented in the Cow Testing Association and some lively competition is looked for. The prizes will consist of dairy feed, etc., and ribbons. The contest will end Feb. 1, 1922. Fred Burgess was in town this week from Glendale, accompanied by his wife, and put in time calling upon a number of old friends. Fred is in the railway mail service, his route being from Los Angeles to Needles and return. He is 61 years of age, and will next year retire on a pension of $60 a month, having been in the service since 1882. Fred first saw Anaheim away back in the early seventies when the Southern Pacific built its line here from Downey, and completed rail communications with Los Angeles. He was newsboy and peanut merchant on the train which arrived in the evening and returned to Los Angeles the following morning. He became a great favorite among the local kids, and could locate more pear trees and watermelon patches than any boy in town. He has grown up to be a fine old gentleman, and has the respect and esteem of all who know him. He resides with his family at Glendale and will retire there when he leaves the railway mail service next year. The S. Q. R. Store is making a special offer on the yearly subscription to the "Dellineator" this week. This opportunity will be given for a short time only. Turton and Lumston is the name of a firm at Anaheim which has just taken the county agency for the Maxwell. Turton today reported the firm has already sold a carload of the cars Headquarters is with the Universal garage, 142 South Los Angeles street. An agency may possibly be established in Santa Ana within the next week or so. Two Japanese residing on ranches in the vicinity of Anaheim Saturday filed petitions in the county clerk's office to establish records of the birth of children in their families. Yoshimasa Shigekawa seeks to establish the birth of a child to his wife January 25, 1916, and Takashiro Imai seeks to establish the birth of two children, one of whom was born September 15, 1913, and the other October 9, 1914. T. L. McFadden and Henry L. Doering appointed as a committee to investigate the financial condition of the defunct National Home and Town Builders, are now winding up the affairs of that unfortunate business venture. In order to make the investigation it was necessary to assess the bond-holders' small sum to provide funds. This is now being paid back, and after realizing on all its holdings, and counting its cash, Mr. McFadden states the committee will be able to pay the bondholders in final settlement one cent on each dollar of investment. The National Home and Town Builders Association comes pretty close to being a total loss. Asserting that it has drilled a well to the depth of 2,615 feet at a cost in excess of $90,000, the Texcal Oil and Refining Company of Los Angeles has filed suit against H. A. Bardeen to prove a leasehold interest on certain property at Huntington Beach. The Oil Company also asks that a temporary restraining order be issued to prevent Bardeen or his agents from interfering or interrupting the company's drilling operations, pending the trial of the action. A lease purporting to have been signed by the plaintiff is attached to the papers filed. The oil well over which the dispute arises in the Garfield street addition to Huntington Beach. The company points out that the well is within 200 feet of another well which has been drilled by the Standard Oil Company and which is producing in excess of 500 barrels of oil a day. Any interruption of the drilling operations, the oil company maintains, might result in the loss of the well. The company further recites that on March 14, last, it sold to the public generally 17,707 shares of its treasury capital stock. Anaheim Gazette, fifty-two weeks for $1.50. PAGE FIVE Unusual Values In Standard Merchandise Visit Our Underprice Department ALKENSTEIN'S ANAHEIM, CAL. ALKENSTEIN'S ANAHEIM, CAL. Mrs. Marie Norman, mother of Mrs. H. H. Armbrust, died at the Norwalk hospital Tuesday morning. Mrs. Norman has been ill for many months and several weeks ago she was taken to the state hospital for treatment. The remains were brought to this city by Backs & Terry Tuesday. W. R. Buck and Joe Hulme, charged with assaulting and beating up W.m. Arnett, the soda water clerk, will have their trial next Thursday in Judge Howard's court. T. L. McFadden, appearing for the defendants, Mr. McFadden attempted to secure a change of venue at the hearing Tuesday, but the court refused to grant it. Helme and Buck claimed as their reason for assaulting Arnett that he had insulted their wives. Major Harry W. Patton has been in Anaheim and other parts of Orange county during the week obtaining data for a number of very interesting old time stories for the Examiner. Major Patton has printed several stories of Orange county towns the past week and yesterday had a well written article on early days in Anaheim. His stories are most interesting and enjoyable. He is one of the best known newspaper men in the west, and enjoys a wider acquaintance among ploneers than probably any other man in the state. He is organizing a pioneers club, and has arranged to have it meet on the sidewalk in front of the H. H. Helman building in Los Angeles once a week. The Major pays the rent for the sidewalk. As a result of the excellent showings of gas and oil on the lease of the Placentia Oil Company on the fats near Placentia and of the Richfield Consolidated, the Petroleum Midway and the Heffern Well No. 2 near Richfield, a movement is under way to lease a large tract in the Santa Ana ANAHEIM NEWS This Case Has A Hint for Many Gazette Readers. An Anaheim woman has used Doan's Kidney Pills: She has found them as represented. She wishes her neighbors to know. She publicly recommends them. No need to look further for a tested kidney remedy. The proof of merit is here and can be investigated. Profit by the statement of Mrs. S. J. Valentine, 323 S. Philadelphia St., She says: "I know Doan's Kidney Pills are a reliable remedy and gladly endorse them. I had backaches and sharp pains in the small of my back. At times I had rheumatic pains in my limbs and my kidneys acted irregularly. I read of Doan's Kidney Pills and got some from Heying's Pharmacy and they proved to be just what I needed. Two boxes relieved the aches and pains and benefitted me in every way. I know Doan's Kidney Pills are a splendid kidney tonic for people of advanced age." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Valentine had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgs., Buffalo, N.Y. FOR SALE—Small tractor with 4 ft double disc. Just the thing for 10 acres or less. See the Schumacher Garage, Placentia. R. H. Skiles Canada's total elevator capacity is now 226,000,000 bushel. Hot Cross Buns For Good Friday Special Whipped Cream Puffs and Easter Cakes Friday & Saturday BOSTON BAKERY 201 E. CENTER ST. Free--Floor Lamp & Shade Given with every BLUE BIRD Talking Machine sold during the next 10 days. This lamp and shade well worth $45. Easy payments if desired. Anaheim Music and Novelty Co. H. J. Efker Next to Fairland Theatre Phone 70