anaheim-gazette 1921-05-05
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YOU DERIVE
THE BENEFIT
of the confidence which
a million women place in
this trade-mark—
Queen Quality
SHOES
THE confidence which over a million
women of America place in Queen
Quality shoes is reflected in the quality, the
fit, style and service of these shoes and you
receive the benefit of these basic good points.
If you have never worn Queen Quality
shoes, these women, by their unanimous
choice, pledge you satisfaction, value and
economy in choosing this famous footwear.
There is a Queen Quality shoe for your foot style,
your foot comfort and service
The S. Q. R. Store
Home of Queen Quality Shoe
Vie LaMont has been trying his luck at Little Bear lake since the first of the month. He was expected home today with a wagon load of fish.
The fire department made a run to the corner of Atchison and Chartres streets Friday, and extinguished a blaze in a hay stack. The damage was slight.
The Golden State National bank Tuesday placed a huge sign on top of the building. The words "Golden State National Bank," stand out in a frame work, and at alight the letters will be illuminated by three hundred electric lights.
It is now reported that plans for a new hotel on South Los Angeles street which were under consideration a month ago, have been enlarged. It is said that a splendid tourist hotel, costing nearly half a million dollars is being planned. The owners of the Ambassador string of houses are behind the move, it is rumored.
John Ohm, of Yucalpa, was visiting friends here the past week. John says the apple crop in the valley suffered no damage during the winter and if the cherries were injured it is not yet noticeable.
The "Mistress of Shenstone," with Pauline Frederick as the star, will be shown at the Fairyland Sunday and Monday. Some months ago Miss Frederick and her company spent three weeks in Anaheim taking pictures for the "Mistress of Shenstone," consequently the great play is made up largely of Anaheim scenes.
Mrs. Elwood Hunt arrived from Terre Haute, Indiana, Monday afternoon, to spend the summer with her son, H. H. Hunt. En route to California Mrs. Hunt visited in Denver, Colorado Springs and the Grand canyon. She will return east by way of San Francisco, Seattle and then to Tacoma, where she will be joined by her daughter for a sight-seeing trip through Canada.
FLORSHEIM SHOES
To the man who has always regarced shoes as—just shoes, there is a wonderful eifferance when he
TO the man who has always regarced shoes as—just shoes, there is a wonderful eifference when he puts on Florsheims. The difference is in designing—lasts that meet every individual requirement—style that covers the season’s latest fashion—and quality that gives permaunt satisfaction. The price is low for the satisfaction you get in Florsheims.
By All Means Get a Fit.
F. A. YUNGBLUTH
Home of Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes.
Rev. J. A. Stevenson, of Santa Ana, addressed the Kiwanis club at high school auditorium Tuesday. His subject was "Friendship."
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Steafather, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tubach and a number of friends went down to San Diego Saturday, returning Sunday. They motored down into Mexico and gave Tia Juana the once over Sunday, and are convinced that it is a good place to stay away from.
Mrs. Gustave Davis, a former well known resident of this city, died at her home in Los Angeles Friday morning. Mrs. Davis left here with her family twenty years ago, and has resided in Los Angeles ever since. She leaves a son, Harry Davis, and a daughter, Mrs. Charles Jacobson, both of Los Angeles.
Miss Lela Steadman chamingly entertained for the mothers of her piano pupils Saturday afternoon with a recitation in which the pupils took part. The afternoon was pleasantly spent, the pupils entertaining the audience with piano solos and duets. After the program a social time was enjoyed during which light refreshments were served.
"Susie" Shoebridge, of the Anaheim high school, justified the predictions of his friends when he won the state championship in the pole vault contest at the Berkeley athletic meet Saturday. Shoebridge didn't make a new record, but he tied the old one, which was better than any of the contestants could do. He went over the bar at twelve feet, getting five points for Anaheim, which placed the school well up among the leaders. Lincoln high, of Los Angeles, won first honors.
Residents of southern California who formerly lived in the "Apple Blossom State" (Arkansas) are invited to attend a basket picnic and reunion to be held at Sycamore grove park, Los Angeles, Saturday, May 7. County registers and headquarters will be maintained. A program of entertainment will open at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Silk souvenir badges will be sold and each person who buys one will be served with free coffee.
The Employing Printers' association of Orange county was permanently organized at a meeting held at the Blue Bird cafe, Anaheim, Wednesday night, with the election of Edward Pickering, of Santa Ana, as president, and E. J. Horsley, Anaheim, secretary-treasurer. Employees are permitted in the membership. Organization is being made to make the Franklin price list effective in the county, thus making prices for job work uniform.
The Orange county Y. M. C. A. annual meeting, which was originally scheduled for May 10, has been postponed until the following week and will probably be held in one of the Santa Ana church about May 16th. No definite plans for holding the meeting have been arranged, but the secretaries have been hard at work on reports and have been preparing a special program for the occasion. The date and location of the meeting will be decided within a few days.
County Horticultural Commissioner A. L. Morris issued a warning to ranchers and persons looking after small truck gardens to watch for the small coral snake. According to Morris, this snake and the rattlesnake are the only two poisonous reptiles in southern California. The coral snake
Heinle Cole, of Montebello, is at a hospital at Fullerton with a fractured skull and little chance of recovery as the result of the overturning of the automobile in which he and Pearl Hickerson were riding. Hickerson escaped with bruises. Cole has not recovered consciousness since receiving the injury. The accident happened on the La Habra-Brea boulevard early Sunday morning. Both men are employed by the General Petroleum Oil company in the Fullerton district.
The evolution of the pistol is shown in a number of gat specimens on display in the window of the Golden State National bank. There are a dozen guns representing the best makes at different periods. One is 'an old French flintlock, which, no doubt, saw service in the days of Napoleon, and they range from that to the modern Colt's automatic. Conspicuous in the display is a German Luger, which, we presume, Cashier Smith captured from Heinles in the Argonne.
Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Hadsall were in the city from Los Angeles this week, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vard Hannum. Mr. Hadsall and his wife were former well known residents of this city, and he took a prominent part in locating the sugar factory at this place. They resided at Hart, Machigan, a number of years ago, where Mrs. Hadsall was a teacher in the public schools, and Mr. and Mrs. Hannum were students at her school. A very pleasant day was spent, the visitors being guests at an elaborate dinner at the Hannum home.
Although the San Bernardino Elks sent word ahead that they had the best amateur ball team in the state and expected to make the Anaheim team look like thirty cents, somehow they slipped a cog at Commonwealth park Sunday, and failed to carry out their expectations. One lonesome run was all they could get out of nine innings.
County Horticultural Commissioner A. L. Morris issued a warning to ranchers and persons looking after small truck gardens to watch for the small coral snake. According to Morris, this snake and the rattlesnake are the only two poisonous reptiles in southern California. The coral snake is a native of Mexico and works its way into this section of the state about this time of the year. It may be identified by red, black and yellow stripes around its body. The stripes run around the body of the snake.
George Fee, Edwin Yeargan and A. B. Morgan, who were taken in a raid by Sheriff C. E. Jackson and his deputies on an alleged gambling joint at Brea Monday night, appeared in the justice court again Thursday and changed their pleas of not guilty to guilty. Fee admitted that he has been conducting the joint and was sentenced to pay a fine of $100. He also was given a suspended sentence of 90 days in the county jail. Morgan and Yeargall pleaded guilty to gambling and were given suspended sentences of 90 days each. Several others who were taken in the raid pleaded guilty when arraigned Tuesday morning and were released on suspended sentences.
George A. Mills, who lives on the boulevard between this city and Fullerton, and raises the finest oranges in the world on his ranch, was in town Saturday, and made a friendly call at this office. Mr. Mills is a director of the Anaheim Citrus Fruit association, and keeps himself well posted on the industry and its possibilities and prospects. He declares the time is not far distant when the association will own their own steamer lines, and the bulk of California's fruit crop will be shipped by water, the growers themselves owning the carriers. He also thinks the future market for the orange crop is China, and within a few years we will be independent of the eastern market.
Seventeen new members cast in their fortunes with the Anaheim lodge of Elks at their meeting in the Fullerton club rooms Wednesday night, bringing the total membership up to nearly eight hundred men. The new officers were in charge of the ceremonies and are said to have acquitted
Leaping from their machine when struck by a freight train on the Santa Fe crossing at Glassell street in Orange, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lorell, who live two miles north of Orange, narrowly escaped death at 11 o'clock Saturday. The Lorells had left the home of W. E. Calloway and had reached the crossing which is about 300 yards north of the end of the paving on Glassell street when the train approached. The engine of the freight train, which was bound from Orange to Olive, was pushing the cars, and Lorell presumed that the train was going in the opposite direction. Both occupants of the machine saw the danger and leaped from it. Immediately after, the impact came and the auto was demolished. The freight car which struck them was also badly wrecked.
Patrons of the Grand theatre tonight will see Roy Stewart in "One Shot Ross." Her is a real western thriller, one of the best in which our well
Although the San Bernardino Elks sent word ahead that they had the best amateur ball team in the state and expected to make the Anaheim team look like thirty cents, somehow they slipped a cog at Commonwealth park Sunday, and failed to carry out their expectations. One lonesome run was all they could get out of nine innings of hard work, while the Anaheim boys were hanging up eight. Billy Knott admitted Monday that Sap Berdoo brought over a good bunch of players, but they were hopelessly outclassed. In the three games played so far this season the Anaheim sluggers have made a total of 49 runs and their antagonists a total of 7. The state championship cup is coming to this city at the close of the season.
Two hundred May baskets filled with candy, cake, fruit, a package of gum and a package of cigarettes were distributed to disabled soldiers in the Crocker street hospital in Los Angeles by Anaheim Post, No. 72, American Legion, and the Women's Auxiliary of the post. Jack Hebson was chairman of the committee in charge of the distribution. He was accompanied to the hospital by a dozen men and women. The May baskets were decorated by school children Friday, the children cutting out swords, guns and various other symbols of war and pasting them on the containers. The soldiers were very expressive of their appreciation of the courtesy and thoughtfulness of the Anaheim post and auxiliary. It is declared that this was the first time anything had been brought to the disabled soldiers in sufficient number or quantity for every one of the afflicted men to participate in the gift.
Seventeen new members cast in their fortunes with the Anaheim lodge of Elks at their meeting in the Fullerton club rooms Wednesday night, bringing the total membership up to nearly eight hundred men. The new officers were in charge of the ceremonies and are said to have acquitted themselves most admirably, carrying on the business without a hitch. The standing committees for the year were named by the new exalted ruler and the lodge is now squared away for the next twelve months. It was announced that at the first meeting in Jun. the fee for admission would be increased from $35 to $50. A decision was reached to erect a building on the Cajon Pass camp ground and a committee was appointed, with full power to act in the matter.
Found guilty by jury of driving an automobile while intoxicated, F. R. Priest, of Anaheim, Friday appeared before Superior Judge West with an application for probation. This was granted and the pronouncing of sentence was suspended for two years. Priest was told by the court that he must refrain from drinking intoxicating liquors or hard cider and that he would be required to make a report to the probation officer every 60 days. Priest was arrested February 5 on a road leading out of Anaheim. Roy A. Parker was the principal witness for the prosecution at the time of the trial. Al Carrisosa, who pleaded guilty last Frida yto a charge of driving an automobile while intoxicated, also was granted probation with the same restrictions as those meted out to Priest.
Patrons of the Grand theatre tonight will see Roy Stewart in "One Shot Ross." Her is a real western thriller, one of the best in which our well known western star, Roy Stewart, ever appeared. The fact that this production was selected as worthy to be re-issued stamps it as one of the best of its kind. Don't fail to see this. Friday and Saturday night Davis Keane will be seen in "Romance." The most wonderful love story of the modern stage, brought to the screen by the beautiful and talented actress who made the play an international success. Here is a photo-drama that will open the hearts of all you live and love and glorify things beautiful. "Romance" has been one of the sensational stage successes of recent years and Doris Keane, beautiful, talented, richly-gifted, has carried "Romance" to international fame. It is, indeed a rare privilege to present the splendid artiste in her exquisite film creation of what has been hailed as the "most beautiful love story of the stage."
NOTICE.
To the new comers in Anaheim or vicinity who are in need of lower sets of teeth: I guarantee to fit any gum upper or lower, at $15.00 a set, if you are satisfied. If not I will keep them and they cost you nothing.
S. F. PASCHALL,
Dentist.
323 S. Claudina St.
32 years in Anaheim.
An Event, Full of Values You
Cannot Afford to Miss
Walkenstein's Annual
Day Sales of White
Featuring Seasonable and
Wanted Merchandise of
the Best Grades at
New Low Prices
INCLUDED ARE
Undermuslins Blousse
Cotton Fabrics of Every Description
White Silks White Woolens
NEW LOW PRICES
INCLUDED ARE
Undermuslins Blousse
cotton Fabrics of Every Description
White Silks White Woolens
Domestics Bedspreads Draperies
Table Linens Towels Etc.
Nina Majel
The famed Boston Hair Specialist will advise you fully and without obligation in regard to the making of switches, puffs and curls, either from your own combings or from our stock.
ALKENSTEIN'S
California
Anaheim Union Water Co.
Run No. 1
Will start May 16, 1921
$1.00 PER HOUR PER SHARE
No water in excess of credit will be delivered, and no more water than the stock limit will be delivered on this run.
Orders for rented stock must be in the office not later than May 11, 1921.
L. J. SHERIDAN, Secy.
The Best way to Convince Yourself that
WHITE LILY PREAD
The Best way to Convince Yourself that
WHITE LILY BREAD
is the best money can buy, is by testing it on your
table. Do this and you will see why it is the choice
of those who desire the best.
Our Pies, Cakes and
Pastries are made to
be appetizing
TRY:THEM
RYE BREAD FOR EVERYBODY
No shortage tomorrow.
We have baked enough of our celebrated Rye Bread
to supply everybody
White Lily Bakery
B. J. Dresser, Prop.
307 W. Center St.. Anaheim, Cal.
Buy White Lily Bread at the Bakery or at your Grocer