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Publications Anaheim Gazette 1922 January

anaheim-gazette 1922-01-26

1922-01-26 · Anaheim Gazette · page 5 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Your Last Opportunity to Profit by Our LOW PRICES Featured in All Departments All Winter Merchandise Offered At Tremendous Sav- All Winter Merchandise Offered At Tremendous Savings, Including Ready-to-Wear Boys and Men’s Clothing, Dry Goods and Shoes. The S. Q. R. Store Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carroll motored down to Long Beach Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William Falkenstein and daughter spent Sunday at Los Angeles. John Luneberg left yesterday for San Diego, where he will spend some days looking after business affairs. Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Paxton, of Long Beach, motored over to Anaheim last Friday and spent the evening visiting Mr. Paxton’s sister, Mrs. A. G. McKey, of South Lemon street. Judge J. S. Howard was granted leave of absence by the supervisors, and has gone to Mexico to look after business interests. Judge French, of Fullerton, will handle his court business here during his absence. Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Renner motored up to Hollywood Sunday. Miss Aileen Adams was visiting friends in Los Angeles Saturday and Sunday. Captain Victor Schumacher was in town from Fullerton Monday meeting a number of his friends. Mrs. Herman Stern gave a party on Wednesday afternoon in honor of the birthday of her mother, Mrs. Eggers, of Long Beach. The hostess served luncheon at 4:30 o’clock. The trial of J. K. Woods, charged with swindling Mrs. Laura Resh, Mrs. Frances Nelson and other Anaheim ladies on a fraudulent oil land deal, was postponed Thursday until January 30. THE STAFF THE STAFF OF LIFE —There is a reason why Bread has been called the staff of life. For countless centuries it has been one of man's principal foods. The ancient Egyptians raised wheat (then called corn), the ancient Swiss Lake Dwellers used wheat and in nearly every other land since it has been used as the basis of Bread. —Wheat contains more starch and protein than corn and next to rice is the most extensively used of any grain. Dietitians of the present day pronounce Wheat Bread a highly nutritious food and one that provides many of the essentials in the human diet. —Don't accept just any Bread; ask always for Dresser's' Bread. Time has proved its superior quality. Dresser's Bakery 307 W. Center. B.J. Dresser, Prop. The Anaheim Odd Fellows are staging a play which will be sprung on the public next Wednesday evening at the Grand theatre. "The Professor's Dilemma" is the name of the play. Its a comedy, and is said to be a scream. The characters are sustained by local artists who are famed for their triotic talent. Bond and Jones Water company, supplying 13 consumers in the city of Orange, was given permission by the railroad commission to discontinue service as the municipal water system is able to furnish an adequate supply to all consumers. Most of the former consumers of the Bond and Jones company are now taking municipal water. John Link, of Placentia, was found dead in his bed in the Placentia hotel Saturday morning. An inquest was held over the body Monday, and the jury returned a verdict to the effect that he had died from accidental gas asphyxiation. He was about 60 years of age, and had no known relatives. Funeral was held Tuesday at MeAulay's parlors. Mrs. N. H. Mitchell was in town from Los Angeles last week on a business mission. She and Mr. Mitchell are making preparations for another journey into far countries. They expect to go first to South America, and after seeing everything worth while in the southern continent they will probably cross the Atlantic and tour Europe again. Arthur L. Lewis, of Santa Fe Springs, formerly of this city, is confined to his home with a broken ankle, sustained in an automobile collision several days ago. He was driving along the road when his car was run into by another machine. In the collision he suffered a fracture of the ankle. He is getting along well and will The Anaheim high school basketball team, in a game with Fullerton Friday, quit at the end of the first half, claiming that the Fullertonites were violating the rule of the game by rough play. Fullerton claimed the game on a forfeit, but the matter will probably be laid before the county athletic league. Frank Tausch has decided to join the Anaheim band again. For many years Frank played the cornet in the band, and was considered one of the best cornetists in the southland, but for the past year or two he has been resting. He has concluded to play baritone hereafter, and no doubt he will be just as efficient with that instrument as he was with the cornet. The Richfield people are to hold a meeting at the Richfield school house on Monday, January 30th, at 7:30 p.m., to consider the advisability of finishing the river protection work from the Santa Fe track at the Olive closing to the Yorba auto bridge and thence back to the hills. All interested in the Anaheim section are urged to be present. Chairman W. T. Wallop, of the Kiwanis, appointed a committee of ten Tuesday to collect the club's share of the Bop Scout fund. The committee is composed of George Dunton, C. C. Smith, F. T. Edmiston, W. D. Grafton E. H. Ahlswedé, H. N. White, J. P. Taggart and E. H. Metcalf. The Boy Scouts of southern California will banquet at the high school in this city Monday evening. Funeral services were held in Fullerton Monday for Peter Hansen, 82, a pioneer of Orange county, who died at his home in Placentia last Friday afternoon. The Rev. Frank Dowling, of Placentia, officiated and interment was in Loma Vista cemetery. Arthur L. Lewis, of Santa Fe Springs, formerly of this city, is confined to his home with a broken ankle, sustained in an automobile collision several days ago. He was driving along the road when his car was run into by another machine. In the collision he suffered a fracture of the ankle. He is getting along well and will probably soon be out again. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Green, of Signal Hill, formerly residents of this city, narrowly escaped serious injury some days ago, when the roof of their home was blown off by the big gasser of the Shell company. The well was being drilled in close proximity to their house, and the force of gas wrecked their residence. Luckily no one was injured. Miss Fern Stratton, of Santa Ana, lived with her mother, Mrs. Maggie Stratton, three weeks after she passed her eighteenth birthday. The mother presented her with a bill for board, amounting to $9, which the young lady refused to pay. The mother brought suit in Judge Cox's sunrise court, and judgment for the amount was allowed. Walter Brinkop, captain of the 64th machine gun company, will receive the support of every ex-service man in the county in his candidacy for state treasurer, is the opinion of W. P. Webb, Jr., chairman of the Orange county council of the American Legion. Brinkop is a resident of Los Angeles, where he is identified with the trust department of one of the large banks. He is well known in Orange county, having visited reunions of the supply company of the 364th here; a number of times. Upon the payment of a fine of $900 in greenbacks and silver G. Gazzera, an Italian, brought before Justice of the Peace Cox on a charge of boot-legging Thursday and keeping a resort where liquor is sold, was released from the county jail the following day. The Italian was given the alternative of a $200 fine or 270 days in the county jail. One night in jail evidently proved enough. Sheriff Jackson is of the opinion that Gazzera paid his fine out of the profits he has made in selling the illicit booze. E. H. Ahlswedé, H. N. White, J. P. Taggart and E. H. Metcalf. The Boy Scouts of southern California will banquet at the high school in this city Monday evening. Funeral services were held in Furlerton Monday for Peter Hansen, 82, a pioneer of Orange county, who died at his home in Placentia last Friday afternoon. The Rev. Frank Dowling, of Placentia, officiated and interment was in Loma Vista cemetery. Mr. Hansen is survived by five children, Mrs. Mary Edwards, Placentia; Mrs. Horace C. Head, Santa Ana; George Hansen, Placentia; Mrs. W. C. MeLand, and Charles Hansen, of Placentia. Charged with failing to stop and render aid or give his name and auto license number following a collision, J. A. Prescott, rancher of the Tustin district, was arraigned before Justice of the Peace Cox Thursday morning. His preliminary hearing was set for February 14 at 2 o'clock and he was released on his own recognizance. According to Deputy Sheriff Roy Ballard, who caught Prescott after a chase, he cut in ahead of a truck and then collided with a machine driven by H. C. Jacoby, of Anaheim. Ballard was directly behind the two cars which figured in the smash, which occurred on Anaheim boulevard near the county hospital. Among the prominent speakers expected to be present at the annual meeting of the Orange county Boy Scouts to be held at Anaheim, January 30, will be Duncan McKinnen, president of the United States National bank, San Diego, who is scheduled to address those present on the "Needs of Present Day Boyhood." The meeting will be held in the Anaheim high school cafeteria at which time a banquet will be served under the direction of J. A. Clayes, chairman of the committee on banquet arrangements. Tickets for the banquet are now on sale at Santa Ana by Major M. B. Wellington; in Orange by Willard Smith; in Anaheim by George W. Sloop, and in Fullerton by Waldo O'Kelly. Mrs. J. A. Clayes was hostess to the Wednesday afternoon bridge club at the meeting last week. A delicious luncheon was served at 1 o'clock. The color scheme was yellow and green, the idea being very beautifully carried out in the decorations of both an Italian, brought before Justice of the Peace Cox on a charge of boor legging Thursday and keeping a resort where liquor is sold, was released from the county jail the following day. The Italian was given the alternative of a $900 fine or 270 days in the county jail. One night in jail evidently proved enough. Sheriff Jackson is of the opinion that Gazzera paid his fine out of the profits he has made in selling the illicit booze. George A. Mills motored up to Covina Monday, and reports that the orchards in the foothill region appear to have suffered considerable damage from last week's cold snap. Mr. Mills has given considerable thought to the irrigation question, and he advocates the construction of a huge reservoir up the river, financed by the cities of the county. Water could be drawn from this for irrigation purposes within the county, thus relieving the rapidly diminishing wells, and it would also serve for the generation of power, thus doing a double duty. Co-operative marketing of eggs, to accommodate the smaller producer, will be undertaken by the members of the Garden Grove farm center. This was decided at a meeting held in the Y. M. C. A. building at Garden Grove. The continuance of the work by the drainage committee, the drawing up of suggestions on road maintenance, to be presented to the county supervisors, the extension of poultry service, and a program of work among the women of the farms, were other projects taken up. Assistant Farm Advisor Floyd Scott assisted in drawing up the program of projects. Plans to make the February meeting of the center an unusually large one are under way. Mrs. J. A. Clayes was hostess to the Wednesday afternoon bridge club at the meeting last week. A delicious luncheon was served at 1 o'clock. The color scheme was yellow and green, the idea being very beautifully carried out in the decorations of both living room and dining room. Bridge was played after luncheon. Mrs. William Jackson won high score and Mrs. J. A. Clayes second highest. Those present were: The hostess, Mrs. Clayes, Mrs. William Jackson, Mrs. B. H. Sidnam, Mrs. J. H. Garnett, Mrs. Grace Adkins, Mrs. Edgar Hartung, Mrs D. Jessurup, Mrs. Edith Mitchell, Mrs. G. W. Closson, Mrs. W. Manter and Mrs. J. W. Cummins, of Colorado. The oldest inhabitant had to rack his memory to recall a day like that of Thursday. It snowed in Anaheim. Snow fell on the houses and the pavements, on the flourishing gardens, on the green and gold orange trees and on the beautiful flowers. The flurry was of short duration and the flakes did not linger with us long—melting in fact as soon as they reached the ground, but it was genuine snow, something many of the natives had never seen before except at a distance on the white-capped mountain peaks. Snow is supposed to be a product of wintry weather, but the small snow laden cloud that passed over here must have strayed out of its proper orbit, as the thermometer registered 47 degrees above zero while it was sifting its velvet flakes down upon us. January Clearance AND Semi-Annual White Fair Now Going On ALKENSTEIN'S ALKENSTEIN'S HART SCHAFFNER & MARX 1921 Hart Schaffner & Marx ere's No Shorter Way Say Everything You ant to Know About Clothes Here's No Shorter Way Say Everything You Want to Know About Clothes You want the best style. Hart Schaffner & create it. You want fine quality. Hart Schaffner & sewing, tailoring and their fine fabrics be surpassed anywhere. You want value. Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes give or the money than any other clothes. You want satisfaction. If Hart Schaffner and Marx don't deliver it—money back. "By All Means, Get a Fit" A. Yungbluth "Home of Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes"