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Publications Anaheim Gazette 1922 April

anaheim-gazette 1922-04-06

1922-04-06 · Anaheim Gazette · page 5 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Style of unusual distinction gives the Florsheim Shoethat exclusive look desired by well-dressed men. Character is expressed in every detail, and Florsheim quality gives fine style, long life. Florsheim Low Shoes are Skeleton Lined and non-slip. They fit the ankle and hug the heel. "By All Means, Get a Fit" fine style, long life. Florsheim Low Shoes are Skeleton Lined and non-slip. They fit the ankle and hug the heel. "By All Means, Get a Fit" F. A. Yungbluth "Home of Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes" Vote for R. R. Pember, a man with a record for doing things. E. F. Gielow, Anaheim electrician, was at the wheel of an automobile that ran into Miguel Mendosa, 5, Monday. The lad suffered a cut on the forehead and numerous bruises. Miss Antojette Friend came down from Los Angeles on a visit to friends the first of the week. Miss Friend is now one of the Spanish dancers at the Mission Play. George Neeley, of Buena Park, is confined to the Anaheim sanitarium with a broken collar bone and two badly injured legs, sustained when his motorcycle collided with an automobile driven by Joe Silva, of Anaheim. Neeley's motorcycle skidded on the wet pavement. Vote for R. R. Pember, he has a record for enforcing the law. Mrs. M. G. Anlauf was operated on at the sanitarium the first of the week. She is recovering rapidly. Judge Howard sentenced James Worth to the county jail Monday for assault and battery. A series of special meetings are being held at the First Christian church, and much interest is being shown in them. Rev. Loren Howe, the pastor, is preaching some excellent sermons, and A. C. Scoles, of Hemet, is leading the sing, and is assisted by a large chorus choir. The meetings will continue for two weeks, and an invitation is extended to all persons of the Anaheim community to attend the services. You will receive a very hearty welcome. WALK-OVER Price $8.50 Price $8.50 You fellows who want new style THE MAN who likes this shoe has an eye for smartness and insists upon newness of style. Here's a new one for spring, with the rounded square toe. Walk-Over The S.Q.R. Store Vote for R. R. Pember, he believes in a bigger and better Anaheim. Citizens of Buena Park have petitioned the supervisors for authority to incorporate. According to the petition the population of the territory to be taken in is 600. The boundary lines join both the city of Fullerton and the city of Orangethorpe. Walter Bowers, son of Superintendent Bowers, of the Fullerton hospital, and W. C. Manning, of Anaheim, were painfully burned as the result of a gas explosion at Fullerton. Bowers and Manning were working under the Fullerton hospital when the accident occurred. Both were burned about the face and hands. Theodore Kistner is drawing plans for a grammar school building to be erected at Orange, following his appointment as architect at a meeting of the school trustees there Friday. Bonds totalling $60,000 were voted last week for the purchase of a site and to pay for the cost of the building. Kistner and the board will confer on plans next Saturday. The Federal Grocery company, owning and operating Daley's Rock Bottom Stores, opened a new store in Santa Ana this week, this in addition to the four already in operation, and have signed a lease for a sixth in that town, which will be opened in the near future. This company is the largest chain in southern California, now having nineteen stores in Orange county alone, and expects to increase this number to twenty-five in the near future. The Anaheim baseball team nosed out the Riverside Elks Sunday by a NEW INDUSTRY FOR ANAHEIM It is reported that a corporation operating a chain of groceries with headquarters in Los Angeles, is negotiating for a large warehouse in this city to be used as a central distribution point for Orange county. Business in the county having grown to the extent that this has become essential. This should be good news to the people of Anaheim, as it will mean employment to quite a few new people. Combined damage suits of H. L. McClellan and his daughter, Nina McClellan, of Placentia, who seek to recover $10,321.64 from Guy L. Kay as the result of an automobile accident on Placentia avenue last September 27, were scheduled to begin Monday at 10 a.m. in Superior Judge Williams' court. The $10,000 claim, contained in one of the suits, is to compensate Miss McClellan for personal injuries. The remainder, represented in the other action, is demanded to cover costs of repairing the McClellan car. Kay shifts the burden, in his defense against the suits, to the shoulders of the girl's father. She was being supported by her father, he asserts, and was riding at the time of the accident in her father's car, which was being operated by his son for the family use. This son, Kay alleges, was driving recklessly and was responsible for the accident, he asserts. NOTICE INVITING SEALED PROPOSALS OR BIDS. Notice is Hereby Given that sealed proposals or bids will be received by the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim, at the office of the City Clerk of said city, up to Thursday the 27th day of April, 1922, for furnishing all printing and advertising for the City of Anaheim, for the year com- Santa Ana this week, this in addition to the four already in operation, and have signed a lease for a sixth in that town, which will be opened in the near future. This company is the largest chain in southern California, now having nineteen stores in Orange county alone, and expects to increase this number to twenty-five in the near future. The Anaheim baseball team nosed out the Riverside Elks Sunday by a narrow squeak, the score being 4 to 3. The visitors had the best of the game during the early chapters, getting two runs in the first, but Salverson tightened up and stopped their hitting. The locals recovered themselves and began playing better ball the last half of the game, and assisted by a couple of bonehead plays on the part of Riverside, managed to get four men across the plate. The Anaheim high school took third place in the county track meet at Orange Saturday, making 21 points. Huntington Beach was first with 56 points, and Santa Ana second with 41. Fullerton and Orange also ran, but they brought up the rear with the scattering points. Bill Cook corralled most of the points for Anaheim, getting first in shot put and first in the hundred yard dash. Cook is an athlete of much promise, and will some day rank among the head-liners in athletic games. Arthur Stock, 21-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Godfrey J. Stock, and his friend, H. D. Alcorn, of Stockton, were guests last week of the Stock home. Young Stock is a corporal and his friend a sergeant in the United States marine corps. They have been stationed for the last year at Guam. Mr. and Mrs. Stock met them at San Pedro. They reported on board the transport Chaumont at San Diego, from where they go to Hampton Roads and the West Indies. Young Stock has been in the service two years and likes it very much. The north end addition extends the corporate limits of Anaheim to within half a mile of George A. Mills' residence, and on the other side he is only half a mile from the Fullerton city limits. Furthermore, the corporate lines of the city of Orangethorpe hitch onto his back garden fence, and now Buena Park is incorporating territorial within its distance of him. NOTICE INVITING SEALED PROPOSALS OR BIDS. Notice is Hereby Given that sealed proposals or bids will be received by the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim, at the office of the City Clerk of said city, up to Thursday the 27th day of April, 1922, for furnishing all printing and advertising for the City of Anaheim, for the year commencing the first day of May, 1922, and ending on the 30th day of April, 1923. All of said printing and publishing shall be done in conformity to the Specifications therefor, which said specifications are marked and designated "Specifications for printing and advertising for the City of Anaheim," and were filed in the office of the City Clerk of said city on the 30th day of March, 1922. Such proposals will be received as follows: First. For all advertising to be done by said city required by law to be published in a daily newspaper published within said city. Second. For all advertising not required by law to be printed in a daily newspaper. Bidders shall state in their bids whether or not such bid is based upon an estimate for publication of advertising in a daily newspaper, and shall designate therein the name and address of such newspaper. Third. Bids will at the same time and place be received for all job printing required by the City of Anaheim for the year designated aforesaid, in conformity to the specifications herein referred to, for the following described forms, specimens of which are on file in the office of the City Manager of said city. Should the job printing required exceed the estimate herein after set forth, the compensation for such job printing in excess of said estimate, shall be at the same rate as that mentioned in the bill for such estimate. Said printing is estimated as follows: 700 Applications for Building Permits in tablets of 100 (duplicate). 700 Building Permits in duplicate of books of 50; consecutively numbered and original perforated. 700 Building file cards. 700 Building display cards. 2000 Building Inspector's tags (blue). 250 Building Inspector's tags (red). 400 Sewer Connection Permits, in books of 100 each; consecutively numbered and original perforated. 700 Plumbing and Gas Fittings Permits in books of 50; consecutively numbered, with double perforations on original. 250 Plumbing Inspector's report. 700 Plumbing, Gas, and Sewering Notices in tablets of 100. 500 Anaheim Auto Park Permits, in duplicate of books of 50, original perforated. 1000 White Envelopes with City of Anaheim triplicate, consecutively numbered. 1000 Demands on the City Treasury. 275 books of 100 (receipts) each Water and Electric Light receipt books, printed on both sides and perforated. 1000 Postal Cards for Tax Collector's Notices. 1000 Assessment Lists. 1000 Certificates of Sale of Real Estate. 20 Books. Warrants on Treasurer in books of 100 each, perforated and consecutively numbered. 16 Books, City of Anaheim, License, 100 receipts each, perforated and consecutively numbered. 300 Orders for Water Service in books of 50 each. 1000 Permits to Install Wiring. Office of City Electrician, in books of 50, consecutively numbered and duplicate perforated. 300 Orders for Water Service. Superintendent of Water Works Record, Duplicate and in pads of 50 each. 500 Report of Electric Wiring. 200 Electric Fixtures. 400 sheets Municipal Light and Water Works, daily report. 250 Electrical Inspector's Report. 500 New Meter and Service Installation. Water Department (duplicate) consecutively numbered and original perforated. 1500 Sand Pit Records, in pads of 100. Each bid must be accompanied by a check drawn on a bank within the State of California, in a sum of not less than $50.00 payable to the City of Anaheim, the same to become the property of the City of Anaheim, if within ten days after the award of the contract to him, the successful bidder shall fail to enter into a written agreement with said city, to furnish said printing and advertising in conformity to said specifications. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids, or any part of any bid, and may accept bids separately for advertising required by law to be published in daily newspapers, from advertising not required by law to be published in daily newspapers, and may accept bids for city job printing independently from said city advertising, or as a part of the same The north end addition extends the corporate limits of Anaheim to within half a mile of George A. Mills' residence, and on the other side he is only half a mile from the Fullerton city limits. Furthermore, the corporate lines of the city of Orangethorpe hitch onto his back garden fence, and now Buena Park is incorporating territory within speaking distance of him. Placentia, also, is talking incorporation, and will probably close the gap to the east. Despite his determination to live as an independent and untrammeled hayseed, Mr. Mills may wake some morning and find himself living in a city. An escrow department room is being built at the First National bank. It is to be 12x12 feet in dimensions, and will be directly in the corner, to the right of the Center street entrance. Charles A. Boege, who is an authority on escrow matters, is to have charge. Mr. Boege will have an escrow expert in this department with him, as well as Miss Atherton and a stenographer. The compartment will be finished in the marble similar to that used in other parts of the banking rooms, and the room now used as the ladies' rest room will be utilized as consultation room on all matters pertaining to the mortgage loan department. The compartment or cage now used by Mr. Boege and his assistant will be made into an additional receiving and paying tellers' cage. Another improvement made in the banking house, showing the growth of the American Savings bank, is the addition of another window in that department, which will facilitate the work and give additional service to patrons of that institution. Strictly Fresh Vegetables From Our Own Ranch O. K. Produce Co. 311 East Center St. Telephone 3-1-W PAGE FIVE Master Fashions and Accessories FOR YOUR Master Costume! Are Now Being Displayed in Every Department. KENSTEIN'S LKENSTEIN'S FAIRYLAND Thursday and Friday, APRIL 6th AND 7th Mrs. Roy Gardner Wife of the Bandit, IN PERSON Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, April 9, 10, 11, F. B. Warner Production, "Why Girls Leave Home." Do Your Children "Why Girls Leave Home." Do Your Children Like Bread? Why is it that many children don't like ordinary Bread and Butter, but can occasionally be heard to say, "Mother, why can't you get Bread like this all the time?" That is just what they say about Dresser's Bread because it is so delicious and flaky. The reason is that every loaf receives the thorough and scientific baking so necessary to bring out its goodness. Ask the grocer for Dresser's. Don't Forget Our Pumpernickle Bread Dresser's Bakery 307 W. Center. B.J. Dresser, Prop.