anaheim-gazette 1922-07-27
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Copyright 1921 Hart Schaffner & Marx
Good Style is Very Important
Business Men
They need plenty of life in their clothes—but above all they like business. The clothes you'll find here are just right: Hart
Good Style is Very Important
Business Men
They need plenty of life in their clothes—but above all they like business. The clothes you'll find here are just right; Hart & Marx know; so do we. Right style, right fabrics, right tailoring and right prices.
"By All Means Get a Fit."
F. A. Yungblu
Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
145 West Center Street Anaheim
Mrs. Richard Fischle and children are spending this week at Anaheim Landing.
Miss Minnie Doty, who has been the guest of Mrs. Helmsen for a fortnight, returned last week to her home in Riverside.
Walter Cadman and family went down to the beach the latter part of the week and will spend an outing of several days at the seaside.
N. R. Phillips, of the postoffice force, is on duty again after a two weeks' vacation. He and his family visited Santa Barbara, San Diego and other seaports.
J. C. Price and family spent Sunday at Long Beach.
Fred Weisel and family are spending the week at Anaheim Landing.
S. C. Hartranft, who has been mentioned for the assembly, announces that he is not a candidate.
Mesdames Canby and Hathaway have moved the Blue Bird drapery and decorating shop into the new Hartman building on East Center street. They occupy the room adjoining the Gazette office.
WANTED—Boarders. Phone 671-K-1013 East Broadway.
AnaheimSalesDay
THURSDAY, JULY. 27
Anaheim Sales Day
THURSDAY, JULY 27
EXTRA SPECIALS
35 Pair Wolverine Blankets, $2.35
66x80 Double Blankets, good weight shown in blue, tan, grey and yellow plaids. This is an exceptional offer both in price, quality and pattern. Extra Special, $2.35.
Women’s Fibre Silk Stockings, 95c Pair
All first quality and priced decidedly low. “Pure Dye.” In colors of white, black and brown. Limit 2 to a customer
The S.Q.R. Store
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
LUNCHEON AND THEATRE PARTY
Mrs. Edward Ward entertained a number of relatives and friends at a luncheon and theatre party on Tuesday. After a delicious three-course luncheon at 1 o'clock the guests were taken to the California, where they enjoyed the matinee performance of "The Two Orphans." Those present were Mrs. Gerald Ward and Mrs. Robert J. Coleman, of Mazatlan, Mexico, and Mrs. Ernest Varnado and little Miss Mary Varnado, of Fontana, who motored up from Balboa, where they are spending the summer; Mrs. L. C. Bailey and Miss Miriam Bailey, of San Francisco, who came down to Los Angeles with Dr. L. C. Bailey to attend the dental convention held last week in that city, and Mrs. Henry Kuchel.
Fullerton has organized a "Moore-for-Senator" club with J. Charles Thamer as president, and Harry Wilbur secretary. One hundred voters joined on the night of organization.
Mrs. A. Pierotti entertained the B. G. N. club members and their families at her spacious beach home at Newport Tuesday all day. Luncheon was served at noon to about thirty. Decorations were pretty baskets of Shasta daisies and hydrangeas. Prizes were won in the Five Hundred games by Mrs. Winthrop Bowen and Mrs. Herbert Sullivan. The guests of the day were Misses Field, of Boston, nieces of J. P. O'Brien.
John Molt has begun the construction of an $18,000 business block at the Five Points. It is to be a flatiron building, situated on the wedge-shaped lot formerly owned by Dr. John Boege. The building will be occupied by a drug store, a general store, a bakery and a barber shop, the second story being divided into living rooms.
Important to
Len
but above all they must look
are just right; Hart Schaffner
at fabrics, right quality, right
Fit."
ngbluth
Marx Clothes
Anaheim, California
organized at the office of Eygabroad & Fisher Friday evening, Charles Eygabroad being elected president and Vic La Mont secretary. The club started with a membership of seventy, but is rapidly growing, the mg membership now being more than a hundred.
A $5000 pipe organ has been installed in the new Zion Lutheran church. The seats and furnishings for the building which have been ordered at a factory in Cleveland, Ohio, will cost $4000. It will be some weeks yet before the church is open for service.
Little Wilma Heying, four-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Al Heying, is recovering nicely from a fall down stairs. She started down stairs leading to the basement on an errand for her mother, when she lost her footing and fell the entire length of the flight. She is suffering from a severe cut on her lip and a badly injured hand.
An organization of United Spanish War Veterans was organized Saturday night at Santa Ana. Clinton Imes was elected commander. Twenty-eight bert Sullivan. The guests of the day were Misses Field, of Boston, nieces of J. P. O'Brien.
John Molt has begun the construction of an $18,000 business block at the Five Points. It is to be a flatiron building, situated on the wedge-shaped lot formerly owned by Dr. John Boege. The building will be occupied by a drug store, a general store, a bakery and a barber shop, the second story being divided into living rooms. Five Points is developing into an important business center.
Unless you register before midnight Saturday you will not be eligible to vote for your favorite candidate in the August primaries. In Anaheim the registration clerks are Frank Tausch, Vic La Mont, Mrs. G. N. Fording and W. E. Helling. In addition to these Johnny Joplin has a desk in Fred Chamberlin's print shop on Claudina street and will remain all week, for the purpose of registering the voters. Get your name on the rolls.
George A. Mills took a vacation recently and went back to his old home in Michigan, where he spent some weeks with relatives. Among others he visited a sister whom he had not seen for thirty-five years. Mr. Mills went through the Ford works at Detroit and watched the busy gangs of men assembling cars. It is an interesting sight, he declares, the finished cars being constructed from junk in an incredibly short space of time.
Monday morning Judge Howard sentenced Juan Torres to a term of six months in the county jail, in addition to paying a fine of $10. The charge which was proven against him was carrying a concealed weapon. Torres, it appears, has for some weeks been endeavoring to alienate the affections of Pete León's wife. Sunday morning, thinking Leon was away from home, he appeared at the house and was surprised when confronted by the lord and master of the castle. He made his get-away by flourishing a gun in León's face. Leon swore out a warrant for his arrest on the charge of carrying a concealed weapon.
Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Bailey and their daughter, Miss Miriam Bailey, were in town this week visiting with relatives and friends. Dr. Bailey came south to attend the dental convention in Los Angeles. He returned north on Tuesday evening. His wife and daughter will remain for several weeks.
The Berkenstock family have been for some time interested in building a mountain cabin at Camp Weeshaw, in San Bernardino mountains, near the Bear lakes. This cabin is to be a regular mountain cabin of about 7 rooms and will be for the accommodation of the Berkenstock family and their friends during the summer months, and if the roads are made passable the year round, as it is believed they will be, during the winter months as well.
The game of ball between the Anahel mand Riverside Elk teams on the high school grounds Sunday was too one-sided to be interesting. The score was 17 to 1 in favor of the home team. This is the sixth game the Anaheimers have won without a single defeat. They have a game each to play with San Bernardino, Pomona, Long Beach and Huntington Park in the league schedule, and as they have easily defeated all these teams heretofore, the boys expect to win all of them. At any rate the pennant is already cinched.
A crowd estimated at between 5000 and 7000 persons enjoyed the barbecue and picnic of Standard Oil company employees held on the Emory lease in the north end of the county Sunday. Sporting events and "parlor" games were the order of the day. An indoor baseball game between Huntington Beach and Brea teams featured the morning program and another
An organization of United Spanish War Veterans was organized Saturday night at Santa Ana. Clinton Imes was elected commander. Twenty-eight charter members are on the roll, and there are many other eligibles in the county who will probably join. A woman's auxiliary will also be organized.
James Ellwood, 71, of San Bernardino, is at the Anaheim sanitarium, suffering from injuries received Saturday night when, walking on the road between Anaheim and Olive, he was struck down and dragged by a car said to have been driven by George H. Beckman, of Anaheim. Beckman said he was unable to see Ellwood, being blinded for the moment by glaring headlights of an approaching car. Ellwood was injured about the head. It was said that he would probably recover.
Launching an offensive into the political ranks of the county by which they expect to obtain a definite statement from every candidate for office here as to his attitude on the Wright prohibition enforcement act, a committee from the county Wright act organization, was appointed to interview every person who has signified his intention to run for office in Orange county in the August primaries. The men were named Friday afternoon at a meeting of the executive committee at the United Presbyterian church of Santa Ana.
Try Our Potato Layer Cake
BOSTON BAKERY
201 East Center St.
Phone 135-W
248 West Center St.
Phone 861-J
A crowd estimated at between 5000 and 7000 persons enjoyed the barbecue and picnic of Standard Oil company employees held on the Emory lease in the north end of the county Sunday. Sporting events and "parlor" games were the order of the day. An indoor baseball game between Huntington Beach and Brea teams featured the morning program and another game between Huntington Beach and Murphy lease team was the high binder of the afternoon. Chefs in charge of the barbecue were compelled to dispatch trucks to Anaheim after more provisions to feed the enormous crowds. Meats and other foodstuffs ordered for the occasion did not meet the demand.
Fire Chief Dean Hassen, Joe Walters and five other sportsmen went down to the sea Sunday and spent the day fishing for albicore in the channel. They had excellent luck, landing fourteen fish, the largest weighing thirty pounds, and the smallest being not far behind. A Jap fishing fleet was operating in the channel eight miles from the main land, and one of the party proposed that they run close in as there was undoubtedly game where the Japs were anchored, but the captain of the launch declined to get within rifle range of the little brown men, as he stated they would shoot any man who poached on their preserves. Not caring to be the cause of international complications or strained relations between the United States and Japan, the Anaheim party sheered off and fished beyond range of the fleet's guns.
After a man has bought one automobile he works all the rest of his life for automobile companies.
FALKENSTEIN'S
Semi-Annual
Clearance
CLOSES JULY 31
FALKENSTEIN'S
ALKENSTEIN'S
The. whereabouts of M. W. Swinney, elderly Costa, Mesa resident, who disappeared from his son's home at Kansas City, Mo., June 26, is still a mystery. Mrs. George Bremer, 401 South Claudina street, Anaheim, daughter of the aged man, expressed concern for his safety, as she told the story of his strange disappearance. June 26 Mr. Swinney boarded a train at Kansas City, supposedly for the home of a brother in Oklahoma. Here he dropped from sight, and no word has been received since. Relatives place importance on a statement made by him to the effect that he was coming back to California, although at the time that he mentioned his intention, it was not regarded seriously by them.
Hearing before the second district court of appeals in Los Angeles began on the appeal of the Birch Oil company from an Orange county superior court decision which refused its demand for return of $10,000 in taxes paid under protest for the year 1918. Birch was represented by his attorneys, Woodruff & Shoemaker, of Los Angeles, and District Attorney A. P. Nelson appeared on behalf of the county. Rex B. Goodcell, United States collector of internal revenue for southern California, rendered the decision in 1920, when he was superior judge for San Bernardino county and presided at the trial of the tax suit. On the grounds that the oil company had not produced sufficient evidence to support its complaint, the county's motion for non-suit was granted.
Judge G. B. Brown states that several persons tagged by the police for failure to comply with all the provisions of the traffic ordinance, have neglected to show up for judgment at the proper date. These people will be first warned, he states, that monkeying with the law is a costly pasttime, and if they then fail to appear warrants will be issued for their arrest. The judge is not disposed to be unduly harsh, but he declares the traffic ordinances of the city must be obeyed. If you have been tagged it would be wise to call on the judge, apologize, pay your fine, leave a box of cigars at police headquarters, and promise to be obedient to the laws and ordinances hereafter.
HOUSEWIVES
Use French Gloss in your starch and for soft garments. Easy ironing; silky finish; clothes wear much nicer; last 2 to 3 times longer, and French Gloss is guaranteed to do as claimed or your 10 cents back at Grocers or by mail. Fabric Finishes Manufacturing
FLUB-DUB
The brotherhood leaders say the wage reductions ordered by the labor board have "degraded" the employes "below the level of bare animal existence." The remark is commended to the attention of the farmers and workers in other lines of employment who have seen the railroad employees enjoying compensation far above their own.
Revenge may be sweet, but it leaves a bitter taste.
Friends:
Just a short message to let you know that our Pastry and Cake production is just three times greater than it was one month ago.
WHY? Because the quality of them is spreading among the good people of Anaheim, like a fire fanned by a strong wind.
Our ORANGE CAKES are as delicious as the VALENCIA fruit from which it is made.
"Always Pure Food Products"
White Lily Bakery
B. J. DRESSER L. P. BONNAT
307 West Center Street, Anaheim