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Publications Anaheim Gazette 1922 November

anaheim-gazette 1922-11-09

1922-11-09 · Anaheim Gazette · page 5 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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We Invite the Attention of Men who Particular about their Underwear This is the surest method, we find, of selling A Cooper's-Bennington Underwear. The man knows about fit, quality and value—the he likes the kind of underwear we sell. The and Winter styles and weights for men and have just arrived. We would like you to choose from this display. F. A. YUNGBLU Dr. H. A. Johnston has returned home from a business trip to San Francisco. The Philharmonic Orchestra of Los Angeles will give a concert at high school auditorium Friday evening, November 21. The Fullerton high school eleven defeated the Anaheim team on the local grounds Friday by a score of 26-0. C. W. Hall was arrested Monday night charged with selling booze contrary to the law. Judge Brown fined him $300, which he paid. In the fifth supervisor district Jef. freys defeated H. A. Wassum, who was running independent, having been defeated in the primary. The Anaheim sugar factory has closed its campaign. Its beet crop Capt. Alexander Henry will have charge of the artillery at the Fullerton Armistice Day celebration Saturday. Authority to Invest $1,165,240, proceeds from the sale of bonds, in the United States government treasury certificates was granted the Southern California Edison company in a supplemental order issued by the railroad commission. Miss Phyllis Crawford and Wylie Brown, both of this city, were married at the Mission Inn, Riverside, Tuesday, the pastor of the First Congregational church of Riverside, performing the ceremony. The young couple will make their home at the Magnolia apartments in this city. Hearing on the will contest, involving the $250,000 fortune of the late Rosalie Hart Luneberg will be held in Superior Judge R. Y. Williams' court. G. H. Richards near Fullerton, the railroad to serve water to certain adirondack shut off cause his company agreement water except commission had defendant had plant to public. Mr. and Mrs. ed from an and other polls ports farmers prices for their machinery are The east has the coal strike have returned recurrence of spring. These them, are fore considers pretty C. W. Hall was arrested Monday night charged with selling booze contrary to the law. Judge Brown fined him $300, which he paid. In the fifth supervisor district Jeff freys defeated H. A. Wassum, who was running independent, having been defeated in the primary. The Anaheim sugar factory has closed its campaign. Its beet crop was short this year, 50,000 tons being sliced. The beets were of good quality. E. J. Horsley, formerly a newspaper of Anaheim and Santa Ana has returned to Santa Ana and he and E. Stewart, of San Bernardino, completed the purchase of Eastman and Pickering job printing plant at 319 E. Fourth street. Returns from the various counties are meagre and indefinite, but the indications are that George Bauer, socialist candidate for congress, was run over Tuesday by Phil Swing's steam roller. We are pleased to note, however, that George polled a heavy vote for a socialist candidate. Miss Phyllis Crawford and Wylie Brown, both of this city, were married at the Mission Inn, Riverside, Tuesday, the pastor of the First Congregational church of Riverside, performing the ceremony. The young couple will make their home at the Magnolia apartments in this city. Hearing on the will contest, involving the $250,000 fortune of the late Rosalle Hart Luneberg will be held in Superior Judge R. Y. Williams' court February 19. Ona Parker, Ernestine Bunker, Frank Synold, Edward Synold, Otto Synold and Louis Synold purported heirs of the deceased woman, who received no share of her estate, are contesting the will. A match of unusual interest is staged at the Anaheim arena on Wednesday evening next. Roy Mabee, the local star wrestler, will meet Jack Paddillo of New York City, in a catch-as-catch-can bout. Paddillo is a noted wrestler, standing not far below the championship step. Mabee has conquered everybody who has appeared against him in the local arena and his friends are backing him to win. "BALL RED MARK MORE DAYS WEAR They Wear Like Iron The best of materials go into "Ball Band Rubber Boots--and the Like Iron The best of materials go into "Ball Band Rubber Boots" and the best of workmanship. That's why you can depend on them for long wear, as well as comfort and satisfying fit. Soles are extra tough, heels on to stay; specially reinforced in the vamp and at the ankle, to prevent cracking. Come in and select your pair of "Ball-Band Boots." The S. Q. R. Store Anaheim, Calif. ANAHEIM GAZETTE ention of Men who are about their Underwear hod, we find, of selling Allen Underwear. The more a quality and value—the better Underwear we sell. The Fall weights for men and boys we would like you to see and say. YUNGBLUTH G. H. Richardson, a rancher living near Fullerton, has been ordered by the railroad commission to continue to serve water from his pumping plant to certain adjoining farmers. Richardson shut off the water supply because his consumers refused to sign an agreement waiving their rights to water except at his discretion. The commission held that the acts of the defendant had dedicated his pumping plant to public service. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Neff have returned from an extended visit to Ohio and other points east. Mr. Neff reports farmers are receiving very poor prices for their crops, while labor and machinery are still up to war prices. The east has scarcely recovered from the coal strike and while miners have returned to work, he looks for a recurrence of trouble with them next spring. These miners, or many of them, are foreign agitators whom he considers pretty good birds to deport. Charlie Stone is on deck again as head zanjero in the Placentia section, having recovered from his recent indisposition. Charlie is delivering more water than ever and never misses a fandango, where he dances with all the pretty girls in the neighborhood. At a recent dance in Placentia he took first prize for being the best waltzer on the floor. This is much better than being home sick in bed. The girls missed Charlie when he was sick, but now they all want to dance with him. Go it, Charlie; go it while you are young. The Murletta Mineral Hot Springs Auto Stage line is defendant in a complaint filed with the railroad commission by the Motor Transit company. The Motor company charges that the Murletta line has invaded its territory and is violating the law by transporting local passengers from the city of Los Angeles to and from the city of Anaheim. It is also charged that the operation by defendant of its cars from Los Angeles to Murletta hot springs by the way of and through the cities of Yorba, Placentia and Corona is illegal. Superior Judge Z. B. West Thursday afternoon discharged a petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the board of supervisors to call an election in the town of Placentia to determine the matter of incorporation. The court held that the board of supervisors had never had jurisdiction of the incorporation matter because the petitioners had presented no proof as to the number of inhabitants within the proposed boundaries. District Attorney Nelson recently found a legal citation in which he held that it would be mandatory for the board to call an election once it had assumed jurisdiction, but Judge West held that the board had not made any such decision. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Nen have returned from an extended visit to Ohio and other points east. Mr. Neff reports farmers are receiving very poor prices for their crops, while labor and machinery are still up to war prices. The east has scarcely recovered from the coal strike and while miners have returned to work, he looks for a recurrence of trouble with them next spring. These miners, or many of them, are foreign agitators whom he considers pretty good birds to deport. Fritz Horback, of the Golden State Real Estate company, and president of the Concordia club, is endeavoring to locate the man who phoned to him at the club Saturday night and advised that his brother, Frank, was dying at his home in Los Angeles. The Anaheim man drove to the home of his brother, only to find that Frank was in a Crown stage departing from Anaheim for Los Angeles at the time the telephone call came to him. Miss Lillian Rivers, teacher in the Fullerton high school and Carl H. Pettit, teaching in Los Angeles county and formerly a member of the teaching staff at Orange, were recommended by the Orange county board of education to the state board of education for life certificates. Forty-eight months of continuous teaching is necessary to render an instructor eligible for such a recommendation. Twelve teachers' certificates were issued to local teachers. Directors of Anaheim Red Cross chapter were all re-elected with the exception of H. A. Dickel, who resides in Pasadena. In his place H. F. Dierker was named. The directors elected Herbert Sampson, president; H. F. Dierker, vice-president; Mrs. Eva Boyd, secretary, and A. B. McCord, treasurer. Anaheim's quota for next year is $1300, half of which goes to the National Red Cross. The chapter now has $140 on hand, making $2000 available for the next year. Growers are finding a ready market for grapefruit juice, citrate of lime orange vinegar, candied orange peel, marmalade, jellies and butters made from cull fruit that has been thrown away in past years according to H. E. Wahlig, county farm advisor. A formula was sent out by the United States department of agriculture, in department circular 232, giving information for the use of cull fruit and Bill Cook appears to be a coming man in football, and undoubtedly will eventually be one of the university gridiron stars. He played his first game Saturday with Stanford frosh against the U. S. C. freshmen, and demonstrated the metal he is made of. A sport writer in a Los Angeles paper said of him: "Bill Cook, former Anaheim high school star, was the one man most responsible for frying the Trojans' hash. Several times he ran amuck in the U. S. C. line and always seemed to swing himself clear for long gains. He was the best defensive man that the Cards had and he trumped every Trojan back who came through his side." Disinheriting one daughter; and leaving the rest of his $50,000 estate to be divided equally between his widow and his other children, the will of Warren H. Brown was filed Monday in Superior Judge R. Y. Williams' court. Warren E. Brown, of Santa Ana, and Henry Brown, of Anaheim appointed executors, filed application for its probate. Of the estate, $40,000 was in notes and securities, the application set forth. Property in Long Beach and household articles accounted for the other $10,000. Stating that a daughter, Mabel, whose last name,and whereabouts, were not known, should be left without any of the estate, Brown mentioned the following children as legatees: Clara Brown Day Idele Brown Rosenberg, Warren E Brown, Henry Brown and Seymour Brown. The Santa Ana Knights of Columbus walked away from the Anaheim K. of C. in a nine-inning fracas played at Anaheim on the high school grounds Sunday, the score being 21-6 With the exception of the third, Kelley was very effective, having five strike-outs to his credit before an Anaheim player reached first. In the fourth the Santa Anans got to Voltz who was pitching for Anaheim, and also Heind, who relieved him for twelve runs, the batting order going around twice. Carrillo, Arambel Kraemer, Maag, Hurd and Burrel made three or more hits each. Captain Lazzeroni, of the Anaheim team, who was hit in the head by a pitched ball, is reported as doing well. The tomato crop of northern Orange county has been cut approximately 66 2/3 per cent by the frost of ten days ago, according to the Randolph Marketing company, one of the largest shippers. The entire section as far south as the Irvine ranch has been touched. The latter as yet is unaffected. If the frost had held off until Nov. 15 or Dec. 1 the loss would have been little or nothing, according to the company, which operates in the Buena Park and Anaheim districts.The company has been figuring on 150 cars but now can be sure of only one-third of that. Other shippers hit are Dierker & Co., and Fisher & Cook, of the Anaheim district; E. Benetti and E. Klaus, of Hanson station, and the American Fruit Growers and Orange County Produce company of Fullert- Citrus growers of the county who will gather at Olive Friday for the monthly excursion to the Rubidoux experiment station at Riverside, are taking a keen interest in the trip. H. E Wahlig, farm advisor, announced The excursion will leave from the First National bank at Olive promptly Growers are finding a ready market for grapefruit juice, citrate of lime orange vinegar, candied orange peel, marmalade, jellies and butters made from cull fruit that has been thrown away in past years according to H. E Wahlberg, county farm advisor. A formula was sent out by the United States department of agriculture, in department circular 232, giving information for the use of cull fruit and growers using this formula are finding a ready market for such food products, as well as increasing their incomes, said Mr. Wahlberg. C. J. Bagby, of Fullerton, swore to a complaint in the justice court at Santa Ana charging J. Milian, driver of a Crown stage, with battery. According to Bagby, who appeared in the district attorney's office with a bruised and scratched face, the stage driver ordered him to change his seat and because he did not move as directed the driver struck him on the left cheek and then clawed the right side of his face. Bagby did not fight back. In the death of Hughes O. Parton, 88, Sunday, at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Theodore Ford, of Katella Orange county lost a pioneer and Santa Ana lost an early settler for whom a principal street was named—Parton street. Mr. Parton, a native of Tennessee, came to Santa Ana in 1876. Twenty years ago he left for Prescott, Ariz., where he has made his home until about three months ago, when he came to the home of his daughter, Mrs. Ford, at Katella. Burial was in Fairhaven cemetery, where the burial service of the Masonic lodge were conducted by the local chapters. Boston Brown and Salt Rising Bread THURSDAY Whipped Cream Cream Puffs FRIDAY BOSTON BAKERY 201 East Center St. Phone 135-W 248 West Center St. Phone861-J Citrus growers of the county who will gather at Olive Friday for the monthly excursion to the Rubidoux experiment station at Riverside, are taking a keen interest in the trip, H. E Wahlberg, farm advisor, announced The excursion will leave from the First National bank at Olive promptly at 8:30 a.m. Friday, arriving at the experiment station about 10 a.m. The return will be made early in order that the excursionists may attend to their regular day's business. "The last excursion was quite a success," Wahlberg said. "The growers realize the educational and practical value of these visits to the experimental station." The excursions are under the joint supervision of the agricultural extension service of the University of California and the farm bureau. Orange county friends of William Wendt, well known artist who has spent much of his time recently painting at Laguna Beach, were keenly interested when dispatches from Chicago, where the annual exhibition of American paintings opened at the art institute, stated that he was awarded the Keith Spaulding prize of $1000 for his work, "I Lifted Mine Eyes Unto the Hills." His painting was ranked best among the hundreds of beautiful works of art that were entered. Wendt, who is a member of the Laguna Beach Art association, has been accorded many honors during the years that he made his home in southern California and has painted California landscapes. Several of his works, all California subjects, have been purchased for the permanent galery of the art institute. Hursday & Friday---Last Days 23 YEARS OF SERVICE Anniversary Sales See Our Display Windows for Further Particulars ALKENSTEIN'S ALKENSTEIN'S ARTICLE 18 VIOLATED The Berlin newspapers have published the text of a military covenant alleged to have been signed by the premiers of Poland and the little entente at a secret conference held at Marienbad, August 31, according to cable dispatches. Poland is a member of the league of nations. Article 18 of the league covenant provides that "every treaty or international engagement entered into hereafter by any member of the league shall forthwith be registered with the secretariat and shall as soon as possible be published by it." The treaty entered into by Ireland and Czechoslovakia, Rumania, and Serbia is in the nature of an offensive and defensive alliance. It was naturally agreed that the text of the military pact should not be published," says the report of the affair Szechoslovakia, Rumania and Serbia are also members of the league of nations, and are equally chargeable with violation of article 18. This is not the first time that article 18 has been flouted by members of the league. In fact it has been more honored in the beach than in the observance. And it is part and parcel of that sacrosanct document which Mr Wilson and Mr. Cox assured us is to bring enduring peace to the world and which the United States broke faith by refusing to sign. "The outbreak of political disorders in southeastern Europe has served to confirm the masses of the people in their belief in the wisdom of the Republican foreign policies," declares the political writer of a Washington paper, after a survey of the middle west. "It is certain that no agitation favorable to the entrance of this country into the league of nations would strike a responsive chord in the Mississippi valley today." That feeling is by no means confined to the middle west, but is as genius Boston speech that "the fundamental and pressing problems of Europe are political problems involving national hopes and fears; deep seated convictions as to national safety and opportunity; national ambitions, in some cases long cherished, in others recently awakened; established policies which have become postulates in the thought of the peoples. Each nation is its own judge in such matters of policy, and, whether acting in or out of groups, will follow its own interests save as some special exigency may control." Mr. Hughes might well have added national honor as being involved in the problems of Europe. That would have completed the description of the political atmosphere into which our internationalist friends seek to project the United States. We have been told that the league of nations would become a vital force the moment this country should become a member. Does anybody imagine that American recommendations affecting the national honor, safety and ambitions of European nations would be received any more kindly if offered through the league than if delivered independently? In neither case would such action by the United States have any other effect than to inflame the jealousies of this country that already rankle in foreign breasts. The administration policy of non-interference in those alien problems is everlastingly sound. GERMAN STEEL EXPORTS During the first six months of 1922 Germany exported 1,023,108 metric tons of steel products. In June she exported 176,000 tons. That included 781 tons of rails, 124 tons of bars, mill shafting, etc., 63 tons of wire and wire manufactures, 11 tons of crumbles, electric, or cementation. in southeastern Europe has served to confirm the masses of the people in their belief in the wisdom of the Republican foreign policies," declares the political writer of a Washington paper, after a survey of the middle west. "It is certain that no agitation favorable to the entrance of this country try into the league of nations would strike a responsive chord in the Mississippi valley today." That feeling is by no means confined to the middle west, but is as general at this moment—probably more so—than it was when the votes were cast in November, 1920. However Mr. Cox is still in favor of "going in" and until Mr. Cox is superseded as the leader he may be accepted as the spokesman for his party. "The mantle of Wilson has fallen on him." declare the British pro-leaguers. EVERLASTINGLY SOUND No permanent solution for European problems can come through outside suggestion. It is futile for the United States to attempt remedies, either acting independently or through the league of nations, as the internationalists advocate. The old world troubles are too deep seated and have continued for too long a time to be so easily disposed of. Moreover, interference in such matters is not sought and would not be accepted. The assistance sought from America has never been of that kind. Financial aid in one form or another is what foreign nations would like to get from the United States, while they continue to nurse animosities that frequently burst into wars and are responsible for present conditions abroad. Secretary Hughes presented the matter very clearly when he said in GERMAN STEEL EXPORTS During the first six months of 1922 Germany exported 1,023,108 metric tons of steel products. In June she exported 176,000 tons. That included 781 tons of rails, 124 tons of bars, millshafting, etc., 63 tons of wire and wire manufactures, 11 tons of crucible, electric, or cementation process bars, 10 tons of sheets and plates, and 7 tons of building forms sent to the United States. The Fordney-McCumber tariff law will take care of those imports hereafter. Money to Loan on improved real estate and for building purposes. $500 to $25,000; long terms, reasonable rates. C. E. McCrath, 206 Somerset Ave., Bellflower. Phone, Downey A.229. FINE CORNER, EAST SEVENTH STREET, LONG BEACH Two blocks from American avenue in the midst of the progressive part of Long Beach. The only quarter block left in Long Beach townsite owned by one individual, 150x150. Entirely surrounded by streets and alleys. Just now ripe for extensive improvements. Rentals now in good condition, income about $700 per month. Price $135,000. Will consider good income or walnut or citrus grove to $75,000, balance easy terms. Let me hear from you. O. T. GREGG, Exclusive Agent, 412,413 L. B. Security Bldg. Long Beach, Calif.