anaheim-gazette 1923-09-06
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Anaheim Gazette
ESTABLISHED 1870
ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY
Henry Kuchel, Editor and Proprietor
SUBSCRIPTION PER YEAR ... $1.50
SIX MONTHS ... $1.00
THREE MONTHS ... $ .50
Entred at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter
AMERICAN LEGION CONVENTION
The keynote of the fifth annual convention of the American Legion, department of California at Eureka was Americanism. The outstanding resolution on this subsecjt was empowering the incoming comander to appoint large ways and means committee for the purpose of raising $150,000 memorial endowment fund, income from which is to establish a chair in Americanization at the University of California and the balance of which is to be used by the legion for employing a paid director of Americanization, whose duties shall be to have frequent conferences with the school authorities and all of the other organizations interested in Americanization, working out a concrete and practical program for all of the three hundred local posts in California to follow in their Americanization Oork in their respective communities. This undertaking is probably the greatest ever attempted by any state in the union. Resolutions were passed asikng the teachers of the public schools to instruct students in the proper meaning of our national holidays, supporting the Boy Scout movement, making November 11th a national holiday, asking for increased aprropiation for the R. O. T. C., and the establishment of R. O. T. C units in all high schools.
Repairs Inter. truck ... 4.81
Repairs Anaheim Dis... 31.61
Cleaning, general ... 14.20
Cleaning main ditch ... 537.38
Easton line ... 169.73
Labor for H. O. Saston ... 20.94
Oil well salary ... 45.40
General expense ... 34.78
Yardman ... 56.75
Rent—Anaheim house ... 22.70
Zanjero, Anaheim ... 181.60
Zanjero Fullerton ... 181.60
Zanjero, Placentia ... 181.60
Zanejro Yorba Linda ... 164.67
Zanejro head gate ... 79.45
$3,677.61
A WONDERFUL STATE
Just once in a while we have to boost and boast a bit for good old California. It is a real honest-to-goodness wonderful state. It has the biggest trees, the tallest mountains, the deepets valleys, the coldest and the hottest weather,the biggest ocean and, of course, an agriculture to beat the earth. The wonder of its agricultural productions is due to the diversity which permits the growth somewhere within its boundaries of every fruit and food of earth. Up at Redding, practically on a line with the city of New York, the grounds of the court house are filled with bearing oranges, lemons, grapefruit, olives and other sub-tropicals.
Seven hundred miles to the south, in a little mountain valley, farmers are growing King David apples so red they almost black and of a quality of flesh unsurpassed. There are little frost free nooks up and down the foothills of the great valley and over near the coast where tropicals are repeatedly fruited. We would not take San Francisco to be a strictly tropical city; in fact it is quite decidedly not. Now comes Rixford, the United States department man, who has spent much of his life in observ.
their Americanization Oork in their respective communities. This undertaking is probably the greatest ever attempted by any state in the union. Resolutions were passed asikng the teachers of the public schools to instruct students in the proper meaning of our national holidays, supporting the Boy Scout movement, making November 11th a national holiday, asking for increased appropriation for the R. O. T. C., and the establishment of R. O. T. C units in all high schools asikng congress to exclude immigration for a period of five years and proper restrictions after that period. The total exclusion of all oriental immigration into the United States, the proper instruction in the schools regarding proper courtesy due to the flag; favoring legislation to prohibit child labor; opposing the use of public buildings by Eugene V. Debs and others convicted under the espionage act.
James F. Collins, past commander, of Long Beach, and state executive committeeman, was unanimously elected statek commander of American Legion. George Miller, of San Francisco, was elected first vice-commander; Roy Mingins, of Redwood City, was elected second vice-commander, and Daisy Boulware, of San Francisco, was elected third vice-commander, which place has always gone to some lady member of the organization.
Morgan Keaton, who has just completed his second term as state adjutant, was re-appointed for a third term by the new incoming commander, who announced the appointment from the platform due to the splendid record made by the adjutant in the past two years.
George A. Hartman, of El Centro, wa selected state chaplain, and C. K. Badger, of Bakersfield and Harold E. Ellensten, of Venice, were elected sergeant-at-arms and historian, respectively. The delegates chosen to attend the fifth annual national convention to be held at San Francisco, October 15 to 19 are as follows:
Delegates-at-Large—James F. Collins, of Long Beach; Seth Millington, Jr., Colusa; Irwin T. Quinn, Eureka; Madolphus E. Graupner, San Francisco; and George Hatfield, of Stevenson.
The other delegates chosen were: Dr. H. S. Rogers Petaluma; Carl J. Wright, Eureka; Horace V. Ley, Yrke; Ben C. Corlett, Napa; Stanley M. Arndt, Stockton; Charles H. Kendrick, San Francisco; J. W. Collier, in a little mountain valley, farmers are growing King David apples so red they almost black and of a quality of flesh unsurpassed. There are little frost free nooks up and down the foothills of the great valley and over near the coast where tropicals are repeatedly fruited. We would not take San Francisco to be a strictly tropical city; in fact it is quite decidedly not. Now comes Rixford, the United States department man, who has spent much of his life in observing figs, dates, feijoaos, avocados, sapotes and numberless other semitropicals, and in a letter he says: "I will tell you of a visit recently made to R. W. Hills' place, on the electric railroad down the peninsula a few miles south of Palo Alto. Mr. Hills is the well known coffee merchant of San Francisco. He has a beautiful place, with about one hundred avocados, of five or six different varieties, fruiting abundantly. I do not believe I saw a tree that contained less than 20 fruits, and many of them were so loaded that the branches were bending down.
"Besides the avocados, he has lemons, limes, feijoaos, and the tree tomato, all in fruit, and they have never been injured by frost. I have purchased a 15 acres place down in the same neighborhood. This region I am speaking of is in the hilly west side of the Santa Clara valley, and I have found all along the railroad from Los Altos to Los Gatos hundreds of avocado trees that seem to be flourishing. I am therefore proposing to plant quite a number of avocados, sapote blancos (Cassimaroa edulis) and the passion vine which is so popular in Australia and I am going to try the cherimoya, the success of which I am a little doubtful about; but I am sure that the avocados and the other things mentioned will escape the frost, on the top of my hill."
GLADYS IS HIGH STEPPER
Gladys Talbott, whose real name is Seisling, residing at 526 South Broadway, is in the limelight again, but this time the police are in the play.
Pretty, 16 years old, bobbed hair and possessing a winsome smile Gladys is said to be one of the fastest steppers in Orange county. She walked out here from her home in Elliott, Iowa. She was arrested by the juvenile authorities and lodged in the detention home at Los Angeles. She
Delegates at Large—James F. Collins, of Long Beach; Seth Millington, Jr., Colusa; Irwin T. Quinn, Eureka; Adolphus E. Graupner, San Francisco, and George Hatfield, of Stevenson.
The other delegates chosen were:
Dr. H. S. Rogers Petaluma; Carl J. Wright, Eureka; Horace V. Ley, Yrke; Ben C. Corlett, Napa; Stanley M. Arndt, Stockton; Charles H. Kendrick, San Francisco; J. W. Collier, Oakland; J. C. Beaucock, Pleasanton; Dr. J. A. Young, Oakdale; L. T. Stevenson, Fresno; C. A. Tillotson, Dinuba; C. A. Williasm, Taft; Frank Lanmin, San Jose; Geo. Kindred, Oxnard; S. S. Nelson, San Matee; Walter Linebarger, Long Beach; A. Besselo, Eagle Rock; E. S. Dobbins, Long Beach; Daily Stafford, Covina; Leonard Wilson, E. Snapper Ingram and Buron R. Pitts, of Los Angeles; John D. Howe, Upland; Phil D. Swing, El Centro; R. J. Welch, Riverside, and H. C. Wilhelm, Anaheim.
SUPERINTENDENT'S REPORT
Labor on Pratt dam No. 3... $2,371.19
Pumping water at No. 1... 113.50
Pumping water at No. 2... 265.95
Pumping water at No. 3... 84.39
Making pipe... 257.39
Hauling gravel... 39.97
Labor for W. T. Wallop... 13.34
Labor for L. J. Sheridan... 12.10
Labor for J. C .Tuffree... 14.78
Labor for H. D. Tuffree... 2.27
Pumping sand at headgate... 112.36
Labor on pile driver... 8.35
General repairs... 30.08
Repairs 3-B... 224.84
Repairs Fulletron Dis... 312.63
Repairs Placentia Dis... 53.84
Repairs Yorba Linda Dis... 31.10
Repairs mixer No. 1... 13.62
Repairs zanjero house... 8.89
Gladys Talbott, whose real name is Seisling, residing at 526 South Broadway, is in the limelight again, but this time the police are in the play.
Pretty, 16 years old, bobbed hair and possessing a winsome smile Gladys is said to be one of the fastest steppers in Orange county. She walked out here from her home in Elliott, Iowa. She was arrested by the juvenile authorities and lodged in the detention home at Los Angeles. She was released about two weeks ago and went to the home of her relatives, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Talbott, in Santa Ana.
Thursday night Gladys went to work for Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Chandler, 1208 North Main street. Mrs. Chandler went to the theatre at 7 o'clock and when she returned two hours later Gladys was gone and also wearing apparel valued at $260 was missing.
Included in missing apparel was an $85 ladies' suit and a silk velour coat valued at $85.
On Wednesday night Gladys went to Huntington Beach with the Talbotts and ran away. She came home the next day and explained that she had met a boy friend. Thursday she got the housework position and again ran away.
THE RACE OF THE FUTURE
What will be the dominant race of the future? The race that will furnish most of the master minds and the leadership for the rest of the world, as was once done by the Egyptians, the Greeks and the Romans, and is now being done perhaps by the Anglo-Saxons?
Charles P. Steinmetz says it will be the Slava, Not the Russians alone, but the Slavic people of eastern and southeastern Europe, of whom the
Russians are the most numerous and notable group.
Anglo-Saxon leadership received in the last year, Steinmetz thinks, a blow from which it will not recover. Also, the Anglo-Saxon civilization has been strongly individualistic, and he believes individualism has served its purpose. "Collectivistic civilization," he says, "will spread over Europe from the east, where the leaders of the future will be born."
And what of America? To it, surely, belongs the immediate future. It is the strongest nation now on earth, and making the most rapid advance in material civilization. And of all the Anglo-Saxon groups, it lays most stress on the rights of the individual. Can it be that the United States is the last stronghold of individualism, and after another generation or two, or another century or two, the scepter is to pass to the Slavs because they are more inclined to work together for their common good, in a world where co-operation becomes more and more necessary?
The Sons of the Revolution urge every civic and patriotic body and community to observe 'Constitution Week.' September 16th to 22nd, by proper participation in the celebration during that week.
The importance of "re-establishing the constitution of the United States and the principles and ideals of our government in minds and hearts of the people" must be fully recognized, if this government is to remain "a government of laws and not of men."
Every minister, who can, is urged to bring the matter as forcefully as possible before the congregation and at such public gatherings as they
OUR GUARANTEE
We challenge any man or woman well or sick to use WHOLE GRAIN WHEAT twice a day for thirty days and not contess a deflats and distinct all around improvements physically and mentally—friendly, mind you too. We'll go further and contract to return the price of the case, without argument, if after using the case on the basis of twice a day the user has the slightest doubt of his or her mental and physical improvement. This is a guarantee to the world to anybody anywhere.
WHOLE GRAIN WHEAT
Nature's wonderful Food Discovery
If you are anemic or your vitality run down
WHEAT
Nature's wonderful Food Discovery
If you are anemic or your vitality run down
Whole Grain Wheat
Will restore you. IT WILL MAKE YOU WALL. IT WILL KEEP YOU WELL. See the guarantee. It corrects and cures Goiter, Constipation, Stomach and Bowel Troubles; underweight, overweight, mal-nutrition, etc. Sold by J. H. CLAYBAUGH, Distributor
J15 South Olive St. Phone 322J Anaheim, Cal.
School Shoes!
As school time draws near and the rainy season approaches, the children must be fitted with NEW SHOES!
The old-timers who sigh for the old-fashioned girls of their youth would laugh their heads off if they'd see one of them coming down the street dressed as the girls did in the nineties.
"A fool and his money" soon find their way to the blue-sky stock salesman.
The man that makes the most mations doesn't necessarily do the most work. What is busier than a cat chasing its tail?
PHONE 784-J.
Dr. W. W. Adams
THE OSTEOPATH
Has opened office again and will be glad to meet all of his old friends, and as many new ones as he can at
220 North Olive Street,
ANAHEIM, CALIF.
BOSTON BAKERY
approaches, the children must be fitted with
NEW SHOES!
In order take up and attend to toeir studies properly. School Shoes must bear very many hard knocks and stand lots of hard usage. Our variety of styles is ample to please the most exacting buyer. Our complete range of sizes insures perfect fit and good service.
Prices are, as Usual, very reasonable.
LAUTENBACH'S
Corner Center and Lemon Anaheim, California
BOSTON BAKERY
Saturday Specials
Assorted Cookies 20c doz.
2 for 35c
Orange Cakes 25c
Almond Filled Coffee Cake 20c
Boston Bakery
201 East Center St.
Phone 135-W
248 West Center St
Phone861-J
SAVED!
The Hardest Day of All
just ten minutes spent in gathring together the family wash
that's all there is to washday
ow.
Our Wet Wash service does
everything else. It washes all
the bundle sweetly clean, exracts most of the moisture,
and returns everything just
camp enough for you to starch
and iron, or hang on the line.
A whole day saved, and all saving in
bundle sweetly clean,
racts most of the moisture,
and returns everything just
amp enough for you to starch
nd iron, or hang on the line.
A whole day sayed, and all saving in
money, too.
Just phone, we call for and deliver.
Anaheim Laundry Company
Phone 18
Wall Paper
Your wall paper needs can be fully satisfied from
our most complete line of handsome new patterns. The beautiful papers shown in our display
room are carried in stock ready for immediate
delivery.
We are anxious to have you become ONE of our
many satisfied customers.
Why not drop in some day?
B. F. SPENCER
ART GOODS
Why not drop in some day?
B. F. SPENCER
ART GOODS
Pictures Wall Paper
166 W. Center St. Anaheim
THE ANAHEIM GAZETTE
$1.50 Per Year
Santa Ana Monumental Works
BEN P. LIPPI, Proprietor
"FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC"
MONUMENTS
MARKERS AND HEADSTONES
Dealing With Us Direct You Save the Middleman's Profit.
"Our Car at Your Service."
Phone 1800
504 E. 4th St., Santa Ana.