anaheim-gazette 1923-11-01
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Copyright 1923 Hart Schaffner & Marx
Style's Fine-But Better G
Quality With It
YOU want good style of course; but you'd better get fine quality with it. It takes not only
good designing but fine woolens and expert
tailoring to give you the best style. You get
Style's Fine-But Better Quality With It
YOU want good style of course; but you'd better get fine quality with it. It takes not only good designing but fine woolens and expert tailoring to give you the best style. You get everything here in
Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes
By All Means Get a Fit
F. A, Yungbluth
Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
Dr. Sue Amack was in Los Angeles Thursday attending a feeting of chiropractors.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bond of Green field, Mass., and Mrs. Harold Bond of Alhambra, were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Hawley Sunday.
Frank N. Gibbs went up to San Francisco the latter part of the week to attend the Imbermen's convention.
Nearly all the Anaheim school teachers were attending the county institute at Orange the first of the week, consequently there was no school Monday and Tuesday.
If you are set on paying a top price for a Top-coat--you can stop right at these headlines.
"Style-Plus" Overcoats
THE BEST is none too good for our trade but we do not trade in high prices.
stop right at these headlines.
"Style-Plus" Overcoats
THE BEST is none too good for our trade but we do not trade in high prices.
We haven't a top-coat in stock as high as $60 and we haven't a coat that isn't fit to grace the shoulders of the President of the United States Steel Corporation.
This is a Value show as well as a beauty show.
We believe that only the spend-thrift is looking for fancy prices, and we've heard say that the best spenders in the country eventually occupy the best seats in the poorhouse.
These coats are the quintessence of quality at a fine common sense price.
$30 to $40
The S. Q. R. Store
C. F. Grim is at home again after a visit to San Francisco, where he attended the lumbermen's convention.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cohen entertained a number of friends at dinner Thursday evening at their home on Zeyn street.
The Standard Oil test well on the Wagner lease is now down about 1800 feet. It is predicted that this will be a deep well.
Dr. W. L. Bigham has purchased the William Dellison residence property at Palm and Center streets, and will move his office into it after remodeling the house.
The K. C. Ball team gave a dance at St. Boniface Parish house Friday evening. About a hundred club members were present, a number of visitors from Santa Ana and Fullerton were in attendance.
Gus Werrel, just arrived from Nebraska, has purchased a business lot in Mills Park, at the cor. of Los Angeles street and Mills Drive. He is preparing to put up a brick store building on the lot.
At the Los Angeles county fair last week Ferd Heyling of this city carried off several of the prizes for Rhode Island Reds in the poultry display. Wherever Heyling's birds are exhibited they carry off all the honors.
A Y. M. C. A. campaign to raise a fund of $6,000 will shortly be inaugurated here. Final arrangements will be made at a dinner on Nov. 6. Chas Eygabrood has been chosen to head the workers with J P. Schastian and Marchall E. Beebe captains of the opposing teams.
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The city of Orange voted $70,000 for a new school building Saturday. The vote was 463 for and 140 against the issue.
The Ladies' Aid Society of Grace Lutheran Church will meet this afternoon at the parish hall, Mrs. H. Busch being the hostess.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Baker went up to Ontario Sunday taking with them Ruth and Ray Hargrave, who have been visiting at the Baker home.
The Anaheim high school football team defeated Tustin high at Tustin Friday by a close score of 14 to 13. This is the second of the series of leagce games, both being won by the local team.
Mrs. C. F. Grim was the guest of honor at a dinner given by Mr. anl Mrs. Oscar Heying, Thursday, the occasion being Mrs. Grim's birthday. She received many birthday presents from her friends.
Mrs. G. H. Goodale, chairman of the program committee of the Ebell socie-
A Y. M. C. A. campaign to raise a fund of $6,000 will shortly be inaugurated here. Final arrangements will be made at a dinner on Nov. 6. Chas. Eygabrood has been chosen to head the workers with J P. Sebastian and Marchall E. Beebe captains of the opposing teams.
Tom Mix's Wildcats defeated the American Legion baseball team Sunday, the score being 14 to 9. The Legion's crack pitcher was on the bench with sore arm which left one man to do all the work on the mound. After he became exhausted the Wildcats fell on him and smashed out a long row of hits.
The new record for receipts set by County Clerk, J. M. Backs' office in September already has been smashed. September's mark was $2352.25, the largest amount in fees ever collected in the clerk's office in one month. October, however, had recorded $2,614.25 by the seventeenth, with the month only two thirds gone. Now the total is well above $3,000 and still mounting.
The Anaheim Creamery Company at 120 West Charters street, is now manufacturing and putting on the market a brand new beverage. It is made of milk, is non-intoxicating, but analysis shows it to be a nourishing and healthy drink, as well as palatable. It is named Ana-Lac, bearing half of the name of the city in which it originated. Those who have sampled it predict that it will soon become an extremely popular beverage.
Evidently there is no young man in Orange county who wants to go to West Point or Annapolis. At least, none responded Saturday to the invitation to take examinations to be used as a basis of selecting applicants to attend the military and navy academies. Congressman Swing, some time ago, sent notices to the newspapers, saying that he would make his appointments from a list of eligibles selected by the Civil Service commission. Santa Ana was one place designated for holding examinations Saturday.
Please take notice that the Annual meeting of the Anaheim Chapter of she said, honored the paper without question.
Contrary to reports Miss Wakeham declared, the United States government cemetery at Belleau Wood, France, is excellently maintained This was the only one of the American cemeteries overseas visited by the returned traveler.
"The cemetery at Belleau Wood was in excellent condition when I visited it," said Miss Waeham. "It is being restored to the condition it was in when the American boys were on the ground and it is to be maintained by this government as a memorial park."
Living and traveling costs are higher in Switzerland than in any of the other nations she visited, Miss Wakeham said. England came next in point of high costs.
Rheims, she says, looks like San Francisco did after the fire and earthquake. Rebuilding, is proceeding slowly.
Wire entanglements erected by the Germans, she said, are still being reduced by workers in the devastated areas. She said that on the road between Rheims and Pompelle Fort she saw forces of men engaged in tearing down the entanglements and baling the wire.
Miss Wakeham and her mother did not go into Germany, because they were told that conditions there were such as to make a tour anything but pleasant.
STUDENTS KEEP TAB ON NICKELS EARNED, SPENT
Freshmen students of the College of Business Administration at Boston University are required to turn in monthly accounts and Prof. Charles
Mrs. C. F. Grim was the guest of honor at a dinner given by Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Heying, Thursday, the occasion being Mrs. Grim's birthday. She received many birthday presents from her friends.
Mrs. G. H. Goodale, chairman of the program committee of the Ebell society, has arranged an interesting program on foreign relations in the meeting on Nov. 5. Mrs. H. C. Downs will be the speaker.
Lois Rebekah Lodge will give a box social and dance at Odd Fellows hall Friday evening. A program of singing and realing will also be rendered. All Rebekahs and Odd Fellows are invited.
Mrs. J. E. Stroup entertained a number of friends at a Hallowe'en party Saturday in honor of her mother, Mrs. J. P. Callahan. Guests were present from Santa Ana, Tustin, San Pedro and Pasadena.
Johnny Walls, one of the most successful ranchers of this region, was in town Monday and left a sack of walnuts at this office. If these nuts are a fair sample of the 1923 crop, we can testify to the excellent quality of the out-put. Our thanks are extended to Johnny.
Postoffice Inspector Gardner was in town last week checking up on Postmaster Whitaker's application for more city carriers and clerks. He went over the ground mapped out by Mr. Whitaker, and was convinced that the additional force is needed. It is understood that he will recommend the increase asked for by the postmaster.
Please take notice that the Annual meeting of the Anaheim Chapter of the American National Red Cross will be held on Thursday, November 1st, 1923, at 8 o'clock of day at council room, City Hall, for the election of five directors; consideration of action upon reports, and transaction of such other business as may properly come before the Chapter. Each member of the Chapter is earnestly urged to be present.
Eva H. Boyd, Sec'y.
BRITISH REFUSE OUR TRAVELERS' CHECKS
Santa Ana Woman Complains of John Bull's Treatment.
Disappointed because the United States has not cancelled its indebtedness to this government, England is retaliating on American tourists by refusing to honor traveler's checks issued in this country, according to Miss Mary Wakeham, who is home from a four and a half month's tour through England, Scotland, Switzerland, France and Italy. Miss Wakeham was accompanied on the tour by her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Wakeham, of Santa Ana.
Miss Wakeham declared that the Bank of Enland positively refused to honor American Express checks, which she and other American travelers carried. Other banks, however,
not go into Germany, because they were told that conditions there were such as to make a tour anything but pleasant.
STUDENTS KEEP TAB ON NICKELS EARNED, SPENT
Freshmen students of the College of Business Administration at Boston University are required to turn in monthly accounts and Prof. Charles Strattan, who supervises them, tells some of the ways and means employed to earn their expenses. The accounts must be balanced accurately enough to pass muster with the professor, who says, however, that he knows some of them are not absolutely accurate.
The reports throw considerable light on the wide range of occupations adopted by the students. They work as bus boys, waiters, ushers, elevator boys, bell hops, clerks in grocery stores, and department stores. One student is employed nightly tossing griddle cakes in a restaurant window. Another has a job which necessitates his standing on a street corner at certain hours of the day and counting traffic for an insurance company. Another youth has to induct his wealthy employer into the mysteries of golf. Several of the students were shown to be engaged in the majority of the jobs mentioned, but the golf instructor was alone in his class.
Jobs in restaurants are in greatest favor, according to the statements which accompany the reports.
SOFT WOOD RESOURCES OF U.S.A. ABUNDANT
At the concluding session of the British empire forestry conference, Col. Henry Solon Graves delivered a paper on the soft wood resources of
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the paper without the paper without the United States'. He stated that although three-quarters of the original soft wood forests of the United States had been cut over, it had been estimated that that country still contained more soft wood timber than any other country except Russia, writes a special correspondent from Ottawa to the Christian Science Monitor.
The country contained, he said, 225,000,000 acres bearing pure soft wood forests. In addition, the country had 70,000,000 acres of denuded lands which formerly bore soft woods, but are now largely unproductive, and 12,000,000 acres of the southeast coast of Alaska also bear virgin softwood forests.
Colonel Graves estimated that, in all, the country contained 1,830,000,000 board feet of timber suitable for the manufacture of lumber and 940,000,000 cords of pulpwood. Of this immense total Douglas fir leads, with a total stock of 695,000,000,000 board feet, followed in order of quantity by the Western yellow pines and the spruces and firs.
FUNDAMENTAL FACTS TO BE REMEMBERED
It is highly important to keep facts in mind if we are to reach sound conclusions in the consideration of economic problems. One of the most pressing problems now before the American people is that of aiding wheat growers in their financial difficulties. Although it is not the province of the government to guarantee any industry against losses incident to unfavorable natural conditions or abnormal circumstances surrounding markets, yet there are some facts in connection with the relations between wheat such as to encourage payment of high wages and increase in cost of production. Under policies adopted by the Wilson administration, the cost of operating the railroads was enormously increased. Because of those high costs of production, largely in force still, the prices manufacturers of commodities must charge and the rates which transportation companies must receive have not been reduced. Prices of most farm products and of wheat in particular, have, however, come down.
In an interview on August 20, 1923, Secretary of Agriculture Wallace summarized the situation in which the farmer is placed with relation to other industries. He said:
"The farmer could get along fairly well with present prices of what he has to sell if prices of what he must buy were down accordingly. But prices of things remain high. That is what hurts Wages in industry and on the railroads are almost twice as high as before the war. Taxes are about twice as high. Freight rates are from 50 to 100 per cent above pre-Metals building materials of all kinds, are from 50 to 100 per cent above pre-war prices. All of these are items in the farmer's cost of production.
During a sensational campaign one of the newly elected United States senators advocated higher wages for railroad men and higher returns to the farmer. When reminded that higher wages for transportation workers necessitates high rates to be paid by the farmer, the new statesman replied: "I haven't worked out the details as yet."
Obviously he has not.
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in mind if we are to reach sound conclusions in the consideration of economic problems. One of the most pressing problems now before the American people is that of aiding wheat growers in their financial difficulties. Although it is not the province of the government to guarantee any industry against losses incident to unfavorable natural conditions or abnormal circumstances surrounding markets, yet there are some facts in connection with the relations between wheat justify some special effort in their behalf. That is true also of some other industries. The government has undertaken, for instance, to regulate railroad service, and to fix the wages railroads must pay. That degree of interference with the business of the railroads imposes upon the government an obligation to see that such regulations does not drive them to bankruptcy.
In the past the government interfered with the profits of wheat growers in a way that imposes upon the governent an obligation to look after their present welfare. During the war a Food Control law was enacted and in an effort to encourage production of wheat Congress fixed what was intended to be a minimum price. Believing that they were certain to receive this minimum many farmers engaged more extensively in wheat production. But under regulations which the Wilson administration adopted, the minimum price became in effect a maximum price with many deductions on account of inferior grades, distance from markets, etc., so that wheat farmers were much disappointed in the returns they received.
Grain farmers were not permitted to profiteer luring the war as most other industries were free to do. Moreover, the policy of the government in making cost-plus contracts for construction and for war supplies was
notice
In the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California.
Clara M. Swan, Plaintiff, vs. Frank Hart, Defendant. Action brought in the Superior Court of Orange county, state of California, and the amended complaint filed in the office of the clerk of said county of Orange. William A. Alderson, Attorney for Plaintiff.
The People of the State of California Send Greetings to Frank Hart, Defendant.
You Are Hereby Directed to Appear and answer the amended complaint in an action entitled as above, brought against you in the Superior Court of the county of Orange, State of California, within ten days after the service on you of this summons, if served within this county, or within thirty days if served elsewhere. And you are hereby notified that unless you appear and answer as above required, the plaintiff will take judgment for any money or damages demanded. In the amended complaint, as arising upon contract, or plaintiff will apply to the court for any relief demanded in the amended complaint.
Given under my hand and the seal of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, this 26th day of June, A.D. 1923.
J. M. BACKS, Clerk.
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