anaheim-gazette 1924-01-17
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What's the Best Clothing
You have to buy clothes, sooner or later you'd like to have the right answer to the question. What's the best clothing?
We put at your service our long experience, our knowledge of the market, our acquaintance with producers; and of you the best we can find.
There's a lot of good clothing made; we sell Hart Schaffner & Marx clothing because we believe it's the best for our customers. There's something more than good fabrics and good tailoring in the clothes; the makers have put a policy satisfaction-giving into them.
Because our store is the kind of store it a service station for things men wear, we sell Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes;
There is something more good fabrics and good tailoring in the clothes; the makers have put a policy satisfaction-giving into them.
Because our store is the kind of store it a service station for things men wear, we all Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes; there are our kind of clothes.
"By All Means Get a Fit."
F. A. Yungblu
Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clofhes
Ten new members were added to the roll of the Chamber of Commerce at the last meeting.
Ernest Zitzmann, cashier of the American Savings Bank, has been very ill at his home on Chestnut St. for two weeks past, but is now reported slightly improved.
By winning from Garden Grove the Anaheim High School basket ball team captured the county pennant.
Dr. C. L. Van Alstine of Los Angeles, died at the Anaheim Sanitarium Sunday evening. He has been a patient at the sanitarium for several weeks.
The S. Q. R. Store
There are Many Wonderful BARGAINS
There are Many
Wonderful
BARGAINS
IN THE
Final
Clearance
Sale
Now in progress at the
The S. Q. R. Store
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
Miss Eva Merritt is visiting friends in Long Beach this week.
The Coolidge Club is making plans for a mass meeting on January 22.
Walter Ross and Clarence Beatty left the first of the week for Imperial Valley on a land inspection tour.
The Coast Land Company has leased '50 acres for oil purposes in the Katella district.
The Fairyland theatre was crowded Monday evening to hear Judge Samuel W. Green of Louisville, Ky., lecture on Christian science.
L. J. Winney and Frank Delatour have arrived home safely from San Francisco where they spent a couple of weeks recuperating their health.
H. N. Parker died at the Sanitarium Tuesday, aged 64. He came to Anaheim nearly four years ago, and has been making his home with his daughter, Mrs. William Goodrum.
Miss Virginia Noll was struck by an auto as she was crossing the intersection of Lemon and Center Streets Sunday evening and painfully injured. One foot was badly crushed which will necessitate the use of chutches for some time. Miss Marie Graham of Brea was driving the car.
The will of the late A. A. Mills has been filed for probate by the widow and executrix, Mrs. Pamella Mills. The estate is valued at $50,000. Eleven relatives are left $500 each, and the balance goes to his widow and four children, Lawrence Mills, Miss Irene Mills, Mrs. Edna Curtis and
Three new members taken in by the Anaheim Realty Board at the last meeting brings the membership of that body to 39.
Hermine Schovel, a reformed socialist, addressed the Lion's Club at last week's luncheon, her subject being the fallacies of socialism. She scored the non-partisan league and showed up the incompetency and inefficiency o the North Dakota government.
Dr. J. R. Bronson of Atlanta, Ga., lecturer for the Ku Klux Klan, spoke at the Christian church tabernacle Friday afternoon to an audience of several hundred persons. He discussed the purposes and workings of the Klan.
County Clerk Joe Backs was confronted by a man last week who wanted to register with the party that was going to run a Ku Klux for president. Joe is supposed to know everything, but he was lacking information on
The will of the late A. A. Mills has been filed for probate by the widow and executrix, Mrs. Pamella Mills. The estate is valued at $50,000. Eleven relatives are left $500 each, and the balance goes to his widow and four children, Lawrence Mills, Miss Irene Mills, Mrs. Edna Curtis and Mrs. Irma Davis.
The Southern Pacific has notified Secretary Reid of the Chamber of Commerce that the company expects to lease the premises now occupied by the Anaheim Citrus Assoliation to a Citrus Parking firm, consequently negotiations toward securing the building for another industry are off.
Even in the house of his friends and warmest admirers Hiram Johnson appears to have lost much prestige. Santa Ana was formerly a stronghold of the Senator, but at one of the churches Sunday evening a straw vote was taken, and the following figures reveal the sentiment of the congregation: Coolidge, 154; McAdoo, 18; Ford, 33; Hoover, 12; Hughes, 17; Johnson, 21; Mrs. Florence Harding, 4; Scattering, 15.
That the Bayside Land Company contemplates filling in fifteen acres of tideland at Seal Beach, was revealed with announcement that the company has applied to the war department for permission to do dredging work in the eastern part of Los Alamitos bay. According to Phil Stanton, president, the company will use the dredge material in filling in a tract of ground lying between the old and the new coast highway in the west part of Seal Beach.
A woman wrapped in a blanket and lying directly in front of the lights of an automobile parked along the Whittier boulevard near Montebello, was believed by Los Angeles police to have been a ruse employed by four bandits in an attempt to hold up A. Leasa of Anaheim. Leasa told the Los Angeles police that when the four men signaled for him to stop he continued a short distance before doing so and was about to return when the woman suddenly jumped into the machine with the four men and drove off in the direction of Los Angeles.
District Attorney A. P. Nelson of Orange County was in Sacramento Saturday to attend a conference of district attorneys of California called by Attorney General U. S. Webb, at which time two important questions affecting allens in Southern California were discussed.
The first of these is the alien crop decision of the United States supreme court. The second was the matter of tealing with Mexicans who are making Southern California, particularly Los Angeles, headquarters for revolutionary propaganda against the Obregon government.
Discussion of both questions participated in by representatives of the federal government from San Francisco co and department of justice agents from Los Angeles.
The Mexican situation was the subject of a letter Wednesday from Governor Friend W. Richardson asking that district attorneys survey the situations, and where evidence of propaganda could be secured to act at once in the interests of the peace of the state and nation.
On the Japanese question, it was said, the consensus among California district attorneys was that Japanese should be permitted to harvest the crops now planted before any action is taken to remove them from the land which they now occupy.
LOWER RATE GRANTED
Granted a reduction in freight rates that may save fruit growers of the state $500,000 annually in freight
The duty not believe trines of t pulpits they There is plea of any institute for those against accc There is no need in self-reliability to be institution ty yielded h courage com abandons th to him th tions and ta field where what he pla of disloyal posed to re People get terested in trinal disc have ceased problems of have an fidelity, whi be disappe many allegy. They a good dee about next goin up vists is not er-burdened tional bid One of th cals declare when the cease plant
County Clerk Joe Backs was confronted by a man last week who wanted to register with the party that was going to run a Ku Klux for president. Joe is supposed to know everything, but he was lacking information on this subject, consequently he registered the man as non-partisan.
The Anaheim Merchants defeated the Classy Hats of Los Angeles 10 to 4 on the high school diamond Sunday. Manager Krung of the Los Angeles Coast League team, offered Doty Bush shortstop o f the Anaheim team a job with his bunch, but learned that Doty had signed up with the Denver club for the coming season.
F. Conrad of Los Angeles, was in town some days ago looking after business affairs. Mr. Conrad owns the house on Adelaide Street near Anaheim.
Anaheim may possibly be the home of two state champion ball teams. The local K. C. team has swatted everything in the Southern league and won the pennant. Now the boys are figuring on playing Oakland for the state championship. The Anaheim Elks team last October defeated Sacramento to 14 to 1 for the championship of the California Elks league, and we hope the local Caseys will treat the northerners equally rough.
Under the guidance of Arch Paxton, Villa Park orchardist, Prof. J. Z. Gilbert of the faculty of the University of Southern California, Saturday, viewed pieces of petrified bones found in the Villa Park district. Included in the bones of ancient animals inspected by the scientists were some supposedly of a whale. These bones are found in lime rock in the hills east of Olive. Gilbert said that the bones were similar to some of those already on exhibition in museums in Los Angeles. He declared the "find" to be deeply interesting. Paxton showed Gilbert several fish.
We doubt, remained there until petrified, the rock forming around them. Quite a number of similar tracings of fish, found years ago in excavations at Hewes park, were turned over to scientists. These later were classified by David Starr Jordan of Stanford university, now the greatest authority on fish.
For Sale or Trade for Chickens, 4 needigreed Toggenberg milk goats, large milk strain. Geo. S. Baker, R. No. 2, Box 141, Anaheim.
Some men are born unlucky and others buy second-hand cigars.
On the Japanese question, it was said, the consensus among California district attorneys was that Japanese should be permitted to harvest the crops now planted before any action is taken to remove them from the land which they now occupy.
LOWER RATE GRANTED
Granted a reduction in freight rates that may save fruit growers of the state $500,000 annually in freight charges, citrus fruit growers are preparing to carry on the fight for elimination of a 3-cent terminal charge attached to a lower rate announced by the railroads.
According to announcement made in Los Angeles by C. O. Cornwall, traffic manager of the California Fruit exchange, citrus interests have been granted a new rate for shipments into New York city and New England points. The new rate is $1.55 per hundred pounds plus a 3-cent terminal charge.
It was stated the new lower rate was made possible by the concession of the Freie railroad, the only road from the regular freight rate was declared to leave the matter open for further contest by the shippers and it was said they would attack this charge. The matter would have been a closed issue if the transportation companies had made a flat rate of $1.58. Cornwall was quoted as saying.
It was estimated that freight toll on fruit shipped from California amounted to $30,000,000 annually.
If you can't make up your mind, maybe you haven't any.
Everybody stands ready to forgive a sinner—if the sinned is himself.
Inventory
REARANCE SALE
Now in Effect in Many
Departments
ALKENSTEINS
QUESTION
CHRISTMAS CATERWAULINGS OF THE CREED SHARKS
The duty of the clergymen who do not believe in the fundamental doctrines of the churches from whose pulpits they preach is plain enough. There is plenty of room on the outside of any institution, religious or secular for those whose consciences rebel against accepting its articles of faith. There is no particular courage involved in self-righteously airing one's inability to believe in the doctries of an institution to which one has voluntarily yielded his alleged allegiance. The courage comes in when the dissenter abandons the advantages which come to him through his professed affiliations and takes his chance in the wide field where one can believe and teach what he pleases without being guilty of disloyalty to the cause he is supposed to represent.
People generally are not much interested in the pro and con of doctrinal discussions. These matters have ceased to be the most important problems of religion. Most Americans have an old-fashioned liking for fidelity, which in these days seems to be disappearing from the lexicon of many alleged leaders of public thought. They are inclined to believe that a good deal of the militant yawp about next to nothing that has been going up from ecclesiastical bolshevists is not so much the outcry of over-burdened conscience as a sensational bid for transient notoriety.
One of the New York religious radicals declares that the time has come when the American people should cease planting one foot in the first waulling about creeds it tends to bring all reli-
NOTICE TO THE STOCK HOLDERS OF THE ANAHEIM WATER COMPANY
Notice is hereby given that a final meeting of the stockholders will be held at the office pany at Anaheim, Orangeifornia, on the 26th day of January, 1924, at the hour of 10:30 am of said day, for the purp- ing directors to serve for the year, and to transact success as may properly com-meeting.
By order of the Board
L. J. SHERIDAN
M. Eugene Dutce
ARCHITECT
Room 5, Cassou Blvd
Phone 692
long California that Japanese harvest the rare any action them from the occupy.
freight rates powers of the y in freightowers are pre-flight for ellerminal charge to announced
cement made Cornwall, California Fruit have been shipments into New England is $1.55 per-cent terminal
lower rate the concession the only read
freight rate matter open the shippers would attack this would have been transportation flat rate of stated as saying. freight tolls California annually.
your mind, body to forgive himself.
be disappearing from the lexicon of many alloged leaders of public thought. They are inclined to believe that a good deal of the militant yawp about next to nothing that has been going up from ecclesiastical bolshevists is not so much the outcry of over-burdened conscience as a sensational bid for transient notoriety.
One of the New York religious radicals declares that the time has come when the American people should cease planting one foot in the first century and one in the twentieth. In other words, he objects to the loyalty of the Christian faith. The basis for Christian faith may be debatable, but whether it should be in a Christian church is not a debatable question. It is quite possible that this particular theological sensationalist may be, as he seems to think, an improvement on the founders of his professed faith, but the readers of newspapers who witness his persistent posing for the spotlight are filled with disgust rather than with reverence for this headliner of religious vaudeville.
Boston Bakery
201 East Center St.
Phone 135-W
248 West CenterSt.
Phone 861-J
The popular effect of this cater-