anaheim-gazette 1924-03-27
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STETSON
HATS
Way Up
At the Top
Way up at the top of any big business
you'll find a man who wears
STETSON HATS
On the way up to the top are young
you'll find a man who wears
STETSON HATS
On the way up to the top are young men who come here for theirs. The youthful Spring models are ready.
"By all means Get a Fit"
F. A. Yungbluth
Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
Newton D. Baker, ex-Secretary of War, says he recently traveled over a wide expanse of country and talked to many people, and did not find one who was generous enough to admit that there might possibly be one honest man in Washington. We always did think that Newton was mighty careless in his selection of associates.
J. L. Schumacher has been quite ill for some time past, but yesterday was reported on the meud, and hopes are entertained that he will speedily recover his usual health. Mr. Schumacher is 75 years of age, and is one of the old-time residents of Anaheim. His numerous friends are hoping to seen him out again shortly.
Walk-Over
SHOES for Men and Women
Good features
that make good feet yours
Feet are not standardized. Your shoes must fit you individually. Walk-Over shoes are made in a great variety of foot shapes. One of these is yours and you will find it here at the Walk-Over Store. Here you will find your exact fit in a shoe that has a fitted heel top, a wide heel seat, and other exclusive Walk-Over features that make your feet good feet.
Walk-Over
The S.Q.R. Store
Anaheim, Cal.
Postmaster J. H. Whitaker was in San Francisco last week on business.
Dr. H. A. Johnston, wife and daughter Lillis, left last week on a trip to Hawaii.
Secretary Reid of the Chamber of Commerce, was taking in a picnic at Los Angeles Saturday.
Oklahomaans will hold a picnic at Sycamore Grove Park, Los Angeles, on Saturday, April 5.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Melrose came down from San Francisco by boat, arriving here Sunday evening. They will remain some time visiting friends.
Mrs. George E. Smith of Des Moines, Iowa, who has been spending the winted on the West Coast is visiting her aunt, Mrs. H. L. Wortman this week.
Bert W. Hickey was killed at midnight Friday by falling from the derick at the Miley well west of town. He was 33 years of age, and is survived by his wife, his mother and a brother.
Anaheim’s registration for the city election is 3490, a gain of more than five hundred over the figures for the last general election. This will be increased considerably before the final registration closes thirty days before the November election.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hartung were in town Tuesday visiting their son Edgar, and greeting their many old friends. Mr. Hartung has purchased an $18,000 residence at Venice, and they expect to make that city their permanent home.
There is no reason why Anaheim
Deputy County Clerk, Earl Abbott was in town Monday transacting business pertaining to his office.
A sacred concert was given on the roof garden of the Hotel Angelina Sunday afternoon. It is announced that these concerts will be given every Sunday.
Mme. Olga Saranoff, the noted pianist, has been engaged by the Inter-club Association for a concert at high school auditorium next Thursday night.
Another rain began falling Tuesday night, and at 8 o'clock yesterday morning the gauge measured .33 of an inch with the water still falling steadily. This raised the record to 1.46 for the storm, and 5.86 for the season.
All the postmasters and assistant postmasters in Orange county will gather at a meeting and banquet at Elks club house in this city tonight for the purpose of discussing matters relative to the service. There are 27 post offices in Orange county.
Miss Edna Bumgartner, a senior of the Anaheim high school, was chosen to represent her school in the National Constitutional Orational contest. The elimination contest will be held at Santa Ana April 25, and should she win over the other contestants she will represent the county in the semi-finals at Riverside, May 2.
Committees to handle the business and development program of the Anaheim Y. M. C. A. during the coming year were announced following a meeting at which William J. Sebastion, president of the board of directors of the association, named the personnel of the groups. In accordance with their plan to hear speakers on
Mr. and Mrs. John Hartung were in town Tuesday visiting their son Edgar, and greeting their many old friends. Mr. Hartung has purchased an $18,000 residence at Venice, and they expect to make that city their permanent home.
There is no reason why Anaheim people should not keep clean. The bath tub in Municipal park is the largest in Southern California and holds 288,000 gallons of water, and it is open to everybody who wants to use it. The water is disinfected with chlorine, and is always clean and pure.
Preparations are making for a big entertainment to be given here in April for the benefit of crippled and invalid World's War Veterans at Camp Kearny, Sawtelle and Norwalk hospital. Many prominent movie stars will participate and an effort will be made to have Mme. Schuman-Heinck sing.
The storeroom occupied during the past five years by the Anaheim Pharmacy on West Center street, has been leased to the Pigly-Wigly Company, one of the largest grocery and provision corporations in the United States. The drug store moved out the first of the week and Murdock Henry owner of the building, is constructing a forty-foot addition on the rear, in order to give his new tenant more room.
Owing to the outbreak of the foot and mouth disease in Los Angeles county, a strict quarantine was established by the supervisors Tuesday, on the recommendation of Dr. Wilkins, county veterinarian, against the importation into this county of any live sock, poultry, or packed and canned meats. While a considerable portion of the meat consumed in this county comes from Los Angeles packing houses, there is no danger of a shortage by reason of this order, as the Anaheim Beef and Provision Co. is amply able to supply all demands. The local institution gets all its meat from the Imperial Valley, Arizona, Kansas and Oklahoma, where there is no trace of the disease.
The city of Fullerton showed a substantial gain in registration figures.
Committees to handle the business and development program of the Anaheim Y. M. C. A. during the coming year were announced following a meeting at which William J. Sebastion, president of the board of directors of the association, named the personnel of the groups. In accordance with their plan to hear speakers on various professions and occupations, the boys of the Hi-Y club entertained the board members on this occasion, when Bryant Drake, manager of the California Citrus company of Anaheim, manufacturers of citrus products, talked on chemical engineering. Frank N. Gibbs was named chairman of the building and gronuds committee Arthur Coons was appointed to take charge of the boys' work, while Lee Dickengon was appointed chairman of the committee on men's work. Dr. H. A. Newkirk will serve as chairman of the community activities program, while the finance committee for the year will be headed by E. C. Rundstrom.
OUTFALL SEWER DAMAGED
Four workmen were washed into raging waves, but later were rescued unhurt, pillings collapsed and parts of a derrick were wrecked and washed into the sea during a gale late Thursday, when the conceded "jinx" ocean end of the joint sewer line was the scene of dangerous activity.
Work was temporarily suspended when part of the new pipe line and pillings were washed out by the ocean current. In the disastrous occurrence parts of the pile driver, including the boiler and hammer, were lost. These have not been found owing to the depth of the sand. The wooden derick, however, drifted ashore undamaged. The four men who were pitched into the ocean were at work when the pillings collapsed.
City Engineer Knox denied a report that the accident was due to the rain and storm, but declared that it was the fault of the contractor, who he said, had been using piles of insufficient length, even after asserted numerous warnings.
While the damage has not been estimated in dollars and cents, Knox stated that the damage and loss might suspend work for several days. He added that it was extremely re-
organizational state. These are Kansas, Minnesota, Iowa, Colorado and North Dakota. Economists declare that these states have suffered as severely from agriculture depression as any in the union; Supporting Coolidge these five states are said to represent the West's approval and indorsement of the policies of the administration of President Calvin Coolidge.
Within the next few weeks primaries will be held in Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Nebraska, Massachusetts and Ohio. With a possible exception of Wisconsin, all of these states will pledge solid delegations to President Coolidge, according to current predictions. In addition following states, with the number of their delegates are considered certain for the President: New York, 91; Maine, 15; Rhode Island, 13; Connecticut, 17; New Jersey, 31; Delaware, 9; Maryland, 19 and Vermont, 11.
A compilation of the number of delegates from these states tends to indicate that Calvin Coolidge will be nominated on the first ballot of the National Republican convention and that the West will have the distinction of being the first section of the country to line up solid for the President.
WORLD WAR 'RESPONSIBILITY
For the benefit of posterity and the history writers it is probably essential that responsibility for the World War be correctly fixed. Today three
The city of Fullerton showed a substantial gain in registration figures, as announced by County Clerk, J. M. Backs for the city election to be held April 14. The total was 3,168, a gain of 575 over the registration for November, two years ago, which was 2,591. By November of this year the gain is expected to be much more. Backs said. The city of Huntington Beach failed to equal its registration of November, 1922, which was 2,113. The present registration there is 1816, but by November of this year it is expected that the decrease will be wiped out. Newport Beach figures were announced as 868, as compared to 745 in November, 1922.
Seven first-class badges and four second-class pins were awarded to Anaheim and Buena Park Boy Scouts in a district court of honor held with appropriate and interesting ceremonies here. Scouts receiving first-class badges were Gus Lenain and Emil Barret of troop three, Anaheim; Rector Coons, Arthur Gross, Stillman Drake, Fred Easton, and Louis James of troop four, Anaheim. Summer camp for the Boy Scouts of Orange county at Camp Ro-Ki-Li was announced for June 18 to August 13, inclusive, and the annual Boy Scout field meet of Orange county will be held at the Anaheim city park April 16.
City Engineer Knox denied a report that the accident was due to the rain and storm, but declared that it was the fault of the contractor, who, he said, had been using piles of insufficient length, even after asserted numerous warnings.
While the damage has not been estimated in dollars and cents, Knox stated that the damage and loss might suspend work for several days. He added that it was extremely regrettable to him that more care had not been exercised in so important a project.
He expected to have a detailed statement of the damage and the status of the work of Contractors DeWaard and Cobham, who are working at the ocean end, he said, when the councils of Fullerton, Anaheim, Orange and Santa Ana, meet in joint session at the latter place Monday night. At that time, if recommendations of Knox are followed, the contractors will be relieved of the work entirely.
AS THE COUNT NOW STANDS
President Calvin Coolidge now has 209 delegates pledged to support him in the National Republican convention to open in Cleveland, Ohio, on June 10th. Every Republican delegate that has thus far been named is pledged to the President.
The following is a list of states and the number of delegates which have been instructed for the President: Kansas, 23; Minnesota, 27; Iowa, 29; Colorado, 15; Kentucky, 26; Virginia, 17; New Hampshire, 11; Louisiana, 13; South Carolina, 11; North Dakota, 13; North Carolina, 22; and the territory of the Philippines.2
Of the eleven states that have thus pledged solid delegations to the President five are primarily western ag-
The Most Complete
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SPONSIBILITY
posterity and the
probably essenly for the World
ed. Today three
organizations are studying the whole question again and attempting to discover exactly what government was most to blame.
One of these organizations is German. It publishes a monthly bulletin containing articles, new documents and bibliographies tending to show that Germany was not solely responsible.
A French group is seeking the facts and is publishing them as quickly as possible in a quarterly.
Both of these groups are regarded by outsiders as sincere and honest in their purpose, but each of them inevitably leans a little to the side of its own country and the disparagement of the other.
The third group is the Neutral Commission of Investigation into the Causes of the War, located at The Hague. Distinguished representatives of neutral countries make up its membership. It has already collected a large library, and is sitting documents and publishing bulletins concerning its findings. It has not gone very far yet and is hampered a little by insufficient funds.
If all the causes which contributed to the World War are discovered they will be found to have many ramifications and to extend far back into history. If they could all be set forth simply and logically, and if thoughful citizens of all the belligerent and all the neutral countries could then be persuaded to read and study those causes, there might result a swifter movement toward the establishment of a practical program for peace. Unless, of course, nations are always to remain as slow about learning from past mistakes as they have been so far.
RE-ELECT
Howard E. Gates
City Trustee
Short Term
Says what he thinks.
Does what he believes
A lot of men who are not athletes are trying to lift heavy mortgages from expensive cars.
WANTED. single man for all-round work. Tractor experience. Must be steady. Apply at Crowther ranch.
GUARANTEED Hemstitching and Picoting Attachment. Fits any sewing machine. $2.50 prepaid or C. O. D. Circulars free.
LaFlesh Hemstitching Co., Dept. 2.
Sealia, Mo.
WILLIAM STARK
INCUMBENT
Candidate for
Y TRUSTEE
on Monday, April 24, 1924
BOSTON BAKERY
Real Caramel
Layer Cake
30c, 50c
Butterbuns
5c Each
Boston Bakery
201 East Center St.
Phone 135-W
248 West Center St.
Phone 861-J