anaheim-gazette 1924-10-02
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Dress Well and Succeed
Copyright 1924 Hart Schaffner & Marx
You can't beat them this fall
for smart style
You'll feel just as we do about it when y
these suits and topcoats just received fro
Schaffner & Marx.
There's a wider effect at the shoulders; narrower effect
for smart style
You’ll feel just as we do about it when you these suits and topcoats just received from Schaffner & Marx.
There’s a wider effect at the shoulders; narrower effect hips; coat and trousers drape easily; cuffs are wide; button spandex Two and three button sacks, double breasted suits at prices than the best of it.
“By All Means Get a Fit”
F, A, Yungblu
Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
Manhattan Shirts
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Long Tailed Shirts!
Ask for CAMERON "SUN PROOF"
Modern trousers are cut with a low waist band. Most men wear belts. But the generous cut of Cameron Sun Proof shirts prevents them from “working up” or “riding the belt.” Sun-proof—and tub proof, too!
Most men wear belts. But the generous cut of Cameron Sun Proof shirts prevents them from "working up" or "riding the belt." Sun-proof—and tub proof, too!
"those long-tailed shirts"
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TODAY
The S. Q. R. Store
ANAHEIM
S. P. Kraemer left yesterday on a visit to friends at kla Grove, Iowa.
The annual frolle of the Anaheim high school will be held at the county park this afternoon.
W. D. Grafton of the Anaheim Feed and Fuel Company was elected president of the Anaheim Merchant's Association at the meeting last week.
Rev. George W. Irwin of Ontario occupied the pulpit at the White Temple church Sunday morning, the pastor, Rev. Gessinger being absent attending conference.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Vitt, who have resided here for more than a year, left yesterday for Los Banos, their former home.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wein and Mrs. Anns Perdomo have returned from a nine-week's outing in Yosemite. They caught many trout and report a very enjoyable trip.
Scalp and hair disorders disappear after a few applications of Lucky Tiger Hair Remedy, according to millions of users. Ask your barber or druggist about the money back guarantee.
Mrs. A. A. Perdoma and Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wein have returned from a nine weeks' outing in Yosemite. They found the fishing excellent but encountered some frosty weather, being compelled to break ice in the streams on several mornings in order to get water.
His failure to appear in court on a gambling charge when six of his companions appeared, cost H. R. Bavon-soll of Placentia just $85.70, it was
John Crosswhite and Mary Girder, both of Long Beach, were married Saturday evening by Judge Kuchel.
A daughter was born at the sanitation Sunday to Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Gregg of South Bush street.
A marriage license as been issued to Robert Sabein of Santa Ana and Miss Della Wheeler of this city.
Harold Berger's Hudson car skidded on the pavement and overturned near Costa Mesa Sunday, but the driver escaped serious injuries.
W. E. Helling, accompanied by his wife and children, motored up to Tulare Tuesday. Bill will return tomorrow but his family will remain indefinitely in the north.
Fufferton city council Monday night turned down the Orange county joint city water project. This action drops Anaheim from the list. It is understood that Santa Ana and Orange however, will carry on.
F. E. McFarland died Sunday night of acute indigestion an hour after he was attacked by the illness. He was a contractor and builder and came here
His failure to appear in court on a gambling charge when six of his companions appeared, cost H. R. Bavonsell of Placentia just $85.70, it was shown in Justice Jack Landell's court where Bovensell was fined $100 on the charge.
Reverend J. H. Peters, resident pastor of the Grace Lutheran Church here for the past five years, will leave for Los Angeles to do church extension work. He will preach his farewell sermon the last Sunday in October and will commence his new duties the first of November.
A San Diego judge has assessed and collected a fine of ten dollars from a motorist charged with kissing a woman while driving his auto, the complaint being "reckless driving." We know many men here who would pay that much any day to kiss a woman. The San Diego man is rather sore however, for the woman was his wife.
At a meeting of the directors of the Anaheim Walnut Growers Association it was decided to recommend to the growers that they pay 80 cents per full barley sack for the picking up of walnuts for this season. The price last year was 70 cents per sack, ten cents less than this year. There being a few more small nuts this year, it was thought that it would be worth the ten cents extra.
Starting with a small force the McBride Glass company expects to have 18 to 20 men at work within a week or so and 100 within six or eight months, James A. McBride, secretary of the company declared Tuesday. The nearest factory manufacturing the same products is the one of the McBride company at Tulsa, Oklahoma, so that the concern has a huge territory yet to tap for business, said McBride.
Asking $60 a month alimony and custody of two minor children was asked in a suit for divorce filed by Mrs. Lila McKey of Anaheim against Albert G. McKey. Title to property in Mrs. J. W. Wein have returned from a nine weeks' outing at Yosemite. They found the fishing excellent but encountered some frosty weather, being compelled to break ice in the streams on several mornings in order to get water.
The Knights of Columbus installed officers at a special meeting held last night. The district deputy from Redondo was in charge.
Monday was the hottest day experienced here for many years. Government thermometers at Los Angeles registered 102.
The Santa Ana high school light-weight football team defeated the Anaheim Eightweights on the local grounds Monday evening, the score being 13 to 0.
Marshall Horton and Bert Wilson charged with disturbing the peace, were arrested before Judge Kuchel Tuesday. Horton was fined $50 and Wilson $25.
Charged with criminal assault on Felicitas Barranga, a 12 year old girl residing o nthe Bastancbury ranch, Jose Antolin of Fullerton was before Judge Kuchel Tuesday. He was bound over to court in the sum of $2500.
A burgher ransacked six dwellings at Orange Saturday night, but got nothing for his labor. This threat appears to be looking only for money, as he de-dains jewelry and other valuable articles.
W. J. Seimann, president of the First National Bank, returned Tuesday from an extensive visit through the middle west, most of the time being spent at his old home in South Dakota.
Fufferton city council Monday night turned down the Orange county joint city water project. This action drops Anabelm from the list. It is understood that Santa Ana and Orange however, will carry on.
F. E. McFarland died Sunday night of acute indigestion an hour after he was attacked by the illness. He was a contractor and builder and came here only a week ago from Spokane. He leaves a wife who resides at Calgary, Canada.
W. B. Clark, a south street rancher, died at the Elsinore sanitarium, where he was under treatment. Thursday night. Funeral was held Saturday at Redlands, his former home. Mr. Clark was 36 years of age and is survived by his widow, a son and daughter, his mother and four sisters.
After she had struggled in the courts of Orange county for the possession of her two daughters, Mrs. Mary Moore of Yucatina was successful when Superior Judge R. Y. Williams Monday awarded her the two children. They had been in custody of their father, Lawrence Moyer of Placentia, who, in the course of cross examination, admitted he belonged to the Ku Klux Klan. Meyer secured a divorce from the woman in 1921 and since that time, the mother charged, the children's minds were poisoned against her. They had been told she was a "bad woman," she intimated, and she added one of the little girls recoiled from her when she would visit the house.
A genuine four-flusher always has a loud voice.
Asking $60 a month alimony and custody of two minor children was asked for a suit for divorce filed by Mrs. Lilia McKey of Anaheim against Albert G. McKey. Title to property in Anabelm, which she claims is her own should be awarded her, she asserts. Acts of cruelty were laid to McKey by his wife, who also alleged that he once threatened to burn their house at $25 South Lemon street, Anabelm, that he knocked her down on one occasion and threatened to use a rifle when she attempted to call a neighbor for help. They were married several years before they separated, August 28, according to the claimant.
A fine of $300 and a suspended sentence of six months in the county jail for E. C. Young, of Placentia, closed proceedings in Justice Jack Landell's court against a group of eight men arrested on gambling charges by the sheriff's office. The group, with one missing, was in Young's establishment where the officers said they broke up a game of "black jack" or "twenty-one." Frank Cagle pleaded guilty to a gambling charge and was fined $100 which Kenneth Cline, J. J. Condova, William Rudd, P. L. Fritz and S. E. Cook accused him in paying, whereupon changes against them were dismissed. H. R. Davonsell another defendant, failed to appear in court. Young asked for time to consider his plea to a charge of maintaining a gambling place. He later appeared in court and pleaded guilty.
A burger rainsacked six dwellings at Orange Saturday night, but got nothing for his labor. This brief appears to be looking only for money, as he de-dains jewelry and other valuable articles.
W. J. Seimann, president of the First National Bank, returned Tuesday from an extensive visit through the middle west, most of the time being spent at his old home in South Dakota.
Wesley Lees of Washington, D.C., representing the United States Chamber of Commerce, was a visitor in town Monday, paying an official call on George W. Reid, secretary of the local chamber.
District Attorney Nelson received a letter Tuesday warning him not to leave his home at night for a month. It is supposed to have been written by some misguided Ku Klux who took exceptions to his address at the White Temple in this city Sunday night in which he criticized the klan.
It is reported that oranges were not damaged by the hot spell the first two days of the week. While the thermometer here was monkeying around the hundred mark yesterday a milfoil from Duluth stated that the mercury went down to 16 below zero at that place.
In a speech at the Chamber of Commerce meeting held at Elks' clubhouse Monday evening, Ed Smith stated that two new industries, seeking location, might be secured for this city with proper work. One of them asks 25 acres for its site and the other 20. The two would employ 1200 people.
ursday and Friday
Fall
Opening
Days
ALKENSTEINS
Mrs. W. P. Webb, Jr., is a patient at the Anaheim Community Hospital.
A Packard car driven by C. H. Meadows ran into a car owned by Theodore Wirts on Lincoln avenue Saturday night. Wirts ran out of gas and he and Ed. Hatfield were pushing the car along the road when it was run into by Meadows. Both machines were considerably damaged.
A joint meeting of the city councils of Anaheim, Santa Ana, Fullerton and Orange, and trustees of the sanitary districts of Garden Grove, La Habra and Placentia will be held at Fullerton tomorrow night for the purpose of discussing the sewer problem. Adjustment of the percentage allowed each of the towns will be discussed.
J. W. Hurst, who has made his home at the Elks club for a year past, died suddenly Monday night. He had been complaining of poor health for a week past, and at half past eight Monday evening, he asked that a doctor be called immediately. Drs. Johnston and O'Toole, who were attending a banquet in the building were summoned, but it was found that he was beyond medical aid. Mr. Hurst was an agent of the New York Life Insurance Co., He leaves a wife and two children who reside in Kansas.
Dr. George M. MacNeill, phone Tucker 4523, president of the New York State Society of Southern California calls on all who ever lived in that state to meet for the great picnic reunion all day, Saturday, October 11, 1924, in Sycamore Grove Park, Los Angeles. Come early and spend the day with friends. There will be coun-
Sheriff Sam Jernigan late Monday stated that he had been unable to serve the warrant for the arrest of Mrs. Lucile Gladys Sparks, daughter of F. C. Krause, president of the First National Bank of Fullerton, who is charged by her dentist husband, P. A. Sparks of Los Angeles, with theft of $21,000 from a safety deposit box held jointly by the pair at Fullerton. Efforts are being made to apprehend Mrs. Sparks," Sheriff Jernigan said "I admit that we do not have a very good idea of where she is at the present time. We have been informed that she is in Paris. Our own investigation has led us to believe that she may be in California, or on her way here from the East, but we have no reliable leads to follow."
The Albert Lea, Minn., Club of Southern California will hold an all-day picnic at Sycamore Grove Sunday October 5th. All who have ever lived in Freeborn county, Minnesota are invited. Bring lunch and dishes. Coffee cream and sugar will be furnished Picnic dinner at noon.
Republican economy made possible the treasury surplus and tax reduction.
All the vociferation of the opposition falls to drown out the noise of the wood sawing being done down in Washington by one Calvin Coolidge.
No nation can gain by buying abroad and closing down its own production in the process.
FAMOUS DANISH ACTION
COMPLIMENTS MISS DAVIES
Dr. George M. MacNeill, phone Tucker 4523, president of the New York State Society of Southern California calls on all who ever lived in that state to meet for the great picnic reunion all day, Saturday, October 11, 1924, in Sycamore Grove Park, Los Angeles. Come early and spend the day with friends. There will be county registers and headquarters so all can find the old neighbors even with thousands present. There will be a brief program opening about two o'clock but the main purpose will be to have a good time. All the former residents are wanted so as to make this the greatest picnic in our history. Bring your basket well filled and share with friends. Coffee will be served free to all who buy souvenir badges.
Republican women conducted the organization meeting of the Anaheim Coolidge-Dawes women's division in the Elk's Hall Tuesday afternoon. More than thirty women attended and assisted in the activities of the afternoon. Mrs. H. Josephine Winn, president of the Republican Study Club of Los Angeles and Mrs. Viola B. Waddell of Glendale were the principal speakers of the occasion. "Coolidge and Republicanism" was the subject of Mrs. Winn's address. Mrs. Waddell spoke on 'Party Co-operation and Loyalty.' Mrs. Nellie Terry, prominent local woman, served as chairman. The meeting follows preliminary organization work done in Orange county last week by Mrs. Florence Collins Porter field director of women's activities in Southern California for the Coolidge-Dawes campaign committee.
All the vociferation of the opposition falls to drown out the noise of the wood sawing being done down in Washington by one Calvin Coolidge.
No nation can gain by buying abroad and closing down its own production in the process.
FAMOUS DANISH ACTOR
COMPLIMENTS MISS DAVIES
Manson Davies recently received a cablegram from Adrian Poulson, Denmark's famous tragican, collecting over upon her triumph in 'Yolanda' the new Cosmopolitan picture in which she is coming to the California Sunday for 4 big days. The cablegram read: "My warmest congratulations for your notable success in 'Yolanda' Wish I could have been present at the premiere."
Mr. Poulson, who is at present the director of the world-famous Open Air Theater near Copenhagen and who is famous in Denmark for his impressionation of "Hamlet," paid his first visit to an American motion picture studio last fall when "Yolanda" was in the making at the Cosmopolitan studio in New York. He was an interested spectator at the filming of the scenes around the castle of the Duke of Burgandy for which the largest set ever constructed in the East had been fashioned.
Mr. Poulson, at that time, expressed high praise for the historical accuracy of the settings of the picture. He evinced particular enthusiasm in the work of Miss Davies, Lyn Harding, Holbrook Blinn and other members of the cast and stated that American pictures are becoming more popular in Denmark every year.