anaheim-gazette 1928-06-28
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Sutherland Denies A Newport Charge
County Health Officer Says Outfall Sewer Under State Board
Pointing out that at recent meetings of the Newport Beach city council, statements have been made that would imply that the county health department is directly responsible for the establishment, maintenance and operation of the joint outfall sewer located at the mouth of the Santa Ana river. Dr. K. H. Sutherland, county health officer, issued a statement correcting the false impressions he says have resulted from discussions at the council meeting. In his statement, the county health officer says:
"Municipal sewage disposal plants and water supply systems are under direct supervision of the state board of health, department of sanitary engineering. The county health department serves as a local representative for the state department and the two keep in close contact in regard to local sanitary conditions, but any determination of policy or any alteration of procedure must be left to the state department of engineering for decision.
"During a recent conversation between myself and R. F. Goudey, engineer in charge, bureau of sanitary engineering, state board of health, the latter suggested that the following public explanation be made:
"When the sewage of a small community is disposed of by individual septic tanks, cesspools, etc., the local health department is responsible for maintaining a sanitary condition. When the population of the community warrants such action, it is the duty of local and state health departments to encourage the establishment of a sewer district. After the district is established, the latter, through its engineer, confers with the state department of engineering, which then endorses or rejects such plans as are submitted. After the sewage system has once been established under state permit, the state is responsible for such alteratoins or improvements as seem fitting.
"A similar arrangement is employed in the establishment and maintenance of municipal water systems, and these Twenty Counties Cast Preponderant Vote
Twenty-eight counties of California cast 96 per cent of the entire vote of the state at the presidential primary election May 1, it was disclosed in figures compiled by Charles J. Hagerty, election statistician of the secretary of state's office.
The remaining 30 counties represented only four per cent of the aggregate vote for presidential nominees.
Fewer than half the registered voters of the state cast their ballots at the last election, the figures revealed. The actual number was slightly more than 46 per cent of the total.
Out of a total registered vote of 43,018, Orange county cast 14,817 votes, or approximately one and seven-tenths per cent of the entire vote cast in the state.
Hagerty's statistics showed the total vote cast for the Republican, Democratic, Prohibition and Socialist delegates to presidential nominating conventions—by congressional districts as well as by counties.
As a result, aspirants for congressional, legislative and judicial offices at the August state primary election are zealously studying the tables to determine comparative voting strengths and how the political winds will blow by next fall.
The three great counties of Los Angeles, San Francisco and Alameda were responsible for 65 per cent of the state's vote at the last election.
Los Angeles, according to Hagerty's statement, polled 40 per cent of the entire vote of California, or 247,707 votes. San Francisco was next with 13.1 per cent, or 116,842, with Alameda county third, with 10.3 per cent, or 87,940.
Little Alpine county, with a total registered vote of 60, cast 34 votes at the presidential primary, or .0039 per cent of the state's total.
Four Additional Stations on Border
The establishment of four additional border stations on main line highways leading into California at northern points for the purpose of providing information for the motoring public, checking cars and welcoming tourists.
Richfield Co. Enlarged Absorbs Refining Several Other
The Richfield Oil formia, through its pivot bot, announces the publication shares of a substantial block of Pan American Water Company, from the ties Company and Mines In addition to the Pan American Holding Oil company has a crude and refined petroleum facilities, steel and service stations, tax owned and operated businesses.
Richfield Oil company chased all the physical Pacific Petroleum pany, including many distributing facilities Bay.
The Petroleum Sdn and Mr. Edw. L. Doffered into a contract Oil company, selling duction of crude oil ten years, at current price, together with entire output of cases.
Within the near future company will submit exchange of its share of the outstanding American Western. Will present two vantages to present Western "TF" stocktipination in mankind to shares held manifest advantages in power, through organization and management.
With Richfield's production of approx. sand barrels per day American, of approx. thousand barrels per production of the combined between fifty-five and barrels daily.
The capacity of this finery at Watson will
Civil Engineer to Lecture at U.S.C.
Many Students Apply For Admission to Summer Session
C. M. Spofford, Chairman of the Department of Civil Engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is to come to Los Angeles this summer as lecturer for the Engineering Section of the Institute of Municipal Administration, which is to be held at the University of Southern California August 13-18.
Mr. Spofford, author of "The Theory of Structures," has been identified since 1900 with important engineering works, including the designing of numerous bridges and investigation reports upon others. A member of the firm of Fay, Spofford and Thorndike, consulting engineers, with his partners he designed and supervised construction for the War Department of Army Supply Base at Boston in 1918, and he was also the expert engineer upon investigation of strength of Blackwell's Island Bridge, New York.
Mr. John Edy, City Manager of Berkeley, California, and President of the International Association of City Managers, is also to be in Los Angeles the week of the Institute to give a series of lectures on Municipal Budgets.
Four Additional Stations on Border
The establishment of four additional border stations on main line highways leading into California at northern points for the purpose of providing information for the motoring public. Checking cars and welcoming tourists to California, was announced by the Division of Motor Vehicles.
The stations are to be located at Clam Beach, 18 miles north of Eureka on the Redwood highway; at Dunsmur on the Pacific highway; at Donner lake on the Placerville-Tahoe highway.
The boards of supervisors of Humboldt and Siskiyou counties will provide sites for the stations at Clam Beach and Dunsmur. Bark lodges will be constructed by the division at Donner lake and Meyers.
Inspectors Mervin Holden and Harvey Blackwell have been assigned to the Clam Beach and Donner lake stations. Appointments will be made later for the other two stations. It is the purpose of the division to keep crews of three men at each of the stations and to maintain a 24-hour daily service for the motorists.
Border stations have been in operation for some time near Yuma and at Daggett on the southern boundary. Besides these, the division operates a full squad of officers on the boarder road leading into California from Tiajuana.
Motorists will not only be welcomed at the border stations, but will be furnished with road information as well as details for complying with California's registration laws.
Although not established with that thought in mind, the stations operating on the southern border have been responsible for the recovery of many stolen cars and have practically eliminated the stolen car traffic across the border.
CONGRESS STILL TALKING
Congress adjourned a fortnight ago, but the flood or oratory still goes on in a number of appendices of the Congressional Record. And there is still more to follow. This morning there came in the mail a copy of the Congressional Record, containing 125 double column pages of printed matter which, if printed in ordinary book form, would make a volume of about five hundred pages.
Most of this is campaign material which later will be sent out under the franking privilege. It is a part of that congressional privilege which went with the free seeds, and goes with office stationery, junketing expeditions on supposed public business, and other things.
Here are addresses on the protective tariff, which was not at all the subject of the legislation, editorials and articles from newspapers and magazines on subjects equally remote from legislation, effusions by Senator Hefflin on the Western "F" stockship dedication to shares held manifest advantages in power, through organization and management.
With Richfield's purchase of approx. sand barrels per day American, of approx. thousand barrels per day production of the cone between fifty-five and barrels daily.
The capacity of the finery at Watson will output of the two co-limately one hundred sand barrels per day hundred miles of freight trunk pipe line system, including Midway and Elk Hill San Joaquin Valley, geles refineries.
This purchase resumes of the Petroleum company, Pacific Petroleum and the Dohne refining and manufacturing products on the V however, will remain crude oil and casings are under the term der purchase control field Oil company.
Fighting Dr Turn
The world's most now beating their share—and South teaching them how All the way from geria, the ancient gerian Druses, who waging bloody and otele with the French blined, has come amends and methods California for dry-inquiry, from "Esta 22 Rue Pasquier, Tu to the Towner Manua Santa Ana, whose equipment has caused soil cultivation the world.
The letter, according general manager concern stated that a warlike race that to peace is being Druses and other Nnamly, an intensive arts of agriculture; soil and climate in similar to those of S and that, as all eyes spot as the most boiled field and fruit crops Establishments Lec undertake the distribution that has been larger establishing that sundomadic races of t land, who are demise from the French
including the designing of numerous bridges and investigation and reports upon others. A member of the firm of Fay, Spofford and Thorndike, consulting engineers, with his partners he designed and supervised construction for the War Department of Army Supply Base at Boston in 1918, and he was also the expert engineer upon investigation of strength of Blackwell's Island Bridge, New York.
Mr. John Edy, City Manager of Berkeley, California, and President of the International Association of City Managers, is also to be in Los Angeles the week of the Institute to give a series of lectures on Municipal Budgets, according to announcement of President R. B. von Kleinsmid of the University of Southern California.
Students from all sections of the country are sending in applications for admission to the University of Southern California Summer Session six-weeks' term which opens July 2 and runs until August 11.
The eight-weeks' term of the Summer Session is now under way, having started June 18, and according to Dean Lester B. Rogers, the first day's enrollment showed an increase of 25 percent over all previous first-day figures, indicating that new records will be made for attendance at the Trojan eight-weeks, six-weeks and post-summer sessions this year.
According to Dean Rogers, the University of Southern California Appointment Bureau for Teachers and the Employment Bureau for Vocational Work will be available at all times for Summer Session students. Since last summer, the Appointment Bureau has been divided into the bureau for teachers and the employment office and hundreds of students have already taken advantage of the opportunities they offer.
While the six-weeks' Summer Session is the most popular of the three summer terms offered by the University of Southern California to students and teachers, it is expected that the post-summer session from August 13 to September 4 will be very popular this year also.
Few children above the age of eight still believe in Santa Claus, but we know a lot of grown men who believe in their bootleggers.
Most of this is campaign material which later will be sent out under the franking privilege. It is a part of that congressional privilege which went with the free seeds, and goes with office stationery, junketing expeditions on supposed public business, and other things.
Here are addresses on the protective tariff, which was not at all the subject of the legislation, editorials and articles from newspapers and magazines on subjects equally remote from legislation, effusions by Senator Hellin on the Evils of the Papacy, Mr. Hoover and the Farmer, Foreign Affairs and the Armenalan Situation, a biography of Pulaski, a grist of memorial addresses rife with poor and hackneyed poetry, and so on. Mr. Tom Conally gives his record in the House to the extent ob about ten pages, double column. Mr. McSwain does the same. Here is a bit of poetry forever embalmed in the records of the United States Congress:
"This world we are living in
Is mighty hard to beat—
You get a thorn with every rose.
But ain't the roses sweet?"
This sort of extravagance has become an accepted system. No one sees the needlessness of it. No one protests against it, but we presume it is one of those minor abuses for which the people will have to stand because it gives the Congressman the opportunity to be heard by his constituents. In these days when most of the serious work of the National House of Representatives is done in committee, there is little vital discussion on the floor, and the time the House is in session must be filled up in some way.
IMPRESSIVE FIGURES
A compilation of carlot shipments of fruits and vegetables from California, Arizona and Nevada by the Los Angeles office of the Fruit and Vegetable Division, Bureau of Agricultural Economics, contains much interesting information.
One fact calculated to interest the All-Year Club is that during the calendar year 1927 California shipped carrot quantities to this tabulation. The state divisions, Northern, and Imperial, contain the most carrots, grapes and spinach. Nia shipped the most flower, celery, grapefruit citrus, mixed vegetables peppers, turkey peril shipped the most cumbers, miscellaneous ermelons.
One job we would postmaster at Atlanta how he ever managed souvenir post cards of there?
A swimming expedition drownings are easily all you have to do is water.
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
Richfield Company Enlarges Holdings
Absorbs Refining Interests of Several Other Oil Concerns
The Richfield Oil Company of California, through its president, J. A. Talbot, announces the purchase of all outstanding shares of class "A" stock, and a substantial block of the "B" shares of Pan American Western Petroleum Company, from the Petroleum Securities Company and Mr. Edw. L. Doheny.
In addition to the above purchase of Pan American holdings, the Richfield Oil company has acquired all of the crude and refined products, distributing facilities, steel and concrete storage, service stations, tank steamers, etc., owned and operated by Petroleum Securities company.
Richfield Oil company has also purchased all the physical properties of the Pacific Petroleum Products company, including marine terminals and distributing facilities on San Francisco Bay.
The Petroleum Securities company and Mr. Edw. L. Doheny have also entered into a contract with the Richfield Oil company, selling their entire production of crude oil for a period of ten years, at current posted market price, together with a contract for its entire output of casinghead gasoline.
Within the near future, Richfield Oil company will submit a proposal for the exchange of its shares for the balance of the outstanding "B" shares of Pan American Western. Such an exchange will present two fundamental advantages to present Pan American Western "B" stockholders. First, participation in management, in proportion to shares held; and Second, the manifest advantages of Richfield earning power, through its distributing organization and management.
With Richfield's present crude oil production of approximately forty thousand barrels per day, and that of Pan American, of approximately twenty thousand barrels per day, the total production of the companies will range between fifty-five and sixty thousand barrels daily.
The capacity of the Pan American refinery at Watson will bring the refinery to 100 million gallons per year.
Use Electricity to Detect Cheap Paint
Inferior and Substitute Ingredients Easily Detected
Deception may be too "slick" for the eye to detect, but where the human optic fails scientific ingenuity has come to its aid, to the invariable undoing of the deceiver.
The latest stunt in science's magic bag of tricks is the detection of inferior and substitutive ingredients in paint by electricity, according to a report issued by the Brinipstool Paint Company, Los Angeles, Southern California distributors for Barrelled Sunlight.
The paint section of the United States Bureau of Standards has devised an apparatus for determining when a paint, varnish or bituminous coating on a metal surface has failed by cracking, the report stated. Such failures cannot ordinarily be seen by the naked eye unless they are very bad. Now, a few drops of solution which will conduct electricity are sprinkled over the surface of a test sheet previously coated with the suspected material.
A live wire is then touched successively to each drop and an earphone connected to the metal plate records a sharp buzz when a crack is located.
PRODUCTION IMPROVED
The dairy improvement program started by the University of California in 1920 has raised the average production of the state from 183 pounds of butter fat per year to 239.2, a gain of 30.7 per cent, it is announced by G. E. Gordon, dairy specialist in agricultural extension. The goal, says Mr. Gordon, is 265 pounds of butter fat per cow per year, and it is hoped that this can be reached in 1930 through continual improvement.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Broadway and Helena Streets (An Undenominational Congregation)
Sunday Services
9:40 a.m., Bible school; 11 a.m., Lord's Supper and preaching; 6:30 p.m.
Western "B" stockholders. First, participation in management, in proportion to shares held; and Second, the manifest advantages of Richfield earning power, through its distributing organization and management.
With Richfield's present crude oil production of approximately forty thousand barrels per day, and that of Pan American, of approximately twenty thousand barrels per day, the total production of the companies will range between fifty-five and sixty thousand barrels daily.
The capacity of the Pan American refinery at Watson will bring the refinery output of the two companies to approximately one hundred and forty thousand barrels per day, with over five hundred miles of from six-inch to ten-inch trunk pipe lines in its gathering system, including lines connecting the Midway and Elk Hills oil fields in the San Joaquin Valley, with the Los Angeles refineries.
This purchase results in the retirement of the Petroleum Securities company and the Doheny interests from the refining and marketing of petroleum products on the West coast. They, however, will remain as producers of crude oil and casinghead gasoline, which are under the terms of the deal, under purchase contract with the Richfield Oil company.
Fighting Druses Turn to Farming
The world's most vicious fighters are now beating their swords into ploughshares—and Southern California is teaching them how to do it.
All the way from Tunis, French Algeria, the ancient home of the Algerian Druses, who two years ago were waging bloody and often successful battle with the French and Spanish combined, has come an inquiry for implements and methods used in Southern California for dry-belt farming. The inquiry, from "Establishments Leclercq, 22 Rue Pasquier, Tunis," was addressed to the Towner Manufacturing company, Santa Ana, whose specialized farming equipment has carried the fame of Orange county and of California methods of soil cultivation to many parts of the world.
The letter, according to B. V. Curry, general manager of the Santa Ana concern, stated that the usual policy of a warlike race that has been forced to peace is being followed by the Druses and other North African tribes, namely, an intensive cultivation of the arts of agriculture; that conditions of soil and climate in that country are similar to those of Southern California; and that, as all eyes are turned to this spot as the most bountiful procurer of field and fruit crops in the world, the Establishments Leclercq would like to undertake the distribution of equipment that has been largely instrumental in establishing that success to the former nomadic races of the African hinterland, who are demanding such assistance from the French government.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Broadway and Helena Streets (An Undenominational Congregation) Sunday Services
9:40 a.m., Bible school; 11 a.m., Lord's Supper and preaching; 6:30 p.m., Christian Endeavor; 7:15 o'clock, evening observance of Lord's Supper; 7:30 o'clock, evening evangelistic service.
Weekly Calendar
Wednesday evening, 7:30, Prayer meeting and Bible study; Thursday evening, 7:30, Choir rehearsal.
Clayton C. Root,
Minister-Evangelist.
NOTICE INVITING PROPOSALS FOR CONCRETE WORK
Notice is hereby given that sealed proposals will be received by the City Council of the City of Anaheim, at the office of the City Clerk of said city, up to the hour of 8 o'clock P.M. of Thursday, the 12th day of July, 1928, for furnishing to said city all labor and concrete material required for approximately 68 cubic yards of concrete in engine foundation in the city power house.
Each proposal must be accompanied by a certified cashier's check, payable to City of Anaheim, in an amount not less than ten per cent of such bid; the check of the successful bidder will be held by said city until the acceptance of the foundation, as a guarantee of the faithful performance of the contract.
Plans may be seen and further information secured at the office of the city engineer, and all proposals must be on forms furnished by said engineer.
The City Council of said city reserves the right to reject any and all proposals.
Dated this 18th day of June, 1928.
EDWARD B. MERRITT,
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
6-21-3t
Mother!
Clean Child's Bowels
California Fig Syrup" is Dependable Laxative for Sick Children
No. 422 B
BATHST. Calvary
Baptist Woman's Union, first Thursday, all day.
World Wide Guild, last Friday evening.
Baptist Young People's Union, every Sunday evening.
Sunday School, Eulogia Class first Tuesday evening.
Sunday School Fellowship Class fourth Tuesday evening.
Baptist, German
Mother!
Clean Child's Bowels
"California Fig Syrup" is Dependable Laxative for Sick Children
Load quantities of the following products every month in the year: Apples, dried beans, carrots, celery, mixed citrus fruits, grapefruit, lemons, lettuce, onions, oranges, pears, potatoes, dried prunes and mixed vegetables. Thirty-seven items were listed in the bureau compilation. The total movement from California was 285,980 cars in 1927. It was 270,184 cars in 1926 and 242,107 in 1925.
Last year broke California records for the past three years in shipments of the following products: Dried beans, cantaloupes, carrots, cauliflower, celery, grapefruit, lettuce, miscellaneous melons, onions, oranges, green peas, dried prunes, rutabagas and turnips, spinach, strawberries, tomatoes and mixed vegetables;
The geography of production, as shown in this tabulation, is also interesting. The state is divided into four divisions, Northern, Central, Southern and Imperial. Central California shipped the most carrots, grapes, lettuce, peas, prunes and spinach. Southern California shipped the most cabbage, cauliflower, celery, grapefruit, lemons, mixed citrus, mixed vegetables, onions, oranges, peppers, turnips, tomatoes. Imperial shipped the most cantaloupes, cucumbers, miscellaneous fennels and watermelons.
One job we wouldn't want would be postmaster at Atlantic City. Wonder how he ever manages to read all the souvenir post cards that are mailed out of there?
A swimming expert says that many drownings are easily preventable. Sure. All you have to do is to stay away from the water.
Hurry Mother! Even a freeful feverish, billious or constipated child loves the pleasant taste of "California Fig Syrup" and it never fails to sweeten the stomach and open the bowls. A teaspoonful today may prevent a sick child tomorrow. It doesn't cramp or overact. Contains no narcotics or soothing drugs.
Ask your druggist for genuine "California Fig Syrup" which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say "California" or you may get an imitation fig syrup.
CHURCH CALENDAR
Baptist Calvary
Baptist Woman's Union first Thursday all day.
World Wide Guild last Friday evening.
Baptist Young People's Union every Sunday evening.
Sunday School Eulogia Class first Tuesday evening.
Sunday School Fellowship Class fourth Tuesday evening.
Baptist German
Ladies' Aid Missionary first Thursday afternoon.
Sunday School Philathea Class first Tuesday evening.
Phile Classes, Non-Sectarian
Bible Study Class every Wednesday afternoon.
Cottage Bible Class every Monday evening.
Catholic St. Boniface
Young Ladies' Institute first and third Tuesday evening.
Young Men's Institute second and fourth Tuesday evening.
Episcopal St. Michael's
Helpers' Guild second and fourth Thursday afternoon.
Evangelineal
Woman's Missionary Society first Thursday afternoon.
Young Women's Missionary Circle third Tuesday evening.
Ladies' Aid Society third Thursday afternoon.
League of Christian Endeavor every Sunday evenig.
League of Christian Endeavor Social second Friday evening.
Inhereran Grace
Ladies' Aid Society first Thursday afternoon.
Walkier League second Tuesday evening.
Methodist Episcopal White Temple
Ladies' Aid Society first Thursday afternoon.
Women's Foreign Missionary Society second Thursday afternoon.
W.F.M.S., King's Heralds second Saturday afternoon.
Woman's Home Missionary Society third Thursday afternoon.
ANAHEIM'S
NESS AND PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
CHIROPRACTIC
AND
General Drugless Practice
(State Medical Board License)
14 Years Steady, Successful Practice
Dr. Gustav A. Neth
110 N. Resh St. Telephone 80
Cor. W. Center and Resh, Anaheim
240 Feet Private Auto Parking Space
J. W. Truxaw, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
Office Phone 341-J
Res., 887 S. Los Angeles St.
Residence Phone, 841-M
Hours: 11-12; 2-4; 7-8
Golden State Bank Bldg.
Cor. Center and L. A. Str.
ANAHEIM, CALIF.
CHAS. L. REESKE
Anaheim's Exclusive Tailor
Suits made to order in Anaheim at very reasonable prices
I also do Altering and
Repairing on ladies' and
gentlemen's garments
114 So. Lemon Phone 150
Johnston-Wickett
Clinic
ANAHEIM, CALIF.
Hours: 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
TIMETABLE
A. T. & S. F. Ry. Coast Lines
In effect April 15, 1928
Trains to Los Angeles
*No. 79 6:35 A.M.
$No. 71 11:44 A.M.
$No. 53 3:35 P.M.
$No. 73 4:46 P.M.
Phone 337-J Open Evenings
Sunday by Appointment
DR. OSHER
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Dentist—Painless Extraction
TIMETABLE
A. T. & S. F. Ry. Coast Lines
In effect April 15, 1928
Trains to Los Angeles
*No. 79 ... 6:35 A.M.
$No. 71 ... 11:44 A.M.
No. 53 ... 3:35 P.M.
$No. 73 ... 4:46 P.M.
No. 75 ... 9:04 P.M.
Trains From Los Angeles
No. 78 ... 2:00 A.M.
No. 72 ... 10:20 A.M.
No. 74 ... 3:16 P.M.
No. 76 ... 7:24 P.M.
San Bernardino train ... 5:20 P.M.
(Arrive Fullerton 6:02 P.M.)
*Through sleepers to Kansas City,
Minneapolis, Chicago and Grand Canyon.
*Through sleepers to Denver, St.
Louis, Chicago and Grand Canyon connections. San Bernardino and Riverside connection.
*Through sleepers to Chicago from
San Diego for "The Chief," Phoneix,
Houston, Galveston and New Orleans
connections.
C. A. WALKER, Agent.
Epworth League (Departmental),
every Sunday evening.
Sunday School, Fidelia Class, fourth
Thursday, all day.
Sunday School, Y. M. P. Class, fourth
Tuesday evening.
Sunday School, Y. M. P. Club, second
Tuesday afternoon.
Sunday School, Philathea, second
Tuesday evening.
Methodist Episcopal Free
Woman's Missionary Society, second
Tuesday afternoon.
Young People's Missionary Society,
second Friday evening.
Nazarene
Woman's Missionary Society, first
Thursday afternoon.
Young People's Society, every Sunday
evening.
Bresbyterian
Flower Mission, first Thursday afternoon.
Woman's Bible Class, second Thursday
afternoon.
Woman's Missionary Society, third
Thursday afternoon.
Christian Endeavor, every Sunday
evening.
Sunday School, Co-Workers' Class,
third Friday evening.
Sunday School, Philathea Class, third
Friday evening.
Undenominational Hallness
Young People's Bible Class, every
Thursday afternoon.
Phone 337-J Open Evenings
Sunday by Appointment
DR. OSHER
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Dentist—Painless Extraction
Oculist—Glasses Fitted
107½ East Center St., Anaheim, Cal.
Valencia
Barber Shop
ALL
HAIR CUTTING
25¢
226 E. Center Street
EVA LYONS SMITH
Piano
APT. 7—KRAEMER BLDG.
222 EAST CENTER ST.
PHONE 692
Office Hours: 9 to 12, 2 to 5
Phone 221-W
DR. W. W. ADAMS
OSTEOPATH
312 N. Lemon Street
Anaheim California
TELEPHONE FOUR-ATE
Acme Cleaners and Dyers
TELEPHONE FOUR-ATE
Acme Cleaners and Dyers
ELDO R. WEST, Proprietor.
920 N. Los Angeles St. Anaheim, California
Does Your Roof Leak?
Let us tell you how little it costs to re-roof with
Wood or Composition Shingles or Roofing Paper.
Ganahl-Grim Lumber Company
501 E. Center St. Phone 35 Anaheim, Calif.
ANAHEIM FEED AND FUEL CO.
Dealers in
GRAIN
FLOUR
SEEDS
WOOD
GOAL
HAY
Phone 317
W. D. GRAFTON, Prop.
Public Weighing Seales