anaheim-gazette 1932-06-02
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MAN MADE THE TOWN
by RUBY M. AYRES
Twelfth Installment
Diana, a young English girl, in love with Dennis Waterman, a married man, undergoes a nervous collapse and is sent to the country to recuperate under the care of Dr. Donald Rathbone, who lives near the cottage where she stays. She finds herself falling in love with the doctor, but still trying to hold Dennie' affection. Linda, Dennis' wife, tells her that she offered Dennis a divorce but he would not accept it; he would have felt compelled to marry Diana. Diana's love for Doctor Rathbone is tempered by jealousy of a woman named Rosalle, who lives in the doctor's house. At last, Rathbone finds that he is deeply in love with Diana, but he confesses to her that Rosalle is his wife.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
"I was terribly sorry for her, too and perhaps—flattered that she should think anything of me, but I did not love her, Diana, and we were just friends until... until I got an appointment abroad. When I told her about it she... It was the first time anything really definite was spoken between us. Perhaps I wasn't very brave, or perhaps I didn't really care for her sufficiently well, but I tried to show her how impossible it was—that I could not... There is no need to tell you every detail, and God knows I am not blaming her any more than I blame myself, but without any knowledge she told her husband that she cared for me, and she asked him to discuss her."
We could just go on—being friends."
"Do you think we could—just go on being friends, Diana?"
She struggled for words in which she could best express herself. "It seems to me that it wouldn't be such a great—wickedness if you and I lived together, even if we can never be married. Don't think all the wrong things about me for saying that. I know quite well what I'm saying. It wouldn't be like going away with Dennis—that was just a sort of bravado—defiance—to try and forget you. I'd made up my mind to drink lots of champagne to-night just so I should not care, but if it had been you... I love you just as well every minute of the day as I do now. I shouldn't care if you never kissed me or made love to me at all, if I could just be with you. I've been so silly. You said once that you didn't believe I'd ever met real love.
"I hadn't till you came. I must have been waiting for you. Can you understand that, too?"
"You make me very humble, Diana."
She leant forward a little, trying to see his face.
"And—will you?" she asked.
"Will I what, my dear?"
"Let me live with you?"
Rathbone turned suddenly, groping for her through the dim light and taking her to him with the strength of despair.
"Let me kiss you—let me kiss you."
Diana," Rathbone answered,
"In my heart you know I say good-bye to you."
She said with a sob: "I to be only in your heart. I with you in real life. I was your arms round me—to k He did not move for a then, almost roughly, he to his arms again, holding her not speaking at all, just he till after a long time he face up to his.
He kissed her many times, her throat, her hair, once again on her lips, be gently, he put her away.
She stood beside him at unable to speak, shaken to of her being, her eyes rais in mute appeal; then sudden turned and fled up the little sobbing as if her heart woke.
CHAPTER XIX
The following morning the another letter from Mrs. telling Diana to get ready to London on Wednesday.
"Wednesday! That is v the Creature said. 'I shall I shall miss you too,' quietly. 'But I suppose I shu go."
By the way," she said at the table, "I can't find the wore when you went away y No." Diana kept her eye "I changed at my aunt's house it there. It doesn't matter."
love her, Diana, and we were just friends until... until I got an appointment abroad. When I told her about it she... It was the first time anything really definite was spoken between us. Perhaps I wasn't very brave, or perhaps I didn't really care for her sufficiently well, but I tried to show her how impossible it was—that I could not... There is no need to tell you every detail, and God knows I am not blaming her any more than I blame myself, but without any knowledge she told her husband that she cared for me, and she asked him to divorce her... He refused. I have often wondered why, seeing how he had always neglected her... Then after a short time, she left him. Diana—if you knew how hard it is for me to tell you this—"
He broke off agitatedly, but Diana did not speak, and after a moment he went on again:
"In the end... in the end... I agreed to take her away. We thought it would force her husband to divorce her... She was so different in those days, gay and reckless, never counting the cost of anything—only living for the moment... Then—the night before we were to have gone she was nearly killed in a motor accident. She was driving her own car, and she was alone... She was unconscious for days, and when she recovered... she was as she is now—like a child. She recognized me, as she still recognizes me, but only as an affectionate child might, and that is all. The rest, everything that has happened in her life, is gone from her.
"I paid a visit to see her husband—she had nobody else who cared or who could have looked after her—and I remember that he laughed in my face. He was a much older man than I, and he said to me, 'Well, you've begun to pay already. Rathbone, and you'll go on paying for the rest of your life'... It seems that he was right... I brought her down here to my house, and Mrs. Farmer came to look after her. Two years later her husband died... and I married her, Diana. You see I'd always promised her that if she was ever free I would. I gave my word, and I felt that I must keep it. There was always a thought at the back of my mind that perhaps some day she might get better—and know! I didn't tell anybody—it wasn't anybody else's business, so she's still always 'Miss Rosalie' to Mrs. Farmer and Hobson—and to the rest of the household. But she is my wife, Diana, though I—we we've never lived together as man and wife.
"That's all... Perhaps I was stupidly quixotic, but I was—fond of her, and besides... I had given my word. She's like a gentle affectionate child—always happy—asking nothing except that people are kind to her. She made very little difference to my life one way or the other till—till I met you, and then I realized what I had done... Even then I thought it only meant that
"I hadn't till you came. I must have been waiting for you. Can you understand that, too?"
"You make me very humble, Diana."
She leant forward a little, trying to see his face.
"And—will you?" she asked.
"Will I what, my dear?"
"Let me live with you?"
Rathbone turned suddenly, groping for her through the dim light and taking her to him with the strength of despair.
"Let me kiss you—let me kiss you."
She put her arms around him, and their lips met and clung together in a first kiss that seemed as if it could never end; Diana could not think, could not reason; she was only conscious of the passionate joy he brought her, and when at last he let her go, she asked with a sob:
"And can you kiss me like that and still want to send me away?" For already she had realized the hopelessness of her appeal.
"I love you so terribly." Rathbone said, but it was no answer to her question.
Diana put up her hand and gently touched his face.
"Donald?"
"Yes, my heart?"
She caught her breath on a half sob.
"How lovely," she whispered. "Nobody has ever said a think like that to me before."
"Like what, Diana?"
"'My heart'—isn't that what you called me?"
"You are my heart."
She leaned her cheek against his shoulder, and his arm tightened a little, drawing her closer to him.
"You're such a child," he said with emotion.
She shook her head.
"I'm not—not any more. I think I grew up all in a moment, just now, when you kissed me."
"I ought not to have kissed you."
She laughed at that; she felt that at all costs she must not allow too great a sadness to come between them.
"Why not?" she asked. "Why not—if you love me?"
She turned round, lifting her face to his, "Kiss me again, Donald."
But he would not.
"We've got to face facts, Diana. We've got to realize that we can't go on meeting—like this. I'm not made of stone. We've got to make up our minds that the only possible thing is to say good-bye."
She gave a little cry.
"Don't do that, Diana. Don't cry, for God's sake... I can't stand it I'm to blame for all this—I ought never to have done what I did to-night.
You were right when you told me that I only just pretend righteousness."
He took his arm away from her, and with a great effort she checked her tears, though she sat forlorn and another letter from Mrs. telling Diana to get ready to London on Wednesday.
"Wednesday! That is why the Creature said. 'I shall miss you too.' quietly. 'But I suppose I should go.'"
By the way," she said at the table, "I can't find the wore when you went away."
No.Diana kept her eye"I changed at my aunt's house it there. It doesn't matter.
It gave her a queer little realize that in all probability lessly packed suitcase was Dennis Waterman's possession of course he would have sent they had arranged.
"And what are you going day?" Miss Starling asked. It's going to be fine by the Diana glanced towards the. "I think Mr. Waterman will ing presently," she said.
Miss Starling said, "Oh—I Continued Next Week."
Miss Rosalie to Mrs. Farmer and Holson—and to the rest of the household. But she is my wife, Diana, though I—we—we've never lived together as man and wife.
"That's all... Perhaps I was stupidly quixotic, but I was—fond of her, and besides... I had given my word. She's like a gentle affectionate child—always happy—asking nothing except that people are kind to her. She made very little difference to my life one way or the other till I met you, and then I realized what I had done... Even then I thought it only meant that I should be the one to go on—suffering. You seemed so much younger than I feel—I never imagined you might grow to care for me, and when I realized that perhaps quite unconsciously—you... had, I tried my best—a poor best, I can see now—to keep you from realizing the truth. I don't think you will ever know what it meant to me... how I... when Nero hurt you, and afterwards, when you... when you asked me to tell you not to go away with Waterman. I could have borne it for myself, but to know you were unhappy — perplexed ... that you didn't understand why I should seem so... unkind..."
CHAPTER XVIII
He stopped speaking, and Diana said faintly:
"You mean that... she — Rosalie..."
"'Like sweet bells jangled—out of tune.'" Rathbone quoted grimly.
Diana closed her eyes.
There was a little silence; then he said again:
"Perhaps—some day—when we're both quite old—I shall wonder... if you have forgotten me. Do you think you will Donald?"
"I shall never cease to think of you—and love you."
"But you'll send me away from you... all the same. I know that's what you mean to do," she said with a cry of pain.
"What else is there for me to do, Diana?"
"I could see you sometimes—couldn't I?... Not very often if you didn't want to—but just... sometimes!... I wouldn't care what people said if you didn't. I'll do anything—anything you want me to do, if only it doesn't mean I shall never see you"
She gave a little cry.
"Don't do that, Diana. Don't cry, for God's sake... I can't stand it I'm to blame for all this—I ought never to have done what I did to-night. ... You were right when you told me that I only just pretend righteousness."
He took his arm away from her, and with a great effort she checked her tears, though she sat forlorn and shivering without the shelter of his close embrace.
Then Rathbone said heavily:
"I must take you home."
She was silent for a moment; then she broke out:
"If I'm never going to see you any more—"
"I didn't say that, Diana."
"But you mean it, I know it's what you mean," she told him despairingly. a moment: "I wonder what you think is to become of me?"
She would go back to London, she thought, tearfully, she would pay visits, and laugh and flirt, and stay up late, and get sick and weary and bored once again, with no hope of anything better to come.
She said with a last effort:
"If you would only promise me that some day I should see you again—and be with you. Can't I have anything to hope for? Don't you want to be with me too?"
"Every moment of all my life."
She said, with a touch of her old obstinacy:
"If you really meant that, you wouldn't send me away. You've often talked to me about being happy."
"Now I've got the chance—a beautiful chance—you won't let me take it."
She was silent for a long moment; then she said wearily:
"Please take me home now."
Rathbone started the car without another word and drove silently back through the quiet lanes.
They were at the cottage gate now, and Rathbone stopped the engine.
Diana moistened her dry lips.
"I suppose this is—good-bye?" she said faintly.
"Let us say good-night instead,
of an inch of material at the applique, as indicated by line. Baste this neatly undressed with an iron, so that it is perfectly flat and smooth; baste it into position. It plied to the foundation means of fine blind stitch lines indicating the collars skirt gathers should be dotted outlining stitches.
A newspaper reporter was one of the biggest business New York. All the time he was asking questions the industry was cutting paper.
INTER-INSURANCE
WINS GRANGE AID
Moore and Cheney, Agents, Get Word of Endorsement of Exchange
The National Grange has adopted the Farmers Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange as its official automobile insurance carrier for all members of the Grange west of the Mississippi river.
At the annual convention of the Grange, held in Madison, Wisconsin, on November 11 to 20, 1931, the National Grange executive committee was instructed to investigate the feasibility of providing cooperative automobile insurance for its members.
The national executive committee is composed of Louis J. Taber, master of the National Grange, A. S. Goss, master of the Washington State Grange, E. A. Eckert of Mascoulah, Illinois, committee secretary.
The committee met jointly with the Farmers Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange at its annual meeting in Los Angeles on May 18, 1932. Moore & Cheney, local representatives of the Exchange, advise that the National Grange executive committee made a detailed investigation of every phase of the operations of the exchange cooperative insurance plan and the committee reported in its findings in a resolution which is quoted in part:
"WHEREAS, in accord with instructions of the National Grange to investigate and take steps to provide some form of cooperative automobile insurance on a sound basis and at a reasonable rate for Grange members West of the Mississippi, the executive committee has made a careful study of the Farmers Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange and is of the opinion that its form of organization is sound, its financial position firm, its settlement of losses prompt and fair, its costs in keeping with the class of business written, and its management capable and efficient . . ."
of the South-west corner of said Lot Two (2) of Pfeninger Tract; thence North 331.50 feet to the South-west corner of said Lot Two (2); thence East 1329.64 feet along the South line of said Lot Two (2), to the place of beginning.
Reserving therefrom for roads, railroads and ditches a strip of land 30 feet wide, along, adjoining and each side of the Township and Section lines and a strip of land 15 feet wide, along, adjoining and each side of the quarter Section lines.
Also reserving a strip of land not to exceed 9 feet in width along the East line for ditch purposes, as reserved in deed from Philipena Pfeninger to C. W. Overton, recorded in Book 73, page 16 of Deeds, or so much of said property as shall be necessary to be sold to provide a sum sufficient to pay the total amount secured by said Deed of Trust.
Dated this 26th day of May, 1932.
ORANGE COUNTY TITLE COMPANY.
By H. A. GARDNER,
President.
GEO.A. PARKER,
Secretary.
(Corporate Seal)
May 26th, 1932—3t
No. F. 28
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE
WHEREAS, JOSEPHINE HARKINS, a single woman, by deed of trust dated the 11th day of January, 1929, registered January 25, 1929 as Document No. 9899 and entered on Registrar's Certificate of Title No. 5229 in the Office of the Registrar of Titles of Orange County, California, did grant and convey the premises therein and as hereinafter described TO THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ANAHEIM, a corporation, of Anaheim, California, now Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association, a national banking association, as Trustee, to secure among other things the payment of one certain promissory note and interest thereon according to the terms thereof executed by Josephine
WOODMEN TEAMS DRILL
Men's and women's drill teams of the Modern Woodmen of America, forester department, will vie for honors at the California state fair, Sunday, September 3. The Woodmen's forester department will hold its state encampment during the fair, September 3 to 10, and the drill competition will be held in front of the grandstand. It is expected that approximately 500 uniformed foresters will take part in the competition.
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY TRUSTEE UNDER DEED OF TRUST
WHEREAS, D. ARNOLD SINGLETON and ELIZABETH H. SINGLETON, husband and wife, by Deed of Trust dated February 1st, 1929, recorded July 5th, 1929, in Book 284, page 390 of Official Records of Orange County, California, did grant and convey the property therein and hereinafter described, to the Orange County Title Company, as Trustee, to secure, among other obligations, the payment of three promissory notes dated February 1st, 1929, one for $500.00 payable to Louis Palm and Lea Palm, husband and wife; one payable to Louis Palm and Lea Palm, husband and wife; or order, for the principal sum of $7000.00; and one for $13,000.00 payable to Peter Palm and Thekla Palm, husband and wife; said $500.00 note due May 1st, 1929; said $7000.00 note due February 1st, 1932; and said $13,000.00 note due February 1st, 1932, with interest on all of said notes from February 1st, 1929, at the rate of seven per cent per annum; and
WHEREAS, default has occurred in that the principal sum due upon said $500.00 note on May 1st, 1929, has not been paid; and
WHEREAS, Louie Palm, Lea Palm, Peter Palm and Thekla Palm, owners and holders of said notes heretofore demanded that said Trustee sell said property and on February 25th, 1932, duly recorded in the office of the County Recorder of said County, in Book 535, page 445 of Official Records thereof, a notice of said default and of their election to cause said property to be sold and more than three months have now elapsed since the recordation of said notice. The sum of $20,500.00 principal and interest thereon from October 7th
NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the undersigned by virtue of the authority vested in it as Trustee by the said deed of trust will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, in lawful money of the United States on June 20, 1932, at the hour of eleven o'clock A.M., at the South entrance of the Orange County Court House, Santa Ana, California, the interest conveyed to it by the aforesaid deed of trust in and to the real property therein described situated in the
WHEREAS, Louis Palm, Lea Palm, Peter Palm and Thekla Palm, owners and holders of said notes heretofore demanded that said Trustee sell said property and on February 25th, 1932, duly recorded in the office of the County Recorder of said County, in Book 535, page 445 of Official Records thereof, a notice of said default and of their election to cause said property to be sold and more than three months have now elapsed since the recordation of said notice. The sum of $20,500.00 principal and interest thereon from October 7th, 1930, together with compound interest from Oct. 17, 1931, is now due, owing and unpaid on said notes and there is also secured by said Deed of Trust the Trustee's fee and expenses of sale, amounting to $472.00.
NOW THEREFORE, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the said Orange County Title Company, by virtue of the authority vested in it as Trustee under said Deed of Trust, will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, lawful money of the United States, on the 18th day of June, 1932, at the hour of eleven o'clock A.M., of said day, at the South door of the Orange County Court House in the City of Santa Ana, California, all of the interest conveyed to it by said Deed of Trust in and to all the following described property situated in the Rancho San Juan Cajon de Santa Ana, County of Orange, State of California, described as follows, to-wit:
The South 20.80 acres of the West one-half (W½) of the Northwest quarter (NW¼) of Section Three (3), Township Four (4), South Range Ten (10), West, S. B. B. & M.
Excepting therefrom that portion described as beginning at the South-east corner of Lot 2 of Pfeninger Tract, as shown on a Map recorded in Book 7, page 26 of Miscellaneous Maps, records of Orange County, California; thence South along the East line of the West one-half (W½) of the fractional North-west quarter (NW¼) of said Section Three (3), 323.50 feet; thence West 1329.95 feet to a point in the West line of said fractional North-west quarter (NW¼), said point being 331.50 feet South by the said deed of trust to accomplish the objects of the trust therein created.
NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the undersigned by virtue of the authority vested in it as Trustee by the said deed of trust will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, in lawful money of the United States on June 20, 1932, at the hour of eleven o'clock A.M., at the South entrance of the Orange County Court House, Santa Ana, California, the interest conveyed to it by the aforesaid deed of trust in and to the real property therein described situated in the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California, and described as follows:
Westerly one hundred four and forty-two hundredths (104.42) feet of Lot Three (3), Block One (1), Tract No. 221, of J. Lloyd Moore Subdivision, as shown on a map recorded in Book 13, page 4, of Miscellaneous Maps, records of Orange County, California.
To pay the amount due and unpaid upon said note, to-wit: The sum of Twenty-five Hundred and no-100ths Dollars ($2500.00) and interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent per annum, from July 11, 1931, to the date of sale, together with the expenses of said sale and also the costs, fee, charges and expenses of the trust created by said deed of trust, including compensation to the Trustee and all other sums secured thereby. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title possession or encumbrances.
TERMS OF SALE: Cash, lawful money of the United States, payable at time of sale.
Dated: May 23, 1932.
BANK OF AMERICA
NATIONAL TRUST AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION.
By Roy E. Vincent,
Vice-President.
By R. D. Fuller.
Asst. Vice-President.
(Successor to The First National Bank of Anaheim, a corporation of Anaheim, California).
Date of first publication May 26, 1932.
Anaheim Gazette.
5-26-4t
NOTICE OF SALE BY TRUSTEE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on the 6th day of June, 1932, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock A.M. of said day, at the South entrance to the Orange County Court House, in the City of Santa Ana, County of Orange, State of California, the BANK OF AMERICA NATIONAL TRUST AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, as Trustee under a certain deed of trust executed by MAY E. HARRIS and R. U. HARRIS, wife and husband, and recorded on November 13, 1930, in Book 431, page 369, Official Records of Orange County, California, which was given to secure a promissory note for the sum of $3000.00 with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, principal and interest payable in monthly installments of $35.00 each, on the first day of each and every month, beginning December 1, 1930, in accordance with the terms of said deed of trust, and in compliance with a notice of default and demand for sale of the property in the said deed of trust and hereinafter described, recorded on February 6, 1932, in Book 533, page 325, Official Records of Orange County, California executed by the owner and holder of said note on account of the default in the payment of principal and interest due on September 1, 1931, and all payments due subsequently thereto, there being a total sum of $2962.09 due and unpaid on the 25th day of January, 1932, and all payments due subsequently thereto, will sell at public auction, for cash, lawful money of the United States, and to the highest bidder, subject to liens and encumbances prior to said deed of trust, the following described property, situate in the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California:
Lot Six (6) in Block "C" of Tract No. 131, West Court, as per Map thereof recorded in Book 11, page 22 of Miscellaneous Maps, Records of Orange County, California.
SUBJECT to convenants, conditions, reservations, restrictions and rights of way of record.
or so much thereof as shall be necessary to pay the principal, interest, advances, charges, costs and trustees fees
Blames Failures On The Bankers
Former Treasury Secretary McAdoo Says Wilson Warm-Hearted
Ultra-conservatism of bankers manifested back in 1913 when the federal reserve act was passed, was blamed for the tremendously large proportion of bank failures in the United States within the last two years, in William Giggs McAdoo's talk at Santa Ana last Thursday evening before a packed house at the high school auditorium.
Bankers then so strenuously objected to the depositor-insurance section of the proposed federal reserve act that it was eliminated. Their reason was that it would tend to make bankers careless.
Now, according to the former secretary of the treasury under the Wilson administration, bankers throughout the country are seeking to have that clause inserted into the banking law, under the claim that had it been in force of recent years it would have tended to prevent tremendous hoarding of money, and would thus prevented many failures of banks, largely through carelessness of the bankers themselves.
Among other things discussed by McAdoo were the federal war risk bureau which in six months from its inception was handling more insurance than all private companies combined, and a character analysis of his father-in-law, President Woodrow Wilson. McAdoo claimed that Wilson was much misunderstood, had a high sense of duty, that he was warm-hearted and approachable when persons understanding what they were talking about wanted to see him.
Dr. Flagg
Dentist
105 East Center Street
(GROUND FLOOR)
A careful dentist using painless methods at a price that is reasonable—an honest effort to render the best type of dentistry.
EXTRACTIONS $1.00
PLATES $10. $15. $25
FREE EXAMINATION
Remember, the only dentist with a ground floor location in Anaheim.
Open Evenings—Phone 4527
A.B.C. BUSINESS DIRECTORY
For Quick Reference Look Under Alphabetical Classification of Business or Profession You Are Seeking. You'll Find This Anaheim Gazette Business Directory Reliable, Convenient and Profitable. USE IT.
BIG AUCTION
Every Saturday at 2 and 7:30 p.m., at Jack Martin's Auction House, 137 S. Lemon, Phone 3220.
Private sales all the time.
For Cash or Easy Terms.
Buy Anything—Sell Anything.
"The Bargain Spot of Orange Co."
Jack Martin, Prop.
IRISH AUCTIONEER
Automobile Wrecking
Curran Auto Wrecking Co.
L. A. at Palm, Anaheim 3101
Chiropractors
The Pintlers, Chiropractors
108 E. Broadway, Anaheim, Ph. 3413
Funiture—Used
J. P. Glenn
124 W. Wilshire, Fullerton 51
Optometrists
Dr. Loeroh Jr.
222 N. Broadway, Santa Ana 3886
Paint Business
Fullerton Paint & Paper Co.
212 N. Spadra, Fullerton 477
Physicians & Surgeons
Phone 2212 Open Evenings
Sunday by Appointment
DR. OSHER
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Bye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Jack Martin, Prop.
IRISH AUCTIONEER
Automobile Wrecking
Curran Auto Wrecking Co.
L. A. at Palm, Anaheim 3101
Chiropractors
The Pintlers, Chiropractors
108 E. Broadway, Anaheim, Ph. 3413
Funeral Directors
Ambulance Service—Day or Night
Phone 8209
Backs,
Terry & Campbell
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
H. P. CAMPBELL,
Resident Director
251 No. Lemon St., Anaheim, Calif.
DeLuxe Ambulance Service
Telephone 4105
HILGENFELD'S
FUNERAL HOME
South Lemon at Broadway
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
ANAHEIM FEED AND FUEL CO.
Dealers in
GRAIN
FLOUR
SEEDS
WOOD
COAL
HAY
Phone 3210
W. D. GRAFTON, Prop.
Public Weighing Scales