oc-plain-dealer 1921-10-13
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LA HABRA LURARY COMMITTEE MEETS
LA HABRA, Oo home of Mrs. F. committee met at the expense B. Brake and coa purchase of a and advisability by. The matter of building for the J. and plans made a site was discter to a successful for bringing thisable.
Finish as soon I and Mrs. Florence Mr. Edwin Template joining the Rhodes Wilson the Fullerton Ebell musical seecting at the home and attendiner on Melvin street, of Mrs. Ally Fullerton. Is the old home and Making less and pleasure. Mr. combinin Walker left Saturday and Mrs. Mo. While away they for Plae friends in several of will vidle Western cities the lounters left early Tuesday A. of the Tehachapi mountains. A plant Sherman, A. J. Wilson morgell, of East Whittier. The of La Habra women inter- welfare of the P.-T. A. Mothers' congress, held at Saturday. Mrs. Snow as for the local association, repre- parents from here. Deleire Charles Newson, Mrs. J. I. Wil- and Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Terry, B. Chaffee is secretary of the family dinner party was enjoyed the Launer families, here at the vital home on Central-save on Sun- Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Molenrich and all of Los Angeles, were also hosts. Molenrich is a brother of Mrs. Muner. Other guests were the three ys, Nelson, Richard and Erwin and their families.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Thompson, of Bren, have purchased the P. E. Proud cottage on Irna street and took possession on Monday. Pending the completion of the new ranch home on she hill of the F. E. Prouds they will be the guests of their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Luehm.
Gloria Swanson will be seen for the last time tonight at the Fair-land in "The Great Moment." Added attractions will be a Pathe Review and two Snub Pollard comedies.
Carmel Myers will be featured at the Grand again tonight in "The Kiss," a breathless drama of cold steel and flaming-hearts. Added attractions will be a comedy.
G. & L. Lease
G. & L. LEASE, Oct. 12—(Spl.) Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Turner and three children, Virginia, Robert and Jane, motored to Harbor City last Sunday and were dinner guests of Mrs. Turner's mother, Mrs. A. E. Cline; after dinner they all motored to Point Firmin and the mother returned home with them for several days, after which she will return to Harbor City.
A. G. Grainger was a Fullerton visitor Monday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Grainger entertained last Sunday with a chicken dinner and all the good things that makes dinner worth while, those in attendance were Archie Grainger, wife and children, Ethelyn and Craig of Placentia. All expressed themselves happy.
Hole Lease
Misca Annie Tates and Donavan of Los Angeles have been visiting with Mrs. S. M. Yates and family, they are going to San Francisco to spend several weeks before returning to their duties at the Los Angeles hospital.
Laurel Heights-Brea
Mr. Wayne left for Los Angeles Monday morning to enter school at that place.
Miss Clara Senman, who has been working in the packing house at La Habra, is now working in Fullerton.
Mrs. Senman entertained her daughter from Orange last Friday.
Kenneth Sulliff motored to Tustin Saturday to take Misses Beulah Danielly, Edith Spicer and Hortense, Harkey to attend the C.E.convention.
Miss Jessie Maple of Pittsburg, Penn., who is spending several months with her sister and family, Mrs. O. Woods on Redwood-at has undergone an operation, under Dr. Parrett of Brea.
$300,000 LIQUOR BANDITS HUNTED
Redistricting live districts, wi by a special act this winter, is of former CoRandall, Havin reapportionment sembly ten yeats proper spirit motion by every Mr. Randall in that sesial give the council ogition, at tha from the large passed the ass majority, but ate.A deadile session and tha of in a specifl Mr.Randall ment which fo-Three of C now contain T one-half of the state.The state-San Fran Oakland—are i
That is a politically anme that tha exacty one-had der the new adopted soon b legislature.
"From the e influence oive councils he evil.Several York,Pennsylvania the membership Philadelphia al istative bodies ioore and "ap come from tha member of tha resentatives of New York.Phil known to the Boies Penrose."
Happyly nia does not of the legislour three larges who claim tha to redistrict exst basis, ignoring the problem find the assem population by aus figures bspectively app which the three sorb, and thn remaining $5 c."
But the con
NIGHT AND DAY STORAGE and Battery Service
We have made special preparations to care for motor car owners who desire storage and will be ready to serve them starting with WEDNESDAY, OCT. 12.
"Dad" Baker has been placed in charge at night and under his care your car will be safe when left here.
Auto Electric Maintenance Co.
Orange County Distributors for Vesta Batteries
WEST BROS.
or. Chestnut and Los Angeles Streets
Anaheim, Phone 21
$300,000 LIQUOR BANDITS HUNTED
WASHINGTON, Oct. 13. Authorities all along the Atlantic coast today sought to locate thieves who looted $300,000 worth of choice wines and liquors of ancient vintage from the country estate of Joseph E. Leiter in Virginia, just across the border from Washington, D.C. A band of organized bootleggers and safe crackers accomplished the theft, investigators stated.
ANSWER IS HALTED
AKRON, O., Oct. 13. "What would you do now if the marshal should come?" "Well, I would—That's as far as Henry Garren got while handing a friend a bottle containing goods that make men glad. Just then Marshal Youtz stepped up and took Garren to jail. The court gave him $20 and costs."
"DRY" CHIEF SATISFIED
WASHINGTON, Oct. 13. Prohibition Commissioner Haynes today asserted that his office had the "wet spots" of the nation well in hand.
The Plain Dealer for Good Printing.
SPECIAL FURNITURE REDUCTIONS
ONLY A FEW OF EACH OF THE FOLLOWING ARTICLES AT PRICES QUOTED. MANY OTHER BARGAINS EQUALLY ATTRACTIVE.
ONLY A FEW OF EACH OF THE FOLLOWING ARTICLES AT PRICES QUOTED. MANY OTHER BARGAINS EQUALLY ATTRACTIVE.
White Table Oil Cloth, was 50c yard, Now.....29c
Round Breakfast Room Table, drop leaf, from $8.50 to.....$6.30
Genuine Mahogany Rocker, tapestry seat, from $30.00 to.....$19.85
Cane Back Dining Chair, Wm. and Mary, big reduction, each.....$7.90
Solid Funnel Oak Dining Chair, special, each.....$2.30
Congoleum Rug, 3 feet by 4 feet, 6 inches.....$1.45
A Good Link Fabric Bed Spring.....$5.95
STROUP-BA FURNITURE CO
Where Quality is higher than price
THE ORANGE COUNTY PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
URGE COOPERATION IN REDISTRICTING
Redistricting of California legislative districts, which is to be undertaken by a special session of the legislature this winter, is receiving the attention of former Congressman Charles H. Randall. Having been a member of the reapportionment committee of the assembly ten years ago, Mr. Randall predicts that failure will ensure unless a proper spirit of co-operation is promoted by everybody concerned.
Mr. Randall was the author of a bill in that session which proposed to give the country districts liberal recognition at the cost of representation from the large cities. His measure passed the assembly by a very large majority, but was blocked in the senate. A deadlock ended in the regular session and the question was disposed of in a special session.
Mr. Randall has just issued the statement which follows:
Three of California's 58 counties now contain 73,878 more people than one-half of the total population of the state. The three large cities of the state—San Francisco, Los Angeles and Oakland—are in these three counties.
That is a bad omen for California politically and governmentally. It means that these counties will claim exactly one-half of the legislature under the new reapportionment to be adopted soon by a special session of the legislature.
"From the earliest dawn of history the influence of large cities in legislative councils has been recognized as an evil. Several states, including New York, Pennsylvania and Illinois, limit the membership of New York City, Philadelphia and Chicago in their legislative bodies. In Congress the mediocre and "special interest" members come from the large cities. Not a single member of the Senate or House of Representatives of the 88th who came from New York, Philadelphia and Chicago is known to the country at large—except Boies Penrose and Jim Mann!
Happily the constitution of California does not require that domination of the legislature be handed over to our three large cities. There are many who claim that the legislature is bound to redistrict exclusively on a population basis, ignoring all other elements of the problem. On such a basis, they find the assembly and senate unite of population by dividing the state's census figures by eighty and forty, respectively, apportion all the districts which the three large counties can absorb, and then hand the balance to the remaining 55 counties.
But the constitution does not place population districts which is to be undertaken by a special session of the legislature this winter, is receiving the attention of former Congressman Charles H. Randall. Having been a member of the reapportionment committee of the assembly ten years ago, Mr. Randall predicts that failure will ensure unless a proper spirit of co-operation is promoted by everybody concerned.
Mr. Randall was the author of a bill in that session which proposed to give the country districts liberal recognition at the cost of representation from the large cities. His measure passed the assembly by a very large majority, but was blocked in the senate. A deadlock ended in the regular session and the question was disposed of in a special session.
Mr. Randall has just issued the statement which follows:
Three of California's 58 counties now contain 73,878 more people than one-half of the total population of the state. The three large cities of the state—San Francisco, Los Angeles and Oakland—are in these three counties.
That is a bad omen for California politically and governmentally. It means that these counties will claim exactly one-half of the legislature under the new reapportionment to be adopted soon by a special session of the legislature.
"From the earliest dawn of history the influence of large cities in legislative councils has been recognized as an evil. Several states, including New York, Pennsylvania and Illinois, limit the membership of New York City, Philadelphia and Chicago in their legislative bodies. In Congress the mediocre and "special interest" members come from the large cities. Not a single member of the Senate or House of Representatives of the 88th who came from New York, Philadelphia and Chicago is known to the country at large—except Boies Penrose and Jim Mann!
Happily the constitution of California does not require that domination of the legislature be handed over to our three large cities. There are many who claim that the legislature is bound to redistrict exclusively on a population basis, ignoring all other elements of the problem. On such a basis, they find the assembly and senate unite of population by dividing the state's census figures by eighty and forty, respectively, apportion all the districts which the three large counties can absorb, and then hand the balance to the remaining 55 counties.
But the constitution does not place population districts which is to be undertaken by a special session of the legislature this winter, is receiving the attention of former Congressman Charles H. Randall. Having been a member of the reapportionment committee of the assembly ten years ago, Mr. Randall predicts that failure will ensure unless a proper spirit of co-operation is promoted by everybody concerned.
Mr. Randall was the author of a bill in that session which proposed to give the country districts liberal recognition at the cost of representation from the large cities. His measure passed the assembly by a very large majority, but was blocked in the senate. A deadlock ended in the regular session and the question was disposed of in a special session.
Mr. Randall has just issued the statement which follows:
Three of California's 58 counties now contain 73,878 more people than one-half of the total population of the state. The three large cities of the state—San Francisco, Los Angeles and Oakland—are in these three counties.
That is a bad omen for California politically and governmentally. It means that these counties will claim exactly one-half of the legislature under the new reapportionment to be adopted soon by a special session of the legislature.
"From the earliest dawn of history the influence of large cities in legislative councils has been recognized as an evil. Several states, including New York, Pennsylvania and Illinois, limit the membership of New York City, Philadelphia and Chicago in their legislative bodies. In Congress the mediocre and "special interest" members come from the large cities. Not a single member of the Senate or House of Representatives of the 88th who came from New York, Philadelphia and Chicago is known to the country at large—except Boies Penrose and Jim Mann!
Happily the constitution of California does not require that domination of the legislature be handed over to our three large cities. There are many who claim that the legislature is bound to redistrict exclusively on a population basis, ignoring all other elements of the problem. On such a basis, they find the assembly and senate unite of population by dividing the state's census figures by eighty and forty, respectively, apportion all the districts which the three large counties can absorb, and then hand the balance to the remaining 55 counties."
TRY PACKING HOUSE FOREMAN FOR DEATH
Trial of Irving Sieveke, packing house foreman employed by The Whitier Citrus Assn., charged with involuntary manslaughter in connection with death, April 3, of Mrs. Y. Aoto, started today in superior court.
Charges against Sieveke grew out of an automobile collision in which Mrs. Aoto was killed and her husband severely injured. He was accused by Aoto of driving at a rate of 45 miles an hour when he crossed the state highway at Lemon Street intersection in Anaheim. Aoto's testimony, given at the preliminary hearing of Sieveke in Santa Ana justice court, was supported by that other witnesses, including Frank Valentine, proprietor of a filling station at Anaheim, J. E. Thayer, Pullerian rancher, Mrs. Francis Morri, of Anaheim, and W. H. Kennedy. All were eye-witnesses.
Louis Sieveke, father of the defendant, was riding with him at time of the accident, and declared that his son was driving at a rate not exceeding 1.5 miles an hour as he came to the intersection.
In the collision, Aoto's truck was turned half way around Sieveke's car. Mrs. Aoto was thrown from the seat and one of the truck wheels passed over her body. She was seen to attempt to rise, then fall. Her death took place later at an Anaheim hospital.
Sieveke was held to answer to a charge of involuntary manslaughter, when he appeared in the lower court. His bail was fixed at $3,000.
MEXICO WANTS U.S.MEN FOR HIGH POSTS
LOS ANGELES, Oct. 18. — Mexicans are looking to the U.S.S.for more men to fill governmental and commercial positions of importance, according to Roy Dickerson,a member ofthe international committeeofthe Y.M.C.A.,who isinLosAngelesinthecourseofa surveyoftheMexican situationintheU.S.S.HewasjustreturnedfromMexicoCity.Mr.Dickersonsaidmany
HAPPILY the constitution of California does not require that domination of the legislature be handed over to our three large cities. There are many who claim that the legislature is bound to redistrict exclusively on a population basis, ignoring all other elements of the problem. On such a basis, they find the assembly and senate unite of population by dividing the state's census figures by eighty and forty, respectively, apportioning all the districts which the three large counties can absorb, and then hand the balance to the remaining 55 counties.
"But the constitution does not place population above another important consideration, namely county boundaries. Here is Section 6, Article IV, of the constitution."
GREEKS BREAK UP TURKISH DIVISION
ATHENS, Oct. 13.—Fifteen Turkish divisions have been broken and scattered in an eight-day battle at Afion Kara-Dissar, on the Anatolian front, said an official communique issued here today. It added that heavy losses were inflicted by the Greeks.
DRY CLEANERS MOVE
The Puritan Dry Cleaners have moved from E. Center-st to Ine Duckworth-bldg on S. Claudina-st, where they will remain temporarily until their new plant on Cypress is completed.
MEXICO WANTS U. S. MEN FOR HIGH POSTS
LOS ANGELES, Oct. 18.—Mexicans are looking to the U. S. for more men to fill governmental and commercial positions of importance, according to Roy Dickerson, a member of the international committee of the Y. M. C. A., who is in Los Angeles in the course of a survey of the Mexican situation in the U. S. He has just returned from Mexico City. Mr. Dickerson said many Mexicans also are sending their children to the U. S. to receive commercial training. Mr. Dickerson will be in California a month.
SEEK TUSTIN YOUTH MYSTERIOUSLY GONE
Disappearance of Albert Hinkle, 24, of Tustin, who is said to have dropped out of sight mysteriously while on a trip from his home to Santa Ana, has been reported to Sheriff C. E. Jackson by the young man's mother, Mrs. James Warner.
Hinkle left his home Friday, it was said, and failed to return from Santa Ana. No trace of him, from the time he departed from home has been uncovered.
FILES SUIT TO QUIET TITLE IN PLACENTIA
A. S. Bradford, of Placentia, is plaintiff in a suit to quiet title on property in the Placentia district, on file in the superior court. A. H. Bradford, as administrator of the estate of Ellen M. Bradford, is defendant.
At a meeting of Santa Ana camp some members of what is to be a permanent team were selected and with "fill ins" were put thru the spaces by H. MacViker Smith, very erable consul. The Woodmen took a deep interest in the drill. It is expected the team will be complete at the next meeting, with drills being held regularly in preparation for the class adoption of Nov. 1.
A drive for 500 new members on among the clubs within what is known as the orange belt, which includes Orange-co. Santa Ana has been assigned a quota of 50 and enforces being made to secure this number.
Lawen Heaters are absolutely odorless. Stroup-Barnes Furniture Co.
EXTRA SPECIAL
Good Tapestry Rug, 27x54; $1.65
easily worth $3.00, now...
Dining Room Set, William and Mary, 45-inch
round table, 6-foot extension top, four chairs
to match, complete,
was $80.00, Now...
Same Table and
Six Chairs... $71.50
Dressing Table, triple mirror, ivory,
was $33.75, Now...
Bench to match,
only... $4.00
P-BARNES
URE COMPANY
higher than price ANAHEIM
NASH FOUR DROPS
$175 TO $1265 HERE
A drop of $175 in the Nash four-cylinder cars was announced this morning by Arthur Mav, of the May Motor company, local distributors for the Nash automobiles.
The new price makes the car $1265 delivered here. This is the lowest price reached in the history of this popular car and no doubt will cause a substantial increase in sales.
In speaking of the drop, Mr. May said:
"Although we have expected a slight drop for the last three days, we did not believe it would be so great. In fact we are probably more surprised than the general public. However, the new drop will undoubtedly be well received by the public, meaning that there are few quality cars on the market selling at the price of the Nash Four now. The four is becoming more popular each day and every week an increasing number are seen on the Orange county roads. The Nash is one of the best cars yet found for rural work, being able to stand the rough going which accounts for the large number used by farmers. Of course, the economy of operation has a great deal to do with it, too, but when you find a four cylinder car that can stand the wear and tear that the average oil man and farmer gives them you have a real automobile."
PRACTICE RESUMED
OFF SAN PEDRO COAST
LOS ANGELES, Oct. 13. — Heavy gun firing practice, deferred yesterday on account of fog, began today with the departure for the target grounds off San Pedro of the battleship New Mexico. She is striped, for action as if prepared for actual warfare and will fire all the guns of her complement, including the 12 14-inch guns. The practice is taking place about 20 miles off shore.
HOME OF THE AMPICO
A Standard High-grade New PIANO PLAYER
$437
Shop around and look at players selling for $675, then come in see and hear this.
DANZ PIANO Co.
162 West Center Street Anaheim
BUICKS BUICKS BUICKS
The Howard Automobile Company of Los Angeles
THE LARGEST DISTRIBUTORS OF AUTOMOBILES IN THE WORLD.
Announce the Opening
OF THEIR SALES ROOM IN ANAHEIM WHERE ALL MODELS OF GUARANTEED REBUILT BUICKS MAY BE
Announce the Opening
OF THEIR SALES ROOM IN ANAHEIM WHERE ALL MODELS OF GUARANTEED REBUILT BUICKS MAY BE PURCHASED.
EACH CAR BEING IN FIRST-CLASS MECHANICAL CONDITION — HAVING A FULL SET OF TOOLS AND CURTAINS AND CARRYING A THREE-MONTHS' GUARANTEE THE SAME AS A NEW CAR.
WE HANDLE OUR OWN CONTRACTS AND SAVE YOU BROKERAGE CHARGES. TERMS TO SUIT YOUR POCKETBOOK.
Howard Automobile Company
Local Sales Room 241 N. Los Angeles Street, Anaheim
TOWER, Mgr.
Open 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., including Sundays