oc-plain-dealer 1922-06-23
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Friday, June 23, 1922
TO PLAY RIVERSIDE AT CORONA SUNDAY
Anaheim will meet Riverside at Coronah Sunday in the second game of the Cal. Eiks Baseball league. The game will be played at the Corona city park, Manager Billy Knott of the Anaheim team announced today. An-aheim players will change into uniforms at Hotel Kinney, Corona.
FIDO CAN'T WAIT OUTSIDE ANYMORE
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK,
June 23.—Visitors to Yosemite hereafter will not be permitted to check their dogs with rangers at the gate, according to a ruling made here today.
For the HOT DAYS
Don't you need fruits and fruit juices for hot weather drinks?
Save yourself all the cooking you can by using our canned meats and vegetables. Our cookies and crackers are appetizing these warm days.
Don't you need fruits and fruit juices for hot weather drinks?
Save yourself all the cooking you can by using our canned meats and vegetables. Our cookies and crackers are appetizing these warm days.
Come in and see the many foods we have that will lighten your work.
Edmiston's Grocery
We Deliver
Tel. 219
Back East
On sale NOW and until Aug. 31—Return limit Oct. 31
Canadian ferries in years—Florida stopovers and choice of routes.
Coupon and return.....$6.00
Ontario and return.....$7.00
Minnesota and return.....$8.00
Kansas City and return.....$9.00
Louisville and return.....$10.00
Balt Lake and return.....$14.82
AND MANY OTHER'S
Visit Yellowstone Park enroute at slight additional expense.
Straight Through to Chicago—68 Hours
UNION PACIFIC
Excursions
UNION PACIFIC
Excursions
C. S. BROWNE, G. A.
110 Bush Street
Santa Ana, Calif.
Telephone 1877
BIG DANCE
Saturday Night, June 24
and
Sunday Afternoon and Evening,
June 25
and Every Night Thereafter
GOOD MUSIC
Riverbank Camp
Santa Ana Canyon
Camping and Refreshment
Electric Lights
THE ORANGE COUNTY PLAIN D EALER, ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
SPORTS
K. OF C. WILL PLAY
S. A. HERE SUNDAY
HUNT AND KRAMER
WILL MIX TONIGHT
Anaheim K, of C.s will meet Santa Ana on the local high school field Sunday, taking advantage of the absence of the Anaheim Elks team. It had at first been planned to play at Delhi. The local K. of C. lineup will be Bertles, ss; L. Hund, lf; Lazza-roni, 1; Muckenthaler 2; Huerte, 3; Steichen, rf; Gisler, cf; T. Tund and Volz, ps; Neja and P. Storrel, util. It has not been decided Hund or Volz will start in the box.
HARVARD CREWS WIN FIRST TWO EVENTS
NEWLY LYONDON, Conn., June 23. Harvard's freshman and junior crews won the preliminaries of the annual regatta against Yale here today.
The crimson juniors defeated Elli's crew by six lengths. In the freshman race the Harvard crew shot across the finish line five lengths ahead of the Yale shell, which was swamped by a wave a short distance from the goal. Members of the crew were picked out of the water.
The varsity race, the big event of the regatta, was scheduled for late this afternoon.
Plain Dealer Want Ads Bring Results.
at Weber's
Celebrate the 4th
We will help you do it.
Tonight is the night when lovers of the manly art of self-defense will hit themselves to the open air arena of the Anaheim Athletic club on the sugar factory grounds for the weekly boxing card that the club's manager and matchmaker, Billy Darnley, has lined up. Six classy bouts are on the program and if tonight's show is one-half as good as last Friday's standing room should be at a premium.
The bill looks mighty good in print. There are some very good boys lined up and if they live up to the form they are capable of, "fight bugs" are due for a "large evening" of sport. Both Willie Hunt and Jimmy Kramer are in shape to put up a red hot argument in the main event. There is little to choose between either boy as far as class is concerned. Both are clever and pack a real kick in either mitt. There should be plenty of action.
Also, the same goes for the semi-windup which brings together two good little fellows in Leonard Lee, the pride of Denver, and Ted Levin, a fast clever youngster from the Angel City. They are both after a main event here which has been promised to the winners.
The preliminaries will see some new faces. Elmer Foley of Buena Park, will meet Art Espinosa of local fame. Art is well known locally. Foley is making his debut here. Fans will see a real good ringman. He is a fast, hard-hitting, two-handed fighter. They will weight in at 135 lbs. Babe Ohton, who has the distinction of being the youngest Indian Chief in the world, holding that title with the almost extinct "Who Who Tribe" from Phazaz, will mix with Tony Ross of Anaheim who also is making his first appearance locally. Ross can fiht and hit as can also Heap Big Little Indian Chief Babe. It ought to be a battle and then some.
CLEAN SWEEP FOR YANKEE GOLFERS
SANDWICH, Eng., June 23. Walter Hagen of Detroit, American home bred professional became the first golfer born in the United States to ever win the British open golf championship today, when he led the field of 224 players with a total score of 300 for the four rounds of play.
Hagen won by putting up a wonderful fighting finish of the sort which has earned him his American reputation of being one of the gamest men in golf.
Stung by a terrible third round, when he took 43 for the final nine for a total of 79 and dropped from the lead, he came back with a 72 on his final round and thus gained the title. His score for the four rounds was 76, 73, 79, 72; total, 300.
Hagen's fourth round card:
Out 5 4 4 5 4 3 3 3 4—Out 5 4 4 5 4 3 3 4—35
In ...4 5 3 5 4 4 3 4—37—72
Hutchison's final round:
Out ...4 4 3 7 4 3 4—36
In ...5 4 5 4 5 4 4—40—76
At the fourth hole Hutchison put his second shot out of bounds when he overplayed the green. The penalty of two strikes cost a seven for the hole.
Hagen played masterful golf, his birdie four at the 505-yard fourteenth being the gem of his round. He smashed a brassie to within four yards of the pin.
Jim Barnes, the American open champion, made a fine effort to catch Hagen, but failed by a shot. He played the final round in 73 for a total of 301, thus nosing out Hutchison for second place by a shot.
The tournament has been a clean sweep for the Americans.
WILLARD TRAINING TO MEET DEMPSEY
The managers of Jess Willard have leased the Hollywood American Legion gym as training quarters for the former champion, who expects to meet Jack Dempsey soon. Willard will start work on Monday. Late in October will witness the bout, it is anticipated, though Jack Kearns for
at Weber's
Celebrate the 4th
We will help you do it.
$1.00 Fireworks Assortment
Our $1.00 assortment contains 20 pieces of night fireworks.
$2.00 Fireworks Assortment
Contains 30 pieces of larger night fireworks.
Fire Crackers
2 packages for...5c
Vesuvius Torpedoes.1c
Suns of Guns...1c
Sparklers, box containing 8 pieces...5c
FLAGS
Silk Flags
Size 5x8...5c
Size 6x9...10c
Weber's
Park, will meet Art Espinosa of local fame. Art is well known locally. Foley is making his debut here. Fans will see a real good ringman. He is a fast, hard-hitting, two-handed light-er. They will weight in at 135 lbs. Babe Ohton, who has the distinction of being the youngest Indian Chief in the world, holding that title with the almost extinct "Who Who Tribe" from Phazaz, will mix with Tony Ross of Anaheim who also is making his first appearance locally. Ross can fiht and hit as can also Heap Big Little Indian Chief Babe. It ought to be a battle and then some.
Bud Baker, from over Orange way, stacks up with a gentleman of color in Battlel Butler who claims Olive as his residence. They are welterweights. The curtain raiser between Tex Jones and Young Willie Russell will no doubt be a "humdinger" as both youngsters have been training diligently. Billy Darnley will referee all bouts.
The "fair sex" is more than welcome.
Prices of ringside and reserved seats have all been reduced. Ringside seats formerly $2, will now be $1.65 including tax. Reserved section, formerly $1.50, will go at $1.40 including tax. Bleacher seats will sell at $1.00 plus tax of 10 cents.
Baseball Standings
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
Vernon ...46 28..622
San Francisco ...48 31..608
Los Angeles ...43 37..538
Salt Lake ...36 37..493
Portland ...36 39..480
Oakland ...36 44..450
Seattle ...33 43..423
Sacramento ...31 48..392
Yesterday's Results
Vernon, 7; Portland 2.
Los Angeles, 9; Salt Lake, 8.
San Francisco, 12; Sacramento 5.
Oakland, 5; Seattle, 4 (10 innings.)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
New York ...37 22..627
St. Louis ...33 26..559
Brooklyn ...33 29..532
Pittsburgh ...29 27..518
Chicago ...28 30..483
Cincinnati ...29 32..475
Boston ...24 32..429
Philadelphia ...20 35..364
Yesterday's Results
Brooklyn 3; New York 2.
Pittsburg, 8; Chicago, 6.
Philadelphia, 5; Boston 4.
No other game scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
St. Louis ...38 26..594
New York ...37 28..569
Detroit ...34 29..540
Chicago ...31 32..492
Cleveland ...30 33..476
Washington ...30 33..476
Philadelphia ...23 32..418
Boston ...25 35..417
Yesterday's Results
Detroit 3; St. Louis, 2 (11 in-
Silk Flags
Size 5x8 . . . . . 5c
Size 6x9 . . . . . 10c
Weber's
Book and Music Store
112 E. Center Anaheim
NCE
Camping and Refreshments
Electric Lights
Brooklyn 3; New York 2.
Pittsburg, 8; Chicago, 6.
Philadelphia, 5; Boston 4.
No other game scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
St. Louis ..... 38 26 .594
New York ..... 37 28 .569
Detroit ..... 34 29 .540
Chicago ..... 31 32 .492
Cleveland ..... 30 33 .476
Washington ..... 30 33 .476
Philadelphia ..... 23 32 .418
Boston ..... 25 35 .417
Yesterday's Results
Detroit 3; St. Louis, 2 (11 innings.)
Boston, 6; New York, 2.
Chicago, 3; Cleveland, 0.
No other game scheduled.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Yale, 7; Harvard, 3.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
Minneapolis ..... 38 22 .633
Indianapolis ..... 29 25 .609
St. Paul ..... 37 24 .607
Milwaukee ..... 35 32 .522
Louisville ..... 30 35 .462
Columbus ..... 29 35 .453
Kansas City ..... 26 41 .388
Toledo ..... 21 41 .339
Yesterday's Results
Columbus, 6; Kansas City, 2.
Toledo, 5; Milwaukee, 4.
Louisville, 4; St. Paul, 2.
Minneapolis, 6; Indianapolis, 4.
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Baltimore, 6; Toronto, 5.
Rochester, 5; Newark, 2.
Jersey City, 5; Syracuse, 4.
Buffalo, 14; Reading, 10.
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
Birmingham, 7; Atlanta, 7; (14 innings, called account darkness.)
Mobile, 4; New Orleans, 2.
Memphis, 10; Chattanooga, 7.
Little Rock, 3; Nashville, 6.
YESTERN LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
St. Joseph ..... 50 16 .758
Tulsa ..... 39 29 .574
Wichita ..... 37 30 .552
Sioux City ..... 35 29 .547
Omaha ..... 29 34 .460
Oklahoma City ..... 28 40 .412
Des Moines ..... 25 41 .379
Denver ..... 21 45 .318
Yesterday's Results
Sioux City, 8; Denver, 7.
St. Joseph, 10-6; Wichita, 9-11.
Omaha, 7; Des Moines, 2.
Tulsa, 8; Oklahoma City, 1.
TEXAS LEAGUE
San Antonio, 10; Dallas, 6.
Galveston, 3; Wichita Falls, 2.
Fort Worth, 14; Houston, 5.
Beaumont, 11; Shreveport, 5.
SON OF EVANGELIST
PLEADS FORGIVENESS
CHICAGO, June 23. — Arrested with three men and two women on a charge of disorderly conduct, Edwin O. Excell, son of the late Rev. E. O. Excell, pleaded for mercy in the name of his father's famed evangelistic record.
Our New Arrivals
include the very latest things in collars and beads.
Featured in our many pretty things are
Peter Pan Collars
for Slip-on Sweaters, Sport Handkerchiefs, Vestees Beaded Bracelets.
McDONALD'S
Millinery and Lingerie Shoppe
103 S. Clementine
Next to Postoffice
MAINING
DEMPSEY
Press Willard have
good American
ing quarters for
who expects to
soon. Willard
monday. Late in
the bout, it is
Jack Kearns for
pet promised to
MER TO
SMULLER
world's chamyards, would be
Welsmuller of
club, but not unor a couple of
Angeles. The
maining in the
ICTED
MURDER
23. William
nightweight puglmurder in the
today and senJollet prison.
of the slaying
was shot down
a quarrel in
chauffeur, also
received a like
er and David
same offense.
Money In Your Old Shoes
More than half the shoes the average person discards can be repaired to look like new
and wear for months extra.
Look over your discards, there are shoes
there that you should let us fix.
Lautenbach’s Shoe Store
Corner Center and Lemon Streets
ANAHEIM
AMERICAN
DYE
WORKS
10
Established 34 Years
Careful Cleaning
Is a Man’s Job
To do a perfect job of cleaning requires brawn and brain
long with a myriad of ingredients and special equipment. Trained men—each an expert in his respecive branch of cleaning—handle each job with a different application of cleaning science. Perfection gained
through years of experience is applied to our cleaning of
ugs, carpets, curtains, wearing apparel, household
Cateral Cleaning
Is a Man’s Job
To do a perfect job of cleaning requires brawn and brain along with a myriad of ingredients and special equipment. Trained men—each an expert in his respective branch of cleaning—handle each job with a different application of cleaning science. Perfection gained through years of experience is applied to our cleaning ofugs, carpets, curtains, wearing apparel, household goods, etc.
American Dye Works
Our aim is to have your goods come back looking like new. In the plainest or most delicate articles the original shape is maintained. The natural color and brilliance is restored. That is why thousands of women leave ALL their cleaning problems to us. The cost is low and you needn’t worry about results.
Just Phone and Our Car Will Call
Phone 810
We have the most complete facilities in the city for cleaning and blocking hats.
Everything Cleaned by Our
Famous Odorless Process.
American Dye Works
The Recognized Cleaners and Dyers of Southern California
x city stores and branches in Pasadena, Alhambra, Long Beach, Ocean Park,
Riverside, Pullerton, Anaheim, Orange and Santa Ana
120 N. Los Angeles St., Annaheim, Calif.
Telephone 810
814 E. Washington St., Main Office and Plant
Stores
514 S. Western Ave.
1158 W. 7th St.
6621 Hollywood Blvd.