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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1922 July

oc-plain-dealer 1922-07-15

1922-07-15 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 4 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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News of Fullerton 33 CARS ORANGES SHIPPED THIS WEEK Thirty-three cars of oranges and three cars of lemnos were shipped from Fullerton this week, according to the reports from the various fruit companies. The shipments are led by the Placentia Orange Growers Association with the shipment of 20 cars from their Fullerton packing plant, the Benchley Fruit Co. running second with eight cars. The Fullerton Mutual Orange Association shipped five cars of oranges. The three cars of lemons were shipped by the Peppers Fruit Company. The American Fruit Growers, Inc., made no shipments this week, but are getting ready for a run next week, it is stated. HUXLEY FUNERAL MONDAY MORNING Edgar Huxley, 28 years old, of Brea, died last night at the Santa Ana hospital. Decedent is survived by his widow, and a mother and sister. Funeral services have been announced to be held from the McAulay funeral parlors Monday morning at 10 o'clock. LOCAL WOMAN'S AUNT DIES AT ORANGE Mrs. Carl Simmons was called to Orange yesterday by the death of her aunt, Mrs. G. W. Ingle, wife of Orange City Recorder Ingle. Mrs. Ingle had been ill about three weeks. She was 69 years old. Coming from Oregon with her family two years ago, the Ingles made many warm friends, who extend sympathy to the husband and one son, Otis, Ingle, who is connected with the First National Bank of Orange. Funeral services were held at 3 p.m. this afternoon, Rev. H. J. Hill of the Christian church, to which Mrs. Ingle belonged, officiating. Inferment will be in Fairhaven cem- DRUGGIST ADMITS HE SOLD LIQUOR J. E. Doty of the Doty's Drug Store in Fullerton appeared before Judge William French this morning in the Fullerton police court, and pleaded guilty to the charge of selling liquor. He is alleged to have sold intoxicating beverages about July 1 to J. A. Kentro of Fulleron, who, it is stated, wanted the liquor to give an alcoholic bath to a ball team at Brea . M. B. Falconer, a clerk in Doty's who pleaded guilty of a similar charge last Saturday was fined $300. Judge French ordered Doty to appear Tuesday morning for judgment; in the meantime taking the case under advisement. Doty is said to have made the deal with Kentro for the purchasing of the liquor over the phone; and that the liquor was sold by Falconer. Doty's clerk. INJURED MAN REPORTS CRASH L. K. McGregor appeared at the local police station and filed a report of an accident occurring on July 10 in which he was hurt. He stated that he would have reported it sooner, but that he has been in bed from the result of the accident and was not able to get there. The accident occurred about a mile south of Buena Park about 2 o'clock in the morning, when his car struck a car driven by J. Mendenhall of Newport Beach. He says that the Mendenhall car carried no lights. His sister-in-law, Mrs. J. R. On whom he was taking home, was in the car with him, and she, too, was injured. NOW IT'S FRENCHMAN DISCOVERED AMERICA PARIS, July 15—The French press has entered a music theatre in a musical U.S. BISON HERDS SHOW BIG INCREASE WASHINGTON, July 15. — The buffalo is coming back. The picture-esque animals which once thundered across the prairies in such vast herds but which are known to the present generation chiefly by the figure on the 5-cent piece, live now over five and one half times as numerous as they with Wobbley Puppy ago, according to Dr. E. Palmer. In 1902 when Congress made the first and only appropriation of $15,000 for their purchase and maintenance, there were only 1750 of these ox-like animals alive. Now there are over 10,000 in existence, 6000 in Canada and approximately 4000 in the United States. There are 1250 in the nine United States government herds alone, and all but about 130 of these were born on the reservations. WOMEN INVADE SHY MALE'S STORE NEW YORK, July 15. Once upon a time the dictionary definition of a haberdasher as "one who keeps a men's furnishing store for supplying collars and cuffs, underwear, hats, etc." was true, but the change wrought by time and seekers after equal rights have made it necessary to substitute "and women's hats" for "etc." For the haberdashery, treasured refuge of the shy male, has suffered the same revolution that came over the voting booth and the barber shop. Ballots, hair and headgear now share a common fate where gender has no place, and women's "tailored straws" daily take a bit more window space from the lids of masculine gender. PARIS PEDESTRAINS TO PROTECT PUBLIC PARIS, July 15—Tired of protest against the reckless driving of taxi cabs, Paris pedestrians have formed a protective league to defend their interests. The league will undertake to help any of its members who may be victim of an accident on the public thoroughfare in obtaining compensation for any injury sustained. NOW IT'S FRENCHMAN DISCOVERED AMERICA PARIS, July 15. — The French press has entered onto more contestant for the honor of discovering America. This time it is a Frenchman, one Capt. Jean Cousin of Dieppe, who historians of this country say, reached the continent of South America, near the mouth of the Amazon, four years before Columbus set out on his eventful voyage. Cousin's discovery, according to his champions, grew out of commercial enterprises founded jointly by merchants of Rouen and Dieppe. Leaving Dieppe in June, according to the traditions, Cousin sailed southward to the equator and then turned westward, reaching the American continent two months later. KNOT THREADS DETROIT, July 15. — The performance of the marriage ceremony if often spoken of as "tying the knot." The expression may be of comparatively origin, a figurative phrase referring to the fact that the contracting parties are united or bound together in wedlock. Quite as reasonable a supposition is that it has come down from the ancient Babylonians. At any rate, it was the custom in old Babylonia for the priest who officiated at a wedding to take a thread from the garment of the bride and one from a garment worn by the groom. He would then knot the two together and present them to the bride, a symbol of the matrimonial tie joining her and her husband. BABY PNEUMONIA VICTIM Funeral service for baby Katehrine Gertrude, five months old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Fox, of Los Alamitos, were held this afternoon at St. Boniface Church. Burial was at Holy Cross Cemetery. The baby was a victim of pneumonia which developed from whooping cough. There are three other children in the family. CAR HAS COUPE BODY Motorcycle side cars fitted with coupe bodies that carry two passengers have been designed in England to serve the purpose of taxicabs in cities. WASHBOARD SAVES WEAR The surface of a new washboard intended to save clothes from wear, is made of wooden beads strung on wires. HUNTINGTON SUBSTANTIARY With the Owl Huntington Beach to be a good substantive there will not be any ers brought in permanent will go forward proven territory. Ated, the Kisseau Ointryre Brothers, an Oil Company brougien. The Argonaut Ovey No. 1 completed starting off like a Federal Consul long and much cheek its No. 1 ready to Completed at 2770 believe that at least be secured. The cate completed its Huntington Beach and got a 125 barr. McIntyre Brother ed in the productive tington Beach. Mc had as much trouble allotted to the oll have come thru it alty wells 2-2 on 125 barrels. This to 2810 is pro clean oil. Syndical test well failed to 3640-6/4 and will. The Central Ollie the old line concern to the development tier field has gone Beach. The Centra lots 2703, 2704, 2 drilling a well on The Central has been curing property loc treum Midway's. The Huntington pany the concern the history of Hunting with interest will o on the Gothard lea Gothard No. 1 has tion almost a year make a 120 barr Central No. 2 is best water, and the ho ged back up and PARIS PEDESTRAINS TO PROTECT PUBLIC PARIS, July 15—Tired of protesting against the reckless driving of taxi cabs, Paris pedestrians have formed a protective league to defend their interests. The league will undertake to help any of its members who may be victim of an accident on the public thoroughfare in obtaining compensation for any injury sustained. While the league has expressed its desire to aid all pedestrians it will not extend its aid to former "jail-birds." STEPHENS DEFENDS BUDGET Los Angeles.—In a speech at Santa Monica Gov. William D. Stephens declared that the annual state budget now was $44,100.00 and that half of this amount went for education. Comments of the Press What Editors Are Saying COURTESY IN TRAFFIC --Riverside (Cal.) Press There is promise of constructive achievement along this line. Perhaps the chief trouble with the traffic situation today, everywhere, is the lack of any definite system of informal rules for the conduct of automobile drivers and other users of the streets. Legal rules, in the main, have been pretty well worked out, but they do not get far enough. There is always a margin beyond which they cannot go—the margin of personal conduct and free choice on the part of the driver. This margin determines, over and over, the difference between safety and danger. Still oftener it determines the difference between smoothly moving traffic and clogged streets, and between good nature and wrath on the part of drivers, pedestrians and traffic officers. In other words, the traffic problem is largely a problem of manners, city. of courtesy. For some strange reason, many otherwise perfectly decent citizens seem to lose nearly all their normal courtesy the moment they find themselves behind a steering wheel, and behave themselves as they would never dream of doing in the home or office. Hence we have cars butting rudely from side streets into moving traffic, lines of moving cars stubbornly continuing their course and refusing to let a waiting driver cross or turn, cars weaving in and out of traffic and cutting past the line without reason, cars dawdling along in the middle of the street and holding everybody else back, one car parking in the middle of a desirable space large enough for two cars, and all the other well known nuisances and accident breeders. A definite, printed code of automobile manners would be valuable to any lot 2703, 2704, 2705 drilling a well on the Central has been curing property located troleum Midway's. The Huntington pany the concern the history of Huntington with interest will do on the Gothard lead Gothard No. 1 has tion almost a year make a 120 bar Central No. 2 is be water, and the hooped back up and made. The Standard Oil ducer on the Bolsa mita No. 1 is attraction in that it is the "Chinese Tunnels" tion, and in a sing this well has incr from a 150 barrels mita producer was The oil is running cutting less than per cent. Bixby N Long Beach field in hard sand. Alarm to 5100 feet. LOCAL AUDIOPPRECIATION That the program theatre last night best was the opinion tended. Jack Rettel the business life a vaudeville fans, was reception as he disbility in his number piano and with tha But his friends a he was not included actors at the Thurrille ville show and fea ning of the perform management consid ten" to be listed w formaners, but hav ber, they now won are not considered vel in Jack's class. The house was f preciative audience, commend the numb attend this evening number will be repaired. MAKE OIL S A linseed oil from native raw m invented in Sweden THE ORANGE COUNTY PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA CALIFORNIA Final Times Tonight-O Feature No. 1 Jack Retlaw In Person, Presenting His Orpheum Novelty Entitled “A Wee Bit o’ Vaudeville” “BILL” KERR Sensational Huntington Beach athlete who will enter Stanford in fall. THEATRES Jack Retlaw is seen in person again today at the California. The photoplay program is featured by "The Good Provider." Rookie Lewis is seen at the Grand theatre in a musical revue with his Jack Retlaw is seen in person again today at the California. The photoplay program is featured by "The Good Provider." Rookie Lewis is seen at the Grand theatre in a musical revue with his sunkist girls. Marie Provost is seen in "Her Night of Nights." The Minstrel Monarchs are to be seen Sunday at the California. HUNTINGTON BEACH SUBSTANTIAL FIELD With the Oil Operators Huntington Beach has settled down to be a good substatial oil field where there will not be any more big gushers brought in perhaps but development will go forward successfully in proven territory. Federal Consolidated, the Kiseau Oil Syndicate, McIntyre Brothers, and the Standard Oil Company brought in new production. The Argonaut Oil Company's Harvey No. 1 completed at 3601 is starting off like a 350 barrel well. The Federal Consolidated after a long and much checked carrerer has its No. 1 ready to go on the pump. Completed at 2770 there is reason to believe that at least a 250 well will be secured. The Kiseau Oil Syndicate completed its initial well at Huntington Beach at a depth of 3730 and got a 125 barrel producer. McIntyre Brothers are now included in the production reports of Huntington Beach. McIntyre Bros. have had as much trouble as is generally allotted to the oil man, but they have come thru it all and placed Reyalty wells 2-2 on production at a 125 barrels. This well was drilled to 2810 and is producing 20 gravity clean oil. Syndicate No. 1 the deep test well failed to get a shut off at 3640-6½ and will be re-cemented. The Central Oil Company one of the old line concerns that has stuck to the development of the old Whitier field has gone into Huntington Beach. The Central has a lease on lots 2703, 2704, 2705, and start drilling a well on Lot 2703 at once. The Central has been fortunea in securing property located near the Petroleum Midway's Pearce holdings. The Huntington Central Oil Company the concern that made the early history of Huntington Beach read with interest will drill a second well on the Gothard lease near Main St. Gothard No. 1 has been on production almost a year and continues to make a 120 barrels. Huntington Central No. 2 is being made to locate water, and the hole is being plugged back up and a series of tests "Cranking Ability" of Battery Is Important "In selecting a battery," said Geo. Ennis, of the local Exide Service Station, "one must bear in mind that its job is to give a short, powerful turn to the engine succen a muscular arm would accomplish on the crank." "This better termed 'cranking ability' which every battery no matter how cheap, must have a sufficient quantity to properly start the engine. It is this starting ability and not ampere hour capacity which a car owner should demand in a battery." Whether the battery has the capacity to keep turning the engine continuously for 15 or 20 minutes is of little importance because the battery in normal service is called upon CHIRUS SHOW REPORT ISSUED (Continued from Page 1) vage value of equipment, etc., carried forward is much higher than the insurance value as indicated and would point out that the net deficit standing at this date will be reduced by aforementioned donation from the county. As interest at 7 per cent must now be provided on total subscription of $14,440.00 I would advise that the present cash balance be reserved for that purpose, relying upon the success of the California Valencia Orange Show continuing to increase and thereby provide funds for the repayment of subscriptions. Respectfully submitted V. D. LOLY LOCAL AUDIENCE APPRECIATES "JACK" That the program at the Califronia theatre last night was one of the best was the opinion of all who attended. Jack Retlaw, a favorite in the business life and now with the vaudeville fans, was given a rousing reception as he displayed unusual ability in his numbers on the banjo, piano and with the black chalk. But his friends are wondering why he was not included in the list of actors at the Thursday night vaudeville show and feared at the beginning of the performance that the management considered him too "rotten" to be listed with the other performers, but having seen his number, they now wonder if the others are not considered too "rank" to travel in Jack's class. The house was filled with an appreciative audience, which will recommend the number to those who attend this evening as Mr. Retlaw's number will be repated. MAKE OIL SUBSTITUTE A linseed oil substitute made from native raw materials has been invented in Sweden. PRESIDENT PRAISES SMALLER COLLEGES NEW CONCORD, O., July 15. America must lead the world in the onward march of civilization, President Harding declared here today, in accepting the honorary degree of doctor of laws from Muskingum College, United Presbyterian school. Before America can lead the world the President said; she must put her own house in order. Mr. Harding praised the small church schools, saying if he had to choose, he would have an America made up of persons from the little colleges. Insurance value as indicated and would point out that the net deficit standing at this date will be reduced by aforementioned donation from the county. As interest at 7 per cent must now be provided on total subscription of $14,440.00 I would advise that the present cash balance be reserved for that purpose, relying upon the success of the California Valencia Orange Show continuing to increase and thereby provide funds for the repayment of subscriptions. Respectfully submitted V. D. LOLY Public Accountant. Disbursements Office Expense ... $977.42 Citrus Department ... 3,503.86 Industrial Department ... 2,367.19 Automobile Department ... 2,235.26 Baby Tent Dept. ... 454.18 Publicity ... 3,375.71 Programs ... 1,006.38 Art Exhibit ... 206.85 Installation ... 7,974.35 Dance Floor ... 306.65 Finance ... 20.00 Concessions ... 223.73 Parade ... 337.46 Admission ... 528.47 Decorations ... 7,267.00 Amusements ... 2,444.45 Awards ... 310.77 Insurance ... 289.82 Balance in Bank ... 1,447.55 Receipts Subscriptions ... 4,740.00 Donations ... 1,500.00 Gate Receipts ... 18,968.85 Industrial Space ... 4,377.50 Automobile Space ... 3,088.50 Concession Space ... 2,378.10 Parking Space ... 129.00 Baby Tent ... 275.00 Programs ... 1,683.39 Lights ... 387.19 Dance Floor ... 225.52 Salvage Sold ... 524.05 TOBACO CULTIVATION Under the direction of an expert engaged by the government the Australian state of Victoria has revived the cultivation of tobacco and is producing a better leaf than formerly. CALIFORNIA Saturday, July 15, 1922 ORNIA ANAHEIM'S CINEMA TEMPLE BEAUTIFUL night-Great Double Program Feature No. 2 aw 'The Good Provider' eum Novelty Powerful Drama Featuring Vera Gordon deville" and Dore Davidson LY—A PIP!!—DIRECT FROM THE ORPHEUM CIRCUIT Tinstrel narchs narchs of Blackface Artistes in All Minstrel History—Every One a Star MAN, CHARLES WHITE, BILLY TATE and CHARLES UDELL •ALL TOPLINERS HERE On the same program—a Superb Picture—One of the Best ever presented in this city. USOE TOMORROW MATINEE ONLY A. E. F. YOUTH WINS KING WITH VOICE LONDON, July 15.—Weyland Echols, a young American who first discovered he had vocal ability while serving in the A. E. F., has startled London by making his debut before the king and queen and winning their applause. Echols, whose home is in California, stood in the wings at Dally's Theatre during a charity matinee hoping that some performer would fail to appear and that he might be given an opportunity to make his debut in London before the king and queen. Fate was kind and Sir Charles Hawtrey was unable to appear. On a moment's notice young Echols was substituted and won instant fame. FIGHT FOR SHORT SKIRTS 4000 YEARS PARIS, July 14.—Controversy over the relative merits of revealed dimpled knees and ankle-length skirts has not ended the vogue of long skirts on the Rue de la Paix. Women folks have been fighting for short skirts for 4,000 years or more and with a 50-50 success. Short skirts will be back and between times there'll be longer skirts. For proof view the recently discovered statues of ancient Egyptians Some of them wore ankle-length gowns and in others the bottom of the skirt was suspiciously near the knee caps. And 4,000 years hence, doubtless photographs of present-day flappers won't be so very startling. Grand Theatre TONIGHT ONLY A Brand New Show—Anaheim’s Favorite Rookie | Snuffy| Lewis and His Sunkist Girls IN A PEPPY—JAZZY Musical Revue Here’s a lot of class — Also a good picture, too. MARIE PROVOST in “HER NIGHT OF NIGHTS” ONE VAUDEVILLE SHOW ONLY Starting at 8:45—Picture Starts at 7:15.