oc-plain-dealer 1922-08-02
Searchable text
THIRD BOUT LOOKS LIKE EXCITING CARD
(By MANLY ART)
Leonard Lee, the flashy 118 pounder from Denver, but who is now making Anaheim his future home, will clash with that very good youngster from over Placentia way, Kid Louie, in the main event of the weekly Friday night card of the Anaheim Athletic Club. This will be their third meeting. They have already met twice, on both occasions a draw was the verdict although there were many of the fans who did not agree with the referee's decision of a draw a couple of weeks ago, they claiming that Louie won a mile. However there was little to choose at the time and as both have been claimoring for a return match since it has been decided by the club's matchmaker that the only thing to do to settle their argument would be to grant them their wish and let them go to it once more in the hopes that there will be a decisive winner. Both boys have been in constant training—Lee going over to Murrietta Hot Springs for a few days in preparation of conditioning himself for a grueling struggle next Friday. Louie is reported as being in the best shape and form that he has as yet been in since he started boxing just a short year ago. The Placentia boy has been rapidly coming to the front and with a few more fights tucked under his belt should be capable of meeting and holding his own with the best of 'em in his weight. Louie only last week fought the main event over at the Covina club and easily beat Ad. Renny, a very good boy, from San Francisco in four fast rounds. Any one who knows anything about the boxing game predicts bright future for the Placentia gangster. If these two game bumps
ROY MABEE TO MEET J. HACKENSCHMIDT
Another wrestler blew into Anahemi yesterday to claim Roy Mabee's scalp, in the person of John Hackenshmidt, of Glendale, formerly of Chicago.
It was decided last evening that Mabee and Hack will meet on the mat at the Grand Theatre, best two falls out of three, time limit. This is going to be a match worth while. Hack and his manager, J. J. Healy, hunted up the local wrestler-rancher and dared him to sign for a chance on the mat. Mabee responded with $200, which Hack's manager immediately covered. They signed articles of agreement and deposited the $400 with the Plai Deater. The winner of this bout will receive the $400, plus the gate receipts, which should be a purse around $800, a sum quite worth wrestling for.
Hackenshmidt is billed as a clever man and is confident of his ability to put the shoulders of Mabee on the mat.
Mabee, who is very clever, thinks otherwise, and will give the audience a good show for its money. Roy is down to 175 pounds and is fit as a fiddle. With the training that he has in mind he will be down to 170 lbs. When he met Sparkes he topped the scales at 192.
Roy is being backed by hundreds of fans from the country all around, and the news of this coming match will be read with interest. When a definite date can be settled, Mabee and Ad Santel will meet.
Mabee must win the match with Hackenshmidt or give up his proposed match with Santel.
Several weeks ago, Joe "Toots" Mondt won a decision over Hackenshmidt at Glendale. Some weeks prior to this Mabee won from Mondt,
Baseball S
PACIFIC COA
San Francisco
Vernon
Los Angeles
Salt Lake
Oakland
Seattle
Portland
Yesterday's
Salt Lake, 5; Lo
San Francisco, 3;
Oakland, 6; Port
Vernon and Seattle
AMERICAN
St Louis
New York
Chicago
Detroit
Cleveland
Washington
Philadelphia
Boston
Yesterday's
St. Louis, 5; Boston
Detroit, 11; Phila
Cleveland, 17; W
New York at Ch
fourth, rain.
NATIONAL
New York
St. Louis
Chicago
Cincinnati
Pittsburg
Brooklyn
Philadelphia
Boston
Yesterday's
Pittsburg, 10; New
Boston, 3; Cincinnati
Chicago at Philadelphia
second, rain.
St. Louis at Brook
SOUTHERN AS
Little Rock, 6; At
Birmingham, 4; C
Memphis, 0; N
(called end third, ra
Nashville, 4; Mobl
INTERNATIONAL
Reading, 3-3; Bal
Toronto, 9; Roche
Other games postpAMERICAN AS
best shape and form that he has as yet been in since he started boxing just a short year ago. The Placentia boy has been rapidly coming to the front and with a few more fights tucked under his belt should be capable of meeting and holding his own with the best of 'em in his weight. Louie only last week fought the main event over at the Covina club and easily beat Ad. Renny, a very good boy, from San Francisco in four fast rounds. Any one who knows anything about the boxing game predicts a bright future for the Placentia Jungster. If these two game bantims set up half the scrap this Friday as they did on their two previous engagements then "fight bugs" are due for another real thriller.
Paddy Dillon, the Santa Ana Bear cat, will take Joe Chency's place on the semi-windup position. Cheney is boxing the main event at Covina with Joe Layman on that date some will be unable to oblige. However, in putting Dillon on the card again, Matchmaker Billy Darnley is showing good judgment as the Santa Ana boy is showing all of his old time class and form once more. He is getting to be a hard boy to beat and if he keeps up his present gait it won't be long before he will get a chance on the top of the card. Paddy is meeting Jimmy Ray, that hard-hitting 125 pounder from Tacoma who put up such a whale of a fight at a recent club show. It locks to be a "humdinger" of a scrap. Three snappy prolims between good mixers will also be down on the bill. The feature one being between "Big Bill" Cordes, the hard-hitting knuckk 'em all dead kid and Pete Burgess, another wicked walloper from Los Angeles. These two huskies are expected to set the crowd dizzy with their punches and the pace they promise to set. Johnny Alexander, a fast 118 pound darkey from the Madison Square Garden club of Los Angeles meets Petey Wagner, a ready willing mixer from Frisco, while Kid Wirt, the Garden Grove boy will tangle Johnny Bush, the local Elks' second baseman and who hits as hard in the ring as he does on the diamond. Plenty of action seems assured for Friday night's bill—the boys are all in daily training and they should set a fast pace.
Plain Dealer for good Job Printing: Plain Dealer for good Job Printing.
ELKS AT BAT MAKE GOOD SHOWING
Manager Billie Knott, of the Elks' ball team has arranged the batting average of the team men and announces the following:
At bat Runs Hits Av.
Pendleton ... 30 11 9 200
Ranage ... 30 5 10 333
Dunn ... 27 9 13 481
G. Callan ... 29 5 11 379
B. Callan ... 30 4 9 300
D. Bush ... 30 7 9 300
R. Bush ... 22 8 6 273
Schrott ... 24 11 9 375
Hughes ... 23 6 6 261
Lewis ... 3 1 0 000
Coffman ... 7 6 5 714
Salveson ... 4 2 1 250
Callahan ... 5 0 0 000
"WOULD-BE" THIEF SUSPECT IS HELD
The preliminary hearing was held before Justice J. B. Cox late yesterday afternoon of Jesus Sargosa, a Mexican, suspected of entering the home in the Talbert vicinity of T. Fujimura, a Japanese. In default of ball of $1,000, Sargosa was held in county jail. The attempted robbery took place two weeks ago, according to Sheriff C. E. Jackson's office. Deputy Sheriffs Herman Zabel and Roy Ballard hurried to Talbert in answer to a summons and found the Japanese scouring the neighborhood, hunting for the would-be thief.
Candidate
JUSTICE OF THE
of Anaheim T
15 Years' Experien
Howard's Or
Your Vote and Support
Primary Election Aug
Excursions
Back East
Revisit old friends and old scenes. Ease
resorts are now at their best.
Specially low excursion fares on sale daily
August 31. Good returning until October
Chicago and return ... $86.00
Omaha and return ... $72.00
Minneapolis and return ... $87.50
Kansas City and return ... $72.00
Denver and return ... $64.00
Salt Lake City and return ... $48.82
AND MANY OTHER
Liberal Stop-Overs and Choice of Route
Los Angeles Limited
Leaves 10:50 A.M. 68 hours straight thru
to Chicago
Continental Limited
Leaves 4:00 P.M. Another fast through
to Chicago
Visit Salt Lake City and Yellowstone Park enAround the world tickets via all steamship
UNION PACIFIC
C. S. BROWNE, G.
419 Bush Street
Santa Ana, California
Telephone 1877
UNION
PACIFIC
SYSTEM
OVERLAND
BASEBALL STANDINGS
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W. L. P.C.
San Francisco ... 75 46.620
Vernon ... 68 50.676
Los Angeles ... 66 56.541
Salt Lake ... 60 59.504
Oakland ... 58 63.479
Seattle ... 54 65.454
Portland ... 50 70.417
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Salt Lake, 5; Los Angeles, 4.
San Francisco, 3; Sacramento, 0.
Oakland, 6; Portland, 5.
Vernon and Seattle traveling.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. P.C.
St Louis ... 58 41.586
New York ... 57 44.564
Chicago ... 53 46.535
Detroit ... 54 47.535
Cleveland ... 53 50.515
Washington ... 45 53.459
Philadelphia ... 39 57.406
Boston ... 39 60.394
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
St. Louis, 5; Boston, 2.
Detroit, 11; Philadelphia, 4.
Cleveland, 17; Washington, 3.
New York at Chicago called end fourth, rain.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. P.C.
New York ... 58 39.598
St. Louis ... 60 41.594
Chicago ... 53 46.541
Cincinnati ... 53 48.525
Pittsburg ... 49 47.510
Brooklyn ... 47 49.497
Philadelphia ... 35 57.380
Boston ... 33 62.347
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Pittsburg, 10; New York, 2.
Boston, 3; Cincinnati, 2.
Chicago at Philadelphia, called end second, rain.
ST. Louis at Brooklyn, rain.
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
Little Rock, 6; Atlanta, 3.
Birmingham, 4; Chattanooga, 2.
Memphis, 0; New Orleans, 0 (called end third, rain.)
Nashville, 4; Mobile, 13.
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Reading, 3-3; Baltimore, 2-2; Toronto, 9; Rochester, 8.
Other games postponed, rain.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
GRAND THEATRE TO BE RENOVATED
Beginning on or about Sept. 1,
when the lease of the West Coast Theaters, Inc., expires, the United Theaters, Inc., of Los Angeles, which has taken a 10-year lease, will renovate the New Grand Theater and, as soon as the building is ready, re-open it as a motion picture house. The improvements will consist for the most part of re-decoration and retiring of the interior.
Arrangements have been concluded with leading motion picture distributors, according to reports current today, for the release of some of the best current productions, and Anaheim, because of its proximity to Los Angeles, will be given opportunity of witnessing the very latest pictures available as soon after their release as possible.
William Falkenstein, local merchant and owner of the house, arrived in New York yesterday on the American Liner Manchuria and is expected to reach here not later than Aug. 15. Falkenstein gave intimations concerning the change of lease before he left town on April 2 for his trip to Europe.
Falkenstein will return via the Canadian Pacific, making a few brief stops en route at prominent pleasure resorts.
GERMANY ORDERS REACTIONARIES OUT
BERLIN, Aug. 2. — In the face of the brewing Bavarian storm which threatens to assume secessionist fury the German government today has begun a merciless "housecleaning." Officials of the government said they recognized the necessity of cementing the structure of the republic which has just passed through a terrific crisis that showed how precarious some of the pillars of state still are.
Backed by the defense of the republic act, which will become effective Saturday, the government proposes to "clean out" the monarchist strongholds. All persons of reactionary tendencies, who hold public positions, will be removed and supplanted by republicans.
CHINA IS POORER THRU MILITARY ORGY
PEKING, Aug. 2.—Just one definite result is apparent after China's annual political and military orgy.
China is poorer.
As thoroughly as gunpowder, political intrigue and public wastefulness can do it, the country has been driven one step and almost the last step toward large foreign loans and consequent financial supervision.
Other results, and among them some good ones, there may be, but they are not now apparent.
The period of fear preceding the war, the ten days of actual warfare and the recovery period took a solid month out of China's producing year.
Merchants in that period refused to ship goods for fear trains would be seized by soldiers. Then the roads were cut by armies and even the cheaper commodities were not transported locally. Money was withdrawn from banks and secreted and stocks of merchandise in the war area were hidden. Cutting of telegraph lines paralyzed business throughout the country.
"TRIALS OF A RECRUIT"
"Texas" Cassidy, just out of the hospital, and not yet discharged from the service, is in Anaheim today, selling copies of his own work, which he wrote while in the hospital," The Trials of a Recruit." He was wounded while overseas, and has a scar on his face to show it. The story of his experiences is very interesting. He lives at Long Beach.
WHAT'S MATTER WITH USING FORDS?
DETROIT, Aug. 2.—Health and sanitation of this city is threatened by a strike of practically the entire force of the city's garbage collectors and drivers. Two hundred and fifty-four of the 260 men on the job are out protesting against a recent cut in their wages from $5.50 a day to $5.The garbage collectors of the city recently organized and armored themselves with the American Federation of Labor.
OFFICIAL DAILYPUT TO SEVERE TEST
HANNAH L. HORWITZ
Candidate for
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
of Anaheim Township
15 Years' Experience in Judge Howard's Office.
Your Vote and Support Appreciated.
Primary Election August 29, 1922.
I THANK YOU.
MINES CO. TO GIVE $500 IN AWARDS
Five hundred shares of stock in the Gold Link Mines Company, par value one dollar per share, will be given away by the agent on Aug. 10 on the completion of a guessing contest announced today. This stock is fully paid, non-forfeitable and non-assessable, the later feature being particularly attractive.
Features of the contest are detailed elsewhere in this issue of the Plain Dealer.
First prize for the best guess will be 250 shares, second 150 and third 100 shares of the stock, which is held at the Golden State National Bank.
Sales have been heavy, the company's representative here said.
DETROIT, Aug. 2. — Health and sanitation of this city is threatened by a strike of practically the entire force of the city's garbage collectors and drivers. Two hundred and fifty-four of the 260 men on the job are out protesting against a recent cut in their wages from $5.50 a day to $5. The garbage collectors of the city recently organized and affirmed themselves with the American Federation of Labor.
OFFICIAL DAILY PUT TO SEVERE TEST
WASHINGTON, Aug. 2. — Just suppose that on one of these hot, sultry days you were working in a room where there were dozens of bottles of real, honest-to-goodness beer.
And your throat seemed lined with blotting paper, and you had a thirst like a camel at the fag end of an eight-day drouth.
Could you muster up enough power to swat Temptation squarely between the eyes and say: "No, I won't touch a drop?"
If you can't do this you couldn't qualify for the position of W. V. Linder, who, by all odds, holds the most difficult job in Washington. Linder is chief of the prohibition bureau's chemical laboratory, and every day he finds a lot of real beer in the stuff that comes to him for analysis.
Yet the law prohibits him from taking any of it.
Patent medicines, flavoring extracts and all sorts of concoctions also are tested at the laboratory to find if they contain more than the legal alcoholic content.
East
and old scenes. Eastern
are now at their best.
Pression fares on sale daily until
returning until October 31.
d return ...$86.00
l return ...$72.00
s and return ...$87.50
y and return ...$72.00
l return ...$64.00
City and return ...$48.82
MANY OTHERS
vers and Choice of Routes
Leles Limited
M. 68 hours straight through
to Chicago
ental Limited
Another fast through train
to Chicago
and Yellowstone Park en Route
tickets via all steamship lines
PACIFIC
S. BROWNE, G. A.
419 Bush Street
Santa Ana, California
Telephone 1877
UNION
PACIFIC
SYSTEM
OVERLAND
MOORER
STATARY ORGY
2. — Just one deficated after China's
and military orgy.
is gunpowder, polipublic wastefulness
has been driven
just the last step, toloan loans and conseservision.
and among them
there may be, but
apparent.
Seear preceding the
of actual warfare
period took a solid
man's producing year.
A period refused to
trains would be
Then the roads
ties and even the
tes were not transmoney was withand secreted and
rise in the war area
setting of telegraph
business throughout
MOVE LONG BEACH STATION
Reciting that the property has
changed from an industrial to a
high-class rental district, the Southern Pacific applied to the Railroad
Commission for permission to remove
freight station facilities and traction
spurs from the eastern part of Long
Beach near Alamitos avenue to a location just west of the flood control
channel. The company states that the
Long Beach Milling Company and
the San Pedro Lumber Company are
also preparing to move from the district and that the Salt Lake railroad
is arranging to abandon its freight
station facilities at Alamitos avenue
near Second street. As a part of the
proposed change of location of the
freight facilities the Pacific Electric
Railway Company requested permisision to construct three tracks at
grade across Pico avenue in Long
Beach.
MAGNET HANDLES METAL
An electro magnet with a long, flat face has been designed by a Chicago man for handling sheet metal.
'UTES INCREASE
IN PAST DECADE
DURANGO, Colo., Aug. 2. — The census of the Ute Indians on the Southern Agency, in Southwestern Colorado, shows a slight gain for the past ten-year period.
Superinendent McKean and Dr.
Leforge, the agency physician, have
just completed a survey that shows greatly improved health conditions on the reservation.
Tuberculosis, the dread disease of the red man, is being slowly stamped out, as is trachoma, the survey indicates.
At no time during the past six years have there been more than three deaths in one year due to tuberculosis.
Trachoma, which at one time was prevalent among the Indians, is now under control, and the eye affliction is rapidly being overcome.
Superintendent McKean declared that the Utes are becoming civilized at a rapid pace, adding that more than 50 per cent of the Indians on the Southern Ute Reservation are now self-supporting.
OWNERS of delivery cars, small trucks and taxicabs have found that the same strong construction which enables Red-Tops to roll up surprising mileage records for small cars on rough roads will show astounding economy on cars used commercially, where incessant use under heavy loads soon breaks down other tires.
Nowhere else can you find the sturdy combination of the extra ply of fabric and the specially compounded heavy red tread which has built the Red-Top reputation.
There's a Fisk Tire of extra value in every size.
on cars used commercially, where incessant use under heavy loads soon
breaks down other tires.
Nowhere else can you find the sturdy
combination of the extra ply of fabric
and the specially compounded heavy
red tread which has built the Red-Top
reputation.
There's a Fisk Tire of extra value in every size,
for car, truck or speed wagon
Time to Retire?
(Buy Fisk)
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CLINCHER TIRE
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Ply of Fabric
Extra
Heavy Tread
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