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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1922 August

oc-plain-dealer 1922-08-21

1922-08-21 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 4 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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DAILY GREETINGS TO OUR READERS So unto hibh-born soils the Truth shall come, And now over all the earth to low-liest minds Shall be reflected, and the glorious day Shall bring to hearts now cold, and lips now dumb. New life and holy love—the love which binds Soul unto soul, and lights Earth's darkest way. Annie Louise Brackenridge. The pure home is one of the richest assets of this Nation. Shorten the ballot, and give the voter a fair show to vote intelligently. In too many instances a blantant demagogue occupies a seat in Congress where a true statesman should be. Europe is reaping the whirlwind. It sowed the wind when it engaged in the World War. That clamitous folly will plague mankind for generations to come. Show your interest in the schools and in the work of teachers and pupils. There is no more important functioning in this Nation than that of the schools. The people are independent in politics this year, and it is a blessed thing that they are. Good citizenship is dwelling more upon patriotism and less upon partyism. Dollar-wheat will not last long, in all probability. Farmers, while not peased, are undismaped. They know that prospects are good for much better prices for this cereal. Through conciliatory processes, and by arbitration, if necessary, industrial disputes should be settled. This would be fair and equitable for capital and labor, and also fair and equitable for the public. PLAYGROUND RESOURCES OF CALIFORINA The years come and go, with their mutations — their frequent changes in human conditions and in the fortunes of men. But amid the vicissitudes of life and of time, California holds its pre-eminence and will hold its pre-eminence as a playground for the world. They come here from four quarters of the earth to throw off dull care and to rejuvenate themselves. They find here that almost infinite variety of scenery that captivates the sightseer. They find here the mild and equable climate which permits of outdoor life throughout the year. They find a magnificent system of good roads spanning the state, and traversable trails into canyons and mountain wilds. They find that man has supplemented the grand work of Nature, and made God's beautiful and sublime handiwork accessible. They find almost numberless ways and means of entertaining delighting and rehabilitating themselves. And so it will be always. WHEAT CROP OF STATE IS RECORD-BREAKING California is producing approximately 15,000,000 bushels of wheat this year. Last year's crop was 8,355,000 bushels. The average yield of what for the whole state this year, is the largest on record. The principal wheat-producing regions are the Sacramento an San Joaquin valleys. This really large and important yield of wheat coupled with the many and diverse productions of other kinds of grain and horticultural crops, denotes the wondrous volume of variety of California's productiveness. Facts about California's productions read like romance. It seems more like a land of enchantment than an actual matter-of-fact commonwealth, where persons and conditions and productions are real. astrosously so long as labor and capi- Dollar-wheat will not last long, in all probability. Farmers, while not peased, are undismaped. They know that prospects are good for much better prices for this cereal. Through conciliatory processes, and by arbitration, if necessary, industrial disputes should be settled. This would be fair and equitable for capital and labor, and also fair and equitable for the public. So long as this Nation needs formidable defenses, the Pacific should be defended strongly, both on land and water. It is upon this side of the Nation that attack would come, if attack there were. California should have at least one of the great political conventions of 1924. Los Angeles and San Francisco should agree as to which one shall have the united support of the state, and the one which is agreed upon should be backed strongly. This really large and important yield of wheat coupled with the many and diverse productions of other kinds of grain and horticultural crops, denotes the wondrous volume of variety of California's productiveness. Facts about California's productions read like romance. It seems more like a land of enchantment than an actual matter-of-fact commonwealth, where persons and conditions and productions are real. astrosly so long as labor and capital indulge, in desperate struggles such as the coal and rail strikes. There will be no permanent relief until the spirit of harmony and cooperation is made to prevail in the realy of industry. The unspeakable distresses which the World War brought upon all nations and peoples, directly and indirectly, should be an overwhelming influence to detr from a recurrence of that ghastly struggle. If ever the world had incentive to be peaceful, it has now. We repair Watches & Jewelry right. DIAMONDS - JEWELRY RELIABLE WATCH, CLOCK WATCHES - SILVERWARE The Jewel Box "Gifts That Please" DIAMONDS - JEWELRY WATCHES - SILVERWARE RELIABLE WATCH, CLOCK AND JEWELRY REPAIRING The Jewel Box Gifts That Please Arthur A. Coe Prop ANAHEIM CALIF. PEACHES FOR SALE Elberta, Hale and Bennett free stone varieties. Pears and Jelly Grapes. Get your fruit at the orchard. Those desiring freestone peaches better secure them this coming week as next week will end the season. Five miles west on County Road, one-fourth miles south on Western, watch for our sign on the County Boulevard directing you where to come. S. HUFF EDITORIAL Abe Martin New York Letter by Larry Jensen Price NEW YORK, Aug. 21.—A fierce and unmistakeable feud is on in the motoring district surrounding Manhattan. Which said will wipe out its opponents remains to be seen. Maybe it's because the cars pour oil on the sweet clover along the highways and maybe not. But something has aroused a deadly hatred of all motorists in the breast of every bee in Westchester-co and Long Island. One man is in the hospital, one car in the junk shop, and other men thanking their stars for lucky escapes, and the was only begun. The sting of a bee doesn't sound like a fatality, but when it comes just as a driver is concentrating on a dangerous curve in the road, it becomes pretty dangerous. Never have motorists around here been attacked as the bees are attacking them this summer. A friend of mine who has been spending the past two years in roving the world was telling me various interesting things about her travels the other day. It was exciting, much of it, and some of it wonderful, but somehow nothing pricked my fancy more than the news that she had met the chief of police in Shanghai—and he was a good Irishman named O'Brien! The age of childhood! If ever in the past poor little things were brot up suppressed and unappreciated under the slogan of being "seen and not heard," that time is past. From theaters to our biggest and best hotels, nowadays they are catered to and thought about at every step. The latest thing is the wading pool. The child visiting In New York City is going to have more country joys here after than most children living in the country. The Hotel Commonwealth, now under construction, is putting in a wading pool for its juvenile guests, to be not over three feet deep and to contain water which has been filtered and purified. There will be nurses. LITERARY OLPMPIC CVONTESTS New York Evening Post Peots, painters, and musicians, as well as athletes, it is reported, are to compete heerafter in the Olympic games. This is a belated improvement. The ancient Greeks would hardly have thought the Olympic contests worth while if they had been limited to athletics. Certainly the modern games will gain immensely by the introduction of rival versifiers and novelists. Following the broad jump, for instance, spectators may be invited to witness a poetry competition. Here it would be safe to bet upon our own Vachel Lindsey, who has a way of reciting verse that makes it sound as if something phenomenal were happening. Novelists could not be allowed to read an entire volume, but they could select their weepiest or cleverest or most scandalous unpublished passages and do their worst. Handicaps would be imposed in accordance with the respective lung power of the contestants. It would be obviously unfair, for example, to compel Indiana's newest lady poet to compete from scratch against the open-air versifier of the Ozarks. For colyumists a special contest might be arranged, the prize to go to the one who read another colyumist's work with the greatest gusto. TOWN IN REVIEW CENSORS A campaign is started to censor the manuscripts of writers who skate on thin ice. John S. Sumner, secretary of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice, makes the announcement. Some publishers are said to have agreed, and it looks like business. The censorship is badly needed. But the root of the evil will not be written in such a way as to prevent it from affecting public opinion. Baseball Standings PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W. L. P.c. San Francisco 89 53 627 Vernon 82 56 594 Los Angeles 79 62 560 Salt Lake 67 73 479 Oakland 65 74 468 Seattle 63 75 457 Portland 57 81 413 Sacramento 56-84 400 Yesterday's Results CENSORS A campaign is started to censor the manuscripts of writers who skate on thin ice. John S. Sumner, secretary of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice, makes the announcement. Some publishers are said to have agreed, and it looks like business. The censorship is badly needed. But the root of the evil will not be gotten to until a way is devised to censor the emotional appetites of fiction readers. They support the traffic. Like prohibition—the real problem is the drinker, not the drink. MISS US Dim, shadowy lights, Soft, moist kisses; A few nights of that— And the Miss is a Mrs. Then— Hard household duties, Infrequently kissed— A few weeks of that— And the Mrs. is missed. So— A trip to Nevada, Reno's the tryst, A few months of that— And the missed is a miss! What is the handiest tool for a cashier?—W. W. M. The adz. What bird do the hulksters carry on their wagons?—C. W. The hawk. Please tell me how to put a ribbon on a typewriter;—S. G. Forget it. Put a string of pearls on her. QUESTIONS MR. GREY CANNOT ANSWER Is photography in this country at a standstill or is is developing?—W. V. O. Are there any fur capes along the Atlantic coast?—F. M. S. What kind of powder and rouge should I use in making up my mind?—Gwendolyn. Please tell me where I can find a key to open a deadlock.—H. H. Does it weaken coffee to strain it?—Mrs. G. He prest her to his manly chest, The maiden felt distress; For all her boasted lovli-ness, Lay scattered on his vest. TOWN IN REVIEW Fatal wave of heat hits the east. Anaheim still has seven days until the election. Mr. Dam Fino is registered at the San Diego jail. We've heard him Plaster Sand and Gravel Baseball Standings PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W. L. P.c. San Francisco 89 53 .627 Vernon 82 56 .594 Los Angeles 79 62 .560 Salt Lake 67 73 .479 Oakland 65 74 .468 Seattle 63 75 .457 Portland 57 81 .413 Sacramento 56-84 .400 Yesterday's Results Los Angeles, 5-2; Oakland, 4-3. Vernon, 2-4; San Francisco, 0-3. (Second game 17 innings.) Sacramento, 3-6; Salt Lake, 2-7. Portland, 5-7; Seattle, 8-5. AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. P.c. New York 70 47 .598 St. Louis 69 48 .490 Detroit 62 55 .530 Cleveland 61 59 .508 Chicago 57 59 .491 Washington 54 62 .466 Philadelphia 47 65 .420 Boston 45 70 .391 eYesterday's Results New York, 7; Chicago, 5. Cleveland, 2; Washington, 0. 12 innings.) No other games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. P.c. New York 69 46 .600 St. Louis 66 50 .569 Chicago 65 51 .560 Cincinnati 64 54 .542 Pittsburg 60 53 .531 Brooklyn 54 59 .478 Philadelphia 40 68 .370 Boston 37 74 .323 Yesterday's Results New York, 5; Chicago, 4. St. Louis, 9; Philadelphia, 6. Cincinnati, 10-4; Brooklyn, 5-3; (second game 10 innings.) AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. P.c. St. Paul 78 44 .639 Minneapolis 70 53 .569 Milwaukee 70 56 .556 Indianapolis 64 57 .529 Kansas City 62 62 .500 Louisville 60 65 .480 Toledo 46 77 .374 Columbus 44 80 .355 Yesterday's Results Columbus, 11; Milwaukee, 8. Louisville, 2-0; Minneapolis, 1-2. Kansas City, 2-4; Toledo, 1-6. St. Paul, 4: Indianapolis, 2. WESTERN LEAGUE W. L. P.c. St. Joseph 80 48 .625 Tulsa 81 49 .622 Wichita 68 59 .535 Sioux City 66 58 .532 Omaha 66 65 .504 Oklahoma City 58 71 .450 Des Moines 46 .79 .368 Denver 46 82 .355 Yesterday's Results: Oklahoma City, 20; Denver, 8. Des Moines, 5; Wichita, 1. Tulsa, 7-6; Omaha, 6-0. St. Joseph, 9; Sioux City, 4. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Buffalo, 7-7; Jersey City, 1-6. Does it weaken coffee to strain it? —Mrs. G. He prest her to his manly chest, The maiden felt distress; For all her boasted lovli-ness, Lay scattered on his vesat. TOWN IN REVIEW Fatal wave of heat hits the east. Anaheim still has seven days until the election. Mr. Dam Fino is registered at the San Diego jail. We've heard him mentioned when people asked who they would vote for. Tom Sims says: If we all did as we pleased, there wouldn't be enough autos. ANAHEIM NEEDS A CARLOAD Interesting device for preventing auto speeding is invented by Fragano and Villa, Italians. Rome thinks of adopting it. The speed regulator, which can be attached to any car, is said to slow down the machine automatically as soon as speed reaches ten miles an hour. Then, the harder the driver steps on the gas, the slower he goes. An invention of this sort could work wonders, prescribed by the courts for chronic speeders. Like giving a gunman blank cartridges. PLASTER Sand and Gravel Crushed Rock Hile Rock and Garvel Co. Phone 893-W Anaheim DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Ambulance HUDDLE FUNERAL HOME WALTER S. HUDDLE, Director Corner Lemon and Broadway Telephones 870J—870M Don't Forget That The Ever-Ready Truck & Transfer Co. Is still able to do your hauling of any description. Contract hauling a specialty. Get our price. O. J. LINNARTZ, Prop. Residence 211 E. Sycamore St. WATCH CHILDREN'S EYES Neglect often means serious defects in vision, education and health. Our examination will tell. 179 W. Center St. DR.W.R.BLAKELY OPTOMETRIST ANAHEIM CALIFORNIA Yesterday's Results: Oklahoma City, 20; Denver, 8. Des Moines, 5; Wichita, 1. Tulsa, 7-6; Omaha, 6-0. St. Joseph, 9; Sioux City, 4. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Buffalo, 7-7; Jersey City, 1-6. Baltimore, 8-7; Syracuse, 7-5. Toronto, 4-7; Newark, 3-4. Rochester, 11; Reading, 8. TEXAS LEAGUE Dallas, 6-6; Beaumont, 0-3. Galveston, 5; Fort Worth, 2. San Antonio, 10-0; Shreveport, 2-5 Wichita Falls, 5; Houston, 1. J. E. Rodden, insurance, Phone 71. STEINWAY The Best is the Cheapest. Easy Terms. F. SIEGEL 422 West Center Street MONDAY, AUGUST 21ST. 1922 Subscription rate—In No. Orange-co. Per yr. $3; six months $1.75 Entered at the Postoffice at Anaheim, Cal., as second-class matter ELKS WINDUP SCHEDULE WINNING LAST GAME 13-5 ANAHEIM'S champs romped home with another win yesterday afternoon at the high school field, sending the rejuvenated Huntington Park lineup home with the small end of a 13 to 5 score. It was a fitting finale for the windup of the schedule in this division, previous seasonal records by winning every game. The next on the program is a best two-in-three series with Pasadena, the titleholders of the other southland division, to determine who will represent So. Cal. in the battle with northern champs for the state Elks pennant, the game to be played at the annual convention in Santa Monica early in October. Manager Billy Knott is still holding out for the Vernon ball park as the neutral location for the series with Pasadena and for the winner to take all the gate receipts. This point will have been threshed out with Manager Urey of the Crown City Bills by Tuesday evening. Manager Knott rightly insists that for such an important series, the best playing field available should be secured. Both the Anaheim high school field and Brookside park at Pasadena necessitate numerous ground rules which are always unsatisfactory. Also, while Pasadena may turn out by thousands to Brookside park, when it comes to passing that hat, nine out of ten have left their pocketbooks at home. But to get back to yesterday's pastime, Huntington Park started off with pep, scoring two in the first on a wild throw, walk and single. It looked like an interesting handicap for the home boys. But not for long Ray Bush, leadoff for the locals, lifted the first ball pitched by Schatzlein over the fence for four-base clout. Ramage followed with a double and scored on Glenn Callan's single, tying the score. Thereafter, there was nothing to worry about, as the locals piled up three more counters in the second while Huhtington Park could make but one in that round. AB. R. H. O. A. E. Frost, lf. ...4 0 1 0 0 0 Brown, rf. ...4 1 0 0 0 0 Robertshaw, 3 ...3 1 0 2 3 0 Haskell, ss. ...3 0 0 5 2 0 McGarvey, cf. ...4 1 3 2 0 0 Jones, 2 ...4 1 1 3 0 1 Wilkins, c. ...4 1 2 5 1 0 DeWeese, 1 ...1 0 0 3 0 1 Schatzlein, p. ...4 0 0 2 2 1 Totals ...31 5 7 24 8 2 Anaheim— AB. R. H. O. A. E. A. Bush, ss. ...2 3 1 0 2 1 Ramage, stt. ...5 2 3 6 0 0 Dunn, 3rd ...5 1 1 0 0 0 G. Callan, cf. ...4 1 2 1 0 0 B. Callan, c. ...3 1 0 13 2 0 D. Bush, 2 ...4 3 25 1 1 Schrott, rf. ...5 2 20 0 0 Coffman, lf. ...4 0 2200 Callahan, p. ...3 00020 Hughes, p. ...200010 Totals ...37 13 132783 Score by innings: Huntington Park ...210101000—5 Anaheim ...23101303x—13 Hits by innings: Huntington Park ...110112010—7 Anaheim ...33100303x—13 Summary: Innings pitched — by Callahan; home runs, R. Bush, D. Bush; Jones; 2-base hits, Ramage, McGarvey, Schrott; sacrifice hits, DeWeese; hit by pitcher, D. Bush, R. Bush; G. Callan; wild pitche, Callahan, Schatzlein; bases on balls, off Callahan; off Schatzlein; off Hughes; struck out, by Callahan; by Schatzlein; by Hughes; Umpire Ferguson. LOWERY WILL MEET LOWERY WILL MEET HUNT FRIDAY NIGHT Jack Lowery will meet Willie Hunt in the main event on the Friday evening. Matchmaker Billy Darnley has signed these two good battlers for his feature and it should prove to be the one best bet of the season. Lowery, in his one appearance here, made many friends by the great fight he put up against Mike O'Leary, holding the "Eighting Harp" to a well earned draw after four of the hardest fought rounds ever witnessed in the local arena. Jack is now in splendid trim and if he gets by Hunt next Friday in good style, he says he will meet the best of men at his weight. Hunt is expected to give the former "Frisco" scraper a real battle as Willie is going great guns at present. He is in rare form right now and the Lowery figure to step fast all the way. Hunt's best bouts here were on the two occasions that he mixed with Young Dudley, the local colored flash, and whom he held to a draw on each occasion. Willie is after a crack at O'Leary and has been promised the chance if he gets by Lowery. He has a draw to his credit with Mike and was loser in one instance. Both these battles having been fought at Vernon recently and both were reported fast and furious. There are to be six bouts on the bill this week and each one promises action galore. Kid Louie and Ted Levin will feature in the sent-windup and that announcement alone should pack the area to its fullest capacity. There is also to be a special event between a couple of heavyweights that should bring the house down. Darnley has signed up a big fellow who calls himself Young Jack Dillon and whom Fred Windser, the discoverer of Jack Dempsey, believes will be the next heavyweight champion of the world. But not if George Meadows has his way, for little George has been selected to give the young giant his initial tryout. Anaheim Elks will have the honor this year of entertaining the pinplers of the So. Cal. Elks Bowling League at a big dinner and ball. Each season at the conclusion of the league, such an affair is held as a fitting aftermath. The league closes for Anaheim teams with the local No. 1 crew meeting Pasadena here Friday evening. Baldwin Refrigerators Save Iec. Stroup-Barner Furniture Co. August is your last chance to buy back east excursion tickets Santa Fe $86.00 round trip Chicago proportionate reductions to many other points On sale daily to August 31. Limited for return to Oct. 31 Liberal Stopovers Santa Fe all the way insures uniformity of service Fred Harvey Meals Grand Canyon Line