oc-plain-dealer 1922-08-25
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PAGE EIGHT
THE OL
Youthful Tennis Stars Who Shine This Season
Left, Robert and Howard Kinsey, the California doubles team just after they annexed finals. They are considered a strong contender for national honors. Right, Vince Catt won the Southhampton singles. He has been chosen a member of the Davis Cup Team.
WATCH YOUR FRUIT!
M. G. Harris, of Garden Grove, minus 50 boxes of oranges as the result of a visit of a passing truck driver. The fruit was left in grove and is worth $135. The boxes were loaded on the Chapman side of the grove. Herman Zabel, deputy sheriff and fingerprint expert, found on examination. The boxes were labeled "Garden Grove Citrus Ass'n."
DOUBLE KEYBOARD PIANO
A piano has been invented in Scotland with a double keyboard, which enables a player to reach octaves without stretching his fingers.
IRON DEVICE
To hold the cord of an electric iron out of the way a wire frame to be slipped over the end of an ironing board has been invented.
OCEAN FRIE REVIVING
With Ocean frie real boost a few Standard Oil Co barrel well at Surf producer wa and is a flowing was put on produ
WATCH YOUR FRUIT!
M. G. Harris, of Garden Grove, mines 50 boxes of oranges as the result of a visit of a passing truck driver. The fruit was left in grove and is worth $135. The boxes were loaded on the Chapman side of the grove, Herman Zabl, deputy sheriff and fingerprint expert, found on examination. The boxes were labeled "Garden Grove Citrus Ass'n."
DOUBLE KEYBOARD PIANO
A piano has been invented in Scotland with a double keyboard, which enables a player to reach octaves without stretching his fingers.
IRON DEVICE
To hold the cord of an electric iron out of the way a wire frame to be slipped over the end of an ironing board has been invented.
Grand Theatre
SATURDAY 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.
Picture Starts at 7:15
"WILL ROGERS"
"The POOR RELATIONS"
One Vaudeville Show 8:45
BASE BALL
Anaheim, the only team with a 1000 percent score.
Anaheim Elks
BASE BALL
Anaheim, the only team with a 1000 percent score.
Anaheim Elks
VS.
‘Dutch’ Ralls’ All-Stars
of Los Angeles
Sunday, Aug. 27, at 2:30 P. M.
AT ANAHEIM HIGH SCHOOL FIELD
DON'T MISS THIS GAME!
Startlingly Go
Better Buy Your C
ANAHEIM NO. ONES STRONG AT FINISH
Spares and Strikes
It's too bad the So. Cal. Elks Bowling league has come to a close. For Anaheim No. Ones have just started going good the last few matches. Last night, in the final clash of the schedule, locals took two in three from Pasadena No. 1.
Tonight Anaheim bowlers will be represented at a meeting in the German-American Bank-bldg, Los Angeles, to elect officers of the Los Angeles City Bowling Assn., for the ensuing year and to set a date for the Los Angeles city tourney the last of September or first of October, just before the fall league opens.
Sunday evening an Anaheim team composed of Karam, Raymond, Hefern, Efker and Yoern will go to Pasadena to participate in a one-day sweepstakes event opening the new Pasadena Bowling Academy, owned by Herman Levy and Roy Garrison, who have moved their eight alleys from Richmond. Two years ago, Richmond bowlers grabbed the championship of the Pacific Coast Bowling Congress.
"Bugs," Raymond well-known sportsman, has returned from a motor trip to Los Angeles and way points. Today he was a devotee of golf at the Newport links, teeing off at 3 a.m. for a morning constitutional. Next week he plans another extended motor trip over the southland, if he can borrow a car. He has deferred his departure on a much-needed vacation to his former home at Portland until Wednesday, believing the railroad strike situation will have cleared up by that time.
"I travel by train or motor every time," says "Bugs."
SNAPPY MENU FOR FANS THIS EVENING
Folks, it sure looks like Manager Billy Darnley has arranged another very choice "monu" of four-round boxing bouts for his loyal "Fight Fans" this evening. Every number, from the curtain raiser to the main event, has "class" stamped all over it and if any of the settos fall down it will be through no fault of poor matchmaking on the part of Darnley. Each fracas is bound to be a real fight and the cash customers ought to go home a well satisfied bunch.
The boys report themselves all in good shape and just rarin' to go. The main event between these two good welters, Jack Lowery, the new and promising local star, and Willie Hunt of Los Angeles, appears to be exciting no end of interest among local fans. Willie is going right after the local boy and says he will win in short order. Jack, on the other hand, says Willie is talking too much—that's all. Just one word fits nicely—fight.
Ted Levin and Kid Loule mix in the semi at 118 pounds and that old fur is sure to fly. A couple of heavies are Jack Dillon and George Meadows, who tangle in the special event.
Tex Jones and our old friend, J. Wallopin' Wilson, will shake hands and then proceed to put the crusher on one another. Young Kid McCoy, no relation to the famous "Kid" of old, expects to show Chuck West that he, West, is a better dishwasher than he is fighter. They are flyweights.
Eddie Dale, from Placentia, and Joe Mackey will raise the curtain at 130 pounds; it ought to be a
OCEAN FRONT WELL REVIVING INTEREST
With Oil Operators
The ocean front section of the Huntington Beach field was given a real boost a few days ago when the Standard Oil Co. brought in a 600 barrel well at Surf No. 2. The big Surf producer was completed at 4,430 and is a flowing well. Surf No. 1 was put on production by the Standard all of a year ago at 3,759, but failed to make anything like commercial production. Surf No. 2 proves the existence of a deeper and much more productive sand along the ocean front. The success of the Standard's Surf No. 2 may mean the revival of activities by the Union at Newlands 1, and the National Exploration Co., now a subsidiary of Shell Co. on the Newlands-Borchard lease. It will also be remembered that Irving V. Augur "doped" the ocean section of Huntington Beach an oil field at the time the excitement started. Two years ago.
The recent drops in the price of crude have seen the cause of a number of the smaller operators with wells in the Main-st. section of Huntington Beach to redrill and deepen wells. Many of the wells are small producers of not very light gravity oil in the upper sands, and this factor with the battle against sanding up runs the cost of production rather high. The Bell of Mont-bello will redrill and deepen its No. 1. Huntington-Owners, another well that has given a lot of trouble, will go down. Work is already underway for the deepening of the Pantagos-Huntington. In six months the Main-st. section of Huntington Beach will be a new field, with new wells producing double their present production and a quality of oil that will bring a dollar a barrel.
The Federal Consolidated, one of the small companies that has been in the struggle at Huntington for a year and a half, has "arrived." This company's No. 1 is now making a 125 barrels.
Jaggers' controversy with the Corporation Commission over the matter of a permit does not seem to cut down the speed of hole making. A few short weeks Jaggers No. 1 has made 4,000 feet of hole and the outlook for production has passed from the 360,063,800 level to 4,200 or possibly 4,400.
JOS. A. DALEY GOES EAST
Joseph A. Daley, president of the Federal Grocery Co. and Daley's Rock Bottom Stores, leaves Saturday for New York to attend the National Chain Store Grocers' Assn. at the
"Bugs"
Raymond well-known sportsman, has returned from a motor trip to Los Angeles and way points. Today he was a devotee of golf at the Newport links, teeing off at 3 a.m. for a morning constitutional. Next week he plans another extended motor trip over the southland, if he can borrow a car. He has deferred his departure on a much-needed vacation to his former home at Portland until Wednesday, believing the railroad strike situation will have cleared up by that time.
"I travel by train or motor every time," says "Bugs."
Score last night:
Anaheim Elks No. 1
Gorden ... 178 211 163 184
Johnson ... 158 168 186 171
Snirder ... 172 190 156 172
James ... 135 158 155 149
Dugas ... 197 164 211 191
Totals ... 850 891 871
Pasadena Elks No. 1
Christensen ... 173 134 159 155
McCollum ... 190 168 150 169
Bozert ... 210 190 170 190
Hopping ... 173 233 190 199
Shay ... 181 152 172 168
Totals ... 927 877 841
Baseball Standings
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
San Francisco ... 90 55 .621
Vernon ... 84 58 .592
Los Angeles ... 82 63 .566
Salt Lake ... 69 74 .483
Seattle ... 66 75 .468
Oakland ... 65 78 .455
Portland ... 59 83 .415
Sacramento ... 57 86 .399
Yesterday's Results
Portland, 1-7; Vernon, 2-2.
Sacramento, 3; Los Angeles, 0.
Salt Lake, 17; San Francisco, 16.
Seattle, 9-7; Oakland, 4-3.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
St. Louis ... 72 49 .595
New York ... 71 49 .592
Detroit ... 66 56 .541
Cleveland ... 63 60 .512
Chicago ... 58 62 .483
Washington ... 87 63 .475
Philadelphia ... 49 68 .419
Boston ... 45 74 .375
Yesterday's Results
St. Louis, 13; Boston, 2.
New York, 7; Cleveland, 3.
Detroit, 11; Philadelphia, 8.
Washington, 1; Chicago, 0.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
New York ... 71 46 .607
St. Louis ... 67 51 .568
Chicago ... 66 53 .555
Pittsburg ... 64 53 .547
Cincinnati ... 64 56 .533
Brooklyn ... 56 60 .483
Philadelphia ... 40 71 .360
Boston ... 38 76 .333
Yesterday's Results
New York, 2; Cincinnati, 1.
Boston, 12; St. Louis,
JOS. A. DALEY GOES EAST
Joseph A. Daley, president of the Federal Grocery Co., and Daley's Rock Bottom Stores, leaves Saturday for New York to attend the National Chain Store Grocers' Ass'n., at the Waldorf-Astoria, Sept. 20 and 21.
The Chain Store Grocers' Ass'n. has a membership of 35 organizations, operating over 13,000 retail units, doing an annual business of close to a billion dollars.
A prominent member of the Federal Trade Commission will be one of the speakers addressing the convention on subjects of national commercial interest. A talk will be given by the chairman of the commission of agricultural inquiry touching the subject of retail food production, distribution and margins.
Mr. Daley will be gone about six weeks and his trip will embrace practically a tour of the manufacturing centers of the United States, and an inspection of the plants of all the national food manufacturers.
TEXAS LEAGUE
Galveston, 13; Shreveport, 4.
Beaumont, 5; Wichita Falls, 1.
Fort Worth, 4; Houston, 2.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
New York ... 71 46 .607
St. Louis ... 67 51 .568
Chicago ... 66 53 .555
Pittsburgh ... 64 53 .547
Cincinnati ... 64 56 .533
Brooklyn ... 56 60 .483
Philadelphia ... 40 71 .360
Boston ... 38 76 .333
Yesterday's Results
New York, 2; Cincinnati, 1.
Boston, 12; St. Louis, 11.
Pittsburg, 10; Philadelphia, 4.
Chicago, 4; Brooklyn, 1.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
W. L. P.c.
St. Paul ... 80 45 .640
Minneapolis ... 70 56 .556
Milwaukee ... 71 58 .550
Indianapolis ... 65 60 .520
Kansas City ... 65 62 .512
Louisville ... 63 66 .488
Toledo ... 49 78 .386
Columbus ... 45 83 .352
Yesterday's Results
Toledo, 3-3; Indianapolis, 2-0.
St. Paul, 10; Milwaukee, 5.
Columbus, 10; Louisville, 5.
WESTERN LEAGUE
W. L. P.c.
Tulsa ... 83 50 .624
St. Joseph ... 80 53 .602
Wichita ... 72 60 .545
Sioux City ... 67 62 .519
Omaha ... 68 67 .504
Oklahoma City ... 60 73 .451
Des Moines ... 51 79 .392
Denver ... 47 84 .359
Yesterday's Results
Des Moines, 3-5; St. Joseph, 2-2.
Good Alarm Clock
Your Clock at Witman's Than to Wish
If It’s From Witm
EIM, CALIFORNIA
Friday, August 25, 1922
California THEATRE Anaheim
Starting Today
—Winsome Cunning—
VIOLA DANA
In Her Newest Screen Success
"The 14th Lover"
A Laugh-Fest For Young and Old
Also Also
LLOYD HAMILTON
Also
LLOYD
HAMILTON
In That Riot of Mirth
"The Rainmaker"
One of the Most Unusual and Grin Provoking Programs ever Presented in Anaheim
ALSO A VAUDEVILLE NOVELTY
BE SURE AND SEE IT
MONDT WILL MEET ZBYSZKO TONIGHT
Toots Mondt, Los Angeles' leading heavyweight wrestler, who failed to throw Roy Mabee here, tonight will meet Wladek Zbyszko at the American Legion Hollywood arena. Zbyszko stands 50-50 with Strangler Lewis, world's champion, so far as wins and defeats are concerned. Lewis arrives in Los Angeles next week to receive the challenge of tonight's winner.
FOR TRUCK TIRE
A continuous tread of steel plates that can be placed around a motor truk tire without injuring it has been invented.
CHEMICAL MANUFACTURE
Rumania's newest industry is the manufacture of mechanicals from native raw materials, especially petroleum by-products.
MICROBE IN TEARS
An English scientist claims to have discovered that human tears contain a microbe and bacteria destroying element.
JAPANESE RAILROADS
Two of the Japanese government railways out of Tokyo will be equipped for electric trains within a year.
PREVENTS BOILING
A projection encircling the top of a new coffee pot is claimed to prevent it boiling over by cooling the contents when they reach it.
VELVET PARASOL
Something new in parasols is a creations of black velvet lined with white lace with a long handle and ferrule of carved ivory.
CHINAMAN IS RACER
It is said that the only Chinese automobile race driver is Jim Chy, resident of Canton, China.
BOXING
BOXING
Tonight at 8:30
ANAHEIM ATHLETIC CLUB'S ARENA
(Sugar Factory Grounds)
MAIN EVENT—145 LBS.
JACK LOWERY vs. WILLIE HUNT
SEMI—118 LBS.
KID LOUIE vs. TED LEVIN
4—Snappy Preliminaries—4
Prices—Ringside $1.50, Reserved $1.27, General Admission $1.00.
Plus Tax. Tickets on sale at United Cigar Store, 123 W. Center.
Phone 153. LADIES ADMITTED FREE to ringside and reserved sections (1st row ringside excepted) when accompanied by escort.
Clocks
To Wish You Had
Witman's It's Good