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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1923 January

oc-plain-dealer 1923-01-19

1923-01-19 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 4 of 10 · OCR glm-ocr
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Saturday, Jan. 20, 1923 UNITED Theatre Anaheim Last Times Tonight "WHAT FOOLS MEN ARE" From Eugene Walter's Famous Stage Play "The FLAPPER" With Faire Binney SATURDAY Alice Calhoun in "Little Wildcat" ANAHEIM LEADING BASKETBALL LEAGUE With only one more game to play in the Orange League schedule, Anaheim heads the last without a defeat, Orange is running close to Anaheim. Orange and Fullerton have lost two games, but Orange has played one more than Fullerton, their last game yesterday. Orange was Anaheim's close competitor last year, and hoped to exchange places with the Mother Colony girls this season. Following is the standing of the teams: THRIFT WEEK AT FULLERTON LIBRARY "A man may, if he knows not how to save as he gets, keeps his nose to the grindstone." —Benjamin Franklin. Thrift week, which has the backing and interest of so many organizations throughout the country, began at the Fullerton Library Wednesday, the 17th, the birthday of Benjamin Franklin. Franklin is fortunate in many ways among our national heroes, in that he left his own record, for at least part of his life, and the "Autobiography" has from generation to generation been in active demand in every bookstore and library. This autobiography, which is one of the outstanding ones in literature, presents an able man without external advantages, succeeding by force of clear thinking, geniality, thrift and industry; its pictures of Franklin and his acquaintances are vivid, often humorous, and always entertaining. Why not celebrate thrift week by re-reading this book. It contains much valuable philosophy, especially for the young people of today. Following is a list of titles in a special Thrift Week collection of books ready for use at the Fullerton public library. Atwood—How to get ahead. Saving money and making it work. A popular treatment of individual and domestic economy and wise investments. Babson—Making good in business. Fowler—Getting a start. First aids to success. Fowler—How to get your pay raised. MacGregor—the book of thrift. Why and how to save, and what to do with your savings. Full of inspiration and practical help. Smiles—Self-help. A stimulating book for young people. Richardson—Adventures in thrift. Of interest to all home-makers. Bruere—Increasing home efficiency. Fredrick. Household engineering. Scientific management in the home. Has helpful chapters on Family financing and record keeping, and efficient household purchasing. Nesbitt—Household management. Farmer—A. B. C. of Home Saving. Handbook of practical suggestions for economy. BASKETBALL LEAGUE With only one more game to play in the Orange League schedule, Anaheim heads the last without a defeat. Orange is running close to Anaheim. Orange and Fullerton have lost two games, but Orange has played one more than Fullerton, their last game yesterday. Orange was Anaheim's close competitor last year, and hoped to exchange places with the Mother Colony girls this season. Following is the standing of the teams: Team Won Lost Anaheim 5 0 Fullerton 3 2 Orange 4 2 Santa Ana 2 3 Huntington Beach 1 4 Tustin 2 2 Garden Grove 1 4 ANAHEIM CLASHES WITH FULLERTON Fullerton H. S. boys' first and 116-pound baseball teams met Anaheim this afternoon. Fullerton first team: Jean Arroues, Oral Carpenter, Merrill Gregory, Ed Healy, Fred Hezmalhach, Ralph Hills, Louis Kraeer, Leonard Lemke, Phillip Oswald, Red Shipkey and Tom Weeks. Fullerton 110-pound team: Phillip Allen, Glen Bicyles, Clarence Dauser, Douglas Dayis, Denzel Holmes, John Johnson, Lloyd Keniston, Paul Knepp, George Murphy, Gerald Rilcau and Louis Velasco. NEW CLUB HOUSE FOR U. S. C. As a reward for the most successful football season, a new $30,000 clubhouse and training quarters will be erected on U. S. C. campus. It was felt that the old quarters were inefficient, did not make a very good impression on visiting teams, and did not add to the beauty of the campus. The building will include lockers and store rooms, showers and visiting rooms on the first floor. On the second floor will be found the offices of the various coaching staffs. Four squads can be housed easily. OIL FIELD NEWS Good showings and the splendid outlook the Nevada-Ventura has had for a 100 feet or more at La Mirada has induced another company to go into the field. The United States Royalties Co. has leased the Frank Strong property west of the Nevada-Ventura and will start drilling in a few days. The Nevada-Ventura has had some nice showings from 3680 on to 3745. At 3828 four feet of oil sand was drilled thru that showed up very strong. There seems to be a rumor affloat that the Petroleum Center is broke and unable to go ahead with drilling. The rumor is untrue and without foundation. Petroleum Center has been shut down for a month on account of the inability to get drill pipe, something hard to get now. ORANGE BEATS FULLERTON Orange girls' basketball team defeated Fullerton 20 to 8 yesterday at Orange. This was rated as one of the hardest scrambles of the league as it decided second standing. Fullerton had been going strong and had lost to Anaheim. BASEBALL GLENDALE K. OF C. Versus ANAHEIM K. OF C. at GLENDALE K. OF C. Versus ANAHEIM K. OF C. at High School Field, Sunday, Jan. 21 Both Teams Tied For First Place BOXING TONIGHT AT 8:30 ANAHEIM ATHLETIC CLUB'S ARENA Sugar Factory Grounds Etc. Main Event 150 Lbs. Frank Barrieau vs. Sailor Steve Bliss (Canadian Welterweight Champ) (U. S. S.) Semi 118 Lbs. Art Springer vs. Tobby Montoya (Los Angeles) (Placentia) 4—Red Hot Preliminaries—4 Prices—Ringside (chairs) $1.50—Reserved section (benches) with backs) $1.27—General admission $1.00—plus tax. Tickets on sale at United Cigar Store and Jeff's Dew Drop Inn. Ladies welcome. Cars carefully watched. NEVER RECEIVE MAIL; GOAT! JOLIET, Ill., Jan. 19. goat gets the postal "nanny." For weeks the mail javle had been vanishing front doostep. Time and complained to the postals. A guard was s the secret service men of billygoat munching on J. The penalty is $100 three years in prison. sons don't have stalls, where the "nanny" enters. The ox-cart will remind grass made as robbery will bring up back to the If the bone contention to the dogs, one need r the poison. Trouble needs no invi think it and you will hav California Theatre Anaheim TODAY and Tomorrow THE MOST LOVED STAR OF THE SILVER SHEET! Wallace Reid Supported by a Great Cast Including Wanda Hawley In His Splendid Drama “Thirty Days” See Wallie Once More in a Role He Loved to Play America’s Popular Screen Hero! JACK RETLAW PRESENTS AN OFFERING “MIGHTY LAK A ROSE” featuring YVONNE FARR Theatre Flowers Furnished by America's Popular Screen Hero! JACK RETLAW PRESENTS AN OFFERING "MIGHTY LAK A ROSE" featuring YVONNE FARR Theatre Flowers Furnished by YE COLONIAL SHOPPE 214 EAST CENTER STREET SANTA FE LEASE SANTA FE LEASE, Jan. 19—(Spl.)—Mrs. R. F. Jones and daughter Miss Sadie spent Wednesday visiting in Long Beach. Miss Mona Meranda spent Thursday with Mrs. Ed Woodyard at Norwalk. Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Light are having their home remodeled. Mrs. R. F. Jones and Mrs. C. H. Williams attended the Daughters of Veterans at Fullerton Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Marian Johnson and son-Donald spent Monday and Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Bert Ryan. Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Grimage were Anaheim shoppers Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Leguine are entertaining this week relatives from Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. R. Meranda and family, Mr. Don Cullen and Miss Olive Klinger attended the California theater Tuesday night seeing Harold Lloyd in Dr. Jack. Mrs. Willis Evan entertained Tuesday Mrs. E. Long and son Ned of Placentia. Mr. Bill Everett of the Olinla Store was an Anaheim visitor Wednesday. Mr and Mrs. J. Flynn entertained Wednesday, Mrs. Howard Flynn and children of Anaheim. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Andrews and son Lee Jaynes and Mrs. H. Schryer spent Wednesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. J. Van Patten of Rose Drive. Mr. and Mrs. H. Schryer entertained Tuesday evening Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fairbain and daughter Frances Jean of Anaheim. Miss Georgia Collins who has been the guest of Miss Sadie Jones is now visiting at Jardena. Mrs. R. Dales entertained Thursday, her sister, Mrs. Hartoge of the West Coast Lease. Mr. and Mrs. Finch and family have purchased a new Chevrolet. Mr. Ben Golding while on his way home from Los Angeles Sunday, ran out of gas. While getting out to dis- AMERICAN HOME MOST COMFORTABLE Remarks on American plumbing made by Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope and George Clemenceau were entered today in the books of the historical committee of the newly formed Sanitary Development League of Southern California. The league is composed of the leading plumbing concerns or the southland, organized to add to the health and comfort of their neighbors by promoting the use of modern sanitation and plumbing. Research of the league's historical committee shows that when Dickens and Trollope toured America one point of irritable daily comment of both was the fact that there were no bath tubs in their hotels. And not only that, but they found great difficulty in obtaining water for the folding tubs they carried with them. But when Clemenceau reviewed his impressions of daily life in the United States for inquiry ship news reporters just before he sailed for France, the one topic on which he laid most emphasis was the superiority of American plumbing to that of the homeland, to that of all Europe. "Always I found a bath opening from my sleeping chamber, whether in a magnificent city hostelry, a village inn, or a private lime," he declared. "Steaming water ran from the pipes whether I turned the cock at dinner time, or at four in the morning." Henry Boynton, secretary of the league, made comment as he read the words of the immortal trio: "There, briefly, is the progress of the American home, today the most comfortable home of all time, of all lands," he said. "The visino, the resourcefulness of the plumbing industry in the last 60 or 70 years has made the daily life of millions of Americans more comfortable, has helped to preserve their lives, to keep them free from disease." GOVT. PLANS TO SAVE ANTELOPE ETHBRIDGE, Alta., Jan. 19—Government plans to prevent the extinction of antelope in western Canada are proving successful, and the preserve created at Foremost, Alta, in 1918, with 50 animals in captivity, now holds 130 head. Known as the Nemiskam park, the preserve comprises nine square miles, and the steady growth of the herd and the absence of disease is good evidence that the experiment is likely to result in saving this most interesting species from the extermination which otherwise inevitably awaits it. Swifter than the greyhound in flight, exceedingly graceful and beautiful, the antelope has for many years been a prize for the big game hunter, and its numbers have been diminished of late years with a rapidity that has aroused the concern of all lovers of wild life. Ten years ago Dr. W. T. Hornaday, the American naturalist, estimated that there were 2,000 antelope in western Canada. Today there are reported to be only about 1,000 in a wild state in Alberta and 250 in Saskatchewan, while they entirely disappeared from the province of Mantloba some years ago. THIS CRAY WORLD Strike and the world strikes with you, work and you work alone; our souls are ablaze with the apathy craze, the wildest that ever was known. Groan, and there'll be a chorus. Smile and you make no hit, for we've grown long hair and we preach despair and show you a daily fit. Spend and the gang will cheer you, save and you have no friend; for we throw our bucks to birds and ducks and borrow from all who'll lend. Knock and you'll be a winner. Boost and you'll be a frost; for the old sane ways of the prewar days are not from the program lost. Mr. and Mrs. H. Schryer entertained Tuesday evening Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fairbain and daughter Frances Jean of Anaheim. Miss Georgia Collins who has been the guest of Miss Sadie Jones is now visiting at Jardena. Mrs. R. Dales entertained Thursday, her sister, Mrs. Hartoge of the West Coast Lease. Mr. and Mrs. Finch and family have purchased a new Chevrolet. Mr. Ben Golding while on his way home from Los Angeles Sunday, ran out of gas. While getting out to discover the exact trouble a car coming close behind him knocked him down to the pavement. Ben not being seriously injured, but laid up for a few days. SANTA ANA DEFEATED Santa Ana girls' basketball team was given a surprise yesterday when Garden Grove got into the old fight and lead the County Seat girls a merry chase, winning 18 to 16. This is the first victory for the small school team and Santa Ana had expected a complete walkaway. Santa Ana players; Mabel Cook, Frances Cocroft and Josephine Crookshank, forward; Thelma Patton and Axia Goodykoontz centers. Ann Carver and Ruth Finley, guards. NEVER RECEIVED HIS MAIL; GOAT ATE IT JOLIET, Ill., Jan. 19.—This billy-goat gets the postal authorities' "nanny." For weeks the mail of Joe Erjavle had been vanishing from his front doostep. Time and again he complained to the postoffice officials. A guard was set. Finally the secret service mep caught Joe's billygoat munching on Joe's mail. The penalty is $1000 fine and three years in prison. Illinois prisons don't have stalls, and that is where the "nanny" enters. The ox-cart will remind us of progress made as robbery and murder will bring up back to the dark ages. If the bone contention is thrown to the dogs, one need not swallow the poison. Trouble needs no invitation—just think it and you will have it. Henry Boynton, secretary of the league, made comment as he read the words of the immortel trio. "There, briefly, is the progress of the American-home today the most comfortable home of all time, of all lands," he said. "The visino, the resourcefulness of the plumbing industry in the last 60 or 70 years has made the daily life of millions of Americans more comfortable, has helped to preserve their lives, to keep them free from disease." Groan, and there'll be a chorus. Smile and you make no hit, for we've grown long hair and we preach despair and show you a daily fit. Spend and the gang will cheer you, save and you have no friend, for we throw our bucks to birds and ducks and borrow from all who'll lend. Knock and you'll be a winner. Boost and you'll be a frost; for the old sane ways of the prewar days are not from the program lost. Fairyland THEATRE ANAHEIM Today and Tomorrow FRANK AND KINGS GOMEDIANS Present that Roaring Success GEO. WASHINGTON, JR. With a Superb Cast of Artists NOT A MOTION PICTURE One of the Cleverest Plays even seen in Anaheim VAUDEVILLE BETWEEN ACTS See Anaheim's Favorites! PRICES Adults . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39c and 55c Children, Any Seat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28c COM. NEXT SUNDAY 5—MAGNIFICENT DAYS—5 —TO ANAHEIM'S— FAIRYLAND Theatre Douglas Fairbanks In His Marvelous Drama “Robin Hood” 12 SUPER REELS 12 12 SUPER REELS 12 Specials! Music By West Coast Theatres Big Orchestra Jack Retlaw will Present a Beautiful Atmospheric PRESENTATIONDELUXE Featuring Yvonne Farr En Costume Prices Matinees 55c, Loges 85c Evenings 85c, Loges $1.10 Children—Any Seat 28c Shows Daily 2:30, 6:30 and 9:00 Doors Open 2:00 and 5:45