Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Register from Santa Ana, California • Page 2

Publication:
The Registeri
Location:
Santa Ana, California
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 SANTA ANA DAILY REGISTER, FRID EVENING, SEPTEMBER 7, 1923 The Store! Never before have we planned so carefully or so extensively for our service to students during a school year. Supplies in great assortments of every need, priced so modertaely that be no question as to where students will go for service YOUR store for school supplies. Genuine I. P. Binder Complete with 32-Page Filler Here it is again! The I.

P. stu- binder, originated by the 7 Santa Ana Book Store, complete with 32-page filler Seize Texan In £. A In Bank Theft Case LOS ANGELES, Sept. McDowell, Texas oil operator, was i to deposit $15,000 bond with fed I eral authorities here today follow ing issuance of a warrant charg ing him with embezzlement of $60,000 from the Graham National bank of Young county, Texas, in II Santa Ana Book Store 105 East 4th Robt. L.

Brown Very Enjoyable! Cross Fountain Service Creams And when you have really enjoyed a drink or a sundae or soda from the White Cross fountain you feel much better. Our drinks are pure and why you enjoy them. They are served cool and daintily another reason why you enjoy them. Our ice creams are made by Christopher and are wholesome and healthful. enjoy them also! 'White DruaCa in the competitions, according to a rule adopted hy the board of education, it was announced today by Frank L.

Andrews, secretary of the board. The board held a Tuesday, he said. Resignations of Louise Jessup and Natalie Robinson as teachers were accepted. Teachers appointed included L. C.

Helm, Alverda West. Esther M. Carr, J. S. Adkisson, Alice Gammell, Nellie Morgenson, Marie Brecheen Ann W.

Powell. Esther P. Boose was named secretary to Principal Kellogg of the North Main street junior high school. The opening and closing dates scheduled for the school year were announced as follows: First semester beginning September 11; first quarter ending November 16; Thanksgiving recess, November 20 to December 2 Christmas recess, December 15 to January second semester begins February Easter recess, April 5 to 13; end of second semester, June 13; high school mencement June 13. Secretary Andrews said the i board would not meet Tuesday, September 11, unless business of importance was brought up in the i meantime.

Final approval was made of thje i plans prepared by Frederick H. Eiey, architect, for the manual training building and cafeteria at the South Main street junior high school. ORDER OUT (Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 1) kins, $75; C. A. Riggs, $25; Mrs.

J. E. Leonard, Peter Fluor, $15; Mrs. John A. Martin, Roy Russell, $25; John W.

Norton, E. R. Roehm, $25; R. H. Martin, $25; Friend, $100; Mrs.

F. Young, James Krauchi, E. H. Elfest. $25; Mrs.

Mayfield. J. W. Temple, H. E.

Yost, $25; Roehm Sylvester company, $25; Dr. H. MacVicker Smith. $10; B. F.

Baker, Friend, Mrs. Christian Svedman, Cash. Cash, $10; Friend, Subscriber, IF. H. Finney, Young Married Sunday school class of the First Christian church, $25; Sympathizer, $25; M.

O. Hawk, K. Lamme, Cash, E. A Spaulding, $10; Santa Ana Lodge No. 794, B.

P. O. $50; C. W. I Duel, Dr.

J. L. Stephenson and family, $15; Samuel Nau, $10; W. Kelly, $5. L.

A. SPEEDS UP WORK OF RAISING $250,000 LOS ANGELES, Sept. spe- eial committee of the Los Angeles i chamber of commerce today began its efforts to collect a $250,000 fund for Japanese relief. Donations are pouring in lea' ra of the campaign stated. Mystery Blows Kill Redondo Beach Man Register Want Ads Bring Big Results REDONDO BEACH, Sept.

mystery of the death of Anton Arse, who succumbed to the effects of several sharp blows on the head after steadfastly refusing to reveal the name of his assailant, was still unsolved by police here today. Arse was a young married man and a street railway employe. He was found, lying injured, in a street near his home. Even while the city struggles to rise from the ashes of disaster spread by quake and fire, there have been some who have taken advantage of the catastrophe to steal, loot and encourage rioting. Stringent emergency regulations to permit the army to deal severely with such offenses wrere put into effect today.

Order is being rapidly restored by troops in the capital, -who were instructed by General Fukuda, in command, to take drastic action wherever ghouls or looters were discovered. War on Profiteers Profiteers in foodstuffs art- liable to heavy fines and imprisonment. Fresh troops arrived in Tokio today and several vessels pushed they way into Yokohama and Tokio bay with food and supplies. Engineer forces worked feverishly on railroad lines to restore shattered communications in order that the food and clothing piling up at Osaka and Kobe might be moved as soon as possible to the capital. Road gangs are already at work levelling off the ground which was torn and distorted by the terrific vertical quakes of Saturday until Tokio was cut off from the outside world.

While the army and civilian volunteers struggled against disease, famine, Iffbting and the ulean tasks piled up the quakes that shook the capital, there were evidences that the disaster may have changed the entire economic map of Japan. Business Center Changes Already Osaka has become the center of business and communications. The government is considering moving the foreign office there. Kobe is a hive of activity; it is now the silk export center and its chamber of commerce and business are making the necessary preparations. No doubt that Tokio will come back, but it will take years and billions of yen to restore it.

The Osaka branch of the Yokohama Specie bank has become the central branch and other financial institutions are expected to make similar transfers. The financial situation is calm; there has been no 6ign of panic. People even went to the banks in Tokio and drew out small sums of less than 100 yen. Most of the banking institutions and many of those in Yokohama found that first reports of property damage had been somewhat exaggerated and that their specie and books were safe. May Postpone Wedding The prince regent of Japan, who was to have been married in November, is reported to have expressed a desire to postpone his wedding because of the disaster.

It is too soon to estimate the damage to the various industries, but reports so far gathered indicate that destruction in the cotton spinning industry has been immense and it will be tremendously difficult for it to recover. Damage to the silk industry was not great. Fifty were burned at Yokohama but this is merely ten per cent of the whole production. Alleged Auto Pays Fine of $25 Here Grady Rutherford, 22, fmniga- tor of Orange, paid a $25 fine on a charge of accosting young women on the streets, according to records of the police court. Judge Leopold Geopper heard case late yesterday.

Rutherford was said to have endeavored to induce the young women to take a ride in an automobile he was driving. The arrest was made by Officer Barn ard. Dirtf, 1 Geneva (when'the council of the league of nations declined to assert its competency to adjudicate the practical acceptance of rebuff," Lloyd-George continued. like my nation being snubbed out of Europe. A nation which depends upon credit cannot afford being discredited before the world." (Copyright, 1923, by the United Press.) (Copyright in Great Britain and Canada.) Our Wet Wash, 20 lbs.

for $1.00 ADDITIONAL POUNDAGE AT THE RATE OF 4c PER POUND Everything tcashed in rainsoft water no wonder that clothes cleansed our Wet Wash way come back to you so snowy and fresh. Numerous changes of pure, foamy suds remove, without rubbing, every vestige of dirt; then floods of crystal-clear, rain- soft water rinse them free of soap. Returned damp ready to iron After the excess water has been eliminated by a process that eliminates all the wear of a wringer, the clothes are returned to you clean and sweet and just damp enough to starch and iron or hang out to dry. Costs only a few cents a pound AH the washing has been cared the lighter work of ironing is left for you. Washday toil has been reduced by a whole day.

Yet the cost is only a few cents a pound, much less than the true cost of the time yon would spend in washing. Phone us to call for this wash. The Santa Ana Laundry Where Satisfaction is the Washword TELEPHONE 666 NO WORK YET FROM ZONE OF PERIL ABOUT RELATIVES H. B. Woodrough of Costa Mesa today continued his efforts to get word from his brother, F.

C. Woodrough, superintendent of naval construction at Tokio. The Costa Mesan has had no word from his brother since the catastrophe at Tokio and Yokohama, and is apprehensive as to the safety. J. W.

Woodrough, federal judge at Omaha, another brother is in Washington. According to word received from him by H. B. Woodrough, he has been unsuccessful fn getting information from the brother In Tokio. Government aid had been enlisted in the effortd to reach the brother in the zone of peril, it was said.

Judge Woodrough yesterday advised his brother at Costa that the government had received cnly two official communications from the devastated section. According to K. Akiyama, manager of Sam store at Delhi, no word has been received from the latter, with his family, was probably in Yokohama at the time of the disaster. MUSSOLINI TO INSIST ON REVENGE FOR KILLINGS ROME, Sept. could make us recede or accept a compromise on this question, where our national prestige and honor is Premier Mussolini of Italy declared in an interview today.

wrong against Italy, the crime against Italian officers, must not be submitted to the Geneva assembly." rights of little nations cannot include murder of the representatives of great Mussolini said to the Matin correspondent. inquiry has revealed sen- sationat circumstances in connection with the assassination of our representatives. the council of ambassadors in Paris proceed wdth their inquiry, which may lead to any one of three conclusions. first one is very but I like to consider it. It is that Albanians and not Greeks committed the murders.

In that case our ultimatum to Greece would be modified as the only responsibility of that country would be a territorial one. second conclusion might lje that the Greeks were responsible for the murders. In that case my demands must be accepted in their entirety. third conclusion might be that not only Greek citizens but Greek officers were responsible. In that case my demands will be For a Wonder, Fashion Has Something to Say About School Shoes And she says that the customary black and brown in addition to being serviceable and neat for school wear, shall be of stylish line, and that they cost more than 6.00 But she goes a lot farther than that in prescribing oxfords and straps in gray, tan, beige and brown, trimmed in the most up-to'date manner; demanding, however, that the be kefit down to $5.00 Then, Fashion declares up and down that real good Black Suede and Deer Buck are the needed complements to many dainty little school costumes and that pretty models should be priced at $8.00 Silk Hose naturally follows, and harmonizing shades are prescribed in semi-fashioned and full fash' ioned hose of very good quality indeed, with prices of real moderateness at $1.50 and $2 P-E-T-E-R-S-O-N-S The Store of Better Shoe Values 215 West Fourth (By United Press Leased Wire) LOS ANGELES, Sept.

Los Angeles police judge will decide Tuesday whether is naughty or not. Ten members of the cast who were summoned to court on charges that their play was and waived their lights to a jury trial. Unless it is proven that Gerties wearing apparel is harmless, the actors and manager of the theater will be subject to $50 fines or 25 days imprisonment under a city ordinance covering such cases. Is a popular bedroom farce which had a long run in many eastern, cen ters. Tulsa Folk Protest Strict Martial Law TULSA, Sept.

today appealed to the federal government for relief from the qArin- gent enforcement of martial law, ordered by Governor J. C. Walton, as the result of many whippings in this county. WASHINGTON, Sept. of War Weeks will decline to act on.protests filed with him by Oklahoma citizens against continuance of martial law in Tulsa.

the ER! VERIFY DEATH OF AMERICAN 'N TOKIO OSAKA, Sept. Woodbury of the General Electric company in Tokio, is the only American whose death In the Japanese capital has been verified thus far. Italian Consul Gasco was killed at Yokohama. DAYTON MAN LOSES SISTER IN DISASTER DAYTON, Sept. 7.

Jack Lloyd of this city today received a cablegram from Yokohama, informing him of the death of his sister, Mrs. M. Robinson, from injuries received in earthquake. Government Seeks to End Oil Land Clash WASHINGTON, Sept. steps were taken today by the Interior department towards settling claims of 160 applicants for leases in the Red River Oil Gas district, bordering Oklahoma and Texas.

Maps were mailed all applicants showing conflicting claims and with instructions to applicants to show cause why their claims should be preference. Mass Banker Held As $273,000 Missing BOSTON, Sept. 7. B. Marcino, alias Joseph Biata of Chicago, was held in East Cambridge jail today following preliminary arraignment for alleged embezzlement of $273,000 of the funds of the First National bank of Warren, Mass.

Marcino was unable to furnish bail of $25,00,0. Coolidge Calls Ford To Shoals Conference 'WASHINGTON, Sept. Indications that the Coolidge administration intends to make definite disposition of Henry offer for Muscle Shoals were seen today in the summons to Ford to a conference here on the disposition to be made of the Gorgas Power Plant. For Infanti, Invalid Children The Original Food-Drink for All Ages. 2uickLunch at Home GrainExtraetinPow- Nourishing-No cooking.

Avoid Imitations and Wash Frocks for Warm Days at Very Low Prices About fifty pretty wash dresses in ginghams, voiles, tissues, svviss, formerly priced as high as for Saturday, $5.95 New Silk Dresses Several new shipments just in and we are featuring them in two lots $14.95 and $21.50 A large stock of New Fall Coats, Capes and Coats Just In Hosiery Something you always need and especially for the children with School opening next week. fine silk hose and up rib hose 20c to 50c pair THE NEW YORK STORE 312-314 N. Sycamore St. A. W.

Caveness Madras Shirts' Madras negligee attached; fancy stripes. Real $1.50 quality at Saturday 98 4 Shirte, $3.48 jx -TANTA ANA..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Register Archive

Pages Available:
644,837
Years Available:
1906-1977