anaheim-daily-herald 1921-11-28
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PAGE FOUR
Society
CARRIE LOU EVANS, Editor
Telephone 540
LADIES AID TO
GIVE SILVER TEA
The Ladies Aid of the Presbyterian church will hold a silver tea and sale of fancy work, including aprons and cooked foods. Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Grimshaw, 112 West Broadway. The organization invites everyone to attend.
BRIDE-ELECT GIVEN
MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER
Miss Lillian Dumke was the honor guest at a miscellaneous shower recently when Mrs. W. J. Jewell, a neighbor friend, entertained at the home of her mother, Mrs. L. C. Blake. The guests included the girl friends of the bride-to-be from the Fullerton district.
Miss Dumke will soon become the bride of Mr. Raymond Potter of Orange and her girl friends took this opportunity to show their friendship.
HOUSE PARTY
AT LAGUNA BEACH
A week-end house party and hunting trip was enjoyed by a number of the Anaheim high school boys at Laguna. They left Anaheim early Saturday going to Laguna Beach. They spent their time in duck hunting. Those on the party were Al Clayes, Bill Cook, Leo Bushard, Jr., Ed Brown, Taggart and Martin Muckenthaler.
MR. W. H. KENNEDY
GIVEN BIRTHDAY DINNER
Mrs. Ray U. Fisher entertained with a Sunday dinner at her home yesterday, honoring the seventy-fifth birthday of her father, Mr. W. H. Kennedy. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Kennedy, Mrs. Ackerman, Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ray U. Fisher. The afternoon was spent socially.
THREE DAYS' TRIP
TO SAN DIEGO
tin Efker, Adrian Perry, Lola Nareth, Marjorie Erickson, Dorothy Nenno and the hostess.
MRS. EICHOLTZ GIVES
PARTY FOR GIRLS
Mrs. Lee Eicholtz entertained with a matinee party at the California theater Saturday, honoring Misses Doris and Lois Wilson and sister, Wilma O'Rourke, Evelyn Karston, Lois Reise, Arline Pleper. After the theater party the guests were invited to the Colonial apartments where Mrs. Eicholtz served a dainty luncheon.
THEATER PARTY
AND TAMALE SUPPER
A theater party was enjoyed last night by a number of West Anaheim friends. They were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Koehler, Miss Victoria Koehler, Victor Koehler and brothers, Miss Helen Lund, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kratt, Mr. and Mrs. James Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Thompson and family. Following the party the friends all adjourned to the Koehler home where a tamale supper was served.
CATHOLIC GIRLS
TO MEET TUESDAY
The girls belonging to the Catholic church will meet Tuesday night at the Knights of Columbus hall where they will organize a Catholic girls' club. Every girl eligible is requested to be present. This includes Santa Ana, Anaheim, Fullerton and other Orange County towns.
JUNIOR EPWORTH
LEAGUE MEETING
The Junior Epworth League of the White Temple had a very enjoyable meeting last night with Mrs. C. A. McCullah as leader. They met at 6:30 o'clock and were taken to the social hall where an imitation camp fire had
MR. W. H. KENNEDY
GIVEN BIRTHDAY DINNER
Mrs. Ray U. Fisher entertained with a Sunday dinner at her home yesterday, honoring the seventy-fifth birthday of her father, Mr. W. H. Kennedy, Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Kennedy, Mrs. Ackerman, Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ray U. Fisher. The afternoon was spent socially.
THREE DAYS' TRIP TO SAN DIEGO
A jolly three days' trip was enjoyed by some of the Anaheim motor enthusiasts Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The party included Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Schlotter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Elliott, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Champion of Los Angeles, Mr. and Mrs. H. Hawes, Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Tobin and family. They took in San Diego, Coronado and Tia Juana, returning to Anaheim late last night.
GLEE CLUBS MEET
TUESDAY NIGHT
The Boys' Glee club of the White Temple will meet Tuesday night instead of Monday night at the home of Mrs. C. A. McCullah from the hour of 7 to 7:45 o'clock. Every boy is requested to be present and on time.
The Men's Glee club will meet at 7:45 at the McCullah home. Every member is asked to attend.
MRS. DOOLEY GIVES PARTY FOR FRIENDS
Mrs. L. E. Dooley entertained with a Thanksgiving party recently for a number of her girl friends. The time was spent with dancing and music. Refreshments were served late in the evening. The guests were Katherine Huarte, Elizabeth Stoffel, Evelyn Malstrom and the hostess.
MR. AND MRS. DANIELS
HONOR MRS. RAMELLA
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Daniels entertained with a surprise house party for Mrs. Earl Ramella on a recent date. There were forty friends and relatives present. Dancing and games were the amusements of the evening. Mrs. Ramella received many beautiful gifts for her home from her friends. At a late hour a two course dinner was served.
DOMESTIC SCIENCE SECTION TUESDAY
The all day meeting of the Domestic Science section members and other members of the Ebell to be held at Mrs. G. M. Simpson on East street will be held Tuesday. Basket lunches will be the form of the dinner. A hot drink will be furnished by Mrs. Simpson. At 3 o'clock a business meeting of the Domestic Science section will be held.
DINNER AT PANNIER
JUNIOR EPWORTH LEAGUE MEETING
The Junior Epworth League of the White Temple had a very enjoyable meeting last night with Mrs. C. A. McCullah as leader. They met at 6:30 o'clock and were taken to the social hall where an imitation camp fire had been arranged, rugs on the floor and lights out. A stringed orchestra furnished the music for the evening. A good camp fire meeting was enjoyed by more than one hundred enthusiastic members.
Girl Author Claims To Be Czar's Daughter
Considerable interest has been aroused by the appearance of a book in Paris with the title "The Survivor," in which the author, Marle Berditche, asserts that she is hone other than the Grand Duchess Anastasia, the youngest daughter of ex-Czar Nicholas of Russia, and the only survivor of the royal family.
The author says that at the time of the assassination of her royal father, mother, brother and sisters by the Bolsheviks, she, too, was struck down and left for dead. She was found, according to the book, by an old carpenter, who took her to his home, revived her and brought her back to health.
Later, the author says, she journeyed through Siberia to Vladivostok, crossed to Japan, and later reached the United States While there, she continues, she had a conversation with President Wilson.
In an appendix to the book Miss Berditche reprints the official Bolshevik document relative to the murder of the members of the Romanoff royal family, in which the admission was made that one corpse was missing.
'COUNTRY ESTATE' ON FACTORY ROOF
In Cleveland, the manager of a manufacturing concern has arranged a country estate on the roof of his factory, a hundred feet above the street, which is unique in that it possesses an astronomical observatory with a powerful telescope, and an extensive greenhouse used in raising vegetables for the firm's cafeteria and cut flowers for the offices and club rooms.
Cypress and fir trees planted on the roof give it the air of a genuine garden. All employees of the firm have free access to the garden. The beauty of the spot, with the view over Lake Erie, less than 200 feet away, makes it a favorite gathering place the year around. The garden has been laid out after a plan inspired by examples
DOMESTIC SCIENCE
SECTION TUESDAY
The all day meeting of the Domestic Science section members and other members of the Ebell to be held at Mrs. G. M. Simpson on East street will be held Tuesday. Basket lunches will be the form of the dinner. A hot drink will be furnished by Mrs. Simpson. At 3 o'clock a business meeting of the Domestic Science section will be held.
DINNER AT PANNIER
COUNTRY HOME
A Thanksgiving Sunday dinner was enjoyed at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Pannier on South East street. Covers were laid for twenty-six relatives and friends. At 1 o'clock a delicious turkey dinner was served. The center of the two long tables, arranged in the dining room was graced with small French bouquets. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Gloge and family, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Hasshelder, Mrs. Clara Nigg and son Harold, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Nigg and son, all of Covina; Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Bonsey, Esther Baumgartner, Rose Nigg all of Los Angeles; Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Weise and son Carl of Long Beach; Mr. and Mrs. William Pannier and family. Mrs. Pannier was assisted in the serving by her daughters, Misses Ruth and Alice.
In the afternoon the guests enjoyed games and music.
MRS. J. C. SMITH
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY
Mrs. J. C. Smith was honored yesterday with a birthday dinner commemorating her birthday anniversary. The table was set in the pretty dining room of the new home and was centered with garden flowers. After dinner the guests enjoyed motoring. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. J. Lindeman, Homer Collins, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Smith and family.
MISS PAULINE NENNO
HOSTESS AT PARTY
Miss Pauline Nenno entertained for a number of her friends, honoring her birthday recently, with an afternoon party. It was her eighth anniversary and she received many gifts from her girl friends. Games were enjoyed until late in the afternoon when the guests of the hostess went to the California confectionery where they enjoyed refreshments. The guests were Paul Fisher, Verna Baum, Mar-
tory, a hundred feet above the street, which is unique in that it possesses an astronomical observatory with a powerful telescope, and an extensive greenhouse used in raising vegetables for the firm's cafeteria and cut flowers for the offices and club rooms.
Cypress and fir trees planted on the roof give it the air of a genuine garden. All employees of the firm have free access to the garden. The beauty of the spot, with the view over Lake Erie, less than 200 feet away, makes it a favorite gathering place the year around. The garden has been laid out after a plan inspired by examples of the Spanish Renaissance.
Pockets For Women
Found in Their Hats
Old-fashioned lawyers used to carry their writs and pleadings in the crown of a battered hat, also a plug of tobacco, perhaps, and a bandana handkerchief.
The woman of 1921 revives this ancient method of "stashing" pocket things. Two customers of a well-known New York milliner were found on the exclusive Shinnecock golf course at Southampton, Long Island, with amethyst-colored sports hats that had folds specially designed to carry a cigarette case, vanity mirror and powder-puff.
In one hat the necessaries were merely slipped in and out of the folds, while in the other there was a flap with a snap-fastener.
Herd of Cattle Missing
When Dynamite Explodes
ELKO, Nev., Nov. 28.-A quantity of dynamite left over from work on a tunnel in the Ruby mountains had just been touched off by the employees of the Camoille Powder company.
Just before the explosion a herd of cattle was seen to appear from behind some rocks and move toward the scene.
When the smoke and debris had cleared, no trace could be found of the cattle, nor has their owner put any claim for damages.
One of the employees of the company vouches for the story.
H. P. Tobja slightly damaged the front left axle of his new Studebaker Friday when he forgot to stop while driving immediately behind E. M. Schlotter. They were this side of Oceanside and Mr. Schlotter stopped for a moment but long enough for Mr. Tobja to run into him.
This Couple Live Apart But Still are Friendly
In the Popular streets studios, a bit of Parnassus bound to earth in Brooklyn, are two who dwell in that state of matrimony made famous by Fannie Hurst.
And yet there is a difference, too. While Miss Ethel Traphagen—she still uses her maiden name—and her husband, William R. Leigh, have separate homes they live right next door to each other. They eat three meals a day together and visit back and forth. Yet both are free to pursue their careers in their own way.
Where have you heard those names before? Well, Ethel Traphagen is an artist and designer of note, as well as an author of books on costume designs, while her distinguished husband paints vivid pictures of our great southwest, which have brought sunlight and a breath of clean air from the desert into many a home and art gallery.
In June the marriage took place, and until recently those two artists have been roughing it in canons and plains of the wildest parts of Arizona.
Having lived happily in the primitive style, Miss Traphagen and Mr. Leigh now return to the most modern married state, the separate household.
"Doing as you please," says Miss Traphagen, "being absolutely yourself, that is the way to preserve one's own individuality."
Marriages should not interfere with it, but the trouble is that many people don't understand the value of individuality. Some women have to give up their work, when two cannot agree on the value of going on with a career.
But I believe each one must work out his or her own salvation in matrimony or in a career, as it seems best to do.
A picturesque person, Miss Traphagen: Tall, slender, with chestnut braid wrapped tight about her shapehead, she resembles the great type of woman Burno-Jones, the great English painter, loved to portray.
More simplicity in life would help us all," she continued. "The trouble with many modern women, not business women, of course, is that they like to ape the styles and mannerisms of the society women or the nouveau riches. They are content to follow a leader.
One's own real self is the pearl of great price and should not be relinquished.
My husband moved over here from Fifty-ninth street.
Why? Oh, because I didn't like Fifty-ninth street!" she explained, with a twinkle.
These separate houses are studios Nos. 32 and 33, near enough for companionship, far enough apart for two careers to keep on flourishing.
"We'll keep on doing whatever we like, and both will retain our old friends.
"I must use my maiden name, for my work is known in connection with it, so it would be foolish to change it."
Trip Around World
Ih 17 Days Planned
A rush around the world by air in 408 hours, at a cost of $3400, a morning paper of London deems one of the possibilities of the near future.
At the great "airway" congress in Paris in conjunction with the autumn aeron show, an effort is to be made to join up missing links in the world air chain. Airway experts are ready to specify the machine, and map out the route.
Leaving London at 3 a.m. on Monday morning you are at Constantinople at 4 a.m. on Tuesday and Cairo is reached at noon the same day.
Then you go through Australia, reaching Sydney at 10 a.m. the following Tuesday. After this, taking the Pacific in another great air voyage, you are at San Francisco at 4 o'clock on Saturday afternoon.
The next stage is by the trans-American route to New York, which is reached at 10 p.m. on Monday, in time to take another air liner to where you glide down at 8 o'clock on Thursday morning, having traveled 27,000 miles in seventeen days.
Indications of a good orange production are reported from Exeter.
AN OLD TIME
Remnant Sale
Commencing Tuesday
10 o'clock. Hundreds
of Yard Goods Remnants, offered at way
less and in many instances only a Small
Fraction of the Original price.
ON THE SQUARE
The SQR
ANAHEIM CALIFO
Pre-Holiday
Shoe S
Where Highest Quality and Low
This special offering is a real Shoe
question of that—just consider the opoffered to select from big assortment
footwear at prices that are by far the
Orange County. So here is a Real S
Queen Quality and other Standard
The best buy in Orange County. All leather BOOTS. A fine lot of standard made shoes. "Queen Quality," "Johansen," "Pontiec," and "Creighton" makes. Sizes "aa" to D widths. To be closed out at $4.85
Queen Quality and other Standard
PUMPS
[Louis Heel]
$1.45
This lot includes plain and instep tie to $15.00 value, at only $1.45.
A few broken lines of Children's Shoes, 5 to 8 and 8 to 11. Greatly Reduced.
Children
Shoes
Monday, November 28, 1921.
SPIDERS OF TROPICS
TIE UP TELEPHONES
Certain parts of South America are the habitat of a large spider that weaves its web around the telephone wires strung on the cross arms of poles. The spider is enormous and its web is heavy and of a thick texture.
The telephone companies were much perplexed when in the late evenings and nights frequent short circuits tied up their lines. After a time they discovered that the trouble arose from the heavy spider webs. When the sun was out, this webs were dry and there was no trouble; but at night, when the webs were covered with dew, short circuits occurred. The only remedy is constant brushing away of the webs from the telephone wires.
INDIAN FOLK-SONGS
PRESERVED BY U. S.
Songs for burial, for marriage and for birth, in fact, for every important occasion that arises in his life, are the kind of songs sung by the American Indian.
Some of these songs had their beginnings when the Indian was master of the American continent.
Eventually the red man will be of the past, and so the United States government is now having phonograph records made of the old Indian songs.
PLANTS MULTILATED TO FORCE GROWTH
Fruit and flowers are worth more than wood—so English botanists cut rings in the bark of trees in order that more of the nourishment rising from the roots may be diverted to the fruit.
A shallow ring is cut with a sharp knife just through the outer layer of the bark. Great care is taken not to cut into the wood, for this would kill the branch. The cut is then bandaged. The result is that the sap cannot be absorbed by the bark, but passes on to the buds.
At the Ashton Experimental station in Bristol, England, it has been proved that in skillful hands this treatment makes the bark thinner, and greatly increases the size of the leaves and the productivity of the tree.
Pot and Kettle
"You have such strange names for your towns," an Englishman remarked to one of his new American friends. "Weehawken, Hoboken, Poughkeepsie, and ever so many others."
"I suppose they do sound queer to English ears," said the American, thoughtfully. "Do you live in London all the time?"
"Oh, no," said the unsuspicious Briton, "I spend a part of my time at Chipping Norton, and then I've a place at Pokestogg-o-the-Hike." — Harper's Magazine.
Exeter grape growers averaged about $80 per ton for their fruit this season.
SQUARE
R Store
Do Your Christmas Shopping Early
Our store is resolved into a great TREAS-
SQUARE
R Store
CALIFORNIA
Do Your
Christmas
Shopping Early
Our store is resolved
into a great TREASURE HOUSE of
Christmas Suggestions.
Holiday
Sale
and Lowest Price Unite!
280 Pair Ladies'
Oxford's
Louis Heel, in brown and
black kid and patent leather. [turned and welt soles]
All sizes to $12.00 values.
$3.85
that are by far the lowest in
here is a Real Shoe Sale!
er. [turned and welt soles]
All sizes to $12.00 values.
$3.85
200 pair of low Louis and Military
heel BOOTS. Fabric tops is brown,
black and gray to $9.50 value.
$2.95
Mary Janes
specially priced for
immediate sale
One lot of 1st steps.
Values to $2.25.
Extra Special
85c to $1.75