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anaheim-daily-herald 1921-12-05

1921-12-05 · Anaheim Daily Herald · page 4 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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PAGE FOUR Society CARRIE LOU EVANS, Editor Telephone 540 CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR HOLDS MEETING The Christian Endeavor of the Presbyterian church will hold its monthly social and business meeting Friday night at the home of Miss Marjory Day on Lincoln avenue. All members are requested to be present. WOMEN'S BIBLE CLASS MEETS The Women's Bible class of the Presbyterian church will hold a social meeting at the home of Mrs. F. N. Glbbs on East Center Tuesday night. KATELLA P. T.A. MEETS TUESDAY The Katella Parent-Teachers' Association will hold its regular monthly business meeting Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Everyone is invited to attend. MISS EVANS BECOMES BRIDE OF JAMES SUTHERLAND The wedding of Miss Carrie Lou Evans and James Sutherland, popular young people of Anaheim, took place at the home of Mr. Sutherland's sister, Mrs. C. A. McCullah, on East Broadway at 1 o'clock Sunday afternoon, the Rev. James Sutherland, father of the bridegroom, officiating. The single ring ceremony was used. The bride was chaining in her traveling gown of black satin. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tedrick attended the couple. Immediately after the ceremony, an informal reception was held and light refreshments served by Mrs. McCullah to the immediate relatives and the bridal party. Late in the afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Sutherland left for a ten-day honeymoon in the southern part of the state. CHICKEN DINNER AT HEYING HOME Mr. and Mrs. F. Heying of West Anaheim entertained the following Mr. and Mrs. George Tedrick of Orange enterained as their dinner guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Fred Waisel and son, Frederick, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tedrick and son, Raymond, all of Anaheim. The afternoon was spent with music and visiting. ELKS PAY BEAUTIFUL TRIBUTE TO MEMORY OF HERO DEAD (Continued from Page One) taken away the father, silently and tenderly Elkdom softens the grief of the widow, ministers to her needs and bids the orphan look into the future with faith and confidence. Our order stands for the charity of deeds, of actually living daily acts; they never humiliate the ones who receive them and never stand impressively. When the home is invaded bySIONed upon the monument of the giver, Elkdom teaches, will all the fervor of its mighty soul, with all the gentleness of its broad humanity, with all the sympathy of its loving nature to succor the needy, strengthen the weak, feed the hungry, minister to the dying, but beyond and above all your daily acts of human kindness, write the virtues of your brothers upon the tablets of love and memory and their transgressions upon the sands. "Tabernacled Love of God" Their earthly remains shall rest in the tomb but their virtues triumphant and glorious can be profitably studied because virtue is invariable and eternal ever beautious and ever new. The temple of our order contains a shrine and within that shrine is tabernacled love of God, of country and our brothers. Faith without works is CHICKEN DINNER AT HEYING HOME Mr. and Mrs. F. Heying of West Anaheim entertained the following guests at a chicken dinner at their home on North Loara street yesterday: Mr. and Mrs. E. Lyens and son, Mr. and Mrs. G. Ashton, J. Webb, R. Jackson and Miss Inez Heying, all of Los Angeles; Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Heying of Anaheim. PINOCHLE CLUB ENJOY CHRISTMAS DINNER A delicious turkey dinner was served by the women of the Pinochle Club to their husbands at the Ralph Maas home on North West street Sunday, December 4. The evening's entertainment was furnished by the men and caused much amusement among the members. Those enjoying the delightful affair were Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Sidnam, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hathway, Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Riley, Mr. and Mrs. George Prince, Mrs. M. E. Canby and S. S. Conklin. SHERWOOD CLUB MEETS AT HOCHULI The members of the Sherwood Club met at the home of Miss Edna Hochul Saturday afternoon with Olive Tozier as assisting hostess. After a short business meeting, the members were separated into two divisions for the purpose of class study, with Miss Stella Schwenkter and Miss Hochul instructing. Ea training, harmony and other important fundamentals of music were given thorough study at the club meeting. Following the study period a social time was enjoyed and light refreshments served by the hostesses. THE EBELL CLUB Will Hold Its BAZAAR Dec. 9th and 10th in the new Mrs. Paul Tedrick attended the couple. Immediately after the ceremony an informal reception was held and light refreshments served by Mrs. McCullah to the immediate relatives and the bridal party. Late in the afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Sutherland left for a ten-day honeymoon in the southern part of the state. TABERNACLED LOVE OF GOD Their earthly remains shall rest in the tomb but their virtues triumphant and glorious can be profitably studied because virtue is invariable and eternal, ever beautiful and ever new. The temple of our order contains a shrine and within that shrine is tabernacled love of God, of country and our brothers. Faith without works is dead. If we must live, let us bend the knee and bow our heads because that shrine is sacred and from it flows an inspiration for noble and right-minded living. Thus shall we make ourselves better men, better citizens, better Elks, and thus shall we best respond to the genius of our republic, whose splendor and glory must endure until men shall be no more. Our order requires belief in a Supreme Being and demands that a member must be an American citizen, therefore it aims to gather as members ben of conscience and men of loyalty, granting to every member the liberty of worship according to the dictates of his own conscience. Thus this great, splendid, manly, American Order has grown to have nearly one million men loving the land where all men are allowed to build their own altars, to light their own fires of religious worship, to utter in fuller freedom those petitions for help and strength and consolation that in a hundred tongues and in temples of a thousand shapes, men every day send up to god. "And thou, O God, of whom we hold Our Country and our Freedom, fair Within thy tender love enfold This land; for all thy people care Uplift our hearts above our fortunes high. Let not the good we have make us forget.* The better things that in thy heavens lie. Keep still, amid the fever and the fret Of all this eager life, our thoughts on thee, The Hope, the Strength, the God of all the free." Hope of Resurrection In the creation of man is embodied the basic principle upon which we form our belief in immortality. God created man for himself. He stamped upon him the impress of His own likeness, gave to him the divine injunction to love and to serve Him; to do so meant that he should live an eternity with his Creator, sharing with him the immortal joys of the blessed Again, it was for all men that the blood fell in large crimson stains on the unconscious grass in the Garden of Gethsemene To all men has been made the divine promise: "I am the resurrection and the life. He that believeth in me though he be dead ence of a sweet anointship has been loft heim lodge about five separation there ene the hope of resurrection setting sun approach our brief existence we will seem to grow wordily strife will intense. It will have days grow shorter, shadows our happy be the recollection gone from us forever lights when no man our retrospection, old lodge room again features moving at the owners are clay moments when we hear to hear the loved a parted one, to catch lost chord, or to jadecence of a glorious And while we have today in accordance custom, it is fitting we should include in our tributes, and appreciation those who lie in Flanders where, who, by the fice vindicated the over might, and many universal briotic cheer day. God bless them for the present and civilization. One of this land wove to every appeal we are the children would deny to any in His name we raise the stricken and clothe the nake Made Supre There were thousands of men who where the probability of world war, reached intervening years, the teachings of them upon God to witness THE EBELL CLUB Will Hold Its BAZAAR Dec. 9th and 10th in the new Buick Garage on Los Angeles Street. Dozens and dozens of hand-made, pretty and useful articles will be offered for sale. Mr. and Mrs. Phonograph Buyer! Compare COMPARE—and you will discover why only the New Edison brings the higher beauties and benefits of music, why only the New Edison perfectly matches the performance of the living artist. The NEW EDISON We shall gladly supply you with a Phonograph Comparison Card. It enables you to score all the instruments you hear, and rate them. Don't do your Christmas-phonograph shopping without one. If you can't call, use the coupon! DUNHAM & KNIPE CO. With DANZ PIANO CO. 162 West Center Street ANAHEIM DAILY HERALD CRITICAL MOMENTS —By Herbert Johnson OH, YESSIR! YOU'RE LOOKING FOR WILLIE WUNKLE'S ROOM — YESSIR, I THINK IT'S IN THIS DORM—LET ME SEE NOW—HIM (STALLING) PA AND MA ARRIVE UNEXPECTEDLY JUST IN TIME FOR ONE OF THE COLLEGE GAMES — ence of a sweet and tender companionship has been lost to us, in Anaheim lodge about fifteen, but in every heart darkened with the sorrow of separation there enters the light of the hope of resurrection. When the setting sun approaches the horizon of our brief existence here, worldly cares will seem to grow much heavier and wordly strife will seem to be more intense. It will happen then, as the days grow shorter, in the coming shadows, our happiest moments will be the recollection of a time that is gone from us forever. In coming twilights when no man is by to disturb our retrospection, we will peope the old lodge room again with forms and features moving and being, although the owners are clay. There will come moments when we will strain our ears to hear the loved accents of some departed one, to catch the harmony of a lost chord, or to join in the solemn cadence of a glorious "Amen." And while we have assembled here today in accordance with our annual custom, it is fittingly appropriate that we should include in our memories and our tributes, and our expressions of appreciation those of our honored dead who lie in Flanders Field, and elsewhere, who, by their supreme sacrifice vindicated the principle of right over might, and made of America the universal brotherhood of man, because day. God bless the lads who have died for the preservation of humanity and civilization. God bless the people of this land who have harkened to every appeal and vindicated the we are the children of our Father and would deny to any mother, I care not in His name wo bend the knee to raise the stricken, feed the hungry and clothe the naked. Made Supreme Sacrifice There were thousands, yea millions of men who when face to face with the probability of death in the great world war, reached back through the intervening years and remembering the teachings of their mothers, called upon God to witness that while their earthly lives belonged to their country, their souls belonged to their Creator and if called upon to make the supreme sacrifice they asked His benediction and His blessing so that they might enjoy an eternal life with Him. The immortality of the soul needs no greater proof than was given on the battlefields of the great war and no skeptic or doubter will return, but rather his hopes and aspirations and yearnings for eternal life will be strengthened and fortified by his renewal of the faith given him first by a tender and devoted mother. Who would deny to any mother, I cre not what her nationality might be, the hope, the yearning, the consolation of a blessed reunion in heaven with her boy whose body lies now, perhaps, in some unknown grave somewhere in France? If this life is the end of all things, then our four million brave lads did a vain and empty thing in offering their lives to occupy forgotten graves and never receive an eternal reward for their supreme sacrifice. Therefore, we have met today and through the coming years this great American organization will meet every Memorial Sunday to recount the virtues of our departed brothers; to recount the glories of our heroic Elk dead, and pray for one and all a blessed reunion in the Eternal Mansions of our Father who is in Heaven and by this action prove to the world that those grand old mother words, Love and Brotherhood, have still the same old beauty, the same old meaning, calling and calling and calling to the hearts and consciences of men. Dr. J. Silva of Oakland and Dr. Shores have formed a company of their own and bought the entire Polled Hereford herd owned by Cliff Durant, consisting of 23 head. Their ranch is at Alamo, Contra Costa County. The deal was made through E. F. Peterson, manager for the Diablo Stock Farm. They also bought six heifers and a bull from this firm. SPORT CIRCLES ARE STILL BUZZING ABOUT JIMMY CAVENEY SALE SAN FRANCISCO. Dec. 6.—Sport circles haven't yet stopped buzzing about the sale of Jimmy Caveney, Seal shortstop, to the Cincinnati Reds for a sum reputed to be in the neighborhood of $25,000—and a handful of players, including some mighty necessary pitchers, besides. Although once before Caveney refused to go east to join the Detroit Tigers, he has announced a willingness to hang his hat on a Cincinnati hatrack provided he can come in for a cut in the sale price. Caveney knows Charley Graham and company have made a good thing out of the sale—having bought him for a small enough sum so that nobody bothers to mention it. Caveney wants to get a salary from the Reds in keeping with his sale price, a cut in the sale price, and a bonus for the services he has rendered the Seals during three seasons. And there's no denying that his brilliant work on the offside of second base has boosted the box office receipts of the Seals. Fans are hopeful Caveney will get the "cut." NOT FULLY RECOVERED. She—Have you any ill after effects from your sickness last fall? He (regretfully)—Yes, I married my nurse. THE SUPERCRIMINAL Made Supreme Sacrifice There were thousands, yea millions of men who when face to face with the probability of death in the great world war, reached back through the intervening years and remembering the teachings of their mothers, called upon God to witness that while their own and bought the entire Poet Hereford herd owned by Cliff Durant, consisting of 23 head. Their ranch is at Alamo, Contra Costa County. The deal was made through E. F. Peterson, manager for the Diablo Stock Farm. They also bought six heifers and a bull from this firm. Fashions for Americans Paisley prints or weaves, either in silk or light weight wool fabrics, develop into lovely blouses of either the suit or costume type. The model shown in the sketch, a slipover, offers a suggestion to the woman whose blouse assortment is not quite complete. This blouse may be made to wear either as a tuck-in or an over-the-skirt affair. Many of the blouses that are only waist length, such as this one, are finished at the waist line so that they may be worn over the skirt without a separate belt or girdle. Narrow black velvet or cire ribbon binds all the edges of the blouse shown, giving it a very pretty finish. Among the very newest blouses now being shown for mid-winter, southern resort, or very early spring wear, are waist length, over-the-skirt models, made to tie either at the back or side. And dainty crepes in narrow stripes or checks are among the popular fabrics. A group of exceptionally dainty blouses seen recently that were heralded as advance season models were made of crepe de chine, in such colors as orchid, peach, maize, dahlia, etc., with half inch checks in white. Plain white self fabric supplied the trimming, forming collar and cuffs and frequently a piping. The vogue for sports suits naturally creates a big demand for blouses made on mannish lines. Many smart models are being shown, both in silk and cotton. Little panels of narrow pleating, classified as "ladder" pleating, and self fabric lattice work are among the trimmings featured. For instance, a colored crepe blouse may have collar and cuffs of white finished at the edges with self fabric cords looped over in a sort of crochet effect, or criss-cross sections of the cording may form panels down the front of the blouse. Paisley Prints Are Popular for Suit or Costume Blouses. She—Have you any ill after effects from your sickness last fall? He (regretfully)—Yes, I married my nurse. THE SUPERCRIMINAL Mr. Pester—This town's in a dirty mess. All they do is to chase a few petty rascals. They ought to get after the man higher up. His Wife—It's not a man. It's the woman higher up. She shakes her rags out over our back porch every day. RAPID CHILD. Proud Mother—Uncle John, don't you think my new baby is fine? Uncle John—Yes, for a newborn. I even think he's ahead of his time. Proud Mother—What do you mean? Uncle John—Why he's already more than his father. Monday, December 5, 1921. Buy Him A Box of Sox NOTHING can be more useful, as a gift, than a box of Sox. Lisle, Silk or Wool. 50c to $2.00 Kustiner's ANAHEIM Chaffees WHERE CASH BEATS CREDIT Bread Special Two Loaves { DARK BREAD } Fifteen Cents This offer is made at this time with the idea to introduce the quality of our Multi-grain, Whole Wheat and Graham Bread in the Home. The change from white to dark bread lends variety to your menu. This offer will continue until the close of business Saturday, December 10th. Dependable Stores Selling Dependable Foods. The World's Greatest Value at the Price $32.50 THE ELGIN COMPANY'S newest Elgin 12 size watch, 14k green gold 25-year filled case, gold or silver dial; 17 jeweled Elgin works, very fine engraved case, round cushion or octagon shapes. ESTABLISHED 1919 $32.50 At that price it stands alone in a class by itself for goodness, value, accuracy of time-keeping. An absolutely new and exclusive design. THE JEWEL BOX 223 West Center St. ANAHEIM PRINTING HAVE YOU EVER TAKEN IT INTO CONSIDERATION THAT IT IS THE KIND OF PRINTING YOU HAVE ON YOUR STATIONERY THAT DENOTES THE CHARACTER OF YOUR BUSINESS. OUR PRINTING CARRIES DISTINCTION AND INDIVIDUALITY. OUR JOB MAN WILL CALL ON YOU AT YOUR CONVENIENCE, AT ANY TIME, MORNING, NOON OR EVENING. THE ANAHEIM HERALD JOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT Phone 540 Try The Herald Job Department For Your Printing.