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anaheim-gazette 1937-06-24

1937-06-24 · Anaheim Gazette · page 3 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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SOCIETY CLUBS Conservatory of Music Presents Recital Tonight Students of the Anaheim Conservatory of Music will present their annual recital this evening in the Greek theater of the Anaheim city park. They will be assisted by students of the Orange county Ethel Meglin dance studio. The recital will begin at 7 o'clock. Students of piano and violin will represent the Conservatory, which is under the direction of Mrs. A. Siegel Esther Shields will direct the dance numbers. Pianists will be Beverly, Fick; Geraldine Hardin, Grace Wischnack, Rolland Upton, Jr., Robert McDewell, Marvin Mock, Daisy Vuksanowich, Connie Mae Lindsey, Janet Wheaton, Billy Kellogg, Alberta Wischnack, Shirley and Richard Walsworth, Ida Marie Fredell, Josephine Pollard, Beverly Bond and Claire Hollingsworth in the first group. Violinists in the first group are Beverly Bond, Calvin Stewart, Loystene Stewart, David and Alberta Wischnack, and Frank Kellogg. Appearing in the first group of dances will be Marlyn Stueckle, Vina Mae Harmer, Elaine Reynolds, Betty Courtney, Villa Prell, Jack Phillips, Marjory Buegley, Collen Allen and Lois Bradley. The second group of pianists include John Visanowick, Jim Gaddis, Phillip Hargrove, James Stewart, Jules Osher, Elaine Reynolds and Ruth Ellen Taylor. Violinists in the second group are Fumi Fujii, Ruth Ellen Taylor, Lucille Roquet, and George Kelley. Dancers appearing in the sec- Silver Wedding Anniversary of Couple Honored The twenty-fifth wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Criss, 328 S. Vine street, was celebrated last Sunday afternoon when a reception was held at the home of Mr. Criss' parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Criss, 324 S. Vine street. The honored couple were married at Corona. A special guest at the reception was Mrs. Fred Cunningham of Corona, who served as bridesmaid for Mrs. Criss and who was married the day after the Criss ceremony. The same guest book used following the wedding (was used to record the names of the guests at the event Sunday). Individual cakes, sandwiches and tea were served during the afternoon by Mrs. Louis F. Bremer, a daughter of the honored couple, assisted by another daughter, Virginia Criss, and Marjorie Wagner. The five children of the couple were present. They include in addition to Mrs. Bremer and Miss Virginia Criss, Albert and Charles, Jr., and Marjorie. Others in attendance were Fred Cunningham, and Mr. and Mrs. E. Erwin of Corona, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Erwin and Mr. and Mrs. John Nylen of Brea, Louis F. Bremer, Miss Sarah Davis, Mrs. C. A. Dent, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Davis of Huntington Park and Mrs. Clarence Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Davis and Mrs. Emily Stearns of Anaheim. Lois Roquet will play a group Garden Setting Of Wedding of Anaheim Couple Marriage vows were exchanged Sunday afternoon in a double ring ceremony by Miss Doris W. Auperle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Aupperle, and Clifford Smith of Anaheim, son of Mr. and Mrs. Adrjan Smith of Michigan. The ceremony was read by the Rev. David J. Brigham, pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Placentia, in the garden of the home of the bride's parents at 210 E. Alberta street. Attending the bridal couple were Miss Helen Aupperle as maid of honor and Richard Meyers as best man. An instrumental quartet composed of Alice, Lily, Grace and Marion Imamoto played the wedding march and Dr. C. O. Patterson was the soloist. A reception was held in the garden after which the couple left for a honeymoon trip. The new Mrs. Smith is a graduate of Anaheim union high school and later attended Fullerton junior college. Mr. Smith attended schools in Michigan and is employed in a grocery store here. Birthday Dinner Party Honors Ernest Hedges Ernest Hedges of Ontario was honored at a birthday party given at the home of his father, C. W. Hedges, 715 W. Center street, last Sunday noon. Sharing honors with Ernest Hedges was his father who was Villa Mae Harmer, Elaine Reynolds, Betty Courtney, Villa Prell, Jack Phillips, Marjory Buegley, Collen Allen and Lois Bradley. The second group of pianists include John Visanowick, Jim Gaddis, Phillip Hargrove, James Stewart, Jules Osher, Elaine Reynolds and Ruth Ellen Taylor. Violinists in the second group are Fumi Fujii, Ruth Ellen Taylor, Lucille Roquet, and George Kelley. Dancers appearing in the second group are Terry Kilduff, Betty Vardy and Bernice and Mari Lynn Hargrove. The final group of pianists include Lillian Sellers, Dorothy Baumstark, Dixie June Cleaver, Naomi Wheaton, Marilynn Hargrove, Bernice Hargrove and Joan Bigler. Others in attendance were Fred Cunningham, and Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Erwin of Corona, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Erwin and Mr. and Mrs. John Nylen of Brea, Louis F. Bremer, Miss Sarah Davis, Mrs. C. A. Dent, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Davis of Huntington Park and Mrs. Clarence Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Davis and Mrs. Emily Stearns of Anaheim. Lois Roquet will play a group of piano accordion solos. Naomi Frederickson, Marie Clark and Betty Baird will be the soloists in the final violin group. Ushers for the event will be Virginia Fick, Norma Osborn, Lorraine Bercot, Betty Naffziger, Phillip Hargrove and Donald Baggott. Birthday Dinner Party Honors Ernest Hedges Ernest Hedges of Ontario was honored at a birthday party given at the home of his father, C. W. Hedges. 715 W. Center street, last Sunday noon. Sharing honors with Ernest Hedges was his father, who was presented with a large bouquet in commemorating of Fathers Day. Places at dinner were laid for Ernest Hedges and his daughter: Ernestine Hedges, Ontario, Bert A. Landers, Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Shupe Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Challen Landers and daughter, all of Los Angeles. SAVE $50.00 5.25 - 6.18 - 7.15 Cu.f. 5 YEAR PROTECTION On All Parts and Labor It has a built-in TEMPERATURE INDICATOR THIS BIG 6-CUBIC-FOOT MODEL ONLY BACKED BY A 5-YEAR PROTECTION THIS BIG 6-CUBIC FOOT MODEL ONLY BACKED BY A 5-YEAR PROTECTION PLAN 6.15 CUBIC FEET 13.45 SQ. FT. SHELF 10 LBS. OF ICE $16950 NET ANAHEIM FURNITURE STORE 236 WEST CENTER (OPPOSITE FOX THEATRE) ANAHEIM ANAHEIM GAZETTE TELEPHONE YOUR SOCIAL NEWS TO ANAHEIM 2414 Doris Redfern, J. Russell Kent Exchange Vows The marriage of Miss Doris Dorotha Redfern, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Redfern, Fullerton, to J. Russell Kent of Oakland, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Charles A. Kent of Altadena, was solemnized Saturday evening in the Fullerton First Methodist church. The ceremony was conducted by the bridegroom's father, a former pastor of the Fullerton Methodist church, assisted by the Rev. E. Dow Hoffman, present pastor. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Phyllis Redfern, as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Wendell Redfern, Cleveland, Ohio, Mrs. Gerald Rapp, Whittier, and Mrs. Harrison W. Pells, Ontario. Joe W. Johnson served as best man and ushers were Oliver Kent, Los Angeles, Dr. Wendell M. Redfern, Cleveland, Harrison W. Pells, Ontario, Gerald Rapp, Whittier, and Godfrey Beckman, Orange. Fred J. Bewley of Orange sang "Where E'er You Walk" and "Felicity" before the ceremony, accompanied by John Paul Clark of Los Angeles who also played a group of organ solos and the wedding march. A reception was held at the Redfern home on South Spadra following the ceremony. The new Mrs. Kent is a graduate of Fullerton union high school, Fullerton Junior college and Pomona college. For the past two years she has been a teacher in Valencia high school in Placentia. Mr. Kent also graduated from Fullerton high school and junior college. Miss Dorothy Yungbluth Announces Engagement To Norvald T. Ulvestad Sunday Dinner guests, assembled at the F. A. Yungbluth beach home at Laguna last Sunday evening for a Father's Day dinner, were surprised by the announcement of the engagement of Miss Dorothy MISS YUNGBLUTH Yungbluth to Norvald T. Ulvestad of Los Angeles, son of Mr. and Mrs. I. A. Ulvestad of Ravalli, Montana. The bride-to-be is a descendent of one of the Pioneer families of Anaheim. Her maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Strodthoff, were members of the colony that founded the city. Her father, F. A. Yungbluth, is the owner and operator of the second oldest business establishment of Anaheim. His store was established here. For the past years she has been employed at the National Trust and Savings of Los Angeles. He was graded from the law school of the university of Montana. The betrothal was made when guests discovered a scroll hidden in their blue silver favors which were placed on the table when the dance course was served. Upon scrolls were the names of betrothed. Date for the marriage had been definitely set, but will cur sometime in the early winters attending the dinner in addition to Miss Yungbluth and Mr. Ulvestad were Mrs. G. J. Strodthoff of Beach, Mr. and Mrs. O. W. S.thoff and Misses Bernicee Geraldine Strodthoff of Los Angeles, Mr. and Mrs. W. W.RhLos Angeles, Hugo Strodthoff Theodore B. Kuchel, Mr. and F. A. Yungbluth and E.Yungbluth, Anaheim. College Romance Is Culminated In Marriage Culminating a romance story when both were students at University of California and Angeles, Miss Miriam daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C.W. Sloop of Anaheim, was ried Sunday to Robert Schriner son of Mr. and Mrs. E.Schriner of Los Angeles. The ceremony was held at beach home of Mr. and Mrs. Day Dinner Honors Hedges Hedges of Ontario was at a birthday party given by his father, C. W. 15 W. Center street, last moon. honors with Ernest was his father, who was with a large bouquet in arrating of Fathers Day. that dinner were laid for hedges and his daughter, Hedges, Ontario, Bert A. Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Shupe, and Mrs. Challen Landers Enter, all of Los Angeles, of Los Angeles who also played a group of organ solos and the wedding march. A reception was held at the Redfern home on South Spadra following the ceremony. The new Mrs. Kent is a graduate of Fullerton union high school, Fullerton Junior college and Pomona college. For the past two years she has been a teacher in Valencia high school in Placentia. Mr. Kent also graduated from Fullerton high school and junior college. He was graduated cum laude from Stanford university and received his master's degree there. He is a teacher in Oakland. Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Erwin, Fullerton, and Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Hedges. Is Calminated In Marriage Culminating a romance when both were students at University of California and Angeles, Miss Miriam daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Sloop of Anaheim, was ried Sunday to Robert Schriner of Mr. and Mrs. E. Schriner of Los Angeles. The ceremony was held on beach home of Mr. and Mrs. Sloop at Balboa with the Thomas H. Walker, pastor of First Presbyterian church of heim, officiating. Only immediate member the two families were in ance. The new Mrs. Schroeder graduated from U.C.L.A. 50.00 ON A LEVEL Cu. ft. DeLuxe 1936 Leonards at Sensational News TIME BUYERS PROTECTION Only Leonard Owners Have It • If you are out of work two weeks your Entire Contract is Postponed One Month at No Extra Charge • Out of work six weeks—Entire Contract Postponed— Two Months — No Extra Charge Entire Contract is Postponed One Month at No Extra Charge • Out of work six weeks—Entire Contract Postponed— Two Months — No Extra Charge • Out of work ten weeks—Entire Contract Postponed— Three Months — at No Charge • In event of Death of Family Provider the widow or heirs receive a Paid in Full Contract from The Leonard Co. THIS PROTECTION COSTS YOU NOTHING BUY A LEONARD $450 ONLY PER MONTH Top o' the Town By Don Quixote Seldom a day passes in Hollywood without an army of new faces appearing for registration with Central Casting company for work as movie extras. Inviting tales of the salaries extras make lure these aspirants not only from America but from many foreign lands. Each in turn disappears to hunt a new means of livelihood when the girl at the desk repeats in phonograph fashion. No more registrations are taken through this office. Central Casting company's extra list has been complete for more than two years now with ten thousand names from which all the major studios are daily supplied. Of these extras seldom a word is ever heard, yet these unsung heroes form the rear guard of the motion picture industry. A good extra makes from ten to fifteen dollars a day—when he works—which on the surface seems good pay for what appears to be play; but Hollywood extraining is no simple routine, it is an accomplished profession where each must be his own dramatic coach, his own manager and his own critic. He must be professionally versed in the sciences of acting and be ready at a moment's notice to hand in a finished performance. Extras fall into various types and are cast accordingly. These is the everyday variety you see in street scenes who must be thoroughly schooled in the arts and has been teaching at the Westlake School for Girls at Beaverton. The average extra has to spend at least fifty per cent of his salary on a wardrobe to hold his job, for the clothes he appears in must be as smart as any female player. He has to learn the secrets of retaining his looks and applying the most becoming makeup for the camera spots the slightest flaw in a shabby countenance... and finally, he becomes past master in the high art of patience; for by this standard he rises or falls, whether it be the variety needed to sit by a telephone week in and week out for months waiting for the call to work or that of masking his personal feelings to radiate expression 37 of delight when the camera starts grinding. The extra is the fellow who never knows what it to relax. Personal extravagances of emotion and jangled nerves can never be indulged, by the extra. Temperament in a star is treated with highly developed understanding; but temperament on the part of an extra only means his last pay check. The chances of an extra rocketing into stardom are less than one in a hundred thousand, and each one philosophically accepts the Hollywood adage of 'once an extra always an extra'... but, secretly, way back in each extra's mind sits a persistent hope, that someday his 'break' will come. So, for that break he clings to all delicately the culminating a romance started on both were students at the university of California at Los Angeles, Miss Miriam Sloop,ighter of Mr. and Mrs. George Sloop of Anaheim, was mar-Sunday to Robert Schroeder,of Mr. and Mrs. E. SchroederLos Angeles. The ceremony was held at the church home of Mr. and Mrs. Paulop at Balboa with the Rev. Thomas H. Walker, pastor of the Presbyterian church of Ana-na, officiating. Only immediate members of two families were in attend- the new Mrs. Schroeder was educated from U.C.L.A. in 19935 Extras fall into various types and are cast accordingly. These is the everyday variety you see in street scenes who must be thoroughly schooled in the artsand has been teaching at the Westlake School for Girls at Beverly Hills. Mr. Schroeder was graduated this month, after serving for the past year as president of the student body. He will enter the insurance business when the couple return to their newhome in Westwood following a honeymoon trip to northernCalifornia. The chances of an extra rocketing into stardom are less than one in a hundred thousand, and each one philosophically accepts the Hollywood adage of 'once an extra always an extra' . . . but,secretly, way back in each extra's mind slits a persistent hope, that someday his 'break' will come. So, for that break he gives his all, delights the set with animation year in and year out . . . and never says die. Mrs. Louis Bremer of Huntington Park, who before her marriage was Miss Shirley Criss of Anaheim, will attend special classes at U. C. L. A. this summer. LEONARD ards at $50.00 Discount USES 40% LESS ELECTRICITY The most strikingly beautiful cabinet ever built The most strikingly beautiful cabinet ever built 5.25 CUBIC FEET 13.16 SQ. FT. SHELF 10 LBS. OF ICE $14950 NET ANAHEIM FURNITURE STORE 236 WEST CENTER (OPPOSITE FOX THEATRE) ANAHEIM