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anaheim-gazette 1944-06-01

1944-06-01 · Anaheim Gazette · page 4 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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SOCIETY NEWS (Continued From Page 3) MARGARET BUTTREE'S ANNUAL ENSEMBLE RECITAL ON MONDAY EVENING AN EXCELLENT PROGRAM The twenty-first annual Ensemble Recital as presented by Margaret Buttree last Monday evening at 7:45 o'clock at the Fremont school auditorium was very well received, the auditorium being filled to capacity. This is an annual recital and is eagerly awaited each year by patrons and friends of the school. The program as presented was, Part I: "Star Spangled Banner," Kathryn Gauer leading with Eloise Roquet and Marjorie Shutte at the piano; "Military March" by Schubert, Robert Lyons, Kenneth Dymmel, John Braun, Wayne Schultz, Marvin Melton, David Moody, Bill Goodman and Oliver Newton; "Spring Violets," by Bilbro, Patsy Brooks, Peggy Borden, Ruth Keyes, LaVonne Hart, Patricia Mattox, Carlene Korn, Barbara Simonton and Marjorie Wright; "Yellow Jonquils," by Johanning, Marjorie Cranston, Judith Crankshaw, Marilyn Schimming, Ann Goodman, Joan Spencer, Donna Stabbert, Janet Stokes and Helen Weir; "Valse Intermezzo," by Egeling, Judith Crankshaw, Genevieve Kirk, Marjorie Cranston; Connie Woods, Bonnie Jean Smith, Pauline Patterson, Corinne Van Delden and Marilyn Schimming. "Chapel in the Mountains," by Wilson, Rosemary Weir, Marilyn Daigle, Barbara Robbins, Ruth Martens, Barbara Cash, Joan Lakeman Audrey Kruse and Centralia School Hold Graduation Service Wed. Eve Graduation services of the Centralia Elementary school were held Wednesday evening, May 31st, at 8 o'clock before a capacity crowd of patrons and friends. An excellent program had been prepared which was greatly enjoyed. The officers of the graduating class were Allan Wayne Meyer, president; Donald Eugene Calaway, vice-president; Verna Joyce Woods, secretary, and Joseph Chaplin West, treasurer. The program was as follows: Processional by Verdi; Flag salute led by Allan Meyer; American's Creed, class of 1944; "America," sung by the entire audience; invocation by Rev. J. B. Abbott, minister of the Free Methodist Church of Anaheim; "California Under Twelve Flags" by the class of 1944; "I Love You California," song by everyone; class prophecy, Verna Joyce Woods; saxophone solo by Allan Wayne Meyer; class will by Norman Ray Brock; "Life is An Adventure" by Paul H. Demaree, superintendent and principal of the Anaheim High School; presentation of class by S. R. Ammon, principal of Centralia School; presentation of the diplomas by Dr. R. D. Temple, president of the Centralia School Board and to conclude the program the Re Thayer Chapman was the New President of the Anaheim Lions Club. Election of officers was on Tuesday's regular noon meeting of the Lions club at the Elks clubhouse. The nominating committee chairman, Clyde Cromer, announced the results of the balloting week previous which was to be a president, secretary, treasurer and four directors, all of whom will begin their terms of office with the first meeting in July. By their ballots the club members elected as president Thayer "Chappy" Chapman; secretary Vic LaMont, and treasurer H. G. Schmelzer, the latter now serving in the same capacities Directors for a two-year term elected Friday are O. E. Hansen Art Wilmsen, and Joe Wilmsen and for a one-year term, H. Rossberg. Guests present were Cadet Captain C. Duane Brown of the Army and Navy Academy, San Diego son of Lion A. P. M. Brown, Kelsey J. Olds, and Miss Lillian Knutson of the Chamber of Commerce office. E. O. Hutson, a new transgender member from Roseville, Calif., where he was president of the Lions club, was formally induced into the local order by Dist. G. Louis Hoskins. Lions Frank Tausch and J. Baker introduced Ross Lee Law secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, who made a short but spiraling address on Memorial Day. In one of the finest pieces of history heard in Anaheim recent Secretary Laird gave the Lions brief history of the occasion Memorial Day from its inception. "Chapel in the Mountains," by Wilson, Rosemary Weir, Marilyn Daigle, Barbara Robbins, Ruth Martens, Barbara Cash, Joan Lakeman, Audrey Kruse, and Jewel Walker; "Prelude in C Sharp Minor" by Rachmaninoff, Mary Ellen Middleton, Joan Dymmel, Evelyn Taylor, Teddy Lou Payne, Robert Morecraft and Sanford Williams; "Diana," by Holst, Joan Dymmel, Marilyn Daigle, Barbara Cash, Audrey Kruse, Evelyn Taylor and Jewel Walker; "Patriotic Ensemble," under the direction of Miss Margaret Crulkshank, teacher of Expression. Music: Kenneth Dymmel, Robert Morecraft, Claire Spencer, piano, Robert Lyon, drum b, James Friis, and trumpet, Raoul Garcia. Reading: "I Am the United States" by Casseres, Douglas Phillips; "Toast to the Flag," by Haley, Student Ensemble; Song, "Oh Columbia the Gem of the Ocean," by Beckett, Ensemble and audience with Shirley Benecke, Jean Thompson, Gwen Ahlstrom, and Nancy Burdick at the pianos. Part II: "Sunshine Song," by Grieg, Edna Ruth Davis, Mary Lee Melton, Charlotte Varcoe and Mary Lou Wurtz; "Hungarian Rhapsody" by Koelling, Anabel Phillips and Harry Robertson; "Invitation to the Dance," by Von Weber, Wwen Ahlstrom, Nancy Burdick, Eloise Roquet, Veoda Mae Tessner, Teddy Lou Payne, Mary Ellen Middleton, Marjorie Schutte and Rosemary Weir; "Harmonica Player," by Guion, Virginia Reed and James Friis; "Good Night" (from "A Day in Venice") by Nevin, Edna Ruth Davis, Joan Mohn, Mary Lou Wurtz, and Mary Lee Melton. "Indian Love Call" by Friml, Jean Thompson and Shirley Benecke; "Hungarian Dance, No. 5" by Brahms, Eloise Roquet, Marjorie Schutte, Gwen Ahlstrom, Nancy Burdick, James Friis and Roland Schmitt; "Gitanerius" by Leocuona, Anabel and Douglas Phillips; "Prelude Militaire in G Minor," by Rachmaninoff, Shirley Stokes, Kathryn Gauer, Virginia Reed, Marian Merrill, Kathryn Drennan and Joan Mohn. "Valse Debonairre" by Paga- California," song by everyone; class prophecy, Verna Joyce Woods; saxophone solo by Allan Wayne Meyer; class will by Norman Ray Brock; "Life is An Adventure" by Paul H. Demaree, superintendent and principal of the Anaheim High School; presentation of class by S. R. Ammon, principal of Centralia School; presentation of the diplomas by Dr. R. D. Temple, president of the Centralia School Board and to conclude the program the Recessional by Williams was played. The members of the graduating class were Albert Gordon Baker, Gilbert Preston Boutcher, Norman Ray Brock, Jack Harold Brown, Clarence James Bruggeman, Donald Eugene Calaway, Jackie Dale Greer, Sietcke Ann Hummel, Alveria Mandomda Lopez, Allan Wayne Meyer, Lowell Jay Naylor, Ofelia Inda Rowarte, Jimmie Lee Smith, Billy Eugene Tingley, Joseph Chaplin West and Verna Joyce Woods. Former Resident Honored With Party Mrs. Guy Bender, a former resident of West Anaheim, now living in Bellflower, was the honoree on last Thursday afternoon when Mrs. A. H. Booth and Mrs. Lyman Booth entertained at their home with a surprise party. Floral arrangements of pink roses, sweet peas and snapdragons were used throughout the rooms of the home with the individual trays carrying a favor of a miniature nursery chair. The dessert table used the flowers with lighted blue candles to add to the loveliness. An attractive arrangement on the gift table was a large pink and blue umbrella over a buffet table on which the many lovely gifts were placed. These were opened preceding the refreshment course. Garden Grove Girl Weds Navy Man Miss Mary Lynn McCleary, daughter of Mrs. Josephine McCleary of 219 North West street, Garden Grove, was united in marriage to Pharmacist Mate 3/c Walter Rowen in Santa Ana recently. He is stationed at the Naval Air station near that city and the young couple are making their home in Santa Ana for the present. Following the ceremony a reception was held in the home where he was president of Lions club, was formally induced into the local order by Dist. Louis Hoskins. Lions Frank Tausch and J. Baker introduced Ross Lee Lavery secretary of the Chamber of Commerce who made a short but spiring address on Memorial Day. In one of the finest pieces of history heard in Anaheim recent Secretary Laird gave the Lion brief history of the occasion Memorial Day from its inception two years after the Civil War Columbus, Mississippi. ATTEND BOND MEETING IN LOS ANGELES Chairman Paul H. Demaree,the Fifth War Bond Drive,M.L.E.Middleton chairman of women's division,Lee Fabi manager of the Firestone store chairman of the retailers' vision; and O.E.Hanson,mana of the Bank of America,were Los Angeles last Thursday attending a zone war bond meeting Final plans for the drive which starts June 12 are rapidly being worked out and the committee expects to go over the top with quotas as usual. Thomas P. Sharp,Park Employee,Dies at Hospital Thomas P. Sharp., 68 years old passed away at St. Joseph's hospital on Wednesday May 30. He was an employee of the city member of the park employees. Mr. Sharp had made his home in Anaheim since 1918. He was born in North Carolina. Survivors are his widow,M.B.Sharp of the home,543 Jan one son,Glen R.Sharp,who stationed at the Scattle Navy Station;one grandson,Rayme Sharp;three sisters and five brothers,all of North Carolina. Mr. Sharp was a member of Knights of Pythias Lodge in Anaheim. Funeral services will be held Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the chapel of the Backs,Campbell & Kaulbars Mortuary with Rev. Stanley Frederick Georget pastor of the First Presbyter Church,officiating.Burial will be in the Anaheim cemetery. "Indian Love Call" by Friml, Jean Thompson and Shirley Benecke; "Hungarian Dance, No. 5" by Brahms, Eloise Roquet, Marjorie Schutte, Gwen Ahlstrom, Nancy Burdick, James Friis and Roland Schmitt; "Gitanerius" by Leocuona, Anabel and Douglas Phillips; "Prelude Militaire in G Minor," by Rachmaninoff, Shirley Stokes, Kathryn Gauer, Virginia Reed, Marian Merrill, Kathryn Drennan and Joan Mohn. "Valse Debonairre" by Paganucci and "Czardas" by Monti-Gould, Shirley Stokes and Maxine Olson; "Hungarian Rhapsody, No. 6," by Liszt, Mariana Hill and to conclude the program the grand finale was that beautiful "Les Preludes" by Liszt as played by Marian Hill, Shirley Stokes, Shirley Sivy, Marian Merrill, Maxine Olson, Jim Nelson, Anabel and Douglas Phillips. M'COY USED CARS HAS NEW QUARTERS The used car department of the McCoy Motor Company occupies new quarters according to an announcement made recently. The new quarters, located on the west side of North Los Angeles street at Adele opposite the main showrooms, offers greater convenience for the prospective buyers and give much better display of their various model cars. Weds Navy Man Miss Mary Lynn McCleary, daughter of Mrs. Josephine McCleary of 219 North West street, Garden Grove, was united in marriage to Pharmacist Mate 3/c Walter Rowen in Santa Ana recently. He is stationed at the Naval Air station near that city and the young couple are making their home in Santa Ana for the present. Following the ceremony a reception was held in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Johnson in Garden Grove. Mrs. Rowen is a graduate of the highschool in her home town and attended business college in Santa Ana. Mr. Rowen attended the schools in New York City and is the son of Mrs. Ellen Rowen. Engagement of Miss Bee Crawford Told Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Crawford of South East street, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Miss Bee, to Richard Igl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Engleburt Igl of Klammath Falls, Ore. Plans for the wedding have not been completed. Mr. Igl is stationed at present at the Santa Ana Army Air Base. Mr. Igl is a graduate of the University of Oregon. He expects to be transferred to another station in the near future. 5% AMORTIZED LOANS The Savings, Loan & Building Assn. OF ANAHEIM Incorporated in 1889 Phone 3515 211 East Center Street, Anaheim, California ANAHEIM GAZETTE WASHINGTON As Seen By CONGRESSMAN JOHN PHILLIPS One of the troubles with the bright young men who write the regulations and the press releases and the propaganda is that they seem to think they are ghost writers for Divine Providence. Once a government embarks on the road to regulation, there is no easily defined stopping point. You just keep on going. That's what other nations have found. In World War I we regulated less than two dozen food items, very successfully; this time we started out to regulate and control practically everything the people eat and wear and use. The inevitable result has been regulations and orders, in great and increasing detail. Take poultry, for example: To most of us poultry is poultry, as we buy it at the butcher shop, or raise it in the back yard or on the farm. "Cut-up poultry" would mean cut-up poultry. As we move along the road to regulation, however, it is necessary to be more explicit. The OPA on April 6, issued a description of cut-up poultry. It was "Maximum Price Regulation No. 422 Amendment No. 12, and Maximum Price Regulation 523 Amendment No. 13" and the first sentence put every butcher at his ease, for it says, "This trade bulletin is to help you understand Amendment 12 to MPR 422 and Amendment 13 to MPR 423. It covers only the main points of these amendments and does not take their place." It then adds Amendment 25 to RMPR 269, describing cut-up poultry, two pages, very small type, from which I cull the following gems: "The wings of each poultry item must be disjointed and removed at the socket joint adjoining the breast and must contain all the wing meat." Yes, I think that would be the wing. "The legs must be disjointed and at the hock joint and must contain the complete thigh, meat, and the oyster, but contain the illium or the bones or any part thereof would be the very discarded an ischium or any caught in your throat. If you don't like the paper read the following slowly butcher: "If you (the buyer) buy any live, dressed or poultry and sell it in part is not cut-up poultry under definition above, you figure net cost for each part and had bought that part seller pricing under RMU. To this net cost, you apply mark-up for poultry bought up and sold cut-up (2 Group One and Two stores)." Simple, isn't it? The income tax look pretty. All joking aside, I rise mark that regulation require by little the control of detail. Take this one "To sell frozen eviscerated as frozen poultry you longer have to keep it frozen conditions. This mo..." THE VICTORY WILL ARE ON THE WAY BUND BOND MEETING: LOS ANGELES Herman Paul H. Demaree of Fifth War Bond Drive, Mrs. Middleton, chairman of the district's division, Lee Fabian, owner of the Firestone store, man of the retailers' diary and O. E. Hanson, manager of Bank of America, were in Angeles last Thursday attend-zone war bond meeting. Plans for the drive which June 12 are rapidly being out and the committee ex- to go over the top with its usual. Thomas P. Sharp, Mark Employee, at Hospital Thomas P. Sharp., 68 years old, away at St. Joseph's hospon Wednesday, May 30. He is employee of the city, a member of the park employees. Sharp had made his home Anaheim since 1918. He was in North Carolina. Survivors are his widow, Marie Sharp of the home, 543 Janss; Mon, Glen R. Sharp, who is died at the Seattle Navy Air m; one grandson, Raymond three sisters and four ers, all of North Carolina. Sharp was a member of the Society of Pythias Lodge in Anaeral services will be held afternoon at 2 o'clock in Chapel of the Backs, Campbell Bulbars Mortuary with the Stanley Frederick George, of the First Presbyterian Church, officiating. Burial will be Anaheim cemetery. Will you be a VICTORY VOLUNTEER SERVE your country as a Victory Volunteer. Spend an hour or two a day in your own neighborhood. The task is important—the rewards great, for you will have the satisfaction of helping America toward Victory. For full details without obligation, go TODAY to (INSERT LOCAL ADDRESS HERE). Back the Attack! — BUY This is an official U.S. Treasury advertisement—prepared under auspices Thursday, June 1, 1944 must be disjointed and removed at the hock joint and must contain the complete thigh, all thigh meat, and the oyster, but shall not contain the illium or the ischium bones or any part thereof." It would be the very dickens to have an ischium or an illium caught in your throat. If you don't like the price, just read the following slowly to your butcher: "If you (the butcher) buy any live, dressed or drawn poultry and sell it in parts which is not cut-up poultry under the definition above, you figure your net cost for each part as if you had bought that part from a seller pricing under RMPR 269. To this net cost, you apply the mark-up for poultry bought cut-up and sold cut-up (21% for Group One and Two stores; 20% for Group Three and Four stores)." Simple, isn't it? Makes the income tax look pretty easy. All joking aside, I rise to remark that regulation requires little by little the control of every detail. Take this one "In order to sell frozen eviscerated poultry as frozen poultry you will no longer have to keep it in hard-frozen conditions. This means that you are now able to sell frozen eviscerated poultry even though it is not in the hard-frozen state at the time of sale, provided the poultry is delivered to the customer in the original package. The original package means the package in which it was packed at the time of evisceration. If we need regimentation, we need all the details; but do we need regimentation? The one I like best is this one: "No part of the wings, legs, back and neck bones, skin or meat or the gizzard, heart any other portion not breast may be sold as breast." "If you order "breast" and you see the grocer start to weigh the gizzard, the OPA wants you to understand you don't have to take it; it really isn't breast. HERE FROM OKLAHOMA Mrs. Max Kriewitz of Fairfax, Oklahoma, who is visiting with her daughter, Mrs. W. C. Kelley of Riverside, was a guest, with Mrs. Kelley, in the home of another daughter, Mrs. R. F. Nipper and Mr. Nipper of 222 East Center street last Saturday evening and Sunday. Fannie C. Pace, Former Resident, Dies In Oregon Mrs. Fannie C. Page, 80 years of age, passed away at her home in Grant's Pass, Oregon, on Wednesday, May 24. She was a resident of Anaheim for five years until six months ago when she went to Oregon to reside. She was a native of Decatur, Tenn., prior to coming to this state some twenty years ago. She is survived by five daughters, Mrs. Nevada Roberts of Brea; Mrs. Hazel Cain of Grant's Pass, Ore.; Mrs. Ada Penn, Huntington Park; Mrs. Effie Conner, La Habra; and Mrs. Jessica Englebert of Anaheim; two sons, Noah Pace, Pocahontas, Ark., and Clarance Pace of Anaheim; twenty-two grandchildren and eighteen great-grandchildren. Funeral services were held on Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Backs, Campbell & Kaulbars Mortuary with Rev. Hayes of Fullerton officiating. Burial was in Loma Vista cemetery. Job Printing, Gazette, Phone 2206. ERY VOLUNTEERS E WAY Open your door and your heart to them Who is the Victory Volunteer? He (or she) is someone in your locality who has volunteered to work for the 5th War Loan Drive. One of these volunteers may call at your home or place of work soon—on the most important mission of the hour! In this 5th War Loan Drive, you're asked to go all-out with every dollar you can scrape up—for war expenditures are greater now than any time since Pearl Harbor. Double your extra War Bond investments. Whatever you do, buy at least one extra Bond now. Invest $100--$200—$300—$400—more if you can. Yes, it's that important. The men who fought and bled and died for you haven't hesitated. Only by answering "yes" to the Victory Volunteer—only by investing to the limit—can you come at all close to matching their spirit. For their sake—and for your own future—open your door and your heart! 5TH WAR LOAN DRIVE Starts June 12th It may not be possible for a Victory Volunteer to reach every home, plant, and office. If you are missed during the drive, go to your nearest bank or Post Office or where you sell War Bonds. Buy all you can—at least one extra Bond—the biggest Bond you can afford. And then, when you think you've reached your limit—buy some more! D. ARDAIZ prepared under auspices of Treasury Department and War Advertising Council