anaheim-gazette 1950-06-14
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Social and Club Activities
Phone 2206
Couple Honored on Silver Anniversary
A group of friends met in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Moist, 401 S. Kruger st., to share dinner with the couple, who were celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary, Sunday, June 11.
Place cards and decorations of silver and white were in keeping with the occasion. In a white, crepe paper covered arch hung a large wedding bell, one of the five bells used in the original marriage ceremony 25 years ago.
The Moists were married in the Christian church in York, Nebraska, June 4, 1924. They have lived in California for 12 years and last summer became permanent residents of Anaheim.
Attending the dinner in addition to the honorees and their son and daughter, Dale and Jean, were: Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Granere and son Verne, Mrs. Hula Granere and son Everett, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Peterson and daughter, Janet, Don Schilling, all of Anaheim, and Mr. and Mrs. Don Moist and daughter, Donnita, of Northridge, Calif.
Plans Underway For Farm Bureau Picnic in July
Annual picnic of the Orange County Farm Bureau, always one of the major events of the year's social calendar, is expected to draw 1500 bureau members and their families to Irvine park July 1. C. J. Mauerhan of Anaheim is chairman of the program committee, which is county-wide in make-up.
Following a general pattern established by 30 years of annual gatherings, the program will eliminate set speeches and devote itself to entertainment contributions from the nine farm centers of the county. Each center is responsible for an entertainment act.
The county bureau will supply baskets brought from home. The picnic starts at noon and extends through the afternoon and evening, with a baseball game set for 3:30.
A special recreation program will be provided for the young fraternity. Special awards will be made to the oldest and youngest marriages present, the homelife man, etc.
Serving on the program committee with Mr. Mauerhan are:
J. Thompson, Cypress-Magnolia center; Of B. Handy, Foothill center; George Clemons, Gardens Grove center; Mrs. J. G. Brita; La Habra center; E. C. Baste; Placentia center; Mrs. M. L. Osteenman, Tustin; Virgil Paxton, Weber Orange; David Crist, Yorba Lincoln.
Piano Recital by Fackiner Students
Some 200 persons attended the piano recital given last Friday at the Anaheim Ebell club house; the students of Helen Fackiner.
Performers who participated in the program were: Marilyn Nipper, playing "Swinging Alone" and "Little Spring Song;" Warnes, "Swans on the Lake"; Fairies Harp;" Sally Barn;" Climbing" and "Banjo Pickle; Lois Casebeer," Peter, Peter;" In Chinatown."
Gene Newkirk, "Busy Corner," "Pop, Goes the Tarantella," "Habanera;" Diane Bradd,"Wooden Shoes," "Purple Asters;" "Morning on the Lake;" Randolph Schwacofer," Spinning Son,"Three Blind Mice" and "Boogie Choo Choo;" Betty Dienerger,"Quiet Hour" and "Little Chinaman."
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Climbing" and "Banjo Pickler"
Lois Casebeer, "Peter, Peter" and "In Chinatown."
Gene Newkirk, "Busy Corner"
Pop, Goes the Tarantella," and "Habanera;" Diane Bradd, "Wooden Shoes," "Purple Asters" and "Morning on the Lake;" Rand Schwacofer, "Spinning Songs"
Three Blind Mice" and "Boogie Choo Choo;" Betty Dienerg, "Quiet Hour" and "Little Chinaman."
Sandra Sangster, "By a Roofside Fire," and "Tarantelle;" G Brookman, "Tango Carioca" and "Rhapsodie;" Gayle Newkirk, "Variations" and "Song of India."
Steve Schafer, "Dona No Peace" and "Can Can Dance"
Drusetta Martin, "Ballet in Whiskey and The Lonesome Prince;" Human Ahlers, "In a Chinese Temple Garden;" Marlene Anderger, "Fifth Nocturne" and "Golliver Cake Walk;" Gretchen Deck, "Fair Rosemary" and "Marriott Grotesque."
William Fackiner, baritone, also featured on the program. Numbers included, "Little Horner" by Dack, "Song of Spence" by Malotte and "Lord's Prayer" by Malotte, who came as a climax to the evening activities.
Highlight of the evening when Marlene Anderson, on behalf of all the students, presented Fackiner with a floral box of roses and gardenias.
NEW CYPRESS LODGE
At the Tuesday evening mingling of the IOOF, practice was for the initiation of a class of members for the institution lodge in Cypress which will held on July 12. The initial service will be put on in the lodge. Announcement was made that the encampment brace will put on an open air degree Shell Park as soon as they get a date, which will be announced later. The degree work is the entire district and district officers, including the Deputy President, will be present.
Next Sunday morning at o'clock, the Clubroom association will have a breakfast for all Fellows and their friends, breakfast to be held at the hall. Anyone interested is invited to attend this affair.
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Father's Day
SUNDAY, JUNE 18
Give that sport-wise DAD a gift he will treasure. Come in and look over our selection today.
- Sleeping Bags FOR THAT VACATION TRIP
- Camp Stoves and Lanterns
- Mercury Outbord Motors
- Guns
- Billfolds
- Pocket Knives
L. N. WISSER
SPORTING GOODS
— SINCE 1919 —
169 W. Center St. Ph. 3417
SURE THING
Pair Who Have Worked Together
Should Make Happy Marriage
Dear Miss Dix: I am a young woman in love with my employer, who is eighteen years older than I am. That is quite a difference in age, but when two people have worked together three years without misunderstandings; when they can spend eight hours a day together and still find plenty to talk and laugh about; when they like the same things; when they have reached an agreement on such matters as allowances, children, etc., and when they can give each other that feeling of safety and security, don't you think they have a pretty good chance of making a go of marriage?
Answer: Indeed I do. I think you have taken marriage out of the gambling class and, like David Crockett, you may be sure you are right and go ahead. For you have eliminated most of the risks of matrimony.
The first and greatest of these is the danger that a man and woman run in entering into a life contract with one with whom he or she is practically unacquainted. We laugh at the gulleleness and lack of sophistication of those who enter into games of chance with perfect strangers, but in reality they are no greater hicks or simps than are the average bride and bridesmaid who have entered matrimony.
Hanson Manor Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Trimbell, 75142 Brady st., have had Mr. Trimbell's brother, Bob, and his family as house guests from Cedar Falls, Iowa, for the last two months. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Trimbell and their 16 year old daughter, Joanna, and their married son, James, and his wife and 17 month old baby son, Jackie, are so sold on California that they are going to establish residences in Long Beach where they expect to go into business.
Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Van Tine, 7292 Brady, have just left on a 10 day vacation trip in their house raller. They plan on traveling through Nevada. They were accompanied by their four year old son, Lee. Mr. Van Tine is on vacation from the Golden State Dairy co.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wadle, 7521 Thornton ave., have just sold their attractive home to move into Los Angeles, where they will take up residence with Mrs. Wadle's father, Herbert Nott, 8125 South Jopper st. Mr. Nott is ailing.
New residents will be Mr. and Mrs. Oscar E. Dillon from 2526 East First st., Long Beach. Mr. Dillon is a representative of the Pioneer Restaurant Equipment Co. and sells between Long Beach and Laguna Beach.
A general meeting of the WSCS of White Temple Methodist church is scheduled for Thursday at 12
Home-Makers'
FORUM
By JOAN S. WHITE
A man likes good substitute food, well cooked and plentiful. Since June is traditionally a month of weddings, a great is being written for the new Well, a wedding also includes groom, so let's get away from the frilly, fancy party fare talk about food that will suit our man.
Duncan Hines who wrote adventures in Good Eating, spent 11 years traveling a mile in search of good for dinner. He is perhaps Acea's number one food connoisseur and this is his advice to the African housewife:
"Cook with loving hands If women would put me love into cooking, they could chase the pill makers Reno divorce lawyers right of business." He feels too many women neglect fine points of every day cooking to practice show-offs.
have eliminated most of the risks of matrimony.
The first and greatest of these is the danger that a man and woman run in entering into a life contract with one with whom he or she is practically unacquainted. We laugh at the gullelessness and lack of sophistication of those who enter into games of chance with perfect strangers, but in reality they are no greater hicks or simps than are the average bride and bridegroom who have entered matrimony with a mate of whose real character, disposition and habits they know no more than if they had never set eyes upon her or him before.
KNOW EACH OTHER'S FAULTS
But no catastrophe can happen when a man and woman have worked together side by side for a number of years. They have seen each other with the paint all off and their company manner discarded. They have seen each other in times of discouragement and stress, times of exhaustion and nerve frazzle, and each has taken the measure of the other and knows just exactly how much strength, courage, fairness and generosity and loyalty the other possesses. Hence marrying the one with whom you have worked is bound to be a preferred risk in marriage.
You have also put love to its acid test, which is daily association. We can be in love with almost anyone whom we see only occasionally and who always has the fresh interest of novelty, but it takes real love, the genuine blown-in-the-bottle variety, to stand daily and hourly intimate companionship and still keep its glitter and allure.
As for the difference in ages between you and your fiance, that is negligible. That only counts when one of the high contracting parties is very young and still undeveloped. After people are mature all that counts is their congeniality.
Dear Dorothy Dix: Do you think
New residents will be Mr. and Mrs. Oscar E. Dillon from 2526 East First st., Long Beach. Mr. Dillon is a representative of the Pioneer Restaurant Equipment Co. and sells between Long Beach and Laguna Beach.
A general meeting of the WSCS of White Temple Methodist church is scheduled for Thursday at 12 noon in the basement of the church. Mrs. Cora Jordan, director of Friendship Home in Los Angeles will be the speaker for the afternoon. Mrs. Paul Sanford will present the musical program.
IT WAS EGGS FOR BURGLAR ROCHESTER, N. Y. (P)—The hungry intruder who entered the home of Richard G. Shellman made himself right at home. Mrs. Shellman told the police the prowler entered through an unlocked kitchen door while she visited a neighbor, heated coffee and fried himself two eggs.
Nothing else was taken. Shellman, a night worker, was asleep upstairs at the time.
that the parents of a daughter of 15 should be so strict with her that they will not let her date on school nights, or go on picnics and parties as the rest of her friends do?
A. B.
Answer: I believe in giving young girls plenty of rope, but not enough to hang themselves with. And I certainly think that no girl of 15, or 16, or any age for that matter, should be permitted to have dates on school nights.
As long as a girl is going to school she is supposed to be getting an education that will determine the whole course of her future life. It is a crucial time with her, for if she falls to take advantage of the opportunities her parents are giving her to develop into an intelligent, well-educated woman, she can never make good her loss.
To get an education requires interest and enthusiasm and determination and no girl can give these to the pursuit of knowledge when she is running around at night with boys and comes sodden with lack of sleep to school, or when the only date in history that she takes the slightest interest in is her next date with Johnny. Hence the parents who let their little for dinner. He is perhaps Aca's number one food connexion and this is his advice to the African housewife:
"Cook with loving hands If women would put me love into cooking, they cochase the pill makers Reno divorce lawyers right of business." He feels too many women neglect fine points of every day coming to practice show-off es.
Pie is a man's dish. To success it ought to have a flaky crust that will melt in mouth. If you have not had luck with your pie crust try making hot water pie. It is completely opposite to our recipes which call chilled ingredients, but it solutely fool proof.
HOT WATER PIE CRUST Place in a bowl:
½ cup lard.
Pour over it:
¼ cup boiling water.
Beat these ingredients cold and the consistency of ped cream.
Sift before measuring:
Scant 1½ cups flour.
Resift with:
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt.
Combine the liquid and
Dear Dorothy Dix: Do you think
Butterfly Apron
By Peggy Roberts
PATTERN NO. R2962
Even the best cook likes to be a pretty cook. Here is an attractive easy-to-make apron that is becoming in and out of the kitchen. A gay butterfly potholder matches the one on the pocket.
Pattern Envelope No.. R2962 contains hot-iron transfer for designs; tissue pattern, material requirements, sewing and finishing directions.
To obtain this pattern, send 20c in COINS, giving pattern number, your name, address and zone number to Peggy Roberts, Anaheim Gazette, 828 Mission Street, San Francisco 3, Calif.
To get an education requires interest and enthusiasm and determination and no girl can give these to the pursuit of knowledge when she is running around at night with boys and comes sodden with lack of sleep to school, or when the only date in history that she takes the slightest interest in is her next date with Johnny. Hence the parents who let their little 15-year-old daughters go to parties on any save off nights are doing the girls a deadly wrong and falling in their duty.
I don't believe in overstrict parents. I think young girls should have plenty of amusement, plenty of pleasures, plenty of boy friends, but there should be a limit to their liberties. They should take their pleasures rationally and at proper times, as befits their age.
And would to heaven that there were enough parents with sufficient grit and courage and backbone to stand up and fight their self-willed youngsters and keep them under control.
Dear Dorothy Dix: I am in love with a man whom I have supported for more than a year. He has been out of work and doesn't try to get a job. Although my friends warn me that no man who thinks anything of a woman would live on her for more than a year without doing anything, I am still in doubt. Sometimes it seems that for every happiness there is a price and a very great happiness would be worth a great price. Please advise me.
FRANCES
Ansewr: It is up to you to decide whether you want to set up a loafing husband as a luxury or not. If you can afford him and think he is worth the price, marry him. A lot of men seem to consider good-for-nothing wives worth what they cost them.
Home-Makers'
FORUM
By JOAN S. WHITE
Ingredients and stir until they form a smooth ball. Wrap the dough in waxed paper and chill until firm. It will keep for a week in the refrigerator and aging improves it. This makes enough for a two crust pie.
Berries are in season now. Choose plump red strawberries or dark juicy boysenberries to make a luscious pie.
BERRY PIE
Line a 9 inch pie pan with pie crust.
Pick over and hull:
3 cups fresh berries
Combine:
$\frac{3}{4}$ cups sugar
1 tablespoon cornstarch
$\frac{1}{4}$ teaspoon salt
Pour these ingredients over the berries and stir them carefully. Pour them into a pie crust. Dot them with:
1 tablespoon butter or oleomargarine.
Cover them with a top crust and bake in a hot oven 450 degrees for 30 minutes, slow oven 325 degrees for an additional 10 minutes. It takes an oven quite a while to heat really hot. Allow plenty of time so that the oven reaches 450 degrees before you actually put the pie in.
Hamburgers are a favorite everywhere. The Hunt Foods Co., of Fullerton has developed a new way to prepare this beloved dish. FANCY PANTS HAMBURGERS
1 lb. chopped beef
4 slices (¼ lb.) sharp American cheese.
Do not season the beef. Form into eight thin hamburger cakes. On four of these, place slices of cheese leaving a little meat uncovered around the edge. Top with the remaining cakes and pinch edges together to enclose cheese. Take a heavy frying pan and sprinkle over the bottom some:
Plain salt and $\frac{1}{4}$ teaspoon garlic salt (optional).
The salt should cover the pan thinly ($\frac{3}{4}$ teaspoon salt for a 9 inch pan). Heat pan very hot.
(Continued on Page 8)
"Cook with loving hands. If women would put more love into cooking, they could phase the pill makers and teno divorce lawyers right out of business." He feels that too many women neglect the fine points of every day cooking to practice show-off dishes.
Pie is a man's dish. To be a success it ought to have a tender, dry crust that will melt in your mouth. If you have not had good pie with your pie crust lately, making hot water pie crust is completely opposite to most our recipes which call for dried ingredients, but it is absolutely fool proof.
HOT WATER PIE CRUST
Pice in a bowl:
1½ cup lard.
Over it:
cup boiling water.
Beat these ingredients until and the consistency of whipped cream.
Sift before measuring:
Seant 1½ cups flour.
Sift with:
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt.
Combine the liquid and dry ingredients.
Pretty Home Style
Look neat and pretty while you work in this well styled house dress that buttons down one side. Crisp ruffling trims the yoke and pocket. A narrow belt ties in a soft bow.
Barbara Bell sew-rite perforated pattern No. 1931 is for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 requires 4⅓ yards of 35-inch fabric.
For this pattern, send 25 cents, in coins, your name, address, pattern number and size wanted to Barbara Bell, Anaheim Gazette, 828 Mission Street, San Francisco 3, California.
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