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anaheim-gazette 1950-10-11

1950-10-11 · Anaheim Gazette · page 3 of 10 · OCR glm-ocr
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Social and Club Activities Pat Terrebonne—2206 Painting Dedicated At Lutheran Meet "Children are a Heritage of the Lord" was the subject of an address presented to Zion Lutheran P-TA last night by Rev. Pflug, pastor of the church. Mrs. O. C. Ulrich presented a picture she had painted in oil to be awarded as room prize for the year. Copied from the September issue of "This Day" in which it appeared, the work is titled "What Happened to Your Hand." Mrs. Ulrich dedicated the painting in memory of her husband's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Vaus, deceased, who were active in church work and profoundly interested in Christian education. A. B. Paul Relief Corps presented an American flag to the children of the school. Principal Walter Knigge reported a current enrollment of 106 children and announced that school pictures would be taken again on Friday. An informal address on civilian defense was given by Marion Pickle. Program chairman Mrs. E. H. Kersten introduced Ellen Bernstrauch of Orange in two readings. Appointment of ways and means committee was made during the business meeting with Mrs. Wilbur Heiden to serve as chairman assisted by Mrs. Elwood Cordes and Mrs. Vern Schulz. Room mothers for the year are: Mrs. C. Hazzard, Mrs. Arnold Ple Colorful Party For Physicians At a Gay Nineties dinner party, Saturday, Oct. 7, at the Bagnall Ranch, Placentia, the Woman's Auxiliary to the Orange County Merical Association, feted their doctor husbands. Costumes were magnificent and original. One group of doctors arrived in blazer jackets, tight duck trouser and straw hats with colorful bands. They all parted their hair in the middle to lend atomosphere to their costumes. Another group sported tall gray beavers and one original costume headed by a black collapsible topper which had belonged to the doctor's grandfather. Derbies and string ties distinguished other outfits. Women's costumes were beautiful. Bustles, bonnets, and high shoes predominant, as were tiny hats with bows under the chin, sweeping plumes on larger hats, and one beautiful number trimmed with peacock feathers. Drs. Samuel Weaver and Samuel Gendel were joint Masters of Ceremony. A Can Can number was danced by Mrs. Arnold Bode, Mrs. L. D. Spencer, Mrs. Fred M. Hansen, Mrs. Joseph Tirico and Mrs. Bernard Mason, and they were accompanied by Mrs. Thomas Rhone. This group was costumed in yellow and black, green and black, and pink and black striped taffeta, with large black hats. Dr. Samuel Weaver presented a An informal address on civilian defense was given by Marion Pickle. Program chairman Mrs. E. H. Kersten introduced Ellen Bernstrauch of Orange in two readings. Appointment of ways and means committee was made during the business meeting with Mrs. Wilbur Heiden to serve as chairman assisted by Mrs. Elwood Cordes and Mrs. Vern Schulz. Room mothers for the year are: Mrs. C. Hazzard, Mrs. Arnold Plegel, Mrs. L. Rogers, Mrs. Roy Kliss, Mrs. Wilbur Hieden, Mrs. C. Newkirk, Mrs. E. Guenther, Mrs. J. Hushman. Potted plants were presented to the pastor and faculty for use in classrooms. Refreshments of cake and beverages were served by the executive board with Mrs. Paul Lohr and Mrs. Richard Heitshusen presiding at the refreshment table. Room prize was awarded to Richard Heitshusen. Next meeting will be on Nov. 9 at 2:15 p.m. at the school. Large Attendance At Center Meet "Ghost Towns, USA," courtesy of the Signal Oil Co., was shown at the Farm Center meeting last night to 125 people. Tamale pie family dinner was organized by Mrs. Sylvia Mauerhan and her committee and entertainment was furnished by "Estaban McGillacuddy and his Four 'Wetbacks'," the fictitious name taken by a group of musical business and professional men from the Tustin Farm Center. The group met at the AUHS cafeteria at 6:30 for dinner and at 7:30 the business meeting was started. Mr. A. F. Schutte gave the directors report and Mr. Bob Routh spoke on Propositions No. 1 and No. 6. Home department of the Farm Center will meet October 24 at the home of Mrs. Alice Schmidt, 9781 S. East st., at 10 a.m. Gift sewing will take up the morning session. Circles Schedule Monthly Meetings Womens' Society of Christian Service circles of the White Temple church will meet Thursday, Oct. 12. Fackiner circle meeting will be held at Mrs. Arthur Roquet's home on 757 N. Zeyn st. at 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Floyd West will act as co-hostess. The Rinehart circle will meet at 1:30 with Mrs. William Dierbarger at 523 So. Resh. Meeting of the Fawver circle will be at the home of Mrs. Lawrence Wagner at 555 So. Citron at the same time. At 12 p.m. the Hutson circle will meet for a pot-luck luncheon with Mrs. E. O. Hutson of 10072 So. Gilbert. Members are requested to bring their own service. Florence circle meeting was held last night at the home of Ardys Ann Bown at 316 No. Lemon. Co-hostess of the evening was Eliza Cheatum. Twenty-five members heard Dr. Dorothy Jordt review interesting incidents in her career and give a resume of her rural practice. a share-the-cost luncheon will be served by the committee and Mrs. John Chun of Tustin, lately of Czechoslovakia, will be speaker of the afternoon. College Small Talk By JACKIE CUSHING Social-minded Herbie and Herrietta Hornets enjoyed dancing the music of famous band leader and their orchestras Monday at the first noon dance of the year Janet Bedford and Phyllis Roberts rally and committee members charge of the dances, were attractive record changers. Who's Confused It is rumored that a bewildered freshman called the Torch office recently to find out just when the Welfare State was Poor but he should have known that nobody there could give him the right answer. Precautionary Measure Students in Dr. Robert Swensen's Psychology 1 A class wore if physical exams were going to be given again when the teacher came to class last week with scales, yardstick and tape measure. After taking the height weight and measurements of three students it was learned that he was merely trying to prove he point that no two people were actually alike. While on the subject of physical examinations, it was learned recently that more than 2500 students physical examinations were completed at Fullerton High school and junior college. Extensive exams were given all new students and athletes and returning students were given the regular eye ear, nose, throat and teeth check Assisting the medical staff were the physical education teachers and members of the Parent-Teacher Association. Chairmen elected at the All-sociated Women Students election Friday were: Helga Schught, we fare; Mereledean Donnelly, publicity and Pinkie Jones, social chairman. FASTER SERVICE ESCROWS Stephen & Stephen 108 W. Broadway - Anaheim (Opposite Post Office) PHONE 6893 Co-hostess of the evening was Eliza Cheatum. Twenty-five members heard Dr. Dorothy Jordt review interesting incidents in her career and give a resume of her rural practice. a share-the-cost luncheon will be served by the committee and Mrs. John Chun of Tustin, lately of Czechoslovakia, will be speaker of the afternoon. The CHILDREN'S SHOP 721 No. Los Angeles Street North Gate Business District ...and now it's COAT TIME! Select yours early while our Stock is complete. All the quality ... all the warmth ... all the pert good looks you could ever want for your growing girl. Sizes 7 to 14 $16.95 to $25.95 Sizes 2 to 6x $12.95 to $21.95 Smart Daytimer Personal Mention Anaheim Rotarians and Rotary Anns will enjoy ladies night dinner meeting of the organization at the Balboa Bay club, Newport Beach, tomorrow evening beginning at 7 o'clock. The program will consist of a humorous speech and special music. George Washington P-TA enjoyed an informal potluck dinner at the City park last night for the first meeting of the year. One hundred seventy-five children, parents and teachers attended. Credit for the planning is extended to Mrs. S. E. Loard, hospitality chairman and Mrs. Carl Hatfield, president! A church clinic for self study will be conducted at White Temple Methodist church tonight beginning with a pot luck dinner at 6:30 p.m. Workers and members are invited to attend discussion which will be led by Rev. Owen Gear and E. H. Salter of Fullerton. Rev. and Mrs. Frank Butterworth attended open house observing the twenty-fifth wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Elton Swanson in Glendale Sunday. Mr. Swanson is Mrs. Butterworth's brother. A film on Girl Scout leader activity will be shown at Fremont school Friday morning from 11 to 11:45 a.m. Scout leaders and members are urged to attend. Dorcas Society of Zion Lutheran church will meet tomorrow at 2 p.m. in the parish hall. Meeting date was changed to coincide with the Annual Fall Festival to be held Oct. 19. Rev. Edwin Pfug, pastor of the church, will speak on a topic in keeping with the current darkness comes early now that daylight saving is a thing of the past. The children pour over their homework by lamp light and as winter comes, the whole family will depend more and more on artificial light. How is the lighting in your home? Is it softly diffused yet bright enough so that everyone can see what he is doing without eye strain? Proper lighting makes for cheer, safety, comfort and beauty. Without it, the family may become irritable without knowing why and eye strain develops. Few things are as nerve wracking as trying to sew or read in a dim light! There are a few eye-saving principles that you may want to check over: Glare is something definitely to be avoided. No electric light should ever be without a shade. Choose wall and ceiling fixtures with frosted coverings to diffuse their light, and lamp shades large enough to conceal the bulbs they cover. No area of a room should be in deep shadow. Avoid light and shade areas in a room at night. It is very tiring to the eyes to have to adjust constantly to varying amounts of light. However, islands of light should be available where needed. To avoid spotty effects, general lighting in the room should be one-tenth as bright as it is under a lamp. Do not use tinted bulbs. They consume electricity and give little College Small Talk BY JACKIE CUSHING Minded Herbie and Henornets enjoyed dancing to music of famous band leaders their orchestras Monday at noon dance of the year. Bedford and Phyllis Roberts, and committee members in the dances, were attracord changers. Who's Confused Crumored that a bewildered man called the Torch office to find out just where Infare State was. Poor boy, old have known that nobody would give him the right precautionary Measurements in Dr. Robert Swen-psychology 1 A class won physical exams were gooee given again when their came to class last week scales, yardstick and tapee. After taking the height, and measurements of three feet it was learned that he merely trying to prove his hat no two people were ex alike. On the subject of physical relations, it was learned re:that more than 2500 stu-sysical examinations were held at Fullerton High school senior college. Extensive exercise given all new students athletes and returning stu-siere given the regular eye, ear, throat and teeth checks. Using the medical staff were physical education teachers members of the Parent-Teach-ociation. Women elected at the Asso-Women Students election were: Helga Schught, wel-terereledean Donnelly, pub- and Pinkie Jones, social n. A film on Girl Scout leader activity will be shown at Fremont school Friday morning from 11 to 11:45 a.m. Scout leaders and members are urged to attend. Dorcas Society of Zion Lutheran church will meet tomorrow at 2 p.m. in the parish hall. Meeting date was changed to coincide with the Annual Fall Festival to be held Oct. 19. Rev. Edwin Pflog, pastor of the church, will speak on a topic in keeping with the current church theme, "Reformation and Mission" month. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Burke are enjoying a vacation trip to Yosemite and Sequoia National parks in observance of their tenth wedding anniversary. Miss Carol Bostick, a student at Occidental college, will replace Mrs. Burk as organist at White Temple Methodist church during her absence. Third grade pupils will present a program at Lincoln P-TA meeting tomorrow afternoon at 2:30. Mothers of the third grade room are hostesses. Stanton This is the second week Harry L. Raidy, owner of the Stop-Shop market and restaurant, has been confined to his home ill, 9392 S. Stanton ave. He is also known as Terry McCoy and has a swing band using that name. The fignt fans tagged Raidy with the non-de-plume' when he was in the ring, years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur McBratney and their two small children, Wilbur, Jr., two years old, and Florence, 11 months, from Plattsmouth, Nebraska, have been the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis McBratney, Lewis and Wilbur are brothers, 7861 E. First st. This week they are visiting Wilbur's sister, Mrs. Florence Clowe and her family of Long Beach. They like it here so well Wilbur has taken a job as mechanic with International Harvester in Long Beach and is now busy looking for a convenient home. Protestant Women Urged to Register This week, Oct. 8-15, is being observed by the United Council of Church Women as Ecumenical Register Week. The women of Anaheim are humbly proud of being a part of this great interdenominational effort to register. No area of a room should be in deep shadow. Avoid light and shade areas in a room at night. It is very tiring to the eyes to have to adjust constantly to varying amounts of light. However, islands of light should be available where needed. To avoid spotty effects, general lighting in the room should be one-tenth as bright as it is under a lamp. Do not use tinted bulbs. They consume electricity and give little light. Different rooms in the house require different treatment. The kitchen is a worship where particular care is given to work areas. At no time should these areas in a kitchen be shadowed by the homemaker at her evening tasks. In a bedroom, light switches are placed where they can be quickly and easily reached at night. If you like to read in bed, choose an indirect lamp for the head of the bed but arrange the other lighting so that this bright area is not over ten times as bright as that in the rest of the room. We are getting away from overhead lighting in living rooms. It is neither friendly nor very flattering. Without an overhead light, each furniture grouping in the living room must therefore be pro- This life-size baby does real fun, both to its make-up its proud owner. Red wiand embroidered feature "Bonnie" seem almost resilier in outgrown baby cloak Pattern envelope No.R2tains hot-iron transfer measuring 21 inches, pat-romper and booties, mat-quirements, sewing and directions. To obtain this pattern, cents in coins, giving patte-ber, your name, address a number to Peggy Robertheim Gazette, 367 W. AdChicago 6, Ill. Protestant Women Urged to Register This week, Oct. 8-15, is being observed by the United Council of Church Women as Ecumenical Register Week. The women of Anaheim are humbly proud of being a part of this great interdenominational effort to register all Protestant women, determined to work together and pray together for the "whole house-hold of God in the whole world." They pray that God may use this movement of Christian women to strengthen churches in the community, in the nation, and in the whole world. Those not registered who wish to "stand up and be counted" may call Mrs. Andrews, 2156, or Mrs. Kerr, 2385. Layette Sewing Started by Chapter Work on the Red Cross project for the year was started this week when volunteers gathered at the chapter room on E. Center st. for an all day meeting. Initial activity was the sewing of layettes for wives of veterans in military hospitals. Mrs. Robert P. Clark is program chairman with Mrs. Ralph Vipond, Mrs. E. V. Briggs of Stanton, and Mrs. H. A. Alm of Anaheim. Canteen served luncheon to workers under the direction of Mrs. Maude Sanger. Women interested in helping are invited to take work out to their homes or to sew in the Red Cross rooms at city hall. is good when all the lamps are about the same height. If some of your present lamps are too short, it is easy to buy or build a platform base. The most satisfactory shade for a lamp is the large one that flares at the bottom to throw a wide pool of light. A white or pastel color is best for a lining with an outside fabric dense enough to let the light shine through softly without glare. Place a reading lamp behind and to one side of a chair and adjust it so there isn't a high shine across the reading material. When working with the right hand, the light should be at the left. Home lighting is no longer a simple matter of buying a light bulb and inserting it into a socket, but has become a job for lighting engineers. Have you noticed how the new homes use indirect lighting concealed under bookshelves, above unusual window frames and behind wall recesses? This method of lighting is highly satisfactory when combined with lamps in the work areas. Flourescent light is excellent for work which needs close attention. It is especially popular in the kitchen where long bars of light can be recessed over the range, or sink and in the bathroom where it provides wonderful illumination for shaving. If you have a problem in home lighting, whether it concerns the home in which you are now living, or one that you are planning to build, specialied help is available at Brodie's House of Lights. Mr. Brodie is a licensed electrical contractor whose business it is to help you plan your lighting and select the proper fixtures and lamps and to install these fixtures. Brodie's House of Lights has an extensive stock of the latest in light fixtures which range from imported Irish ceramics of coach lanterns and cast aluminum fixtures for each home. The front porch light which caught my eye is a provincial type brass lamp bracket combined with a horse-shoe door knocker. When you are looking for just the right floor lamp, Brodie's is the place to look. The latest are gooseneck lamps gone ultra-modern. They may be painted to match the color scheme in any room and are made in pin-ups and television lamps as well as floor lamps. Brodie's will make a lamp from the base you supply. A fat brass case which housed heavy ammunition during the war, an empty cider jug or an old Victorian vase are some of the things that can be made into ornamental and useful vases—provided they are tall enough. Brodie's will fit and wire them for you. Presbyterian Evening Fellowship group will meet at the home of Mrs. Charles Holiday, 212 Evelyn dr., at 7:30 p.m., tomorrow. Ella Symmes of San Bernardino was the weekend guest of Mrs. C. I. Andrews of 311 E. Broadway. Asisstance League will meet Thursday with Mrs. J. W. Truxaw, 887 S. Los Angeles st., for lunchon. Mrs. P. E. Fluor and Mrs. William LeVecke are assisting. There is no road to success but through a clear, strong purpose. A purpose underlies character, culture, position, attainment of whatever sort.—T. T. Munger This life-size baby doll offers real fun, both to its maker and to its proud owner. Red wool hair and embroidered features make "Bonnie" seem almost real. Dressier in outgrown baby clothes. Pattern envelope No. R2999 contains hot-iron transfer for doll measuring 21 inches, pattern for omper and booties, material requirements, sewing and finishing directions. To obtain this pattern, send 20 cents in coins, giving pattern number, your name, address and zone number to Peggy Roberts, Anaheim Gazette, 367 W. Adams St., Chicago 6, Ill. Nelly Don the California suit Just once in a while a star is born. This simply stated casual looks like one to us — its lines have authority. The unlined jacket is new length, with low-placed pocket flaps suggesting new, slightly lower waistline look. Slim skirt is a beauty — slit pleat in back with deep overlap. Up-or-down cuffs. Smart fabric-covered buttons. The SQR Store has it for you in fine quality crease-resistant rayon sheer gabardine. New California colors. Regular sizes 10 to 20 and Half sizes 12½ to 20½. NELLY DON FASHIONS • SECOND FLOOR