anaheim-gazette 1951-07-05
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Annual Fuchsia Show July 6-7
Plans are all completed for the 4th Annual Fuchsia Show which will be held July 7 and 8 in the South Gate Civic Auditorium, Southern and Pinchurst sts., South Gate.
Leland Weaver, mayor of South Gate will cut the ribbon, "a lei of Fuchsias" at 12 noon.
On Saturday afternoon, Mr. J. J. Littlefield will be Master of Ceremonies with Mirandy taking over from 5 to 10 p.m. Special events will include a program by the Junior Flower Growers of Long Beach at 3 o'clock; Mr. Jim Fairclo discussing Fuchsias at 4:30; showing of colored pictures by Mr. Fairclo at 8 p.m. Hourly drawings will be made for door prizes on both days.
Judges for the 125 entry classifications are: Col. and Mrs. C. M. Gale, H. L. Baake, Mrs. Marie Turner, Mrs. Rena Riggs, Mrs. Sue McRae, Mrs. Susie Zug, Mrs. Fred Distel, Miss Peggy Sullivan, Mrs. F. L. Nicoll, Mrs. Anna E. Marck and Mrs. H. E. Crozier.
A full program has been planned for Sunday with Pat Burke as Master of Ceremonies from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Homer Greene from 5 to 10 p.m.
Celebrate 4th With Picnic
Fourteen guests gathered at the L. W. Hamann home, 122 S. Illinois st., yesterday to celebrate the Fourth of July. The group of relatives and friends shared a basket dinner at noon.
Personal Mention
Mrs. J. O. Thatcher, 924 N. Olive, is a new grandmother, as of June 26. Her grandson, six pounds, 12 ounces, was named James William Thatcher, and was born at San Gabriel Valley hospital. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George O. Thatcher of 123 W. Penn st., Whittier.
Fred and Maurice Robinson of 11112 Lincoln ave., returned to Anaheim Saturday after visiting Hoover Dam, Las Vegas, Carson City, Virginia City and other scenic places in Northern California.
Picture-Pretty for Girls
Parents Entertain Youngsters at Fireworks Party
The spacious yards of the Howard Hall and Owen Wileford homes were the setting last night for a fireworks party for the neighborhood children.
An outdoor dinner was served preceding the evening's activity. Present for the fun, in addition to Mr. and Mrs. Hall and daughter Nancy Louise and the Wilefords' daughter, Cheryl were Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Probst and children, Janie and Vincent, Jr.; Mr. and Mrs. Dan McConnell and Karen and Martha; Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Waterman, Mr. and Mrs. Brit Gray and son Brian; and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Reynolds of San Fernando.
Fatigue Avoided By Proper Use of Energy Resources
Are you using your resources of energy wisely, or frittering them away with poor work techniques?
Perhaps you know that bending requires about 50 per cent more energy, and standing 8 per cent more, than sitting—but are you using such knowledge to avoid household fatigue and accidents? If you are not, here are some pointers worth putting into practice:
1. When hanging clothes on the line, raise the basket to waist height by setting it on a cart or a table on wheels.
2. Train yourself to use a kitchen chair or stool as much as possible. You can save
Celebrate 4th With Picnic
Fourteen guests gathered at the L. W. Hamann home, 122 S. Illinois st., yesterday to celebrate the Fourth of July. The group of relatives and friends shared a basket dinner at noon.
Visiting the Hamanns were Mr. and Mrs. James Stinson of San Gabriel; Miss Elsie Eilers of Los Angeles; Mr. and Mrs. James Huson and Mrs. Mahlon Hamann of Anaheim; Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Dart; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dart and children, Sheila and Danny, Mrs. Peckham and daughter, Lucille, all of Long Beach.
Homemakers can keep wood paneling clean looking and attractive with an application of wax.
Paste, cream or liquid polishing and cleaning wax should be applied with a damp cloth to give a thin protective film, suggests Johnson's Consumer Service. The wax should be polished with a soft clean cloth, covering two square feet of paneling at a time while it is still moist.
If paneling is grooved or beaded, use liquid cleaning and polishing wax as this type will not accumulate in the indentations.
An old toothbrush is recommend for reaching hard-to-get cracks and corners.
Dainty little scallops outline the neck and cap sleeves on this adorable dress for young girls. They also are repeated at the waistline on this simple style that's so nice for summer parties.
Barbara Bell, sew-rite perforated, pattern No. 1284 is designed in sizes 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 years. Size 4 requires 2½ yards of 39-inch fabric.
For this pattern, send 30c in coins, your name, address, pattern number and size wanted to Barbara Bell, The Anaheim Gazette, 367 W. Adams Street, Chicago 6, Ill.
1. When hanging clothes on the line, raise the basket to waist height by setting it on a cart or a table on wheels.
2. Train yourself to use a kitchen chair or stool as much as possible. You can save energy too by ironing while sitting down.
3. Have work heights adjusted to your personal needs. Experiment with several levels, until you find the one most comfortable for you.
4. Finish kitchen wainscots and countertops with such easily cleaned materials as clay tile which needs only a few seconds with a damp cloth to keep it sanitary. Tile is also colorfast and does not need painting or other redecorating.
5. Test the height of your ironing board. Home economists find that the most comfortable height for individuals varies from 32 to 35 inches. Keep your shoes for housework in as good repair as your dress shoes. Run-down heels give bad support and thereby add to fatigue.
6. Do the heavy part of your work mornings. Try to let down during the high fatigue period from noon to three o'clock, and during the late afternoon and early evening.
7. Relax often. Severe short rests of a few minutes are needed for Sunday with Pat Burke as Master of Ceremonies from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Homer Greene from 5 to 10 p.m.
START TODAY...
EARN
FROM JULY 1st
On All Deposits Received
By the 10th of July
Start today on the road to savings with the "full 3% interest plan"
FROM JULY 1st
On All Deposits Received
By the 10th of July
Start today on the road to savings with the "full 3% interest plan
of The Savings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim.
Here your money works "full time" ... and you receive 3% interest
from the 1st of July on any deposit made before July 10th.
Since 1889, Orange County people have found their safe savings
earn generous interest at this pioneer company. You'll like the
friendly, courteous service, too.
INSURED SAVINGS
All savings insured up to $10,000.
Husband and wife or parent and
child may receive "insured protection" up to $30,000.
Anaheim's only
"deposit insured"
Savings Association.
The SAVINGS
LOAN & BUILDING ASSOCIATION
OF ANAHEIM
211 E. CENTER ST., ANAHEIM - PHONE 7283
3 Anaheim Gazette THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1951
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Social and Club Activities
Pat Terrebonne — 2206
Sun-Faded Togs? Here's Good Tip
Local Couple Report on Trip
Home again and ready for a rest are Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ferris 206 S. Ohio, who returned Friday from a seven week's tour of the middle west.
During the last part of May, the couple left Anaheim and followed Highway 66 through Flagstaff Ariz., where they encountered a snow flurry. They also encountered a downpour of rain in Amarillo Texas.
While in Arizona they visited the Painted Desert and the Petrified Forest. In Santa Fe, N. Mex., they explored the famous Pueblo Indian ruins.
From Tulsa, Okla., they travelled on to Iowa where they spent several days with relatives before driving on to Waupun, Wis., to stay a month with Mr. Ferris sister.
During the visit they took in the recently discovered Cave of the Mounds (a miniature Carlsbad) and the Swiss settlement at New Glarus, Wis. One of the highlights of the trip came when the couple attended the University of Wisconsin alumni banquet in Madison. Mr. Ferris was graduated from there, class of 1895.
The return trip was routed north along the Mississippi highlands to Winona, Minn., and on through the South Dakota Badlands and Customer park. They covered the 70 miles of desert on the last day of the trip.
Mr. and Mrs. David Deetz and daughter, Nanette, have moved to Fullerton, after spending th
You can't prevent fading of outdoor togs caused by sunshine and frequent laundering—but there is certainly something you can do about it! You can easily restore their color to look like new—or tintex to an entirely different color—as mother and daughter, above, have done. All-fabric dye (available in 50 fashion-new colors), a wooden stick or spoon, a vessel to hold the article without crowding, tap water, a quart jar for the dye solution, and color remover are all you need to effect the magical transformation.
Because sun-fading is usually uneven, your best bet for a successful dye-job is use of the color remover first, according to the Tintex Home Economics Bureau. The color remover, like the dye, requires no boiling, so it can be employed safely on man-made, as well as natural fibres. One more tip. If your slacks are worn at the cuffs, cut them down and make a pair of pedal pushers for yourself or teen-ager. Then re-dye, so that neither you nor daughter will get that hand-me-down feeling.
better than one long one.
9. Avoid the temptation to skip meals when alone. Like an engine, your body needs nourishing food to perform its work with minimum fatigue. 10. Don't try to do everything in one day. The woman who over-works feels like a martyr and isn't a fit companion for herself or her family.
P-TA Congress Managers to Meet
"Open house" at the new state offices will be one of the highlights when the Board of Managers of the California Congress of Parents and Teachers convenes in Los Angeles on July 11 and 12. The new administrative and magazine offices now occupy the entire third floor of the new Los Angeles Tenth District Health Center, formerly the Yale Street Clinic, at 322 West Twenty-first street. The modern and spacious quarters are the last word in office design and decoration and are in keeping with the vast growth of the Congress which now must serve nearly 900,000 members. Mrs. Henry Hultman of Glendale, who has served as director of office for the past seven years, is in charge of the administrative office and Mrs. Joseph Hook of Culver City is the managing editor.
Fullerton School Cannery Schedule
The Fullerton school-community cannery will be open for canning next week as follows: Tuesday, July 10, apricots at 5:30 p.m. and Thursday, July 12, green beans at 5:30 p.m., providing sufficient advance registrations are made, according to Florence Arnold, instructor.
The cannery is operated as a community service by the Fullerton Evening Junior college, with patrons meeting the operating costs by paying a fixed price per can. In order to keep the operating costs low enough to make canning feasible there must be certain minimum numbers of individuals in attendance at each session. To assure these minimum appointments must be made in advance and then confirmed by a second contact with the cannery by noon on the day prior to that on which canning is scheduled. Advance appointments for the sessions scheduled above must be made and confirmed prior to noon, Monday, July 9 and Wednesday, July 11, respectively; Mrs. Arnold stated.
Appointments may be made through the Evening Junior college office, telephone Fullerton
Clinic, at 322 West Twenty-first street. The modern and spacious quarters are the last word in office design and decoration and are in keeping with the vast growth of the Congress which now must serve nearly 900,000 members. Mrs. Henry Hultman of Glendale, who has served as director of office for the past seven years, is in charge of the administrative office and Mrs. Joseph Hook of Culver Cify is the managing editor of the "California Parent-Teacher" magazine, the official monthly publication of the CCPT. The Congress also maintains a branch office in Sacramento for its legislative advocate.
Mrs. Edward T. Walker of Los Angeles, who for the past year has given inspired and dynamic leadership to this large organization, is beginning her second year as president. She has just returned from the convention of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers in Miami Beach, Florida, and from a meeting of the Governor's Youth Committee in Sacramento and will report on both of these sessions.
The new statement concerning a program for national defense, which was adopted at the post-convention board meeting of the National Board of Managers, as well as their position on child care centers, will be presented for ratification. Thirty-six states must ratify these statements before they become the policy of the National Congress.
The California Congress Board of Managers meets bi-monthly alternating between San Francisco and Los Angeles and is composed of 12 officers elected by the membership at large, 31 district or area presidents representing their districts, and 36 chairmen appointed by the president from various areas of the State.
Mrs. Romona Peters of 10413 Euclid is convalescing from a recent minor operation.
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Fancy Filet Chair Set
Here is a lovely peacock design which makes a handsome chair back set. You'll feel proud as a peacock when relatives and friends compliment you on this fine filet set. It is most distinctive in either white or ecru cotton.
Pattern Envelope No. 5561 contains complete crocheting instructions, material requirements,
County Home Advisor Warns Against Moths
Sun, air, brushing, handling, dry cleaning and pressing are all enemies of the clothes moth. Before putting your woolens away for the summer, hang them in the sunshine and brush thoroughly not forgetting seams and pockets. If soiled, launder them, or have them dry cleaned if they are not washable.
Marian Prentiss, home advisor in Orange county for the University of California Agricultural Extension Service, warns that even with this care, moths may get into the woolens if they are not properly stored. They should be wrapped and sealed immediately after cleaning. Put the clean wool articles in tightly sealed paper bags or boxes, chests, trunks, glass jars or tin boxes.
If moths have been a problem, take further precautions and use paradichloro-benzene or naphthalene flakes or moth balls; when storing woolens, these leave an odor, so woolens must be aired thoroughly before using them again. Instead of these chemicals, an insect spray or even DDT can be applied generously, with no odors or damage to the articles.
All the chemicals give off gas as they evaporate and either kill or repel the moths depending upon the amount used.
Tests show that a pound of flakes or moth balls is required for each 100 cubic feet of storage space. Mrs. Prentiss recommends
Here is a lovely peacock design which makes a handsome chair back set. You'll feel proud as a peacock when relatives and friends compliment you on this fine filet set. It is most distinctive in either white or cecu cotton.
Pattern Envelope No. 5561 contains complete crocheting instructions, material requirements, stitch illustrations and full directions.
To obtain this pattern, send 25c in COINS, giving pattern number, your name, address and zone number to Peggy Roberts, The Amaheim Gazette, 367 W. Adams Street, Chicago 6, Ill.
WILLIAMS SHOE STORE... BARGAINS! SAVINGS!
ONLY 2 MORE DAYS, THRIDAY and SATURDAY, JULY 6 and 7
SALE Ladies' and Children's SHOES
Our first sale in 3 years has been a tremendous success, but we must make room for our new Fall stocks. We made still more drastic reductions in prices. No shoe higher than 4.95. These shoes are from our regular stocks of such famous makes as SELBY, FRIEDMAN-SHELBY and RED GOOSE SHOES!
200 PAIRS WEDGIES Red, Green, Natural, Tans and Blacks ALL OF THESE SHOES FORMERLY SOLD AT 4.95 and 5.95 Clearance
Made by Such Famous Makers as Brief of California, Friedman-Shelby and Williams Shoe Mfg. Co.
Other Shoes in the Sale Further reduced $1 to $3 per pair.
ALL OF THESE SHOES FORMERLY
SOLD AT 4.95 and 5.95
Clearance
ade by Such Famous Makers as
Brief of California, Friedmanhelby and Williams Shoe Mfg. Co.
Other Shoes in the Sale Further
reduced $1 to $3 per pair.
NOVELTIES
Press Heels—Reds, Greens,
Browns, Blacks, Formerly 6.95
to 8.05. Made by Friedman-Shelby
3¾ pr.
Friedman's Style-Eez and Friedmanhelby's Grace Walker.
Formerly 9.95 to 11.95
4¾ pr.
CHILDREN'S
SHOES
Infants', Children's and Misses'.
Broken sizes from our regular
stocks of Red Goose and Friedman-Shelby.
Formerly 5.45 to 7.45
CLEARANCE
3¾ pr.
Few pairs of Infants' 0-8 White
high Shoes for $1.00
Entire Stock of
Trimfit Socks
89c Value .24¢ pr.
Williams
Shoe Store
174
W. CENTER
ANAHEIM
GOOD SHOES PROPERLY FITTED