anaheim-gazette 1951-12-26
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Anaheim Gazette WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1951
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Social and Club Activities
Pat. Terrebonne — 2206
Annual Party At Conservatory
The annual musical and Christmas party for the Anaheim Conservatory of Music was presented Friday evening in a festive holiday setting of red and green garlands and silver bells.
Vicky and Linda Belanger and Bonnie Jean Osborne opened the program by singing Christmas carols. Also participating in the program were Leland Miller, Rosalie Miller, Cecilia Munoz, Margaret Wittesh, Nancy Dean, Linda King, Doyle King, Edward Simmons, Doris Simmons, Sally Van Allstyne, Rachel Caro and Lois Swint.
Mrs. Anna Siegel, director, read the story of the Nativity and explained the blessings of the coming of Christ. Taking part in this part of the program were Rosalie Miller as angel; Doris Simmons, Mary; Leland Miller and Edward Simmons, shepherds.
At the close of the program the entire gathering sang "Jingle Bells" to herald the coming of Santa Claus who was portrayed by N. J. Belanger.
Magnolia Scouts Christmas Fest
Troop 56 of the Girl Scouts from Magnolia Elementary School gave a Christmas party for their parents and friends. The leader Mrs. Florence Muraoka and her assistants, Mmes. Jean Fierce and Ruth McCoy, were hostesses to 35 at the family potluck dinner served in the Stanton Lions Community Clubhouse, Tuesday evening.
The girls gifted their mothers with parasol handkerchiefs they had made, and their dads with handkerchiefs personalized with initials in textile painting. Individual boxes of home-made candies and cookies were presented to the special guests. Members of the troop had a gift exchange.
Catholics Honor Priest on 10th Anniversary
A large group of parishioners from the Blessed Sacrament church in Westminster and other Catholic churches under the mother church attended Mass at St. Columban's church in Garden Grove Thursday for a High
Jeanene Sanders Shower Honoree
Miss Jeanene, Sanders, bride-elect of Denny Dickenson, was honored at a linen shower Sunday afternoon by JoAnn Wood in
ing of Christ. Taking part in this part of the program were Rosalie Miller as angel; Doris Simmons, Mary; Leland Miller and Edward Simmons, shepherds.
At the close of the program the entire gathering sang "Jingle Bells" to herald the coming of Santa Claus who was portrayed by N. J. Belanger.
Mrs. Siegel served refreshments assisted by Sara Green, Rosalie Miller, Mrs. Miller and Doris Simmons.
Buffet Supper In Clay Home
Mr. and Mrs. E. Leon Clay were hosts at a party and late buffet supper featuring roast chicken on Christmas eve, when they held open house for relatives and friends in their attractively decorated home at 7072 E. Cerritos ave.
Mr. Clay drove down from his work with Dunlap and Graham drillers at Newhall for the holiday.
Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Milton Tanner son, from Taft; Mr. and Mrs. Bernell M. Gillies, daughter, and their two small children, Beverly and Richard, from Barber City; Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Gillies and their son David, South Gate; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stickler, Long Beach; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Austad from Kimberly, Canada, who recently moved to Lakewood; Mr. and Mrs. Julian P. Black and their daughter, Pauline Mary and Karl Robert Martin of Stanton.
Beverly, who is four years old, dressed as Santa arrived at the front door with a pack on her back and presented all the guests with gifts.
Ellioft McKnight Returns Soon To Anaheim
Sgt. Ellioft McKnight, whose wife, Willa M., resides in Anaheim at 730 N. Lemon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles McKnight of Buena Park, is in the naval hospital in San Francisco with injuries suffered in a traffic accident. He was wounded twice in
Ellioft McKnight Returns Soon To Anaheim
Sgt. Elliott McKnight, whose wife, Willa M., resides in Anaheim at 730 N. Lemon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles McKnight of Buena Park, is in the naval hospital in San Francisco with injuries suffered in a traffic accident. He was wounded twice in Korea and returned to the United States for the holidays.
His wife and mother were waiting at the Los Angeles depot for the sergeant to arrive by train when they were handed a telegram telling of the mishap. They boarded a train for the Bay City and found the veteran with a broken nose and cracked elbow. He may be released from the hospital next week.
The sergeant has been serving with the 7th Regiment of the 1st Marine Division in Korea.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Kelley entertained friends and relatives from Anaheim and Los Angeles in their spacious home in Riverside with a delicious dinner Christmas day.
Here is a charming afternoon style created especially to flatter the slightly larger figure. Slimming lines, scalloped closing and ruffle trimming are details every woman admires.
Barbara Bell sew-rite perforated pattern No. 1313 is designed in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52. Size 38, short sleeves, requires 4½ yards of 35-inch fabric.
For this pattern, send 30 cents in coins, your name, address, pattern number and size wanted to Barbara Bell, Anaheim Gazette, 367 W. Adams St., Chicago 6, Ill.
MOSCOW (P)—The newspaper Trud charged today that a United Nations mission in Afghanistan is a cover for American aid to that nation which has a long frontier with the Soviet Union's Central Asian Republics.
For those occasions when you want to look your lovelest this well styled frock with its smart new air is the perfect answer. Chalk white is used for the tiny collar and jabot effect, diagonal line has scallops for accent.
Pattern No. 3298 is a sew-rite perforated pattern in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42. Size 14, short sleeves, requires 3½ yards of 35 or 39-inch fabric; % yard contrast.
For this pattern, send 30 cents in coins, your name, address, pattern number and size wanted to Barbara Bell, Anaheim Gazette, 367 W. Adams St., Chicago 6, Ill.
WASHINGTON (P)—A Senate subcommittee has accused the army of "inexcusable and indefensible waste" by "endlessly repeating training cycles" for some units.
HONG KONG (P)—The Chinese newspaper Wah Klu Yat Po said in a Canton dispatch today the reds had executed 220,000 people in Kwangtung Province in the last half of 1951.
Home-Makers' Forum
By JOAN R. WHITE
Gazette Home Economist
This is open season for the hors d'oeuvres tray. The number and variety of these little tid bits are limited only by one's imagination and materials on hand. They are just the thing to serve with drinks, to get a meal off to a festive start and to whip up in a hurry when friends drop in. And since the kind we are talking about have a distinct, pliant flavor and appetite-whetting qualities, they are a pleasant change from sweet Christmas cookies, candies and fruit cake.
CANAPE MIXTURE
Luckily and very conveniently, most of the makings for canapes come packaged or tinned handily to be kept on the pantry shelf until needed. You will never be caught short if you add a few of these special ingredients to your grocery list. Cheese of all kinds are very good and the ones that are already worked into a spread are very easy to use. Anchovy paste, sardines, tuna, lobster and crab come next and a glance at the canned meat shelf at Safeway or Alpha Beta will uncover deviled ham, corned beef, boned chicken and turkey.
Seasonings the thing. A dash of lemon juice does wonders for the plate. A dash of paprika heats a bit of parsley there. Pimient hard cooked egg, stuffed oil and colored cream, cheese take care of that department. Crackle come in assorted shapes the days for a crisp foundation to toast cut in fancy shapes do nearly as well.
BE DRAMATIC
The successful hostess who parties are talked about and remembered long afterwards, the one who always has a trick or two up her sleeve. So we said when preparing your tray of hors d'oeuvres, be dramatic.
You have varied the shapes and sizes; you have added as much color as was possible. Now you choose your best looking tradition, unusual dish. In a pinch even bread board will do. You might like to perch a big red apple, small fresh pineapple, or grape fruit smack in the middle serve as a holder for well filled tooth picks. Ripe olives stuck in yellow grapefruit are very tactile as are chunks of pineapple coated with cheese. Cocktails sausages wrapped in bacon prove popular as you know you have tried them, as will the meat balls provided them.
It's So Thrifty to Sew
Neat as a pin and so useful about the kitchen is this pretty bib style apron. It requires just one yard of fabric in the smaller sizes! Note the gay fruit pocket. Wonderful gift idea for every home-maker on your list.
Barbara Bell sew-rite perforated pattern No. 1880 is designed in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 20; 40, 42. Size 14 requires 1 yard of 39-inch fabric; use scraps for pocket.
For this pattern, send 30 cents in coins, your name, address, pattern number and size wanted to Barbara Bell, Anaheim Gazette, 367 W. Adams St., Chicago 6, Ill.
ROME (P)—Premier Alcide De Gasperi left by train today for Paris where leaders of the European Council Nations are scheduled to make decisions on these special ingredients to your grocery list. Cheese of all kinds are very good and the ones that are already worked into a spread are very easy to use. Anchovy paste, sardines, tuna, lobster and crab come next and a glance at the canned meat shelf at Safeway or Alpha Beta will uncover deviled ham, corned beef, boned chicken and turkey.
Seasonings the thing. A dash of lemon juice does wonders for the fish. For real zip there's nothing like garlic salt, Westcestershire sauce and tobacco. I said these canapes ought to be on the nippy side and I mean it.
To appeal to the eye as well as the taste buds, you will want these tempters to look pretty on
GRENADINE OF BEEF WITH CHICKEN LIVERS
4 slices beef tenderloin about ½-inch thick
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
½ cup sliced chicken livers
½ cup consomme
Salt to taste
Minced parsley
Cook tenderloin quickly on both sides in butter in the blaze of a chafing dish or in a skillet on range top. Remove beef to a hot platter. Saute chicken liver in skillet, stir in wine and consomme and cook 5 minutes before pouring over the grenadines.
Srinkle with salt and minced parsley and serve at once with potato souffle, green beans with walnut halves, apple-cranberry salad, hot rolls with marmalade, plum puddings with rum sauce. Makes 4 servings.
MANILA (P)—Eleven persons were killed and eight kidmapped in Christmas day violence in the Philippines.
Seven of the dead were communist Huks, three were bandits and one a policeman.
PITTSBURGH (P)—The highest authorities in the CIO-United Steelworkers of America meet here tomorrow to decide whether they will go through with a nation wide strike at midnight, Dec.
3298
12-42
For this pattern, send 30 cents in coins, your name, address, pattern number and size wanted to Barbara Bell, Anaheim Gazette, 367 W. Adams St., Chicago 6, Ill.
ROME (P)—Premier Alcide De Gasperi left by train today for Paris where leaders of the European Council Nations are scheduled to make decisions on the creation of an European army.
PITTSBURGH (P)—The highest authorities in the CIO-United Steelworkers of America meet here tomorrow to decide whether they will go through with a nation wide strike at midnight, Dec. 31.
Summing up...
BIG CREEK #4
A new 84,000 kilowatt powerhouse at our hydroelectric development in the High Sierra.
ETIWANDA STATION
Construction under way on a new 250,000 kilowatt steam-electric generating station.
Southern California Edison
head of cabbage and fills it with seasoned mayonnaise. She arranges the outer leaves of the cabbage on a tray around it and puts freshly cooked shrimp, speared with toothpicks on these cabbage leaves. It gives the effect of a big rose and no one has to be urged to sample the seafood.
SANDWICH LOAF
Guests are confounded and then really pleased by a well made sandwich loaf. As you serve it, you seem to be cutting slices from a frosted cake. In reality, you are serving sandwiches de luxe that you have prepared and put in the refrigerator to chill several hours before.
To make the sandwich loaf, slice an uncut loaf of day old white bread horizontally, into three or four slices about three fourths inches thick. You have trimmed off all the crusts first with a good sharp knife. Spread each slice with soft butter and then spread each with a different chopped salad or sandwich mixture, keeping the combination of colors in mind. You might use devilled ham for one, egg salad for another (be generous with pimiento, green pepper or olives) and cheese spread for the third. Stack evenly and cover the top and sides with soft cream cheese piled like frosting or whipped cream. Tint the cream cheese if you like or dust with paprika or parsley.
1/2 Price Special
Colonial Dames
ALL PURPOSE CREAM
enriched with Cholesterol
LIMITED TIME
The minute you dip your fingers into this velvety cream, you know it will do wonderful things for your beauty!
It cleanser, softens, lubricates... helps protect precious skin moisture. Big half-pound jar. Hurry for your supply.
Regular 2.50 Size
$125
ALL PURPOSE CREAM
enriched with Cholesterol
LIMITED TIME
The minute you dip your fingers into this velvety cream,
you know it will do wonderful things for your beauty!
It cleanses, softens, lubricates... helps protect precious skin moisture. Big half-pound jar. Hurry for your supply.
McCOY'S CUT RATE DRUGS
100 W. CENTER ST.
ANAHEIM
GONE
...for another year
Leaving as usual, a trail of joyful kiddies ... and grown-ups too.
Perhaps he left you a bonus check, gift check or a sum of money that you are wondering how to spend wisely.
Why not make '52 a banner year for thrift by starting a savings account with us?
Start with Any Amount—Small Accounts Always Welcome
ANAHEIM BUILDING &
LOAN ASSOCIATION
Member Federal Home Loan Bank System
CORNER CENTER and LEMON STREETS
in ANAHEIM
PHONES ... Anaheim 2158 and 2159
ANAHEIM BUILDING &
LOAN ASSOCIATION
Member Federal Home Loan Bank System
CORNER CENTER and LEMON STREETS
in ANAHEIM
PHONES ... Anaheim 2158 and 2159
This being the final week of 1951, it's a pretty good time for reviewing what was accomplished during the year. And here's a sum in simple arithmetic from the Edison story. We show it to you because it's important to every Edison customer.
More Power
for you
in '52
California Edison Company