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anaheim-gazette 1952-09-19

1952-09-19 · Anaheim Gazette · page 3 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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Social and Club Activities Pat Terrebonne—2206 BRIDE ELECT of Arlo Boettger is Miss Carole Barnett who will wait for her brother’s return from Korea to say Merchants Lunch Arranged by Dorcas Society With Mrs. Henry Bamesby vice president, presiding, plans were made by the Dorcas Society of Zion Lutheran church for first merchants lunch, to be held Oct. 9, in Zion parish hall, from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Erich Baumman is chairman and Mr. E. H. Kersten, Mrs. Erich Winters and Mrs. W. Heiden are in charge of tickets. Plans were also made for a guest meeting on Oct. 16 at 2 p.m. Miss Alyda Overgaard, of Highland Exhibit in Los Angeles, will speak on "The New Israel." She will show pictures and exhibit handcraft made in her school Palestine. All interested persons are invited. Tea time hostesses were Mrs. Helen Keup, Mrs. Herbert Grimley, Mrs. W. G. Horton, Mrs. Wilbanks Heiden and Mrs. R. A. Heltshus. Red Cross Course In First Aid Being Offered Of practical value to all, in case of accident or disaster, is the aid first aid class meeting, 7 to 9 p.m. Mondays, in room 53A FJC, structured by Walter Wood. Based upon the American Red Cross standard first aid instruction, provides knowledge of skills necessary for emergency care of injured until a doctor can be summoned. Among its features are pulse taking, bandage types, shampoo treatment, animal and snake bite artificial respiration, sprains and dislocations, splinting and applying tourniquets. Evening High School Classes Stil Open All classes being offered Atheim area residents as a part Anaheim Union Evening H BRIDE ELECT of Arlo Boettger is Miss Carole Barnett who will wait for her brother's return from Korea to say wedding vows. Spring Wedding To Unite Prominent Anaheim Couple Announcement is being made today by Mr. and Mrs. Claude C. Barnett, 607 S. Palm st., of the engagement of their daughter, Carole, to Arlo Boettger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Boettger, 510 S. Resh st. The bride-elect was graduated from Anaheim high school in June. Her fiance is a graduate of Anaheim high school and Fullerton junior college. Plans have been made for a spring wedding. Y Groups to Host Hamburger Fry The Tri-Hi-Y and Hi-Y of AUHS are hosting a hamburger fry Tuesday night at 6 p.m. for all members and students interested in becoming members. Everyone to bring their own hamburger and buns and 15 cents for dessert and punch. Dancing, ping-pong and trampoline will be played. Mrs. Nan Moore, girls work secretary for the YWCA, and Tommy Thomason, boys YMCA work secretary, will be in charge. St. Boniface P-TA Executives Meet The eight new board members of St. Boniface PTA, headed by Mrs. Robert Merrick, served peach pie and coffee to 52 members yesterday. It was announced that Mrs. Fred Lampher, outgoing president, had been given a rosary. Scout leaders, five den mothers and five assistants for the cubs are needed. Tangney-Range Marriage Service Set for Sept. 27 Miss Doranne Tangney, daughter of Leo Tangney of 407 N. Clementine st., and Mrs. Ellen Tangney, will marry Wendell O. Range, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ora J. Range of 527 Grove st., Anaheim on Sept. 27 at St. Boniface parish house. The family wedding will be followed by a reception at 3 p.m. in the home of the bridegroom's parents. Miss Tangney was graduated from Anaheim High school in June and her fiance is a graduate of Jordan High school in Long Beach. They will reside in Anaheim. Churchwomen Name Chairmen At a meeting held yesterday in the home of Mrs. Chester Ferris, Mrs. Joe Quast, first vice president of the Anaheim Council of Church Women, was appointed corresponding secretary for the coming year. Others named to committees were Mrs. Roy Curtis, second vice membership; Mrs. Arthur Korn, third vice press; Mrs. Claudia Walker, Christian Social Relations chairman; Mrs. Page Vincent, ecumenical chairman; Mrs. C.I.Andrews, hostess committee; Mrs. George Alden and Mrs.Sam Hilgenfeld, tickets, and Mrs.John Henry, telephone. Evening High School Classes Still Open All classes being offered Anaheim area residents as a part Anaheim Union Evening High school adult education program are still open. Principal William Poulson revealed today. Monday night, announced as formal registration night for nine school classes brought 278 rollees in the 17 classes being fered this year. Poulson pointed out. Although some type class are limited in their size, none have reached that number. An additional class in Beginning English will also be offered this year because of the large scale demand met Monday night. Details of this meeting place will be announced as soon as an instructor can be secured. Classes offered this year include textile painting, ceramics, pot lain, lamp shade making, making, leatherwork, plastic sewing, needlecraft, parent-child observation, machine shop, w shop, citizenship, bookkeeping, and photography. Full information as to course may be had by calling Mr. Poisson at the high school (2231). Family Picnic For Rotarians The Anaheim Rotary club has a picnic Monday for Rotarians their families, and guests. More than 200 persons attended the event, including 40 children. Master of ceremonies was Walter Taylor, who with his wife Grace, conducted games for children. C. George Hedstrom provided special recorded music Serving the chow line were A.Baker, club president; John Vee, Dick Gay, Lloyd Larson,H Stakemiller,Bob Bovee,and Ra Focht. Vic Reudy, of the Anaheim park department, furnished lighting and sound equipment for the event. Afternoon-Into-Eve Executives Meet The eight new board members of St. Boniface PTA, headed by Mrs. Robert Merrick, served peach pie and coffee to 52 members yesterday. It was announced that Mrs. Fred Lampher, outgoing president, had been given a roary. Scout leaders, five den mothers and five assistants for the cubs are needed. First Friday breakfasts will be served the students for 15 cents. Mrs. Henry Gillisple, financial secretary, announced milk will be available at lunch time after Oct. 1, with the state paying half of the cost and the parents the other half. Sister Mary Helen, principal, has consented to allow the girls to wear uniforms on Fridays. Parents have been requested by the principal not to visit the classrooms but ten parents will be invited at a time, on Monday nights to have a teacher-parent conference. A lay teacher will teach the fourth grade, as approved by the superintendent of schools. A music teacher is being solicited to give private lessons. The PTA has been asked to be active in the CYO and a high school girl and boy will be selected to be coaches. Students are urged to take advantage of the excellent school library for which the PTA gives an average of $50 a year for new books. Eighth graders will be trained to check library books. The Oct. 15 meeting will be a potluck, starting at 12:30 p.m., according to Mrs. Warren W. Doller, publicity chairman. The white elephant was won by Mrs. Darlene Mathews. Mrs. Maurine Codrey of the Gulf Oil Co. office in Tulsa, and Mrs. Oscar L. Rush and small daughter, Linda, of near Skiatook, Okla., who have been visiting friends and relatives in Anaheim, Los Angeles and San Francisco, left Thursday afternoon for their respective homes. FLUID MOTION, subtly controlled, in below-the-waistline fullness standing afternoon-into-evening dresses of soft textured woolen beautifully cut, dramatically simple fashion in Forstmann’s Navy Snug fitting waist is high and unbelted. Soft cascading fullness is emphasized with single march of tiny self-covered buttons sparkling example of 1952’s favored afternoon-into-evening all-over-embroidered with scroll pattern of silver metallic yarn basque jacket with low novelty-cut neckline-wide whirling skirt dresses were recently selected by the Wool Bureau as outstanding Merchants Lunch Arranged by Dorcas Society On Mrs. Henry Bamesberg, president, presiding, plans made by the Dorcas Society on Lutheran church for the merchants lunch, to be held in Zion parish hall, from 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Erwin man is chairman and Mrs. Kersten, Mrs. Erich Winger Mrs. W. Helden are in charge of it. As were also made for the meeting on Oct. 16 at 2 p.m. Allyda Overgaard, of Holy Exhibit in Los Angeles, will on "The New Israel." She show pictures and exhibit craft made in her school in nine. All interested persons invited. Time hostesses were Mrs. Keup, Mrs. Herbert Grimm, W. G. Horton, Mrs. Wilbert and Mrs. R. A. Heiltshusen. All Cross Course First Aid Training Offered A practical value to all, in case incident or disaster, is the adult aid class meeting, 7 to 9 p.m. In room 53A FJC, led by Walter Wood. Based on the American Red Cross first aid instruction, it is knowledge of skills necessary for emergency care of infantil a doctor can be summed. Among its features are baking, bandage types, shock agent, animal and snake bites, thermal respiration, sprains and infections, splinting and apply-turniquets. Mining High School Lessons Stil Open Classes being offered Ana-area residents as a part of him. Union Evening High Turn of Those Blast Furnaces Save the Meat By DOROTHY ROE Associated Press Women's Editor Turn down the fire, girls—you're murdering the groceries. You're cooking on all four burners, and things are much too hot. So says Florence Carhart, head dietician at the New York institute of dietetics, where they turn out hundreds of expert chefs and dieticians every term. The amount of food, expensive food burned up in America every day would feed a large sized army, says Miss Carhart, who allows as how the greatest and most common mistake of the U.S. housewife is overcooking the family meals. Says she: "You can lose as much as four pounds on a 12 pound roast, if you cook it at high temperature. At the present price of meat, that's like burning up $4." Miss Carhart's opinion is upheld by eminent authorities in the nutrition field, such as Dr. Stefan Ansbacher, medical director of the Rybutol laboratories, Vitamin Corp. of America. In a recent study on the loss of vitamins in meat during home preparation and storage, he concluded: "Losses in nutritive value can be and are serious under some conditions. Thiamine and pantothenic acid are both soluble in water and destroyed by heat. These losses are greater at high temperatures and increase with the length of time of heating or storage." Thus the housewife who cooks her vegetables a long time in a lot of water, and shrivels her roast in a blast furnace oven not only is burning up the grocery budget but also may be starving her family. Both Dr. Ansbacher and Miss Capehart recommend cooking vegetables in as little water as possible for a short time, and saving the cooking liquid for soups, gravies and sauces. Meats, they Packing the lunch box for school is an art in itself. As any experienced homemaker will tell you, ingenuity is often strained to the breaking point by the puzzle of fitting into the narrow confines of a small box the kind of food that will appeal to will o'the wisp youthful appetites, food that will be as good to eat by noon as when it was packed, food that is easy to eat as well as nourishing, and food that will adequately take place of the more desirable hot lunch. A number of schools in the Anaheim area are equipped with excellent cafeterias which serve delicious lunches at a minimum cost to the child. In fact, in most cases, mothers find that they could not hope to send an adequate lunch from home for as little money as the school lunch served at school. Aid from state and federal government makes this low cost possible, and the guidance of trained nutritionists insures high nutritive value. Lucky is the child who can take advantage of a hot school lunch not only from the standpoint of good nutrition, but from the standpoint of learning to like a wide variety of foods, the social experience of the group dining table, and the morale factor which comes with encouraged comradie. School Lunch Box But if a child must carry a lunch to school, every effort should be made to have it measure up to his individual requirements. Most children like to pick out a colorful lunch box complete with thermos for milk. Some would spare themselves the trouble all at once, spreading on alternative slices and slicing wrapping in successive open Take plenty of butter or spreading knife and work fry to bottom. But the sandwich is only the lunch, and what you it depends on the rest meal. A growing child needs and plenty of it if he is going as you would like him. That is the reason for putting the lunch box meal around high in protien. What to Pack Protien possibilities are products such as milk and cream cheese, Cheddar Eggs are an excellent source protien as are meats, poultry and peanut butter; it is a must for the school box, and at least one other protien source should be used. Using different breads for sandwich variety. Little for quick breads made in your kitchen. Leave crusts on to help keep it moist at the sandwich in different to add interest. Rolls instill bread occasionally are with enthusiasm. The sandwich may be bread and butter with the dish taking the form of sour or baked beans hot from the mos bottle or smoked fish of luncheon meat, a cold stick, chop, or stuffed ee beaten with the fingers. Fruits and vegetables Among its features are baking, bandage types, shock event, animal and snake bites, dental respiration, sprains and infections, splinting and apply-turniquets. Mining High School classes Stil Open Classes being offered Ana-area residents as a part of the Union Evening High adult education program will open. Principal William is revealed today. Today night, announced as the registration night for night classes brought 278 enrollees in the 17 classes being of this year. Poulson pointed although some type classes limited in their size, none yet reached that number. Additional class in Beginning English will also be offeredear because of the large demand met Monday night. Of this meeting place will be announced as soon as an in-or can be secured. Classes offered this year are painting, ceramics, porcelain shade making, rug rug, leatherwork, plastics, needlecraft, parent-child education, machine shop, wood citizenship, bookkeeping, art photography. Information as to courses he had by calling Mr. Poulstrom the high school (2231). Family Picnic For Rotarians Anaheim Rotary club held Monday for Rotarians, families, and guests. More than 200 persons attended the including 40 children. Offer of ceremonies was Wallaylor, who with his wife, conducted games for the men. C. George Hedstrom led special recorded music. The chow line were Arch club president; John Boick Gay, Lloyd Larson, Ben Miller, Bob Bovee, and Ralph Reudy, of the Anaheim parkment, furnished lighting and equipment for the event. Calendar (From This Month in Anaheim) TONIGHT Anaheim Lodge 207, F & A M—7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple. Lois Rebbart Lodge—8:00 p.m. IOOF hall. Brothers' night. Varisity Football Game—9:00 p.m. AUHS vs Redlands at Redlands. TOMORROW YLI Rummage Sale—9:00 a.m.—127 S. Los Angeles St. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 Rotary Club—12:15 p.m. Elks Cafe. Toastmasters—6:30 p.m. Eum's Care. Y Men's Club—6:30 p.m. YMCA. Knights of Columbus No. 1154—6:30 p.m. District dinner meeting at St. Boniface Parish hall. Altrusa Club—7:00 p.m. dinner and meeting at Elks Club. DeMolay—1:30 at Masonic Temple. Beta Sigma Phi—7:45 p.m. Veterans of Foreign Ware Auxiliary—8:00 p.m. at 106 N. Philadelphia. Layette Items To be Collected By Cyress P-TA Answering an appeal made by Miss Elizabeth Dickerson, super-intendent of the Cypress school, for a layette for a needy family, Mrs. Edwin Robinson, phone Anaheim 60621, as welfare chairman, will arrange to have articles picked up. Mrs. Keith Giles, president, presided at the first board meeting when plans were made for booth at White Gold day, Oct. 4. The first PTA meet will be Oct. 9, 7:30 p.m. and will be a teachers' reception with the executive board as hosts. School Lunch Box But if a child must carry a lunch to school, every effort should be made to have it measure up to his individual requirements. Most children like to pick out a colorful lunch box complete with thermos for milk. Some would spare themselves the trouble of tooting a box both ways by carrying a sack lunch and purchasing milk at school. It's his lunch. Guess he should have some say. Mornings when lunch boxes are packed are busy times for mother. She makes it easy on herself by reserving a drawer or corner for lunch box supplies. Right handy to her work surface should be a sharp knife and cutting board, softened butter or margarine and a knife for spreading, the refrigerator for the perishables that go into the box, and the ever helpful waxed paper, aluminum foil, covered containers for salad and puddings, paper napkins. Individual containers for salt, plastic forks and spoons, colorful straws are nice touches too. With supplies at hand and the deck cleared for action, lunches can be whipped up for the day while youngsters are breakfasting. Sandwiches Plus The sandwich is usually the mainstay of the lunch. There are good reasons why the sandwich has maintained its popularity ever since the Earl of Sandwich, way back when he got so involved in a card game that he would not stop to eat. The story goes that he ordered a servant to put thick slices of meat between slices of bread, and this he ate while he continued his game. So the sandwich was born. It is easy to eat, and if made right, is highly satisfactory. Satisfaction comes from fresh bread, spread clear to the very edge with butter or margarine and then put together with a generous amount of filling made fairly juicy and crunchy by mayonnaise, lettuce, celery and the like. You will agree, we think, that there is nothing worse than a dry sandwich. If several sandwiches are to be made at once, it is most quickly done by arranging all the bread out on a board and then butter- ... am you can h Beautiful NOTH AS LONG TO PAY F.H. All Details BOTTS 1228 Lincoln We Give "Buy i HAPPY DAYS Pontiacs are rolling way to your nearest order now to assure e-production, your Pontiac you the finest deal in much longer time purse. So don’t delay place your order n CASEY-BECKH 336 S. Los Angeles St., "A GOOD DEAL AND A Hear Clete Roberts' World R 13, 6:45-7 P.M., Observe 150th Mission Year Celebrating the 150th anniversary of national missions, Women's Fellowship of the Presbyterian church met for luncheon this week with January Parish group as hostesses. Mrs. Arval Morris was chairman. Highlight of the afternoon was the presentation of a play, "For Whom the Bell Tolls," a story of the first missionary society meeting on March 3, 1880. Featured were Mrs. Eldon Paddock, Mrs. Marion Pickel, Mrs. H. B. Pearson, Mrs. John Knutzen, Mrs. L. E. Middleton, Mrs. Page Vincent and Mrs. D. Fenner Chambers. Mrs. F. B. Morley was program chairman and Mrs. Eldon Paddock led devotions. BOARD MEETING The Katella School Board met Tuesday night and approved minor changes in the drawings for the new classroom building submitted by architects. The plans will be completed Oct. 14 and when approved will be forwarded to the State Department of Schoolhouse planning. Mrs. Betty Gordon, 825 N. Clementine st., has been taking care of her two great grandchildren, Mike and Michelle, while their parents were away for two weeks. They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Hayden Stillson of Manhattan Beach. WITH U.S. FIRST MARINE DIVISION, Korea. (U.P.)—President Syngman Rhee today presented the Republic of Korea's highest military decoration, the order of military merit, to General Lemuel C. Shepherd, commandant of the U.S. marine corps. Officer Mistakes Wife for Burglar Shoots, Kills Her NEW YORK (U.P.)—A policeman shot his 15-year-old wife to death in their dark bedroom early today, mistaking her for a burglar who had been seen in their apartment building. Police gave this account: While Patrolman John Milo, 27, was asleep, his wife, Mary, got up from their bed. When she returned to the bedroom, her husband was wakened by her footsteps. Believing she was the burglar, he seized his service revolver from a drawer of a bureau near the bed and fired two shots at his wife. One of the bullets pierced her brain, killing her instantly. The Milos' 2-year-old daughter, Patricia, slept soundly in another room. WASHINGTON (U.P.)—The Defense Department today identified 162 battle casualties in Korea. A new list No. 652 reported 24 killed, 121 wounded, four missing and three injured. TOKYO (U.P.)—Thirty applicants for passports to the Communist "peace conference" in Peiping Sept. 26 were beaten and kicked by about 20 young black-shirted Japanese, the newspaper Asahi reported today. LONDON (U.P.) — Britains Boy Scouts—nearing the half-million mark in membership—are 30,000 pounds $84,000 in the red, the organization's annual accounting revealed today. Beauty Counselor, Inc. help keep it moist and cut sandwiches in different ways add interest. Rolls instead of lead occasionally are greeted with enthusiasm. The sandwich may be simply head and butter with the main h taking the form of soup, stew baked beans hot from the therios bottle or smoked fish, slices luncheon meat, a cold drumck, chop, or stuffed eggs to eaten with the fingers. Fruits and vegetables make asp accompaniments. Relishes the form of carrots, pickles, lery sticks, salads in small screw oped jars; fresh fruits eaten out hand are popular; baked or sewed fruits are fine desserts. Milk puddings and custards are good way of building up pron, but keep well only in cool weather. Cake or cookies are exa nourishing when made with its, raisins, dates, oatmeal or glasses. Pack the lunch box with love, WITH U.S. FIRST MARINE DIVISION, Korea. UP—President Syngman Rhee today presented the Republic of Korea's highest military decoration, the order of military merit, to General Lemuel C. Shepherd, commandant of the U. S. marine corps. and pack in a special surprise now and then to satisfy the soul as well as the appetite. BACKS CAMPBELL KAULBARS Mortuary Phone 3209 251 N. Lemon NATIONAL HOME WEEK SEPT. 14-20 ...and NOW, you can have your home Beautifully Landscaped for NOTHING DOWN and AS LONG AS 30 MONTHS TO PAY FOR IT ON F.H.A. TERMS WE WILL DO IT FOR YOU or FURNISH MATERIALS AND TELL YOU HOW TO DO IT YOURSELF All Details Cheerfully Explained Without Obligation BOTTS NURSERY 1228 Lincoln Anaheim LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORS Phone 5450 We Give “Buy in Anaheim” Votes and Give and Redeem Gold Bond Stamps BOTTS NURSERY 1228 Lincoln Anaheim LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORS Phone 5450 We Give “Buy in Anaheim” Votes and Give and Redeem Gold Bond Stamps HAPPY DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN! Classes are rolling off the assembly lines—on the road to your nearest Pontiac Dealer. Place your order now to assure early delivery. Despite limited action, your Pontiac Dealer continues to give the finest deal in town. Low-low down payment with longer time to pay—terms to suit your needs. So don’t delay. Assure prompt delivery and enjoy your order now. CASEY-BECKHAM PONTIAC 336 S. Los Angeles St., Anaheim — Phone 4012 "A GOOD DEAL AND A GOOD DEAL MORE" State Roberts’ World Report, KLAC-TV, Channel 13, 6:45-7 P.M., Mondays through Fridays