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Publications Anaheim Gazette 1953 January

anaheim-gazette 1953-01-02

1953-01-02 · Anaheim Gazette · page 3 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Anaheim Gazette 3 FRIDAY MORNING, JAN. 2, 1915 ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA Social and Club Activities IRENE JULIAN SOCIETY EDITOR Phone 2206 A. B. Paul Social Club Meets at Roberts Home Mrs. Irene Roberts was hostess to 39 members of the A. B. Paul WRC Social club when they met in her beautifully decorated home, 618 N. Lemon st., for the club's Christmas party, Tuesday. Assisting Mrs. Roberts were four officers of the corps, Leona Hull; president; Betty Talset; auditing committee; Linnie Campbell, treasurer and Mary Hatfield, secretary. Following a delicious chicken luncheon, the group sang carols and a scintillating little reading "A Little Mouse," was charmingly given by Mrs. Sylvia Leep. A talented reader, Mrs. Leep thoroughly delighted her audience. Another talented member, Mable Ives, offered a sparkling bit of pantomime with, "A Date," which was equally as delightful. Mary Mitchell as Santa Claus, presided beside the huge Christmas tree for the gift exchange, and gave each guest a bag of candy adorned with a perky bow. Amid much fun and laughter, with wishes for a happy New Year, the club adjourned until Tuesday, Jan. 6, when they meet at the IOOF hall at 1:30 p.m. Installation will be held on Jan. 20, when Mary Fordyce comes in as president. Olive Notes Mrs. Emma Luchau, of San Diego, a week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Burdg entertained members of the Tripoll club at a luncheon at the Imperial cafe, and the afternoon was spent in playing cards in the Burdg home. Prizes were received by Mesdames Matthilda Harms, Oliver Burdg and Gilbert Bradford. Others present were Mrs. Dorothy Luchau, Mrs. Gertrude Boehner and Mrs. John Leek of Auburn who was a house guest of the Burdg. After Christmas gifts were exchanged by club members, they showered Mrs. Leek with birthday gifts. Mrs. Leek, who formerly lived in Olive, spent Saturday visiting old friends and on Sunday returned to Pasadena where she is a guest of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Leek and children. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Burdg spent Christmas in Long Beach with Mr. and Mrs. William Burdg and sons. Steven and Craig. Christmas eve the Russell Burdgs entertained with a family party. Others present were their children, Linda and Tommy and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burdg and daughter, Terry. Rev. and Mrs. George Mieger of Oakland are spending this week with their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Mieger and children, Paul, Alfred Jr., and Jean On Sunday, The Rev. Mieger. Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hight on Sunday were Messrs. and Mesdames Ray Catherman and Donald Stanley, Santa Ana; Ralph Hunter, San Diego Elmer Calkins, Whittier; Graff Fuller, Los Angeles, and George Lemke, Olive. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Heim were hosts at a family dinner on Christmas mas day. Guests were Mrs. Hiima Helm, Santa Ann; Miss Joseph Derigo, Anaheim; Mr. and Mrs. James Webb, Bishop; Mr. and Mrs. George Duerr, Union Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. William H Paulus and son, Eugene, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reusch and daughter, Lynn. The George Cudworths, daughter Peggy Ann and son, Gene entertained with a dinner on Christmas mas day. Their guests were their parents, the W. W. Cudworths or Orange, and Mr. and Mrs. August Helnemann and Mrs. Cudworth's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Guenther, Olive. Mt. Everest is called "Chomolungma" (Goddess Mother of the World' by Tibetans.) Mary Mitchell as Santa Claus, presided beside the huge Christmas tree for the gift exchange, and gave each guest a bag of candy adorned with a perky bow. Amid much fun and laughter, with wishes for a happy New Year, the club adjourned until Tuesday, Jan. 6, when they meet at the IOOF hall at 1:30 p.m. Installation will be held on Jan. 20, when Mary Fordyce comes in as president. PARTY TIDBITS Among gay appetizers for your party tray include these tidbits prepared with tiny Vienna sausages. Simply wrap the canned sausages with bacon, then broil them about two inches from the heat until the bacon is cooked. Rev. and Mrs. George Mieger of Oakland are spending this week with their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Mieger and children, Paul, Alfred Jr., and Jean. On Sunday, the Rev. Mieger, who is a former pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran church in Olive, preached both services and renewed acquaintances with his many friends in Olive. Week-end guests of the Arthur Memo to Men on Managing Crying Women—Business Women, That Is By ADELAIDE KERR AP Newsfeatures Writer NEW YORK—(P)—Memo to men on how to manage women—business women, that is. It comes—complete with notes on what to do about gossip, tears and talk—from the Research Institute of America. The institute is a private research organization that analyzes and interprets developments affecting business for a membership of 30,000 business executives and others. Both men and women members of its staff worked on the memo about women after consultation with psychiatrists and psychologists. Here is the gist of it: If you are faced with a flood of tears, give the girl an opportunity to recover her self-control. The tears are generally due to a combination of on-the-job and personal problems. Let the girl know you are available to discuss anything she wants to bring up, but don't pry. Above all, don't dismiss a tearful girl with an off-hand. "Go wash your face: 'You'll feel better.' Finally, keep in mind that some women use tears as a deliberate weapon. Don't yield. Whatever happens, you have to maintain your standards. When criticizing a woman's work, remember that women take things personally. Ask a man, "Where did you get this steak?" and he will answer. "At Green's Meat Market." Ask his wife the same question and she'll answer with some emotion: "Why? What's wrong with it?" In the business world such reactions are due partly to the fact that women are on the defensive; not only because they feel as a group that they have to prove themselves, but also because a spent Christmas in Long Beach with Mr. and Mrs. William Burdg and sons, Steven and Craig. Christmas eve the Russell Burdgs entertained with a family party. Others present were their children, Linda and Tommy and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burdg and daughter, Terry. Start New Year With Budget As Guide To Thrift Start the new year with a record of the family spending. Is the advice of Marian Prentiss, home advisor for the University of California agricultural extension service. It will settle the problems of who bought what; give a reference date of when the bills were paid; help the children understand about the use of money; and serve as a guide for future family spending, she adds. According to the home advisor, the only reason for having a spending plan is to help the family get what it needs and wants most. The plan must fit each family, and not just the "average" family. Each member of the family should share in making the plan to insure a fair distribution of the money among the family members. A home account book, kept near the place where the family bills are paid, will serve as a handy reference to show where the money goes. For those families who would like some guidance with their accounting, Mrs. Prentiss suggests a copy of "Our Family Account Book" by Julia Pond, extension home management specialist. The book includes pages for each month of the year, and lines for each day's spending. Summary sheets at the back provide the space for yearly... When criticizing a woman's work, remember that women take things personally. Ask a man, "Where did you get this steak?" and he will answer, "At Green's Meat Market." Ask his wife the same question and she'll answer with some emotion: "Why? What's wrong with it?" In the business world such reactions are due partly to the fact that women are on the defensive; not only because they feel as a group that they have to prove themselves, but also because a woman tends to see almost everything in terms of herself. In dealing with women, criticism should always be linked closely with encouragement and appreciation. Never take a woman for granted. Your failure to comment favorably is likely to be interpreted as disapproval. Women expect praise in greater quantities than men do. Women, if not as logical as men, are sometimes one jump ahead in their thinking. This may be women's intuition, which is not as mysterious as it seems. Women are extra-sensitive to other human beings, observe them more carefully than most men do and feel their moods. Women generally are more interested in people than things. Women's gossip stems from this intense interest in people. The interest which women manifest in certain things stems from the fact that they are people-minded. They give attention to their clothes and peek in mirrors because they value and need the good opinion of others. The time spent talking in the powder room is out of all proportion to the importance of the subjects discussed. This kind of absenteeism during the day is contagious. If you don't control it, expect it to spread. Women are quicker to suspect favoritism than are men. When a supervisor gives a lot of attention to a girl who needs help with her work, the other women may see very personal motives behind it. The girls are wise to the office wolf and can take care of themselves. A home account book, kept near the place where the family bills are paid, will serve as a handy reference to show where the money goes. For those families who would like some guidance with their accounting, Mrs. Prentiss suggests a copy of "Our Family Account Book" by Julia Pond, extension home management specialist. The book includes pages for each month of the year, and lines for each day's spending. Summary sheets at the back provide the space for yearly totals. Books are available by writing or calling at the agricultural extension service office, 1104 West Eighth St., Santa Ana. The charge for each book is 35 cents to cover the cost of printing. Robert Aguilars' Welcome Their First Daughter A little baby is always welcome, but when a baby girl comes into a family of boys, a special kind of joy and gladness attends her arrival. So it was with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Aguilar and sons Larry, Alan and John, formally of Anaheim, now living in China Lake, when Mrs. Aguilar gave birth to the little seven pound girl yesterday morning in St. Joseph hospital. Mrs. Aguilar is the former Lydia de Leon, daughter of the R. de Leons of Coffman ave., and the paternal grandmother is Mrs. Ethel Wanggrud of Buena Park. TASTY TOASTWICHES Chipped beef and cheese toastwiches will fit any holiday occasion. To prepare, heat a can of condensed mushroom soup with a clove of minced garlic. Add ¼ pound of grated cheddar cheese and ¼ pound of shredded chipped beef. Cook slowly until the cheese is melted. Serve on toasted bun halves. Many of the world's deposits are found in the very old pre-Cabrian rocks. HOME-MAKERS' FORUM By The Gazette Own Home Economist JOAN S WHITE BETTER LIVING Better living for 1953 is the aim of up and coming Mrs. Anaheim homemaker. Nowadays it is the labor saving appliances that take the place of servants to make housework easier. There have been many new advances in the direction of time and labor-saving for the housewife. They are making it easier to preserve, prepare and serve food with automatic ranges, that feature all sorts of time and heat controls, giant and simmer burners, swing out, waist high broilers, pilot-lighted ovens, griddle-tops, smoke preventers, spun glass insulation, warming racks, towel dryers and push button operation. Roomy refrigerators have bigger freezer compartments, more ample dairy and vegetable fresh inner compartments and an easier way to make ice cubes. LAUNDERING PLEASURE They have gone a long way to ward taking the back-wrenching brief out of doing the family wash. The new washer-dryer "twins" come mighty close to making laundering a pleasure. With automatic timers, including adjustments for damp-drying or fluff-drying, the dryers give housewives the benefit/of equipment developed in commercial laundries with the added advantage of providing extra working surface on the gleaming tops. As people begin to pay more than passing attention to the importance of hot water at the right temperature for different uses, they find that the water heater manufacturers have more than kept pace with kitchen modernization. Now they have simple dial adjustment of water heat for everything from baby's bath to dish washing and from household hygiene to laundering. Gas incinerators and all types of gas comfort heaters, from the kind that heats and air-conditions the whole house to the kind used for warming a single room, have a long way in design and efficiency and will play a big part in making the open plan kitchen the most congenial room in the home. TROPICAL PIE You will find yourself the best line of a dessert success story when you make banana chiffon pie. Since a delicious dessert can bring on praise and certainly a request to the recipe. With Anaheim fruit markets currently offering chocolate chiffon filling, sweet mellow with fresh banana flavor makes the perfect pie for any cason. The secret to making the most of banana flavor is to mash bananas that are fully ripe and wilted with brown. That is key to that delicious banana flavor. Slice bananas into a boiled and beat them with a fork or tary egg beater until smooth and creamy. BANANA CHIFFON PIE 1 envelope unflavored gelatin ½ cup cold water 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten ¼ cup sugar ¾ teaspoon salt ½ cup warm water 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1¼ cups mashed bananas 2 egg whites 3 tablespoons sugar 1 baked 9 inch pie shell. Soften gelatin in cold water. Combine egg yolks,¼ cup sugar and salt. Stir in warm water. Cook over hot but not boiling water, 8 to 10 minutes, stirring constantly until mixture is of consi JANUARY WHITE SALE EVERYTHING FOR YOUR LINEN CLOSET AT LOWEST PRICES EVER CLEARANCE HURRY DOWN TO THE SQR STORE ANAHEIM'S OWN JANUARY SALE BEGINNING TODAY Yes, January is the month of SALES at The Store ... Clearances! White Sales! Special Pursuit Sales! Toiletries Sales! Shoe Sales! ... January for you, your family and your home at sale during the entire month and in every department. You can buy Cohasset Sheets, 72 x 108 for as 1.98 ... regular 11.95 Red Cross Shoes for 5.50 regular 39.50 and 42.50 100% goose down filler Comforts for 29.88 ... exquisite nylon gowns lar 29.95 values for 16.88 ... one group of W Dresses, broken lines and sizes, actual former up to 29.95 for only 4.99 ... girls' Print Dress RELEARANCE SALE! Terrific Reductions SALE You can buy Cohasset Sheets, 72 x 108 for as l. 1.98 . . regular 11.95 Red Cross Shoes for 5. regular 39.50 and 42.50 100% goose down fillen Comforts for 29.88 . . exquisite nylon gowns lar 29.95 values for 16.88 . . one group of W Dresses, broken lines and sizes, actual former up to 29.95 for only 4.99 . . girls' Print Dress merly priced up to 6.00 for 3.00 and formerly up to 10.95 for 4.00 . . girls' Coats, formerly pr to 29.95 for 13.00 . . yes, hundreds of items e low in price and big in savings! So hurry do pecting astounding values . . you'll not be pointed! SHOP FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P.M. DOORS OPEN 9:30 A.M. GRE during CITICAL PIE will find yourself the heroa dessert success story when take banana chiffon pie. Such delicious dessert can bring only and certainly a request for recipe. With Anaheim food sets currently offering choice at thrifty prices, the delichiffon filling, sweet and with fresh banana flavor the perfect pie for any ocsecret to making the most banana flavor is to mash bathat are fully ripe and well with brown. That is the that delicious banana flavice bananas into a bowl, heat them with a fork or rooeg beater until smooth and y. NA CHIFFON PIE envelope unflavored gelatin cup cold water eg yolks, slightly beaten cup sugar teaspoon salt cup warm water biblespoons lemon juice cups mashed bananas eg whites biblespoons sugar kneel 9 inch pie shell. en gelatin in cold water. one egg yolks, one cup sugar alt. Stir in warm water. Never hot but not boiling wato 10 minutes, stirring conuntil mixture is of consis- tendly of soft custard. Refreeze from heat. Add gelatin and stir until dissolved. Add lemon juice. Chill until slightly thickened. Fold in bananas. It will take 2 or 3 bananas to make 1¼ cups. Beat egg whites until stuff. Add 3 tablespoons sugar gradually and continue beating until mixture forms peaks. Fold in gelatin miture. Turn into pie and shell and chill until firm. Top with whipped cream and additional slices of banana. FEAST AND FAMINE The holidays just past were notable for the amount of feasting that went on here in Anaheim, the same as everywhere else in America. At the same time men, women and children in Korea were eating less than seven meals a week, consisting only of a handful of rice. Col. Harry L. Mayfeld, commander of UNCACK in Seoul, reports that a great many of Seoul's 900,000 inhabitants live in wretched shelters without food or warm clothing. Thousands of deaths from starvation and disease are expected before spring. He pleads for at least 400 American organizations to adopt a plan of sending each month $50 worth of powered eggs, powdered milk, B-1 vitamin tablets, peanut butter and woolen clothing to "Commanding Officer," Seoul Civil Assistance Team, APO 72, care postmaster, San Francisco. Baby Girl Welcomed By Kenneth Curtis' A little late for Christmas, but still arriving in time for the holiday season, baby Lori Marie weighing seven pounds, made her appearance in St. Joseph hospital at 8 p.m. Tuesday, to join the Kenneth Curtis family of 915 N. Topeka. Eagerly waiting to welcome home mother and the new little sister are eight-year-old Connie and Larry, two and a half. The proud and happy grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Curtis of Lincoln blvd., and the John Lathams of Glendale. Women Grads Increase BRUSSELS (AP)—The number of women university graduates rose by 179 per cent from 1937 to 1947 in Belgium, according to the Belgian National Institute of Statistics. The 1937 total of 1,596 women graduates jumped to 4,458 in 1947. Men graduates only took a 25 per cent step upwards from 41,620 in 1937 to 51,243 in 1947. The total number of graduates increased in these 10 years by 2,485, rising from 43,216 to 55,701. Only 525 of the 1947 graduates said that they were unemployed. UNCE Unbelievably Priced THE BEST OF THIS SEASON'S SHOES N TO SALES! TODAY! SALES at The S. Q. R. ales! Special Purchase ales!...January needs ur home at sale prices in every department! 72 x 108 for as little as oss Shoes for 5.95 ... goose down filled Satin te nylon gowns, reguone group of Women's s, actual former prices girls' Print Dresses, for- January Savings ON GIRL'S WASHABLE DRESSES JANUARY WHITE 72 x 108 for as little as oss Shoes for 5.95 . . goose down filled Satin te nylon gowns, reguone group of Women's s, actual former prices irls' Print Dresses, for00 and formerly priced ats, formerly priced up dreds of items equally ys! So hurry down exyou'll not be disap- IANUARY WHITE SALE TING FOR YOUR LIFE CHOSE AT FOWEST PRICES EVER TIL 9 P.M. 9:30 A.M. GREAT SAVINGS during our JANUARY SALE