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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1921 March

oc-plain-dealer 1921-03-03

1921-03-03 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 2 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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PAGE TWO Society: Clubs: Lodges: Churches HOSTESS TO 500 CLUB Mrs. George Trapp was hostess yesterday afternoon to the members of the "500" club at her home northwest of Anaheim. The affair was an unusually delightful one as it was the first time Mrs. Trapp had acted as hostess in the home which has been so charmingly re-arranged and remodeled. The hours between two and five were spent in the playing of 500. The honors of winning first prize were given to Mrs. Kane, second to Mrs. Salter and the guest prize was awarded Mrs. Wheelock of Illinois, who is the guest of her brother, B. Shinn. The prizes consisted of dainty boxes of candy. Following the playing a dainty two course luncheon was served by the hostess assisted by her daughter, Mrs. M. M. Steward of Miami, Ariz., who is visiting in the home of her parents, and Mrs. Edith Treeman of Watts, Mrs. Trapp's niece. The guests were seated at one long table in the dining room which had been prettily decorated in a color scheme of yellow and white. The guests were: Mesdames A. L. Bennett, Ed Cole, George Cole, Benj Shinn, Wheelock, Miss Wheelock, S. Miller, Kane, Salter, Miss Anna Melba Delay, Edith Freeman and Probst. ENTERTAIN SO. DAK. CLUB The Hecla, South Dakota, Club was entertained last evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Pember, N. West-st. The time was passed in the usual diversion of playing whist. Late in the evening the hostess served a dainty luncheon, each table holding a pretty bouquet of spring flowers. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Pember, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Pember, Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Pember, Mr. and Mrs. Art Kemper, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Prescott, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Arndt, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McCulloch, Misses Blanche Hexon, Viola Muckenthaler, Valle and Esther Pember, Messrs. Fred Hayes, Chas. Walker, Lloyd Schrode, Jack Kemper. MRS. MAAS ENTERTAINS The Wednesday Afternoon Bridge Club met yesterday at the home of Mrs. Ralph Mana. The afternoon was passed about the card tables with Mrs. C. E. Harbison winning the prize for high score. Late in the afternoon the hostess served a two course luncheon, the table decorations being bouquets of bright colored nasturtims. The guests included Mesdames B. H. Sidnam, W. Are You Having Trouble With Your Tractor? Eliminate loss of time by equipping it with a Bosch Magneto Insuring easy starting and a Sure, Hot Spark Demonstration of THOR Electric Washers and Ironing Machines EVERY AFTERNOON THIS WEEK Starting Wednesday A. M., March 2 at Salesrooms of JOSEPH A. LIEB “EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL” 111 E. Chartres Phone 531 Anaheim "EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL" 111 E. Chartres Phone 531 Anaheim Ford THE UNIVERSAL CAR The Ford Coupe More and more this fine enclosed car for two—but it will is growing in popular demand. Strongly built, the body marvelous Ford chassis. It brings to its owner every modience; easy riding—while sliding plate glass windows make cool in hot weather; dust proof and water-proof when the closed—it is cosy and comfortable in inclement and wintry there is the durability of the car, coupled with the low economy and the saving of money in operating expense. Behind it, Ford car, is that unsurpassed "Ford-After-Service" which army of Ford dealers scattered all over the country, together 15,000 authorized garages, until the Ford owner is always diate touch of dependable, reliable service, where the genuine parts, and the genuine Ford methods are applied in the car. The Ford Coupe administers to a great variety of owners, sician to the traveling man, from the engineer to the arch for a pleasure car for two it is unbeatable. We ask your ea want a Ford Coupe, because we want to make delivery as an but we must have a little time. Come in and talk it over. GEORGE DUNTO FORD AND FORDSON SALES AND SERVICE Phone 263 Women Must Be Citizens Now as Well as Reformers By Mrs. Jacob Riis For a good many years, women along with their struggle for universal suffrage, have been fighting for certain specific reforms, "welfare measures." Child labor bills, mothers' pensions, minimum wage laws, and other similar steps toward greater protection for women and children in industry and in society have had leading places on 90 per cent of the club programs of the country and have been the cause of a great deal of diligent, unselfish and effective work on the part of individual women as well as of organizations. Those welfare measures served a double purpose. They did benefit the groups affected by them, and of almost equal importance, they brought women up against the whole world of social and political work. Other measures have been before the country during those same years, which were probably of equal importance in their bearing upon the well-being of its people. But they lacked the dramatic element. They were concerned, not with people directly, but with economic laws which just as truly, but not as directly, determine the welfare of those same people. There was nothing in them to act as a rallying cry to an unenfranchised group only beginning to grasp its power and responsibility in public affairs. Now then— That group is enfranchised. It must work, not only to influence legislators to vote for certain bills but to elect or defeat those legislators upon their entire records. The women, who could pick and choose the movements to which they should give their influence, cannot pick and choose the particular details of a man's record upon which to judge him. That is what I mean when I MRS. RIIS, as her name would indicate, is the widow of the famous newspaper reporter whose investigations into the living conditions prevailing in New York City tenement districts 25 or 30 years ago—and his writings on what he found—prompted the late Theodore Roosevelt to designate him "America's most useful citizen." Her very practical conception of the road that now lies before American womankind is probably due to the fact that she looks at the world about her through the eyes of the practical business woman—she is manager of the women's department to work for reform. But this can no longer be governed one by the so-called reform. This must be complete citizens, concerned with and informed upon every line of public and political action. For example: There will be considered by the next Congress several educational bills. These are fundamental. Education must ever be the foundation of democracy. But there will also measure providing for the means of raising the funds with which to carry out the provisions of those bills. A great deal of portance accrues to that legislative line of legislation. There will undoubtedly tariff modifications discussed, nothing more. What do the women, individually, not collectively, think about the tariff? Even more pertinent, how much do they think about it? We must have national prosperity if we are to serve our people well. What can Congress do to ensure that? What about foreign trade? What legislation is needed order to give America an even start toward the markets of the world? And why does she need her share of the fruits of these markets? Next Spring, the National Foreign Trade Council meets Cleveland, Ohio. The discussion of that meeting are as close as the interests of the women of the country—usually, at such time spoken of as the Womanhood Conference. Do the rank and file of the women appreciate that they have been sufficiently impressed with the fact that the material welfare of the child of the country depends very closely upon the material welfare of their fathers and mothers? The development of international trade will be of benefit all our manufacturers, not merely Makes Elaborate Plans For Cafe at Balboa The decorations on the cafe at Balboa Beach of J. H. Clark, form proprietor of the Hotel Valencia have been finished. They are palms, grapevines and flower kets. The painters and carpenters are busy working and the cafe will be opened for business April 2, M. Clark said today. F. Rahe of the Toke Tavern C. San Francisco will be the host walter, and the finest jazz orchestra in the west will be employed, it stated. Others may try to imitate the F. coil traction system, but there's no one genuine Fagcol Tractor, durable clean and easy riding. Anaheim Mo Co., agents. Makes Elaborate Plans For Cafe at Balboa The decorations on the cafe at Balboa Beach of J. H. Clark, form proprietor of the Hotel Valencia have been finished. They are palms, grapevines and flower kets. The painters and carpenters are busy working and the cafe will be opened for business April 2, M. Clark said today. F. Rahe of the Toke Tavern C. San Francisco will be the host walter, and the finest jazz orchestra in the west will be employed, it stated. Others may try to imitate the F. coil traction system, but there's no one genuine Fagcol Traector, durable clean and easy riding. Anaheim Mo Co., agents. Makes Elaborate Plans For Cafe at Balboa The decorations on the cafe at Balboa Beach of J. H. Clark, form proprietor of the Hotel Valencia have been finished. They are palms, grapevines and flower kets. The painters and carpenters are busy working and the cafe will be opened for business April 2, M. Clark said today. F. Rahe of the Toke Tavern C. San Francisco will be the host walter, and the finest jazz orchestra in the west will be employed, it stated. Others may try to imitate the F. coil traction system, but there's no one genuine Fagcol Traector, durabl DELIGHTED WITH ANAHEIM Mr. and Mrs. Bert Shuck, of Long Beach, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Doubs and son Raymond, of Genesee, Ill. EBELL WILL MEET MONDAY The regular monthly meeting of the Anaheim Ebell Society will be held in the club rooms, Masonic Temple, on Monday, March 7th, at 2:30 p.m. There will be a good program, and a large attendance of members is expected. P.T.A.WILL MEET TUESDAY There will be no meeting of the executive board of the P.T.A. this month, but the regular meeting of the Association will be held on Tuesday afternoon, March 8th, in the kindergarten room at Central school, at 3:00 o'clock. A large attendance of all members is desired. PACKING HOUSE VISITORS Visitors at the Anaheim Orange & Lemon Assn., yesterday included: Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Johnson, Sloux City; Dr. William F. Reilly and wife, Cincinnati, O.; Henry Ball and wife, Seribner, Neb.; and Miss Clara Schroedter, Seribner, Neb. "Mid-Summer Madness" will be the feature of attraction at the New Fairyland theatre again tonight. It is a story of how madness and passion can sweep away a man's integrity and a woman's honor, and how sin committed even in thought, tho the body be not defiled, will yet defile the sinner. It is the vibrant story of human love and passions that lays the soul of modern marriage bare. Tomorrow night there will be four acts of vaudeville and Frank Mayo in "Colorado." "The Marriage of William Ashe," starring May Allison, will be seen at the New Grand theatre tonight. Tomorrow night "Clothes" will be seen. Masquerade Dance at Olinda, Thursday, March 3rd. STATES R. R.S WILL LOWER LEMON RATE PASADENA. March 2.—That the railroads will be willing to join the lemon growers of California in asking the Interstate Commerce Commission for a reduction of the present freight rates on lemons, is the opinion of A. D. Lasker of Chicago, one of the deepest business analysts in the country and head of the noted advertising house of Lord & Thomas, who is the principal owner of several of the biggest business concerns in this country, who is in So. Calif. This matter of freight rates, of interest to lemon growers, is merely one of a number of items Mr. Lasker mentioned in an interview today in which he discussed the general business outlook for the United States. Mr. Lasker says he is an optimist on the situation; not in the ecstatic sense of claiming business is booming and everything in the world O. K., but in foreseeing that in a constructive way things are looking up and that if reconstruction is intelligently carried out, America and the world will emerge from the readjustment better than before. "Tariff and peace," President-elect Harding's "normalcy" at home and abroad, the refunding of Europe's debt to the United States and the stabilization of foreign exchange, are what business, speaking of the country as a whole, needs most of all, said Mr. Lasker. To the incoming Republican national administration, headed by President Harding, Mr. Lasker looks confidently for "Tariff and peace," or normalcy, two of the most important items he enumerated. And Mr. Lasker is rather close to the new administration. He and his friend and fellow townsman, here and in Chicago, William Wrigley, had charge of Senator Harding's publicity campaign before election. Mr. Lasker was in charge of the Republican publicity headquarters at Marion, Ohio, and elsewhere. As to the tariff, Mr. Lasker is firmly of the belief that a tariff on lemons will be included in the permanent tariff law. A tariff on lemons rather than a wild eyed one who lesses to believe that things are always all right as they are, Mr. Lasker thinks that no part of the country, not even so favored a region as California, can entirely escape the cost of readjustment. "Advertising, incidentally, is one branch of business that has shown no decline during the readjustment period. Before the war, advertising was really in its infancy. "Business men can have a lot of fun now. They can be statesmen as well as business men by going at the problems of readjustment constructively. The work should not be hurried. If we go through with it carefully and constructively we will come out better than before. It will be a good thing. That high price era was not sound; no one wants its return." ROAD MAPS READY AT SO. CALIF. AUTO CLUB A supply or road maps has been received by the local office of the Auto Club of So. Calif., C. C. Phillips stated this morning. Just In New Mackerel, 2 for ... 35c 2 Pkgs. Pancake Flour ... 35c Lux Twink Collars, pkg... 10c Pure Fruit Jam in large glass ... 42c 2 Cans Good Corn ... 35c REMEMBER 3 Pounds Prunes ... 25c Anaheim (T. M.) Brooms Ave Sellers Elaborate Plans for Cafe at Balboa Decorations on the cafe at each of J. H. Clark, former of the Hotel Valencia, finished. They are of rapevines and flower bas-relief painters and carpenters working and the cafe will be for business April 2, Mr. today. of the Toke Tavern Cafe unicisco will be the head and the finest jazz orchestra rest will be employed. It is may try to imitate the Fagon system, but there's only one Fagool Tractor, durable, easy riding. Anaheim Motor Works. Order Your Easter Suit NOW WE MAKE CLOTHES THAT TRULY GRATIFY —Gratify your desire for custom made Clothes and economize at the same time. At our prices you command super-work and the style advantages that go with high grade made to order apparel. Such Clothes appeal to the man who wants to wear good Clothes and can only get such a service at a shop like ours. Suits as Low as $35.00 H. Chasin High Class Tailors 213 E. Center St., Anaheim AHLSWEDE'S 5 W. Center, Anaheim Next to Post Office We Give J.N. Green Trading Stamps With Every 10c Purchase AHLSWEDE'S 5 W. Center, Anaheim Next to Post Office We Give J.K. Green Trading Stamps With Every 10c Purchase Aluminum Sale —We have received a large shipment of Viko Aluminum. This is considered to be the best grade made and fully guaranteed. We have reduced the price considerably and make these special inducements worth while. $4.50 Tea Kettle, 5-qt. $3.25 $1.60 Sauce Pan, 1½-qt. 60c $3.00 Tea Kettle, 3-qt. $2.50 $1.25 Sauce Pan, 2-qt. 80c $3.25 Percolator, 2-qt. $2.50 $3.50 Kettle, 6-qt. $2.50 $4.50 Combination, 6-qt. $3.75 Aluminum Spoons Large Basting Spoon ... 50c Large Basting Spoon ... 40c Basting Spoon ... 30c Table Spoon ... 15c Tea Spoon, 2 for ... 15c Utility Tray “Glass Bak” Utility Tray, a new one Free if it breaks in the oven. $1.50 Value, special ... $1.00 $1.10 Bread Pan ... 85c MATCHES Ohio Blue Tip Matches, 6 boxes 35c AHLSWEDE'S