oc-plain-dealer 1921-03-07
Searchable text
Society: Clubs: Lodges: Churches
CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY
Arnold W. Walker was the honoree at a very fine dinner party at his home northwest of Anaheim on Sunday when a number of friends and relatives gathered, the occasion being his birthday anniversary.
An excellent dinner menu was served at two o'clock. A color scheme of orange and green had been selected for the decorations and this was carried out in the menu as far as possible. The birthday cake was decorated with candles of orange and green. Jonquils and ferns were used also in the decorations for the rooms and the table. The place cards carried out the Easter idea.
A delightful afternoon was spent by the guests in conversation and with vocal and instrumental music.
The guests were: Mr. Walker's mother, Mrs. Corinna Walker, of Santa Ana; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grisett and children, Louise, Helen, and Dorothy of Tustlin; Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Irwin and son, Myrie, of Greenville; Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Planchon and children, Carl, Earl and Martha, of Santa Ana; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Planchon and children, Evelyn and Gilbert, of Springville; Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Walker and daughter, Maybelle, of Greenville; and Miss Edith Northrop of Springville.
Mr. Walker was remembered with a number of splendid birthday gifts.
PEETTY CHURCH WEDDING
A simple but very pretty wedding took place on Sunday at the German M. E. church, following the regular morning services. The bride was Miss Dora Tuschoff and the groom, the Rev. E. Rathert, of Appleton, Mo. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Tautenhahn, pastor of the church, who was assisted by the Rev. H. Lange of Arresta.
Following the wedding ceremony, the party repaired to the home of Mrs. Rathert's sister, Mrs. J. Schroff on Olive-rd, where a wedding dinner at German M. E. church at Appleton, where they will make their future home. He has been enjoying a vacation from his ministerial duties for some time on account of ill health.
Rev. and Mrs. Rathert will spend a few days in California and will then leave for Appleton.
ONE O'CLOCK LUNCHEON
A number of Anaheim ladies enjoyed a pleasant day Saturday at the home of Mrs. J. P. Hatzfeld, a former resident of this city and now living at Tustlin. The affair was in the nature of a 'one o'clock lunch-eon which was served in buffet fashion.
The rooms of the Hatzteld home had been prettily decorated with flowers of the spring season.
The afternoon hours were spent in playing bridge. In the games the highest honors were given to Mrs. Dyer of Santa Ana while second and third prizes were won by Mrs. Sears and Mrs. Borchert of Anaheim. The prizes consisted of pretty handmade handkerchiefs.
The ladies from Anaheim who were included in this courtesy were: Mesdames J. Frederick Ahlborn, E. Borchert, O. A. Mullinix, H. L. Sears, F. H. Houczk, F. A. Yungbluth, J.W.Wallop,Miss Fay,Homer Ames,P.J.Welsel.
Those in attendance from Santa Ana were: Mesdames A.McCalm,T.Barnes,H.W.Dyer and Earl Aberey.
ENJOY "DUTCH POT" PICNIC
A jolly party which had been planned by a number of Anaheim people for Sunday was somewhat interfered with by the rain. They had intended going to Silverada Canyon and enjoying a "Dutch Pot" but instead gathered at the B.H.Sidnam home on Pythian-ave and enjoyed the "feed" there. Each one brought what they had intended to take to the mine and at four o'clock a most appetizing meal was set forth.The afternoon was spent in a social manner.
New York Manhattan has been reopened.Green self put up ed and ville legislative rebellion thereto one of its congressas come the 45thator Salvate that Greatest 6,000,000inh than 60 per population,taxes,and the represence.
There is no doggia,a b yearsand O from the shopwhere om over-feel believe them when the g home.The in spite of f selling line took her ferMaga,the disciplineand told apologize to"I won't do don't feel a right."sight choice!"once bet"w thirtydaysthe modelry I slappedawfull,awaidwasq
PRETTY CHURCH WEDDING
A simple but very pretty wedding took place on Sunday at the German M. E. church, following the regular morning services. The bride was Miss Dora Tuschoff and the groom, the Rev. E. Rathert, of Appleton, Mo. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Tautenhahn, pastor of the church, who was assisted by the Rev. H. Lange of Artesta.
Following the wedding ceremony, the party repaired to the home of Mrs. Rathert's sister, Mrs. J. Schroff on Olive-rd, where a wedding dinner was served to a number of relatives and friends.
Mrs. Rathert came from Missouri about a year ago and has been with her sister, Mrs. Schroff, since that time. Rev. Rathert is pastor of the Gold Band Dinnerware 50 Pieces--Special $15
—LADIES, you can get this set or any other Dinner or Breakfast Set for $1.00 down and $1.00 per week.
Anaheim Music and Novelty Company
H. J. EFKER
ENJOY "DUTCH POT" PICNIC
A jolly party which had been planned by a number of Anaheim people for Sunday was somewhat interfered with by the rain. They had intended going to Silverada Canyon and enjoying a "Dutch Pot" but instead gathered at the B. H. Sldnam home on Pythian-ave and enjoyed the "feed" there. Each one brought what they had intended to take to the mine and at four o'clock a most appetizing meal was set forth. The afternoon was spent in a social manner.
Those who enjoyed the occasion were: Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Seymour, Mr. and Mrs. Hathaway, Mrs. M. E. Canby, Mr. Conklin, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Holland, Mrs. Trotter, Frances Backs and Tom Gisler.
300 AT PARK SUNDAY
The J. E. Stroup family went to Orange-co park Sunday and met relatives from Costa Mesa, Orange and Owensmouth and enjoyed a picnic dinner.
There were about 300 people at the park and the rain did not spoil the pleasures of the day at all, the tables being brought into the pavilion and a general good time indulged in.
PHILATHEA BUSINESS MEETING
An important business meeting of the Sunshine Philathea Class of the Methodist White Temple will be held this evening at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. C. B. Godson, 117 S. Philadelphia-st. Every member of the class is urged to be present as very important business is to come before the meeting.
EXECUTIVE MEETING
The Fourth District Congress of Mothers and Parent-Teachers Association will hold their district Executive Board meeting Saturday, March 12th, at 2:00 p.m. in the Fremont school. Every member expected to be present and help form plans for the April all-day meeting.
P.T.A.MEETS TUESDAY
The regular meeting of the P.-T.A. will be held tomorrow afternoon, March 8, in the kindergarten room of the new Central school. The meeting will be called to order at three o'clock.
Does Your Auto Need
Does Your Auto Need Repairs?
—They do at all times—no matter how carefully driven or watched.
—When it happens that your car needs any repair work bring it to this garage, and get it repaired the way it should be repaired.
—All work done in this garage is carefully inspected by the proprietor—All work done by this garage is done right.
—Let us number you among our list of satisfied customers.
Chas. H. Mann
GARAGE
210 No. Los Angeles St. Phone 43
THE ORANGE COUNTY PLAIN DEALER, ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
New York Letter
by Lucia Jeanne Price
NEW YORK, March 7. The state of Manhattan' The once whispered idea has been revived and shouted in the open. Greater New York, feeling herself put upon and brow-beaten, scorned and vilified, by "upstate" and its legislative majority, has expressed its rebellion thru a resolution offered by one of its state senators. He calls upon the legislature to memorialize congress asking that Manhattan become the 49th state of the union. Senator Salvatore A. Cottillo sets forth that Greater New York has more than 6,000,000 inhabitants, representing more than 60 per cent of the present state's population, pays 73 yer cent of the taxes, and yet has but 40 per cent of the representation in the legislature.
There is one way of getting an apology that is truly sincere. Loonia Cape-doglia, a beautiful model of nineteen years and Grecian lines, got such a one from the forelady of the costumer's shop, where Loonia makes overly buxom, over-fed, women of fifty summers believe they will look just like her when the gown is once purchased and home. The forelady slapped Loonia in spite of her beauty and her costume-selling lines. And beautiful Loonia took her forthwith to the police station. Magistrate Roseblatt explained the disciplinary limits of forelady-ing and told the slapper that she must apologize to the model or go to jail. "I won't do it," she cried. "I can't, I don't feel apologetic. I won't." "All right," sighed the judge. "Take your choice!" "How long will the sentence be?" wept the forelady. "Maybe thirty days." The forelady turned to the model. "My dear, I'm awfully sorry. I slapped your face. I'm really awfull, awfully sorry." Which, as I said, was quite sincere.
Leaders of the "back-to-the-barrel" movement which is just now so agitating women's clubs and unaffiliated New York households have seized upon the cast of players are secondary.
Just the reverse is true of the "Peg O' My Heart" company coming to the Grand Tuesday night, March 8, as each member of the cast was she came into national theatrical notice.
Last season, Miss Alden starred in "The Brat," and her success was no less than that scored the season before with an all English cast, she being the exception, in Cosmo Hamilton's eugenic play, "The Blindness of Virtue."
It is said that as "Peg" she is at her very best, and from ocean to ocean the newspaper reviewers have enthusiastically proclaimed this little artist as the most delightful reader grazing Thespia.
But one performance of "Peg" with Miss Alden and all-star cast will be given here, hence early seat reservation should be made.
PICNIC had been of Anahelm somewhat in. They had orada Canyon Pot" but in. H. Sldnam and enjoyed one brought to take to clock a most forth. The social man occasion C. Seymour, Mrs. M. E. and Mrs. W. Letter, Frances
UNDAY nilly went to and met rel. Orange and yed a picnic 100 people at did not spoil at all, the to the pavil time indulg.
MEETING meeting of Class of the will be held the home of S. Philadelde of the class as very im come before
ETING Congress of teachers Absorst Execurday, March the Fremont expected to form plans for ing.
UESDAY of the P.T. now afternoon, garden room school. The to order at
and told the slapper that she must apologize to the model or go to jail. "I won't do it," she cried. "I can't, I don't feel apologetic. I won't." "All right," sighed the judge. "Take your choice!" "How long will the sentence bet" wept the forelady. "Maybe thirty days." The forelady turned to the model. "My dear, I'm awfully corry I skipped your face. I'm really awful, awfully sorry." Which, as I said, was quite sincere.
Leaders of the "back-to-the-barrel" movement which is just now so agitating women's clubs and unaffiliated New York housewives have seized upon the current issue of the New York telephone book as propaganda for their cause. It happens that the directory, just off the presses, looks like Joseph's coat. There are more colors of paper, and more grades of it represented in the book, which is some 600 pages big, than you can shake a stick at. The telephone company explains by telling how it was forced, because of the print paper situation, to send its people here, and everywhere, buying up all the job lots of paper stock they could get their hands on. It was trucked into New York from as far north as Boston, as far south as Baltimore, and as far west as Buffalo. "It all goes to show, says Mrs. Perry Heath, president of the National Housewives' League," what lengths the American public has gone to in encouraging the diversion to fancy food cartons and so forth, of wood pulp that should be made into news print for newspaper use. I am no ta newspaper proprietor, nor yet an authority on the paper market, but any woman with a grain of common sense will realize that the newspapers are far more important than the handsome packages in which we nowadays buy our crackers, our rice, our coffee and—goodness knows, everything we get from the grocery store. If we women rose up and demanded the restoration of the good, old-fashioned barrel, one wouldn't have to be occupying a college chair of economics to realize that newsprint prices would drop like plummet."
Maybe it had something to do with the psychology of a war benefit. It may have been an attempt at realism. But whatever it was, the Pennsylvania hotel was well-nigh wrecked when 2000 aspirants appeared for the jobs of posing as models in the fashion show to be given for the benefit of the service house for crippled soldiers. It was expected that 200 or 300 would arrive; but the advertisers hadn't realized the appeal of the ad, which made eah reader see herself posing in a lady-like bathing suit for $15 a day. The corridors were jammed, and when the doors were opened, every woman made a center rush. One woman fainted, one lost a handsome yellow wig, and scores had their hats crushed, their blouses torn, and sad though it be to relate, their faces punched, before the judging was done.
Direct action propaganda seems to be gaining. Here is another discipline of the method. Mrs. Adela Kruse, of Brooklyn, "City of Homes," thought her husband was calling on a widow who lives in Fulton-st, so she set the stage of stage and secret, hence the coming of one of America's greatest young actresses in person to Anaheim is of more than ordinary moment.
In the past it has been the rule rather than the exception, for a third class traveling attraction to rely wholly on the merit of an established play to attract audiences, and in most instances, the cast of players are secondary.
Just the reverse is true of the "Peg O' My Heart" company coming to the Grand Tuesday night, March 8, as each member of the cast was especially chosen for the respective character portrayed.
Miss Audra Alden, who will appear here in person in the title role, is a second season star who was selected to follow her famous sister actress, Billie Burke, in "Jerry," when
"The Frontier of the Stars," starring Thomas Meighan, will be the feature at the Fairland tonight.
Will Rogers will be seen at the
B
INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAKE
EVERY PRODUCER HUNTINGTON BEA IS WITHIN CHARMED
A-4, 1500 BBLS daily
A-1 PRODUCER
A-2 PRODUCER
A-6- 600 BBLS daily
B-1. 850 BBLS daily
HUNTINGTON BEAC
can reader see herself posing in a lady-like bathing suit for $15 a day. The corridors were jammed, and when the doors were opened, every woman made a center rush. One woman fainted, one lost a handsome yellow wig, and scores had their hats crushed. Their blouses torn and sad though it be to relate, their faces punched, before the judging was done.
Direct action propaganda seems to be gaining. Here is another discipline of the method. Mrs. Adele Kruse, of Brooklyn, "City of Homes" thought her husband was calling on a widow who lives in Fulton-st, so she set the house on fire. Juries being insufficiently alive to the sentimental point of view, she is facing a possible seven years in Sing Sing.
Whether skirtless riding costumes are proper school clothes when the snow packs high and slush abounds, threatens to become an important question in scholastic circles. A school girl in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., wore that costume for making her way through the drifts the other day and was sent home. Her father took the matter up with the board of education, but the board members sided with the superintendent that riding breeches do not belong in the school room. Then a girl in New York City, determined not to let Poughkeepsie carry off anything of that kind, bedecked herself in her own trim riding outfit—equally skirtless—and hled her forth. There was hurried whispered consultation in the school room. But nothing was said to her. "How did you decide it?" a disinterested teacher asked. "We—er—we—not caring to have any issue raised upon which we weren't sure, we just assumed that she had merely dropped in for a few minutes on her way to a riding lesson." So we didn't ask her to recite or do anything official at all.
DR COLLINS SPEAKS TO MEN'S BIBLE CLASS
Dr. F. W. Collins of the John Brown College of Siloam Springs, Ark., addressed the Men's class of the White Temple church yesterday.
In the evening, Mrs. P. W. Collins spoke to the C.E. Society of the Presbyterian church and to the ladies' meeting.
Both Dr. and Mrs. Collins are teachers in the John Brown school.
Dr. C.S. O'Toole, Physician and Surgeon, Phone: Residence 646; Office 508.
Three of the leases of the Bolsa CHICA inside this circle as indicated.
THE MAP IS ACCURATE
Also remember that the Bolsa CHICA formia controls One Hundred and Thirty Chica (Standard) well, adjoining station, Union, Petroleum Midway,
If you are desirous of sharing in this sured to the operators within this Chica Petroleum Corporation of ACT PROMPTLY! BUY ALL YOUR INSIST UPON IMMUNITY OF YOUR CHICA
A Limited Amount of Stock Is Off
The most thorough investigation in "THE PASSPORT TO PROSPERITY" may be obtained from a number of Bolsa Chica Petroleum Central Building, Anaheim Telephone 656
STATE CORPORATION COM
Monday, March 7, 1924
Grand tonight in "The Guile of Wonich," Tomorrow night, "Peg O' My Heart," a stock company show will be seen.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
William A. Galnes, 52, Fullerton, Lizzie Lucas, 45, Wesley, Ark.
HOTEL VALENCIA GUESTS
Guests at the Hotel Valencia yesterday included; C. M. Casey, San Fransisco; C. P. Jessu, Santa Ana; Mrs. Hallie Barker, Los Angeles; T. Ozaki, Oceanside; T. Heaston, San Diego.
PACKING HOUSE VISITORS
Visitors at the Anaheim Orange & Lemon Assn included: W. A. Thomas, Santa Ana; E. C. Coyer, Feir-Vier; H. C. Z. Wetsch, Cleveland; F. E. Norton, Cleveland.
Mrs. H. H. Kingman and Mr. Geo. Green of Hollywood, and Mr. and Mrs. Eygabroad spent today at the Silverado mines.
DR. J. L. BEEBE
Anselm
Emphasisizing Surgery and Obstetrics
208-9-12-14, First National Bank Hours, 1-4; 7-8; Sunday by appointment Pacific 655-3
Residence: 728 Lemon Street Pacific 655-M
DR. W. M. McMULLEN
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
502 North Spadra
Cor. Chapman
Fullerton
Glasses Fitted
The Golden State Limited
Is a 68-Hour Train to Chicago
—A high-class fast train, over the "line of low altitudes"—straight to El Paso, on to Kansas City and Chicago.
—All equipment, including diner and compartment-observation car, through without change. Also a through sleeper for St. Louis and one for Minneapolis, daily.
—No. 2, "The Californian," is another train over the Golden State Route, running through to St. Louis. Leaves daily at 4:30 p.m.
—Leaves Los Angeles at 11:15 a.m. and arrives in Chicago 9:15 the third morning. This means connection at Chicago with fast trains for New York and east-
PRODUCER IN THE
TON BEACH OIL FIELD
WITHIN THIS
ARMED CIRCLE
LEASE Nº 4
BOLSA CHICA PETROLEUM CORP.
LEASE Nº 3
BOLSA CHICA PETROLEUM CORP.
LEASE Nº 2
BOLSA CHICA PETROLEUM CORP.
of the Bolsa Chica Petroleum Corporation are also indicated.
IS ACCURATE—STUDY IT CAREFULLY
after that the Bolsa Chica Petroleum Corporation of Calihas One Hundred and Twenty Acres northwest of the Bolsa
ward) well, adjoining the leases of the National ExploraPetroleum Midway, Mid-Central and other companies.
of sharing in the success which seems to be now assitors within this circle, secure an interest in the Bolsa
Corporation of California.
BUY ALL YOU CAN AFFORD TO PAY FOR!!
BEST UPON IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
OF YOUR CERTIFICATE!!!
of Stock Is Offered at ONE DOLLAR Per Share
through investigation is invited. Full information contained
IN "SUPPORT TO PROSPERITY," an illustrated booklet, which
is based from a number of the Stock Brokers or direct from the
Chica Petroleum Corporation
OF CALIFORNIA
Anaheim
Central Building, Los Angeles
Telephone 656
Telephone Pico 310
CORPORATION COMMISSION PERMIT GRANTED