Coronado Eagle and Journal, Volume 5, Number 14, 19 August 1916 — PERSONALITIES [ARTICLE]

PERSONALITIES

Mrs. Chadwick of 923 10th gave a bridge party on Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. Herreshoff have gone to the back country for a trip of a week or ten days. The Rev. Paul Jones, Bishop of Utah, will preach at Christ Church on Sunday morning at 11 o’clock. Mrs, A. C. Seymour and little daughter are taking a vacation at Ocean Park. Facetious Individuals have a name already for the new Masonic Temple It is called “the goat house.” Mrs. Reed and children, who have been living at Fifth and G, left on Wednesday for Oklahoma City, to live. Miss Linda ’Jessop gave a bridge party at the Zlac Club house Thursday afternoon in honor of her sister-in-law, (Mrs. Richard Jessop. Sefior Elosua, owner of the Regional fair,* at Tijuana, has rented the house at 1105 G avenue and is located there with his family. Bill Hammer is wearing his working clothes this week. He is repainting J. A. May’s drug store building. The same decorative effect will prevail as in the past, two coats of It, Miss Catherine .Owers will leave soon for Baltimore, Maryland, to attend Johns Hopkins University, and take a course In medicine. Mrs. Redfern, who has had her granddaughter visiting her for some weeks, is going back with the child to Pasadena,, for a while, leaving her son to keep bach during her absence. Leslie Young, who has been ill for the past two weeks and confined tg the house, Is now able to be up and about, and hopes soon to join the Boy Scouts on their hikes and other trips. Miss Foley, with her friend. Miss Moynahan, both of New York city, are visiting Miss Foley’s parents,. Captain and- Mrs. Foley, of the Clearman apartments, for the summer. Dr. Humphrey J. Stewart returned Monday from San Francisco, where he has been spending his vacation with the Bohemian club at their camp in the Big Trees. C. J. Brown, formerly an electrician at the hotel, was a caller at The Strand office on Saturday, in the interests pf Governor Johnson’s candidacy for the United States senate. He didn’t leave any advertising copy, Louis Berlin, proprietor of the Coronado Shoe Hospital, is enjoying a three weeks’ vacation in San Francisco. He left a competent man in the shop to take care of the wants of his patrons. Miss Maria Dobbins of National City is visiting Mrs. Geo. M. Dannals for a few days, and thinks the swimming is fine here. The First street beach is proving more popular every day. Louis J. Collomb and D. J. Quinn have returned from a camping trip to Little Bear lake. They caught lots of fish, and bad plenty good time, their only kick being on gasoline at 35 cents pergallon. A. J. Morganstern, San Diego attorney, has rented the bungalow at 749 C avenue, and will reside on our tight little isle for a time. Mr. and Mrs. Morganstern lived here some years ago, so that their return is not unexpected. They all come back. Coronado Chapter Order of the 'Eastern Star, after a brief session on Monday evening, adjourned and all went up town to see the movies. After they get into their new building on Orange avenue they won’t have such a long walk to the movie, theatre Mrs. Mae B. Paradise, of the Moson Apartments, had a birthday last Saturday. Said she was trying to escape it, but her niece sent her a handsome knit neck scarf, “wishing her many happy returns,” and that It’s no use to try an ddodge birthdays as long as the old family bible is available. Miss Mary Drewisch has returned from a two week’s vacation in San Francisco. She went up by boat, but didn’t get sick till leaving San Pedro, on the way north. Then she says she did as well as any of the other passengers. Miss Alice de Ford, instructor in elementary industrial art (which is another name for manual training), left Monday for the mountains, where she will spend a few days, later going to Los Angeles on her way to her home in Philadelphia. Miss de Ford objected to our “personality,” stating that she was a school-marm. Also, she is a firm booster for Philadelphia, and says that if it were not for thq tourists, New York would be dead, whereas Philly has few tourists, and is lively in spite of them. Nothing like standing up for the old home town.

“Little Harry" Titus is “draft clerk” at the American National Bank. They say he opens and shuts the doors and regulates the draught. Another smart young person suggests that “Harry shaves notes like a Barbour." (Neither of these cute little sayings are original, so don’t blame us, Harry.) Trustee H. A. Collins and family have returned from a camping trip to Smith mountain. The trip was beneficial to the genial trustee, for he looks better than we have seen him In a long time. Collie says he has lots of pep now, and will take on all comers Mr. and Mrs. J. Clyde Hizar, Mrs. G. U. Fryes, Mr. Hizar’s sister, iMiss Catherine Hizar and Miss Blank were Sunday campers on the silver strand. ' The party carried a large piece of canvas and other articles necessary to comfort on a beautiful sunny summer Sunday, and spent the day on the sand. Miss Frances Virginia Parker, one of the W. U.operators at the Hotel, is a firm believer in “safety first.” She goes swimimng every day, swimming out to the farthest boat, resting a while, and then swimming back. Monday the boats were all out, and she forgot, and swam too far, and had a hard time getting in to the float. Hereafter she will insist on some kind of a resting place being provided, or she won’t go in, so there! Fayette Myers returned to Redlands on Sunday, reaching there Sunday evening, and at noyn Monday he started to work spraying Orange trees. Fayette Is a bear when it comes to rustling a job. He said It would be better for him to go to Redlands now and be on the ground, ready to make his arrangements for work to carry him through school next Winter. He is attending the Redlands University, working his way, and deserves lots of credit for the game fight he Is making for an education, 8. D. Chapin, who is in Imperial, erecting a house, writes that it Is so hot • there, that until they learned to put their tools down on the shady side of the house, they burned their hands every time they picked them up. They use 100 lbs of ice a day for drinking water; also if the family physician thinks that his patients need to drink more water, and they don’t do it, why all he needs to do is to send them to Imperial, they will be thankful to get the water to drink, and take all of it they cap get.