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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 12

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE TWELVE THE MINNEAPOLIS TRIBUNE: SATURDAY FEBRUARY 5 1938 CRUSH PRO- JAP COUPIN CANTON Hongkong, Feb. Japanese plot to overthrow the nationalist government of Kwangtung province and set up a pro-Japanese administration at Canton was reported thwarted Saturday with the arrest of 700 Japanese undercover agents. At the same time a group of onetime Chinese pirate chieftains were reported reliably to have formed a Japanese-backed administration on several small islands off the coast of the south China province. Advices received from Canton, where martial law was in force, said the arrests were made in a citywide roundup and a raid on the headquarters of the Japanese agents, situated in a pawn shop. The headquarters was said to have had a wireless station capable of exchanging messages with Japan.

A quantity of hand grenades and other munitions were reportedly seized. Japanese airplanes which droned over Canton all day Friday without dropping bombs, appeared to be observing the headquarters building. It was believed they were awaiting a signal indicating the coup d'etat had been engineered successfully. CHINESE FORCES BATTLE TO COVER RETREAT Shanghai, Feb. are fighting a desperate rear guard action along the frozen banks of the Hwai river to cover the retreat of their main army northward from Japanese conquered Pengpu, The Chinese army is withdrawing to positions near Kuchen, approximately 30 miles north of Pengpu, for a renewed defense of the- 180- mile wide corridor along the Lunghai railroad that separates the Japanese areas of conquest in north and central China.

Encircling Japanese units reported they had surrounded Chinese division, estimated at 10,000 men. U. S. WITHDRAWS FORCES IN PART FROM CHINA Washington, Feb. (P) The United States government decided Friday to reduce the number of American armed forces in North China.

The state department announced withdrawal of the 15th infantry now stationed at Tientsin and the ping of transfer two to companies Tientsin of from marines. This will leave at Peiping two companies of marines. The troops will leave north China early in March, and their departure will reduce the number of American armed men in China by 808. MUSIC Marian Anderson Recital. Marian Anderson gave her recital in Northrop auditorium, Friday afternoon, singing German Lieder, some songs by Sibelius and a number of spirituals, in each showing that she has been well trained to bring the utmost out of the texts.

Her interpretation of the German songs showed familiarity with the language and fine appreciation of the content. Best of the group was Tod und das Maedchen," rendered with touching simplicity and emotional beauty. For the most part there was little evidence of the strain to which this young singer's voice has been subjected in these selections, but one instance was different, for the upper tones of her voice developed a metallic quality that is not ni i the least a promising factor for the future. There were further evidences of the tired voice in other songs notably two of the Sibelius selections. But why emphasize this fact concerning one of our best American singers when her manager, whoaver he is, books her for long perieds of time, over thousands of miles of territory with hardly a chance to obtain needed rest.

The probabilities are she will continue to be a victim of her own popularity. She is deservedly popular, for she has platform grace and charm seen in few singers; she has a glorious voice and knows how to use it to the greatest advantage. Since Roland Hayes was heard here there has been no one who sings spirituals with the same delightful unction in those with touches of humor, or who can give so richly the spiritual quality of others, that, crude in themselves, speak out of the soul of a race easily moved to transports of emotional ecstasy. JAMES DAVIES. SPEAKING OF VALUE.

$18.50 SHEEP LINED ULSTERS To the best of our the lowest price at Twin Cities! Don't been sold in the which Ulsters of this quality have ever knowledge, this is 969 Miss This Saving! Browns, A AN ANT CLOTHES 306-14 NICOLLET AVE APPLE MARY-He Lost His Appetite By Martha Orr THEY'RE GONE! MY TWO THAT MAN- WHO WAS STANDING 1 MEANWHILE- HOLY SMOKE,) BASKETS. I LEFT THEM RIGHT HERE- -HE STOLE THEM! BOY, TWO AFTER NOT A KID! HERE! EATING FOR DAYS, THESE THE ONE WITH SUNNY I'LL CATCH HIM, AND BREAK APPLES TASTE LIKE A BANQUET IN IT, AND THE ONE FULL OF HIS NECK, THE CHEAP CROOK. HA HA, I BET THAT OLE LADY APPLES. WAS SORE WHEN SHE FOUND 'EM 2-5 S. Pat Syndicate Copyright.

MARTHA Publisher ORR NEW $160,000 BUILDING TO RISE ON FAIR GROUNDS WPA and State Project to Be Started Monday Construction of a combination exhibition and service building at the Minnesota state fair grounds will start Monday as a joint WPA and state fair board project. The exhibits portion of the structure will be U-shaped, 375x170 feet. It will be a monolithic concrete building. Inside the enclosure will be a forage building 250x70 feet. More than 300 men will be employed on the project, which is estimated to cost $160,000.

OLE C. HORGEN. Ole C. Horgen, 78, of 1018 Twelfth avenue southeast, died Thursday at Fairview hospital. He had lived in Minneapolis 18 years, coming to the United States 56 years ago from Norway.

Surviving are four sons, Albert, Boyd, Melvin, Wahkon, and Joseph and Clifford, Minneapolis; a sister, Mrs. Nels Frenstad, Amery, and a brother, Edward, Ellingsburg, Wash. Services will be Saturday at 1 p. m. at the Enger Funeral home, Grant street and Park avenue, with burial in Montevideo, Minn.

MRS. MARY E. VORE. Deceased Funeral services for Mrs. Mary E.

Vore, 69, 1810 Marshall avenue, St. Paul, the widow of George W. Vore, will be at the Listoe -Wolds Mortuary, 150 West Fourth street, St. Paul, Saturday at 2:30 p. m.

with the Rev. Clinton Lowrie of the Merriam Park Presbyterian church, officiating. Members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers will be pall bearers. Mrs. Vore was born in Hastings, and was a resident of Minneapolis and St.

Paul. She was the daugh-2545 ter of Mr. and Mrs. Alvan B. Bell.

Interment will be in the family plot at Hastings. MRS. I. C. CUVELLIER.

Mrs. I. C. Cuvellier, 70, of 5019 Emerson avenue south, a resident of Minneapolis since 1904, died Friday at Northwestern hospital. Born in Bolton, England, March 29, 1867, Mrs.

Cuvellier lived in LaCrosse, before coming to Minneapolis. She' was a member of Simpson Methodist church, the W.C.T.U. and the Gideon auxiliary. Surviving are her husband; two sons, William R. of Excelsior and John H.

of New York; two daughters, Mrs. J. C. Taylor of Logansport, and Dorothy Cuvellier of Minneapolis, and three grandchildren. Funeral services will be at 2 p.

m. Monday at Simpson south and Twenty-eighth street. Methodist church, First, avenue Burial will be in Sunset Memorial cemetery. JOSEPH F. ARBEITER.

Joseph F. Arbeiter, 65, of 1801 Twenty-fifth avenue north, died Friday at St. Mary's hospital. Born in Germany, he came to Minneapolis 60 years ago. He was a school board shop employe 20 years.

He was a member of St. Anne's Catholic church, and of the AustrianHungarian society. Surviving are his wife, Nora; four daughters, Mrs. Frank C. Doyle, Mrs.

A. P. Michels, Mrs. Edwin Barck and Mrs. Harold Norby, all of Minneapolis; two sons, Joseph and James, both of Minneapolis, and 10 grandchildren.

MISS MARGARET M. CARLSON. Miss Margaret M. Carlson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Henry C. Carlson, 510 Groveland, died early Friday. Born in Albert Lea, Miss Carlson had resided in Minneapolis 18 years. She was a graduate of St. Mary's school at Faribault Columbia School of Music, Chicago, Surviving besides her parents are two brothers, Henry C.

Carlson, Minneapolis, and Richard Du Toit Carlson of New York city, and a sister, Mrs. E. L. Finneran, New York city. Funeral services will be Saturday at 3 p.

m. in St. Luke's Episcopal church, Forty-sixth street and Colfax avenue south. Burial will be in Lakewood cemetery. GEORGE A.

SIMONS. George A. Simons, 48, of 510 Grove and avenue, vice president of the Simons Lumber died Friday. Born in Chaska, had graduated from the University of Illinois in 1911 and served in France during the World war. He was a member of the Minneapolis Athletic club, Knights of Columbus, Lafayette club and Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity.

Surviving are his wife, Lenore; the father, Henry Simons, four brothers, Alex Edward Leonard and Henry, and a sister, Mrs. P. J. Duffy. Services will be conducted at the Basilica NEW DIET IDEAS MEET COST BAR Scientific discoveries in nutrition point to a higher living standard, but the problem of placing this "new deal" in human diet within the economic reach of everyone will Tequire co-operation of agriculture and industry with science, Dr.

L. S. Palmer, University of Minnesota biochemist, said in an address Friday night. Dr. Palmer gave the first of a series of four lectures by university scientists in Northrop auditorium, under auspices of Sigma Xi, national scientific society.

But It Costs More. "New discoveries definitely call for a higher standard of diet aS well as one which now demands a greater outlay of money," Dr. Palmer asserted. "If diet and nutrition are as important in determinling health as these new discoveries suggest, human welfare will demand an abundant food supply of sort and either adequate inproper come to buy it or a cost level within the reach of income." Dr. Palmer asserted that for ren, turies the most commonly accepted idea about food and nutrition was that food to be nourishing must contain a single vital nutrient which living creatures were able to extract from food by "some mysterious process." Full Stomach Theory, "According to this conception," he said, "the one which would insure adequate nourishment was a full stomach at frequent intervals.

Now we appreciate that diet must supply numerous chemical substances, nearly every one of which plays a specific role in relation to one or more of the chemical processes which together constitute life." The science of nutrition is still too young to warrant definite promises, the speaker asserted. Scientists sometimes think they can see en ending to the discoveries of new, fundamental nutrients. The same notion has been held many times in the past even in the past 30 years since modern nutrition thought began, he said. List of Nutrients Grows. "We appreciate how little we know about real chemical processes of nutrition which go on in living cells and how ignorant we are of the interrelations between the growing list of fundamental nutrient principles which must be supplied in a diet and the list of chemical substances which living Admire Trophies FURNITURE SELLERS TO ORGANIZE CLUB A Twin Cities furniture salesmen's club, to include men selling home furnishings at wholesale, is to be formed as the result of a dinner meeting in St.

Anthony commercial club Friday evening. An organization committee appointed to form a plan includes George Coughlan, representing bedding lines, Walter Parson, floor coverings, Ernest Erickson, upholstery, Fritz Luger, case goods and Eugene Bruner, jobbing. O. M. Teslow.

president of the Twin City Wholesale Furniture and Floor Covering association presided, "and outlined the purposes of the meeting. Charles F. Collisson, The Tribune farm editor, and Elmer Berdahl, secretary of the wholesale section of the Civic and Commerce association, spoke on the opportunities for merchandising in the Twin Cities market. "Alibi days are over and sales days are here," said Mr. Collisson.

"The northwest's billion-dollar farm buying power already lines the pockets of the blue jeans of our best customer, the milking farmer. "The cow, the sow and the little red hen alone bring more than $700,000,000 of our billion-dollar i income for 1937. We no longer depend on the ups and downs of the wheat crops or grain prices 1 for the money to buy advertised goods. Observe this striking comparison. "Minnesota's farm cash, 000, is fifth in the country.

in creamery butter-making. Texas, first in cotton, is second in farm income in the United States, 176,000. Of this, cotton and wheat alone bring 46 per cent or 600,000. "But Minnesota's 200,000 farms average $1,213 per farm, while Texas' 500,000 farms average cnly $186 per farm income. It is cur cow-sow-hen farming here that makes the difference." EXCHEQUER CLUB TO MEET.

Friday The Exchequer club will hold Eighth their February dinner meeting ex- the Curtis hotel Monday. Clarence Mil- Haberland, president, will conduct the business session. -Tribune Staff Photographer. Trophies of a big game hunting trip in the Canadian Rockjes by Henry P. Boos, center, last fall were examined by Dr.

M. A. Lowe, left, and Dr. Fred Overmeyer Friday night at the annual meeting of the Uptown Professional Men's club at the Granada cafe, 3018 Hennepin avenue. cells produce from these nutrient principles by chemical processes," Dr.

Palmer asserted. Because of the rapid advances in nutrition, he declared that the public often becomes confused at contraditions and pronouncements in this scientific field. As advances are made, he said, it sometimes becomes necessary to discard old theories. Some new conceptions are based on and imperfect knowledge while in other over cases statements which are made to exploit certain products confuse the public mind. Vitamins Important.

One of the most important discoveries of the "new deal" or era of experimental nutrition was that regarding vitamins. Scientists now know 22 different vitamin substances of 14 actually different kinds, he asserted. Although this number is greater than the average person is accustomed to hearing about, five are probably of no importance to human nutrition and one of the remaining nine still 18 in the experimental stage, he said. FIREMEN RESCUE MAN AS RIVER ICE BREAKS -Walk Across Mississippi Ends in DuckingFiremen who slid ladders out who broke through the ice on he attempted to cross the river on the treacherous ice rescued the Mississippi river. The ice at the foot of Jackson street Adam Soderberg, 68, of St.

Paul, gave way under Soderberg as in St. Paul. of St. Mary at 9 a. m.

Monday. The byterian church, Lincoln and Macbody the father's home, 2130 alester avenues, St. Paul. West Lake of Isles boulevard. C.

L. JOHNSON DEAD. Carl L. Johnson, 46, 3339 Dupont avenue north, was found dead early Friday in a garage at the rear of his home. He had told his wife late Thursday he was to a union meeting.

Becoming alarmed early Friday when he did not appear for breakfast, Mrs. Johnson went to the garage and found her husband. MRS. W. C.

KORFHAGE. Funeral services for Mrs. William C. Korfhage, 75 years old, 901 East Fifth street, St. Paul, who died Thursday in her residence, will be Sunday in the Dayton's Bluff Methodist Episcopal church in St.

Paul, with burial in Forest cemetery there. She is survived by her husband and five sons, Lester, Arthur, and William, of St. Paul, Earl of Austin, and Edgar of Redwood Falls, Minn. Sees Bright Prospect For Wage- Hour Bill Washington, Feb. Norton, Democrat, New Jersey, of the house labor committee said after a White House conference Friday she believed a wage-hour bill would be passed this session.

"I decidedly think the outlook is very bright," she said, adding she had discussed the legislation in a general way with President Roosevelt. Tenants Driven Out By Apartment Blaze Apartment house tenants at 2200 Garfield avenue were smoked out of the building Friday by a twohour basement fire. Damage of several thousand dollars was confined to the basement and first floor. The fire put telephones in the building and in dwellings on either side out of order. BANDITS GET $10.

Two bandits took $10 from WillLiam Downing, 2543 Chicago avenue, attendant at a filling station at 188 Glenwood avenue, Friday night. INJURES HEAD IN FALL. Joseph Harheault, 61, of 21 Prince street, was in General hospital with head injuries Friday, received when he slipped on the icy sidewalk and struck his head at Fourth street and East Hennepin. COMIC VALENTINES HUNDREDS OF COMICS NOT OBTAINABLE ELSEWHERE LARGEST LINE OF COMICS IN AMERICA FLYING HEARTS. MECHANICAL AND FANCY VALENTINES We have many new Valentines and postcards this year comic, funny Hundreds of Jokes and Fun Makers for Your Valentine Party WE FEATURE AMERICAN MADE.

PHONE AT. 4702 EAGLE MAGIC AND JOKE STORE 604 THIRD AVE. S. -MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. AFL Defers Action on CIO Until Next Week Miami, Feb.

4- (P) The American Federation of Labor's executive council Friday deferred until next week consideration of its future policy toward the Committee for Industrial Organization. President William Green said the question of expelling the powerful CIO unions now under suspension from the federation would be decided Monday or Tuesday. The council adjourned for the weekend. TROLLEY TRAFFIC TIED East bound street car traffic tied up for 15 minutes late night at Washington and avenues south, while firemen tinguished a small fire in the waukee railroad viaduct. COLBEN JACOBSEN.

Funeral services for Colben Jacobsen, 85, of Ebenezer home, Portland avenue, will be at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday, at the home. Mr. Jacobsen died Friday, following a brief illness.

He was born in Norway and came to the United States 68 years ago. For the past 24 years he had been a Minneap-1 olis resident. Mr. Jacobsen is survived by two daughters, Mrs. H.

Kasa of Osakis, and Mrs. Magdalene Sampson, Long Prairie, and three sons, John Jacobsen, Hastings, Olaus Jacobsen, Goodhue, and Marcus Jacobsen, Cannon Falls, Minn. HELEN KENNEDY. Funeral services for Helen Kennedy, 28, of 1820 First avenue south, fourth grade teacher at the Lauderdale school on Eustis street north of Larpenteur avenue, will be at 10 a. m.

Monday at St. Stephen's Catholic church in Anoka. Miss Kennedy died Thursday night at Asbury hospital. Born in Anoka county, Miss Kennedy was graduated from the Anoka high school, and from the St. Cloud state teachers college in 1926.

She taught at New Brighton six- years before coming to the school in Ramsey county last year. Surviving are her mother, Mrs. James Kennedy of Anoka; a sister, Hazel, Anoka, and three brother, Edward of Anoka, and Arthur and Arnold of Waukegan, 111. GUY M. JAMIESON.

Guy Marvin Jamieson chief appraiser for the federal land bank in St. Paul, died at midnight Thursday in his home, 1571 Osceola avenue, St. Paul, after a five months' illness. He was 55 years old. Jamieson was connected with the federal land bank since its organization in 1917.

He was secretarytreasurer of the National Farm Loan association of Crystal, N. from 1917 to 1928, a field man after 1928 and an, appariser in that area from 1931 to 1934 at which time he was selected as chief appraiser of the St. Paul bank. Surviving, besides his widow, are five sons, Raymond and Marvin Jamieson of Fargo, and Ralph, Harry and Onald of St. Paul; one daughter, Mrs.

C. F. Midgarden of St. Paul, and a brother, James Jamieson of Hallock, Minn. Funeral services will be at 2:30 p.

m. Sunday in Macalester Pres- GLASSES ON CREDIT i EYES EXAMINED in Dr. C. C. Consult McQuire, 0.D.

LOWEST PRICES 50c Each Week NATIONAL OPTICAL 426 NICOLLET SAME LOCATION 26 YEARS 1 Special DRUGS Dorothy Perkins Set and Powder Both for $1 The $1.00 Treatment Set and the $1.00 face powder for the price of one. Clairol Shampoos $1 Clairol accents the natural color of your hair and brings out the highlights. Lip Youth for Softer Lips 35c A protective lip cream that prevents parching, chapping and dryness. Prices Saturday on Powers Famous AND TOILETRIES A Mail or Phone Your Order Main 2141 or Midway 3088 JUICE ON PERIOR LEMON glo POWERS SECURITY PREPARATIONS Norwegian Cod Liver Oil, quart 89 Glycerine Rosewater, 8 oz. 29 Rubbing Alcohol, new formula, pint 2 for Mineral Oil, heavy, quart Mineral Oil, heavy, gallon 2.09 Halibut Liver Oil Capsules, pkg.

of 50 Halibut Liver Oil Capsules, pkg. of 100 1.19 Antiseptic or Mouth Wash, pint for 1.00 Lem-0-Glo Aspirin, 5-grain, bottle of 100 .29 Hair Rinse VITAMIN PRODUCTS 12 Tablets Squibb Yeast Tablets, bottle of 100 24 Rinses 25c Squibb Yeast Tablets, bottle of 250 Use in place of lemons Squibb Cod Liver Oil, mint or plain, 24-oz. 1.29 or vinegar. Not a dye or Parke-Davis Cod Liver Oil, pint tint will in no 1.27 color of the hair. way Security ABDG Capsules, pkg.

of 50 change Security ABDG Capsules, pkg. of 100 2.37 Ironized Yeast, $1.00 size Parke- Davis Haliver Oil with Viosterol Capsules, pkg. of 100 2.69 Abbott's ABD Capsules, pkg. of 50 1.59 Wow TOILETRIES Elmo Beauty Essentials, 3 jars of creams, 1.50 1.00 Powers Toilet Creams, almond, oatmeal or liquefying, pound jars, regularly $1.00 KOTEX Revlon Nail Polish, all newest shades Loate Oatmeal Facial, 75c size Pacquin's Hand Cream, $1.00 size Pinaud's Eau de Quinine Shampoo -both for St. Denis Bath Powder, regularly 50c Kotex-64 B-ettes, Invisible Sanitary Pads, pkg.

of 12. in Val-U-Box Comfort Magnesia Tooth Paste, 50c size DENTAL SHAVING NEEDS $1 Takamine Tooth Brushes for An economical way to Pepsodent Tooth Paste, 40c size buy these soft, absorbent Calox Tooth Powder, 50c size sanitary napkins. Tek Tooth Brushes, regularly 43c each. for Char-Tex Antiseptic, pint Williams Palmolive Aqua Shave Velva, Cream, 50c giant size size KLEENEX Mennen's Talcum for Men, 25c size SOAPS LAUNDRY SUPPLIES 200 Sweetheart Soap 6 for Cashmere Bouquet Soap for Hilex Bleach, gallon Royal Lemon Scouring Powder 6 for Palmolive Soap for Crystal White Giant Laundry Soap 12 for Powers Granulated Soap, 24-oz. pkg.

for Ivory Flakes, large size for Kleenex -Drugs Toiletries -Sireet Floor Tissues 2 Boxes 25c Powers 200 Keep a sheets supply to at the the box. of. fice and at home..

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