Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 20

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

First Peek in Fashion's Crystal Ball Shows an Early Fall NEWS OF THE WORLD mum nucit til Way 24, GALLUP POLL GOP Shows Sharpest Loss in Four Years By American Institute of Public Opinion PRINCETON. N. J. of the sharpest Republican losses in nearly four years are recorded on the latest Gallup Poll barometer of potential registration. Indications are that if the estimated 100,300,000 civilian citizens eligible to vote were required to sign up with either party at present, the final tally would read: 56,800,000 Democrats 35,100,000 Republicans 8,400,000 'on the fence' When the Gallup Poll's first audit on the re-registration question was conducted in the fall of 1954, the potential party line-ups were little dif- ferent from what they are at present.

With an estimated voting population of 97,500,000 at that time, the Democrats held a 1 1 fa hmf I v-; 1 1 4 1 Wtv NEW LOOK IN STORM COAT Black zibeline with white orlon SOPHISTICATED SUBURBAN COAT Slim skirt is made to match CHEMISE LOOK IN A COAT With a touch of mink trim School Lunch, Supper Menus Medical Auxiliary WEEK OF MAY 26 Monday MEMORIAL DAY RICHFIELD SCHOOL LUNCH MENUS Wiener on a Bun Mustard Buttered Whole Kernel Corn Apple Crisp with Whipped Cream Milk Tuesday Chow Mein with Fried Noodles Buttered Rice Baking Powder Biscuit Jelly and Butter Apricot Sauc Milk Wednesday Potato Salad Luncheon Meat Sandwiches Carrot Sticks Cookie Milk Head Named Mrs. Reuben F. Erickson, 4335 Sussex road, has been elected president of woman's auxiliary to Minnesota State Medical association. The group is holding its annual meeting in Curtis hotel. Other officers 1 ed Thursday were Mrs.

M. F. Fellows, Duluth, Mrs. Erickson president elect; Mrs. Howard F.

Polley, Rochester, Mrs. Robert L. Pedersen, Brainerd, Mrs. W. P.

Gardener, St. Paul, and Mrs. Horatio Sweetser, Minneapolis, all vice presidents; Mrs. Stanley Peterson, Aus tin, recording secretary; Mrs. John S.

Milton, Minneapolis, corresponding secretary; Mrs. By AILEL.N REYNOLDS Mlnneapolii Tribune Fashion Writer You have a pleasant surprise awaiting you when Minnesota Apparel Industries fashions reach your local stores this fall. In all categories coats, suits, dresses and sportswear the manufacturers have done a deft job in adapting the new silhouettes to our tastes and adding a special fillip to the old standbys. Take the old storm coat. One firm has brought it up to date with chemise styling and a surprise.

The skirt zips off below a flange belt placed low on the hipline and you end up with a jacket. The coat I saw was done in black zibeline with white orlon pile collar and lining. ANOTHER house has upgraded our old favorite, the suburban coat, into an outfit smart enough to show up on city streets by offering a slim matching skirt (fully lined to keep its shape). You have a choice of Douglas wool plaid in gray or brown and in plain colors, too. A coat manufacturer has a car coat in tweed with a bulky knit collar and pocket.

Lining is quilted rayon. This comes in both imported Italian tweed and a domestic tweed according to your budget The same firm goes opulent with a pearlized white leather coat with a detachable mink collar. You also have a choice of beige and an assort ment of pastels. WHEN IT COMES to chemise, trapeze and the other eased looks, firms have kept the basic conservatism of Upper Midwesterns in mind. The.

flirty skirt shows up, too, not only in dresses but coats. One coat has a pleated flounce, and a wool costume has not only a pleated flounce on the skirt of the dress but also around the bottom of a cropped jacket THERE IS no point in go ing into more detail on fall fashions before we have even had much chance to use sum mer play clothes. Later, we'll cover the collections in more detail. Members of Minnesota Ap parel Industries in this divi sion include Barnett Coat Minnesota Knitting Mills, Ed-Burt Great Six Co. Jeanette Maternities, Jean Lang Dress Julette Orig inals, Kahn Dress, Kaur man Knitting M.

Liman Mfg. Paramount Coat Rite Coat Rosen- berg-Minter Mfg. San-ford, and Sharpe Mfg. Co. U.S.

Lag in A-Test Ban Assailed By DOROTHY MILLER Minneapolis Tribune Staff Writer The natlona' president of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom spoke out here Friday against the United States' lagging position in the movement to halt nuclear tests. Visiting Minneapolis to speak at an annual meeting of the league i ta branch, Dr. Orlie Pell, New York, said in an interview: a i ng atomic tests is not the answer to the threat Dr. Pell 0f war, But it would help us break the stalemate with Russia and provide a step toward dis armament. "Most i i ts agree there is possibility of harm in all fallout.

The fact there is a danger point is reason enough to avoid further pollution of the air." A LEAGUE observer to the United Nations, Dr. Pell said the United States should be more flexible in possible negotiations with Russia. "We need to find common interests as a means for agreement. One mutual interest is that of survival. Russia doesn't want to be blown up any more than we do." She attacked civil defense as an "attempt to lull people into thinking there is protection against atomic weapons." "There is no adequate defense in such warfare," she stressed.

"Instead, we should aim at impressing people with the horrors of such a possibility, and with the importance of avoiding it." SPEAKING of the league's stand for disarmament, Dr. Pell said: "There is no foolproof way of enforcing disarmament ft- AROUND NATION ALASKA DEBATE House debate on the bill for Alas kan statehood ended abruptly in Washington when Rep. Clare E. Hoffman a 1 1 ged the presence of a quorum. During the 20-minute consideration.

Hoffman Craig Hosmer Calif.) doubted Alaska's financial ability and said its present economy is tied to government spending. General debate on the bill ill end Monday at 5 p.m. PLUNGE Stephen B. Gibbons, who was assistant secretary of the treasury from 1933 to 1939, crashed to his death from his New York apartment as his wife watched from another win Police were not able to learn immediately whether he jumped or fell. REVERSE A federal court in San Francisco, denied a motion to set aside an injunction to prevent four American pacifists from sailing their 30-foot ketch into the Eniwetok testing area.

The group was convicted in Honolulu, Hawaii, of criminal contempt and given 60 days suspended jail sentences for trying to set sail May 1. GUN FIGHT One bandit was shot and another injured in a gun battle with police in the financial district of Los Angeles, Calif. Police caught the bandits holding up a loan company office. A woman bystander was also hurt in the fracas. FOREIGN THEFT Father Leon Bach, parish priest of Beaux-en-Mo-selle near Dijon, France, confessed he had stolen silver statues and crucifixes from other churches to adorn his own.

He was given a suspended three-month prison sentence and fined $25. RUSS ROYALTY? The question of whether Mrs. Anna Anderson is Anasta-sia, only living daughter of Russia's last czar, will remain unanswered at least until fall. A German civil court tak ing evidence Mrs. Anderson in Hamburg, Germany, postponed further sessions after hearing conflicting state ments about Mrs.

Ander son's claim. She now lives in a hut in Germany's Black forest CIVILIZED An a word by Dennis Cross, math ematics student, provoked a challenge from Christopher Waddie, classics scholar. So they agreed to face each other at 10 paces on the lawn of Lady Margaret hall at Oxford, England, each armed with three bottles of cham pagne. First to score a hit with a discharged cork was to be the winner. There were only near misses, but honor was satisfied, the men shook hands and everyone had a drink.

SECRETLY The French movie actress Mylene De mongeot, 22, seen by Ameri can audiences in the Holly wood film version of "Bon jour Tristesse," was married secretly near Perpignan, France, to Henry Coste, a photographer who helped her GI ON TRIAL A Japa nese prosecutor demanded in Yokohama that 10 years at hard labor be given an Amer ican soldier, Gregory J. Kup-ski of Detroit, Mich. Kupski is charged with strangling a Yokohama "pleasure girl be cause she wore a religious cross on a locket chain. Local to Honor Union Officer Pulp and Sulphite Workers local 259 will sponsor an appreciation dinner tonight for Elmer P. Meinz, St.TJloud, recently elected vice president of the international union.

The local has invited all employers under union contract and the executive board of its sister union, local 264 in St. Paul. Thief Steals Home, Then Hits the Road ABERDEEN, S. D. Someone stole home at the baseball park here, but the team was on the road.

Police are looking for the thief. 1 IV 1 1 FINEST BORGANA CLEANING a margin of nearly 20 million voters over the GOP or just about what it is today. From 1954 on, the Republicans were narrowing the margin. In June of last year, (or example, the gap was only 12,600,000 voters. Even in November, although the margin had 'widened slightly, the GOP Still could claim a net gain of some 5 million voters since the original audit in 1954.

Today, however, the Republicans are showing no gain in potential voters despite the increase in the voting population in the last fpur years. The Institute in a com-. panion question to the one on re-registration asked per sons what their image was of a' typical Republican and a typical Democratic voter. 1 Although many people said there was no basic difference, the answers of those who did see them differently reveals the following images people have of Democratic voters: "Middle class common people a friend Jan ordinary person works for his wages "average person someone who thinks of everybody. Descriptions like these were given by those visualizing a typical Republican: "Better class well-to-do type money voter above average well off financially wealthy higher class." Air Pilots Union Pays Divi Special to the Minneapolis Tribune CHICAGO A labor union distributed a 5 per cent divi dend Friday.

The Air Line Pilots asso ciation, with some 15,000 members, announced it re turned $106,000 of dues pay. ments to its members be cause its income was greater than necessary for operations and reserve. The AFL-CIO union dis-'tributed similar dividends in 1956 and 1957. Total refunds 'have amounted to $807,848 during the three years. Pilots pay union dues at 1.5 per cent of earnings.

Divi-dends returned this year range from $3.13 to $19.52 for members in good standing as of March 31. The actual dividend is determined by placing an amount equal to 15 per cent the year's net surplus in reserve and distributing the rest Man Dies After Fall From Ladder A Minneapolis man died about midnight Friday of head injuries suffered when he fell from a ladder earlier yesterday, General hospital reported, i. The victim was Joseph Shallbetter, 65, 4451 Went-worth avenue. The accident occurred about 2:30 p.m. as he was putting up awnings on his house.

Dr. Frances Lowell, Psychologist, Dies WESTPORT, Mass. (Special) Dr. Frances E. Lowell, 71, a Minneapolis native, died in Tiverton, R.

Friday. was a psychologist for the Cleveland, Ohio, board of I education before her retire-' ment in 1952. She will be buried in Lakewood cemetery in Minneapolis. Upper Midwest Deaths MICHAEL F. WALLE, 68, chief research engineer for the department of land and minerals, In Duluth.

M. H. GRAHAM, 70, retired publisher of the Devils Lake, N. Dally Journal, at Devili 'Lake. Gilman Goehrs, St.

Cloud, treasurer; Mrs. Fred. Wester-man, Montgomery, auditor; Mrs. O. I.

Sohlberg, Mahto-medi, historian, and Mrs. Leo Fink, Minneapolis, parliamentarian. Mrs. L. Oppegaard, Crookston, is outgoing president.

Plan Rummage Sale Lynnhurst chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, will hold a rummage sale today at 306 Marquette avenue. sclilampps Northwest's Largt Furritm 2319 Hennepin dSouthdcU Calcium Pantothtnats-Plut 80 tablets $3.00 I Mailing add lOc) SO. 8TH ST.a Easy to Sew For pattern 9278 send 35 cents in coin, your name, address and pattern size to Marian Martin, Minneapolis Tribune pattern department, 232 W. 18th street, New York 11. Won Ass mst I llrrto, Ncfc Ara saiy ta site, gst fait reiulh.

PHONE FldtTol 3-3111 1 9278 sizes 6-14 SUGGESTED SUPPER MENUS Breaded Pork Chops Au Gratin Potatoes Brussels Sprouts Molded Fruit Salad Bread and Butter i Butterscotch Sundaes Milk Fresh Fruit Plate with Orange Sherbet Cottage Cheese Shoestring Potatoes Finger Sandwiches Chocolate Cake Milk Beef Shortcake with Vegetables Mixed Green Salad Oil and Vinegar Dressing Extra Baking Powder Biscuits Butter Pickles and Olives' Vanilla Tapioca Pudding Milk Shrimp Salad on Lettuc Buttered Asparagus Peach Pickles Hot Rolls and Butter Cherry Cobbler Milk Bank Women Will Meet Here Today Minnesota group meeting of National Association of Bank Women will take place today at Pick-Nicollet hotel. Taking part in a 10:15 a.m. panel djscussion on correspondent bank relations will be Mrs. Ruth B. Lundsten, Buffalo; Pishney, Winsted, and Mary Lushene, Biwab' A discussion on "New Look in Bank Operations" will be given by Jennie Williams, St.

Paul; Mrs. Mona Cunningham, Wichita, Eleanor Vanderbilt and Juan-ita White. John DeLaittre, president of Farmers and Mechanics Savings bank will speak at a 1 p.m. luncheon. Genevieve Howe is chairman.

Class to Hold Anniversary Party Today West high school class of 1933 will have a reunion din ner dance tonight in Lafay ette club. Both January and June graduates have been in vited to the event, which begins at 5:30 p.m. The party is called "Silver Roundun of th Golden West." General arrangements chairman is Maurice McCaffrey. Resnonsible for much of the planning are Erie Benjamin, Blair Smith. Mmes.

Herman Jalosky and Irving Hork. Garcias Will Be Honored Today The Filipino-Minnesotan as sociation of the Uni erslty of Minnesota, will honor Secretary of Health and Mrs. Paulino Garcia of the Philippines at a reception and tea 8:30 p.m. today -at Coffman Memorial union. i MINNEAPOLIS SCHOOL LUNCH MENUS Macaroni and Cheess Deviled Egg Half Tossed Salad Dinner Roll Brownie Milk Meat Ball Spaghetti and Tomatoes French Bread and Butter Vegetable Sticks Apple Crisp Milk Chili Con Came Toasted Cheese Sandwich Fruit Sauce Cookie Miik Pizza Green Beans Perfection Salad Bread and Butter Sandwich Banana Cake Milk Note: Menus may varv in indi vidual schools.

Thursday's Recipe Everyone is astounded when Mrs. James W. Foss tells him there is whipped cream in the Shrimp Salad. "It sounds unusual, but really is delicious," she said. Mrs.

Foss, who lives at 2020 Third street is PTA president at Clay school. Here is her recipe which is suggested for Thursday's inspection is not the whole answer. But the chance that some cour might cheat is no greater than the risk we run in allowing the arms race to go unchecked. "Our hope is that people will realize that war with the weapons we have now is no longer a reasonable possibility for settling disputes. Perhaps now we will see that the only way to deal with our differences is to talk them out in a sort of international court." ANOTHER league aim pointed out by Dr.

Pell is United Nations control of outer-space missiles. Monitoring of experiments through international control would prevent the extension of rivalries beyond the globe, she said. Hamline Cruise Set for Today Students at Hamline university, St. Paul, are slated to take a cruise at Minnetonka today on the "Tonka Belle." Floyd Scott is In charge. Another voyage will be made next Saturday on the St Croix river.

Chairman is Judy Ackerman. Earl Ketchums Married 25 Yeart Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ketchum. 1812 NE.

Jackson street, will celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary Sunday with open house from 3 to 6 p.m. in their home. No cards have been enU Thursday Macaroni and Cheese Lettuce with French Dressing Peanut Butter Sandwiches Ice Cream Milk supper entree with the school lunch menus. SHRIMP SALAD c. canned shrimp 1 c.

chopped celery 2 c. hard-cooked eggs, chopped about 6) 1 tbsp. minced onion 1 c. chopped stuffed olives 1 tbsp. chopped green pepper 4 tbsp.

mayonnaise c. whipping cream, whipped Mix all ingredients together and serve on lettuce. Eight servings. 1918 Home Ec Class to Hold 40th Reunion Graduating home econom ics class of 1918 from Uni versity of Minnesota will hold a 40th reunion luncheon this noon in agricultural cafe teria, St. Paul campus.

Dr. Louise A. Stedman, director of home economics at the university, will be the speaker. The committee is Mmes. Richard H.

Lindquist, L. A. Dyregrov, Floyd Adams, Paul Neibling, Carl E. Nelson and Clarence Fuller. Elkhound Group Plans Testimonial The Norwegian Elkhound Association of Minnesota will give a testimonial dinner in honor of Miriam Phillips and Olav Wallo 7 p.m.

today at Curtis hotel. Miss Phillips, owner of Jaywood Kennels, and Wallo, owner of Runefjell Kennels, have been long-term mem bers of the club. Paul Anderson! Will Be Feted Mr. and Mrs. Paul Anderson, 2300 NE.

Arthur street, will be honored at open house and 6 p.m. buffet supper Sunday in celebration of their 40th wedding anniversary. Their daughter, Mrs. Roger Schnabel, 2215 NE. Arthur street, will give the event in her home.

COATS JACKETS 6" $4 BY EXPERTS FREE PICKUP FE 3-f J7 814 NICOLLET GOULD tit Nicoutr fURS COATS SUITS IftOWNTOWK SOUTH HALE HARD TO FIT FEET? spaclallM In the ptrtttl fitting of tvtry foofl CONSULT OUR emsundat NICOUIT AT 10TH ft 24IH ALL WORK GUARANTEED Btauty Sooni -Visit tht levtly Ntw- Featuring I i (I for fh lrqnr womml fh filf-liit mothtr to btl tll mitt and woman and chubby girll 2f S. Betw. Nie. Hcnn. (----- Dona fey Uptth STYLED HAIRCUTS Only $1.50 IT MEN STYLISTS $1.71 Cams lal ITH AT 1 ii tint I iiiinda am mm i 0e Mas.

Than, till mm 7.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Star Tribune
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Star Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
3,156,115
Years Available:
1867-2024