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Show tiik sroAnnorsE bulletin Jade Treasure Adorns rpring Is here and that helps the real estate business. HERE and THERE Home of Pittsburgh Man By M. LaCUe Morgan When Woodie leaves his hamHarvey Anderson la the new burger shop, they won't need the salesman at the South EastFurn-Uur- e nirror any more. Company, and who was the ambitious salesman that vacuumNo wonder Dave Allen is such ed the new rug Monday a good looking; chap, he takes a beaaty nap in the morning. Fish' At Park PITTSBURGH.-t- S750.000 collec- A tion of Chinese art treasures stands casually on tables in the home of a retired Pittsburgh business man. Jade bowls, two of them forming one sixth of the total known treasures of this type, porcelain vases and delicate ivory carvings, finer than most museums can boast, are owned by George H. Taber, retired oil company executive. In an upstairs room of his home stands a table holding delicately carved Jade screens and bowls. An incense burner, Ailing the room with its heavy odor is the "whitest, purest piece of jade ever imported into this country," Tabcr said. Value, however, is not Taber's criterion of his collection. He said he collects Chinese treasures as he would books, because of the enjoyment he gets from studying them. Taber has never been to China. He formed the hobby when he was a small boy. Virginia Ball, left for Omaha, Nebraska, last Monday morning to visit with relatives. She will go from there to Kansas to atTrout planted last spring at tend the International Conference Fairmont Park by the Salt Lake coming back she will stop in Den- County Fish and Game ver and is expected home about present a study in fly the middle of April. in catching early morning hours as they leap and catch their meal Officer Archie Duff in, policeman from on duty in Sugar House suggests A plan to once more open the that the business men of the dis- lake to children under legal aife trict lock their doors and win- is being studied by the Sugar dows on going home at night, House Chamber of Commerce as an unlocked door or window and the Fish and Game AssociatWins 50 Cents, Falls Dead n is an open invitation to a prowler. ion. The lake was closed last UNION CITY, N. J.-machine, year after several weeks of joy- won 50played aandbagatelle then fell dead of cents, Nephi J. Hansen's smile is a ous fishing by children of the heart disease. as southeast. little broader "if possible" Arouse Interest Assoc-lngiati- mid-air- on v. The Staff of The Paint Pot Joins Walter joined the staff of the Taint Pot, 1047 East 21st C. R. this week and will work with Scdney J. Ottley, manager. Mr. Walter will take over the bookkeeping end of the work and credit as well as aasistine in South, sles. Students Serve Army in China Groups Behind Lines Teach .. Soldiers and Spread Propaganda. CHUNGKING. Chinese students past have led sntiforeign, antigovernment and movements now are working In and behind the front lines, organizing, ' teaching and assisting wherever needed. It Is not difficult to understand mass their ereed. Propaganda, meetings, instructions from their leaders, all have tended to chan-neliz- e their thinking. Their beliefs, as one student explained, are as follows: "One leader the generalissimo; one creed the 'three principles' of the Kuomintang; one organization one the Nationalist government; purpose to build upward and outward, not Inward and downward." Most of the students are occupied with organization, dissemination of propaganda and reconstruction Some students left the work. schools and went to the front lines, where they became common Tark-linso- Carl THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1939 who in the st ' SWISS MET AND FRIDAY SUGARHOUSE SATCRDAY f T 11 M Until N00I1 Chickens, Bacon, lb 11c 19c stewing, lb. . . UNTIL NOON SATURDAY New Potatoes, Red Bliss Springers, pound Butter, solid pack, . . FLOUR, Drifted Snow,48-lb- . K elWcrs Corn Flakes, large w Fruits and Vegetables c BANANAS, pound GRAPEFRUIT, dozen 15c 9c 15c 10c LEMONS. Medium juicy, dozen . ORANGES, medium size, dozen SPINACH, fresh Utah, pound , 9c ASPARAGUS, fresh green, pound 3 ...5c Utah. mild by Green ONIONS, RADISHES, crisp Moapa, 3 bunches....l0c 5c RUBARB, French Red, pound Quality Meats HAMS, Puritan Black'hk Premium lb 25c .25c LAMBS LEGS, pound 15c LAMB, Sh. Roast 10c : LAMB STEW, pound 14c ROAST POT BEEF, pound 19c LEG OF VEAL ROAST 19c PORK LOIN ROAST, pound 18c STEAKS, Beef shoulder cuts 15c MUTTON CHOPS, pound 19c HAMBURGER, fresh, 2 pounds .......09c LARD, pound package 19c BOILED HAM, Vipound 15c MILD CHEESE, pound DANISH BLUE CHEESE, pound .. 43c 25c FRANKS, 2 pounds Thuringer Summer SAUSAGE, lb. ....25c 17c Sliced Ham Bolona, Found lb. thick pieces....29c Kippered SALMON, DILL PICKLES, 2 for 05c 19c EGGS, U. S. large dozen 65c FLOUR, 48 pound sack 19c PEAS, Spring Garden, 2 cans 3 PEAS, No, 2 cans, 4 S3 p. CORN, Delmaiz Cream style, 17 oz. 2.15c 25c CORN, white or golden, 4 cans 25c BEANS, wax or green, 4 cans PINEAPPLE, Urge 2W can b. slices..l4c Valamont Preserves 22oz. jar Purefruit... 23c TUNA FISH, White Star, Vz, 2for ...29c TUNA FLAKES, Va size can .9c SALMON, tall .....9c SARDINES, oval Iarg can 9c SHRIMPS, 5 oz. dry pack can LAUNDRY SOAP, White King, 10for34c reg... 10 for 29c, Giant I'm v a lb. 5 c 19c 2 lbs. 4 Tc . $1.30 9c I 31c BROOMS, 4 tie, good quality ...10c 125 feet Diamond WAX PAPER, OLEO MARGARINE, pound ..... . ......16c GRAPEFRUIT, 2 cans , MARSHMALLOWS, 15 oz. package..10c 12c NOODLES, Queen Tast, 14 oz. 18c KETCHUP, Heinz, 14 oz. bottle...., KRAFT CHEESE, Am. or brick, 2 lbs... 45c 8c PORK AND BEANS, large can Dinner SHEFFORD MACARONI, pkgllc lGc FRUIT COCKTAIL, tall can 10c FIGS, tall can for breakfast............. HEINZ SOUP. M. can 3 for 25, lge 2 .25c 1.5c DOG FOOD, 1 pound can 14c 3 Jello or Royal Gelatin, pkg. 15c 6 Cartoon of MATCHES, 15c MIX VEGATBLES, 2 cans .35c ., SANKA COFFEE, pound SOUP CAMBELLS TOMATO, 2 for 15c WHEATIES, with Jack Armstrong: 21c flashlight, 2 packages 55c HONEY. 10 pound can COFFEE. Hills or M J B. 1 lb. 25c 2 lb.47c CALUMET BAKING POWDER, 1 lb. .21c 23c SWAN DOWN CAKE FLOUR, Forest Dale Saratoga Chips, large....l7c... 9c small Schillings Tea, Orange Pekoe, 8 oz. ... 33c 27c Green 8 oz. pkg. SPRY. 3 pounds 17c LUX TOILET SOAP, 3 bars ...17c 3 bars LIFEBUOY, 19c RINSO, large package 19c ... Lux. flakesJarge package BANQUET BUTTER, 4 in one, lb. .. ... 26c FOLGERS COFFEE, 1 lb.. 24c, 2 lb....46c 9. Stellevs Cream Com and CnK ;.?.;i5c StrS 2 PEACHES, 2 CRACKERS GRAHAM, 2 lbs. ..16c Sodas 2 lb ..... 14c SALAD DRESSING, quarts 21c Wall Paper Cleaner, Climax, 3 cans....20c SUNBRIGHT CLEANER, 2 cans 9c ...19c SANIFLUSH, large can Scowcrofts TOMATOES. Urge 3 for TOMATO JUICE, Urge can... PEACHES, Urge 2Va can CATSUP, 14 oz. bottle KRAUT, Urge 2 can, 2 for PEARS, large, 2ft GEM PEAS, very good .. SPORTS fighting for. Some of us joined the Red Cross and the medical aid units, but there again we found ourselves better fitted to educate the wounded soldiers." Others were sent Into the back provinces of China to teach the masses to read and write, and to Instill them with patriotism which would bring heavier contributions to the various war funds and make conscription of troops an easier problem. bet-- j . Man students taught farmers ter methods of production, so as to 'make China leu dependent on im- : ports from the outside, while women students taught mothers sanitary measures, first aid and better methods of keeping care of the home. Most Students Are Liberals. Most of the students are liberal some of them are Communist But only a few still fight for communism as an end in itself. "Most of us regard Communism as only a part of the Three Peoples' principles,' " one avowedly Red student leader said, "and as such it can only play a proportionate part in the development of our new China. Those who do believe in it do so because they regard it as the only effective means of helping the people." Several students pointed out that many young men and women have gone to the North to join the. eighth route army, "because they believe in doing things and not just talking about them." Most of the students show a curious detachment when questioned concerning their attitude toward the Japanese people. Students from Peking, Tientsin, Tsinan and other occupied areas, who lost their homes and families during the Japanese advance, showed a hatred for the Japanese, and disavow any desire relations with I ever to have friendly the Land ox the Rising sun. . Church History Is Found By Archeological Canine . J..:20c .9c .....15c .i....12c .......15c r....:.15c .10c 19c FORT HOWARD TISSUE, 3 rolls PRIM TISSUE, 3 rolU ......::.;....;:....:.:..14c ...... ....29c TANG, quart jar ...... .. 21c Grand dressing Spread, quart FRENCH DRESSING, 8 oz. new or old. ... 13c style LIBBY'S Chili Con Carne, 11 oz. can... 9c 9c Deviled Meat, 3 cans 7c Vienna Sausage, can ...25c Veal Loaf. 7 oz. 2 for 16c Corn Beef, 12 oz. tin 11c Corn Beef Hash, 10 oz. 15c 2 BECKERS BEER, (cans) for Case .... $1.79 27c WALTERS ACME BEER, 4 for (With empties) Sun Valley Lodge, vac. pack, Kerne 2 for 17c Corn, 12 oz. tin 10c S perry Pancake Flour, small pkg Medium, 28 oz...l7c, Large, 3 lb 27c ESS A dog GREENFIELD, MASS. pawing in the town dump recently records of the unearthed century-olAll Souls Unitarian church. The two leather-boun- d books, missing since 1926, contained data since the founding of the church in 1825. A substitute record had been com' piled, but the list of members and other items could not be duplicated. Though the bindings were dam aged, the pages were still legible. The toss was discovered 13 years ago when a newly elected clerk was unable to find the histories. d - Warm Arctic Current Is Discoverd by Russians Ships may make good headway into the Far North; accord ing to Russian scientists who recent ly discovered a strong current of warm water about 600 feet below the surface in the Arctic. Its pres ence, they say, means that vessels usually will be able to sail north of MOSCOW. Novaya Zemiya, Svernaya Zemlya and Novosibirsk islands. The warm stream la north of Kotelnw island. and the scientists reported that the ice of the Arctic is not as dangerous to shipping as that near the coasts Amazing Parades of Family Treasures on Aucticn Block in Capital Match Scheduled Friday Dern-Kunk- el WASHINGTON. "The trash of so one generation becomes the treasstartling as to render locaj.funa ures of another." Thus read the sign hung by old followers the long speechless, awaited and heretofore unpred- C G. Sloane when he opened his room In Washington, D. C, ictable contest between two of auction ) back In 1891:. . th' greateet athletes ever producNow C G. Is gone and his son ed in the state of Utah has at Mark, has grown In last materialized. business. One of the most Salt Lake . wrestling fans and amazing parades of family treas" sportsmen in all waikea of life ures In this country has passed over their auction block. are tense today in anticipation That's because Washington Is such of the coming battle to settle a a village of srmy and question which for at least sev nsvy people, diplomats and rich coscn years has been wrinkling the mopolites. They die, or they ar abroad, and their belongbrows of even the most analy ordered,, ings are sold. Ileal observer. Can Dell Kunkil Items Used by Presidents. conquer Utah's great slammer, So you can sit and bid for such past lord and master of local items as Lincoln's dining table, that went for $25, or Admiral Dewey's wrestling circles, Ira Dcm. Whether it is due a failure, to mahogany bed. that went for $27.50. agree - on their respective cut or If you can indulge yourself, there are Items like a crystal. chandelier, the ; gate receipts of whether it from the White House that went fo due to fear of the outcome of $8,000. such a contest with respect to . Seems that when the time conies prestige and personal pride, it is for White House families to' leave, difficult for one to say. It is ob- they usually look around with die-- " s at all the they have vious : however. that some such may collected. They don't have room for '. reason has kept them back home. So unpublished they often these two apart for years when call Sloane' a. under a heavy veil of a .natch has been fn actual de secrecy. It scarcely would be pomand by every wrestling fan in lite for a President to give Coming- - with. , a4 suddenness the-sa- gray-haire- d globe-trotter- me s; . , doo-dad- . some-generou- Finds'Cause of Skill in Sports It's the Animal in People, Psychology Professor Discovers. CLEVELAND. A psychologist trying to' find out how people learn skin in sports, music and trades, re ports that it's the animal in them. Roland C Travis, associate pro fessor of psychology at Western Reserve university,- used animals that are blind, yet, strangely, can see. to learn that skill develops, when the old "animal" part of the brain is put to work with the new "intellectual" part i. The old brain," he explained "is common in we with have that which our animal ancestors. On this part. Impressions of the long period ti v olution are believed to have bean recorded. "The new part is the thinking brain, developed most thoroughly in . I , brain. Visual Centers Removed. Professor Travis took some animals and removed the visual centers of the "new" part of their brains. This operation, he found, made them flounder about, bumping into walls and furniture. "But when a light was swung back and forth in front of their faces the animals could follow it with their eyes," he said. "Although blind as far as their conscious minds were concerned, they were seeing with retheir old brain, the gion, which serves very primitive creatures to find their way about" Professor Travis then found that human beings have both conscious cub-cortic- al and unconscious seeing facilities. "If the eyes .followed a swinging light," he said, "they moved at a rate of 60 degrees a second. The motion from left to right always was smooth. The motion is involuntary, and is governed by the old brain." speedily 300 to 500 degrees a second. No matter bow hard the sub ject tried., he. could not move his eyes in a smooth, unbroken motion. They always jerked. Hands Used in Tests. '" "The hands in their first crude efforts at golf or typing," Professor Travis learned, "are like the eyes in their voluntary motions." Be demonstrated his conclusion by rigging up a device he calls the "pursuit oscillator.'-- ' which charts the hand's course ss it tries to follow a haphazardly moving button with a pointer. It also charts .the course of the eyes as they follow - :. the button. ' the tye's, of motion "The being in voluntary." he said, "tollowj the button perfectly, without any prac tice. But it is very difficult for the hand to follow the button and makes many false attempts, like the first attempts at golfing;' typing, or play . ing a fiddle." On experiments wjth 100 students, ' Professor Travis found that the hand needed six trials before it op erated as perfectly as the eyes. Then, he concluded, there was com between the old plete ' and new brains. ' . .. Some auctions bring out' famous families, seeking sentimental reminders of someone who has died. Women in mink coats sit'on hard Wooden chairs alongside boarding housekeepers just looking for an ex-t-ra dresser for the third Boor back. Such an event was the lefof A miral Dewey's possessions, i Mr Svalyn Walsh McLean, owner-o- f thjj Hope diamond, who- has a strong sentimental streak, was In the audi- -, ence. She had known Dewey. For $11 she got a deck chair on which the admiral supposedly sst as he' directed the bsttle of Manila bay. When Sen. Frank B. Brandegee died he left a Peale portrait of George Washington. The D. A. R. wanted It badly for its Constitution hal The society bid it in at $3,150; And listen, art collectors: A Whis tier water color went here for $140. It was "Boats on the River." It ha-- ) Whistler's little butterfly signatory , j down in the corner. Just after the senate moved front Its old chamber the richly carve chairs were auctioned. Congrestl came down en masse for that Ton price on a chair was $3,000. Not body knew whether it was Clay's or Calhoun's but it had belonged., to one of them. - man." It seems that many of man's Im pulses, which have to be controlled or inhibited, come from the old Be found that when a person moved his eyes voluntarily across the page xst a book or some other field of vision, the eyes moved more s city this Idea: "We liked that silver tee service you gave us. But we already had six." The tea service Is auctioned off anonymously. Half the time the buyer never, learns that his new treasure one ' ; belonged to a President But once such a story leaked out;-an- d thereby hangs the tale of a startling collector's Item. It was a day In which a jumble of things was being sold at Sloane's, among them a quaint, little wooden tapestry frame. It was very, very old. but what would a person do with such a gadget? Anyway, someone took it for $30. Months later the story came out: The little gadget was the loom on which Marie Antoinette had whiled away her dull hours. It had been a gift of. the French government to' President Wilson. Wonder if the present owner knows. the state. - SSi S .....11c size large can..... 25c 2for can, large 14c DILL PICKLES, quart jar TOMATO JUICE, Delmonte, 46 oz. 15c TOMATO JUICE. Delmonte tall 5c PINEAPPLE JUICE, 46 oz. can .... ..25c PINEAPPLE JUICE, 18 oz. can, Dolellc GRAPEFRUIT JUICE, 46 oz. can.. ...... 15c GRAPEFRUIT JUICE, No. 2 can 7c PEANUT BUTTER, 2 pound jar 20c PEARS, Teach at the Front. "Our commanders soon discovered we had been educated, so they made us front-lin-e professors.' " one of the students said. "We trained the soldiers, taught them to read and write and made every effort to show them what they were Society Bids on Gifts to Great Stunt Man Makes Study Of Errors of Driver CLEVELAND. Al Durante, stunt driver whose business is head-ocollisions, believes that automobiles, are safethat only the drivers and careless driving are responsible for accidents. "If drivers would be alert constantly and keep their heads in. emergencies," said Durante, "accidents would be cut 50 per cent. Durante said one of the first re--, stricUons be puts on his assistant is that they drive carefully in the streets. "We know exactly what our earl n - - will do in the show. It's all. calcu- lated mathematically," he said,' "but In traffic, you can't predict the actions of the other fellow. You; hsve to keep your eye on him constantly to avoid accidents." Durante said that even In acctv dents, drivers who know bow to handle their cars and to keep con-- ; trol of them often can come outj without a scratch. Woman Barber Denies Profession Is 'Gabby DETROIT. A woman barber has taken up cudgels in defense of the charge that all barbers are "gabby." Nina Adams, for 20 years an accredited barber In Detroit, said the amount of talking by the barber depends entirely on the customer's mood. "If the customer wants to relax," Mrs.- Adams said, "my observations show that the Darber . keeps his mouth shut" .. - . . |