.,

MEATS. FAT8. book 'our .....I.",p. VI Ihre.rh Zf CloudY. loud Ihroarh Sepl. 80; A I Ih,ourh IH ••lId Ihr.alh lOWA: C.... erable e10llllinrs Otl. :11 : 1' 1 Ihr... h KI .ood Ib,.a.k Noy. 30, aDd 1.1 t.­ Ihroarb QI valid Ib,o.rb D ••. II. 8VGA" Itamp II da,. 8ea&teftd ahowen in after­ ,004 Ih ...,b D ••. 3l 10' ,Ive ro ••• " IIHOI8, b.ob DOD... No dedded ebaqe in tem­ t.hree alrpl.n • • t.lm,. J, S, a And, Ire r ••• lnderlaitel,. DAILY IOWAN THE perature. Iowa City's Morning Newspaper ======-======~~~~~~~======~~~======~~~~====~~ :NE CENTS THI AI'OCIATED ral.' IOWA CITY, IOWA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1945 TBIt .IIOCIATU PUll VOLUME XXI NUMBER 298 loio· ive to _xp aln• ar ui t Japan Reduced 10 fourth Rale House Places Final ATOMIC BOMB EYEWITNESS TELLS OF HIROSHIMA Former Premier Given 50·50 ' . Ad· M A OK on Congressional Nallon ccor Ing 10 ' ac rlhur Pearl Harbor Inquiry Chance by American Doctors

Allied General Feels Nips Unable Group to Investigate Will Be Medics Fight to $aV. Lif. of War Lord To Wage War Again With a Predictable Future Degree of Individual With Plasma Transfusions and Penicillin By DON STARR Neglect in Catastrophe day (AP)-Hideki Tojo, art r another YOKOHAMA (AI') ,Jnpon hilS bl'cn reduced to II fourth rate TOKYO, Wedn blood WASHINGTON (AP)-Congress transfu. ion, still was given better than a 50.50 chanct' y t rday to nalion, Oen(,l"al M!l eA1't hlll", 'ommander-i n-chierfor A lIied forceR voted yesterday to conduct its own in tht' Pacific. sui<1 ye~t('l"tlay . surviv his uicid attempt-and thus p ibly Inc trial a a war investigation of the Pearl Harbor MaeArthlil' dee lul'ecl that the complete defeat of lhe .Japanese criminal. army had uee n gellerally oV<'l'Iookcd in report. of Japan 'R military disaster, the third inquiry since the 'rhe man who 88 JOPllJl' war premier helped engin r lh n ak disint<'grntion whi·1i hod a tend(>ncy to stl'CSS tl'emend01 ls novll1 Japonese struck Dec. 7, 1941. attack on Pear) Harbor was resting easily at 9 ft . ID. Y terday and lIit" vic1 0rirs by Am r l"icllli fot·c PR. The house passed 308-0 a senate n arly 17 houl'S after It hot him. If at IIi hom "'hil Aln rican ---- Basing his estimate of the situa- resolution providing tor a 10-man officers stood outside to arrest him for questioning. lio n on service as commander-in- committee to: His age wa d lared to be til IDain obsta 1 in h is rt' o\' ry. 'I'h wonder drng, p nicillin \va inject d in larg (illantiti '. Big Five Conference chief in this theater throughout al- 1. Investl~ale the baek&,!,ound 'I'ojo still was not out danger. most five years of war as well as of American preparedness and or Lieut. 01. Jam Pry, TaxweIJ, Va., chief llI'g n a the army observations made since landing 2. determine whether any Indl­ Opens With Talks on Japanese soil, he declared this vidual's neglect contributed 10 eVllcuatlon hospital where Tojo is nation would be unable to wage the sucess of Ihe enemy attack. detained, said there WII posslblJ.lty Five senators and five represent­ On Potsdam Issues war again with a predictable fu- atives will serve. They will be Ration Point Values puss mll1ht be forming In the I It ture. lun, which was punctured by the 'an • • • given a $25,000 appropriation and selt-admlnlstered pistol shot. Rumors of Russl ordered 10 report back by J an. 3, Eliminated on Every 'ble Nol only has Industryy been 1946. Twenty thousand units ot peni­ Refusal of Possl flattened but the army which Six wi! be Democrats, four Re­ cillin have been elv n at three hour Intervals. Ita~' an Pact Spiked once convinced NI p po n e s e publicans, appointed by President Variety of Cheese people of its InvlnclbllllY, is now pro tem McKellar of Tennessee ' Tolo's tempernlure this morn­ LON ON (AP)- F'oreign min- being returned to civilian life and Speaker Rayburn of Texas. ' Ing was 100. degrees. His pulse wns Top Food Authorities islers of the Ii ve major Allied with a record of defeat. House Republicans soul'bt In 112 a compared with a norma) 72. powers met yesterday to chart the • • • vain to obtain equal party rep- Look For Early End SUIl conscious, he asked some world's fi rs t steps towatd a re- The chief of the occupation resentation on tbe committee. questions and was able to say lurn lo peace, beginning with the forces sat easily and informally They contended this would as­ To Rationing of Meat "thank you" In Enellsh atter being questions referred to them at the' on a gray davenport which might sure a. non-partisan Investll'a­ given a glass of wat T. historic Potsdam conference. have come from an American la- tlon. Democrats countered tbat WASHINGTON (AP)-The 10v- • • • A communique issued aner their borer's home as he chatted with it was accepted practice for tbe ernment made all eheese ration- Brt~. Gen. Geor~e W. Rice secret lour-hour opening session three correspdonents who called majority party to hold a. major­ free yesterday as top-flight:tood ordered a bed and maUr l ub­ left the door open. however, for to express their appreciation for Ity of places on all committees. o!ticials conferred on the possibll- , muted for the cot on which consideration of other questions the treatment Allied pressmen re- The Democrats had the votes to Hy ot an early termination ot meat Tojo had been I yln~ since be that might be proposed by (he na- ceiv~d at the surrender cere- wIn the arlrument, 168 to 136. rationing. WII brolll'ht to the ho pltal la t. lions they represent- the United momes. I The ration point value of all va- niJ"hl. States, Great Britain, the Soviet Withou~ ackn?wldglng criticism ' Senate Refuses Federal rieties of cheese was reduced to • • • Union, China and France. by certam umnformed persons zero e:tfedive at 12:01 a. m. today. The prisoner was ofCered brenk- The announcement tbat tbe who have expressed impatience Supplement for Jobless This actlon had the technical ef- fast with coffee but he reCused It. Pot8dam outline would be fol- wJth what they regard as a slow WASHINGTON (AP)-The sen­ fect of keeping cheese on the ration The one-Ume premier, who shot lowed appeared to spike humors application of authority in occupa- ate finance committee late yester­ list, but offiCials said It undoubted- hlmseU at 4:15 p. m. (2:15 a. m. that the Russians michl refuse tion procedure, the general said day voted against any federal sup­ Iy si,nlfled the end of rationing of central war time) at his suburban to discuss a peace treaty for there were three preliminary steps plements to increase state pay­ this commodity. An order 10rma]- home, groaned r peatedly "r IIaly unless the Americans and I necessary to safeguard Allied in- ments to the jobless, but approved ly ending rationing may be issued want to die, I want to di ." British accepted the present \terests. All three were related 'to aid to make the maximum dura- very soon. "I am sorry fo r the peoples of roverrunents of Romania, Hun- the lives of his fighting men. tion 26 weeks in all states. The cheese action, announced greater east Asia," the Jopane:ro ,a,y and Bulgaria. These were: Chairman George (D., Ga) an- jointly by the agriculture depart- Domei news agency quoted him. Italy's future was No, I on the • • • nounced atter a two-hour session ment and the ortlce of price nd- "I wlll shoulder the whole re pon­ agenda laid out at Potsdnm by 1. The transfer 01 All\ed pri- that the group had agreed tenta- ministration, came as Acting Sec- slbiJity. I hope they will not go President Truman, Prime Minis- soners of war 10 safely from tively on a blll also embracing: retary of Agriculture J. B, Hutson amiss In dealing with the sltua­ ter Attlee and Premier Stalin. miserable Japanese camps scat- 1. Unemployment compensation lind OPA Chiet Chester Bowles IUon . I did not wont to stand be­ Britain's new foreign secretary, teree! throughout the Japanese for all fed era I civil workers. went over the meat supply sltua- fore the victor to be tried as the Ernest Bevin, presided at the ini- lsI d d th I th P If I Rates will be at the same rates as tial session around an oval ma- an s an ose n e ac c. lion. vanquished. This Is my own case. hogany table in the cream and * • • are paid by the state where the I A spokesman for Hutson empha- I wonted to kill mysel! at one gold conference r oom ot luxuri- 2. The landing and dispersal of federal worker is employed. Fed- sized thot no decision was made. stroke. I llrst thought of using ousiY-furnished Lancaster house. sulIicient occupation troops to in- eral workers abroad will be paid Some announcement of plans may my sword to kill myself, but in­ Each of the other forel~n mln- sur!! utmost security without en- the District of Columbia scale. I1IRO-KUNI DAZAI, leader of Hiroshima's pollee force, talks Lo Allied correspondent, top, tellln,. the be made, however, soon after Sec- stead I used the revolver for tear Isters, It was decided, will pre- dangering the lives of troops while 2. Transportation payments to sLory of the terrible destruction resulting from the world's first atomic bomb attack. Shown above wltb relary of AgricultUre Anderson re- I might fall and survive." side In Tum, with Russia's V. at the same time prepared for any enable migrant workers to return bandage around his head, the Hiroshima policeman returned to his native city Just 40 minutes after turns to his oUlce, probably today, • • • M. Molotov taking the chair to- to their former homes, or to a place tbe bomb landed, which he said "seemed as If thousands of lire bombs dropped torether." Tbe lower from a short vacation at his home General Ma.cArthur bad Of- day. (See l'1ACARTHUR, page 5) of new e m ploy men t. It was photo above shows some of the devastation in the once large city being viewed by one of the correspond­ in Albuquerque, N. M. dered that Tojo be u re ted and ents. • Earlier, United Stales Secretary Iagreed to limit individual pay- Hutson's spokesman sold the end brOlll'bt to headQuarters for of State James F. Byrnes had pre- Two More Eldora ments to $200 and to allow only of meat rationing might come yet Questlonlnl' alon,. with ten mem­ (~ dieted that the Italian question travel for a worker and his de- this month, or it mlihl be delayed ben 01 hi. cabinet who helped would be the fi rst to be taken up E C d I pendents. No allowance was ap- several weeks. him In Upte the Pearl Harbor once organizational work was scapeesapfure proved for movement of household All Convention Ruth Madsen, Freed Senate Pushes "It all depends," he sold, "on attaek ltartlnl' the war. comuleted, but that neit.her the effects. livestock marketings during the • • • atomic bomb nor Germany's fu- 3. Unemployment compensation • From Asylum, Fac·es days and weeks ahead. The meat But Tojo apparently thought he ture would be among the subjects ELDORA (AP)-Two inmates of for an estimated 400,000 maritime supply has not yet Improved sut- wal to lace trial as a war criminal, discussed. the state training school for boys workers. BaniSWill End Tipton Murder Trial Service Cuts 'ficiently to assure equitable dls- and hastLIy shot himself Instead of who escaped Monday night while tribution without raUooini." committing the traditional bara- Iowa Sai lor Drowns assigned to the institution dairy Cattle marketings are runnilli klri by sword. Ruth Madsen, the object of a GILMAN (AP)-Everett Thomp­ crew' were back at the training CIO Asks Increase Marshall and King considerably ahead of a year ago, The medical skllJ of American son, 26, son of Mrs. Tillie Thomp­ school last night. OnOciober1 two week hunt by police follow­ when they were at a record level doctors, who said he had better Of Wages to Meet Invited to Explain lor the period. Some marketing than an even chance to survive, son of Gilman, drowned off Long They were returned yesterday ing the death of her husband authorities believe cattle sales will was beLng utilized to the rullest to Island, N. Y., Sept. 2, Mrs, Thomp­ by a farmer from the vicinity of Rising Living Costs Discharge Systems WASHINGTON (AP)-AIJ re- early in September, 1942, has becn increase even more this month to save the life of the most prized son has been notified by the navy. Eldora, The state board of con­ released from the state hospital for provide a plentiful supply of beet, prisoner in the Pacific becau.se A gunner's mate, first class, trol which has jurisdiction over PITTSBURGH (AP)-The CIO­ strictions on conventions, group WASHINGTON (AP) - Co n­ the school reported in Des Moines the insane at Cherokee and will be particularly of medium and iower authorities stili want to Question Thompson had made several trips United Steelworkers of America meetings and trade shows will end returned to Tipton to face a mur­ gress, u uder {lre to get the boys that the escapees were Clifford Lo­ grades. The Increased cattle mar- him on aUalrs wh1ch he directed. overseas. set out yesterday to get wage in­ Oct. 1. der charge. back home faster, undertook yes­ velt of Galesburg, Ill" and Paul creases of $2 a day for their BOO,- ketings have come simultaneously But the treatment and occornmo­ This date lor the termination of Her attorney, Ed O'Connor of with a sharp cutback in military datiollS lor the Japanese genel'al Krante of Newton. 000 members on grounds that thei'r terday to divert some of the heat the so-called convention ban was Iowa City, sold District Judge R. requirements. were exaclly the same as any The Hardin county grand jury, living standards have been "seri­ to army and navy leaders. announced yesterday by the office G. Rodman of Cherokee yesterday Pork, on the other hand, wlll re- American enlisted man would re­ Brutal Bealing which is investigating the recent ously undermined" by the "stead­ handed down a decision granting The senate military commit­ series of breaks from the school ily rising cost of living." of defense tl·ansportation. main relatively scarce until De- ceive. her a writ of habeas corpus. tee invited General of the cember and January, the peak ToJo ahot himself wIth a .32 call­ and the condi tions there, recessed The union's wage policy com­ In its original form. it prohibited The judge found the woman had Armies George C. MarshalJ and month of the fall and winter hog bel' American colt aulomatJc pLstol. lor two days, yesterday and today. mittee, in the first nation-wide all sorts of gatherings with more recovered her sanity and ordered Fleet Admiral Ernest J. K1n~ marketing season, because hog • • • Given General County Attorney D. W. Dickinson action of its kind by any interna­ than 50 persons from out of town her released. The 1lnl'Ie Mot came clOie to production dropped off sharply said he would go to Des Moines tional union since the end of the without a permit from ODT. Mrs. Madsen is being held for to come to the Capitol tomorrow klllln,r him immediately, Aid this year. today. He in d I cat e d his trip war, directed its representatives This has been relaxed recenUy to Cedar County Sheriff CharlC;5 R. and explain tbelr demobilization Capt. James Johnlon of New- would be in connection with the to proceed with appropriate steps permit statewide gatherings of any Willey who has a warrant for her plans. training school situation but did for collective bargaining confer­ (See TOJO, page 5) Wainwright size, and gatherings with an at­ arrest charging murder, O'Connor Bolsterihg sentiment for public • This Promises To Be • not elabol'ate on his specific activi­ ences with the steel companies for tendance limit of 150 persons from disclosed. She will, probably be hearings was a war department re­ SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Three ties. new contracts. out of the state. moved to Tipton tomorrow. I An Unpleasant Day brigadier generals yesterday re­ port that the army totaled 8,050,------...... I, .. lated eyewitness accounts of a 000 on Sept. a net reduction We're having 80me rain, cold 12,000 Ignore Discovered in Charge of Bibai POW Camp- brutal beating given General Crom a year earlier of 53,000, The r~ln. In {act, it promises to .be a Jonathan M. Wainwright, hero of committee also received assurances most unpleasant day. LIJht nln Corregidor. by a Japanese prison that the army is discharging 11,000 started falling here shortly alter guard. The generals were among midnight this morning and there WLB, Walkout Col. Devereux, Hero of Woke, Found Alive men a day and hopes to double a group of 20 Ilberated prisoners Is no telling when It will slop. We that figure soon. Who al'l"ived by plane yes terday. might not see tbe sky clear for By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Brig. Gen. J . P. Vachon, Seattle, BI THE ASSOCIATED paRS8 bira hold 1,556 Allied prisoners. of these had been evacoated. An Dutch and Australians. Many The red-hot issue produced these quite some time. A b a c k-t o-w 0 r k movement WaSh., told of seeing General Lluet. Col. James P. Devereux, Meanwhile five camps crammed additional 1,137 were being cared voiced the opinions Ihal "Ibe other developments during the Yesterday's low temperature was among 12,000 Westinghouse salar­ Wal nwright hit four times by a commander of the heroic marines with 19,000 women and children, 46 and the bigh was only 67, which for aboard hospital ships in Tokyo Japanese stili are a definite day: Ied workers In the east fizzled Japanese private. He was hit so who early In the Pacific war held were discovered on Java. An would bave seemed like an un­ yesterday and the nation-wide Aneta (Dutch) news agency report bay. menace" an4 "our victory was I. Chairman May (D., Ky.) of hard he 'Staggered back about 10 out gallantly on Wake island until usual minimum readilli this time total of persons idled by labor dis­ feet. swamped by superior numbers of said 2,000 of the Inmates were In the steady liberation process, complete but too many of their the house military committee last week. The mercury was stlD putes leveled aU at 100,000. Present at (he interview were Japanese, yesterday was reported seriously ill. Plans were made im­ headquarters said 1,362 prisoners armies were untouched." going down last night. urged his colleagues to be "dis­ Memben of the Federation of Brig, Gen. Carl C. Drake, Cabin alive and in charge ot a prisoner mediately to fly medicines and were released on Tuesday. They • * • creet and temperate" in their de­ Westinghouse Independent Salar­ John, Md., and Brig. Gen. A. J. of war camp in Japan. food to them in 12 royal Austra­ included 474 Americans, 694 Brit­ Planes of a United States car­ Truman Asks Judge Funk, Sarasota, Fla. Ian Liberator bombers from Dar­ ish, 110 Canadians, 37 Australians rier task force showered down mands for demobilization. ied unions Itruck Monday moroin, * • • for a bonus or incentive wage pro­ Th~ officers said they received lie was reported thin but well win. Australia. and 4.7 Dutch. In the same period, medicines and food to the Hok­ 2. The war departmenl dJs­ To Aid In War Trial their most brutal treatment at a In a camp at Blbal, one of four 3,150 otbers were started for their kaido camps in a day-long opera­ closed that the lmu baa lliarted aram. Monday night the walkout • • • WII called oU at the request of the camp in Karenko, Formosa, where lpotled for the flnt time on the The musln,r of other priaoners homes on ships. tion. Vice Adm. Frank Jack thlnnln~ out Its war-lWoIlen W ASHlNGTON (AP) - Presi­ they were constantly slapped, mOWltainoUi northern Japanese dent Truman was reported yester­ war labor board but was renewed freed recenlly from Japanese • • • Fletcher of the United States Ninth nnks of 1,600 I'enen'" Sevent, beaten, humiliated and forced to laIand of Hokkaido. Thll tint home illand cam.,., continued A &'!'oup of more than 1,000 fleet off northern Japan sent word day to have asked Pederal Jud" a, a I n yesterday morning, and work all day in the l un. They deflnUe word of Devereux', at Yokohama. They were being who arrived Sunday in Manila to the prisoners that they would tenenl orflun have been re­ John J. Parker of North Carolina President Truman was asked to in­ labored in a vegetable garden. whereabouts came from ttve 8hlp~ out of the crowded POrt from FormOA camps detailed to be freed as soon as evacuation leased or pul on the IDacUve lilt. to serve on the international trib­ tervene. When the crops ripened the Japs mlDnen of wlr lIbented from by plane and ship as rapidly II Investl6ators stories of hardship teams and ships become available. since V-J day and an additional unal which will try European war Plants of the Westinghouse Elec­ let them rot rather than allow the that district. criminals. tric corporation in I i x eutern pouIble. and horror which will be added The (ive Allied war prisoners 100 are belnc reduced In rrade- prisoners to eat any of it. to other thousands of slmUar who trekked from the Bibai camp Another federal Judge, Orle L. states were affected. Elsewhere • • • * * • 3. Representative Dirksen ( R., "A ll of us, and that Lncludes United States naval tilers who General MacArthur's headquar­ dossiers a~llnst the Japanese to the naval base at Ominato said Phillips, of Denver, was said to be there were lew developments on Wainwright, existed on a handful located the camps learned by radio ters at Tokyo announced that captors. Amon.. them were '74 their captors had mistreated them Ill.) proposed a system of "lndefi­ among those being considered by the labor front. More than 50 ot rice and watery soup," the gen­ from the inmates that the Bibal 14,000 Allied prisoners had been Amerlcanll captured In the Phil­ and forced them to work in coal nite furloughs" to release eligible Mr. Truman, for appointment to c:ontinuilli strikes, many of weeks eral said. 'We used to steal a main camp, two smaller ones at treed from Japanese camps by Ippines, 1,050 British taken at mines that were subject to fre- army men In advance of their for­ a vacancy on the United States duration, kept the total idle at the tew potatoe 8 ~ from the larden." Alblbetsu and a fourth at Aka- midnleht Tuesday and that 11,468 Sinrapore and Mala,a aIId a ~ew quent cavein.s! ______._ mal discharge, supreme court. 100,000 mark. l PAGE TWO THE DAILY lOW AN. IOWA CITY, ' IOWA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1945 Religion in the Classroom- I F J I Full Emplqymenl Bill OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN The Illinois court case te.;ling complish as much 01' lie",. I, &I•• U ..rvIUr:n o.u.."I,)Aa .r••• h •••I •• I ...... mor~be- rom uog es ~~.. d ..... 0111"1. 0 " O.pltol, 11o ... r., t". OINI.AL NOTIOII .. Could Be Effective, d.,oalloll wl",- ...... P. ....II'" .r Tb. ".ll, I •••• or "'." the right of public lichools to take cause of its frequency and en- , fh Sf f ...... ml\ p..... I. .be h. provlilo. ra, Ibelr ••.,.,11 I. lb. .ffI.... 1 ~ pupils away from other subjects d 1 'ty , , te oaU, Iowa., OIN'''AL HOT 1011 111.,1 bt 01 Tb. D.h, I':~I force regu an -as a mIDIS r 0 e aes "IQ , . II. Ih. "a, pree,,,ln. II ... ,1ublleallul Doll ... ,.111 M01 to discuss religion with them Or a Dud, or Suicide •••• pl•• by 1.lo,boao, an. mull b. Tl' PID oa LIOlllLr w strikes at an educational as could, ••• ,IONIID b, " ... p.... lbl. ,...... well as a religious problem. Young children would benefit Wednesday, September ttU 'HeUships' Helped By JACK STINNETT Vol. XXI No. 2036 n, WE HEARTILY APPROVE OF because THEY WOULD LEARN RELIGION IN THE CLASS­ AT AN EARLY AGE THAT Set News of War W ASHlNGTON- As far as the (I'or ..,..... &1011 rerardl.., 11a&el beJond , .... acbe'...... naena&a.aa fa lbe offtce of the PretldllD&. Old OaDl"") ROOM. It benefits pupils in a • THEY SHOULD BE KIND TO Out to World Unitcd Stales is conccrned tho (ull number of ways. .. The question OTHERS. The teacher would not cmployment bm proposes a new is: How should liuch a controveI;r need to instill faith in God to get By JAMES HUTCHESON economic weapon, as untried as the UNIVERSITY CALENDAR sial subject be presente

(ConUn

~ • • ark. OhIo • ..... ,oa. _,rowe e 'ensive ,Dri ,' IOA~ lItl Ives Johnson s esSly ioten i ul'ckly. bu * * * 1 lightly mls~ I fh; Qjg Shqyt I'ubs Co"" ffp.m ~hi,,4 iq Ninlh 10 fdg~ , hrough Tojl 46'Turn Out Cardinals Rall,y CubsStumbfe, Lying on led securel: NEW YOllK (AP) - ~ a J ~ r ag"gn, ~-4; qqr YlY Wj~s ~p,1 fqr Brum$ lanket beCI leagUe stan!11n"s includi~F all · '. . ____' ------!rom shock. galhes of Se~t. 11. In,Flag Race; WBll simply ; For Jecond In 9th to "ip Amerlcan Lea(ue lIy ~r Jqap'AN ior the Cubs, but he let Bost?n put h()5pltal pat Teams V ' , W ' L ~llt CHICAGO (AP)-Hank ~or- together tour hlts In tr,e fifth for He was t~ Detrdit ...... _.... _... :.... 80' 57 .5~~ owy, ex-Yankie hurler who was two rUhs and four mor~ I~ t e sell. Pain ri Washington ...... 80 6~ .587 t I 1 /. , t seventp for .wo mOre tallies. Ca'rds Surging ' Giants,.6 10 5 II , ,dy face N"w York 70 51· 9 mys er QU,S y wl\lveq ou. of the r j Fall Practice " .... -- .... . -... --- U • His mutes came back in the last I pinched his st Louis 71 66 5)8 American league two months ago, ' . .-.... ---- .. -... -.. --- . , , t h of. the nrnth with one out j.o st;Prc ST. LOUIS (AP)-St. Louis By JACK llANO , His mouth i Second day of fall fOotball prac­ Cleveland ...... ---- ...... - :~ ~~ .!illS pitoheq his ~ O~h cOJ11plet~ game in the' declding rim, before a crowd Norte of h clung on Chicago's heels. two and NEW YORK (AP) - Just y.ohen' tice for the Iowa Hawkeyes was Chicago ...... :...... ·.~487'25 as many s~ar~s for · *e l~a~ue- of only '5.588. I • men was a half ,ames back. by rallling in Bdston ...... 66 73 I di Ch ' C b ·t d Chicago seemed ready to start sell· touched off by a "Touch Tackle" Philadelphia __ ...... _._ . .-47 89 t. H6 ea ng , Icago u s :res, er ay. Phil Cava\'l ~ etta slngle\i to right ; GI's carried the last of the ninth for a sixth Ing world scrles tlckcts, the 'Cub! Present wer ~crimmage. Coach Clem Crowe Na:tlonal Learue and although he p ew a 3-0 lead. with one out in the tinal frame, straight victory yesterday, B-5, at stopping hitting and yesterday the , fieers and r alllo spent considerable time on Chicago ...... 85 50 .630 came up with ~ ' ni~th-innlng vlc- ~rld w~nt to second whe~ Pick , army and , the expense of the New York St. Louis ...... _83 53 .1110 tory ovl!r the Bostoh uta'V~. Cuner bO~leq And y atko's St. Louis Cardinals are only 2\1 defensive tactics-which he ne­ I ill\;. Giants. Brooklyn _. ___ ...... _.__ ._75 110 .556 . 'The tall, anlitulrr ~UFler gave tOUhder. . Slston seht lefty ~6b games behind and in a position to 1 ' glected during the summer session _._ .. _.. ______77 65 .542 the Braves 10 hits In his gan to ' the mOund. and he Pit~sburgh wlnlHn~ make a serious bid for a fourth A few J in favor of offensive work-with ''s single to left New York ...... 73 65 .52\) elFltth victory ~sai sr ~w6 losses Walked pinch-hitter Frank Secory tillie, Inolll several minute~ devoted to passing with the bases loaded broke up the Boston _...... _59 78 .43J ' . .... to' till ~he bases. Then pibch-hitter straight ilag. Jewspapetl and fundamental drills. game. giving the Red Birds a clean Cinclhnati . __ .___ .. _.... ____ 55 81 ,404 Eddie Sliuer beat out an infield Shut oui thrce times In 'their Forty-six men were an hand tor local offIc' sweep of the four-game set with rlilladel~hia ______. ___ .-42 97 .30~ 1,·, II~t 1;. ''''. "ing. hit, and"'Cavap:elta daShed! aCross last five starts be(~re meetin. the Tuesday practice, with Carl I ' . . ~ . f n~" '7 ~ ,,'mal,!P ti\e plate with the wlnnin . IISI!lnr a r Bowen, first string full back can­ the Giants. . batting Boston for the iast time yester; YE8TEap'-tY~~ flf;8ppS U~"' A"d' '" , Tl'u! CUbs were' oino a -0 lead day, the Cubs have seen their "I am Toj didate, leading the group. The for rookie Catcher Crumbling. Na!!~!,al "e~~e 111 m9 .1, la 19,8.. rS In the sec6hd When Bin Nicholson only missing man from the sum­ walked to open the frame. After lead melt away as the Cards ··un. the officers St. Louis B. New YO\'k 5 . ~~ h!lmlnered oile of 'Bllt Lee1s slants ,rrived at mer practice crew is Bob Gustaf­ spUrt. beat out a bunt. Pep Chicago 5, Boston 4 5-0 Win, OY~r D:'S'1Ul Into the· right' field stands for his corked a five-game winning for his arre: son, Rockford, Ill., ehd on the Young moved the runners to sec­ Brooklyn 11-4, Cincinnati 6-5 13th homer of the yellr with Patko Iowa eleven. uti JVB SUch "ordinaray" tossers as rook· ~cowJed and ond and third with a sacrifice. Mel abOarCi. Stan Hack scored anotll1!r ies Sal Maglic of the Giants 'and \ographer ( Herb Braun, heralded as the Pittsburgh 5-5, Philadelphia 4-1 BOSTON (AP)-The invincible In the third when he s[ngletI, went leading player among the new Ott ordered Ace Adams to pass Ed Wright of Boston and the v~te. jlictUl'e. AmerI.an Learue • combination of airtight pitching to second on Roy Hughes' sacritlce , Then Toj( Hawks, was given a chance at a Red Schoendienst and the hurler Detroit 5. Boston 0 and timely t)itting, as demtmstrat- and came in on Palko's single to ran Harry Feldman of New i(lrlt fullback spot in the scrimmage Ihut. The then struck out Buster Adams. Chicago' 2, Washington 1 ed by righthander and left. P a f k 0 d r 0 v e in the have' whitewashed the Circuit's, front of the yesterday. The former Gopher by Doc Cramel', ye terday produc- follrtr Cub run, when Ite tripled to starter, is anxious to play for the Kurowski's blast then upset the top sluggers. ~eard. Th ed a" 5-0 sl1bt6IJf ove\' tHe Boston rlllnt in lhe fifth Innig after Cav­ Iowan's after starting 'six games strategy. Cubs Blow Series ~oors and f. for the University of Minnesota­ Bill Crouch. tlie fifth Cardinal Tq~~y' s ~~lfleS ttM Sd~ a'fld' enabled nefro1t·s att~~ta 'had slnJiled . . All memt NEW Yp'RK (AP) - Probable Weakeo'ed btit deiel'mll'led Trg~rs to Bpst6n's lirst two runs came on Ten days ago after the Cards except the once against the Sea hawks-and hurler, was credited with his first pitdhers for today'g major le~~1! had taken five out of six from chi. appears to hal'.e plenty of football expa'nd iMlt slirineali' Jh tt\e' Am~ a st.cc~sslon of fqur hits 1n the ., IhYsteriouBl: decision since his recall from games. (Won and lost riltords in eri~lih\' leilk\le'8 b1l t.e'rin'g pennant (U:th ~h'rif ~aw Carden Gillenwater. cago. only to fall back Into their \he furor 0' ability In his 170 pounds. pare'lltheses.) During the scrimmage Coach . Rochester and Adams. who re­ rac~ Wl~dli~. · " i'hll 1'4'11$1. Vince Shupe and phlch­ careless habits of biowlng serje! ,pparently JACK KELSO, '175.POUND H~LFBACK. from Atlantic is a top can­ placed Sal Maglie in the eighth A:ib4!rlCan Learue , Tropt' t~r\led j~ a spar~ling ~wo- hl~tei' B~tch Nieman ap hit sately. neighbors. Crowe switched two pairs of back­ Detroit ~t PhiladelpHia (2)­ to the second division cI\lb$,' the dfdate for a starting assignmen~ In Iowa's backfIeld this fall. A teUer­ hit ptl1'lormiln'Ce whlJ~ ' Challdrtg u~ with Masi and Nieman driving Tojo, in fields, while line cOach Boeringer was charged with his eighth loss. "experts" were ready to concede man at end last year. he was switched to a ball carrIer by Coach Clem NewhouseI' (22-8) and Benton his 11th wih' of tM seasO'n again~t th~ ·scol'e · across. Ma~ i hit his six ~ h fas placed used Ralph Woodard and Dick Maglie !1idn't allow a htt in the (}I-B) VB. Newsom (8'-17) and Meyer at ends, Andy Novosad and Crowe. 13 losses. r , homer of the' year for one run in that Charley Grimm's gang W.~I ~ulance an, first four innings as New York Flores (7-10) Cramer blasted his sixth homer the seventh. and then Shupe. 'who in. squadron cl Bill Kay at tackles, Harold Mc­ Cleveland at Washington (night) Namara and Paul Fagerland at -I' bounced into a 4-0 lead on two­ of tbe season fnto tlte right fi ld si\'\gl~ behind him. reach!ld sec­ BlIIy Southworth now appean iog the p run homers by Roy Zimmerman in -Groml!k (16-8) vs. Woltf (17-10) bUll pen Ii'I the se ent\\. in·ning, ilft- ohd on a wild pitch and s~ored on handling b. guards, and Ronald Wulf at the Chlcago at New York (2) ,.... to have Iltralghtcned out ~ center position. ~he second and Danny Gardella in er Joe Hoover had doUbled In that Culler's single to center. Likely to Start Oct, 2 Grove (13-10) and Lopat (10-12) same direction and ;?lteeter Webb The victory was the third fo r the pitching staff and Is In a poallion., Tbe cIe; the third. The other Giants' score VB. Zuber (4-10) and Ruffing FiI's~ ( had beaten out a' Mnt. Cubs In the final four-game series to make a run tor it In the flnll 1\ Notre Da.me Shlfis Line came in the sixth off (5-2) .a Uae Vc WASHINGTON* * (AP) * - Basc- since all other* clubs* * are virtually Thaf mar](ed the end for big with Boston. three weeks. SOUTH BEND. Irld. (AP)­ on Clyde Kluttz' single. a · passed st. Louis at Boston - Potter Pink¥ W60ds. '\\'\/'10 after getting oft ------­ .bleb T~ As Notre Dame devoted its day's ball's first peacetime world series out of the pennant contention. (13-10) VS . Ryba (7-3) BOston .(\Jl a H In addition to the onrushing Red tiher eire. ball and an infield out and Buddy NatIOnal Learue (n impressive fashiOn. kicked away E drills to blocking under new back­ since 194 L probably will start Oct. Other details that will be dis­ Kerr's squeeze bunt. Birds, Chicago, has a "suspehded" his own gl1 me in the' sl1Cth ' by giv­ Culler, ss u •••••, ...... 4 0 1 1 cussed are the selection of um­ Brooklyn 'at Se. Louis (~-twi­ still ~sh : field Coach Joe Sheeketski, Coach 2 on the field of the American Ljlu Klein's double followed by Inll lhe Tige~s their first two rUns Wiete1mann, 2b .... 4 0 0 o game headache to make more un· Hugh Devo~e made the first major pires, seating capacities of the night) - Lombardi (8-11) and inside the league winner. an FJnfield out and Deb Garms' Oli 'S two'-baggtir an'd HolmeSj If _____ ...... (} o certain its crumbling lead. Brook· parks and ticket pri es. Branca (3-4) vs. C. Barrett 4 .0 01 blood pll shift of the Call season by moving outfield fly broke Maglie's shut­ (our bases on palls. on~ of wllich o lyn leads the Bruins, 10-4, at the This was indicated yesterday by This year's series will bl! played (21-11) and Lopatka (0-0) or Workman. rf ...... 4 0 0 Soon Toj freshman Bill LeOnard to tlie start­ out in the fifth. Doubles by Klein forced In a tallY'. Gil)ehwater. cf .... _. o end of eight innlgs of a July '20 ing right end job. The Youngs­ Commissioner A. B. "Happy" on a wartime basis insofar as Burkhardt (16-7) , 4 1 2 barna, the and pinch hitter Art Rebel, fol­ Nelsdb, 3b ._." ...... _. 0 o contest that was called to allow town. Ohio. lad replaces Mike Chandler, who has called a meet­ travel is concerned in further co­ Philadelphia at Chicago - R. e*rolt E 4 0 requiring a lowed by Augie Bergamo's long I , D the Dodgers to make atrain. II operation with the office of de­ Barrett (7-1B) VB . Wyse CI8-l0) 1B ~ Masi. c ...... 4 2 2 o As Amer Bush of Davepport. Iowa. ing here today of l'epre enta­ fly produced two more in the sev­ the Bums can hold a six-run lead fense transportation. New York at Cincinnati-P'e1d­ Hoover, ss .... _... ___ ._._. 5 1 1 a Shupe, l6 ...... 4 1 2 o bored to sa tives of all teams still figuring enth. Kurowski pulled the Birds for outs. when they poliSh The first th-ree games will be man (12-12) vs. Kentl.l!dy (5-l4) Webb. 2b ._ ...... 4 2 2 o L~, p ...... 1 0 1 o th ~ee tal at Yoke the two pennant races. . to within one of a tie In the eighth oft the unfinished business Satur· WALDORF HUNTS held in the city of the American Only games scheduled. Cramer, cf ._ ...... 3 1 1 a Nieman- ••••••• n ••••••• 1 a 1 o his condil t< The major league season ends when' he doubled and came home a day, the Cubs will drop another EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) - Coach league winner and the next three od ' single. ;lork. lb ...... 5 1 1 o Hutchings, p ...... 0 0 0 boss of Ja L:rnn Wa,dorf of Northwestern Sept. 30. Chandler, checking his in the park of the National league Cullenbine, rf ...... 3 0 1 o Aderholt •• ______. 1 0 1 o game in the vital lo ss column. -.I university yesterday continued his call!ndal'. said that he thought Oct. champion. If a seventh game is New York AS R H E Mierkowicz, If ...... 3 0 0 o Hendrickson. p ...... 1 0 0 o Cards Have Tie search foi' seven starting linemen 2 would be "about the right time" required, the site probably will be Maier. 3b ...... 3 0 1 1 Logan, p ...... 0 0 0 a After yesterday's contes~ , Ib~ ,Da,'I,' I'l as he ran his Wildcats through al­ to begin the championship series. determined by the ' flip of a coin. Rucker, cf ...... _. 3 o o o Chisol Defeat RichardS, c _._._. __ .... __ 3 0 1 o Cubs have 19 to play and SI. r most an hour of tough scrimmage, Hausmann, 2b ... ____ . 3 1 1 o o Total ...... _.... _.. _._36 4 10 1 Louis 18. counting a playoff of a Detroit 'and Washington of the The question of whether the Ott, rf ._ ... __ .. __ __ . __ ... _.. 5 Trout, p ...... 4 0 1 st.\bstituting frequently at every American league and Chicago and world series winner will make a o o o - Batted for Lee in 5th tie with Pittsburgh that has hot IICI In" Gardella. If ... _...... 3 s~ot in the forward wall. When St. Louis of the National league gO-day tour of advanced Pacific 2 1 o Totals .. __. __..... ____ .. 33 5 II 1 •• Batted fo r Hutchin'gs in 7th yet been resched uled by 'pr~l· ' IIIIC-"RO ( he was through, he said that aside may be the only teams represented bases may be answered at this Treadway. If ...... 0 o o o SenatorS, 2to 1 dent Ford Frick. Here again, t~~ , OJI-tnn' ( from Max Morris. veteran left at the preliminary conference meeting. Kluttz. c ...... _...... 3 1 2 o Boston AS R H E Cl1lca,o AS a H E B1rds actually are better off tHiI.n The sche( end, he still was uncertain as to Berres. c ______. __ ._. ____ a o o o --~------....!-- the offiCial standings show.' on WSUI is Lake. ss _... __ .: __ .. _._. ___ . 2 0 0 3b ...... 5 1 2 what line he could use when the zimmerman, 1b ..... 4 1 2 1 WASHINGTON (AP)-A two- 0 Hack. It may well come down to the over the Redskin! Win ...... _ 4 1 o season opens. Chuck Hagmann. a Kerr. S5 ...... , ...... 3 o 1 1 run ninth-inning rally pulled out Bucher, 3b ...... 4 0 0 0 Hughes, 2b 0 five remai ning meetings of . ttie , This schel CHI C AGO (AP) - Halfback ...... Lowrey, ...... 5 o freshman, was giving Steve Ben­ Reyes. 3b .. _..... _...... 4 a 3 a a tense 2-1 victory for Chlcag()'s Metkovich. 1b 4 0 0 0 If 0 0 o two contenders to decide the ~~ news, book Frank Akins of the Washington Johnson. If ... __ .___ .. ___ 3 0 0 0 CavartC!tta, lb' ...... _ 4 2 3 nett, last year's regular, a run Maglie, p ...... __ .... _ 3 o o o White Sox yesterday and dealt o sue. Chicago has been able to triin and several Red'skins raced 49 yards to set up Williams Gels crip~ling LaZOr. rf ...... _...... _. d for one \ackle posit.ion, while A. Adams. p ._ .. _._._ ... 0 o o o Washington's S-enators a 3 0 1 0 Patko, ...... 4 1 3 ~ the world champiOhs only fodr day. Westi Hansen. who played at Yale his own winning touchdowrl last blow in the American league pen- McSride. cf ...... 3 0 0 0 Nicholson, rf ...... _... 3 I 1 times In 17 attempts. Tltree onbe exhibition with the Chicago Bears Telalll ...... 31 5 10 Z nant race. Newsome,2b ...... 3 0 1 0 Secory' ...... -...... •..... 0 0 a WWNEe last year and was transferred to Holm. c __ __ _.- ._ ... __ ._ .. _. o contests still to be played , ar~ Northwestern under the ROTC night in a national football league The de~eat dro~ped the Seha­ 2 0 0 0 Schuster-- ...... 0 0 0 scheduled under the Sportsm~n's 8:00 Mor! at soldier field. Washington won Release Today St. Louis o AB' R H Ii: tors two full games behind the Steiner, ...... 1 p~ogram, and Bob Achisaon, an­ c 0 0 0 G llles pie. c ...... 3 0 1 o park arclights Sept. 18-19-20'aAd 8:15 Musi 14-7. ------0--0-.0 leading 'who shut Woods. p _.. __ .... _.... _.. 2 0 0 a Sauer -_ ...... 1 0 1 8:30 New other freshman, were fighting for Bergamo, rt ...... -.. --- 4 out Boston's Ret! Sox. 5-0. -.. o the fi nal two are set for Wrigley the other tackle berth. GREAT LAKES, ILL. (t\:P)­ Hausmann, p ... __ .... _ 0 0 0 0 Merullo, ss· .... __ ...... 3 0 0 8:45 Prog Crouch. II .. -- .. -- ... ----. a 0 ~ 0 J 0 h n Niggeling. W,pshlngtoh o field Sept. 25 and 26. began to shal?e up with the enthus- Lieut. Comdr. Rollie Williams. Un­ Camilli, ...... 1 0 0 0 Borowy, p ...... 4 0 1 o _==::::::::::::::::::=::==:;::::::= 8:55 Serv iasm of two freshman starters- iversity of Iowa basketball (''Oach young·.. • .. -...... 0 0 1 0 knuckleballer. pitched superbly Barrett, p- ...... 0 0 0 0 9:00 Afte lIIini Preps Dave Shaw of Indianapolls at on military leave and athletic di- Scllbendienst. )f ...... 4 a a a until the njnth in an old-fashioned -. Total ...... 18 5 13 • BOX OFFICE OPEN 1:15-t:f$ 9:15 Spor CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP)-Coach right halfback'and Bob Demoss of rector here will be discharged to­ E: Adams. cf ...... 5 0 3 ~ duel with Thorntoh Lee, big Chf- T6tabl ...... %1 II ! o . Batted for Nicholson in 9th 9:30 A L, Ray Eliot of the University of Dayton, Ky.. at quarterback - day. Kurowski. 3b ... --..... 5 I 1 1 cago southpaw. and had a 1-0 vic- • Batted for Hausmanrt In 8th .. Ran for secory in 9th ' 9:t5 New Sanders, Ib ... --.. --.---. 3 0 a a tory almost within his grasp. Iltlnclls continued Hgllt' workouts being stabilized by veterans Ed iam's departure, the office and title Detroit 000 002 300-5 ••• Batted for Gillespie in 9th qm;tljji 10:00 Hel here yesterday as the Illini pre- Cody, fullback, and Bill Canfield, of athletic director at Great LakeS Verbano 2b ...... 4 0 2 Niggeling walked Wally Mose'il Boston 000 000 000-0 Boston 000 020 200-4 10:15 Yes pared f()r thl!.Ir opefilng game with left halfback. would be abolished. Thete dutles KleIn. 5S .... -... -.. -.-.... 4 2 a 0 to open CHicago's last turn at bat Chicago 021 010 001- 5 TARTS TODAY "END~ vorites Rice, c -.-- .. -.-- .. -.- .. -.--- 2 0 1 0 and that led to his un!1olng as the Pitt here sept. 22. ,.Eliot confined will be absorbed by the office of • 10 :30 Th~ Rebel·" .-...... 1 1 0 Sox played smart to score ~is drills to signal running and physical training and recreation. Pirates Take Both 11:00 Mru fundamentals. Georgi! Sibbons. Hoosiers Find Place-Kicker Crumbling. c ...... 0 a 0 0 tWice with the aid of only one hit. LAST "Tholle Endearlnt' 11 :30 Les i25-polmd fUllba¢k 'Prospect. was BLOOMINGTON. Ind. (AP) _ ' W!~iarrls will retur~ to .the Unl- Marion·"'· .---... --- .. -.-. 0 1 0 a Bill Mueller ran for ~oses and G~m.s of Twin 8111, 11 :45 Far D'AYI inove~ from ' fullback to ' center While tile Indiana grid:stcl's re- ve~'sl y of Iowa but dId not know Docklhs, p -- ...... ---.-- .. 0 a 0 0 stole secOnd . He remained there 5-4, 5-1, Witt.· Phits Younr Charnts" 12 :00 Rh: Hurin tlte workout. I Jfeai'sed their jobs of covering the I wh~ther he would take ~p hiS old Jtlrisich, p .- ...... 1 a 0 a as Nlgge1ing tossed out Floyd 12:3t Ne, I I _, __. ~i~~er and punt plays. Coach Bo d~tles. the n a v y announcement Garms ...... 1 a 0 a Bakel'. Niggeling deflected John BOX MnCf! OPEN" 1:15-tO:00 PITTSBURGH (AP) - The l2 :45 Rei McMiUin noted the place-kicking said. Byerly. p .-... -... -...... 0 a a a Dickshot's smash into center field 1:00 Musi Gophets Il!.lIigh Gear .ability of newcomer Charles Arm.: Partenhelml!r, p -.. -. 0 0 0 0 and Mueller scored. Plttst)urgh Pirates strengthened their hold on fourth place yester­ %:to New Mltl~PJA:POLI~ ~tJ')-Bernj!! strong. The Evansville tackle is RoPt'. 1'( ...... 2 1 1 0 As Dickshot stole second, Fred ENGLERT 2:10 Sign lerman thr~w hlsl'4mnesota foot'- d~stined to' fill Johnny Tavener's day by wihning both ' games of a _rooklyn, Cincinnati Totals ...... _.... _.... _.... 36 6 9 1 Vaughn failed to cover the bag and doubleheader with th e f'hiladel­ aU passers Into, high gear ye:ster- shoes as the Hoosiers' point-aHer- Rick Ferrell's throw went Into NETW( f:r ay, botl1 0l,fensiv'eJy and defen-. touch€lown Brtist. • • • Batted fol' Jurisich in 5th ptiia Phlliles, 5-4 and ~-l. , • short centerfield. Gh torres re­ the first B!1me went 10 innings .ively. JnJurles benched ~wo ve~- ' QpaFterback ~ick Lyoshil' was Divide Doubteheader •• Batted fol' Rice in 7th trieved and his throw to third hi t Jack Kirl ~rans, H()Ckey Mealey' and ~I1'II added to the string of fullbacks as ... Batted for Crumbling In pth with Bob Elliott driving in Jack Lucia Tn ----I Dickshot on the shoulder. Barrett with the winning run after }1cMa~us. ' . replacements for John Cannady. .... Batted tor Crouch in 9th . Gtly Cllrtrlght dumped a buht (WHO: CIN('JNNATr (AP)LBrooklyn a , a sacrifice, a sec­ The Grai Bear~ng the brltrtt ot the vlgOl'- still among the injured. New York ...... _.022 001 000-5 down the third base line and Dlck­ and Cincinnati conclUded their Lou.is ...... ,._ ...... 000 010 212-6 ohd walk anp an error had {illel'! (KXEI OUs scnmmage session wet;e I'Red': season's business. yesterday all st. shot raced home with the wlnning Williams, Bob Casper tnd Ken the bases. Cltllrle:y Schanz wenf farent. the latter a 29-year-old Mlchl~~n Line Light square at 11 decisions apiece after run. the route for the PhUs. Ken Jack Sml discharged .vetefan from foley, ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)-' splitting a doubleheader in which ()Qbles, who started for the Pi­ News of Chlcaco AB R H E plu_ POPEYE Minn., whQ Bierrrlan s~id is show- Gre"t J;.akes' 200-pound line is al- tne Dodgers stormed back to take rat9$. went out for a pinch-hitter H. R. GI' Ing _~r(Jffi!se in· back positions. most a cinch to carry a weight the second tilt. 11-6. after losing OftoYogei Moses. rf . __ . 0-.. _ _ _ . _ .. _ _ 3 a a o In the ninth artd Xavier Rescigno, "To... In the at, Top" (KXEI r edge. OVi!r Michigan Saturday in the opener, 5-4, in 10 .innings. Mueller. rf .... ____ .... _. 0 1 o o his rellj!f. was the winner. , the nation'~ first major football Joe Bowman scattered 10 Dod­ Brker, 3b .... :...... 4 o o 1 In -the second game, Charley 'iSLE OF TABU EUery Q. Bucke~ Ex~rlment . game of t~e season. Yesterday'S ger hits in the opener won by AI Dlckshot, Lf ...... 4 1 3 o Sproull held the Corsairs scoreless "Musleal" News, M COLUMBUS, .Ohlo tAP) Wolverine drill indicated that Libke's single with the basC'':; O~ofNan Curtright. cf ...... _ 3 o o o untll ·the eighth when they got to Old You Ohio State unlv~rsity's Buckeyes, Coach H. O. (Fritz) Crisler has lo,ded in the first overtime fl·alne. Michaels. ss . __ . ___ .... _ .. o o o him and his successor, Anton -LATEST NEWS teveling, in crisp pre..s e a son ~etUed on 175-pound Harold Watts Cincinnati had rallied to tie the Nagel, Ib ..... _...... 3 o o Ellery Q. ",eathe~, . expet'intent~d with two' 81;- Michigan's starting center and score in the seventh inninJ on Lieut. Cmdr. Otto Vogel. base­ I!eynolds, 2b ...... _..... 3 o 1 o Karl,Max for Butcher, five tames who. relieved Ei- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Ic- News. H. new plays yesterday and put extra lBO-pound Dom Tomasi and lB7- sl,lccessive 'homers by Eddie Miller ball coach at the University of Tresh, c . __ ... __ . __ . ___ .... _ 1 o o O win (Preachl!r) Roe In the eighth Preferrec dttention on timing and nssign- pound Jobn Lintol as the guards. and AI Lakeman ofi Art Hetl-i\\g. Iowa now on leave of absehce. has Appling- ...... _.. _.. \. 1 o o o got credit for Ole vIctory. although ~enl8. . Wl1ttf and Libtol both earned let­ Miller's clout came With a man been discharged from the navy, Castlno. c ...... 0 o o o Resclgno-' .galn finished. The Sain T Coach Cllrro~ Wldao~. anxious ters last year as centers. Tomasi on base. Augie Galan had fo~r the Associated Preas IBid last Lee. p ...... _...... 2 a o o By driving In two runs In the Mr. and tb 5 a Ii e his practice-battered is Ii treshJJ.lan. · • , safeties, including a double and night. Lopat...... _... _. __ ._ .... I first lame,' Bob Eltiott ran his Lum 'n J a o o Stana JquaCl, stresSed' contact wdrk in the . . . triple. for the losers. Vogel, who's teams won high Johnson. p ... .'.. _..... __ 0 o o o runs-batted-in for the season to TO .. DAY *'orn'1ng session ' onry. ·· , . - . .. Hal Gregg failed to 11\3t throuW,1 recognition In Bi, Ten cIrcles, has Ibi, the thl\'d year in successlon , A NEW 8IRRWCK HOLMES The Sain T In individual exploits, Freshman Guard. Act" to B_drer 8*re""h the second inning of'the lin ale but been statioru;d at St. Mary's Navy l0tal• . _._... __ ..... _. .. _... 29 " 1 h\! hilll gone over the cen tury Mr. and ~ex Verdova Vil'tUally held his . ~ADISON, Wis. (AP)-The a~­ Cy Buker finally came on to si­ Pre-llIght s~hoo1 ' at S~. Mary's col­ Batted for Tresh in 8th • mark. "TM:HOUSE George} OWn with 1309 Dove the Bucks' aee Ii.ltlop of a pair of guard candl­ lence th~ Reds while his mates lege in C.1ifoi'hla. •• Batted .for Lee in 8th of *ck~r. "anll •th~ ~am ·alkd wet- . li8~ to the University of Wiscon­ collected 15 assorted blows off FIn' Gam~ FEAR" Dr. Chr!! c!omed to its ranlts quarterback Al sin footb~ll squad y~sterday ralsed three Red Hurlers. Four-run Out­ \fuh1na1o.n AB a H E Phlladelphill - Gay Mrs bursts in the fifth and sixth when 8et. New aecord --~------...... 002 020 000 0-4 9 2 ~itsos. a Columbus product, just the Badger squa~ to 46 and gave 4 MI'iii ••' !· ,." fishing a r\l~l,Irn~Q, frQm two-y~ar service Coach Hatty Stuhldreher reason the Brooks collected nine at their NEW YORK (AP)-Thomas T. Case. If ...... 4 0 1 0 Pl~tsburlh- (KXEI 1 -. With thi marlrtes '. .' I 1orlSelie'4tini his forward wall will hUs. doomed the home club. ,.I Mott's floating isle set a new track Lewis. rf .. :--- .. -...... 4 · 0 0 0 .. . _.... _...... 300 010 090 1-5 ,6 1 -. -"ODED record today . . be-an' ImJ)rovement over last year's First Game . In capturing the Kreevich, 'cf ..... :...... 2 0 0 Schanz and Seln!t\lck; Gables, BACK TO DOUBLE THE FUN I Dr. Chrlt Iin~ . . Brooklyn .. 101 000 200 0-4 10 2 $7,1100 added Glendale steeple­ Kuhel, 1b ...... 4 0 O. 0 Re8ci~no arid Salkeld. Gay Mrs Purdue en Pass DefelllMl chase handicap at ~queduct. Clift, ab ...... 4 0 II 0 I t The new men are John Isen­ Cincinnati 100 000 300 1~5 10 2 I 1OI11O'~~ ... Flshlng B LAFAYETTE. Ind. (AP) berger, an army dischargee w~ Buker, Herring and Sandlock; Handled prefectly by Georlle Vaughn, 2b . __ _...... _... " 1. 2 1 BecoIid Q. (KXEr Coach Cecil Isbell put his Purdue play~d one year at the Unlvers~ty Bowman and Lakeman'. Walker, boaUn, Isle caulht up tet ,'errell" c ...... : 3 • 0 1 0 Pplladelphla- , . • . AlAMo,. 1 ~IOU. squad through a lengthy drill on of Texas, and Erwin Christians 01 Second Game W. H. LIslscomil's Mercator at the Torres, S8 ...... 3 0 1 0 .. :-.-...... \ 000 001 000-1 9 0 NlggelJng. p ...... a 0 0 0 Plttsburlit-' Fronk 81 pass defel13e yesterday In prepara­ WaUsau. Wis. Brooklyn __.. 020 144 000-11 15 · 2 17th and last jump of the two and Wcdnesd tion Iol' the Reoson'f oPener with Stuh~dreher sent hlR squlld CincJnnnti .. 2:10 ]00 000- 0 0 , 2 a half mile race alld went. on 10 ._. __ .. :.... _._ .... 000 000 ' 01»:- 11 R 0 iAV 'AVO"rr - - Curtain 1 Marquette here a week from Sat­ through ' a heavy workout as 'he Greg. King. Buker' and Dan~ win b~ a heat! in 4:511 /15. The .... o~ ...... ~J 1 8 1 Sproul\. Kat!' anc\ SPlngel, Man­ 11.010'" , urday. sought a smoOth working ba~k- tonlo; Fox, Modak, Carter and old course mark of 4:59 was set by Chicago ...... ~O .000 002~2 cu,o; B~~"e!" It~cl,,"o, Roc and .... ,•••••• 'tlttI,. .possib16 bllclfield combInations fle1l1 comblliatlon. : Lakeman. Corrljan In June, 1943 • Washin,ton ...... 000 boo 100-1 Lopez, Salkeld. w ! --"-_,. - . - . •••,0-. ,-1 # ..,...... • \. ( T H & D A J L Y lOW A N, lOW A -CITY, lOW A PAGE FIVE ---=~====~~~--~======~======--~-~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~======~~~======~~=m======-==-==~ Japan would be allowed to retain !!Quipped ,roups, incapable of MacArthur yesterday ordered 40 CAP 'FW Sick h,y sufficient heavy industry to re­ United adlon at 11110&1 where important Japanese held for ques­ Insecticide Drinker I WEDS FOR THE nyELFTH TIME (Continued from page 1) build the nation themselves, but Utey were IIlOIJt IOrel), aee4ed. tioning. SuHers 'Hangover' To Des Hotne that this would be controlled to • • • Ten members of the cabinet ark. Ohio. of the flral medJc~1 MoiRes I the extent that war industries The general said that J apanese which helped the former dictator •PITTSBURGH (AP) - J ames• would be completely wiped out. army suppUes were so low troops plunge Nippon into war with the Satira aCCidentally drank some ...... rd. First cavalr,. John-­ DES MOINES (AP) - Three­ He said destruction in Tokyo could not ' have been fed six United States . were among the DDT, the army's magic insecti­ lOll WIll lite 'IrAt &0 treu Toio. year -old Michael D(ehl, for whom ranking personages ordered de­ elvU all' patrol pilots made a convinced him Japan did not have months hence. cide. and that's why he had a • • • tained. "hangover" yesterday. mercy flight to Rochester, Minn., enough war industry left In this He is completely unimpressed Johnson said that 'rojo doubt­ area to build a musket. Steady expansion of the occupa­ Mistaking DDT for water he esSly intended to kill himself ate well and then went promptly with the potentialilies of Samurai J apan's rise to take the leader­ tion zones continue. It was an­ gulped more than four ounces of it. uickly. but that the gun was to sleep upon his return horlte last and feudal systems. declaring that ship in trade in the Orient cannot nounced that two more landings Doctors pumped out his stomach lightly mlsaimed. The bullet went night, his mother, Mrs. Lyle the latter is doomed to deteriorate be prevented even if it is desired, would be made shortly. The Un­ and assurred him he would be all rough Tojo's body. Diehl, reported. until it leaves counts and other Ja­ the general said. He made it clear ited States 81s.t infantry division right. Lyillg on a stretcher and bun­ She said her son "stood the trip panese nobles holding honorary that the confinement of the nation was scheduled to go ashore at Ao­ ('It tasted like hot water," Sa­ led securely in an American army wen." titles as in Britain. mori. Northern Honshu, abo u t to her four ;home islands will pre­ Ura said. "And then my throat aliket because he was sutferlng T)Je CAP offered its aid after With the return of defeated and Sept. 23. A few days later the Un­ began to burn, but I kept calm. My physicians said ' Michael cou Id not vent her reconstruction as a lead­ discredited J apanese arl'Tl(Y and from Shock. the former dictator ing war power. ited States 77th infantry division eyes became blurred and I began was simply a short, shaven headed stand the trip from a Rochester navy personnel to civilian lile and the ninth corps headquarters to shake all over and today I hospital patient. hospital to Des Moines by train • • • under an unparalleled blow of de­ will land at Otaru. on Hoitkaido, Enlar,lng on milltar:r possi­ have a hangover-like feeling." He was t90 weak to move hlm­ or automobile. feat, the general recalled an adage the northernmost .home island. bilities in the future, he said that i!l!lf. Pain rippled across the stern Col. Don C. Johnston and Capt. familiar to the world of sports: Demonstrations mea nw h i I e ,.y [ace and periodically he C. L. Rutherford, Oskaloosa, flew never In history was an army "They never come back." broke out in -Seoul, the Korean 9,438 Planes Destroyed dealt such a deleat. lie admJtted pinched his eyes shut and drew Rutherford's plane to Rochester capital, with Koreans protesting Japan stili had men In rreat A R d' U 40 By Eighth Air Force I his mouth into a sharper line. and picked up Michael and his numbers. but pointed out that rmy oun In9 P the American announcement that None of his relatives no r" hench­ father. Japanese oUiciais would be left in manpower was absolutely lnef- Japs for Questioning LONDON (AP)-United States _ WIIS present as American The boy is ill with chronic ne- office to carry out directives of eighth air foret! command head­ fectlve because the men were In TOKYO (AP)-Tillplening the , GI'll carried him from the house. phritis, Johnston said. ,. Lieut. Gen. John R. Hodge, com­ quarters in Britain said last night PreSent were only foreigners-of- II m a II. Ineff~ . a~~I ~cupatlon grip on Japan General manding the occupation for c e s that their fighter groups of that 1 fleers and men of the victorious there. airforce, which (ought in Europe , army and American correspond­ MACARTHUR- General MilcArthur 0 I' d e re d under Lieut. Gen. James H . • ~ts. (Continued from page 1) Genel'al Hodge to replace all Jap­ Doolittle, destroyed 9,438 enemy \ \ . . . anese in governmental positions as planes during the war. A few JIPlnese stood to one eventuality should there be an rap i d) y as po sible "consislant An additional 464 were listen .we. IDllludlnr a quartet of outpreak of violence. with the saiety of operations." as probably destroyed, and 4,642 in their aewspapetmen and one or two 3. The complete disarmament, Although the J a pan e s e were were damaged. toeal officers wlro were busy demobilization and return to their "only working lor the Americans," The announcement said exactly ~lnl I repor t on the Incident. homes of all Japanese mlljtary the Koreans massed in protest. 3,000 fighters were iost by the MARRIED for the 12th tJme. Arthur Adel&rd duPont.. known .. • • • perSlADE CO .• NEW YORK a half." Dr. W. Paul 01 the college of States the sum of $6,000,000,000." ·: tol and Linn streets-but 'still ver~ity's physics-engineering de­ motorists their cars parked all-night ga.rages. Others say that velopment project accentuated the The Houston left Panjong Priok medicine at the university will be "This Is not a loan to relieve le~ve General Nelson Wins after dark on the day following the speaker at Lions club meeting to- starving peaople, or suifering hu­ "between 2 8. m. and 6 B. m .. " even if these facilities were L f M . A d housing shortage. 'in this area despite the signs. available, many travelers woulet 0 battle of the Java sea, intending day. The s.ubject of his discussion manity or to defeat a Hitler," Cur- egion ent war About the rent control, De Reu to pass through the strait under will be "Diabetes Melli lus." tis declared. "The purpcse of this Maps of the restricted area insist on leaving their cars parked said that he hoped that inequali­ cover of darkness. exploitation ot the Amerlcan tax- ties in rents could be wiped out I have been posted in all stores and on the street in front of their WASHINGTON (AP) _ Brig. During the night a report was payer is to furnish funds so that other conspicuous places but still hotel. soon. Rent control ceilings went Marria~e license I City patrolmen tind it necessary Some visitors to the city would Gen. Morris R. Nelson, formerly received the cruiser had made A marriage licen;;e wa s Issued the English government can buy into effect here in December, 1944, contact with an enemy force off yesterday by the clerk of the dis- the Bank of England, their mines .to place tickets on some cars rather pay a one dollar fine for of Corydon, and San Antonio, with all rents fixed at the Jan. I, I Tex., received the legion of merit St. Nicholas point on the coast Itriel court to James Butler and and their railroads." .every night. street storage than go to the in- 1944, level. of Java. There all information Laura Mae Lehman, both of West The long awaited Anglo-Ameri- The street cleaning equipment convenience of parking their car yesterday for his services as com­ "Landlords who had had sev- about the ship's fate ended. And Branch. can economic conference opened and practices of the city have also in a parking lot or even drive a mander of the 305th fighter wing no word came from any of its - in the slll-te department' vaulted, come in for some criticism. These block farther and park it on an in the Mediterranean area from personnel until almost nine month~ where they were landed at Moul- gilt-columned conference ro~m critics say that the equipment is unrestricted street, these <;ritics September, 1944, to May, 1945. later when a Japanese shortwave meiD. across the street from the White not efficient and that the streets maintain. Sherman Conrad Gets General Nelson, the citation broadcast was heard purporting to Railroad Construction House. In the absence of Secre- are not cleaned and flushed as There seems to be a feeling said, took part in 11 combat mis­ Of often as they should be. _ around the city hall that even come from one of her ollicers. In Burma they were joined to a tary State Byrnes, now in Lon- sions and "deliberately chose cer­ No Parking Lots though giving ' warning tickets Appointment to Bard Insufficient Evidence crew of some 60,000 prisoners as- don, Assistant Secretary of State tain dangerous and difficult mis­ The navy, however, did not feel signed to construction of a rail- Clay.lbn he~ded. the American d~l­ Part of the problem, .according would not solve the problem, that sions . . . in order to gain first to some civic thinkers, is that poliey would be conductive to the Sherman Conrad, formerly of then there was sufficient evidence road from Burma into Siam e~ahon whlch mcluded secretaries hand information." The citation the University of Iowa English de­ to change the status of her crew (Thailand). Of 368 survivors who VlOson of the treasury and Wal- La Iowa City has no parking lots good will felt toward Iowa City added that by frequent personal near the business district and no in the surrounding territory. partment, has been apPOinted as from missing to prisoner. reached Burma. he said, 69 died 11~a~c~e.o~r~co~mim~e~r~ce~.••• ~._~~~~~!~!!~!~~ I visils to all sections and units of an instructor in English at Bard Liuet. (J.G.) Harold S. Hamlin of malnutrition during the year ~ his wing, General Nelson created college, Annandale-on-the-H u d­ Jr., of Orlando, Fla., whose wife spent on the railroad construction "an efficient and coorcijnated son, N. Y. lives in Honolulu, said the ship job. THE END OF THE ROAD TO TOKYO fighting force." Conrad received his AB degree was the victim of both enemy gun Lieutenant Hamlin said the General Nelson has been chief from Harvard university in 1933 fire and torpedoes. It was lost ROl,lston survivors were abl to of the policy group in G-I (per­ and took one term in the Harvard only after it had exhausted prac- keep fairly well informed on the sonnel) of the War department Theological school the following tically all of its heavy ammuni- progress of the war lhrough sur­ general staff since June 28. year. He received his MA degree tion and had little left but star reptitious radios in the prison from the UniverSity of Iowa in shells. camp. Two British officers, he 'BOYS' University of Chicago 1943. Survivors were in the water said. were discovered with a for­ Since 1934 Conrad has pub­ from three hours to three days, bidden radio and were beaten to Man Wins Farm. lished poems and criticism chiefly he said, and many made their way death when it was found . Association Prize in the book section of the Brook­ to the Java shore where they be- The group. which new here lyn Eagle. In 1940 he came to come prisoners. from Calcutta, India, looked sur- here's why you will like a About six weeks were spent in prisingly health considering their WASHINGTON (AP) - The Iowa City in order to study and a filthy pail in the mtle town of experiences, but Hamlih explained I American Farm Economic associa­ teach. tion announceCilast night award of Bard college is a co-educational Surong, he said, and then they that those who suUered most did I college of liberal arts and science were transferred to Batavia. Sub- not survive the ord{!al of 1943. , DAILY IOWAN a $5,000 first prize to William R. sequently they were transferred For the past 18 months, he said. Nicholls of the Universtty of Chi­ about 100 miles north of New cago economic department for his York City. to Singapore, and then to Burma, rations had been fairly decent. paper in a contest on ways of ------~------dealing with post war farm prob­ ROUTE··· ch. lems. FIRST YANKS TO FLY OUT OF JAP PRISON CAMPS un.11» Nicholls urged the rejection of' po_ the so-called "parity" yardstick and for measuring "equitable" farm 1. You don" have to collect pro~ pric&s. Instead, he suggested that the government underwrite a high on a Daily Iowan route. Me level of employment to provide a sian good market for farm products. ing 1. - Agricultural returns from this 2. You are guaranteed a 8Upp market in times of unemployment ufacl should be supplemented, Nicholls good salary PLUS bonus' for even said, by "compensatory payments" at we to farmers. Under Nicholla' plan, efficient work. UBI. farm prices would be left to the hone free play of supply and d~mand . 3. A few minutes e a c h the S4 Second award of ,2,500 was move made to D. Gale Johnson, also of morning and you are through ernm. the economics department of the University of Chicallo, and third for the day. feste!:" award of ,1,250, went to Frederick atM] V. Waugh, of the office of recon­ the \'"! version, Washinrton. ' . blBic The awards were made at a din­ iean ner given by the association. a tre- Chester Davis, president of the (a1l4191 ForA F'ederal Reserve bank at St. Louis Eo. and former war tood admlnlatra­ ( tee, tor, was chairman 6f tbe commit­ toa tee of judies. Itnt. .)!teen awards of ,2110 each Daily Iowan Roule BrU. were made, one to Geoffrey Shep­ W&rII , Mil. GIN. WILLIAM C. CHASE, commandlnr general ot the famous herd, Ames. Firat Cavalry dlvlalon, leads his men, top photo, 'U they proudly hal'dl parade In Tokyo, the goal of their battles acron the Paclftc. Power­ tr, ~ ful tank destroyers of the dlvlalon are shown jn the lower photo al Leaves for College . ItA Dandy School Boy's Job" .. they join In the victorious march which cllmaxu the long and Jeanne Murray, daullhter o~ Mr. ClOWDID HAPPILY ON the whlte-croas-marked J~p "Betty" plane abovt) are the first American Navy 110' arduous "Road to Tokyo." The men of the Flrllt participated In the and Mrs. Walter Murray, 927 E. and Marine Corp. prtlonen of war to be flown ou t of Japan by lhe U. S. Naval Air Tran.port eerv­ Ilmple lIag railing ceremony before Tokyo's U. S. embassy that College street, left Monday eve­ ice. The plan. uled to \ranaport the I!berated prtloners to Guam on the flrat Ie, of their flight to the marked Gen. Douglu MacArthur' I arrival In the Japanese capital. ning for South Bend, ]nd., where U. 8. il the Arne flown by the IUrrender envoYI to Ie Shima en route to Manila lo meet MacArthur'l Oll1clal U. B. Army SIJ!I\l Corpl radiophotos. (Illternatiollal) she will eriter St. Mary', colleJe aldel. Thil photo wu ta'ken at KiAruu, a Jap Navy field 22 mUel fronl Tokyo. Thll I. an omclal 1- .--- - .. . of Notre Dame al a freshman. United Btat.. Navy Air Trana~r~ Service. !~otorraph. (lnt,rnltiona' So_undp~~.t~ "

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