t~, 1940 ., ~

Mioland Win, Cloudy, Rain te Takes Amerlcan Derby: iI IOWA : MOJJtly cloudy with occa­ GalIabadion Fourth sional fain today and tomorrow; See story on Pare' UUle chan.. e in tempera lure. --lIe 'l_I .• I , C i , y • • Mor"i", lYeN.paper 100 FIVE CENTS IOWA CITY, IOWA SUNDAY, AUGUST 11, 1940 VOLUME XL NUMBER 267

'er, Gib. -­drlvlnt d to PI, eatnolllll 1Yenienee ICed as I injUries hosPital s Whi~. Gn he !gligellCe, Ir agree. Important Proje~ts Enhance Prep,aredness Program Here; Olhel'8 May Be on the Way- lion ex. rt Wheeler Challenges Supporters ~ ot the led to I To Submit to Vote of People was Per. S~ V.l. Departments ,Line ·Up With Defense Preparations some ot Ind ""ill BY GENE CLAUSSEN _ Other departments also have portun) ty to enter the rerular is successlul, one of the most Prof. H. L_ Rietz, head of the "We also have the lacilities and Expre files Conviction That Popular Sentiment Ind men. Associated Press Correspol\deni offered their facilities for student army flying corps training sctrools. serious problems will be solved. mathematics department, expects olJportunHies," Dean Dawson says, Is Against Compul ory Training; The hospital has sent supplies II large increase in the number 'for giving part-time training to The University of Iow(l is,wast- training in defense directlons. The Vn~ve('sity hospital, ~hich has of blood with the local nation,l Of. ~tude nts taking trigonometry Iothers if the federal government Would ,.uve Te t in November petitions iog nOltime in setting its ?epart- college of engineering and th e gained national . prominence for ruard unit for use at maneuvers aud college aljebra this fall. and educational authorities de­ 1 a pub~ ments ,in line with the national. mathematics department have al- its work on blood storllle, ill one at Camp Ripley, Minn., to the Niwi,ation, exterior ballistics and sIre." WASHINGTON, Aug. 10, (AP)-A challenge to support­ Gne-half defense program, which is daily ready begun prePBfations to alter of lour Institutions nemed by the P.c1fic coast and back by air, astronomy courses are also ex- The university R. O. T. C. unit ers of the Burke-Wadsworth compulsory military training gathering momeptum and which their courses for the faH term national resell'rch councll of the and to various parts of the state peeted to receive enrollment oHers another important part in bill to submit the que tion of conscription to a referendum IY Attys. may affect thousands of -college in ibis direction. army to carry out research work and back by truck and automo- boosts due to their intimate re- the defense move. Here stUdents vote of the people was voiced today by Senator Wheeler :Shill o! students either directly or indi­ The government recently called relating to the storage ot blood bile. lationship with mllitary science. may receive military training and (D-Mont), a leader of senate forces opposing the measure. 1e Plain- rectly this fall. back 10 of the students who flO­ for transfusions. Civic leaders have also telt Specialized courses will be . tIll pursue their college activi- Contending that popular sentiment definitely was against Two of the most important de­ ished their primary flight train­ Modern mechani;ted warfare has the defense urge and have sent open to 200 students in the col- ties. )f the compulsory military fense projects being carried out ing this spring to take advanced created new problems for me­ a request to the national govern- liege of engineering this lall. training bill Is passed It Is quite drafting young men into the army, Wheeler said that those who believed in the compulsory method ought to be willing It the resent time are the ci viI work. Forty-five men are erl­ chanical unit!l----{)ne of them the ment asking that Iowa City be I Work in aeronautics and me- likely that the R. 0 _ T. C. head­ aeronautics authority flying pro­ gaged in the summer primary task of keeping medical assist,­ made a strategic defense point in chanlcal eogineering, designed to I quarter here would take care of to test the popularity of their views at the polls in the N()­ aram and the research work by cour~_ . It is indicated that 'Upon Mce abl'east of rapidly advancing the nation by enlarging the local fit students for mechanized war- I the training ot all men enrolled vember general election. University hospital on the trans­ completion of the advanced train­ troops in scattered' regions. alTport, making it a protectorate Itare will be expanded, Dean F. in the university and perhaps re­ "If the proponents of conscription feel that it i necessary portabiIJty of blood. ing the students will have an op- It the experimental work here ol the Rock Island, IlL, arsenal. M. Dawson decla.res_ I cruits trom surrounding territory. to have the draft to democracy, as they repeatedly have ----- s '4 they ought to be wiJIing to submit the question to the people because that would be the democratic way. to ascer­ . If • tain the Jlublic viewpoint, · I t Wheeler told reporters. AffICa 3 DIp oma S The practical difficulties of 'Italians Reach Key· Rositions In obtaining such a vote might ! • • • • • • • • • •• ...... ' -----:.----'''-'-----;-----~--- turn From be large but should not be insur­ Re mountable, he contended. De ert Warfare MAP SHOWS LATEST IT ALlAN GAINS Wheeler's challenge came as Britain Believes Invasion Threat Europe' War proponents and opponents of the Burke-Wadsworth measure , pre­ Tempo Speeds pared for resulllPtion in the sen­ Dwindling; Air Attacks Continue Bidtlle From Poland, ate Monday of debate which be­ ... • J • • • • • • • • • • • • In Somaliland ·Gordon From Holland, gan yesterday with a routine ex­ Phillip From Italy Here planation ot the bill by Senator . Briti h Raiders Two New Lookou! INazi Airmen Sheppard (D-Tex) and flared al­ Ouce's Army, Harassed ~vernment StatIons I . NEW YORK, Aug. 10 (AP)­ most immediately into a heated controversy as to whether the Three dJplomats By Airmen, .8ombs United Sta~es was Ukely to be at­ Range' Widely To Be Establi hed IBomb Briti h returned Crom Europe today, by Irrotectorate of Aden tacked In the near future. WA$HlNGTON, Aug. 10, (AP) Mete' PI ' t aY of Bermuda, aboard the Am­ Publlc Sentiment . -Diplomatic lookouts for the lInl ~ erican export liner Excalibur, The Montana senator's confi­ CAIRO, Egypt, Aug. 10, (AP) Over Germany Ion n with 126 other passengers, many -Sirong Italian armored columns, United ' States government will be dent statem&ni that public ,senti­ of whom displayed autographs ment was opposed to conscrip­ harassed a I m 0 s t continuously Last of eptember established soon at Dakar, French Hjfth ComUJ,and Report given them by the Duke and tion was quickly disputed by from the air, advanced through West Alrica, a "jumping ot! Duchess of Windsor. Senator Barkley of Kentucky, the hot w'astelands today on the main Seen as End of Na7.i place" for planes flying trom Eu- German PJanelS Active . The three, Anthony Drexel democratic leader, who said lie rope to South America, and t St. I 0 Fa t ic<:;, Yard Biddle, ambassador to poland; thought the weight of opinion in Brilish positions in British Soma­ Hope for Blitzkrieg ~r William Phillips, ambassador to Plerre-Mique)on, French pos, s­ favor or drafting men would be- liIand' and st.~edJI.P the U!mptt ly'+~ , Jlo< LOriIDON, ' Aug. 10 (AP) Y- lt in to b felt tft!avil" as debate ot tLe desert war by fiercely AJ- sion nit the COllst of Canada.' Isler 1.0 the Netherlands, adhered progressed. ' I bombing the protectorate of Aden. This map shows Italian gaiIle In Atrlca, \vhere D DUce'a legIons III < though nazi warplanes struck with This was disclosed today in D German air 0 ce, bunching day strictly to the state department On the other hand, ::..,"aoor Nye Th British-still, apparently de­ hurling attack!! agalnit British i!!omalllan(l In a. drive directed at renewed ferocity today, BI'itish state department announc ment I a~d .nigM raids on heavily indus­ rule agaillllt ul'lauthorbed inter­ (R-ND), an opponent of conscrjp­ pending upon the impel-sonal ma­ A.den, Britain's protectorate, 1.0 mlle sacrOls ~e Gult 0' A.den, milltary men express beJlef that of changes ordered r cently in I trlaltzed Kent in ou heD t Eng­ views. tion, said he thought that the sen­ lignancy of the desert to cut down the threat of a German blitzkrleg the foreign service. land, was reported today to "av~ To all questions concerning ate debate would build up so many of the invaders as always invasion is dwindling day by day conditions abroad, th y had a po­ much popular opposition to the it has done-were active mainly set off great fires and explosions toward a vanishing point near the lite "0.0 (,"Imm nl" draft that even j[ he and others ~vacuation of Flood R~fugees in some of Britain's biggest 1T'uni­ with their aviation. end of September. Biddie said he had been called oi like views were unsucoessful Counter Attack Mass altacks by power-diving Hess Declares tions and airplane factori and to Washington for consultation in deteating the measure in the 000 successful British ground From 'Rice Bowl' Under Way German bombers, spraying ma­ shipyards. and would 10 there immediately. senate, it would almost certainly action-a counter attack which • chine-gun fire and whistling Invasion Tinte Phillips said he planned to re­ be 'Compromised in the house. pushed the Italians out or Korin­ The munitions work ~ at Fa­ .------b6mb on British coasts nd hip~ versham, the Pobjoy aircrllit fac­ port to the state department early Propo ed CompromIse' dil, on the border of Kenya col­ Removp. in Box Cars ping, caused unstated damage and Has Arrit'ed next week. Barkley said he was opposed ony and Ethiopia-was reported, Britain Admits tory at Rochester and government 5,000 Stricken Persons casualtles. The British, however, shipyards at Sheerness and Chath­ Biddle and Gordon were ac­ to prOpOs d compromises such as however. British headquarters at expressed belief they were pri­ BERLIN, .(\ug. 10, (APP)-Ru· companied by their wives, and that outlined in a substitute bill Nairobi, Kenya colony, announ­ Lo 8 of Twelfth am on the ThQmes were bombed From Inundated Area marily "terror" caids. dolt Hess, Adolf Hitler's deputy heavily, the nazi high command Phillips by his daughter, Beat­ by Senalor Maloney CD-Conn). ced they had taken over the vill­ ---- ' CROWLEY, La_, Aug. 10 (AP) S It b mar i n e Brlti h AUack lor nazi party affairs, declared reported, along with two other rice. The Burke-Wadsworth measure age ph the shadowy frontier after The British, too, kept up their tonight that the German nation would call for the registration of "slig t opposition" and without -Evacuation of flood refugees in ship repair depots in Kent. dogged air attacks on Germany was convinced that "the moment At Newcastle, east coa:st seaport, Remove U, S. Mall about 12,000,000 men 21 to 30 luff ing casualties_ box Cars to nellTby Lafayette LONDON, Aug. ]0 (AP) - The and German-occupied territory. now Is at hand to break England's ~he high command said "great HAMILTON, Bermuda (AP)­ years old, and part of this num­ itary circles said the action, from this inundated southwest MI admiralty announced tonight that The air ministry announced: power even to the ruination of damage" was inflicted on dOCk!!, British censors removed 400 bags ber would be drafted by a selec­ I t ieal minor border episode, Louisiana "rice bowl" city was under way tonight. the submarine Odin wall presumed Silvera I tires started by three the entire empire." while at Bristol, in the southeast, of mail yesterday from the Lis­ tive system. Maloney's bill, how­ Iho not be interpreted as fore­ waves of British bombers at Gurn­ Hess spoke in Vienna concert the airport runway was reported bon-bound American export liner ever, would delay conscription Un- ~ha wing a British invasion of lost. An emergency organization at sey aid rome in German - occupied hall. destroyed. Exochorda, which stopped here_ (See DRAFT, Page 6) Elhl pia. Lafayette, 25 miles away and This was the 12th acknowledged Channel islands; "heavy damAge" Vessel Afire itself drying out after hi g h British submarine loss since the on munitions factories in Ger­ B tish military headquarters waters following days of tor­ war began. many; hangars and anti-airrratl told f heavily bombing the march- rential downpour, sent two trains batteries damaged at German .ca­ Ing talians as they wound through of box cars to remove as many plane base near Brest, FI'ance; ~W:e're Hitting Defense Stride",- F.D ..lt. !Car in Pass just east ot the Ital- as 5,000 persons from Crowley, oU tanks set afire at Flushing, cupied town ot Hatgelsai of . whose 10,000 normal population the Netherlands. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • fal on the harbor at Tobruk, was swelled to 13,000 by nearby Nazis Place The price British defenses have Lib a, in which one Italian ves- residents fleeing flood waters. exacted from the nazi air raiders President Contrast to Europe's Unifonned Dictators ael as set afire and others dam- steve AlltO'rd, Irtate superin- Famine Blame was credited by military observ­ ag ; of successful attacks on gun tendent of police, aSSigned two ers with having turned aside any em lacements Bnd buildings in divisions of his men to Crowley immediate threat or II German at­ Inspects Vi s. lh Red sea port of Massaua, Ital- and two 1.0 La!ayeUe to aid the On BlockaCle tempt to storm t.his island ciUldel ia Eritrea. transfer. either by sca or air. ar to the nol'thwest, Egypt- Water stood two to eight feet Defen$c Units BERLIN, Aug. 10, (AP)- Nazis Destroy 60 Plan th land of the Suez canal and ap- deep except fOl' a stretch along The Britons said thc r ported p ently the grand aJm of Pre- the raidroad right-M-way. lU!­ are prcaing a propagandA cam­ destruction of 60 German planes B 0 S TON, Aug. 10, (AP)­ r Mussolinl's strategy - took [ugees had been crowded into paign designed to place upon the Thursday-about one In sever: of Pre')!iden Iloosevelt asserted to­ ry necessary step to range her school houses aDd OthE... publlc British blockade responsipHity lor tne 4.00 raiders in the great battle day that "we are really getting in­ f' Ming men with Britain's when puildings for two days with Short any !amine when winter how1s over the English channel-was to out st.ri!le" on the $10,000,000,­ e expected Italian invasion (ood and water supplies. down upon thil war-ravaged con- "just a taste," of the medicine 000 defense program_ tnes there. Coast guard boats were bringing they are prepared to eive in- He. told reporter that tact was Tonight, the entire Egypto-ltal- bread and milk to refugees here tinent. vaders. The Britis~ los. were demonstrated On .his inspection . n (rontier was calm. The British and at Gueydan, where hundTeds "Who in England has the right listed at 16. The G rmans main- during the dllY of the Portsmouth, mmunique, for the first time of. persons were stranded, many to speak of the necessity on the tained, how.ever, they .lost only teu N. H., and Boston navy yards and J, week, omitted any mention of them French Acadians who part 01 Hitler to supply relief to planes; against 37 BrItish cr:-aJt. th y senal at Watertown the situation. Military sources speak only their na tive patois. the peoples of the countries he By the end of September, as .,.e.. arm ar , Id, ho~ever, that big ltaUan has occupied?" asked a propagan- protective mantie II! fog should Ma. . oop mdvements had been ob- Italians, Albanians Club ds broadcaster who uses the air Ie!JYelop the islan

HE AND' HIS SHADOW Gone? Sl Where Has the Week :::::::: A ummary of the Big and Little Events of Seven Day • The Battle Lines Le,.gthened tempt 011 thl:! part or Bulgaria, Hungary and Humania to 'etUe theil' boundul'y differences '0 wiftly do ·"ent. happell ill thi' crazy [ touit the II nito-Ad If interest. sphere of ours, WI' 1111 lun~er dare contem· Rome circles hinted the allis had asked plat of a ·unua.\' morning: what the next 1'urkey how much, be thought f Britain­ By PAUL MALLON. Saturuay will nHlHII lu us-the world-from ' Ul' -I," nut as much a.. he thought of Ule Adolf Hitler. litur pel'form!'r in tht· current axlS. (Dlatrlbu&ed b;p I[Jq- Featv... footlight paradl' of e\,\,I1~, tu .Jim Brown. the • import not only' the grains, but Hu.·ia {lui tly adopt d E tonia into th Syndlea&e, Inc., reprodaetloD 1D tats for themselves and fodder corner (lruggi.·t uf lIny ~mal1 American town. O\'iet Jold. l::iuch 1ll0V ha\' connteracted Whole or lJa par~ .trlcu" pro­ for their Uvestock. They cannot \Y 've btOpp'l1 clIlculating in terms of the e\' 'I'Y Uel'Ulun ~eizul'e 01' territol-Y, Next hlbl&e4.) Jive without imports. German numb r of tlays until 'hl'ititTHIil l' who'f, go· pleatle ' occupation has cut them from ing to win til!' national lelll!'ue penllant. to a their source of supplies and Ger­ c rtain extent. We're thinkillg: in tenn of Cudahy, the British many has no substitute supplies battl hip and Uaralltl rif'le ' and the dis· '1'1, War for an Empir to offer them .• tance fl'Om Bueno8 Ain'" til Ila,'anu. ,Vhile iuvasion loomed over Britain, Ital. A.nd Belgium' 8 Plight 11 's u bad ,ign, ian t!'Oops marehed into Egypt and British W ASHlNG TON-Grim British NO CRITICS OF BRITAlN-- 'I'he w k 0lwned 011 u thr 'at of invasion 'omalilalld, headed fOt, tll 'ue.z eanal. vital frowns backstage have stopped Yet there is little criticism of iliat has hung oyer major Sl'clion' of thl' lifeline 01' Britain's empire. cold, and silently, here the plea the British opposition on top here. world. inee way b fore 18·t "ptetnb r. Eng. And Britain once allain beld out the plum of American Ambassador Cudahy The British position is not re­ land fought off iner asinllly Ill' ater numb or: of indcp ndenee and more·than·dominion for shipment of our food sur­ garded as inhuman by those whQ r nazi planes through u lon" seven days. status to I ndia for support of "the world pluses into occupied European know the facts. British lives al;;o areas facing winter starvation. are involved. hlJJ'~h ill warn d th hou,'(' of commons a 'ause which is at stake." '1 h vast reach It is a subject upon which we k ago that an attempt to land troop on orrabulously wealthy India weI' sil nt. It is not merely that every sack nelltl~r British nor American of­ Hie Briti&h Isles "still is imminent." 1'hel' was that feeling: " I. t's leave. This of American flour which goes into is wlwl't' we came in." ficialdom likes to talk . No doubt Belgi um will relieve Germany as All attempt to land troop. on th British exists about Cudahy telling the much as the suffering Belgians. hies ,,'TILL is immin nt. Now', the time, th truth. France may be able barely The Germans, of course, will not strategists tell UN. '],h£' tides, the moon lmd Far Ea tet'n R1tInblillgs to squeeze through a hard cold take the flour for their own use tIJt' w('uther a['(- on Hitler's ~ide. Commentatonl told the world t he closing season without much outside help, (unless they need it and appar­ Hilt 11('ver has t he distance from 'alais to of the Burma road wou ld not whip China, but Belgium, Holland, Denmark enUy they do not) but its arrival Louuon seeuJt'd quit so g'l'eat to nazi official­ llillt d that ,Japan will seek a temporary and Norway will suffer fata lly. will relieve them of the respon-I In normal times, these four must dom. It' g'l'owil1~ I1reall'J'. peace. slbility 01 keeping the Belgians alive. Hungry nations wlll be .Japull ]1 ['self illdicaleu she would throw trOUblesome prisoners and im­ p(){J(/Y 1V e k in Budapes( grC'!l\ J'l'SOU rees into a plunge toward t h prove British chances as much as rr'he fog in the Balkan.' Itot fOI1g'i I'. Peal'S Dutc.:h l ndie Hud li'l'ellch Indo·Cllinu when the fighting of British armed of eomm unist distil l'baJWl'!'l in lhl1lgary and nazi paracllUt tl'oop. had turu d Britain's forces. r TlulIgll I'iall disorclers in Humallian·beld filII rl'SOlJrces to the JlOme fl'onl. The responsibility is solely Tr/lllsylvania led to pJ'(~parutiolls for all at· '1'he mal'cll 01' fascislJI contillu d and spread. Germany!s. Hitler could solve the problem simply by restoring the nations he seized to an inde­ * * * * * * * * • I pendent status thus permitting • them to trade with the outside It Was Hot In world. They could sell their own Washington - - He's a Second goods in exchange for food and I W ill Rogers fodder. • Bllt Things Happened There blitzkl'i g by air and by sea t hat ITitl r has p I'om1sed for Britain. BY GEORGE TUCKER BULLITT MAYOR OF PARIS- WSUI '!'hl' usual 'omeback to that remark is "it Matching Brother Diplomat Ja mes Crom· NEW YORK- Harry Carey has Bill BUllitt, the American am- isn't the heat, it's tlle humidity," nnd u· well , fOl'filer minister to Canada, for indis· the same sort 01 ~ ome s pun , in- bassador to lost France, is telling SIGHTS ually senatol'S and th> l' 'presentatives and cretion, nited tateR Ambassador to Bel. gratiating appeal that made the it only where he knows it will )oliticiuJlS and lobbyists add to that: "and gillm John Cudahy was I'epol'ted to have late Will Rogers so beloved. If not be repeated, but he was • uI'(ln't we glad we're 110t in Wa~hington!" told newspapermen in England that the con· you called Harry Carey a second mayor of Paris :for three days. ~ SOUnDS At 880 on Y our Radio Dial But baiter, was dead. "Yes," said Reuters. "No," of natives . . . The lush :foli age of are not marks at all, merely re- the pIcture (hIS flTSt) to brmg.. out of th Yanke' 'Iipper as it flew 100 feet the jungle was on every side. All landladies expecting to keep nasium fee for the summer St!S, said D. 1. B. Tass wa silent. ceipts. every laugh, every satlrJcal JIbe, &tudent roomers this year n n d sion, may swim during these Monkeys s c r ea m e d in the When peace is tinally estab- and every story value. whose rooms have been approved A battle·searr ed nazi sea raider and a bat· branches above. . . • • • hours. tle·,'carrecl B r itish cruiser were reported · • • • lished, Berlin will decide the should list their room vacancies GLADYS SCOTT t ing it up again off t he coast of Brazil. value of these receipts. It is no "Queen of Destiny." Anna. at the housing service office, Old mbt ilnilU iotuan,' Carey was supposed to be giv­ secret that Hiller intends to throw Nea.gle, Anton Walbrook, C. Au- Capitol, OJ') or before August 8. In Cincinnati, a p astor of the 'l' rue Church Ing some confidential information brey Smith. Directed by Her- J\v:lilable houses and apart Graduate Students Published every morning except Monday them back upon the occupied The lhree-weeks' independenl of God declared "we 'Il use snakes in our to one of the chiefs. . . As he governments as part of the cost bert Wilcox. ments should be listed by this dat. by Stud nt P ublications Incorporated at voiced his lines, the sound engi­ As in "Victoria the Great," Miss also. Vacancies reported altel study-unit for graduate studenlll services whenever the Lor d r eq uires." H e of occupation. Thus what looks will begin August 5 and close ] 26·130 I owa avenue, I owa City, Iowa. was in a serious condition from eopperhead neer said, "Make that a llttle orderly to the eye is realJy just Neagle again triumphs in a ehar- thaI date may not appear on the louder, Harry." .. . Carey repeat­ acterization of the queen who rave August 23. Registration, includ­ bites. P oli ce seized the snakes. a deft and orderly theft, camou­ her name to a golden era of Brit- liS\.used by students who are ing tuition payment, must be com­ Board of 'I'rustecs: Frank h Mott, Odi K. ed the scene. • . "Louder," said flaged by economic ramifications. Bob 1· cller stopped tile Browns for his the sound-man. . , Again Carey ish Empire progress. see mg roo~s. pleted by A. g. 5. Registration Patton, E wen M. MacE wen, Kirk H. P orter, 19t1l victory of t he eason. Not a "plotted" movie, but rath- , All landladIes wh~se rooms have rna terials may be obtained at the Donald Dodge, Demillg Smith, William went through the scene, with the rowa let the nation know Dr. Edward N. cameras grinding and the micro­ THE EARLY BIRD- eT an episodic and aulhentic ac- been approved preVIously but ~ho office of the registrar beginnin8 Sener, Il'ene 1<'rederickson, Robcrt K adgihn. ndC'rson had to be head coach of the .All· phones pieRing up his words. . . Heavy taffy pulling with Louis count of outstanding evenls in'l have mov.ed to new. locatJ~ns Monday, July 29. Each studenl !::ita rs. "Louder, louder!" screamed the Johnson by a White House squad­ Victoria's reign, the film is im- should notify the housmg ~ervlce should see the head of his major pressive for its pageantry and ' (ext. ~75) o~ the change ill ad­ F r ed M. Pownall, Publisher .A bat invaded W DI's east hall remote sound engineer. "You aren't ron failed initially to bring the department relati ve to permission talking loud enough." bounced ex~assistant war secre­ performances. The young queen's dress lIDmedJa~elY. to emo11 and approval of his Thomas E. Ryan, Business Manager st udio at the wrong time, almo t'stopped a romance with Albert (Walbrook), All landlad ies who expect. to This puzzled Carey. He was tary back into the fold. Presi­ study PI'oj ect. I Loren L. H ickerson, E ditor sports broadcast. his wise counsel through their ~eep st~ d ent roomers for the first supposed to be whispering confi­ dential Press Secretar y Stephen HARRY G. BARNES ' Mor ty 1'onken, Managing Editor 'fhe state board of ducation named Prof. married li,fe until his death, make time thIS year and w~05e rooms r dential information, but was al­ T. Early who has beeen known to Kirk Porter h ad of t he political science de· lasso a recalcitrant across the the more interesting portions. have not been preVIOusly ~p- most screaming. Done in color, in England, wi th prov.ed should call the housmg Employmen~ E ntered as second class mail matter at the purtmen t, discussed " six candidatcs" for the Even the natives knew some­ continent with one swing 01 the Board jobs in university Ul\ill p ostoffice at I owa City, Iowa, un der the aet presid neics of . U. r. allCl L . T. C. tafty, went to San Francisco for the royal castles at the 'liIm's dis- service at once. are now available for both thing was wrong. Finally they posa!, it is an interesting contri- HOUSING SERVICE stu­ o f' congr of March 2, 1879. Two nazi·elad De 'Moines men, hired to went ashore and built a camp and Johnson and spent an entire day dents and non students. PleaJI udvertise a capital city moving picture, were in the St. Francis hotel sticking bution to movie biography. COMMITTEE cooked dinner, and while they • • • apply in the University Employ' S ub. ription rates-By mail, $5 p er year; almo t mobbed as they strolled non·chalant· were eating the doctor who was him with arguments that he Men's Swimming ment Bureau. ly down Des Moines treets. Even phony should not go away mad, "The VlIllan StllJ Pursued by carrier, 15 cl.'nts weekly, $5 per year. with the group on location yelled Her." Hu&'h Herbert, Alan Mow­ The men's swimming poul in LEE H, KANN The A ociated Press is exelu ively entitled nazis aroused the ire of the city. something to the sound engineer. Johnson went home to West the fi eldhouse will be open dur­ Virginia to think it over, will bray. Nita. 'Loulse, Busler Keat­ l!~ ro m a H onolulu, Hawaii, dentist came a The man made no response. ing the three-week session from LIbrary Hours \ t o us fo t, r epublication of all news dispatehes probably see the president next on, Joyce Compton, Richard r ecj uest for the date of the H omecoming Everybody looked up, The doc­ 2 to 6 p.m. daily. From Saturday, Aue. 3, thro~ c l'editetlio it or not otherwise credited in tllis week, and get a better job than CromweU , Mar&,aret HamUton, game. Tlle Iowa grad of 1926 plans to re­ tor led the sound man into a Diane Fisher. D. A. ARMBRUSTER Wednesday, Sept. 25, the rea4~ p aper lind a lso tlle local n ws publisbed tent. A tew minutes laler they the one previously offered. herein. t u rn t o ,ec the Hawk in action. • • • rooms in Macbride hall and the A n eastern \~ agneri an sopr ano changed came out, the doctor laughing and ,.. Based on a century-old play, Recreational SWirnmlng library annex will be open ~ the engineer grinning sheepishly, Italy has established a large air 11cr concert repertoire, doesn 't think Ameri· "The Fallen Saved," and played I The pool in the women's gymna­ followi ng hours: TELEPHONES They were in Africa, remem­ base at Massawa, Eritrea, a colo­ straight, this is a novelty which sium wi ll be open Jor recl'ealional Monday through Friday, 8:. can pre 'entation of Hitler's favorite music ny in northeast Africa. E ditorial Offiee ...... 4192 ber. Mindful of the perils of doesn't qu ite come oU. The audi - swimming 4 to 5 p.m. Monday a.m. to 12 noon; 1 to 15 p.m.; is quite the thing to do. jungle fever. the sound engineer Society E ditor ...... 4193 ence is invited to hiss the vil1ian through Friday and Saturday 11 Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 12 noon. A de·populated Iowa City began to think had been barricadina himself by A New York court recently held B usiness Off ice ...... , . . ... 4191 and cheer the virtuous. just as in to 12 a.m. during the three-weeks Special hours for departm~tal in terms of vaeations. taking 25 or 30 grains ot qui- that a damage suit could not be \ll8rious stage pres8ntations re- of the independent study session, libl'aries will be posted on the SUNDAY, AUGUST 11, 1940 And a new week began, very quietly and nine a day. As a consequence he Ibased on an injury suttered by an viving the lush over-acting and All women registered [or this per­ doors. < uneveutfully, at midnight last night. had become temporarily deat. unborn chlld. scenery-chewing ot that period. iod and women of. the unive,'"ity CRACE VAN WO~

, I ' -- • SUNDAY, AUGUST 11, 1940 THE DAlLY IOWAN, IOWA CITY PAGE TIlREE,

H. Hamilton and their sons How­ Plwlps Fam.i1y ard, Allan, Robert and William and daughter Christobel of Oak Movie Colony Influences Latest by Reunion to Be Park, Ill., and Mrs. J ames L. I Fyfe, also 01 Oak Park. In Springdale • • • Morton Tonken has left for a Ninth annuaJ reunion of the two weeks vacation 111 the east. Phelps family will be held today He will visit in at the school house in Spring­ and his hf'me in Hal ICord, Cc.nn. dale. Nearly 20 members of the • • • family from Iowa City are plan­ Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sweat ning to attend. according to R. J. of Owensboro. Ky, arc 'Spending a Phelps, 730 E. College, president week 111 the home of Mr. and Mrs. 01 the union. T. R. Bak!"r, 1621 Wilson. A basket dinner will be I'erved • • • at noon and a baseball game will Mrs. C. W. Baldridr,c, 310 S. be played during the aftel"lloon Governor; Dr. Anthony Trapasso, bet.ween the unmarried men and nnd Jean Kellenberger of Dwen­ the married men. port have returned from a week's Secretary of the family union visit. at Gull Lake ncar Brainard, in Laura Phelps 01 West Branch. Minn. Members of the family from Cedar • • • Rapids, Muscatine, Tipton, Dav­ Kenneth Kool, 226 S. Johnson, is enport and Cedar county are ex­ spend ing a three weE'k vacation pected to attend. with Bill Langston 111 Pruit.t, Ark. Mr. Lang~ton is a formn student h re. • •• AMONG Mr. and MNl C. W. Moore and rhildn>n, Mary EII!'n and Robert IOWA CITY of Ames ar spendmg the week in the home of F . C. Swank, 120 PEOPtE Evans. a • • Mr. and Mrs. Clifton J ac~ Visiting in the home 01 Mr. and of Oak Park. Ill., and Mrs. and IMrs. C. A. K~l. 226 S. Johnson, ...... I Mrs. ALbert 0 .. Baldwin 01 Chica- are Mrs. Kool s mothcr and Cath­ go, Ill., are week end guest., of er, Mr. and ~rs. C. F. Black­ Juanita Long, Clinton Place. Mrs. man of Kn ox~I1 Il: .• Film Inspires Jackson and Mrs. Baldwin are suters of the local student. The Rev. and Mrs. Richard Mc­ a Evoy, 212 S. Johnson, left th i> .Leadin g Artists • a week for a month vacation in the Jessie Lou King of Adel, society east. editor of The Dally rowan, is at­ • • • ,In Hollywood tending a house party at. Clear Anne Miller of Ames is visiting Lake this week end. She was ac­ Barbara Swank, 120 Evans. companied by Mary Frances Beck • • • Iowan W orkR in Largest of Davenport. Hostess of the Jean Gould, Josephine Healy. --('opyrl.'1t 1911) "J" U".Jtl'"rWan.t8r house party is Madelyn Miles of Group Project in Art Grant. Woad's first. visit to Hol- Lorraine Hobbs, Dorothy Huff­ t<1neou~ly from the .>ame basic Clear Lake, former student here. man, all of Iowa City and Re­ IIislory of America lywood Inspired this latest. paint­ source material of the Eugene • • • gina Rohret of Oxford left. this ing (upper left) tilled "Senti- O'Neill war picture "The Long Prot. and Mrs. Baldwin Max­ morning for a w k's vacation at well left yesterday Callrornia, The latest paint.ing by Grant mental Ballad." Brough t to the Voyagc Home." Thc collection tor Clear Lll ke. where they will enjoy a tew a • Wood, America's most noted art­ movie colony on a commission to • will bc cXhibited in 26 American weeks sojourn. ProCessor Max­ Barbara Mezik, 333 Magowan, is!, will be placed on public exhi­ paint any scene or charact r dur­ mu.eurry· in principal cities from well is chait'man at the Engll~h has return d home from Cleat· bition for the first time Thurs- Ing the actual filming of the Eu- co, st to ('ua t :tarHng in Septem­ department here. Lake, where she has been visit­ day in New York at the A~:.;ocia-· gene O'Neill epic war story, "Tbe ber ill the close of the first ex­ • • • ing her cou:sins Mr. and Mrs, Betty Bauserman and Juanita ted American ArtI~ts gallel'les. Long Voyage Home," the noted hibition of t.he collection lit the L. H. Rl'binson of Des Moi nes. I Gray will leave tomorrow for WI s­ She has been gone live weeks. I Wood 's piclure i~ included in artist was impressed with onc or Aswcinted Amel'ican Artists Gal- leri" 71 I Firth Avcnu<" New consIn where they will vacation • • • an exhibition of recent the closing seenes depicting s<,ven York f!"Om Augus~ 15th to Sep- for a week at a northern lake. Arthur Maxwell of Montrose by leading American artists which sailors on shore leave Singing .<('n- tembC'l" 10th. Lcft to right are • a • and Mr. and Mrs. Keith Blair will travel to 26 principal mu e­ tlmental songs In a Limehouse .'landing John Qualen, John Mr. and Mrs. William Bartley left to spend the week end at pub. The seven actors posed for Wayne, ThClm~s Milch II, Joseph lell yesterday tor Gut.tenberg, Maxwell's home. urns (rom coast to coast at the I him on the lot in S:JwyCl', David IIulJhes and J. M. where they will spend their va­ • • • dClie of the New York showing. Hollywood and the artist complet- Kerrigan. Seated is Barry Fftz­ cation. Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Smith Including seven charactel·." the ed the painting in his stud I/) in gerold. Ned SC'ott. of Hollywood • • • of Toledo were gu sis of their son, plctuce, "Sentimcn\;l] Ballad,' is Iowa City. It is the first time did the' ("'lmen' portrait of the Atty. and Mrs. William Hart Deming, here today. Hi.. brother, that Grant Wood has paintcd ~('v- Iowa attift (rl.-ht above.' Wood and son David are vacationing Richard, visit.ed also. the most. ambitious painlin~ he en portraits In one canvas. The chats with James Chapin( Ie£t. be­ at Park Rapids, Minn. a • bas ever attempted, accordiug to paint.ing, whicn is owned by Wal- low) nncl n frlf'nd on the Walter • • a Everett Hogan of Epworth Is the ' local artist. ter Wanger, is one of a collpc[ion Wunger lot where' "The Long Voy­ Donald Klng of Cedar Rapid spending the week end in his He created th<, pointing from a compl ted by nlne artists simul- I age Home" wa filmed. was a week end visitor in [owa home. stene he witnessed on his first City. • • • trip Hollywood. While watch­ operas. to • • • Frank Park of Cedar Rapids In, dircct a motley Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Neuzil spent the week end wlt.h triends ci'!w ' of sailors in a scene from a realm of activity that is closer and daughter, Kathryn, wlll re-I in IOWD CiJy. Mr. Park is em­ fullcne O'Neill's wtlr story "The to t.he everyday life of the Am­ Boola' Reviet turn today from a two weeks trip pJoyed for the summer by the Long Voy age Home," h(' became erican people," the movie colony Baby Vevia's Career Began in a Stove Oven Ithrough the Black HlUs and visit LaPlante-Choate Co., in Cedar Ra- intcre:;ted in the chllraclers por­ officials believe. To iJe Gi .n At Iowa lakes. pids . trayed. Other Artists • •• ••• • • • • • • • • • He asked the entire erew ir they Ot.her famous arti3ts who were The Amazing tory of a Two·Montbs·Old Baby and a CapabJe Woman Over W S VI Ruth Yocum of Waterloo has Prof. and Mrs. C. H. Benton and b en the guest of Mr. and Mrs. family of Springfield, Mo., are would pose (or him, and the high included in the commission were "Straw in the Wind" by Rut.h salaried movie stars did pose for Thomas Benton, Georges Schreib­ VAN, Van Zandt, Tex , Au~. 10 I By JACK B. KRUEGER a mixture composed of plain cow's KeUog Hunt ot Toledo, Ohio, sum-! spendi ng the week nd vi.iiting many hours, as Wood sket(,hed er, , , (AP)-Vevill Marie Camp r, two Associated Pre Staff Writer milk and corn syrup, totaling three Llningcl' Dobson will be reviewed mer session students here. Miss friends in Iowa City. Professor them . Ernest Fiene, Robert Philipp, monlh3 old, pent the first night ------ounces, every three hours-el, 306 Ferson. Mr. Wilkie Wood's picture is an oil tempera William Rockhill Nelson gallery Here is the ~tory of Vevia Marie, to keep the oven mOist. Swinney's hand. One yard of • • • Prot. and Mrs. E. P. T. Tyn­ Is a chemist in the depart.m ent of on a masonite panel, which he m Kansas City, Mo., St. Louis and it also is the ,·tory of Mrs. Every 30 minutes through that batiste makcs six dresses. lastens to a stretcher wIth an Vevia Swinncy, 45: night and unt.il 3 o'cl(lck the next Every day when the weather is dall and son, Bruce, will visit. agriculture in the capital city. Art museum, Baltimore Museum Prof. and Mrs. H. E. Way of edging of stainless st.eel. Two months ago next we~k, in afternoon Vevia Swinney red her fair baby Vevia is placed ncar an 'Hawkeye' of Art. and the Brooks Memorial Knox college, Galesburg, Ill., this On his first trip west, the local Art gallery in Memphis, Tenn. a tiny three-room larm hou~e on charge-three drops of sugar wat- open window through which the _ a sandy road not far from Van, er from a dropper. sun ls shining. week end. artist admitted his Hollywood ex­ I perience was extremely valuable :--______-, this infant girl came inlD the With the sun still at full On some days, the babe is bundl- Has Birthday • • • Mrs. Edgar Vassar, Charlotte to him as a painter. worLd - three months ahead of strength, Mrs. Swinney carried ed into II. bushel basket and carried time. She weighed two <1nd a her meager burden over the sRndy t.o the fields, protected from the Ameri{'an Di tionary Vassar, Mrs. S. F. Critz, Mrs. "I found a wealth of material Tomorrow Charles Kindl and Mrs. Gladys to paint even on just tbe Walter haIr pounds. hill the half mile to her home, its sun by a piece of tarpaulin, while Lists Nickname Origin Mrs. Tommie Camper, Vevia's unpainted three rooms squatting Mrs. Swinney picks tomatoes. White will leave this week to BE A P ARTlZAN Wanger lot. I a:sked to see rusb­ Three Organizations spend a tew days in Kewanee, Ill. IS of the 'Long Voyage Home' to mother, is Mrs. Swinney's second next a eotlon patch. "The baby never has knocked For Stal of Iowa Dr (' UARLE!! BECK.'\(AN cousin and has six other children, On a little iron bed the baby me out of a minute of my work," • • • moose a scene to depict, but I Meet ~ the olde:st 13. The lather did wa3 laid. Three quart bottles Mrs. Swinney explains. This Mrs. Frank Whinery is spend­ In this tom· ~ame so fascinated with thl' film "Hawkeye," nickname Jar the ing the week end at Clear Lake. In, pre.,lden· that when it. was all over I re­ THETA RHO GIRLS have a . WPA jO? but. hasn't now. of hot water and fraying blankets work includes milking tnree cows University of Iowa or any Iowan, Ual f,/ect.loo, alized I hadn'l looked [or ma­ . thell' eIghth chi ld dl d. were fashioned into Vevia Marie's twice a day. reaches its ninety-filth birthday • • • the.., lo .. dul,. -.-W ill hold monthly meetlng DJ'. James Montgomery d spair- seeond mak shiet Incubator. "Girl babies are my favGrite. Mr.s. Howard L. Beye enter­ owed by you terial and had to sec it a ll over th~e this ycnr, according to the 10th to Amerlea J~ the I.O.O ..!! . hall tomorrow ed of keeping Vevia alive. He Day by day the baby grows We had one, but we Jost her. I'm ta ined last evening a tabu [tet t. h" t mtreLY again ." section of the American English supper for Mr. and Mrs, Gurdon .011 ...... not First AUiance nlg~t. ~t 7:30 p.m. where plans for Iknew tile chances were one in a alI'ongcr, now weighing three going to adopt Vevla it I possibly dictionary, now being compiled at a PICniC WJth the Lone Tree Theta thousand. Mrs. Swinney standing pounds two ounces. She is led can." 1"17 In 'ul1. The commission to the ilrtisis Itho gll'ls Tuesday will be made. __' ______..,.- ______the University of Chicago. It J. _ 1m ­ ma rks the first alliance of the mo­ The 1Oth ~ection of the diction­ IlOrt-.nt e I e ~. lion picture industry with the art ding c1ub-49 present this year­ nry, beginning with "goldenseal" t IOD, lD a. Ume of erl.h to of paint.ing. TWO-TWO CLUB Greatest Iowa jealously watched tbeir registra­ and ending with "holler" was com­ uur repubUc. It was a lso the first timc that --will be guests o( MI'. Will A Deer pleted thi('l week. 'JIO ,.rent • c ...... II, tions. The presidcncy goes to the .1. tI,..t It be­ Q, group o[ art.i sts have lived and Kindle, 811 Church, at t.h e regu­ Picnic. Held I The dictionary is under the di­ longest-married husband regis­ ~omf!8 y ou r lIQrked together, creating at the lar meeting t.omorrow night at It Almost Bag Driver rection of Sir William Craigie, duty ~ not OIlly California tered durmg the day and the vice l o~ot~ but lime time, and under identical I 7:30. Mrs. Edward OIdis will be . presidency to his wile. Apparent In Hollywood co-cditOi' of the Oxlord English _"'" 10 Influ· ronditions, their own interpreta- assistant hostess. A social hour winners wel'e Mr. and MI·s. W. L. dictJonary and Prof. J ame R. Hul- ence ..... maoy bert of the English department at IteOVle """ you can. to vote YOUR tions from ihe same basic mater- will follow the business meeting. LONG BEACH, Callf., Aug. 10, Ross ot , formerly of " , V. AIMI t hl .... true. no matter NORTH HOLLYWOOD, Aug. Chicago university. It includes your poIlUCAI Miler """" M. ial. (AP)-Former residents of Iowa Monticello, Iowa, who !lave been I _at The exp riment may open a 10, (AP)- Mrs. Violet Leavy got word5 invent.ed in America and Lt. on tto!'lr ..· co ..... tor hon..,l,. and TOWNSEND CLUB - 130,000 of them-thronged Bix­ married 67 years. d"Lnte ....tw patrioU.m. It, on the" new door into American industry her deer today on the first day tho~e which have acquired new HEEDS. not merely th.tr .JqJ~"~ and a new field of income to the --will assemble at 7 :30 p.m. to­ by park today for the largest Iowa meanings in this country. OI,lnloJl8, you belJcve that lir. Booee­ morrow for a short business meet­ Brit! h Bomb LeBourget "fib and M.... Wlllhtce prom~ tHII American artist., "leading him into picnic ever held. 01 the season-In front of the Walt "Hawkeye" w,u first. recorded much to Am e rl~ that ~ ..~n the thlnl ing in the C.S.A. hall. Dancing PARIS, (AP)-Two newspapers Disney studio. in "Cincinnati Miscellany" in 1845, t.".m lnodHion should .... thrown l ..... and entertainment will be pro­ Prominent. among the hand­ reported Loday that British planes the d18card, ad out lind hu, Ue ror For a !lme it was a question the dictionary reveals, quoting a them and 8.. ln .. Ju~t .~ mllll7 >otee vided following the meeting. Mem­ shakers was Iowan Frank' F. Mer­ flying at very high altitudes • ., )TOU ('tw for them. Tbe-,'re apt to whether Mrs. Leavy would get the sentence from t.h e publication: bers and friends are invited. riam, former governor of Cali­ bombed Le Bourget airport and "The inhabitants of Iowa are call­ Take It or n .. ed tb08e ,·ute•• fornia. It, 00 the ttfher h l... U). y ou hft."e be­ the outskirts of Paris Tuesday deer or the deer wO\lld get Mrs. ed Hawkeyes.'· (-om~ ~on"lncefl that hflttvy ~dID. Members of Lhe Goltlen Wed- afternoort, killing fi ve persons and Leavy. The two-year-old doe hurl­ First referenc to the " Hawk­ Leave It- lind In."... ..,I ... debt POln~ 1.0 dl_.,." ed itseU into Mrs. Leavy's auto­ that Ihl ••reat bU!lln."" enterPrIoe of DOORS OPEN 1:15-35c to 5:30 wounding others but failing to hit eye Sta te," according to the dic­ The Unll.",1 IIt"l" new. " _".fal strategic points. mobile as she drove past the stu­ A teacher was explaining to _d c(tln~tf"nt l)u.,lnf!l8ft eXf'MlUve at tionary editors, was in 1859, when 118 helm, Inot..... or a poIlU""'n. tbaL dio, smashed the machine's hood Harper's magazine asserted that her class the meaning ot the what we ItoeIf'd Iii to •••••p hoq,e.u and windshield and its own rear It we ar e eyer to .et aUOflliil the rI .. "The Solons of the Hawk-eye word "bigamy," saying it OW! legs. Park officials put the aru­ \' ~r or doubt and dWraM. Uld dtJpreit.. l~iMnii~ State were not all in the Legis­ was a man who had two or 510ft, then your duty I. to ""D:.1n~ mal out of its misery. lature oC 1851." tUl nUlOY JJeople a.8 ' IOU can. tbat. the" THEN 30e more wives at the sam e should ....-nr tl3' 8uPlNM"t Mr. Wlillde NOW! ~~:nAY Another early reference w ns in and Mr. M.N..,.. TARTS TODAY Moore's "Songs of Soldiers," pub­ time; when she asked the TId. I. '''' tim .. 'or ohlllr-.h ..U .yln.. . 4 GREAT STARS ENDS It I. .. tim.. rur .... trlotlc partl..,.. Shure, An O'Boysterous lished in 186 1. A line in one of the tihlp. Make op )"ou.r mind .hleh man IN 1940'S MOST EXCITING It's JIh TUESDAY class what havinl one wile • • With a McNlfIcent Cast! songs was "We have come from ~un dO' th~ mOf\t for AMEBIVA.-no& SCREEN THRILL! was, Little Tommy said: me""y whl"" proml_ the _ ror 2 BIG FEATURES 11 • 't,~~/:1 the prairies of the. young Hawk­ YOU-but Ihe m08/, for AMEBIOA 30c ANYTIME TODAY thru WEDNESDAY eye State." "Monotony." Man day is _d 1h...... t out and. "'one 'or CEO. 3 CHEERS looked upon .by most women hlm. ANII FOR THE LeI', ,et I he whol" .ub.....,t n,...,," SHERIDAN Second Dance as a day of monotony: Our oa.1 1 h ...... ' lfh I),. Wile Saving station takes Nut ... ""k llr. n..,k...... 01 tho RANDOLPH SCOTT Beckmft.D Funeral Home will com­ IDA LUPINO IRISH the monotony out ot Mon­ KAY FRANCIS HU."H.IlY Prlsdlla lcLane Will Be Given ment. on Women In BouMA. BRIAN DUNLEVY day. 10 GA RT Thomas l\Ic1\UtcheU Iowa City high school P.-T. A. Also Dennis l\lcMorgan GEORGE BANCROFT 00.. PAGI '. AJ~. HALf, 10.... /CAINS will span or th e second of a ~eries Alan McHale 8l9DlalCK CRAWFORD of dances for all Iowa City high ADDED New ProceM Laundry ANDY DEVINE -Plus- stUdents and alumni tomorrow ~peY8 Ca~n__ _ Mystery Thrtller night from 8 to 11 p.m. in the old & Cleaning Co. STUART ERWIN "Carl Hoff and Band" "CALLING PHILO VANCE" high school gymnasium. -- - .. -- fRAU ALBERTSON LATE NEWS James Stephenson Music f(1r the dancp will be pro- SU-Sl' 8. Dubuque 8t Also Late Fox News !~=~=:::::::= vided by Flet Miller and his or- -- . chestl·a. PAGE FUUR Helen Jacobs _ • r Reaches End Of the Trail Tigers In-cr lise -Lea~ Against Chisox 'Alice Marble Beats MAJOR LEAGUE Rowe Pitches Ex.National Champ ..... _S_T_AN_D_lN_G_S_~. Eleventh In Straight Sets Win AMEJUCAN 'LEAGUE BY BILL WBlTE W, L Pel G.'O. Detroit ...... 64 42 .604 RYE, N. Y., Aug. 10, (AP)- fears D,5-2 Clevelann ....63 43 .594 I The end of the trail rune today Bo_tbn ...... SA 4/1 .547 6 for Helen Jacobs, four-time na­ Chicago ...... 51 51) .505 IO ~ 'h. l·t~U Game tional champion, and one of the New York ..52 51 .505 JOY. o lYe Tnnings; few women believed capable of Washington ..46 59 .438 17 'h St. Louis .... 45 63 .417 20 Greenberg Homers extending Alice Marble, queen of Philadelphia 40 63 ,388 22'h the world's tennis courts. Mioland Wins Yesterday's Results CHICAGO, Aug. 10 (AP)-Tbe Her game ready and her stra­ Rip Radcliff Fools Them Detroit 5; Chicago 2 Detroit Tigers stretched their tegy carefullY planned, she took Boston 3; Washington 0 American league lead to a full • New York 13; Philadelphia 0 the field against Alice, hoping to $62,000 Derby • • • • • • • • game today with a 5 to 2 vic­ SI. Louis Browns' Outfielder Still Leading end the ruthless domination of tory over the Chicago WhIte 80s American League rutting Race W. L Pet. G.B. the blonde Californian but Alice Howard Horse Puts Cincinnati ....66 34 .660 in a five-inning, rain-shortened won with ridiculous ease-6-1, 6-0. Brooklyn ...... 61 41 .598 6 contest before 1'1,247 spectatolll. Third Stratlht Title Three·Year.Old Race CHICAGO, Aug. 10 (AP)-Rlp inglon, .329; Joe DiMaggiO, New New York .... 52 45 .536 12 ~ The rain, which held up the Chicago ...... 54 52 .509 15 That gave the girl who hasn't In Perplexing Puzzle Radcliff of the St. Louis Browns is York, .328, and Hank Greenberg, game an hour and 29 minutes In . h h j b t Detroit, .328. Pittsburgh .. .. 50 49 .505 15¥.! been beaten since the semi-finals 0 the third inning, lorced postpone­ doing qUIte a t oroug 0 Greenberg held onto his runs St. Louis .... 47 52 .475 18~~ at Wimbledon in 1938, her third By CHARLES DUNKLEY disproving the familiar old be- batted in leadership, his total now Boston ...... 38 62 .380 28 ment of the second game of a straight eastern grass court ten­ CHICAGO, Aug. 10 (AP) lief that he is only a good "spring standing at 96, but lost the double Philadelphia 32 65 .330 33'h nis championship, a margin of scheduled doubleheader. Splashing through a sloppy track hitter." honors to Lou Boudreau, Cleve- Yesterday's Results The victory was Schoolboy four matches in the six times the in a driving rain, Mioland gal­ Spring has long since turned land, who has 37 , McCosky and Boston 4; Brooklyn 3 two bitter rivals have met-and Rowe's 11 th of the season as loped to a three length victory into summer, but the 33-year-old Finney are tied in triples with Cincinnati 5; St. Louis 0 left her atop her field by a mar­ in the $62,000 outfielder has shown no sign of 13 each. New York I; Philadelphia 0 against two defeats, although he gin as wide as any champion ever at Washington park today to dropping out of the American Jimmy Foxx ot Boston banged Chicago I; Pittsburgh 0 was hit freely in the early enjoyed. throw the three-year-old cham­ league batting race. He lost out three homers to run his pace­ stages. In gaining the trophy-one ot pionship into a perplexing puz.­ seven points the past week, in- setting total to 26. McCosky has NEW YORK (AP) - Probable tennis' most coveted possessions­ Detroit pushed across t h r e e z.le. eluding Friday's games, but most the most hits, 142, and Williams in the majors today: Alice lost only one set, and thd runs in the second inning. Rudy Mioland, owned by Charles S. ot his rivals were slipping, too, has scored the most often, 90 National (AU Doubleheaders) York opened by drawing a base to Pauline Beu, another coast girl. Howard of San Francisco, led enabling him to hold the lead. times, New York at Philadelphia - The 32-year-old Miss Jacobs, on balls ott Southpaw Thornton I from start to finish. Sirocco, He collected 10 hits in 38 times George Case of Washington has Melton (8-3) and Schumacher who planned to keep the ball Lee. Frank Higgins hit a ground­ winner of tbe Arlington classic, at bat, dropping to .360, but even 26 stolen bases, Detroit's Buck (8-9) vs. Smoll (1-6) and Higbe right at Allee's feet all day, er to Luke Appling, who threw finished second, and Weigh An- this descent left him with a 12- Newsom tops the pitchers in per­ (7-14). couldn't give her strategy an air­ wild to second in an attempt to chor third. fOur lengths back of point edge on Barney McCosky, centage with 14 victories against Brooklyn at Boston-Carleton ing. Marble was on top ot the force York, the runners advancinl SIrocco. Gallahacl1on, winner ot Detroit, and Lou Finney, Boston, two losses and Bob Feller of (4-4) and TamuLis (6-2) or Casey match all the way, running Miss to third and second. After Birdie tbe , finished pegged at .348. Clevela~d long ago lapped the (6-5) vs. Posedel (7-14) and Sul­ Jacobs dizzy, getting her out ot Tebbetts fouled out, Frank Metha fourth after runrung last most of Chicago's Luke Appling lost an field in , now having livan (8-12) or Strincevich (2-5). tripled to right - center, scorinc position, forcing her to shoot hur­ the way, with Super Chief fifth riedly, and breaking her heart by even 10 points, but remained in whilled 190 batters. St. Louis at Cincinnati-Cooper York and Higgins. Rowe then in the five horse field. fourth place with a .337 mark Detroit's team batting mark (6-8) and Warneke (9-7) vs. singled Metha home with the piCking up spurts of white dust The race lost much of its ap­ as her drives hit the baselines. and his teammate, Talt Wright, soared to .289 and St. Louis and Derringer (16-6) and Turner third tally. peal by the last minute scratch­ is fifth at .335. Others in the New York shared tielding bon­ (9-4). In the fifth, Dick Bartell sin­ Never tn Doubt ing of , Col. Edward R. first 10 include Ted WUIiams, ors. The Browns executed 16 Chicago at Pittsburgh - Lee gled and scored ahead of Hank Seven times Miss Jacobs torced Bradley's potential three year-old Boston, .333; Frank Hayes, Phila- double plays to run their total to (8-13) and Passeau (12-10) vs. Greenberg, who smashed a line the games to deuce, but never champion of 1940. An hour be­ delphia, .332; Cecil Travis, Wash- ' 124. Heintzelman (4-4) and Lanahan drive into the left field stands for once was the outcome in doubt. tore the race, a terrlIlc thunder­ ~ 808PASTOR (2-5). his 22nd homer of the season. In the day's other headliner, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • storm drenched the racing strip natJonal champion Bobby Riggs • • and thousands of spectators jam- American Lea.gue The Sox got at least one hit Philadelphia at New York in every inning oft Rowe but was far from good-but even then BY m FEDER Imed under the stands. Most of Cedar Rapids Takes American he was far better than Henry NEW YORK, Aug. 10 (AP)- I a couple of train announcers the the 35,000 received a soaking, Caster (4-15) vs. Chandler (7-5). could score only in the first two Prusoft, winning 6-2, 6-2, 6-1 in Although you'd never know it to Last few weeks telling the public nevertheless, since a strong wind · T W· h 6 2 W· Boston at Washington-Grove frames. Mike Kreevich doubled a thoroughly uninteresting semi­ listen to 'em Billy Conn and that Louis has gone far back and blew the rain under the stands. Le210n ourney It - m (6-2) vs. Hudson (9-12). in the first inning and came home L- I Cleveland at St. Louis (2) - on Joe KuheI's single. Bob Ken- final struggle. Bob Pastor tangle Tuesday night that the Pittsburgh pretty boy is William Hurley, trainer 0 f The victory sent Riggs into to­ in what shapes up as the classi- the lad to show the Bomber up. Bimelech, decided against send­ • IAllen (6-4) and Milnar (14-7) vs. nedy singled in the second and morrow's final against Don Mc­ est heaVyWeight boxing show Despite the iact that Pastor ing his three year old in«> the Ottumwa, 1938-.39 Vern Olsen _ Harris (7-10) and Hudlin (3-4). Iscored from lirst on Lee's double Neill, Oklahoma City's national since Tommy Loughran was dot- twice carried Louis a distance, race because of the sloppy track. Detroit at Chicago (2)-New- down the left field foul line. clay court and intercollegiate tlng "i's" with his left jab. Conn has been installed favorite Mud was fetlock deep along the Champs, Defeated· Blanks Pirates~ som (14-2) and Bridges (7-6) vs. The drizzling rain started again champIon. to take the "Duke" Tuesday. The rail, i3Jld only a few seconds In Final of Meet . Lyons (7-6) and Rigney (10-13). in the fourth and continued in- Gardner Mulloy and Prusoff de­ From talking to the two prin- odds, however, have steadily nar- befOre the race started the rain Cubs Win, 1 to 0 termittently until the downpour feated Charles Matmann and Bob cipals in the Polo Grounds bat- rowed from 1 to 2 at the start to -broke in a deluge. ROCKWELL CITY, Aug. 10 ended proceedings just as the Harman, 6-4, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1 in one Ue, you get the idea that to each 5 to 7 now, and may wind up at Mioland, fourth in the K.en­ Sox concluded their turn at bat (AP) - Cedar Rapids won the PITTSBURGH, Aug. 10 (AP)- semi-final doubles match while the other guy doesn't mean any 5-6 and take your pick at fight tucky derby, and second to Bun­ JC'wa American Legion baseball End Dodger in the fifth, McNeill and~ankie Parker took more than the color of his shirt. time. elech in the Preakness, never Southpaw Vern Olsen held the The victory, coming as secoruf­ care ot the veteran duo of Wilmer Each is ignoring the other to This corner, needing the crystal was headed,. with ,jockey J~hnny champion.~hip here today by de­ Pittsburgh Pirates to seven scat­ place Cleveland was rained out at Allison and John Van Ryn, 6-4, spend his time talking up a ball and a course in astrology Adams pilotmg hlm to v1ctory. tE:afing Ottumwa, 6 to 2, for its tered hits today as the Chicago Win Streal{ St. Louis, enabled the Tigers to 6-3 6-3, in the opener. heavyweight title shot at Joe picks Conn ).0 win the decisio~ Mioland splashed over the mile third straight victory in the gain a hal! game in the two­ Louis tor himself in September. in 15 rounqt after the toughest and one quarter route in 2:05 4-5. Cubs capitalized on Dominic Dal- Chet Ro s Clouts team battle for first place. round-robin tournament. lessandro's tourth - inning triple Mike Jacobs has promised that tussle of his career. This selec- The winner retUrned $14.20 to With Ottumwa, the 1938 and doubtful reward to the winner. tion takes into consideration the win, $5.00 to place and $.3.40 to break the Bucs eight _ game Homer for Bees Off UJo::'l'ltOIT B a IUO A 11 1939 titlewinners, leading 2 to 1 Giants Win Just why either of them would argument that Promoter Jacobs t~ show. The place price on winning streak, 1-0. •.•. ::: going into the eighth inning, Ce­ I 'Hot Potato' Hamlin ~~~~'I~f ,::::::~:::: ~ ~ want this is a major mystery. realizes his one chance tor a big SIrocco wa~ $3.00 and $2.60 to D II dr ed th C b ' MOCOlk y, r 9 Q I 0 I First off, each would need a third gate with Louis with the avail- show. Welgh Anchor. retumed dar Rapids rallied for four runs a essan 0 scor e u S Or.enberg. Ir ...... :1 I I e I Gumbert Shuts Out winning tally on Al Todd's long BOSTON, Aug. 10 (AP)-Chet York, I\) ...... 2 I I!,' arm to weigh 185. Pastor already able matcrial on hand is to build $3.20 to s!'ow. GallahadlOn, hold­ on one hit, one walk, two hit Hlll'lrl n.. lb 2 I O. Phillies, 1·0 has tried to stand off the Louis Billy the Kid up to it. ing ~ ' rep~t~tion of great mud­ fly to shove the Pirates out of the Ross' 11th of the year TebbellS. c '., ...... , 8 0 : e I batsmen and fOur eorrors to clinch MethQ , ~h .'.' .. ' .. • , 2 1 ~ I , artillery twice. Once he dodged This figures to be the artistic runrung ablhty, ~ent to the post first division which they gained came in the sixth inning with the Rowe, p ...... ' ...... l ~ 0 I 1 PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 10 (AP) it for 10 rounds, the next time fistic success of the outdoor sea- at two to Qne wlh heavY back­ the game. The new champions yesterday in defeating the Cubs. bases loaded today and gave the TOTALS . •.•••. . ..•22 "6 -;» -, t -Harry Gumbert of the New the roof fell in during the 11th. son but even the most optimistic ing. Sirocco, entry of Charles topped off the scoring with an The Pirates' principle threat to Bees a 4 to 3 victory over the I CIIl('AOO ,u.l It u: po A • York Giants was the V!ctOl·, 1 to Conn has just stepped down sou~ces along bash boulevard T. Fisher, Detroit automobile additional run in the ninth. bold the hotly contested fourth Brooklyn Dodgers, shattering a Webb,!b ...... a 2 1 0 0, in a rattling good 's from the light heavyweight can't say as much for the finan- body manu~actur~r, was an. even Bob Hurych, who hurled ~ p~ce i~ the senior loop was five-game winning streak for the Kreev lch. cr [I • , duel with old Si Johnson of the throne and shouldn't be hollering cial side The estimates are for money chOice With the betters. two - hit game against Council I Phillies today. for the Bomber until he grows a turno~t of some 20000 ot the With the field reduced to five, BlUffs last Wednesday, cam e mpped 10 the seven.th when Sec- visitors, . ~~gl~~g, I~ I .::: ::: : : :: ~ : ~ , ond Baseman BIlly Herman . .. Wrlghl, rr , ...... , , . 0 0 0 Though he didn't strike out a up some more. lie and his man- faithful and a gate o£ $50000 or the race had a gross value of back with a four-bit performance stopped Al Lopez' drive and Luke Hamlin, whose home Ro.enthal, If ...... ~ l ~ man, Gumbert allowed only five , $62,150. Owner Howard collected ager, Johnny Ray, have been like so. $44,900. Fisher received $7,500 today. He fanned 11 Ottumwa threw to Hank Leiber for a dou- run ball" recently incurred the 'f!.~·~; dl~ ai.··::::::::: lOt hits and supplied the winning run players. ble play. Lee Handley's infield acid displeasure of President Lee, p ' ., ', • • , . , • •• • ,. _ ~ _ ~ ~ _ himself when he doubled in the all second money, While W. B, Bob Bates did the :pitching Simpson, Chicago, 0 w n e r of out ended the Bucs' bid. Larry MacPhail, was the victim TOTAI_~ .. , ...... 2~ 2 I Ii 4 I third inning, was sacrificed to for Ottumwa, holding Ceda-r Ra­ Herman and Leiber, Stan Hack .Detroit ...... 0$0 01-1 third and, scored on Joe Moore's Wei g h Anchor, drew down pids to five hits as he struck of the Ross Wallop. He had Chicago ...... 110 00-1 Moore Pitches 5-0 $5,000. Mrs. Ethel V. Mars. Chi- and Rabbit Warstler contributed Run. batted In-GreenberJr I, ~.. b. long fly. Qut 14 opponents. Ottumwa, how­ just relieved Lee Grissom after 2. Rowe, KUhel. Le &. Two b"l. bit.­ He made two of the five hits cago, owner of Gallabadion, co1- ever, made seven errors. three double plays during the Kr •• vlch, Lee. Three b.... hlt-Methi. tight duel in which the Cubs three straight singles had filled Home run-Greenberg. Lelt on b..... - given up by Johnson in the eigM The game was played on a OelTolt 3, Chicago 6. Bllies on banJo- innings he worked. Shutout Over Cards yl"""::;;" '" ,,~th mo.",. grass diamond because of the touched Bobby Klinger and Mace the bases. ort Le. l. Slruok oul-By Rowe I, by Brown for eight hits. Manuel Salvo pitched for the Lee B. Joe Marty led the Phillies at­ heavy r a i n which yesterday Umplrea-Rommell, Quinn.. Moriarty tack with a double and a single. a ees Blast forced postponement of the final C_IU_C_A_G_O______A_B_&_H_1'_O_A_E Bees and registered his third vic- an'~I:~~~~~ ' day's activities in the tournament 0 1 2 247. XEW YORK All R Ul'O A )!l Uack. 9b •...••... •. • o 0 tory over the Dodgers. He yielded Altendanco-t7, Reds Stretch • Boston Rookie until today. Herman. !b ..•... ',. Whitehead, 2b SOl I 5 0 Athletics~ 13-0 Ceda-r Rapids, which won the Glee.on. ot ' . •.•...... g ~ ~ ~ g 11 hits, including a home run by CROSETTI OUT l[oore, II ...... , 0 0 J 0 0 NlcholllOn. rt •.• , .. .. . nemaree, or ...... 4 0 1 2 0 0 Blanks Senators championship in 1933 and 1937, Leiber, lb ...... Youn'(. lb ...... 4 0 n 18 0 0 Lead to Six Oa.UeI!l8Q ndro, it ...... ~ ! I~ i ! ~~e ;::~!~ ~~~o~:;n ~~~:~u~ NEW YORK, Aug. 10 (AP) - will represent Iowa in the re­ ToM. c ...... •.. . Dan nln~, c •...• . . . •. I 0 I I 3 1 Yank Suspended For Ott, rr ...... 4 0 0 0 0 0 For 3'() Triumph The Yankees scored their second gional series at Belleville, IlL., Wantler. u ...... ~ ~ i ~ ~gber. Grissom was the losing Witek, ...... ,., 4 0 0 S 7 0 straight shutout over the PhiLa- against Minnesota, Wisconsin and OJ,en. J) •••••••••••••• ucclnellO'. Sb ...... , S 0 0 0 I 0 Games in Race Pushing Ump TQTAUI , .. , ., .... . 31 I 8 27 17 0 UKOOK]SN AU R 111'0 ,~ E Oumbert, p ..... , .. .. II 1 J J 1 0 WASHINGTON, Aug. 16 (AP) delphia Athletics today, 13 to 0, lllinois. d b as Rookie Ernie Bonham held the Bancroft wound up secon y PITTl!B-U-RG-JJ------ABBUI'O A E -R-ee-.-.,-.-.-·.-.-. .-.-.- ..- .-.-. .- .-::--l-O- -O-O NEW YORK, Aug. 10, (AP)- TOTALS ...... ------31 1 5'7 Jl 1 CINCINNATI, Aug. 10 (AP)- -Earl Johnson, rookie left-hand­ Mackmen to five hits to score his blanking Ottumwa, 9 to 0, in ------:--:--:--- W"lker, of ...... 1 3 0 0 Frankie Crosetti, Yankee short- PHILAJ)IIIJ.PmA AD & U·PO- A- ]I; With his high, hard one and er from ltte Piedmont league, HlIndley, Sb ...... ' .. 4 0 0 0 0 0 Camilli, J b .•..•.•. ,., 1 2 0 0 . d d tad th I first American league victory. the last game of the round-robin I!l I11011 . rf .... , ...... 4 0 : 4 0 0 Phelps. 0 ••••••••••• , 4 0 3 0 0 stop, receive wor ay a Ijchulte. 2b ...... S 0- 1- 1-3- 0 Isnapping curve working like a checked the Nationals here today The youngster from Kansas today. au.lIne. !b ...... , 0 0 , I 0 Releer , rt . , ...... , .. , 4 0 I 0 0 President Will Harridge of the MarlY, cr ...... 4 0 Z ~ ~ 0 clock, Whitey Moore pitched the VAughan, " ...... SO l • 7 0 Lavagetto, 3b .. ,.,.... U 0 4 0 Am · 1 h d ded as his Red Sox mates made the CI·ty struck out three and didn't Holding Council Bluffs to one Fletcher. lb . ••.• .•.• 4 0 I II 2 0 Medwlck, Ir ...... 3 0 2 4 0 0 erlCan eague a suspen BrA&,an ...... 4 0 0 a 2 0 Cincinnati Reds to their third Rltzo. If .... . , ...... 4 0 1 3 0 0 give a single , wbile hit, Anton Schneider, Bancroft Van Robay •. Ir .. .. '.' S 0 0 S 0 0 eo.carart. 21) •••• •• ,. 3 0 U • 2 0 him three days lor disagreein, lIa.. er", rt, lb ., .... S 0 0 3 0 0 straight victory today, a four-hit, most of their five hits off Ken his mates plastered three Athletic hurler, turned in the best mound DIMagtrlo. cr ... ,.', .. 3 0 I 0 0 0 OrlaaolO, p ...... : 0 1 0 0 0 ·th U . S 'd ., i D.. vl •. 0 , •• , • • •••• •••• 3 0 I 2 0 0 IHamill!. U ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 WI mplre ummers eCISIOn n MIIY, Sb ...... S 0 0 I 2 1 5 to 0 whitewash of the St. Warren, c, ••••.••.•••• 3 0 1 S 0 0 Chase and Walter Masterson to flingers for 13 hits, including performance of the tourney by L. W .. ner, x ..•. , •... . 0 0 0 0 0 0 Frank •. x . , ..•• ,., •.. I 0 0 0 0 0 the seventh inning of yesterday'i Mahan, ·Ib ...... 2 0 0 8 0 0 Louis Cardinals. Dro",n, p ...... 0 0 0 0 1 0 Head, V .•...... •.•.•. ~ 0 ? 00 0 0 game with the Athletics. deal Washington a 3-0 defeat. home runs by Charley Keller, fanning 13. Klinger. p ... 4...... 2 0 1 0 1 0 WasdelJ, XJC ,...... 0 11 0 Mueller. , ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 His erformance coupled with 0 Monehnk, I. , ... . , .. ,. 0 0 0 0 0 0 p , Joe Gordon, Babe Dahlgren, Red Red Baker, Bancroft center- Lop .. , c .... , ...... ' I 0 0 0 I 0 Hudeon. xu ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Summers, who called Crosetti Brown, p ,. , • ••.••..• 0 0 0 0 I 0 Boston's defeat of Brooklyn, UOSTOS An R It po A ]I; Rolfe and Joe DiMaggio. DiMag- fielder, scored his teammates TOTALS ...... 31 0 7 27 Ii 0 U 9 1I!4 6 out at the plate, said he had re­ Sl John.on. p • .••. . .• 2 0 0 0 0 0 t tched th R d' Nt · 1 TOTALS ...... 0 Klein , rr ...... I 0 0 0 0 0 s re e e SalOn a OIMagglo, or ...... 6 0 I 0 0 gio also slugged a double and Bloyer, "",atts and Ringsdorf on :I-Ran ror Dav'. In Sth. x- Sa tted tor l:iamlln In nit. commended the player's suspen- Cnlcago ...... 000 100 000-1 xx-13alled ror !ffad In 9.b. ------league lead to six games. & drove in four runs. a triple in the ninth, and then TOTALS ...... , .. . '9 0 & %7 8 1 g:~;~~,~: ...:: ::: ::: : ~ g ! ~ Plttoburl'h ...... 000 000 000-0 xxx-Ran lor 'Vasdell In 9th. sion more lor pushing him than . - Batted ror AIlIhan In 8th. ~'Oxx , c ... , ...... , .. i I 0 1 0 crossed the plate himseU on :l Run. batted In-Tocld. Two ba .. hit his verbal protest. It was the first Hr. LO JI'\ ,\II It Il 1'0 A E 3b ...... 3 1 I : l'.lITLADI'lLl'lnA AU ]I, H P; -Gleelon. Three baae hlt-Dalleeaandro. BOSTON AB R II PO A B at..-Ro.n for MueUer In lh. Tabor, 0 1'0 A fly out. It was his second three- BUl­ New York ...... OO[ 000 000-1 ~'I nney, Ib ...... • 0 1 0 0 b . th Double playe--Hack, Herma.n and Lei· time Crosetu ever had been Phlladolphl ...... 000 000 000-0 Brown, lb•• 8 •••••••• 2: o 0 0 3 0 Do.rr, 2b ...... • . . . • 0 I • 0 Rubellng, 3b ...... 0 0 I • 0 agger In e game. ber; Vaughan an(l Fletcber; Jierman Sisti. 3b ...•. ••.. , .•. ! o 3 l 1 pended. His place in the lineup Run, ba.lted In-Moore, Two base hlta T. Moore, ct .... 4 • , " l n u , n I Spence. rr ...... • 0 [ 0 0 Mo ..., rt ...... 0 t 4 0 0 Joe Fillingham, Cotmcil Bluffs and .LeIber; Herman , Wantler and ~I· Cooney. ot ..•... , ., ..... I 4 - Gumberl. Marty. Sacrttclel--Maaaera, Slaugh ter. rl ...... , ... .. o ! 2 0 0 Johnlon, 1> ••••••••••• 0 0 '0 Chapmon. or ...... 0 2 I 0 0 . ld ded th ber. Left on ba.eea--Chlc88"O 9. Pitt . .. nowell. Zb , .•• , ••.. , ~ ~ 2 ! g was taken by Bill Knickerbocker. I' •• " Whltehea.d. Double plaYI-Dllnnlng. Wl~ Mile. Lb .•.• •• • 4 " 0 0 0 Wil Bo n. P •.•••• , •..•• 0 0 0 0 0 John.on. It . . ,...... 0 0 I 0 0 centerfie er, was awar e burl'h 6. Baa •• On ballo-Klinger 2. 01- \\' e.t. rt ... , 4 • ••••• •• , .. I I 1 1 U~ k and Young; Gumbert and Youn ... Koy, It • .• • .•. . •.•. . I .. o I 0 0 ------Sieberl. Ib .... ,..... 0 I II 0 0 baseball autographed by Babe 1.0 I. Hlto-OU Klinger 7 In 8 In ­ l\foore, rt ., ...... 0 o 0 o 0 Lett on base..-Phlla.dBlphia. 6, New Pa.dgett, C , ...... •• 4 o 1 1 0 To'rAUl ...... 33 a 5!7 [4 1 Hoyel. C •.•.•• , •.•. , 00 10 21 0 0 Ruth, having the highest tourn- ning., ott Brown 1 In 1 Inn Ina. Hit by H.Olfl. It •••• • •••••• ••• 4 a : 1 0 'fork 6. Hue on ballo-Orr 81 John­ Orengo, 2b .. ,., ...... ­ o 0 4 0 0 McCoy, !b .. , ...... , 8 0 pitcher-By Kllnger-(Olee.on, Nichol· ~1t1l cr . flS ...... 4 o 5 1 0 Takes lIOn t oCt Gumbert t. StrUck out-By 81 Marton, 88 ••••••••••. 2 o 0 0 0 I WMmlNGTOS An ]I, IlPO A E Branc .. to, aa ...•..... 0 0 -3 3 0 ament batting average of any of 80n) . Loe1ng pitcher-Klinger. llneeelt, I b ...... ' 1 7 J 0 S. Martin, 3b ...... 1 Umptre&-Balla.ntaTlt, Camllbpll, Klem. Bf'I·r~8. 0 ...... • I Z JOhn';"n I. HllIO~rf 81 John,on 5 In o 00 0 14 0 0 0 6 0 0 PO~~!le.r., .p ...... , .. ...' .. .' ...... ·. 0 00 00 0 0 the players, .500. 2 0 8 Inning .. orr Brown 0 In 1. Lollnl' plt­ Bownlan, 11 . • • • • • • • •• • L 00 Tlm&-I:H. Salvo, p ...... ••. ... o I 3 I Saratoga Race cher--SI Jobnaon. i:loPlJ, x . ... • .•..•••. I gog 0 0 ~~:i.,crrr·'::::::::::::: 0 2 I 0 0 .D;~n. P '...... 0 0 0 0 0 FINAL STANDINGS Attenda.nce--4, 47 4. Omplree-Barr. Ma,erkurth, 8lewar"­ Doyle, p . , ••• , •.•• , •• 0 0 OU 0° 0 \Yalker, It ...... 2 00 O[ 0 0 °1 Beckman. P , .. , . .... _ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ W L TOTAI..s ...... , .. . 81 4 827 H 2 " "".me--l :47. J . llarlin, X:lX •...•. 1 0 TTavl., !it...... 6 Pet. Brooklyn ., ...... , ..... ZOO 000 100-3 SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y1 )!Ioodwor,h, Ib ...... , 0 013 I 0 TOTALS ...... 11 0 52t U 0 Cedar Rapids ...... 3 0 1,000 W olfl Score, Up,et Boalon ... , ...... ,.,. 000 004 00X-4 Aug. 10, (AP) - Whirlaway, a TOTALS ...... 31 0 4 24 9 2 Myer. 2b ••••• , • ••• .• 4 00 ; II 4. 0 x-Sattell ror Potter In Srd. Bancroft ...... 2 1 DULUTH, Minn., Aug. 10, (AP) Runs b8.11 e(\ In--Can1l1ll, Phelp8. Roae x ...... Baltel! tor' BoWllU1n tn 8th. porohl .•• , .. . , .. . . , . 3 .667 4. Two ba.e hlt,-liedwlck, Walker. stretCh-running colt from Warren ...-Ba.Ue • • • •• •••• 0 0 0 0 0 0 Rolfe. 3b ...... 5 a ! 0 I 0 invitational golf tournament to­ on ba8~B-f:jrOOkl.Yn 9: "oaton 7. Ba.llell "sporting" horse race, the Sara­ Northwest Title Werber. a~ ...... 4 1 1 0 1 0 Early...... , . . . 1 0 0 0 0 0 R.nrlch, Tr , .. , ...... 4 I I I 0 0 day by beating Earl Larson of on ballI-Orr Orl"Oll1 2, ott Head 1. M . 'ltteCorml('k, ct .... :1 1 1 lOU ------DI'M'"ulo. or ...... 4 ! ! 8 0 0 ort Salvo 6. Struck oUl-By Orl.8Om 5. toga Special. ~'rey. Ib • .•...... • .. . , 0 1 a 3 0 To'rAUI .. ,. , ...... 32 0 927 I. 2 Keller, Ir ., ...... , .. & I I 6 0 0 50 Baqertl To Report Minneapolis, the defending cham­ by Sa.lvo 2. Hlta-ort OrlSBOIn 6 In 6, Ii", McCorm ick, Ib q .. -l 1 :t 9 0 0 a- BAU"£! (or 'hale In Hh. DICkey. c ...... , t 2 " 0 0 MADISON, Wis., (AP) - The Innings (none out In 8th), oft Hamlin It's the only race in which till MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 10, (AP) r.omoordl, rt ...... , 0 1 I~ 0 0 z&-Batted tor Mn.ltereO Ii in 9th. Da.bl.-ren, lb ...... 1 t. 0 pion, one up in the semi-finals. By University of Wisconsin will turn I In I. orr Head 2 In 2. r.oalng pitcher owners contribute the entire pur­ Dick Hainline ot Rock Island, Ill., Ooodm8.n. rr ...... ~ 10 0 I 0 0 Boltun ...... 003 000 006-3 Knickerboc ker, ...... " 0 0 2 0 sinking two almost miraculous -Gris8om. A rnovich. It ., . . ...• , 4 , 3 0 \Vslihlnglon ...... \ ..• 000 000 000-0 Bonham. p .•..• • ..•. 3 J 0 J 0 out about 50 candidates tor toot­ Umpires-Reardon. Bearl and Jorda. through entry fees and in whicll won the northwest grass court Myero. II ., ••••••••• ~ I 0 0 : U RUns baLted In- Tabor, Finney:. Two putts for birdies on the last two ball practice Sept. 10, again hav­ Tlm e--2 :28. the winner takes the whole pot. singles tennis championship at [.. Moore, p •••••••••• .!. ~ ..: ~ ...: ~ ba.. p hlta-Spe nce. Tabor. Stolen blliel TOTALS .. . , .. . , ... 3G t3 13 27 • 1 holes, Wolff earned the right to AUendHl1ce-t,68 • - Tabor. Ooutlle n'a.ya--Myer, Pofahl Philadelphia . , ...... 000 000 0&0-;.0 ing the smallest squad in the Big meet Johnny Goodman of Omaha, Thus Whirlaway, in addition to Deephaven .today by defeating the TOTALs ...... 12 6 9 t7 7 0 ond Blood\\'orth: rnmer ana F"O:lI. ; Cro~ N.w York ...... HI 006 Oh-13 stamping himself as favorite for defending champion, Norm Mac- Ht. l..aull ...... 000 000 000-0 nln, Doerr and f'-Inney. Lert on ba..ea Run! batted In-Henrich 3. DtMa... ,lo Ten in point 01 numbers, Harry former national open and national Will Make Dra.wID&,s Clnclnnoll , ...... 030 000 ZOx-6 - BOlto n ; WaRhlngton 10. Ba.le.ll on -4 , Keller. Gordon, Dlekey. DahllTen I. Stuhldreher, a.thletic director and amateur champion in the 36-hole DES MOINES, (AP)-Drawings the even richer Hopeful staka. Donald of Minneapolis, 6-1, 6-0, Run, l> .. tt.d In- ~· r y :. F . MoCor- b.II.-o,( J oh nlon 6. otr Chale. e~D The emu and cassowary of Bafles on ba.lht~-Otr Bo,,·mll.n 2. ott L. 80n 1 In ,., Innln&". Winning pftcher­ and l).. hl~r.n : Rub.rrn~ .- JCcCoy l.nd 7 In 4, ort Soeltm ..n I In J. LoeluJr pit· ing Aug. 18 will be made here skids by not touching the braaea. beating Dorothy Busch of Min- lItoore 5. Struok out By Bowman 6, Australia, ostrich of Atrica and Johnl!lon. La.lng pltcher-Ch.ae. Sleb.'tl. !Aft on b.a..-New York .. : oh.er-Polter. next Thursday. Fourteen district leaving the car in gear, and. turn­ Deapolis defending titleholder IbY J;loyle I, by L.. \100 .... 7. >llt ....orr Umplre..-McGoW'an, Kolla and Rue. PhlladolPhhL 4. an"". on bllla--orr POI· Ulllplrel-PIPar~ .. Or",.by. SlImmlrt. rhea ot South America are the 8 8 • ' 8 3 ' Bowman I In 7 Innl"p, ort DoYI. 1 In Tlme-2:10. ter it ott Oea.n I, ott Beekman 1. at ruck Tlmo-l :4i. world's only large running birds. champions will compete. ing with the skid-not agaiDIt it. 2-, -, -. _. _ 1. Lo.lnll pllch ...... »O.. m .. D . A "ond&no_6. DOD, out-B)' Boob.1Il '. b)' B•• kman 1. HJtI Alllndauoo-7.517. • .L.L , .lvil ... J...,. ,I."" 'f~_ IX [ ~We're Getting Into Our Stride' on Defense Program~ Declares Roosevelt ------~I I whether anyone within the ad- tw~ candidates on international \ mouth, people by the thousands can't you cut out politics and talk ' third shift, he said, primarily to Europe last m onth. by the president as one of th e I - Defense- ministration had approached Wen- poltcy. had jammed every street. something else?" eliminate bottle necks in produc- "He went over to be my eyes Washington rumors. , dell L. Willkie about a r approach- " I haven't se~n a,?y papers since It was in New England that the To an inquiry whether operat- tion of specific items. and ear s," Knox explaLned. The presidential yacht Potomac (Continued From Page 1) yesterday mornmg,' Mr. Roosevelt es ment on foreign policy. responded. higgest crowds of the 1936 cam- log defense establishments at full Secretary Knox was in the car "Can you tell us what he moved down the harbor at 6:23 ~ Sunday at sea, the president Newsmen wanted to know whe- Noisy but skimpy crowds turn - I paign showed up. production meant three shifts, the beside him and reporters thought found?" a newsman asked. p. m. (C~T) tonight to anchor for r' !lid he wa glad to know the ar- ther the president had seen a ed out as the president dro\'e Mr. Roosevelt's tone was some­ president responded that it would It would be a good time, while "No," the president declared, the niiht in Massachusetts bay. In ;onal was operating at about 75 statement by the republican nomi- about the Boston area. But his Iwhat resentIul when some one depend on the article produced. they were together, to ask about "because it's his mouth." Mr. Roosevelt went aboard 'If cent of capacity and that the nee in morning papers to the ef- route from the navy yard to the popped a question pertaining to Three sbHts would be cheaper in a secret mission on which the A radio report that Secretary shortly after 4 p. m ., but the .1"1 yards "also are working fect that certain persons had arsenal lay along the scenic the New Hampshire gubernatorial some instances and not in others, secretary sent Col. William Dono­ Hopkins would r esign to superin­ yacht waited nearly two hours to 5·2 pttty near to capacity." approached Willkie to suggest an Charles river and touched a mere race. he said. Ivan , World war commander or the tend the Roo veil library at permit the chief executive to have -lie shunted aside a question agreement be reached between the corner of Boston proper. At Ports- "My Lord," he retorted, "why The navy yards are using a fighting sixty-ninth regiment, to Hyde Pa rk, N. Y., was dismissed dinner at the pier. ------~------tne nearly 30 miles through coast Na t io n a I Geographical society the peaks 01 Mount Sanlord, ca at their national t"Onvention Walk.' Patriotijl m is the keynote L. A. Downs, range mountams to ·,tabILh ('amp which has been planted on every Mount Lucania, Mount St. Agnes Patriotism to Be It oday. ot all our thinking and cannot UII! 10,000 Feet, at the ba~e of peak un July and Mount Cillon. The fla~s are Found in Ne'west Among them are the "Plymouth 'help but in!iuen<'"e our dancmg." I I 22. peak recently climbed. This flag, lind also an American IJag which in a small aluminum cylinder Rock," and a milital·Y dance, "The Rail Magnate, upplies From Air which is kept between expeditions Dcmce Sensations I Liberty Parade." Of the latter, Le- P)-Tbe Pretty High! went up with it, has Clown twice A thousand pounds of supplic:J at the society headquarters i n r oy Thayer, Washington leacher PopulaliC':l of Barrow Alaska. Ii their were thrown to us from an air­ ove)· Mount McKinley, hi ghest Washington, D. C. Dead at 68 But Explorer' Wife peak in America ; was carried PITTSBURGH, Aug. 10, ( AP)- and president ot the dancing mas- 1arthest north habHation on the , a lull p lane on Brady glaciC'r, 15 miles North American continent, has into the mountains in order to aeross th SI. Elias range from Patriotism dominates the new ters, declared: • 2 vic. Is First Woman To increased in 10 years from 330 CHICAGO, Aug. 10, (AP)­ speed our advance. We c ·tabli~h ­ Canada in to Al aska in the winter The Australian "black tellow" dances accepted for next season " Il will sw eep the country as the ~te Sol Lawrence A. Downs, 68, who rose Reach Peak Afoot ed an advance camp at 7,000 feet of 1935; and was also carned to is not black but brown. by the Dancing Masters ot Ameri- 'Chestnut Tree' and 'The Lambeth to 362. Most are Eskimos. 10riened I I (rOnI the humble job ot B $60-a­ on the east ridge of Mount Bt:rth" POPEYE taton. IIIOnlh rodman to the important Editor'S note: Bradford Wash - July 25. There we wuited (lut ,cv­ up the p:st of chairman of the board ot burn , dlrect.or of the New En"-, eral days of stormy weI pr be­ OOR'E>H! SHE·... I-PW \~ 'YOUR. land museum of natural history fore finally succeeding on our LI>.OV FRIEND, nutes in ~ Illinois Central Railroad SYS-I rHE PER,IEST lflii, died today. expedition, succeeded ill reach­ climb on the 30th. QUEEN I EVER MI'S~ OI...I\IE DstpOne. OYL? He had been in poor health :tor ing the hitherto unclimbed 10,­ The route which We were for­ <:XED..--- OOO-(j)ol summit oC Mouot le of a twO years and entered a hospital ced to use to reach the ~ummit Bertha in the Fa irweather range was extremely ~tccp but magni­ two weeks ago for trea tmen t of a of Alaska. on July 30. Here­ :hOOlboy licent. We had been forced to bftrt ailment and high blood with is his story of the trip. in give up an attempt by an ap­ ason 88 pressure. which he discloses that his wife, parently casi('[" route on account Barbara, was among Ihe five of Dugh he [)owns became chairman of the of a terri ble :eries of .ES Of l'A" , I-IAAoVEV, ····WHAT Boss 'backer. Oassified, Of Course! R)~EST , ANt> YOU STAGGE~ 1- II' YOU ~PECT ME 10 'PULL "'­ THIS FUEL / •••• WHY, MAN.··· WHI"Tl:: UMBIi!E\..I..A ~es . and Thesis Supplies SUPPER. THAT, I"LL LET OFF ON A l'OLAR "EXPEDITION, I Authorized Agency For 'rOll TRY "FRYING AN EGG A "A~HUTIST You never see this vast Classified market, GRIL~ED WALRUS STEAKS loce : Underwood Typewriter, WIn< A "FLASHLIGHT ! but it's just as real as the crowd in the COl'­ WITH A ~ED DRAFT ON PJES IOWA BOOK STORE MY MEERSCHAUM PI'PE.! N. Y1 ner grocery. It's composed of literally hun­ vaY, a .... dreds of people whose marketing function \Varren . TRANSPORTATION is to read and shop the Iowan Way. They're It Chi­ the people who have things to sell, or .are s most 8-12 Sara- looking for something they w.ant to buy _ .. DEAR. NOAH· IF PICK- both buying and selling al'e done efficiently, pOCI are annually prod uced in developments in the field of na- SpeCial horse exhibitions. the Wellman community. lional defense: High school horse and other en­ Wellman's leadership in the tur- The WPA reported it had ap- Reverend Dalton tertainment between classes. key industry is recognized na- proved $7,225,000 worth of na­ FRIDAY tionally and the town is known. tional defense projects during the Will Preach 9 a.m.-Judging 4-H colts and n a t ion a II y as "Thanksgiving last two weeks of July, bringing judging contest, superintendent, Town." Considerahl e publicity the total since July 1 to more than This Morning F re d Stock; judge, W. F. La­ has been given to "Thanksgiving $27, 000,000. The projects are com­ Gra nge of Ames. Town" as a result of articles pub- prised mainly of work on faclli­ The Rev, J ohn Brucc Dalton II a.m.-Judging purebred bee! lished in the Country Home and ties for the army, including bar­ will occupy his pulpit at the First heiiers, superintendent, L o u i s Readers Digest. racKs, rifle ranges, airports and Christian church this morning at Lord; judge, W. F. LaGrange storage plants .. the 10:40 service speaking on the 1 p.m.-Judging 4-H baby The civilian conservation corps topic, "The Drama of Life." As Allierican as PorI and Bean beeves, superintend ent, Emil Mey­ said that 400 enrollees would sail Rollo Norman will be soloist for er; judge, W. F. LaGrange. Britain-- from Seattle on August 30 aboard the service. Priscilla Keeler, guest organist and member of t he mu­ 3 p.m.-Selecting beef calves for (Continued From Page 1) the army transport LeonaJ'd Wood he's proud of if. helps to fi nance hi state fail' exhibition. to build an army airfield at Mat­ sic department of the University It SOMEHOW we've come to lOOK 3:30 p.m.-lntroduction of boys whcn favorable weather returns lakatla, Alaska. The field, locat­ of Georgia, will play two num­ educatiun, or to make things a little easier and girls county wI nners. in the spr ing the British are de­ ed on Annette island, will be used bers, "March" and "Meditation" upon the newspaper boy as a purely at home. Many of our prominent business by Dubois and Schubert's "Sere­ Girls club exhibits will be on termined to seize the adva ntage. as a n intermediate landing stage and professional men right here in Iowa Wheeler display in the armory Thursday tor army planes flying fi'om nade" during t he worship service. American phenomenon-much like free­ "We're not afraid Hitler will try City we re new&j)aper boys. And they 1. Sti rn! and Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 4 to invade us," one officer com­ Seattle to the Anchorage' and All regular Sunday services will dom of speech. The right of an individual be maintained by the church dur­ II secret. p.m. Girls demonstration teams mented. "We're afraid he won't." Fairbanks air corps bases. . • don't pass up the opportunity Lo mention by Sen ing the vacation period. to earn money In an honest endeavor is w ill present their demonstration No Lolller Haunted The United s tates Chamber of it, either! The training that these boys 1Ilch) th in the fieldhouse Thursday and No longer haunted by expec­ Commerce cautioned that "while The Rev. and Mrs. Dalton just as typically American as pork and and daughter, Donna, have re­ get serves to make them self-reliant ... Ihould ~ Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 12 noon. tation of a direct German assault complete deCense must be prompt­ before 1', ly made effective, yet in so doing turned to Iowa City after spending beans. It's one of the rights that we've There will be special 4-H num­ at any moment now that this peri­ teaches them the va lue of money , • , the lIld a sl< bers between each demonstration, lous week has passed, the Br itish we must not, by our own acts, a lO-day vacation at Linn Creek, Mo., on t he Lake of t he Ozarks. fought for-with battles and wi th word . wisdom of savin g. (D'Mo) H has been announced. are in creasingly aware 01 th e lose at home that which we are bill becal properly preparing to defend Announcement of the demon­ mushrooming power of their own prOll\otiol a g a i n s t possible attack from stration team scores will be made forces itching for a chance to take HERE and there, per hap , we've W E don't know of any, group ficer per. at 1:30 Friday. The winning dem­ the offensive. abroad." The chamber said in a onstration team will be eligible to statement prepared by its na­ come off a little the worse for it, But in th at's more deserving of praise lind en· Towar( This week was one of the m ost Quiz Program Sr hato: present a demonstration at the favorable for sea-borne invasion tional policy council 'that "pri ­ the main, the privilege is still untarnished. co uragement. We salute every newspaper the deml state fair in competition to other because of high tides which would marily we must guard against any Special Feature Given No group expresses this American trait as boy in the country. and especially our OW[I county winners. loss of these fundamental rights those In ha e carried nazi troop barges much 8S the newspaper boy. The mon ey IQwan staff. Hi s diligence and initiali\'c far hest up British beaches, through federal encroachment. At4-H Club Show IItcided I Now, as far as Britain is con­ We must be alert to the effect of he earns is earned the hard way-and is a hining light for aU of usf (See cerned, the war of. nerves is over. greater debt, heavier taxation "The Battle of East and West," Dark Skies Today's wholesale raids were r e­ and increasing propaganda both a question and answer program, garded as aimed to crack public from witbin and without." - is the latest addition of special Intermittent Showel"8 morale whlch, the British say, is Secretary of Labor Perkins sa id features to the Wednesday night far higher than in jittery August, the treasury department had in­ show of the 12th annual J ohnsor. 35 In Iowa City 1939, before the war and daily formed her t,tlat costs incident to county 4-H club show at the Iowa L...______air r aids began. the training of apprentices could stadium and lieldhouse Wednes­ ATW be deducted from gross income Wlth dark skies and frequent day, Thursday and Fr iday of this YOUR IOWAN CARlUER BOY IS A GREAT least 35 showers throughout the day yes­ for federal tax purposes. Miss week. terday, the mercury in Iowa City Tryouts to Be Held Perkins commented that this was Announced yesterday by Coun­ FELLOW TO KNOW •• HE'S ALWAYS READY ilamale failed to rise above 73 degrees as in accord with the labor depart­ ty Agent Emmett C. Gardner, the IIIilUons compared with a normal high for For Amateur Show ment's "plans for stimulating ex­ show will be presented as a con­ Ibt hurr the day of 85 degrees. Given by 4-H Club pansion of apprenticesliip in es­ test ot tea!fs repl'esenting the por­ TO SERVE YOU •. . KNOW HIM BETTERI ,South CI A total of .37 ot an inch of sential defense industries." tion of t1ie county east of the Work , rain had fallen up to 7 o'clock Tryouts for the amateur show Iowa river versus the west part l!store c I of the county. last night and the intermittent to be held Wednesday night at to tryout tomorrow night. Coun­ b, the '0\ Quizzers or the show will be showers continued Into the niaht. the 4-H club show at Iowa sta- ty Agent Emmett C. Gardner said lr!a in I Low temperature reading for dium will be held tomorrow nJght yesterday that the Wednesday Ray Heinen, farm editor of radio While the day was 67 degrees and the at 8 o'clock at the Woodman han night program will be made up station wsur, and D. Mac Show­ ers of The Daily Iowan stafl. ~trat e normal low for the day was 82. in Iowa City. tomorrow night following the try- ","I(JS to Readings a year ago were 78 de­ Any persons interested in par- outs so any who plan to take part Judge for the program will be ~ Cro pees high and 57 degrees low. ticipating in the show are invited mUst attend the try-out meeting. James Nelson of the WSUI staff. =:.t~