Saves on the Water Bill The Weather Today L08 ANGELER (If') - NIIIe raolDlq hoWle tenants who eIaIm Ute, lleed a baUl fUed ..U ,.terday because, they Mostly cloudy with showers today. Not aIIeIe4, tbelr laad".,. ....lIted on lleeptn, In tbe tub, TIle superior eoan IlOIIIplatnt, aikin, $50,000 damares, much change in temperature. High today cbarred allD &be lallllad" Mn. IUlle GUbert, levied rente at owaJ1 82; low 65. Yesterday's high 80; low 57. In eKe_ of OPA celllD... No· 262-AP News a nd Wirephoto Established 18SB-Vol. $0, Iowa City, Iowa, Tuesday, Auquat 3, 194B-Flve Cents

nrtd but Happy - When a Laddie Meets His Lassie Highlanders Western Envoys Talk Back Home

Tired but* happy * ,* the State University of Iowa's Scottish Hllhlanders returned to Iowa City To Stalin In Kremlin 1IIt niaht on the late Rock Island Rocket, ending an 8-day tour. Only a handful of people were Hold Post· Interview Me~ting on hand to met the younr ladles Iowa Science Law Russ-Backed Polite who performed before more than 10,000 members of the Internation­ Called 'Vicious' by Arrest West Sedor al Lions at Madison Square Gar­ At U. S. Embassy in Moscow cltn in New York City July 28. The 30 young ladies also made ap­ Chiropractic Ma n By EDDY GlLM RE Policemen in Berlin pW'ances In West Point, N. Y., lit COW (iP)- DipJomats of the ni ted States, Britain and and Cleveland, Ohio. DES MOINES (.4") - The state BERLIN (iP) - The Russian· basic science law yesterday waS F rance talked with Prime Minillter S talin last night about the backed German police in the Sov­ Meets WIfe termed "vicious legislation" by chance of s tUiJ1.<7 east-west differenc s. iet sector of Berlin have launch­ Robert Sautter, 1730 Musca­ ed an arrest-on-sight war against tine avenue, was on hand to meet Ralph Evans, vice-president of the T hey remained in the Kremljn more than two houri, leaving Palmer school of chiropractic at their coun terparts in the western his wife, the former Nedra Mc­ that wall ed c uteI' of th oviet governm nt aL 1 p.m. Towa time. sectors. American public safety Habney of Cedar Rapids. ,He said Davenport. Evans appeared before the leg­ Tbe lpngth of their stay indicated talin had g ranted one of bis olIicers said last night. IslaUve interim committee . longest interviews to foreign dip­ Four western sector policemen "There is n o question in my plomatic representatives. were seized over the weekend be •hael warned his wife not to eat when they entered the easlern mind," he told the legIslators, Even before the visit there were on the last part of the trip be­ "that the viciousness of the type indications of an easing of the Botany Lab To Go; sector. They still are in custody. cause he had a couple of steaks of legislation enacted is now at tense International situation: Au­ According to the American In the icebox at home. The Saut­ work." thoritative sources said progress Contracts Awarded sources, the Russian sector police ter. have been married about six With Evans was Charles WOson are acting under orders to arrest _ Iu. already has been made among the of Atlantic, who has been enjoin­ tour great powers. any policeman working for Johan­ Sautter daslled over to the train nes Stumm, who recently was ed from practi cing as a chiroprac­ The three envoys-U. S. Amblls­ For New Building shortly after It pulled into the tor; a representative of the DIs­ appOinted police ch ief by the anti­ mUon and kissed his wife who sador Walter Bedell Smith, French The botany iab will be demol­ Communist city government. abled American Veterans; a Farm Ambassador Yves Chataigneau and wu one of the first to aUght. bureau member, and two other ished instead of being cut from Stumm was told to repla('e F rank Roberts, special British Its foundation Bnd moved, George TriP ''WoMerllll'' representatives of the Palmer re'Presentative-returned to the Moscow-traincd P aul Markgraf, Tbe trip, she said, was "wonder­ schooL L. Horner, university architect, accused of complicity in the dis.. American Embassy after their said yesterday. ful,' and she was "tired but very FaUed Teats meeting with Stalin and went in­ appearance of hundr ds of Berlin­ excited." Evans told the commJttee that to immediate conference. Lack of bids on the moving for­ ers in the Ru ssian s ctor. The Members of the or,anization ced him lo negotiate for a con,.. Russians rcfused lo recognize the Wilson had taken the basic science All three were smiling and af­ llid Mrs. Sautter had been anti­ exam eight times, being failed tract, lJ orner said. city government's action, and cipating the arrival in Iowa City fable. As they hurried into the Markgraf stayed in his had­ each time in four or five of the embassy buHding, Smith led lwo The C. W. Marlin construction ever ainee the train len New company of Mount Pleasant was quarters in lhe Russian sector. six required subjects. He eventu­ colleagues up the stariway. York. ally passed all but the anatomy awarded a contract for $69,685 Stumm movcd his headquarters A former Hlllhlander was at teit Included in the examination. Corespondents had to folloW for constructi on of the new botany to th e American sector. Both claim the station to meet Norma . Lou The basic science law, enacted him partly up the steps before lab according lo Horner. to be the lega l chiel o[ police. Haeq of Cedar Rapids. A mem­ in 1945-, provides that a person they could stop him. Then, turn­ Ing and laughing, the U. S. Am­ The new building will be 20 Meanwhile, the conference of ber during 1942 and 1943, Robert must pass the basic science exam­ by 80 Ieet and .two stories high, Renfro, 115 E. Market str.. t, be­ bassador said: western diplomats with Prime ination before being quali!ied to Horner said. It later will be en­ Ion&ed to the largest balPi~ band Minister Stalin In Moscow last take an examination for a license "Walt a minute. You can't fol­ 60 In the world when it was not en­ larged to by 80 teet, the size nlllht caused Americans to delay to practice medicine, chiropractic low me right Into my office. We're of the prcsent lab, when funds dealing with the lroubled cunen­ lireIy a 'Y0men's ori anizaiion. (Dany lowu Photo by n ub Nlplon) having a meeting there tonight, or other methods of healJng. and materials permIt. he said. c)! situation in BerUn. )lore 1Velcomnea MMMMMM .. . ('M GLAD YOU'RE BACK! Rob ert Sautter, 1'130 Muscatine avenue said it all wUh a Wilson successfully passed the you know." The site of the present lab has American occupation authorities Betty Kirby, 1108 E. Burlinr­ kill las' night as he welcomed his wife home (rom her trip east wIth the universIty Scoltish Highland­ chiropracUc licensing examinaUon Other U. S., British and French to be cleared lo make way for met with German bankers to lind ton street, had hardly stepped off ers. Mrs. Sautler. the former Nedra l\1cNabney of Cedar Rapids, was one of the 30 Hllfhlanders who but his license was held up be­ oftJc1als already were in th em­ the train before being firmly hur­ the new VA hospital soon to be ways of dealing with the Soviet left Iowa City July 26 and returned last night. The group made appearancflll In Madison Sq uare cause of failure in the basic bassy waiting for their chiefs lo erected. I!d by her grandparents, Mr. and Garden, at West Point, N.Y., and at Cleveland, Ohio. There were several happy reunions like the oue science test. return [rom the Kremlin. freeze on accounls of western Berlin firms. lln. W. R. Tharp, alld her sister, pictured above last night at the Rock Island station. Note the electric iron Mr,. Sautter bolds in her "Wronlf LerlslaUon" Smith told reporters: "General­ Horner said bids on services to the new building will be opened lbrian. band. "Enactment of that type of issimo Stalin and Mr. Molotov re­ American sources said it had in his office at 2 p .m. Aug. 12. ifarllyn Smith, 1\.1, OxfQrd, re­ le6lislation is wrong," Evans de­ ceived us all at a meeting.' been pl anned to tell banks to Iwned with the knowled,e Ulat clared. Then he added: "There will Carsten Brothers of Ackley is ue loans to the fIrms 0 ttde lItr pIcture will SOOIl adorn the It is wrona, he added, to set up probably be a communique to that were awarded a contract for them over, but the plan was cover of Colliers malrallne. The Observes Second a board that has the authority to effect tonight. I don't think there plumbing and heating at $38,546. abandoned pending developments blo/ld piper of the organintion Pool Fund Senator Fails from the conference with Stalin. '. deny a person the right to practice will be anything more. I'm sorry, A $4',117 electrical contract was lpent lwo hours on a Cleveland Silver Wedding a profession which is his means but that's all." awarded to WJlson Electric com­ loll course Sunday posin, for of livelihood. Veteran correspondents who pany of Rock(ord, lll. photographers. L O NG BEACH

,. 'I1lII)AJLY IOWAN. TUE8bAY, AUGUST 3. 19U-PAGE TWO " • pIC BOO-Meter "· Mark r Miller Anderson Iniured In Foil away dive from a handstand po­ After four di,:es, wilh four more relay squad to swim In this Q_ Ris on Relay Team; sllion on the lO-meter (32 t1. to be judged thili morning, Mrs. 1. Wally Ria of C~o III I 10 In .) platform. Victoria Manalo Draves of Pasa- the UnlvenJty of Iowa. the 111 Anderson rinasnea set'ona to dena, was first on point. The U. Olympic 100-meter free ..,.. Brand Wins Crown S. springboard champion, Zoe Ann champ: !. Wally Wolf. ... B~ GAYLB TALBOT Ohio Slate tcommate r:.·ucc Har­ LONDON (JP) - Wally Ris of lan, the first Amerkan Olympic Olsen o[ Oakland, was second and Altl"elea; 3. McLane; •. 014 .. OLYlIIPIC STADIUM, WEJIB­ Iowa university was named num­ water champion uj'the 1948 games. Patricia Ann Elsener of San Fran, liable ukelele BIIlSmltb of u.. LEY, ENGLAND (A» - A record ber one man on the United States in. the springfonl di\! iug final' ci~co. was third. olo1u. breakin, victory by BOO-meter free style swimming Saturday. Olympic swim coach Bob Ki· TurkeYI with four fJrst plaCtS the 8DO meter run and a mag­ team yesterday. Coach Bob Kip­ Anderson wa. hurt when his left puth of Yale. got his water sprint- and two seconds, won the OIy. nificent flight by Guinn Smith In htuh made the announcement. fool slapped the platform liS he cut ers qualified for the finals of the free style wrestling team chill­ -ib6 ~ IlaUlt gave A.me.rica's Meanwhile, Aqlerican hopes for a through from a handstand. lIe BOO-meter relays without even us- ships. trJck.tnct .field st8.fS two more Oly­ clean sweep of the two men's Oly­ went spinning down to land llat on ing any of th first string quartet Two American grapplers, G\t!In n$1~ tin. before another capacity ITlPic diving championships faded his back. he will put on the mark in the Brand of Clarion, Iowa, and Heary crawd <1f 84,000 yesterday. tooay when Miller Anderson of In tne day's only s\\immlnl:" payoff race for the championship Wittenberg, the wrestling cop 1m 1MbWieJd, an army air force Ohio State was in~ured in an un­ fin,", statue que Ann urtis of tomorrow night. New York, won Individual tidft. to Coach Kiputh was satisfied to Brand trjumphed in the middle­ ~ Ntlooed at Lockbourne controlled aO-loot [all to the water San Francl co, wa second fleJQ, CQlumbus, 0., establi hed a while performIng an exhibition Denmark's Great Gretn. Ander- finish second iin his heat with Rob- weight class while Wlttenblt{ ...., -Qi,Jmpic mark o! 1!411.2 tor dIve. on In a 66.3 second 100-meter ert Gibe of Detroit. Williom Dudley garnered the light heavy\\,eilbt free style. 3rd of ~cw Orlean, Edwin Gil- crown. """ .. of the w~t , heavy track Beth the UIlUed. tates team In beating the greatest field ever coach and doctor feared. Ander- As expected, the three spring­ bert of University of Texas, and In addition to triump~s l ~ Eugene Roger of the New Yorl< Brand aod Wlttenberg. ueJ'IIQ iM ~nt in 1011 had knocked lJjmseJf oui or board girls from Cnlif01'llia 1in­ 1o'nm In the games. A. C. ·wimming in that order. . Leeman of Cedar Palls, Iowa, .... , ...... , file hllDall eker be (AI' Radlowlr~ pbol. ) flll1her OIYDUlIe competition. He ished the first halt of their diving aofered a 8L1a'~t bemonha&"e as program in first, second and third But for tonight, Kipulh haS' ~cond in the bantamw~lght divi· ...... either beat 01' eQDallecl WITH ADIS OUTSTRETCHED Mal WhIttleld (136) Oblo State races to victory In the 800-metu cham­ ihe result of a. miscue In a eut- places. named the top men of his 12-man sl~n lind Leland Mernll. Jr., ~l ~ ~ Ol,mpic rM0r8 01 p.ion !lIp at the Olympl • Second I Arthur Wlnt 'Of Jamaica (lZZ) eloeely followed by Mareel Hansenne * * MIlltown, N. J ., wound up thIrd U\ ,.. -' Ity BrUabt'.Tom (151) of France. * the we lterweigh t class. ,.11I r II an un and all six * * * * * * America's wizards of the COIIIi punctured any doubts or their '.=-:=':':iY!" w:.::: -= In th~t event. Adolfo CODJiOllnl, OlylDplc basketball Invlnelblllly III 1111,' Ja \be 1916 ..ames at the winner, hattered the Oly- __ .... _ mplc record with. a toss of 173 by scorlu a leisurely 55 to u ,--- feet, 2 Inches, and 0 did hi irlam,ph over CsechOilovalda, IMAJORs~ Ute best ~a.m Ln &11 EwOPe. '·.Ar~hur Wint, a tall J amaican, teammate, Giuseppe Tost, with " nlsb4id aecOlld about three yard 119 fMt, 10 '\ Inches. AM ERICAN LE OUI! NATIONAL LEAGUE The American's mastery W8l1O W. PCT. GB W. L. yeT. OD .bacl!- M.ter puttiQi on a thrilling l.. Bo. ton ...... 5" 40 .6&8 dunk the ball in the basket with Pbl.la

n, • . .- .. ,- ~ ..... ,- ..."TIl! DAlLY IOWAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, UU-PAGE TRJLD Two Brides-Elect Prepare ' For Earl Fall Weddi Tour Five Department Stores ~t:l~mPII For Wedding Trip Apparel By JO BARNES Society Editor every-popular "opera" pump and "Busy is the bride-fa-be." sling pump still lead the trends. Sarah 'Records and Marjorie However, there is much mOl'e va­ Smith, two brides-to-be who have riety in color this season. cho~n the "Indian Summer" sea- "That old-fashioned look" . . . son for their weddings have found variously caUed "victorian," and this saying to be very -true. "quaint" is a strong trend evident Marjorie, the niece of Mrs. L. in dress clothes. It is a trend Ihat C. NebergaU, Long Beach, Calif., comes within th established suc­ will be -married to Murray Weir, cess-silhouettes of snug bodices, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Weir. sloped shoulders, full skirts. Pen­ Iowa City, on September 10. cil skirts, however, are being The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. shown in abundance. F. Records, Iowa City, Sarah wiU Fabrics shown suggest victorian exchange vows with Jack Fox. tbe richness. There is lots of velve­ son of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. FOll:. teen and corduroy and trimmings Waterloo. on August 25. such as braid, ba1l1ringe and em- These two girls, finding them- broiderie3. sei-Jes In "the same boat", decided Sarah and Jack plan to go to to do their trousseau shopping 10- White Fish Lake, Minn., for their gether, believing tHat "two heads wedding trip while Marjorie and are better Illan one." Murray will journey to Mannatu However, the unpredictable Springs, Colo. weather man has them in a quan- So lots ot informal sport clothes dry. The question that immedi- will be packed for both girls. Sun­ ately occurs to both of them is, dresses are the most popular "Sbou1d I buy cottons or woolens sportswear for women this season. for my trousseau?" The unique feature of these So, while shopping they agreed dresses are that when worn with­ to make somewhat of a COmpro- out a jacket, they are correct on a mise with "friend weather" and to tennis court or golt course. But try a few garments of each type. when coupled with the jacket, they can be worn to semi-dressy occa- Both girls plan formal weddings, slons. 50 the main item on their shopping Jist is the traditional white wed- On the golf course, plain, un- ding gown. pleated shorts in various colors Satin definitely predominates in are being worn. Halters and white early, fall weddings, with some shirtwaist blouses are coupled with marquisette being shown. How- the shorts. ever, no certain "type" gown is es- "T" shirts have become popular pecially popular this season. In again, when worn with pedal­ tact, in browsing through Iowa City pushers and shorts and are some­ department stores, the two shop- times even worn with gabardine pers found that gowns of almost ,sport skirts. every type are b~lng shQ'YlJ • •. Play shoes In bright qr pastel victorian, tailored. frilly, etc. . ., colors are being displayed. Gold The' traditi on II I "sweetheart'" sandals for dress are making Ia ~ h­ neckline as always Is in demand ion history. There's no end to for fall weddings ... liS are the the variety now obtainable in a pointed sleeves. sty1e whose basic lines were es- The two shoppers found that tablished when Helen of Troy was suits have ' taken on a more in the ship-launching business. A LOVELY BRIDE, Marjorie, A VI ION IN WWTE, Sarah L •• "classic" look. Although they 'are Both open and closed models are In a flowing 8~~1n, . weddln&' no;>t mannish, they are not extreme- seen, but most of them, bowing to wears a lovel satin weddlnK dress. Styled wlih the tr~dJtlon­ ly friUY. Also, a new silhouette has warm weather, are wide open, at gown, fashioned with a bustle al "sweetheart.. · neckltn-e, tbe been added to this year's . styles. toe, heel and shank. They are de­ whick trail. Inlo a swtrllnr Straighter-looking skirts with hid- siiDed with elegant straps of aU dress is sheared.i.n a panel down den fullness, usually concentrated kinds .. . ankle, instep, double and train. The yoke I.' or sheer nd the front. The sleeves are full In the back, are Oeing snown. Single, symmetric and asym- and the full-Ientlh sleeves at the top and taper 'd01Vll to Skirt lengths lire about the metric, T-straps and bracelet come to a. point a~ the wrists. points at the wrists. A halo same as those of last seaSOll, or at straps. MarJorJI' model a hridesmald ot flowers C'Ould be worn In the the most, two inches longer. PaU- Sarah and Marjorie were both TIny ath,-covl'red bulton, at halr witb tbe veil fallln« frOID ded hips, dropping shoulders and very good natured throughout the the back, fa ten the drill! from the flowen. The tuJI IIkirt voluminous fullness for strt!et shopping elGpediUon, however, the nccklluo to the walsUine. swlrlll Into a rounded train, giv­ wear have gone the way of all toward the end, they had to admit At the middle tlf the yoke, a ing grace to tbe «own. Jewelty, passing fads. The Frenoh silhou- they were a bit fatigued. beautifully dcslgllcd flower of sttd pearl, decorates the bodice. such as pearlll or a locket (a ette has been boiled down to the "All I've got to say is the groom The waist I snug with the 1)11 - gift of the (room) could .1110 be American taste. certainly gets off easily in these 10wloA' skirt flarhlg from It. worn with th. irelll because of In afternoon and evening dress- matrimonial affairs," Marjorie re­ Its simpl e bu t slOart lines. es, skirt fullness Is concentrated marked. dre s for arah's approval. Of at the back for the most part, Ume saUn, Its unlque leature b (CourteSY of Willard's) with the front facade slim and "Yes, but wait until they','o the hooped skirt. Insets of lace Simple. paying lor our shopping sprees," peek from the bottom of the INSERT B- Sarah laughingly remarked, "they skirt whrre 1£ is caught UP. Pert * * * Velvet has taken first place in won't think it's so funny!" puffed sleeves reach to the (Daily Iowan m'lady's bOlJnets tllis season. Ber- So, twei very tired, but happy curve of MarJorie's shoulder, \ ets and oU-the lace hats are very girls linished an all-day shopping I'lvlol' a drOP-shoulder effect. Photos popular. Also feathers and veil- spree, confident that they . had This gown aIm bas the snul' by lng is used abundantly In dec'orat- chosen IIpparel whlch, when worn, walstlint', adding slenderness to ing the headpieces. would make their husbands-to-be the wearer. Herb NipsOn) In shoes, the' styles have re- very proud to introduce them as (COUl'te6Y of yetter's Department mained almost the same. The "my wife. II store) * * * * * * * * *

FOR "DRES -UP" OCCASIONS, Marjorie trlcs a lIrhtwell'ht summer suit and Sarah, a two piece black dress. l\larjorle's two piece suit Is topped off with an off-the-{ace velvet beret llportin, a perky feather. Her spectalor pump add the final louch to thlll "juST IN CASE IT'S WARM," THESE ITEMS OF SPORTSWEAR neat and attractive ~utflt. The sheer black suit-dress worn bT Ire examined by Marjorie and Sarah. The tailored chambray drfl38 Sarah Is trimmed In dainty lace and rhillestone buttons. She WlUch Marjorie wears can al.o b wot'li for semi-dressy occasions. chooses the ever-popular picture hat aud black sued opera pumpa 'iaab up" sleeves and the pointed collar are the unique feature for accfl3serles. Iltilis dress. Sarah's s nndrl' ~s I~ of RPUII ayon and Is coupled with \lie malehlng bolero jacket.

THE WEDDING AND RBCEPTION 'ARE OVER ... AND THE COUPLE DASH OFF IN a raUy decorated car. And for tbelr ",olo, -lUST IN CASE IT'S COLD," Marjorie and Sarah try these en­ "UMMM, THEY'RE SO 80n"'. _b Saralt and Marjorie wlten preHnt a ple&aallt picture with their simple tailored Ilnflll. Made awa,." suits, the two ,irIa tum \0 the fall fashtons. Marjorie'.· ....leI. Sarah's black falll~ suit boasts three-quarter-Iencth llleevell the,. don ,be flIm,. nlclt'wear. Sarah wean a ..Un ,own aael 01 embrolelered ra,oa, they are styled with "shirtwaist" collar Illree-plece nit .. tailored. offset only by tbe decorated metal, lit II detllned with a. vlaln round neckline. MarJorie's tbree-pletle ne,llcee RL The bodice and aVa,. of the ,own are of embrolclerecl anel sleeve&. The jacket buttons down the front and Is belted anll bat\ons. Ber off-tile-face bat Is draped In black velUn, wblcb _ _ eert.,., oaUit cmnslsts of II> skIrt, Vl'~t and cape, with wooden laee. The ne,liaee bas paDela of matebln, lace rannlll6 from ~e fastened wltb a brow In the Iron&. The trOURn are narrow with & fastened beneath tbe chin. Sarab', IUU bas a "sa.Uor-\Ype" collar ~ futenln,; the vest and decorating the nap pockets on &he lh'Oaleler line $0 Ute waist, wblch _ fastened with a ..tin bow. the '11cM Dare at the bottom. and a llilabt peplum. Ber bat, alllO an orr-the-face model, III decor­ 'taN.. A ,white long sleeve "blouse complet.es the ensemble. lull, ftowiDr sleeves taper to narrow wrlat bands and the back Ia (Courtea)' 01 Towner'. Depariment ,\ore) .tee! wlYl a featberr addlnc color \0 bcr ensemble. --.------(Courtfl31 01 DuJua'S) eo_lete., ..tin, at,1,etl ,alolll prtue... Una. Marjorie'. par11M' _(Courtes1 of Yetter's Department store) The Da/~ -IoWan t , ESTABLISHED 1868 ALBANY, N. Y. (R>}-Four law­ CI yers are running Gov. Thomas E. By BJLL MCB'RlDE TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1948 Dewey's campaign for the presi­ In II ·tatement to the pI' the otber oay, Vaugbn . Mon~ dency. 1 J mode tbt' taJ1lin~ announet'ment it lIa alway bet!n bIB hfJ;tt j Three ot them have worked as that "the bt'. t fi . h J ('\'1'1' ate W I'e the blue gill my U ncle Maa1II a team for severa I years in pr<>­ us d 10 catcb out in Akron." • moting the politicaJ. fortunes of You're probably thinking thal ju t . hows how far . a eelebrit the Republican standard bearer. will. tretch a point to Illake a statE'menl to the prt' . \Vby botMt 1 They are Herbert Brownell Jr., of • Board 01 Trust_: LHlle G. HOOler. milking a stilt ment Il t 01\ if something mol' dynamic tban Did n Mason Ladd, A. enl. Balnl. Paul R. New York City, J. Russell Sprague Olson, LMier Brooks, Steve Dlnnlna. Matlh 'b blue .... ill , call't bl' ment iOlled f KJothryn l>kNamano. Rlclard Dice, Ketti> oC Minola, Long Island, and Ed­ A. Clucow. win F. Jaeckle of Buffalo. • • • -c .... ., II. POWNALt.. hbllab,r The fourth, Rep. Hugh D. Scott 1 (\)./1 imaqill how Iltili Iiloteml'lIl aboll l MOllroe's lid CRA RLES WA. SO AulalaD &' t o the P u. blllber 'I'elep~ Jr., of Phil delphia. joined the CI'Ol ,Wl. Th .~i1lYC'I· and lI·i, ayent !I' r' sitting in Uti> offW' DBNE CARNEY Bu.ln_ OUlre ...•.•.•.•.••• . . •••.•.• ,.1 "backfield" ot the veteran Dewey . _.. at... Ma .. a,,., Edltor1a.1 Offl"" ...... 41111 wll el1 a /ou IJj, bill ill fficil'l1t, s cre lary op lied tit dpor_ Soclaty OUk;r ...... tlU campaign team in June when be GAD. R. 111'.... '.1,• • was elected chairman of the Re­ al1JlOlIlIccrl Ihat a melJlbl'!' of iJw preg.~ I/'ont d to talk to M.r, ' publican national committee. }lfO/ll·U. I/o II' do 1 kno/(' Sill ll'o~ ill fficit/ln Tf you f)1 1J{U I Brownell Is the quarterback. the mOllty tlwl .'I1U1lroe cia s, u'olllcin't YOlI hi"e at least oU Disturbing Signs in the Univis Strike He calLt Ole slpals and directs BROWNELL, JAECKLE AND SPRAGUE inefficitlll, prttly stet' tary jn '1 0'/1 U neral principle' Following a fnll w(>ek of polie(>·pieket "iolene at th(' strike­ the field drive tor votes. Political Savvy and Seldom OI.shes bound nivis Lens company plant in Dayton, 0., ov. Tboma The extent to which Scott will Bing fresh ouL of dynarni' statements, tbe crooner and t.lI8 J . H erbert has di pat hed national gnardsmen to the. cene. participate in the drive to reach was police justice of Lawrence, Dewey's subsequent campaigns. ageut decid d they waul I ,give the pr . s a "humanizer" this tiBlf. A "hull1snjzer" is a press release that is suppo ed to brine I Tb re is 80m thing aboul tht' 9-day-old tl'ike that is p culiar. the Dewey goal-the White House Long Island, for ] 3 years start­ 1aeekle broke with Dewey, how­ A oomplete coUap of hlll'Wlining-, ma. viol nee and olh r symp­ -and the scope of his activities ever, after his defeat by President celebrity clo. ('1' to bis public by letting it know that be is jut - s have not been dete:cmined spe­ ing in 1913. From 1930 to 1937 a. common fl'llow who likes to get into an old pair of blue de. tOO18 of a union which iH not willing to settle a dispute quickl.~' BI'e h ewas supervisor at the town of the governor, but poli tical ex­ r l'min' eent of the re 'ellt packing-hous workers' strike. cifically yet. As the national chair­ perts l!aid it was due either to on a IInday Ilflrrnoon and slloot mar bles wi th tbe president If man, however, the Philadelphian Hempstead, and since 1937 he has been the $20,OOO-a-year county Dewey's failure to make J aeckte Genprol MotOl'S who happl'lIs to live next 0001'. 'l'hat is how tile tt1ement' in 1ll0!>L of AllIel'i['an industry for lhird round pay will be entrusted with vilal assign­ national chairman or to give him Unci Maahs story was bol'll. (If 1 had' an unele with a name /iI! wages give til 'TO united eledrical workers no excus' that they executive of Nassau county, Long ments. a ~nr Important role in the 1944 that, J 'd kl'e)) it ont of p ress l'e ll'ases.) are fighting to et a pre 'edl'nt for thril· industry. The outcome of a Island. "Coach" Dewey. ot course, sup­ campaign. Y(,'lt,~ hall! -it Il)o"ks~ Vaughn Mon"of, who rnlUkes a. livillf. di put again. t a eompllllY t'mploying 65 prodllction w rkers erv ises overall s tra tegy a nd has the Sprague, as Nossau county Re­ publican leader, was among those He returned to the Dewey groaning abollt sailing with Ihl! m.oon, ar basti)lg witlt. tIN cannot affect II bru ie indu.lry. J finaL say on all major decisions. camp more than a year 8&'0 and SPOOlI, or mailil/g IVillt the boom (neve,' " a've b en ab le to ••. The thing that IlrOllses IlU)'pil.'ioo is tilat the heads of the union But he rates hIghly the proven who In 1936 urged Dewey, then the racket-busting district attor­ Inee then bas been one ot the liel'slml(l him,) h(J,q (111 midI' in Akt'on who fishes ffJr bl'IU g1lU,. negotiat('c1 an agrl'ellll'nt with 1ht· company over t h. weekl~d. 'rhe poli tical so vvy of Brownell, ney of New York county, to run hardest worklnr members of My da4 fishes for anythillY he can catch, and that practically negotiation were i'ipollliored by GOVl'l'IlO I' H(,I'bert III all effort to Sprague and Jaeekle, and eJdom the te.m. clashes with any of them. tor governor. Since then he hns .~efs 1111' 1'7) ill bllSilll'sS II .~ (/ C'·Olnltl'. end the viol nee. had a major part in managing his Jaeckle, 'Brownell and Sprl'gue It is rar whf'n ullion I'ank ana fill' rejed "ullanimollsly" un Brownell, a slender, affable, are men of markedly different ... - . campaigns. balding and urbane gentleman of To cinch thl' "hultlaniz('r" th singer said, 'My aunt would agreem nt negot iated by tllt·ir II-ader. In announcing the re­ Sprague once elCplained his poli­ personalities, but they each have jectioll of t1lf' ng-rl'PlI1pnt, I ht' t' E ]('adprs , how('cl . ign. of being 44, first tied up wLth Dewey in rour traits in common-tremen­ take oU the top fins, ·IPIIII '40'111, slosh 'em II I'OlWd ill a pan uf 1930 when both were young mid­ lic\il philosophy this way: "Bet­ 1'01"11 meal ao(l fry 'em." thrown orf gllllrd. 'I'll\' onl.\' ('X('U~C they 'ould 1hink Qf was that I r politiCS mak for bett r gov­ dous capaCity for work, great or­ they wrre pres. Ul' d into IIgrrcing uy th governor. western-bred lawyers seeking a ganizing ability, a passion for pol­ That. stat ment is ()osl iv Iy loaded wilh "humanizers. " SIP­ toothoLd in New York City. Born ernment. The higher the plane (If po. we 1II1IlIy!;<, it. \<'ir"Rt of all he mentions his aunt ... .that omething i. WI'OIlI!. 'fIll'!''' is a weu!!'e between lLl1ion leac\l'l'ship the political party administering itical detail and an abiding faith in Nebraska, Brownell settled in is and. union m mberH. '1'hl.' thing Ihat wordes 11, ab lit il all is thl' in the political destiny of Thomas mean!> his l' neII' .\JllalJS is married, and since mar riage (be Manhattan after graduating from the atfairs of government, the r c nt ommuni~l pllliy writ!' up of the indirtment of Ow; H all, more b n fits will be derived by E. Dewey. gr at Amel'ican in!'ltitntion anu all or us know at lea t one couple Yale law school in 1927. who i!! married, WI' havl' something in co mmon w it h a famons V(It· Obio 'ommnnist leadt'r, \I ho \las Olle of 12 top ~oml1ll1nists ill'­ the p ople. I like politics for whet coHo the new member of the :rested by theFBl rp[·enlly. Dewey started up the political clean, forthrighl politiCS can ac­ team, Is Ito friendly, Informal, en­ alist right ofr the bat. ladder as an assistan t district R - complish." erretlc man ot 47, who has been D cribing (Jus, Ih(' Daily Work'r boa.t d "11' (rives to bluld publican captain. In 1931 he per­ . - . t he party on thE' rork botto'lll bas(- of ma indUstry wOl'k rs." Jaeckle, n. quI et-spoken, hea­ dubbed tbe "Yankee from Vir­ 'r1l s('{'0/1(1cli11c1ler reMs ';n the sta.tl'me111 that M.~ o1mt AlIt,. suaded Brownell to run lor lhe ginia." W wond r. assembly from Manhatans' 10th vy-set rra.ylnr man of 53, blos­ off the t(1) fhls, rl(all.~ 'ern, sloshes 'em (tI'ownd i1~ a ,.. of, bomed as New York tate poH­ He was born in Fredericksburg, cornmeal and I,.i., 'em. (Not Ote 118 01 m .~tic Eft{JliJII. ll district, ~ Tammany stronghold, Va., is a graduate ot RandolPh and acted as his campaign mann­ Heal power In 1936 when he BrokE'n dOWll, this means that he (10esn't eat f ish wbole, al· was elected chairman of t.bfl Macon college and the University , SCOTT A gel'. 'Brown II lost, but r n aenin though he failed to m ntion removing thl' head, and the thou"'t Nation or a Misterl Erie county Republican com­ of Vireinla law school, but made Friendly, Fonnal, EnerreUc of a blu(' gill Hillring lip from the pla te wh il r 1 dissect tbe fioJW in 1932 and won. despite the first his career on the northern side To the ptim lslie sil!lIS sti II hall/(ing Ol'OUlIU Buro)1e anti. the Roosevelt landslide. He was re­ mittee. lle was rerarded as a little fellow is a littl too oriental for m . I world odd the llH'l'tinj.! 11I,,1 nif!ht or tinite!! Htau·., (I',·t'l1('h IUlI1 liberal and long Was at IMIds of ihe Mason-Dixon line. Roosevelt ' in 1944. No public ex­ eLected four times. I don'l see wh ere jlJ011roe yai1tS milch in Lhe po rL a'bbll ~ British diplomats with .rO(' Htnlin. with what he termed the "oon - He got into politics as an assis­ planation was offered by him or The two hooked UP agaIn In 1/1 i1l slosh Th diplomuts S('I'IIH'd ill /tom! ;,pil'its when thty Irft th' ('on­ raUve" wlnr of the party. tant district attorney tor Phila­ most of the war years, Scott saw xl0.vlLill{l , ar(}lInd cornmeal. What elNe wliuld yo" 'e. 1940 when Dewey wa maklnr d Iphia county, a job he held 15 ar01l11d i11 r .... n 1)an of emeralds maybeY ferencI', RO tak!' hl'lIl't. APP!lI'PlItly I-Ilalin WII a good hUIOOl' to. hIs first bId for the GOP presi­ H> hitched his pollticel wagon considerable active military ser­ to the rising Dewey star early years, and in 1940 was elected vice. He was commissioned a lieu­ The fact that lIis alltlt fl'i d 'em is a Ilic touch, though. Now 1ft' Why shonldn't hi' Ill' ill II /!,ootI humol' In Hpit' of s(lvcl'ol reo dential nomlnaUtrn. In 19~ 10 the house ot representatives. buffs h(, has tllk('11 in ['('ntl'1I1 Ellropr, 111(>1'(' IIT't' thing<; t() h('ul'tcli Brownell helped Dewey be­ and active espousal of Dewey's tenant in the naval reserve In know thllt VIlIlg-hn Monl'o!' eats h iA fish cooked just. as you and I gubernatorial candidacy in 1938. H was re-elected in 1942, defeat­ an aging eli ·totOI· - Iw is u (Ii(·tutor unlr S you j!O !Iloll'l{ with ll. come New York's fi rst Republi­ 1940 and served overseas in Ice­ do. Dewey lost by a narrow margin to ed in 194-1 (when all six congres­ land and in the Truman who , AYR 11(' 's II goud guy but tll(' tool of thf' politburo. can governor In nearly 20 years, Pacilic theater. He • • • Democratic Governor Herberi If. sional seats In Philadelphia went was a lieutenant commender at n tlung is till' Wullu('(' P,·oj.!ressiw' couvention. Aftpr all the With Dewey back in the nation­ WhiLe /)r. lJufllet· 1w. hi.~ d teclive magazines, P,·of . Ma.· Lehman. Ja ckle became state to Democrats) and elected again the end of the war and drove the al limelight, Brownell was a mem­ 7'1'rio Dusuns/(y halds Ute (11It}ioli.~ honor of bping the O'/tly ari fllt­ m aD thin!!S that Hllllin hilS 1>1'l'1I ('allM in A Il1l'rir'o , h('I'(' is a chairman that year and worked In ]946, first navy jeep into Tokyo after group wllO"'clllims hp's II ]lrl'lt." good glly - with or withont the ber of the triumvirate with lilly IIltlJlbl'l' who ('1'/'1' found a ral tlps1wke i11 Ir i.~ Slltdio, a,1td 1111 with BrownelJ and Sprague In all Although a congressman during Japan's surrender. politbul·o. I"or u ",lIilt' 11",1'(', HtHlin mi/!,hl hnvf' ('lIt('rtoil1('d all Sprague and Jaeckle which work­ muller how disLi1l(Jltislted Y(}-1L are, a thi1lg lik thai can upset G idf'B. that Amt'I'i('1l di(ln't hute him so mlwh aftl'l' all. ed successfully behind the scenes bushel of b arillg. • Thi. brinw; up III10tll(ll'ill('/I: if tll I ud(1rs of Russin, Frun '(1, to gain Dewey the GOP president­ • • • Grf'nt Britoin lind th!' 1'nil«'<1 Htat s did get t getllf'r 11'1 tIl(> t'umOt' Ial nomination in 1944 without the IIarold Sla 'sen wafl named president of the University of PenD· I governor ever formally declaring Indigestion's Not Your Own at the U. S. Mint sylvania WondE'r he'll be IlUowed 1.0 speak now has it whllt would t Illlt ulPan ' Tt wouldn'l bl' just flurry WeclMRdIlY. if 011 his candidacy. } Trumall Illlkil1l( tu AIH!J-c' MfII'ic nnu u chap llameu Stalin talk· By ELLIOn CHAZE "Keep an eye on it," he warn- They oan punch out '150,000 Penn's campus . .. avowed political eandidllte yon know. I Dewey made Brownell n tional J illl! to II (:llup 1I11111t' A man is told to bring his truck day and. at 7 a. m. other days. Call j semester hour will bit added.lIt' siding, on an ordinary hot sum­ as to rest up for eight hours more. to a certain place at a certain extension 2311 for startlnr time. graduation requirements W;. mer morning, the machinery is Ii Lt Indeed a ltory of natlon- time, and there is involved, In the unexcused class abs~ loaded, the car moves off again. al aceeptanee, aceeptaDce f the forward roll of his wheels, the the last day of the swmmet ~ There Is a lpeelal herrer lit lnialerable and the Im.,.alble. failures ot obdurate and angry ART EXHIBITION ~ 1\ i ~ the very ordlnarlnell ef tIleR Semethinr has happened to 111 men on both sides; but failure be.­ OFF-CAMPUS- BOlllJlllGdlt The tourth annual exhibition ot small eVeD"" for '--.n slnoe that day, three yean 8&'0, comes so ordinary and so much Householders ' wbo bII\(e·' ~ u.e,- contempiCMlry art Is on display in that the menaee of the ..... wilen unlleJJevlDgb we read the a part of our lives that It is hard ments and rooms aV.i1able~ the main I8l1ery and the art aud­ llelac la&e fa-.. aceouDts of the first explo- to tell this momentous truck from for the Iall semestet' are ~ are Lt now WOV .. Uae Itorium dally from 9 to 5 a;]d on OIH' It .. lion. We dhl net know quite any other as it rolLt toward list them. with the off. labrie of readne Ilk; Sunday from 3 to II p.rn. Thirly­ no lonrer an apeealypUe .....n, how to ialre It then, or what.. where the machinery waits, loos­ housinl bureau before AUf, .... four of the paintlnp are beina Dial 80511, ext. 21111. It Is now u re.1 .. brealdu& do. New, We lulew, or think we enehone Phone 6403. Dennis and Williamson also s met hlnr worthwhUe," .iIe : I Dial 4919 lace group, h said, explaining: Left to rl&'ht, they are ColleHe Morell, Georcia Arthur and Patty 5659. ------were indicated by the grand jury. Carpenter, aid. WHO DOES IT 'Capatallsm On Wa y Out' "There are manY ways ot " PORTRAIT WANTED: Ride for family of three "The most important. is that approaching the subject at the dif­ or DUERT HOOVER to New York around middle of ASHES and Rubbish hauling, while many lenders in the Pro­ library and institute can be ex- ford university, was itself a co­ ferent grade levels and these will LJ_ -Our Unknown Ex­ August. Retufll September 15tb = iP=b__ o -n:-e-5-62-:3__. ::-:- ______--~- gressive party believe that the Accepts S70,000 Gift panded. operative project. Funds were do­ have to be work d out to achieve I badly crippled world capitalism Preslilct $Z.95 Read this en­ Share driving and expenses. Phone HERB'S P1CK UP. Baggag , light The occasion was the [ormer nated by Mr. Hoover and suppJ .. the best results." IIIhtenln, book before hearlJllr system can be slIved and trans­ Library president's approaching 74 t h mented by other contributors and One of the major problems eon· 8-1174. hauling, rubbish. Phone 7237. formed into 'pl'ogressive capital­ For Hoover birthday. Hoover speak. Stan ford. Us work is directed pri- fronting the committees, Miss THE BOOKS HOP WANTED ism,' we MOl'xist-L ninists do not. PALO ALTO, CALIF. (.IP)-For­ Actually, Mr. Hoover will not Parker said, is the preparation oc. 114 E. Washington DO YOU ftAVE Capatalism historically is on its mer President Herbert Hoover was be 74 until Aug. 10. The fund was marily toward promoting pcare suitable textbook material. Dial 4648 WANTED:------~------U. S. Ensign's uniform--- way off the world stage." given a $70,000 birthday present handed over to him yesterday a throughout the world. The department's first oppor­ sile 36. Call Ext. 3339. A WHITE ELEPHANT? FosL~1' said "the Tl'umans, yesterday. few days early, however, because Edgar Rickart of New YOI'I{ tunity to bring 'the program to the Dewey ', Dulles, Hoovers, and No, we don't want to buy one. It was in the form of money he will be at his bil·thplnce in City, long-time collaboratol' or the attention or Iowa teachers gener­ WANTED: Responsible woman in Mar. halls, Vum.enbergs and other After all, where would we keep donations to be used as a nu­ West Branch, on his bil'lhday. former president in mining and ally will be during the tri-county my home to care for 2-year-old men the trusts who are run­ It? BUT .. . what you consider ot cleus for a continuing fund by Establishment of the library and relief, was among thos makIng meetings preceding the opening of TRIPLE·S VALUES! ning our government could read­ girl while mother works. Phone a white elephant, 80methlnr which the work of the Hoover instltute, on the campus of Stan- the presents tion. chool in Sept mber. ily secure a Democratic agree­ When ,ettlng your books (or 8-0765 after 5:30. you don't need, may be Just ment with the USSR, as Roose­ POPEYE the four-week session, stop in what IIOmeone el e Is looking PASSENGERS WANTED velt did. But they don't want it. at STUDENT SUPPLY. You'll for. No matter what It Is - a They are fighting tor Wall stree s find a complete Hne of text One passenger to help drive to table, a poppy, a sofa, a type­ world control." b. a It s, supplies, stationery, writer, 'Or anyone of a thous­ New York City. Leaving early A m. e ri c a n are "paying Palter Ind Sheaffer pens, leg­ and itelllS . , • al notebooks. August 4. Call 6060. through the nose for Wall DRIVING to Detroit August 3rd. . YOU CAN SELL IT WITH A street's In ane Imperialistic ad­ velltures," Fo tel' said. STUDENT Take two persons. '47 sedan. · ,DAU.Y IOWAN WANT AD. Call 6700. Phone 4191 For Results "A decisive factor in the SOO1'­ SUPPLY STORE ing cost of living is the govern- 17 S. Dubuque NonCB SPECIAL SERVICE '======' SECURITY, Advancement, Hlib ;======:; t:lOAT: 15-/oot step-bottom run­ pay, four weekS vacation a about, complete with 16 h. p. year. Work In the job you like. SUMERTIME IS MOTORING TIME Evinrude motor and trailer. Call These are the highlights in the 8-1030. New U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force career. See M/Sgt. O. A. lQ33 PLYMOUTH 4-door sedan. McClung, .Room 204 Post Office, Whether you're lakin. a vaca­ New tires, glass, mechanical tion trip of a. thnusand miles, parts, etc. Best offer. Call 5823. YOUR WHOLE or Jus~ runnlJlg up to Lake WEEK'S WASH MacBride for a picnic, be sure .. BLONDIi: CHIC YOUNG I FOR YOUR EVENING SNACK m your car Is In top condition, 30 MINUTES IllS' rlrM for that snack wh lie at the Ii Ilud,llIr or stroUlng - Dixie's LAUNDROMAT Our experts wUl check up and tuneup the motor, tlchten up aeuoDed popcorn, cheese corn, 24 S. Van Buren St. body bolts, and recommend needed repairs. Brlnr your car and carmel corn. Try some Phone 8-0291 Iodl,! In today and assure yourself of eare-Iree motorlnr. DIXIE'S CARMEL CORN SEWING MACHINE for rent. El­ SHOP ectric portables, $6.00 per 15 South Dubuque month. Singer Sewing Center, 125 DUNLAP'S MOTORS SALES, INC. S. Dubuque. Phone 2413. Corner Burllnrien and Dubuque A DUCK would drown in Fina Foam. It's so penetrating. '======:::=::::::::::::::=====:======Cleans rugs perfectly. Yetter's CLEANING & PRESSING A.ays Oven fresh Basement. IS IT TRUE ihat wOlUen alve and forgive, and that men get and Let Us AlII fer Swank oven fresh ro1\8 torget. Always a good time at the Keep Your Clothe. If donuts at your tavorlte AN.NEX. lldaurant or lunch counter. FUBNlTURE MOVDfCJ Looking Like New HENRY A !I D E B,s 0 .. C. O. D. Cleaners Swa,nk Bakery.. MAHER BROS. TRANSFER For EilcleDt F\IIIIltuN FREB PICKUP AND DELIVERY SERVICE MovlD9 And DIAL U33 106 S. CAPITOL JOR -SALE: Evening dress, size BAGGAGE TRANSFER Tn Our Alterations and Repairs DepL IS, taffeta with shadow neck­ line. Matching mits. Worn once. DIAL - 9696 - D1&I. lilen's sport coat, size 40 long, tan With brown. Black crepe formal BOOM AND BOABD By GENE AHERN 111m, size 15. PhOne 7472. WANTED TO BEltT i • r-::D::-E::-Y--:C::-"-L-L-T-~-15:--T-H:""W-I p:"'E::"' ·-OP-E-N-.... W ANTED: Apartment to -rent, IAn· I REALIZE '37 PORD 2-DOOR, engine over- SPAdES, BUT WE:VE BEEN hauled. Voss washing machine, napolis graduate, wife and lIOn, WHAT GOOP HEALTH for comlng academic year. Neat. CROWDED IN BETWEEN BULLETS I'M IN, UNTIL 1 lIIlall overstuffed chair, dining tab­ SINCE WECAME/"·l AIN'T I-IEARD GUNFIRE .. .. le and chairs, army cot. 210 West­ clean habits, prompt payments. AFRAID OF NOTJ.lIN' IN A ... " AND FOR. THE lawn Park. Write Box 7W-1, Dally Iowan. FIGHT, WHAT BREATI-IES ...... FIRST TIME IN MY BUT DEY AIN'T NO GUARD LIFE I'VE HAD A LIGHTNING RODS. InstaJl , reas­ YUH CAN PUT UP WHEN GUNS 8 1TOFMONEY onable. 1310 E. 5th, Muscatine. WHERE to BUY ft' ARE SLUGGIN' 10 ENJOY Phone 1085 J. AT YUH! LIVING! W A"SHER. 9x12 ~ARTMENT Typewriaen. rug. Play pen. Drop lea r table. and Steam Iron. Phone 3995. A~.' COASTING lI-lRU LIFE 10' AddlnJ' Maebbl. G&TH~! WoNOIlI2I"UL lH1N6,'THIG -lIEN's MOVADO SWISS wrist both LAW OF GI:lAVITY_' lHArs WHAT watch. English RoJls razor-life­ StaDclud " Por&able pULlS NE TO YOU!! time blade. Remington electric 1'3- now lOr. All like new. Bargains. Call Available ~n,2682. , Frohwem Suppb Co. Phone 3tH IErRIGERATOR-&tyle Coolerator, We Repair All Make. kitchen set, coal beater. See be­ ""een 9-12 a. m. 325 ~ E. College Il ' WOH WMIJ'EP $150 BUYS GOOD-RUNNING, BABY aitllDa and aewiJll. CaD rood-looking '33 Master Chevro- 8478. ~. 306 E. Jefferson. Phone 7614. D-R- E-S-S-M-A- K- IN-G--d-r-a-pe-r-ies-a-I-te-r- MODEL A FORD. First class con- lotions. Satisfaction guaranteed. dillon. Phone 2037, Hobby ShOPP~, 23 W. Burll/l6ton." _1,.e~i;!..!!:=:E!Lll:!!.!::::E~~= ___~ 'I'D DAILY IOWAN. TUESDAY. AUGUS'r I. INS-PAGI SIX .,. Iowa City's FJril One-Year Enlistee WSUI To(~t H C;OP Resdies Anti-Inflation: pf-="-=--+. :~:~:~~: ~n Time on Air WSUI will begin its shortened To DiHer from Lutheran ~ludents Change Copnselors Of Rent Board summer schedule Monday, Jolul Hfghlander, WSUI program dirt\!. tor, announced yesterday. The Iowa City rent advisory Under the new schedule, WSUI Truman Plan board will "definitely not" be In­ will broadcast daily, except s-. -- WASHINGTON (IE? - The con­ creased to 11 members, T. J. Wil­ day, from 8 a.m. to 2:15 P.a gressional Republican high com­ kinson, area rent director, said KSUl's broadcast time during tile mand yesterday drew the outlines yesterday. new summer schedule will lie of a GOP anti-inflation program, Early in Jul,y Wilkinson an­ lengthened by one hour, Hip- , flatly rejecting most of President nounced that the board would be lander said. The FM station Will Truma ~'s proposals. Increased 60 th~t there would be broadcast trom 4 p.m. to 8 PJI. Chairman Wolcott (R-Mlcb) of a proper representative ratio ot daily, except Sunday. the house banking committee told landlord, tenant and publJc inter­ All the classroom broadcuta groups' provided for In tpc reporters he probably would estl and many of the personality Pr0- Introduce the Republican bill to- 1948 rent law. grams will not be heard duriftg morrow. f 'Later &laere ' was an lDdl~. the shortened schedule, Biah_ The GOP program, in a prelim­ U.. tb.t &be Increue or mem- ' lander said. WSUI will rl!lWllt inary stage and not formally an­ ben OIl &be board woal4 not. •• full-time broadcast Sept. 20. nounced, was reported to include: ~ At the time Wllkln~ IIOD ..... abaJUJenmen& .f' &be 1. LeJlslat100 10 "",~Jl bank P.... would "'"e 10 be aathor­ Civil Service Continues credit by increasing bank reserve Iaed bT -Tlabe Woods, naUonal Acceptance of Typist, requirements. houID. exPeClJ&er. Z. A housln&' btll tha' woald "1 have received word from Steno Job Applications reenact the !IO..called "title 6" Washington that the idea of an 11- (DaUy IOWaD Dbolo bf Erwin OUmorel nR8T IOWA CITY 18-YEAR-OLD to enlist In the army's one-year An "acute shortage" of steno. under which the government in­ man board for this area has def­ graphers and typists in the eighth enlls&ment prolTlm autborlled by the Seleetive Service Ad of sures mortgages on new dwellings, Initely been abandoned," ' Wilkin­ ci vii service region bas prompted 1948, I, GaTlord O. Graham, AI of Iowa City. He Is shown here give investors in rental property son said. the U.S. civil service commissiou 'lmlna \be application blank as S~ O. A. McClan~ (left), rccrult­ tax savings by Increasin, the rate He said an ll-member board to continue accepting applicalioor of depreciation ot the property "is too large and unwieldy" for Ina offJeer, loots on. Graham wUl leave Friday tor Davenport tor his pbTsical examination. Upon succesafnl completion, he l' sched­ for these jobs, the director of lilt and yield insurance, guaranteeing this .area. H did not know what eighth U.S. civil service reclon ~ed to be allliped to Fori RUe,., KIn., lor procellling. a profit for investors in large action Washington will take to announced yesterday. rental properties. balance representation on the The age limit for these posltianl The housing bill, eliminating the board. DAIRYMEN TO HOLD PICNIC has been lowered to 17 years, he controversial federal ltw-rent VaeanCT On Board Prof. Jahn Resigns The Johnson County Dairy Herd said. housing and slum clearance, pasa­ Meanwhile, names have been Improvement association number Pay for the jobs ranges f~ ed the house during the regular submitted to the national housing one will bold its annual picniC 2,086 to $2,724. session and is pend in, In the Position in Zoology expedl~r as nominees to fill the and field day Thursday at the Information concerning dala senate. advisory board vacancy left by Howard Fountain home, route 5, and places of examinations for the Mr. Truman has asked for that (Oan,. I •••• I'll.'. b,. 110,11 NI,... I the resignation of Ruth A. Galla­ For Post at ' UCLA Emmett C. Gardner, county exten­ jobs can be obtained from the measure, with the subsidized DISCUSSING THE LUTHERAN student pro,ram for the fan are (left to mht> Lemlne Servbeen, her last week. sion director, announced yester­ local civil service secretary at the Iowa City postoUlce. housing teature back In it, along Fern Bohlken, and \be Rev. A. C. Proehl, Lutherlll ...Ior. AI~r aUendlna" the Lutheran Aschram, "An appointment to fill tile va­ Phof. Theodore Louis Jahn of day. with price and raUonlng controls, national meetln, 01 Lutheran students In ln~rloc" en, Mlell., Miss Bohlken will berlo duties &! SUI cancy will be made in a week or the zoolollY department has re­ 'Spa and a multi-billion dollar excess Lutheran student.. a8loclaUon dlreclor In September. Mill Servheen, reslrnlnr ,tlldent cen~r COUDse­ ten days," he said. signed to become protessor of lOO­ proms tax. ~------~------~ lor, will enroll In the Corcorln school of art In WashlD&1on, D.C. thll faU. " Present members of the board logy at the Universltr of Calif­ The Republican program outline are Chairman Jacob A. Swishes, ornia at Los Angeles. -- was drawn at a meetin, of House H. J . Dane, Stephen G. Darling Macbride Lake-Beach Speaker Martin, Senator Tatt of and Harold W. Vestermark. At UCLA Jahn will teach gen­ Ohio, house Republican Leader MOore Named Police Captain L. Servhe:n *Feted WUIUnIoD also reminded vet­ eral physiology, physiology of Halleck of Indiana, and Wolcott. protozoa and phySiology of sense erau )'flIItercJaT that tbe~ ahoaJd They also discussed whether Mike A. Moore, 1112 N. Dodge organs. wartime controls on installment be JiYen first oPllOrtwdly to street, was appointed pOlice cap­ . At Farewell Party bllY or' reit& slQle. rami., reaI­ Jahn came to SUI In 1934 as a Swimminq buying should be restored. Indica­ tain yesterday by Pollee Chief .denees eonatructed ' between research associa te In zoology. tions were that no agreement was L u the r an students surprised BoaliJ:l9 E. J. Ruppert. ~ 3.f. .' 1911 a.1td. . _~Il I, &ince 1935 he has been on the reached on this subject. Moore, who has been with the Lorraine Servheen, student cen­ illft wben \be pr_t rent' law staff, of the J,..akeslde laboratory Flahinq The session was held amid department since January, 1943, ter director, at a farewell partt expires. , wl}ere he cond!Jcted inveslillations indications that congress might Picnlckin9 will be in charge of the night shift Sunday . liigbt. Miss Servheen , The , v~teran has ~ purchB/le and of the protozoa of the Lake Oko­ clean up Its extra sesalon work from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. boji" r\!gion and studied the temper­ and quit in a few days. leaves Friday for her home in rent preference for 30"days follow­ Ruppert said the appointment ature ,cyCle of the Okoboji lakes. TPl The Truman profits tax blll was Washington, D.C., where she wilt irig completion ot' the' dwellln~. went into effect immediately. The The local rent office is also pre­ . He has published more than 75 PL~ sent to the capitol earHer In the attend. the Corcoran 5<;11.001 of arl. day. police chlet's choice of Moore was Pllred to receive complaints of research papers and has written Take a break from that city beat .•. bring your family anel end 0 After ' a buffet supper, Misa Republican leaders let it be approved by Mayor Preston Kos­ veterans who pW'ch~sed dwell! gs sc,!l!ral chapters in textbooks and enJoy 8wlmmlng, b'oatln" fishing and plcnlckln,. Relax and Use known immediately it has no er, and will be given to the city Servheen received gitts including during the time the veterans emer­ research monographs. enJoy shade trees . . . ,reen ,rass . . . white sand beach .•. baseb. pAl more chance of engagement that council for approval at its next a $150 purse, a radio, flower,_and gency housing. program was in et­ 'Thls ran an illustrated elemen­ cool refreshing water. Ing no the President's price control pro­ meeting. f~t. tary ' text by J ahn and his ( wile, The police department's staft a life membership in the student SwlmmIn, dally 10 A.M. to 9:50 P.M. Qualified 1I1e ,"uanll bouse. gram. Prior to this time the I office I)f France~, will be·published. of officers, Ruppert said, now foundation. She has been. student on dutT at aU times. SEll They were working on an anti­ the housing expediter was not Mrs. Jahn was unUl recently an inflation plan of their own. They consi~ts of himself; Joc Dolezal, counselor since 1943, with the e4uLpped ·to · handle complaints on Relax and enjoy life at Macbride. proxir instructor in the hygiene depart- requir hoped. to get action on this and assistant chief; Laurencc (Bey) ex~eptlon of one year's leave of priority housing. . ment. . then adjourn the extra session Ham, caplilin, and Moore. ab$e\lce spent In S)I\Iedoo. INF , Th Jahns live . at 329 Beldon IIRefreshments at the Canteen" DIDA next week. The Rev. A. C. Proehl presented avenue. the new director, Fern Bohlken SUI HospitCils Admit \. S W~", You Might of ,Nebraska. Miss Boblken was Jahn Is secretary-treasurer of t ~E A.MOORE Another Polio Patient 2. J -'------in ,Iowa City over the week-end the American Society of Protozoo­ West Liberty Nurse Go Riverbanking acquainting herseU with the stu­ .' University hospitals yesterday logists. He is also a member of C CONDON'S J deqt ce{lter duties. She will return reported the admissIon of one new the Society for Experimental Bi­ ology and Medicine, the Optical u Files $37,000 Suit She had bcen hunting for an Yordis File ·Twin in :;eptember. , , polio case. apartment lor months. Ever since Wayne Crotty, 8, Hampton, son SOCiety of America, Sigma Xi, the li Miss Bjhlken comes here from American PhySiological society, DRASTIC STOCK REDUCING d they had bccame engaged she and Powell, Wyo., where she taught of Mr. and Mrs. Bud Crotty, was Over Fatal Collision her fiance had been spending their Aulo Damage Suits Iliagnosed as having polio August the AJru!rican Society of Zoolo­ g in an elementary school. She is a gists, the American society of Na­ n spare time hunting (spelled John and Emma Yordi, 40l Mel­ gra,duate of Wayne State Teach­ d His condition was reported as $37,oo(} damage sult growing fair. tu ~alists and the American Mi­ ir out of the fatal auto-truck colli­ h-a-u-n-t-i-n-g) landlords to rose court, yesterday Iiled two ers' college, Wayne, Neb., and the seek lodgings. croscopical SOciety. 3. F, sion near Wilton Junction May University of Nebraska in Lincoln. Final aJ Sunday she got her first wed­ damage suits against G.H. Swails, DAUGHTER BORN TO JEN8ENS III was tiled yesterday in John­ 611 Oakland avenue. As a 'college student, Miss Bohlken It ding girt. It came In a huge white was a member of the Lutheran An 8-pound daughter was born PARKER KIWANIS SPEAKER son county district court. The suits resulted from an auto­ Sunday to Mr. and Mrs. Harvey CI Margaret Bottomley, 38, West box. student association for four years. Prot. Edward M. Parker of the Rer eyes lit up as she unwrap­ mobile collision at Iowa avenue Jensen, route S, West Branch, college of engineering will speak Tues.-Wed.-Thu.-Fri, 4. T Liberty nurse, brought the suit and. Dubuque street last July 6. Mercy hospital reported yester­ si against the Treloar Truckin, com­ ped the tissue paper as her fellow on "Alaska" at the noon luncheon employees at the Iowa Union look­ Mrs. Yordl's suit is for $2,500 per­ C. B. Righter To Speak day. today of the Kiwanis club. Sorry-All Sales Final pany, Peoria, Ill., whOle driver, sonal damages she sald were in­ John Wesley Turnipseed. 29, Des ed on. Store Hours-9 A. M, to 5 P. M. As she opened the lid of the curred when she was thrown from At Michigan Con~rence Moines, was trapped and burned her car to' the pavement when a to death In his auto-carryln, semi­ box, her Jaw dropped, lind with Prof. C. B. Righter, director of • It the beamlng-of anticipation she car owned by the defendant and trailer. driven by Larry Swails hit her university bands, will be guest Dresses, CoHons, Slacks, Miss Bottomley, employed by had carried. lecturer at the University of Mich­ automobile. Dr. A. E. Ady of West Liberty, "Oh," she said, "I thought it Igan in 'Ann' Arbor, at ·the. music "Mr., & Mrs." Get Ready said her new car was completely was going to be a tent." She said she suslillned injuries teacher's conference, Thursday. Sk,irts, Suits, Housecoats, But she appreciated the big, demolished. Valued before the ac­ to her leU leg, back, and righ t Righter will lecture in the orch­ Warm, moth-proofed blanket, any­ arm. She said she has been and Israel cident at $2,500, she said it hid way. estra clinic on "Rehearsal Tech­ for Week-End Guests Matern ~ ity Dresses a $100 salvage value afterward. will continue to be under a doc­ tor's care. niques." H,e will also partkiPjltt! The nurse said her Injuries in­ in a roundtable discussion on Consl cluded a fractured jaw, thigh, Her husband asked for $172.50, "Problems of String Teaching.'; DRESSES DRESSES nose and vertebrae, lacerations, Schedule Dates for the amount of damalles he said TEL J ~_""'!1' One Group a brain concusaion and first degree was done ,to his car, which his ___" __"'_"III!I'"'. One Group 5.88 SCription burns on her tinllers and neck. wife was driving at the time of , . 88 County 4-H Show Value. to 19.98 Value. to 22.50 10. 'anlll wt She said she will continue to the acciden t. suffer mental anguish and physi­ Attorney D. C. Nolan repre­ bing of The Johnson county 4-H club .. . ~. cal Injury of a la,tin, nature. She show will be held in Iowa City sents the Yordis. July 18 said she sustained "disfiguring August 11, 12, and 13, Emmett C. COTTONS BETTER COTTONS l&raeli ~ and lasting" cuts. Gardner, county extension direc­ SHOW FILMS IN CLASS Values to Terms She was confined to Mercy hos­ tor; announced yesterday. Values to 3'.88 Nearly 3,000 reels of film were 88 aIlltaJ:y pital for six weeks and will con­ The 4-H girls' club exhibits, 7.98 10,98 6. tinue to need medical apd nurs­ shown in university classes or in llicrants booths and demonstrations will be campus educational programs dur­ Ing care at home, she said. tht COVE at the Iowa City community build­ ing the year ending June S(}, 1946. Other losses her petition men­ ing August 11 and 12, Gardner CHILDREN'S DEPT. for drall tioned included clothing and lal­ They were furnished by the bur­ I said. The 4-H boys' dairy, hog and eau of visual instruction of the The ary. sheep exhibits aod judging will Odds & Ends Rack Boys Ov.ralla university. 6playel Sbe has assigned her cause of be beld at the National Guard Ar­ DRESSES action to Walter B14~kledle, a And Slacli PODia lfinister mory, August 12, the extension SUITS ' resident of IUlnola. ' director reported. that Ara 8KIRTS Attorneys Harold Keele qf West 'Baby beef steers and purebred ,f U8- 3.98 WIIUld 11 Liberty and D. C. Nolan of Iowa beef heifers will be exhibited and JUMPERS Wit by City are representift, Miss Bottom­ BATHROBEsV&lue81o 10.98 Values iudged at the Iowa City Sales Goes aI long way Israeli ley. Co. pavillion, August 13. Some SPECIAL "iterate $50,000 worth at livestock is ex­ Auqua12·7 SLACKS SKIRTS BLOUSES fl'UN Q' pected to be on exhibit. lions w1 iii Iowa City • • • . Valaes to 8.98 Values to '7.98 Pia n Picnic PartY 4~H clubs will put on a pro­ , . Values to 7.95 dotte, It (rapt at the Iowa City commu­ here too nity building AUl\lllt 11, at 8:00 8 88 For Farm Bureau p.m., Gardner said. 'SUIT 29 when you ride 4. 2. --- The annual Johnson county farm bureau picnic will be held at Univenity ROTC Cadet ~~!~ c City park SaturdaY', Emmett C. Receives Commission HOUSECOATS Maternity Close Out , Gardner, county extension direc­ PERM·ASEPTIC BusseS '20 tor, announced yesterday. Brian Robert Carter, A3, son I)f ' DRESSES SUITS Prof. H. W. Saunders of the Mrs. Jeanne Cart'er of New York, CLEANING 88 8 SUI sociology department will received his second lieutenant's • NO ODOIS 4. 5. speak at 1 p.m. His IUbjec:t will commlAion In the eIlIineer r~­ , NO OIIMS 88 be "Rural Commuql~ea." serve; Maj. Gen. Douglas L. 2. Contests and glm.. wU1 be con­ Wean, ROTC camp commander, • NO MILDIW $1~·$20 ducted from 10:30 to "oon. The Fort Belvoir, Va., announced yes­ . Fr. Iowa Ci~ ~al ... 10 lUI • Values to 9.98 Values to 311.75 county all-star f-H softb~U teelll terday. will play an adult farm bureau Carter receiving his commission Moth Proofing team at 2 p.m. Thia (aIDe will be at a retreat review marking ~ IOnUD ... ~ Of 1111 COCMXX A COM'AN'( IV followed by a 1O«bal1 pme ~ end of the enlineer ROTC 1948 tween two 4-H lift'. club te&ml. summer camp. CoaCh Co. (leIIi.CWa ...... '*-...... CONDON'S Prank A. Cololl1, farm bureau ROTc cadets from 48 colleges 019.1, no. c_.e... c..,.y , president, is paeral dlabln for and 'univeraities 'in :U states were ORVIS [LERnERS p • 130 S. Dubuque ~ W-' traiDecl at the camp thia aw:amer! ---- ... .. - ••