"1 On the Inside ~ ~ ' . Weather\ . Houtteman Hurla One·Hitter ... Paqe 4 Fair &ocial, Dot quJ~ 10 cooL .....&1,. d,. ancl warmer MODci.,.. Rich .•• Paqe 5 &oda" n.: low. It. BJrh Picture Paqe Sa tIU"cIa 1, 7t; low, 5t. . •.. Paqe 6 al Est. 1868 - AP Lea.ed Wire, AP Wirephoto, UP Leased Wire - Five Cents Iowa City, Iowa. Sunday. August 20, 1950 - Vol. 84, No. 270 . ,

Re.ds Massi, . ng. Allied Forces * ~. * • ' ,. *. * * * * * '. ~ *~ ,, * ..:'./. Launch Attack Are We FI~hhng Only NorthKore~ns~ WASHINGTON (A') - Some to)) SOOth Korean soldiers manning ing northward in China toward A few weeks aeo the Perita~n ranking military leaders ar~ won- th!! defense. ., the Korean border. This force is announced that Russian nationa'is On Eas t ( oas dering whether we are flehtlng The deep SuspICion of the Pen- composed largely of Koreans were known to be serving as ad­ t only North Koreans or soldiers tagon about ~here the North Ko- "trained in ManchUria by the v~rs attached to at least one TOKYO (SUNDAY) (Il') - UN from other Communist nat~ons - reaps are gelling manpower to re- Russians." North Korean unil lorces launched an attack today and how much loncer thiS war place losses now estimated at 50,­ '. . can be considered "just a Korean 000 men and to enable a continu- Then there was a dispalch from One of the handy devices .Ior on the east coast anchor of the explaining the enemy's eapapllf\y South Korean battle Line as 50,- affair." Ing ' bulld-up of strength seemed the front which had bearing on Th!s growin& worry, hei,hten- to. have support in developments the reports of the presence of out­ of offsetting battle losses and ex· 000 Red~ massed north of Taegu. panding hI! army has been to Uy Empha:o lzlng the Red menace to ed b.v new, tha' the North Ko- outside the military command post landers or foreign-trained troops rean Invadlne forces may be eet- here. among the Korean Red army. that the North Korean Con-mum. that key American supply base, ting set for still another assault First, there was the comment Photographs found on the bodies Isu are conscriptinll bQth North enemy a rtlllery shelled it for th~ and South Koreans. ~ . '. second time. on the Naktong river line, sound- of' Sen. Joseph Wiley (R-Wis), a ot enemy dead in the southern ed an ominous note at the end ot member of the senate foreign re- sector of the front showed these That undoubtedly accountS •fOr Another Red force, with tanks 1I week which had been the best lations committee, to reporters. He _oldiers in Chinese Red army uni- much of it, but not all. Nor d~s and motorized infantry, was build­ 01 the war for the defenders. sala this: forms. Other material round on it explain how the enemy appit. ing up near Chinju at the south­ It was a week ill "Vl'lich there Cpng~sional members have the bodies Indicated the homes entlr continues to have at lease ern end of the 120-mUe ba ttle­ had been no serious revenes (even been informed that a crack Ce m- ot some ot them were In Mim­ a nucleus of unusually highly iiklll­ front perimeter. I! no big victories) lor the U.S.- munist force of 200,000 is mov- churia. ed troops, who light like veterAns. For the moment, Red drives were so effectively stalled that .. the North Korean radio at Pyonl ­ War* at a* Glance * yang stoppcd claiming Red "ad­ vances" tor the first time. A broad_ 1{lIrean frollt: Americans and cast today spoke frankly of "coun­ South KOI'C9ns launch general at­ terattacking American and South taek on cast coa ~ t anchor of Ko­ Korelln troops." I, '1t. Reds numbering GI's Gather Fruit Near Front Lines 50,000 reported threatening vItal Mlacln MenaC"e "led base ot Taegu. Full-scale HlAVILy-'ARMED u.s. SOLDIERS rather a helroeUul ('f aoples In a. Korean orchard near the front On the cast anchor, South Ko­ Red allack atso feared on south­ Ullell .• The area had been a ' batUetield a short time before. In the ,roup (left to rlrM) are PIc. A. rean troops which recaptured th e ern Jlank by lorces threatenln, Lampaiqna, AUadena, Calif.; Pva. William Irvin, Hammond, Iud.; Cpl. James Moore, Pleasant CUy, pod city ot Pohang Friday jump­ America/lll barring road toward 0)110, Ih.d .Pfc. L. Jacobson, Butte, J\'bnt. ed of! in an attack north, teamed key supply port of Pusan. , , with American elements. The Air WIl: Ninety B-29s blast. front for this drive extended hlne NorUl Korean Indus trill areas miles west of Kigye. with 800 tons of bombs in sccond Demos Predict. Defeat, But the Communi ts' main biggest strike of the war, hlttin, "!~bers Se·e,k Missing Links, menace remained to Ihe west o( 9S far north as 80 miles from the Pohang - K\gye fighting - In Soviet SIberian frontler. Jet fight­ 91 Proposed Cha nges ers chew up enemy trains an(l oil the Kunwi sector where the 50,- installations. Marine and airforce (all-New Witness in Hiss (ase 000 Rcds were reported IIssembled. flier. hit enemy along battleLineli. To Anti-Inflation Bill Ahead of tbis m~nacing force Wa.hln,ton: Army es:tlm~tes was the spearhead ot Reds which \VASHINCTON (AP) - Sec king "missing links" in the Hiss· WASHlNGTON (JP) - A senatc North itoreans have lost 50,000 drove within 10 miles of Taegu dead, wounded or missinJI of their Chambers case, the house un-Amcrican activities <':olllmittcc has Rcpubliean leader dec\..Bred Satur­ beforc South Koreans and a "fire day that lack of confidence in the lOO.OOO-man lorces, but rccruitJn, clIJloo as' a witness, Lee Pre small , onetime New Deal govern­ brigade" of Americans blunted It. wholesale with call up of all meo Truman administration is mainly Resistance In that sector today ment lawyer nnd a former C[O leader. responsible tor a stack of pro­ and women between 18 and 40. disappeared but American lead­ South Korean losses put at 37,000 Rep. Hiehard Nixon (H·Calif. ), disclosing this Saturday, s, id pos$!d changes in thc senate's anti­ ers were cautious. inllation bill. up to three wecl

, , , PAGE TWO - 'rHE DAILY IOWAN. 'T 20. 19:;0 u.s. Air Defenses IYes, Yes, Of Course' ff Iintepreting the News - ' editorials Too Feeble fo Stop !Indo-Chlna-An Easy Conquest nemy Bomb Raid By J .M. ROBERT JR. ,' PlY. as the Russian satellltes con· AP Fo ..I,D Alf.lr. An.lr&l , ducled their campaign in Gr~ What Now, Hank? - WASHINGTON (JP)- An ene­ With Britain and the United and so possibly avoid Inlerna· my probably could make an aeri­ Slates in a stir over Formosan. tional war. Henry Wallace has the people guessinJ{ again. and many in­ al Pearl Harbor strike at almo~t policy and all sorts of talk and In Indo - China the Comtnun­ t· rpretations will be mllde of his recent resignation from the Pro­ any place in the United States to­ threats about a CommUnist inva- ists have the same situation they !.vessive party. day and get some bombs down on sion ol the island, people keep had in China itself, with mosl or lhe target. Policy on Kor~ was tlU! point over ,"hieh the former New Dealer asking why I put lndo - China ai the p.eople preferring Communist sl lit with the party he headed, the dispute bccoming public when he It is not considered within the the head of the possible emergen- ruie 1'0 their present French pup- realm cr possibility that the pres­ cy list. pet regimes. ir. ued a statement saying thllt lIlthoucl1 he did not condone previous ent sparsely spotted radar sys­ • 1' .ions of either the U.S. or the Soviet Unio:l, he was supporting this Well, there are a number of No important native defense can tem - even though on a round­ reasons involving bo th positions be Jmproved in Indo - China be­ n •. lIon and the United Nations In the CUlTe!1t crisis. the clock operating basis -would /T-/! NONE O~ tJo! o~ ,.. :...... ·...... which seem valid, although I yon~ what use can be made oi Wallace used to have many more lriends than he can boast detect all approaching bombers or learned long ago not to get in too native troops who may not be too that existing fighter forces would of now, but lor many of them he went too far off the deep end in pUR 'BUa,WESS - deep when trying to figure out stable. The Communists would be destroy hi'. love Cor Russia. For a long time it seemed he did nothing but everyone of them. any situation in which Russia has fighting a popular war. Cl'mpetent military sources tT3 MrIlSL.Y Afel AFFAIR p ~ ise Russia to high heaven and knock America liS being about the a hand. Handle Situation doubt if more than a quarter of The Formosan' situation, as I It would seem that 200,000 \\.0 'st place thereunder. This was just too much for many of those an attackln&' bomber force com­ :BeT1v'E£N TU M / fri. nds. , get it. is this: French troops equipped by the in&' in over the polar rerions The Chinese Communists are United States, as they are being, Ills trip through the south in 1948 subjected him to Ireat­ co uld be knooked down before not equipped with modern ves- would be able to handle the situa­ I ent that lew contemporary American ponticfans have uffered. " erossed the northern border sels for an overwater attack. Even tion. But for five years 150,000 T e was called a Communist and was konked on the head with a of the United States. without the U.S. seventh fleet of! them have not been able 10 :.rlety of objects ranKjnl' Irom well-a&,ed e&,&'!1 10 over-ripe They point out that in World which is uo

• I THE DAILY IOWAN, Four-Day Session Attr. cts 250 From Mid west - Two-Week Safe-Driving Betty Jo Frederick Cotton Popular for Fall Indian Trib s End Annual Powwow at lama · W k Of Iowa City, Weds I Th Today marks the climax of thQ PI an 0 pens IS ee Graduate Student thirty-fifth annual powwow o( The Iown safety congre "Drive Right ~ campaign to ave the Meskwaki Indians Qn their Sac and Fox reservation near lh'e' on the highway over a two-week period, open Tues­ The Methodist church in.. Iowa da" over the entire tate. City was the scene of the mar­ rillge of Betty Jo Frederick. A3', Tampar O\·t.. IClpa t Ing' In, tn'b a 1ftes IVI.. ,'le s I . Dr, R. . Leighton, retiring cllUirm. II of the John on county daughter of Mr. and Mn. .Nathan during the (our-day pOwwow wen: Frederick, route 6, to Floyd vi$lting Winnebagos [rom Wiscon­ chapter, said Saturday the campaign will be based on a safety Freerksen, C, son of Mr. and Mrs. sin and Nebraska. Sac and Fox k ,turation program," constantly warning motorists against th I Elso Freerksen, Freeport, Ill., Sat­ from Oklahoma, Omaha tribes­ pitfalls of thoughtll'sS driving. I men (rom Nehraska. Kickapoos urday afternoon. Safety "stop - sign" pos!ers go ers bearing the slogan, "Two The Rev. Robert S. Sanks per­ , from Kansas and Otoes from' Ok­ on display in about 100 business Weeks to Live." lahoma. formed the ring service. establishments in Iowa City. These State otIiciais will assist by GlenIljl Lovlg, Villisca, a former Today the assembled braves ' posters, spon.ored by the junior placing billboard pos'ers at points from the various tribes arc schEl­ SUI student. attended the bride chamber ot commerce, will be the I of entry along the Iowa boundaries as maid of honor. duled to compete (or the title of Lirst in a 52-week eries to pro- to warn in-coming motorists. "Men's Ohampion Dancer." mote safety in every phase of Compare Pro&'!' James Wheat, Freeport, m., served as best man. and Wayne More than 250 Indians. includ- I communl'y and !arm Jlfe. Progress of the drive will be ing the representatives frOm other Frederick, brother of the bride, . . A White Fla&, determined by comparison with and Robert Ely. FJooeeport. Ill, tribes, have been participating in B~glDnlDg at noon Tuesday a?d an average trartic accldent record daily afternoon and evening per­ endmg at noon Sept. 5. a white were ushers. ; . formances which a numQer 01 flag wiU fly over the courthouse. for the past two years In Iowa. The bride was given In mar­ Iowa Citians I}ave at'endeqr reminding motorists to resist all In each of the past two years riage by her father. Following the t mpta'ion to drive recklessly dur- during the corresponding two­ Welcome Visitors ceremony. a reception was held at ing the campaign period. week period. an average of 27 per- Wesley house. The couple left on The Indians have welcomed vi­ A black strip will be added to sons have been killed and 795 in­ a short wedding trip. sitors to watch the pageantry. to the flag for each traUic death in jured in 1.657 Iowa traCtic acci­ see the displays of native handi­ The bride is a junior III the the county during the campaign; dents. SUI liberal arts college. Mr. craft, agricultural produce, and '0 a smaller red strip will be added Johnson county's average in inspect the tepees and wickiup: 1 Freerksen, an SUI graduate, ma­ for each traffic injury. this two-week ton is one killed jored in art. and Is a member of erected on the powwow ~rounds. ' . I Highway pairolmen will distri- I and 12 Injured in 27 accidents. Phi Kappa Sigma, social frater­ The presen,t site of the pow,vow bute safety education lolders to The average financial 10 due.o nily. is known as the "Old BaUI - Ithousands of motorists, while 10- accldents during the period is $18.­ After the weddlng trip, the ground." where, according to rn­ cal garages will issue bumper post- 192. and the s'ate loss $1,206,942. couple will live in Washington, dian tradition, the Meskwaki were where Mr. Freerksen will teach attacked by a band of roVio'l -==:::::::::::::::::::::::::':::::::::::::====:::=::::=:::::::::::===;;1 in the high school. Mrs. Freerk­ Sioux warriors in 1839. I ,,-n will teach in an elementary COTTON I VER ATILE In 1950 f II fa hlon . al shown here in According to the Sta te :Histori­ th18 tbeater suit. The suit of cotton v ... l"eteen. consi t of three paris. a , traleM sheath klr!. decollete bodice. and fitted jacket. Tbe deep cal socie'y, thi~ plot of ground. !Dall' la wan "holo) boneshoe neck.llne wllh rounded r vers is an Important ruhlon nestled in a wooded area on the THREE VI ITING OTOE from Oklahoma. son of Chief UPI' Church Calendar hlehll&'bt thl year. The matchln~ hat i also of velveteen. bank of the Iowa river, was {\ Brown, pau~ed in thejr plumed and featbered rlnery for a brief r t IK:~; ~:~;"nDrive gift set aside by Jim Poweshiek between the trenuous dances at the thirty-fifth annual ~'[e kwnkl TIUNITY IlPI OPAL CII\JIlCU week Bible lIudy and pra} r ",Ice in 1937 as a powwow ground. /10WWOW at Tama. 1\lore than 250 In":ans, lncludlne r"pn enlativf' .neltl In' Gllbtr& I"ee' In Ihe Merl Rolh home. tnfl E. Church The Meskwaki tribe, wtilch is from other tribes, participated in daily afternoon and evenilll' pt"r­ The aey . • t aroltl . MeOef.' Istreet. tr. J ohn Awbtr)' ~.ker Opens Thl·s Week redor and sludenl ~".pl.Jn Catherine Mof1et, SUI Student, Wed Saturday of the Algonquian or Woodland (ormance durin, the \\eek. The four-day powwow come to 311 end Today. 8 • m. Holy communion. 10 ;45 FIR T II Kcn or C HIlJST. a.m . . t(lmlna pny~r and .e:rmon. F.'h~r SCIENTI T Two Iowa City woman. Mrs. stock, formerly lived on tre AI- today when brave from the various tribe will compete ror the Uti,. , .... .Ue,e .lrrd teen and Stocker ,leG will prueh on "The Hour 01 V.A. Cunnette and Mrs. W.L. Bri­ Cat!lerine Mott t. A3. daugh! r jewelers In lantic coast and gradually moved of "Men' Champion Dancer." A number of Iowa. Cllian have at- De<>I.lon,· Today 9 43 a.m. Sunday ..,hool II of Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Mottet. Iowa CI y. I.m. ws>on rmon on ··Mind." denstine, have returned from Min­ westward to Wisconsin. There. tended the colorful paleantry. ZION Lt:TIIEIl N 11 RCII The couple will A nur ry with allendanl ... mlln­ neapolis, where they helped plan route 7. was married to Willa live in Iowa during the early fur - trading days. John ••• and 8100mln~. IIr. III timed tor 101.11 chJidren. John Dickens, son of Mr. and Mrs. City, . The Itey. A.C. Proehlt " ..lor Wedn....,.y 8 p.ffi Teothnonlal ffie<>t­ Iowa's part in the annual Sister a tederatlon was formed with Jowa to the secretary of the in!et- ]n the years following World Today 9:15 •. m. Sunday ""hool. ':30 InJ. tllzabeth K.enny Foundation polio Willa N. Dickens, N. Dodge court. their kinsmen, the Sac. or Sauk. iOI'. War r, the late Billy Jones. a.m. Bible cia , 10:30 a III Dlvln" . 0 ..·- A readln. room al 23'. E. WalhlnClon at 8:30 Saturday morning in St. ..1.' Ice. Sermon by lhe pallor: "Standaret. 1.. 0' I. o!><,n to the public d.lly. eX­ fund appeal. The word Meskwakl InealB The Meskwaki Indians. as the Meskwaki who served ovcrseas 01 RI&hlOOU n ," 2 p.m. Divine .e.,·- Mary's church in Iowa City. ~pl Sunday Rnd I ,at holiday.. 10 a.m. The drive in Iowa City should former Student "people of the red earth," but thc Foxes prefer to be called. met an- with the 88th lown division. pre- ~c: .1 51. John LUlh~ran church. Shar­ to ~ p,m. and MoAda)" and ThuradBY eve .. nln,.. 7 La t . be underway by the t:nd of this The Rev. Cart Meinbel'g per­ early tradcrs called them Foxes or nually before 1913 in what thcy seated a special dance depicting Friday 0:30 p.m. Zion Home Builder week, accordlna to Mrs. Gunnette, formed the double rinc service, Reynards. . called "field days." his experiences in the service. pol - luck .upper and me.tln,. T. M"ar' CII ItCR the Johnson county chairman, The bride was attended by her Marries Nebraska Sprrendcr Land Rights De len on Bombers Til f 1ft T ENGLI II LUTHER • jeff,,,•• Ind LIba Sheeh sister, Marilyn Mottet, as maid of In 1803 when the Louisiana Pur- Thcir white neighbors found In recent yenrs the cagle dance II R 11 Itt. an. III.r. C. n. MeIDber~. p. I.r Mrs. Gunnett~ and Co - Cbaic­ allY. J . W. ehmlb, a ,'t. p •• ler honor. chase was made. the Suak and these events entertaining and be- as performed by Frank and Charles Dubuque and l\lar.lr.d l~e" man Mrs. Bridenstine mel at Tbe Rtv • • a'pb 1\1. Knee-ef. p'ltor Sunday m__ : 8. 7:30. I. 10:15 and Minneapolis with nearly 100 Iowa Girl, Fern Bohlken Fox lived alo'1g the Mississippi ri- gan to attend in increasing num- Pushetoncqua, grand~on of th~ Todn 1,30 a.tn . Momln, WOJ'!,hlp wl'\I II :30 a.m. Wetl She organized physical educa- band, Neil Moore, with cruel and August brings much d. ,com­ viduais. ed the 100th anniversary of the theft of $37 from a locker in the tion classes lor women at SUI In inhuman treatment. fort as Hay Fever and _\ller­ Gradually additional acres have Black Hawk war. The 1939 event school. 1900. later performl ng similar du- AccordIng to the sui t. the gies to certain weeds and been purchased until at t!le pres- has been known as the "powwow The men. Wallace Davis, Mar- tics at Coe college. couple's three children were in plants. It your doctor directs men ent time. the reservation !!onsisls of contrasts." In that year a 'per- ion, and L.C. McConaughy said Funeral services are scheduled the husband's custody, and Mrs. - let us tlU your PRE­ of about 3,353 acres. In 1896 tt\1? rormance of "Hiawatha" was fea- the money was taken from their for 2 p.m. Monday a' the First Moore stated she was wming to SCRIPTION or furnish some trusteeship over the land was tured while at the same lime a billfolds which they kept in a Christian church in Fairfield. A agree that they remain with him. Drug or Medicine - please transferred from the governor of portable dan~e floor was sported. locker. sister, Mrs. L.W. Van Nosgrand, He was last reported living in come in - , Cedar Rapids, survives. Centralia, Ill. I The Moores were married July DRUG SHOP Mornmg Glories Cover Street Sign Iowa City Saddle Club 2, 1929, and had lived together 109 S, Dubuque Street until July 11, 1949. To Meet Here Monday VI ITlNG THE KENNY INSTITUTE AT MINNEAPOLIS lui week The Iowa City Saddle club will were two Iowa Citlans, Mrs. V. A, GUlUle&ie, poUo drive cbalrman hold a business meeting, 8:00 p.IT'_ . or .Johnson cOlln'y (tar lert). and Mrs. W. L. Brldennlne, count)' Monday, at the Community build­ co-cbairman (second from leU). Tbe women bave volunteered ing. In charge of the program are to work In the statewide drive to raise S15 ..... durlne the annual Mr. and Mrs. Nels Malmberg, Mr. Ister Elizabetb Kenny FoundaUon polio lund appeal. sebeduled and Mrs. Elmer Vi ctor, Mr. and to beeln this week. Pictured wlih tbem are other state workers. Mrs. Oakey Schucher, and Rose The palient Is haron Underwood. 7. Hahn and her brother, Herb Hahn. The club members are entertained today by the Rapids Horsemen's club on a Sparkling Beauty "trail-ride." The riders will meet at 9:30 a.m. at the Upmier stabl near Eli. Dinner will be at the Horsemen's clubhouse at wesr- I for ern.

Insurance Firm Sued Hand and Wrist For Medical Expenses A $400 medical expeD~e suit A thrill of Sparkling Beauty awaits you when you II was filed Saturday in Johnson choose your Wristwatch from Fuiks. Fuiks has a ... county district court by William SUIT-DRESS ... complete sel ction of the finest Men's and Ladies E. Cahill, West Branch, againd IfA,mluur ,nellAN" AfI' ,"SS" .- the Sterling Insurance company, wristwatches which you'Jl find both beautiful and Chicago, 111. Cahill charged the company had practical. insured bim against medical, sur­ gical and hospital expenses, and Also at Fuiks you1l find a. beautiful array of lovely then faiJed to I pay his expenses diamond engagement and wedding rings. Choose r for an illness during November SKIRf. TROlJSERS and December, 1949. from a wide selection of quality diamonds onJy, Attorneys for Cahill are W.J. "Au",unr OI,etfAlI" AN' '''SSED with exquisite mountings of Platinum. White and Jackson and Edward F. Rale. both They're oH to a clean stan in a Davis· cleaned garment' • lDall, Iowan Pholo) of Iowa Oity. Yellow Gold. 8EAUTIFICATION WENlI' TO TOWN when Mrs. Fred L. Clark and Darrell Atkins de iJ'ned a plot or Send us their school things now-ond take ad vanta,e lIetunias in front of the Iowa apartments. 109 S. Linn street, In the business district 01 Iowa CUy. of the.e low, Atkins is manager of the apartments and Mr. and Mrs. Clark live In apartment 6. The momlnK glories LICENSES ISSUED Your leweler for ol)er 48 years In the center were already tbere wheu they started, Atkins said. I.n spite of belnX beaten down b)' two Marriage licenses were issued ~e~.aying price. I hall storms this summer, the morning glories &'!'ew 80 luxuriantly they now cover tbe street marker. Saturday in Johnson county The plot has been entered in the Iowa Cily Beautification contest spon!ored by tbe IOwa City Woman's elerk's oUiee to George Georgian I. FUlKS dub. Entries will bo Judged the fir t week In September. Clark is a tailor for Bremers clothine store. and PanagIota Golemis. both of 218 E. Washington Belore coming to Iowa City five years ago. Mrs. Clark assisted her husband in tbeir clothing busi ness in Iowa City. and Laverne K. Thein, Jeweler and Optometriat Corydon. where she was Ii member 01 thc Corydon Garden club. Mn. Clark and Atkins have taken Strawberry Point. and Lorrayne 220 East Washington 1 S. Dubuque turns carinI' for tbe flowers. C. Ra!tis, Oelwein.

I , , lIn • ,r AGE FOUIt - TIlE DAILY lOW N, , ...> - ~." ." ------Art Houtteman H"urls "One-Hitter At Browns,6~O STANDINGS NATl ONAL LEAG ' E A~J E RIC AN LEAGUE '" I, I C T . (. 8 \II I. PC'f. all Phlladelphls " ~ . fi9 I l .f"".; 8 . ookl yn • . hO I ': .•"K.I I gfe::: .. ':. :: .. ~ : :: :c :~ I Delsing's Hit BOlton • • • no ;)U .M'; New \ ' or ll . . ..• 6U ...... IJ • I L Loub . frO M ..... 1 BO !i I. ~ " ..69 "Ie .ut • Merrins Beals Brewer 6 • •• New l~ ork . 3; aJ .=)18 w. btort n . •. . . . !HI 61 .f. " C' b Je... o .. ' . • • -1M U!I .. ~.. ! Ch lco"o .. « 7 1 .1113 JII CI... i" •• 1I ., .... t7 63 A'!7 Sl. Loul. . ... 88 17 .W .. Pili burrh .•. 4 1 ;0 .a69 PbliadelJj hl. ., . 4' 7J .341 IN In 2nd Spoils For Junior 'Golf Crown S TURDA 1" RES I.TS P ltt,bu rrh l :i, C h lt_ • • " I>" TURDA l" S RflSUI.TS S t. Lo uis 3. CJndnol.tI '! 1)o( r.1t II, !. Loul, • M E , I . (UP) - Eddie ~ l errins, ~ l e r idan, W ss., won the Doston a t brook lyn f Po llf!l orll~ d . r aIn ) C Jf' ,,~J " Dd J. C hlcal •• Phll. d el b bl. at New l!'ork (P oI'poned. BOl ton .1, Wash'n,toD 4 a tional Amateur JUllior golf ch ampionship Saturday, def a ting rIIin) New York (I, PhU.deJph'. '! No-Hit Effort TODA l" S PITCHEII S Gay Brew r, Lexington, Ky., one-up in 36 holes. Phll.d e lllhla Il t New Vork _ ('!) _ TODAY'S PITCIIERS DETROIT (JP) - Young Art Simm ons (13-7) a nd Robe rts (18-5) v. lWubJnr lon . t Bo, IO. - X ..... /l·lt \(errins, who will be a freshman n 'xt fall at Louisiana tate J .nlen (111-"' an d ~lar ll e 1 11 -~10 v. tobbs (7-.). 1I0utteman of the Cln~ lnn .tI a t St, Lo uf. - We hmeie r ' New 1'ork at Phll.delpJt •• - (! ) - ju t missed pitching a perfect universit , was two-dOWll a t the e nd of the first 1&, ancl built up UJ· ' t. or P er kowlkl (0.1)' VI Polle t ( I.· L pp a L 03-7) .nd "or" 13·6 hi Clle. 10) o r Urtehu:n 6·9). m an (O·,!) a nd Kellner (1.14 ). game Saturday as he blanked the \ three-up lead before staving off Brewer's drive in the last nine. P Jttsb urC'b a t C b1tal'G - (!!) Mae· C ldt!.a l"o a t Cleveland - t:) - "~rh st. Louis Brown3, 6-0, on a one­ Donald (u.;j) a n d Ulw (a- I ) 'II IJtller (lI,l~) • • D" Wllbt (T- I'!) VI Lt.... Ill· hitter, facing only 27 batters in Brewer, who will be a Lexing-I UI-'!) a nd flnner (6.7), V) ,nd O.rol. CM-1). • B olton at 8 roo kl)'n ~ ('!) _ Uaefn er t Lou'. a t Detroit - (2) - 0".,. t he process. ( I-If) a nd Saln (111-9) va R oll i HI.7) a nd m lr .e: 1(4 .. 1(l) .and PIIJeUe ( 1· :1) ¥. N,•• ton high school ju lior next .fall , Yanks Topple Cards D nnta (:l-O). hou.er (W·1) . nd 1I.lchln. on (lB ·.>. III Outfielder Jim Delsing spoiled won the 34th and 35th holes a I .1·10 Houtleman' drorts for a no-hit­ ter as he pumped a clean single tinal surge, but was unable to II Eh'b't' 23 10 eliminate the a-up advantage into right on a one-one pitch in n X I I IOn, - ; Merrins held on the 33rd. I the second inning. .Pennant Fever for Phillies But from then on the Browns Th~y halved the final hol.e, and Banks Plays Bnefly Merrtns won the trophy III the could do little as Houtteman National Junior Chamber oC Com­ Phi/adelphia No Longer 'A"s Town' as 'Futile notched h i 16th victory as merce sponsored meet. DES MOINES (JP) - The New a&"ainst nine losses. York Yanks handed their owner, Phils' Change to 'Fightin' Phillies' Delsing was thrown out on an The second 18 holes of the Ted Collins, his first exhibition PHILA DELPIIIA (A P ) -- Pe n;lant fever, that a utumn af. attempted steal. \ match were a reversal of the first victory in seven seasons by whip­ Only two other Brownies got to 18. Brewer won the first hole of ping the Chicago Cards, 23-10, in fliction of baseball fans, b urned - h ot ill Philad elphia Satllrd~y first, both on walks, but they were the day and led through the first a football game here Saturday wit h aJl eyes and ears turnecl to th progress of the Phillies. ' erased by a couple of double plays half of the mlltch, carrying a two­ nigh 1. up lead at 18. Merrins won the On the streets, in offices and p ractically everybody's home as the Tigers came up with their The Yank~' first touchdown was first hole Q! the afternoon round most brillian~ defensive play of set up on a 63-yard run by Buddy the lational league pennant .chase is the o. 1 talk topic. and then evened the match on the the year. l AP Wlro phot.) Young, just after Ev ryhody admitted it hasn't ha ppened yet, hut inthe same ART "0 TTEMAN (third from right) receives conrratulations from happy teammates after he pitched 21st hole. He never again was be­ Delroit ban, ed Sed Garver for a cne-hitter for the American leuue leading Detroit Tigers aturday at Detroit. The Tigers beat the to hind. New York had breath came the q uestion: how 10 hils Inr-Iudlng a two - run scored 2 pain Is I Louis BrowlIs, 6-0. Houtleman pitched to 27 men, The players (leH to right) are George Kell; Neil Ber­ The two youngsters played 0 n a safety. do we get W orl d Seri s tickets? delph la I fans is almost unbeUev- homer by Johnny Groth in the ry, lIautteman, Don Kolloway and Aaron Robinson. eighth. steady gol! with lew exceptions. Sherm How- It's beer'! 35 ypars since Pat able. , For lwo or three baseball The victory came on the eve of ard, lormer Iowa Moran and his gang brought the! generaijbns the town has be~n IIoutteman day at Briggs stadium. star, punched 3 only pennant the Phils ever won I called "an elty'." Art wiII be pre ented with a power yards tor the back to old Baker bowl, a 35-year Often there was talk of moving Red Sox Capture touchdown three launch and other gilts today. streIch when the club wa3 the th~ National league franchise, IRileyWins Western Goll Title plays later. K Oddly enough, Houlteman was , doormat of the league and de- I living the Athletics a clear field, ~eventh .Straight New York tal- BANKS far from happy about his pitch­ CHICAGO (JP) - Alter eight and Mae never could get closer odically ground to a seven-over- !led again in the sel ved the nickname "futile Phils." B\lt last year the Phils were ing Saturday. years of trying, persistent PoUy than two holes behind. par for the distance. same second quarter, with George No t 'a ny more, though. The the top drawing card, and thIs "Il's a funny thing how base­ Riley of Ft. Worth, Texas, Satur- MI s Murray, who looks more The best Miss Riley ever did Taliaferro going over from the 3 club stopped bpi ng a doormat Win, Beat Nats, 5-4 shortly after roung- Bob Car- year they figure to attract some­ hall goes," he said as he reclined day won her first women's West- like a high school kid than the previously in the tourney was Iin the last minute of the first haIr. in the whirlpool bath in the Tige BOSTON (A') - Boston's Red ern Amateur golf title, 4 and 3, 24-year-old site Is, In 61 pre- Th Cd' r t Ilenter bouf ltt control back in thing like 1,250,000 paying custo- mers -il t home, almost five times ~ox came through with two ninth M M I' OUS competl·tlve holes durin'" reach the 1948 !inals, losing to Dot e ar~. Irs score came on drl'ssing room after the game. over a newcomer, ae urray " .. Kielty a 17-yard field goal by Ventan 1943. as many as the floundering A's "I didn't have 100 much stuff inning runs they needed to whir ot Rutland, Vt., who lost her earl- her first appeal:ance in this '. Yablonski late in the third period. Today it's a new, young ball who drew only slightly more than Ollt there today, in fact J had a Woshington's Senator~, 5-4, Sat­ ler tourney skill. tourney had been only one over Mae shll had a chance after 27 Both scored in the final quarter club, complete even to pepper- J ,000 Ifor each oC their last two lot less than I had in three of the urday and extended their winning Poily, 23, the meet medalist, par. holes when s~e trailed by th~ee the Yanks on an 18-yard pas; mint-striped red and white home home games at night. games I lost this year," the 23- streak to seven fames. jumped into a three-hole lead Saturday, Mae, the daughter of holes. But mlser~bIe luck WIth from John Rauch to Lowell Tew uniforms and a sct of new nick- year-old righthander added. The string equals thl'ir best pre­ after the first tive greens of the a Rutland pro, was a staggering her p~tter, including ~our. taps and the Cards on a pass good for names, "Whiz Kids" and "Fightin' The one-hitter was the classi- vious mark of the season. scheduled 36-hole match at sun- 12 over par tor the 33 holes played. from eight to 12 teet which lipped 20 from Jim Hardy to Don Paul. Phillies." SR Eagles Top Iowa City 5t performance to date by Hout- Catcher Buddy Rosar, who play­ . pattered Exmoor Country club, Polly, on the other hand, meth- the cup on the la~t 18, cooked her Earl Banks, former guard to' And they've got the whole town In Midget Baseball, 11·1 ed only the ninth inning, came goose. the University of Iowa, made a talking. , ~t. I.oul...... (1110 OOtl 000-0 I ,! through with a lusty two - out , Polly won the 28th and 29th brief appearance in the last The sports page is the best­ The Cedar Rapids Eagles de­ Oelrolt ... . • , II'!'! (tHO W! -(I 1U II bases landed sin~le high orr the G3r\'f!r In· I '!) Ilnd I..ollar; lI ouHtm"n to gO five up, and Miss ~furray quarter. read PIIrt of the newspapers. feated \Jawa City. 11-1, on the (HI-f)) and RolllnKon. lI omt run-Br ...... I wall in left center to drive in made her dyjng bid on the 31st, Radios in homes and oUkes, on City high diamond Saturday night t IlIlI.). Vern ~tephens with the winning tllnklng an eight - footer for a. TIIREE- I LEAGUE street corners and in autos, blare to win the fifth district's eastern run. ",Inning )Jar three. They halved Danville ~. Turt llautf' '! the play - by - play of daytime division midget baseball tourna­ Stephens' line doub~ into the (he next two hole w ith fi ves, Evan.vllle 4. O~eat.ur 1 Wynn's 3-Hitter Cedar RI,ld. I I , (luad Ollie :1 games. At night you can walk any ment. leCt field corner, r IS ~econd two ~ ndln g the ma1.!'h on the S3rd. Waterloo ii, Quine)' ': city or suburban residentitli neigh- The 'Eagles play the W,\!lMt lit bnggcr of the game, had driven Blanks Ch isox, 1-0 A fter trailing by three holes in borhood and keep tr~ck of the the No,th English tourney Tiles­ home Johnny Pesky with the ty­ e score. day for the fifth district champ­ ing run. tl'1 morning t8, lhe closest Miss Equals World Mark CLEVELAND IIP)-Early Wynn Murray could get was two behind Series Tieket ReqUests ion_hi? The winner of that gam\!. The Senators opened the scor­ her efticient opponent. That came will ad\l nee into the state ' midget finally pitched his first shutout There's greenbncked evidence in of the senson for Cleveland Satur­ ing with one I un in the second. qn the 23rd and 24th holes which to:urna'ment at Cedar Rapids next The Sox went ahead in the third Miss Murray won with a par four the Phillies OffiCll as mailmen week. dav. He trimmed the Chicago every day add to the pile of Se­ White E.ox, 1-0, with the help of wPC'n they balted around for three and birdie three respectively. 'orhe Eagles jumped on Pitcher ries ticket requests faster than EN! Y ,Luke Easter'!; . runs. , Her bird on the 355-yard 24th John Englert for five runs ill t~e they can be sent back to the re­ Four other times Wynn had Aitcr I it-killg liP a run in the was produced by nn 18-foot putt. third inning to coast In 'wlth ··tn'tl questers. . h · "·t· s'ar1.!'d ninth innings with a shut­ fourth ti le Senators tied it nt it 3 tnump • ... .'," .. \'1 ... ~ on Johnny Ostrowski's hO ~ l C' il "We've already returned 25,- T il e Jlnescore: \ ,',.\ t ' . jout within his rench. l ow. Cit!" ...... Rllo nlo II-r r', • the seventh and Sam ~\L I· · e. a for­ Saturday he gave up only three 000 applications," says .... ublici­ Ced.r n ' pi ds Ilarl ••. GO;; ~ I ~ "Jl-'U,J; ' mer Red Sox player, (hJbled home ~iMaggio Continues Elicle.! a nd ned, .. : Moor,e ~W: hit~. Onlv three balls were hit out ty Dirertor Babe Alexander. the fourth Washington run in the of th(' infield off his thl'ows. Two "We aren't accepting any appli­ ; II' of the outfield blows were flies eighth. Spree as Yanks Win cations now, and won't until we ''Jjobrs Open 1:15-1O:~~'~'.: WlShi,nton ...... 010 100 110-1 10 '! caught by Thurman Tucker. The fJolilton • . ••• DOlt IIno Ofl'!-.j I'!. I !(et a green light from Commis­ other was a fifth inning pop J\larrero (.1~~1J and Evans: Jlo arntl1 (II· PHILADELPIIJA (A') - Joe Dj­ sioner Chandler." (l'jfi';ZR'W }:,' K) _nd Ball., ROlll r (I). Jlome run - double to left rield by Chico Car­ Osl rou kl (6th). Maggio continued to bang Phila­ Might Shirt Seri es '. E N'rHU~ NEW ISlfOW,- l~ rasquel. delphia pitching Saturday as the Shibe park, which hasn't seep I Cleveland collected 10 hits off trimmed the a Series since the Athletics won TO-DAY . :--~,,} ( A P Wireph ot o) the American league title in ] 93 1, ,K n Holcombe, including doubles POLLY RILEY (left), 23, of Fl. Wo rth, 1:ex .. accepts her trophy Athletics, 6-2. Bues Blast Cubs, 13-8; figures to seat about 33,125 for a by , , at the Exmoor county club In Chlca, o Saturday after defeating DiMaggio hit a double and two . Only about 3,000 and Rny Boone, but it was I\l ae Murray (right), Rutland, Vt., 4 and 3, fe r the women's West­ singles and qrove in two runs. The seats will be available for game­ until the eighth inning that Kiner Hits NOl 35, 36 ern Amateur golf title. Presentln&" the trophv is Mrs Charle M. Ya nkee Clipper returned to the won the game with his Price (center ), llresident of the wo men's Western Golf Assooiation. starting li neup Friday nigh t al'er by-game general admiSSion sale omer of the year. CHICAGO lIP) - a week on the bench and won the All the rest will be reserved...... 000 000 000-4) ~ I blOlsted his 35th and 36th homers game with a ninth inning homer. City council looked into the at­ 1('1 " ".,.". • ...... IIIIU 0011 Ol x--I I~ 0 of the season and Clyde McCul­ tendance possibility this week, ('HI) . nd " l ..i: Wynn 111 - The Yanks nicked Hank Wyse y. .. ome r un E2.sier lough drove in ~i){ runs Satur­ for two runs in the tirst with Di­ suggesting the Series might be day during a Piltsburllh Pirate Cooper Ties Heafner at 209 Maggio driving home the second played in Municipal stadium slugtest which overwhelmed the which seats 100,000. There was no WESTERN LEAG E with his two bagger. They picked . 13-6. It was the (AP ) -- Clayton H eafner held grim ly to shan: official comment, but some mighty Siou", CUr II, Colorodo Sprl nr' ~ B LTI~[OR E a up two more In the fourth on a Om:lha. U. 11 u e bl0 I Bucs' sixth win in their last sev­ in the lead a t th three-qu arter p o le of the Easte rn Open &01£ pair of singles, error, fielder's big changes would be needed at I)e n ver H, Lln ~o ll1 i'j en games. choice and double play. MAL W HI T F J EL D, 1948 the stadium to layout a baseball tOUl'n y Saturday. Kiner's homers put him nine An error and singles by J oe American Ol ympic star from diamond of major league size. The games ahead of his pace last year C urly-haired Pe te C ooper from Ponte Ved ra, Fliil., steam ed C.ollins and Billy J ohnson led to Ohio State, is shown finishing home oarks of the two clubs tradi­ Dynamite when he led the National league into a tie with lIeafne r w ho h as b een in front sinee the fir st another run in the eighth. DiMag­ an exhibitiOn 880- yard run Sat­ tionally are preferred as World with 54. At the same time he is lti o Singled home the Yanks' final urday at Cleveland in 1:49.2, Series sites. 1 holes Thur ci a)'. Change Unbelie,'able only one game behind the pace r un in lhe ninth. equaling the }vorld record set The change that a winning Phil­ Bobe Ruth set en route to his The pud&'Y North Carolinian struggled migh t il y to matc h par "" .. n . VAple •• • •• • • t Oll "lOft nf1--tiI '~ fI 12 years ago by Sidney Wooder­ Philadolphi. . , . . . ftOO ~O. OOO-~ i) t son, the English star. lies' club produced among Phila- record 60 in 1927 . 72 Sat urday a nd hring his 54- ' Oy rne, F e rrl ~ k " ~ ) \I'd Be rra; W Ys ~ , The Cubs paraded five piichers S hantz ( 11\ a nd Tinton. 'Vlnn! n, pitc he r , hole total to 209. ooper, I)lay- and two more withdrew on the 8'+rne n :l-tiL LoJJnl' pltcbe r . Wvse (;;. . second nine. - Doyle Lade, Johnny Klippstein, ing in the same trio, chopped three I ~!). Hom ~ rvft - C h apman (21st), "" Dutch Leonard, Bob Rush and ,h'okes from par II) pull up even, The play was in weather thal LI.';I;tll :.] STEELERS WHIP LIONS Johnny Schmitz - to the mound Pace-setters in the $16,500 tour- changed back and forth from sun whil\) the Pirates hammered out PITTSBURGH (JP) - A 16-yard ney on the Mou n Pleasant links to drizzle. iFl d goal by J oe Geri in the sec­ NOW Ends TUESDAY 14 hits. are bunched for a mad r ush to the The Pirates employed Mel ond period spelled the difference wire in the fi nal 18 holes today. LA MOTTA BOUT SANC'f10NED Saturday night as the Pittsburgh Queen, Dickson and Bill Werle t~ A hot round by any of several stem the tide of Cub hits. Werle MILWAUKEE 1m-Fred Saddy, Sleelers ripped to a 17-4 victOlY touring pros can grab the $2,600 over the sta r - studded Detroit 8nIG~i; stopped them after ther~ h !ld been fi rst mo ney. head ot the National Boxing asso­ homers by Roy Smalley, Mickey ciation, Saturday sanctioned mid­ Ljons in a National football league Owen and Hank Sauer and a The honors for such a round on dleweight Champion J ake La Mot­ exhibition. ~tp)tf double by Andy Pafko. the third 18 went to Lloyd Man­ ta's plan to defend his title grum, the former Open Na'ional PIlIs burr h ...... 000 llO l O ~ I - I ~ 1\ 0 agains Frenchman Laur ient Dau­ EXHIBITION FOOTBALL ~·S 1 I . C hl. 'ro ...... •. . O·! I 11 0 IIOo-K 1/ 0 champion [rom Niles, Ill. H e flash­ New l'ork Ya nks :!R, C hltaro Cards 10 I wI(, p. Qu.on , Dick.on ( ~ ), Worle (K) .nd thille. The bout is scheduled for -C leveland Drowns 9-4 , Baltimore Colb ,. ~!oC uliour b: Lad e, ~lIpp . ltln 1(1), L.on · ed to 67 to bring his total to 210 Sept. 13, at Detroit. La Mo tta had a rd (II). Rush (8), Sohmlt. If) a nd OWOll . which tied him for second Dl ace been ordered by the NBA to de­ Wlnnlnr pltcber, Dlck.l on (fj .. llJ); LO l lnr with F red Haas Jr., from Clare­ nUeber, R.u s h (11\ .. 10). Jlome runl - fend his title against Ray Robin­ " .. (~-~ ;;!h ~ Kinor . nd 8Glh). lIop p IR lh), mont, Calif. Owen (:!nd ). auer (1 9th). son by Oct. ] 2 when he signed Bunched another slroke ballk up for the September bout with In strlkln.&" pOSition are Walter fd.0I1f :w'~ Dauthille. Cardinals Edge Romans, Baltimore, Cary Mld­ dlecoff, Ormond Beach, Fla., jllG HEAR BING SING and John Palmer, Badin, N.C. SIX TOP TUNES ! Reds in 9th, 3-2 JUST WEST OF CORALVILLE The course, already a long 6,895 BOXOFFICE OPENS 7:00 ST. LOUIS (JP) - Red Schoen­ yards, was stretched to the full­ wmiffH Shows at Dusk and 9:45 dienst tripled against the right est Saturday by pushing baek the NOW SHOWINGf field wall in the ninth inning Sat­ tees and the pi ns. Several at the ., Adults SOc - Children urday night, driving in the run co ntenders, including Heafner, Under 12 in Cars Freel th at broke up a pitcher's duel to found it rough going. TONITE and MONDAY give the S t. Louis Cardinals a The most no .a ble of these was 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati young Jimmy Clark from Hunt­ Reds. ington Beach, Calif. He soared to MILTON SERLE Red's single in the 11 h inning &aTS FUNNY wrrtt a 77 , five over par, and a sixth­ Friday night enabled the Redbirds place 214 . Be started the round to beat Cincinnati, 2-J. ONE OF THE TOP contenders in a first-place tie with Heafner VIRGINIA MAYO The deciding marker was scored In the National Amateur goll at 137. by Pitcher AI Brazle, who had tournament at Minneapolis next singled . In gaining his ninth tri­ Henry Ir.uIsom, the Tam 0 '­ l\'eek wlll be BUt "Dynamite" umph, Brazle allowed six hits and Shanter ''World'' titleholder, fal­ Goodloe Jr., of Valdosta, Ga. He struck out three men. ' tered to 78 and dropped to 8th was e ..y to spot while prac­ Ewell Blackwell, on the mound plaoe at 216, par for the 54 holes. tleln~ Saturday. He decked hl~ fo r Cincinna i, gave up eight hits The original field of ] 25 WflS 5-foot, 8-lnch, 245-pound frame and fanned seven. cut to 70 with a qualifying score In plaid socks with matchln, C lnf! 'nn:l ll • . •. ...•. .• ). tOO (Mftl-'"! (I • of 153 :for pros and 156 for ama­ Also MARCH OF TIME cap, brl,ht blue shorts and St. Loul, . . . •• .. • • . .. 11111 100 IWlI-:1 8 0 teurs for the first 36 holes. How­ BIIle1l:weU «I'!-l'!) and PralDf'aa: Brade Colortoon and Screen Snapi 7eJlow t-Ihirt, (O . OJ aDd D. Blee. lIome Run-Adeock. ever, fOUl' eligibles failed to start TITE DAILV lOW tiG ~ dantic Coast Residents AI rted for Storm Philippines to Send British Carrier Leaves for Pacifi c Du ty ldIAMI (If) ~ Northeast stol"'m les retching outward. After Troops to Korea ., lI\in3S were hoisted from More- iJfchin~ along at a pace of lO milC'J WASHINGTON UP) - A regi­ WANT ADS ad City, N.C., to the Virginia !hour or less for a week. the mental combat team from the jptS Saturday as the Atlantic ~torm pas stepped up its pace to Philippines, including veterans of SEl l EVERYTHING hOUT. bmicane speeded its forward mo- about 12 miles an Bataan, may be among he flr~t ulil. United Nations reinforcements in WANT AD RATES Typing All advisory issued at 3:30 p.m. Korea. ·• 1--=--'-- ---=:..::.-.--=---'---- ()rtllime) by the Miami weath- Wife Hides Auto WANTED; Iyplnl- Phone 12120. President Truman tacitly ac­ CIa i11~ Display bUreau predicted that the 140- f/om Tipsy Mate cepted the island republic's offer One Day _. . 75c per coL inch Autos for Sale - Used rtIt "inds whirling in a narrow of troops Thursday. In a message Six Consecuti\'c days, arourld the storm's center ~ ATLANTA (,4» - A slightly tip­ thanking President Elpideio Qui­ . h I11131 TUlflAPLANE. lnrured. rood tl_, per day .. _.. _. 60c per col. \DC nod.o. " ... ter. 575. Bo" 37. Ind)' 10wwn. :tUld remain at sea otf the North sy man telephoned Captain Jimmy rino, he said: One Month ...... _.. SOc per col. inch 1.. 7 HUDSON dUb coupe; 19141 NASH a coast. Bro,wn at police headquarters Sat­ "I am proud that the soldiers (A\'g. 26 insertJons) 4-<1oor; I": HUDSON _oor; 1.. 0 Anavy spokesman at Glenview, urday and reported his car miss­ of our two naUons will, again STUD£BAQR _oor; 1113'1 TERRA· caval air station said the air ing. , stand shoulder to shouJder agains t PLAN!! _oor; 1t1311 CHEVJlOLrl' I. For cOlUecutive insertions door; 100 5ev~ra1 olde.r .GOd U.sed cars. Iltioll at Patuxent, Md ., was be­ the forces of aggression." " What's the Hcense number?" One day _~ ...... _ 6(' per word III EKWALL MOTORS. C21 So. CAD.loL partly evacuated as a precau­ At the Philippine embassy, a asked ,the captain. "And the model Three dan ..• _ ... lOc per word Planes were being flown to antl m'ake?" spokesman told a reporter the sol­ I da,. 13c per word InlUJance 1M naval air bases. Patuxent diers wiJl be ready any time their "Wel,I," the gent hiccupped, "it's One lonth ... _ 3Sc per ,,·ord ror AUTOMOBILE I!IStTRANCl!: and abOut 50 miles southeast of a late model car and I don't re­ former commander, Gen. Douglas Oth". Insunm" purc.... of JiOM~ ISbington. MacArthur, calls them. I.OTS. and rH.'" loan -,.. Wltftln,· 'fllembel' the license plate num­ cn"clI )'our ad In Ih~ flnt I. u .. it .p. lKerr R".l l), Co. D ..I 21D. Between 40 and 50 bombers, oer. J mean I'll have to look for He said the officers alread)' pean. Tb: Dally low n can be T t.pon- ibJIt tor 01l1)· one Jn~1 r~t in ertJon. by some 200 men, were It. I'll call you back." have been cho en and the men Wanted To Reot to Glenview naval air sta­ wHl come from the standing Phil­ Mi'nutes laler a 'o¥()man called Deadlines near Chlcag~. The storm ippine army, including many who GARAGE wanled: Slot..... room or the. captain. double I.ra.e-. Near downtown. J uck­ ttr is expected to pass a short fought beside Americans agalru.t Weekdays 4 p.m. loOn EIKlnc Company. . tlnce offshore from Gape Hat­ • y husband just phoned you the Japanese on Bataan during , t!flS Sunday morning. Coast a I re­ l\bOUt I stolen car," she said soft­ World War 11 . Saturd a y Noon Music and Radio I!)!' sHenlS were advised to take pre- ly. Because of American eqUipment, rJltiOIl$ against dangerous gales .... yes ma'am," Brown answered training and advice, the combat ( r WI .. ,IIol., Ed Hunting, Jr. RADIO reDaJrln,. .rACKSON'S ELEC· TRIC .AND GIFT. --' high tides. polJtel~, "you have the license team will be one of the easie.t THE BIUn H Ant RAFT CARRIER Theseus left Portsmouth, En,'and, Frida on It way to join other ClaSSified Manager The storm covers a diame!er of tW!\\bet?" of all the proferred United Na- Bl'ltlsh naval force opera tin, In Korean waters. The Royal Navy dl closed a po Ible ca e f sabotare to.t and Found miles with heaviest winds "No," she whispered, "r hid the tions units to mesh into the Amer- aboard the ve el lour day before Its departUre. Eleetrlul wirinl" which led to the hip' I" ro compass Brlnlr dvertlsemel1ts to !he center and lesser veloci- car and don't want him to tind it." ican force fighting In Korea. was round slashed. The Theseu earrles 40 plane and a ('rew or 850 men. The Dally Iowa Buslnes Of tire l.OST· Jotn', Hamlllon wrl I w.t~h. 8a eroent, Eat.t Hall or phone Reward. Phon .. ~tG9. ., ~======~~~====~==~~~======OPE Y E Help Wanted , I alAR>' LOU IS TAk:E'" 4191 [NSIDl!: ..I. man. So",,, EIKtrl.,,1 ex· Four Gis Bailie Red Tanks ~rfenc~ prefernd. 30-t0. Must. ume- ~~H AbRO, THE r pon Ib,IIU.. . R.r.~n"" req ulrl'd. 6 L~ASED TO A ",eIGi-/8OI(, T E FHO T, (1.:1') Four nH'ri· Permant'!'nt . .Jackson Electr.r Complny. lIE ANC~OIZ 15 On Miacellaoeoua for Sale LFFED, ANO-- can infantrymen fOllght a battle \\ illl fh (' • orlh Kor('an tanks WANTED· EI..,trlclan. r:"pe.. encl'd. Ptr- PLATfORM rockor. lOra ~. ~hlld· . MBntnt. Ja('kson EJ~'trlc Company. bed. Peel. t.1 lable. Phone 1\047. Friday night. 'ULL tfmp lind part tlm~ hftlp tor 4lnln-, room and kllchM. fI~ltt\ Cafe. Two Iielltenants and two ('nlisteel !nc'n langk'd with the HilS' Instruction sian·built T·34' · at the fon"ud-mo.t obs('r\'ution po t of the General Service. BALLROOM donee 1_.... 1I.bu1 Youd. American for (' which is < ttackin~ 1:3 mill'S north of Tuegu. Wurili. 0101 "85. PORTABLE ~I~rle win, machines for ~1aj. Cordon ~IlIrc11. t. Lou- .------""nl. S:! per month. SlNGER SEWING C.ENTER, I~ S. Dubuque. is. sent tIl£' first word on the the whole bunch starled to take HOW TO GET FUl.l..ER BRUStn:s ."d D bulanl Co battle back to headQuarterr. His or~;parker came down the hill mttle • Phone &-1396. voice was almost casual as he said AN APARTMENT over the field telephone: with more bazooko ammo and w~ ------Rooms for Rent fir d some, but ] JCue~ w dldn'l No, we don't hove any magic "Five cnemy tanks In our posi- hurt anything. That's all there was lecret to tell you how to tind an ROOM lor renl. Nt.. sur 110. p,lat. lions. No sweat." to H." Ipartmenl. In fact, It's common M~n Phone gMB. That Is a widely used expres- That wasn't quile all. One of ,nowledge that Dllily Iowan FURN! HED alnll rOom to ,Irl Iu­ LON DIE By CHIC YOUNG d,·,,!. Avnllabl .. Sopl. 15. Cnnl... 1 Lnu­ I sion here to Indicate the Issuf' lhe sh Ils a tonk fired down thl' Want Ads hav been ltelCilg Cood I.e M.It.. ln bdo,e Sopt. I. Dial 61382 can be met. rand cut a GI in halt. ·esults for apartm nt-hunters. £\,.. nln,". "We ere holding," Murch ndded. His (lonfldence was Justifi d, A few yal'ds forward were the two King's 'Chorus Girl' ~U1CJt LOANS on Jewel.,., clolhln., ofticers and two men battling thc ~rAfIER BRO, 'adlos, tiC. gOCK·F.Ylt LOAN, 12e\4t tanks. S. r.r lhuque. The briet and victorious Yank Denies Shady Dance III,",,"~------I 'JANED on I\Inl. ...mer.. , TR N, FER dlamondl, • ·\h:"c. ele. RELlABt..E battle r duced the number of tonk., DEAUVILLE, FRANCE ,~a· n"N ("on In,... q ,. "u",.tnt'l to three in a few minutes. min Gamal, King Farouk'. favor­ For Efficient Furniture lust Came to VI It he dancing air!, made a (ac when Iowa City Trailer Mart The ~Ight slarted when Lt. Dix­ she WDS asked if she did a belly Moving Ie ParKer, Gre n Pond, Ala Pfe. dance. nnd RENTAL - SALE Frank ~chlavone, Mullica HilI, N. "Oil nta I dance," ~he cOTl'cctC'd. Rental luggage trailer Daggngc Tran~rer J ., Ptc. Edgar Taylor, New Cum­ "Like 'his." by the hOllr, day, or week berland(, Pa., and Lt. Derwood lier hape1y teel wove a deli· catc pattern, her midritr rolled JIhrbway 218 near Airport Simms '1o'ere at their posts by :1 Dial - 9696 - Dial Phone 6838 road tr'ying to detect nnd report in n slow rhythm, Her jet-black enemy movement. C),-C shot stars ancl she tlasheo Here is Simms story, told as he Lhe whilC5L teeth in the middle· was stilndlng beside a blacken('d eas~. "Isn't that a belly danc<,?" "No,' •• J III B y CAR L Russian tank Saturday morning ~I EN R Y ANJ)EIlS O N he insisted. "rt' an Oriental ~~~~r------' with the odor at dead Koreans 0 , CJ around )im and n dirty red beard dancc." Samia Is 26, auburn - haireo C] CJ blacke~f g hiS Cace: and beautiful. She has made 30 "This forward position isn't my films and has danced countless job, 1 jflsl came down the hill to times for Farouk in his palace. She take a l ook and visll some with has one of the 2:; room~ reserved Dixie Parker. We were sitting there for the corpulen, monarch's party just alter it got dark with the at thc luxurious Hotel Du Golf. bazook~ team (Schiavone and Tay­ Samia i· unmarried. She jerks lor) when we heard the tank~ her thumbs down when asked her highballing up the road. opinion of men. She says she has "We phoned It back and wait­ one hig ambition - to dance in ed. We didn't walt long. When we lhc United States. figured the tanks were about 100 She is a s asoncd campaigner. yards away, Schiavone whnmmell When two American beauties lried one at them. It hit, but good. Thp Lo catch the King's eye at er an tank flared up Dnd we saw it was all-night gambling session, Samia only -lO yards away and tha' it froze them out of the picture by 0' wasn't the only t nk and that it stepping in front of them. The '0 I wasn't the lead tank. American girls, both blondes, both .1 I Lead Tank Clo e lovely, refused to give :heir names. " : "The lead lank pulled up right . be ide us. I~ stopped no more than Sheriff Puzzled as 10 yards away, Schiavone banged CLEARANCE: it twice but didn't hurt it. He Fish Flood Town - OF ­ looked around for more ammo and UNUSUAL there wasn't any. We ran back up WAUSAU, WIS. Ill'! - Ma rathon VOLUMES the hill about 30 yards and Parker County Sherif( Carl Mueller hDS started over the mountain lor his hands full of fish these days more ammo. - and he'd like to know where PHONE 4191 "The Gooks tank wheeled its thp sturr is coming from. turret and fired one at us. It hi' For the Iourth time in the past lET THE ClASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU 10 Ieet away. We could hear GOOK month, county residents have re­ infantry bringing up ammo to lhe pOl·ted finding Sizeable amounts of tank. One Gook stood on the back freshly-smoked chubs. ------of the tank and was yammering Mr. Ervin Kufahl, Wau au, about something. said Saturday she found 12 to-lb. 8·11 tnt. It r~_'l ""''''' w~ y..... • 1r-U "1 popped at. him with my car­ boxes of {ish neatly stacked on a .' bine and missed. The tank s'arted read ncar her home . C_ _L_A_ FF_-_A_- D_A_Y~,,~\ By P A U L ROBINSOft slamming a lot of shells down the Friday, Ihe Bernard Loughrin ~~------~ ~------~ road anS then it began to back family, near Elderon, rep,rted out of the fix il was in. finding 140 pounds of chubs, all in "My ~arbine wasn't any more 10-lb. boxes, piled along a road. good thim a slingshot against ~hat And Rev. AHred Schroeder, an­ ~At tank so we sat there and watchcil other Wausau resident, said he • them. Our inlanlry up the slope came across 12 more boxes in a f, poured Jt into their in!an~ry and we ods. tOOM""AND OOAllD

IF WE KEEP OUR MATCHES DRY EXCELLENT, AN' DONT LOSE TH' CAN OPENER, RODNEY/ ···TIlE WE'LL e.... T , ... I UN WHIP UP WHOLEscw\E CAMPING ME .... LS FROM BRE .... K- P~NDE~ FAST TO SUPPER, BUT OF OUTDOOR.. TI-lEY'LL BE /'oS PLAIN ....N' MEN ····THE SIMPLE /'S .... PUMP H.A.NDLE··· HEALTHY. PL,A.IN .. NO FANCY CHEWING FARE:. OF THE OR. FINGER, PIONEERS.! BOWLS.

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\ \ --- i, .-. i ~~ .-: \ t, \. i, .. I : • ,A,\..I- I ~@~ : " . .A " I J e ' 21 , , .. COPl ~ l{1NII PFA,,-UR£S ~\,NDll:ATF.. 1K. ",·Ollt.n "teU" kt.St.."'"l:o. ·'This marvelous acce880ry is known as 'The Silencer'. I' rreu UUI In&tton aAc1-" '--- - • ~AGE SIX TIlE DAD..Y IOWA.."', SUNDAY. AUGUST 20, 1950 • -,~

, - , , Teacher's-Pet for Keeps Now And• Here's Where the Wild Geese Go

Pre: .nd

4~ WELL ON ms WAY to an "A" In romance WA!! Arthur Williams, 18, EVIDENTLY TilE E WILD GEE E were sold on Chicago as a vacation stopover, for they swooped AIRLINE HOSTESSES MODELLED uniforms trom 1930-5' .1 ~ when he married his teacher, the former Mrs. Jean Lewis Bres­ right down to the 57th street beach on Lake Michigan and got in with the bathers. Apparently the Chicago Fair recently. Showing that their fashions bad cllJll,l/ seUe, 30. They were "Ictured in her home In West prlngfield, Mass., 73-derree temperature ga\'f the 30 birds nothin, to squawk about, for (hey refused to comment to pass alon, with the airplanes were, left to right, Vir&inla Vaoderllie,I!3t where she said ahe would resi&11 her teaching Job to keep bouse ersby concerning their de linalion. Mary Crowell, 1933 ; Betty Schultz, 1937; BeHy Gientzer, It", ... for Arthur. He', a football - hockey star currenlly open for Job bids. Betty Williams. 1950.

. She Swims, Too -.' Off to England by Plane and Silip Four Sons Leave for War

r

, , MRS. NELLA DUSATKO proudly bids good luck (or the second till to her Eons as they enter sert'ice ih Huntington Park, Calif. ~ World War II she said good-bye to five, but this time only lour III goi)1g. The three above are, left to right, Donald, William aDd Nft A four.th, George, was just called by the alrforce. The filth DUllib brother, Emil. will stay hOme to look after his mother. He served ~ the Pacific. BOUND FOR EUROPE BY ArR AND SEA was this twin-transporta­ Flying Eagle aluted Ihe CUllard Linf'r Queen Elizabe\h recently in tion combination as the Pan American World Airwal's Clipper New York Harbor. Both left Oil trips to England.

! WEBSTER DEFINES health as the quality of being sound In mind and body. Whatever U is, Judges c-Ialmed Lynn Moorhead, San Antonio, Tex., had enough of It to rate tbe title of National Orphan Fawn Takes on Rations Swim , for Health Queen of 1950. She competed aa-alnst other beauties on the basis of figure, penonaUty, photo qualU.tes and --: . even a little swim min r. ~ Coffee Served While You Drive

Could This Be 'Unfair?'

A QUESTION OF JUDGMENT has I&rlsen In the seleetlon 'of Mar: ~aret Bradford, Windsor, Ont, as "Miss Canada." Four other rirls OME PERSONAL aUention from two-year-old are proteaun~ the choice of Miss Bradford. They claim Ibe was A SOLUTION FOR SLEEl'Y rJRIVEU was provided \\ hen a Ger· Susan Brown, of Bethel, l\le. Bambi 15 a two-week-old lawn that chosen from pic-tures alone, "whiCh wasn't fair." The Judges re­ man motorist Installed thi coffee ('outainer In his car. H is operated was 01'lJlu1l1ed when its mother was killed by an' automobile. Animal portedly are stili satisrlrd, but have fxpre!lsed a willinl'nl'lls to view from the ~enerator and holds three cups of roffee. It ran nl~o warm lovin, lovers of Ihe area have agreed to provide Ihe nourishment lhe rea' jirGduct• soup,but doesn't as yet make toast, he said. for the fawII. • (j