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ON THE INSIDE ( THE WEATHER TODAY Bums Drop Cards Twice ...... Page 2 Partly cloudy and continued hot and rather SUI Exhibit at Stat. Fair ...... Page 3 humid today. and tomorrow with widely scat· Austrian Doctors Slip ...... Page 6 tered showers in north. Eatabliah.d 1868-Vol. 19, No. 278-AP New. and Wlr.p~to Iowa City, Iowa, TUllllday, August 19, 1947-Five Cents .. • • World in Action- Yale University Dean in Local Crash Local Crash .Hurts State Resls • I Louise Turns Back on Gollum Files Anti-, rusf Around Dr. S. W. Dudley Of Yale University Overell (ase; SuitS Againsl The Globe CEDAR RAPIDS (JP'}-Dr. S. W. Dudley, dean of the enllnHrin, Louise (hilly Tire Concerns OHICAGO (JP) - An attractive college at Yale university, New SANTA ANA, Calif. (.4')- The 6runette housewife, found nude Haven, Conn., was injured severe­ Charp' Price-Fixing; and battered in mysterious cir­ state rested it. case yesterday ly yesterday in an automobile ac­ a,alnst Louise Overell, I8-year­ Hits at Conspiracy in cumstances yesterday in her cident 12 miles south of here. locked Lake Shore drive apart­ old heiress, and her husky boy Dr. Dudley was brou,ht to '3t. frl.nd, Geor,e Gollum, 21, accus­ Color Film Industry JIIent , died last night, nine hours Luke's hospital here for surgical after she was discovered sprawled ed of !laylna her parents. treatment. Allendants said his A! the state concluded Its case, NEW YORK (,4»- The federal unconscious amid packing cases condition upon tmterlnr the hos­ and partially filled gin bottles. at 4:34 pm. (CST) the jury was ,overnment, charllnr a 12-year.,. pital was "fairly good." He sut­ excused until Thursday. old conspiracy to fix tire price. Police Intensified investigation fered severe lacerations on both to determine whether Mrs. Celeste Otto Jacobs, chief of the ,irL's and limit production, tiled a arms includln, the severini of defense, quickly launched Into Sell, 39, a salesman's wife who I criminal information yesterda,. some tendons, lost a considerable arlumltl'lts to strike portions of was preparing to move to St. aealnst 19 defendants includi~ Louis to join her husband, had been brutally beaten by an assail­ amoun•t 01 blood, had sever• brui- testhnony In the IS-week• trial the nation's principal tire manu.. • tacturen. ant, or had been injured In a fall. ses on both ieas and was described which he claimed pertained only as in "deep shock." to Gollum, not to his cUent. The Iirlormatlon, filed In teder .. TAMAZUNCHALE, Me lC leo The mishap occurred et the Belore the state rested, Prose­ al district court by the justic. * * * north edge of Shueyvllle. Patrol­ (.IP)-At least 12 persons were cutor Eu,ene D. WlIliams said he department's anti-trust division, killed and two vllla.-es were men said Dr. Dudley was enroute wished to review testimony\ as to wlpecl out by a seriM of land­ to Cedar Rapids, and that two cars the clothing Gollum wore the said the defendants elimtnated .Ud" which rumbled down whicl\ were traveling ahead of mornin, of March 15. Financier price competition by agre41lne "on from peaks of east central Mex­ him stopped abruptly. Dr. Dudley and Mrs. Walter E. Overell were prices, discounts, allowances, bon. ict Friday durinl" hurricane tried to go around them, but in so found dead after a blast that night U!leS, classification of customel'l, doing lost control of his car. nln., city officials bere rellOrt· which wrecked their yacht. uniform warrantles, ,uaranteea til yesterday. II a bridge abutment, spun Ov.rell, Gollum and two mech­ Ten of the known dead were at over It and dropped about )0 to 15 anics spent the day working on and adjustment polJcies, allocation Tarnal, eight and one-hall milts feet into a ditch. Dr. Dudley ap­ engines of the cabin cruiser, the 01 sales to state, county and mun· lOuth of here, where a roaring parently was traveling. alone. 42-foot Mary E. The state contends icipal ,overnrnent all4i!ncies." s\lde wiped out 43 houses F'riday that later that night the Overells Officials of several ot the de­ night. were blud,eoned to death and a fendant firms quickly denied the char,e of dynamite, receipts for government allegations and de­ SANTA MONICA, Calif. (iP) - Train Hits Brooder * * * which witnesses testified were in clared they would contest the IUit Virginia Warren, 18-year-old Gonum's handwrltln" was set off vigorously. daughter of California's Repub­ House; 2 Fined $100 to hide the crime. The alleged conspiracy to fix lican governor, saidl yesterday AMES (,4»-The North Western Jacobs contended successfully DemOcratic Gov. James E. Folsom Jllices be,an in May, 1935, the railroad str amIlner "City of Los that the matter at Gollum's c1oth­ inIormation stated. of Alabama was flying west lor a Angeles" was delayed for several In, had been gone Into on dlr­ vacation and she planned to see The defendant companies, which minutes here early yesterday ect testimony, and that there was include the industry's "bl' four," bim, but disclaimed any romance. morning and railroad oUiclals said no point In reopening It. Super­ "My goodness," she exclaimed, Goodyear, Goodrich, Firestone and Dean S. W. Dudley the wheels of several cars were lor Judge Kenneth E. Morrison Miss Overell and Fiancee U.S., produce more than 90 per.. "J've only seen him three times." She'd Rather Talk to Her Attorney, Lett He Swerved to Miss Two Cars flattened when the train plowed sustained him. cent of the tires and tubes made Into a brooder house being moved The courtroom earlier had not­ In the United States, the informa.. JERUSALEM* * (JP)* - F1&'htln across the railroad tracks about iced a distinct chill between the *ween Je_ and AJ'lLbs In the tion .aid. • Boly Land I1Ibalded 'yesterdaY 12:30 a. m. (CST) by two Ames two defendan.t. n ' th.y sat down WUllam O'Neil, klresident ot after el.-ht days 01 .trlfe u.s. Prolests PetkoY (ase men. to await the trial's openin,. Louise (ity's 99 High for Midwest General Tire & Rubber Co., one brou.-hi a total of S5 dead and The men, Charles Jones, a farm turned her back: on her boy friend of the defendant firms, declar.d WAS H J N G TON (JP) - The ican representative on the three­ laborer, and W. G. Mitchell, a once, as he started to talk with You were right. It was hot In spots in the midwest. 150 wounded. United States pressed Its cam­ power allied control commission The temperature In Iowa elty In a statement the Buit "just A report that two Syrian Arabs canning factory emPloyee, were her. Later she whispered briefly Iowa City yest rday. And no re­ doesn't make sense." paign of protest against commu· for occupied Bulgalra charged fined $100 and costs by Municipal but intensely to him, then swung lIet Is In sigh t before tomorrow <>r was 78 degrees at 9;30 last night. were kidnaped near Tel Aviv was nist tactics in the Balkans yes­ The low for yesterday was 71 de­ Hewert E. Smith, presJdent of denied officially by police, who that Petkov's convctlon in Sofia Judge J. Y. Luke yesterday morn- back In a swivel cbair and talked Thursday. the U.S. ltubber Co., declarecl terday by appealing to Russia to log on a chay.ge of moving a build· with an attorney, at the same time grees. said their earHer announcement of halt Bulgaria's execution of Ni­ Saturday of "plotting" against the The thermometer boiled up to a "this action is Incredible" and the kidnaping had been "based on Ing across a railroad right of way beating her fis ts on the counlel San Francisco's temperatW'e was said three of the four tire. whlcn kola Petkov, ,>utspoken aulgarian communist fatherland front gOV­ without a permit. table. torrid 99 degrees here in the atter­ fiJle Information." a cool 70 degrees and New York account tor 85 percent of his con· opposition leader. ernment was a "miscarriage of . 'The tuln proceeded at a speed Gollum, reUred with a discon- noon to place Iowa City on a level had a high of 74, accord In, to The cern's business now seU for 1... With British support, the Arner- justice". of 15 miles an hour to Boone. solate expression on his face. WASHINGTON(,4»-The* * * condi- with Sioux City as the hottest Associated Press, than prewar prices. lion of Fleet Admiral Ernest J. ------• • • King remained serious last night. Meanwhile, in Los An,ele., an. The wartime ehtet of nav&l other anti-trust suit was filed eperaHons and commaruler·in­ chariinl a conspiracy in produc.. ehlef of the tleet has harden· tion of color motion pictures, with In.- of the arteries and indIca­ the Technicolor Motion Picture iloDl of a mlly•• trok.e wUbout Corp. and Eastman Kodak Co. "rlysls. Suic'ide 'Killer SI,9'YS 2, Wounds ·2 named as defendants. . SEVILLA, Spain (,4»-Author- . . "Victory In this suit shoull! illes here reported* * a* heavy explo­ make possible an early and aub .. lion, possibly in a munitions Psych Prof. 'Flunks ' stantial Increase In color motion dump, had occurred last night at Sea (rash Possible Love pictures for the public," laid • JlOlnt between San Fernando William C. Dickson, chlet of the ,nd Cadiz and was believed to As Infant, 2, Hunts west coast anti-trust dlvlll1on. have caused many casualties. Telephone and telegraph com­ Motive for Story Told j munication with Cadle was cut 'Cars and Horsies' 'and it could not be determined HONOLULU (iP)-The navigator Russ Vetoes Reject :Nhether it was because of explo­ CmCAGO (,4» - Some child problems that lYeren't in the book of the army B-17 which crashed lion damage or censorship. at sea SaturdLy mJdnl,bt and ap­ Killing Spree were put to Prof. George Zimny parently cost the lives of Ambas­ Ireland, Transjordan, WASHINGTON (JP) - Maj. and his child psychology class by GLIDDEN, Iowa (.4')-Possibll­ * * * an emergency visitor yesterday, sador George Atcbeson Jr., and GeD. Ira T. WYehe, war dn.n· nine others blamed the disaster Ily 01 a one-sided romance be­ Portugal for U.N. IleDI lnapector .-eneral, left and Zimny said even the teacher tween an ex-sailor ' and a pretty flunked. yesterday on a ",as·hungry" en­ Jealerday by plane to look Into farm girl figured last night In LAKE SUCCESS (JP)-The Sov.. Student John Nugent, 25-year­ gine and head winds that exhaust­ JIIbliJbed reporta of low troop specula tion over possible motives iet Union cast its 12th, 13th anci old army air forces veteran, ed the fuel. -orale and h",h Uvi~ by offl· in a shooting in which Sheriff 14th vetoes in the security coun .. brought his tlYo-year-old son to Fifteen planes and 12 ships con­ etll in the Mediterranean thea­ tinued theIr search of the crash Tom Finegan said Jack Heuton, ell late yesterday to reject appU .. ler c_nd of U. Gen. John class at Chicago's Loyola univer­ 27-year-old . navy veteran, killed cations from Ireland, Portugal anel sity because Mrs. Nugent was in area some 65 miles west of Pearl C. H. Lee. two members of a larm family, Transjordan for membership iQ a hospital awaiting another baby H~bor all day yesterday in futHe wounded two others and then fa- the United Nations. and he ,ad no other place to leave hunt for the bodies of Atcheson BUENOS. *AIRES * (,4»* - Victory tally shot himself. The council also rejected Sov~ Mike. and three army men still unac­ 'claims in tne battle for Asunsion coun ted for. The sheriff said Elgie Wessel, 55, let-supported .Albantll and Outer wtre put forth by both sides yes­ Zimny brightly welcomed the and his niece Lois Mae Wessel, 16, Mon,olia. youngster, saying he'd give Mike Capt T. L. Rider, one of three ttrd.y In the Parai!uayan civil survivors, meanwhile gave the were shot dead from ambush late It then voted unanJmously to war. some tests and papa Nugent could Sunday night by Heuton, who also recommend the admission of the forget about him while attending first full account of the pre-crash A aovernment communique minutes of tense decision. wounded Clayton Wessel, 40, Arab klnrdom of Yemen and the .11om the Para,uayan capital de­ his morning classes elsewhere. father of Lois, and Donald Wes- new dominion of Pakistan. The At noon, when Nugent returned Rider said the pilot, Capt. K. R. clUed Loyalist troops were Still, considered trying to reach sel, 13, Lois' brother. two MOSlem atates will become the "advancing In all sectors in ten­ to feed Mike, he found him sitting the island of Kaual, northwest of Finegan reported Heuton, who 56th and lI'lth members when lCious pursuit of the rebels Who on the distraught teacher's desk, quit in June as a farm hand on given routine sanction by the gen~ Oahu and trying to land on the lie fleeing In complete disorder." which Mike had covered with col­ the Wessel place, peppered. the eral assembly meeting in New, ored chalk. From Zimny and other beach, but abandoned this idea A broadcast Rebel communique Wessels with a .22 caliber auto- York Sept. 16. I IIld their forces had taken the students. Nugent got this: and instead chanced "dltchlna" the malic rifle as the famIly returned It was the second time in a year Fiver of Viletta, 18 miles south of Mike had spent most of his time gasJess plane. home from an evening of roller that Soviet Deputy Foreian Min­ Asuncion, thus completin" the hanging his head out the window, He said his first warnin, of skating at nearby Scranton. Ister Andrel A. Gromyko had in- li,,. of the capital. looking for "cars and horsies:" trouble came when the pilot asked Heuton then want out bebind a yoked the special big power priv. catching ftis fingers In file dra w­ him casualJy which was clOSer, farm sbed, broke the butt from Jle,e in the council to upset rna.. ers, and tossing out the window Barking Sands beach on Kauai is­ the rifle, and fired a bullet Into jority votes. rComo Socko No Dream i the experimental blocks with land, northwest of HonolulU, or Jack Heuton and 'Victim' Lois Wessel his own head, the sheriff sald He Poland polned Russia In oppoa­ , . which the book says a child will Hickam field. "'We're a little One·..... Love Mar .ave Beea the Reason added that pictures of Lois Mae Ina Portugal but abstained on I .... .CHICAGO (....,,-Perry Como, show his powers of coordination. low on gas,'" he said the pilat were found in Heuton's billfold land and Transjordan. The other the crooner, stopped the show at Professor Zimny, a bachelor added. and that Heuton had ransacked nine of the 11 council members the Chlca,o theater yesterday, but who was looking a bit worn, The pilot said 130 gallons was UN OK/s 2 New Nations the Wessel house this summer and supported the three. IIOt thit wayan entertainer dreems gratefully surrendered Mike to "what the gauges say. Of course, Princess flizabeth Denied 'Something New' taken some articles belongln" to The delecates rejected a RUt- Of doing. Nugent with the question: they're inaccurate." LONDON (A')-Prlnceu Eliza- a sin ale new travelln. outtlt, pair LAKE SUCCESS (JP) - The security councll last night gave Lois. lian demand for postPonement of Como called for hou.e lI,hts in "All I want to know Is how Rider said "then ( pve him the beth, cast by ber country'. ttou- of bedroom slippers or froth1 ne- Sheriff Finegan said the poal- applications from Austria, Italy. you get your homework. done." unanimous aPPJoval to the appli­ the middle of his lecond sonl, distance to Barkin, Sands and bles in the role of a "poor little alii'" bilJty of a one-sided romance was Rumania, Hungary and Bullaria. "Dretm, Dream, Dream" after an Hickam. He figured it would take cations of Pakistan and the King- a "Ukely one" but added that on the grounds that the peace rich girl," has been denied the The only "lOmething new" when IIIIIdlntifled member of the audi­ dom of Yemen for membership Lois Mae told him recently that b'ellties bad noli been ratified, 'ts Demand 19 1/ 2 minutes to Barking Sands heart's delire of every brid.-to-be she marries Lt. Pbllip Mountbat­ ence Itruck Como on the temple Cuba Subml and 24 minute. to Hickam," be­ In the United Nations. Heuton had not molested her. They will be taken up Thursday. tiith a piece of hard candy. QUlTANDINHA, Brazil (.4') - cause of wind conditions. -8 new trousseau. ten In Wutininater Abbey next The sheriff related that there The United States, lpearhead- The councll's recommendations The crooner publicly invited the Cuba submitted a formal demand The navigator said the plane In accord with the wishes of Nov. 20 will be her wedding bad been "bad blood" between 1.. the drive for consld.ration of lnarklman "and all his friends" to yesterday to the Inter-American carried 3,190 gallons of gasoline King Geor,e and Queen Elizabeth, dress, a Norman Hartnell creation now go to the general assembly Heuton and the Wessels ever ~ foW' former Axis countries .tep up on the .t... for a face-to­ conference that any mutual de- when It lett Kwajaleio-normall1 and "owln, to present day condi- meetinl.in New York Sept. 16. since Heuton quit hla Job with the and Austria immediately, wa. face IJlCOUDter. Th. heckler tail­ fense treaty adopted by the 20 na- enough for 15 hours and 45 mln­ tions," Buckingham Palace an- which the prine.. selected from The two Moslem countries Wessels voluntarili. He said the aupportedb, Pranee, Brazil and ed to accept, and Como continued tions Include a clause againat utes of lliJht, or about a three- nouneed lalt niCht, tbe princel' Mveral deaipa with th. counsel of would Increase the U.N. member- Wessel bam burned clown the BeIcium while the others ab. "ecoDQmic alI.llioD." _~ .. ___ ,hour aafetY. ~1iDt __ __ 011 ,hip to a total of 57! _.... __ _ nI,ht Heulon quit. 1taiDed. Ilbe ~, _._ ,_ .. l....i..) _~ willIG bet, hOD~OOIl without her t\m-lovlq fiaAe.s ~ , 1_ ----..------_. -----' ! 'l'BE DAILY IOWAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1947-PAGE TWO t . . • Brookl,yn Trips' Car In al 5 Twice 7-5, 12~3 * * * ------~------~--~~----~------~------~----~------~.~~.~--~------~------~------FIJUIT OAMf! 8t. Loul. AB R II Brookl,n AB a H, Sch·nd·st. Zb 5 J 2\ Slanky. 2b 3 I 0 ~ 8ums Biasi Dusak. rL ~ 0 I Robinson. Ib 3 2 J Bears Beware-Dangerous Men! I Musial. Ib 3 2 01 Rel.er. If 3 2 1 K·rowolol. 3b • I DruMIIO. r:f • I I Slaughter. II • I I Ed wards. c 4 I 2 Moore. cf 3 0 I Walker. rf 4 0 0 Marion, IS • 0 0 Reese, sa 3 0 1 Chattin' ·: Brecheen in Rice. c 2 0 0 lorg'no'n 3b • 0 I "Cross 0 0 0 Lombar<\.l p 4 0 I Wilber. c I 0 I C. y. P 0 0 0 0 KxxxCreger 0 0 0 Pollel. p 2 0 0 Elurkhart. p 0 0 O· (xJlledwlck I 0 01 with Cha .xxDlerlng 0 0 0 Wilks. p 0 0 01 :~!~!YN ~!T.~_k- ".l

.. .~.\. ::- ... '. ~ I l'UE DAILY IOWAN, TnIDAY. AtJOtJRT If. IH'1-PAnK 'I'RIlIIQ} Me an~ My S~adow < Sees Million Dollar suf Campus Miniature To. Be New Home Splurge In Johnson County Displayed at Iowa' State Fair Farm families in Johnson coun­ ty are eXipected to spend more than $1,445,000 for new bousin, in Daily Iowan Confused As- the next three to five years, accor­ Exhibition ding to a forecast released recently by the Tile Council of America. "As a result of high incomes State Fair ' Publicity Snows Down, during the last few years, farmers Sponsored by in every part of the nation are Like Blizzard in August prepared to invest record amounts in new home construction and in A veritable snowstorm-in-Au-. at the fair, expecting a 20 percent.general assembly, and elective general farm improvements," said Stale Board * * * * * * * * * P. B. Orttnan, chairman of the gust has been descending upon reduction in admission prices, and state officials. before council's residential construction to·ge~ A theatricpl stage-set miniature The Daily Iowan during the past find that it is only a 18.67 percent Thursday, A.ug. 28-Derhy day. prob,. of. the Old Cppitol campus as committee. week. reduction, it is doubtful they will Friday, Aug. 2 Auto race day New rural homes will incorpor­ viewed from the west will be the It consists of publicity hand- and grand finale day. outs, press agents' dreams and enjoy it as iully as Secretary Cun- The state fair board expects an ate such features as central beat­ future item of the University of general propaganda from the 01- ningham expects. attendance even gf ater than last ing, tiled bathrooms and modern Iowa exhibit at the state fair in fice of the Iowa state fair news An increase (slight) in grand- year's history-making halt mil- kitchen facilities, Ortman said. Des Moines, August 22-29. pointing out that the comforts and service. stand admission prices is also an- lion. conveniences of uMan living are Photographic panels, uni versi ty Some of the litlle snowflakes of nounced but the press release The Dnily rowan is expecting, o1t publications, movies, wire record­ now available to farm families. publicity are pure gems of propo- least hoping tor, some surcease Incorporation In new homes 01 er demonstrations, and a penicil­ ganda; others, diamonds-in-the- doesn't say what percentage of in- f rom the snows t·orm-In-August. lin display will supplement the many labor-saving and comfort­ rough though they be, are worthy crease the 75 cents tor the upper providing devices is now possible, diorama. of note for the information they half, the $1 for the lower halt, and Or tman noted, because of the For the first time since 1941 , contain. the $1.50 fol' the box seats entails. according to Dean Bruce E. Ma­ Other little newsy items are: Miss Cochran Weds availability of electricity ' in rural han of the extension division, the Take the one collcerning the Eighteen county lIooths comprise areas of Iowa. Iowa state board of education is one-and-only Sally Rand. the roster of one phase ot a "Ru- He said rural electrification ad­ tponsoring exhibits by its insti­ It seems that Sal will or will not ral Family Living Exhibition" Jack Harb ~art Here ministration estimates disciosl tutions: the University of Iowa, appear as the star attraction ot the which will shpw new methods of that more than 74 percent of aU In a double ring ceremony, Mar­ farms in Iowa now receive Clntral Iowa State college, Iowa State fair's midway with or without sev- home management on Iowa farms. eral IO'Wa girls included in her The Iowa district YWCA will garet Cocl1ran, daughter of John station electric service. Teachers college, the Iowa School Cochran, Traer, Iowa, became the for the Deaf, and the Iowa School cast. have a drop-In lounge booth in the bride of Ja ~k Harbert, son of MI·. for the Blind. Sally had four Iowa girls wOl'k- varied industries building at the and Mrs. Z. L. Harbert, Seymour, Nine Morriage Licenses ing 101' her, and all seemed to be fair. This booth Is planned to ol­ Located in the educational an­ Iowa, at 4 p. m. Saturday in the Issued Over W.ek.nd nex of the amphitheater at the gOing smoothly up until Ihe time fer refuge and relaxoUon for wea­ First Presbyter'ian church ot Iowa fair grounds, the university exhi­ o! the Illinois state tair at Spring- ry fair Visitors. City. fieM. Special days at the fall' are Nine couples were granted mar­ bit will be centered around the Marie Todt, SI. Louis, was maid riage llcenses in the county clerk's diorama of Old Capitol, the phy­ Last week the girls became un- scheduled as follows: of honor and A. Hugh Trask, Io­ office over the weekend. ,leI building, University hall, and h,appy with the way Sally wanted Friday, Aug. 22-Children's day, wa City, served as b t man. Those from Iowa City were the west approaches. them to dance, and also wifh their auto race day, and 4-H club and Attendants were Kathryn Kitz­ Ralph H. Benton and Doris Hol­ The diorama was designed by reception by the audience, so they F. F. A. day. man, Conrad, Iowa, and Neva man; Dean R. Rousel and Corinne George L. Horner, university packed up, pausing long enough to Saturday, Aug. 23~Thrill day, Plltehn, Des Moines. John Suur­ L. Douglas Bennie L. Abbott and. architect, and Arnold S. Gillette, get their pictures taken, and lett press day, and baby beet judging balle, Fort Wayne, Ind., and Jay Shirley K.lumforth, and Donald university theater technical dir­ Sally to her fans. day. Hesser and Dayton McMllJan, both Wllson and Bonita Lansing. tctor. But Sally wasn't alone with her Sunday, Aug. 24-Auto race day of Cedar Rapids, were ushers. Others Included Harold Weimer The miniature stage-selting has fans for long. She found solace and horse show day. Following the ceremony a re­ and Audrey Hjelmgren, both of scale models of the three build­ with Harry Finkelstein, her man- Monday, Aug. 25-Horse race ception WIlS held Bt Hotel Jetter- Chicago; Robert p . Geigle, AlIo­ ings. George Smith, fo rmerly of agel', who wiped away her tears day and livestock day. son. THIS PRIZEWINNER In tbe amateur dlvl ion of the Iowa. photolrllphlc conte t IllSl week In Des na, and Vera J une Lackender, Io­ fJle university archi teet's office, and gave her medicine prescribed I Tuesday, Aug. 28-Horse race Mrs. Herbert attended the Uni­ MoInes 18 a study of Greal Lakes pipeline eQuipme nt In Iowa Cit '. It broulht a. second pla.ee ribbon wa City; Marvin F. Brecht, Nor­ prepared the Old Capitol model by her physician for heat exhaus- day and livestock day. versity of rowa and was graduat­ 1.0 PhotOlrapher Albert G. fariln of Davenport. way, and Thelma J . Teefy, Iowa in complete detail for the Centen­ tion which forced cancellation of I Wednesday, Aug. 27-State day, ed from Washington university , City; Earl D. Westbrook, Daven­ nial celebration last February. her show last Wednesday she with special honors for the gover­ schoOl of nursing, SI. Louis. She In some AfrlCDn areas, the I n North Africa and Tibet, 1\ is believed that Negroes in port, and Opal Wright, BurbanK, said. ' 'nor, former governors, Iowa mem- GiUelle and two student assist­ was employed at the University smelting of Iron is accompanied biacksmiths ilre orten considered Alrka smelted Iron before the Cal.; and Bernard R. Hoover, Mi­ ants, Joseph Johnston and George Now Sally has more trouble, or bel'S of congress, members ot the hospital. Her husband, a gradu­ by a religious ritual. low caste or outcasle. process was known to white men. lan, Ill.; and Betty Lou Murray, Tanner, built the other two ~od­ so it seems. Finkelstein's wife, ate ot the University of Iowa, is Rock Island, Ill. . tie, a sky -cyclorama background, Georgian Sothern, the strip teaser, now attending the graduate col­ the walks and lawn, and a pros­ viewed the proceedings between Meeting., Sp•• ch .... lege of the university. cenium which is lettered: "State her husband and Sally, and Sally's The coup1e will be at home after II.lnlversity of Iowa, Centennial story, with a jaundiced eye and Sept. I, at 213 S. Madison street. 1847-1947". has hailed Sal in to court in Panels of enlarged photos will Spring,field. Town 'n' LUCKY STRIKE pres "'S THE MAN WHO KNOW5- flank the d~orama. On one side, So, Sal will or will not be at the Marine Recruiters Here , A marine corps recruiting team training, research, and service at Iowa state tail', with or without , t" "".' the university will be pictured. the four Iowa girls. will be in Iowa City, Friday, the Cedar Rapids sub-district head­ THE TOBACCO AUCTIONEER! On the other side a series will Another little gem ot Informa­ Campus depict veterans at the university. tion tells us there has been a "20 Quarters announced yesterday. "Our Iowp," a 30-rrunute color percent reduction" in general ad­ The recrul ling team will be lo­ cated In the postoffic:e building "I'VE OLD more than 240 million moUon picture prepared by the mission prices for this year's tail', ELKS LADIES-At 2 o'clock from 9 a.m. 5 p.m. to give in­ bureau of visual instruction of "The admission will be 50 cents, to this afternoon ~lks Ladies will formation on all phases of the pounds of tobacco, and at every the extension division, will be tax paid. Last year it was 60 have a social meeting In the Elks marine corps. thown dailY at scheduled inter­ cents, tax paid," a press release hall. Mrs. Kenneth Deming will be vals. The film features the five says. in charge. auction I've attended, I've seen inatitutions under the state board With its passion for accuracy, • • • of education. The Daily Iowan delved deep Into KIWANIS-Members of the Ki­ the makers of Lucky Strike buy The use ot a wire recorder in Its rudimentary mathematics ancl wanis club will bear Audrey remote control broaqcasling and found that the 10 cents cut from Rummels, pianist, at the luncheon (Used fatS ': nne quality tobacco ... that fine, in speech training will be demon­ the admission price does not mean meeting this noon at Hotel Jef­ - . ~~fated. Another scientilic fear a 20 percent saving. Ten cents is ferson. ripe-smokin' leaf that makes a tUfe will be the display of a unit only 16.67 percent of 60 cents. • • • of penicil in. "The reduction is made largely VFW AUXlLlAIlY - Veterans smooth, mild smoke." On tables 'alongside the photo­ Ibecause of the fact that we are an­ of Foreign Wars auxiliary will Are Stili ' .raphic pa nels will be uni versity ticipating such big crowds this meet at 8 p.m. Thursday in the publications including a 1947 year that we do not expect to need Community building. ;/:M(jJ~ Hawkeye. the higher admission figur~ in or­ • • • base­ The tollowing university offic­ der to break even on OUr exPen­ Tonight's dinner meeting of the L. B . PURDOM. INUEPF. OENT1'004 00 AU('''IO!'lEER Iowb' ials will install the exhibit on ses," Secretary'L. B. Cunningham Junior Chamber of Commerce, of SJlrluK6eld. Kent u.~y Bad I (22 lEAItI:I A LUCn 111'811(£ Ill\lOI>EII) AUi\!si 2(} and 21 and be in charge said in the press release. scheduled to be held out-of-doors thereafter: Lee W. Cochran, exe­ "The state fair is for all Iowa, at the Armory, has been can­ cutlve assistant of the extension and we want to make it possible celled, according to Wayne E. Put­ division; John R. Hedges, director for everyone in the state to come nam, Jr., vice-president In charge ot the bureau of visual instruc­ and enjoy it. We would rather of activities. Ie ...... tion; Cletus Hogan, bureau ot have mo re people at a low atten­ The regular bi-weeklY Tuesday vuual instruction terhnician; and dance price, than fewer people at evening dinner meetings at the SayJ the Food Edi/rJ,. )lames Jordan, director of the a higher price," he continued. Jefferson hotel will resume on of McCall's, university, Information service. But if people are going to arrive September 2. HELEN McCULLY PERSONAL NOTES

Mr. and Mrs. Dale M. Koser and 1amily, St. LoUis, were the week­ fIld i\!ests of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Koser, }(}16 Newton road.

Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Myers and children, Dick lind JerrY, 1813 Morningside drive, returned Sun­ day after a week's visit with Mr. , llId Mrs. E. E. Bekkedahl, Grand· RaPids, Minn. . , .-' ( ;,, ' Dr. and Mrs. E. W. Paulus and tbUdren, Susan, Edward and San­ '$A BULL· T.ERRIER: cIJ,1039 E. College street, have x' e­ FINE TOBACCO is what counts ,'in a cigaret:t~t1. Illnied from a two week's vaca­ ~ • : ~~ , t ,,~~ lIOII at Pine Lake, Mich. TRACTOR lor FA~I~ ~(J45 . ~ude Adams, Greensboro, anti INDUSTRY PItICI "1 N. C., will arrive today to visit ,\ p. o ...~ ••CTO.\, ' LUCIAN PURDOM IS RIGHTI.,. And like Mrs. F. D. Francis, 529 E. College So many women write to our him, scores of other experts _.. who really "~t. 'Hen-II a .iW.L,- unUJUalli Drawbar,- and J!O- . ~...!l • , PoWIRJIUL, aU·work tractor (or are.tandard eqUJplDlRt. ••.... 1 maganne and ask if they know tobacco. _. have seen the makers of Ilr. and Mrs.' Stuart Cullen, 830 (IrrI\ and induatrial use..1 apeeda forward.. 0'b.:vu::' _hould keep tUmiDC in their W. Park road, returned Sunday with implementa and atuch- rour-wheel adJIIIU d rea; used cookinC ratl. MOlt cer­ .Lucky Strike buy"~ quality tobacco." IIIeI1ta ... to provideeconomic:eJ lindividuaJlY bra.1Ie 1'8CIiu.' tainly yea I There i. .fill • frOln New York City, whlre Mr•. power for piowinl. plantin •• ' a_tlltlUOl_ .. w~ ttnd ahortace--not only in thl Cullen met her hu9band who rl!­ 'frtilizin., cultivatin" mow-; 1of .".feet. Mter all, that's what you want in a I United States but all over the t~tly arrived from an eight in"hoein.,aawin,wood,pump- Atuclunentainclude bulldOlll': cigarette. _ . the honest, deep-down en­ I week', teaching mission in Aus­ inr water, di,rinc poIt.hol.. ! plow., hilh-row cultivator.\ world. Here i. what S«tetary tria. \ . . I . rin _tooth harrow" r and of Agriculture Clinton P. joyment of fine tobacco . • The .Haney Bull-Terrlerj Jnd:m-dl.k huro••• ~.J1~ AnderlOn lay.: "It i. 'till ,Tract:or al.ao provld. power \)IOIt-hoie dl ....~ , , Prof. Gladys Scott, 1508 Center necessary to COI\IerV. ~ery ,forhllhwaymaintenanoe,park '7 ( ' ,v.nu' , entertained members of land airport care. _ and _00.) f:• - ~ pound or uaed fat, lince the thl Federated Business and Pro­ lindlltlrial ilia D over-all fat .upply lituation liu\onal Womens club at a picnic it Uttle better now than it wa. Iltali J1 honepower aIr-coolec!' EALE RS I ) IIIPper at her Lake Macbride cot­ lalt year," That'. why WI! s... m ... b..... en;ine .u. It ldeaI (or \118 '0-, ~ ,.1: yesterday evening. -0' taae. in all w.. ~ •• , all _lIUO~ 'Ir'~'o'I·· 11(""'/"1 American womm mu.t keep --. b alllocatio... r.:.. .. I' O"""obl•• on .avinl u.ed lata untU the Mr, and Mrs. William Cahlll, world-wide abortall! i. over! 522 N. Van Buren street, are par­ \ j..s.//tf. •• .,..• • fto __.- ellia of a .• ix...pound, two-ounc. JOn • born Saturday. HANEY 'MOTOR COMPANY, INC~ : roB.CCO t ~ "~ Ql'IICe's mainline ralJ,way run. 1111 HORlM .ROAD 1I1l11T • ,"JL.A~A_SI,~~ I lUCKY STRIKE- .. throu.h mythology's "Vale of D,,.,,,.,., PR-l. ...--J ...... 111 .. ,1 ... Tllllpe" bltwHn Mount. OlJlm~ So Rou,,1I, So Firm, So Fully ~~c~.d - So fr ••.: .~iI ·, I ••, on the Draw fJ PIlI uel 0.... _~ ~_ ._.,. - • :DlULY Jf)WIlN, TtJIlltAY, AUGUR it, ,*,-4'~ ~,

- ...... ~ ---.... - ...... -.or ...... The DaRy Iowan Whot Keeps ' f eadleTrs on Job?' ESTABLISHED 1181 By WILLIAM ZIMA from teaching is seen in terms ofTfession as a stepping stone 10 This year school teachers will personal satisfaction. Teachers other careers, For instance, tber Published dlUI' except Honday by MEMBER or THJ: ASSOCIATIlO PRESS be making an average of $911 - ~ud~nt Publl",,~on.. Inc. Entered .. The AlIIIoeU1.ed Pre. II enmred ex­ from small communlty big h said, women head for ~rif IeC:OIid class mall mailer II the pastofllce eluslvel)' &c! lbe use (or l'epubllc.Uon at more a year than the)"" made in , life \md men for some lucratlJt • t Iowa CIt)'. 10WI, under \he act 01 all Ihe ICIC'II new. prlnled In \.hII ne..... schools pomt out that they get a administratIve or business' ~ _rea 01 March 2, 111'11. pept,r. .. ..ell .. all AP DeWi clll­ 1937. But in the light of increased paldlea. costs of living this may not be constant kick out of watching tion, nu:D 'M. POWNALL. Publt..ber inducement enough to hold teach­ their pupils grow into intelUgent The NEA, howl!ver, disagrees. "ALLY STRINGHAM, Bualo_ ers ih the field. Manacer... BoaI'd of Tru_: Kirk R. Porter. A. youth. One veteran teacher with It says of a major group of teacb- B. BRUCE HUGHES. EdJtor Cl'llJ/l Balrd. Paul R, Ollon, ~ Lanon, PI/rUle. DavldlOn. WJ1llarJl Bul­ Wbat, according to teachers and 24 years service said salaries mean ers queNed the conclusion ~~ ler, Louloc HutcblruJQn. leachers' organizations, keeps the very little to him. He Is making reached that teachers chOle tbla Iklb>oc!l1ptlon r.lell-By canJe. In 19"'" Clly Z cenls weekly or .7 per year :n schoolmaster behind his desk? about $2,700 a year. He said he career because they like to teach -.lvanee: six monlhs 13.115: Ihree monl,," TELEPHONU loves to teach kids. and because they like to went ,,1,90, By man In Iowa 87.50 Nr yeu; According to the National edu­ lib< m",: lb. 13,90; three months $2. AU Business OuJee ...... 4181 cation association, which provides Working conditions are such, with youngsters. . MIler mall luburlpUons '" per ye.. ; Iix UlIoml Of(lc:e ...... J4182 the NEA points out, that teachers The three representatives of.h .->1"" \bra. mont"" $2.:IlI. Soclet)' OUlc• ...... 41t3 the 1947 teacher's salary average ,,,:Ill: in their February research bul­ live a long time, The working profession were not, however; u TUES~AY, AUGUST 19, 1947 letin, such factors as security, schedule is limited to a 44-hour condemnIng of their profession. - personal reward, worklng condi­ week, vacations are annual and indicated in earlier wortls. ' , tions, social position, worklng sometimes run as long as tbree Tbey said cond1t1ons Bre im- schedule and! public favor make months. proving in the teaching profession WiJl Marshall Plan Sa a B~ang~ teachers stick to their jobs. Of course the NEA fails to point and better people are comlng Into I. About 90 percent of the teachers out that teachers must malntain the field with the 501e aim II The conference for European economic cooperation which In the profession, the NEA says, a social position in their commun- mind to teach because they lCJ\ol! are protected against unfair dis­ ity hy belonging to clubs and lead- to teach. But, they said, teaclWlJ opened in Paris Oil July 12 established, its first step, a cooper­ as crimination and injustice b;y some ing the~e clubs; and in the sum- must be professionalized in I ation committee ~omposed of the representatives oE thc. sixteen form of tenure laws. 'mer time they have to go to school greater degree than Jt is today to participating nations. ' , to better their teaching positions keep these teachers. ' These laws range trom private and to refresh their teaching By professionalized, they slid, This committee is to prepare a report concerning European re-/ contract arrangements to local knowledge, as ODe young school they meant that certaln ethlllll sources and requiremf'nts for the next four years, for submission and state laws. Some of the pro­ teachcr pointed out. sta'ndards should be set up so.1hIt tective measures tJlken are: teach­ to the United States before Sept. "Physically," he said, "Teaching only the best college jrai:lualel ers cannot be flred from their is an easy job, but I would al- are permitted to enter the 'field. '1'0 facilitate tile work of the cooperation committee, the con· jobs after turning in two years of most settle for a job in a shop "It is easy to become a teacher," satisfactory service and public fereuce created four technical Gommittees-on rood and agricul­ because when the 5 o'clock the principal said. "There is' 110 hearings must be held whenever ture, fuel and power, iron and steel, and t ransport, Problems eon· whistle blows you quit and are profeSSion where educational rt­ a teacher feels he is being dis­ throl\gh for the day." quirements are so simple. AD!!. cerning 'the balance of payments are also to be studied by the charged unfairly by a school "This is not so for the teacher," that goes for every stdte in tlJl board, committec. \ he cohtinui!d, "Teachers have to union including Iowa." ' Teacher's retirement plans are It i provided that the committee shall maintaiu close l'clations do a lot of things they dont want The superintendent said 'fhaUhe becoming better organized and to do:' ' teaching profession will hav,e to with the United Nations organization ahd with its specia1ized some civic groups are gOing to "The community looks upon a' be 'formed like the law or' .. agencies- including, -presumably, the UN economic commission I bat for teachers by raising retire­ teacher as a servant. H!! is re- medical profession where c'onstabt ment pay, the NEA adds. ctlJired by the nature of his job screening is oarrled on, A lonaer for Europe, of which the U,S,S,R., absent from Paris by its own A discord is sounded, however, to participate in all the social or- period of trainIng should De ti­ ehoice, is a member. when one veteran teacber report­ ganl2!ations in his community. tablished, Instead of three aJII\ The. present divi iOll of Europe resulting from the absencc of ed he would rather retire as a The teacher is looked to as a four years of college, five and bricklayer than a teacher any day. Russia and its eastern EUl'opean neighbors leaves in the Pads leader and must take an actlve six year courses should ,lie He said his school board glves out part in these organizations which planned with the emphasis not group sixteen nations with a population of Ih8,875,OOO, (exclu­ a poor man's pittance as retire­ COhsume a great portion of his so much on educational subjects ment pay. sive of Germllny ) . free time, liut on subjects in fields within What personal reward is gained This atea commands resources of coal, iron, and other raw ma­ "Free time is not your own. The whlch the teachers will be ,teach. teacher is on duty 24 hours a day, in'g, • terials with which technically skilled western Eu ropeans have Ism I-n like a fireman or policeman. Other '-If the teaching profession, ac· built tho most highly developed inqustries On the continent, but tban club activities, he must pre- cording to all 'Shades of opinion is relatively poor in foodstuffs. U.S.-Must Slop Communi pare lessons tor the following recorded, maintains standarcls of . day's classes, mark papers and the medical profession; the noJ!lll8l III the Russian sphere, the U.S.S.R. and eight small nations to· Inside Washinglen I plan projects of all sorts. Besides discrepencies of the teachhig pfo.. gether have a population of 280,410,000, controlling rich reo By THE CEN1'RAL PRESS hll I R f V-, I ,reet-e· IS e orm's '. a this if he is maintaining ~ home fession will automaticalb' tlke sources of wheat and other ccrcals, as well as industriaL raw ma­ G .. r Rtg II he has to take care of hiS own cate of themselves. UMT Bill to Remain Pigeonholed I work around the house." terials, notably coal in Ru sia and Polana, oil in Russia and WASHINGTON- Safest bet on Capitol Hill is that the universal 18Y J. M. ;ROBERTS, Jr. ready be In the works. That is a An acting county superintend­ SAMUEL GRAFTON and PhUL Rumania, and iron in Rus ia. military trainIng bill-pigeonholed during the first se~ion of the 80th AP iForeIgn Affairs Analyst broadening and democra tizing of ent making $3,800 a year, a MALLON are on vaeaUon, . 'rhis area, howevel', is as yet relatively undeveloped industrial· congresg.-.will remaih where it is in the next session. Ametioa's 18 Gu errilla efforts to establish a the Athens government. This principal making $3,300 and: a Iy, exccpt for Voland and Ozechoslovakia lind the industries es· to 20-year-old youths can thus be fairly safely able to plan their civil­ gov'ernm·ent in northern Greece government still contains the teacber expecting to get $3,200 Air-'sea P~,senp'r Plet!:' ian careers-unless there be war ot- serious threat of war, tablished by Russia during the -past quarter of a century. raise the 'possibility that the Unlt­ rightist /forces which fought the this coming year were asked to WASHINGTON (Ir)-Nort~we,t Even so, if the danger of war should appear, the present bill would eC! States, commItted to protect the leftists in 1945, These leftists, comment on the teaching profes­ Airlines and American PreSident While the Soviet government's deoision to remai n outside j he be discarded and a more "effective" bill introduced and passed, But country's integrity, may have to through lack of any real amnesty sion, lines, steamship op.erators, iIlh­ current drive to unite Europe economicaliy, and to enforce this neithcr statesmen nor Capitol Hill leaders scent any powder of a send in troops and also do some­ and practically outlawed, have 1n part they reported that many nounced yesterd'ay a cOQperlltl1ll! decision on its neigh bors, unqncstionably aggravates the division shooting war now, thing about the present Athens been thrown into the arms of the teachers are not really interested agreement' for interr~llt!eli ' ,_ of the continent, it is important to bear in mind that this division The Republicans for the most part are dead set against peacetime government. Russian-controlled Communists, in their teaching jobs. " and air passenger service. long antedated the risc of Communism and RUB ia's re-emergence conscription. So are numerous Democrats, The GOP, however, dis­ Up to now the guerrillas have Some move for the A'hens gov­ To qualify tbis they indicated At the same time the COII)PBnifll as a, world power, claims, al the top, any intention of weakening national defense. They that because of salaries and other said they are considering a sliD!· been fighting a bit-and-run war, ernment to regain the cooperation I t- I • l ,~ In 1929 a French economist, Francis Delaisi" in his book Les claim to be thoroughly displeased with the presidcnt's bill, calling without important territorial con­ of honest Greek liberals has been conditions teachers use the pro- lar arrangement on cargo,, Deux Em'opes, pointed out, as the title indicates, that the con· it "nebulous." Were it "practical," they contend, they would still solidations. Now they aru>arently indicated for a long time. The tinent was sharply divided into the highly industrialized west oppose it as "regimentation ," plan greater efforts in this direc­ U. S, has been widely criticized for and the still backward agrarian east. Chairman Eugene Milliken (R-Colo), of the scnate finance com­ tion. The British foreign office not making it a requisite for sup­ mittee, one of the GOP Republlcan leaders, voiced the views of many "'he fundamental problem of Europe today, as it was before says it has been expe~tihg esta­ port. when he said: OFFICIAL D'ILV SUUEII 1914,'il:l to bridge the gap between these two Europes ill such 11 blishment of a Communist puppet If we do it now, of course, we "1 would have to be convinq!d of the need for compulsory mllitary government in or near northern way' that the ea't, through development of its resources by mod­ training first. Then they would have to show me that this bill accom­ will be subjected to just as bitter 1I.m. In Ih. UN(VtIt8ITY CALENDAIt Ire ••heclale. III IW~" Greece, with active support from criticism for interfering I Gr~ek lie.". Ofll.e., 01. C"pllol. ICe .... ft>r til. 'GII,...!B"" • ern methods and training of its vast manpower in industrial plishes anything definite. It seems to be a theoretical bill to me. No' jn Russia's Balkan satellites. 'nternal poll'tl'cal affal'rs. I IIii"ml~~,~:,~oob~:e deposIted ,.I\b Ibe tllty edItor .r Tbe D.,ly' 10_ III . kills, can create a higher standard of living for its peoples, such bill would pass the 80th congress at any time." I III EI.I lIal1. GKNEBAL NOTICES ... D.t lIe".t ,.. who then wouLd offer a lal'ger market for the products of tue If the Nationalist army is unable But such a change seems to con- " ~(IIIW by 2 p.lIl. 'Iho d&, ,...... 1111' flh" ,.blloall•• " " " ...... ' .' . . . to prevent it, the leftists obviously , NOT be .oeepte;! b, lele,he.. o. Ind muo! be TYPED 0& LI industrialized west which, for its part, needs thc foodstuffs of taln the only real possibility of 'WKITTIN 'OD' SIONIm b7 • ro.p.... lbl. per...... , . Black Market in Oil intend to take their territory into uniting the vast majority of the cast, Tue~a" A .... _ ,19. , ~ Thc division of Ell1:opc pt'esents a supreme test for both Rus. • BLACK MARKET BACK-The current oil shortage is reviving on the Russian sphE\re and use it for Greeks against communism. , ., sia and the United States, 'l'be Sovict £!overnment is tryin!! to a small scale the blackmarketing of petroleum products in some mid- further inroads on the rest of v v western areas, This is due to shortages caused by a 15 percent increase Greece, This would be a major UN I V ER SIT Y CAL!.NDAR ubstitute for the Mal'shall pl.an what is called the Molotov plan in consumption over last year. The increase is due largely to the defeat tor U. S. policy, Saturdaf, AUCUlt 23 Unlt. of barter trade agreements. seasonal demands of farmers to move crops to market by rail. These Whether the presence of Amer­ Urge 'Get Tough ' Iowa Mountaineers: Overnight Monday, Sept. ~ Russia's chief problem is that, in spite of the development of must have priority over oil shipments on the railroads, ican troops would cow the guerril­ outing to Baokbone &tate Park; Beginning elf OrieqtatiQll ' ~ its heavy industry, sharply set back by war destructiQn, it is not Eastern states need fea r no ·shortage. There are plenly of tankers las is a question, If not, and With Russia' 'Policy uClIder, ~ugene Burmeistllr RegIstration. ., I: '., in a position at the present time to furnish its agrarian neighbors available to haul petrolcum supplies to seaboard states, Americans were forced to unoer­ Wedneeda)', A~~ullt 27 ~ Monda" sepl.~ Woith the machinery and tools they need if they, in tu ,ar to • • ' • • • take a campalgn to hold northern LANSING, Mich. (JP)- Veterans Close of Indepehdent study 7:30 a.m. Opening of Cl~8Ij"" Greece, the ramifications would of Foreign. Wars delegates from become industrialized. I Lewis Yearning for AFL Presidency (For i;nfonna1lon rerarlllnr datel be10nd th~ I(lbe~,-~. ,PI ~ At the sam~ time Ru sia, unlike UlC highly indnstrialized Ger· • AFL LEADERSIIIP"'7"A battle royal may be staged at the San be terrific, six midwest states conferring here But an effort to support the in­ yesterday announced thl!y would semUon III tbe ~fflce ' of tbe Pre'5I~ent. ()I.d Capl~I,) " I man state, wlllch lo ok~d upon eastern Europe and tbe Balkans as rrancisco AFL convention for the presidency of that organization ,1 It source of raw matenals and a market for manufactured goods, should William Green decide to retire from the post he has held for tegrity of a country in such case sponsor a "get-tough-with-Rus­ has a djrect interest in thc further industrialization of this area, 23 years, without the use of sufficient force sia" resolution at the organiza. G.E NEil A L NO 11 CiS whose manufacturing rcsotll'ces could then supplement its own. Chief aspirants are expected to be George Meany, present AFL also ·carries its dangers, as Britain tion's national convention Sept. U,NlYERSIn' uBRARJ' nOURS ture production conferen<;!! fllr ~ql­ Russia's express concern for the independence and sovereignty secretary-treasurer, and ,John L, Lewis, lately returned to the Ad, learned in the case of Poland in 4-9 at Cleveland, O. leges and universities, now ~ of its neighbors and its denunciation of American" imperialism" The former has the support of the powerful building trades depart­ 1939. Thc unanimously backed resolu­ Listed is the library schedule Also, 'if the U, S, were forced to' tion drawn up by the conference held in the radio studios of':ur:{:.~~~ are obviously unconvincing in view of the PI'essUl'e it exercises ment of thu federation. He is a m~mber of the plumbers union, ~is from Aug. 9 to Sept. 2l. yield any of ils position in Greece declared: gineeiing .building, ,Is as lfoUoW': upon these small nation ', . cause may also bc supported,by Damel J. Toblll of the Teamsters union Readl~r room, Macbride h~lI; now it would revel1berate through­ "We emphatically oppose any Tuesday, A ..... 19, •. ..", Yet if American aid t-o the countries of this l'egioll had been and no. great fnend of LeWIS. .".' " out France, Italy' arId other coun­ further lIppeasement of Russia and 8;30 a.m. to 12 noon and 1 p,m. to 9:30 'a, m. Scenario prepara· conditioned on abandonment of economic plll.n~ already formll. LeWIS can dcpend on the sup~ort, of BIg 1,3111 Hutcheson of the tries where we are trying to hold her satellite nations by the t,Tnited 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, tion, ' ., ' I> 1 C ., carpenters, long a potent leader In AFL counCIls, Iate d , f or ~xamp 1em. 0 and, a~ld zcch:m. ~.Ic.l Chat. ences held hy Marshall and President Truman with congressional hold letters is reset've(l Ulnd, of , Federal School Aid 10:30 a,m, Illaaterwprb M Mutlc 8;00 1',1II. lo~ ClIun17 M-.. ': leaders before adjournment. \ course, the opinio.ns IJxpressed BOSTON (JP)-Federal aid for 11,00 I,m, Unlvenlly of Chlcl,o Round " .15 p,m. SIGN 9"' _ But even if eongress should, once it learns the. full scope of the do not n()c~ssanly rel1resent schools "within a year" wa,s fore- " impending Europeau erfsis,' vdte the ne!!essary funds, the ques· those of The Daily Iowan,) cast ye!~rday · before 1h~ 7\rneri. tion will still remain: can the American economy, under current ' - can.Federation of Teachers (AFL) : N, , .. CilendarI inflationary conditions, and with existirig dOllll!8tic demand "for TO THE DAILY I,?W~:' "'. bU,t ' a cimmittee reconunendatlon (CBS Outlet) , . WHOJ!I:." . I ,m , 8:00 ·New •• Wldrnark ' :00 ',Ill, Trecl 51' r ' : the products .of heavy industry, fulfull "EUrOp~'8 neeas a.aequate- We,-the underSigned, ,who aPe . 'tor free lun~es, transportation 10:00 I ,m . Wendy Warren 10:(10 • 11\, 'rile OWl Iy at prices which will eventually permit some form of payment' 8bo1;lt to enler the teachmg pro- and text books Cleve10ped minority U :oo noon Vol~e of Iowl , I~ P;l\\, ~r ' . . ljl!l,p,m' E" or..Nothln" 2:30 'p.m, Lorenzo 9f\.fS , As Vera Mlcbeles Dean says in a recent Fprei"'" Policy b~- fes.slon, have .spent a very sad day disagreeml!nt OVer assistance to 3r,:1!"[In. • 'Pitt)' ':110 p,m, lUll' Pilin Bill I · l' . ",... ' . qUietly Weepmg ever the fate of o{>arochlal schools~ 4 ,00 11'm. nr'Odin ':30 p,m. Maaquerlda • etm, \111 ess .the UllItcd StateR comes rI'RhSti.C8UY to gnpll Wlt Ij the professorial slart ot. the mt!1..,,,,, II; 16 p,m. OU Ihe Record ? I:OO p.m. Millie by 8br~ '~ .~ , • . '. I Use Iowan 'Want Ads to Buy' Sell or Trade! Pu61~ Sch·oo.ls.fxp~f 2,150; "lise 'Psychology' fo~ Evicting y.ena~ts *'* * * * * Ie 10 , ~ , Announce Reglstrallon Dales Make Whoopee All Night to Shoo Birds ~ Ifrl WANTED TO BENT HELP WANTED Iowa City pllblic schools will have an enrollment of about 2,150, Bl' BOB HAMU:NSON r;:: QASSIFIED RATE' CARD according to Iver A. Opslad, superintendent of schools. These are trying days in land- the sector adjoining "Starling HOUSE or unfurnished rooms at GRAND .ri:mCTION cOlisolidated, Opstad said there are stili jobs open for a music teacher and a lord-tenant relationships but few Heights." Dimhat is counell chair­ . CASH RATE once. Cali 4549. a twenty teacher ustem needs would imagine f~ cruelty of evic- the following teachers: (1) Sev­ school nurse, .• . . . . ~ l •• Dan-l1II ...... "' MALE STUDENT wants room for Scbool will get under way Sept 8. Registration will begm Tuesday tion tactics right here in Iowa man. eaCh· .., enth grade-selence and mathe­ morning, Sept. 2. Seniors at City hilb will \'Ilgister the!)j juniprs, City. The two drew up their eviction fall term. Write Box 192, Well­ matics departmental (2) Vocal • Couec1Ittft Can-III ,. Wednesday, Sept. 3;. sophomores, Thursday, Sept. 4, anll freshmen, Eviction is being accomplished startegy. secured the university's ,"'.' DIIe ,. ela, man, Iowa. music in grades a,nd high school. t.. FridlU', Sept. 5. by armed bands in evening-long blessing. organized their raiding teach • CoDJeC1IUve CQII-l.. .. Highes~ salU,ries paid. Good loea-I PERSONAL SERVICE tion. Contact Sup't. W. J. Edgar, ~tad said that al\ freshmen who have not enrolled in the Iowa rioting in the very yards or Iowa party (recruited from incensed lIDe per dl7 City Junior high school, are rcquested to report at the high scllool at City tenants. neighobrtl), then hooted. shot, "':0Jt &Yen,e RADIOS, appfiaD;;ClI, lamps, and Grand Junction, Iowa. [ ....., I-word per u.. 10 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 2. Beb Menkemiller is one of the shook. and banged .Jlway at their Mlnlm1l .. Aj-I LID. lifts. Electrical wiring, repair­ )f ,. Fall al yill leaders. He is armed with a dish- night roos • . To prevent re-roosl­ Lng. Radio repair. JackaoD E1ec:tric semester Clly high Sept. 2, with first classes Wednes­ ~, pan and long-handled spoon. Mar- ing the raIders sustained their .. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY IIld Gift. Phone 5465. get 4nder way at 9 a.lTI. Monetay, day morning, Sept. 3. ~, I Sept 8, with a. meeting of the Sister Mary Magdalita from tin Dimbat is another. He carrie.s psychological warfare from night­ 110 per ColuDlD 1Jl~ WANTED ,. a shotgun and blank shells. fan until the wee hQurs. And the faculty and students in the aud­ CIIIJar Rapid&' St. P Jr\~'$ school Or II tor a MonUa SHOB REPAJR inI. itorium. succeeds Sister Mary -~onori\.lS as The tenants? The tenants are raiders are not thinking in terms !Salon , (:ueeUaUOD DeaelUDe 5 ...... Fountain Help. Pupils who have never enroll­ sister superior of St. Pa~ick's bll'ds-starUngs, hundreds of of one or two raids. They are , them, thousands, tens of thous- making plans a campaign hatt rlnlo IeIpoJlllhle for ODe IDNI...... ed in Iowa CitY. public $Chools here in ltlwa City. tor mill and who will be new students in ands. may last up to two weeks. , 10It! IDIer'''D Oab Apply in person AlL summer long the starlings It's a battle to the death: either IIrIq Ads to DaU, 1O'fta J\.Inior higp. should enroll, Tues- V, :hiIIJ ...... Offloe, Ealt Ball, Or at Racines. day, Sept. 2, pr any da,y there- prl"VerS "Iolatl",. n have flocked. at nightfall to a the starlings go or tb.e vlllJllle.t'4 In • after thI1>ugh Sept. 5. I wooded area; former~y the uni- go. ay to DIAL 4191 ve~liLty shrub nursery wh'i<:h lies Where do the starlings spend Grade srhool pupils, with the ~ between Riverdale village and Rj- the day? When they oonverge .\In exception of new students at No-P,asS Liries . Bald, verside A/lrk. Be.inn~g 111 early "StarL,ng, Heights" at nightfall Ihlll'll Longfellow schpol, will have no Ii ~ spring thc starlil')gs made them- where do they come from? No one Help Wanted going right to class G n'k t' I that regl~trat:ion, PC Iven Ices selv~ obnoxioux by holding a is s~re. Observers have noted that Monday, Sept" B. ,Nelf Longfellow I • ~ I.. uate. Full time and part time help I, 6' ' npl~y r~v~il1e about four Srm. they come from the east across .ld. stu~ents wil,l register FriditY, Sept. DES MOINES (JP)-Highway So Sob Meni<;emiller conferred the river and from the southwest ROGERS RITEWAY wanted. $30 a weck. Six day I :her,· 5, from 9 a.m, t9 4 p,m, pat~olmen will begin picjking up with Ma~tin Pimb;ll. Menkemiller across north Riverside drive. Acrosa hOlD StraDd Tbeater if 110 week. Yearly paid vacation. Opstad said those students lTIotorists who ignore the Dew yel­ is Riverdale council repre&enta- But wl\at matters to the vllLag­ Lft. AFTER BEING cbosen "Ml!!s pre­ knowing their grll(\e placements law no-pa.ss!ng lil)~~, ac;cqrdlnc to tive fro~ the southwest "wa'rd", erB is that the starlings must go! Ana ' RADIO SERVlCB Ajr-conditioned store. Apply in &,on" at a beauty con~t in Sea­ will find it to their advuntagj! to an order by Al ~ahl, state como, buy tQeir books in advam;e. Book missioner of public safety iss LIed I ~l)I side, Ore.. Jo Ann Amorde, 20, a HELM RADIO SERVICE: Prompt person. lists showing book5 1(ll' ~ch gr/lqe yesterday. , Aberdeen-Angus Beef pick-up and delivery. Dial 6062. sehoolteacher of Rosebu .... , pOMC) will be .vailable in the bqok Work on the no-passing lines is Austratians Develop lUbe Forel Ropifns for thJa photo with her nl:wly­ Ranks Top in Corn-Belt stores beginllip.g , Tuesdl\Y, Sept. 2. almost completed, o~ highw'J( No, ~e 10 201 E. Washington won crown and seeptre. She .will Iowa ranks first in membership : iii. EXPERT RADIO REPAIR Parenl$ Q~ .yncpln SC;hool pis- 6 i;letweefl [awa City and Des 3 DAY SERVICE compete for the title of "Miss trict kindergarten pupils should Moines. From, Des 'Moines to F661-Ptoof' fence In the American Aberdeen-angus ~tabl America of 1947" In the AtlaDtie r 'I \' l I . breeders' association with .L,$2;) 'naer WORK GUARANTEED have arrangements l1lade wltb 01/- Ames and Des Moines to lndian­ Cl~y, N.J.. a.nnual beauty D.. eant SYDNEY, Australia (JP)- A new breeders listed, according to . !~ stad's of1i~e llQOut tran,spor,tatiQll. ola., t~e Iinl)S a~e finished 'and PICKUP & DELIVERY to be held In September, 19.7. type o( flood-proof fence has been Registration at University high other highways wlll'be marked la­ .frank Richards, association secre­ and WOODBURN SOUND Student wanted for light part· (Intema.tionaJ) dev!!lo~ in ~ew South Wales. tary. 8lid school for seventh, eighth and ter. SERVICE It bows before the onrush of Second place ranking goes to I If!e time janitor work. Apply aL ninth grades will be held Sept. 8. "The new no-passing zones, us waters and lies flat.as the cllrrent I B. COLLEGE DIAL l-tUl IWnois with 1,522 and MI,sour~ not Want Ads Will Traveler Grades 10 through 12 will regls- Laid down by the state highway passes over it. After the passage Ijecb Varsity Theater. ter the following day. commission. are a definite safety ranks third with 1351 members" of !lood walers, It mlU' be levered Corn-belt c,ttle breeders have 'ffiiin 81l'rrON BADIO IDVlCII Registration hours are 9:3 0 a.m. and accident-prevention mea- upright easily and locked in posi­ lach- IFurn ish Your turned to the Aberdeen-angus in , Guaranteed RepairiDC to 4:40 p.m. sure," KahL declared. "I have or- tion. a big way, Richards reporls, be­ & WORK: WANTED First classes for the six grades de red our highwlU' patrolmen to Pick-up Delivery cause of the excellent beet-mak­ , 1lC­ at University high will be Sept. pick up any driver found passing Spare Room IlADI08-PBONOQBAPIII SEWING and hemstitching. Mrs. ing Qualities or the cattle. ,nlon 111 Itock tor Two Divorce Actions ute Charles Sherman, Coralville. 1 lEn trance tests for new stud- against these Jines." The breed has won 39 out of 41 II of Market DIal ... III So Dial 5958. Lines are bl)ing placed below Filed in District Court granc\ championships in inter­ t'maI ents entering University high will hlUs, on approaches to curves and p\i,.. breed,.cllrcass contests at the In­ WANTED: Laundry and cllrlains, be given from 8:15 a.m. to 4:30 h h ' 'b'llt . 11 Two divorce petitions werc filed ,take I WHODOESlT p,m. in room 224 on Sept 1. This ot er places were VISI I Y IS - ternatTonal livestock exposition, , Dial 80169. does not inelude those students mited by obstructions and passing in Johnson county district COutt Richards said. THESIS typing, German translat­ is hamrdous. They are trea ted 80 yesterday. ing and tutoring. Call 5748. entering from University elemen- as to be visible at night. About Abner Mackey fiied suit against LOANS tary school. Set Mine Blast Blame TYPING- Notary Public- Mime- $$$$$$$$$$$ loaned on cameras, In the elementary school. regis- 1,000 miles of highways are sche- Marjorie Ellline Mackey, aUeging WASHINGTON (JP)-The bur- I ographing. Mary V. Burns. 601 \tllIl8, clothing, jeweirT. etc. tration will be completed Friday, duled lor treatment. cruel a.,nd ,inhuman treatment. The eau ot mines yesterday tentatI ve1 y Iowa State Bank Bldg. Dial 2656 Reliable Loan. 110 S. Linn. Sept. 19. First cLasses will be held couple was married Aug. 23. 1940. blamed unauthorized use of ap- LW,l!~" st -Res. 2327. raent STORAGE, cleaning, gluing. fur Monday, Sept. 22. Senators Study Aid Attorl).QYs fill' the plaintUf are proved eqUipment for the August FULL COVERAGE auto insur­ repalrin,. Condon', Fur Shop. Registration at St. Mllry's will WASHINGTON (11')- Chairman Swisher and Swisher. 14 explosion in the New Orient 1Ili1- They'll Furnisti A Dial 7U7, be beld today and tomorrow for Bridges (R-NH) o! the senate Louise C. Martin has asked cus- mine at West Frankfort, n1 .. in ativ.e ance. Fred V. Johnson. Iowa State Bank & Trust Bldg. Dial al\ grades trom 9 a.m. to 11:30 appropriations com mittee announ- tody of her child and $200 a month which three men were killed. ~ 2002. I'UIlNlTURB MOVING a.m. and from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. in oed last night that 15 members alimony and child-support pay- Daniel Harrington, chief of the Roomer, Tool the school assembly hall. First are gOing to Europe to size up menls in an, action filed against bureau's safety mines, said a pre,­ Inles ORDERS wanted for Avon prod­ classes will be held Wednesday results of America's foreign aid C\lnoil J . Martin. They wcre mar- Iiminary I"eport by Inapectoni list­ ;!mf, ... ucts. Post Office Box '/63. MAHER BROS, TRANSFER morning, Sept. 3. expenditures and "determine the Tied May 15:1938. ed as the cause 01 the accident a Registration at SI. Patrick's need for the continued large oul- Mrs. Martin is reprcsented by "gas explosion into which dus.t en.. LOU'S Repair and Equipment , For tHielellt FWDlIUn ANOTHER GOOD NEIGHBOR on ~ALL 4191 probably will be held Tuesday, I lay." Attorney Arthur O. Left. tered slightly." , Shop. Authorized dealer, sales Monno way to SOllth AmeJ'lca is 11- ~..... ------~------~~----~------and service. Power lawn mowers. A.. I month-old Eileen Buckley of Lan------.. . Demonstration by appointment. BAGGAGE TRAN.FER i caster, England. who stops In at PQPBYE Dial 3323. 1124 MUscatine Ave- DIAL _ 9696 _ DIAL New York to say bello befol'f) 2 ROOM unfurnished apartment. n_u_e_. ______'------.....;...;.:.--:.~:::...-..! contlnulng her trip to Peru. Call 33 Wcst Branch. WASH your own car evenings. 500 charge. Truman Johnson's Tex­ FOR SALE aco. Corner Linn and College. Dial APPLES FOR ' SALE: Thayer baby car­ 7243. APPLES riMe, Excellent condition. Dial WHERE TO BUY It' 80848, Direct to you by express. Tree Rillcned alld orchard packed, We wlll accept orden In bushel box lots for delivery about FOR SALE: 1946 Cushman Motor Scooter. Dial 3411. Values AUlJusl 25th. $3.00 cuh with order, or c.o.d. Sec YOIU local At Morris Furniture expl'eIlII "lent for low eommodl~y rlltes. FOR ', SALE: 1942 Studebaker U n fln'i shed Book Shelves Champion tudor; 1941 .I1'ord 5 Comers, ends. ' credenzas ATWOOD ORCHARDS passenger coupe; 1940 Nash Sedan " I. Radio and Heater; 1937 Nash 18", 30" and 36" Sectiona C~JtOLLTON, MIS 0 RI Sedan; 1935 Chevrolet tudor; Cash from 4.95. '.,. or trade. Ekwall Nash Co. 19 E. Harvey space saver hamp­ , Burlington. ers-3.95. ' One lot of tQ},(e " POR SALE: Golf Balis, Hock-Eye lamps $5, Loan. 111 'h E. Washington. Morris Furniture Co. AUqlON SALE lOR SALE: Black 1934 Stude-I:.. ::,D.:.:la.:.:l_'1;..2_1..;.2 __2.:.:1:.:.7_ .!'2.:.:1_9_S,;..._C.:.....II_nto_n...J baker Dictator. ~200. C a I I 2679. APPLIANCE HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE BLACK portable record player. and AUTOMATIC RI~ATlNG ,aTl- M1TSICTRON 5 tubes. Very . " ,ood quality. Lc&s thun one year REPAIR Friday; Auguit 22, 12:30 Noon '8Il'll lid. Brown leatherette record Quinn's Appliance ., eairYing case. Call 4111 after 6 . . ~ ~r t: • ~ t.J ~ i ( ! 1. ' P,m. 323 E. Market Dial "21 ~­ FOR SALE: 18 it. Folbot folding Having sold my house and moving into a smaller house, I am ~.~­ Kilyak. Molded rubber huH, STOP AT CLEM8 canvas deck, 3 passenger portable. MEATS selling at auction the following: r~t1· ~mplete with carrying bags, GROCERIES aUh- BEVERAGES Beds, Vanltl' Dressers, living Room Suite, End Tables, Rugs, ,; ~ ~uble bladed paddle, life pre­ aervers, 1.1 horsepower outboard CLEM'S GROCERY Dlnln, Room Chairs, Study Ta.bles, Wash Tubs, Wash Boller rit!- IIIOtor, Dial 6336. 1222 Rocbester Dial 1197 ~,.. ariel 37 yeats ot accumulated Junk. ,- FOR SALE MOTOR SER~CB \ 1 Baby Grand Baldwin EARL W. KURTZ Plano ...... _...... $1000.00 1 LtVln, Room Suite .... 125.00 • IGNITION 1 Malic Chef 0( burner . • CARBURETORS • 621 N. Van Buren S!.ne!. Gas stove ...... 110.00 .GENERATORS .STARTERS Dial 2468 • BRIGGS .. STRATToN DIa.l 2468 MOTORS' , T HOTlca Pyramid Service. 7 !tao 's. CHDto. Dial 6713 OPEN SEPTEMBER 1ST rife" Swank Bakery will soon be open to serve you the best in' hkery goods. ,We thank you for waiting-while we repair the fire damllge and remodel our store. - 8WANK BAKERY :UI E. CoUere

- .1 flYING INSTRUCTION

'. AnENTION G.I.'. teani 10 By under die G.t PHOTOGRAPHY &W df rl9hta. a+- DO COllI 10 fou. • I For Particulars CaD ,I • j , ~HAW AIRC.AFT CO • •• MllNICIl'AL AIRPORT DIal 1131 Da, l 5852 Nlrll' . - Woodle Walki Into Car" Receives Scalp Cuts Ebert Wins, Loses Harold F. WoOdle, 131 W. Col­ In Soap-Box ,Race lege, was treated 'for sealp inju­ Medicos on Skies LeRoy Ebert, Iowa City's repr Claims ries at University hospital yester­ .------~------~------sentative at the National Soap day after he collided with a car Box derby In Akron, Ohio, II Court Order Evicts driven by Mrs. George Nagle, 342 cominr home from the races. Cullen Finds -Morale Low Free Ride for a Lucky Youngster Invalids Leave for Emma Mahnke Today Lexington avenue, at the corner The local soap box champiOll of College and Dubuque streets. won his first round try with I A judgment awarding John W. According to the police accident time ot 27.08 seconds \tor the Journey to Catholic . . report, Mrs. Nal{le had just started 975-foot coUrse. His secolJd heal In Austria After Two Purges Pelzer IITlIned.late possessJOn of across College street atter waiting effort was so good that a phol4 Shrines in Canada the premises at 319 N. Van Buren· for the light to turn green and taken of the finish had to be By PHIL MILLER street and ordering the viction ot was almost through the intersec­ studied before it was decided he Vienna, the one-lime medical capital of the world, has lost its grip. CHICAGO (JP)-A Pilgrimage ot Mrs. Emma Mahnke today was lion when Woodle walked into the had bee\1 nosed out. ~uch was the opinion expressed yesterday by Dr. Stuart C. Cullen, 50 invalJds, most of them on stret­ given yesterday by Justice of the right front tender of her car, T.he 1947 championship went 14 chief anesthesiologist IIjIId an associate profesEor in surgery at Unlver­ chers or crutches, or confined to Peace J. M. Kadlec. knocking him down. Ken n y Holmboe, 14-year-oid lity hospital. I wheelchairs, left Chicago last Sale of the property was given Police and an ambulance were Charleston, W. Va. , boy, who wu Dr. Cullen has jus returned from a "very broadening" but "de­ night in special railroad cars for a as the reason for the eviction. called and Woodle was taken to well armed with four-leaf clover., pressing" trip to Vienna. He said: ten-day visil to Catholic shrines According to tl1e petition Mrs. University hospital and released rab,bits feet and lucky pennies. "They are way behind UI and admit It. The medical dean at in Canada. Mahnke was served a 30-day no- after treatment for scalp laceta­ The Iowa City entrant received Vienna made the remark that American medlcille has taken the Spokesman for the Invalids, who tice to quit the premises July 5, lions. a wrist watch and a racing di. lead. over Vienna." followed by a 3-day notice Aug. 6. ploma, as did other contestant., at Dr. Cullen was a member ot a came from various sections of the country, was pretty Mary Ellen Attorney for the plaintiff was The tulip is a member at the a Sunday nieht banquet followinl lO-man American and Swiss med­ Emil G. Trott. lily familY . the derby, Ical mission that returned to New Kelly ot Marcus, Iowa, a bedfasl York by plane Friday after spend­ arthritis victim for hall' of her 24 • ing seven weeks in Austria; at years. She said: Vienna, Graz and lfUlsbruch. "We'll hope for miracles. They do happen, you know, but We "In my own field of anesthes­ won'l be d~sappointed if they iology, they (the Viennese) just don't have anything. In lectures, don't. We'll just keep praying." En route to the shrines, mass I had to start from scratch. They were using the same practices will be eel brat d daily by Arch­ that had been in use for years," bishop Francis J. K. Beckman, for­ mer archbishop of Dubuque, Iowa, CLOSING he said. now bpirituat director of the con­ I As for ,urger)" he laid, It I. fraternity of Pilgrims, sponsor of "technically preUy good. They lhe trip. Several other Pilgrim- ! are behind in pre-operative and ages have been made this summer post-operative techniques. under the contra ternily's aUspices, i "They don't know how to keep but this is the first one for inva-I a patient well-fed where an oper­ lids. ation makes ordinary feeding Im­ Archbishop Beckman said that .August 25 to' September 2' po&sible." while miracles may be hoped for, He said the people at Vienna the purpose of the journey is for and Graz were "pretty well de­ "spiritual and moral uplifting." pressed. They've suttered two SIXTEEN BICYCLES like this one John B. Wilson has just unwrap­ He said the afflicted usually re- purges in Austria-the Jewish DR. STUART C. CULLEN ped at. his sporting goods '1tore will be a warded tree to children of turn home "stronger in mind and purge under the Nazis, and then body and more resigned to the For.Vacation Iowa. City and Johnson county by the Community Dad's Club of t~e Nazi collaborationist purge. will of God." "They have a very distorted Iowa, No. 1. Each purchaser of a $1 ticket, now being sold by all As a result, medic,l staffs were Dads, Is entitled to vote for a child he t.hlnks deserves one of the The group will visit three cut about in half." image of us. Most of their infor­ shrines and return to Chicago, mation about us comes from Hol­ bikes. Ten bikes will be awarded to the boy and girl In each of the Though Innsbruch also went Aug. 31. lywood, you know." oity'S five wa.rds receiving the highest uumber of votes. Six more will through these purges, he said, "it go to three Johnson county boys and girls with the most votes. Pro­ Youngest of the Pilgrims mak­ These things he :found out by is different there, It's more a west­ cee(ls from the ticket sales will be used by the Dads to provide better ing the journey was Dolores Hake, ern civilization, infiltrated by the private conversations. recreational facilities for Iowa. City chlldren. Wilson has agreed to 9, of La Crosse, Wis. Some of the doctors, he slated, Swiss, French and so forth. The furnish the bikes to the Dads at cost Other invalids making the trip PAllIS CLEANERS people there are happier."" "questioned our motives. Some of included Mrs. Genevieve Mont- Dr, Cullen said he dldn t see them have learned to be tight­ gomery of Storm Lake, Iowa, and ioo much malnutrition, "There Upped." The Austrians get some of their older doctors are stuck. There's Ann Nienberg of Gle~dorf, Iowa. " probably are starvtn. people in 'J:his was only part of a general medical supplies from them. not much they can do." Austria, though." The older scheme of caution. To cross the The Swiss have an elflclent and The throne is the ancestor at 121 Iowa Av~nue Dial 3188 .roup, from the a.e of 35 up, III border into Austria, lle said, the working relief pro&,ram." aU chairs, which originally were being "shorted out," of the right doctors had to have a "gray card To discover what the Austrians Two Pay Traffic Fines kind of tood, but the YOUDl'er' signed by all four occupying pow­ them~elves think of the siuation, ,roup Is "being pretty well ers-otherwise you couldn't get Dr. Cullen asked a young doc­ Francis Brophy, Riverside, paid I~S ~ym::b:ol:s:o:f::au:t:h:or:i:ty::a:n:d:r:u:le:.::::::::::::::::::~~;;;;;;:~;;~::~::~:;::~::~::~~::~::~::~~::;:::~ taken care of. Bj)811Ual patients in." tor "in his late 20's Qr early 30's $26.50 in police court yesterday get extra rations." Consequently, "it was hard to just what he ihought of his fu­ after pleading guilty to a charge of As for housing, "they were all find out what they think of us. ture. The young doctor replied improper passing on a highway. amazed that we had housing dif­ They were afraid to say anything 'I'm going to get out. I don't know It , cost Juther Springer, 18 S. I -I STUDENT,, ficulties of our own. I explained against us because we had some­ just how, but somehow I'm going . that some of our doctors were thing to hand out. to get to South America or to the Van 'Buren street, $16.50 when he living in barracks or trailers, "They do have a very high United States.' " pleaded guilty on a charge of dis­ They could not understand. regard for the' Swiss though. Dr. Cullen concluded, "The orderly conduct. ! J SPECIALS!, I You cannot afford to overlook thele speci als. Real money saving value, on furniture you ... need especially for 'he barrack, quonset or small apartment. Ask your Mighbors. They can l. _ tell you how we save you money on furniture a nd furnishings made just right for the students. 4 · . -. ~- .. ~/ . /~ , . ./ ~ : ..... Come in and see for yourself. '- /~j . '" :;;'--...... -Ji - - ., /. './ - ...... f ..... ,.,... Our UNFINISHED FURNITURE display is most complete and will satisfy your every de· ~, - --'~ ~/ ~~;,;; mand. Ask to see it and compare values before you buy• .... - . .7'~ .. '- -~/ /' \ ,RDRAWER CHEST Sold r.~larly at $10.95 ... for one w~ek only. .wt offer you this chest at the ~ - ~ FOU remark"bly low price of only $1.'5. This is a let aC

STUDENT STUDY TABLES Nice size work top, handy drawer. CI.ar wood, sturdy '1.50 :PHI1IP MORRIS ('HELVES Sizes to tit any need. 33~ inches high. 1. Inches wld_,S.tr. 24 inches wid_U.'6. SO BOOK J inches wid_$5.95. A full line of other size book shelves in both the conv,nUonal lj.nd sectional grouping styles. I J • is so much ....., .' , Choice of ext'lUion, ,ate-lei or drop leaf table. 4 iturdy chairs. An inexpensive Itt :beHer to smoke I BREAKFAST SET at only ,21.95 • "It's always fair weather when good fellows MAGAZINE TABLES Well made and serviceable. 54.'5 get toget,her" ••• with PHILIP MORRIS! 7.. drawer kneehole lar.. size It's uue ~ •• if eve!y smoker knew what CREDENZAS Decor'ative and practical. All wood , •.,95 I DESKS tOp. $2&'50 PHILIP MORRIS smokers know ••• they'd .ALL cbaoBS to PHILIP MORRIS. CORNER CUPBOARDS Open tap. 2 door bottom 'lisl If Yes, the PHnIP MORRIS smoker- really Unfinished furniture is easy to finish and you will be surprised at hie m~ney TOU cin s~ve. It', made of .cle!!r wood (no knots). Can be finished to individual taste. ~ gets what other smokers oo1y 'hQ~ to get ••• w. ~ ... to: "" , PERFECI'. SMOKlNG PLEASlJRE. We carr), I. eeaiDle~ 01 JUVENILE FURNITURE. CHESTS 4 drawer, walnut or maple ~~~.~~ all wood Un. So for ~ $!Poking pleasure ... try a pack Nationally adverti~ ~YER products ar. a teature of oW' JuveDlle departmeDJ. • todayl .-- , 7 drawer, walnut finish, KNEEHOlf DESKS formerly $22.50, Now only Full ~ize, full, ~anels, adjustable .~rin ••tur­ th: $16.95 CRIBS dily const~ted, maple or wheat finish. ,27.50 ~u Other cribs from '18.15 ·e CHROME DINETTE SETS ~~t~la~~~oPl::~!: CRIB INNERSPRING MATTRESSES do and hair-pin style legs. Four S-type chairs covered Ie with red leatherette. All five pieces "9,50. The very finest. Waterproof cover, in blue or pink, 01 acid resIstant, venW*Un, air holes: Real comfort iii for the baily tor only $12.95 One group of table lamps. Some formerly re sold at $12.95, A real clearance price. OnlY hi LAMPS r::~onally knowR for quality ,S.OO each. PAL STROLERS '" E' S~l~i or pink,' waterproof i:OV- 3-way complete with glass re­ BUMPERETT .red $2.15 a sel. FLOOR LAMPS flector bowl and . pleated shade ,IUS ROCKERS Solid 'Qak, nice aile " U5 All , metal, flat turtle top, ap- STUDY LAMPS proved. n.95. PORCH 6A iES T::~;:.• :trl' 4 toot '1.15. , .. .. •••• ••• 4. *4 ~ One lar~e selection of fine brald~a ruts .t , cli.~.nce price of 50% of! orilinal BRAIDED OVAL RUGS price.. FrOm 'US to ,405'. Cocoa Mat ••l.i, ' WOOL RUGS Firth Axminiater 9 by 12 size. All wool. ..US ,. HAMP,ERS Famous Harvey brand, color~, full size lids ' •••5 -- ...... -v-.",,,, '" ...... 4. .. ••• 4 ¢ .. MORRIS FURNITURE, CO,' " 'IA f tl ., 217 S. CLiNrON • FREE DELIVERY. , •

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