I

FATS, MEATS, 11, •• , ••• re' .ta.,. Q! I...... UI •• od Ih,ou,h A.,. at I ", Ih,•• ,. EI 1JI,.. ,h S.pl. lain so : Al Ih,o ••" II ..... , ...... O.L II, ... PI Ibro •• b KI ...d Ib,.. ,1l N ••• lit, LI 11l ....b Ql b.­ IOWA: 0eeuIeUI Mowen and •• me •• tld 8.pl. I ani a,. ,... '""D,b D~.. 8l. SUOAIl. ,lamp 16 '.0' Ib' ..... A••. 81 '0' II .. thu.ntl.nlM~ PvIb eleallz and pound,. Siamp aa lO'" 8.,1. lib,•• ,. D ••. 81 I., DAILY ' IOWAN eonUnaed wana. five pnqndl, 8HOS. bloll ,brei allpl... 1&aIll,1 I, " THE z. a and ••re v~JJd la•• II.'taly. Iowa City's Morning Newspaper • ======-~======-======~~~~~==~~~~~~~~======~======~~~==~~~~~~~ ?IVE CENTS TBI ASSOCIATED paESS IOWA CITY. IOWA SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 19.5 TBI AIIOCIATU PUll VOLUME XXI NUMBER 29S In fast x_ club O. direc­ county filed their '" Farm Bur- ac rt u·r,· 1st ...... ova ry _nter o yo' • HERE'S FIRST AMERICAN FLAG TO FLY OVER TOKYO Advises MacArthur Strike Tolal " Backers Push Jap Fanatics Killed General in Attempt Journey Back Hils New High Benefit Plan To Delay Surrender From Deleat '" Of 121,000 Produce Endorsements Nip Sources Reveal Of Uriemplcyment Pay BaHle Between War, Completed Green Ignores Plea Boosts From Business Peace Fadions To Continue Pledge Symbolic U. S. Flag WASHINGTON (AP)-Backers TOKYO (AP) - J a pa ne se Of No Strikes of President Truman's imperilled sources said yesterday the mur­ Flies Over Tokyo plan for higher unemployment pay By THE A8S0CIA:n:o Pllt88 accused opponents yesterday of der of a general near the emper­ Yanks Paracle The national total of strike trying to befuddle the issue_ or's palace grounds, the forging of idle mounted yrstcrday to ] 21 ,- They also produced endorse­ a military order and a wild chase T KY, aturd8Y (AP)­ 000, highest in months, as AFL ments of the plan by bdslness, to the radio station climaxed at­ General MacArthur cov red the President William Or de· farm and llibor leaders comprising last mile of the long road back en tempts of a group of fanatical c1ared labor"S no-strike pledge the advisory board of the office of from defeat in th Philippin ended with Japan 's. urrender. war mobilization and reconversion. Japanese army office;s to prevent by entering Tokyo today with In Wa. hington, Oreen told Thus they opened a determined the imperial surrender announce­ ment from reaching the people. oocopa 'on troop of lit First reporters he could not accept counteroffensive in behalf of the proposal to use federal funds to The dramatic battle In the clos­ eM'alry divi i nand Tai 'ing the Pr'esident Truman's request for supplement state payments so that Ing days of the fight between two same nited tates flag which continuance or the wartimo "no persons who qualify for miximum factions in Japan-one for peace, flew over Rome and B rlin. The Bream, strike, no-lockout policy'.' but benefits shall get at least $25 a the other to continue the war­ GEORGE ACHESON JIl., 48. ca­ Axi dcf at was compl t . Colony, "we will tr to work out some week for 26 weeks. Present state was revealed by well-Inrormed reer diplomat with nearly n yean' l'IiacArthor mad his trium­ Gardner, understanding wit h manage­ maximums vary from $15 to $28 Japanese sources. service in the tar east, will be act­ phal entry in & thre mil pa­ I win Hunter, ment to minimize work stop­ a week_ Most tor no longer These sources said that youne Inr political advlAer to Gen Doue­ rad of American meehaniz d Robert Jen­ pages." than 18 weeks. Japanese offloers on Au,. If ia. MacArthur In Japan. A native military might throngh the Murphy, Reeords maintained by The Social Seeurlty Board kllled the commandlnr eeneral of Denver, Col .• he recently w.. heart of Tokyo .. bands blared Paulus and A!!Ioclated Press showed yester­ Senator KiJgore (D ., W. Va.), of f:mperor lllrohlto's personal named United Stala m1nlster to "The Star Spangled Banner" and .ay's hl&'h total of idle over the made public an opinion from the r u a r d s dlvl Ion. Lieutenant Thailand. "The General's March." country com,ared with a pre­ social security board that the plan General Morl, and by lorlin' Japanen In downtown TokYO vious high of 92,815 on June %1, would not conflict wiLh state laws. hJs name to an order sent troops .tared In "Ience .. the parade. r~hed durin, the wave of op­ Williams had told the senate fi­ to surround the palace. They led b,. the Seventh re,lment of Germany timism Il'owlne ou' of vlctorJ nance committee that laws in most hoped to prevent a recordlne of 22 Persons Killed the First tavair), dlvl"on-the In Europe. states would require deductions the emperor's hi torlc surren­ rerlment which roueht for Cus­ The Detroit outomobile indus­ from state payments equal to the der reserlpt from leaving the In Air Liner Crash ter Oil LItUe BIa" Horn--.moved try, racing to supply the peace­ amount of federal payments. fl'ounds. from a point Jut east of the em­ time market with new cars, was Chairman George (D., Ga) of The plan to ·capture the sur­ peror's palace to the United hardest by the new wave of the committee telegraphed the render announcement lailed, how­ Plane Seeking Place Stales embuly. stoppages. Approximately 45,000 governol'$ of ail states asking if ever, when the forgery was de­ For Forced Landing At the embasay, MacArthur or­ were idle in the motor capital. that was right. Nearly half replied tected. dered Lieut. Gen. Robert L. Eich­ A continuing strike at the Kel­ that it was. When other members of the Plunges Into Swamp elberger, whose Eighth army ts sey-Hayes W h eel co m pan y Plan Unworkable "Cight on" faction learned of the occupying Tokyo and all Honshu prompted the Ford Motor com­ George then labeled the pro­ failure of the original scheme FLORENCE, S. C. (AP)-Twen­ to the north, to have the flag un­ pany to halt all its passenger car gram unworkable. In another they raced through the streets of ty-two per on -nine ot them sol­ fut-Ied. It was the same flag which field, Senator George said yester­ and truck production in eilht ci­ Tokyo to the radio staUon and diers-were killed before dawn flew over the White House jn day that an average reduction of began a search of the building for Washington, D. C., on that never­ ties and lay of! more than 30,000 yesterday when an Eastern Al l' LIEUT. BUD STAPLJfTON of Syracuse. N. Y., hoists Old Glory atop the Nippon News building,. over­ 18 percent In individual income the document. to-he-forgotten day of Dec. 7, workers. taxes can be expected In 1946. Ford o(flclaJs said, however, lookine downtown Tokyo, as tbe first American flae files over the capital of defeated Japan. This Is an Their efforts failed when 1\ radio Lines plane plunged into a dense 1941. official United States army radlophotocraph. . The chairman of the senate 11- station employe eluded the con­ swamp, exploded and burned. At the momentous ceremony on ZM" of tho e laid off would nance committee estimated pro­ be r_Ued to OetroU area "'anY • spirators and telephoned a nearby The pilot apparently was seare/)­ the grounds of the embassy, Mac­ bablo income tax cuts for indi­ army garrison for help. Arthur was surrounded by men Monday and that It w .. ho~ viduals at $3,000,000,000 and lor jng for a place to make a forced III plants outside Detroit eould All the time, the reeordinr landing. who fouiht back with him on Ba­ Quisling Defends ' corporations at $2,000,000,000. was ,UIl at the palace and was resume production next week.' French Files Disclose Nazi Meanwhile, a move to modify All ot the bodlcs were burned taan in the closln, days of 1941 Other arranremenb were said delivered to the radio station badly except one-that of a JT\IIn and the early days of 1942. the operating principle though not shortly before It went on the air to have been made for materials Rule, Says Norway the goal of the so-called full em­ who was thrown clear of the The rlebt wine of the nearbJ ordlnarUy supplied by KelseJ­ at noon AUf. 15. wreckage and killed by a blow on chancellery had been tlalll8l'ed. ployment bill gained Democratic Organlzed resistance to the em­ Hayes. Civilians Killed 8Yank Flyers support last night from Senator the head. by a B-19 incendiary raid bat Needs More Traitors peror's decision to surrender the The Kelsey-Hayes strike, in­ Radcllt!e of Maryland. The bodies were brought out of the white atone embul,. bulld­ volving 4,500 CIO United Auto­ country apparently ended at the the swamp late yesterday In a inc, where MacArthur wUl set OSLO (AP)-Vidkun Quisling No Reason for Guarantee mobile workers, centers on com­ PARIS (AP)-The story of how missing in action on that date along "F'ull employment is important, radio station. Kamikaze pilots tractor-pulled wagon to army and up his headquarten, 'w.. 1I.D­ capped his two-day defense of his (suicide airmen) who were trained civilian ambulances. Rescuers had toaahed. pany refusal to rehire three minor eight American fliers were slain with the entire crew of a pomber but not more important than the union (lfficials. puppet dictatorship yesterday with on a mission to Mannheim. ten commandments, the four free- to fly their bomb-planes into to cut a road three-fourths of a The I Irs t mechanized unl tl last year by Nazi civilians-one of American ships, took their own Other thousands were idle be­ the defiant ~tatement that, it his Two of the three were beaten doms, or our national delense," mile through thick vegetation to moved Into the bomb-wrecked whom admitted beating a dyfng lives In spectacular dives into the cause of several continuing De­ actions were treason, Norway into insensibility and then shot, Radcliffe said. get the ambulances as near the capital before 7 a. m. (5 p. m. Fri­ troit strikes, including 7,000 at airman with a monkey wrench­ the documents related. The third "We ar«:Jl't going to let people bay soon arter the announcement scene a possible. day central war time). needed more traitors like him. of surrender was broadcast to the Hudson Motor Car company. was disclos~d yesterday in copiru apparently was drowned. starve, but I see no reason to say The accident occurred about I Jeeps and weapons carriers The case went to the seven­ people. a. m. (CWT). It was not until drove up In front of Emperor In Akron, OhJo, all operations of French war crimes commission At SchoUach, the defendants' we're going to guarantee every 10 hours later that authorities Hlrohlto's palace at 7:25 a. m. of the 8 . ~. Goodrich company's judge panel trying him, but a ver­ files handed over to American au­ statements said, five airmen para- man a job. .Ix plant stopped a 15,000 CI0 dict was not expected before Sept. thorities. Seven Germans are chuted safely from a crashing' "If a man has a right to a job, • • reached the place of the unex- Tokyo time (5:25 p. m. Friday, United Rub b e r workers re­ 12. under arrest for the crimes. bomber. he has a corresponding obligation Weather for Today I plalned crash, deep in a water cy- central war time). to tit himself for the job and to press swanp. They were the Icad elements of mained out In protes~ aeainst Alter boasting that "Hitler took Capt. DIm1trl Vellachef of the Two of them were taken to the eondltlons dtll(lrlbed by union work well." I Is Sti II In de f inite Capt. J . Olin Kin g of Miami, First cavalry units to be swoUen a deep liking for me and wanted Freneh army's war criminals In­ town halt, where they were Of­ leaders .. "cbaotlc," vestleatlon b,ranch showed cop­ dered shot by the Nazi kreisleiter • • Fla., was the pilot of the big DC-3 to 15,000 by Monday. Operations oC the me for other tasks in Europe," Ies of documents stating the kill­ of Ne U3 tadt. who later committed It's rather indefinite ~t this I tran. port on the night run !rom Tokyo newspapers warned the works of Jones and Laughlin steel Quisling told the court: Inl's occurred d Schollach. suicide. One of the !liers received point just what the weather is Miami to Ncw York. A tew mln­ populace that the eyes of the corporation, em p loy I n g 10,000 "If my activity has been treason north of Neu.stadt, on July 21, several bullets in the head before British Seek Missing going to do in or to Iowa City. It utes before the crash he radioed world were upon them, and po­ seems quIte certain that we aren't the Florence ail' base he was "hav­ lice told the people to remain calm were halted yesterday by a sit­ -as the records of this case charge 1944, and at Weisenbach. near he dropped dead. down strike of 60 railroad work­ Gernsbaeh, on AU(. 9, 1944. The three others landed near going to get much rain. We had ing trouble" and would attempt to in Its supreme moment of national I Yacht in Belief Hitler ers employed by a subsidiary. The -the.n in the name of God hope At Weisenbach three fliers who Uraoh village and were appre­ ttaces off and on last night but it land there. humiliation. men are members of lhebrother­ that for Norway's sake many of bailed out of a Flying Fortress hended by the ,endarmerle. is probable that for all the boom- He was apparently circlIng back Prior \0 bJ, entry Into TokJo, hood of railroad trainmen. Unlon her sons wilJ become the same were captured separately by civil­ They were beln, broU(ht to Might Be Aboard ing, it didn't amount to much_ Bet- toward the Florence base when MacArthur took two steps which officials declined to comment on ki'nd of traitor as 1." ians. One was SergI. Robert L. Schollaeh by three guards who ter we should forecast for today for some unknown reason the ,bowed clearl), to the JapanClie partly cloudy and continued warm. plane plunged Into the swamp, issues. Throughout his defense Quisling Harmon, arm y serial number Intended to turn them over to HAMBURG (AP)-A mysteri­ that his occupation forcH mean 13109166, a radioman hsted as the German army when three ous, handsomely-appointed, 90- The mercury hit 91 yesterday plowing a 50-foot wide pat h Six West Virginia communltJes contended that patriotism dictated busiDfJIIII • . were withou ~ domestic gas sup­ armed civilians. Includlne the root yacht is belng widely sought but started falling fa st when the through the trees and under­ His headquarters announced the plies and President Harry S. Wal­ his policies, arguing that he knew krelslelter's son. arrived and in the belief that AdoU Hitler thunderstorms started moving Into growth for a distance of 200 feet appoiniment of an "atrocity" of­ lace Jr. of the strikebound United Russia wanted Norway's northern Rites for Admiral McCain ordered the guards a.way. may be aboard it. this area. At 9:30 last night it was before exploding and making a ficer who will tour the prisoner F u e I Gas company predicted provinces and that the allies SAN DIEGO (AP) - Funeral The civiIJans immediately shot The search, which has covered 75. Good night fpr sleeping. funeral pyre of the bodies. of war camPI, making a formal Huntington and Charleston might planned to Invade the country. He services for Vice-Admiral' Johrr two of the prisoners in the back every islet and Inlet of the Schles­ investlgatlon or war crimes for be cut of! next. deniec;i Implication in any secret Sidney McCain will be held at Ar­ and brought down the tIlird as he wig-Holstein coast, got new Impe­ plot to deliver his country to the lington national cemetery Mon­ which the Japanese must answer. tried to run. tus In recent days as BrItish secur­ He also appointed stern, Brie. Nazis. day, it was announced yesterday. A German pollee report listed ity police took official congnlzance Speaking with fluency and pas­ The body of the veteran naval Gen. Elliott Thorpe as head of the names of the two mcn shot at of persistent rumors that Hitler counter-Intelligence to begin cen­ Six More Attempt sion, the pale-faced defendant officer, whose de a t h Thursday the town hall as Bernhardt E. and his deputy fuehrer, Martin sorshIp of Domel, the Japanese sald: night was attributed to battle ex­ Radowski and M. N. Milles. The I Bormann, were in the Hamburg news agency, simultaneously wlth Escape From Eldora "Any charges that J gave Ger­ haustion, will be flown to Wash­ other three were listed as Leon­ area In early May. many secret information are fan­ ington, D. C., in a navy plane, ac­ hardt A .. Kornblau, Charles Wolt the arrival of the Americans In Bormann, one of the 24 Nazis Tokyo. ELDORA (AP)- Hardln County tastic." companied by a guard of honor. and Frank ~is iak. the Allied war crimes commission Attorney D. W. Dickinstm yester­ has listed for trial at Nuernberg, day Wed information chargina six Symbol of Victory Over Japan- . is known to have been with Hit­ Inmates who attempted to escape ler In the last days of the Nazi re­ Hardin County Group \ from the disciplinary cottage at gime. the Eldora state training school A recent broadcast repbrted to .To Ask for Modern for boys Jast night wi th malicious have been picked up In Sweden destruction ot property. U. S. Flag Raised Over Tokyo and purporting to come from The boys have been placed in Bormann declared Hltler was In Discipline at Eldora what was described by officials By SPENCER DAVIS and thereby brought devastation embassy bUilding, where Ambas­ Germany, a I i v e and in good as "soIJd lock up" for the at­ health. JOW A rALLS (AP) - Hardin tempted escape. TOKYO, Saturday (AP)-The and defeat upon herself. sador Joseph Grew nmained after American flag was raised over When MacArthur turned to the outbreak of war until his ex­ British Investigators have dis­ county citizens have organized a Should they be convicted on the covered that equipment taken law enforcement association as an charge, each could be sentenced to Tokyo yesterday as a stirring Lieut. Gen. Robert L. Eichelber- change, was not struck. 8ym):>01 of, victory oVf:r the empire aboard the missing yacht in the outgrowth of the Eldora training five years in the men's reforma­ ger of the United States Eighth When the ceremony was com­ weeks just hefore Germaqy's col­ school for boys situation. tory at Anamosa. of Japan. . army of occupation and ordered plete, the First cavalry division's lapse included two radio trans­ The asaoclatlon Is clrc\llatilll a The boys tied blankets together "Have our country's nag un­ mitters. petition In the county to be pre­ for clothing and broke out a win­ furled," declared. General MacAr­ the historic flag unfurled he had chaplain gave a brief benediction Germans questioned have re­ sented to the governor, attorney dow and a eltSing. It was one of thur, "an in Tokyo's sun let it given the final order of the Pa­ and the su'preme commander left ported seeing Bormann in Ham­ general, Hardin county board of several recent tutile attempl.'l 01 Wave In Its tull glory as a symbol cific campaign and had fulfilled for a short inspection of the em­ burg the night of May 1-2. supervisors and the county attor­ inmates to flee following three of hope tor the oppressed and as his own slogan-"on to TokYo." bassy. ney. askina tha.t Gov. Robert D. successful escapes involving a a harbinaer of victory for the The supreme commander of the Guards standing at 20-foot in- Blue suspend all persons who have total of 225 boys. Ten still are at rljht." AlJIed powers stood in the em­ tervals presented arms on the had aJ)7 part In the aUeged beat­ lar,e. The hour was 1 a. m. (9 p. m. bassy gardens, flanked by an Civilians May Expect In .. Ind other 'inhuman' acts at Friday, central war time) and as honor guard of cavalrymen and general's arrival, cavalry drums More Gum, CigareHes the inatltutlon and tha t modern Blow to Jap Navy the fiall rose over the American surrounded by the men who beat four ruflles, and the band methods of dlaclpline he adopted. •YOKOHAMA (AP)- The bame embassy ~unds the First cavalry fought back with him after the broke into the general's march. WASHINGTON (AP) -:More UNDER PANAMA'S TORRID SUN, men and machlnClllabor tollDJlh The petition requests alto,. that o fthe Bismarck sea, when Allied dlvialon's band sent the heroic bitter days of Bataan_ the double-barreled fuel 011 pipe Hne frilm Cristobal on AUanUc l14e the county attorney appoint a Their drums had beat a lew chewlne gum, cigarettes, corn­ planea sank an entire convoy of atrand. of the "Star Spangled The general had retused an offer starch, cereals and chile con came of Ule Isthmus to Balboa on the Paclfle. Conceived .. leu. al __" special invtllltiaator to assist him ,t least 10 warships and 12 trans­ Banner" echoln, through the heart of the Japanese government to hours earlier, when the crack lec­ are In prospect for clvlIlans. IUpplJ artel')' from ocean to ocean should Ute canal be knocked oa&, In flndlnl all evidence pertaining PIlrl-cargo ships with 111,000 troope of tIH! enemy's ruined capital. place guards along his route of ond squadron of the Seventh regi­ Termination or cutbacks in the Une, orldnaU,. a lin,le 20-lnch pipe, proved 10 'Valuable, .... to the death Aug. 28 of Ronald lboard, was the greateat shock of Tbe fla, was that same one entry Into the city, as Is done for ment and the 302nd reconnals­ army demands for the products needs of the Pacific nee' 10 ,rea" &hat Ii duplicaie line 'IVU ..... Miller, 11, of Des Moines, inmate the war to the Nipponese navy, which fJew over Washington's the emperor, preferring to make san c e troop entered Tokyo's will make more automatically even before tbe lin' was eompleted. The double arter)' ean earrr of the school. Rear Admiral Toshltane TwU! Capitol on that Dec. 7, 1941, when an unostentatious arrival. streets with the division's stand­ available for distribution through %85,_ barrels .f 011,80,800 of PIOUae and .',oot of dellel 011 daIb'. A total of $1,000 hu been pledg­ laid yesterday. Japan .truck without warninl The white stone, Grecian strle ards and guidons flyinl. ci V~an channel,. Offlcla1 Unlied S'-'" DAVJ pho&o. ed to tile work of the aasoclation. PAGE TWO THE D A IL Y lOW A N, lOW A CIT y, lOW A SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, la.S - __ c_ China Moves Forward- News Congress Came Back A return by China to the fam­ democracy, and constitutionalism F ~~ ~!f~.~~.opolll•• "nb ibt' "rlaPll •• ~t~'~~~~}jiJ!~Adllor .t Tb' ...1 ( I .....r _, .. ous "Three People's Pt:\nciples." and consolidate national unity"; To Cut War Controls, ,~ p ...... In .". bot ,r•• lh. t.r Ib.h' •• p~1I I. I"•• fll ... of ,.. IIi nau, 10.... OKI'UAL No'l'lcta ....t b••• 'fll. Dan, which Generalissimo ChiBn~ Kai­ to "return the power of govern­ • 4:110 p. m. lb. dar prec.dln, 'Irol publl ••lloDI .0.1.... 111 = "CIt... shek now professes to oe3ire, ment to the people"; to "abolish ...... II,. lel... be.f, ...... 1 •• TIP.» oa LaO"L'f Behind But They Were Gone aD. IIONIO II, • r ••po •• lbl. , ...... seems to be the way ot lea~t re­ ithin a specific time limit the . sistance to avoiding a China civil wartime press censorship, so that By JACK STINNETT Vol. XXI No. 2033 S.aurday, 8epteDlller 1,1 war and at the same time give to the people may have freedom of The News WASHINGTON - The r e' sa (.0' lDIonut... ,.,.rdlD, d •• ben...... ,...... the people the rights which are speech"; to allot land to soldiers; great big laugh here in Washing­ NMl'VaUODI ID th. lffloe 01 th. P'.... at. Old. (lQlleJ.) theirs. to lift the land tax for a year in ton on those members of congress n is the way of least resist­ recently occupied .areas; "to re­ - By Paul Mallon w~o have been moaning lor fO\.lr UNIVERSITY CALENDAR ance beeause It seem& to be place unemployment with em­ years that we would never get rid Monday, Septenlber 17 tile mOlt common meeting ploymeht" ; to give "the same Frtday,' Sep{embet ;1 of censorship, price controls. man- 9 a. m. Freshman assembly. lI'Ound for Chiang and the ChI­ WASHINGTON -The 7:3~ p. m. Variety' show, MrII!io treatment without discrimina­ * * * power contt·ols. wage cOl1tl'ols. ra- Macbride auditorium. nese Commun...... Certalilb, to bride auditorium. tion" to all armed forces who what the Truman administration tionlng, priorities.and all our other 7:30-9:30 p. m. Play night (fresh­ a Westerner. it seems the basis ",:mbmit to . recogn~tion" by the is up to, economically and finan­ government war.tlme restrictions. men), women's gymnaSIum. play Saturd.,.. SepteMber H ·1 of a just lind likely compro· existin~ government; to make an ,ciaLly, lies only half-hidden in Congress ~ut Lts .nine-week va- ' Cield, River room of Iowa Union. 7:30-8 p. m. Inlormal concert lit freshman band, south lawn, IdtIW ndse. , "early. c01'lv~atren o( the na- figures announced by Budget Di­ cation pr?cllcally Ln hnlf. but it Tuesciay, September 18 Union. And the ideals involved' in ttie tional assembly." rector Harold Smith. A little already IS ap?arent t hat the 7:30 p. m. Freshman assembly, "T h r e e People's Principles" WOUld-be nx-wle~ders are I'eturn- Macbride' auditorium. 8 p. m. Open house. Iowa Unl04. would be as GREAT A HERI­ There may be some dlspate inside. work with a pencil on these lng to the choppmg block to dis- Wed1Iesday September 19 Sunday. SeptembeJ' 23 TAGE FOR THE CIUNESE as about the Interpretation of th~ will show you: cover there's ptactically nothing 7-8 p. m. Pl~y night, women's 3 p. m. Freshman orlentatfol/ third potut In the prinCiples. tbE' bill of rights has beeh for us. (A) Much tax reduction is un­ left to cut off. gymnasium. play fIeld and River mass meeting, Macbride auditor, Generally" 19 held to mean, at The "Thl'ee People's Prihci­ likely. In fact it toay be only Drop Controls Fan room of Iowa Union. lum. Jeallt to Westerne.... that It will pies" call lor' (1) national unity what might be called (and is Even before the Japanese could 'l'blil'sday. September 20 MohlYay, September ,. inelude state oWDerllhlp of na· and independence. (2) popular already privately being called screw up courage to meelr Genetal 7:30 Fl'eshmlln assembly, to In- 7:45 a. m. Induction cerernori11 taral monOPOlies, a division of government and (3) a kind 04 a "political" reduction. MacArthur face to fnce, a busi- troduce student leaders, Macbride Old Capitol campus. the land. and the eneonrare· ness man couldn't keep pace with auditorium. economic democracy. By this Is man' a mild and 8 a. m. Instruction begins. metrt of unions of peaants and perhaps complex rev I s Ion the way wartime restrictions were The Chinese now have ~chieved laborers. sll&'htly downward but actually falling off. GENERAL NOTICES their greatest measure of inde­ War agency employes were get­ Chiang's iqterpretation veets to ma.lntalnlnc government reve­ IOWA UNION smimULE pendence. They even ha ve F'or~ ting in the habit of calling to find the right, probably because he nues near what they are. Only the lobby, Information desk mosa back. And they have assur­ (B) The spending program of if they still had jobs belore they UNIVERSITY LDllA.RY'ilotlll and director's offices will be open ance from Stalin that the Rus­ accepted the support of certaln gulped their coffee; jalopies were Au.... 9-Sept, U, 19U the first peace year will make trom Aug. 9 to Sept. 10. The conservative elements. The Com- capering all over sions will not interfere in inter- pikers out of both Franklin Roose:', the place on full Union will reopen for public serv­ Main reading room-Martitfdt munists' interpretation is more velt and John Mayna'rd Keynes tanks of gas; and merchants here nal affairs o[ China. '" ice Monday morning. Sept. 10. the hall. ,I leftist. bounding almost on Marx- who led the way in this world in the heal't of wartime restric­ BUT CHI N A DOES ' NOT 1 cafeter'a will reopen ai 11 :30 a. m. HAvE UNITY. The Kuomintang ism. for an established policy of tre­ tions were hanging out signs: "If Tuesday, Sej)l. 11. Periodical reading room-LIb. goernment headed by Chiang With China's future. at stake. it mendous govemment outlays far we haven·t got it, we soon will E L E. BAltPl!!1t raryannex. beyond anylll ing hitherto co n­ INTERPRETING have." and the Communists have been would seem that these differences Dfreetor, Iowa Ullfon Government documents d.... rt. could easily be compromised. ceived in the mind of man. struggling for power since about More Than FDR ' ment-LJbrlll'y annex. 1927. Sometimes their struggles Chiang now has at least the pas­ Censorship* Director * * Byron Price GIlAM:8-T1:IlM n, 19t5 The Truman treasury expendi­ Tfie WA NErW. , slJMMn SlMESTIlt Education - philosophy - "7- have broken in to open war. sive support of R u s s i a. HE was the first to put up the "Out tures are to run $50.500.000.000 Grades for Term 11 of the 1945 cholo«y library, East Ha1J. However. if both are working COuLD ALSO HAVE FULL for this fiscal year (nine months By JAMES D. WHITE Mori of the imperial guards and or Business" placard. "Old Cur­ mudgeon" Harold L. Ickes didn·t summer semester for students in Monday· Ftlda,. for the good of ChIna as they SUPPORT OF AMERICA IF HE to run) says Mr. Smith. The Associated Press Staff Writer tried to get him to help them steal wait 48 hours to lift the ban on the colleges ot liberal a'rts and 8:30 a. m.-12 M. _ert. they oU/rht to be able CARRIES OUT HIS PLEDGED vaunted Roose~Lt spending pro- The doublecross is a very old the recording. When he refused commerce and the graduate col­ gasoline and fuel oil. His capable 1 p. m.-5 p. to reach an understandllll" on WORD. gram of the bollom-depression lege are available at the office of m. year of 1935 ran one-tenth of that Japanese custom, still go i n g they murdered him. director, Ralph K. DaVies, told Saturday thIS point through wO'rking 10- Thus. if Chiang, who now friends that the petroleum admin­ the registrar upoh pr sentation of eether on the other )Joint! of bolds the upper hand, wi1l step sum and Roosevelt in all his years strong. They then faked orders with the student identification card. 8:30 a. m.-12 M. never spent one-fifth of ihat sum, Associated Press Correspondent which they tried to carry out their istration for war would be gone the people's principles. down from his dicta'tol'Ship ana Professional college grades will Reserve readiilg room-Librui (C) To talk 01 further gov- Russel Brines has cabled a highly plot to steal the recording, but completely within 120 days. In his V-J day message to the if the Communists will agree to be distributed as announced by annex. lerrunent IlPpropriations now, to illuminating account of what went Ease Rationlne the dean of the coli ge. people Chiang pLedged himself to compromise. China may well somebody doublecrossed them and OPA started lilting rationing so cushion the conversion period. on in Tokyo before and during the o lfAltRY G. BAliNES Closed Aug. 9-Sept. 22. 1948 popular government. be stepping toward its greatest In Ihe face of such a t.remencWus surrender crisis. phoned another loyal garrison of fast shoppers couldn't keep up Schedules ot hours for other d~. with them; Secretary of Agricul­ • Reeldrar He promised to "introduce years. spending program, not only runs Nowhere in his account is there the guards who arrived in time. part mental librariea will be poaUd the ext.cemity - of 111e sublime any hint that his Japanese in­ ture Anderson began to talk about There is so much precedent in ·The regular meeting ot the SUI on the doOrs of each library. to the ridiculous, but creates formants saw lmything strange in plenty of unrationed meat by fall. nurses alumnae associntion will be Japanese history for.. this sort of The war labor Poard stripPed it­ a new category at the end which the weird parade of back-stab­ held Monday. Sept. 10. at ~:45 R. E, ELLSWOITII thing that it seems normal, rather sel! ot a bou t 90 per cen t of its Hats Oft to the Farmer- might accurately be described as bing that went on. p. m. in the We tlawn parlors. Dlrl!Cttl ridiculous sublimity. His account reveals these at- than abnormal, to many Japanese. authority. As another great harvest begins farmer again hali accomplisheij a I will try to analyZe these mat- tempts at chicanery. among others: Take Iyeyasu. the first of the The war manpower cOllUlll!­ slon opened the doors on .lOb to fill American granaries. city great end. tel'S for yoU in detail. as they. In June Japan tried to bribe Tokugawa shoguns. He set up his AMG Looks Ahead- Farmers agaL'n have "vorked reach down into the fundamentals' Soviet Russia into continued neu- restrictions. WPB cut loose basle Consumers may f1BVe wondered , shogunate (supreme wal'lordship) metals and a seore of other long hard hours. Many of them of all the domestic post-war pro- trality by offering her Manchuria in 1603 after the death of Hide- how this vital farm job was car­ wer' able to ause onl brief! blems, with -:v hich we are c~n- and north China. . things ,that opened the flood· gates of reconversion. ried on during the w . years 1 V J d P f th y L' ~ I fronted, anI mdeed, our foreIgn When the emperor made hiS re- yoshi, the warlord who had done Preview of Japan : or - . ays. o~ ey rea Ize problems as well. beclUlse Mr. cording or the rescript accepting most of the fighting to uni[y the I couLd go on listing for col­ when "hired hands" and farm that thew own JObs were far Truman has wiped the lend-lease the Potsdam terms (not uncondi­ country. umns, but Ule list would be in­ By ROBBIN COONS people from their own resources youth were drafted in every from completed-and that the slate clean, and is starting upon tional surrender, we might note) Hideyoshi had entrusted his complete before this gets into township and thousands more print. OKINAWA (AP) -Ishikawa, as far as possible. OklnllWa'r same job might face them again a new additional lending program young army fanatics learned about five-year-old son, Hideyori, to the tastest-grown village on Oki­ were lured to better paying war next year. abroad. the real contents of the address lYJ!ysau's keeping. but when the nawa. giVes a preview of what crops were good this year. 01111 jobs. State universities and agricul- Tax Rates through somebody in the palace son grew lip Iyeysau decided he There's a reason* * for* it. of course American mil ita r y government truckloads of civilians go out to The answer ' is simPle . but tural colleges did much to help Take taxes first (as no one here who doublecrossed the emperor. was a menace and got rid of him. -one that isn·t easy to dig out. may have to face in devastated harvellt sweet potatoes, the isliDil the farmer. They cHose state is.) ML·. Truman concludes fhe They' then cornered powerful-and it is a tribute to ~eneral Iyeyasu still is regarded by Jap'a- After questionfng officials in halt areas of Japan. staple. the farmers of America and to farm I abo r supervisors and present heaviest war rates will nese as one of the greatest men in a dozen agencies, including WPB, War bombed Ishikawa's popu­ But there isn't enough M~ the volunteer aid frbm towns and picked staffs of specialists who not this year produce the bulging lessened some next year, and their history. OPA, PAW. I have conciuded that laUon Cram a pre-invasion 1,800. grown stutr. Army rations have cities. understood agriculture and local $45.000.000,Ouu gleaned last year. more the year after. For 264 year~ r~eyn su a.nd his it is principally because nearly all within week~. to n~8rly 25.000. It With his somewhat limited He assumes no doubt that much The fiscally-wily Republican Mr. descendants mamtallled their con- these war agencies are run by in­ is now a small-scale version of to supplement the supply. Van problems. less bUSiness will be done and Knudsen claims the budget for forces mobilized. and his forceful trol through promoti~g ~'eachery Idustry men, These men are just that teeming orient you've heard Zant has n tent loaded with ct~ Hats off to the American far- people will produce less, although next year( beginning next July 1) among the feudal as sick of wartime controls as any determination propeling him. the dls~rlct lo~ds about-and how it teems! of it-"dated." perhaps stale. 'rf., mer. the stock market does not seem ought to be down around $2(i.000,- ~ho ruled through t~elr permls- of us- and incidentally just as The place Is not at Its be t ------to think or say so. as it con- 000.000. which would enable a gen­ slOn-and for a consIderatIOn, of sick of government red tape. after prolonged rains. Many or lions lell from ;:arly war yean, tinues to disregard any post-war uine tax reduction, if receipts are course, Political Implications its narrow streets are lakes 01 but still b iter than Okinawans possibilities of less corporate ot' kept run n i n g $10,000.000.000 This worked well, but Japan There's a political implication tbtell, soup mud. were used to. Mr. Alfree on Conscription- indIvidual income or spending as higer. Of course there is debt re­ Was not yet iso.lated from the in the speed with which war con­ Children. some pilifully thin School But No Boob a whole. tirement to think of and a con­ world. Catholic traders and mis- tr~s are bing' lifted too: anti-ad­ from past malnutrition, others lit­ There is a schoof, with no boob New YOrk Times: In a straight­ that what has been won in THE At any rate Mr. Smith says siderable excess of receipts should sionaries were arriving from Spain ministration forces. both Repub­ tle brown dolls with bright slant­ as yet, Where children play IIId forward statement. to the British WAR IS NOT LOST IN THE IM­ he will nClt get S36.00G,OOO.OOO go into this (just carrying the and Portugal, and British and lieans and greener-pasture Demo­ eyes. play in the soup, scurrying people. Prime Minister Attlee MEDIATE POSTWAR PERIOD." out of these rates this year. debt will cost $6,000.000.000 an­ D ute h Protestant traders ap- crats. are gOing to lind one of to safety as a jeep approaches. take exercise. Here also the hor!· has explained why conscription Mr. Attlee of course. is speak­ I! the government is to spend noally in interest.) peared. The shogun wanted very their powerful "weapons" of ad­ Babies are in ,the charg of older chos (straw bosses) meet to let must remain in force in England ing only to his own countrymen. $50.500,000.000 and takes in only Two ScJlOols much to get rich from foreign ministration criticism has melted sisters. some alma t babies them­ orders and to bring problems to "to meet the continuing needs of But every argument he uses here $36.000,000,000. it is evident real Two schools of thought are de- trade, but saw that Christianity away in their hands. selves. who carry them slung AMG, the services and in particular to applies with equal force in our tax reduction is impOSSible. So veloping in congress behind this robbed him or some 01 the people's piggy-back style in pouches. In the hospital tent, dirt floOr it looks like the be;:!t that the re- condition of financial affairs. The * * * release those who have been own situation. strengthening the loyalty. He turned against it. Everybody Works swept clean. an Oldnawan Iirl election hungry congress may do line I have outlined is that o( the MeanWhile the shogun became If congress doesn't hurry, it serving in the war." case for a contlnuation of OUI' The adults work. Everybody watches over a native patill!nt. is to-patch together some kind of administration and what seems more and more frightened of the won't even have the pleasure of Germany is defeated but un­ who can work at Ishikawa doe. A civilian mother thai ..... own selective service system dlfr- a tax reduction effective next likely to be the majority. Christian "menace" nnd too k hurlln&- more brickbats Into the says Maj. Herbert Van Zant or pentant: "We must continue lnr hu elven bIrth 10 .... ing the period of redeployment Jan. 1 ~hich will make everyone But there Is another school measures to stamp it out. Prob­ windows or Elmer Davis' office Duncan, Okla., the AMG oUker child, then rl en to Jilah Iiw to flnd large forces for occupa­ and at least the first stages of feel a littlE) beller-except in the whiCh claims It is far more ne. ably hundreds of thousands of of war Information. in charge. \lQ\ anl\ II) \I) VlI)Y .... tion of the British zone." military occupatio~ of Germany pocketbook. cessary to create a proper spirIt Japanese Christians died the most Congress will of course get the There Is no monetary system A child with toothpick III'IIIII A hard and dangerous winter and Japan. Keep Wlthholdln&- 't,ax toward progress in the country horrible deaths from torture and satisfaction llnd full credit for tak­ at IshlJeawa. Arnelican Invnlon and legs Ii s feverish ot\ Its cot. lies ahead on the whole conti­ This is the policy which Presi- The talk is' they will reduce the than to run everything down too mass slll ughter. They became wil­ ing us off war time and putting us money ha not yet been PUt Into A native woman who has refused nent: "We. musl take OUt share dent Truman has recommended normal income rate from six per- closely ~o fisca.l policy. ling martyrs. and the ra1th flour­ back on "God's time" but that'}] use for the natives. They work to eat-her family is mlssint.­ in establish ing conditions which to congress. IT IS A POLICY cent to four or three, but keep This school adocntes a genuine ished underground. to the terror be n pretty smalI Victory. When fer theIr keep - puUln... the sits tllring in dejection. There if' will allow of RECONSTRUC­ BASED ON THE WISDOM OF the withholding lax (treasury in- tnx reduction now in anticipation of the shogun. congress voted daylight saving produets I n to a community a native doctor as well as Arnei'!· tends to keep this probably per- or heavy coming cuts in the $50,­ It was then that the Japanese time in the first place, it specific­ hoard, drawlnr from It tor their cnn medics. and a native delltill TION WITHOUT VIOLENCE." PROFITING FROM EXPERI- manently with pay-as-you-go) 500.000.000 budget of this year. police system lIppears to nave ally reserved to itself the right to 11l4ivldlial need . who operates in a plush ch.lr .... Then lbere are Britain's obli­ ENCE. and the other indiVidual rates Their theory is the lower rates will gations in the East: "The occupa­ been perfected to its present-duy put nn end lo it. As elsewhere, AMG eeds the cued from Naha's ruins. F'or as Mr. Attlee reminds both where they are. bring greater revenues. and such intensity, with neighbor spying tion of Japan and. the restora­ his people and our own. "those Great demand is present for abo- anticipation is necessary to sus- upon neighbor. with district ,pitted tion of the territories' Of our­ who remember the- distutbed 'lition of the corporation excess tain good business. against dbtrict. and the whole so­ NAVY RECOMMENDS WE RETAIN THESE PACIFIC BASES s'elves and our allies will need period at the end of the last war profits Ux. which is clearly a de- Those two schools will soon be ciety deliberately and inlricately .. \Substantial forces for some time will remember that one 'of the terrent to business expansion as it fighting out the matter In the broken up into as many units as enables the government to take up open. to come." prime difficulties of the situation possible - all hating, suspecting to about 90 percent of any expan- I will have more of this subject, S. S. •. Veterans' wh9 have done the was the inablU'ty of tM powers and spying upon one another. u. sion. ' exhibiting, I hope. that people do actual fhrlJtlnc overseas) and The Japanese people, caught in which had won the war to pro­ But I suspect this III more not yet have the fai ntest idea of - .. ~ .who now want badly '0 co_ vide the necessary forces for the IIl1ely to be moderated than what has happened to this country this web of Machiavellian mass- home, can be released from the prevention of viole'nt aelioh by aboltahed. Best prospect IS' that fi scally during this war, although treachel'Y [or 300 years, wlll not AI.ullon. .performance of these new dut­ sectional interests pehding the a taperlne·ofr scheme will be the figures are beginning to sho\Y easily shake it off. Ies only to the extent that Dew completions . of negotiations for adopted whereby the tax will be it. meD are provided In necessary • wor1~ p ace." -;:::::;===::::;:;::=::.::.:::::==::=::=:::;:::;;;;:::;;::~- Wage Dispute Halts ADAk numbers: This time. "WE MUST NOT III.U "The maintenance of adequate FAIL THE WORLD. We have ... Construction Work .- forces by sea, in the air. and on raught for democracy. We must the ground is vltally necessary if insure that the collditlons for its In Des Moines we are to fulfiil Our obliga tions exercise exist. All this reacts 01'1 DES MOINES (AP)-Most can· to our allies and it we are to see our situation here today." struction in Des Moines came to a halt yesterday as the result of u '(1/("'( 0(.011 wage di spute between member of the building labors union. 177 41 THE 'DXILY IOWAN AFL, and the master association Publisne'd every morning except !'.fonda, ." StudelJlt PubUeattoDl composed of contractors. In.corporated at 126-130 Iowa avenu~, lolta CltJ, lo\\, .. The ul,lol1 is asking a wage hike from 85 cents to $1 un hour and .W"NE l)lHAWAI Board of trustees: Wilbur Schr.mm, Kirk H. Porte" A. Ctal, the master builders have made a '" 1.1 Baird. Paul R. Olson, Donald Otillie. Ma.,. Jane Nevtlle, Mart Ikth counter offer of 92 cents. filmer, Karalyn Keller. Jack MoyeH. Union membe~'s met. yesterday "... " ! to discuss the counter ofter but ...., K"'AI' Fred M. Pownall, Publtllber reached no decision allcl will hold tohn A. Stlchnoth. Editor Wall, Strillfbam. Act". MI'. another meeting Monday. it was " MANUS I'epol'l~d. En tered as lecond class mail SublCripUOIl ratel-B, maD S5 AI Davis. union business agent matter at the 'DOst~ffice at Iowa per ,ear; b, earrler, 11 eenta was not available for a statement City, Iowa, uncle the act of cpn· weeklJ. • , per ,ear. but another union offiCial Raid the aress 01 March 2. 1879. men didn't report for work be­ The Auoetated Pt'I!III If ftelu­ call~e they wan Led to attend the TtLEPHONES lively entI~ to ute' to\' republi­ meeting. He asserted {hat to dote cation ot all new." dlspUcbes !(iltorlal Office ...... _ 4192 there is no strike. credttfd to It or not otherwlte Rudoh)h Weitz, president of Ule THIS MAP ,howa the .,..twar rlbr of ntv•• '" et the flaV1 ha. reeelltll'lt!fI'fd the Unltel ,",tiM .-i Society Office ...... _.. _...... _._ 41118 cr~ted In t!l1t paPer and alBo I milster builders association. said NIne malor b&HI were I'"'tuilell III the I... ",hte.. AI .....n' lI_etar)' H. 8'""11 a..el IIiIetIW BUlinesl Office ...... _ 4191 tbe Joeld lid. pubUlbed herefn. that no official notice of work in· lted to 'hoee we Ihollfd Inwn. 10 mal.... ta ..., ..hlel! are llIIceM!ble lei cHtenfe." Milt., ....II. III .. S7 n terruptlon had been received from AdllllraltleR. was Bri"... belere tlie waf .1111 aflor', ODe of the flnfJllt neM ...... es lit UIII .. SATURDAY, S~ S, 1946 the union. added 'the men just There are othen Ute uvr reeoaunenclt 'lie Valted II .... k .... ,tt..... U, ... , ...... "-' fi1iII .. • didn't report for work.' Uled b;y anJ I,h.r n.Oon, Th.,.. .re ...... _ .... , 8, 1845 ... SATURDAY, SEPTEMlJER S, 194.5, - THE DAJt Y IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA ======, Fralern ilies REWED "WIDOW" HEARS "DEAD" MATE IS ALIVE Ocl.1 Frost WIVES GREET GENERALS FREED FROM JAP CAMPS SetUp Rules Would D'eslroy for Rushing ~O~O o'Corn Rules permitting Infol'lllal rush- According to a survey made by 11\1 but prohibiting pledging be­ Emmett C. Gardner, county ex­ 'ore Sept. 24 have been la id down by the Interfraternity council to tensl.on director, a killing frost ,overn the rushing of men for the before Oct. I would injure 60 per Dew' Ichool year, It was revealed cent of the com and it it occurred by Dean C. Woody Thompson, of after Oct. 15 only 23 per cent the 9Wce of affairs. would be damaged. The entire week beginning Sept. The survey includes reports 11 will be devoted to the enter­ from 87 farmers in Johnson county lalnment of rushees in order that owning farms averaging 240 acres. they may become acquainted with The survey revealed that the auditor. tile various fraternities. There average tarmer would have on his wUl be no' scheduled periods for farm only 343 bushels of old corn 14 enlei'tainmen t as was the proceed­ on Oct. 1. However, his oats and lire 'In years before the war. hay crops are above last year. EUglble Men He threshed and combined 1,764 AB ye no plan has been formu­ bushels ot oats as compared to lated to Inform the fraternities of 851 bushels last year. He also har­ men e\lgibJe for rushing. This vested 53 tons of hay compared to problem and others wlll be dls­ 44 tons last year according to the cUAed at an interfralernity council survey. meeting during the first part of Farmers reported in the survey next week. that they planned to market their ''rhere will undoubtedly be a de­ spring pigs at a weiaht of 236 cided Increase In fraternity actl vl­ pounds. About half reported they YEARS Of AfoIJnm AND WAmNO ban • haW)' ei?dIDf,. above, as eight U. 8. ArIII)' ,enerala, treed ties,' was the view expressed by will produce about the SIlme num­ trorn Japane" prl80n campi, vrlHd at a..utoa IneId, Cal.. to be ,reeted tIT thelr wlVeL OIl the Kenneth Carter, president of Phi ber of fall pigs as usual but will alntrlp Juat after the plane landed are '-It to nrllt, 'lilaj. Geft. aDd Mra. W. r. Sharp, BrI,. Gen. Delta Theta. 'The fellows relurn­ .11l0NEOUSLY iEPORTID death of Lt. Jame. Cales. right, a Navy flyer, led hi. wife. Mrs. Laurie Cales sell them at a lighter weight. and Mrs. James Weaver (embracir\l'), Adm. IIoJaI IJIpNoll wbo IJ'Hted the ,enersla; Gen. A. M. Ing from service are mOl'e serious Bernstein, above. to marry Lt. Ethan Bernstein. a wounded veteran of the EUropean campaign, on One-fourth expected 'to increase Jones, back to camua, and BrI&. Gen. aDd lin. CHord DluemeL (lnteraltioaln IIId want to get down to business. JUly 9. Lieutenant Cales, who wa.s reported missing on Sept. 1. 1944, and ofticlally reported kUled the feeding of cattle over last They know how the fraternities In May 9f this year, has been liberated from a Jap prison camp. Hia wlJ.e bolda their lon, Jam" year and one-fJ>urth were waiting - PI,. Ire .operated In peacetime and it Cales, Jr. , (Int.rn.tion.1) to see what happened to the corn POW's Released won't be long untiL things are back crop before making their plans Iowa City Man Commanded Regiment CALCUTTA (AP)-AdditJonal to normal. This should also give 'regarding the feeding of beet cat­ United Stales prisoners of war re­ the average fraternity grade point Canterbury Club New Guinea Names tle. Of 98th Infantry Division in Hawaii leased from Japanese camps yes­ I bOost. It looks like a good year.' Gave Yank Soldiers Junior Hostess Dance terday included Pvl. George Im­ . Pledge Tralnl~ blrock, Hawarden, and Sergt. Bob Bush, Sigma Chi treasurer Announces Plans Geographical Headache To Highlight Commanding oricer 01 the 390th role In American hiatol.'Y. He is Donald F. Johnson, Friend, Neb. declared, 'There will be a consid­ usa '. Island Hopping regiment ot the 98th infantry divi- servilli on the 4:1,000-ton battle­ erable difference in pledge train­ The New Guinea campaign was sion, which, army headquarters re- ship MllSOuri and was present The first Bessemer steel rails Banq~et manufactured In the United States Ing because of the returning veter­ For Fall a military nightmare for the Japa- Weekend Activities New Yank Strategy cenUy announcel, has been guard- when the Japanese erwoY8 came aIlS; We can't expecl men that aboard to sign the tinal surrender were rolled in 1865. have been in this war to accept the Canterbury club, Episcopal stu­ nese, but it was a ?eographical Highlighting activities at the Defeats Japs ing the Hawaiian Islands during document. type of training that was given be­ dent organization, has announced headache. for the . Allies-and for IUSO this weekend wilJ be the the past 16 months, is Col. Wllllalll Tne Missouri, narned for the Bronze Star medal for meritorious for.e. That, however, will aU be plans fOr the second annual stu­ the Amencans trymg to follow the junior hostess dance tonight' from One phrase unknown to most B. Means. son of Mrs. J. R. Brun- home state of President Truman, Is services in support of combat op­ settled al meetings of lhe intcrIra­ dent-faculty banquet which will be war. news at home.. . I 8 to 10:30, with the public ad- Americans at the time ot Pearl ton, 1403 Yewell avenue. one oJ. Ute most powerful warships erations in Italy. ternlty council and when more ac­ Friday Evening, Sept. 28. Names ltke WamaklOkoOlanga, dre&s system providing the music. Harbor-sums up the story ot vic- Colonel Means was graduated ever built. It is now the flagship He served on the Fifth Army tive members return. The guests of honor at this din­ Bedamunumuno and Klabe!ogat- Leo Cortimiglia will be' featured tory in the Pacific. trom the United States Military ot Admiral WiUlam F. Halsey, front in the l09th Medical Batta­ 'This is the year,' exclaimed ner will be the Rt. Rev. Ellwood L. naba were common. for the popu- at the piano in the lounge. The pit rase Is ':amphibious op- academy in 1935 and served with comander ot Ihe 1:hl'rd Fleet. lion with the 34th 'Red Bull' In­ SAE's president G e n e S h a r p. Haines, Bishop of. Iowa, and Presi- . Iat~ places tlie Aliles were called Sunday activities include . a tea erations." It means the abilJty to the Philippine division until 1939, • • • lantry Division. 'Thipgs might be a bit slow in dent Virgil M. Himcer. .. upon to conquer. At. the othcr ~x- dance from 2:3(} to 4:30. The pre­ send troops against strongly fortl- during which time he visited Ja- Dale D. Hughes, son of Mr. and His wile, Mrs. G rlrudc C. Saar, 522 Ita~ting but we'll soon be back to Canterbury club is sponsoring treme were towns wlth names like Iflight orchestra will furhish the fied coasts and wrest them from pan and took part In the Bataan Mrs. Edwin J. Huahes, S. lives at Westlawn. normal. The rush week decided this banquet in order that students Ta. Ba, No, Mo, Egad and Wuwu. music. the enemy. It means the combin- Peninsula maneuvers. Lucas, and a mem~r of the 43rd upon will give all fraternities an new to th~ Iowa cainp.us may have Gi1(ing . military 'directions by Snack bar hostesses for · this ing of sea, land and air power in • • • 'Winged Victory' division, has been even break. However, I believe an opportunity to meet the other telephone produced n u mer 0 u s weekend will be members of unit a precise coordination never be- MaJ. Harold J. Monk, 234 Lowell promoted from private first class n , Ihe .date lor p1edging should be a stUdent and faculty members of minor complications, since giving B of ' the Women's So

• .. By Jack Sorci. • Ph-il.-":'M-au-IRe-dl-, -... W., illiams Due SURPRIS! PACK"GE Giants' Rookie To Work Olit . 8-6, After Dropping (ardslurn RociAg • First· Game, 2 to 6. For Discharge Plans for T~iI' CINCINNATI (AP)-Philadel- Bac Boston Blanks Cubs phla mauled t h r e e J::inclnnati .Roundup hurlers ' t~r seven runs on eight Maybe Today hits and an in the second In four Days ForlrdWin With Six Hits of the nightcap of a twin , Tro»h)' ets Record NEW YORK (AP)- Samuel D. DES MOINES (AP) _ Vee blJl yesterday to win 8-6 after BJ WALLY STRINGHAM ST. LOUIS (AP)- Glvin. up CHICAGO (AP)-Sal MIIIlle, Riddle's War Trophy set a new Green, Drake university's football Joe Bowman pitched and batted Former University of Iowa bas­ three hits, George Dockins shut rookie Giants righthander, stoll\1lll the Reds to an easy 6-2 victory ketball coach, Lieut. Comdr. Rol­ out the Boston Braves, 4 to 0; as track record of 3:06 4; 5 f I' the the cold yeslerdaJ, coach, said yesterday there was lie Williams, will be discharged the St. Louis Cardinals won the in the opener before a "crowd" of mile and three-quarters Bush­ limiting the league leaders to III .Ia possibility" that the University from the 'navy Tuesday. final game of their series at wick hurdJes handicap before of Iowa football learn would play 675. Just what this will mean to Spoftsmans park last night. hits and registering hi s lhlrd shUI. 23,757 fans at Aqueduct yesterday. his team either Sept. 28 or Sept. It was the Phils' final appear­ Iowa basketball this season, no The Cards won three of the four out in six major league stub, 29. ance of the season he.re and the one knows. Williams says that he games. They are four games be­ Lovely Kni gh t held the old mark to give the New York invadet'll hind the leall\le-Ieading Chicago Both schools face an ppen date victory was their second in the plans to return to Iowa City and ol 3;12 3/ 5. 2-0 triumph. that weekend because 'of cancelkl­ his family as soon as he is re­ Cubs. The three-year-old , former flat series-aI-five. It was Dockins' eighth victory Mel Oit drove in bbth tion of games by the Otlumwa leased from the navy, but gave no runner broke last In the field of of the eason. Bob Logan, the los­ naval air station, which was (Plrst G.me) indication of his future in the Iowa runs on flies. A pair of erran by ing , allowed the Red Birds ten, but came from behind to nip scheduled to play 10wa, Sept. 29, Philadelphia' .... 000 ·000 002-2 7 4 athletic picture. the Cubs' rookie first baseman to score three runs belore he was Mrs. F. Ambrose Clack's Great Cincinnati ...... 010 122 00x- 6 102 Williams, who has been acting Reggie Otero put men on [irst lid and, by Cornell college which was relieved. It was his 1Itb deleat of Flare in a photo fini sh. Mrs. Esther S pro u'll, Mulcahy, Chapman as athletic director at Great Lakes, ~ have met the Drake' squad Sept'. the year. Du Pont Weir's Bind r was third, third in the third frame. Ott then 28. and 'Mancuso; Bowman, Modak wlll be relieved by Lieut. Comdr. \~ eight lengths farther behind. A. W. Thompson who will act as came through with his first run· Cornell officials told dr~en that and ·Lakeman. · . AB .. H War Trophy earned a purse of scoring hoist. The other tally lack of manpower would prohibit a combined coordinator of athlet­ (Seecmd Game) ics and athletic director. Culler, ss ...... 4 1 $4,290 and paid $5.60 in the mu- cam e in the eigh th. Johrll1y their appearing on the Droke 1 luels. Rucker beat out a hit to shortstop schedule, while Ottumwa's eleven P1Hladelphial .... 170 000 000-8.12 0 E. G. Schroeder, Iowa athletic Nelson, 2b ...... 4 Holmes, rf ...... 3 Len Merullo, advanced to thlid was affected by the revamping of eincinnati ...... 030 111 000--6 13 1 head, said that WilJiams has the o Barrett, K a r 1 and Spindel; Medwick, It ...... 3 Sea Bees Clips Zax on George Hausmann's si ngle and the aviation cadet program caused right to come back to Iowa if he o Workman, 3b ...... 3 o The Brookfield stable's Sea romped home when Ott senl a by the end of the war. Wehmeier, Lisenbee, Harrist and desires, but that the btlard of ath­ Lakeman. letics had not yet made any de­ Gillenwater, cf ...... 3 o Bees won a nose decision over deep fly to Ed Sauer. Green will meet with a repre­ Masi, c ...... 3 o Mrs. R. H . Heighe's Zax In the sentative of the University of cisions regardtng Pops Harrison, New York AB R H I present cage mentor, or Williams, Shupe, Ib ...... 3 o Barrington purse at Garden Stale Iowa iii Des Moines today and until they know of Williams' Logan, p ...... 1 o park before 18,697. Big Party was Rucker, cf ...... 4 details of the proposed meetlng plans. Nieman· ...... 1 o third. ~ Hausmann, 2b ...... 4 may be worked out at that time, Ryba Uses to; Hutchings, p ...... 0 o Sea Bees stepped the six fur­ Ott, rf ...... 4 he said. Ramsey" ...... 1 o longs in 1: 13 and paid $11.40. Gardella, 1! ...... 4 Hendrickson, p ..... '" 0 o Jockey Shelby Clark, upon Zax, Lombardi, c ...... 4 Cancellation of the Iowa-Ot­ 'Caf~ Back Injured;. the odds-on-favorite, lodged a Zimmerman, Ib .... 4 tumwa navy football game here Pitches, Wins Totals ...... ~ ..... 29 0 3 ~ foul against Sea Bees, but it was Jut'g S, 5S ...... 4 Sept. 29, was announced Friday • Batted foc Logan in 6th not allowed. Reyes, 3b ...... 3 by At hIe tic Director E. G. Barker Chips Knee .. Batted for Hutchings in Bth Maglie, p ...... _ ..... 3 Schroeder. BOSTON (AP)-Using only 80 6I

lIN. OEOROI S. 'ATTON, commander or the U. S. Third Army, The Daily Iowan I alltel forth In Au!trla uttl\le "JI'avory Alrlea," the hone Which I Adolf Hitler had personally pIcked ,out to be prelented to Emperor • S C()()K ~INKY'S' HlroIIlto until circumstances, In whleh Patton had quite a hand, WOItD altered ht. plaOll. The hor.e formerly belonged to the rldln, IChool Phone 4191 ot Vitnna. __.. __ . ______. (llltllll.tional), JS 'Jo/I" PAGE SOC THE DAILY IOWAN. lOW A CITY. IOWA SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 8',1945 9,000 Jap Prisoners Waiting to Come Home- ',· . , Local Guard CLAIMS ARLEN DESERTED HER Already Liberated Yanks Give: Camps a Touch of .A }1];"ca To Eldora Tales of Brutal ' .... Br RALPH L. GUYETTE * * * * * * Treatment Common, WAITING IS A JOB. In itself Company C of thc local state Told by All it is a tough assignment. But guard ~has been ordered to Eldora I when you are waiting to come for one week to relieve company B, THE ASSOCIATED PRlIS8 home it is really hard work, espe- F of Newton which has been doing Thousands of skk and weary cially if you are one of the men guard duty at the state training but joyous Allied prisoners of war in our victorious European army. school for boys. are being shepherded from Japa- Lolllng around and listening to ru­ Three officers and 40 mcn will nese camps of bitter memory to mors, which fly about thicker than leave Saturday at 6 p. m. for EL­ embarkation points for homeward llies in dry weather, GI morale dora by army trucks with Capt. journeys. quickly takes a tumble. Don Brown In command. The So the Special Services Division, other officers are Lleutenantlt Their tales of brutal treatment- Army Service Forces, has endeav­ Robert D. Bothell and Harold D. common to all-are being told to ored to make things just a little Ahlrt. easier for the boys. Since many c "atroclty officers" accompanying the li~eration teams. These offi­ of the soldiers are being rede­ ployed to the Paci!ic and since Buren Krahling, cers, questioning the freed men as many more have weeks or even Dick Mitchell to Lead they travel toward evacuation cen- months t wait before getting a ters, are makihg a record of their glimpse of home, the S. S. D. has . Forum Discussion mistreatment, Jrom which will be brought a bit of home to them. compiled n a me s of Japanese RellDll Area Buren Krahling and Dick Mitch­ guards and others to be held re- The 17 camps in the Reims as~ ell will lead a discussion on "Dis­ sponsible. sembly area, France, have been ciplines of a Chrlstian Life" at Already about 9,000 have been named for large American cities the Wesley foundation vesper liberated and transported to Yoko- and have been decorated with au­ forum tomorrow afternoon at 4 hama. There, after treatment for thentic posters, shields, banners o'clock at the Methodist stUdent diseases and ailments incurred in and other typical materials and center, 120 N. Dubuque stre~. The - captiVity, they are rushed home- documents from the name-sake vesper program will be lead by ward, some by ship and others by metropolises. Helen Ladwig. piane. Their post exchanges have been A picnic supper will be served At American beadquartel'll in built i n to , elaborate relaxation after the forum. The committee Manila It has been announced spot~ with the stores and sur­ in charge of arrangements in­ that at least 1,000 prison atroolb rounding areas ado r ned with cludes Kay Hart, EJlen George IROOKLYN TREE-Thl. 'r•• , which ",.. ,rew In Flatltu .... I. b.l", replanted In Camp Brooklyn. Europe. Ity cases already have been pre- Amerlcana of various kinds, remi­ and Dale Dilts. All students, cadets four Brooklvnl •••. From left: ,fc. Loul. W... ns ••ln. C,!1. T_ San'l"ascl. Cpl. Tom VOIDI. "c. Tom K.II". pared tbere. namlD&' several . niscent of another New York. St. and young people are il,i'ited to thousand Japanese who are Louis or Chicago. / attend this meeting. ."1 photographs of the Statue of Lib- veaHng evidences of the effort by cord congratulations and gratitude. JOBYNA RALSTON ••lIent screen actress, III IIhown 8S she appeared IIlated for trial as war crlmlnais. Actual Landmarks In Lo. Angelell divorce court to testify that her actor.husband, Rich· American authorities yesterday At the request of the Assembly erty and New York's skyline. the government to make available The city of Norfolk is grateful for It is against the law in Dunn. ard Arlen, Inset. lett home seven years ago and never returned. She began full scale evacuation of an A~ea Command, the 17 representa­ Rldln&, Outflt • ,. N C to 1 dl h t 'ts Ch t every possIble need and lOY to ser- the prj vilege of participating in .. snore ou y enoug 0 wu «ranted a divorce tor de.er~lon. (Inttrn.uoIJ./) estimated 5,000 American and Bri- tive cities sent in a flood of ma­ T o I name camp near a eau Ii 1 d I ' h t th' f' k ' disturb your neighbors. Ush prisoners from about 12 camps terial-in some cases they even Thierry, San Antonia, Tex., sent a v,~ce~p:;e~r~so~n~n~e~,;a~n~~w;;I~ . s~~o=r;,;c:;-~~IS~Jn~e~w~o;r~.======~======in the Kobe-Osaka-Kyoto region i'Ulled up actual landmarks to help complete riding outfit - bridle, of southern Honshu, mairf Japan- the Army help the boys. reins, saddle, blanket and spurs . ese home island. From Brooklyn came the home plus a lariat, two deer horns and United States Third fleet prl- plate of the famous Brooklyn a Texas table cloth. soner of war recovery teams com- Dodgers, 'The Tree' tram its Bo­ Out of their own board room, )leted evacuation of some 5,800 tanical Gardens and a#ackage of the commissioners of the Dist.rict prisoners from Nagoya and Hama- sand, from Coney Island. • of Columbia sent their highly val­ matsu on the southern coast of Dirt from Oklahom~ ued, silk flag ·showing the district Honshu and from Nlig~ta on the 'So that Oklahoma City boys can seal. WH.AT ~~RY MAN KNOWS ... western coast. ' Tun their hands through it and get While the city of Cleveland went PlanS are ready for joint the feel of home," Oklahoma City all out with some irreplaceable army-navy evacuation of 3,1180 sent a gallon of dirt and, among prints and photograph~ as' well as I' prlsoners from . the Sendal area other materials, a blueprint street some very practical information on Honshu's 'eastern coast. Sen- map to permit a local man to jut about its $63,000,000 post-war, iob­ clal Is to be the coilectlon point his finger on the exact spot called providing plan for returni!,g vet­ • I ,.i , for aU northern Honllhu prlson- home. erans. " era. New York City sen tactual Enthuslastlc Aproval The most daring evacuation was street signs, one reading 'West In all the 17 cities the proj'ect of the liberation of d' group of ~03 59th Street, Columbus Circle"; an­ helping the boys was met with . I prisoners by a United States other, 'Canal Street, Bowery,' as enthusiastic approval. Said James Eighth army rescue mission of 'well as the city flag, maps of Man- W, Reed mayor of Norfolk, Va .: 24, including five nul:S~ ' which hattan and Long Island and large "It is. another of the many ·re- , , rode a Japanese troop train 365 miles in 13 hours from Yokohama ) to reach them at Kobe, in unoc­ Legion Post 17 cupied territory. The rescuers said Smith's Cafe To Open they were unmolested. To Meet Monday I While the question of war ---~' . crimes is principally a war depart­ Under, New Ownership The Roy L. Chopek Post No. 17 ment responsibility, Eighth army of the American Legion will meet Lincoln L. Loper of Seattle; Monday at 8 p. m. at Legion quar­ officers are taking steps in the Wash., has purchased Smith's Yokohama areas as prisoners ar­ ters. cafe and will re-open the cafe Bowling prospects will be ctis­ rive to supplement the work of late this month. war department personnel. No ar­ cussed and a new meeting feature Loper, a graduate of Iowa State will be intoduced. rests have yet been reported, and college has been in the restaurant no definite policy on war crimes business in Milwaukee for 10 has been announced. Reports of new contacts wUh years and in Seattle for eight Farmers Find Buying prison campS continued to pour years. Roland Smlth, former owner cif Well, bere it ill 1955 ! And Tom in buainel lor birmelf- already In all army and navy IlberaUon heading f r a real suc e . teams l)lread their activUles. the cafe. will retain ownership of Feed Corn Difficult the building. He had operated the Latest of these was word that Set him ell up with th0t!8 matured Wax Dond w bought back contact had been made by' units cafe for the past 20 years. Farmers in Johnson county are, in the 1940's-jour dollars for every t"roo we 5aved originall) I of the United states Seventh finding it difficult to buy corn fleet with a collection of l,7U Hannegan to Ask for their feeding operations ac­ Back in 1915, even, we knew it would turn out this WB). prisoners In the Mukden, Man­ Reduction in Rate cording to Emmett C. Gardner, Buying all the Bond we could. And SflVill8 them! churia, area. county extension director. Tom's a wonderful husband. And he deserves aU the credit. American warships covered by Of Domestic Air Mail Some farmers produclng Geveral carrier planes rescued 1,200 a~ied hundred head of hogs and several Well, almoM all! prisoners Wednesday from f'or­ NEW YORK ~AP)-Postmaster thousand turkeys can find scarcely mosa. They had been brought to General Robert E. Hannegan said corn enough anywhere to feed There tOO! a time-tbat WAI hack in 19 &S, too, 1 gUt the coast a few days earlier by a yesterday he would ask congress their livestock. when he needed a little help from me. I {Olm(l he'd let down daring marine major who had to reduce the domestic air mail As a resu It, some livestock will commandeered a train for their rate to five cents an ounce. be sold light and manY farmers on his Bond buying. ot only that, he a tually almo t use. "At present the rate on domes­ will cut down the number Qf sows !uggested we cash in a Bond or two to pay for something tic air mail is eight cents an bred this fall for spring farrow. we wanted ••• ounce," Hannegan said at a lunch- Blencoe Barber Dies eon commemorating the 25th an- Ninth PoUo Victim And thoL'&wher e I put my foot down! OMAHA (AP)-Charles H, Lee; niversary of the first trans-con- DES MOINES (AP)-The ninth 54, Blencoe barber, dled at a hos- tinental air mail trip. poliomeylitis victim of the year lIyOU LISTEN TO ME, Tom Lapham," 1 told hilll. "Don't pital here yesterday of a heart "This is a wartime rate, which in Des Moines was reported ye-s you know that t din: ren • between 1\ success and I ailment. His deatt} ended a part- automatically drops back to the terday to the city health depart­ the bigg nership of more than 40 years in peacetime ' rate of six cents an ment. He is Emil Arblin, 17, who failure is tbat the succes 51icJi5 to hi plans? I don't want to the barberiQg business with Ar- ounce six months after the official was removed to Iowa Lutheran be married to II. man who hasn't tbe r lution (or maybe I thur Rock of Blencoe. termination of the war. hospital. aaid 'gumption') to alack off on what he knows ia right! You're -~, not going to !labotage our future! '

JAP PRISON 'CAMP WHERE BOYINGTON wAS HELD ) I gue88 ellery husband needs a wife I' dre ing down on~ in • I - while! And thank b~.ven Tom li3tellM to me! men bitt We. kept OUl' Bonde- aud bought mor amI more of 'em! First will thing we knew, w hafl eDough 80 we began ft'~liltg secure. , TrUl That gave Tom confidence- helped him get abead. And this FEP Ire I year, enough honda matured to Jl1ake our dream come true! 1& tI Umt TOM'S A SUCCESS- yet he might have fail ed if 1 hadn't ReI !lpoken. And, of collr e, be'! forgotten. 1 wouldn't the 1 dream of reminding bim-it'll II secret between UI girl •• think after MORAL: Think of ,Your future-hang on to Jour bond!! And lions. aboU1 on buying keep more! meet kind pUsh Th Byrd Viclory Bonds • • • foote for f. ater J)O\Ie( a 30- ••• 10 have and .10 hold But! a 81 "Mal h'll The 'Daily Oct " Iowan L( Pilot I/I'Y rulI1r,·tiRlJmtnt- pr&pared Mac, This is a,t officiaZ U. , . Trr(l the 1tn.dcr auspi (',~ of 1',.I'(I.,"0·u nr pal'/ IItr n.t {/ "d WIU' AdIJer· 83 y. \ ntiS All YlIW .bOWl prllontr of war cAmp In the TokJO-Yokoham& &rea where Maj. Ore, (hPPY) well \ Boyln,ton, Marin. CorpI ace reported mllllnr 18 month. aro, wu held until Uberated by U. II. ce­ tisino Oounei!. .eupation torclI. PrIIOnt",.p:!!!ttd the 1.0, oIl b@dlnf! to direct reaclI. planel. __ . (lnc"",t;u.J). , ,