1,1945 • • ~ " -rATS, MEATS. bool< leu ••ed Ilampe Q! Ib,o.rh Ut rood 11I,. ur h AU J. KI; v ~ Ih.o.,b Z ~ Ib".r" lIepl. Hft ; A I Ib ••• , h I I I ••' Ih •• • ,h Oel. 31 . aad fl Ih.ourh KJ r Ood Ih,o'rh Nov. 10. LI Ib.ou,h QI be­ Cooler Clo nte valid iJe p'" t an' are ."d lhroulh eo. 31. /lUGAR, olarn, au , ood Ih.ou,h Au,. 81 ro. IIv. pound.. Slarnp 88 I.od S.pl. I Ib... ,b D ••• 81 for THE, DAILY', IOWAN IOWA: Falr anel eoolO'. live pound.. 8 UOB8. bo.k Ihr•• alrpl.... Iamp . J, ~. Sand . are valid Indollallolf . Iowa City's Morning News-paper - ,. ?IVE CENTS THE A 80 CJATI!D paus IOWA CITY, IOWA SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER I, 1945 TBB AIISOCU'l'I\.Q nlllS VOLUMED! NUMBER 290 =-- : = • • • Ie lela 5 at er or urren er I DDT TO BANISH FLIES. MOSQUITOS U. S. Troops Spread (onlrol WASHINGTON (AP) _ P resi- 1. Abolished the office of war our foreign affairs," President dent Truman yesterday ordered information. Truman said. S'ecretary of State Byrnes to set 2. Placed un?er ~he state ~epar t ­ At the same time he declared Navy, Marine Officers up America's tirst peacetime for- n:'e~t the foreIgn mformatlOn ~c­ lhat the United States would not In Tokyo Area eign propaganda program in ~h e bV I ~les of OW~ and of .the oH!ce "attempt to outstrip the extensive Carryon Drive ilnd growing information programs state department. of mter-AmeJ:lcan aUalrs whICh For Continu ~ d Draft First Units of Eighth School Charges · hi g th ff·. f . has operated in L3~in America. An of other nations," nor would it H ~ ad Ab o IIS n e 0 Ice 0 war m-, ". t' . l . I' f t· compete with private organizations f (' If f S t 15 ih m eflm 111 ernationa m orma IOn WASHINGTON (AP) - Th e Army Reported Cottage Manager °hrlmta Ion e. eCdl ~e t eP · , te service" was created in the depart- "in such fiel ds as news, motion t d B c e execu Ive trec e yrnes 0 ment, to operate until Dec. 31. pictures and communications." armed services sought. yesterday to Landing at Yokohama Gave 'Tip' for Riot take over part of the OW] opera- 3. Directed Secretary of Slale The intention, Truman said, is enco urage voluntary enlistments tions ov~rseas. . Byrnes to work out by the end of twofold-to assist private enter­ but kept plugging also for continu­ Y K 0 HAM A, Saturday DES Mo rMER (AP)- O. S. The aim, Truman declared, Will the year an information program prises. in spreading information ance of the draft. (AP)- nit d lates t roop in von K I ·o~. Sllp('I'int nd nt of the be to give the peoples of oth er "which he considers should be con­ abroad and to SUPPl ement them Navy and marine corps otlicers w lling numbers s too d at Eldora sla.ll' tL'uining R('hool fo!' nDti ons "a full and tair picture of ducted on a continuing basis." where necessary. told the house military committee Tokyo', nlhern W1tes today Ame:ican life and .of the aims and The long-range program un­ The future of most of OWl's that those servtyes do not beleive boys declared at Ehlora last and allied dign itaries wer ar­ pol lCICS of the Umted States gov- doubtedly will have to be ap- 9,000 employes remains undecided recruitment alone will keep them riving in Yokohama fo r tomor­ night the William n. Lawr nee, ernment." proved by congress. far the time being. up to needed strength. row's hi. tOl'ic surrender cere­ In a sweeping executive order, "The nature of present day [01'- The owr had an appropriation 25, who resigned hili position as The commutee was Informed, mony ('aturday, oited ta tetl Truman accomplished these th ings, eign relations makes it essential of $35,000,000 for the current. fi scal bowever, tha~ draft calls can be maJl!lgel' tIle school cottage al some of them revolutionary steps for the United States to maintain year which ends next June 30. Of­ cut U volunteerln, exceeds ex­ tim .) "gave the lip" which started in the conduct of American [01'- informational activities abroad as ficials said the amount to be pectaUons, and a Jolot army­ Meanwhile, Lieut. Gen Tomo': yuki YlUllashilli. in the Philip­ Wed n ~ay noon's riot and ma.ss eig__n poL'______licy: ______an integral_ part of the conduct of turned back wil! be. substantial. navy board presented a pro&,ram of proposed Induce ments for vol ­ pin radioed h will begin his e~ca p e of ] 79 hoys t.he from unteers. Their outline consisted own urrend r jonrn y tomor­ 6cl100J. British Children- , At a Glance- lat',ely of financial benertts wUh row. It WlL'l Y omlL~hita w ho dic­ Law rence, a velt'l'an of World Congress Considers special allowances lor reenlist­ tated the surrender of lhe British War II and llims If a .former ment and for lon, overseas serv­ Ilt Singapore and had vowed he Pearl Harbor Probe Ice. would crush MacArthur's Philip. iJlmate of ihe training school, A·Sad The navy meanwhile set in mo­ pines re-invaslon. bad assel'ted that conditions at Today's tion an all-out recruitment drive. INTERVIEWED In New York, Dr. Paul 1\lu11 O', lelt, and Dr. P aul The swoggering J panese gen­ the school were "as bad as those in Single Army-Navy The jOint army-navy program Lauger, two Swiss scientist. who gave DDT, the mJracle In eeUclde eral previously had said he would a Nazi prison concentration camp." Command May Result was oftered to a committee several 10 th e United States army and world-wide public heli llh, predicted not meet American commnnders 1 Ret.urn of whose members had indicated a that ome day In tbe not.-far-distant fut ure (he common housefly and until after Japan's surrender was Both he and his wife, who served From Investigations Iowan desire it possible to go on a as a matron, quit. mosq uJto will be as extinct as the dl no aur and 0 wlll the diseases Signed In Tokyo bay Sunday. sou TH AMP:r* * * ON, England I straight volunteer basis for occu­ these 1nsects now tarry. They believe tbat with prO)ler control these But. today he sold he would be 1\1'01, who returned to ELdora WIASHINGTON (AP) - Con- Allied officials a l' r i v i n g in pation armies and cut out the draft (AP)-There was a queer, quiet, J f * * d"* and other harmful Insects can be IIm1nated eln tlrely frOID the United in Kiangan, norlhern Luzon, to­ yesterday from Duluth, Minn., and somehow sad homecoming at gress edged along yest rday to- apan or sUrren er slgnmg. entirely. There was talk in ihe States In a few years. morrow ready to proceed to Ba,­ said Lawrel}ce had "waited until ward hearings of its own on Pearl ""mmittee also of asking President uio, the Philippines summer capi­ I ieft" and then "rave the tip" Southampton yesterday. Eldora superlotendent charges Truman to explain to the country tal, to sign the surrender of all for tbe break. He said Lawrence More than 70 British children, Harbor and on a single command employe with giving "tip" for why he thinks selective service is remaining Japllnese forces in the had been called several times Cor sent t.o America five years ago to to improve army-navy teamwork. riot; training school described s 1.i1J necessary. Lost Yanks Reappear Philippines. his use of barsh, disciplinary escape Gerrna,Jl bombs, returned The house postwor military pol­ as similar to Nazi prison con­ To expedite release of avia­ AmO'lcan control wu . preael­ measures and ~serled that Law­ to England-returned, some of icy committee probably will begin centration camps. tors, the navy meanwhile re­ In r • moo t h I J and lwittl, rence "lIuew he was on his way them, almost Hke strangers. duced the number of points re­ From Prison Camps Mothers and fathers crowded interviewing a string of witnesses throurh the area of Tok,o ba" out." Truman abolishes OWl, orders quired tor their dlscharr e, put­ where the United Sta&a EI&'hth Meanwhile a conference was the wharf where their ship, the within a month on legislation to peacetime foreign propaganda tlnr tbe fi&'ure at H- the same Nearly Freed army of Philippines IlberaUon held at th school last night. Those New Amsterdam, docked. Mothers put the armed forces in one de­ program. as for enlisted men. It takes 49 2,000 and fathers waved, and shouted, partment of national defense. rame was scheduled 10 beain attending inciuded Chief R. W. for all other male reserve offl­ Americans Reach movln&' In before ru.hUall In the Ger­ Nebergall of the state bureau of and eagerly searched the lines of On Pearl Harbor, it's a lillle Armed services carry on fight cers. atomic [aces to find their own. more indefinite. But n number of tor continuation of d\'aft. Ship for Hospitalization force. c rim ina I investigation, R. O. But with the idea of continuing (An NBC broadcast said that because But the you n g s t e r s stood Republican and Democratic lelld------~ ~- ~ Schultz of the attorney general's the How of new pilots into the first units of the Eighth army al­ had B office, Lieut. Col. Durwood W. Silently, almost apathetically. And ers on Capitol Hill declared con­ flee t, the navy announced it will TOKYO BAY, Saturday (AP)­ and 2, when they talked it was not of gress would sturt its own investi­ Long-lost American fighting m n, WASlllNGTON (Al') - The ready were landing at Yokohama Moss, commander of the state continue to offel' flight training to nnd that Qeneral MaCArthur, Ad­ efflden\ guard units stationed at Eldora, England, but of Newton, Mass., gation of Pearl llarbor unless Death Asked 17 and IB-year-old high school some of w)1om had been held in union involv d in II Brooklyn Germans Rochester,,N. Y. and Wyoming, Pa. court marlinls are ordered on the court de 'ision giving "supersen­ miral Nimitz Dnd others co nferred and three members of the board of graduates or students in their last almost Hving death for three formally at MacArlhur's head­ perfect control, P. F. Hopkins, E. H. Carl­ Ready to Go Back basis of reports of army and navy semester of high school or second­ lorily" to returning velerans ad­ years, appeared today in the quarters on Sunday's formal sur­ sen and David R. McCreery. "We're all ready to go back," boards of inquiry. ary school. vised its locals yesterday to ignore stream or prisoners pouring from render program.) No statements were issued fol­ said Dennis Bilkus, 15, nick-named Neither board recommended mi­ For Quisling They would get three or four Japanese camps. the ruling and promised an im­ Japanese Imperial headquarters lowing the one-hour conference, "Wharpie" because he jitterbugs litl!ry trials, and President T~u- semesters of college education be­ Some were from ships sunk in medi:lle supreme court :Ippeal. but some attending inferred it likes J'ive music. "That New man has said he doesn't intend to 0 I fore entering flight school. The PI'csident John Green of the tried to put off this !innl, humHl­ and OSL (AP)-The death pena ty the desperate, delaying actions of sting act ot a lost wor by askin, was the start of lhe investigation York is some place, brother. What order ahy. was demanded fOr VI'dkun QUI'S- youths would have to be single, the war's Cirst days and from Is­ CIO - Marine and Shipbuilding Workcrs told u news conference MacArthur for further conJ'erences at the school. a CI't y lB'rig ht rIg hts an d a ml'1 - Findings of lhe two /:>oards were ling yesterday by prosecutor An- and stay single until commissioned. lands seized by the Japanese In · thO t d d Th t' released by Truman Wednesday, his union will take tbe case di­ on the terms, but it was asserted A sweeping InvestluUo l\l of IIon 1I1gs 0 0 an see. a s naeus SchJ'oedt, who declared To preven t a surplus of Wen their Inilial victory surge. Others " along with statements by Secre- l'ccUy to Ithe highest court in nn here that the ceremony wlli go otf Iowa pena1 Institution was In th e p Iace for me. Quisling was a murderer, a thief, In anyone a&, e bracket, the navy were airmen who had been shot "I d 't thO k J' i to l'k tary of War Stimson, Secretary of said U would let out a lar,e effort to avert. further confusion on schedule. prospect last night. An Inquest on m m go ng I e a man lustful '01' power, and down over Japan. 'h " 'd h' bl k h ' d' the Navy Forrestul and Admiral ... number of aviation cadets-If over the status of servicemen com­ Meanwhile, Rusisan, French and was scheduled for sometime next It ere, sal IS ac - SIre SIS- guilty of the "most ext.ensive and Prisoners [rom a camp in the Dutch delegations were arriving week Into the death of a 11 - t H I h h Ernest E. JS.ing, commander in the cadets want to ,.0 back to Kawasaki suburb of Tokyo de­ ing bock to thcir jobs. The judge er, e en, w 0 was seven w en chief ofothe fleet. most .evil hl'gh treason Norway held Thursday that for a year by plnnc lor the surrender cere­ year-old Inmate of the train in, s he went away. ever experienced," full civilian. status. elDred they had been held thcre, a mony aboard the battleship Mis­ "I l'ked hi' Am' b t Legislative leaders, though they 'Officers said 13,000 of the army's aIter he gets au t ot service and school and two r uards at the 1 se 00 m el'lca e - Summing up the state's case, short distance [rom the prime ­ souri, and other signatories were school were suspended yesterday didn't want their names used, said 45,000 physicians will be dis­ pon steel works military target, goes back to his job a veteran is ter than in England," said An- the people want and should be ScbJ'oedt declared Quisli ng, puppet enli tl d to work ev n though a mOving in by transport ships. _ 11 the aftermath of a riot at thony B arth oomew,I who was leader of Norway under the Ger- charged by Feb. 1. while American all' raids were go­ With but a sJn,.le Incident­ the Institution Wednesday. gi ven more facts. Ing on. non-veteran with gre tel' seniority eight when he left. "We didn't mans, should be given "the most is laid oIt. t.he shootJn&" 01 a. J apanese who Gov. Robert D. Blue called for have to work so hard." seve\'e punishment of the law"- Eight Americans and 15 British rerused to halt In a resirleteel the probe by "on unbiased, disin­ prisoners, unable to seek shelter, "We told our locals not. to worry Parents Call Messar es B H W d death, General Wainwright obout the d cislon," sold Green. area-American troo,. ancl ma­ terested party or parties from out­ Down on the dock the mothers etty utton to e The \Jrosecutor charged that were killed in recent raids on the rines fanned out over the ba, side the state" alter suspending camp. "We teel sure the supr me court and fathers heard disappointedly In Ceremony Sunday Quisling began his treachery in will lhrow it ouL. The locals will area. Carl Klatt and Harold Nelson. The thot. they could not go aboard for 1939 by telling Nazi leaders that Reache~ Yokohama Some of the nearly naked, haH Troops ot the 11 th airborne divi­ act ion followed a special, two­ starved prisoners couldn·t wait for resist its application, t)uoueh hours, So they stood alon gside the CHICAGO (AP)-Betty Hutton, the invasion 01 Norway w as ne- their grievance machinery." sion sped up to the sou th bank of hour conference caJled by the gov­ ship, calling the names of new ba- 24, film actress, and Theodore S. cessary. boats to take them to hospillil the Tama river, at. the southern ernor, with members of the board For Surrender Signing ships and transports. They were The veteran involved was Abra­ bles, of 's puppies, and teU- Briskin, 27, pre sid e n t of the That he was responsible for de­ ham Fishgold. edle ot Tokyo, but observed that of control and others, ing of Uncle Reginald's getting out Revere Camera company, of Chi- portati on of more than 1,000 picked up swimming. t.emporary Ilne of demarkatJon. Meanwhile, four state guard YOKAHAMA (AP) - Lie u t. Nearly 2,000 llberaled I)l'isoners Meanwhile the decision stirred of the army. Cago, yesterday obtained a mal'- Lo Germany, 01 whom only 12 re- eCforts to hove congress Itself clar­ Associated Press correspondents companies totaling aprpoximately Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, liber- had reached the ships by last. night inside the ruined copital said that r'Dol'is , Doris!" screamed one riage license in the county clerk's turned, and that "he probably sent ated hero of Corregidor, reached lor hospitalization. ify th issue as one of its first 164 men and officers were palrol­ molher frantically as she spotted office. these men, women and children to t.he main Tokyo ,arrison was dis- Ing the school grounds armed with here last night and on landing on Comdr. Harold Stassen of Ad- tasks. her daughter in the crowd aboard The wedding will take place their deaths to please his Gennan Japanese soil declared th at "the arming. rilles and full equipment. They ship. "Doris !" Sunday at 6 p. m. in the Camellia masters." shoe is on the other foot." miral Halsey's staff, in charee of The J apanese asked that Tokyo, were called out by the governor "Mother, I di dn't recognize you," house of the Drake hotel, the That he tried to change the con- Wainwright -arrived at General the evacuation program, sold the V-J Day Proclamation its hungry population cut two­ after a second break of ni ne boys Doris shouted back. "You have Icoup le said. Federal Judge Philip stitution and introduce "govern- MacArthu,r's headquarters at the Americans would be sent home by WASHINGTON (AP) - Presl- th irds by the bomber raids that Thu.rsday, following the escape of changed so." L. SulJia n will offic il\te at the ment based on German power and supreme AWed commander's invi- plane or ship as soon as possible. dent Truman's proclamation 01 l' uined it, be placed out of bounds l79 the day before. Authorities Teal'S filled the mother's eyes. ceremony. \ I the 'fuehrer' prlnCl·p__Ie_._" ____ tation to attend Sunday's signing An estimatcd 36,000 all ied pri- V-J day will be broadcast to the to American troops during the dis­ reported "all quiet" now and ap­ of the sur render article; in Tokyo soners, 8,000 of them Americans, nation, tonight. or Sunday, under arming to avoid incidents. prehension of all except 35 ot the b were expected to be freed from tantative plans announced yester- boys. PAYS OFF 100-TO-l BET ON DATE OF WAR'S END afhin and h.agga.rd and leaning the camps in Japan. day. Hitler's Chief Depu'" P. F. Hopkins, a member of on a cane, Wamwflght. nonetheless , the board of control, which has I I, illrlsdlctlon over the Institution., ~:~e ~ sparkling eye as he reached Bill' I , U I I In Allied Hands aald "This Is not too appropriate "It is on e of the greatest. thrills a time 10 make such a eurvey at I 0 ncrease nemp oymen IIdora because of the poor cali­ of my liIe to come back to witness LONDON (AP)-The Russlan- ber of solDe or the , uards, but a the surrender," he said . B ,I, M I 0 1,1 ~ ontrolled Berlin radio reported luney is necessary." "The last surrender I attended, ene I S e'eS PPOSI Ion without amplification last night the shoe was on the other foot. It's that Martin Bormann, AdoU Hit- The death of lhe inmate, Ronilid good to be back a free man and ler's chie1 deputy in the Nazi partJ Miller, was the resul t of "a blow an American soldier wearing a gun who faces war crimes charges, "I, on the hend," Hardin County Coro­ again." WASHINGTON. (AP) - With committee who didn't want his in Allied hands." ner E. H. Biersborn announced Wainwright said he was fe eling claims ror unemployment com- names mentioned predicted that The terse announcement Id not after an autopsy. It. was Miller's much better and that while he pensation climbing, a bill to let measure would command scarcely say exactly Where Bormann wu death , earli er attributed to heart had lost consider able weight he the federal government ante up haH a dozen votes out of n pos- or what official announced his ar- dilation 0 fter n day of dtsciplinary work in the hot sun, that Assist­ would recover quickly. more m 0 n e y for the jobless sible 21. And a backer of the bill rest. ant Superintendent Darrell T. He had flown {rom Mukden, in bumped into more opposition yes- said privately nO/ more tban 6 of A few hours before the broad- Brown ca ll ed n factor in the riot. Manchuria, where he had been terday on Capitol Hill. the 24 members of the ways and cast Associated Press Correspond- The governor said both Klatt h ~ ld a prisoner of w ~ r , to Chung- The social security board re- means committee would support it.. ent 'Charles Chamberlain reported and Nelson admlt.ted "excessive" kmg, thence t.o Mantia. ported 960,913 claims had been While the finance committee from Field Marshal Sir Bernard , diaciplinary measures. Klatt, Blue turned in by the close of last was gettilig the opposition side, L. Montgomery's Hamburg head­ Rid, admitted striking Miller with • • • week. They included nearly 600,- the ways and means committee quarters that "British military elr- a blackj ack, and Nelson was "in­ Ain't This Just I 000 new ones (!led in the week. heard R. J . Thomas of Det roit, c\es believe that if he (Bormann) \rolved" in the use ot a leather •I Too Oi.gustin'? ended Aug. 26. Jobless war work- president of the United Automo- is a prisoner he Is in the Russian .trap on the boy, the governor 1ers swelled the seven-day total to bile Workers (CIO) urge expan- zone." added. Awfully sorry, but It's the same nearly double that of any previous sion of unemployment benefit pay- The fact that Bormann's name At Eldora, Klatt claimed . Miller old story again . No rain, no re­ week. m"ents. appeared on the first Jist of Nazll fiflll hit him with two chairs and liet from the heat. And there isn't Now it remains to be seen what "The 2,500,000 workers who to be tried as war crlmlnalt at was picking up a third choir "when a doggone thing that we can do will be done about tiding the idle made up lhe productive force of Nuernberg next month has "led ] Clipped him." about it. There was some thun­ over until they find new pobs. aircrMt and automobile industries to the assumption that he is in Klatt clalme he l urrered a derstorm activity in this area yes­ Pending in bot.h the senate fi- a year and a half ago," he said, "is Allied hands," Chamberlain said. frutured leU .rIb In a lCulfie terday; you cquld see lightning all nance and house ways and means now shrinking to approximately with Mille r, and exhlbltl!d around last night. But no rllin commitlees Is legislation President 700,000." • Suicide Boats AHackeci 111'111_ on his left Ie&, and 'hl,h. then and no rain coming in the Truman and many 01 his subordi- Thomas said his oifice had been SYDNEY, Saturday (AP)­ ,clatl claimed the altercation immediate future. Guess we'll just nates want. It would add to state deluged with protests from work­ Three Japanese suicide boats, at­ with Miller occurred after he have to sweat it out. unemployment compensation pay- ers who had been denied unem­ tempting to escape from HOD' (Klatt) told Miller he was going The mercury had a nice trip ments, which vary widely, enollgh ployment compe,nsa tlon because Kong's Picnic bay, were attacked on disciplinary detail because it BAOK: IN JULY Lieu&' J. J. J' Cooke of Baltimore, Md., bet UOO 10 $1 that the war would not be over b, yesterday: from a low paint of 72 federal money to give the jobless they wouldn't take jobs unrelated by Britilh aircraft, a British Pa­ had been determined he WIlS one 8.)1&, I, a ..re bet-he tho.... ht The l1eu~nant 101t, but U's one bet he'. happy to pa, oft .. 100 one­ dearees all the way up to the 94 up to $25 a week for 26 weeks. to their experience and at less cilic fleet communique announced today. The attacks were effective. of til. boys plannlne Ii break. dollar bUll chan,e handl aboard I J)attop In Uie Pacific. Unlt~ 8tatea DaV1 photo, ----- p\ark! But a member of the finance than haU their former pay. .. • PAGE TWO THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA' CITY, - IOWA SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1,-184& Q Naval Might and History Sanla Fe-YPro jed "iHE 'MOON IS ON THE WAr-.Ir" Swiss Observe 654th OfFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN OHWARR ..... Disclosure Thursday that the POWER IS VITAL IN A WAH­ Remains Secret Wi ~~ ll~MKI(Ot1RE Anniversary; Move Japanese navy could have mus­ if only to carry men, supplies and Deep INOMDfRfUL '.'. tered only one seaworthy major planes. S41(/~~ warship against the Allied fleet JajllUl'. defeat waa the most Of Atom Development 4-4( / Into Japan's Embassy )n the last days of the war pro­ crullhln&' III -hlaory. From a OI'Y~.I1 vides the answer to the fallacy third-ranldlll' Il&vy, the Oed (FIf&ll or Slx ArUclel) , . By JANE EADS Vol. XXI. No. %&Z8 saturday, September I, 1", that our victory was due to the waa reduced to the point where By JACK STINNETT A.P Newsfeatures Writer atomie bomb alone, It couldn't even cbalJen,e a (r. "'onaaUoa r ..arcUn, date. beJond, UtIt eclleda...... WASHINGTON-Of the three -,., W ASIIlNGTON-'l'he Swiss here r...... a&IeDt .. til, ..noe of the Pre.ldabl. 01. VlplW.) The have been lamentlng smaU power. main projects connected with observed the 654lh birthday an- that they could have continued Only one major ship remained, atomic bomb production, the least nl versary of their con! deralion by tne fight except for our powerful and that ship-a cruiser-was moving into the Japanese em- known, even now, IS what the bossy. GEMERAL NOTICES new weapon, But, they wail, damaaed on the day surrender inner circle refers to as the Santa Up unLiI reccntly, ncutral Swi t.z- the emperor so loved his people terms were offered. Sbe bad ONE Fe-Y project. rland represented and protected The UnieJ'slty Ubl'arles, except be dl:stributed as announced 11, that he quit for their sake. BATTERED AND CREWLESS But the facts now indicate that Not only that, but Santa Fe-Y lhe in~el'ests in Washington of bel- the medlcltl and dental libraries, the dean of the college. ' BATTLESHIP LEFT OF 12, undoubtedly will be one of the ligel'ent Germany, Italy, Vichy HARRY O. BARNIS THE WAR WOULD NOT HAVE will be closed on Monday, Sept four crew less and equally bat­ world's most closely guarded se- France and Bulgaria, . 3, Labor day, Re,lstrar BEEN PROLONGED M U C H tered carriers remaining of 22, crets until the atomic bomb is no Now the Haltan and French em- R. E. ELLSWORTH EVEN IF WE HADN'T HAD THE two heavy cruisers &floet of 19 lqnger a mystery to any nillion, bassi are opcn again, l'he Dlreol.Dr SCHEDVLJ!! ATOMIC BOMB. Our invasion and both of them unseaworthy, In a "hidden" valley near Santa American government has taken UNIVERSITY LIBRARY HOUIa fleet would have been unchal­ no light c;ruisers of 24, 26 de­ Fe, N. M., "Y" project, as it was ovcr the German interests. Bul- IOWA UNION Au,. 9-Sept. 22, 1945 lenged except by a few suicide originally called (and thus 110t gat'ian interests have been Jlqui- ~aIn reading room-Macbride stroyers of 165 and 22 submarines Only.Jhe lobby, Information desk }llanes. A few more fire raids even identified with the huge dated, The logation is still closed hajl. of 140. "Manhattan" plants in Tennessee pending a decision on sending an and director's offices will be open Periodical reading room-Lib_ and Tokyo would have been all from Aug, 9 to Sept. 10, The but destroyed, The enemy's lQsses compare and Washington state). became the envoy to lhis country. rary annex. with our own announced losses center of activity for a 600-man At the beginning of the war Union will reopen for public serv­ Government documents dep_rt­ TIle Japs were Uoked before ice Monday morning, Sept. 10, the through May 31 , 1945, of one bat­ team of the nation's arilltocrats Japan's Interest.; 'Nere in Spain's menl-Library annex. . ibe flnt ~omlo bomb eXplollld cllfeteria will l'eQpen at 11 :30 R. m. tle~hlP, five large carriers and of skilied workers and scientists. keeping. Spain withdrew because Education -phllosophy - .111,- over HIroshima. They had lost Sohools to Labs of some question of J apanese Tuesday, Sept. 11. chology library, East Hall. six lim/lll o~es. six heavy cruisers, • EAIlL Eo lIARPER their sea power. and WUh it "'!ter the buildings were up, and treatment of Spanish nationals in Monday -Frida, tqree light cruisers. 60 destroyers IMrector. low_ Unloo they bad lost control of the toe Los Alamos boys' school WIlS ille Philippines, F'or some time no 6:30 a, m,-12 M. al)d 43 submarines. Pacific. The enti of Ute empire &emodeled to house . laboratorle3 counlry was looking out for 1 p. m.-5 p. m. was In sleht. All ql "..- 10"'" however. and assembly rooms, no unskilled Japan's inlerests here. ORAJ)£S-TBR.M II. 1945 SIi-lurday Without seaborne air power w~r.e o(fllltt man.J t~ ~ new or even semi-skilled workers drew The Swiss finally :said they'd SUMMER SE"ESTI:R 6:30 a, m,-12 M. they could never have stopped corutiruc&lon. 'rbe Ja..- apo pay at Santa Fe-Y. Dr, J , Robert takc over the job on the condition Grades lor Term II of the 1945 Reserve reading room-Llbl'lry Oppenheh'l1er. tlje University of that the Japanese let them visit annex. ~r~ntJy weu ~b1e to '"'* summer semester for stUdents in the massive task .corces wbich California atom-smasher and phy- • prisoner-of-war camps in Japan the colleges of liberal arts and Closed Aug. 9-Sept. 22, 11145 very few ~ !IlI1... d1lriJw' ,tbe were sheUing and bombing their Schedules of hours lor other de­ war. sieist, hillided the scientific stllff Interpretirug the War News and Japanesc-orcupicd territory to commerce and lhe graduate 001- cities and industrie.3. Without a alld hll~ gllneral supervi:sion of this check on how well the Japanese Lege are avaUablil at the office of partmenlal libraries will be posted merchant marine and a navy to There is no doubt the atomic final Phase of atomic bomb as- * * * * * * ore observing the Geneva conven- lhe regIstrar U,pon pt' entation of on the doors of each library, protect it, THEIR PEOPLE AND bomb has revolutionized the con­ sembly and testing. H 0 fOG t t R _. tion. the student identification card. R. E. ELLSWORTH THEIR FACTORIES WERE cept of war, but for the record Col, Gerald B, Ty1er was in unger ne 0 ur rea es emammg * * * Professional cQIJeee grades will Dlrecler RAPIDLY BEING STARVED, it should be pointed out th!!t jn t;qmmand of an army detachmellt Enemies in Japan Altogether. d uri n g the war, Long before Hiroshima, the this war Slla power was one of which, 24 hours a day. in blizzatd 1------=------;1 Switzerland represented the in- and balmy weather. kept a bay- By JAMES D. WHITE rail system~its only really cr- terest of 26 belligerents in 41 other A Mystery to Yanks- ,. .laps had lost all hope of ever tl}e mt'ior dettlrmining factors . onet-spiked wall of guatds around Associated Press Staff Writer feetlve transportation neiwork- warring countries and has acted That w'as true 41 tile Atlantic, as ljiain carrying the war to the the whQle project. Human hunger is one of our Is crippled through the loss of [or the United Stales in all Axis well as t\'le i'licific. Sea power .Allies. They were on the defen­ * * * great remaining enemjes in Japan. rolling stock alld Ihe clcslructlon countric-s and occupied territories, sive, with no prospects of re­ spearheaded every adva~ce. cov­ .nto this great compound, the The hunger of the PeQple is of bridges. The guarding of belUgerent in- Who Is Tokyo Rose? turning to the offensive, e{ed ever.y Qeachilellcl ~nd kClPt war manpower commission poured obvious from the graph Ic stories All this. coupled wi t h unem- leresls means mo:stly the custo- It proved, also, that SEA the supply lines open. a steady strllam of t~le very royalty being sent back b'y American cor- dianship of property. evacuation any number of dif1erent gals who of the nation's skilled arti:sans. The respondents who are wandering ploymenl and the demobilizatiun of diplomats and checking up on By AL DOPKINO project was so "hush-hush'l thllt through Tokyo and the country of soldiers. can add up to a ter- war prisoners. YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP)­ spoke the Engllsh lan~uage . specifications aod tequirements h ri[ying" pictu[l" The Japanese The white modern Japanese em- The American fighting man has Solve Mystery to the sout . government gives every evidence Time for Dignity, Nol CalerwiHtMg. for the recruiting of these men The people in Tokyo are skinny bassy here is one of the most b au- round frustration at the end of the BLlt then she speaks the Ian. were never committed to paper, and living in shacks thrown to- of being gravely concerned, It tiful in tOWI1 and before the war long road to Japan- "Tokyo Rose" guage herself and admits sh, Des Moines Re&,lster: The Reg­ MERELY BECAUSE THEY ARE Paid Expenses gether from bomb-burned sheets continucs. it says, to evacuate was lhe scene of many large and is a frigment 0 the fertile brains works ior Domei news agency, ister has said a good many times ELEVATED TO RESPONSIBIL­ Although WMC officials couldn·t of tin roofing, The imperial hotel. the larger cities and to encourage lavish parties. The Swiss are o( the propaganda oilice, Or is fountainhead of Japanese propa­ since Dec. 7, 1941,- that our ITY. offer wage .inducements greater one of lhe more luxurious es- people to grow their own .cood doing business only in the em- she? ganda, and so boys, let us PfQceed That fe ..lnlne ch"rmer whose weaknesses of that day at Pearl There is adtniltedly a strong than absolute tops allowed by the tablishments of Japan, serves a where ever·t possible,d If bassy's offices, or chancellery, with some care. Maybe we will Harbor were, more lhan anything temptation to find "goats" and war labor· board, other monetary Can Fcc lIersc The Swiss do not do much gad- '~ntalb;lng voice used to iSSolle ferret out this mystery yet. meal of poor soup, a small fish Japan doesn·t feed hers'elf b ' . from Radio Tokyo to the accom­ else, a product o( the policies "whipping boy:s" when a great, inducements were held out-paid cake, and noodles made of Man- ding a out or entert81nlng on a My «ulde Is a Z5-year-olcl P1 transportation of the men and normally. and while part of hcr big scale, When they do enter- paniment of music made-in­ pretty enough laU fy 1111 .and attituqes which the Ameri­ proud people has been humili­ churian maize like kaffil'-corn. b d to their famHies (even back from the The masses in Tol{yo apparently inability to do so has een tr that. harness China's greatest river, th! network with a radius of some human; they. too. most of them. But "rehashing" simply to f ourth greatest on the globo. 3.000 miles, the project. planned to considered the possibilities that drub up personal victill\6 01, pub- Present plans call .cor the loca- aid 150,000,000 persons. will cost later became realities to be pre- lic scorn and wrath-nol That t ion of this great system of elec- about one billion dollars to build. posterous. MEN DO NOT 'BE- is a revelry of neurotics aI)(\ t rical power houses at the foot of If modern American methods are t he Yangtze rapids just above the used. work shou~ be compLeted CLAIRVOYANT dl¥TlUoes, and it is b~lleath us. COMI city of Ichang, some 1,200 miles wtthin live years. f rom ~he Pacif\c ocean, The significance ot modern John LucIan Savage, just retired power to the millions of people in as chief designing engineer of the China and lhe Orient is nol easily } 'THE DAILY IOWAN bureau of reclamation. United encompassed. Rice production may PubUshed every mornlni axcept Mon4q bJ S&udeDt PubUc&tloDI States dellartment of toe interior: double, and lhe use of electriC tncorporated at 126-130 Iowa avenue. Iowa CJty. 10WL drew the overall plans which call lighting and equipment may be­ f or a vast dam at the foot of the come general, raising the Masses i gorges where the wide lower above the candle-and-kerosene Board of trustee.: Wilbur SchrBmIA Kirk It Fori... A. Crall Yangtze valley begins. Additional standard of living. ~Ird, Paul R. Olson, Donald Ottine, Mu7 J¥, NMije, MU1 ~~ power projects are planned on Even more important, the dam PUrner, Karalyn Keller, Jat'k Mot.... , tributaries farther up the Y'angtl'le would hold back the Yangtze's (see map). Running deep and swift flood waters which have scourged Fred M. Pown~ Pultu.h.. at the mwn project, the river is central China from time immemor- John A. SUcbnoth, Editor Wally ~trinJhun. Ad...... 1,000 yards wIde, locked between iaL shear rock walls 1,000 feet or more How China may finance the Entered a. lecond class ~ Subacrlptloa. retee-By mall " matter at the nost.t)fflce at 10.,..' per year. by catrler. 111 C,enta in heilht. project Is the source of much eli s- Crossiqg the river at this point, cussion. Many experts believe City, Iowa, unaer the act of COD- wtek11, ., ~r 1 •• IrNl of March 2, 1871. - _. the dam woul'd be about 800 feet China cahnot "absorb" thlg colos­ The AIIOeJated Prell t, eltctll- high. aDd twenty-four 50-toot di- sal task, but others, equally version tunnels would be carved equipped to speak, say rel\ulLant TELEPHONES lively entitled to uu for republl- cation of all newt dllpatcl\el from the rock Willis for electrldty industrialization rapIdly would tdltorlal OUice ___.... _...... U92 generation, permit tl\e nation to liquidate the ,credited t9 H or ~t otherwise c Sodety Office _.__ ._ ..... __ 41~3> credited In tRIll paper and alao ;Each of these tunnels would ,expense. TillS MAY BE AN OPTICAL ILLUSION. btt& " WaWJI hew Mr. ""- at ,"",y, '""'" 118 W1I1IIIIn,; 11)Ichlp "Ur.... 60,,-. .... Bu.In.. OUice _ •• __._ ... _ 4191 the local newt publilhed hereln. hllve foul' lenerating unils-a total The Yanltze project is viewpci ""I ot 96 units-to produce 10,560,000 hy many as the "parent" unqer­ IUId Mrs. America feel about the news tlmt reconverted indu.&rllII are eraterJ, b)'lo. &Geld .... ~ elec&rlc lro... dwarf tb.e IJIWta&. ... •I SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER I, 1945 kilowatts of el~tric energy. tsJc:ing. in th. industrtaUz,a\ion of &lain Jr~klnr the . peacetime produds which vanlstlod co ...... , denl" ol"IUua, .....ve, whe (roUe an4 cavort on all "...., • • 4 i J:9rnp.dS9P, ~riJ:J·a. QrJlod China. .from the market whllp .wac: delP8~ C'lIle fint. Damanda ler tblM . ,.,..... " 1 , l.D • • ..s}.'MIDAY , SEPTEMBER 1. 1945\ THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA PAGE THR.EE 25th Anniversary for Airmen U. S. Willing Evelyn Jenkins Weds Woodrow Lambirth Army Reduces At Double Ring Ceremony in Knoxville *** *** * * * To Lei War , Clothing Needs ,

WASHINGTON (AP) - The 1\ Aid Debts Ride army yesterday announced a $265,- 000,000 redut'tion io clothing pro­ WASHINGTON (AP) - Secre­ curement and sweeping curtail­

tary of State Byrnes slated flatly ment at contracts for dehydrated c> that the United States is not seek­ potatoes, jam s, peanut butter, ing dollar payments in setllement canned salmon and California . for lend-lease. pilchards. I He said formal settlements are By Oct. I, the war department still to be worked out with 10r- said, the army will be entirely out eign governments. of the market for most of 175 lead­ Dollars for payments are not ing clothing items and virtually avaiJable "to our debtors" Byrnes out at the market as f r as wool said in a statement issued by the textiles are concerned. ulII'hter of 1\1r. and Mrs. D. W. state department late yesterday. The reduction represents about Bates, 512 N. eeond street, Mar- The statement, the department 31 per cent of the $845,000,000 &halltown, will buome the bride said, was prompted by a question worth of clothing for the army, in- of William Bo well Jr., on or Mr. based on President Truman's lend­ cluding the WAC, which was on and lUn. W. L. 8 0 "ell, 303 N. lease report at the congress Thurs­ the 1945 procurement program. Ei&'hth treet, thJ afternoon at 4 On the tood side, the army o'elock In Ibe Cenlnl Chun:h of day in which the President in ef­ ended contracts for approximately Chrl t of 1\larsJallto'Wn. The bride fect gave notice that the costs of 10,000,000 pounds of jelly, 27,000,- WlIB cradualed rrom IarshalUown lend-lease might as well be writ­ 000 pounds of peanut butter, and ~h school The CTOOm was ten off the books. 74,645,000 pounds of dehydrated c-radualed from 1anhalltown hleb Mr. Truman said the country Corp. and Mrs. Woodrow Lamblrth white potatoes and sweet potatoes. sehool a.n d attended the Unlver- had been repaid for that $42,000,- Procu.rement 01 salmon trom the II)' of Iowa wb re he Wali awn- 000,000 outlay in allied Victories, 1945 pack, the army said, Is ex- I ated with the 1f'DUL Alpba. EpsIlon in rever!ie lend-lease and in the Miss Evelyn* *Loretta * Jenkins, delphinium *and * baby * breath, with peeled to be approximately 40,- fralernlt.y. Both will attend the basis laid by lend-lease for free 000,000 pounds-less than hair the uol"erslly this year. and equitable postwar trade. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur matching flowers in her hair. Pfc. John Sellers (USMC) of guantity indicated in June esti------The question as released by the Jenkins of Knoxville, became the Chari lon, s rved as best man. mates. Requirements Cor canned Teachers Signed statement was th,s: bride of Corp. Woodrow M. Lam- Navy beer California pilchards have been re- For All But Two "In the light of the recent lend- birth ot Ottumwa, in a double The bride's mother, Mrs. Arthur duced by approximately 32,500,- lease reports, are we to assume ring ceremony, at the First Chris­ Jenkins, wore a navy blue sheer 000 pounds for the nine months Rural Schools that all lend-lease debts are to be tian church in Knoxville, at 3 with while accessories and a cor­ Irom July I, 1945, through March cancelled and the only lend-lease o'clock, Sunday, July 8. The Rev. sage ot red roses and white sweet­ 31, 1946. Te;lchers now hllve been signed settlements required are settle- Marvin Plgg officiated. peas. The groom's mother wore for all but two at J ohnson coun­ ments for shipments unused or un- Mrs. Chalmer Neal provided the sky blue crepe with matching ac­ ty's rural sehools, County Super­ delivered at the close ot the war?" nuptial music and Mrs. Herbert cessories and a corsage of tea Professor l. Cooper Intendent Fronk Snider said yes­ Bymes answered: Dixon sang, "r Love You Truly." roses and sweetpeas. terday. NOW-Not only moll but pa"ongor. go aboarel a mammoth 'our-onginoel airlinor. Soon many of tho .. "There is no justification for Floor Length Gown Following the ceremony, a re­ Most of the 104 rural schools in drv ,Ian'. will Ra.h alolla 'ho IranlConlln.ntal airway 01 300 mil •• an hour carrying 52 pan.nll'rs. that assumption. Hasty generali- I The bride, wearing a tloor length ception was held in the church Prepares Iowa History the county opened la. t Monday zations should be avoided. Noth- I gown ot white silk organza, was parlors, with 75 guests present. while the remaining 34 chool wlJl ~ ~ ~ * ing more should be read into the given in marriage by her fa ther. Weddlna- Trip open this Monday. , By LUCIA PERRIGO * * 15, 1919; the* s *cond * leg between recen.t lenp-lease report than is Her fingertip veil was held to Corporal and Mrs. Lambirth left Volume for Centennial The county uperintendent'! of­ CHICAGO - Bonfires bill zed Cleveland and New York, July I, written there. The President made place with white sweetpeas, and on a weddin~ trip to Clear Lake fice has been kept busy this week away the blackness of the night, 1919; the third leg between Omaha no statement amplifying that re- she carried a shower bouquet ,.,[ and other pomts in Iowa. Mrs. A history ot the 60 years of handing out instruction materials Burning beacons they were, bright, and San Francisco, Sept. 8, 1920. port. The report set forth factors pink roses, sweet peas and baby Lambirth will resume her work the University of Iowa pharmacy to rural teachers. County Super­ as a senior cadet nurse at the college, written by Prof. Zada M . beckoning, burnishing across the Proud Man to be considered in connection breath. intendent Snider hllJ had severol University hospital and Corporal Cooper, formerly of the college m elings with new rural school country. From coast 10 coast, the Perhaps one of the proudest men with the settlements. Those settle- Miss Colleen Jenkins attended signal of fire ran, dotting the ments are for futUre determina- her sister as maid of honor. She Lamblrth wili report to the naval of pharmacy faculty, is being pre­ teachers. who will participate in the silver tion. wore a floor iength gown, colonial base at Greal Lakes hospital, pared for distribution when the in­ darkness. anniversary show will be United's , Roaring through the shrouded in style, 01 pink embroidered or­ where he has been recovering stitution observes I ts centennial in E. Hamilton Lee, dean of all the gandy, and carried a colonial bou­ from injuries received at Iwo 1947. He's Safe sky,over head, a plane raced east­ world's pilots. He was on the ward, flying the course ot the quet of pink roses, sweet peas, blue Jima. The colume of 300 to 400 pages, original 1918 mail run between now nearly complete, gives de­ flames. New York and Wnshington; and High School Debaters Pilots were plottlnl' the new tails ot the co liege's history since today, with almost 4,000,000 miles ·its establishment In 1885. lie 01 lJJ,ht, a.nd pa.trlotlc, vJs­ of flying to his credit, he is cap­ Birth of the college of pharm­ \ou.r,- fumcl'1I with their eyes To Argue Compulsory tain on the Los Angeles-San Fran­ Local Employment Survey acy coincided with the birth of on tbe skies, were dOing thelr cisco section of United's Pacitic the profession In Towa, for the earthbound best to aid and abl!t Coast route. On Sept. 8, he and Military Training tirst legislation to govern the prac­ tile camilli' of this aa-e by flrtol' his son, Robert E. Lee, also a tice was passed in 1884. The col­ -U sections of their fields. United pilot, will fly as an honor­ Shows Need for Workers lege has been a major factor ot the Pilots of the post oflice depart­ Compulsory military training ary crew over the midcontinent wiJl be argued in 1946 by Iowa growth of pharmacy in the state. ment of the government were fly­ coast to coast rou teo In the book will be a prologue Ing through night, to prove mail high school debaters and youths E ven w h en servIcemen. an d war their former employes will return After ha.vlng pioneered the in more than 125 high schools soon and three chaplers. The Ii rst could be carried Crom San Fran­ will start research into the pros workers who lett their employ- to work and that 638 of their pre- chapter deals with the period in I cisco to New York in less than cloud route for ma.i1 carrier pos­ sibilities, the post office depa.rt­ and cons of the question. ment here to return to their old sent employes will retire, move 1885 when leaders or the Iowa 78\10 hours. Those pilots put over pharmaceutical association con­ their point, proving by daring and Olent bega. n turning such oper­ Prot. A. Craig Baird, chairman jobs, Iowa City industries w!ll away from Iowa City, return to ations over to prlva.te contractors ferred with President J . L. Pick­ in precious minutes that it could of the Iowa high school Forensic still need 625 more workers, ac­ former jobs in the community or in 1926. league, said Friday that the 1946 cording to the Chamber of Com­ ard relative to the teaching of be done. They did it in 33 hours pharmacy at the university. The topic setatement is: "Resolved, merce polltwar employment sur­ stop working for pay. and 21 minutes. Boeing Air Transport obtained department opened with a faculty that every able-bodied male citi- vey, details of which were an­ Bu Iness Expands 1t was Feb. ~, 1921, and the re­ the San Francisco to Chicago por­ of three. zen of the United States should nounced yesterday by Roscoe E. sult of that first :(light to prove THE LEES- Capl. E. Hamilton L.o, tion in competitive bidding while They then expect tnnt 625 per­ ]n 1890, better Quarters were have one year of full-time mili- Taylor, chairman of the postwnr what could be done by an all-air lo't, and hil co-pilot iOn. Ro~ort i. National Air T ran s p 0 r twas sons will be needed to fill posi­ obtained, the faculty increased to tary training before attaining the business committee. delivery of lhemail was an ap­ awarded the New York-Chicago tions required by postwar business 10 persons, and laboratory work proprlaUon of $1,250,000 by con­ section. age of 24." The number of local firms in- cockpit, 90-mile-an-hour type to expansion. Of this number, 470 was included. The third chapter l1'ess for continuing the air mail The University of Iowa will be dulled in the survey is 204. The twin - engined, 190-mile-an-hour Fare Was $400 opens in 1926 and the college later service and for lighting the route the site of the final contests in university, hospitals, retaiJ, whole­ will be positions (or men and 155 passenger and cargo airliner; fly­ Many a "tirst" has been chalked additional women will Reed to be and a staff of more than 50 per­ across ~on ti nen t. the league competition'next March sale, service, industrial and gov- ing has changed from what pilots up during the 25 years on the mid­ sons Ilnd a four-year curriculum. In 82 2/ 3 1I0un! 28, 29, and 30, Vj ith the events in- ern mental concerns are included employed. call the "seat of the pants" type continent coast to coast route. , The United States post office de­ cluding debate and discussiQn, ex- in the survey. The totnl number of When asked In the survey how to precise, scientifically planned Some of the nation's first passen­ partment completed the first air tempore speaking, oratory and in­ they expect their business will Next Year Earliest schedules; and coast to coast tran­ gers rode over it in the box-like terpretative reading. It will be rlrms reporting represents 90 per- route between the Atlantic and compare in volume with 1940, 92 sit time has been slashed from cabins of single-engined Boeing cent of the largest business firms Date for Opening Pacific on Sept. 8, 1920, and this the 41st year of league activity. and 70 percent of all esiabUsh- of the firms estimated that their three days to overnight. 40's. They paid $400 for a 32-hour business will increase (rom 8 to year :/titles throughout the country transcontinental trip, with 14 re­ Current events speaking again ments in the city. World Assembly 500 per cent. Five firms were not will observe this silver anniversary And if you think the men of tbe fuelling stops en route. Today the will play a big part in the pro- War Effects aIr/are content to call it work well so optimistic: they said that their of a service that received such a fare would be $119.10! gram. Topics will include educa- The effect of the war was not LONDON (AP)-Dr. V. K. Wel­ done, think again. Some airline tional adjustments, inflation, taxa­ business will decline from one to lington Koo, Chinese ambassador CAPT. ARTHUR W. WERMUTH, the boost by that night iUght. In 1929 multi-motored service tion, rationing, economic controls, nearly as great on Iowa City em­ Tbat first flight Just 25 years officials declare the immediate 20 percent. to Britain, said yesterday that the "one-man army of Bataon," hllll post-war prospect includes four­ came into being with tri-motored postwnr international government, ployers as on those in many ot~er early part of uext year was the been freed and will be home lOOn. ale, Sept. 8, took off from Min­ planes, while a year later United air policies, and Inter-American areas. ]n 1940 the firms reportmg N. Y., at 6:14 Ill. a.ncI engined, 300-mile-an-hour planes first possible date for the opening Word of his rescue trom Muken, eola, a. introduced the stewaraess service relationships, Professor Baird said. to the survey employed 3,790 per- didn't reach San FrancIsco till and ocean to ocean flights of nine Many Jobs Open of the United Nations general as­ Manchuria., was r celved by hI. to passengers with eight girls em­ Debate competition will be held' ~ons; at prese?! they are employ­ p. m. Sept. 11-82 2/ 3 boun and one-half hours! sembly. wile, Mrs. Jean -Wermuth, Tra­ 1:25 ployed experimentally on the San in Classes A and B, with about a Ing 4,316, an mcrease of 526 per­ later! But It was the men of vi_Ion To Local Workers Dr. Koo Is temporary chairman verse C!ly, Mich. One of the out­ Francisco-Chicago run. Now there This pioneering snail's pac e, on the rround wbo charled the dozen schools qualifying for the sons. of a committee making prepara­ standing heroes of an army of are more than 1,000 girls flying final tournament. Class A cham- Women taking the places of men compared to present day speeded­ course for the sky route, too. For The local office of the United tions to get the United Nations set dare-devlls who fought the Nip. with all the air lines, catering to pion of 1945 is Central of Sioux are responsible for this wartime States employment service an­ Up when the post oftlce department up for business. United Slates to a standstill for months betoro schedules, was due to the fact customer comfort. City, while Carrol won the Class employment increase, the survey beran to look for a likely route nounced yesle.·day that in Iowa delegate Edward R. Stettlnius is Bataan fell, Wermuth slew at that the first trllnseontinental air B title. shows. Since 1940, 173 less men lIIIIil service had to rely on planes to Ihe Pacillc, one which would World War Il only eOlPba­ City men are urgently needed to expected to take pari in sub-com­ least 136 Japs with a tommy gun The 1945-46 schedule lists Dec. have been employed and the num- AND trains, planes carrying the best serve the whole country, slzed the stra.lel'lo Importance' of work as auto mechaniCS, plumb­ mJttee meetings next week. and a rlOe. (International) 1 as the last date for filing high ber of women employed has in­ pouches in the daytime and trains they chose tbe pathway or the the coast to coast route and ers, quarry workers, sec lion hands .t nigh t. pioneers, that whloh carried the when tlle army called for 'planes school entries, and March 15 Db creased by 699. and salespeople. ~!§§§§!:i!1§§§§§~§§§§§~§§§§=:=g~~'§§ "We are in a transition period ' Fast as this schedule seemed in explorers on foot, by covered from the airlines durin&, tbe the last date for district debate, Iowa City employers who re­ .~ those days, the advantnge over a11- waa-on, by tlrst transcontinental emer&,ency da.ys of 1942, com­ oratory and extempore speaking ported to the survey anticipate in which the closing of plants and contests. Outstanding winners wJll that they will need 4,069 workers the return of veterans still do not l'811way delivery stili WaS not great teleeraph line and by first trans­ mercial companies cut their enough to warrant congressional continental hlrhway, from lea fleets In balf ~ send nylne ships be awarded eight scholarships for when the switch from war 'to provide enough skilled and un­ Support. And so the pilots of the to Ihlnlnl lea. to Uncle Sam. • four years of study at the univer- peacetime economy has been com­ skilled Jaborers," E. E. Kline, di­ post office department volunteered Out over It, soared and roared In its qUarter of a century, the sity. pleted. They calculate that 391 of rector, said yesterday. The Banks w to stage the night :flight demon­ the pioneer mall pilots in World midcontinent coast-to-coast airway stration which found eager farm­ War IDe H a v i I and planes, has grown and extended to scores ers anxious to help and pl'ove a equipped with 400-horsepower en­ of additional cities. Recent major point. gines, • capable of canying 400 additions have been extensions of 01 Iowa ,Cily Planes Gruw pOl,lnds of air mail. The first leg service into Washington, D. C., Since 1920, planes have grown ot the airway, between Chicago Hartford and Boston. Serivce is to BOYS! BOYS! . from the slngle-engined, open and Cleveland, was opened Mny be opened into Detroit soon. will be closed ------~------New Wheat Program resident Hancher­ Three-Fou rths To Stabilize Prices Of ODT Employes DIAL TODAY Monday, Sept. 3rd Now in Effect To 9bserve Birthday Will Ehd Jobs Soon 4191 tiES MOINES (AP) - Hervey CHICAGO (AP)- About three- Jluen, a member 01 the Iowa agrl- President Virgil M. Hancher will fourths of the 400 regional office cultural adJU$tment agency com- observe his 49th birthday anniver- of defense transportation employes IF YOU WANT A TOP·NOTCH hUttae, said yesterday "a new sary Tuesday as he prepares for wlll end their jobs Sept. 30, lhe j "!leat purchase program thot will his sixth year as the institution's regional ODT office announced The First Capital ••ure producers of a stabiUzed chief executive. yesterday. PAPER ROUTE --- FIND OUT price Is In eUect." President Hancher was born on A spqkesman for the agency "J'armers putting wheat under a farm near Rolle Sept. 4, 1896, said all ODT staffs in the fifth commodity ere d I \ corporation the only child of Mr. and Mrs. M. region-which includes Illinois, AT ONCE ABOUT THESE SWELL National Bank loan," Hazen explained, wlll have Ip, Hancher. His father, who died Nebraska, Iowa, Wisconsin, Min­ the option ot selling the wheat In 1928, was one of Iowa's best­ nesota, North Dakota, and South of Iowa City next .pring to the ptoductlon and known breeders of blooded live­ Dakota - would be' abolished marketing administration at 111 Btock. within 30 to 60 days. Any matters JOBS FOR F,ELLOWS ANXIOUS cent. a bushel above the appllcable ------~---­ remainini in ODT hands within loan value, le ~ charges. The Ilurchllsed by PMA as of May I, the region after Nov. 30 will be pUrchase progrllm applies to both ~946. handled at the agency's Washing- TO MAKE GOOD MONEY - ~' - fann-.tored and warehouse-stored fhe producer will be paid the ton headquarters. . wheat." difterence between (l) the pur- The spokesman added that the Iowa Stale Bank and All unredeemed farm-slored chase price and (2) the unpaid arain and ore movement division wheat on "prlt I, 1946, which Is amount of the note plus Intel'est probably would continue operating delivered to PMA by the producer throullh the date of purchase and longer than other divisions. In accordance \wlth the instruc- Inc1udlna the amount of accrued 4191- THE DAILY .101IN-4191 Trusl (0. tiona, will be purchased by PMA, unpaid warehouse charges through Milk has five or six times as and 811 ' unredeemed worehouse- the stOrBlle yeoI' under the unl- much cnlcium as is found in other ,tored wheat In this area wlll be for m ,fain atorll,e 8,reement. toods! ,

~ PA ot FOUR ----, r- THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, lOW Jl !!! ~ • ~2 SUI Athletes Die I,n Combat 'Cardinals Harr w6a 'pin R~ World War II look the lives of Sports Writers Vislt- Br Defeating Leading Cubs, 4·1 "D 12 University of Iowa major letter lJtIl men in athletics, seven of whom of 8 died in combat. according to rec­ ST. LOUIS (AP)- THe world 'Chlea,G AD afllover ords of the Hawkeye athletic de­ Eisenhower ReicR iPhillies ~!I~ champion St. Louis Cardinals, be- )1:' partment. hind two-hit pltchlhg of soutlip!tW Hack, Ib ...... 2 o 0 1 c.ttl Harry Srecheen. narrowed the Schuster·· ...... 1 o 0 o bel~ First to die was Aviation Cadet Bf WHrtMIY MAR1'IN fRobert Jones. a swimmer. who board of directors room and its gap between thl!m and the league JoHns!)n. 2b ...... 4 o b o aCel! 'Was killed in, a training plane FRANKFURT-ON-MAIN, Gllr­ size and elegance would make the leading Clilcllgo cuos to three Sailer, rl ...... 3 1 2 o IIIVII crash In Florida Feb. 8, 1942. and many, (AP)-Well, there we sat Hollywood idea of a business ty­ BOSTON (~P)-Tlie Phlllies gllm~s by wlhHlhll last hi9ht·s 1>alko, ct ...... 3 o 0 like a bunch of dopes. loolting per­ coon's offlee seem like a watch­ lIet off a three-runs blast in the opener of a four game serh!s. 4 to 1. LOwrey. It ...... 3 o 0 the last reported casualty was ~o 'I Pf~. Lieut. 'Robert Yelton, infantry. (fectly natural probably. but a man's shanty, It has orlerltal rulls sillth Inning against liill Lee' to BI!!![des Breclle,n's hurllrtk. iRe Hughes. 3b ...... 3 o 0 w.ho died in France last January. group of itinei:artt s\)orts writers over a thick carpet. with heavy defeat the Braves. 6-5. yesterday Cart!inals gave excellent fh!ldlhg Merolla. liS ...... ~ o 0 1 I does not breeze In on Gen. Dwight walnut panels between tHe huge In BOston's first major league support. t\I.Io outstahdlng Williams. c ...... 3 o 0 Two of the victims were nation­ es~eially o D. Elsehhower, slap him all the curtained windows. game since Sunday. plllYs by shortstop Marty Mlltlon. Wyse, p ...... 2 o 0 a1ly~known for their sports prow­ back and say "HI~ya kid. how's The general Quickly put us at With two out in that frame, Lee O· 0 • ess. Ens. Nile Kinnick, all-Ameri­ Hoine runs were c1outt!rl by Bltstl!r Livingston • ...... 1 o tricks?" ease by remarking he sometlml!s started the visitors on the victory Adams and Gedrge KUrowskI. can halfback and athlete of the road by passing Vince DiMaggio. It was not alone the presence of sat back and surveyed the sur­ The CUbs only run was 8 1\0lT\er Totalll ...... %11 1 I • year. 1939. died when his fighter Andy Semlnlck followed with a a great man that awed us. We roundings and wondered what the with two out Ih tHe first by out~ • 'Batted for Wyse In 9th plane crashed in the Gul! of Paria, directors would thlrik. knowing an single and DIMaggio scored when .. Batted for Hack In '9th off the coast of Venezuela, June 2, were knocked speechll!ss the mo­ fielder Ed Satllir. Tliil 1ti!d 'BIrds ment the door dtlened into the American general was sitting Vlnee Shupe dropped C h u c k 1943. After molor trouble devel­ WOrkman's low throw on Bitsy collt!'eted nine hits off Hank Wyse. St. La... , AD general's prlvate officI!. Which Is there. oped, Kinnick was iost four miles MOtt·s grounder. ,from the carrier. located in a sbrt of taBloid edition Strictly Uke an old shoe is the Sch~naienst, 'If .... 5 1 o of th!! Pentagon bullSing. the general. a ,kind of modest unas- Pblladeltthlt. :AD R H E 110pp, r! ...... 4 o 21 Lieut. Ray Walters of the naVy Drop Nits ' 1 whole bewildering layout for­ suming citizen you find In any ------,Ak' ?ams, cf' ...... 2 1 • air corps. formerly national col­ American town and like to think Daniel. llb ...... 5 0 1 0 legiate swimming sprint cham­ merly hollslng the general offices urowskl, 3b ...... 4 I I 0 ot 1. O. Farben Ihd. of as typically American. Any man Antonelli. 3b ...... 5 1 1 0 Sartders, 1b ...... 3 1 ploh. disappeared on a reconnais­ In Header, 3'" 1t 1 0 the general's officI! *as the of his stature who punctuates his Foxx, Ib ...... 4 0 0 0 3-2; O·Oea. c ...... 2 o o 0 sance fllght in th~ soulh Pacific comment with such crackl!rbarrel Triplett. If ...... 4 0 1 0 :April 13, 1942. Verbah. 2b ...... 4 o o 0 expressions as "By golly" and POWl!iJ, rf ...... 4 1 2 0 Games Mp Mlft'lon, ss ...... 3 o 1 • These arc the other men on the four "Goldarned" is being hlmslef and. Oi MaUlo, cf ., ...... 3 2 1 0 Br~tll!t!h. 'p ...... 4 o 2 0 Hawkeye gold star roll of former not putting on an act. seminick. c ...... 4 1 2 1 WASHINGTON (AP) - ErnIe athletes: 80sox and A's Naturally our visit was to pump Mantcuso. c ...... ~ ~ ~ ~ Bonham and Al Gcttel last night 1'otal...... 31 4 9 • ., ' Lieut. Bush Lamb, army ail'. him on sports and that gav!! Him Mot. ISS ...... 0 0 pitched tlie New York Yankees Chlcalio ...... 100000 OOD-! j St1rou I. P ...... 2 0 north Africa, November. 1944; within four games of {he Atrterlcllh St. Louis ...... 100 001 ~Ox-4 a chahce to let down his sparse Monteagudo ...... 1 0 1 0 league lead by beating Washing­ (track and football). hair as his interest in athletics is Karl. P ...... 0 0 0 0 - ) Lieut. V.ictor Vargon, army ail', Splil Heaeler ton's Senators twice. B to 2. LInd no pose. His career Is dotted with Mauney, p ...... 0 0 0 0 3 to 1. Mid d 1 e East. February. 1944; s~rt! etllsodes and he said as a (swimming). Alter Bonham won the first PHILADELPHIA. (AP)-Randy boy in Abilene. Kan.. If he were Totalll ...... 36 6 10 2 game before the seMon's la~gest Lieut. I r v i n Wolf. marines. Heflin pitched the aoslon Red Sox asked which he wmllti ratl\er bl!. • Batted for Sproull In 6th crowd. 30,036, Gettel shut tl1e Sl!n­ Racing Guam. July, 1944 ; (track). to a 4-2 victory In the second game presldertt or Hans Wllgnl!r. it Boston Ad R ators out until th~ ninth inning of Lieut. Harold Lind. marines, of a twi-night double-header here would have been Wagner. the nightcap. southwest Pac i f i c. Sept~mber. to give Boston an evert break after :Naturally. aiso, the general Un­ SHupe, 1b ...... 5 o o 1 1944; (baseball). the Philadelphia Athletics won thl! wrapped all the bromides about Wietelmann. 2b ...... 5 1 2 o New York AIIR R B Lieu!. Rudoiph Bolte, arm y. opener ""3. favoring spor~ and thinking they Holmes. rf ...... 4 1 2 o Roundl!P European theater, October. 1944; were here to stay. or words to Stlrnwelss. 2b ...... 5 2 2 1 The rookli! from Louisville held Aderholt. If ...... 3 o 1 Metheny, rf ...... 2 o o o (gymnastics) . the A's to five hits as the Sox lhat effect. but his statements Workffian. 3b ...... 3 1 1 ...... Stainback. cf ...... 5 2 Lieut. Sydney Story. army aif) took ativafltage of Ernie Klsh's were made in such obvious sin­ ~ Indians Down Tigers o Gil ierlwatl!r. cf ...... 2 o I Byron Nelson Keller. If ...... 5 o o ~ NEW YORK (AP)-A disquall. California. September. 1944; (blls­ muff of George Metkov[eh's fly In ceritr th~t they ca~ried weight. 1 ticatlon marred the 43rd runnlns ' Masi. c ...... 4 o o Etten. Ib .1 ...... II ketball) . the fifth with bases loaded to tie o o He said hI! ihtendt!a to push Culler. 88 ...... 4 1 2 ! With Six-Hit Hurling Grimes. 3b ...... S ! 1 of the .10,550 A.Ibany handicap Sl!rgt, Burdell GiUeard. army, o the seurt! at 2-2. The SOli tallied spdrts to tHe limit In his theaier; Lee, p .... : ...... 1 o o Crosetti. ss ...... 4 o 1 1 tor Juveniles at Belrrioht P~rk Ley t e. Philippines. November, twice again [n the seventh after that he belived Initiative ahd the Medwl<'k • ...... 1 o 1 yesterday when Mrs. Aksel Wlch­ 1944; (football). ~ Hogln Garbatk, c ...... " 1 1 8: T,. La Forest trIpled with onl! on. Of Allie Reynolds Falls' to dl!sire to excel marked a continu­ Whitcher ...... 0 1 o o ~ tield's Cable. after prevailing ill i Pfc. John McCammon. army Bonham, p ...... " o 2 8: ation of the pioh~r spirit and Hutchings, p ...... 0 o o o three-way photo finish. was set Italy. May. 1944; (track). • Boston All R .. E DETROIT (AP)-Felix Machie­ 8: made better-citizens and soldiers; Ni~man ...... 1 Totals ...... 37 S 10 "back tor a foul. F. W. Hooped o o o wlcz's second home run of the sea­ .8: Lake, ss ...... 2 1 0 0 thah the b~t thin!! ahy man can Hendrickson, p ...... b o o 1 ---:-----.,.."..-7"-"---;- Yesnow. secohd at the wire. wa! son. a three-run blast off Dizzy AI Nashville 8: Wasblnrton R B awarded the. $7,800 first money, La Forest. So ...... 4 b 1 0 do . tti dl!velap h!adt!t-Shlll is CoacH Trout. broke a 2-a11 til! in the sev- Ail E Metkovich. Ib ...... 3 9: o 0 0 some athletic team and, \hat if yoll 'totalll ...... 38 II 10 3 enth inning yesterday and enabled Case,lf ...... 5 I o E. R. Bradley's Blunt Remark Pro Grid Leagues johnson. it' ...... 4 o 9: o 0 0 leave a group of GI's alone five • Batted for Lee in 7th the Cleveland Indians to swamp NASHVILLE (AP)-Ben Hogan Myatt,2b ...... 5 o 1 o received the place and J. B. The· Lazor. rf ...... 4 () 2 II hours they have some kind of •• Ran for Medwick in 7th o all's Jono the show. Just before ,1 Culberson, cf ...... :I the Detroit Tigers 7 to 2 behind strung a closeline df birdies over Lewis, rf ...... " o 1 o 1 1 game started. ••• Batted for Hutchings in 8th Evans· ...... 0 1 .0 the finiSh. Cable bore in on nls Prepare for Battle cf ...... Allie Reynolds' six-hit twirling. Richland'S tight fairways yester- o McBride. 1 Philadelphia ...... 001 203 000- 6 Kuhel. Ib ...... 5 1 rivals and Blunt Remark appeared Newsome, 21> ...... ~ ~ () He gave boxing an exc!!~t!9nal o 3 boost. saying no other single sport Boston ...... 010 030 100-5 Cleveland AD R H E day and stepped off to a first Blnks. cf ...... 5 1 o the chief victim. Yesnow paid Steil)er, c ...... o o AII-Amecican Clubs 3 o round lead in the Nashville Open Clift. 3b ...... 3 1 2 o $21.20. Clark. p ...... 1 ~ ~ 0 promoted such sell-confidence and Cihocki. ss ...... 2 o o To Play North-South 1 1 0 that if you conquer one tear. such McDonnell- ...... 1 o Gol! tournament with a seven­ Ferrell. c ...... 2 o o '0 A crowd of 25.749 saw tttl silt Barrett. p ...... 1 o o Layne·· ...... 1 o as fear of a black eye or a bloody Weingartner. ss ...... 2 1 1 o under-par 64. o o o fUrlong dash run In 1:10 3/ 5. Divisions Next Year Zardon·" ...... 11 '() 'totals ...... _...... 0 3 6 1 nose. you cohlluer several other The Big Show Rocco. Ib ...... 4 3 2 o Nailing his shots in a fashion o o ••• Guerra, c ...... 0 o o 11 ::--______fears at the same time. such as the '------..! .F1eming. rf ...... 2 o 1 o reminiscent of his prewar tri­ Mrs. H. Haggerty's Rampart, By JERRY LISKA Philadelphia All R H E fear of going in and asking for a Kimble, ss ...... 3 o o 1 under a strong ride by Nick Jernas, CHICAGO (AP)- Girding for a NEW YORK (AP) - M a j 0 r Mackiewicz. cf ...... 2 1 1 o umphs. the 135-pound Texas wal­ Job. league standings including all Heath. If ...... 4 Haefner, p ...... 4 o o 1 Wok a nose decisiop over Rock knock-down. drag-out battle with Hall. 2b ...... 5 2 3 1 4 o loper gained a two-stroke advan­ I The general was apparently en- Clinies of Aug. 31. Meyer. 2b ...... 4 aill Farm's war strategy in thi the National Football league for Peck. rf ...... ,...... 4 1 2 o 1 o tage over the field and a six­ Totalll ...... _.. _...... S'f t D 3 o joying himself and showed no Amerlean Lea&'Ue Ross. 3b ...... 4 one mile and 70 yards miss Ameri- postwar patronage. the new All­ Estalella. cf ...... 4 o o o o o stroke edge OVet· his old rival, Ran for LewIs in 9th o signs of desiring to shoo us out. call purse, sixth and feature rac~ American conference yesterday McGhee. If ...... 3 1 Teams W L Pct. Seerey, cf. rf ...... 4 o o o Byron Nelson. o o After more than half an hour we Detroit ...... 69 53 .566 Haye:s. c ...... 3 -. Batted for Ferrell in 8th at Garden State park. announced its eight clubs will play Smith, If ...... 0 o o 1 1 o The favored Nelson lost three ... Ran for Layne in 8th () headed for the doOr under 1lur own Washington ...... 69 56 .552 Reynolds. p ...... 3 o o o strokes to par on the first two Rampart and war strategy bat­ in north-south divisions in 1946. Siebert. Ib ...... 3 o 3 St. Lou[s ...... 65 56 .537 New York ...... _.. 001 010 100-3 ~ power. stopping to exarrlihe a plc- holes and never fully recovered. tled it out from tile six-furloril Commissioner James Crowley, KeU. 3b ...... 4 o :2 New York ...... 64 56 .533 Washington ...... 000 100 001-2 left haHback of Notre Dame's Rosar, c ...... 4 o ture of Stalin that the general had Totals ...... 35 7 11 e He came scrambling in with a 70, pole to the finish line. Miss 8al­ o o received that morning bearing the Cleveland ...... 63 57 .525 S5 ...... o • Batted for Cichocki in 6th one under par, trailing a full dozen New Yorte: AD R H E ladier came in third. The winner famed Four Horsemen backfieid, Busch. 3 1 1 Chicago ...... 60 61 · .496 Christopher. p ...... 3 o inscription "to the famous strate- others. paid $4.00 and covered the dis­ presiding at the opening session of 1 1 Boston ...... 59 66 .4 72 Detroit AD R H E Stirnwelss. 2b ...... 4 1 3 Wilkins ...... 0 o gist. General of tl'l,e Armies. D. o lance in 1:44. a two-day organizational meeting, 1 o Philadelphia ...... 38 82 .317 Pressing Hogan with 66's were Metheny. rf ...... 5 o o o said the All-America would line ElsenHbWer. with very best wishes Webb, ss ...... 2 o o Herman Barron of White PlainS. -'-Stalin." National Leallle o Stainback. cf ...... 5 1 2 o ••• up as follows for sectional compe­ 'totals ...... _... 33 II 13 1 Mierkowict·" ...... 1 o o o N. Y.; temperamental Sammy Keller. II ...... 4 o 2 o Mrs. Mary Run's veteran cam­ The general looked weary and Chicago ...... 76 45 .628 paigner Mintlock won the $2,009 tition: • Ran for McGhee in 7th St. Louis ...... 7fl 49 .602 Hoover, S5 ...... 0 o o o Snead of Hot Springs, Va., and Etten. Ib ...... ~ o 1 o Boston ...... 000 000 030-3 said he wuuld reallv like to go to Rochester claiming purse by three North section-Chicago, Cleve­ BttlOklyn ...... 68 53 .562 Borom. 2b .: ...... 4 o 1 o Jimmy Johnson of Dearborn. Mich. Robinson. c ...... Ii o 1 o philadelphia ...... 602 600 4i.lx-6 the woods somewhere and sleep Cramer, cf ...... 4 1 1 lengths at Rockln!ham Park. W. land, New York and Buffalo. New York ...... 67 57 .5~0 o Then following by a stroke Grimes. 3b ...... " o o 1 for five mOnths. But he still could Greenberg, Ii ...... 4 o 2 1 1. Lurtt's Doctor Jeep was second South section - Los Angeles. Boston AB &- 8 It flash that COl'! tagious grin. Pittsburgh ...... 67 62 .519 o came Bob Cochran, st. Louis ama~ Croseiti, ss ...... " o o Miami, Fla.; San Francisco. and a Cummbine. rf ...... 4 o o o teur. and Sammy Byrd. the ex- Gettel, p ...... 3 1 1 o and Marilyn StabLl!'s Darby Ducat Boston ...... 56 68 .452 third. fourth city to be selected at the Lake,' ss ...... 4 Z 1 0 Cincinnati ...... 49 73 .402 York., Ib ...... 3 o o o baseballer from Detroit, who Maier, 3b ...... 3 1 current meeting. La. Forest. 3b ...... 5 1 3 0 Philadelphia ...... 37 87 .298 o o shared 67'5. Amateur Freddie Totals ...... 311 3 11 I With Jockey Carroll Blermal\ All teams will play on a home­ Metkovlch, Ib ...... 4' 0 1 0 PirafeS Score SiK YESTERDAY RESULTS Richards. c ...... 2 o o o Haas Jr .• of New Orleans, Nelson's uP. the six-year-old Son of Snap­ Mayo· ...... 1 l'ashhtl'tdn AD a 8. E and-home basis. playing 14 games Johnson. I( ...... 4 0 O . 0 Amertlli... Learue o o o nemesis at Memphis. tied with lock and Irish Mint brok!! on tdII Swilt. c ...... 1 o o each during the reguLar season Lazor. rf ...... > .. . 4 0 1 . 0 Cleveland 7. Detroit l! 1 Mike Demassey of Lookout Moun~ Kreevich. cf ...... 2 o o o Qhd h ld he lead over tHe sit M· Trout, p ...... 2 o 2 and the sectional champion; will Culberson. cf ...... 1 0 0 0 Runs in Two Innings Philadelphia 6-2. Baston 3-4 o tain, Tenn. Case, I! ...... 2 o o o long roul • covering the dlstallc4 McBride. d ...... 3 II :2 0 Mueller. p ...... 0 o o Il in 1: 13. and paid 3AIl. meet at the winning south city Chica,o-St. Louis, rained out () o Six players Were tied at 69. They Myatt. 2b ...... 3 o o around Christmas, Crowley said. Newsome. :!b ...... 0 () 0 New York 3-3, Washington 2-1 McHale" ...... 1 o were Harold (Jug) McSpaden of 1 To Defeal Reds, 6-5 Overmire. p ...... 0 o o o !.Jew!s, rf ...... '" 1 o Tl)e Nationa i league operates on Holln. c ...... 4 1 l 0 Nt&lonal I.e ...... e o Sanford. Me.; Jimmy Hines of Kuh~l, Ib ...... " o 2 o gave 80m insight irHd tht! ~ro§­ Philadelphia 6. Boston 5 Chicago; Vic Ghezzi 01 Deal. N . J.; an east-west secUonal basis. Heflin. Ii ...... 4 () 1 0 CINCINNATI (AP)-The Pitts- Tbtals ...... 32 2 6 1 Binks. If-cf ...... 3 o o o peds of lhe Badger gridlroil t8lh Pointing out that the league has St. Louis 4, Chicago I Johnny Bulla of Atlanta; George Layne, 3b ...... 3 2 1 aUrgh Pirates scored six runs in • Batted for Richatds in 6th o for this fall. and lndlcal.'e8 lOiit'e contracted the services of more T.::.o_' ta_I_I_ ..._ .. _... _ ... _ .. _ ... _ .. __._ .. _S'7__ '__ l _t_O the first two innings of la:st night·s Pittsburgh 6. Cincinnati 5 .. Batted for Mueller in 7th Lowe of Clearwater. Fla.. and Guerra. c ...... 3 o I o players who are apt to make tillIr Henry Ransom of Houston. Tex, S5 ...... than 150 players and has booked Phtladelplilt. AD Il 8 II jartie with Cincinrtatl and tHen ••• Bated for Webb in 7th Kimble. 3 o o o names known on midwest l06tllaJ) playing sites for every member, turned back a Redleg nlly in the Cleveland ...... 000 101 302-7 Sharing 70 with Nelson were Leon­ Niggeling, p ...... 2 o o o fields dUring the 1945 seAson. Crowley declared: Hall, 2b ...... 3 1 i 0 eilhth to win 6-6. . Today's Games Detroit ...... _..... 000 110 000-2 ard Dodson of Sal'! Franciscol Clift...... 1 o o o the defensive play of the ~ad­ "The All-America league has a Peck. r{ ...... 2 1 1 0 Pittsburgh pounded starter Joe Amateur Frank Stranahan of To- PieretU. p ...... 0 o o o ger grldders far outshadowed t1i'fr foptball now and it's blown up," McGhee. If ...... 2 o 0 0 Bdwman from the mound in tl'll! NEW YORK (AP) - Probable ledo, Ohio. and Al Nelson of Ponte o!fensl ve prowess, as usually Is \1\. The remark was in 'retort to a Kish, It-rf ...... , 3 0 t f[nt inning with five hits thllt pitchers for today's major league Ve~ra. Fla. 1'111&18 ...... _...... 3. 1 • 1 sllulIUort al this period in giid­ o games. (Won and lost records 'in comment made iast winter by Estalella. cl ...... 3 o 0 0 were good for three runs, and then Trippi' Voted • Batted for NlggeUng hi 8th Iron preparation. Both teams wen parentheses. ) Commissioner Elmer Layden of Siebert. 15 ...... o 2 (j collected three more from his sUt- New York ...... ,.100 odIl dH-3 100 oIten oft In their timing, a fac­ American te..... e the National Football league when Kell. 3h ...... 4 o 0 0 cessor, Earl Harrlst. in the second ~hisox-Browns Game Washington ...... 000 000 001-1 lor so e sentlal to the success of the All-America tossed a peace St. Louis at Chicago-West (3-3) George. c ...... 3 o 0 0 frame. vs. Lee (13-9) . Rained Out In First the SIUh.ldreher type ot att~acl feeler. Busch. liB ..: ...... 3 000 Most Yaluable Nev~hheless, 'the game dla ,tV Cleveland at De£roit - FeUer The Nationalleague. · ~ayden as­ '.F10res p ...... 2 000 Plltsburrh Half of Second Inning Badger Squid Has lhe Badger coaching staff a - serted, couldn't talk cooperation (2-0) vs. NewhOuser (21-8) Smith· ...... 1 010 Gionfriddo, cf ...... 5 2 0 New_York at Washington-Ruf- ~ H I C AGO (AP) - S erg t. t Idea ot the problems that iIlej with a rival that "doesn't even ~ Berry. p ...... 0 000 Barrett. rf ...... 5 2 1 0 fin., (5-1) va. Niggeling (6-9) Charles Trippi. speedy, trip-ham­ CHICAGO (AP)- Heavy rains 'Lot of Work ihead ill face this fall. [or the boys iii owh a football, y~t." Layden also Russell, If ...... 3 1 1 0 Boston at Philadelphia (night) mer halfback from Georgia. was last night interrupted the White the summer practice game will was a member of thl! F'our HorSl!­ TbtIIa ...... :...... Z 5 1 Salkeld. c ...... 1 0 1 0 -Heflin (2-8) vs. Black (3-8) voted the most valuable player to Sox' game with thil Louis MADISON. WI . (Specilll)­ urldoubtedty form the nucleus f~ men backfield, st. • Batted for P10res ~n 8th Lopez. c ...... 2 0 1 0 NaUonal I.e..... e the College All-Stars in their 19~ Browns after only ah [nlling and W~ hive a lot of hard work..ahe.~ . the sqllad when It reports l or iii Cro'wley added that he would Boslon ...... 000 020 20(}-4 tillott, 3b ...... 4 0 2 0 Brooklyn at New York-Seats 7 defeat by the Green Bay Packers orte-hal! of play. necessltatirlg 8 The sttUad Is not as far advanced regular tall drills starting on Sal­ open a league o.fflce in the Em­ Philadelphia ...... 000 200 000-2 Gustine, ss ...... 3 . 0 G 0 (6-5) vs. Voiselle (13-11) or before 92,753 fans at Soldier field poslponement that will be played as the; were a yl!ar alo." wer!! the urday. September 1. The veteran pire StQI- A church hour for kinder­ Wednesday, the usual weekday tween the holLr$ of 2 and 5 o'clock which the Rev. Jobn Bertram wiU icy, granted the monthly raise to sets needed to bring home the vic­ i~rten is maintained during the services will not be held as the every afternoon except Sundays speak on "The Good Works of offset the loss in earniJliS from torious arl"ies, or to supply forees ~orship service for the conve~­ rector must be at the AnnUal and legal hoU4ays. Christians." dropping of the bonus, which is occupying Germany and Japan. itmce of p"rents with small chil­ Clergy conferetlce at Ames MOb- Sunday from 9 to 9:15 over 11 :30 a. m. The Lutheran hour effective Oct. 1. The action aUects The maritime board Was wjlTned dren. dry day through Wednesday of this station WHO, Des Moines, there over stallon WMT. Waterloo, or at 100,000 seamen in carlO oper- by unioniats at a ~earing last week Participating churches: Baptist, weelc. will be a transcribed program 1 p. m. over station KXEL, Water- ations. that men were leaving the service cp'rJ.st)JLn, Con~'etational, Method­ Thw·sday. 10 a. m . Red Cross from the Mother church in Boston, 100. Since the WLB's decision mlght rapidly and wol\ld not return to ist ~.nd Prespyterian. sewlng group. Mass. Tuesday, 8 p. m. St. PaUl's mean an inc~ase In costs to the sea because of ptospective loss of Each of the participating chur­ 7:30 p . m., religiOUS education I -- Council meeting. war IIhi pping administration, it the bonus. ches in the wUOIl services will ', Cbvrclt Which the pastor will speak on capitalized at $SO,poG, yesterdll,Y day, the maritime war emergency was disappoint in, and "let the 1·08 McLean street 222 E. Jeffersou street The Rev. t.eonard J. Brurman "Spirit Versus Flesh." No com- filed IIrticles of incorporation with board cut ~ia, and ye4terday an- seamen down." RI. Rev. Ms". Carl B. ~e",~ .., munion on Hlis SundlQ'. the secreta,ry of state's o(1ice. DOUOCed. simultaneously with the In a messa,e sent to NMU cen­ 1The Rev. J. Walter McEleney pastor 7:30 p. m. Regulllr meeting 01 The following off~ers, all resi- WLB order, the ellmination of the ters In all ports, Curran said: The Rev. J. Ryan Belser, Ph. D The Rev. J. W. Sc:lmllta, Sunday masses at 5:45, 8:30 the Luther league. dents of Cedar Rapids, we~ listed: bonus al!.ot{ether, eitbe. in lbe At- "We will con\lOl~e to struggle asalata .., ~r a.nd 10 a. m. Thursday, 2:30 p. m. R.ciUlar Paul H. HlJSton, pre!lident and iaDtic DC Paci(ic. for a 40-hour week, time an(i a Sunday ma s~es at 6, 7:30, 9 and meeting of the Ladies aid society, tr«asurer; William J. Barron, vice- lInqerneath the government's half for overtime, and double time We~kday masses at 7 and 8 a. m. HI:15 a. m. First F\riday l1lasses at 5:451, Friday, 10 a. m. Regional m-:et- pl'Gsldent ,and John W. Beck, sec- COllCeI"ted action wal the danger {or Sundays throuSh our regular Daily masses at 6:aO and 7:S--- 8:,0 News, The Dally Iowan Freedom of Opportunity 8:.5 Program Calendar (W{Y!T) 8 : ~5 SeL:vice Reports Barn Dance Party (WHO) 9:80 Afler Breaktast Colfee Nazarene Hour (KXEL) 9:.5 News, The Dally Iowan 9:15 Dai~ Iowan Want Ads 10:00 What's Happening in Hol­ Assignment Home (WMT) . jywood Barn Dance Party (WHO) BLONDIE CHIC YOUNG 10:15 Yesterday's Musical Fa­ Nazarene Hour (KXEL) , vorites 10:30 The Bookshelf 9:30 11:00 Freedom Forum ASsignment Home (WMT) FOR SHOES OF MERIT 'Il:30 Democracy's Tribute to a Saddle Serenade (WHO) Democratic Queen (Salute to Hayloft Hoedown (KXEL) Queen Wilhelmina) 9:45 AND STYLE 11:35 Platter Chats Frank Singiser News (WMT) 11:40 On lhe Home Front Barn Dance JubUee (WHO) 1I:45 Farm Flashes Hayloft Hoedown (KXEL) Visit Strub's Mezzanine 12:00 Rhythm Rambles 10:~O 12:30 News, The Dally Iowan Doug Grant News (WMT) 2nd Floor 12:45 Chesler Bowles Sunset Corners Frolic (WHO) 1:00 Musical Chats H. R. Gross & the News (KXEL) Air Conditioned %:fO News, The Daily Iowan 10:15 2:10 Sign Off Parade 01 Features (WMT) News, M. L. Nelsen (WHO) HETWORK ffiGHLIGHTS H. R. Gross &the News (KXEL) HELP WANTED 6:00 19:30 CLASSIFIED Musical Scoreboard (WMT) WANTED: Washy/oman. Call 4191. Sammy Kllye's Band (WMT) RA1ECARt HENRY Cljff Carl & CO. (WHO) Judy Canova Show (WaO) INSTRUCTION CARL ANDERSO!l Econom ic Development Program Waldorf Astoria Orchstra (KXEL) CASH RATE (KXEL) I or I da;y..- Dancing Lesson_ballroom, bal­ 6:15 10C per line per let, tap. Dial 7218. MimI. Youde Anti-Saloon League (WMT) 10:45 daT Sammy Kaye's Band (WMT) I conaecutive da,._ Wurlu, .'l;in Pan Alley (WHO) 7e per Ilne per cIa7 ·H. R. Gross & the News (KXEL) Judy Canova Show (WHO) WHERE TO 8UY Waldorf Astori\l Orchestrjl II c..'OnJeCUtiv, da1..- rt 6:30 lie per line per da1 A.!;nerican in the Air (WMT) (KXEL) 11:00 1 month- News, M. L. Nelsen (WHO) 4c per line per da, 'J,UMBING AND IDATlNll Swinging on the Golden Gate News (WMT) News; Music (WHO) -FJiure II worda to line­ &Qen W.r.m.n.... (KXEL) Vlnfmum Ad-2 Un.. 6:45 News (KXEL) I.AREW CO. AlJl1erican in the Air (WMT) 11:15 227 E. W..... J>bODe HI1 Barn Dance Carnival (WHO) CLASSIFIED DISPLAY OU the Rllcord (W~T) I!OC col. Inch Eye Witness News (KXEL) F\' a~e MiSters Orchestra '5,~ per monU. 7:00 (WHO) qr Jaycee Radio Week (WMT) Y011 are .Iwa,.. weloome, Rev. Pietsch's Hour (KXEL) All Want A~ Cuh 111 Advance 'HUs and Misses (WHO) and PRICES are low.' the 11:30 P»ablo ~ Dail7 Iowan Bua)­ & 'Gilbert Sullivan Festival Off the Record (WMT) nell olftee daily until II p.m. (KXEL) News, Garry Lenhart (WHO) '7:15 Rev. Pietsch's Hour (K.XEL) CocellatlonB must be called 111 DRUG SHOP Jaycee Radio Week (WMT) II p. JUts and Misses (WHO) 1l:~ betPre m. ..Dtlb~. for one !ncottfJd Gilbert & Sullivan Festival Of! the Record (WMT) ~OD oD,l,. (KXEL) Music; News (WHO) '7:30 Dance Orchestra (KXEL) Viva America (WMT) 12:1111 , .... BtJk.d Qoocll Fantasies from LJgnts Out Press News (WMT) DIAl. 4191 riel cUte ar,.. (WHO) I Sustain the Wings (WHO) aol1l .1IIrIeI Man from G-2 (KXEL) Word of Lile Hour (,KXEL) 8p.ciGZ Ord.r, .WAm'SD City lakery BATAAN TO TOKYO·· THE VICTOR IIJ"W~ ...... EXP;ER~EtfCED l\lwn mower ",.ants work. Phone 7969. WANTED TO RENr MAHER BROS. TRANSFER WANTED - P~}lMANENT RESI- for Efflcient Furnlture ~ DENT desires to rent 5 or 6 room AUt About Our house in desirable locatlon. Em­ W AlIDROB£ SERVICB ROOM AND BOARD ployed as agent, Rock Island Lines. DIAL - 9696 - DIAL bial 11:601. :; : b GIVE. TIllS PIKE. 10 TII~AT ~ . I WITI-l ill' BLACK. M cHil HE. GAVE MEA NO ORGAN AW 'l WAI>JT 10 'PAY~M, BACK. Win! ANOTI-l~R. Fl · .' •• , •• MY PET BEAR. AlCliES IEM WI4!;N ~EY SWIM • BACK. IN SIlALLER.. WATE.P-!

Cqll V.our Want Ads to The Daily Iowan I -:, ..... GINIRAL 0' THI ARM!IS DOUOLAI MA.CARTHUR, .upre~ AlII\!~ •• ., 0 : Commander-In-chlt't of l~ occup)'INr to"\U W J4Pan, ¥Jlhown _l!9,ve BUSINESS OFfICf. <'t>O In a "victory portrait" made on the porch of hl8 olllee In Manila ~ore he led the force~ Into Japan. The Bataan.to-TOllYo victor no.\\' bill a new addru.- for hle headqllarter. are .In Yokpham\l on 1\1._ PHONE 4191 Jill rnlUnland, , • • . . "(#"#.,"0.,,,"_11

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PAGE SIX THE DAILY IOWAtN. IOWA CITY. JOWA SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER If 1945 = Firing to Frying Vinson Believes • Ten Hogs Are School Heads 'Announce O'p:ening Dates U. S. Should Find Subject of p,titio Jobs for All Ten black and belted HamPlh~ tt------. hogs weighing approximately I,, ' usa Features W ASJJlNGTON (AP) - Addi­ poUhds each and valued at . ,~ tional indorsements of full em­ are the subject of a petition for I 'Public, Parochial Teachers Have Former Nanking University Professor Dancing, Pianists ployment legislation plied up yes­ terday as wllness nfter witness writ of replevin and jud&melt Classes to Begin . Postwar J k PrediCts 'Social C:onsciousness' :for China Eleven Snack Bar hostesses and argued that prlvale ent rprise filed In district court Ye3lerda,. seven senior hostesses will be on lllone cannot provent an economic John P. Zahner, plalntlU, COlI. hand to serve guests at the USO tailspin. tends thn tRoy Malatek, dlfencJ. A greater "social consciousness" serve as mercenaries In a war- .Soon After Labor Day as this weekend. Cookies for the ent, "wrongfully detains ~ --__ but not outright communIsm 'was lord's army. Secretory of tho Treasury Fred weekend will be furnished by the Vinson said the government should slon" of the contested ho,s, Zahne, • The teacher's postwar task will predicted lor China by Prof. C. The rise of Chinese students and Post

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. .' SURELY YOU CAN 'IN THESE!

No m.tt.r what the palmi.t may tell you come true i. to buy more War Bond •• Remember - tl~. , R/u. In ten ahort ,ea,. ••• no matter what you may read in the .tara­ Put more and more or your money into you'll be lIellinl back four dollar. for eVI!), you can be absolutely certain of one thin, in three you've put into "E" Bond •• them-the but !nuei/ment In the world. And your future. .. " once you've boul/ht War Bonda-hold onto You couldn't a.k for. beUer, or wiHr. wa, And that'. what your War Bond, promiae them till they mature. to help your.elf to • happier future I yo~ ju.t ten .hort year•• ' i" . Whether you want to buy. plane, or tend your IOn to colleae, or take a ,ood lonll Vlea· . ..' tion, the be.t 'way to make your future plan WAR BONDS ••• TO HAVE AND TO .HOLD !.

f • LACKING NONI O. THI -DASH and zip that characterlzed.... theJr InV&llona aero.. the PaciJIe, tl\';' Leathernecks (top-photo) ot the ·U. S. Fourth Marine regiment splash &abore on Futtlu &aid P.nlnlw,. THE DAILY IOWAN " In tull batUe dre.. , to be the Ar.t Marine. to "hit the beach" on Nlppon'l home Ibor... Onc. mUnt .1 to deltroy our landing tore.. , the I'I,lD emplacement (lower pboto) at Futtlu tort ,et. • thorou,h ,. , (- , . ,o~i-ov!r by the 1IIarIn.. , y. B. J4ari!1e QorP.I rl!:llop'~.!oa. - , _ Clllt.rllltiog/ So"IId,,,ot~). t,.:.. . .: . T~i, '8 a:n official U.g. l'rea.s1Lry advf,lrtl:sement--prI'2)("'I'(ill11dl'r a1181)ires of TreuslII'Y Dl'1Jorlmot,t .o1Jel IVaI' Advc1'tising Council , I •,