JST 27, 193~.

by the diplo.. ,. !3\lrllu, Homo r This German World War Widow, FaCing A New Conflict, Reminisces .... e British source no discussion at By EDWIN SHANKE warplane which had been shot place in her within the last 24 the Czechs before them, would new rationing slip and tries to Friends call on friends, to com- new German rationing law places Six pair of stockinlS. BERLIN, Aug. 28 (AP)-Tears down. hours is remarkable - and she bow before the mighty German figure out how she can best take Henderson and fort each other, to talk over no restriction on the amount of Six handkerchiefs. tilled her eyes and trickled down She is a proud woman, proud is typical ot millions of German nation. ' care of her family. chances 01 war or peace. clothing a certain woman may Men have to get along with two md deems Ger. upon the steel fragment in her I Now she, like the others, She doesn't come back with "We went through one World possess, but she must be almost suits and three shirts. But what excessive the hand. of the fighting ability of the Ger- men and women today. watches tight-lipped. Around the much from the store. main as critical Moved by the tenseness of the man soldier and convinced t.h~y It is a change all the more corner automobiles and motor- "Imaline! A thimbleful of war and haven't recovered yet," down to the extremity of "not might be more embarrasing to world situation, this German don't come any better. remarkable because the nazi-in­ cycles are being commandeered. mitk," she exclaJms. one says, "and now we face an- having a single thing to wear" them is the fact that they are I wing indicatiollJl World war widow was showing The war took her husband. And spired press and the government­ In the school yard, hundreds of She watches silently as crews other. God, I hope cveryone call before she may buy something permitted only one stick of shav- abinet would be some of the mementoes of the now, she knows, if war comes controlled radio is working over­ horses are being examined and ot men with acetylene torches get together again as they did new. ing soap far five months. ; of war to IC­ last war - mementoes which she agllin the chances are fifty-fifty tlme to show that the "calm of assigned to the front. cut down iron fences. last year and settle it over the A woman in Germany. under Two pair of shoes will suffice ional ministries had found in the garden of her it will take her "war baby." the German people is unbreak­ She rushes past 'signs reading steps like these have awakened conference table." the present regulatiOns, may not for both men and women. leaders, among home In western Germany, close He is somewhere on the Polish able." "To the nearest air shelter" to the German people - almost buy anything new if she has: Men however are favored by :hurchill, World to the French frontier. front. It required Germany's exten­ the grocery, to the milk and dairy overnight - to the danger of Ratiom Two dresses. the government in that they are lead has been There were rusty shell splinters "If I only knew where,". she sive mobiliza tion to shake her products store, to the butcher alJd another war. Three sets of underwear. permitted to possess two pair of discussed. which had falien to the ground; says. full faith in another bloodless to the market. I It has made them nervous and For Germam Two nightshirts or pajamas. winter gloves whereas a woman a battered part of an English. The change which has taken Victory, in which the Poles, as In her hand she crushes the irritable. - BERLIN, Aug. 28 (AP)- The Two petticoats. has to get along with one pair.

Looking Forward Partly Cloudy Hawkeye FootbaUers Impatient 10WA-Par1ly oloudY. IO&Uered . For Openlnr Of Prae*tce mowers tomorrow and In extreme R! (See Story, Pare 4) .outhwe.t today; warmer today. Iowa City's . Morning Newspaper

FIVE CENTS IOWA Cl'J'Y, IOWA TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1939 The AJIIIOdtotod P""•• VOLUME XXXVlll NUMBER 187

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Britain, Fuehrer Come to Showdown * * * * * * . * * * * * * • * * * * * * * * * * * * Britain Gives Reich World Awaits His Move Fuehrer, Sir Nevile Henderson Four Alternatives Ta.lk Situation Over in Berlin; j Hitler Must Poles Declare Atrocity Tales Postpone Any Are Unfounded Session Outcome Not Revealed

Polish Decision WASHINGTON, Aug. 28 (AP) .------~------The Polish embassy ~ade pub­ Announcement More· Tense Hours of Waiting-Peace Two Workers British Diplomacy lic tonight a communique from the Warsaw government declaring Or War-Are Order of Day for Poland Demands Negotiation that "all the recently reported To ,Be Made Burned Fatally WARSAW, Aug. 28 (AP) - stories of atrocities" against Ger­ Hitler apparently had closed the Of Dispute--Or Wat'! Poland, with Its western frontler wly,to Qireci; negotiations between mans in Poland "are completely From london! facing Germany blockaded, set Beilin and Warsaw, and that ar· In ExplOSIon DON, Aug, 29 (Tuesday) unfounded." . bitration would not be acceptable. herself tonight for ' more tense (AP) - Gre!)t Britain's "show- It accused the German govern­ Poland is firm against German down" message to Adolf Hitler ment of trying to "convert imag­ Event's Serious'ness hours, of waiting for peace or war threats of force and insists the Third Rock Island signals from Berlin or London. was said authoritatively today to inary stories into an asset to be natioh's sovel'eienty must be re­ Man Severely Hurt contain a flat warning that a Ger- Impresses Germans; Informed sources expressed be­ spected, it was asserted. man threat to Polish independence used for purposes of diplomatic New Talks Probable lief that the Polish government The Polish ministry of com· In DHnois Accident would find G rea t Britain and pressure." pinned most of its hopes that war munications said the entire fron­ France "fighting from the first ------­ By ALVIN STEINKOPF could be averted upon the possi­ tier was now "hermetically seal· ROCK ISLAND, Ill., Aug. 28 day on the side of Poland." bility that mediation of the Ger­ ed" from the German side. High­ (AP)-Two men were burned to BERLIN, Aug. 29 (Tuesday) man demands for Danzig and way, railway and air traHic was Strictest sllence was maintained death and a third perh;lps burned about other angles of the com· Sweetheart (AP) - Adolf Hitler and the Brit· Pomorze (the P 0 Ii s h Corridor) cut off. munication handed the German ish ambassador to Germany, Sir might be arranged througn a third Tension mounted in Warsaw. A fatally in an explosion and flro chancellor in Berlin last night by Admits He Nevile Henderson, discussed the party. number of foreigners, including in one of the 2,000,000-gallon wa­ the British Ambassador Nevile grave possibility of war in Europe These sources said that Adolf Americans left the capital. ter tanks under construction at Henderson. Its general tone was for an hour and 20 minutes last described in usually reliable quar­ Killed' Girl night at the reich's chancellery, the Rock Island reservoir this ters, however, liS aimed at putting but left the world completely in French People See Possibility; afternoon. a definite end to European uncer· the dark as to the nature of their The dead are: tainties - preferably by negotia­ Clergyman Father CHANCELLOR HITLER talks. Glen Heckman, 744 24th street, tion but by war it Hitler should 'Solicitated' Murder Henderson flew fro m London Of Lengthy Crisis Negotiations Rock Island. choose that course. and presented to Hitler written Robert Raiche, 212 Gaines Four Choloes .. According to Confession Premier Mussolini Stands By, conclusions from the British gov­ stteet, Davenport. The communication, which was ernment on the violent quarrel PARIS, Aug. 28 (AP)- Diplo­ the crisis from dragging out per­ in reply to one received Irom Hit· matic circles considered tonigh t haps for weeks. The injured man is Sam u e I CAMDEN, N. J., Aug. 28 (AP) between Germany and Poland Lyons, 112 Pershinl avenue. ler last Saturday, also was believ­ over the Danzig and Polish Corri- that Britain's new note to Ger- The British note, they indicated, -County Prosecutor Samuel P. Ready To Mediate in Crisis . Davenport. It is doubtlul it he ed in circles close to the govern­ Orlando announced today that a dor issues. many might have paved the way was designed to maneuver HiUer will recover, doctors said. ment to have re.tated British pol­ former sweetheart signed a state­ After presenting the note from for long negotiations for. ~ettle­ into a technical and legal argu­ icy In terms which left Hitler ment he killed 18-year-old Wanda FORTUNATE TURKEY the British government, Hender- ment of the European crISIs. ment over his position as outlined The fire started with an ex­ these choices: Dworecki at the "solicitation" of son made verblll explanations. I After ~'eading th~ text of the to Premier Daladier and Prime plosion at 1 p.m., which occurred 1. ArI'M to nerotlate tbe Gel'­ the gtrl's father, a Camden clergy- It was reporied that neither the reply whIch the British rushed to Minister Chamberlain in personal in tar wit),. which the workmel'l Illan-PoUBh dilpute In a peace· man. Kansas Thanksgiving fuehrer nor the ambassador bang· Berlin, French ctrcles said that messages. were waterproofing the lnside of fill atmosphere and In a man­ Both the sweeheart, Peter Shew­ ed the door on further discussions only a "lightning stroke" by Hit­ The note was described by a the tank, which has a diameter ner rlvlnc aIIunnce tIIat Po­ To Be Nov. 30 chuk, 21, and the father, the Rev. ROME, Aug, 28 (AP) -Premier at their historic meetinllast night. ler against Poland would keep (See FRENCH, Page 6) of 135 feet. land's Independence w 0 u 1 d be Walter Dworecki, 42, will be reapected both tn any lettle­ . TOPEKA, Kans., Aug. 28 (AP) Mussolini stood by tonight ready No Co~ent . ------.------charged with murder tomorrow, to mediate the diplomatic conflict But there-was absolutely no of­ men& and alterward. ~Thanksgiving in Kansas will Orlando said. between Berlin and London over ficial or even reasonably well in· Z. Enter alto ID~ ne,o&latloDl Air Raids-An Approaching Threat The gi'Cl's body, beaten and be observed on Nov, 30, not­ Germany's demands on Poland. tormed comment to support this with Great Britain and other strangled, was found Aug. 8 In withstanding the announced in­ slightly optimistic report. powers lor a reneral polUloal Italian newspapers reported that a clump of weeds beside a little tention of President Roosevelt "a govemment," which they did The Germans 'contented them­ .... economic .eUlement which used roadway on the outskirts of selves with an official news would restore normal oondltloDl and several state governors to not name, had appealed to the Camden-a corsage of roses pin­ Duce to intervene. At the same agency report which merely stated 10 Europe, allow na&loDl tarre ned to her coat. proclaim a date one week earlier that Sir Nevile had vilited the aDd .mall to Uve In peace, and time they reported an "increased Prosecutor Orlando said "the this year as a stimulus to bus­ doubt of a negotiated solution." fuehrer and thai the ampassador 'lDBure Germ a. n y reasonable father hoped to obtain the insur­ iness. di5Cu~ed the Polish Germln quar­ "Uvill&' IPace" for her people. Fascists said some change in ance on the girl, which would In a statement announcing his positions might result from the rel after handing over the British 3. POIItpone &IIY decision on amount to between $5,000 and $6,- note. action on the date today, Gov. British reply to Adolf Hitler'. hili clalnui ..alut Poland lor 000 with indemnity." peace proposals to London. Eur· , The aritish embassy here said retum of Daul6 &lid tile Polilh Mi.S5 Dworecki's death came Payne Ratner described the ope, they said, was awaiting an that any comment would have to Corridor ta Germany. just four months after a previous president's plan as a "crumb to "act of mediation," but they warn­ come from the foreign oUice in 4. Or lace Ute combined forON' attempt on her life. She was ab­ business men." . and added that ed that "no bright h0P.e" should London. of Great Britain, France and Po­ ducted in April by two men, "In Kansas we do not destroy be drawn from the prelM!ht wait­ Henderson rode alone to the land if he aUemDta to ,",Ule beaten, choked, and left uncon­ ing period. chancellery, slttlni upright and in theae elahu br foree. tradition merely to gain news­ scious on a country road 25 miles paper headlines." Virginio Gayda, .Jho often a ,eriou. mood as hla bli black What Hitler's choice would be, from home. speaks the mind of Mus80lini, limousine paS¥d the silent crowd no one pretended to know. But Shewchuk, a one-time boarder wrote in II Giornale D'Italia that which had gathered hours before the swift tempo of Britain's mili· at the lirl's home, was the object Il Duce could not perform the in front of Hitler's official resi­ tary preparations showed she 'Was of a wide search after her murder. D. M. Truckers "miracle" of averting war alone. dence in the Wilhelmstraase. preparing for the worst. ,He s\tl'rendered to police Saturday He said any appeal for mediation There was 1\0 cbeeriOi for either PubIJcaUon of outUnes of both In Cheater, Pa., his home town. must entail "understandlOi and Hitler or the ambassador. Hitler's communication and the Liter, the clergyman was taken Union Seeks respect" o~ the needs, and rilhta The quiet Germans. all of whom reply which was llQwn to Berlin Into custody. ' of all. 1I0f certlflcates yesterday ration· late today by Sir Nevile Hender­ Alter hours of questioninl. Express Group Hitler has demanded Danzig and ing food on a wartime basIB, were IOn, British amba.. ador to Ger- prosecutor Orlando announced late the Polish Corridor. ·~ Italy has deeply impressed by the serious­ 1IlIUl,y, had been expected tonight. today: been demanding, as a need arid ness of the event. But official aources laid it now "Statements have been made by DES MOINES, Aug. 28 (AP)­ right, advantages in Tunisia, the Pia.. Unannounced Wil unlikely that they would be both admitting the scheme which Truck union ofticials tonight Suez canal and Jibuti. Tbe Britisb embusy, wbere made public before tomorrow at resulted in the killing of the yoWll moved to obtain jurisdiction OVt·~ everyone was in a IJOber mood, the earUest. lady. The murder was committed the railway express company could say nothlni of the ambas· Another 8ellion by Peter at the solicitation of the drivers union here after an ex­ Swiss M obili:;e sador'. plans. Parliament wu 8ummoned tor father. press truck today delivered two But immediately after arriving another emer,ency session tomor· "Shewchuk was to receive the loads of merchandise through a 100,000 Men at the Templehof airport, in the row to hear .peeches by Prime sum ot '100, but the tather never picket line to the Younker Bro­ II,re of landinl Il,hts laat nilbt, Mlnl.ter Chamberlain and leaders paid." thers store. For Protection Sir Nevile asked that hla plane be of the opposItion. Carl Keul of the 'Des Moines kept in readinea for a return to But unleu there has been some Truckers union said he had Jiled BERNE, Switzerland, Au, 28 LOndon, poaibly tocia)', reaponse from a.tUn by that time. Fvley &0 Ire.... the jurisdiction demand with the (AP)-Switzerlandmobllized 10Oj- At the airport be wa. amlUnl '!'he prime mlnllter was expected CORK, (AP)- POItmaster Gen­ American Federation of Labor and 000 troops as a covering squad and compoaed. He was mOlt ser· deaJ cautiously with the ex­ eral James A. Farley, on a vaca­ that a representative of the team­ for her frontiers today In case of lous when he went to the chancel­ of communicatlons. tion In Europe, said he would sters interna tiona) orianlzation European war and at the same lerY. feuon for thl. was .aid in spend several days In Ireland de­ would be here Wednesday morn- time put into effect a decree for- The hUll! doors to the court (See SHOWDOWN, Pile 6) api te the cri.la. .. inc· biddini purchases of too much food. (See MUTING, Pace a} TUE,

~AGETWO THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY TUESDAY, AUGUST, 29, 1939 tint time is trying to justify his M rrHE DAILY IOWAN position. 'LIBERTY? JUST WHAT IS THIS LIBERTY?' Published every morning ex­ Stewart Says.. TUNING IN cept Monday by student Publica­ Yet the one way in which that Spies Are Not tions Incorporated at 126 - 130 might best be done, by negotiat­ As Dangerous with D. Mac Showers Iowa avenue, Iowa City, Iowa. ing, Hitler bas refused to do. As Saboteurs "Why?" is a signi1icant question. A'LEC TEMPLETON'S "Mr. District Attorney." He'l! Board of Trustees: Frank L. By CHARLES P. STEWART .impressions of Rudy Vallee characterize tough lcs. Mott, Oills K. Pation, Ewen M. Unc~e Sa~'s sl.euths are having I and a revue of popular lmpres­ MacEwen, Kirk H. Porier, George Since the German reich firs! ~ glorJo~s time ?ust now chasing ~ions including Carole Lombard Mr. DIstrJet A ttorney'll filii love trlanl'le problem In tbe ellt. Dunn, John Evans, Edward Hoag, took possession. of the Sudeten­ mternatlonal spIes all over the ' United States and our insular an old phonogl'aph record and rent series of broadcast. will be Donald Dodge, Frederick Loomis. lands of Czechoslovakla, with the possessions. Ol'dinarJly this coun- fI lady ballad singel' will highlight heard tonight Ilt 8 u'olock uver the Mrs. 1 Fred M. Pownall, Publisher try worries very much less about the weekly Templeton show tonight NBC-Red network when "Rllcut exception of telephone calls to Witness" III draJlU't1zed. Loea] Thomas F. Ryan, Mussolini and the members ot bis spies' activities than old world at. 7:30 over the NBC-Red nel­ countries do. However, dispatches work. In Ch Business Manager own. staff, diplomats have scur­ MURDERS, BOMBINGS James Fox, Editor say espionage agents are perfectly ried to Hitler- never has Hitler rampant in Europe at present, EtIn.a O'Dell will sln8' "Moon ...and poisoned candy all leave Plans their trail of mystery 101' the D, Entered as second class mail gone to them with his demands. owing to the strained state of in­ Love" and "[ Never Knew." Tem­ conventi A. to solve. Ray Johnson, aSSisted matter at the postoflice at Iowa Much has been written of: the ter - governmental relationships pleton's swlngphony will be orary v. by Eleanor Silver, Maurice Frank. which y City, Iowa, under the act at can· type of man HelT Hitler may be, there. And evidently we're as "Sweet Sue" and he'll playa. med­ ley composed of "Jll&h and Low," lin, Jerry Lessel' Ilnd pAul Stewart rowan tress at March 2, 1879. hut the most obvious indication much entitled to a bad case of will be heard under Ed Byron's spy jitters as anybody is. "Dancing in the D rk" a.nd "This announe of his power as a diplomat rests Is It," a. new Dietz- cluvartz. direction. tce and Subscription rates-By mail, $5 The quest lor snoopers into in this one fact. Hitler has not of the I per year; by carrier, 15 cents our military, naval and miscel­ gone to !he world with his de­ RACHMANINOFF'S Ed Byron, producer 0' "Mr. pital st weekly, $5 per year. laneously defensive secrets is de­ District AttorneY," Is otferlll8' $75 mands-the world has come to ."Prelude in C sharp minor" the grou The Associated P.·ess is exclu· scribed as extending from Alaska will :J1so be played by the pian­ for any two-page plot accepted Two 1 him. EgOistic, Single-tracked, ex­ to Puerto Rico, from the north­ for a. Mr. D. A. broadcast. .1vely entitled to use for republi­ plosive, Hitler heretofore, like a ist. Billy Mills' orchestro will be cation of all news dispatches eastern corner of Maine to the heard. credited to it or not otherwise stubborn child, has got his way Gulf of California, from the Ca­ "JUMPIN' JIVE," with the least possl ble effort to ... a swing tune, will get a mu­ credited in this paper and also nadian borde!' to the Panama An orchestra. leader, II. radio the local news published herein. himself. canal, from the Pacific coast to critic and a song-writer will re­ sical workout by Johnny Green Again today, the world is going Hawaii and on to the Philippines veal their secret ambition to and his orchestra as 11 feature at TELEPHONES to Hitler, but Hitler, as never be­ and even down into Latin Amer­ OIL the "Johnny Pres nts" show over JWUertal Otrlce ...... _.. .4192 l\[~rt Lewis "n I II ad the fore, isn't getting his way. Nevile ica-on account of the Monroe Chance" over the NBC-Blue net­ the NBC-Red network this even­ Society Edi&or ...... _ .. 4193 ing at G o'clock. Bualnetl Office ...... _...... 4191 Henderson has flown back and doctrine. work tonight at 8 o'clock. forth to the German fuehrer, but Director J. Edgar Hoover of the TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1939 the middle name of Britain is no' federal bureau of investigation is TIlEY ARE Other numbers are "Listen to longer "Munich." in charge of the campaign. Aid­ ,Shep Ficlds, cfC'ator of Rip­ the Mackin&' Bird," embelJlsbed ing the F. B, 1. are the army and pling Rhythm; Marty Lewis, all vocally by the wlltJ' Fourteen; "I'm orry for Myself" SUng by We Con,ide~ What must be Hitler's personal nayy intelligence divisions, the editor of Radio Guide mug should noury the houslOf Sl'rvice wh.n the only alternative is war? they are, alJd here alain there is was contaminatep by flies. and typhoid were water bO'l'ne, plnces and many slips OCcur which army posts, our shipyards, our reading "ooms In Mocbl'id hall ( xt. 275) of the chon, In ad­ Certainly no doubts can remain The water. looked all right; it af the bacteriologists insisted, both allow typhoid to get into the humor in the midst of grim pos- smelt all right. Nobody could tell defenses generally. They've been and library annex wllJ be open dr ss irnmediolE'ly. concerning the fact that Hitler sibilities. good water from bad water. The cordially invited to ride in our Monday through Friduy from 8:30 All land! dj who expect to doel/n't want war, by his own ad­ 1. France, disturbed by the IC- farmer would show a glass of 5COTT'S SCRAPBOOK R. J. Scott' newest airships. As brother :l,m. to 12 noon. ond J't'om 1 to 5 keep tud n t roome-rs for the tlrst mislion. tion of her would-be friend, thll\ water ' fI;om his well. It sparkled craftsmen, .our militury folk have p.m . Qnd Saturday hom 8:30 n.m. Um this y liT and whos rooms St. Anne's Those who listened to H. V. C::oviet Union, has been curtailing in the sunshine-clear as a c:r:y­ laId 'em everything they could to 12 noon. hove not b n pr vlously opprov­ church will Kaltenborn from London soon communistic activity in F,rance stal. No taste, no odor or stagna­ lhink of - and the attaches have Special hours for d porlmen­ C'd should clIll thl' housi ng aervlce bridge party after Hitler had dispatched his to the right and to the left. tion, No, sir-nobody could tell reciprocated. lal libraries will b po. ted on til' (ext. 275) at once . The public is refusal to negotiate in a letter to . 2. Japan, a big one-third of the him that was infected. Yet, there Is this spying? Not so you doors. ROBEH.'f E, RIENOW, Premier Daladier of France had Rome-Berlin-Tokyo axis, likewiee GRACF. VAN WORMER, Mrs. O. L. t('OA.!", could notice it. H's diplomacy. o n of M n. brought home to them certain disturbed, has not only made cab­ axis is< now a Berlin axis, shift­ IN Acting director of libraries the member, ~ 'ilM-(L£.""''' But the guy who gets his slurt chanlea In Hitler's attitudes dur­ inet changes on the way tQ be­ inl rapidly away from plumb. out of nn easily aVailable book PO.D. Readln, In German clUb (It 8 ing the past few days. coming a "splendid isolationist," In short, the bee that buzzed I~ DIs<."~II'91~ For tht' b n Iit of gruduul stu­ Evans slr NO"(' t.y K~ in any public Ilbral'y is a spy if In the first place, said Kalten­ but thel'e have been reports that so merrily in Hitler's bonnet seems dents in other fields d ~irln, to DR!SS, auf he tries to market it. born, Hitler never befO'l'e i'\as writ­ certain Japanese hOltllities against to have backed into the fuehrer's I'm not defending spying. satisfy the languag rI!Qult ments '1 - III All xDminnllons will b ,Iv n any other country that takes the In J'oom 104, Scha rr r hull. ried on with other diplomats has tl1ey've been deliverinl to such such in~rest been apparent --(ME. Pi.l8~'c $clloou. tl,'ouble to read the newspap rs. been. brief, emphatic. sectors. throUlUlout the world over Eur­ CIt' --1IIL drinking water or food. In Mon­ Landladies Notice tenborn, is different than the Hit­ the axis, while not verbally dIs­ As we said in the beginning, NMIOIoI $ 74.31 To"- "1$ f.l"·Jc:.-"ION Pf.R 'lIAR. , treal, in the summer of 1927, the All lnndl dies xpectlng to keep ler of five days ago. Here is a turbed by Hitler's actions, at least even. as this is read, war may ""I> ~,,-,\ <;R.OWK-UP 1$ SIIPPO$iJ) raw milk was allowed to be dis­ student roomel's this y IJ1' and German leader who is beginning hl1sn't had mucl) to say, and there have I1'IlIterialized. That remains '1"0 p"Y "&0111' f."5 fol<- tributed without adequate pas­ whose rooms huve b n approved to l'ealize that what "he considers ha~ been talk that MU9Solini may a question. -mIS PLlRJ'oSF- teurization. Over 5,000 cases of should list their room vtlcunci II to be right and just is not con­ give Count Ciano, his foreian But from the turmOil, we qan typhoid developed .in six months. at the housing service ornc , Old lle(\ruUo1\&~ w\mm\\\I sidered right and just" by the representative son-in-law, a bit of conclude at least one thing-~t- ~ The only sure method of preven­ Capitol, on r beCor Au". 25 . '1'h f\ \lthou aw\mtt.\l\& ti\Jcl rest of the world. Here Is a man chastisement because of his al­ ler, the irresistible force in Eur- ! tion Is for ellch pel'son to acquir Vacuncies r port d oft r tll t d t will b op n fol' T I'ea\\_ 1n whom doubts have begun to IndJvidual immunity by typhoid mllY not app ar on th Ii \ u S'd swimming from 2 1I.m. to fl:-' leged pro-nazi activities. ope, has at last met what appears vaccine. Three doses ol'e given al by students who are seeking p.m . dally durlni the lhree-wt8 be applI'rent. Here is a man who It would seem that what forrn­ to be an immovable object. about five-day inteL'vals. SchOol rooms. Rtudy p >dod. hal belWl to hesitate, who for the ETly was a Rome-Berlin-Tokyo AnI! the fuehrer is surprised! children should especiaUy have Alllandl:ldies whoee room hav D. A. this protection. been approvec} previously bu.t who TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1939 TIllE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY PAGE THREE ST 29, 1939 : -- Meeting of Women's Chemical Group Begins Here Tomorrow .. , Air J'iew of Moose Picnic- Plans Revealed 'Wait-Let's Look at the Birdie' TODAY WITH I Wilma Jeffen, lie'l! wsm For Triennial 1 •i Edward K yvig TODAY'S WGRLIGHTS National Affair "Vacation Adventures in the Wed Sunday West" is the subject that Syl­ vanus J . Ebert will discuss on the Mrs. Evelyn Cook, 7: 15 program, Vacation Adventur­ Eighty Gu Is ";1 Local Pre ident, ing. Entertained At In Charge of PJan NEWS Story City Mlair Plans for the triennial national concernln, the European In the garden of the home of ' convention of Iota Sigma Pi, hon­ crisis and 'he rest of the world her mother in Story City Sunday. orary women's chemical sociely, Is brought to lIstellers over WSUI wh ich will be held here tomor­ on The Dally Iowan of the AIr at 4 p.m., Wilma leHen, daugh­ row and Thursday, have been broadcasts. Up to minute news ter of Mrs. Katherine JeLlen, be­ announced by the local commit­ will be broadcast at 8:30 a.m.. ('ame the bride of Edward Ky­ tee and by Dr. Genevieve Slearns 12:30, 5:50, and 8:45 p.m. "ig, on of Mrs. Ellen Kyvig, 309 of the universily childl'el1's hos­ N. Capitol street. pital staff, national president of The bride wore nn Empire style . Is Your Child Ready For white gown lashioned with a long the group. ' School? A question that is im­ Two luncheon sessions at the train. Her tulle veil, which was Jefferson hotel, business meetings portant to ali parents sending cdged with Ince, fell trom a and discussion groups at lhe children to school this fall will Duchess cap. She carried a prayer I be answered on the Iowa Stale book, a bouquet of Kilarney roses chemistry auditorium and a din­ Medical society program at 7 :45 ner tomorrow evening at the and a white point lace handker­ tonight. This week's talk was Palisades and Thursday evening chief which her mother carried written by Dr. Arnold N. Smythe ai her wedding. at the Amana colonies are sched­ of Des Moines. uled. Arlene Jetren, sister 01 the bride, was maid-or-honor. She About 5d delegates are expected to attend. They will represent wore a blue lace and tulle gown University Women's association with dubonnet trimming and ac­ "Ll8ten to the University of Cincinnati, the will present the first in a. series Some 800 members of the fami­ from a Muscatine concession firm, sions on the midway, shown here lies of the Loyal Order of Moose a day of entertainment was pro- at the lake shore trom the air, cessories. Her colonial corsage embellished Universily of Washington, the of four broadcasts torucht at 8. was of salmon gladiolus and dark Fourteen; lJni versily of California, Stanford, . The program wUl tell of tbe work in Iowa City and surrounding vided, wit.h basket lunches at were a merry-go-round, a ferris towns attended a picnic at Lake noon and games, raCC3 and other wheel, small automobiles and a red roses. SUhg by Southern California, lhe Univer­ of the association, especially tbat The two bridesmaids, Gene­ Macbride Sunday, sponsored by entertainment during the after- photograph gallery, while pop Kite" With sity of Colorado, lhe University In which freshmen ,will be in­ vieve Nordskog of Cedar Falls of Denver, the University of Ne­ terested. The program will be the local chapter. With amuse­ noon, and a dance in the eve-I and popcorn stdnds provided for ning. Included among the conces- appetites and thirst. and Evelyn Malianger of New braska, the UniverSity of Kan­ directed by Helen Focht, coun.selor menls fo r the children rented Orleans, La., cousins of the sas. of the dean of women. '" '" '" '" '" '" ------. . '" '" '" '" '" ...... bride, wore similar gowns of ap- . Iowa State college, the Univer­ . .> ricot net with dubonnet acces­ sity of Minnesola, lhe UniVersity 'Round and 'Round- United States sories. They also carried I!olonial ' of Illinois, the University of Indi­ TODAY'S PROGRAM bouquets. ana, the University of Texas, 8-Morning chapel. Preceding and aller the cere­ Western Reserve university, Penn But small Debbie Sidwell was Sidwell, are spending the week 8:15-Manhattan concert band. Keeps Contact mony nuptial music was pl!lyed State college, Gcorgetown univer­ apparently mOTe interested in visiti ng in the home of their S;30-Daily Iowan of the Air. by a string quartet. Mrs. Alvin , slly, the University of Michigan why brolher Eddie was smiling grandmother, Mrs. E. H. Sidwell, 8:40-Morning melodies. During Crisis Haag sang "I Love You Truly" and lhe local Iridium chapter when the cameraman snapped 220 River street. The Roland Sid­ 8:50-Service reports. and "Oh, Promise Me." which will serve as a hostess this picture. The children with wells, who live in Philadelphia, 9-Homemaker's forum. Eighty guests and the mem- _ group. their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Pa., arrived in Iowa City Sunday. 9:50 - Program calendar and Pre ident Roo evelt bel'S of the bridal party were Mrs. Evelyn Cook, local presi­ wea ther report. enlerlained at a reception in the ' dent, is in charge of convention 1G-Homemaker's forum. Cancels Trip To garden of the home of the bride's arrangements. Dorothy Stingel' 10:15 - Yesterday's musical Hyde Park ~lale mother after the ceremony. The is in charge of lhe dinner meet­ Bertha Hughes To Be Honored favorites. couple then Jett for a wedding ings. 10 :3G-The book shelf. WASHINGTON, Aug. 28 (AP) trip to an unannounced destina- ' The national oHicers include By Mrs. Vernon LUc.li at Tea ll-Concert hall selections. -A close and apparently contin- lion. On their ret.urn they will besides Dr. Stearns, Marian 11 :15-Travel radio service. make their home in Estherville . Cleaveland of Cleveland, Ohio, • 11 :30-Melody mart. uous exchange of crisis lnforma· where Mr. Kyvlg will teach national vice - president; Agnes Utah librarian St. Wenceslaus Group 11:50-Farm flashes. tion between this and other gov- speech in the Estherville junior . Fay Morgan of Berkeley, Cal., 12 noon-Rhythm rambles. ernments was revealed today by coliege. national hi storian; E. Sanderson Will Be Guest Enter-tains Tomorrow 12;SO-Dally Iowan of the Air. Secretary Hull, while the con· Mrs. Kyvig was graduated trom . "Tune­ Radford of Seattle, Wash., na­ This Afternoon 12:35-Service reports. Hnued seriousness of the situation St.ephens college in Columbia, Mo., week .,0 tional secretary; Alice Biesler of The members of the Ladies 5:45-0rgan melodies. compelled President Roosevelt to and the university, where she St. Paul, national treasurer, and 5;50-Daily Iowan or the Air. also received her M.A. For the the si,­ Honoring Bertha Hughes, for- club of St. Wenceslaus church defer a trip to Hyde Park. Mrs. Hazel Fehlmann of Boulder, 6-Dinner hour program. past two years she has been his Wire, merly of Iowa City, who is now will entertain at a public card In response to press conference Col., national editor. 7-Children's hour, the land of teaching in the Fl. Madison high ' and Anee university librarian at the Uni­ party lomorrow at 2:15 p.m. in questions, Hull said the Washing­ trartle. the church parlors. Bridge and the story book. school. She is a mcmber of \'ersity of Utah in Logan. Utah, ton government had pursued its Gamma Phi Beta sorority. and who is visiting in the home euchre will be played. 7:15-Vacation adventuring. usual policy. American diplomatic J. Concannon, The group was also hostess at 7:30-Evening musicale. Mr. Kyvig attended 10 cal of her sisler, Mildred Hughes, 30 representatives have sought and schools and was graduated trom' N. Van Buren street, Mrs. J. a bridge and euchre party yes­ 7:45-Iowa state medical so- received important information, he the university. During lhe past Vcrnon Luck will entertain at a terday aHernoon at the church. ciety program. said, and have been queried by F. Miller Wed year he held a Rockefeller fel- ' lea this afternoon from 2 to 4: 8--University women's associa- foreign officials for data on what o'clock in her home, 933 River Fred Hambrechts tion program. America has been doing. iowship in radio here at the uni- · Univer ity Graduates street. 8:15-Alburo of artists. BobbY Davis, son of Mr. and :1:rs. the midway at the affair, Bobby The secretary emphasized that versity while he did advanced ' To Live in Keokuk; A pink and white color scheme Have Second Son 8:3G-Sportstime. Miles Davis, of Iowa City, didn't was handed tickets as he entered this procedure in no way entailed work loward his Ph.D. degree. will be used in the tea table 8:45-Dally Iowan of the All'. have such a tough time with the the gate, good for rides on the the seeking or giving of American Takc Minnesota Trip decorations. Guesls will include Word has been received here of horse on the merry-go-round at ferris wheel, merry-go-round, lit- I advice in advance of action taken Phi Mu sorority sislers of Miss the birth of a son to Dr. and Mrs. Mary Ellen Walpole. Dr. Ham­ the Moose picnic at Lake Mac­ tie autos or other conceSSions, and by other powers, or any implica­ State Officials Florence E. Miller, 718 S. Du­ Fred Hambreeht of Galesburg, brecht is the son of Mrs. C. F. bride Sunday. One of a great buque street, and Judge J. A. Hughes and Mrs. Luck. calling for icc crellm, pop and lion of America's prior approval The guest lisl includes Mrs. Ill., Aug. 18. The child, who has Hambrecht, 821 Iowa avenue. The number of children who enjoyed othcr eatables at intervals. or commitment to support any Concannon of Keokuk were mar­ been named Frederick Terry, baby is the Hembrecht's second Place Catfish " ried in a quiet ceremony in thc C. W. Keyser Mrs. F. D. Francis, '" • •. • • •• * • '" • '" '" '" '" • '" '" '" '" course of action followed. Mrs. Esco Obermann, Mrs. Paul weighed nine pounds at birth. son. Mrs. C. F. Hambrecht visited The United States, Hull assert­ reclory of St. Patrick's church Mrs. Hambrecht is the former in Galesburg over the week end. yeslerday at 8:30 a.m. The Rev. Toomey, Mildred Hughes, Portia 'Going Up?' ed, has made known to other In Iowa River Patrick J. O'Reilly oHicialed. Mr. Showers, Paul and Esther Rien­ f countries the things It has said and king, both of Ciarence, Mrs. and Mrs. W. C. Chudwick, broth­ done, after it has said and done Over a thousand small channel er-in-Iaw and sister of the bridc, Frank Kinney, Mrs. Harold Mary Frances Hauser Feted them, and the same was true of callish were placed in the Iowa attcnded the couple. Monk and Hazel Chapman. actions taken by countries abroad. river at the Oity park yesterday , NBC- Afler the ceremony the bridal In answet' to one question, the morning by state conservation of·' party was entertaincd at a wed­ At Many Prenuptial Parties secretary of state said the United ficials. ding breakfast at thl! D and L A~fONG States had not suggested to any The four to eight inch catfish, ' grill. The coullll! lhen Ic!t on a Bridge Party Tonight Latin . American countries that brought here from the Mississippi wedding trip to Minn sota. They IOWA CITY they appeal to European leaders river near Lansing, will be of legal will make tbcir home in Keokuk At Chittenden Home Freshmen for the maintenance of peace. He length by next seoson, according: where the bridegroom is the judge PEOPLE To Honor Bride-Elect intimated, however, that this gov~ to officIals. I of the superior district court. Mrs. Radio Programs Aid ernment would highly approve if The fish were brought to Iowa, they should do so. City from Lansing in a truck Concannon has been secretary in Mary Frances Hauser, who will th e university buildings and Mr. and Mrs. Milo Himes of New Students which had specially constructed N[JI'mal, IlL, and theil' son, Milo wed Clark J. McGaughey Sept. 7, grounds of[jC;~, Cheap sources of synthetic r ub· steel tanks on the l'ear plaiform. Jr., visiled friends in Iowa City is being feted a t numerous pre­ Prospective University of Iowa bel' have been found in mineral The transfer was made through ' Both Judge and Mrs. Concan­ Saturday. non al'e graduates of the univer­ nuptial parties. Tonight Margaret freshmen will be aided by a oil residues.-by products of the the efforts of the Johnson County ... sity. • • • Chittenden and Bal'bara Bouch­ series, of seven radio programs petroleum process-and sulphur. Conservation club. from !;lation WSUI during which Howard Langfitl of Indianola ard will be co-hQstcssC,l; at a bridge was a business visitor in Iowa City university leaders will talk infor­ party 101' Miss Hauser. Thc af­ Sunday and yeslcrday. mally. ENDS Colbert and DANCING Today • • • fair will take place in Miss Chit­ The series opens Tuesday at 8 TODAY! Don Ameche lenden's home, 1101 Kirkwood p.m. Other broadcasts this week WEDNESDAY in "MIDNIGHT" Twilight Golf Planned Irene J acobs of Ames will be a avenue. occur Wednesday and Thursday houseguest in the home of Jean at the same time. Dates of the BILL MEARDON AND At Co lllllry CIuh Three lables of bridge will be -Plus- H IS ORCHESTRA Wilson, 818 Rider slreet, tomor­ programs next week are Sept. 5, "Silver on The Sage" row. Thursday Miss Wilson and p layed, and the guests and host­ 6, and 7 while the final one is ~9, II" and csses will present the honoree with FRIDAY & SATURDAY Several local organizations Miss Jacobs will go lo Warren­ Sept. 16. DUSTY KEATON clubs wlll meet for business and ton, Mo., CC'l' a meeting of the na­ 3 shower of miscellaneous gifts. Practically all major angles of f~m:t]'ttt:~ ~ocial sessions today. tional council of the Wesley Play­ Last night Frances Spence, 521 lhe students' new life will be dis­ STAATS Admission 26c per person , • • • ers, Methodist sludent dramatics Park road, entertained 14 guests cussed, some of the programs be­ CITY PARK Two-ball foursomes will tee oCf organization. Miss Wi! on is the al a kilchen shower for Miss ing in interview form. Speakers at 5 o'clock at the Iowa City national president of the gl'OUp. Hauser. The evening was spent in­ will include persons from a dozen These three young ladies were Branch. The picnic was a big WEDNESDAY PAV1L10N country club fOr a twilight mDlclr: MI'. and Mrs. Joseph H. Wilson formally. departments. JOHN BOWARD After the tourney, D buffet sup­ snapped by the photographer as success, as far as the kids were and their younger daughter, Reve, HEATHER ANGEL per will be sel'ved at the club­ will take the lwo young women they were getting set for a ride concerned, and t.he midway was kept busy providing rides for in bouse. .15 far as Warrenlon and then con­ on the ferris wheel at the Moose eager youngsters. • • • lmue on a motol' trip through the Witnesses Help Prof. Wylie family picnic at Lake Macbride "BULL DOG DRUMMOND'S st. Anne's soci ty of St. Mary's Ozarks. The Wesley players meet­ BR1DE" church will ent rtain ot a d ssert­ sunday. From left to right they ing will be Saturday, Sunday and Compute Speed of Meteorites -PLUS­ bridge party al 1:30 I1t the school. Monday. are Henriette .Peterson of West ~tarts TODAY : The public is invited to attcnd. • • • Branch, Jean Lenz of Iowa City "MICKEY THE KID" The familiar detective-story with stop-watches seldom are Those who ma/(e an art Sturi~ ENDS THURSDAY • • • Mr. and Mrs. Lesler Jensen of and Marilyn Peterson of I Mrs. O. L. Re s will cnlertoin lrick of having witnesses re- present when a meleorite strikes, Y Bruce Cabot - Za.su PUts W st Liberly nre the parents of a of II ing depend on In His Grandest, Most Heart r th e m mb rs of th U-Go, I-Go enact lhe crime has aided Prof. C. Professor Wylie declared that all I this world famed hotel club ol 8 o'clock in h rhome, 121 son born Saturday at Mercy hos­ that can be done is to take eye­ Warming Role! EVDns street. pita l. The ch ild weighed eight C. Wylie, University of Iowa witness reports and then attempt Mrs. W. Miller as the ve/)' embodi­ • • • pounds, five and a half ounces at astronomer, to decIde that melectr- to compute the speed. In this way ment of gracious serv­ The m mbcrs of tpe Tu sday birth. ites probably are fragments of an speeds have been computed high­ To Be Hostess ice,true reflnement and Sitters-Inners club wlll m et in '" exploded planet. er than possible planetary veloci- I dignified hospitality. I l... l..... • .. ' .. '~ ....'Z .... ;..... , th \! home of Mrs. Edgm' Vossur, · . At a recent meeting of the ties. At P.E.D. Meet Me. and Mrs. P tel' Rocca, 718 ... I 911 S. Van Buren street, at 1 :30. American Astronomical society in The university man therefore _ N. Gllbert slreet, a rc the parents --..e- NOW! • • • of a son born. Saturday at Mercy Berkeley, Cal., the method of the has had eye-witnesses re-enact Mrs. W. F. Miller, 1027 Wal­ I TNG,t"''' An apron donee wlll be given tt. "" 'f" Stuart Erwin hospital. The child weighed seven Iowa man was sketched. The the scene : standing just where nut street, will serve as hostess by the members of lhe C,s.A. paper aroused much interest they were when the meteorite fell, ntll"u Allen Jenkins pounds, 13 ounces at birth. when the members of Chapter U IUU lodge at the C.S.A. hall at 2 among scientists and was widely pointing out just what they saw, It fv.ns.ltt in 1!Il'f:ClAL ADDED W'l'- • • • HIIU'Il.KL O'clock this oIlel'Ooon. quoted. and doing over again exactly E of the P. E. O. sisterhood meet I ''Dance, Charlie, Danee" __lkT_fi-w Mr. and Mrs. Puul Kessler of "The chief way to tell whether what they did. . Friday at 2:30 p.m. u"""(IIJ.nt.., "SONS OF LIBERTY" a meteorite might be a planet This proved many of the first Will Teach History Oxford UTe the parents of a daugh­ Assisting the hostess will be co - BIT -INCOWa- ... Arlhur Noble, who rcc ivcd his ter bam Sunday at Mercy hos­ fragment or a visilor from outside estimates were much too fast. All I M.A. degl'e het'e in 1933 , hos been pital. The child weighed eight the solar system is lts speed. If it of the bright meteorites studied Mrs. R. J. Maurer, Mrs. J. S. "TORCHY BLANE IN EDDIE DELANGE appointed to a position as history pounds at birth. hits the earth fasler than possible seem to have been moving in rath­ Brown and Mrs. Fred W. Boer­ PANAMA" AND BAND instructor in the high schooJ' at • • • planetary speeds, It may have. er slow orbits', much like those of ner. Calumet, MIch., according lo word come from outside but certainly the tiny planets already consider­ With Lola Lane and Paul KeU, -NEW8- A marriage license was issued As a part of the program each received here. MI'. Noble form­ Saturday to Joseph A. Concannon, not from a former planet," Pro- ed as fragments of an exploded AIle NeWi erly taught · at the Stote NOl'm fl l legal, of Keokuk ond FIOI'cnce fessor Wylie said. planet, according to Professor member will teU how she spent school in Havre, Mont. MllIel', leial, of Iowa City. Pointing out that astronomers Wylie. her vacation this summer. ., . r ~--~------~~~------~------~-----~-~~------~------~.~--~------~--~~------~-. TOE- Hawkeyes L~ok ~orward to Opening of Football Practice 10 I •. Editor's note-today's is the :Cirst the won-loss record may not be Osmanski who served at Holy that includes South Dakota, In- I up is the spirit" o[ .the coaching ker, 202-pound tackle from South In addition to the above sopho­ Rapids, Geol'ge Fry , 185-pOUnd of a series of aTticles dealing with so good bccause of the "killing" Cross under Anderson, is a pro- diana, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pur- staff and players, Bob Otto, 205- nend, Ind., Harry Eisberg, 200- mores, considered the better pros­ the UnlveJ;sity of Iowa's footbaU cenler [rom Albia, Gerald Ankeny, schedule ahead. Iowa fans will be duct of Notre Dame and the due, Notre Dame, Minnesota and pound sophomore center from Ft. pound guard from Sioux City, Al HOUS: prospects. Northwestern. Dodge. summed up ·the attitude pects, eight other second-year m n 196-pound quarterback from Dix· treated to some plea ing football Rockne system ot grid play. Not a "breather" appears on the of the squad. Asked how the play- Couppee, 190-pound quarterback must be considered whcn dealing on, Ill., and HenTY Vollenweider, r FOR It: By 1. DENNIS SULLIVAN performances once the season gets The loss ot nine men from last iist, unless the South Dakota ers (ell. about the approaching from Council Bluffs, Burdell Gil­ with the new comers. Ray Gor­ 175-pound fullback from Dubu­ room Dally lciwlUl Sports EdJior under way. year's team-seven 01 the players game~ could be considered suc,!). season, Otto replied: "When we're leard, 170-pound haHback from man, 180-pound end from Chi­ que, are all given a chance of corated. Although few fans are expect­ The coaching staff of Dr. Eddie having regular ranking-leaves But the fact that Iowa will have together we talk about the hBTd New London, and Bill Green, 182- cago, John Maher, 190-pound end pushing thciL' way into. the stljtl­ ing anything .. of a stariling nature Anderson, Jim Harris, Frank Car- Anderson the difficult task of a green team playing its first work ahead. But all of us are an­ pound fullback from Newton, are from Davenport, Phil Strom, 195- ing lineup before S pt. 30 When FOR Rl from the 1939 Hawkeye footbaU ideo and Bill Osmanski is the finding ',eplacements for the losses game unde"f a new system eLim- -xious for the first day of prac­ among the sophomore group upon pound tackle from Ft. Dodge, Wal­ Dr. Eddie Anderson trots his fW'nisJ team, most everybody concerned third group to tackle the task of and, at the same time, building inates this contest from the tice-Sept. 10- seems a long time which Anderson will have to draw lace Bergstrom, 196-pound tackle product onto th field for its pre­ Electr. with the fortunes of the squad building a winne',' here si nce 1932. a suitable group of reserves to al- "breather" class. to wait." heavily to replace the veterans from Winfield, William Diehl, view against th South Dakota luundr gives the impression that, although The staIr, with the e-xception of leviate the strain of a schedule The lone bright spot in the set- Otto, along with James :Wal- lost through graduation. IS7-pound cenler from Cedar machine. autolJ'\ati FOR HE apartrr , Coming Shadows-They Hope ton, Apt. FOR Hawkeye and Sl rooms, £, I 232 Sum I Highlights FoRRl Dial ~ Veterans of veterans is the title APART 6f Floyd McDowell of Jefferson, • • South Cll Iowa football guard ...big McDow­ ell was a letter man on the Hawk­ PAGE FOUR TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1939 eye §quads of 11;34 and 1935 . .. ~~=------~ now he's coming back for his senior )'ear... he is a good guard, too, with his 200 pounds. . . coaches are hoping the years oul competition have not slowed Yankee Slaughterhouse ot him up too much ...he is 26 now. And spea.kill&' or v~terans, Bob Berman, another pard, Is the reasonll only man on the 1939 squad who Dial 5175. PlaYed. under Ossle Solem a.nd Mangles Tigers, 18-2 ld Tubbli.•. The Pacific Junction "OR RE~ Benlor has had his bad knee re­ \ .' un!ur~ paired and has IImbe~d It up to tor one p his normal state by byclcle riding ,tor. Dia thls summer. Boston DoWns .---_S_T.AN_ D_IN_G_S_ -.I DiMaggio S1aps South Dakota's football squad FOR RE will come to 'Iowa stadium to open Cleveland~ 6·5 American vertible the Hawkeye season Sept. 30 aiter W L Pet. G.B. Pair of Homers ments. already having played an inter­ New York .... 86 34 .717 and ele sectional game on the west coast. Rookie .Williams' Boston ...... 73 46 .613 13 Drives in RUlls nished. Coyotes meet A. A. Stagg's College Chicago ...... 67 5.4 .554 20 8 ults only. of the Pacific team at Stockton, Round·Tripper Is Cleveland ...... 65 55 .542 21 Y.! As Every Member Of Calif., Sept. 23. . . the Dakotans Detroit ...... 62 58 .517 24 \~ are defending North Central con­ Big Bl~w of Game Washington .... 52 71 .423 36 Squad Hils afely ference champs. Philadelphia .41 79 .342 45t~ Of the eight teams on Iowa's CLEVELAND,Aug. 28 (AP) St. Louis ...... 34 84 .288 5l'~ DETROIT, Aug. 2S CAP) grid schedule, the Hawkeyes have hit one of Mel Yesterda.y's Results The advanced New York 18; Detroit 2. a victory edge in the series with Harder's three-two pitches over today from the "murderers' row" BLECHA Northwestern (13-8-2), South Da­ the right field wall today at Washington 2; St. Louis 12. to the "slaughterhouse squad" kota (6-0), and Notre Dame... Boston 6; Cleveland 5. stage. They hit the helpless Ti­ League park and gove Boston a Philade\phia 4; Chicago 5 (night) yes, Iowa beat the Irish in the gers with everything in the book only game between the universi­ 6-5 win over Cleveland. The NlLtional and piled up nn 18-2 victory to ties ...10-7 at Iowa City in 1921 homer, Williams' 20th of the sea· W L Pet. G.B. stretch their current winning . . .Hawks have an even break son, came in the eighth with Joe Cinci nna ti ...... 73 45 .619 WANTED streak to 10 straight. with Indiana (4-4-3). Vosmik, who had walked, and St. Louis ...... 68 50 .576 5 dry. Shi Coach Otto Vogel, whose Iowa Jimmy Foxx, who had singled, Chicago ...... 68 55 .553 71{, Joe DiMaggio kept his hand in Pial 2246. baseball team won the Big Ten on base. ...... 60 56 .517 12 by walloping a homer with the title outright last spring and tied Up to that time the Indians New York ..59 58 .504 131 ~ bases loaded and another wHit in 1938, will start development of seemed on their way to their Pittsburgh ...... 53 63 .457 19 two mates aboard. Charley Kel­ his 1940 team in. October... he eighth straight victory, and Hard· Boston ...... 51 66 .436 22 ler also clouted a round-tripper, i with one on. Meantime, young .. _--.... must .£ill vacancies at first base, er en route to his seventh straight. Philadelphia .. 38 77 .330 33 1" left field, and centerfield ...work­ In the seventh Hal Trosky had hit Yesterday's ltesu II Marius Russo, soulhpaw roolcie, r It is es ou ts will continue until cold,. his 22nd homer, with Ben Chap­ St.Louis 5; Boston 10. stopped the Tigers cold with tour dozen bobi wealher. man on base. That headed Eldon hi ts for his fourth Victory this Cincinnati 1; New York 3. ~ew York Auker for the showers, but he was Chicago 5; Philadelphia 3. year against thl'ee setbacks. that 60,000 the official winner. PittsbuTgh at Brooklyn (po t- Every member of the Yankee Umpire Bill McGowan banished poned). starting lineup hit safely at least lend. Browns Jump Johnny Peacock in the sixth when once in the IS-hit attack. All Jeff Heath slid around the Boston Roger Pettit, Burdell Gilleard, A junior, he is expected to make him a good chance of playing a 185-pound center candidate with but drove in at least Switzerla catcher and scored after Ken Kelt­ one -DiMaggio sending elg)lt Bob Otto and George Frye take a real bid for a starting assign­ lot of baU before the cnd of the plenty of speed and fight, comes League o[ T~aces Again a nap and dream the ctreams 0:[ ment on Dr. Eddie Anderson's season. Bob Otto, also a sopho­ ner had tapped out. Peacock pro­ Jack Spratt ucross. And nil but Babe Dahl­ • trom Albia where he turned in a tested vehemently. We expccte all football warriors-the long end first Iowa grid edition. Gilleard, more, is a burly center candidate gren and Russo scored at least now since Hop on Washington of the score. Petti t is a halfback good record as a high school Mack Declares H '11 a sopbomore, will also be out for weighing 205 pounds. He is ranked JIOSTON All R 11 0 A .E one run. Altogether, it was a thing to sa with exceptional kicking ability. a halfback spot, his speed giving among the beller prospects. Frye, player. lair afternoon. For 12 RWIS To Cramer. cr ...... G 1 2 • 0 II Eat No More Fat . Voomlk. If ...... 3 1 1 0 0 0 , }; \I HlIlK BJlI10AI: Break Loss Streak Foxx, lb ...... 4 1 1 9 I U German William •. rt ...... 4 2 2 2 0 1 PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 28 (AP) ------2b ...... 4 0 4 4 0 f'ru8elll, .19 ...... , •• -4 3 1 .. ~ Doerr. 0 ab ...... 6 4 2 1 1 read, are in Cronin, IJ.~ ...... " 0 2 0 2 0 -Connie Mack said today that kolf,·, ST. LOUIS, Aug. 28 (AP) - 4 J 3 3 0 Pellr utk, Q ., , •• • ••••• 1 n 0 ~J 0 (j DIM.fRIO. tf ...... their minds from now on he is going to at­ lJlckfoY, c ••••••••• , ••• G 1 If .. 0 ~e\1 the St. Louis Browns do Oe.!JR.utt>hl, C •••.••.... () 0 0 1 1 0 nOSlll'. r • .•.•• • .• •.... 0 0 0 0 II the reich. PI n ney • • •• •••••• •••• 1 0 0 0 0 0 tend strictly to the busi ness of jump over the aces they don't H~Jklrli, II •.••••••••••. S S 1 2- 0 aort!. c ...... 1 0 1 2 0 II running the Philadelphia Athletics those place~ monkey around about it. 'rabol', 3b ., ...... 3 I 1 0 -i () Uorllun, 2h ...... 1 l " S tration" ca Auk.,,, \l ...... % 0 II 1 0 0 -and not go abQut attending Uahlarpn. Iii ...... 6 0 3 • 1 Behind the four·hit pitching of Hartnett Ties Record It 1..111 (I, j) ' ••••••••••••• • 6 • 1 • 1 NonnenklLmp •• "," •• 1 0 0 0 0 0 luncheons, dinners and making Bill Trotter, they trimmed the Diekman. p ...... 1 0 0 0 0 \I speeches. '1·"t.l ...... ~4 18 II *7 11 Washington Senators, 12 to 2, to· IVll oon. p ...... 0 0 0 00 II Meeting visitors at his home to­ Ot7rROIT ,\P K It 0 A I day to break their latest losing Giants Turn Back Reds, 3.1; 'rot-als ...... •.... 301 6]0 27 12 1 Catches 1.,721 John Rigney ·-HaHt!fl tor Del'lRuteil! In 7th. day, the 76-year-old leader of the streak of eight straight. .\1 ("('lWilk)', d •••••••••. 1 I U ··-Batted lot Aukt'r In 8th. A's who was confined to his home Cecil Travis homered in the A.\·I·rllJ. If ••••••••••••• I 0 AIlRHOAfJ by iUness since last June, said he U.·hrlnc,·I, 2l! •.• , •.••. 2 o I fourth to drive in both Washington Games; Bruins Cards Drop 10·5 Game to Bees In 9th Straight \It.·Cuy. :!h , .••••••••••. 1 o 0 r had been careless. He was sup- 11I..,ln_. :Ib ...... :1 1 • runs. Don Hefmer, Brownie sec­ 'Boudreau, HI! ...... 5 1 1 1 7 0 CQ.lllpbell, rt ••• ,., •••• 6 0 1 2 o 0 posed to be on a diet. ~·o lC. rr ., ...... •. , .... 4 o 1 0 \lnd baseman, hit his first circuit ('ullt:'nlllnE', lb to ...... 4 ij 10 1 ChtHllnu.n, cC ...... 4. 1 1 2 ~ ~ "But I ate too much," he said. blow of the season with one on in Beat Phils, 5·3 Caught Shor' Stung A.gain Win for Chis ox 'rro.ky. I b ...... 6 1 2 13 H."l"eJl. ." ••••••••••••• :11 o • 2 PYlll).k • ...... " ..... 0 0 o II o II Homeward bound from the (·ruuc.:h~r, III .••.••• , •• 1 1 2 the seventh. NEW YORK, Aug. 28 (AP) BOSTON, Aug. 2S CAP) -The 1I .,l.th . It ...... 6 1 l 0 TebJJ~tlt., c ••••.••••.•• 2 o 0 Keltner, 3b •••... • . &. ,of. 0 l l Purt'un, r. ••••••••••••• 0 o 0 WASIIINGTON ABR• H 0 A II .' PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 28 CAP) Master Melvin Ott and Young Bill St. Louis Cardinals' grip on second CHICAGO, Aug. 2S (AP)-John l.\filek, 2b ...... 0 2 2 ~ ~ ~:~n~~.:yo~n~sa~a ~:rr~:~~h~~~ Hl'ld t-I, J1 •••• •••• ••••• 0 o 0 r ilt'llton, I) _, ••• , •• •••• 2 11 0 -c-u.-.-. -,.-r-.-.- ..-.-. - ..-.- ..-.-. -.1-0--0 -0-0--:0 -Manager Gabby Hartnett tied a Lohrman combined today to give place loosened a bit today when Duncan Rigney won his ninth H ale ...... , ...... 1 0 o 0 ~ ~ not attend a luncheon or dinner in lIemlsey. 0 ...... 3 0 t 0 1',,11 • • ••••• •••.•• , ••• • • 16 CoHIIIIln, p ••••••••• ••• 0 " 0 WeIIlJ. rt •••••••.•••• . 2 0 0 0 0 0 major record today as his Chicago the Giants a 3 to 1 victory over the Bees, getting off to a six·run straight game tonight when he Jlnl ' a ~r, II .... , ...... 2 1 1 0 o 1 his honor, eating heartily, giving o Wpatberl}' ••••.•... , .. 1 0 I 0 3b ...... 3 . ~ ~ talks and meeting hundl'cds of .Lewl •. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ the Cincinnati Reds, but despite flying start against Rookie Nate limiled the Philadelphia AthJetics 1)01)8011, P •••••• • ••••• • 0 0 o 0 Totnl •• , .... "",:lK S .. ~7 12 4 We. t. of ...... : 1 1 2 0 0 Cubs, behind the effective pitch- Andrews, g'lVe them a 10·5 drub- pel·sons. ·-UQ\tecl (uf' H,·"ton 1n Ihh. 20 to seven hi ls as the Chicago White ~t'ore b) J n nhll',oj ~~I~I~I. : :::::::::::::~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ing of the veteran Charley Root, the deCeat, the Rhinelanders main· b_in_g_. ______--:--:--:--::--:: ~l'ot"l ...... 39 6 12 27 12 1 --Ran tor r.i'rosky In 9th, .'1,.w ),ork ...... 20& 101 134-l BlOOdworth, 2b .. ..•... 4 0 0 0 2 9 tumblE:d the Phillies, 5 to 3. tained their five-game lead at the " Sox scored in the ninth inning to • -- 'ulll ted tor Mack In 9 th. UH,olt ...... 000 100 101- I ···-ll8.lLea tor Harder In 8th. Contender' Sinks l:tulU' tmttetl In; K .. lh·r !, DIMa.,lo I, i:~~'~'~: ~I~.::::::::::j ~ qO ~ q The Cubs scored four runs in head of the National league pen- WI'. LOlllM Alii! II 0 A .: win, 5 to 4_.______S(>()re by Innln8'M DETROIT, Aug. 28 (AP)- The IHt·kflY. Ru .... o. CroR€'UI. Htllte. Relklrk , CarraoQuel. P ...... 0 0 t d .r. ~In,.tlll. :tu ...... ij 0 II 2 0 Booton ...... 00 1 000 1411-6 I hi II 'arrton. ('ruud"·I. 'rwo bfLM. blli: ,Appl eton. p •• • .•••••• ~ ~ ~ ~ the second inning on singles by nan para e. OUl1orliiKe. :Ih •• •• .••• J 1 II 1 0 J\D 1\ )( 0 A E i)HhIKH'lI ,. jo;,'lklrk, Rulff'. H OIllE' tun.; ,:!. _ (,Ievolon~ ...... 002 OOl 200-. speedboat Delphine IX, million­ Runs bAlled In: Cra.mer, Call'lphell 2, Ktlll t'I", Ht\IIlMlJlu 1. Huuh1e plft)''': 001'­ 'l'Olal., ...• •. • •• ••• SO 2 4 21 13 1 Dick Bartell and Stanley Hack, Ott's single in the first inning ~ill~~~'\~~'~: , .~h : .::::::~ ~ ~ aire Horace Dodl! contend I' for .:: 1 1 :: •\lUI-I!;,H, 1'[ •• " ••••••••• 4 U 0 1 0 0 'rrosky 2. I;"Qxx, ,Vllllam8 !I, 11'l nn8Y • 's 'lon, C"IOH\"lli lAI111 Duhlkrl'n; OordOll, a tl'ipJe by Charley Root, and a drove in one run, and his 27th .lledwld(. II ...... 4 U 1 IOU ~t'\~foIllnH. 8M ...... :1 o 0 4 I () t':: eHner. 'J.'wo ba"e hlh : Douc]relLU, l lll('k, the gold cup in the impending Dahl¥rpn ROIl ('ro"put: HU."Q, ('rOM-HI ST. I.OlllS AU R Jl 0 A E II IHI L}lhla;ftln; t)phrlnj{pr Hnd RQlel1 ; double by August Galan. They homer of the campaign, in the ~·t'~~:,.11\: . :::::::::::::~ ~ ~ I~ t I, O anlt'nht'ln, 211 ...... 1 o 0 0 0 0 Cramer. Three bu.se hltlJ: Tabor, VOl- Labor day race, leat>ed from the Heffner. 2b ...... 6 Z 2 3 5 .Jnhn~oll. Ir ...... •... 4 o 0 1 0 I) JIItk , l-It"alh. liom e run8: Tro,ky, WH­ HOII',·II. ll"hrlnller nnoJ Cullenbl •• : a.h· got the olher run in the ninth on fourth, sent the other two Giants 1100,.0, cC ...... 4 I 1 1 II 0 1.... Ilu~ ... ", u ..••.•.••. .. 4. O 1 .( G 0 lIu.n\s. ~Ilerl flC'ea: Pea.cock, 1'Il1)or. Dou- water on a test run in the Detroit rln'l'l·r. HOlit,lI nllll CUitl'llllltu!: ClouchJr Sullivan, It ...... I) o 1 2 0 and 'u llt'hlllnil. J ... n un hnlel: New 1 Slt~lH'rt, 111 ...... 1 1 11 lOUie Ill.yo: Kellner. Mael< ana Tro8ky: McQuinn. Jb ...... 3 2 2 12 a home run by Glen Russell. tallies across. Lohrman, mean- ~;~'i;•. '!•. ::::::::::::: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ river tonight and sank. Ynrk 7: \)plJ oU... RIiJoI on hB.lIl : ott Laobl. ct ...... 4 2 2 2 0 .'JlIgel, 2b , •.••••••• •• . 2 o 0 0 1 1 DouOreau and 'Ma.ck. Lett on ba.lel: time, held the Reds .to seven bits And,·,' w,. I) ..•.•••••••. 1 0 0 0 3 0 '"1 ('~ • ,... ,.. ,. . ,.... 1 1 1 0 0 0 JJo8ton If ; l evpland 11. Bille on ball,,: Pilot Joe Schaefr r and meCh­ nU8Su It: tift Ilrhll'('" 3; otr Behton 4: 41 Cllrl. 3b ...... 4 3 3 0 6 AU It ~ 0 A E ntr Cortl1l8 n J Kt rurk out : by RUlilO Orate, rt ., .•...... 6 o 1 0 0 d bi ked th t'l th . th 1,lnG ...... 1 0 1 0 0 0 ,J\IUh!t'J', ~b-H" .... , . ... 1 o 1 0 0 0 orr Auker 3: ott 'Vll8on 1; ott Hn.rdar 1. anic Ed McKenzie, both of D - an an em un 1 e nm . :;Ulll(.1. 1> •••••• •• •• ••• tOO 0 0 ° (' hnVlnnn, (·f ••• •• , ..... 4- o 0 4. 0 0 Struck oul: by Auker 4; hy Hnr(1er "; ~; hy rtr!(t fOil I; hy llf'nton 1. .HH': H(>uhany, c ..•..•..... 5 1 2 6 1 Uack, 31, ...... 4 1 2 3 Hrl,lll"" If I 1 0 0 l ...ulialunl l abh .••••.•.. 3 l. nrr in Innln,l; Qtt DtlQton Ch,.J.tmall, I...... I) 2 4 2 2 when three Ingles and a fly push· DIl\·I...... 0 0 0 2 1 1 2 0 by DobMn Hit., ole Auk.r III 7 troit, were thrown clear, and a lierman, 2h ...... 3 1 0 2 nOIUl, JJ ••••••••••••••• 2 11 In n; Qfr ((Ittlnt." , In 1. l'ullfd Trot [';'r, p • •••••••...•. 2 o 0 1 1 o 1 0 1 1 I""Ing,,; ott DlC'knaan If In 1 l oa; oU race committee boat reScu d th m. Oalan. It ...... 4 o 2 2 ed their only run acrQss. Tottl'k ...... :\4 6 fj:!4{ 13 11'811. I) .••..••.•...••. 1 o 1 0 1 0 Wll ,on 0 In 2·8; olr lIarder 9 In 8; hllll; jlauone. 1,1,lIln. pll('h~r : Brldl." Li eber. or ...... 3 o 6 .---Aatle(t for An,trpwII In 6th. ~i.~IMOn, p ••••• , •• • •••. 0 l 'm plr~ lI: PIPI'I,,", U.IIII ana 8ununtrll, "'­ 30 12 17 o 0 0 1 0 otr Doblon 1 In 1. Winning pi Loiter: Schaeffer WB$ reported eriou 1y Totol ...... 27 16 0 NlchOladn. re ...... 4 o 1 (:lXCINNATI AD R J( 0 A E ."- Dutl(>cl hll' Runkr>1 In OUl . 'rIm,. : 2:UI. 8eor., by llWio&,. Auker. LOllnjJ llltCher, Hnrd er. Ha1'lnetl, (' .• , ...•. , •. If. o 0 H 34 4 1.2613 2 injured. I\tt .. n(fnn(·~: 1. 2 ------'fotal ...... , .... Umpire,,: McGowan, Grieve ond Quinn, 1.,' 48 WRlhlngton ...... 000 200 000- O. HIi MRell, lb • ..• , ...... 1 t 10 lVerb.r, 3b ...... 4 0 2 1 2 0 nOSTO:>l All R 1( 0 A ]I; <-Hntl.'1 ro,· Nu".1 In 71h. 'J'lme: 2:16. SI. 4>ul ...... 306 000 2,.-12 Ou rt(l If , IIR ...... 1 1 1 .Joost, 2b . ....••..•. , •. 3 0 0 S 6 1 -...:...------x-'r\\(} out when winning run Icored. Run. uatled In : ClIrt, Grnce 2, ]Ie!"· A.ttenda.n('e: 2,000. lloQt, » .... , ...... ".4 1 1 0 Goollman, r( ...... 4 0 0 3 0 0 Coon.y. rr ...... u 2 3 1 0 0 .hany 2, Christman 2, Hetrner 4, Sui· J\lcCormlck, lb ...... 3 l 2 9 0 0 Gnrm8, 1' ( ...... , ... 2 1 0 3 0 4) ('II U 'ACiO /\11:8 UO A]IJ IIvan. Travis 2. Two baae hlu: o race. Totals ...... H • 7 27 12 I.ombu.nll. c ...... ,3 0 0 2 1 0 RlllIlllOllS. 11' ...... 2 1 1 0 0 /J HOMnthal, rt • • •••••. ,.9 2 Chtlatlmn..n, ·WrJgbt. Home r un,,: 'l'ro.vls, o l.i f>fe hberger, c .. , .. . .. 1 0 1 0 0 0 H AAMf'tl. 11) .•...••.••.. fi 2 -4 H 0 0 \1. Il nytlH. 211 • •• •••••• • -4 0 2 ! 0 MeNnl,.. Sb ...... 4 1 2 Heffner. Stolen bases: Cnar, BeHner. TRY OUR AM R II 0 A E Bongiovanni. If •••••••• f a l! 1 U 0 'VeRt, U·!"f ..•.. • .. .•.. :1 1 0 !t 0 (J 11' (J..... b.). o Chlellgo ...... 030 001 001-6 pilcher: ,'\pplolon Lo.· Suh,.. 111 ...... 4 0 Johnson. p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 Tolal ...... 371014 37 t:I I) IIHl'lfiett (2). J.lf' tt on blUH~IJ : St. JA)UIK ho. A scrap Ing : CarrasC1uel. o 0 10 0 Rune halted In: Rqfll.8. I,JQdlglanf. nellil May. :II> ...... 4 I 2 1 • 0 ------Sf'ort Ity IUlllnM'N 7; llul"Ilnn to . BIlAO on bOIlH: (trt An .. 2, Treah. M. Haye". Kr e~v l ch. M<-Nuir, Umpire.: Hu-bb4rd. KollIl n.nd Rommel. Laundry Senice 112. Wound Rehuff'ln, Jill" ...... I 1 2 I I 'rotn.ls ...... 3: I '1 24 11 1 St. L"ulfll ...... 000 120 0 20- [. dJI'"1'I :1; urr RlInkAI .1; nrr MorAn . ~ '\v"'lke r. Two ba.lle hLllI: 1", Hoyea, Ru",., 1:69. Time : 1)8\' 115. C ...... 1 2 6 0 0 .-Ou.tled rOI' Thompson h~ 6th. Boston ...... 610 0:10 OOx 10 ~tnlf'k (Jul: hy .A ndr~wR 1; hy Runk;el 6plrnlly Paid 8ttendanc@: H3. ne .. n. Stolon baoeo: Roeenth"l . MCNnlr. .rohneon, r, ....•....•.. :1 o 2 0 0 0 "-BlLtled for Grlltllorn In 8t h, Runs battNI In: Pulilfeu, )foOlE". H. r'j hy I\lnrun %. lilt": ort Andl'ewlJ a In AncrltlcelU .RIgney. ])ouble Olo.YI : ROIR, I l~ . Slringed lhtf(lly - •...•..••.••.. 1 o 1 0 0 0 OIArtln, :\Iedwlf'k 2. Cl1 Cf' lnello' 2, Mfl~ 4 Inlllng.; ofr Runkel 6 In 4. Hit by li'. HIl.Yt'1I and Sieberl. Left on I)Q.fI{lK: In.trumcn • NJi;W YORK AR R }{ 0 J\ E Hlll1mon~ Send us your bundle incJuding- .I cskl. RloU. WrAt. 2. Hu."ell . "lIchrr: 11)' Kunile l tW• • t). 1,001nr IlhlindelPhln, 7 ; ChiCAgO 10. Bllae on la.Beard of r TO,"I ...... 36 3 11 27 8 1 ------Two hose hila: Slftughtt'T', Simmons. l)Jl c' hl:'l': .1\ nd '·f'W!. bRII. : olr Ro •• 6: ofl Doan 3; ot RI.n.y Towels - Underwear - PajamllB - Sox - Hand· ·-linttNI ror ,JohnsOn In 9th. IVh I teheall. 2 b ...... 4 o 1 3 0 Three bll.N hit : IIn.RI4 PU IJ ome ,·un.: lJnq)lr~M: C'IU)Iphpll, M[lgerkurth and •. 8truok out< by Roo. 1; by D ... n 1 ; 117. Young dog Sirigles Finals Nt'ore by Innine.. ldoore, It ...... •• • , ...... l 1 0 0 Moof"e. ,f.ltol("n bn JilOM: S. MIl.·tln, ('111'- Hh·wtlrt. hy RII/noy S. 1WI: olt Ro •• 6 In 0 kerchiefs - Shirts 19. Larvtlof Chicngo ...... 040 000 00l-6 l)elnnree, or ...... 1 1 0 0 olnello, -~tnj~,.kl. Sncrlrl(" p,,: PRilgett, TIIIlf': 2:10. Inning.; otf DelLn 3 In 2 1·3; off Nol.on the botfly Phll .. ,lplphl& ...... 000 000 102-8 Ott. rt ...... 2 1 2 0 0 MorAIl , Cu(·('lnAllo. Oouhl0 plll)'K: R. AliP1HI1I1H'e: .,006. I In 1·3. l,o.ln~ pilch .. : D nn. We welch' eharre you at ...... 1111 Runs hu.LLt'cI In: RooL, llack, Glllu.n 2, Dunning, c ' •.....••.... ll I) I 3 I 0 alia .11. 20.:&rk ------~~------Set fO,r Today O. Jlul'IHell, Johnfto n, V, I)av"" Harey. Bonura, lh ••• •••. •.•.• 3 o 0 12 0 0 SblrM euslom finished at ...... 1111 ... ahrilly Two Imse: ,ililS! Arnovlch t Oslun, May, ,JUI·ses. 88 • •.••• , •.•..• 3 o 0 2 4 0 V. n""I~, Horry. 'l'llI'ee ho.fH' hit: Root. Hnfey. 30 ...... 3 o 0 0 6 0 HalMlkerehlel. Unlsh('d. at ...... 111 e .. 22. Drunken !lome run: O. H.u88el l. Hto len baKe: Ilohrman. J} •••• " ••• ,3 o 1 0 0 0 loafer The men's singles finals of the lIack. Double pla.yJl: .Rn.rtell, .ilermnn Sox finished (and mended) a& ...... 111 pro third annual Iowa City Tennis Rna O. n UMH I ~ IJ. l~ ett On '.)Use!: Chicago Tol .. l •.•...•...•.. 29 a 1 21 13 0 Heath Fouls Out, Punches Fan (lIang) tournament between John Ebert "; Phlhule.lllhh.. '1. Billie on hal!',: ott Rf;'ore hol' Innh',," 1'owels, Underwear, Pajamas, etc. Soft Dried, Folded h .l!ymbol tOr .JohnBo n :!; ott Root 1. E;truck Q~t: by ClnclllniLlI ...... 000 000 OOI-l radium and Keith Weeber, will be played Juhnson :t; l)y HOot 3. New YO"k ...... 100 ~OO 00.-3 Ready tor Use at No Added C08t RunR blluetJ In : Ott a: rort. HOlli e * * 126. Sweet tomorrow afternoon at 4:15 on the CLEVELAND, Aug'.* 28 CAP) - * * * run: QLL. HIl('rltl('eM: ,IOOftt; Crn.H. Dou ~ nftcl'Iloon," the sturdily - built dugout ond* assailed* * him with ob- Soft Water U ed ExclusiveJy Potato university asphalt courts, accord­ hie piny! : Craif( unll .roo~l: .1nOHt, M'yf'rtc Jeff ~eath, Cleveland Indian out­ scene Jimguage. Anet McCormick. l..A!rt {In bluleJl : Npw playcL' told newsmcn who had ~7.lilatua ing to an announcement made $30,000 Bid 'Olnclllllll.tI 011 fielder, punched a remonstTating "I walked over and puncbed York ~ ; 7. Bnlle bull": seen him chased from the field yesterday by John Paulus, tourna­ CHICAGO, Aug. 2& (AP)-Pro­ (Iff r.. ohrJnan 1; orr Orh.sllln I. Hi" lI ck fan after fouling out in the nint~ , him," the 23·year-old outfielder out.: by l Alhrlllfln 2: by 'fholllPfilllIJ I. yestcrdoy ror angrily tossing his NEW PROCESS 1. Rot ment chairman. motel' Irving Schoenwald today HIU~ : oft 'l'holllll140n (I In 6 Innltlge: inning of todtlY's game with the 3$serted. "I cao't remember where Ted Swenson and Chuck Oker­ offered lIenl'y Armslrong $30,000 off (lrlR8om I In 2: orr Jnhn~on 0 11\ 1. Boston Red Sox, ond thereby put. but into a box seal of tel' striking I hit him but I hurt my hand. It 2. Chiefly l.o~lng I)ttt:'her: 'l'holl1paon . Laundry & Cleaning Co. [ blo.oqt won the doubles title, while to defend his wcltcol'weight title Umpires: Dunn. Stork, Billiaurant and himself "on the spot" fol' the sec· out. was just another blUhder In a bud J . IlL1tt~ment Bob Merriam captured the junlor against Chicagu's Milt Aron here Klelll. ond Ume in ns mnny days. ~13-1l' SIt. D..... uft. &. DIal UU tor plerc. Time : 1:36. Heath sU id the fan rushed down season that has been full of mI.· in the early fall. Ing-holel ~own. Atl8D

------~.=::.- - -- I TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1939 THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY PAGE FIVE

lOW AN WAN'f ADS tJow I 'lAMA. T~IS L.ONG-RANGE ASSI S~AI'Ji WEA."THER PRED'CTlN~ WE.ATHER- IS MOST DIFFICULT 115-pound MAN FOR* *RENT * ROOMS* *FOR * RENT HOUSES and APARTMENTS F-O-R-R-E-N-T ----L-AR- G- E- R-O-O-M. FOR RENT- UNFURNISHED 2 New Maple furniture, twin beds, Dubu­ room downstairs upt. Newly de- comfortable chairs, desk, radio, chance (ll corated. Adults. Dial 4998. hot water, shower. Entertaining tbe start- privileges. Dial 4786. 30 when FOR RENT- 2-3-4 ROOM UN­ trots his furnished aptll'tments. Close in. FOR RENT- ROOM FOR GIRLS. its pre­ Electric refrigeration, stoves, Diul 6431. Dakota laundry Pl'iviJ ges, private bath, automatic heat. bial 9681. HOME FURNISHINGS FOR RENT-Attractive furnished FURNITURE, DRAPERIES AND apartment- adults. 308 N. Clin­ Slipcovers made to ordcr. Doro­ ton, Apt. No. l. thy Davis, 116% E, College. Dial 4614. FOR RENT - BURLINGTON and Summit apts. Two and four PLUMBING BLONDIE rooms, fumished Or unfurnished. PLUMBING,--- HE A T I N.G, Am .232 Summit St. Dial 7193 or 9184. STOP BE'ING AND VOU, TOO! STOP t3t::IN(::J Conditioning. Pial 5870. Iowa r DON'T WANT TO SO srue80RN AND SMILE ---- City Plumbing. MY PICTURE TAKEN··· SO CROSS · .. ""OW FOR RENT - APARTMENT. Wj..\EN 'tOUR FA~ER I WANT TO PLAV II CAN I-1E SMIL.E DIal 3891. WANTED - PLUMBING AND WI-IEN YOU'RE' TEL.LS VOU TO SCOL.DING HIM 'APARTMENTS FOR RENT- 125 heating. Larew Co. 227 E. '? • Soulh Clinton. Washington. Phone 9681. Foa RENT - OVER 30 1I0USES REPAIRING f and arar'"'='~"''\ts for rent. $30.00 HEATING,------ROOFING,._-- SPOUT----- ger monlh ane. up. Koser Bros. Ing. Furnace cleaning and re­ FOR RENT - HOUSES AND pairs of all kinds. Schuppert and apartments. Wilkinson Agency. Koudelka. Dial 4640. Pial 5134. e F~OOR SANDERS FOR RENT - 3 ROOM FUR­ FLOOR SANDING. GUARAN---- nIshed ground apt. Private leed work. Dial 2012. bath. Private entrance. Very reasonable. Laundry privileges. MOVING 2 Pial 5175. fOR RENT - 'THREE IN ONE Lon g distance and unfurnished apartment. Ideal HENHY for one person, Electric refriger­ general Hauling, Fur­ ator. Dial 4935. nitnre Moving, Crat­ FOR RENT-MODERN CONVER­ ing and Storage. vel'tible 3, 4 nnd 5 room lIpart­ ments. Private baths, heal, water and electrical refrigerntion Iu'C­ MAH.~R nished. Laundry facilities. Ad- tIlls only. Dial 6476. BROS. HAULING TRANSFER & S1'ORAGE MOVING AND GENERAL lIAUL­ DIAL 9696 ing. Caley's Delivery lind Trans­ fer Company. Dial 4290. STORAGE BLECHA TRANSFER- --- AND storage. Local and long distance STORAGE AND TRANSFER t, hauling. Dial 3388. Local and long distance mov­ mg. Reduced rates to Pacific WANTED-LAUNDRY Coast, pool cars. Fireproof Warehouse. Dial 7721. WANTED - STUDENT LAUN- IOWA CITY TRANSFER dry. Shirts IDe. Free d livery. AND STORAGE CO. ETTA KETT )I pi al 224~6.~ ______~=:::::=~~=~~===!:! SORRilOBb POLLY! F,ASr, OFFICEf'2 i INTER£STING ITEMS r DON'T GlruS Gdr AN I • • YOUDARf Il'ItI~~..,~ ArrACK OF , It is estimated thnt about a. The Jupanese are a s t ran g c ELOPE.!' APPEt!DICtrlS, dozen babies will PC born at the people. Now, it seems, they are ~ew York world's fnir, figuring t)'Yin~ to save their fuees by that 60,000,000 persons will at- SluPP1l1g those of others. tend. Mussol!ni must be in t.raining DOITAI-I'A ,~t:>..CON, HERE MABE'L-- I REMEMBER 44 t>-N \ GO S\.\t\R?£:N 'EJ'I\ ON A, I 41 42 43 ~E:/::>..N 5 P>-Nt> 1=LOUR '.-­ YoU IN PI" TAIL.S --.yOU WERE WI-IE:TSTON E: roR N\Y ~LE:SS SOU,'TE?'?'\( ,'TI-\/::>..'T \~--- ~ COO~\N'! ,..--~\ SMART6ElTJAGA RICH CI'TY ~ 1M. GOING TO PRt:.?~?E T\.\'. IS ~A.RE: 1=IT ~OR' OLYN\PIJ~ '. 45 46 47 HU.sBAND- -YOLl KNOW.,' ~ CHOW LIKE t DO OUT ON 11-\' --WOI'AE.N ARE t-AODt=RA'TELY' ~ I SHOULD 0 .... GONE 48 4Cf . p,t:>.N GE ~ ~~- I'T WON"" "BE.. . CAPABLE. O'F "PP-E'P~R\N0 ""fl-\J~K ~t\NCY, -AND 11= YOU CAN ;:OOD,WT iRUE: CULINARY I .0 "1l-'.E CIT,,( ---- ~ PULL T\-1RU TWO Dp..Y5 O~ IT, t:>.RT IS T\.\E. GIFT OF YOU'LL BE: ' MEN \ AORO S 13. To lle In mountain range t>-BLE: 'TO EAI 1. Kind of steel 29. Mon th debt ot 30. Nobleman ?OKtR 7. By J wi~ h 14 . Confer 9. Solemn calenclar knighthood 32. Exciamatio:1 C\.. \\?S\- wonder 31. Keep upon ofcontemr ' ~O. A scrap ('aunt of 18. Small close· 34. (,eUere , 112. Wouncl 33. Choose Mired dog 35. Small splro.lIy 3G. Wo.ste Piece 21. Timely anchor 15. Stringed ot cloth 23. Chart 37. Obtained , Instrument 38. A wit 20. Craw of 39. J elli fies I 18. Beard of rye 40. 1'he bill ot a bird .. 2. J Ilpanese 117. Young dog an anchor 28. Variety ot coin 19. Larva of 41 . Greek god apple 44. A meado," the botlly of love 29. Rugged 46. Greek Jell -: 20. Bark 43. Assillted crest ot a Ihrilly • 415 . IndIan pole 22. Drunken decorated An8wer to prevloUIl puule loafer with carvings (slang) 47. Wreath of 24. Symbol tor flowers ancl radium leaves 211. Sweet 48. Half an m potato 49. An annoy- ~7 . HiatUIJ an co DOWN 1. Rot 6. Salt 2. Chlelly 7. MoUon' ,I. In.tr\lment picture for pi ere· .p rformer Ingholea . Grc k letter . t . To ooZ(' 11 A vat HOUR ON "'tHE JOB • ~ Ii. Aloft • (gpYfUGHT, 1919, KINe. F("ruR(~ SV NOfCAn: ItIC W(JIllO __ .Gr1 n IlUL""'1O

1 PAGE SIX THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY TUESDAY, AUGUST 29,1939 Europe's Bulletin Boards Popular These Days Committee Announces Program University Exhibit ~~o~~~~~: Page 1) • yard swung open for the black car For State Archery Meet Here Popular At Iowa Fair carrying the envoy and then quickly closed. again. Inside the Over 100 Archers spacious entry an honor guard was 900 Visitors • drawn up. There was a roll of Temperature Expected for Event FIVE Cl THEY Here drums .as Sir Nevile entered the Of Coming Week End resplendent chancellery to meet Within One Degree Per Hour See Of Norm.al MAKE, and Hitler. Program plans for the annual Foreign' Minister Joachim von Iowa archery tournament here s. u. I. Display Ribbentrop participated in the in· Yesterday's Iowa City high and Sunday and Monday have been NEWS There terview. Dr. Paul Schmidt was low temperatures were within one announced by the loca l commit. interpreter. degree of normal, the University lee. More than 100 archers from Healing Art Exhibit Hliler Firm of Iow a hydraulics department all over the state are expected to Nazi political circles said last weather station reported last compete for the state champion. Of Greatest Interest night Hitler has made up his mind ni ght. ship. J~I / To Des Moines Crowds to be adamant in his demand for The maximum temperature was Ten events in additi on to the Danzig and the entire Polish Cor­ B3 and the mini mum was 58. No men's and women's singles are ridor. precipitation was reported in the included on the schedule. The s tate fai r-goers are inspecting " If others want peace they wlll the University of Iowa's exhibit 24-hour period ending at 7 p.m. rounds are York, F light, Ameri. have to bring it," these quarters yesterday. can, Columbia, National, Junior at the rate of about 900 per hour said. BI during peak periods, with special Columbia, J unior National, Clou~ , . Germany is willing to negotiate, Team Shoot and fun round. interest focussing upon the heal­ these quarters said, but "the only ing arts exhibit. Weinberg To Registration for the tournament way negotiation is possible is for will begin at B a.m. Sunday ~t P rof. Bruce E. Mahan of the Britain and France to put pressure extension division, who supervised the Iowa City airport. CompeU. on Poland to cede Danzig and the Be Returned lion will begin an hour later. the fi rst university exhibit at Des Pr Corridor." Local bow and arrow artists I Moines since 1932, reported that This will be necessary, it was the 1939 display prObably is the To Iowa City will play important roles in th, , intimated, regardless of how ne· . contesUi. Mrs. C. J. Lapp will most popular ever sponsored by gotiations might take place-either the university at the fair. defend her state wo men's crown, direct or through a mediator. Sheriff Don McComas left yes­ and Jack Dysart is considered F.D. The healing arts exhibit is the a Re-defining of the German po­ terday l or Des Moines to have ex· strong contender for state men', source of great attentiot). This in­ sition came at the end of another tr adition papers, asking the return title, now held by Bill Jepson of cludes "before and after" displays tense day of waiting during which of Kolman Weinberg from De­ Sioux City. of teeth-straightening, correctional diplomats and common people This ,radiopl1 oto fro m pariS'j outside the of a large news· Ith e Danzig question holds the a t- troit, Mich., to Iowa City, signed Locai committees making ar. casts and braces used by the or­ many times asked themselves by Gov. George Wilson. Sheriff I France, shows citizens reading paper. Much the same is going tention of the world. rangements fOr the tournament thopedics department, and ~ow x­ Henry D. Allen whether, alter all, it would be pos· bulletins on the European crisis on in other European capitals as McComas will then proceed to ray is used to locate foreign bodies are trophies and banquet, Mra. Henry D. Allen, of Los Angeles, sible to maintain peace, now that Detroit to return Weinberg here. Jack Dysart, Mrs. Lapp, Mrs . in persons. " Weinberg, according to County Cal.; appears b ~ore the Dies war preparations nave been made William Hale and Mrs. Arnold Other university displays in­ and such strona poSitions taken by committee in Washington as Gillette; entertainment, Mr. Dy. clude those in fine arts, enaJneer­ a either side. Seven Building Libraries of University Report ~~~;~~d H~~~~~eX7~~:~rn~~~:0~~~ witness duri ng the committee's sart; grounds, Mr. Hale, Profes­ ing, and general campus phOto­ ,Food Cards In Ulle money from the Hills I.,ank and graphs. A staff of three men. Is in probe of a reported attempt to Food cards came into use for the · I d L C· I · Hi sor Lapp, Mr. Dysart, F. Parker P ermlts ssue l argest Ireu ation m story gave chattel mortgage on seven and Professor Gillette; registra. attendance. J. form a federation of all nazi, first time in the reich today and horses and a mule as security. He housewives naturally rushed to . ------is then alleged to have sold the tion, Professor Ellen Mosbeck; fascist and anti-Jewish elements pogram and publicity, Professor In in the United States. buy all they could of materials not Four Residences 14,308 Volumes than the average of recent years. horses and the mule. French- yet rationed. A charge o[ "embezzlement of Gillette and Professor Mosbeck. Families made bargains with Will Be Included A:dded to Collections Anoth er mark of last year was mortgaged property" was filed Cities which will be repre. (Continued from Page 1) each other for exchanging foods surpassed when 3,583 periodicals against him by Attorney Vester. sented at the tournament include ) according to their individual In Local Construction During Year Period were received, so m e 200 more mark. Sioux City, Oelwein, Davenport, French diplomat· who saw it as tastes. Grownups sacrificed their than in the previous period, her Cedar Rapids, Muscatine, Bur. being so "technical" that a lengthy own long-established food eating Seven new building permits The largest circulation in the report revealed. Of these, 1,672 North Liberty Woman lington, Des Moines, Iowa City and detailed German reply would habits in favor of their children. have been issued by City In- history of the University of Iowa were acquired by subscription, and Chicago. Entries from other be necessary. An appeal was issued tonight to spector Harold J. Monk. Four of libraries, 743,219, was recorded for 1,157 by exchange, and 754 by Files Petition Here Iowa towns are expected, acc ord­ While diplomats continued ef­ gift. parents whose children have been the permits were for new resi­ the fiscal year endnig July I, it ing to officials. forts to find a solution, P aris put helping with the narvest to per· was reported Monday by Grace Although no major collections Asking for Divorce itself in fighting trim to resist at­ mit them to stay on farms to as­ dences. Van Wormer, acting director of of books were received as gifts, LewLos Dies tack from the air. sist in potato and turnip gather­ Local people to whom t he per· the libraries. 2,300 volumes were added to the A petition for divorce was filed st. PETERSBURG, Fla., (AP ) Hundreds of thousands of per­ ing. The appeal said that many mits were issued include H. T. As the circulation neared the shelves through the generosity of by Ella Blankenship of near North Tracy Lewis, 6~. whose family in sons jOined those who already had l parents were calling their chilo McNabb, residence and garage at three-quarter million mark, she individuals. Gifts also included Liberty. The defendant is T. W. 1888 built St. Petersburg's fint gone to the country. Railroad dren back because of the war Second avenue and A street; said the current figure was an in· 2, 700 issues of periodicals. Blakenship. Mrs. B 1 a ken s hip house, died yesterday after a lOI1l stations were jammed with fami­ fears. Clarence Burns on Rider street to crease of 31,81 5 over the record other figures given by Miss charges cruel and inhuman treat­ illness. lies sitting forlornly on suitcases Only 34 railway trains left the be constructed by Armstrong total of last year and 22 per cent Wormer included 2,238 volumes ment. and boxes containing cherished capital today compared with the Builders; R. E. Adams on Kirk­ over that of five years ago. loaned to correspondence, stu· The petition states that the F. R. Gets Requesl possessions. hundreds that customarily depar t. wood avenue in Hillcrest addition Miss Wormer reported that 14,- dents, an increase of about 400; couple was married in Webster LONDON, (AP)- The nationai While France wai ted there was Airplane transporttion was un­ to be constructed by Dunlop and 308 books were added to the col­ 4,25 1 volumes bound, and 3B6 City Nov. 25, 1907, and separated peace council, cabled President no change in her posltiol).. After certain. Trains ran only to bor· Sons, Contractors, and J. E. Wil· lection during the 12 months, books received from 0 the r li­ in February, 1938. Attorncy Rooseveit yesterday asking him Hitler's rejection of Daladier's der points. kinson, residence and garage at bringing the total to 445,704. The braries under an exchange of duo Henry F. Negus filed the petition to intensify efforts for a negotiated suggestion that Germany negotiate The only basis for negotiation 1703 E. College street to be con­ 1938-39 additions totalled more plicates arrangement. for the plaintifi. solut1.on of the Danzig problem. directly with Poland if he wanted acceptable to Hitler, Berlin politi­ structed by Lampert yard~ . peace, French sources said: cal quarters said, was the proposal S. D. Gratke received a permit "Hitler must back down now ~tae Murray made by President Woodrow Wil­ to remodel his present residence or we fight." Mae Murray, former screen ac­ son in 1918, accordilli to which at 802 E. Washington street; H. In diplomatic circles- it w~s re­ tress and dancer, appears in a P oland was to be given only such W. Newman received a permit to ported that the London note, strip­ Los Angeles, Cal., court to testify territory as was inhabited by build a three stall garage and Mrs. ped of diplomatic wordage, stated during her suit for support by her Poles and free access to the sea. Magdalene Englert received a per­ practically the same pOSition as son, Koran. She asks $12,000 a Wilson'. Point 13 mit to construct afive stall garage. that of France as far as Hitler's year. Koran, now 12, is a son of (The 13th of Wilson's famous 14 demands for return of Danzig and her marriage to her former hus· points of Jan. 8, 1918, called for the Polish corridor are concerned. band, Prince David Mdivani. establishment of "an independent NmiDemands A slight ray of hope held out Polish state _ .. which should in­ in these circles was that Britain clude the territories inhabited by was believed to have indicated a indisputable Polish popull\ tions, way for discussing opening of which should be assured a free GA RY COOPER wlro$e raw material markets to Ger­ combination 01 Personality anti many if l;Iot a return of colonies and assured access to the SE:a and provided Hitler withdrew from his whose political and economic in· acting makes Ir,m tire star 01 present position. tegrity should be guaranteed by international covenant.") Paramounf'$ Current Hit However, the same foreljln dip­ lomatic observer said that they The German argument ran that BfRLIN "BEAU GESTE " Poland got territory inhabited by gained the impression In Paris as well as in London that the chances more than ~O per cent Germans and that the "free access to the of any such wl~drawal had been considerably lessened by Hitler's sea" provision did not mean Po­ ••• land should get it by a grant of publication of his letter to Dala­ dier last night. territory where such would in­ ·?:(j)/.:t It was pointed out that Daladier volve inclusion within Poland of Germans. The Germans say that TERR/1VR. . ··.. ·:·>:6· by not making public Hitler's first , ... : . formal demands for the corridor this free access could be provided ...... for ~oland throuih international­ in additlon to Dan~lg had left G ERMANY . ~ .~~--. Hitler an opportunity to change ization of the Vistula river. " . - J Germany demands what now is ..... _. ~' zone his tactics. • ..1 ,._ P' /' Mr . Hitler by takinS the initiative Polish territory from the Baltic sea southward ot between Byd· ( ,,~~ . . slation himself, diplomats said, apparently ) H \.001 / present indicated he felt strong enough in goszyz and Posnan. This region right after the war, it was said, re­ This map shows the Polish Cor· of war his position to out most of his Dr. Karl Burckhardt ridor and the Free City of Dan~ .hus opening bTldges. Dr. Karl Burckhardt, league of turned a majority of German votes. zig, territory taken from Germany (See F. Some hope for peace still was nations \high commissioner for at the end of the World war. held out by the fact that contact Danzig, keeps secret what trans­ In addition to these territorial claims, Germany wants Poland to still was kept among ~rlin, Lon­ pired during his conference with bind herself to a "just treatment don and Paris. The bridges were Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler at of minorities." not burned after Hitler made Berchtesgaden, Hitler's mountain known his terms Friday to the retreat. Po British and .French ambassadors. lI Nevertheless, the French ,ov­ Showdown- wit ernment continued its preparations Police Seek for war by decreelnc censorship (Continued from Page 1) Denie of news and photoaraphs. Effec­ tive immediately, all printed pub­ Clue to Theft well-informed quarters to be a I lications, radio broadcasts and desire to avoid any provocation .Of motion picture newlreeJa must be At Local Cafe at this criticai sta,e and at the 'Oil/aM submitted for approval to a newly­ same time to make it ea.y as pos­ formed general information ser­ sible for Hitler to choose peace­ Vice. Iowa City police are jnvestigat~ luI negotiation. FOR YOUR PLEASURE The nation approached the last ing a break-i n at the Princess The British IIress with almost stages in full preparedness. cafe, No . 2, 118 E . .Washington one voice declared the time had Lightea signs were banned in street, early Sunday morning come for a definIte "showdown" the capital. Householders were told whep robbers took $213 .67 from relieving Europe of the tension of When you change to Chesterfield that their electricity would be cut the cash register in the front part the last few year•. off if they allowed light to shine of the restaurant. Public ~lIIUlda Showdown you'll find a combination of mild­ out of windows or doors. Entrance to the cafe, according Public op~on generally ap­ A total of about 3,000,000 men to the police report, was gained peared to support this position nesS, better taste and more pleas­ were under arms in the French by forcing open two windows in overwhelmlnglf . empire. the rear of the building. The Brltllh cabinet was said re­ ing aroma, that you can't get in any Letters Made Public The loss, according to James liably to be !ullf united on the The weekend exchange of let­ Lons, owner, was not discovered stand it had taken and in circles ters between Hitler and Premier until 5:30 a.m. after the cafe had close to the ,overnment there was other cigarette. Daladler was made publjc at been opened at 430 u.m., having said to be a complete ab,ence of noon by the foreign ministry. It been closed for about two hours Sentiment within the cabinet from This combination of smoking showed that France's propolIIIl for and a half. any form of "appea.emertt" unless direct negotiations between Poland Germany .howed a willingness to Ther.'. ao be".r way to re­ qualities comes from Chesterfield's and Germany had ~n flatly re­ abandon her present policy. lax la c:omfort tlaaa b.lor. the jected by the reich. Fenton Rites There was talk In political che.rful glow 01 tla. Humphr.y RIGHT COMBINATION of the world's best ' Originally, a resPQnslble source quarters about a pouiblllty that Badiaatflro. No ldadliag to said, Daladier intended to lend a Chamberlain would reconstruct carry - ao dirt. dll.t. or 1I00t. cigarette tobaccos. second letter to Hitler, but the Will Be Today his cabinet, bringing in 'lUch "antl­ IIYt tlao 10llch 01 II lIIatcb cmd wordIng of the first exchange and • appeasement" conwvlltives liS YOII'ro all ..t to oaloy your­ There's no other like it. Berlin's publicatIon of the texts Winston Churchill, Anthony Eden .01L Oao 01 tla. D.... modom last night twelve houri before is­ Funeral s e r v i c e s for Mrs. Blanche F~nton , 504 S. Johnson and Alfred Duff Cooper. eloal9Jl8 Is IUIYtrcrt.cL Com. la suance in Paris ' complicated the street, who passed away Saturday The best informed opinion was ael ... th.m all. situation. evening at her home, will be held that such a recoDltruction would Now, it was a18erted in author~ at 2 o'clock this afternoon in the await the actual outbreak ot war IOWA CITY UGHT itatlve Quarters, It is "virtually chapel of the Oathout funeral -If war came - and that the impossible" to find a common home. Rev. James Waery will be leaders of the 18001' and liberal op· & POWER CO. meeting ground between Porls and In charge of the services. Burial position parties l1kewllle would Berlin. will be in the Oakland cemetery. join any "war cabineL" hester ,