m: 5, 194s ~ MEAT8. PAT8, tt' ota.,. lilt I~ro ... Z2 ...... 11 • • Partly Cloudy on ..aOCEIIS'., roo.,., ~I.e " •• po Nt Ihr'.J~ Z' .nd ". I~ ••••II HI ••,...... /lUG"., b.d f ••••lam, ..._ for 'I"...... 11 ....._ ".... 11'. IIUOEII, IOWA: •• IU~ el •• d., wUh __ ...... alr.",...... ,. I, t aa. , J'" I ••• n.h•• , . ....wen ...... GAIOLINI. Ja-A. M ••••••••• f.r I •• r ,aJleaa .ach I••••• ~ J ••• II a.' ...... " e ...... e-, .... f •• , Ne tIeeWei ebaai"e iA f ... ,all... o.. lt . ""IL OIL. ,...... Ibro.,b ,. .. DAlLY IOWAN THE teJQuatueL ... ,... Ir'" talMI_ A.,. ,.; ta" ,t.u'. ~.r". '.. r .~. ft ••••• , ...... e ••ln a'a • . 31. Iowa City'. Morning Newspaper c~CENTS ;:======:~==,.=a==.~====T=D==~======~==~======IO==VV=A===c=n=t=.~k)~~==A======VV£D==~NES===DA==Y=,=nINE~==6=,=1?~=-5======~"==='=S·=S=2~An.==~~==~====~¥=OL==~~~X=XI~==~NUMB~~ER2~
~======~======Allied (ouncil BLOOD PLASMA AT THE FRONT ;Takes (ontrol Ne.ws Blackouton Okinawa Of Germany Country Stripped Of Arms, Conquests Hints at End of Resistance By Four Powe" WASHINGTON (AP)-An allied council took form.1 ('om Japs Abandon Veto-Voting Issue - Reporllgnores mand of shattered Germany Yeliterday, slashed the nil! ion down to its pre-1937 size l,md as· Side Againsf lumed sweeping rellpon ibility Four Towns France to Russia Ground Action for its military, civiliall and ------peon(lmic administrati.on. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-The treaty ties with the Sovkts. He 411 nations resulted In unanJm0u8 United Nations conference looked predicted Russia would lose by a approval of Denmark's IdmlasJoQ. Nimitz Discloses Ordered stripped of aJ! lIrm Chinese Force Nips to Washincton, London and M06· 45 to 5 ballot. with only U1ualnia, A deteat ot such proportions tor Scattered Operations and Hitleri~ conqucsts, the na Out of Hong Kong cow y terday lor cuJdance toward White Ruasle, Cuchollovaltla and the Sovletl, Paul-Boncpur aa.1d in tion ·was reduced virtually to I solution of the Imotty veto Issue, Yugoslavia bac:klnc her. In interview, might ~danger the Agains. Jap Shipping tbe stahlR of a pro!ectorete. Ot Industrial Areas on which France made known Ilhe whole conference by caulln, Rus· That line-up prauppoMd the sday ( AP) all Hitler's acquisitions only th ~ would vote with the United State sla to walk out. GUAlI, Wedn HUNGKlNG (A P)- Japane a&ailllt RUISla. admission of Denmark to the con· Secretary of State StettlnJus AdmjraJ h trW. Nimitz in Saar basin which Germany WOn ference as its 50th member, and through a plebiscite remains even troops have abandoned (our big ,n. At II take is the right ot free dis considered the QU ..Uon so vital an unu u 1 ommuniqu today the executive committee met ye - that he SQUlbt a decisJon trom delayed beyond its u ual hour, technically a part of the ~ch dustrial towns in the Hong Konjl cussion of events threatening peace terday to arrange It. oday. Moreover lhe way '110'11/1 lett within the security council of a PrHident Truman on wJ1eUvr the for the tim omitted all orea in contraction of their hold· lirst open for further territorial revls new world league. Russia says the Members of the It-nation com· American /lelelatJon should push meJltion ot ground op ration ings along the vulnerable, inva mlttee said they voted unani· i008. Big Five - hers~tf, France, the the veto quntion to a ~t. Okinawa and report d only sion·th at ned south China coast, mously to IHt Denmark at the on A ~1~_&Ioa. _UN at _ United Sta~ , BrItain and Chlna Lord Halifax, the British dele seatter d air a tion again t CAPT. J"1I18 R. Buron, Corpus Christi, Tel(., I elven blood pia 111& Chine e reports said yesterday. conter nee. The Danes already ration chief, checked with Prime pre_ laeactquarten ~ Paris ",141 must have the right to block such en my hipping and be e ex Uae llUed control 001111.11 ___- b:r .trollt-Uae alel men alter beln, wounded by a Japanese snJper on Thr hundred and forty roll s have a three·man deleration here. MlnisteJ;' Churchill. The Russians dlscu ion. tb , pOMd of representatives of the Okinawa. Thl. Is a United States army I,nal corps photo. northwest, Chinese troops swept But lh preponderance of opine The action will be reported to a already had referred th Issue back tending to ma.inland aod U.lted Statel, 81'1\8111, B_ta and within 21 miles of imperil d Llu Ion and vot In th conference steering committee, but Forel,gn to Moscow, alon, with word of TCor a. chow and lnunched a new encir· appear d to be aaainst her. Mlni.sler J on Masaryk of Czecho unrelenting opposition from the ( uch an pxtraordinary omig cling threat to th former Amerl· ])eleratlon Chairman J 0 S e p h slovakia 8aid "Denmark Is In.'' rest of the Bii-Four to the barriO, , ion might m an that a p cial F:.t~~:~:':::~;~:: .French Ask Big Five 10 Mediale can nirbase city, an American an Paul·B 0 nco u r definitely put A few hours later, the secretary of mere dlscuulons of dlsput In communiqu i. in the offing. u.e) nouncement. dlsclo ed. France Into the opposition In the ,eneral of the conference, Alger the security council by th vote of perhaps 81l1nallln, the expected event of a Ihowdown, despite her HIas, announced that a poll of all a linrle bii nation. The declaration assuminr this ]n an ar a 55 miles west of Honr end of enemy re tance on lhe is E 'S M1ddl E I Q ,. Kong, the Japane e were reported -----=-- land.) ~~~~~E;:~h~!~~t:r\:~i:it~ n Ire I e- as ues Ion to have pulled out. of Holping, Sze· The near t the communique States, Marshal Zhukov tor Russia, ping, Sunqul nnd Toishan, all lying At a Glance- cam to reportlnl th situation on Field Marshal Montgomery for betw n 43 miles southw t of 37th Division Makes I Fires Rage in Kobe Okinawa, wher the Japan e have Britain and Gen. de Latlre de Tas· LONDON (AP)- Prime Minister Pacific war, Moscow has expre sed Canton and 19 miles from th south been compr ed Into th southern ny for France, the announce· Churchill stood firm yesterday for hope that the Levant crL IS would China s a. 13th portJon of th island, was In 1m'mediate me d I t Ion of the Six-Mile Advance After 8-29 Strike nt said. a be etUed quickly. The Kremlin The Japan e also were ralllng say In, there was "adverse" Syrian-Lebane e dispute by the n'mmediately afterward the four has made no specific lIugge tlons back under Chinese pressure along roday's Eight Superfom I.oIt w other which prevented enemy United Stales, Britain and France ;rgllitary leaders with their princl on the form the negolia lions should China's east const north of lhe Dou8h~oys Approach air activity Monday. in the «ace of a formal French res P.t political and military assistants take. Japan I land of Form06a. Showdown BaHles In Blow at Japan's In brief, this is what todaY'll d the tlrst mee.tini of the Q.;tad quest for a "Big Five" conference commUnique aid: i _partite aUied control council on the entire middle·east question, With blunt words Churchill de The biuest battle In China raged Iowan Largest Seaport nied De Gaulle's allegations ot tor po esslon of Lluchow, 400 For Cagayan Valley ~ eanler ulanelt ", the hich will govern occupied Ger. with Russia and China also sitting Unlte4 ia.les Paclfle neet de· last Saturday thnt the British hod mlleli southeast of Chun,klng. Two MANILA, Wednesday (AP) GUAM, Wednesday (AP) ny. in. * * * "ro,ed five fl'oundecl en e m y J, stirred up the Syrians. Chine e armies were closing on the ShQwdown battles for north rn NI!W* blaekout of operations In Great fires raaed In Kobe yester. . The _Hili' elided abruptly, The action of the French council planet on the aklshlma. IsIanu, "Far from slirring up agitation city on an expandlnr 1BO-mlle Luzon's vital Cagayan valley were lIouthern Okinawa hlnlt at end dlY houri after approximately 4110 however, w h e D the AlDerkan, of mini:sters in Paris in opproving lOuUtemm h e RfUkylW, in the Levant state', our whole in· front and the Chine e command believed nearer y terday as the of resl tance lhere. SuperfortrHlH atruck their heavi toft General De Goulle'g proposal tor ...UIsh &lid French reprenn&aUveI! est blow at this sixth cIty and Su.nda:r. learned 'hat the Soviet member of a "Bjg P iye" meeting will neceSsl· lluence h~· been u~ed In pr ci ely said Chin. veterans were xes result of the 37th division', six· the other direction," he declared. cutlng on nveloplnr movement to Four- power council takes con- largest POrt of J apan at a cost of Search privaL rs of Fleet Air 1M MuDdl, Mal'llhal Zhukov, was ta~e a formal reply {rom each ot mil advance up hlibway No. II Win, One blew up a larie enemy "Most. slrenuou lind succe ful f· ncircle the Kwail I province rail lrol of G rmany. eltht bombers. _, empowered to do more than the tour "atiollll to be inviLed, but ~ nd the captu~ of Aritao village oller, l ank thr mall cargo ship Il&n th& fleel&rUIon and did no' thercappeared to be lillie doubt forts had been made by the Brit· hub. 114 oday. The bomber 10l __le611 than J'rIUlCle declil.. to With and damaged a (relghter around W.. to Il1atUIII the H,..uation of of Britain's attitude. ish mini t r In Beyrouth to pro FOl'ty·three miles wl!St of Llu This carried M J. Gen. Robert S. side halt the record total of 19 shot "U. S. aiainst Russia on veLo Korea, Monday. That brought the centrol wonen or I til method Giving comrnQnS a liq;t hand res duce n calmer atmosphere In chow, til Jopane put up a .tub Belahtler'. douahboys to the Junc down over Tokyo In the bl, fire which n goUotlons ('ould b con voUn, issue. raid of May 29-were announced Pleet Air Wlna On's bag sine the , It"·))roee.!ut.e ~ntU all OIl\ff.aDdlfta port bf the recent fiery exchanges born boUI ,but the Chinese boWed tion of hlahway No. 5 and a Jap ducted fol' s ttlement of outstand· Okinawa operations beaon to ~lI88l1_ hah been leWect. . between himself and D Gaulle, to the outskirts of Ishon, an outer an t·bullt 11lt ral road acrou lhe In Washlnllton by the 20th alr ing qu stlons belw n Franc and French InaW on five-power 904 ,405 tons of n my shipping Earller, the tour l11l\eII hahit oft Honshu. by ~ rocket.-flr~ ton assumed Ufe and death powers prime minister did not say, but the civilians from Manila were evacu· fires were only then "rradually fIghters I' turned to the communi· Employment Pradlce M'1~hell of the Fourth marine air over every m"n, woman and child British torelgn oUlce has taken ated la t December. belnr extlnaulshed." craft w1na'. cotions chy to kindle n w !Ires In At Arltao the Yanks encountered PI Germany. . the view ti ll along thnt the Im Draft Program the city foy th second stralllht day. CommittH Asked Three thousand tons ot fire Other planes attacked a naval Final disposltion of Germany's mediate concern both of London the ti rst prepared N1 pponese de bombs plummeted into a seven Some 220 miles northeast of Llu· station and other installations In territory ' and determination of her and Washington was to protect the fen e line, but It wa, deserted. W ASH1NGTON (AP)- ln a vi. square mile Irea of east.e~ Kobe, chow, lhe Chlnelle apparently ran the Kurlles Mondoy. ;fate await a peace conference. Yes vital communications line through Presented to Congress Th y took pillboxes and gun posi gorous letter to conil'etIS, Presl- embraclna the vast Kobe steel up :lgalnst bitter enemy opposl· The communique said the Brit terday's a'greemimt defines the ex· the middle east fo.· the war against tions without a fi'ht, although tlon befor the [ormer American dent Truman yesterday termed works. ish fleet, which has be nin co· tenl of JOint allied military con J apan. WASHlNGTON (AP)-A com they sou,hi several sporadic ac "unthinkable" the Action or the The bl, bombers resolutely ordlnated operation with the fighlerplnne bnse at Shaoyan" trdl while Gennany "Is carrying Allhough so (al' a neutral in the promJse peacetime draet program tions enterina the town and house appropriations commltt.ee pressed home their attacks aioinst "United States PaclClc fleet, had (Poaching), and the Chinese com 9u~ the basic requirements of un was pr s nted to congress yester· knocked out three more tanks, In deletin, fund. tor the fall' em- the worst that the Japane and lost a total of 70 Qrtlcers and men munique WIJS silent on operatiollJll conditional surrender." day as the two moJor x-service making six tor two days. ployment practice committee tram the weather could olter. kJlled or ml slnr and 34 seriously Maurice B. Crabbe men's orilanizlltions (>ndorsed the In thal seclor. Ttle 3~rd division under Maj . the war aaencies bill. Heavy and accurate anU-aircraft wounded. dO;:eno:s~~,::~t~~~ aO:ne~~~~ri~ principle of un Iv r 01 mil ita I' y Meanwhile, at opposlte ends of Gen. Percy Clarkson swunr Into fire gl'eeted the bombers a9 they Appointed to State The president wrote Chairman sailed out of the banks of thunder. Germany, ~ separate statement de· training. lhe 900-mlle front stretchinr acro 9 swift movement up hlrhway No. dared. Printing Board Offered by the veterons of for· China'S heart, the Chine e ballled 11, which enters the valley by way 58balh (D., 111 .) urilin, the house heads and for Into the talr skies Truman Asks House eign wars in an apparent attempt to consolidate gains in Kwanr$i of the Chico river valley. rules committee to permit leals- over Kobe, 250 miles southwest of QeDeral Eisenhower new to lallon settinr up a permanent Tokyo. B,erlla early yesterday to .1'11. the DES MOINES (AP) - Maurice to remove strong opposi lion (rom and Honan provinces. ..,eemen& aa4 waa ,iven, .. rouslnc B. Crabbe, business manager of educatlonal and religious groups, FEPC "to be voted upon by the At least 40 a.ar_lve Japanese To Ratify Agreements members of the house as quickly fl,hter planes came DarrellOf' up .... tlcome by the faUen eUy's BIIII the Eagle Grove Eagle, yesterday the compromise calls for cmpul British Labor Leader as possible." to meet them, and b)' enem), ac· Ita colIQueror, Manbal Zhukov, was appO inted to the state print· sry military training of able Still Cloudy, But Sun "To abandon at thls time the count some crashed Into the Sus Of Bretton Woods ~ W&II to ....n for hi. couur, illl board by Gov. Robert D. bodied youths in home environ· Asks Nationalization fundamental principle upon whlch perforts In su icidal attacks. Field Marshal 81r Bernard Mold Blue. The term is two years from menL in such a mannel' as to mini· I May Break Through WASHINGTON (AP) - Urging r... 1'7 _ .. 11m. tor Brltala, July 1. mize disruption of education and the (air employment practice com-I But for all the oppoeltlQn, the raUflclltion of th Bretton Woods mHtee WBi established Is unthlnk· heavyweirhlt cruised the skies a'" Gen. JelUl d. LaUre ile Tu· Crabbe, who wm succeed Tom nOI'mal home li!e. The sun should be able to break Of Basic Industries a,reements In the name of world "'nr for France. W. ;Purcell, retired publisb'er of throu,h today, for a few minutes able," the President said. over Kobe for an hour. peace, President Truman yester A third statement Issued by the the Hampton Chronicle, is a part- anyway. The clouds will be h igh LONDON (AP)-Clemenl R. day praised the "stalesmanship ,.111 e d representatives declared ner ot Ward Barnes, editor 01 the Hotel Rations to Be Cut and grodually thinning. Not that "tuee, leader of the British Labor Army Holiday- and non·parUS:lnshlp" de m 0 n their intention to consult }'lith t.be Eagle, who managed Blue's 1944 It wl1l be clear, by no means. party and former deputy prime Itrated In early congressional lOVernments of (lther United Na primary camJ)llign. W ASHTNGTON (AP)-Food ra- There Is no sign yet of clear mlnl8ter In the wartime coalition consideration 01 the international tions In 'exerclsina the supreme Bath 'Crabbe and Purcell are tions of the nation's hotels and weather cominr our way but the cabinet, last night appealed to the monetary plan, lauthority which they assumed over Republicans. The board consists restaurants wlll be lrlmm d for cloud layers seem to be very voters for a ,overnment with the A letler (rom the president was t\\e wreckage of GermllOY yester- of . three state officialS, ex·offlcio, July ond Augusl to bring them slowly thinning. It will be warmer wlll and power to nationaJile Ena A ¥'eor A fter D-Day read to the house a9 It opened de· 1I0y. and two appointive members. The more closely In line with the point loday. land's basic indUltries and lead bate on the ratification bill, with . The declaration set up a jOint state' auditor, secretary of state purchasing power or housewive . Early this mornin, It was the country into a "happier and se- (Bdl.... Note: Tbe followln6 It was "D_day nllbt" at Red Democrats and Republicans alike and attorney general serve on the ' The cut, Lo be announced by the drizzling but the chances are that curer future." predicUnr passare by an over control council to govern Ger Hil address opened the Labor ltol'7 w .. wrlUea b, ....,., B. CI'OIS c1ubl and soldiers who many., : poarQ without additional c.ompen· naUonal OPA soon, will affect it didn't amount. to much precipi could prove they were D-day vet· whelming vote. tation. Yesterday's hirh tempera. partY'S campairn for the ,eneral J_o, AatoctaW rre. war saUon. The appointive members allotments or meats and fa ts, ~"'_&w"'~ erans lIot a tree melll. Mr. Truman uttered n hope and receive $10 per day and expenses canned !ruits and vegetabl ,and lure was 61, the low ~ and lit elections to be held July 5 and re- t.be thlnl _ve of IaYUlea ,_ BeeDe a Year "-e prayer that the e x amp I e of Mitscher Discounts on board bQslness. sugor, It was learned last night. 11 :30 last night it was 55. plied to Prlme Minister Cnurchill's 00 D-d~, .... wbo .... W1MII1Il.. One year aao lasl nllbt this WAS "statnmallJllhip and non-partisan speech Monday niliM araillJllt the d~ tIae _1IIt -.a .... Nor the scene on an laland burlun, at ship" Ilh own In house banking lAbor party's socialist policy...... , beaebee. Be reealk beft- the seams with Invuloll troops; as com mit tee action on Bretton O~inawa Criticisms Churc:f,m Takes 'Full Responsibility'- "When I listened to the prime 'with tIae talleeff a ,ear ,,0 Ie darkness fell, 11,000 .hips-little Wood, "will become the pattern minister'. speech lut nlaht In ....Ja&.) ships, blr ships and medium-sized for American participation in WASHINQTON (AP)-Ope of which he aave such a travesty of ships-all laden with troop. and International economic and securl· the: navy's top commandin, offl the Labor party 1 realized at once B., B • ...., B. J...... equjpment, started pul11n& anchor. ty cooperation." ~ri on the ilcene declared yester· Loan of Fleet Un;ls to Russia whal WII his object." AtUee said. LONIXlN (AP)-One year a,o They all had been loaded two His letter yesteTday was sent to cia;; that all the services lpvolved "lJe wanted the electors to under· last night a plcked army of niahla previous between mldnirht Chairman Spence (D-Ky.) of the In :the baUle for Okinawa are stand how great was the dlUerence American and allied ' IOldlen, and "dawn. house hankin, committee as he 'dciina the bf8t that ill humanly LONDON (AP) - Prime Mln- Britain's part of the transaction crews to Scotland to man all of between Winston Churcblll, the scared but det.ermlned to do their All the ships were blacked ~t. and ~presentatlve Wolcott (R I)OI8lble.'" Ister Churchill, taking "full per· inVOlved vessels with an aggregate lhe ships. ,reat le~er in a war of a united jobs, pushed off from £Orland to The only Urhts visibl. were ocea· MiCh.), tenior Republican on the " Vice Adll1iral Marc A. Mitscb~J sonal responsibility," revealed in value of nearly $0,000 ,000. The questions of the disposition nation, and Mr_ Churchill, party light the fUM for the areatest mIU- Iional .Irnal blinkers and rJd and committee, joined in urging the COIIIInand1ilg, fast Carrier Task commol1ll ye9terday a loan to Rus The agreement lo turn the ves of the Italian lJeet after 1141,y'. Leader of the ConservaUVH. He tary explOllon in history. creen markers laid down by brave hoUle to approve the plan for a rorc~ 58 in the Okinawa o,*"UOI), sla of Brjtish' fleet units, includ· sels over to Ru ssia was reached at surrender was raised by Russi, fearttd lest thOle who had accepted Many of theae same men foulbt IIWe mlnHweepers breakin, 1\ ,9,100,000,000 world bank for re a he bad' l,nM nine former over·age de ~d ~eWll confl'r~nce Tehran, Churchill said. which asked for one betUuhlp, his leadership in war milbt be their way rtaht on Into German)' lane fOr the prize carao. con.truction and development , b~rd and read critiClslIlJII of .lItra- stroyers, to meet Soviet demands The transfer, marking the ttrst one cruiser, eight destroyers, four tempted to follow hlm further, 1 and are now back In £o.land 1 crossed the channel to bloody loans and a separate $8,800,000,000 there but that hl~ OpuliOll, for part of the surrendered Italian teJ>: time during the war Brilain bad submarines and 40,000 toQl of thank him for havlnr dlsiUUllonect awaltinr transportatIon homr. Omaha beach with third wave monetary fund for international ~red by "evt;rybody ou\ there/, fleet. loaned to lhe Red navy a comple merchant shipping. them so thorou,hly.n I'In& A...... -rF forces and the thiDJ th,t 814ndl Ippl\td equally. to the armY, navy cur~ncy stabilization. Supplementing the B l' j tis h ment of its fighting navy, took Churchill pointed out thllt the Alonr with all other alUed sol- out In "" mind u the blUest mir· and ~'l!Very other br8anIIl8Uop." transaction Churchill said the place May 30, 1944 . aboard the ships in the Italian fleet had been dier. they will paUle toda)' to Db- aele of all Is how the navy cor· ~Iral fvfitscher discou~ted the Generals Tour Facto..... Yank P. O. W.'s Coming United Stales gave Russia use 01 built to operate mOlUy in t.eJnp serve the flnt anniversary of raUed this riranUc fieet of IhlPl IeriousDesS of the Japaenll4l auH:ide Royal Sovereign in the fog DETROIT (AP) - Gen. Carl the 7,05O-too light cruiser Mil D-day, which General EiHnhower and lot them acrosa the c~lII1elln plane threat, aasertlnr that not shrouded estuary of the Firth of el'ate waters of the Mediterranean SPRitz, commander of Un i ted Home This Month waukee - I)OW named the Mur Forth near Edinburgh. and the allies decided to continue in has proclaimed an anny holiday. luch orderly fashion_ It lIlOre than one per cent of those States strateric airforces Ell IJIjInsk - and lhe prime minister them in service in that area aDd to At all army lnatallatlolll onl), General Eisenhower visited ona PAR IS (AP)- Virtually aU ~t out by the enemy prove ef Admiral Sir Edward Kennedy· ,ope, and four other top·ranlt.in, sugges\ed the United States also skeleton ,tattl wUl operate on a base just before t~ take-ofI ljIld American prisoners of war, includ J8dlve. That eUectiveness js beinl Purvis, deputy first sea lord, made turn over to the Rusa1alll an army alrfon:es eenerats made a aa ve halt of the 40,000 tons of equivalent number of British and 10 called SuRdI)' lChedule in order oUered a word of ,ncourll.~nt Ina thOle in Russian·occupled . red~ daily, be pld, and wJIl be the presentalion of ships, declar swift tour yesterday of four major to ~d areas, have been recovered and further red~. . merchant s hlp pin g asked by ing "we know we are turning American vessels to RUllia OIl a w,r factories, rive the boYI a chance to cele- to the men who the tourbest brate_ There wl11 be no formal job of aU-landina in darkneu "all ot them will be e.nroute home . .MUiChel', who returned fr!llJl the Russia. these ships over 10 a gallanl, high· temporary loan basis. PUlldina alone Woodward ave ~e Una w~th before the end of the month," PacWc ynterday for , confere~ In ,dcUtion to the surface war spirited navy and we know they Final disposition of the Italian Due, Detroit', main thorough1are, celebrationl, bUt wherever Amer- behind Gennan only a Ueut. Col. W. P. Scbweltzer, chief here, reported an "lInpreIlliOl)" at ships C bur chill said Britain will be used against a common fleet will be setUed at the peace the five ,Cen~.ra1s received a roar· Ican lroopI ..thered lalt nieht prayer on their lipl &hal the 11- of the recovered allied penonnel home lh.t the Pacific war WJII turned over .four submarines and enemy to full effect." coruerence, the prime miDister ina welcome from thousanda 01 there wu an WlUlUlI show of pult landin, force, would reach comradeship, them before the Germaua did. dlvWon, said yesterday. IIti1l on ~d front. "bflt of the merchant ihlpa." The Russians had sent complete said. people Unip, the street.. ~ ~;AG~E~~~O~==~======r======T~H=E='=D=A=I~L=Y==I=O=W=A==N=?=t=O=W==A==C=tT=Y==.=I=O=W=A======~======~==9R======vnm===NE==SD=A=Y=,=nnm===6=,1=~= Tn E D At LY .1ow AN Formttt Reich Vitlitfts Na,y Releases Story OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN PubUsbed every montin, except _MondaY by Student Publlcatlons n..:.wti..L.I incorporated at 126-130 Iowa IIvenue, Iowa City, Iowa. WIU UCU at AI,'led UlnVE_Srry OAL.NDAa .r. ,.• ".1.... tilt ..... Of Submarine Strike 01' C.,U.I. II.... r.r tlo. OENII.AL MOTro.i lit lb ••am, ..... tor ., Tb. Dail, r...... r .., .. Board of trustees: Wilbur Scbrainrn, Klrk H. Porter, A. Craig Dlbe h. ....ovld.. 'or Ibe" '.'01" ... Il. .m." .r n. Baird, Paul R. Olson, Donald Ottilie, Mary Jane Neville, Mary Beth , 10 ..... GENEaAL NOTICES ...... It ••1 T" Pall, •."" h Treatment of Nazis At Japanese Convoy .:1It ,. at. 110 ...., 'r...... , "rat p.1>I1 •• I108 ; .00Ieo... 1ft IIOf .. p!tmer; Karalyn Keller, Jack Moyers. ••..,'k. 10, t.I •• h •••••nd m ...t b. Tl'PED oa LEOIIILY ...".. By Kenneth L. Dillon .ad 810NED b •• r •• ' .... lbl. p.r.... Fred ~ . 'pownall, Pubtlsher WASHINGTON (AP}-Sneak IN OCCUPIED GERMANY Vol. XXI. No. 195' Wednesdal, JUDe •• lHi John A. Stlchnoth. Editor 'Dick Baxter. Adv. Mgr. (AP)-On a little hill not far from ing into the middle of a Japanese bl Internment 'Camp Number 94 deep convoy. the UnltM States subma fl Eptered as second class mal] Subscription rates-By mail ,5 rine Parche blasted five enemy UNIVERSITY. CALENDAR per year; by carrier, 15 cents inside Germany a group of Poles, Jc Jbttter at the DOstoUice at Iowa Frenchmen. Rugslans and BCllians vessels in 46 minutes of furious t ( <;:lty, Iowa, lInaer the act of con weekly, S~ per year. lighting. Saturday. June 9 Workshop. Home and School C0- sit each night arid stAre with burn ./1 ~ of March 2, 1879. The story of the explolt was re Registration Cor freshJllen. C61- operation, sponsored by Child WII The Associaled Press Is xchi ink eyes and haunted memories at lege of Liberal Arts. fare and PTA. Old Copitol. III what used to be the Ohrdruf con leased by the navy yesterd'ay under ) TELEPHONES slvely entitled to use for republi 12 M. Summer Session Term cation of all news dlspatcbes centration camp. Its new p01icy of disclosing as Saturday. June 18 Editorial OUice ...... 4192 much as it deems feasible of its I ends. credited to it or not otherwise TI1ey are not pleased at wbat Workshop, Home and School C0- Ir hitherto hush-hush submarine S1UtdaJ, Joe 10 Society Office ...... 4193 credited In this paper ~nd also goes on there. They have been operation. sponsored by Child Wei· Jc operatfons. Time and place. how 3:30 p. m. and 4:30 p. m. IOwa Business Office ...... 4191 the local news publlsbed berein. told th~t it is "the American way" fare and PTA, old Capitol. bl ever. were not disclosed. Mountaineers: Campfire H 0 r s e and that two wrongs do not toake of a right and perhaps they under Under the command· of Comdr. back Outing; meet at engineering Sunday, Jane 17 WEDNESDAY. JUNt: 8J 1945 building. )0 stand. It 18 hard to tell becAuse L. P. Ramage of Lowville. N. Y., 1 :45 p. m. Commencement. Iowa the camp which now houses Ger the Parche had stalked the big TUe8day. Jane U Union. 2 p. m. Bridge, University club. man war criminals is the same one convoy for several hours on a Monday, Jone 18 AWorld Universityt stormy night. Once. it had closed In Wednesday, Jbne 13 where many of them were tor 8 a. m. Summer session Term 7( tured, beaten and starved . and for the kill only to be blocked off Workshop. Home and School Co· 11 classes begin. operation sponsored by Child Wei· of squeezed 40 to 50 into a single by escorting war vessels. itevolutlonary changes in our a small group of American naval Thursda.y, June 14 fare and PTA, Old Capitol. system of higber education. may officers as "language students" at hideous cell not long ago. - On the second run. the Parche Workshop, Home and School Co Workshop, Home and SchOQI Co come because of the tremenaous ouI." embassy in Tokyo and that The only thing you can be sure maneuvered inside the esc 0 r t operation. sponsored by Child Wel about their thoughts Is tbat. If screen. The submarine was run operaUon sponsored by Child Wei· p\-ogress in the development of their k)1owledge of Japanese lan fare and PTA. Old Capitol. fare and PTA, Old Capitol. the airplane. guage and customs has played an they were runhing it. things would ntllg on the surface when it came Friday, June 15 smack up against the first target. With every place in tbe world be very diUeren1. 6 p . m. Iowa Mountaineers: Tuesday. June 19 important part in our war al!ainsl Ohrdruf was opened as intern The submarine loosed torpedoes. only a few bours away by air. it Japan. He points out that these horseback rlding-lh'l'Jbertrail ride; 7 :30 p. m. Partner-bridge, tjnl· ment camp ,Mmber 94 by th'e There was a loud explosion and meet at engineering buUding. versity club. Is conceivable that. within this men were not sent to 111\ Ameri 35Sth regiment of the 89th infan the ship was not seen again. generation, countries, their 1\.15- can college to learn About Japan try division-the ~ame r'eilment A tanker was the next victim. A (For lDtormatloD refarella, dates beyond 'bIB lelledale... tories and languages. will be but were sent to Ja~ah proper. w¥tich marched lnto Ohrdr'uf early torpedo knocked off her bow. and """*"0.1 la lb. ofllce of tbe President, Old C,"tol.) studied at first Mnd-In c1ass- 'he war depar'tment ~nnounce early in April and found a nlgh\ Servicemen Wonder- she sa nk almost immediately. · rooms in tbe native countries- ment Monday that It w1l1 estab mAre of murdered. starved and , Another lanker came into the GENERAL NOTICES Ihstead of merely through books lish "army colleges" for >over tortured victims of tbe Relch's Parche sights and again torpedoes sadists. . found their mark. The ship slowed FlBLD ROU8& WOMEN'S RECREATIONAL and lectures. seas soldiers may add impetus to but stayed afloat. Eventually. according to a this not-too-improbable dream Maj. Nunzl Casavola of Taun SWlMMlNG ton. Mass .• and Portland, Me., was Have WOn?' While the convoy's escort fran Studend and faculty must ar · provocative article by Paul Schu We 4-5:30 p. m. Dai1y. of a World university. Although placed In cbarge with orders to tfcally senl up flares and opened range for lockera before 8 p. III. at bert in the June issue of Cosmo- American soldiers at these "army up with machine guns, the Parche the fleldbotlR. 10-11:30 a. m. Saturday. operate it o,n a "stern but just and KENNtTH L. DtxON ' board chaIrman told us just 'belore found a new ttlrget-a vessel "with RecreatiollaJ swimming perto.di · politan magazine, we may have a colleges" presumably wUl be hUl"ane basis." All universIty men ma" use the World university, which would taught American subjects by IN OCCUPIEb G E R MAN Y we got on the bus 'for the induction a sizeable superstructure." field hJuse floors and faCilities are open to ali women studl!ll" The first problem was sanita faculty, far.ulty wives. wIves 01 have four colleges-located in the American professors. the mere (AP)-"Why certainly we won the centet. 'Yb'u boys wfh the wilt,' tie A bullseye shot amidships broke from 8:30 to II p.m. Tbe;y lIIusl be tion. Under German rule It had iI'Ie vessel in two. dressed In regulation lult of graduate students and e:drrunlst',. United States, Europe, Russia academic contact with foreign been a disease-ridden hol~ wh.er«; war." said the sergeant somewhat sald, 'and we will wcil ilie peace Cor .,m beliigerently. "Has some dopey Joe you.''' The Parche. under a haiLflf ma- black shorts. white shirt, and rub ti ve • staft memben<. Stuilenlt and China. nations ought to stimulate the de ~be starving priso.ners !lte garbage. ber-soled em shoes. should present theIr IdentlflcatlOft Tbe first batch of German prfs been implying otherwise?" ' chine gun fire, again spotted the Subj~ct:s taught at this sug sire for actual first-h/md study "And that is not all," said · th~ tanker it had hit earlier. The I. G. 8ctmo£Dlta cards to the rna tron tor admittalJCl. kested World university would. be of forei~n subjects. oners was put to WOrk c;leaning We had been sitting around .Iaz- • tanker's small guns laid down a M. GLADi'S SCOTl' up and making Ohrdruf a fit p1ace l'ly I'n the sunshl'ne when ~ co:rp'6 I al co'tpOtal. "While all of this ts going . languages, history, economics and The affects of a Wo~ld univer "r . hot barrage. Commander Ramage. IOWA uNION t.eUglon. The college of the sity could be far reaching. It for human existence. rAised lhe question. H"ere ib wAs on ot/t fil SAn tranciS'Co H SIlys he're who received the Congressional wllter was the next job MUSIC ROOM SCHEDULE World university In the United might serve as a great Instrument Gettin~ V-E qay plus 21. and here was a that II new war hut Friday outside room 307. Schaeffer hall. line the work. that?" ,'corporal "nobOdy has started any ever, and hit the hvge ship end selected in proportion to the vances have been made in r'my "Well, it seemS thilt the Itlin~n$ whr. It sH~ here ttiaL m\ltber Bri- on. stopping it. Then the Parche 7:50 a. m.-12:00 M. The next examination will ,. be There is plenty of work to do populations of tbe countries In do not seem to agree wJ~h him. As taln nor France acted until their swung out and scored a torpedo 1-5:00 p. n. given at the end of the summer sponsoi'ed t r a i n I n 'j: programs. cleaning the grounds, repairing the area. The World university Even greater ildvances could be a matter of fact th ey are very \Jp s'e~ responsibility was tod great to ig- bullseye from the side. A few SMurdaY session. , the buildings. motor vehicles and Abou it and sOme of them seem I\oi'e nnd tbey jllst stepped in to minutes laler the big ship sank 7:50 a. m.-12:00 M. l>ROF. GRACE COCHItAH would be co-educational a r'I d achieved by a World university. sO forth-and the o'nly way that to be ready to fight over It and save bloodshed." with a rumbling gurgle. Government Documents Dept" Romance Lan,.arM would offer post gradua le courses "Perhaps the gasoline engine. the prisoners can escape work Is what is more, maybe England' i~ ------____~ _____'______open only to holders of a degree plus 20th cen{ury rniliative, will if they are sick. ,LIbrary Annel!: Department going to get mixed up irt It too- Monday-Thursday from an acceptable institution. Inake some form of World uni The prisoners work eight hours maybe against Tilo.'· I' 8 a. m.-12:00 M. In support of bls thesis. Schu versity possible before many daily. Under the SS, the working "Well, aiter what hllppened Beet, Pea, Cherry Growers Facing Losses 1-6:00 p. m. IOWA MOUNTAINEERS .. bert points out that the United more generations go by," Mr. hours were from daw;n to dusk down in Gre~e 'r am no~ sur of Friday The Iowa Mountaineers will States navy for years maintained Schubert concludes in his articie. whict) at this time of the year prised," said the sergeant, "but I 8 a. Jrt.-12:00· m. would be twice lis long. They are Unl@ss They'Gan Obtain Enough Farm Labor reckon if our government flkured 1-5:00 p. m. ritle at Upmeir Stables near Ely fed ~wQ 10M meals dally from that thal was. all right tbey o/,ill fi Saluraay Saturday. June 9 at 6:30 p. m. The captured German army supplies, gure this Js all right too. Is tHat al1 By MORRis CLEAVENG£R the district this week. 8 a. m .~ 12 : 00 M. group will meet at the engine'er· as compared to the thin . turnip Soicid~ &mbings Will Not Halt -offefisive- that ill worrying you?" WASHINGTON (AP) - Wires Col. Wilson R. Buie. labor direc EducaUon-Philosophy - PsYchol ing building at 5:45. Every,one soup which was the sole fare of "Not by a long said the w~ys." between Washington and the west tor for the WFA, has written l1li Library, Ea!l~ Ilall By lUrke L. SIm);son the Japanese islands themselves the SS victims. corporal, "It seems thetf! is 11 16t should bring 70 cents to covedosl hummed wHh farm labor l:Jrob- Senator Wheeler that a close Monday-Thursday Serious as bave been American If apd when tbe time for that pf trouble out in San FranclscO. of ride and transporLation. · A comes. lems again last week. watch is being kept of sugar beet ~ : 50 a. m.-6:00 p. m.' losses afloat in personnel and to Hold Wheat Up There is the Polish question and the 7-10:00 p. m. campfire will be provided and each DES MOmES (AP)-Detalls of 'Argentlne fuss and the Russian 9b Senators and con g res s men areas "in order that we may assist ship damage off Okinawa, there is Friday member is to bring his own food. New Ce'i1'et II. commodity loan program to keep je c.~o n s . to some c1ayse or the c;lther thought the use of prisoners of ... in procuring an adequate 1abor authoritative word fo r it that Negro 7:50 n. m .-5:00 p. m. Preceeding the ride. Verne Up.. DES MOINES (AP)-A gift of the price of the 1945 Wheat crop that keeps the big counb-y rFq~ war an,d the Importation of M"exl- supply to pl'oduce the maximum Saturday meir will instruct the group in lhe measures to curb Japanese suicide $100,000 in honor of the lat at 90 per cent of parity were an changin~ governments of. the ,ljttle can nationals and Jamalcahs had bombing attacks are taking effect. 7:50 a. m.-12:00 M. handling of horses. All Il\ember ~ Wenden Willkl~ to build a pew nounced yesterday b)' the war countdes 01' so rriethin~ . Thim. tHere s01ved most. of the l'llfflcultles. sugar beet acreage to meet the going on the sU mmer outing shOUld There seems reasonable prospect Negro ~ommunlty center building loop administration (WFA). is the British govern men t refusing tiut beet farmers ' telegraphed critical demand lor sugar." Scbedules of hours for other de take advantage of the opportuility tllat by the time American forces in Des Moines was announced yes The program will give a na to recognize the new Austrian gov t hey needed additional workers. Bui\~ said that about 2,600 Mexi as they w ill be ex pected to kTtow are ready to move on against their terd,al by the Gardner Cowles Uonal average of approx.imately ermTtent and some argument over Pea and cherry growers said they can nationals will be delivered to partmental libraries will be posted how to care for their horses on next major objective tbls enem)' foundation. ,1.38 a bushel on a farm loan whether Dertmark g ts to sit in pn on the doors of each library. the three-day trail ride. ThMe weapon of desperation will have faced loss of crops unless they gol . Montana by early June. but that The foundatlpn made the gilt basis. Loan rates announced a the conference and s uff like th t" help. Other farmers reported thelt Reserve books may be with wishing to make reservations for been written down to no more !oJ]o~in( a r~po ~ t of a special year . ago on 1944 crop. wheat A Pfc. sat up and yawned. growing seasdns ate well ad- transportation difficulties might drawn for overnight U'Se at '" p. m the ride must do so by Thursday than nuisance value. commi.ttee of the Negro communi showed a national average of "I see what you mean," he said. va~fe.d-a J'Jd 'fho's going to gather preclude the early delivery of the night with Martha Ann IsaBCIj , Th~t. at least. was tbe opinion ty center. about $1.35 a bushel. "It reminds me what my drart In tbe sheaves? full 4,000 al10cated to that sta teo OD Frlftay, anel at 11:00 a. m. on 116-29F5. . of Admiral Halsey even before he SaturdaYIL. In the rtl1dst of this War Food Any additional w 0 t' k e r s for MARTHA ANN ISAAclI returned to action with his rr'lighty HOW SYRIAN CRtSIS A~FECTS AL~IED STRATEGY .· Admb1.1strator Marvin, Jones in- Montana, he added, must of neces •. E. ELLSWORTH Le.aer Third fleet. f9rmed Sen a tor Wheeler (D- sity be West Indians. Director Halsey did not doubt whlle In M6nt.) that he will meet war de------~-=::..-:::...:::...;:~------..-----...:.;;:=..---.-, Washington that wa;ys and means pllItment officials June 3 to cte to deal with tbls Japanese llarI velbp a farm la~or program for FIRST AMERiCAN \vORL!) WAR II CEMETERY IN FRANCE lirl technique would be evolved. the remainder of the year. partlcu His confidence Is now ecboed by larl), tor September and Octobet. Vice Adm. Marc Miiscber. until "WHen ~ I il rl 5 lit.! definitely recently In command of the fast completed for the remainder of carrier task forces covering the the yeAr. we will make a public Okinawa operations. He estimated hh\\otlhcement liS to t~e number Of \0 a Wasbington press conference prl~oJ)ers 6f wlit who Are tI\.'ail !hat only one percent of Japanese aBle," Jones saId. suicide b 0 m b e r 5 actually get F!lrfn labor plans, according to through navy air defenses for ef Jones, were predl'cated on the fective attack and that every day assumption that 100.0'00 prisoners sees that ratio being reduced the of war would be used. So far. I1ractical e Ii min a t Ion of that however, he said, only 85,000 have menace to shipping can be fore been available. seen Mitscher believes. • Meanwhile, Colo\-ado sugar beet A believer in offensive tactics. krOW!!fS Ihforlne.d ,Senaror J ~hn kalsey's first move on resuming son (D-Colo.) that tbe need of command was to throw bls car workers for "thinning" their- crop ner-based planes against probable I~ crjti~al . They said they required Illlcide takeoff spots in Japan. at least 1,000 m'ore mtm. Based on Mlt5Cher's figures. the Pleas 10r prisoners of ~ar to attrition factor of Itself would J\e\p 10M 40(}.OOO pounds of peas 'eern to be an ultlmafe ahswer to l(>r shlp¢ertt ab oad throullh the iJipahese suicide tactics. unH~ Nations Relief and If.e Th~ w~stage is fantastic If 99 haiSlUtation aClJ)linistration also out of ioo ships are beaten 6ft ot were lTu~de. The pea ' growers 'hot down. asserted that all tb\: pow labor It is .an axiom of normal aIr his ~n Bssllned to the beet combat fully affirmed irt the farniers. course of the war in Europe "thlit ral"l1\ers flS'lted triat prtsoners ot .ustalned attack Is Impossible YrIl'r ~tlw dlsmtlntll'ng Camp Hale where losses run as hl,h as 10 per In the Colorado Rockfes be sent cent. t6 tI\~ir I$rms, but this probably f The pertinent fact also Is that Won't tle done. Army sources say for all that monile-shattering loss IUh\~r . al \he eamp Is vitlilly tatio, the suicide bOmbing tech needed (o\" b'ospl\al constnlctton. nique has not halted altbougb it Around Lewlst'brl; fd.aho, g'row may have prolonged the clearance ~rs c\ e c I a e Ii they are faced nl)H. SGT. Robert BrlidieJ of Altoena. Pa.• exaDUne. the 10-foot square. enclosed by rolles. \'tIIWI 9f Okinawa. Nor Is there any Wlt\\ the 10$8 of 3~OOO to'ns o~ che'r tharls the sl\e "'I\ere tile nn. American s'olcUers (vere burled after they wC'rC' killed I'tormlllJ( 6'.... teason to expect that it collld pre rl~s DTld 4.~~O obres'of pen'8 uiifess Beach on the Normanely coast Of fihc" Int Jane 6. Tile bodletl of the men. hurled B few mlnu\e. ~ vent an Athj:;hlbt6lis iBsault on more workers are brought ·\1\to lie lal\dIDr. hlve been remDve'ct to a .rerul'" clemeny a\ St. Laurelr'li:
" ~~WED~NES~~DA~Y~.~JUNE~~6.~1;;94~5======T=R:::E=D=A=I=L=Y=l 0 W A K. lOW A CITY, lOW A PAGE flUId Pre-Nuptial Courtesy NAZI "WHATZIT'! PLANE WHICH NEVER-SAW' ACTION' , 'War Has Set Back Training of Doctors, IStudents in Hospital I Hitler's Sister To Fete Sally Wallace, Medical Research, r Says Dr. Harry P. Smith Ruth M~ldler, N4 of Charles City-seeood West Patricia Jensen, C4 of Webster .. June Bride-Elect "Research in medlc~e has been I "Chemistry, engineering and CilJ'-53 set back by the war," declared Dr. physics have been well tabU hed Harry P. Smith, head of the path V~R..... In honor of Sally Wal\ace, in universities, but this is not true ology d partmetlt of th~ colleg of Private Patlenu 10 a. m. to 8 brid~elect of this month, Mrs. or all medical schools. Of the 80 Frederick Kent and daughter, Mrs. medicine, to Kiwanian at their p. m. John S. Greenleaf, will entertain weekly luncheon in Hotel JeIfer medical schools In the Unlled Ward Patien!.s -t p . rn. and 7- on y terday. tom orr 0 \II at a miscellaneous states, 30 ar tr diUon lIy tab 8 p. m. thower in the Kent home, 302 "Enormous numbers of scientists Iisbed in the universitl " Dr. No ward vi 1I0rs in 11IOlation RIchards street. Approximately ore needed now and after th Smith said. ward. 14 guests wm share the courtesy. war," Dr. Smith said. "Our coun- Miss Wallace, daughter of Mr. try has not made adequate pro\'I- FUll"" 8bet~e and Mrs. Ben P. Wallace, 810 N. ion for training such men, Ill- There a a tremendoU! hortage New Y.tI: lUll Ve-.. Johnson street, will become the though there are two bills before on the teaching staff of the medl- The New York: sute ~cislature bride of Dr. John Evans Wleh, son congress at present that will do cal schools nd all positions are not I r~ntly attempted to pass an act of Mrs. Grace Evans Wieh. June much to help the situation." filled with m n having d greo. that ~rmitted the graduates of 10 in the PresbyLerian church. The first bill would provide d - although the t.T1md in the univer- any medical school in the United • • • ferm nt from the armed forces for sWes a to have as many as))05- SUtes to practice in the sute. Gov- Dilucbter Born 5,000 medical tudents per year; sible. Approximately 70 per cent . . Prof. and Mrs. John C. Gerber, Ihe econd calls lor the def rment of the Instructors in the medicaJ emor J)ewe,. vetoed it because It 106 Clark street, are the parents of 20,000 men in phy IcaJ and en- schools hav Ph.D. degr would allow man,. incompetent of a daughter, Barbara Pag~ Ger gincer!ng sciences. ,·ft S(lmething is nOI done about doctors to practice tn New York. ber, born Monday evening at Uni "One-half of the 150,000 physl- the Iraining of physicians:' Dr. "'The standard. of lOme schools versi ty hospl (at cians in this country are In "Ihe Smith lS id "the number of com- plalned. "Students weren't ,etting • • • rmed forces," Dr. Smith stated. petent leaders In clinical schools are very loW:' Dr. Smith ex 'AULA HllLiR WOlf, slaler of Visits Mother "Lare numbers will be kept In the will go down, the amount of tsH laboratory experience and though Adoll Hit! r. la ahown above alter she had ~n placed under hOUH Visltlng in the home of Mrs. s rvice after the war. the veter- time for teaching will be I ,we courses In anatomy were good, arrut near Berchteagaden by Nile W. Jones, 30 S. Governor an's bure u will need many dOC- I will slide back histor cally in other pre-eUnical courses were street., Monday evening was Alice forcea of the lOlat Airborne di tors for treatment of our wounded medical science and the establlsh- farces. vtaSon.. She \I lIvine In the bome Jones of Cedar Rapids. Also visit and !.he new program of medicaJ m nt of new schools will show up. " A lap of time in which no men ot Dletrtch Eckhart, NU:\ poet Ing In the Jones home Sunday and insurance and socialized medicine I "There is consid rabl pure are trained for the ,medical pro and form r favorite of h I' broth Monday was Mrs. Jones' son, will require many of our doctors." from the publlc to turn out more reslon will harm the counlry," er. She said h l' brother had or Lleut. Nile W. Jones Jr., who is U. S. IOM.ING RAIDS on an aircraft factory at OberptalfenhOfen. Germany. stopped production on thia 2M,'" Doetan Needed . physicians. It soundB nice on Dr. Smith staled. "The quality of dered her to ch&nge her name 80 en route from N'ew York to Cali had German plane which WSI developed too late by the Naw to aee acLlon. It II a two~ngtn d DomJer The country needs 200,000 doc- paper bUI It cannot be done at our schools will be lowered by th~ that nobody would know he fornia. 336 lighter. bomber. featuring tront and rear propelleH. capaClOWl bomb lIlLy . a COCkpit on two lev.1t, tor and deferments are being present because of Ule scarcity or ,horta,e of tratned IfI$tructors Bnd any "vine relaUv I, and ahe &lao taken away from pte-medical SIU- te ching personn I," Dr. Smith the pro,res. of medlcal science reported that ahe w.. man1ed .". . and tricycle landing gear .. It waa IUpPOsed to have a apeed ot over "'00 mile. per hour at 2~ ,OOO le4I&.l Visits Dauchter just recenUy. (IDt~rn.tioDaI) .Tbla Ia otllclal United SUtea Army Air Foreea nhotocraph.j"- d nts. "ald. would be forced bacl' 50 years." Mrs. 1. A. Rankin, 1114 E. Col an Ott,,.,nu,,m.lI. lege street, ii spending two weeks In Washington, D. C., visiting her daughter, Dorothy Rankin, yeo A. E. Walz Elected Bundles for Britain man secon dclass, who is stationed Nutritionists 118-124 South Clinton Street with the W AYEs. Phone 9607 • • • Junior Councillor Organization to Meet Visit Mrs. Kessler STRUB --- WAREHAM Recent guests of Mrs. James A. E. Walz, instructor In science To Meet Here The Bundl~ tor Britain orlanl Kessler, 109 Oakland avenue, at University high school, was zation will have a special m ting Iowa ity', Departmen' Stor,-Ed. 1867 were her btother lind sister-in elected junior councillor of the The Iowa State Nutrition coun at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning In law, Dr. and Mrs. 1. K. Sayre of Junior academy of Science of Iowa cil will m et Friday for the second room 508 of the lowo State Bank St. Charles. Dr. and Mrs. Sayre in the grOUP'S annual election. time this spring In Iowa City. The and Trust company. All members are now visiting relatives in Dav Under the direction at Walz the public Is invited to the morning are urged to attend. enport. University high school science club, session in tilt> enate chamber of • • • "'Ihe Radicals" published three 'Old Capitol. A bUSiness meetini Zion Lutheran Llldles Aid O() leb Footwear Leaves ror California issues at the official organ of the will be held in the afternOOn. The Zion Lutheran LDdi s Aid Mrs. r. B. Lee, 115 S. Governor academy this year, "News LeUer." DUring the open ession the fol soclet.y will meet at 2:30 Lomorrow street, has left for an extended In compliance with the order of lowing topics will be dlscu sed: afternoon in the church parlors. with a Smart visit with her sister at Pasadena, the Office of Defense Transporta "Calcium and Phosphorus Utiliza tion, the junior academy did not Calif. tion in Adolescence," led by Dr. Welsh Misslonaryoclel" hOld its annual m eling this year. Genevieve SLearns, re earch pro An election of officers to serve lor fessor. 01 pediatrics at University Mrs. Myrtle J. Hinkhouse of the ensuing year was conducted by hospital; "Common Nutrition W ., Liberty, a r turned ml lon ary from China, will be gu t • Mountaineers Plan mail. Ol!icers elected were Bob Problems of Children In Iowa," by Dickey, Phi-Chem club, Senior Dr. Robert Jackson, assistant Pl'O speaker at ;J meeting of the We] h Saturday Night Outing high school 01 Keokuk, president; tessor of pediatriCS, and "Ascorbic Missionary soci ty tomorrow aft Bernard Christiansen, S. O. S. club, Acid Blood Levels in Normal ernoon at 2 o'clock in the home of Wilson high of Cednr Rapids, vice Adults in Iowa," by Dr. Kilte Mrs. Clark Hugh s, 221 Melro e Iowa Mountaineers will ride at av nue. Upmeir stables near Ely Saturday president; Beverly Anderson, S. Daum and Ruth A. Wlrsig of the nutrition department. Mrs. J . S. McLDuihlln will be evening. Preceding the ride, Verne O. S. club, Wilson high, secretary, and Ronald Jesperson, General In charge of the proaram on Upmeir, who has won a number "Leornlnll About outheast Asia." of prizes at horse shows and fairs Science club, Amos Hiatt Junior for showing horses, will coach the high school, Des Moines, treasurer. Jobs, Good Housing group in lhe handling of horses. The senior councillor will be Veterans or Fore-I.-n Wars Here you wiIJ lind stylo, He will also give instructions in Miss Myra G. Willis, biology in Available to Students A u III tY o. .aS81 riding and the general care of the structor in the Woodrow Wilson The Vcterllns of Foreign Wars exactly right (or your animal. high school of Cedar Rapids and auxiliary No. 2581 will have a so Walz, junior councillor. In Summer Session cial meeting ot 8 o'cl ck tomorrow prettiest ,un· lOving prinla. Reservations for the ride must F. E. Brown ot Iowa State college evening ot lh CSA hall. Each be made by tomorrow night with at Ames is chairman ot the high Jobs for partial s If-support and member is B ked lo bring a guest. for Martha Ann Isaacs at 116-29F5. school relations committee of the good housing facilities are avail. A movl will be Shown. others cycling. golf Club leaders emphasized that all Iowa Academy of Science, which able tor students who cnroll in members going on the annual sum sponsors the junior academy. D. C. the University's summ r session and picnicking ... styles for mer outing should lake advantage Stroud, science instructor at the and the special freshman semester of the opportunity offered by Sat Amos Hiatt Junior high school in opening June 13, Dean C. Woody Mother ~ Daughter complete Bummer comfort urday's outing as they will be ex Des Moines, is permanent secretary Thompson of the oUice of student pected to know how to care for at the junior academy. affairs has announced. Shower to Honor , and service! their own horses on the three-day The Iowa Junior academy is ar trail ride. He said that th new students filiated with Science Clubs of would have no lrouble In securing The group will meet at the en America, a national organization jobs at various sorts throueh the Barbara Smith Today gineering building Saturday eve wllh headquartel's in Washington, employment section of the student All sizes, expertly fitted. ning at 5:45. Cost of the ride and D. C. affairs office. These jobs are for Honoring Barbaro Smith, June transportation will be paid by in cash or for board and room. brlde-elecl, ~r8 . S. W. Sayre ond dividuals. A campfire will be pro Roster of Federal, "The usual trend Is tor too many Mrs. LeRoy S. Merc r will ent r· vided and each member is to bring women to wont ortiee jobs, how tllin at a mother-daughler tea and his own fOOd. State leaders Compiled ever, and it is therefore impo Ible crystal shower at 4 o'clock this At the Mountaineers council By SUI Department to place al1 at them in such posi aft rnOon in the Mercer home, 709 meeting Friday. It wa~ decided tions," Delln Thompson said. S. Summit str et. that people desiring to join the A pamphlet, "OUicers of Our CurrJer hall and th grllduate Guests wlll include Mrs. Fred club may do so on an unclassified Government, 1945," containing a house are dormitories open for M. Smth, Mrs. B n Wallace, Mrs. ba ~is at the present time. roster of prinCipal leaders 01 the women during ihe summer, while Wlll Jacobs, Mrs. Milford Baml!ll, federal and stat.e governments, now men may live in the Commons. Mrs. Clair E. HamJllon, Mrs. Eorl 1- Firemen Extinguish is available through the university Approved rooms In private homes L. Wal rrnon, Mr . William Buck extension division. ley, Mrs. N d Smlth, Mrs. Everett and in rooming houses also will b Pictured-Comfortable pac in blu. Donohoe Roof Blaze It was compiled by the political ready tor men and women stu Pia. , Mrs. HOroce M. Korns, Mrs. .ud•. science department, under the dir dents. Edwin Kurtz, Mrs. Frank Seydel, ted call Clnd brown pig. All·l6ather .,1.. Firemen were called to the ection of Pl·of. Kirk H. Porter. The Mrs. H. S. Ivie, Mr . Georae Gay, home of Nora Donohoe, 22 E. pamphlet cont.ains officers of th"! Solly Wallace, Prudence Hamilton, and hee". Court street;' yesterday at 4:45 federal executive and judicial de Lieut. Nyle Jones Anne Waterman and Dorothy Gay. $5.95 p. m. La exLinguish a lire on the partments, numbers of the legisla Miss Smlt., daughter of Dr. and , roof caused by sparks :from the tive department congressmen from Mrs. Frcd M. Smith, Ridge road, , furnace. each state, members of congress Visits in Iowa City will b come lhe bride or Don O. A hole was. purned' in the roof Irom Iowa and compiete informa Newland, son or Dr. and Mrs. Don and some damage was done to tion on Iowa state government lea Lieu!. Nyle Jones Jr., son of Mrs. H. Newland of Belle Plolne,. . , articles stored in the attic. ders. Nyle W. Jones, 30 S. Governor June 1'1. 2- sireet, spent Sunday and MondllY Here', a smart "Loafer" lor the busy .porta in his mother's home en route to YANK SPOTIER OVER OKINAWA · New York from California. enthusiClllt. Of brown calfakin With "no- Lieutenant Jones has been with the 15Lh alrforce In Italy where GI Amnesia Vidim mark" sol••. he was the pilot of a B-17 Flying . . $4.95 Fortress bomber. He recently com~ pleted 50 missions. His sister, Mrs. William Stick for, resides in the Ball addition. 3- Bob Ray to Speak To lions Club Today A new Saddle ,lyle oxfonl With btoWil and and .... Bob Ray, research assistant in white upper. ond no-mark IJC)'" a.. speech at the unlver Ity, will speak Smart and durabl•. to members of the Lions club this : $5.45 noon at Reich's on "Glimpses of Mexico." .' Ray is the winner of a National . .. ~ Discussion contest on international , ., ;.. affairs, which led to an appearance on the Town HaU of the Air \)ro- gram and later a trip to Mexico, where he attended a session at the Tbia .mart white and brpwiJ!mocc:asin .m University of Mexico. ploy. caH and pig.kiD ~ the uppers and no mark 101•• anci'heels. Issues May Report Lumir Jansa, county treasurer, iSSUed h is report in receiPts and THIS SMILING 'f'A ..K foullht..hI. way disbursements for the month or Into Berlin with RUSllian COIISIIcks May yesterday. wbile sufferina a lapse of memory Receipts were current year taxes, and then ftew back to the American $11,379.34 ; delinquent taxes, '577.- lines from Tempelbot Airdrome. Still suJJering (rom amnesia. he be 98; special assessments, $354.40, lieves his name \I William Walker , Haalen , and miscellaneous collections, $10,- and that he comes from New 'iork ·... H OVII THI IAnUFRONT on Okinawa, a small Marine obHrvation 764 . 57. Victory plane IJiea an artlllel1' control mission and spot. enemy .trollGlolnt. for He lIays he remembers beina a Ger 1 Disbursements were face value man prisoner untilliberaled by the U. S. gwmers below. The pall ot smoke on the around leIUAea to !.he of warrants paid, $41,294.83; taxes Russians who offered him a harM Buy Bcmdal 1 expert teamwork of the pilot and the IUD crew. liItening to hla 1oItruc:- refunded, $357.39 and miscellan and a chance to join the Cossacks l\GAI. Otlkial Marine CorPi pb,otQ. ______..tJn~) EOUS payments, $118,473.28 • ba!!YPIlnto Berlio. (Itl'm!~J!g~l • ,,;.11 •
• • • I MCE FOUll ~ ., RID AI r. Y 10" A I. to" A CITY, lOW' WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1M! ._~======~_~_~t~~~====~~~======~~~~~======~~~~~~~~=~==7======~======~=7====M=E=L=H~AB==~~R=B~A=C=K==~ l - l Martin FalCinated by- CLEVELAND (AJ')-Mel Hard- "",Itt 'Moon MU III ns to . Second Guys ,·n· Monkey SUI·'S :}:;a:~'ab~S:b~~I~~~~~lrbb= ~:: . '. ea ve . :;'~I,I:"'::re":' ~:;~"~: 'fbe Gu e S S lhe Tribe yesterday to resume ItU Ilocter t ..,. WHITNEY MARTIN proportion to his 102 pounds but assault on the 300 mark in pitch- aid SCaI NEW YORK (AP)-As an in- would be more or less average for ing victories. ",ill be frequent visItor to the hoss race a man of average size. Hawley re- Harder left his job as an expedl JiOCll' Jl tracks we always are fascinat.ed by calls thal Bobby Walson's 73/8 tor with the Ohio Rubber Co.• 1 n eVtfli ' Pre-Flight School Friday the jockeys, and wonder out loud cap is the largest riding headpiece WlUoughby to maintain an UII- t/I8 ",u ~ how the little guyS in the mUlti- to come to his aUention. broken string of 18 campaipJ colored monkey suits can swing 'Just a Thlmblo' with the Indians. .".1) aboard a different nag every race t/I8 Jla! and stay there, consldering the Don Meade can ease into a 2~ ACE WORKHORSE By Jack Sotds varied temperaments of the ani- shoe without trouble, although he lalt on Jack Meagh~r Reds Split mals. wears a No. 3 boot to insure rid e~ This possibly is a throwback to !pg comfort. Bobby Permane needs creec' I B,. &OY LUC8 our days as a hoss artilleryman a 5'h shoe, but lhat is just a ion. "'II DalIJ 1.,,_ 8...... Ul_ when we were forced to ride halt- lhimble compared with the 7~ encd New Director broken mounls which shook us off dogs of J. N. Jones, who quit rid- 1111 01'1 With Pirates IOWA'S QUESTIONABLE SKA to more than one-point landing. ing in 1932. siOll In HAWKS rapped up lOllS No.. 2 for LI'Ue information . Hawley considers Eddie Arcaro o~ti( To Replace Sam Barry, the record bOoks Monday when of the Buet Fall «» they were manhandled by tht Min Anyway, we were glad to get a the stout boy of the jockey crop little Information on the little Iel- when it comes to arlTlll and hands. ,tto« I Former SUI Basketball In First Game; nesota Gophers to the tune of 14 world. to 10. Pour Cadet hurlers took to lows who earn a precarious living Arcaro, at 112 pounds, is in the Coach at Corpus Christi rldlng the sun deck of the racers. heavywcight class for riders. r< Win 9·1 in Secontl the mound In an effort to stop the They are little feJlows, as the .fol- Joe Renick nevel' would let a 8:00 Iowa pre - flight oUicials an Gopher bats for rood, but to no lowing information shows. It was porter touch him with a broom PITTSBURGH (AP)-The Pitt! avail. 8:J5 nounced late yesterday afternoon compiled by Frank "Frenchy" when sweeping nearby. "11 a .:3t burgh Pirates piled up a 9 to I win MlDnec .... ,ot to. llenr, KaiIIer. thal Lieut. Comdr. "Moon" Mul over the Cincinnati Reds yesterda,. Hawley. physical director at Hia- broom ever louched him," Hawley 8:45 &lie starUq Seabawk _muta.n leah and a halt dozen other said. "I believe he'd cancel his J ins, athletic clirector ot the pre after Ed Heu88Cr blanked the Bucs , :55 la &lie _ODd lnniDa' fAIl' a pUr of tracks. mounts for the day." II .. :f light school will leave Friday for for the second time this season. 4 5:»-Oe tIM .... L Doil, ,:00 aeores anti eonUnIle4i the .-It. Conn McCready. Hawley's data George Woolf uses a special pair S,40-N .... lro. • .... Doll, ex .. the naval air training station al to 0, in the first game of a double 5 :.S-Jor,.,. Smith .... , ..... Do Il, n III 9:15 ill &lie UalrtI wHh. qlllal'Wof nlM. reveals, is known as "The Head" of boots for riding big slakes. They ':OO-H.lvcft .nd Hom •.• : •• . Daily a ... 9:30 Corpus Christi, Tex., where he header before 2.834 fans shivering Crew., Keifer, aael Soard.. all bad in the jockey rooms because he 'never have been polished, jusl 6:l5-p.,m S.-rviu• . .•• • •, • •Mo. Wed 'Ii will succeed Lieut. Comdr. Justin in Pitts burCh's coldest Jtloe 5 day Cbeck.rboord Pan...... Tuu Tn lot 9:45 their him ..... all suffered the wears a 7 \i cap, which Is out of washed with saddle soap. 6:3O-P.... N .... fr.m wHO •• Doilr .. .. ,:55 8am Barry as staff physical and on record. IUM f ... 1l&Iaer. ':.5-J.,,., ond ul~., ..... I>o!I' .. ... military training director. 7:00-N"". lrom NOc; ...... D.iI, n" 10:00 In the second game the Pirates Th. fact that the quartet of Sea 7:I5-TiIM t. Sbi ... ..• 11 ... 0.;1, n .. 10:15 Lieu1. Comdr. Meagher has been nIcked four Red llitchers ttlr 13 hIts hawk hurlers walked a total of 11 7 ,3 0-Blbl. BrOldClII., ...... S.MOr Beaugay Wins- N ... , Irom WHO ...... Doil, .1 .. appointed to a thletic directorship, to score their nine runs in conse men rna,. have had much to do r The Big Show 7 :.S-Cllft ond H.IOj> ••• , ./ .. Doily ., Sn pre-flight a f Ii cia I s announced. cutive innings from the third to the with the outcome of the contest. I,OO-World N .." Ra~.da~ ...... S.'" R American League R ...bUn, C... bo~ ... I. M•• W.d Fri Meaghet· was coach of last year's sIxth. The victory broke Cincin One man, Hockey Mealey set Reveille Roun.u, •. p•• • T_ Th .. a c·ng Teams W L Pct. ' :I5-Sto" t. Ord.r ...... Seahawk football te a m which nati's nine-game wloninl streak. something Qf a record by draw- S.'" I New York ...... 25 16 .610 Soo,loIl." •••••.•. I ••• M.. w... Pri compiled a 10 game winning streak Max Buteh.r held the Red. to ing five strallbt bases on balls oft' S.... d Cup o· co«~, ...... T.. n. after losing the opcning game. seven hits, one of which was Gerry the Cadet hurlers. Whatever, tha Detroit ...... 20 16 .556 AII . n Roth ...... !hI'''': St. Louis ...... 19 17 S:30-N8C Slrin, ()uartft., ...... ~ Walker's double in the sixth which .528 New. fro. WHO'u• • ,.MOI t.r. t'ri Notre Dame Star caWle, the Seahawks were defin- Chicago ...... 19 19 .500 Encore • •.•.•...... •••.. 51,. drive in the only Red run. o~that Roundup itely is from the team Mullins succeeded Comdr. Har Boston ...... 10 20 8 :4()-Moml., Milke!. • .;ott MOIl Ibn '" Heusser's shutout was his third that whipped Notre Dame bere .4117 8:45-M.lody Madh.a.~ ...... M•• til .. p,j vey Harman as athletic direclor in Clevcland ...... 17 19 .472 Vietory C.rd•• P.nde .....S •• ",., 12 :4 of lhe season and showed 27 inn.. last Saturday, 5 t04. ':OO-Osri.ti •• Bel ...... S..., October of 1944, after serving as jngs against the Pirates with only * * * Washington ...... 18 22 .450 N .." 01 tho World .... M•• til" Pri 1:00 athletic coordinator. Adter play Philadelphia ...... 15 23 .395 Ad.efttur •• 01 Artlli. Andr ...... ' 2:00 one run scored. He also clouted a Reviled Lineup NEW YORK (AP)-Mrs. Ellza- 9'I ..... P'0p/t• ., I. N."" ...... , ing fullback on Knule Rockne's homer yesterday. Coach Carlos Ratliff sent a com- beth Graham's Beaugay demon National.League Lo,...... wton .••••••• ,. MOl Ibn ,rt 2;10 last three teams of 1928, '29 and pletely reviaed lineup alainst the Btrat.ed yesterday she may be the New York ...... 27 15 .643 9,30-Araorl... LeCion ...... S...., 3:00 FIrst Game Road .1 Lif ..... " ..... M•• tk ... Pri '30, the final two acclaimed na GDphers. In fact, we are famlUer best two-year-old filly of 1945 by Pittsburgh ...... 23 17 .575 Trea.ury Satuta •. • f •••• •• • Slt.,., 3:15 CI--n-c-In-na-'-I----AB---a--U--E-I with only five names of the start- winning tbe $5,OOO-added Fashion st. Louis ...... 23 18 .561 9:45-N .... Irom WH3.' ...... Sio4ir 3:30 tional ch L.As( {SA~. _. , Ratliff had finally hit the right Straus' New Moon came back yes- 11 :4S-Th. B.~".roo •..• I .••• MGIJ t~r. '" 7:30 Philadelphia at Boston. rain U:SJ-HY"b lor Tod.y .... , .Mo. t~ PII defcated tcam. His ncxt post was 1'~Is:seASl:W"'eAAs ....oRI(EP',JAlJ,(oS'1'ItA£.l"of1i'l6~~ PI.Uabaqll AB R. H E combination in Saturday's victor- 'terday lo win the Stanton Handi- 7:45 backfield coach at the University Cleveland 9, Detroit 0 AmRNOON PROGRAMS ------0--2--0 laus win over Notre Dame, b~t 3ll- cap at Delaware park before 8,179 New York 12-3, Washington 12:OO-0Jd FIJhioned Re"iYlI •..•.•• Saa., 8:00 of Florida, where he was localed Barnhart. ss ...... 5 0 parently he thought otherWIse, as 'who bet $784,943. MorbI • .t F.rm N ..... M•• thru Pri basketbaU coach, Pops Harrison 3-7 8:45 at the lime he enlered lhe navy in Handley, 3b ...... 5 0 1 0 the next time out, it was an en- Ridden by Johnny Gilbert, New Corn B.1t lio.r ...... Slit'''' 9:00 wes a melT)b ~r. shared first in the ·St. Louis 2. Chicago 1 U ,IS-S.ddl. MI. R.undup ... M.. We4 PrI the first instructOl'S' class of the Gion(rlddo, cf ...... 4 0 0 0 tirely different team thal bore the Moon sprinted the six furlongs in Vietory FIlfIII...... Ta. n. Big Ten with three olher schools. 12 ,lD-U. 01 0.1. Round r~bl ...... 5•• "" pre-flight program at Annapolis. Dodds to Run Elliott, rf ...... 2 0 0 0 colors of the Cadets. I : 11 3/5 to beat Blue Wings by 21,.2 N.", frOfW WRO . . • : .. D.ily u: III it Wonderful Records Pre-flight officials said tha t Russell, it ...... 4 0 1 0 BWI), Weekend lengths. Quillon was third. New U'.5-SO•• loIl.,...... Mo. Wed Pri Sot was not 'yet known if Meagher Todat s Games S.rv.d Wi.h Son' •.••• ..•.• Ta. n. Whilc athletic director of the Dahlgren. lb ...... 3 0 0 0 The Seahawks face another busy 'Moon was a $3 .90 favorite. 1:00-"'" Pard Show ...... S.. .., will continue as Iootball coach or austine, 2b ...... 3 0 1 0 weekend with games at North- • • • G.iding Li'bt ...... M•• Ihra Pri Seahawks, his teams have com Natlon.al League Mosietat ., . •••.••.•••..••• 511.,,,, if someone else will be appoinled Only to Help Saltzgaver· ...... 1 0 0 N D Bill N' h I 17 ld 11l5>-Todoy·. O'ild.... , ... "M •• t~'" Pol piled wonderful records in all to the post. o 1 0 western Saturday and orte arne Y 1 COS, -year-o Boslon at Philadelphia (2 twi N ...berry .t Cold!F.U Awa,d, ... Sot SPO t·ts. The Seahawk football Lopez, c ...... 3 0 Sunday. What will happen to the jockey, rode four winners at Haw- light)-Cooper (3-0) and Hutch 1:l/)-WUlib.hoa •• Pro, ...... SO.., Barrett·· ...... 1 00 0 Seahawk's success story remainS thorne, including H. H. Fausett's Woman In WHiti . ~~ ••• MOd tlml Prf team. under the director of Lieut. ~ I ings (0-2) vs. Schanz (1-6) and Veterans' Advi.or . ~. , ...•. S.lard., Comdr. Jack Meagher, was one Strincevleh, p ...... 3 0 to be seen but we fear that at Grey Days in the featured Elm- Wyatt (0-4) .1.45-H)'1IIo. All a..r.b •••• Mao th" 'I). Boys Develop Betty Crocker ...... Pri., of the outstanding outfits in the Colman"· ...... 1 0 1 least anoth~r defat will be added to twood pw·se. A $15.60 long shot Cincinnati at Pitlsburgh (night) New. About '1f!iiion ••••. . . s..ar• ., country, as was the basketball and • the ledger after this week's con- Grey Days beat Four Deep by a -Wallers (3-5) and Roe (4-2) l IllO-World P.llld...... s.... BOSTON (AP) _ Gil Dodds, Total. 35 0 '7 A Woman of A'cncri~ ••. MoD 1.n Fd track teams. The baseball team !.--._C_i-=.tY_L_e_a_gu_e_-..-.:1 tists have been played. If North- neck. Ghost Hunt was third. The Chicago at St. Louis (night) To be Innounced .••.•..•... S-lb,., • bat,ted for Gustine in 9th. 3,IS--M. Perklo ...... r-fo. til". Pri last year compiled a record of 30 Complete Auto climbed a notch holder or lhe world's indoor mile .. batted Jor Lopez in 9th. western doesn't do it, Notre Dame time for the six furlongs was Derringer (6-3) vs. Creel (3-1) or Z,30-Army H.a, ...... S.oiIY wins as against 3 losses, testifying in the City soltball league sland lrack record, last night became a ••• batted for Strincevich in Oth. certainly will. The Cadets were 1:144/5. Brecheen (3-1) Pap Yo 110", p ...n, ... Mo. tlh.. Itt plenty lucky in beating the Irish Nichols' other winners were Only games scheduled 2,.5-R i~t to H.ppi.b..... M•• !h,. Pri lo Mullins' ability as athletic di ings last nighl by coming from be full-fledged minister of the gospel Cinoinnati 000 110 002- 4 3 :OO-B ••kst.,. WiI • .••.. ••• ~fo. Ihn PrI rector. "to follow Christ whom at an here and only the brilliance of Forevic, Joe Spagat and Sibley. A American League Cldldren', Bible. Haur ..•.•• S'lhr., hind in the last two innings to Plttsbur.b 000 000 000-0 a: 15-St.lI. Doll ...... Mo. tIIr. FrI Former SUI Coach score three runs and lo send early age I found as my own per Stev~ Stuka on the mound saved crowd of 11 ,206 wagered $783,952. New York at Washinglon (night) 5,JO-l."o·Nobmka Qu,ia , ••• .••• 5 ••.., IJeeOnd Game - Bevens (4-1) or Zuber (0-1) vs. LOI'IDZO Jonn .••.... MOD thru Pli George's Standard Service reeling sonal saviour." their victory. If Coach Ratliff had • • • h"'l Roundt,q" ...... S,lI"cIty BaITY, who Mullins succeeds at The modest, mild-mannered par ------AB--R--H--.-· a few more hurler5 of Stuka's cali- Tiny's Choice ~rom t~e Tr~so Leonard (4-2) Corpus Christi, was formcr head to their third defeat, 8 to 6. 3 :.5-Yo•• , Widder Brf:"" .. Moa thnt PII son, who set up his record of C__ ID_C_ID_oa&I.. ______. ber (at least the caliber he showed stable won her thIrd slralg~t VIC- Philadelphia at Boston (2) - 4 ,OO-NBC Sympho.y .; ...... Sa"" Complete Aulo jumped into a When I Girl MIIl',l .... M... Ih .. Pri basketball coach at the University Fiores (1-2) and Knerr (1-2) vs. 3 to 1 lead in the first inning, but 4:08.4 in Chicago in March, 104 •• Williams, 2b ...... 4 o 2 0 Saturday) lo go against North-·. tory at Narragansett by takIng the G""d n ot.1 ...... S""~ of Iowa from 1923 through 1928. reiteraled his inlention of staying Clay, cf ...... 4 1 2 0 western and Notre Dame he could Quonset Purse. The four-year- Ferriss (7-0) and Woods (2-0) • :IS-Portl. Pa.tI Lil..... M•• thrD Pri His 1923 team was co-champions George's came ba~k strong in the St. Louis at Chicago-Jakucki 4,3()-Jull PI.in Bill '~'•• " .. MOl til .. PrI second to go ahead 4 to 3. The out of competitive track, which he Walker, rf ...... 4 o 1 0 (eel a lot more cOmfort~ble than old filly finish~ two !engths N.". from NB ...... Sol". of the conference and his 1926 abandoned before last winler's in McCormiclC, Ib ...... 4 o o 0 he probably does right now. ahead of Good GOIng, runOlng the (3-3) vs. Lopat (2-4) . ,45-Fro.t P.,. Po" 1I .... Mo ••hra Fri Auto 10 smashed across two more Mu,io fo, Millioftl . t •••• to ,S.tard., team, of which present Hawkeye Delroit at Cleveland-Mueller runs in their half of the inning to door season opened. Mesner, 3b ...... 4 o 1 0 * * • six furlongs In 1: 15 and paying 5:tt-Rythnt RODodaD ...... iIA4oY "My only object in running Ti\)ton, lf ...... 3 o $7.80. Heel look the show. A (1-1) vs. Klieman (1-1) New. from WHO J..... D.ily ex S. -- grab the lead again, 5 to 4. o 0, WE MUST ADMIT that we were erowd of 10.000 bet $806,517. S:I5-N.... Irom W.,IlO ••..... •... Su.~., now," he said in an interview, Miller, 88 ...... 3 o 1 Caribhean CrulJi , I.... MOD Wed ,tt George's cored again in the o slightly wrong about our predic- * • • lion,. at T"ill.. I ...... TD. n. What a Difference! "will be to prevent 40-year Lakemanj c ...... 2 Son&fello" •••. " .••••••.•. Sorar • ., I fourlh to tie the game at 5-a1l o 1 tlons of the outcome of the City J . McShane's Navy Cross. $6.20, spread, to taper off so that my Libke* ...... _.. 1 o o 1:3()-Gr.. t GlIde"leeV. : ...... S.. ... and added another in the Iifth to heart will not be aHected by lhe o 0 IOttbaU league. Bremers fell from made it two triumphs in three THfBESToF Spotllaht o. Rhythm ...... take the lead once more, 6 to 5. Riddle, c ...... 0 o o 0 the list of the unbeaten Monday starts by winning the Woodland ...... ,.W•• Wotl nu. PrI sudden letdown, and to help boys Beck, p ...... 1 Mu.l. lor Millionl ...... Tueod" The Auto aggregation squeezed in o o 0 night when previously unheralded Purse at Churchill Downs before THE BLUE To",..,. Do ...,..·. Sh.w ...... SoI1lr'" of high school age develop." Fox, p ...... 0 o 1,45-Bcililh Bro.dmli.qA .. Mob jhru PrJ a run in the slxlh lo tie the game o 0 O. K. Tire Shop bumped them 2 7,800 who bet. $401,633. The five~ .,SO-Wlr Comme.t"y .. i • .'. Moo til .. Pol once more, 6 to 6. Fleget·· ... _...... t o 0 to 1. Both pitchers, Leo Tesar year-old gelding was two lengths o 1540 ..INI", PlloORAIrIS Bosser, p ...... 0- o o 0 1m' the Tire Shop and Bill Barbout· in front of Ben Gray. Sigma Kappa CUfl'an opened lhe seventh for Nun Owns Jamaica 6:00-W.yn. King .n'd'(J,..b ...... Sao., Complete Auto by [lying out. Lisenbee, p ...... 0 o o 0 for Bremers. hurled superb ball- was thit'd and the faVOred Zacapet . 50.000 WATTS Lod. Thor ...nd Co, .. M.. Ihra Pri A CliW C. rl .t CQ ...... SlIDrday Burke grounded out to the third NEW YORK (AP)-A nun's vow Tesar racking up a three hitter and fourth. " ToWI ...... 31 < 1 7 l ' ',I5-N.". 01 the World ... . Moe tbr. 'rt FlRST • MODERN baseman and it looked as though to perpetual poverty may bring Barbour a four hitter. -Box office open 1:15-10:00- 'fib P.n AII.Y., ...... hI.~ • batted lor Fox In 6th. 6,30-Pi •• h B•• d.. do~ ...... S. The the game would go extra innings. about the sale of Jamaica race Unbeaten Teatnt ·Ne", from WHO. : ... •Deil. cr TELEPHOn~ ~ TELEPHONE .. batted to .. Lakeman In 8th. Bradley, however, smashed a long track, tight little Long Island The only unbeaten teams in the Betty Jameson. twice women's 6,45-N.". from NBG .. tio. W•• Th I'rI o • • • • • • • • • .... batted. for Bosser in 8th. national amatuer goll champion, Jimmy Fidler ...... Ta",,", Ray triple to left and Kastner followed plant where 64,000 spectalors gath league now are: W.llIams' Delta Blltn Dance Carlli".!. •••.• Stt...., Edd /' witb a long home run scoring both I Sigs and Navy Enlisted, both of turned professional yesterday. "t;NDS 7:Qf-Spik. Jnn .. , ...... ~ ...., ered Memorial day to establish two K Co ..I.,d. Thutr...... "' ••., The Bradley and himself to take the world betting records. whom have played one game. How- NOW TIIURSDAY" J.b.ny Pret•• 1t ...... T• ...., 1 Mr. cl Mn. Nqr'h ...... W.""...., game for Complete Auto, 8 to 6. William He) is, New Orleans Barnhart, ss ...... 5 o ever. Bremers are not to be counted Tt) be. . nnnuneeH ...... ••.. Tha""" Both teams collecLed 7 hils, but sportsman who paid $66,000 for the Handley, 3b ...... 3 1 o out ot tire league- race. Nor is the Clti .. S.m •• H i'~ ..., ...... 'ri,., l'E1i\1iiJ NOW! V.,iety Hall ...... S... ~ 7 errors on George' part 'counted colt Pericles two years ago, is re Gionfriddo. cf ...... 4 1 01 Veteran's association ten. The Vet f,lD-Eddi. lI""ken Sadly ...... !I_ heavily against C. Phl1lips, the ported the high bidder with an Elliott, rf ...... :':.. ~ ) 1 O erans are tied with the Complete Voie. of Fire'tIl"' ..•...... Mo. Murder on the Loose! A Om .. itll iu4r ...... Ta ..dI, George's hurler.. ComplelJ! Auto orfee or $4,000,000 for the track Russell, If ...... ::...... 2 2 01 Auto with one victory and one Goy Mr •• r •• ,h.Iit••••••• Wad ...., which a member of lhe Society of Dahlsi'en( lb ...... 41 1 o defl:at api.ece . . Bremers will un • Ad.lIIt.r.. 61 'loppor·•.•..• n •....,. committed but one error. Correction Pie...... •••• •.• Frid., ORDtnARU . ... PAL Line score: lhe Slsters oL St. Vincen t De Paal Guattne, 2b ...... 41 1 O' doubtedly be one 01 the top teams Tralb .r Coa ••4 ...... !IIImIIr inheriled a year ago. Salkeld, 0 ...... 3, 1 O· in the league-and apparently I ,OO-M •• b.tI.. Mer"·lio.Rad ..... II... ~ 6LADE • HOLLOWSROUND Georg's Standard T.leph ••• Hoar ...... M...... l ~ Oomplete Auto has 50methlnl on RI~ID IN RAZoR Flui"" in 1I0.or Because of her vow, she turned Lopez.c ...... 0 o lit).... " Th.tro • , ...... T...... Service ._ ...... 130 110 0-6 7 7 the legacy over lo the religious Butch.r. p ...... 3 0 the ball too. Eddi. C..,or ...... W..... o Cr•• nu.... • Complete order localed at Mount St. Vi!\. Complete Aut. ... Ute oal,.. team Bin. b, ...... Pol cutlers PIoneered, Perfected WiltS Tim .....~ ...... FrWo, Auto ...... 320 001 2-8 7 7 cent-on-the-Hudson, N. Y. T ...... ::...... _ ...3.. 9 11 I te defeac the O. I. Tire Sbop,-.and • PLUS. Notion.1 n,rn Dance ••••• ,SItu,.., and Patented the Hollo." Ground 'Songs 01 the Colle,es' I:lO-AibulD Il.millor MIlIi ...... ~ 000 001 ~M add defeat. blod.-o dIfferent, Modern • • • CiDoinnati 006--1 we that. tho was -PLUS rnl.r... tion PI.'31.;'Ij." .111...... In another game of the eve Pittsburgh 002 322 00x-9 rather clIaITacln, to Ute Tire Shop. -Mnslc:al- Jerkey-Turkey Flbb.r MeG.. I ... :r..... blade for a differenl; modem SOX ,LOSE TO BROWNS Oomedy - cartoon - News Mr. OI .. ,i.t At'. e; .... W...... shove. Polls ftelCibleln .... ning, played ' at the Pre-Flight A mere sbut out, bat by Ute lIClore "Carteon" In. Color Bob Barn •..• .• ..••••••• n ...... razor. CHICAGO (AP)- The Chicago Foopl. A.. """~r...... PrWo, follows fadal contgun, whisk· school, the William's Delta 8igs 01 II to O. Where that plaees Com Worlds Late New_ . I..... Bar" Do... r ..H ...... 111"" White Sox, lost their first night TOl>AY IS FRE E MOViE DAY I 'Ing away whiskers a knocked Navy Enlisted out of the plete Auto In Ute raee fM Ute ',IIO-Huu, 01 Ch.""...... • ... s.... " with lust game of the season in Comiskey FJlf " )/.... d tuui \" 0 .. , .\:0,,,, {REf I Confenl6d Prf)~"'1111 .. ,_ ..... MaaIIIf "Foalfler TGUdI". No "bearing ranks of the undefeated with a Senators TaD J to 3 championship, we don't know. Th. M.n Coiled X ...... T ...... park last night, 2-1, to the cham KI ... Coli ...... Wed.~ down" SO no Irritation 11ft 1WId. weU earned 11 to 6 victory. The M&rbe Ute,. wID be the c..... p1Ona. K'r r'. pion St. Louis Browns. Abbott .t Comllo ...... n....., skins. Delicate blode edges lost game was postponed from last We frankl,. doa't kncl1W, .. ,.OU Box Office Ope.. 1:15 - 11: .. DlInnin,., The M_talill .•• The three-hit pitching of vet ':lO-Co,.04y TbOln. •. / ...... 'ee ! longer. too. Try a pock today. Thursday night. ·VictOry from rIRkees ...., have ...... Baeh are tile eran Ai Hollingsworth that gave Or: I. Q ...... Ma wus of tate. You. Ia,. ,our -.,. Navy Enlisted look the lead in him his :second win of' the year, SI..,a.d RomlJtorj ~ ...... ,...... PAL BLADE CO., NEW YORK the first with a three run burst. .. &he team. Uta* ob.v ....., hU the ROOr V.II ...... n;i and Joe SchuJtz' pinch sinlle in After losiAt, 11.to 1 I (.1~7!' 'toi' i';':" .~ Hoa,....,od Thntr...... t! STABTS ENDS The Delta Sigs scored all but two the ninth that scored George Mc ,""ier team aDd what baPpe_ You TO DAY lG:O&-A ... ln ODd s.ottld ...... 1 It, brother. We ..., teel Last Times Tonite • lI'RIDAY CIIH1orfi.ld Sa,. C~ M.. don of their runs in the third and Quinn, who had walked, proVided W ASHINGTQN (AP)-Marlno Jueaed lD :lJ.-N .... , .... WHO ...... D!!It fourth innings, counting five times the victory. Hollingsworth and Joe Pieretti hurlec'l Washington's Sen IO:lO-W" S ...... B.II.... Mo. wed ,.. in the third' and' four in the B.orythiJo, Iqr ,h• . ..,...... T.... Hayes put on a pitchers' battle, ators ttl an even br,ak with New Con You Top ni.: ...... P~ fourth. D1BRBE BLAJlfIiS '1'10888 Judy C.noy. SIo." ...... with lhe latter losing when he York last night, winning the sec CLEVELAND (AP) - lfurling IO,4I-A ...r1. U.I.ad , ....,...... S~ White started for the Navy, but walked McQuinn, Farrell booted ond game of a twilight-night twin his lallt game before induction into Yo.rr NI., P, ,.~r...... M..... Crowner was rushed to the m04nd Mlttl. lor Mil1l ...... "'...... , one and Joe Schulte was passed. bill, 7-3, after the Yankees bad the armed forces, Charles (Red) T .....a,., S.I~ ...... T'nnAtit In the fourth to stop the violent That set the stage for Schultz' pounded out a 12-3 victory. Embree blanked the Detroit Tigers Il:OO-N.". I... N~", ! ·::. .. L ... . outburst of Delta Sig scoring...... !Out _ Tft 'tlIo l\It, single. batting for Mancuso. The Senators gav~ ' little Pler last night to give the Cleveland Stvllt ROM .~.l".",...... Crowner silenced the Delta Sig \L<.. ; . ... . The Sox scored in the first in eUi a (jve-nfn ITlIlrIin in their first Indian. a II to 0 viteory. BilllII<>", ...... ~ bats, but the damage had already It :O~M ••I ••.•.•... , , .., t .. TIl ... ning when J 0 h n n y Dickshot turn at bat bJ' _lIng their bi,...t Embree's mates pounded three SpH" lor A. .., ....."'"""" been done. doubled and Guy Curtright singled U'I~Ti ...ly Tot>i<: .... • M...... " .. ralli of the season at the expense Detroit pitchers for 10 bits, in 11,"'014 I'.. blo.od a... I,...... 8 • ..., Curnes on the mound for the to cenler. The Borwns tied it in of Bill BevellB. dOOIn, a two-run homer by sec ...... 0>1._ ...... , ....M.e4IIt Delta Sigs was stingy with his the second on two singles, an in Nick Etten rapPfCI. out a slnale N.". 'n>_ WHO .... .'rM. "'"' ttl ond baseman Dutch Meyer, re !In Pro ...... O>._ ...~ hits, but six errors by his mates field out and a fly. and thrie doub(es, driving in four cently obtained from the Tiser.! 11 :.8-Muoio ...... Utl" at Ilia lllded the Navy cause. 11 ,S~N_ ""_ NBC ...... o.n. .. iii runs 811 m. V.nkees fired a 19-IHt In the trade which sent Roy Cul 12 ,OO-Mldnilht RhYdira I'I ..tIe ..MiIa tw. The Navy Enlisted 10 will face association. attack In tb .... first ,arne. - lenblne to the Motor Cit,.. The N. I Saflal. tho Wjnp ...... , .. ~ the Sigma Chi 10 tonight on the Line score: , The V.. Jtees piled up a 9-2 lead Tribe's young righthander, Who Is All Ihlin~. aubfeattJe ch .... Ben fun slreet dillmond nt 7 William's • oft lIit:key Hne_r in fOUl' in to be inducted Monday at Glen o'clock. Sigmll Chi has yet to win Delta Sigs .. 205 400 x- ll 10 6 ,rtings lind Atley Donllirl easily dora-, Clllif., IiOowed sIx hils and ALWAYS A GOOD St-'OW a game, fallinlf tQ WiJJlafll'!! .Qeita !'ofavy • L ' posted his fifth victory alainst .tW4I was never In trouble. Lea. MuellGr ON Sigs and the University Veterans' F.nlisted ...... 302 OOO · }- 6 6 ~ loses. WU' tl1e· IOsln, l'ltctrer; WHO 8, l!US fBi nAtL t t()'" Al, It). A Cltt. 1c) • .A (~ PAGE rIVE ~ • CK , -- tel lilt'd. Sonner CholllS to Appear OR Music Hour- CLARK REPORts TO HIS COMMANDEI They 'Rule the Roost'- 101 Year Old Man ntribu~ e clev~ Niles and Prindle (KXEL) Llla~ for 9:15 Gooney Birds Found·on Midway To Take Third Bride reJoined TIle sum m e l' session chorus Great Moments in Music RACINE, WIS., (AP) - James ~urne hi! under the direction ot Prof. Her (WMT) Augustus Cooper, 101 years old In Piteb. By Rlehanl O'Malltl7 a youn, gooney f'1III' himRIl that rna heavenward. Bowing, how alef Stadt of the music department Kay Kyser Show (WMT) tree trimmer who applied tor a Niles and Prindle (KXEL) MIDWAY ISLAND (AP)-This far off the ground the UfPrise ever, is required lOOney etiquette will be presented on the Music Is the l'Jace where bIrds dig holes ,pparentlY get the better of him marriage license Monday, pictured Hour program at 8 o'clock this 9:30 and is done any old timp. iothe (round, bow gravely at vis ~d he Ie panicky. So he folds hlmseU yesterday as a man lucky tvl!l\ing. It will be broadcast trom Let Yourself Go (WMT) Moaning birds are enough to to h ve held out a long as he did Kay Kyser Show (WHO) itors, lay eggs in trees and act his win.rs and goes into a spin." 1M music hall auditorlum. lenerally lilte the man who Casualties of a serioUi nature ,ive Jack the Ripper chills, and In the matrimonial scramble. One Man'. Oplnhlft Woods and Fields (KXEL) 9:(5 thought he was Napoleon. ~rely occur. spend theIr lives huddling outside Cooper, who listed two previous 'II. Earl Hall, managing elitor of If you go in Lor bird life-and Quite often a mature looney marrillg ,and h inted there mllY \he MasOn City Globe-Gazette wilt Let Your-self Go (WMT) windows at ni&ht making blood ll'~ required on a Midway visit CQIllCi in tor a landil'Ull, hit. tail have been another, winked know taRt on the top "Speaking" this Kay Kyser Show (WHO) curdling sound of ~ortal agony. Voice of the Army (KXEL) -the gooney birds take top sPOt first and then uiUe alOllJ end ingly at hIs 62-y ar-old bride-to evening at 7:45 WS~'s trans When Lieut. Comdr. N. W. 10:" Technically the gooney is an alba pver end. The)" always act In be, MI'lI. Julia Wespatet, and re crR)ed prOlJ'am,.poe Man's Opin tros . The gooney birds are black .ulted when this occurs, arise Clein, • navy doctor, of Seattle, marked: "lots of other women \011. Hall draws Qifthls Own experi Doug Gl'ant News (WMT) Supper Club (WHO) and white, about the sire of a Jrav~y. and bow to no one in par Wash., first arrived he pent a were after me, but they never ence! and obse~tions while he goose and apparently share the ticular. I:aught me." w;tI Of! a war col1'espondence mis H. R. Gross, Newks (K.XEL) rood deal of hi nocturnal time 18:15 same I.Q. The looney dance, a set pattern rUihi~ out to ee who needed The wedding Is scheduled (or slOll In tile European theater of Young goonies spend their youth ot n~nse which tak~ pIllet! operations la~t fall. He will speak Fulton Lewis, News (WMT) medical Ul!istlince. Saturday. It will be Mrs. Wes News (WHO) just silting around all over the whenever a couple of gOl=lI\en feel patet', seeond marria e. Her lirl>t of the prospe~tiv~ duties of lCradu pl.ce waiting for a sort ot thick In tl\e mood to cut a sand dUlle, Moanil\ll birds hive a tendency Sportlig1'Jt Parade (KXEL) to cowardice and hide slyly dur hu band died in 1941, leaving her .lfnI stuaents in the PMtwar ' peach (uu to drop from their I~ne 10:30 has entertainOlerlt value for with f1v children. She had been world. wings. The drop-off process, in the men stationed here. It II inc daytime in hoi they scrabble Sympnonette (WMT) in the Jround with beaks and working as a waitress but quit TODAY'S rRQGRAM8 War Service Bilboard (WHO) cidentally, mak them look like rumQred that two sallol'5 who have 8:00 Morning Chapel battered seats In an old day coacb. been on Midway for a lime time c1alW. whpn Cooper said he didn't want Paul Hutchens (KXEL) IN SI'HIITED CONVEISATION with h1s commander In chlef at the White Naturtl rolled another one over his wife to work. 8:15 Musical Miniatures 18:45 When ran comes and the young have the routine perfected and .:31 News, Tlu!. Dally rllwan House, General Mark Clark. commander ot the United Statl!ll ath Arm)" goqrues try (or their take-oILs a when ho tere. " .. S.D~ son (D., N. Mex..), deSignated as ,I thn ." 8:45 News, The Dally Iowan ~ '~!ir ~ 9:00 University Plays Its Part President Truman's new secretary .. Ta. Tloa of agricultute, pI dged t.o the com .... Su.", mittee thai he would look after ily ex S Nf:TWOBK HIGHLIGHTS od Frl Sol the interests of agricullurc at home .. lu. Tloa 6:00 in negotiations of trade pacts under dIp Daily Iowan Want Ads .... S.. Jack o Kirkwood Show (WMT) the reciprocal program. • tbtu Fri Lucia Thorne & Co. (WHO) ;.:::rr.r "I shall not be timid in behalf FOR SALE '.rd' ... SIt Grain Belt Rangers (KXEL) of the American larmer," Ander CLASSIf1ED ... S• .., 6:15 son promised. • 'bra Pri RATE CJ\.Rt For Sal : Bausch anel Lamb mic- •: Saturd., MOsic That Sati 5 til~s (WMT) The finance committee begins tbra n. NeWs of the World (WHO) o roscope, S obje Uvea. 41 ocul.rs. .... F,ida' executivc session consideration CASH RATE .. 80I.,d" H. R. Gross, News (KXEL) today ot the house-approved legis- Lomp and CIl IC Illcluded, '85. .•. 5..... 6:30 lor 2 da,._ • tb .. Fd lOe per line per day H alay, 737 N. Prairie, GalesbUrg, .. 80t.... Ellery Queen~ (WMT) lijinoi3. 1 thN Prl News (WaO) ,Tops at Point I CODllecuUve daTI- ... S.bdtY 7c per Une per day HEMRY I til... wrt Did You Know? (KXEL) CAllL ANDERSOll II coDBecuUve day_ FOR SALE: Skycl, bookcase, I thr. Fri 6\'5 • thra Fri Ilc per line per day lamp. Call Wehrnacher 3226- .. $ot ...., Ellery Queen (wMT) I thrb frl News From NBC (WHO) 1 mont.h- 20 W. Burlington. ... s•• ., Une I Ihru prt Preiel'l'ed Melodies (KXEL) 4c per per da)' -Figure II wordl to Un_ · .Stturd:r '7:00 INSTRUCTlON , tbr. , MinImum Ad-2 Una .. .s....,. Jack Carson Show ~WMT) ·, .s.ta 'bra ,.,PM Mr. and M,·s. North (WHO) Danclng Lessons-ballroom, bal Ted Malone (KXEL) CLASSIFIED DISPLAY let, tap. ))Ial '1248. MimI Youd. , Ihratllra '"Pri ,.SIt ,,'" 1:15 (jOe col. Incb Wurlu. Ihra prJ Jack Carson Show (WMT) Or 15.00 per month ....S ...s.....,,4" Mr. and Mrs. North (WHO) WHERE TO WY IT If" S. Lum an' Abner (KXEL) All Want Ads Cash In Advance 8u.~" I Payable at Dan,. Iowan BUIII ..., W.d Fri 7:30 oruce. dally until II p.m . . T.. Th Dr. Christian (WMT) ncaa •Sotar • ., PLUMBING AND BIATING ... S... ., Gay Mrs. Featherstone (WHO) ClbceUatlonl must be c.a1lec1 In bperi WorbD...... , i ·Tho. Pri Counter spy (KXEL) before II p. m. .. Tac.d" '7:.5 Relpon.lblo tor one lncor~c:t •SOt ...... , Dr. Chdstian (WMT) LAaEW CO• /h,. FrJ toaertlon only. 22'7 E. Wash. PhoDe 8811 \10,. Pri Gay Mrs. Featherstone (WHO) Counter Spy (KXEL) ... Suo'" 8:00 • Ib .. Pri .. 5l1ardoy Ray Noble's Band (WMT) 1'08 are alwa,. wele...... lET T A lET T PAUL ROBJMSO JI ..• ,..rdoyIbra FrJ Edtlie Cantor Show (WHO) and PRICES are low.' Ute ... SlIIdo, The Road Ahead (KXEL) ill' ex: !WI 8:15 d 1)-0 Prf .. T • .. Rliy Noble'S Band (WMT) .. 5...... , WMC Regulations DRUG·SHOP Eddie Cantor Show (WHO) ... S.. "'" Advert! emeDta 'or male IIr •• ".M.. .., The Road Ahe"d (KXEL) •. T• ...., aenUal female worken are car· IV ...... , 8:30 rled In Ulese "Help Wanle4" .Th.'" Which Is WhIch? (WMT) cIII:;mna wltb 'he Glulen&aruJ ... ',i.., Mr. District Attorney (WHO) " S"·rdIT , ..... 'hat hlrlnc proeedaree .Iaall ... 1Io...., Spotlight Bal'\~ s (KXEL) JI.... Baked QooIII .. Mo" '"' DISTlN4aUISHID "ON Oil, FJrst conform to War Ma..,.,.. ... c.-...... 1 • .,.1·, 8:'5 Caplaln of tbe Corps of Cadets, Commlsaloll ReplaUII_ W.d .....' Which Is Which (WMT) a.u. , ...... Tbondo, hl,heat rank attainable by a cadet " .. Frid" Mr. District Attorney (WHO) at the United States MUltary ~cad· 8,,~ OrtJ.n Spotlight Bands (KXEL) .... 8ofI". S.... em),. has been earned by Robert E. LOST AND FOUND .. Mo~ 8:00 Wood., Cotbinl!,l'oI . Y. In addition to III .. WC!!l.~bry fMaJ ...... T.... Great Moments in Music hi. mllilary and academic achieve Lost: Black Eversharp Lifetime Wed .... fountain pen. Probably Lost at .Th ..... (WMT) . ~ents, Woods was an outstanding ... .Soh" "rI~ kay Kyser Show (WHO) aU-around athlete. (Intern/ulan.an the Capitol Cafe. Reward. Phone FURNITURE MOVING ..... Mo.- Sa"'" 2229 . 100M AND 10ABD Iy GENE AHIBII O,.D HOME TOWN .n~",1~• ...., MAYBE HIS POMPADOUR SLIPPED LOST- Envelope containing prints MAHER BROS. TRANSFER I"STANLEI' and Ilegatives. Sib Brinkel', J'or Eflictenl J'umltura IIovlq ·· ~:::.i X304. AK About Our Lost: Kt!y chain with one key. WARDRO~SERV1C8 "e:~~!~ ' University pendant attached. I .'--.:::. , Daily Iowan, Box D . DIAL - 9696 - DIAL :::~ ... .. ~.:; :ri';i" .P ... 8 IN A QUANDARY l th .. w~D.t4 ABOUT HOW TO ..... T.-: ,':., .SIItW .. .~ SEll THOSE ODDS .. M"""", ,. .n~.e:.= AND ENDS? ~l--= ,n.a... ,1')1- Why not'" ..... Maoo'= F The DAILY IOWAN : .~.h"" t~" take ovar for pu? Ii, II I"M""" tr CALL ' 4191 and hay. y~ur t ~ ~M 'TM! lQOkS Of .THINGS there seelllll to have been lOme h1rsute ad in .omorrOw. ~nsPlan'titW~;. ~ out by Be.aman ~. D. Bernhard (left), Brooklyn, N. Y., aod .Pi n Sidn", Llelbei't, Po,"eroy. 0 .. ~sll out the Dew ·tr'6wtll. ~ 'PtctUrtdiu navAl baH in the Pacl1le •. (l"t~l) , PACEm fB! DAILY IOWAN, IOWA City, IOWA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6,- 1945 ------....\ Crow Says Defeatist VISITING IN IOWA CITY Airline Stewardesses End 1S Years' Service; RELEASE REPORT ON BRITISH DEFENSE FOR INVASION Attitude Worst Block Idea 'Sold' by San Francisco Nurse in 1930
SUI Football Coach By LUCIA PERRIGO more girls to fly United's Pacific Ceatral Press Correspondent coast route between Los Angeles Addresses Junior CHICAGO - Sky t r a vel e r s, and Seattle. Chamber of Commerce kindly step right up. Il's time to It did not take the girls long to give the snappiest salute you can break down even the pilots' he "The defeatist attitude on the muster to those women with wings sistance because they beean taking University of Iowa cnmpus will be -the airline stewardesses. care of pilOts as well as passengers, the toughest obstacle to over They are 15 years old, in terms 01 serving them coffee and sand come," foolball Coach Clem Crow service, this month and they have wiches. said in a talk lasl night before gone a long way from the old days Today ,il an airline tried to dis the Iowa City Junior Chamber of when eight of them comprised the patch a flight without a steward Commerce. sum total of f1ylne females who ess, the first screams wouLd prob bolstered the courage of timid pas Expressing confidence in the ably come from the pilots, say air sengers with well chosen words line oUicials. (Romance note: Ac football team this year, Coach and cold chicken lunches. Crow revealed that Jerry Niles, cording to the passengers' service 25-year-old (ormer stnr center, It was May 15, 1930, when a department, most of the girls re will be with the team this season. purposeful young feminist with sign to marry pilots!) her eyes on the skies and a vision Coach Crow said summer prac Before the war, all stewardesses in her heart, stepped aboard a had to be registered nurses, but tice would begin Aug. 6 with 25 Boeing tri-motored plane at the men returning from last season's ~ince the war-time demand for San Francisco airport. She wore them, United Airline eliminated team plus a few veterans, 4-Fs and a uniform, a cape and a cap that high school graduates. Besides this qualification, substituting two looked like a tired bun warmer, or more years of college education. Niles, Andy Novasad, 1reshman worn within a mere Inch above the lineman will be out this year. eyebrow. Over 1,000 Flyllll' Today "Sevenleen-yeal'-olds will nol be The airline stewardess service, Under this war-time policy, used on the leam because they are most streamlined of all feminine more than 300 "coeds" have gone too young 10 be relied upon," careers, was just beginning. aloft. Crow staled. "We lride it at Notre FIrIt Stewardess In Service "Mortality" among stewardesses Dame and it does nol work. It is The "Eve" of-the skies was Ellen is high, the average length of serv a rare case where they are fit for Church, now a captain in the army ice being 14 months, with Dat 01' PETROLEUM WEA'ONS ready against German Invasion of England are shown above as they were tried . college football. nurse corps air evacuation serv Davil Lo-o-o-o-ove causing 99 per out In 1940. Flame thrower. capable ot ftrIng tor several hours shoot flames and smoke over the c\JlDo nel. It hal been revealed that by merely pressin&" buttons an Inferno ot· flames on the .ea bu._ "We will have a lightin, team Ice. Since her first trip for United cent of the resignations. Currently and hills beyond Will ready to be released in the event of an Invasion. (1 nternatlona' SoilodDbGfo) this season, and one we can be SPENDING TmS week In Iowa City are Capl. and MrL Alan W. Air Lines between San Francisco more than 1,000 stewardesses are proud of," Crow declared. Baldwin, who are vlsltlnr Prof. Beth L. Wellman, Caplaln Baldwin;. and Chicago, every domestic air tlying the domestic airlines. former I"uardlan. Caplaln Baldwin was rradualed from the collece of line in the nation plus a dozen Many are the changes these lly Iowa City Meat Dealers Comment- " ,il' enrlneerlnl" of the University of Iowa In 19'0. foreign airlines have adopted the Ing maidens have seen in 15 years. AAF Technicians stewardess service. They have flown In successively However, the s e r vic e was larger, faster and more comfort strictly Ellen's idea. She envisioned able planes - from the Boeing No Let-Up in Shorioge Expected Police Find No Clues to Prepare Training Japs Retreat it and she sold it, accompanied by 80-A's Ford Trl-motors, to the , an arresting smile and a ,oarin, first twin-engined all-metal Boe Aids for 8-29 Cr,ews In Albert Langford enthusiasm that wouldn't brook ing 247's and on up to the present By John Anderson give fair and even distribution of any beef and will not recelve 1117 "No" from airline executives who, day DC-3 Douglas Mainliners. Dally Iowan Sla" Writer the meat that is available. until late July. I did have ~IDI They have seen their food serv In Burma at first, had their doubts. Miss Some Iowa City meat dealers No meat that is not federally in pork but now even that is &IvillC ROSWELL, N. Mex. (AP)-This ice chahge (rom' the box lunch of look optimistically upon the "lair Park Avenue Murder Church was a nurse in a San Fran spected can be shipped across out. The new plan will probably is part of the story behind the slory cisco hospital, learning to fly in cold sandwiches and chicken to an distribution plan" recently an state lines and Ule amount of of how B-29 Superfol'tresses have NEW YORK (AP)-A whimp era of full-course hot meals. give the packers more mat but CALCUTTA (,'\P) -Tank-sup her spare time. She had a winged nounced by Price Administrator farm cattle slaughtered for sale they will lose money on it" polished off Tokyo and turned to ering, black Pekinese yesterday ported British troops bat~ered \WO conviction that she and others like Hundreds of their ranks have Chester Bowles in an attempt to has been limited. other enemy targets in the appeared to be the only witness to miles across deep Japanese mlne jOined the army and navy nurse gain a more even distribution of One butcher, when asked haw her could promote the advantage Several dealers ih Iowa City much meat he was receiving rom· stepped-up Pacific air war. the kJlling of wealthy Albert E. fields in Burma· yesterday in ·pu..r of air travel among timid passeng corps and are serving on the bat meat products. placed some hOpe in the new plan. It's about the army airlorces Langford, 63, as police said efforts suit of enemy forces falling back tlefronts of the sky-evacuating pared' to that in 1944, replied, ers, the pioneering few who were The meat situation in Iowa City One said, "The meat shortage is "I'm getting only about 10 per ceo! technicians, whose sweat and in to solve the Park avenue slaying toward Thailand fro\1l mountain wounded. beginning to look to the clouds for has become critical, especially in severe arid I don't expect an in of the meat I had last year-at this genuity have pared hours and dol so far had been [ruiUess. positions 150 miles north of Ran commercial travel. Today they are serving Uncle the last two months. Several mar crease of shipments for several lars Irom the preparation for new With the shooting almost 24 Sam in increasing numbers but time. The chances of lIeWnt goon. Officials SkepUcal kets have been forced to close be months. The government is the more meat look slim and Ldl)a1 blows against Japan. It's about the hours old, police said no motive tomorrow they will return to the cause they could not obtain suffi only one who can help and their methods they helped evolve for On a 600-foot mountain' hiah Miss Church went to United and think tl')e new government ol'dll had been established for the way between the Sittang and officials we r e skeptical. Pilots airlln.es in expanding ranks to cient meat to operate profitably. new plan looks god." training hundreds of B-29 flying crime. wiJI help things. The meat jus\ Salween rivers, Briflsh infantry called in to confer on the propsed work in high-speed, four-engined One butcher when asked his When asked if the OPA' ceiling isn't available." and shooting teams. Langford, a tall, gray-haired luxury liners handling a new gen The information was made and tankmen reached a point 16% plan scowled. Passengers were a opinion of the OPA order replied, prices had any effect on his mar -- ---~--,..-.,.".--- textile executive, was shot in the miles east of Toungoo, on the nuisance to them since their prime eration no longer having to be "I see no letup in the meat situa ket, one butcher said: "The ceiling available by the western flying head Monday night in the hallway "sold" on the salety and speedy training command, which took Rangoon-Mandalay railroad, Bnd interest was pushing the mail tion until September. The new prices don't hurt me but the prices of his suite in the Hotel Marguery. then launched a powerful thrust through. Passengers were pests travel afforded. government order possibly will are too low for meat packers. They newspapermen to inspect its Ros His body was found by his wife, well, N. Mex., and Las Vegas, Nev., against Japanese bunker positions. and passenger service features help the shortage but it can't do lose $15 on each head of cattle bases, sit in on briefing of Marion, 70, art patroness. simply meant mQre pests. They much if there just isn't any meat they process." trainees, fly regular missions with Mrs. Langford, who before her did not like it-not even a little Food, Money Topics available." Alrhost every meat dealer in instructors and students, and fire marriage to Langford three years Capt. R. O. Shackle" bit. Another dealer said, "It doesn't Iowa City agreed that there would .50 caliber machine guns at range ago was Mrs. Robert T. Gimes, But EUen Church was a sales mean a bit more meat, and it be little beef or veal for several targets. told police she did not hear any man, a visionary with a shrewd Discussed at Institute won't help the situation at all. months. The supply of pork is also Demonstrating the technicians' shots, although she was in a near To Visit in Iowa City business /lense and finally the ex Meat dealers laugh at it." dwin~in~ • by bedroom. Police theorized that ecutives saw her 'point-up to a One dealer said, "Do away with, role were elaborate training aids, At Drake University· One dealer said that jf the new with which instructors say they possibly a silencer was used. Capt. Robert O. Shacklett, son point! She could recruit seven oth system brought any meat at all it the OPA and everythjng would Her story, liS related by police, ers, they said, and give it a try. straighten itseJt out. I don't hilve teach in minutes many things of Mr. and Mrs. q. E., Shacklet of DES MOINES (AP)-Food and would be more than he has re students would need hours or days continued: 730 Walnut street, is expecteq In So Ellen called on those other ceived the last six or seven weeks. "I was dressed in a lounging money were topics of discussion to learn [l'om the bomber itself. Iowa Oity the latter part ot this flying "firsts," Margaret Arnolt, yesterday at Ihe midwest institute robe, lying in bed reading a bQoJ<, Ellis Crawford, Alva Johnson, The new plan, which goes into Jury Expected :Today Months ago lhese AAF special week to visit his parents. He win of international relations at Drake effect June 17, calls for all com': and my husband, fully clad, was Harriet Fry, Cornelia Peterman, ists rescued [rom a crashed Super come from Mt. PlellBllnt, where his University, which opened Saturday merCial slaughlerers to folloW the To Reelch Decision fortress one oj its four 2,200- sHting on the edge o~ the ):led wife and child have been residing Jessie Carter and Inez Keller. and will be concluded Sunday. looking at a newspaper, when system of distribution employed in In Neuxil-Carlton Case horsepower engines. For three with her family. Captain Shacklett Today, incidentally, Miss Arnott Allan B. Kline, president of the the first three months of 1944 . weeks five men labored with 'Winny,' our small black Peklnese, is on a 13-day leave from the armY is a private nurse in Del Norte, Iowa Farm bureau, spoke on hacksaws and torches, cutting growled and indicated he heard a Col.; Miss Crawford is a nurse in It compels each slaughterer to The jury in the D. E. Carlton air field at Dyersburg, 'Timn., America's role in 100d production deliver into each county at least versus Joseph Neuzil civil case in away whole sections of the ex noise. where heavy bomber creW$ are San Francisco; Miss Fry is Mrs. after the war; and John De Jong, terior. Deep inside they installed "My husband went to the door. William H. Wisner of Chicago; 80 per cent by weight of the meat district court is deliberating and trained by returned veterans from president of the Iowa-Des Moines he delivered into that county in should render a decision today. tiny lights. An electric motor was I heard the two strangers say they every major war 1ront. Miss Peterman is Mrs. John Tyson National Bank and Trust Co., sum hooked up to simulate realistic wanted to talk to me 'about of Piedmont, Calif.; Miss Carter is the first thr~ months of 1944. Testimony in the case, the first of marized the setup of the Bretton the May term ot district court, performance. Today the engine is Raphael Diaz,'" they said. Mrs, L. E. Bronson of Mineral, Woo d s conference, agreements The plan will not give each area Member of the 214th mj)jtary po as much meat as received last started Monday with Judge Har being used by Roswell instructors "My husband lett them at the Calit., and Miss Keller is Mrs. R. made there and reception of the lice company in the European t~e year but it is hoped that it will old D. Evans presiding. to "sell" the B-29 to Its flying door, returned to the bedroom. I J. Fuite of San Francisco. Miss agreements. team- the pilot, co-pilot and flight told him to tell them I didn't know ater is Pfc. Charles Hummer, son of Johnson died several years ago The plaintiff, represented by D. Prosperity in this country, Kline C. Nolan, asks $394.07 in damages engineer. them and wouldn't see them. Mr. and Mrs, Paul Hummer, 508 :E. after a Wyoming automobile acci said, depends on our making the From other war-weary Super "Then I heard a thud, and a Bloomington street: This. comt>any dent. from Neuzil, as a re~ult of an ac great contribution we are able to cident which occurred Dec. 3, 1943, torts, no longer flyable, the tech groan. I ran to the door and has participated in most of- the Publlc Loved Ladles make in the rehabilitation and re Col. J. Tracy Hale nicians have grabbed parts and major campaigns from the Nqr one mile south of Coralville. WILLIAM O'DWYER, above, 8ro&Ir. found my husbanq slumped to the The airline officials may have construction period. Iyn district attorney, hall equipment to be converted into foyer floor." mandy beachhead, across the Sieg been dubious, the pile'.., downright The petition states that the col t_ De Jong, a native of Holland his hat Into the' ring In tilt ~ more cutaways and mock-ups. ------fried, line, the Rhine, and into t~e Irked. but the public-Whammo! who was engaged in European ex To Speak at Annual lision between the plaintiff's truck The resulting set-up is labelled Pearre Missionary Society heart of the Gf!rman Reich. Each and the automobile driven by Neu York may 0 r a I t y call\Plllll· It loved the ladies of the s~ylanes. port-import business in European O·Dwyer. a D.emocrat, rtceoUy "invaluable" by Brig. Gen. Hay The Pearre Missionary Society policeman wears three Bro,¥e It loved the way they pacified countries during the early part of zil was solely due to negligence wood S. Hansell. will meet at 2:30 p. m. today Campaign stars in this company Elks Lodge Service on the part of the defendant. was discharged tram the tI. I • . Wailing iruants, whipped out the the first world war, compared re Army after serving III a brlga4ltr in the home 01 Mrs. W. R. which is one of the few amphiblofls sirictions and trade barriers of Jack C. White is attorney for the spirits of ammonia for the weak of Col. J . Tracy Hale, II veteran of fenertl. (I nttrn.tioU/) A researcher has discovered McNeal, 309 N. Dodge street. Mn. assault mill ary pollee organ!~a defendant. stomach; supplied magazines to the then and now, said the earlier bar both wars, will speak at the annua1 that the home occupied by Miriam Emil Boerner will lead the dis lions in the United State,s army. literary - minded and generally riers seemed like a picket fence Hopkins on Sulton Place in New cussion on "Islands of the Pacific Elks lodge Flag day service to be made a plane a pLace of hospital compared with those existing now. held here June 10 at 2:30 p. m. at York City once was occupied by -the 7,000 Emeralds." A social ity. 'NO.2' MAN IN ETO ARRIVES , HOM~ Stephen Crane, famous American hour will follow the business meet Francis Joseph Wicks, store' tht Elks lodge rooms. 'I'll\! complete keeper first class, USNR, of 434 S, Air travelers definitely liked the For easier handling place apples program will be announced at a " writer, at the turn of the century. ing and program. or stuffed peppers in muffin tins Johnson street, was among five stewardesses and demanded more. later date. Miss Church then employed 20 belore baking. Iowa men who fouaht Ilbpard the Colonel Hale was wounded in JAPS MOVE TROOPS TO MANCHURIA USS Caldwell, one of the navy's France while serving with the in newest destroyers now back in the fantry in World War 1. II battle zone after undrgoing repairs A REAL "BARB" IN THE NIPS' SIDE In tbis war, he was stationed in in San·Francisco; fQllowin, ~Ilrjous damage by. Jap bombs in . tne fa the southwest Pacific Ilnd was wounded during jungle fighting cific. This dest~o)ler particlpatt!d In the Attu ' and. Kiska campal,ns, while serving as commander of an raids on Wake, Tarawa and Makin infantry regiment in the Papuan islands, the occupations of the Gil campaign, He has also heen duty in bert and Marshall islands, raids 'on Australia. \I' Truk, Palau, Hollandia and Wakde Returning to the United States IOUI and the occupation battles of New the latter part of 1944, Colonel stlli Hale took over training activities in !Gle Guinea and the Phllippin~. order to transmit the benefit of his experiences in the PaCific to troops Lieut. Irwin E. Katz, 1944 uni scehduled to go overseas. versity graduate .in absentia, is sta Colonel Hale, a native of Mil tioned at an air transport command waukee, is on duty with the @eak* base in india: where he is an air ers branch of the bureau of public traUic controller. This command relations of the war department. At flies some of the most treacherous the completion of this assignment, mountain country in the world, he will return to his regular sta getting supplies to allied troops tion at Camp Blanding, Fla. fighting in China. The service is open to the public. The committee in charge is under V Arley Francis Hayes, 20, radio the chairmanship of L. E. Clark. IUr man third class, USN ~ son of Mr~ . Serving on the committee are Dot'r 're ,Ted De France, 1210 Keokuk Hudson and Lawton Petrick. tor 'iVA IAU , street, is servine aboard a de stroyer escort of the Atlantic fleet. 7 CHINA IIA .' Unemployment Officials Yt!If ' \ He stands watch in the radio .hack ~OKINAWA and is a 20-mm. &\Ulner WJheo at Of Midwest States pia; bottle station. . Plan September Meet anGIl. ~ Star has been added to tn • .Asi tieI atic-Pacific ribbon of PIaneis E. DES MOINES (.AP) - Unem 2: •• Stinocher, gunner', mate' third ployment compensation ofticlals OVII!!!! Pacific Ocean. class, USNR, son ot Mrs.1 Grace from five states yesterday laid rIc-iE Stinocher, route I, for P8l:ticlpatlng plans for a September "swap At.:: Idea" conference. POI SOME WEEKS 'AST, accordln, to reports from abroad, Jap dlvislona in the bombardment and' Invasion 011 in Manchuria have been recelvin, reinforcements from the .outhern of Iwo Jlma aboard a heavy cruiser Theme of the September meet ing will be "How to Do Your Job (1) and western (2) areu of China. These troop ml&raUona 'account, in the western Pacific. THI NAVY HAS DISClOSID that a full convoy of Japanue ahlp. was GEN. OMAR NELSON BRADLEY, commander of tI1l 12th A:rmy .eociI L Better," said Claude M, Stanley, in part, for the rapid Chlnue advances throu,h the key cit, of NIlDIlinc ---...... ---,- blown up by a .lngle American .ubmarlne in a lpeetacular attack In Europe and described by many as No.2 mal In thnt Uteat" ,tI: ID (8) and beyond. The movement of men may be prompted by the an lnaIde a heavily ruarded, 1l1dden enemy harbor. And as lenaational chairman of the Iowa Employment war. 18 .hown above with his wife as he arrived by pi","' fro~J.'UIl.. bee. Security commission. nouncement from MOICow that "the Soviet Siberian armltll (il) ",Ul Divorce Petition Filed &I the raid Itlelt was the ,lCape of the l,500-ton lub, the U. S. S. at the LaGuardia fiel.d in New York City. Renowned as the "i 1111 move into camp. for lWIUIler maneuven early in June." DlplomaUo Barb, above, which &"ot away Alely after an hour'a runnln&" batu. PolicY matters were not in* btly.· General," Bradley led the Americans in the Normandy In .' . ' abc. circles point out that the JaPi are believed to be prepared to make '*tr A petition for divorce wa. filed on the .urface of water. lWed with minea, rocks and ftlhIn&" junk•• volved in the discussions, but only a year ago and dl reeted the forces who broke the ftrst big Q . In. rltorial aacrl/lce. to the RUJllana to keep them out 01 the war. One .uch by Clarence V. Brookhart a,alnlt The sub Uve4 ,up to Itl name in pertormlng the aenaaUonal attack, a chance for employes to learn counter·offenllve aJ: St. Lo and flaltened buck Von' fj.~nd.tedt\;' Clt_ concession, accordin. to the reports, may be the ctdiDJ to the RedI of Floy 1. BrookhaRt in district court which the Na~ baa described .. "Virtually a suicide m1ulon_ better techniques on their jobs,
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