'"'_ • •, _ • • "'0 ,. •• ' • ___ •• _ • Y nnkees S pUt Partly Cloudy Connie J\lack's Athletics Win FIrat, IOWA-PartI,. cloud,. 10 some­ what unsettled toda,. and Iomor­ 5-4; Lose, 16-3 row: warmer In east today, cooler See Siory, pare 3 In west and north Iomorrow. .1 1 0 tv a Cit y Jf 0 , n i n g New 8 pap e r = \ FIVE CENTS The A ",ocl._ 1'-. IOWA CITY, IOWA SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1938 VOLUME XXXVIINUl\1BER 265 , French Alarmed Over Arrested For Must Accept I(raschel's Terms AskingAlm~ book. Little Woman In University Nazis' Military Action To End Martial Law in Newton year til. Tattered Sweater , the an. wonner • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Search d by Police UniverSI~ Fear Germany Carroll Gets Life for Murder • "Prohibited Areas" on Gernlan Front PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 12 (AP) - Today, as tor many days, a little ...\ .uthorities Of Preparing To woman in a tattered brown sweater and billowy black skirt stood on a Jasper County Aid Sudetens busy downtown street corner, stretched out a thin hand and piped Hold Deci ion a plea for alms. Seek Information On But this time Policeman John Fuehrer's Intentions Smith strolled over to her, took her Gov rnor Is. u Order by the arm and led her away to a From Foreign Service police station. To Remove Troops A pollce matron searched her When Official Agree " PARIS, Aug. 12 (AP) - The clothing. A gold coin tell out; then French government, a larmed by another, and another. The ma­ DES MOINES, Aug. 12 (AP) - reports of huge mill tary move­ tron's expert hands found bulges ments underway in Germany, to­ In the old black skirt. Coins and Withdrawal of national g u a r d day sought information on Reichs· bills had been carefully $titched in. troops from Newton, scene of the luehrfr HllIer's intention through Total resources of Ihe poor beg­ three-month May tag labor row, French diplomatic representatives gar-woman: $2,893.36 - the 36 hinged tonight on lhe acceptance • brond. cents clenched t1ghUy In her fist . by Newlon authoritl s of Gov, Nel­ The reports: son G. Krasch l's demobilization That Hitler's army had requisi­ lerma. tioned private automobiles, trucks, The govrrnor today issued an fUrniture vans and even munici­ Georgia Vote order to Adjutanl General Charles pal buses in Bavaria in connec­ H. Grahl ending martial law in tion with forthcoming autumn N wton as soon as local officials maneuvers. Cri i for F. R. agrec lo ccrtnln recommendation That more than 1,000,000 Ger­ made several days ago by the mili­ man reservists had been called to tary commission. the colors. President Will Watch Governor Insist That Germany was speeding up tacp Date (or Primary Th recommendations, which the construction 0/ fortifications on tilR~~ -~~~IO"~C governor Insisted must be followed, her French and Polish frontiers. Creation of new "prohibited ar-I eig~ military attoches wer~, or­ In Soulhern State Includpd: Preparing for War? Las" blanketing the eastern fron- deled to leave the new pro­ Dismissal of all Indictments, con­ These lhings led lo fear lhat tiers and the northern coasts of hibi.ted" zones Imm.ediately or be WASHINGTON, AuI'(. 12 (AP) tempt cItations and an injunction the nazis were greasing their war , subject 10 prosecullon, and lour- - Pre Ident Roosevelt has circled resultin~ from the long dispute be­ Germany leads to the assumptIOn ist traCClc will be closely super- machine for use in case they fail­ a new date, Wednesday, Sept. 14. tween the washIng machine com­ ed to receive quick satisfaction Ihat a vast ring of land and sea vised. Placing of emphasis on pany and its C.I.O. union locn!. on the 1938 political cillendar. It from Czechoslovakia in the dis­ defenses prolecting Germany on lhe Czechoslovakian rron~ier came Restoration of U1e locat courts pute over the future slalus of 1:;11 sid.?s is nearing complt'tlon. on the eve of Lord Runciman's marks a new crisis tor him, tor his and law enforcement officials to Czechoslovakia's 3,500,000 Sude­ 'fhe map above shows how Ger- arrival in Czcchoslovakia [rom party and perhaps for the Mtlon. normal authonty, R turn of Dis­ Paul Dwyer 8aroora C8rroll ten German minority. many is protecting Jtse lf in this London to try to medmte the Su­ On that day Georgia, the presi~ Francis M. Verroll trict Judge Frank Bechly to the Such ostentatious military prep~ manner. As in the west, ali for- deten German controversy. dent's "second statl'," holds its prl- Another angle in the strange Carroll, a former deputy sherl1f, li~ . An unusual a",le to the case Jasper county bench to replace arations were in contrast with the murder trial in South Paris, Me., for the murder of Dr. James G. is Ihat Barbara Carroll, the ac­ Judge Homer A .Fuller of Mount nazi precedent of swift and secret maries. The political rate of Wai­ Ayr. Littlefield. 67, who was slaln cused man's 16-year-old daughter, action-a fact which pa radoxical­ Report 100 Japanese Planes In ter F .George, seeking his fourth that has drawn allention from the with his wife. Paul Dwyer, 18, Judge Full r had b n assigned Iy tended to ease French fears. election to the senate, will be de­ entire nallon closed yesterday confessed to the crime last Octo­ tormerly "went with" young to Jasper county before martial Foreign office circles and most cided. And on that decision ot with the convlcUon ot Francis M, ber and has been Imprisoned for DwYer. law was declared to hear contempt diplomats voiced a belief that the Most Di a trou Raid of War Georgia voters may tUrn also the actions brought against three union preparations were designed to political destiny or Franklin D. • • • • • • • • • • • ~ ...... • • • • • • • • • • • • orrlcials undf.'r Judge Bech ly's "intimidate" C z e c h 0 s 10 v akia, T J;toosevell, of the new deal, ot Ih!' "reasonable picketing" injunction. France and Britain, but watched' 400 Civilians Killed, democratic party and of the nation. an D dine Dt'c1 Ion carefully the advices trom French Burned Up I Ipjured in 'fri.Cily 1n Georgia, as In no other state Carroll Convicted for Murder Luther M. Carr, county attorney diplom tltic aod secret agents in eXl'ent ili£ own N w York, Ptesi· at Nrwlon, 1'1'11.1. d to announce an Germany. Boy's Father Ohjects Area on Yanglz dent Roosevelt has built up a per. Immediate decIsion on the gover­ Reinforce Spy Service I sonal popularity and political fol­ nor's pl'Oposal. Carr, who flied most Thus, two possibly interlockIng To WPA Error HANK w. Chin, Aug. 12 (AP) lowing he has now pul to the su- Doctor; Gets Life Sentence of the contempt and criminal pro­ 1 Of explanations of the Germtln man­ - Ope red" 'J'~l>anese war pre me test. For in Georgia he has ceedIngs arising from the strike, ifestations emerged in Paris: SMITHFIELD, P Aug. 1:1. planes virtually poured bombs into cast asid IradltJonal restraints on said he was "at a 10 s to 'know why I.-The nazis wish to impress tAP)- Walter Malo~~, father of Hankow and the neighboring cities his office and considerations of the governor had made such a pro­ the world with their military II seven-year-old boy hired and of ~uchang and an~ Hanyang to- party harmony to single Senator Warn Again t Nazi Plots Youth Still nouncement at this time." power. fIred by WPA, today was "burn- day,.n one of t~e Chmes ·Japanese George out for decapitation In the I He said he would like to know 2.-They wish to have their war ed up" by what he termed a war s most dlsas~rous and most democratic primaries. The bold­ • • • • • • the situation bplwepn the company machine ready tor use in case of "clerical error" listing his son, spectacular air raids. ness of his attack and the uncer­ Undercover Agent Tell House Committee Of Held in Prison and the umon before he makes trouble over the Sudeten Ger­ Richard, as a relief worker. The bombs and the flames that tainty of the outcome made it a "any commitments." man's demands for autonomy in spread m their wake killed or breath-taking dramatic moment to Nazis' Un· American Activities The governor's provisional order Czechoslovakia, Malone, whose sun wa~ mailed wounded 400 civilians of the tri- political students, fraught with tar- Barbara, preceded by less than a day the At the same time, the French a $6.54 WPA check, declared: city area, which lies 600 miles up reaching possibilities. WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 (AP) who came to this country in 1914, scheduled resumption of negotia­ minister of interior, Albert Sar­ "It looks like someone sUpped the Yangtze river In the heart of The pl'esident rated the Georgia · -An Undercover agent told the lold of joining the German-Amer­ we theart of Boy, tions between the company and the raul, made known he had taken up in Richard's case." China. senator a [riend, a scholar and a house committee on "Un-Ameri­ ican Bund under a German name, union on the problem of a new measures to reinforce the French Lyell L . Buttermore, WPA di· Two American mission proper- gentleman; but he also weighed can Achvities" today that the nazi and becoming a trusted lieutenant W ep for Father contract. The governor, still bed­ counter-espionage service to deal ff:'ctor in the three southwestern ties were dire tly hit. More than George's political philosophy in movement in the United States of Fritz Kuhn, National Bund fast in a hospital here, said he with an increasing number of spy Pennsylvania counties, said the 300 residences, most ot them hum- new deal scales to lind him want­ (,Ims to set up a "vast spy net­ leader. I SOUTH PARIS, Me., Aug. 12 wanted "slate influence" in the cases, especially In the German boy had been assigned to a job ble, were destroyed, and tens of ing and call tor his defeat. George, frontier region where France's work" and "power!ul sabotage "I have secret relations with CAP) - Francis M. Carroll, for-I form of troops removed while ne­ lhrough "clerical error." State Itholl sands of dollars worth of raU- promptly and with dignity, ac­ machine" for use in case of war. Germany whereby I can geL any­ mer deputy sh riff tonight was gotiations are in progress. Maginot line of fortifications lies. WPA headquarters in Harrisburg way equipment, crude oil, and ker- cepted the challenge. It could At Metz, in the frontier zone, These charges came from John thing I want," Kuhn said, ac­ convicted ot garrotl~g Dr. James The company an~. the union dtclared two timekeepers had osene were blown up. mean for him a brllliant political C Metcalfe, committee investi­ cording to Metcalfe. . . opened formal negotlahons on the German workmen who in the past been suspended after investigation I (In Shanghai a Japanese naval future - or the end of his public G. LIttlefIeld, elderly country doc- contract queStion last Sunday. have crossed into France to work {;alor and former Cbicago news­ Under questioning of Chairman "turned up information that pOint-j communique announced that the career. paper man, whose short stature, Dies (D-Tex) Metcalfe estimated t~r, and was immediately sentenced They adjourned that meeting until in coal mines said German auth­ ed to collusion." I raid was "100 per cent effective" As political observers read the pmal I black moustache and criSp that "at least half a million per­ to lite imprisonment for the crim tomorrow. orities had forbidden the practice. ArthUr Malone, discussing the I and th.at the headquar.ters ot Gen- signs, the president has given new tone reminded spectators of Adoll ~ons in this country" ar~ mem­ "lifer" Paul N. Dwyer, 19, once "clerical error," saId he went to , erallsslmo Chiang K.al-Shek ~ere and incalculable Impetus to the Armed Forces AI. WPA offices as soon as Richard destroyed. Ha~kow IS the Chmese clash within democratic ranks over HItler. bers, supporters, or sympathizers confessed. No Action Likely Metcalfe, a native of Germany with the nazi movement. War Time Basis and his brother David 14 cashed provISIOnal capItal. The Japanese his leadership and poliCies. He has Tomorrow he wlll join the boy, UIltil Week End !h h k ' " estimated there were 500 casual- stimulated republican hopes that erstwhile sweetheart of his pretty NEWTON, Aug. 12 (AP)-That BERLIN, Aug. 12 (AP)-Top e c ec . ti ) in 1940 there will be a democratic 18-year-old daughter, Barbara, in any possibillty of lifting of mar­ speed preparations tor nationwide "~hey cam~ home laug.hing at e~o Chinese planes took the all' party split comparable to that Shooting of Japanese Policemen state prison at Thomaston, adding military maneuvers are hOisting the Idea of RIchard draWIng pay to combat Ihe invaders, whose big which ended a long era or republl­ another twist to Maine's bizarre tial law in the Maytag washing Germany's armed :forces to a (or WPA. Why that boy can machines droned over the city in can power in 1912. "death tour" murder case. machine labor controversy would war-time basis. hardly lift a shovel. the morning. There was an Inef- Mr. Roosevelt may tollow up hIs Renews Tension Along Border B81'bara was not in the hushed bc delayed until the week end The regular army, already cap- " I took the money back and I fective anti-aircraft fire. Georgia thrust by aiming direct court room as the verdlct was was seen tonight as Jasper coun­ a?le Of. tull force ac~on over- IPtrieved the check and took it In Wuchang the chapel of the blows at other democrats he rates brought in, but Carroll's wife 17 authorities awaited the return ~Ight WlthO~t t~e nec~ ss lty of old-l ot once to the WPA ... Now Order of Saint Anne convent, op- as too conservative. He intimated Chicago Killers New Incident Occurs Ruby, sobbing, heard the stocky 10 Newton of District Judge Frank t~me mobilizatIOn, ':"'Ill take . t~e we're even off reliel." era ted by a mission of the Ameri- little less hostility to Senator Withiu 48 Hours Of defendant again protest his [nno- S. Bechly. ~eld next mon th WIth new d~vl-1 Malone said Buttermore and can Episcopal church, was demol- Smith in South Carolina, though Get 8th Victinl cence before Judge William H. The jUrist is on a fi shing va­ 810ns of reserves for the fIrst Max Whoolery. one of those [shed by a direct hit. While an- he called no names there. Tydings Changkufeug Peace Fisher sentenced him to hard labor C'6tion in Minnesota. County At­ such jOint training since t~e suspended, came to his home in olher bomb tore down a nearby of Maryland or others m ay be on Within 7 Weeks lor life. torney Luther M. Cllrr talked Wor!d war.. (Germa.ny generally lS this Fayette county town near sisters' residence in which three his list. TOKYO, Aug. 13 (Saturday) Friends said Barbara was at a with the judge by telephone late credited With havmg an armed Uniontown, and showed him an I American w 0 men missionaries, But George of Georgia heads the CHICAGO, Aug. 12 (AP) - (AP) - Tension between Soviet moving pictUre theater when she today and the latter lett irn- fore~ . of 1,000,000 men.) assignment slip for Richard. I huddled under a staircase, escaped list. That alone makes him a na- Gunmen's bullets tonight killed Russia and Japan increased to­ learned of the verdict. mediately for Iowa. Military observers were unable "I went into the house and without a scratch. tional political figure ot greater Chicago's eighth gang execution day with a new border incident She left immediately, bursting He was expected to arrive 10 to estimate the. number of men brought out our assignment slip I Another bomb destroyed the proportions than he was before Mr. style victim within seven weeks. born within 48 hours after settle­ into tears as she reached the street. lime for Saturday conferences at to be Involved since.. there was no tl la t h a d never been us.ed DOId I American Seventh Day Adventists' Roosevelt spoke out against him. The body was identified by po- ment ot the dangerous Chang­ "I don'l see how the verdict which Carr will take up recorn­ d kufeng affair. prece ent upon whIch to figure. II'1eu' eyes bt'"ug ou . ,..city clinic in Wuchang ' killing 12 And around George's name, ever lice as that of Joseph La Porte, 24. could have been that," she was JlIendations contained in Gov. The new trouble broke out on quoted as having said. "I want to Nelson G. Krasche1's provisions Threatened Presldenl'8 Life "Furthermore, neither Whool- Chm~se pabents. Many wounded since he came to U1e senate 16 Witnesses said they saw him shot ery nor the other cler could I h~d . Just been removed from the years ago, has clustered specula- to death in an automobile by men sparsely-populated Sakhalin Is­ go home to my mother." for removal of the National LOS ANGELES (AP)-Keith ld tif ·th Alb tOld r CIIIllC when it was struck. lion that he might be the first Iwho then drove into the aUey oU land, north of Japan, where Mos­ The jury, which returned once Guardsmen. n. RaliP, 28, who was arrested in . en y el er er, av 0 I ---- southern democrat since the '60's to West Van Buren street and un- cow and Tokyo dlvlde control to bear transcript of testimony of 1___ --: ______Memphis, Tenn., and returned myself as having worked on the Report Corn Loans receive a party presidential nomi- ceremoniously dumped the body, At an isolated corner of the Dwyer and others concerning the B U L LET I N here on a charge of writing a job." WASH1NGTON (AP) - The nation. I The last previous gangland-style Russo-Japanese boundary, Domei scene of the murder, was out five letter threatening the lile or He charged that the slip shown Commodity Credit corporation Should George return to the sen- killing occurred . I as t Tuesday (Japanese new. a,ency) reported, and one-halt hours. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, lum had been signed with an "x" onnounced yesterday that corn ate despite Roosevelt opposition a morning when the bQdy of Sam infantrymen of the NKVD, Soviet Defense counsel would not re- Report Airliner was sentenced ' yesterday to a fLnd that someone had written th~ !oans reported to it through Aug. place in the forelront of the party ,"FroglegS" Piccioto was tound near secret police, shot and wounded veal whether an appeal would be hospital tor the criminally insane. lad's name under it. Jl totaled $21,777,554. clash in 1940 is assured him. the White Sox baseball park. two Japanese pOlicemen. sought in the case which came to Hours Overd,,£ Adding to the gravJ ty of the IIgl1t when young DwYer was ar - incident, the pOlicemen, one at rested In Nortb Arlington, N. J ., At Mexico City whom was hurt seriously, were last Oct. 16 with the bodies of the escorting Ryukichi Tashirogi, a doctor and his wife, Lydia, 63, in Report South Most ~III-Housed, III.Fed, Ill-Clad' member ot parliament, and an his car. MEXICO CITY, Aug. 12 (AP)­ "inspection party" near the bor­ DwYer first confessed to garrot­ A.Pan American airways liner car­ w~Hrn~0~A~ . 12(AP)1 "The-s-o-u-th-b-th-e-n-atl-~-'-S-P-~-l---W-a-s-th-a-t-~-l -~-s-t -~-o-oo-,-OO-O-f-a-m---te-r-O-f-tr-a-n-s-~-t-t-~-s-a-W-th-a-t -th-e-S-O-U-th-~~~O~W~th~ der, Domel said. ing botb victims, and was senten­ rying eight passerlgers and a crew The agency reported the Sov­ ced last December to lite imprison­ of three was hours overdue tonight -The National Emergency coun- est untapped market and the illes, one-hall of the families in realistic attitude of southern lead- information largely from govern­ iets opened fire without warning. ment after SUddenly pleading guil­ and apparently had run into b~.d elI reported to Presidenl Roose- market in which American busi- the south, needed new homes. ers who helped prepare the ment departments aod agencies. Authorities at Shikika, Japan­ ty the tHird day of his trial. weather. velt today th at the south, more Iness can expand most easily. Nor- Agriculture, industry, banking, trealise indicated that "something ese ci ty on Sakhalin, reported a Only a pardon can release the The plane was on its way here than any other section of the thero producers and distributors labor, women and children all will be done about it." He added They were aided by a large ad­ corps of police, rushed to the youth from prison, and no one yet from Villahermosa, Tabasco state, country, was ill-housed, ill-fed are losing profits and northern were described by the council as that the solution must be part visory committee of southern men border to "investl&ate" the inci­ has been indicted fOr Mrs. Little­ about 420 miles to the southeast, and ill-clad. workers are losing work because burdened by the economic iUs political, with participation by in- prominent in all walks of life. dent, now were confronting the field's slaying. and was due in Mexico City at 2:10 Summarizing the south's eco- the south cannot arford to buy peculiar to the area studied: Vir- dustry, business, schools and pri- The 60-page report stated the Russians. p.m. C.S.T. (3:10 p.m. E.S.T.) It nomic conditions at the presi~ their goods." ginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, North vale citizens. south, with a wealth of economic (Sakhalin island, lying close to was last heard from at 12:18 p.m. dent's request, tor the inrorma~ The report was made public Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, The president, in asking lor the resources, is the poorest section the Siberian coast, was first set­ Boy Struck by Auto when it radioed that fill was weir. Uon or congress and the country, lonly a few days after President Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, report on June 22, and in outlln- of lhe country. With 28 per eent tled in 1857 by the Russians, who EMMETSBURG (AP)-Donald The plane lert Villa hermosa at the council said the region's pop- Roosevelt, campaigning in the LouIsiana and Arkansas, Okla- ing it to the conference on eco- of the population of the country, owned all of it until 1905. In 1905 Burke, 13, son of Mr. and Mrs. 11 :25 a.m., CST. Its message Ulation problems were the most south tor a new deal congress, had homa and Texas. nomic conditions in the .outh on lit has only 16 per cent of tan. the Trellty of Portsmouth allotted .James Burke, farmers near here, shortly thereafter said it was fly­ IIresslng of aoy America must Ireiterated his desire to increase No remedial measures were July 5, said tbat It would be pre- gible assets, Including factodes, the nortbern three-fifths to Rus­ \'las killed last night in a bicycle- ing at 11 ,000 feet over the regu­ face. Declaring these problems southern purchasing power. sl.\gge~ted, but Lowell Mellett, di.- sented to congreu. machines, and the tools with sia, the southern two-fifths to ft utomobil~ colUsion in front of lar route but was encountering Were national, it cQncludell: One Of t~e council', findinis rector of the council, in his let- It WIIB dratte(l entirely by which people IDllke lheir llvinS. Japlln.) his home, heavy rain, PAGE TWO THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, THE DAILY FISHERMAN'S LUCK! I======:=;;=:= Published every morning ex­ OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN .1 cept Monday by Student Publica­ Items in the UNIVERSITY CALENDAR ar( L..on;; Incorporated, at 126-130 schedulrd In the office of the Presld enJ, Old Capi­ Al2()U~[) Iowa avenue, Iowa City, Iowa. tol. Items for the GENERAL NOTICES are de. ~--~-~ posited with the campus editor of The Dally IoWlUl, Board of Trustees: Frank L. or may he placed in the box provided for their de· TIl~ Moll, Odis K . Pallon, Ewen M. posit In the officf'S of The Dally Iowan. GENERAL ::=: MacEwen, Karl E. Leib, Amos NOTICES must be at The Dally Iowan by 4:30 p.m. Pearsall, Rubert Dalbey, Ben M. the day preceding first pUblication: noUees wlll NOT T()W~ B. bc accepted by telephone. and must be TYPED or I = Stephens, David Evans, Orval LEGIBLY WRITTEN and SIGNED by a resPoll8lble Q. Matteson. person. With .- Fred M. Pownall, Publisher VOL. XII. No. 62 aturday. August 13, 1938 MERLE MILLER Donald J. Anderson, I Business Manager ...- Entered as second class mnil r.",wra) Noticefil "Punch" Dunkel, who m I'm 8eck. who's president, "is what Men l\ta.y Swim Library Hours matter at the postoHice at Iowa going to miss seeing on Sou'th happens when one eommlll« Pitts members turns ou~ to be an unlal! City, Iowa, under the act ot con­ The 1Jeldhouse pool will be I For the three weeks designated Dubuque, had lowl\. City'S fir t New gress of March 2, 1879. open daily from 2. to . :;:30 p.m. 1 as a period of independent study radio station, the first, now that l'epre5entative of the I. C. tennis I for recreational swmumng for all . . ' we mentlon It, in this part of the club. Chic Subscription rates-By mail, $5 men registered in the IDdepen- Hom Aug. R to Aug. 26, the library country.. • Cine: per year; by carrier, 15 cents dent study unit. reading rooms wil be open trom 8 Bost' I noticed in yesterday's D. M. BrOO weekly, $5 per y ar. And "Rube" SwartZlander counts column a word of advice to the dis· D. A. ARMBRUSTER, a.m. until noon, ann from 1 to 5 st. I Gymnasium Director p.m. on the fingers of one hand the tracted mother who wrote, "One The Associated. Press is exclu­ of my children bItes everyone he Phill The education·philosophy-psy- Iowa football games he's missed sivelY entilJed to use lor republi­ I since 1916 - local or foreign . .. sees. What can I do to make him cation of all news l;c the world safe fOI We were saying: the Ught heavyweight champ (Bill trouble ail around. It leads even A matron who spent yesterday R. J. McComas - who's a near. neU one may have either for Or ugnlOsl Ihl' Aryan race, Is tiS futile but "Come here to thls free land' Gargan) adds him to his vaude- to the estrangement of her sweet- In Des Moines annOUJlCCS a new image of Brother Don - has ana­ Lann the president, it is Iwrd to pictun' !lUt;... creditable as Aml'Iica's at· and think as you like, speak aq Let us pl~rase our invitation not vllle tour. heart (George Murphy.) sltoV's opened there. calls itself a tiona I I'ep os a well-inlormed agenl (4-8) his every move as forshadowing It mpt to make the world safe for vou like and act as yOU like as only accord 109 to lls generous pW'- • • • When Mannering. long away "corsetorlum." ... And It's a mtle ... He never consults a time table, Chi the scythe, the Iusl'l's 01' th{' SWHS- democracy. long as ~ou OBEY OUR LffiER-1 ~.o se but according to its ADVA~-I The boy grows up (to be Taylor) from the stage, agrees to return to I alarming to remember you need a seldom takes (I trip ... Never mis· (5-0) tika. It is hard to VIs ualize his 'rill' wurld cannot be made safe AL I.. AWS AND RESPECT OUR I AGEOUS EFFECT, ~nd .we WIll and he's forgotten about singing. assist in his daughter's debttt, he B.A. to get a page job at NBC ... sed an answer ... (01 every political move n "purgl'''; !Ol the ~A l'yan race. unci should T'REE INSTITUTIONS." fee clearly why Amel'~ca IS today He's climbIng to a ring title, finds he can't take it-and Menjou his every sp ech a s('athing dC'IIl"t be. In doing this we wel'e surely Ihe stl·ongest,. and I'lchest, and knocking 'em off as they come. gives one of his finest scenes. That tennis tournament's been And Confucious wrote It. "A nunciatJon of his enemies. H Ihe Aryun mce cannot take b stowing a great blessing on all most progressive, and most pros- And then he's matched with Gar- "Gateway' 'is the new title for jinxed from the slart... They're wise mall never attempts to plough Such has been t~e attitude of ('nrc (I[ i(~clf in competition with persecuted peoples, but think what perou~ natiOll in the world. gan, trying for a comeback fOI' the the film "Ellis Island." Tailored to more unhappy one's a result. • • Ule sky, paint npon the waler or the news and echtorwl columns of olllcr r[lC(;5, then it is an INFER- '1 blessing we were invoking on It 1S because we al'e NOT a wife and kid - the broken-down show the inside working of the ''Inconsistency,'' writes A l y c e argue with a woman," he advised. this paper for the Jast few years. lOR race, and should not be pI'e- ourselves. Ho -ca~ed "pure" race. ,ehump, his best friend, and Taylor "gateway to America," the picture If anything, the paper has be- ~f1·vt'd. Let us express and explain that I It .IS, beca~se we are NOT a has to knock hlm out. is best when it tends to that phase come more ncrim011-ious towl.ll'd CCI.t

---- ! . ------~~ Sl ANDINGS I I MAJOR LEAGUE i ---.------.~ NATIONAL LEAGUE Bill Lee-and Cubs Rout Pittsburgh, 9-3 W. L. Pet. G. B. Pittsburgh ...... 62 37 .626 New York ...... 58 44 .569 5~ Turner Pitches Yankees Split Chicago ...... 57 45 .559 6 ~ Tobin, Bro,m. Cincinnati .. ... 56 46 .549 7 ~ Colgate Raiders Will Bring Tricky And Boston ...... ,47 51 .480 14~ Bee~Backlnto Two Contests Brooklyn ...... 47 53 .470 15~ Pounded Hard Flft'" Place, '2·1 St. Louis ...... 43 57 .430 10'h Colorful Eleven to Iowa City This Fall Philadelphia .. 30 67 .309 31 By Chicagoans BOSTON,-Aug. 12 (AP) _ The With Maekmen Yesterday's Results # • ~ • • • • •• •••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••• Chicago 9; Pittsburgh 3. • Bees regained fifth place in the New York 1; Philadelphia O. Co-Captains of Andy Kerr's 1938 Colga,te Eleven National league standings with a Alh1etics Take First, Boston 2; Brooklyn 1. Ca rl Reynold Stars 2 to I victory over the Brooklyn Cincinnati 3; St. Louis 2 (night As Hartnett' Club Dodgers. 5-4; New York Grabs game). Jim Turner gave up seven hits, GaInes Today Cai rn. on Leader tanned lour and did Dot walk a Nightcap Easily, 16·3 New York at Philadelphia man in chalking up his tenth win Brooklyn at Boston (2). PITTSBURGH" Aug. 12 (AP)­ ot the year. The only run scored NEW YORK, Aug. 12 (AP)-The Chicago at Pittsburgh. Chicago's challegning Cub~ made a of! him came on Dolph Camilli's Yankees and Philadelphia Athlet­ Only games scheduled. personal probe into the Pittsburgh homer in the second. ics djvided a doubleheader tooay, pennant proceedings today and The Bees collected only six hits during which 10 home runs were Al\IERICAN LEAGUE found that two of the Pirate's best ofl Luke Hamlin and Vito Tamulls, hit lor the entertainment at 25,864 W. L. Pet. G. B. pitchers could be touch d tor 16 but Johhny Cooney's triple and paying customers and 8.719 "ladies' New York ..... 65 33 .663 hits - sufficient to wJn 9 to 3. Debs Garms' single produced a run day" guests. Cleveland ..... 58 39 .598 After Pittsburgh jumped Into 8 in the filth Inning, and Elble Flet­ short-lived one run lead in the cher's homer put the game on Ice PHlLADEJ.l·m/\ /\0 R II ° A E Boston ...... 55 4l .573 In the second. ----:----r,------­ Washlngton 53 5l .510 third, the Cubs b gan g ttlng to Sperry. ab ...... 4 0 I 0 , 0 UiOOK L-\-'N~------A-H-B---H--O--A--£ MO"I, U . _ " ...... " l 0 I 0 0 Detroit . 4.9 53 .480 Werber. Jb I" ...... I I • I I 0 Chjcago 42 51 .452 Hayu, e ...... ll.01 ADDITIONA L llolen. rf .. .. o I 2 o Jobnoon. ef ...... • 1 I I 0 0 Philadelphia ... 37 60 .381 Hudaon. Ib .. . o • 0 o Chapman, If ...... • 0 0 j 0 0 St. Louis 34 65 .343 Hal.tu, It o 0 , o Finney. 1 b ...... 1 I 11 I 0 SPORTS C.mlJll. I b 1 I 1 o Ambler, •• • ...... 0 (J J l 0 Yeslerday's Rt'sults Ltl \'alt'tto, III o 0 0 o Neleon. p •••••••••••• J 0 0 0 I 0 Philadelphia 5-3; New on Npxt Page Cuyler, of ••..•..•. o I , o B. SmIth, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 Duroc her, ., .•.••... o 0 I o [ 4-16. Campbell, c •. .. , ..•.. o I I o Total...... j. I f 11 10 I Cleveland 12-5; Chicago Ko)'". •• . •••••.••••••. o 0 0 o Jim Tobin. who now has won lO Sb ...... o 0 I o t;W " OR K AlIR 110 (second game 10 mnings). lIamlln, p ...... 2 0 0 0 o and lost six. and finally forced him Stainback. • ...... :----:-:----- Washington 1:1; Boston 1. 1 , 0 0 0 o Cro... tU... • ••• . 1 0 • I 1 0 to the showers in the se'venth after Tamull .. » ...... , o 0 0 0 o Rolte, ah " , •.•.. " 1 o I I I Only games scheduled. Henrioh. rt •. " •.•.. 4 0 o I o 0 Stan Hack poled 11 home run inlo Games Today Total I .•...... 34 I 7 H I 0 iJlaoIPI,IO. ct ..•.• ', .. 4 1 I 0 o 0 the right field stands with one on. ' -Hatted (or lhamlln In tho Oc.ahrll. lb .. . .•..• " 0 o .10 o 0 PhJ1adelphia at New York. " - Ran ror Campl1611 _In_It_h____ Dicke)', e ..•. • .•••.• " 1 , 1 o 0 I Mac "Fir man" BI·own. only Selkirk, Ir ...... 4 1 Boston at Washington. 1 0 o 0 lother Pirate pitcher who has won 1::-'0::-8:-T_O_N:--::______"_ "_R_ II-:.0__ -:::. 1! !lordon. : b .. • • .. • 0 o I • 0 Detroit at St. Louis. ct ,...... 4 0 0 p •...... ___o I • _ 0 10 or mort' games, failed to p~t PIMaRlJlo. DOn Rurrlnl', ~ ~ Cleveland at Chicago (2). Cooney. rf ...... t I , 0 I Tot .. la . .. II 4 'II 11 1 out the conrJagration and Chicago Uarma. It • • ••.••••• , 0 1 1 0 0 ('ore b, I DOla. added thrce more runs in the Cu ..lnollo. I~ ...... I 0 • 1 • 0 Phlla.I.'~hlo .... ,. lUO '00 101-1 ..-­ Fletcher. I tJ IO' •• 10 •• :l J a , I 0 Npw York . 200 OU 000-. I Torlay's Hurlers ninth. 81r ll>p. 3b ...... a 0 0 3 0 0 Runl Ij_l\f'11 In f-ta)'u '0 VIMatllJlO Carl R ynolds put the Cubs in MUflllfir. c ...... J 0 0 ,. I 0 2, Vic key, Selkirk, trlnney, John.on, Two \V"rlller,.. • .••..•• J 0 I II Ii f) bale hll 1>13.lal,lo Thl~e blLa~ hit - front for the first time in the sixth Turner. l.I ••• • '... I 0 1 1 0 D Snetty, Home runa--IlIMA'l'lo. Ua."u, American Lt'ague by tripling with two on Arter a DI~k.y, Selkirk, ""'lnn~1, John,on Stalin Total...... %B ~ I 17 II I bue.-.selklrk. Wei b r . ~tt On b •••• Philadelplua at New York Idouble nnd single had lied the 8('0'''' b)' lIullnarll -New York fI, J1hlhulelphhl I. Bale. on Potter (1-7) vs. Vance' (0-0). BrooklYn ...... 010 000 000 I baill-S .. laon 6, HutrlnK 1 Strikeouts count at I-I in th fifth. R ynolds HOlton ..... _.... , . , . llU .00 OOx-~ Nellt!)u 6; Rutrln. 61 f-flt..-oCC NtI'l.on Boston at Washington-Oster­ himself scor d ocr Manager Gabby RUn l biltled In - Oarm_, Fldt.' her. , In 1 1 S lunln ... E'mlth 0 In 1 s·a, mueller (5-3) vs. Wr3vcr (6-4). CMmli1i ToWn baat- hll __ W'Ira,'er. Thr". Wlnnln. I)itcher- R. Smith Hartnett's s cond double. but To­ bA8~ hila-Cooney HOllie rUI1e-FltHch l1mplrn- .Koll •• Ba,11 nnd Rommel, Detroit at SI. Louis- Gill (8-4) bin got the side out and fared three e r, Camilli. DoulJ1$ J.)IIlYI Hud.onl Time ~OI. VS. Vurocher to Camllll. Left on bs.lelf­ COX (0-3). I men in the sevenlh. DOI'on ,: 8rooklyn • StrlkeotJt.....-Tur. 1 Cleveland at Chicago (2)- Fel­ Brown gave up seven hits. but nt'r •. H.mlln I: Ta.nlulll l Hlle-or-r ------:----: Hall111ton • In 1 Innlnll" , Tlmull, l 10 I( 0 A. E ler (11-6) and Milnar (1-0) vs. held the Cubs scoreless until the 1 Loaln, "tlehftr-HRllIlin Lee (6-9) and Knott (4-5). ninth when two Singles, Rip CoJ­ Untplrte-Raa.r60n, Phlelll lind Ooph. Sperry. Ib . . I 1 0 3 0 Don Wempl, 195-pound end. -Daily Iowan }~ngravi.ng And here hi the other co-cap­ - DaUIi Iowan Engraving Tlme-I :IB. AloIn, rf .•.•. ,. 0 I , o 0 National League A ttentlan _S.IOO talo of the Colgate squad. Johnny Uns' triple and a long fly counted Werbflr, 3b ... .• 0 I 0 I 0 New York at Philadelphia (2) (above) co-captain of the 1038 of the oul,tandlng stars on the Brucker. f" . ••• ••• 0 o i o 0 Lucy, a 190-pound guard and a Luc III a nephew of Fraok Frisch, three times. 'V • .-ner. e •.•.•..•.. 0 o 0 o 0 - Hubbell (12-9) ilnd Melton Jobn_on. cf •.•.•••••• 0 1 1 o 0 (9-10) VS. Passe au (9-12) and edition of oach Andy Kerr's Red team that Invades Iowa. City for standout performer In the strong tnanaa-er of tbe t. Louis Cardl· Chapman. It ...... S 0 2 1 o 0 Raiders from Colga.te wlU be one a fame Oct. 22. forward wall of the easterners. __-,--_"U_II_JI_O _A E Laffoon Leads Finney. 1 b ...... I 113 o 0 Butcher (4-4). nals. lJack. 'b ..•• '" 5 1 I 0 1 0 Ambler, U .. ,., ••.•• 'S 1 o I 6 0 Ro... p •••••.••.••••• 10 0 I 0 Brooklyn at Boston (2)-Press­ Hflrman. 2b .•••..•..• F) 1 1 I 6 0 o 10M D. )l ...... 0 0 0 o 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ol1lna, Ib ...... , 2 \I 1 0 Smllh, o nell (10-11) and Posdel (7-5) vs, • • O.lan. II ...... 4 1 8 J 0 0 n pen eet '\'\\\\ .. m.. \l ...... \ 0 o 0 I 0 Lanning (5-5) and Hutchinson By SCOTTY FISHER down and the game began to BS~ CUSe had been riding high on the he outstanding, along wIth Burke. nflynolda, or ....•... 6 1 • , 0 0 Uarlnett, C ...... I 1 3 • 0 0 TtHa', 31 a 7 2f 11 0 (4-8) or Shoffner (5-4). Daily Iowan Sports Editor fume the aspects of a rout at wlnlls of one of its most successful Although Colgat lans are not nomare •. r( ...... 0 I I 0 0 I ------NEW YOR K A U R II A E Chicago at PitL~burgh - Dean The Raiders are coming! that early stage but when the Old seasons, only to have Kerr's Raid- confidently expecting a champi- t~~p~ ~~.::.:::::::::: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ CLEVEL.AND. Aug. 12 (AP) - ° (5-0) vs. Blanton (9-1), erolelU. •• ,. . .•.... o 1 I I t With I evcnge strong in their Gold offensive swung into action ere, led by Jaeger, pull a victory OMhip team, this may be the year ------Ky Laffoon, the Chicago Bholmaker Rol[e. Ib ...... 2 til 0 (Only games scheduled.) hearts tOI' the 12-6 defeat Iowa 1t surged through the mvadlng /)ut of the fire in the annual [or the Raiders to hit after lhre Total...... 19 ~9 16 17 i3 0 with a strain ot Cherokee Indian, Henrich. rt ••..•..... I 1 0 0 0 DIM ...lo, cf ...... 2 ItO 0 plastered on them when they In- wall hke a bJark wave. "grudge" battle between the two lsirly lean seasons. With his PITT8Bl '~(lll 01\ .. ° E took to the wooded hills and mean- ehrllr. lb •.•..•••... 341100 Dickr)'. c •• 1 1 aID I ·t ' 103"(T, th s h ls I I bOO I I derlng creeks ot the Oakwood l\lystery Surrounds va d e d owa CI y In e Men's School coo. aJdes, Les Hart, Johnny Orsl and r.nd n, I ...... 0 Olenn. c •••..•• .•• • I 0 I 1 0 highly-publicized "Red Raiders F t I·t f HOd t· L, b Gill " ked II I, Wanor. of ...... 2 I 4 1 0 course and cantered in easily to- If •••.••.••• l 3 3 1 0 rom he I tle Lown 0 a mll- ther gra ua Ing stars who per- uO son, ...err wor a 1'. Wanor. r, ...... ~: Ig ~ ~ day _ two under par and two Selkirk. Seabiscuit Victory Gordon, Ih .....•.• •• J 1 til from the Chenango Valley." in ton, N. Y., boasting a population formed against Iowa in 1935 were r.pring on a new oHense that WIll Tt~~:;" JI~ ::. ::::::;::: 0 0 l 0 0 strokes ahead of the paek in the Badley. P ...... 1 1 0 , Q other words the Colgate unJver- of some 2,000, on the banks ot Albie Burke and Edclie Lalor 10 b( spectacular if the men picked Va.lfhan, a' ..... '" 0 I I 7 0 At Del Mar Track TOy, !u ...... •.... :1 ] 0 "I. l"lri KI t. rt . ...•.•.• 0' 0 1 1 0 club." singles finals. Merritt on several l(reevlch" ct 0 ...... 6 2 1 10 0 0 Berger, It ..... 0 " .... " 1 2 2 0 0 GlullU11, C ...... 1 a .. 0 I(ul1 el. Ib . 0 •• , •••• ".. I' 0 0 Goodman, r( ....•....• 4. I 0 .. 0 0 Leonard. p ••••••••.• 2 1 0 i) u- occasions attempted to put away Renflll. (" ..••. . , .•••.• 3 0 j ~ ., 0 ~lcCornll('k, t b ••.••• " 0 1 13 0 0 ------iJurgh, gained an easy eight­ 16- Lyon •. p • • • .....••.. • I 0 0 0 o~ 0 Lombartll. " ...... 0 1 3 0 0 Tot.I...... '0 13 16 ~7 13 1 Zivic Triumphs hard drives but usually knocked n~k.... • ...... 0 U 0 U 0 Cra/t. ' I,ANJ) 1/ 0 A E Japan in the first two singles Chambers, a right - hander, to 131 'iouth Dubuque Street but the tension proved too much I",ry. I...... 1 I 2 0 matches of the American zone fi- MinneapOlis of the American as- as each played netted a return to Cumph.lI. rt ...... 1 2 0 0 nal. I(runflr, 2b ..... ".... 0 3 2 0 sociation. ~------' deuce the games and give their Joe Hunt, Bob Riggs, Wil,ner Allison, P Ylhtk, •• • ', .••.•...• 1 1 0 0 0 foes another chance. :: ~~~·It. allr .:::::::::::: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Fights Postponed Four other matches were com­ Jack Kramer in Net Sem,ifinals at Rye Averill. cr ...... I 0 I 0 0 DES 'VIOINES (AP)-Promoter pleted yesterday with Irving '!;.~~~~~i. I~b .:::::::::: : ~ g ~ ~ Pinkie George announced last City Keeler and Charles Owen enter­ 1I .,nol,·,. c ..•...... 3 2 7 U 0 naght his scheduled boxing show ing the final round in the mcn's RYE, N. Y., Aug. 12 (AP)-11eated Gene Mako, and Jack OlilphoUHe. l' ... " .•... 4. ] 1 1 1 ------for next Monday night has been L ~ singles with wins over Dale Featured by the brilliant and un- Kramer, 17-year-old Montebello, Read The Want _t\ds Hatch and E. Jensen, respective­ X-~~l~~I:\ll' '\~jl;'n' ' ,~ 't n~~l1g6 ;~~25Ii1co~ed~ postpof\ed because several fight- I expected victory of Joe Hunt of Cal., player who won when Bitsy "-HAtt•• 1 tor Kroner In 7th. er& were unable to appear and ly; "Eddie" Steinbul'gh and John Los Angeles over Frank A. Park- Grant, stiU showing the effects of Ebert defeating Margaret MiUer l'IIICAUO AU n II 0 A ]I; 1hat he did not want to weaken Mell er of Beverly Hills, Cal., the men's his collapse the day previously, 1,'OR SALE and Ed Shea in a mlxed doubles You Can Buy New cil yc singles of the eastern grass courts defaulted. semifinal encounter, and Kcith FOR SALE-1931 GRAHAM SE­ N tennis championships moved into ~-~-T-f-I;;-·i3-.~-~-I'-:-: :.- : -:-:: -;-::-. :-~-. -I-~-i--i 11~~I~":h:~ 1~~ .:I~~.S ti~:~:~ns~ e l . & e r 2. Clothes With the hire Weeber and John Ebert upsetting period the scmi-finals today and the wo­ Appling. 88 .•• " .••..• 4 0 0 3 0 Sdlltlt:'ti!I·. 'fwo bltJw llita-Owen. Her.. dan. Good condition. Reasonable. \ Money You Save br Bob Huffman and Don Klotz in Krt>cvlch . cr ....• , . •. 3 2 1 3 0 ~~I 11 0m\, rUIlS - IhHntll~y. KdWl'r. Dial Ext. 8236. City s men"!; singles reached the final. Musto Wins ~i.\t.. the semifinals of the men's J(ullf'l, It; .•.•.. . •.... t 1 J 11 1 II rlrh.·tt-K\llwl. t .... h . 011 ba.llee-Cleve· Having Your Rob< tIunt, who eliminated Parker, ST. LOUIS (AP)- Tony Musto, Et4:h lut'tt'r. c ...... , ... 6 0 1 ,,' 0 (J hUH) 7; I."'htcolol3. Baae.. on oalb- doubles. Rlgnt1Y, p ." •. .. .. '" S 1 3 1 3 (j orf Ollll'huu~~ 6; H.lgney a Mtrlkt'OUl8-­ PLUMBING been I J 96, Chicago, decisioned Art OU­ Clothes Cleaned Although no seedings have been se ded second, 6-4, 6-4, was joi n­ by On If INuae. 6. Rigney t. Wild pi lchn in ph\. v 1', 202, Chicago Negl'o, in a '1'QI~I...... 3~ fl 14 27 13 Q C1ll\(~hu u se 2. PLUMBING, HE AT 1 N G, AIR Rete made in the tourney, Keeler ap­ ed in the round of four by Bobby lS~or(l't by Inn\nll'M Vmull'C'" - Ptvgl'a.. Hubbard and signed t(-n-rouwl (inat bout in a boxing 0"2 000 300 6 Quinn peared a heavy favorite to carry Riggs, who whipped Ronald Clovelana ...... " ... Conditioning. Dial 5870. Iowil pervis. show here last night. Chlc8g0 ...... 110 02L Ot.ll - 6 'rhne-2 :24. City Plumbing. oU the men's singles event today Lubin; Wilmer Allison, who de- Ru n8 balU'd tn-H~ltu.ley !I, Keltner.' Attt"nlianc€"-Paid 7,000; ladlu lI).OOO when he easily overpowered WANTED ----PL-m-m-lN-G-,A,ND-­ r Abb black-haired Dale Hatch, 6-1, 6-0. heating. Larew Co. ~~'l E. ancien Keeler breezed through the sec­ Washington. Phone 8671J. ond set with scarcely the loss of a point as Hatch played errati­ WANTED- LAUNDRY SC~ cally, blasting many of his shots outside the baseline. WANTED - STUDEN'l' LAUN­ I ..... dry. Call for and deliver. Dial Owen turned in somewhat of Dial 4153 6553. Cash & Carry an upset when he removed Jen­ - 2 for $1.00 sen from the meet in the other W ANTED--STUDENT LAUNDRY I Suits - HalOJ - Clean" semifinal match, 6-4, 7-5. Both Shirts 10c. Free delivery. Moved Dl'l'sses sets were close and hard-fought with Owen's smooth stroking to 315 N. Gilbert. Dial 2246. ------=::'.."'::------... J;lroving too much ior his oppon­ WANTED-FAMILY AND STU· TYPEWRITERS MISCELLANEOUS ent. dent washing. Done reasonably. The men's doubles arfail' be­ Dial 6198. FOR SALF~Typl<:wRr'l'ER. UN- SWEDISH MASSAGES FOR MEN a derwood St,mdarcl. Reasonable. and women. Miss Bessie Smi th, tween Weeber and Ebert and the There'll be hot Huffman-Klotz dllO was marked WANTED-LAUNDRY, FINISH- Dial 3992. 20~6 S. Clinton. bia) 7264 for ap- ed, lOco Dial 9486. pointment. by some fine volleys at the net APARTMENTS AND FLATS on the part of both teams. With ROOMS FOR RENT DANCING SCHOO: his ri vals at the net, Eberl on \ several occasions gol off some • FOR RENT - ROOMS FOR FOR RENT-EXTRA LARGE DE­ sirable unfurnished apartment. DANCTNG S C H 0 0 L. BALLa powerful smashes from deep in three weeks term, or transients. tlme the 01' town Town and Gown Residence Hotel. All modE'rn conveniences. Refer­ room, tango, tall. Dial G71T: his own court to chalk up points. Burkley hoteL Prot, HoulhtoD. Weeber also turned in sOine tell­ IDial 6903. ences required. Dial 9439 after 5 p.m. ~ ing overhead smashes at the net. FOR RENT: ROOM. CuOL. VERY TRANSFE~STORAG~ .BM Other Finals Today SA..l desirable. Eteasonable. Dial FOR RENT-TWO FURNISHED Me CAB E BAG GAG E AND 'Final matches scheduled for 5429. 10\11 this afternoon will see Owen and apartments. Two sleeping rooms. transfer. Dial 3687, Newly decorated. Reasonable. Dial WALK Keeler taking the court in the TRANSPORTATION BEAG~ men's singles finals at 2 o'clock; ,. THIS WEEK! 5117. LOST AND FOUND ISJ..N WANTED - TWO PASSENGERS tt"'WA I Keeler and Hatch opposing Weeb­ FOR RENT- ONE THREE ROOM LOST- ADOPTION PAPERS. RE­ er and Ebert in the men's doubles to Los Angeles, Aug. 12. Union HEAR Fountain. apartment and one five room I .ward. Bring to Daily Iowan. INC; - finals at 3:30, and "Eddie" Stein­ --(HE 51 bur gh and John Ebert playing apartment. Both on second floor. I Kimes. Available Sept. 1. Commonwealth 'Si\RK Betty Braverman and Don Klotz EMPLOYMENT WANTED - R-A-Q-U- E- T-S-R- E-S-T-R- U- N·G SON! at 5 o'clock for the mixed doubles -~------apaI'lments. Di al 5925 and 2625. C;RA,. WANTED - WALL WASHING. or --(tiE.) title. No admission will be charg­ Paper cI earung.. Yard work. Dla. J FOR RENT-ATTRACTIVE FOUR EXti PER T RE-STRINl GING6507 ...... ed. 2472. room furnished apartment. 430 ennis recquets. D a ..- Ribbons were awarded to yes­ Many people will 8uff~r 1;IDlleces.sarily from. h.eat this week. E. Market. n_O_O_n_5_. ______terday's winners in the junior NOTICE divisions and Eugene Trowbridge, FOR RENT-2 ROOM FURNISH­ HAULING playground director and member They will fuss and fret an«;l fa~. them!el~es As they scurry ELDERLY MEN.OR WOMEN pE­ ed apl. Private bath. Electric 1.· e- ASHES. RUBBISH. TRANSFEB 01 the Recreational board, an­ siring a pleasant comfortable frigeratol'. 202 1-2 E. Fairchild. work. Dial 4290. nounced yesterday that plaques from counter to counter and store to store, looking for home. Address Box 123 Daily will be given winners of tOOay's Iowan. FOR RENT - ONE OR TWO ASHES. RUB B ISH HAULING. matches. something. • room furnished apartments. De- Glick. Dial 4349 . Yesterday's results: MIMEOGRAPHING sirablc. Dial 2327. FOR SALE-MOTOIWYCLE JunJor Boys' Singles MIMEOGRAPHING. MARY V. FOR RENT - TWO MODERN Final Round Butll8, 8 Paul-Helen Bldg. Dial apllrtments Sept. 1st or sooner. FOR-SALE--1936 INDIAN CHIEF. Kay Rurnmells defeated Ben 2658. Dial 2682. A-I shape. $265.00. Dial 4818. Merritt 6-2, 7-5. Junior Boys' Doubles Save steps, t~ese hot d.~Y8. Sit down in. the shade of a Final Round Kay Rummells and Bob Simp-· cool porch. Glance through the . adverti8~ments i. the newe­ son defeated Ben Merritt and AI Classified Advertising Rates Schmidt 3-6, 6-2, 8-6. Woolen's Singles paper. Find what you want before you go to buy it. 81'l10UL OA811 BATES-A Ipeclal dIscount tor cash Tq.k. a4v&ll~e 01 the ....h rate. printed ...... will .. aUoW"~d all all Ol&salfJed Advertlslng Itccount_ below. Final Round f part W1tlIn 8IX 4a78 fr'Om pptratloll date of the ad. Betty Braverman won by de­ I fault from Alyce Beck. • z.t.. Iff 1. Oue Day Two Days Th1'l)e Days Four Da.y. ~ FIVe Dayl' 1Ix~ Men'a Singles Word. I Uu~ClbarKe Ca.sh 'Charge Cash Charge I Cash Clja.rge Cash Charge Cuh l~ Quarterfinal Round UI! to 10 I J .2! .%5 .88 .SO .42 I JIll .61 .48 .58 .M ,t That'.s what adverli~emenI8 . a~e fQr. You can trust the I I I I I E. Jensen won by default from 10 to 16 , .28 .%5 .65 .50 . .00 I .60 .77 .70 .88 IIJ • Harold Emerson. .' le to 20 ·4 , .80 .S 5 .77 .70 .90 I .82 1.03 .9<1 1.17 1M 1. Semifinal Round advertisers to tell you about bargains in the acls. You can 1.S% • l,J1t Charles Owen defeated E. Jen­ Uta 26 I 5 .60 .4 5 .99 .90 1.14 I 1.04 1.80 1.18 1'.~6 sen 6-4, 7-5. 28 to 80 , • .81 .55 1.21 1.10 I 1.89 j 1.26 I 1.66 l 1.4% 1.74 l.511 I.U Irving Keeler defeated Dale save money and minutes and many a headache if you read 81 to 86 , , .72 .65 1.43 ' 1.30 I 1.63 I 1.48 I 1.83 I 1.66 2.02 1.84 L» II Hatch 6-1, 6-0. If to 40 .83 .75 1.65 I 1.50 1.87 1 1.70 2.09 1.90 I.n UI U. Mixed Doubles the advertisements-and heed them. 41 to 45 • .I1ll 1.87 I 1.7n 2.11 I 1.92 I 2.36 Uf UO US • I • .'. I U4 Sem1flnal Round 48 to 50 It 1.06 .911 !.O9 1.90 US , %.14 I 2.62 I U8 1.88 ~~ IJI " "Eddie" Steinburgh and John 1\ l1lIJ_ ~ 1.18 1.05 Ul UO I uo I U6 U.8 !.~ U'T \ ... -I Ebert defeated Margaret Miller Uto .. [I 1.IT 1.1. u. 1.10 1~14 1.11 •• tAl and Ed Shea 8-6, 6-2. I I I I I J." I I U' I ' .11 I '.n '.'T'I Men'. Doubles Semifinal ROlqld ~. 1IIar...... -..mal lone t_ rat.. tv­ _bar aat ...... ,. " ...... IllaMd _ NqUUt. -.eh word til th. ahertt ...mellt 011& ."ord. , Kef th Weeber and John Ebert OIa.lIIJt!lecl 4lqJay, 100 lI,r 111.... ____ ...... III'" .. 8OQted. '!'he lIr.flu. "For Sale," ....or Jteftt," oolumn tnch, H .DO j)M' 11'1",11. . defeated Bob Hultman. and Don ''LiIIIt." aad IImlIar GnU at the begInning at &42. a.. to CI ....lttQd advarl .lIle .. Ii,. • ,...... ,...... Klotz 7-5, 6-3. be 'l-ted .. dM .... umber ~ .~ .. tile at. ~a the ftiUowlDtr • -The 13, 1938 SATURDAY, AUGUST ]3, 1938 - THE DAILY TOW ITY PAGE FtVE ~ Daily Cross Word Puzzle POP EYE leat HOLD YOUR DONT \NORRY, MI5S OYL, I AM PUSH THA1' COA1' OVER IT ONE OF THE BEST GAL UP OUT TIGHT, WIMPY STOVE-PIP(­ OF THE HaLL toO R5 OF THE 50 THE SMOKE WILL ESCAPE COUGH­ COUGH

, 1 0 , o I 0 , o I 0 , : : 1 , 1o uI •0 , 1 0 4 , o 0 : : 6!714. ~ WAIT .JUST A , , 1 , MlloJUTE, DEAR. ~: a , V o , I Wt>,NTYOU TO a , TAKETI-lELID o , F A JAR I 0 or= I a p~ESeRVES o , I , o , "I ii" ACROSS 15-Symbol tor N. E. France l-A jester where alumlnum 29-A source ot 5-TIny dramas are 18-A spook IUgu lo-Level enacted 19-5mall pleas. 31-Pronoun 12-A tune 35-Annoy by ure boat 32- The color 13-Twllled faulUlnding 22-Depart beige tabrlc 3S-Ever (con· 23- Symbol tor SS-Man's name U-The ocean tracted) uranium S4--A lath l&-Encoun· 39-Pass be· 2ol-0pporlunlty S6-A weapon tered tween adja. 25-Three-toed 37- A mass 17-Chlvalrous cent moun· sloth 4l-Plural of 1 20-Possesses taln peaks 26-Second note 42-Blbllcal city 21-Malarlal . 40-13rag of the scale on the Eu· tever 42-Elther of 27- A river In ph rates river I 24-A bllliard the two Answer to prevIous pu:r.zle shot Bears 27-Dlsdaln (Astron.) ~I 28-Hastens 43-A glowing 29-Exclama· fragment tion ot ot coal dIsgust H-The case ot 3D-Places a pie I DOWN l-A sharp. masurium suddenly 7-An upper I arrested 11mb pull 8-Falsehood 2-Baking 9- A kind of chamber brass-Ilke S~M!l1tary cap aHoy 4-Letter N l1~Spur ts 6--Symbol tor l4-Feign Copr. 1938. KIng Felltur ~s SyndIcate, Inc.

City Esc:'pe From Jail Council Hires BILLINGS, Mont. (AP)-Three Laborer for Sewage Jlri~onl'rs l'scapl'd [!'Om the second s floO!' oC thl' Yellowstone county Disposnl Plant Work jllil yesterday by prying apart I window bars and jumping to lree­ Members oC the Iowa City cOlln· dom. eil yesterday mornIng voted to hire Melvin J. Justice for a GO-day Rcfusl's $20·a.Day Job period as a lnbo!'e)' nl the lown City sewnge disposal plant. DES MOINES (AP) - P. :F. Robert D. Mott had Hlrcndy llopkins, sLatC' planning board di­ been named acting superintendent rector, said yesll'rday h WOUld in pl ace of J . F Sproatl, who re­ Ilot nccept a S20-a-day position as signed last week to

Abbreviations wer!! cummon in Submurin sure usually oper- ancient Writings and inscriptiuns. "tt,d by Diesel engines.----- ~COTT'S SCRAPBOOK R. J. Scott

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~ NO,...... - T\-IE: SU'DGE ISN'T HECK ~ -ANt) HERE \-lOME AND r DON'T Iol.NOW WHERE. WE: WERE ""1...1... SALLY'S SALLIES LOA.OEO UP ,0 'T\-IE BIG BA.BOON 1'5 ~ ~- 'BUT \-11M, CURL I-IIN\ L\~E JU'5T WAIT UNTIL t GET w\Y SHOWING .AlL YOI.1 131120$ HANDS ON \-IIM=----HE:'LL 'BE IN AN p..NCHOV'Y, u S IN CA1J WRt'('E-' " A 'P\...ASTER CAST SO LONG, I'LL WITH ENV'Y, V/::>..R\OUS IS I.O.U ... Hp..VE. \-11M WIRED A.ND USE. 1-111'1\ OVER LISTENING POSES m : A.'5 A. FLOOR LA.MP '.-RIGHT A.'F-TER TO T\-I'SWELL LUXURIOUS YOU WENT ON YOU?' Vp..Cp..'ION, HE TIME WE. LOAI="ING, WAS ALL SET f:OR "" ,sOB I BUT \-I AD '. WERE HE CUT 'THE: NE'T ""NO NO DICE: I S~IPPED A.WA'( ! ~ '-2

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, Th~ land qistre.as signal equivalent to the S, O. S. at sea iaI. O. U; PAGE SIX THE Di\lLY IOWAN, IOWA CITY SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1938 ( Detlef Petersen, Two Others W orl~men Transform Architects Drawing Into- Delinquent Sewage Rental Bills Killed in Head-on 'Auto Crash; Will Be Added to Year's Taxes

Coroner to Conduct Inquest ..J More Than 540 City to I Residences Affected Wlwt Do About University of Iowa University of Iowa in 1935, had Illegal FirewO/'ks? wo)l a numeral in track and By COUllc~'S Action Graduate Will Be was a member of the 1resh­ More than 540 Iowa City resi­ Puzzle fol' Police Buri d in Iowa City man cross-country team. He was dences will have delinquent sew­ United> Press correspondent here age rental bills added to next Police Chief William H. Ben­ while in college and was president The body of Detlef R. Petersen, year's tax bills through action o{ der has a job on his hands-get­ of the Associated Students of Jour­ the Iowa City council yesterday. Fr 23-year-old manager of the Ft. nalism, the senior class of journal­ ling rid of several large boxes of Unpaid bills totalling $3,550.14 fireworks. Wayne, Ind., bureau of the United ism and Sigma Delta Chi, honorary will be sent today to County Aud­ PI'ess, will arrive in Iowa City this journalism Iraterni ty. A local merchant, who haei sev­ itOL' Ed Sulek, Manager George eral boxes of firecrackers left ell afternoon [or funeral service here. Petersen is survived by his mo­ H. Dohrer of the city sewage Until the time of the service, ther, Mrs. Anna C. Petersen, over from last year turned them treatment works, said. over to police. Sale was illegal tentatively set for Tuesday, the 228 1-2 E. College street; three Some of the bills may be paid body will be at the Oathout funer­ brothers, E. C. Peo.ersen of Clinton, this year. before the tax bills are made out, Probably, Chief Bender said, al home. Service will be at Oat­ J. W. Petersen of Chicag and Leo since the delinquent bllls are first W: hout's, and burial will be at Mr. H. Petersen o[ Philadelphia, and the firecrackers will be thrown certified to the coun ty tt'easurer in Iowa river. Petersen's childhood hom e in three sister, Algona Petersen, Ro­ for collection. Miles. letla Petersen and Mrs. Ramona Delinquent bills are sent to the Petersen was fatally injured ear­ Weber, all of Detroit, Mich. treasurer's office each Aug. 15. ly yesterday. and two others were H orrabin Firm killed outright in a head-on auto­ mobile colUsion on U. S. highway 'Council AsI~s Dunkel Cigar Store! , Given Contract 27, eight miles south of Decatur, Sold; L. J. Shulman ) Ill. Five other pcrsons were in­ The Horrabin Contracting com­ jured. none seriously. pany yesterday afternoon receiv­ Coroner Robel·t Swick said last ForPWAAid • • • • • • • • • • Is New Proprietor Hillcrest, Io'wa's Finest DOrTnitory ed the contract for grading 2.61 night he will call an inques t early In Pavl-ng Plan Newest Dorm Sale of the Dunkel Cigar store, miles of loca 1 coun try road in next week into the deaths of Peter- 202 S. Dubuque street, has been Jefferson township. Bids were Head sen. Monica Colehin. 20. Decatur. announced. L. J . Shulman will be opened by the county board of and Jerome Case, 30, driver of the - --- Nearly Readv proprietor; A. C. "Punch" Dunkel supervisors. . In A. machine in which he was riding The Iowa City council yester-I has been proprietor for the last with Miss Colchin and three others. day morning made application to' ., The Horrabln bid was nine Lewis three years. cents a cubic yard, a total of Po!tersen was returning to Ft. ~he PWA for financial aid in pav- I •• Mr. Dunkel maintains owner­ Wayne with Joseph K. Gaskill, 22, Ing a~out 500 feet of the drive- FurnIshings Being $2,376. It was the only one sub­ WASl: ship of the building, and Mr. mUted. United Press staff correspondent at way In Oakland cemetery. Placed in HiUcrest Shulman has possession of the -John Ft. Wayne, driver of the aUlomo-1 T~e stimated cost of the .proj­ bUSiness and a long-term lease Federati, bile, ilnd Linda Niehaus, 23, a ste- ect IS $1,100, and the city IS re- For 1st Year's Use on the building. Things could be worse, Zadok day tha nographcl' at Fl. Wayne, when the questing a grant of 45 ?Cr cent The city council. meeting at Dumbkopf thinks. For instance, labor a crash occured. They had attended I of the cost from the pubUc works Hillcrest, the University ot the city hall yesterday morning, the telephone company might start combed the J ay county fair at Portland, administration. granted Mr. Shulman a beer and charging for those steam ba ths that commurl Ind. The Oakland paving is in addi- Iowa's newest . and most uP-lo­ date men's dormitory, ",ill soon cigaret license and granted Mr. go with every mid-summer phone he said Petersen, a nalive of Miles, suf- tion to other city paving for Dunkel a refund on his. booth call. Imom fered a fractured skull and died which a grant will also be asked. be filled wi th activlty-of a dlf­ i<:rent sort than that ot the past committl four hours later in Adams Memor­ ~everal months! party m' ial hospital in Decatur. Judge to Hear It will be the actlvlty of hun­ on CIO I Gaskill's leg was fractured, and officials, he sufCered head injuries. dreds of moving feet, the unpack­ 'ng of trunks and the endless hum lb.at Lev Miss Nichaus rcceived a skull Arguments To jority ot voices. The noise of pounding fradure. ct posed to Riding with Casc and Miss Col­ DisTll,iss Petition hammers and biting saws has Frey, practically ended. Hillcrest is al­ chin in Ca~e's machine were Joan departml Colchin, 17, severe cuts, bruises Di strict Judge !I. C. Ring oI Ce­ most finished. peered g If you were to look up at the and shock; Vincent Tanvas. 19. dar Rapids at 10 a.m. next Thurs­ Final and wav windows of the dormitory's nOl'th Wind Up broken left arm, lacerations; Bnd day will hear arguments on the vigorous James Wemhoff, 18, all were of molion oC City Solicitor Robert L. or east wing this morning, in all committe Decatur. Larson for dismissing thc certior­ probability you'd see curtains ap­ "It's ti Coroner Zwick and Sherirf Dal­ ari petition Iil\?d in the Johnson pearing in window after window. truth ab las Brown of Adams county said county district court by Della Gri­ Men's furnishings are being ar­ munist p they were unable to determine the zel against Iowa City board of ad­ ranged in the rooms; the lounge, to carry cause of the cmsh, which occ\lrred justment...... ith its bookshelves and oak pan- What was only an architect's Iand the east campus, the four­ dam roadways permit a ready cow and on a straight stretch or highway. In her peti tion the plaintiff had clUng, wm soon be a place In drawing has become imposing re- story structure is now being fur­ approach to the building, soon to which pl He said he had postponed the in­ asked court review of the action which to live. IaJity on the west bank of Iowa Ri- nished and prepared for general be teeming with life as UniverSity quest bc<'ausc the injured were un­ taken by the local board of adjust­ More than 240 men will live ver, where Hillcrest, new men's occupancy. Its north wing is di­ of Iowa men huslle into its new For 20 able to (csli fy coherently. ment several weeks ago in which there during the coming school ' ~ormitory , is. being prepared fo~ its dectly in line with the n~rth boun­ rooms to take UP residence for the encan F "The visibility was good," Zwick it refuscd to grant Miss Grizel's year. Ii's tour floors fully equip- first academiC yea~ . SItuated ~n a dary of the Quadrangle, Just across coming school year, which opens held COl said. "Apparently both drivers plea to erect II gas station on her ped with the latest finishlngs, the\broad V overlookLng Iowa nvel' the way. New walks am~ maca- Sept. 26. check iJ were riding too near the center o[ property, Second and Muscatine brick structure Is nextdoor to the ------movemer avenues. DRESSES (he road. It appears to have been Quadrangle, making that particu­ had gail1 purely accidental." Attol'ney Larson's motion asks Miss American Degion" years, FL' that the petition be dismissed. lar area of the west campus pre­ Give Tea At A fire started in the Case ma­ dominately the home of university influence chine immediately alier the crash, SWEATERS d()mi.nati. but motorists succeeded in remov­ men. Painting to Begin Adequate desk space. proper Chapter House In add ing all occupants from the wreck­ BLOUSES communi age before th flames spread. The lighting. ventilation, sound-proof­ , On Park Bridge ing and sanitation-aU are com­ or had b automobiles were wedged so tig'(t­ gave the ly together that wrecking crews LJmed to make HJllcrest a pleasant Pi Beta Phi Actives SKIRTS COATS place to hve. Its spacious lounge others hil had dIfficulty separating them. Work of repainting the city park Entertain for GueRt ; he said, bridge will start early next week, is the heart of the dormitory, Monica Colchin and Case were City closely 1 dead when extricated from the it was announced yesterday after equipped with fireplace, books, Alumnae Pre&ide Among t wreckal(e. Miss Colchin received the city council voted to hire E . J. und the latest periodicals. a CIO d. Diltz to furnish the labor and to Hillcrest's office will offer com­ Yellow and white formed the s a fmctured skull, and Case a frac­ Internatic tured jaw and Internal Injrules. paint the bridge. plete service accommodations to color scheme for the table appoint­ United 1 Peterscn had been employed by The cost will be about $475. its patrons beginning next month. ments at the Pi Beta Phi tea, given ham MOl the United Press for three years. Cleaning and laundry will be han­ yesterday at the chapter house, 815 the Unit Be Joined the slaH at Milwaukee rUed there. A sub-post office will E. Washington street. The table of Amerl after his graduation from the Uni­ I Gaffney to Preside I br' one of its services. communi versity of Iowa in J 934. lIe became Here This Mornin!j Two plans of dining service-­ was centered with silver canclel­ J.y unde: assistant bureflu manager before 1 table board and a la carte orders abra with yellow candles. The George B his transfer to thc Chicago bureau Judge James P. Gaffney of Wil­ - will be offered to the men who theme was carried out in the floral chie! of In December, 1936. He remained liamsburg will preside in John­ hve there. Lunch counter and decorations and refreshments. Mrs. the Paci! in Chicago as assistant in charge son county district court this soda fountain will be open from L. D. Wareham and Mrs. Roy Koza. de nee wI' of state wire filing until his ap­ morning. early morning until late' evening. local alumnae, presided at the graphic pointment as Ft. Wayne bureau Judge Harold D. 'Evans is Food will be prepared in the table. , members] managpr last FebrUllry. spending this week at his cottage most modern kitchen on the cam- Out of town actives who were He was graduated from the at Clear Lake. here for the occasion were Betty Names I;:U8. Gutch of Chariton, Gale Gildner FoUowing the university's gen­ volunteer and Louise Olston of Marshall­ ales werE eral poUcy, self-government will A Few Extras! town, Lillian Locher and Maxine be resum reign with only a limited amount Redman of Monticello, Madge Chairm col faculty supervision. Scholar­ Jones, Annabel Anderson, atld Mrs. . , investigal ~hip will be encouraged. Varied Wayne Foster of Cedar Rapids, names ( l1nd extensive programs of recre~ Elaine Russell of Vicksburg, Miss., Emily Shaw of Davenport. Anne membersl ~tion athletics and SOCial activi­ brunette beauty who has been cho­ City Aug. 27 on its way to the na­ Jayne Bieler of Dubuque anq Ruth and wou: ties will be arranged for the men sen "Miss American Legion." Miss Jones of Williamsburg. dence. themselves. Russell will be·part of the caravan, tional convention in Los Angeles. Dresses "They Hillcrest is truly a "home for • • • • • • • • • • he said, 1ellows." r------, sell, chosen by legionnaires of the the comn U. S. as "Miss American Legion." ments. Arrayedl in the sheer white mantle "I've ( PERSONALS A Plea For of the Goddess of Peace, the queen Today LINEN SUITS lace," Frl commands and entreats the nations • ed four I Paul Griffith, technician In the World Peace of the world revolving before her With ' SWEATERS The ril Psychology department, left yes­ moving throne. American terday with his mother for a va­ ------Is Opening Theme BLOUSES liid, datE . cation in Maine. They will viSit WSUI communii l'elativ~s. Of Ar;nerican Le,;ion Evelyn Benzler I States c' Parade, LQs Ange]es , . program Dr. and Mrs. I. W. Leighton, Weds at Britt Today's H1&'hllght controllin 947 Iowa avenue, left yesterday !------~ Dick Bow lin will present the s CIO." with their two children, Marilyn America's plea for peace in a That w Evelyn BenzIeI', daughter of Mrs. "Science News o[ the Week" :lOd Bob, for a trip into fdinnesota. troubled world wilt be the impres­ InUnist 11 . George Benzeler of Britt and Ed­ broadcast at 11 :15 this morning sive opening theme of the National gar M. Tanruther of Lafayette, Moscow, over WSUI. The weekly program Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Spencer, American Legion parade at Los Jnd., were united in marriage at were inst !030 Bowery street, Mrs. Helen Angeies Sept. 22, to be seen in a high r100n July 28 at the home of is a complete resume of the part old prece] Gay, and Gordon Kent, are vaca­ unique preview at . Iowa City on the bride's mother. The Rev. C. N. which science has played in the of opposi tioning in Minnesota {or two Aug. 27. McMillan performed the ceremony. world's affairs during the week. Wilb c3en: weeks. They will first stop at Emblematic of the legion's own The bride wore a British tan ('.ass Lake and will then travel doctrine of world peace, the lead- sheer frock with white trim and Constuutions of Iowa 80: Merle Miller will present the fi­ SHANe to the extreme northern part of lng .float in the Los Angeles parade whitjl accessories. Her corsage was Japanese the state. which will move overlanB from of white rosebuds and gardenias. nal portlon of Prof. Benj. Sham­ !llanes h~ Jackson, Miss., lends a{jpeal for Following the service, a lunch- baugh's book, "Cons\ltutlons of central C] International amity. eon was served as which the wed- Iowa," on this morning's "Book Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Pownall taidi last will have as their guests this weeit The peace float is one of five ding cake and the floral decora­ Shell" program, at 9:30. s <.nd, Mr. Pownall's brother and motorized units of the Mississippi tions carried out the bridal color DRESSES caravan that begins its 5,750-rnile theme. Today's Procram - wife and two sisters, Mr. and M.rs. Walter Pownall, Eleanor journey from the deep south Aug. Mr. and Mrs. Tam'uther left for 8:45 a.m.-Morning Melod.ies. COATS Pownall and Bertha Pownall, all 21, stopping at principal cities to a wedding trip In Minnesota. 8:50 a.m.-Service Reports. Sp: of Cedar Rapids. give It! western states a partial The bride, who graduated from 9 a.m.~The DaUy Iowan of the and view of the legion's annual show. the Brill high school and received Air. Mississippi won the right to lead a B.A. and M.A. from the Univel'- 9:10 a.m.- Drum Parade. SUITS BJ Prof. and Mrs. Kirk H. Porter, the national parade by enrolling sily of Iowa, has been teaching at 9:30 a.m. - The Book Shelf, SOl Richards street, with their LaNDe more legionnaires in proportion the University icmentary school. "Constitutions of Iowa." IIonmic ba daughters, Carolyn and Marjorie, than other states. Mr. Tanruther. who has a Ph.D. 10 a.m. - Illustrated Musical ltaoundinl are vacationing at Squaw Lake, In keeping with the coveted hon- ,from the University of Iowa, Is I Chats. 'the next M inn. They will pass two weeks or; artists, architects and crarts- j assistant proCessor of education at 11 a.m. - Program calendar and KNIT SUITS • • • l Price deadly Ie as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Malcol!n men have designed and assembled Pur due university, Lafnyette, weather report. 'lid Chin~ Grimth and sons of Des Momes. a $26,000 caravan of floats - an whcre the couple will reside. 11 :15 a.m. - Science Ncws of Thisd04 undertaking requidng ingenuity /IS the Week. lleceuaril' Dr. and Mrs. W. M. Rohrbacher well as artistry because of mech, PM· t 1:3 0 a.m. - Yesterday's Musi- loon, but' and four daughters, Helen, Char­ anical problems Involved in trans- ostpon.e eeUng cal Favorites. llJlt in Cit! lotte, Florence and Betty, 811 E. porting delicate handiwork across The meeting. formel'ly planned 11 :50 a.m. - Farm Flashes. Shanlill College street, will leave this hall the I;ontinent. for Monday, of the Daughters ofl 12 noon - Rhythm Rambles. ~_Bl1bi Most cacti have no blooms atlspence, S21 West Park road, had morning tor northern Minnesota The "peace" float represents. Union Veterans has been post- 5:45 p.m.-The Dally Iowan of """" of nil; a few have one, but this ~ive. The bloo~ were displaye4 where they plan to vacation tor moving world ruled by a queen of poned. The meeting Is now Ithe AI ... ttau attic plant, pclonsins to D{, W. E. lD a local florist s Ihop. I about 10 day•• peace, 'rile queen ill Elaine RU8- .cheduled tor AuS. 22, 6 p.m.-Dinner Hour ProF 11m. -..s tacti