Indians Lose Fair, Warmer Bolton Bed Sox Blast Home... IOWA-FaIr ...... er Way To Down Tribe aM tomorrow. See Story on Pll&'e .. • _I ~ld I~ !r. JIOII~ ro.,,. CI,y', Ifornin. Nelll,paper uP

OlQ : r fork • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . , . . . r SalOn I * * * * * * * * * * *. * Goal of Hitler's Blitzkrieg-London and Its Environs n ina!nIc IOWa -; l ~oulogne Attacked by Bombers NORTH d plf!t'f.s pf Iowa State SEA annoullc:ed !iab. 11Jb :, el\tJ, to Crowds A 'oss Channel ee Ickes Flays Willkie I ex()ected \0 awarda' 'in Spectacula Fire on Shore; I Rd· Address I!ol\. ~ rD~ enfu Nazi Raider Vi it All EnO'land n a 10 ~~ talr ,~ ~ ~ est exhlbu, • • • • • • • • . • estate. t Correspondent Watches 'Fourth of July' Display W illkie Calls Calls Criticism -,"" As Planes Battle Anti-Aircraft Units; British Attack Strongest Yet Ickes' Charges , Of Candidate , 'Falsehoods BY WILLIAM H. McGAFFtN \SK A SOUTHEAST COAST TOWN OF ENGLAND, Aug. 20, RUSHVILLE, Ind., Aug. 19, 'Contemptible' (Tuesday) (AP)- Royal air force bombers lashed the big (AP)-Wendell L. Wi1Ikie said to- ,. T. Get'man military base at Boulogne, France, in three violent night that Secretary Ickes had slated "plain and Simple talse­ Regards Nominee's ."!,, attllcks last 11ight and early today, putting on a regular hoods," in a radio address tonight Fourth of July fireworks display for cheering walchers on and that he was "astonished that 'Challenge to Debate' --.:. the English shore. the president of the United States As 'Cheap Bravado' ---... At the same time, German raiders were sighted over ev ry would authorize such a speech." corner of Eng1and. Three civilian were reported killed. The . republican presidential WASHINGTON, Aug. 19 , (AP) The Boulogne bombardment l!till, was in progress. as I left. nominee sent the 10Uowing tele- - Secretary 1 c k e s, sarcastically my coastal vantage point to telephone this story to London. gram to Chiiirman Joseph Martin calling Wendell WlJlkle a "simple, -. • • • • of the republican national com- barefoot Wall Street lawyer," to­ mittee: night accused the republican presi- There were repeated brilliant flashes on the opposite side "Please waste no mon y in buy- dentiliL nominee ol "unpatriotic . ' of the English channel, about 22 miles distant. They ob• be totaU,r' ing radio time to answer Ickes. demagoguery" and "unpardbnaoLe viously were made by demolition bombs of the heaviest 'Sort. It Is unworthy ot ,answer. Unable references" to President Roose· i b,. fire,' Following one such flash, a huge fire flared up, blazing to make any reply to the accept- velt. I it tnt for so long that observers in England were sure an I1mmunj· ance, spe~ch, the new dealers are I In a radio speech described as !8S8ry :ad:' tion dump must have been destroyed. evathng I.ssue by .resort to talse a reply to Willkie's acceptance [\t for mi ' The British raids wet'e apparently the strongest yet dir~ct­ personal Innuendoes. address at Elwood Ind. the in- ed at the French coast in three successive nights of ever­ "I am not surprised thn! Ickes terior depormtent ' head' asserted heavier attack. would gt~op to such levels, ~u.t I that WillJde's criticism oC Mr. From the seafront of this harbor town (apparently Dover), am agtom~hed that the preSident Roosevelt's conduct of forei,n .d­ This Central Press map pictures IHitler has been hurUng against IthiS . area is so well defended by Iand a va t spread of balloon bar­ .' of the Umted State would au- Coil's was "contemptible." the goal of those titanic all' ar- the British Isles- the clty of Lon- innumerable anti - aircraft guns, rage, the attackina planes have lem . the French shore seemed to be lit by repeated sheets of thOl'ize such a speech. , "heat lightning." "The statement of Mr, Ickes Concerning WllIkle s challenge madas which Relchsluehl'er Ad oil don and its environs. Because swarms ot British pursuit planes been lOl'ced to tly high. IrI'IMII ~ • • • • that I am or ever was a member to Mr. Roosevelt to m et .him on Anti-aircraft shell and tl'acer bullets sLabbed up into the of Talpmany hall and his impU. the sameplat~o:m In jomt de­ clouded heavens like roman candles. cation that I ever approved of the b a.~es, Ickes saId. activitie of Samuel Insull, or that 0 nee ann 0 t .challenee the Permanent U.S.-Canadian Defense Board &Co. ~' The attack seemed to extend along sev rul mil s of coast I hnve any busin 5S connections of president of the UnIted Stules to '., on both s id es of Boulogne. any kind. today are plain arid sim- go about the country barnstorm­ OIl 8lreet So high was the visibility that J could see not only the pie falsehoOds." lng, aHer the pl'e-ra~io fashion of Will Have First Historic Meeting Next Week 14 rays of th Ge 'man searchlights but also the glowing faces the past century, WIthout laying ------..------. . hlmsQlf open to the c/l~g lila, ...... ed, ing !Get " "" . of the light as they revol try to pin' tl'ie AI" pia • .aHit'! ' to the sky for ground gunners. LEWES, l)el. (AP) - Jacob he is indulging in cheap bravado. For several seconds the beams criss-crossed the sky in a Morris, 84, was advised by his "The gravity of Mr. WilIkie's Refugee F.D.R. eeks West Indit:s Bases offense consisted ol the fact that F. D. R. Begins moving pattern before the anti-aircraft batteries opened up. dentist yesterday to throwaway he WIIS reflecting upon the dill­ When they did it. looked like a Foul'th of July display. his false teeth and "get a teeth- ing ring." ' ntty Dnd striking at the prestite Is in or Near 1/'LST INDIES Selection Of oWce Indicating the likelihood of even farther-ranging RAF Morris complained of soreness of an which, as a candidate I -to"tt.':'. raids, the Hamburg and Bremen radio stations went off the along his gums. Dr. G. M. Wilt­ himself lor the presidency, It Danger Zone • &RITlSIt air at 11 :15 p, m., and at 1 a, m., all German radio stations bank said a second set of teeth ought to be his zealOUS duty to ~ , U. S. Members shut down. were about to break through. UPhold and defend. The president First reports ot the German. ______cannot adjourn the battle of Brit­ Germany Apprehen ive raids on England listed death of I ain in order to ride the circuit ~. Grave Problems three civilians and lnjury of a President Looks Happy, Healthy with Mr. Wlllkie. The president is Over Danger of Mine!.' Of Continental Defense number of others in east Anglia not n mountebank. ..' "At that, Mr. Roosevelt has 'We Cannot Control' whe[\ a bomb demolished the cor­ C' " ... Draw Clo er Ties ner of a smithy. been eltectively debating the Wen­ J"/II.,, WASHINGTON, Aug. 19, (AP) ., AnoUler German raider jetti­ dell Wlllkles of this country for ... of' HYDE PARK, N. Y., Aug. 19 soned his bombs in a southeast years and will continue to do so." -Unofficlal calculations tonight I , I ... " (AP)- The llrst meeting of a "If Mr. WiIlkie is so eager for • - Q regio[\ when he apparently was placed the refugee ship American 1 J permanent United States-Cana­ Intercepted by British fighters. a debate in order to hold his au­ Legion in or near British waters (See ICKES, Page 6) ~1. dian board of deClnse was pro­ Most of the bombs appeared to where Germany expressed con· fall i[\ open country. , . jected for early next week as cel'n over "mines we cannot A high-flying plane over north­ .. President Roosevelt began today west England started fires with Mexico Stops control." the selection of its American three incendiary bombs, but they Dr. Wilhelm Tonnenburg of the members. we re soon extinguished. German embassy here summoned By telephone from his ancest­ Fire risk Irom incendiaries was U. S. Freighter a press co nference to express as­ AM!.ItICA ral home, Mr. Roosevelt asked declared to be red uced now tha t surance "that German military state, war and navy department much of Britain's grain had been Halted by , authorities will not In lIny way­ officials in Washington to recom­ cut. President Roosevelt has an - the West Indies, concentrating on mend lour or live persons, drawn Ship Proceeds After even Unintentionally - threaten nounced he is negotiating with new outlying defenses :tor t rr e chiefly from the armed forces, to Britain Abandons the American Legion" but to re· Great Britain for the establish- Panama canal. This Central serve on the board with an equal U. S. Sends Destroyer new a warning "about the dan· ment ot American naval bases Press map shows the British pos­ number of Canadians. Somaliland on British posse88ions ran,ing sessions (in black) in and near ger of mines." There was nothing to indicate LONDON, Aug. 19 (AP)- Brit- MEXICO CITY, Aug. 19, (AP) from Newfoundland down through I the Caribbean sea. Aboard the army transport, the whether he would call on the ain abandoned her Somali land -Mexico, on watch against any army and navy h igh command for '. protectorate today to Italy, con­ attempts to land arms for a revo· 897 passengers, mostly Americans, the personnel or rely on subord­ lution, s top p e d the American ceding defeltt in the first phase of apparently w~re ignorant of the Use of U. S. Shipi' to Remove Inate officers. But he hoped to the lar-flung war in Africa. freighter Herman Frasch off Aca· complete his choice by Thursday pulco, on the Pacific coast, today situation. Replying to an inquiry As at Dunkerque, when they sent Saturday, when the original in preparation for the board's Ini­ but qu ickly permitted the ship to tial meeting at a' place not yet were forced La flee from Fland­ go on its way. warning was Issued in Berlin, Mrs. Children Approved in Senate ers, the British said they stuck designo ted . (The ship was reported to have J . Borden Harriman, minister to , 10 the figh t as long as possible ------. Morrenthau to Canada been halted by a Mexican gunboat. , wirelessed The Associated to make ~he Italians pay the German Ambassador MeanWhile, Secretary of the At San Francisco a U. S. destroyer Would Continue Treasury Morgenthau left· his Bea· highest price for their victory. was reported to be on the way Press from the ship: They made a successful with­ "Your message tirst intimation Wallace Policies, Views Voy~e ~h~oug~ con, N. Y., home today for an south to investigate. The destroyer undisclosed destination in Canada. drawal by ship, removing much apparently was sent out before of newly-mined area. No one · ka d S War Zone Dangerous of their material with them and There was speculation in Wash­ the word came that the freighter aboard informed." WlC rays , ington that his trip might be in ., WASHlNGl'ON, A~. III, (AP) dtstroyed what was left behind. had been released.) Navy officials declined to dis­ connection with the defense pro­ Acknowledgement of defeat In The ship 01 2,641 gross tons is cuss the situation aboard the ves­ WASHINGTON, Aug. 19, (AP) -The senate today unanimously ject but here at the summer white Africll came as Germany's storm owned by the Union Sulphur com­ sel or even to report its position. -Claude R. Wickard, undersecre· approved lefislation permit.ting . J house presidential attaches said at bombs against Britain abated pany of New York and was bound Unofficially, however, it was cal­ tary of aerlculture, was nominat­ American to remove children they had heard nothing of Mor­ ::- mysteriously again. from San Pedro, Calif., to its culated that if the ship is travel­ ed today to be Secretary Wallace's from the war zones under safe- genthau's Canadian visit and were The withdrawal from Somali­ home port. lin, at normal speed and the wea­ successor and immedialely an­ unable to suggest what role, if land-British since 1884-gave the (Customarily she pic.ks up sul­ ther Is favorable, it should be ap­ nounced that, if confirmed by the conduct pled,es from the belli~- any, he might play in defense Italians unchallenged possession This latest photograph of presi-, health and, allparently, ' is not too Iphur at gulf . ports for the west proaching or already within the senate, he would continue the Wal­ erents while a German embassy plans, of an East African wedge ex- dent Roosevelt indicates that th e greatly worried bver ' the Inte~na- coast and carries lumber and gen- "danger zone." It left Petsamo, lace policies. spokesman warned that the nazis' The rapid pace of developments (See BRITAIN, Page 6) chief executive is enjoying good tiona I situation. ';' . eral cargo back east.) Finland, Friday night. W i c k a I' d, a former Indiana "total blockade" would make It lead in, to the unprecedented farmer who has been active in the strengthening of U. S. ties with administration's aerlcultural pro- daneerous for aoy vessels to en- a nation at war emphasized the Oec I gram since its beginning; was at tel' British watens. . I eravity with which the chief exe­ Senators Attack BullitI' for His Philadelphia S '- h IBiloxi, Miss., when word reached Dr. Wilhelm Tannenberf of the cutlve viewed the problems at P him that Preaident Roosevelt had embassy was ~sked about the continental defense. ' * * * . sent his name to the senate. h 'ld 'tr _ 1 tat· t . Meet OD BonIer After praising the Watlace poll­ c 1 ren s anspur 1011 a a preu He announced Friday in Wash- WASHINGTON* *, Aug.* 19, (AP) United States* enter* *the war, of Ibecause he *believed * * there was tion of $5,008,189,277* * * tor be.ln- their opportunity to break into cies, he said: conferenre reflD'ding the army ington ethat defense consultations -Charging William C. Bullitt, seeking to promote a dictatorship not sufficient danger to justify it, ning the conatruction of a "two- the debate. "I hope that jt will be possible traMport Anierldan Legion which were under way with Canada. the American ambassador to for this country, and of suspicious- Senator Frazier (R-ND) joining ocean navy" and providlDl equlp- They chose the beginning of tor aU agricultural groups to help iJ briDling AmeJ:icans home from That same night he disclosed he Prance, with something "very little ly close and friendly relations the opposition because the mea- ment for an army of 1,200,000 Frazier's speech. Senator Clark support these policies and to see Fi la d was meeting Canadian Prime Min- ~rt of treason," an indignant with Soviet Russia. And, they sure "would undermine the entire men. Downtown, meanwhile, the (D-Ida) led off, asking Frazier if that they become recognized as an n n . i3ter W. L. Mackenzie King on troup of senators hotly attacked added an assertion that Bullitt's economy" ot. the country by creat- war department reported that he had read BuLlitt's speech, and essential part of our defeJ'\le pro­ He said that ,German mlliial'Y Saturday at Ogdensburg, N. Y., on 1ht diplomat today lor his speech speech was "not only approved iIll a huge peace-time war ma- army recruiting, stead1ly rising received a reply that he had not gram." authorities would have to dKide the border between the neighbor :'1 PhilajJelphia last night. but inspired by the state depart- chine," and Se!llltor T y din g s since last May, reached a peak of thought it "worthwhile." Sena­ Meantime President Roosevelt, whether ships I could be sent countries, to discuss "mutual prob­ 8ullUf, warning that the coun­ ment:' (D-MD) drawin, a prolol.lled Qva- 8,805 enlistments durin, the,week tor Clark (D-Mo), asking that his at Hyde Park, accepted the resil­ through the blockade for the chil- lema ot defense: ' was In danger 01 C'ierman in­ Their remarks inlerrupted a tlon trom the laHeries with a sup- ot Aug. 11 to 18. "COu.in trom Idaho," yield to him, nation of Wallace. dren but expre.led the view that Their afreement to set up a advocated conscription and senate discussion of the draft portin, speech in which he said The concerted attack upon ~ul· put in ~t while BulJitt's speeches WyomJ.... Votes such voy8Jes wo~d be daDlerous. board to consider the defenses of that destroyers be made which found Senator Hill (D-Ala) that he prelerred too mucl1 pre- lilt was delivered by frankilre· carried little wei,ht in the United The senate acted ~ter brief de- ~orth America and begin Imme­ fI'lilab,l~ to Great Britain. supporting it on the ground that pared ness to too little. arrangement amon, tpl!! BefUltprs States, that "unfortunately" was CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP)-W'y­ bate in which Senator Ashurst d(ate stUdies of "ses, land and air ,One alter another, the senators voluntary enlistments place "pre- Another defense development who participated. A1mbSt entirely not true in other countries. Then Qrning voJerll will .pick candidates (D'ArIz) said that. he diCf not problema, including personnel and 1Nie, In the course ot the senate's mium on slackerlsm and a- penaltY saw the senate appropriatlons membt!rs ot' the 'bloC 'whJCh ~s' the' onataug'ht was· on. .. for United States senator, repre­ "regard safe cqnduct offered by material," waa announced jointly ~te on the peace-time draft, to I on patriotism," Senator Capper committee Quickly approving a urged a strict aloofness lrom the "In my opinion," said Clark 01 sentative in colliJ'e88 and .taw Hitler as of the allihtelt c:onae- by the two chiet. of state yester- aeeu.. Builltt of urging that thll (R-Ark) opposinJ the lqWatioD record,.or ilia: record, ~j)ro.PJ1J- Eur~~ war, they .t tw<iDC (Ste BULLITT, Page 6) le&islature today. Queoce." da.Y • .. - , - - - -- . .... - _ ... - . PAGE TWO

individuals. They are not at liberty to ex­ press their pri \'ate vi IV in pUblic, The free­ dOlll of speech which we as private citizens enjoy must be redefined when applied to Publi bed every morning except 'Monday one who i ' acting in the capacity of t he gov­ by Student Publications Incorporated at el'nmeut of th nited tates in other coun­ 126-130 Iowa avenue, Iowa City, Iowa. tries. Ambas adol' udaby not disciplined Board of Truste : Frank L. Mott, Odi K. for his indiscr~t words. It may have been PattQn, Ewen 1\1:. MacEwen, Kirk H. Porter, tu protect the dignity of the stat department Donald Dodge, Deming mith, William 1 hat OlUe ueb action was not taken. The By PAUL 'MALLON. Sener, Irene Frederickson Robert Kadgibn. wide-. pread publicity given the incident may have b n regard d a rebuke enough, pub­ certainly will not win the war [or Fred M. Pownall, Publisher licity which, we hope, other envoys of the President Excited Britain, nor can they prove an im­ Thomas E. Ryan, Busine Manager l'uitcd 'tates wiil read with more than p By War for Britain portant factor in the result. Loren L. Hickerson, Editor jng int re t and will /'emember th next time Far more important to the Brit­ :Morty Tonken, Managing Editor they feel the Ul'ge to tell the world what WASHINGTON-M r, Roosevelt ish is the political commitment fhey feel as John Q. 'itizen wbile they are never betrayed more excitement of the United State to the i r Entered as second class mail matter at the a ting a.' l ncle am. in a press conference than when cause. po toffice at Iowa ity, Iowa, under the act he told of his dealings with Brit- of congrcss of March 2, 1 79. Am LOSSE • Expanding CivU Service ain over ba3es and destroyers, The one way to tell how Hiller'ti His voice quavered with determin­ new wal" game, which depends Sub cription rates-By mail, $5 per year; The adoption of a state civil ervice act in ation. The atmosphere was so on the destruction oC the British by carrier, 15 cents weekly, $5 per year. Louisiana last month' brings to 1 the num­ tense it could have been cut and air torce, is going is to watch The Associated P is exclu iv ]y entitled brr of ·tates employing worke~ throug]l a sold to England as a munition of the number of planes tbe Briti3h t o u e for repUblication of all news di patches war. lose ih comparison with the nazis. crcdited to it or not otherwise credited in this formal merit sYlStem. according to the ivil His explainers latel' intimated It they lose less than one to tbree paper and also the local news published };ervice A.·sembl), of the United States and he had just heard 2,500 planes they are Winning, herein. Canada. were over Britain and disastrous Unfortunately not even Mr. Loui iana's new law will not become en­ co nsequence;; migbt be immlnetlt, Roosevelt himself has worthwhile til'el~r eff-ective until July 1, 1942, althougll but obviously something more figures on plane casualties so iar. TELEPHONES certain provisions to lay 'th foundation for than that had moved him. The His advi3ers all have more fmth' Editorial Offiee . ... ,,"",.,'" .4192 t he )' tem and to -tart the machinery for last man to see him, signi!icantly, in the British figures and rightly was not a state department mes­ or wrongly have come to accept ociety Editor ' .. , .. ," .. " .... ,4193 cIa ifying jobs already are in effect. senger but his new publicity men­ these as their uncertain guides. Bu lness Office ...... 4191 Practically ali 1)ositions in the state ser­ tor, Lowell Mellett, who seems Averaging the claims of both vice xeep!; elect d officers, legislative ~­ TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1940 to be succeeding Charlie Michel­ Berlin and London will bring you ployes, court em~oy6!! imd the militAry come son for this campaign. to the conclusion that tbeir losses u ncwr the act. Approximat ]y 16,000 work­ Presence of Mr. MelleH spon­ have been exactly equal. e/ it;g e timated, will thu!! be piaoed under sored the interpretation that the Facts Belor~ America civil sen ·ice. president decided at the last mo­ LONG-RANGE G NS-- '1'l1c withdt'uwal of' British forces hom ment to use this publicity blank.et Censored rumors from London on the Willkie acceptance speech about the Germans shelling 'louth • oInlt liland mark:; unother victory fOl' the Ciuil ervit'e States as had been forecast from-of all As in the c&ie of civil service lawlS in lSev­ coast towns from across the chan­ I xi,.,. 1l'llltht'l' oeC at for Britain, another imaginable places-the Will~ie nel are only half of it. The Gel'­ el'al other tates, the Loui .. iana law a1. 0 per­ headquarters at Colorado Spril1l~ s. It ill H pa t11 towal'd fascit> l control of mans have a gun o[ sufficient mit.) thc state to give personnel scrvices to Twenty-four hours earliel' the gTf'at s c tion~ of t he world. range to shell London, 100 miles local g'ol'ernment!! QU their l'equ t. pr ' Ident's nominal adviser, Steve (rom the French forts they oCCUpy. , • I 'l'h"t~ week, it would appelJ l" , will Dlean tbe Half of the 1 state merit sy tems have Early, had denied both the de­ Will advised artillerists speak cur­ •• 11 ~/'ealest attack in hil;tory upon the British , been adoptedince eal'l y in 1937, sooording stroyer story and the blanket. rently of a German gun with a ., !sIcs. Hel'lin has warned th' English not. to ,I 10 the as ·embly. '1'hese include the sy tems Qccasional publicity conflicts range of 130 miles. Tbe Gel'mans l - shoot nazi parachutist. as spies, ou pain of have in the past developed sim­ ,. of Alabama, onuecticut, Maine, Michigan, have even released pictures of a death for British airmen taken pri.oners on ilarly from Mr. Roosevelt's ten­ Minnesota, New Mex ico, Rhode Island and gun which has a range of 50 miles 1he COl1tinel]t. ~azi troops are mass d on the dency to change hUl"riedly his pre­ (the channel is only 20 miles 'J' e nll es.~ee . ne state Arkansas, which adopt­ continent opposite DOI'er. The hour is at viously made publicity plans. across at Dover.) ed civil service in 1937, has repealed its mel'it band. But these guns cannot throw system. '1'he other ninc sta1le which havc state ANGRY AT WlLLKIE- GpOll the ba is of the fact, what attitude projectiles of the weight of bombs .J eivil service laws are 'alifol'Dia, Colorado, Note : An excellent new deal dropped by planes. Theil' chief 1311811 America take friendly and regular person-has times to get it the way the direc­ Illinois, Maryland, Milssaehusetts, ew det'­ authority offers the supplemental effectiveness is in destroying en­ l pon the basis of the facts, we shall push taken hold. There's been no back­ tor wants it and tbe wa,y she TODAY WITH scy, New York, Ohio and Wisoonsin. uplanation that r-tr. Roosevelt emy r:norale. sliding. Sister Mar-lay-nah is def­ wants it. Says she laughs at over­ Olil' prcparcdn . program to the limit. ::lome was angered by inside advices he ~ " .. initely In the Fold now, with tbe time. Tells about the time a fel­ WSUI dozen nations havc fallen within oue year Civil ef'vice vs. poils had received that morning lndicat­ AN WERlNG WILLKIE-- rest of the White Sheep. low actress was about to lose a to anti-democratic forces, ing Mr. WilIkie would not take Mr, Roosevelt nevel' intended 'J'he l'ight of individuals to eleet theil' "ov­ Once when you asked Mar-lay­ part because the exec's didn't TOMORROW'S WGHLlGBTS POll th basi ' of the f act , we shall pa. a su(ficiently firm stand for -the to answer the WilLkie acceptance s crl1lnental representative must never bc nah a profeSSional question, such like her test. Says Marlene saw Jack Johnson of the 'uniwrslty Borne kind of legislation for voluntary, if dl'aft bi II to force its passage. speech. Acid tongued Interior tbe test and said "Wait a' minute, taken away, but merit systems, it would seem, as how-did-you-get-that-way, she political s<;ience department wiD be necessary co mpulsory, military training. Secretary Ickes was assigned in fixed you up with a cold, wide boys--let me work on her." Says Rhollld come into inerelllled use as "employes BASES FROM BRITAIN-- the speaker On: the program "Thb .A metiea 's young men will be needed ·to man advance to make the first re­ stare (close up specialty No. 24D), Marlene took over and the gil'l of mm nt in rae in llumber. The plan to get bases from the buttal shot Monday nlgbt. The Week in _ Gov1!rnment" at 11 American defenses. go" raised her inch-long lashes, and was tested again and won tbe POl' that i. the cfficient way; the rcsults Britisb in the Caribbean has been cabinet was to take up thereafter o'clock thJs morning. 'pon the ba is of th facts, we shall aid ignored the query. Or maybe she part hands-down. reprf'scJJt a return on an investment in wages alive for the last two-and-a-half­ with Mr. Wallace, the vice presi­ Britain with evcry measure short of wa1'­ years. A t least as early as tha t, sighed at the stupidity of it all, • • • too oftcn not roaliz d on a spoils system dential candidate, leading th e Marlene, surrounded by leading ])llIneR, guns, old destroyel's--even as we push conversations were initiated for or shrugged, or gave you Enig­ "Serenade Bandine" and "Al· Ilppointce. counter cborus, matic Smile No. 271-B. men like John Wayne and Albert legro Brillil\nt" will be on the 'pro­ our output of defen iYe weapons for home acquisition of Barbados and Trin­ idad. It we held those two is­ That was because (we know it Dekker, is playing a singer wbo gram of the ' Evenlng Musicale at d efellse. now) somebody had told Mar­ 7 :45 to 8 o'clock toninght. J)or' lands 0 u r stl'ing of Caribbean wears the clothes-feathers and pon the basis of the facts, we sLall speed­ ley-nah she wa~ a big star and otby Lorenz, violinist, and lin. A Man About bases protecting the Panama ca­ cheap jewelry-Dietrich hussies ily reconcile differ nc b tween political and nal would be satisfactory. ought to make hersel1 as objec­ Maude Whedon Smith, acQClntpan· economic factions. Organized industry must Quiet dickering with Ecuador tionable as possible to insure her usually wear. ist, will be the mu~icians . , make fillcrifice', even a' must the individuals and Mexico for the western canal status. It might have worked if "I'll never play a good woman "-'--- of t h uatiOll. MANHATTAN defense bases has been going on Marlene had kepi on making the again," she says, crossing her kind of plctures thai put her on knees on a high stool off - stage. TODAF'S PR.OGIlAM Upon thr basis of Ule facts, we must bcgin almost as long. We want some 8:00-Morning chapel. to thinJ, of the significallce of the ]940 fall canal protection in the Galapagos, top in the first place instead of "Good women areinterestin~ The ~est Phoney playing sweet girls lind virtuou.; when other actresses play them, 6:15-Musical miniatures. of nations in terms of wbat now, from the Salinas Cl"UZ, and one other Mex­ wives. It didn't work. Marlene but they're not my type. I used 8:3~aUy Iowan 01 Ute Air, activities uf Japan, Germany B[ul Haly, can Of All 01 Them ican west port. 8:40-Mornillg melodies. Sf GEORGE 1'UCKER ,ank with her pictures. to fight against playing them. This b lakt'll ONTJY to be the ultimate goal of Harlene Dietrich girl now, she's not really bad­ 8:60-Service reports, E W ~ORK-'l'he Polynesian motif ·has DESTROYER ANGLES- * • • fa!lcism- wol'ld wide control of individualism. Joe Pasternak was the fellow there's the Hays oWce and the 9:0o-ruustrated musical chats. finally caught LIP with swing-at least it Fifty destroyers would do the In a New Picture 9:5O-Program calendar and Upon the basis of the facts we must get to Britieh some minor good although who remembered the kind of roles U. S. navy (it's a navy picture) work-and quickly, lIas Ull Broadway-and now the Onyx elub that made Marlene memorable. He to see to that! ... Yes, I do all weather reports. not in their present predicament. By ROBBIN COONS lO:OO-The week in government. is following -the Lead of the Beachcomber, HOLLYWOOD-Marlene Diet­ cast her as a dance hall hussy my own make-up. Why not? Who ------We have 123 of the old sea grey­ 10:l5-Yes!erday's musical fa- the Hurricane, thll Pagu Pago club, and the hounds, 106 of which have been rich, who hit the sawdust trail (with hear! of gold) 1n "Destry." knows better than a woman what • Expensive Law Violations Hawaiian room, a tran 'ition that many of gracious behavior when she So Marlene is playing that kind her own face is like? ... Irene vorites. recommissioned, bllt none of wbich 10 ;30-The book shelf. Law violations are those things we know wouldn't bave b liev d possible a few years could be put into the most effi­ came back to the sound stages of part again. does my castumes - oh, yes, I orcu C', but the most of us aren't inclined to ago. Oncc the cradic of' swjng, the Onyx Tay Garnett, who's directing', make suggestions, but they're 1l:00-Concert hall seledions. cient condition for modern aerial for "Destry Rides Again ," is out­ 1l:1S-The touring reporter. pay much attention to the scope of slwh vio­ first achieved tile limelight around Christ­ warfare within a few months. The doing herselC now. says there's not a smArter dame! really hers . , . Isn't this one won­ lations, or the total number. She's making another number, in pictures than Dietrich. Says derful? The feathers - they're 1l:3O-Melody time. mas, 1D35, wheu Farley and Riley drove British apparently wanted the 11 :SO-Farrrt flasttes. I owa 1]a8 cou ervation laws ttl protect tho overybody crazy with "The Music Goes M for mine sweepers, layers, and "Seven Sinners," and the "con­ she knows all about camera light­ tripped ostrich-l brought .from ver.;;ion"-from an aloof, sligbtly ing. Says there's nobody more Paris. We couldn't find a hat here, 12:00-Rhytbm rambles. captUl' of wild lif . Violation QJ' the Jaws 'Round and 'Round. " It continued in later tenders, in which cause the y 12 :3O-Serviae reports. wcnt lip during June-there were 178 cases would be serviceable-but they disdainful star to an interested, willing to do a scene 10, 20 or 30 so we snipped the end of the boa yeal's with "Stuff" ,mith, a. mecca for those and used that. The dress was once 12:SO-Radio features. compared to 12 in May, according to the who ' drew Satisfacliou from listening tol ear­ ------an evening coat of mine-oh, ex­ 5:45-0rgan melodies. state conser~ation commission. splitting music in tight, compact little places. War's Greatest Drama-Attack Oil London cuse me, Mr. Gannett is calling." I 5:5 ~Dally Iowan of the AIr, JJct's look at the l'ecOI'd for the month. It goe ~outh Seas now, a lmost over night. We turn to go, and Marlene 6:00-Dinner .hour program. 'on "iotions were obtaincd in all but OIIe of 'l'llC te f guitar is to replace the siLver trum­ rushes back. "You must leave? I 7 :OO-Children's holU", The. Land tho 165 cas IS pl·osecuted. 'l'hore w,el'e 155, pet. 'J'b e soft swish of ti-Ieaves will fan away m u s t say goodbye, then. So 0, the .Story Book. fishing violations. 12 JlUuting law violations, glad-" 7:15-Remiliiscing time: the fevel' that fO I' so many years gnawed at 7:30-Sportstime. /lev n navigation law infractions. the healt of the ji tter-bugs. Baby, that's White Sheep stuff for you! 7:45-t:veninf; musicale.- Of the $3,9J 6.20 aF!. cs,'>cd in fines, $1,320 • • • 8:00-1owa iStkte MediolJl S0ci- WilS suspended. Of a total of 4 -1 days in jail On a ' l'OUlld' of tlw town the other night ety program. S('ntoncrs meted out to vioilltors, 203 days wc ran illtO '~Pr~nce" M.i ke Romanov, who The forest service planted 8:15-Poe1ry patterns. we/'e suspendcd. city-slicked New York, ' Miami, and Holly­ 7,600,000 trees in Kansas farm 8:30-Album of aritsts. COli riscations du ring the monUI included wood a few years ago with h is " old world sheLterbelts this year, 8:45-Daily ,lewan of Urre AIr, 350 fi:llre.~, three game animalS, 11 nets and airs" befor solllol;ody exposed him. Mike seines, 13·trot lines, olle snagging outfit and never blu hed Ill. iliat time and he bas never 1 h ree tra ps. been em barra d ",inee. An ' East ~ide boy OFFICIAL DAILY BUI14ETIN Law yiolations, we til ink, are soch little whose llame is Harry, he pos d as royalty t hingl'l, but the cust mOUllt. up-to the state and got away with it long nough to build A N J) to the violator. up a tradition. I used to see .him around be­ fore he headed we t, Seeing him thi t ime was • Being Diplomatic, Regardleu- • t he fir. t time I had thought of him in yell!' . ow t hat United States Ambassador to Whilc we were talking he drew out an amaz­ Belgium John Cudahy has been vindicated ing ~ilver cigarette case, which was slightly by the :tate department for whatever indis­ 'lSmaller than a shoe box, and said, "My c l'et l'cmarks he may have made, he can pay friend Charlie Chaplin gave me this." He V 8 t off his bet on Roosevelt's candidacy and go pUUed out Ii crisp $10 llote and offered ' to U n i e r i Y Cal end a r . Monday, Aueust Ii, to (F 0 r lDt~tIoD ~ on his vacation with an casy con eience. ·buy· 1\ mineral water. "1 have a suite at t he Friday, Aupst 23 dates beyond illa._ale,. • ," '1'he president authorized the ambassador P ien e, " he said, "and when I go back to Hollywood I'm goi ng to open a smart bar. Ind~ndent Study Unit forervatleos ID abe S...... to say lhat no rebuke had been intended and l;rlidUllte Students. OUiee, W-9 ~ 1IaIl). •• that none had been received although he had :My movie friend will be my board of apparcntly becn called home to an weI' for elir etors.' , 1\1 ikc once !Said: "G'ertainly I'm a pboney. G e n era I Not i c,e 8 what ' llmller W el/es. undel'SeCretal'Y {)f Men's Swlmmlnc si um wiII be open for recrea_ But people like m~and . help me-because Iltate, called violations of "standing instrllc­ The men's swimmIng pool in Iwinuning -4 1;0' 5 'P.m,. 1 'm the best in the busilless. " Mike W8-'J right. tion. " of the state department. Cudahy was the iieldhouse wILL be open dur- through Frids?, ' and 'l!iIwran People do. And h e is. up posed to have been rebuked for an un­ ing the three-week session from .to' 12 a.m. durIO, the t.h1~1!8o_1D"' uuthoc;zed interview he had given in London • • • 2 to 6 p.m. daily. of the indepenilent studT in which h had b en quoted as saying Bel­ We w re talking the other nigbt about the D. A. ARMBRUSTER All womeh relifte~ ' ''r .w.,_",.--"'u" people who play glamorous, adventurous l'oles gium faced It

• ~ . J .. _ • ...,...... ';..f . - " • ., .. .,. I • i

TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1940 THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY PAGE THREE Bt'itain's 12.-Day Casualties May Reach' 46,000 to 57,000 • • • • • • • • •• ••••••••• • •••••••••• State Fair Exhibit Calculations FIRST LONDON OBJECTIVE OF. GERMAN AIR RAIDERS Today Indicate Scoop Four Organization Of War's Toll Plan Meeting TWJLIGHT GOLF . • . I 'It Probably Is Safe · .. will be played at the Iowa City country c1u~ at 4;30 this at- I To Assume Losses Are ternoon. Supper will be served after the play. Greater Than Admitled' • • • By DEVON FRANCIS W. W. CLUB . .. NEW YORK, Aug. 19 (AP)­ • •. of St. Wenceslaus church will On n basis of mathematical prob­ hold an ice cream social on the I ability advanced by the British church lawn at.7 o'clock tonight. themselves. it is possible - but • • • rather unlikely-that in 12 days of WOMEN OF THE MOOSE ... bombing England, German ail'­ · .. will meet at 7:45 in the JIltn have taken a toll of from Moose hall. 41.000 to 57,000 casualties on the • • • pound. PO T OFFICE CLERKS. . . I Censorship continu - to veil the · .. auxiliary will meet at 2; 15 Iifcree or the punishment meted this afternoon In the light and by the bombers 01 either Eng­ out pow I' company assembly room. land ar Germany in terms of ma­ I \trial damage or ot casua I ties. • • * MR WEBSTER II probably Is sate to a8llUme IU' the wounded and killed HERE, DEFINITELY, ARE ...ber many more than the THREE FOR THE BOOKS WlI,erenls admit. Tbe probabUity curve Jlresent­ CHICAGO, Aug. 19 (AP)­ fII bere Is subject to many qual­ The Illinois Central railroad If'~ lactors, and the totals are purely theorellcal. notified Its traffic representa­ tives today that among the ma­ This Is the way It works out: Brllish air raid precaullon terials es entJa I to national de­ of -/loily la\l'a~ Moll. ,enerally circulated am on&, fense and subject \0 license by The college engineering will \ ual inslruction department, left ' Photo, ElIgro"h,g dvillans before tbe war warned the secretnry of stat before be r presented at the Iowa State to right, examine the model be- pnrtmcnt to the fair this year. lllal from 16 to ZO personll were Rere are the great Tilbury docks, situated on the I German aJr raiders against the British capItal. they can be exported were the rail' Friday by the model air- tore it is packed and shipped. The university will join other lliel, to be struck tor every Thamel river, 211 mllea trom London, which were Royal All' Force planes engaged the raider. In a tollowlng: plan and wind tunnel pictured The college ot engineering is Iowa coll ges and universities in tint a tlgbl .. of bomb~ dropped on tarrets the objective of heavy bombing attack by terrlftc dog MonochlormethyJchlorto r m - above. BlIl Baumgartner, Mack nmon6 Ihe colJe6es Dnd depnrt- pr entln6 exhibits. Tbe mDte- II populated areas. ate, trinitronapththalen and Townsend and Lee W. Cochran, ments which will s nd displays rial ent by S. U. J. will be • • • The population ot Solon is 502. hexanitrodiph nylamine. sup rvisor of th university vis-, through the visual dueation de- shipped today. The number of plan€:s-both Marriages of Former S. U. I. ------bombers and protective fighters­ !IIlplayed by Germany in the in­ • tensive bombing operation which Students, Graduate ~ Revealed Secretary Ickes Involved In Postage Stamp Controversy started Aug. 8 is subject to dis­ pute, but an arbitrary average . --~,------01 600 a day would appear to be ' Raid Weds lock attended the Oxford schools I WASIUNGTON,* * Aug.* 19 (AP) of low In *th '* di* tribution of Dal"aher *sald * similar* slamps, Senator Byrnes* * *(D-Se), who Ickes, Byrn* ' *added, * never so](~ conservative. ond is now employed in Anmno D, -AJ serting thal Seer tory Ickes stomps sold lor collectors' pur­ which wet· not gummed, weI' said he had telephoned !c'kc unu any 0 r tl 1 S 1ilicrUon that the has been roughly 3 to 2, producing DO~l11enson Ceremony £aid Ick ' letter indicated that this," declared that lek ' ocqui­ 417 .50 01) 150 imp rforate ·tamp. The ConnecUcut senator read to the stamps held by the secretal'y sition of the stamps occurI'd in litamps In!!' worth $187,417, • figure of 2,880 bombers for the Estle-Chapman i! days. Each of the swift, med­ Word has been received here purchased for $82.50, Senalor Dan­ the senate what he said was u of the interior were valuable be­ 1933 "and that's seven years ago:' Byrnes ~aid hc hod "the author­ Mr. and Mrs. Hall Estle of Letts lum·size bombers may be assumed recently or the marriages and ap­ aher (R"Conn) demandcd today copy of a letter from Ickes to cause they were gumm d. "I do not think," Byrnes said, ity of the ~ecretal'Y" to oCfer the to carry a ton of explosives. proaching weddings or 'rormer uni­ announce' the wedding of their a senate investigution to deter­ Harry W. Chase, chancellor ilf At collectors' prices, lhelena­ "that anyone would even inltm- i~hue to DanHher "if he will pay U each plane's bomb load In­ versity students and alumni. daughter, M!IJ'Jorie Ellen, and Wil­ mine whether "certain persons by New York university, in which tor added, (he 150 stamp. still ote or think the matter was flicted the number of casualties liam A. Chapman, son of Mr. and virtue of official poslUon or oth­ Ickes oaered Imperforate. gum­ held would be worth $187,500. brought up at this time bec.-ause the face value of $82.50. .nticipnted in the air raid pre­ Mrs. Harold G. Chupman ot Ce­ erwise" had received special pri­ med stamps of a seri s is ued in "Th se stamp. <-'(1st thut noted of the tact that Ovcr thp radin Danaher IJlsi~led that the stamp tiuUons manuals, from 46,080 to Krehbiel-Raid dol' Rapids. The ceremony took \'ilegeg in acquil'ing postage commemoration of the national col1 ctOI' $82.50," h said. tonrght the seer tary or the in- is ue came out in 1035. 57,600 persons would have been Pauline Krehbiel, daughter of place Aug. 8 in the home of the stamps. r-ark service, with th notation "Th nct prom to the cobinet (erior is scheduled to malte a few "I spoke to Mr. Ickes und ru;ked wounded or killed. Mr. and Mrs. August Krehbiel of bride's parents with the Rev. Danaher introduced a resolution that he originally had obtained orticer who was able to get the rcmarks in rep1y to the republican him what the. tory of (he stamps • • • Donnellson, and Howard Roid, son AII!)(llndel' of the Methodist church calling for an inquiry by th' PObt­ 200 of this "roup. The stomps were postottice d pm·tment and the bu­ gentleman now r~nning fol' pre!;- wa~," BYJ"l1. relat d. "He Sllid, \,Ujce committee to learn wheth­ oUered to Chase tor sa Ie at 0 reau oC cngraving to gum th Oae reason tbe fi&,ures are of Mrs. Clara Raid, also of Don­ in Letts oWciating. ident. I'm sure thnt would be ,'WhOt! Thot uld stolY. Why they er there had been ,my violation charity auction. stnmps for him was $J87,417.50.'· unwOl'thy of us." used that ill the 1936 campaign.' ,. .ijed to quaHrlcation Is that nellson, were married Aug. II in Mr. and Mrs. Chapman will be lilt British Insist dIrect hits on the Zion Mennonite church there. at hom affler Sept. 25 ill Iowa ------~------.------~------~tivea have been at a pre· The bride is a graduate of the City, where they will attend the Barbara Ann, all ot Hanover, 111., Cedar Rapids visitors Saturday. cable net over white satin, fash­ Ilium. Anotber Is tbat, caurbt Donnellson high school and hu ' university. : A.~10NG spent the week end in the home • • • Eileell Gaten, , ioned with ,1 three-tiered skirt III Inlenslve fire Irom British attended Bluffton college in Blu [f­ Mrs. Chapman is a groduale or or Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bowman, Alvin LiUig, 24, of TWin, and and a sweetheal'( neckline. The planes, raiders fre­ 319 Hutchinson. Alace and Jean Zita Canncy, 23, of North Liberty, 'JrbtJnc ton, Ohio, and Iowa State Teach­ the West Branch schools a'nd has LOJf' A. CITY short putted sleeves were inset ,ueaUy have dUmped their ers college in Cedar Falls. Mr. Hatfield will sp nd the week with were gronted D wedding licen e H. Donnelly attended the university two years. wilh chantilly lacc lind the finger­ Mrmb loads short 01 their ob­ Raid received his B. A. degree in MI'. Chapman will be u senior PEOPLE Mrs. Bowman. y sterday by R. Neilson Miller, lteUveI and fled. • clerk 01 court. tip-length veil was caught' with Parsons college in Fairfield and here this fall. ~------,,-- • • Marry Monday SUU another is the fact that has done graduate work in the uni­ Hugh J. Williams, 321 Hutchin­ Anita Williams, Mary Bell Neu­ • • • snU n rosettes. The bride carried many of the bombers have car­ versity here. He will be superin­ son, left yesterday tot' a ten day man and Catherine and Mary Grim Carl W. Eickstaedl, 24, or Mil­ Johanna Hill roses. ried incendiary bombs, to start tendent of the high school in Shar­ 1\1 ueJler-Kircbdoerfer v a cat ion in Minn apolis and left for a week's vacation a1 Pine waukee, Wis., and Winifred E. R v. P. J. O'R illy A gown ot ov r pink satin fires, rather than the demolition on this fall. Mildred Mueller, daughter of Mound, Minn., where he will visit Beach lodg In Brainerd, Minn. Wedlock, 24, of Waukesha, Wis., OfIiciates at er mony was \\I111'n by Marguerite Gatens, or general-purpose type. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mueller of friends. • • • rec Ived a wedding license yester­ sisler of the bride, who WII3 maid­ One British authority, among Waverly, Dnd Herbert Kirchdoer­ Betty Fairbanks, daughter of day from R. Neilson Miller, clerk In t. Patrick' Church ol-honor. It was trimmed with tIozens who ul'ged preparedness Scanlan-Perkins • • • tel' of MDrtensd,1le were married Visiting in the home of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Doug Fairbanks, is ot court. powd I' blue velvet bows and Miss Ql the public before the war, said Aug. 31 is announced as the Aug. 4 in Sl. Paul's Lutheran In a ingle ring ceremony yes­ a Mrs. O. S. Blexrud, 126 N. Clin­ visiting her grandmother in Shel­ Gatens wore pink and blue III enemy intent on delivering a date Cor the wedding of Ciarnell church in Martensdale. They wLll don. She will be gone three w eks. terday, Eileen Got ns, daughter flowcred turban. She carried a '1tnockout blow" might drop Scanlan, daughter of Mr. and ton, is lone Hefte of Caledonia, Ladies Club live there. Minn. Miss Heft. a nh:ce of Mt·s. • • of MI'. and Mrs. J. L. G:Jtens, colonilll bouquet of sweet peas. enough bombs to kill from 50,- Mrs. Thomas J. Scanlan of Clin­ • Mr. Kil'chdocrfer has done gra­ Blexrud, plans to spend a week 414 S. Lucas, and Harold M. Don­ A three-tiered bride's coke cen­ 000 to 100,000 persons "in a few ton, and Reimer A. Perkins of Visitors at the Eleventh Annual To Enterlain nelly of Iowa City, son of Hubel'( lercd the tabl at a br'caklast duate work here and Is now high in Iowa City. bours." Chicago, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gladioll\ festival in Cedar RllPlds . Donnelly of Vinton, were mal'ri d acter the ceremony in the Jetter­ school principal in Martensdale. Saturday and Sunday were Mr. A. Perkins, also of CHnton. • • • Bridge and euchre Will be in St. Patrick's church with the ~o n hotel. Bouquet of pink pom­ Wilma Powers, 755 Oakland, and Mrs. Louis Pelzer, Mrs. C. E. played at the public card party Rev. P. J. O'Reilly officiating. pom osters and whit gladioli were The ceremony will be in St. Seashore. Mrs. Carl Seas.hore Jr., SaJIy Shulman, Mary's rectory in Clinton and the Norton-Munb. spent the week end in Hannibal, Wednesday at 2:15 p.m. in the j "Beni Jesu," "Ave Maria," on either side of the centerpiece. • The announcement has been Mo., visiting in the home of Mary and daughter, Julianne, Mrs. basement of St. Wenceslaus "Bright and Pure" and "Oh Lord, For her traveling costume, the couple will live at 500 W. Fuller­ Chester Phillips Dnd Jessie Phil­ made of the approaching marriage Frances Luck. Miss Luck will be church. I Am Not Worthy" wer sung by bride wore a black net dress, ton avenue in Chicago. lips. Shapiro ot Eleanor Mae Muntz of Des a sophomore in the university this The party will be sponsored Mrs. Walter Riley and Mrs, C. tl"immed with white lace. Her Miss Scanlan is a graduate of fall. • • • by the St. Wenceslaus Ladies club Urban Kelly. Mary Louise Regan accessories were red and black. St. Mary's high school in Clinton Moines and Charles W. Norton, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Norton • • • Dr. and Mrs. I. L. Gould and with Mrs. Tom Neuzil acting as was the organist. The couple will be at home Wed Sunday and attended Scoville Business family of Kellogg spent the week hostess. The bride wore a gown of Rilk aftel' Sept. ] at 619 E. Market. college there. Mr. Perkins wos of Avoca. The ceremony will take Visiting in the home ot Mrs. place Sept. 1. 1. L. Pollock, 212 Park road, is end in the home ot Mr. and Mrs. graduated from Clinton high 1. L. Pollock, 212 Park Toad . Hal'J'iage Takes Place school and attended Wartburg Lieutenant Norton is a graduate Josephine Pollock of Madison, • college in Waverly, He received of the university here and is af­ Wis. • • In thicago Ceremony his B. S. C. and M. A. degrees in filiated with Alpha Tau Omega • • • The Rev. and Mrs. R. M. Krue- 4t Temple of Isaiah the university here. At present he Ifraternity. He has been . stationed Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Potter gel', 117 E. Market, returned yes­ is employed with Ernest and Er- at Ft. Crook, Neb., but 1S now at of New York City 'Sre spendIng! ~erday from a ten-day vacation In the temple Isaiah in Chl­ nest, C. P. A., in Chicago. Little Falls, Minn. The couple will the week in the home ot Mr. Pot- In Park Rapids, Minn. Sunday, Sally Shulman, __ live at Camp Ord, Monterey, Cal., ter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank: • • • of Mr. and Mrs. H. where Lieutenant Norton has been lin Potter, 248 Hutchinson. Aaron Wolle of Lawrenceburg, 946 Iowa, and Erving Stuart-Sherlock transferred. • • • Ind., Is visiting Sam Shluman, Shapiro of Chicago were mar­ In a single ring ceremony Bar­ Mrs. Henry Homek and friends 946 Iowa, this week. with Rabbi Rosenthal offi- bara Elaine Stuart, daughter of of Cedar Rapids spent yesterday • • • Mr. and Mrs. J ames Stuar1 ot Paulos-M\ller visiting in the Louis Pelzer home, Edith Hotka ond Mildred Sed- North Liberty, and Wilton W. The wedding of Mary Paulos, 127 Ferson. lacek returned yesterday from a bride wore a floor-lenith daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James of green with a matching Sherlock ot Anamosa, so n of Mr. • • • visit at Lake OkobOji. and Mrs. Robert Sherlock of Ox­ Paulous of Ironwood, Mich ., and and veil; her long gloves Mrs. J. A. Parden and children, • • • ford, were married Aug. 1 in thp Eli G. Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bob, Mary and Dorothy, 225 River, VisIting friends in Iowa City white. White orchids were First Methodist church here. G. E. Miller of Cedar Rapids, took left Sunday morning fot' a week's this week is Margaret Gordon, now flowers. Mrs. Maude Whedon Smith and place Juiy 28 in the Church ot vacation at Clear Lake. employed on the Register and Tri­ Sam L. Robinson of Iowa Mrs. E. W. Hostettler of Iowa City the Transfiguration in Ironwood. • bune in Des Moines. a sister of the bride, was • • supplied the special music. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Miller are at Mr. and Mrs. Herberi White • • • of honor. Robed Lewis of Iowa City was home at 734 W. Colfax avenue in and Mr. and Mrs. Omar Hatfield Mr. and Mrs. Charles Showers Immediate families of the the matron of honor and the South Bend, Ind., where MI'. Mil­ and daughters, Jean, Alaee and and daughter Portia, route 5, were attended a dinner, served bridesmaids were Helen Sherlock Jer is employed on the South Bend the Hotel Beldon-Stratford. of Oxford and Margaret Gould of Tribune. He is a graduate of the lin. Shapiro is a grad uaate 01 Cedar Rapids. Russell Sherlock of university school of journalism -. City high school and the Oxford was best man, and ushers and is a former membet· of The LAST DAY lIIiVtraity here. Mr. Shapiro is were Ralph Smith of North Lib­ Daily Iowan staff. Mrs. Miller at­ "Shop Around Corner" manager of the Chicago ~ea"p' , 1'- erty, Bud Came of Anamosa and tended Northwestern university. AND of the Certified Hosiery Dick Reha of Iowa City. '''!\Dar\y A reception was held later in "Man Who Talked Too· Much" a three·week trip throulh Iowa Union for 130 guests. OOORS OPEN 1:15-S5e to 5:30 New England states, the cou­ The bride was graduated from will be at home at the Fair­ university high school and attend­ ~ switch to ISO-VIS hotel, 1359 Hyde park boule­ ed the university here. Mr. Sher- STARTS WEDNESDAY In Chicago. TODAYJ T~~=Y" the ceremony were MERRY ••• MAD­ the favorite of IIIlelwest motori.... and Mrs. H. Shulman and FIVE MAIDS ON A Sam, Mr. and Mrs. Sam L. MAN-HUNTI .":llIIIIIln and Mr. and Mrs. Louis ,1I-MUIllJOIIS • A film so thin you'd need a microscope to measure it! all of Iowa City, and IlAlTHAUYI That's wh at keeps your engine from going haywire. It's a fI-4 MI'I. Herbert Shulman ot JOE"•• tough job for a motor oil, but Iso· Vi5 is built to "ralee it." Wit. GARSON L_ , IOSUWYLAII Modest price. Safe lubrication. Fewer quam berween I tllNE HElVEY drains. Three reasons why more midwest motorist! buy OLiVID. I a... IIInIlWIIIIII Iso·Vis than any ocher oil. ~iitP.1P.r. • "~ I Ii~tiJ~ I!I I ALSO WENDELL WILLKIE 4 011.-4 price. r.. '.y ...... as guest star in C''''II c..... ,.".., UlftK THEN S80 LII ISO-VIS,'" .andO_ • •• ...... IIlU- ••·-QUAXIl.STATI. III "'" ,,_ .... t. A .. y StIIntIIInI STARTS TODAY INFORMATION PLEASE roLAIINI, III ...... ,.... STANOUND ...... 111154 rI.· 011 DMIet "lID nOM KOKOMO" .-ADDED mTS­ • • I"...... !cotl• • ,... ,•••• ... O'Brten-.Joan BlondeD DISNEY CARTOON PI... SWING SOCIAL "CARTOON" Gn IT 'ROM YOUI IYANDAID OIL DIALIR "PUVATB DETECTIVE" -LATE- NEWS- PLUTO THE DOG '''' ",_Dick F_ I~l!~ PAG~ FOUR THE DAILY IOWAN, IOY'A CI1Y > Savold Knocks 0 t Nestell in Third Roun ~ .~------~=~-=-=--======~====~======~==:======~======~======;======~. Blond Bomber Knocks NesteD Pressbox Red Sox Hammer Cleveland 16 to 7 .. Indians,! Down )fwice for Nine-Count BOSTON. Au,. 19 (AP)-The starter Joe Dob on in the third win but ol\ly Weatherly, Trosky Bell. rl ...... i 0 ! ! 0 0 He,·lng. u ...•...... Ii 0 Z 0 1 0 K hnrr, 3b I 0 0 I ~ B06ton Red Sox gained their mOllt inning and then hopped on Hum­ and Rpy managed to hit ...... I Pickur~ 13ell Grim,.. ~b ...... J I U 0 4 TOTAI_" ...... 9 16 U 27 II ) .Mack, %~ J •I lUI 010 210-7 d~cisive tdumph of the season phries to pull into a 12-2 lead at safely against him twice...... I I I CI.,·.lond ...... Trapshooters c 4,000 Chilled Fans H.m.l ~y. c ...... •! 0 I 1 i BOAton •....•.• .• •. •. •• 11<1 'III Slx-IG oyer ll1e league-leading Cleveland the end of lhe fourth. That mar­ Dobson lIave the S.ox six hits Pyllak. c ...... I 1 0 •0 nUIl8 batted In-Heath I. Troak.y 2. IndlaIls today by hammering three gin was a great help to Joe Hev­ and as many runs before he was J)ob.on...... •I 0 I •1 ff 0 \\' •• therly, P}'lIak. Hale. Tabor lowball pitching lor 12 hits, in­ ed for seven hits and nine runs. DOI,Nt. p ...... 0 0 0 • bit - WtbLlhforl)', ~J.oJll O runA -- Henth. • • • " "eatherlt", l"fHlky. F"oxx, " ' llIlam•• I n TIt e eet cluding homel's by Hal Tros~y ------Jim Tabor .>ma hed out a "grand . Dorsett took over the Cleveland 1'01'.11>8 ...... 38 7 Doerr. '-"001', . SaOrlfh.:•• -Cru.mer. era­ DES MOINES. Aug. 19 (AP) I~Z 8~~. 11 • slammer" against Johnny Hum­ Jeff Heath and Roy Weath~rly. mound in the eighth inning and x-R~tlN.I rOr HumphrJe! "JR. Double P.La.YI-D(Wirr. Cronin and 0 .• Mo' h PI.ReY. Left oa ~...-cl.v land I; VANDALIA. Aug. 19. (AP~ -Lee Slivoid. 1110. of Des phries in the fourth inning after Foxx. Williams and Doerr each gave but one hit. Doerr's homer. HOSTO." /\8 R 111'0 A F. 8011ton • • Ball•• t)ft hs.lI.-Qrc l>Qb80n 4. -S i x national championships knocked out Bob Nestell. 188. oj Le&'w Iaear • btl of 1M "too Jimmy Foxx had belted his 33rd scored lhree times, and Foxx led Dft Hutnl\llrlea 1:. ott Hfi'linK 2 Slruck went into the record books today Los Angeles. Ca\., here toni,hl LI':\' I':Li\l"1I /UJ R H IJO 4' E DIMaggio. cr ...... J. , 1 0 0 OU~- ay · HUmphrl I 1. by U"'IDIr ~. lilts UveLY ball" 1IQ ••iq ••1' Ua.W circuit drive of the year. Ted the Sackers' attack by getting - Cramer. rr ...... •4 l ~ J 0 0 -orr oa_n , In ! '·3 in nl n11'.. ott at the 41st Grand American trap- the third round of ibeir scheduled WilUams and Bobby DoelT al 0 three hits for four, including the Cbap~n . It ...... ! 1 0 I II n Foxx. c ...... 4 , Ii 0 H umphrl ... 7 In 4 1·3 Innlns,. OIl Dor­ shoot. Qut the opening day's 100,- 10-round bout. Buk ba 1939. &Ia. GIa bU a nealh. Ir ...... ! I I 0 n 0 Willi_me, Ie ...... •J l I e •0 "ell 1 In 1 inning. J.A:Hdng Jlhche.--.Oob­ help~d pile up the score by driv­ game's only two-bagger. The in­ W""lherly. 0 1 ...... I t S Q 0 '''Jn IlP)', tI...... ,• I I I! 0 0 Obn. OOO-shell barrage caused less re- A crowd of 4.000 chilled !pet• ieaa ___ Uln ••"e .... e 01 .~19. wU~ • ing balls out of the park. dians sent 16 player to bat .aainst ~ou '(0 /e,6p '1i{e;. ~oil'\es as an alternate on the Mich .• tied for fourth place with The missed putt gave Snead the games are just as tough. with New York 9; Cincinnati 2 McCarthy at til'St base. Mel Ott at cou.e~ AU.' ~1'ARS East squad for the first annual third and John Rucker In center­ 98 of 100. IS-hole playoff by a one- \rel.l three top-notch non-conference high school all-star game between Boston 3; Pittsburgh 0 A6AIItIS1" 1'~ ~~ field. were too much for the Cin­ margin as 1.500 spectators saw tIr teams playing almost :full Big ""''1 the East and the West the night Only games scheduled Ten schequles. PActc:~S IN <:~,,~ cinnati Reds who bowed. 9-2. to­ two Americans decide their 72· of August 30. at Drake stadium. AMERICAN LEjAGUE day. hole deadlock. Each finished till '.fhe three, Notre Dame. Mich­ AUG.~ Des Moine . J W. L Pct. G.B. Hubbell. in marking up his third regulation four rounds with a 2,: !fan State and Nebraska. each White. at the close of the ballot­ Cleveland .... 69 46 .600 H awk eye I v ictory of the /jeason over the total Saturday when McSpade take on a of 'Veswn confer­ ing last week. was 67 votes be­ Det~oit ...... 66 49 .574 3 league leaders. limited them to rallied on the last 36 holes II ence o~tfIb. Notre Dame's Irish hind his teammate. Bob Caywood. Boslon ...... 63 52 .548 6 · hZ· ht battle [lUnols, Iowa and Norih­ seven hits, while his starting op­ Htg tg S overtake Snead. who had hack" Who grabbed the fourth spot Chicago ...... 58 52 .527 8Y.. ponent Paul Derringa' was blasted !-----~~---'=-----' nine sLrokes off par on the first western, Mlchl,an Sta~ tackles Ben Hogan vs. 'Public Jitters' among the guards. This closeness New York .... 57 53 .518 9* for four runs in the first inning It won't be long now before two rounds. Indiana. Mlchi,an and Purdue in the race between the two Red Washington .. 49 64 .434 19 and driven to cover in the filth. Iowa football players report Ior and the Huskers take on Iowa., • • • • • • • • • Today Snead had a par 11 allel' Little Pro Catches P ... blic's Eye, But Now and White boys, who each polled St. Louis ... .47 69 .405 221f.. The Giants. who displayed some the opening drill Sept. 10 a rather shaky start. He was oul IDdlana and Mlnneso~. • over 33.000 votes. undoubtedly In­ Philadelphia 43 67 .91 233* of thefr worst form of the season "Dad" Schroeder. wn other and the muddled middle­ Dllvis (4-9) and Fitzsimmc;ms 'rOTA l.8 ...... 11 0 H 27 II 0 practice again at the University graphs. radio interviews, and somt' to . hake those putts in-instead wei~t championship pictut·e. neighborhoods of any Big Ten (12-2) VS. McGee (12-9) ana CINCINNATI AU II< JJ 1'0 1\ ti of Iowa track and baseball lip kid. The Boilermakers list as unheard of demands-all during of letting them hang on the Zal~, recognized by the Nation&1 Shoun (9-7>. men will work until inclemcnt Kallsas Cfty 000 410 OOJ~ 10 I tourDllmeIlt pl~, of the cup. Boxing association as the middle­ Werber. Jb ...... ,. ... 4 0 1 0 2 0 away from home games :five de­ Boston at Pittsburgh - SalVO f'.Y. Ib ...... !I D 0 Q I 0 weather sets in ... and the Hawk­ Louisville .... 020 000 10~ 8 f The~e demands were entirely It will take him a little time weight champion. won·t be risk­ cidedly rugged contests - with (6-5) vs. Lanahan (3-5). Goodma.n. r( ....•... . 4 1 1 3 0 1 ~ye basketball squad will start Wensloff and Riddle; Paullleill new to Ben. for he had developed to master that department >of the ing l1is Utle in this scheduled F. MeCorml('k. 11, ... . <4 0 1 10 0 0 OhiQ State. Michigan State, Iowa, PbUadelp!lla at Chicago.Pear­ r IOmhardl. c .•...•... !I 0 1 6 0 0 drills about Oct. l5. and LeWis. a power of concentration t hat game. His present case of "public to-round affair because it's lin Fordham and Minnesota, while lion 12-9) v~. O~n (8-8). WlllIOn. 0 •••••••••••• ~ 1 1 0 0 U In addition to coaching the All- started with the practice round jitters" will vanish with time. and overweight match. But the ex­ Arnoylen. Ir ...... I 0 0 I 0 0 meeting only Butler. Wisconsin M. McCorl11lck. ot .... t 0 Z 6 0 0 Stars. Eddie Anderson also is one We , m ~(ue anq. Indiana in Ross-Ade stadium. and, continued throughout the once he takes the public in hii steelmil1 wor~~r from Gary. Ind .• JQo.~...... 2 0 0 2 7 0 of the leading instructors in Worthington 030 000 ,010-4 • tournament. Whether-he was iak- stride you'll Cind the big-little man will be risking loss at much pres­ D{';rrln&"lIr, p •. .•.•... 2 0 0 0 0 0 Riddle. I) ...... , ... , 0 0 0 0 J 0 Northwestern univer3ity's coach- Mitchell ·.... 060 020 10x-~ 11 ing a shower or tieing his shoc of golf drawing galleries equal tige both to S003e and Ken Over­ Errickson, CrRlt. • ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 ing course which started Monday Puck, Scheel and Kruege.:. strings Ben was concentrating po to those of Joncs' day. lln, recognized as the 160-pound Sho!fncr. ~ ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 . . . some 200 college and high han; Lindsey. R. PefTY .I\Qd king by the state of New York. 8~kcr...... ' ..... ' I 0 0 0 0 \I I In the Dumps? Soose recently' beat Overlin in Clips Pirates school coaches are attending. land:'======:S=5~1 St ~ Mary's Clinches City Loop an overweight match at Scranton. 1I;;~;~(~ ',(~;,:: (,;;An i3 ~ ~ ~ No! fa., ~k~ a great linii;h to take , z:£-BttUed for 'hotrner In 8th . neck, the decision. On Wedneiday night For 9th Victory New York ...... 401 022 000-9 Clnelnnl.tl ...... , ...... 100 000 010-1 he has a chance to whip a second Reds Get Prepared Power Boys, l25·8 " Run. batted In- Moore, Delllarte. r.~e ­ By Beating atrJllight 1.0.pound titleholder and PITTSBURGH. Aug. 19 (AP) earthy 2. Dannlng, Ott. Cucclncllo a t \Vtlok, OoodUlan. Bilker. Two blJtJe hlU To Take Advantage c~hn r~olnition as the No. 1 -Dick Errickson pitched Boston -Ruck~r • .),oortJ. letcCiu 'thy, Da,l1ninR' 2. j , Nelson. rf ...... 2 1 I ~~cllewejgM in the land eve J] to a 3 to 0 victory today over CucclneUo. Three hase hlt-Oprnaree. Of Long Home Stay Gau (ocher Hits Three HOIllO ' rltnll-(ll L. Oood m~n . Stolon haJle ~ though he'd hold no crown. I Ahlif. p ...... 3 1 Pittsburgh. winning his ninth - Ruoker. Double plfl),- RlddIP. .fooKl Ho~e ' Run, ingle game of the season against nine and F. MoCormiok. I ~tt on bas(,I-New York : Cincinnati 13. 13 .... On ballll­ CINCINNATI. Aug. 19. (AP)­ Totals ...... 31 8 12 defeats and tumbling the Pirates ort Hubbe ll 8. orr ))errlnger I. arl Rh\­ For the first time th is year t~ere To Fatten Average Gelbe,., If' aived St. Mary's AB R • into sixth place in the National tile I, orr Shortn r 2. R~ruCk out- a~ was no one at the big union depot li,ubbell 5. by Dorrl",Of 1. Hilo-Or( SI. Mary's clinched the city Sulck. 3b-ss ...... 6 3 ., league standings. U'lrrlnger 1J In 4 2·3 Innln&'!!!. ott Rid· today to welcome the Cincinnati To Red Sox Sebastian Daniel Sisti scored die 2 In 2 ) ·3. orr Sbotlner n In I.• )/1. Rec;is back from t he outlands but league crown yesterday evening Mahcr. ss-c ...... 5 4 2 l' .. lluLcMn". I In 1. P .... ed ball-Lon>- the deciding run in ~e tbird bardl.l.oelng pilcher- Derringer. if you think the National league on the university intramural lleld, Gauloche.r. sf ...... 5 4 4 BOSTON. Aug. 19 (AP)- when he doubled and Carvel UmplrcIJ-Ooetl. Pine lli and Rear-iton. champions are in the dumps. buy as they mercilessly battered the Shannon. p ...... 5 3 2 Charles Gelbert, \ltility infielder of Rowell singled. Cheater Ross' Attcn(1(lllca-7.447 p Id. 10,012 woman. another ticket. Power Boys. 25 to 8. Bradley. Ib ...... 5 2 2 the Washinat/W & na~ors. W~ ob- single sent in two more runners B 'W' 54 U may be whistling in the ,rave- . Until the fifth inning, the game tained today by the lias ton Red after a walk and Deb Garms' r awn , In, .. chic •••'. c ...... I.y ••••• yard moonlight, but there's nobody was cLose. with St. Mary's lead­ Coen. lf ...... 5 1 2 Sox Ity the waiver route. _ error placed them on second and Brown's Cleaners officially won • hotel 01 great autograph ••. • Oil i.t around the Reds' frpnt Qffice or ing. 2 to I, but in the fatal fifth. B09k, 2b ...... 5 2 ~ R4jd Sox officials said Gelbert third bases. the prote.t~ game with, Racine's on U1e field who gives , a good the Marians opened up with eight Chadek. rf ...... 5 2 I was to report immediately to Man. Except for the lapse Joe - yesterd~ momma on the uni- r. gh •• " ill oollege-I"n'. ,..therra •• bla~ety-blank how many games runs on eight hits and followed it B f • 1 0 0 a&er Joe Cro"in. Gelbert. who is h II versi\,y.,. 'ntfamlU'lIl t,ield, with a the ,econd-place Brooklyn Dodg- with 13 tallies in the sixth. rown. c ...... _...... • a,. 'tas p l \ly~d . in 27 3r .3 70. ponent, the Pira~ being ~ unable The "ame was protested by .wing .a.te" play •• • li ••en nt,lI.., tals .... to hit in ·the pi nches. ~ I National league cbampions will leading battet. fattened his aver­ T o ...... 49 25 - ..,. Racine's and ,replllYeQ ~00'l the wmaq and .enr ••• , ..... roc .... re~t. ~ age with three homers anti a single .0 - - 'or V I nkS.Ti gers GtUDe 1J0000N B JI, H PO A It point IIf ttie dlBllute. but Racine's ".1'tte Reds have beef\ over the in five attempts. while Bradley St. MalOY's ...... 200 0 8 13 2-36 f" ------f iled <_ th t I_ of th. wollc:t 01 lo•• ,row ·•••• 1 _, f Boys 0 1 11 0 0 0 7' 0 t·' F tb Slotl .' lb ...... 1 1 1 " ~ • 0 a w score e. y ...g run. bUlIQIs." said one of the faithful hit 1wo homel'S in the sixtn mmna. ower ...... - .ain a&..... U m our Moore. rt ...... 6 Z 1 0 0 ampng the officials, "!;Iut they're Bra,;:k collected three sa~eties {Ol' M,'a.ra.lI, all lurprilint'y JH'OI\IJtI~ I • ~!'f'~[,I1.c/nt. . :::~::;:::: It : ~ ; : ~ OmH(n~. 9b ...... " 0 2 2 " wee~ loolUng better. Up to a 11110 the .champs as \lid Moore for the Tree Eye ~e NEW YORK. Aug. 19 (~)- lin .... Ir ...... 0 ! ~ 0 0 ~'ero""d ••. e ...... ~ 0 0 . 1 0 we tlad lost 12 out of 2', Qut we Power Bo~s. ' A · ~vere .. ai~torm wh\ch held up M·lll er. 1ft •••••• •••••• 4 0 J ! ! 0 lIo",",.". \l •.••••.••. 4 0 1 0 4 ..... 'a!.! " ,'s!.! '. Moline 5, Clillton 3. 1-i1\1"(ltt. Ib •..•....•. • 0 0 11 I 0 ' ------won three of the lut Hven " a~· Po1ftr Bon " ; AB Springfield 6. Waterloo 4. play for over an hour. finally B@ ...... e ...... 4 0 , 0 0 0 ro'l'>\I,S ...... a~ 0 9 27 13 I "~sid es. we'YI! been playin4 I HO\iYelj. lb ...... : .. ~.; .... :... : i a1 '. 1 2. 1; 2. caused postponement of the game I Hlrrlc~."n . " ...... 4 • ] 1 4 0 800toll ...... : .. nn~ 006 n06-3 Cedar Rapids 'Decatur 1, ·L.e New York Yankees ------PIU.bur .. h .•...... •••. 000 000 000-0 holel .h...... ,700 baJl at home all IN!a,on a"d Moore. c ...... 4 f ~ )lapi&on 11, Evana,!iUe 7. between m TO"" 1.8 ...... as ~ I If H 0 Runs t....tt.d In-Row.lI. Ro.. I. '1''' 0 don't think that home cooking for Putman. 2b ...... 3 o '0 and the Detroit Tigers at the Yan- baBe .r_Moo,·e. \'"u.. h~". BI.tl. Stole" ~, ~4e,..( .!&Je Md!fj 9',& S1...t I'fT1'IIal'1WJl "II a 111'0 A E ba.~Rd".II " Dbublo nlay-'Row ell . Mil. ihe next 20 games ian't aoini to Strohmeyer. 3b ....; ...... A .. ~ _1 1 IJee .~ium tod¥y. ------:--,----- ler .IId H ....t .. 1"If! on bRIM-BOlton help that hitting.slumP. TtJe out- Vergamini, ss ...... 3 1 1 Norrolk ...... 100 002 001-4 7 2 The Yp nks had sl;ored three ::: ~~ ~~;: fl~ ::::::::: ~ ~ : I~ ~ ~j:I~:.~.bt~~I~o!~;:nn~ . ~:~~;;;?f~ •.;'r . cltlcalo tie"'l is hilting I~lter. aod if \ () Millet'. -se ...... :...... " . {l 1 1> i •.lu l( Fn lls .... 000 11110 1100-:1 7 :I I'III1N ~n tll('lI' hnlf of Oi(' fllllr1l1 no,·m .•.. "", ...... , ...· 1 0 ~ I ·· I n; 1~"· II\.n I. ~ drive your car right into tU hotel __ en!) play .700 for thi.S \lonle,sl.flnrl, O'Brien, cf ...... 3 1 1 '0 \110 an(\ Holland; McEntep anli ;11111118 And we~o ahead 3-0 when Vouhnn." ...... j U I. g \ T1u',:~~;-oon.• II ."IO"I. Onmr,h,lI. KI.1l1 . lIed th Va" \Iohar•• 11 ...... U ~ • " :we'r, in and no foolin·." B. 'Hauser, ll ...... 3 1, 1 Fenner. the UIltP~eil c;a e game. Iil III."" rr ...... 4 0 0 • 0 0 ' Auend.o ...... l, ... '. ZO,194O , TUESDAY, AUGUST 20,1940 THE DAILY lOW AN, IOWA CITY PAGE FIVE ~ ored at two courtesies this week. elect, Mrs. Mary Kron, president toord Flynn · Alice Lang Thursday Miss Lang and Ray- of the group, Neuzl1, . Finds Willkie 'We W ant Work, Not Relief' Willkie mond Hotka wjll be married in Mary Haman, Mrs. Agnes Hotz . • • • • • • • • • Sl Wenceslaus church. Mrs. Eli&abeth SchilUg, Mrs. Wil Story"":' Given Honor Yellow and green was the fred Cole, Mrs. Richard Ka.6par I Pro-New Deal A Story of the Search for S curity of Migrating American . u Mrs. Frank Kolar, Mrs. Mlc:hae 1 I co Or s ch eme 0 t a nusce aneous Edinbum and the hostes. The G. o. P. Candidate shower given for Miss last Rev. Father J Falconer was NEW YORK, Aug. 19 (AP)­ cmCAGO, Aug. 19 (AP) - witnesses urged the government Ihe cou1d not qUtlllty fQr ~eliet Brid&Elect Given Lan, Edward J. Flynn, democratic na­ The plight of the ''man witbout to initiate a plan for migratory because bis nine months ablience Had His Troubl 'Shower, Breakfa t night by Kathryn Neuztl in her also a guest. worken;. made him ineligible lOlder tbe home. 314 E. Davenport. ------stell UOIIIII chairman, said tonight that a country," who wanders about On One Occasion Later, George Hanke, 37, a Illinois three-year residence law. During Pa l Week Gue ts who shared the courtesy ~'r8. Wendell L. WillkJe's speech ac­ the nation seeking work or aid., Bertha Sidwell Chicago machinist, testified that "1 don't ~ Were I ~ were Mary Haman, Edith Hotka, cepting the republican presiden­ was pointed out today by wi~ he went to Minneapolis last year, now," he said. .RUSHVILLE. Ind.. Aug. 19 Alice Lang, bride-elect, daugh­ Marie Shimiu, Gene\'1eve Vitosh. Gi"en Reception tial nomination showed he be­ nesses at a hearing conducted by worked four and a halt months He reported that he was wash­ (AP)-W~ndell L. Wi1lkie today ter of ~. John J. Lang, 711 Hazel Chadek, Dorothy Campion. By Frienm Todoy lieved "in most everything that the special congressional commit­ until his job "blew up," applied inJ dishes in return for help he told his stOry about his CQUJ:tship ~ Bloomington, has been hon- Alice Campion, Florence Schne­ the Roosevelt administration h as tee on interstate migration. for relief and was sent back to and his wife and chUd received of Mrs. Wlllkie to a crowd of berger, Marcella Kron, Mildred Garden flowers will be u.sed r~ The congressmen Ustened to acco mplished. " Chicago, upon his return here, from the Salvation army. neighbors in Memorial Park: my coat on the rack and then Sedlacek and Bernice Krall. as decorations at a reception to the stories two men and two In a nationwide (CBS) broad­ ot he added, he was iruormed that Two siJlSs, Karen Lee, 20, "There used to be IlD inter­ remembered I had left my candy Tiny sprinkling cans were fa­ day given tor Mrs. Bertha Sid cast. his first since he succeeded girls who had roved from region and Katherine, 18, related how urban line wh.ich oonnecled El­ in the Cir$1, car. J went back for vors at a breakfast which hon­ well, who is leaving Iowa City .JtD1eS A. Farley as head of the tC' region in search of security they left iheir bome in Kansas wood and Rushville. 1 wanted it, my hat blew oU, and the ored Miss Lang Sunday morning. lor the winkr months. Co-hos and heard Chicago and Illinois aaliDOal committee, Flynn as­ City six years 1110, worked as d0- to come trom Elwood to R~lh­ teai n ran (wer it. Hostess at the event was Mrs. tesses will be Mrs. Albert B 011'icials opine that the federal W led that instead of "a vigor­ Useless! mestics \n St. Louis until 1938, ville on Il very important mis­ ''The Cllr with my candy moved James Schmidt in her home, 71 8 Sidwell and Mn. A. W. Ben OUS and specific indictment of government shou1d take the lead hitchhiked to Gaillornia and sion-but it was not business. oIl in one direction and the car N . Johnson. Pink and blue nett and the event will take DeW deal measures" WiUkle il' solving the problem and that Nobody Pay Any thumbed. rides to Chicago last "r went to a arug store and with my Q\'ercoat on it moved 011' shades were used in the table place in the home of the former, 'lOllod it in bis heart to praise." state laws covering destitute week. They were found in a bought a box ot candy. r put it in the otb r. appointments and gifts were pre­ 223 Melrose, [rom 3 o'clock to "We have his own word for it," wayfarers should be changed. Attention park. they added, and turned over on the hat sbelt of Ule interurban "I wen~ to the jail and talked sented to Miss Lang in a larger 5:30. it said, "that he believes in tbe Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chi­ to the care of the Salvation car and took otf my overcoat. to the sheriU. He gave me an sprinkling can. Assistant hostesses will be cago spoke in favor changing ~ and hours law, that he ot WASHINGTON, Aug. 19 (AP) army. We cam to Tjp~on, wheJ;'e you overcoat twice my size and a hat Members of the Legion of Mary Mrs. Robert Spencer, Mrs. E. L the Illinois statute requiring believes in federal regulation of -Toward the fag end of today's They emphasized that the y had to change cars. naif my iu and I cQmpleted my ot St. Wenceslaus church were Titus, Mrs. Herman Smith and aecurilies markets, banking and three years residence before a wanted work DDt relief. "I got into the other car,. put mi ion." present. They included the bride- Mrs. E. R. Means. non-resident is eligible for ald. conscnp tion d e b a t e, g a 11 e r Y Interstate utilities, that he favors ~------~------t.nn relief, that he favors social He advocated a one year resi­ cheering interrupted a speech by P OPEYE ,Jeturity, old-age benefits and dence instead. He also suggested Senator Connally (D-Tex). that laws in other states, where UfIeIT\Ployment allowances. . .tt Senator King (D-Utah). pre­ residence requirements range Earlier, in a press conference, siding, announced that he would the democratic cbairman de­ from six months to five years, admonish the galleries. Connally, JUibed as a "cbeap publicity shou1d be revised for the sake ilunt" Willkie's suggestion that of uniformity. Several 0 the r whose speech had suffered nu- J!resident Roosevelt meet him in merous interruptions of one sort debate, and commented: publican leaders. and another, waved his hand in I "After Mr. Willkie's speech, 1: Samuel F. Pryor Jr., director weary protest. I Ihinlc that the best th.ing that of the eastern division of t he )lr. WUlkie I:an. do is to vote for republican national campaign "Mr. Pre~dent," he sair., "there J')'esident Roosevelt." committee, made this commen\ ain't any use of doing it. They've during a press conference: bee~ admonished all day an~ they I Pryor Will 'Let "I will let those who heard don t p~y any more attention" to Mr. WiUkie be the judge whether I the chaIr than the senate does. The People Judge' it was tor political purposes or NEW YORK, Aug. 19 (AP)­ whether he really meant it or BLind Pianist to Wed The assertion of Democratic Na­ not. You know the difference LOS ANGELES, (AP) - Alec tional Chairman Edward J. Flynn between the new deal govern­ Andrew Templeton, 30, blind ra­ that Wendell L. WiUkle's chal­ ment and the Hitler government dio and concert pianist from Eng­ Jeoge to President Roosevelt to -Hitl er assassinates you and the land, and Juliet! Vaiani, 39, di­ CHIC YOUNG debate issues with him was "a new deal assassinates characters vorced singer of Beverly Hills, cbeap publicity stunt" brought an -but 1 trust the American peo­ applied yesterday for a license to immediate retort today from re- ple's judgment." wed next Sunday. ..

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-' . PAGE SIX THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY, IOWA TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1944 Hitler May he Planning to Force Early Decision with Unleashed Fury of Attack

Signs Indicate Hint of Fall ix Were Injured Wizen These Cars Crashed Ickes- Dies Warns That '5th Column I (Continued From Page 1) Coo] Weather Here-- I Invasion' Is Already a Reality j Crucial Week dienee, I suggest that he challenge 51.Degree Low his runnlOg mate, Senator Me· . ------~. Nary, with whom he is i1t greater • Now at Hand Urges Nation to Stop 1 Cool temperaturcs typical of I Ivariance on domestic and loreign Britain-- lal1 weather invaded Iowa City issues than his speech or accept­ 'Armed Invasion' Talk 1 ance shows hun to be with the (Continued From Page 1) ! Briti h Air Frontier8 yesterday holding the m.,r~U>i And Get Busy at Home down to 69 degl'ees as its high­ president." Hanllllf'TCfl Inwa rd; est mark. Low tor the day was Ickes silid the Wlilkie speech SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 19 (AP) tending from Eritrea on the nortt True Damage Hidden a cool 51 degrees. had failed to Jive up to its ad- - Americans were warned today to the border of Britain's KeDJ1 Normals for the day were vance "build-up." by Congressman Martin Dies that colony on the south-the whole III BY EDWARD E. BOMAR 84 degrees high and 62 degrees I ,. A man cannot mnke an eCfec- their first line of defense against the "horn of Africa." ; Although many uncertaInties low. The high mark was but 1 tive assault on the new delll when foreign invasion should be pro- ltly has won a strip of COlI! cloak the air war over England, seven degrees above the normal I he accepts the new d"al In prm- tectlon against an "I nvasion by covering part of the Red sea I} it is probable that the nazi raids low mark for the day and the l'lple," he said. fifth columni:.:its which alrcady has the "back door" of the Suez CIJ will be intensified sharply, and low was I t degrees below normal. Finds Al'reement taken place." nal, the narrow Rab EI Randell soon, as Adolf Hitlel' undertakes Readings a year ago were 81 He expressed thanks to WiUkie The chairman or the congres- strait between French Somalilanl 10 force an early decision. degrees high and 64 degrees low. fol' agreeing with Mr. Hoosevelt ional committee investigating un- and Britain's protectorate, ibI As many as 1,000 planes have No rain fell through Sunday or I on such tOPICS as selectivc sel'vlce American activities said he favor- Gulf of Aden and the India! been sent ovel' Bl'ilnin in a single yeslerday and warmer weather and material aid to Britllin, but d preparedn S5 and national de- ocean. doy during more than a week of was pl'edicted fOI' today. "deplored" lhe nOllllllcc'S aelton fense, "but I can'l undel'stand I Suc~ess of the Italian drive i hammenng without giving Ger­ in lOssing "a sop to the biller 1111- why certain persons are trying Somaltland, regarded by BriUs many the air control demanded ti-Roosevell isulationists" by ac- to scare the American people with observers as a possible prelu tor a successfu I i1tlempl at inva­ cusing the president 01 ineiting talk about an outright military in- to an attack on Egypt, also It sion 01' a decisive blockade. Organizations the country to war and mislead- vDsion when lhose pel',ons al'e not cures the rear of Italy's W The d fending fighters are still ing other nations. dO:l1g anything about the invasion African forces which mllbt at- battling with such effect that the "By what gril~shopper leilp of which ah'eady has taken place. tempt a coordinated squeeze ~ British claimed for Sunday "the Plan Meetings thc imaginatiun does this candi- "All this talk about sending Egypt and the Anglo-Egyptian III. greatest defeat Germany has yet date conclude that this president Americ:m troops or ships to help dan with Marshal Rodolfo Orm. suffered" in the aerial warfare, has not taken the coulltry into his the English is foolish. We have ani's army in Libya, on the west. and royal air force bombs are able During Week tonfidenct! un forclgn pulic'Y?" 'our hands full right here." Withdrawal was decided on, "'i to harass theil' foes in France, Ickes demanded. Di es said he would demand, in British announcement said, as III Germany and Ilnly in nightly "Have the dangers against which a speaking tour acr 3S the na- alternative to reinforcing the. raids. rowa Cily Women's President ltuosevcll repeatedly lion, starting here tomorrow nighl , Somalilond garrison with reserv, Nazi Boast Church Groups Li 1 warned failed tu materialize'! Is thai PreSident Roos veli and who were needed elsewhere. The air command asserts 513 the Hitler attack on Englul1d a Wendell Willkie stille "unequivoc- l raiders were shot down in direct Even ts for Gatherings I manufactured punic? ally" whether they ravor out- LEGAL NOTICE combat ",lone in the last seven "Does not MI'. wdlkie remem- lawing "foreign-controlled" politi­ days, probably as many as Ger­ Women's organizations r rom bel' that, tIme and aguin, the cal organizations, and whether NOTICE OF RESOLUTION Ol! man factories cou ld replace in four Iowa City churches are president sought lu urow;e the they favor job preference for Am­ DERING CONNECTION8 that time. l<'ighting 01 this nature planning business and social American people to the danger in ericans. TO BE MADE might go on for weeks without a meeti ngs this week. the EUropean siluation, only to Dies said he would ask congress TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. decision. have his request for defense ap- for $60,000 mOre to continue in­ All propel'ty owners interesleO The signs arc multiplying, how­ propriations attilcked again and vestigations, including about 60 are hereby notified that On th~ If Business Meeting again as excessive uud unneces- days on the west coast. ever, that the full fury of the at­ . . . 01 the Ladies Aid society 12th day of August, 1940, the Cit" tack is about to be unleashed, as sary; only to have Ilis warnings Secret sessions were held here. Council of Iowa City, Iowa, a do pt ~ of the Christian church will be met again and agnin with jibes The congressman said lhe nexl predicted lrom Berlin. held at 2 p.m, tomorrow. ed a resolution ordering that ~ The nazi boast thal Britain's air and jeers Crom Mr. WJI)kie's new· Ipublic session probably would be connections trom gas, wa ter a~ power could be crippled with found friends, and to be accused, in New York aboul next Monday. steam heating pipes, sewers ooC three more days of favorable wea- Fall Plans • • • as Mr. Willkie shabbily accused He set this date in response to underground electric connectiOl\i ther, a Gt!rman warning that . . . will be discussed at a him on SatUl'day, of inventi~ war a telegram trom Congr "sman to the curb line of the prope1 parachute troops must be treated meeting of t1,le Ladies Guild of scares foJ' selfish political pur- Thomas (R-NJ), who requested adjacent to the proposed per~ according to international law, the English Lutheran church to­ po~es'?" public hearings in Newark, N. J., nent improvement by pavlnt the order making all Britain a morrow. The group wiu gather after he said about 1,000 persons which said Improvements weI'! defense area, reports trom Ameri­ at 2:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs. attended a meeting of the German ordered by this council on the 121jt can correspondents with the at­ Charles 'Messner, 830 N. Dubuque. · American bund, the Ku Klux Klan day of August, 1940, on the fol. tackers-ali point to the conclu­ The hostesses will be Mrs. A. I , 074 MiSSlllg , ond another organization al Camp lowing streets and parts of $tree. sion that lh crucial week of the C. Cox, Mrs. Darwin Cox, Mrs. , N. J., Sunday. in the City of Iowa City, la-will offensive is at hand. Charles Anciaux, Mrs. William Dies expressed the hope several LEE STREET-from the north" 130 Dead I n film figures would appear before 'I'h at the nazi ait· force is cap­ Groh and Mrs. A. C. Lind. A so­ line of River Street to the north~ able of intensifying the raids ma­ cial ho ur will be held aIter the line of Highwood Street. British Disaster 1 him 10m_or_I·0_w. ___ terially thel'e seems little doubt. business meeUng. HIGHWOOD STREET- from, At ait'dromes from Bergen to the west line of Lee Street tot Brest there are probably 5,000 Professor Skee]s the east line of Blackhawk­ opel'oting planes, by authoritative Mrs. Susan Dubell • . LONDON, Aug. 19, (AP)-The Selecled to Judge street. neutral estimates, with thousands . . . 1211 Kekuk, will entertain admiralty tonight listed 1,074 of­ be made within 12 days fro m th~ more in reserve. Formidable as it the Gladhand prayer meeting 01 ficers and seamen as missing and State Baby Contest 20th of August, 1940, said con; has shown itself, the R. A. F. is the Christian church at 7:30 p.m. 130 killed in Britain's wOl'sl na­ nections to be made in accord, certainly smaller. tomorrow in her home. val disaster of tile wal', the sink· Prof. Harold M. Skeels of the ance with the ordinances of said Control Not Won Mrs. E. E. Norlon will lead the ing of the aircraft carrier Glorious Iowa child welfare research sta- city relatirig thereto. Britain '~ aerial frontiers already meeting. ' June 9. tion has been appointed as one of Said resolution further provid8 have been hammered inward, even The casualties incl\lded 41 royol the 39 examiners to judge the that in case such connections ~ I ail' force officers and men. though Berlin is unable to claim Five of the six persons injured old son, David, both of Ingalls, - JJnily I"",nll Plw/o.1 a'lIll b'grn"illg.1 annual statewIde baby health con- not made within said time by the The Women's Total war losses anllounced by thai command 01 the all' over d • B~bi study in a head-on collision on U. S. l')wer picture. Bot hears, test at the Iowa state fair. . property owners, then the En&I- Ind., riding in the car shown the admiralty thus were increased The baby health contest at thIS neer of the City of Iowa CIt, England has been won. In thl'ee .... prayer an . I e Ihighway No.6 near Oxford about he said, were traveling about 50 days of mcitol'ing along the coast meetmg of CoralvIJle Gospel . . below. In fair condition last to 7,465 nllvol men. Official cas­ year's fail' will seek the health- I shall cause the same to be made, chul'Ch will begin at 2:30 p.m. Sunday noon 111 the above plC- miles per how'. Sievert Jr. and between Ostend and Boulogne, an . lured cars were still in Mercy night were Mrs. Wilson, Mrs. Mc- his wife were cut and bruised. ualty lists have shown a total ot iest Iowa baby between the ages and the cost and expense thereof 3,066 killed, 4,370 mi sing and 29 Associaied Press correspondent re-I Thursday 10 the church. The Mrs. Sievert Sr. suffered a :frac­ 01 12 and 36 months. A total of will be assessed against the pro\)­ , bl hospital in Iowa City last night Lary and Mrs. Sievert Sr. Re- prisoners of war. In addition there ported seeing no Bl'ilish shipping m l d - ~eek ~rayer and Bi e s~udy where they were brought follow- ported in good condition were tured leg, a broken rib, ' severe $400 in cups and trophies is to erty in front of which they art convoy, but only two German meAetmg. wll.1 be ott 7:45 tom.ght. ing the accident. Of tM five, David McLary and Mrs. Sievert have been 1,969 wounded. be awarded the winners. made, as a special tax. I d shock and bl'Uises. Mrs. Wilson, mine sweepers. The R. A. F.'s re- sWlmrrung par y an wetner three were reported in "fair" Jr. Mr. Sieverl Jr. was released driver of the car shown in the Dated this 191.h day of A ugUl~ taliatory bombipg raids are un-' roast is planned for young people lower picture, suffered a broken Nearly one-hall of Oregon's 60 ,- There is but one automobile 19~0. derlaken only under covel' of of the church and their friends condition and two in "good." The from the hospital. The accident 000,000 acres is forest land; the to e\'l~ry 35 people in England, Grover c. Watson darkness. tomorrow evening at Lake Mac- sixth person was released from occurred, according to Iowa hand and a severe face gash. I Mrs. McLary suffered a punc­ state had 60 parks and 400 ~i1es ccmpared to one for every four City Clerk of the Clt1 Heavy d!lmage unquestionably bride. The young people's group the hospital yesterday afternoon. Highway Patrolman William Ma­ of coastline. in the United States. of Iowa City, Iowa has been done to the British air- will meet at 7:45 p.m. Friday Injured in the accident were Mr. tias of West Liberty, when the tured kneecap and her son, Da­ dromes on which nazi dive bomb- for its regular session. and Mrs. Kenneth Sievert Jr: right front wheel of the Sievert vid, suffered bruises. The il'onl ers have concentrated, and to fac- and Mrs. Kenneth Sievert Sr., car, shown in the top picture portions of both autos weI' e ~ • ••• ••• • ••• ••••••••••••••••••••U ••••••••••••••••••••, all of Chicago, 111., westbound in above, slid off the edge of the tories and ports. Just how serious the damage has been appears hld- Nazi Capital the top-pictured car; Mrs, Fred highway and then swerved back den from lop American officials Wilson of Indianapolis, Ind., Mrs. Ion into the path of the eastbOUJld ~~~Fn~~~;~k!:£s;~~!~~~~~~ Ii ITS TA R TS TODA Y r as effectively as it is kept from Has I ts Fourth Herberl McLary and two-year- Wilson machine, shown in the and dash instruments, • • newspaper readers by wartime false to the republic which placed had asked in lhe last ten years." • ce~ssol~~~.i~rila in's chances to sus- Air Raid AlarTn Bullitt-- him where he is ." Clark of Missouri was on his :I tain inlensified aerial blows on d ) "In the second place," the Ida- feet as soon as the Idaho man had • the eve of a threatened life-or­ BERLIN, Aug. 20, (Tues ay (Contimled From Page 1) hoan said, "he (Bullitt) says- • death struggle to defend her soil (AP)-More than 4,000,000 Berlin\ Bnd in not thinly veiled language finished. • residents spent one hour and 40 Idaho, "the address of Mr. Bul- - that he would set up a dictator- "If Ambassador Bullitt should BREMER'S AUGUST from land and sea invasion, it is I. minutes in air raid shelters early Iitt, coming from a man in his h' . thO tr An d' tt' . to " , . only realistic to note thilt the best today after an air raid alarm was s Ip 10 IS coun y. . . y man succee 111 ge mg us III war, • informed American military of­ position, at this time, is very lit- who proposes 10 set up a dictator- ' he said, "he wm find a safe place • ficials, who make no secret of sounded in the German capital tie short of treason." ship in this country-the very for himself to hide out during the I. at 12 :42 a. m. (4:45p.m.C.S. T. I thO f h'h T" Mr fth" theit' sympathies, remain grim. Monday). Some citizens said they SUI' In Galler es 109 or w IC we cn lClze . progress 0 e war. • heard distant anti-aircraft artil- There was a pause and a stir in Hitler and his ilk- comes mighty • TOPCOAT AND Local Optometrist lery firing west of the city. both the senate and the galleries, close to being false to thai coun- , . The all clear signal was given as the severily of Clark's charge t[·y which has nurtul'ed bim." • . Attends Zone Meet sank in. Congress 'Remiss' • at 2:22 a, m. (6:22 p. m. C. S. T.) J t' CI k al b' t d h tl • Dr. J. Hotte----ll of Iowa City at- Monday.) The ambassadol', 1e con mued, ar so 0 lec e ve emen y • tended the meeting of the south­ The alarm was Berlin's fourth had delivel'ed a "demagogic ap- to whal he called Builitt's accusa- i. OYE'RCOAI SALE eastern central zone of the Iowa of the war. The last siren~so u nd- peal," and urged that the coun- tlons that congress had been "re- 1 • Association of Optometrists held ed warning came shortly after try enter (l war for which Bullilt miss" in prepilring the nation's %0 Monlll. 10 Re l'"Y • midnight last Wednesday morning himself said the nation was un- defenses, asserting that congress Federal Discount Corp. • Here yoU are- Bretner's Great Annual AUl uS' Topeoat in Cedar Rapids at the oUlces of . prepared. That, Clark asserted, had voted "every dime" for de- 2",1 ]<'1. First Cnl). NAt 'l I\ ld". • and Overcoa t Sale Begins TodilY . , Dr. E. r. Copeland. an d I as t e d 47 mmutes. " . hI ' f h' h h d " . • Wh e Plans were made at the meet­ T~~y w~n~~m~d~d =c=o=m=e=s==m=~~t~y==C=O=R==t=o=b=e=ln~g~=~=s=e==w=Ic==t=e=a=m=ln=J=d=r=~=I =OO======. We made . pecial effort to make this the ,rcatest of 1111 n ( ~~itw~~~edthatB~~ I. ______._. ___ ~ ______~ ___••• ing for participation in the op­ all our Au, ust Sales of this type and made lar,e pur­ lal sai tometric public health servIce pro­ planes were turned back at Pots- chases of new topeollts and overcoats month. a,o at Allanti gram. dam, a~ut 12 miles east. iarel! redud lons and are passllll these lavin,s on te :I you now. IlUda, lad N, • AU tbe newest colors-best fabrics-smartest JDOCIel_ ChUl ! the best Quauty - expertly tailored by America', belt i ~ ht manufacturers, The famous AlplI'ora coat. are ill· tl eluded as well as the two way zipper lined coat .. fnIm • for "I • If you'll need a coat--we sucrest you buy now .... lIriliin • you'U make a substanUal savlne. Use our layawa, stales­ :I plan at no extra cost. Itferen • l!ttes' • YOU'LL SAVE 25% AND MORE ON THESK leet. I IaIlere dppmw by AAd NEW FALL 1940 COATS 1f5C( For safe, economical ator.,. the I of grain, leed, feed, h.m.... i (8eI everything, FIRE - PROOF, II RAT-PROOF, WEATHER­ --on a new $8.95 Westinghouse, Sunbeam II Gel-- TIGHT, Ventil.tin, I,.t.m General Electric, or Manning Bowman 1000 • cure. &rain while holdln(. Con­ watt-fabric dial-fully automatic iron, II PLAN YOUR BUYING AHEAD FOR FALL AND YOU'LL SAVE! venient mea, EuIly .rec:tecL LMt • Au. 15 to 30 yean I "Rid-Jid" ironing boards or ironing pads and • USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN! covers given free with $8,95 irons (no trade • , , -COME IN AND ASK ABOUT IT- 1 1. . COLUMBIAN!!!!! .!!! Am"" ~ Goyer ••••t Storl,' • The government will PlY you 7c a bUlbel to keep your ,0v'l'IIIMIlt allowance )--Limited number of these pre­ • Haled corn on tIM fann If It II IMu.d ud re-tUW til approved! miums during August only. Itorage, Uke Columbian ... Top 0nIa BIDa. Furthermore, tIM I IOvernment will aclnnce )'011 tIM 7c Itorap to halp you buy Colum· bian Bina. Set your county &PIIt for cSetalla. (40-C1) II KaDla' ..' ...... Q GOU•• I.M IniaL " ...... Kauu ~, ... • II• BREMER'S " Nagle Lumber Company II . IOWA CITY'S BEST STORE FOR MEN AND BOYS 211 E. Washington St. • L.. 120 W. BurUqton ...... ~ .... ~ ...... ii ...... ~ .. ~ Kt·.·.··· ...... , ......