Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1934-06-23

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Transcript of Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1934-06-23

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IQWA CITY, IOWA, SATURDAY. JUNE 23. 1934 .' .. _ ...... VOL. XXXIV NUMBER 21

The 73rd Congress

Churches Urge Boycott Against Salacious Films I ~I ~R::OO=SE~V~EL~T W~'~NS~¥~AL~E D~E~GRE~E~==.III Council Hits 'i, Colorado Slayer Will H H Three Faiths Great Britain Seeks Complications

Passes Acts Aiming at Long Standing So­cial Reform.

(;oes to Death In • ays To Avert Economic On Proposal New Gas Chamber Says Industry' Move to Erase Clash With Germany

Thm Is lohe second In u. IICrlea or nVOl daily articles.

By AtEXANDER It. GEORGE WAShlNGTON (AP~A consider.

able amount of .so·called "retorm" ]eglsla,.lon emergild t rom congres~

during 1\ session marked by sweeping proposal~. hll.rd- fought controversies Bnd sensational hearings.

Weh;III'd from the "tandpolnt ot

j ulthna,l e significance, t he retorm measurpq ore genel'ally considered

I outslandll1g prod ucts ot t be seve nty· . third ge'l.,lon, 'r hey differ trom "re·

covery" moves In that they alm to­ward long-time results.

Prou!llJly the most far·rcachlng of the reform measures defini tely placed on the federal statute book' are thoaoa providing fOl' government regulatlo" Of stock exchanges, pen­Ions COl' railway labor, Income taa: revl~loll lind tor combaltlng the kit!. r. the kidnaper ond the rackeleer. A common characteristic of tbe

'retorm" legislation Is tbe Increase n Uncle Sam's supervisory powers II keeph,g wltll the ad mlnlstrallon's

avowed intention to combine reform wllh recovery and to promole the .elfare of the average citizen.

'l'lIe railroad pension meR sur", proYldjn~ {or compulMry retlrenlen t of labor at 65, wllh Year-to·yem· ex­tensions by agreement with the em­ployers but not beyond the age of 70, Is regnr.,tcd as a forerunner of pres­Ident Roosevelt'" progra.m of social leglsll4!lon to lJe presented to con­gr~~ n~:u wlnlel'.

Just tcfore tho session ended, tho D\1I·Cro~8er raHway labor act wa~ passell. It provides for changes )l\

\\\~ ad~lls\m~nt bOards to s<lttle labOr dl.putCs, sets UII a national alljust. menl IJoILr<J IWlll mal,es olher cJll\ng~1I In employer-labor relaUon­ships,

'fhe ,,~ock exchange control law Is deslg~ed to curb speculation and protect the sma.l\ Investor. It pro­vides f(J~' regullLtIoll \)y a commi«. ~Ioll ot (Ive memhers appointed by the president. Mal'gln regullltions are to be Bot UP by the federal r eo serve Loard, manipulative opera­Ions are Prohibited and the .e~url. Ie., act jR modified. ~

The la'!: revision measllre cuts the evles ClI~ Rmall Incomes, raises rates

Oil large ones. It {Ilms to close loop­holes I" the tax la\V8 and to 1·a.4,e nn adill:lnnal $417.000,000. Consoli· . dnted corpor(Lte Income tax returns are a\)Qll~hed, eMate taxos Q.Ild sU,'­axes Il.:e boosted. ~verol new laws ald the nation

rI'urn to page SI ----~-~

Planning Board To Conduct Survey Of

Railroad Crossings

,------Weird Attempt On May

Result8 In Capture Of Itinerant

OMA HA) Neb., June 22 (AP) -Bagged by TowlL ~tate agents oarly today In a t rltD set for a would-be eztortion let. Lyle E rwin, 42, an Illnerant sal aman, will face federal IlroRccudon under the "Llndberah law,"

CANON CITY, Colo., June 22 (AP) -Wllllam Cody Kelley was executed tonight In Colorado's new lethal gas chamber tor the slaying of Russell Browning, Delta hog raiser. H e was t he chamber's tlrat victim .

Kelley wae strapped to the "throne" In a specially constructed gas house, 12 polson pillS were drop· ped a utomatically Into a pa ll ot water under his chair and he a p· pa.rently died In about SO seconds.

Fifteen Colorado physicia ns peer · ed at ~lley through sma ll windows In the death house as he died. The physicians asked to watch him i n HIe hope they would obtain informa· tlon w hich would be ot aid to them In treat ing patlenta who are victims of gall poisonin g.

Sister of John Dillinger Says Fugitive Alive

tetter First Evidence In Several Weeks

On Desperado

GALION, Ohio, June 22 (AP)-A sister of Joh n DUllnget; today said the fugitive desperado 'Is "alive a nd welf."

The Intonnation Woa the first defl· nlte word In several wee~ t hat the murderer and bank robber 8tfll Is living.

I t was given In a letter written by M.rs. Audrey HanCOCk of May. wood, Ind., to Mrs. Eulalia. Callender Of Oallon. Mrs. Hancock added thllt "today, June 22, III his thirty·second birthday."

GIrls Elude Police Her lelter arrived here as Chi·

cago authorities dlllclosed three DlI· Unger gang girls had eluded the sur· velllance of federal agen ts who brought them to that city to act as decoys In the hunt for t he mobsters.

Mal'lon Conforti, 21, s lipped from her apartment In Chicago to take the trai l again with Homer Van Meter, expert machine gun nlst of the Dll llnger gang. Van Meter is wanted at Fostoria, Ohio, for a bank robbery In Which Pollee Chief Frank Culp and several other per· sons were wounded In machine g un fire.

Last Lett '8\lhlrul

,---------------ed he Wl\S an Innocent hltoh·hlker and not the author of three threa.t· enlng letters receiVed by May dur­Ing the last week. The letters threa tened that May's "dear one8" would be killed and his home bomb· ed If he falled to deliver U ,OOO at a point on the highway near COuncil Bluffs. •

The flut letter wss printed In Ink. The grammar . and spellIng were correct. M,a.y W81 told to Insert. a want ad In an Omaha. paper signify'

Wern r Hanni , chief Of the lowa- Ing his wflllngn688 to pay the mono Nebraska. alvls lOn Of the federal bu· ey. The letter added that "the I'tau of Investigation, announced to- worms will 11& eating you It you nl, ht the ch(Lrge will be tiled , pos' don't." Ilbly tomorrow, 1\8 th result of a. . May was In Des Moines, return­lVelrd atll'ln pt to obtaln '6,000 from Ing home from a flBhlng trip to Earl E . Afny, weal thy Shenandoah, Wlseon.ln, when hi. IICcretary ad· la., nurseryman, meroha nt (Lnd ra· vlaod him of the tlrat letter. It was dlo ala tion op(lrator. pOltmarked at Omaha. /.. oonfe ....

Two shoU were tired by one of ence with Park Findley, chief of the th ree JoWl\. slate ogenta who the Iowa bureau ot Inveetlgatlon, made t he captUl'6 on a highway two reaulted In a deciSion to toUow In­mllea Routh of Counoll BluCt. , la., atruotlonl and nllb the extortionist. when he mlatook th other lsent. Two etrorta were made prior to tor accomplice'! No OM wa. hit. lut night to plant a 4ulDJlly pack, ~In, Hannl ... 14 tonlaht, lnal.t· lie,

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Takes Action Dirt of Films LONDON, June 22 (AP)-Orent

Britain loday took atepa to avoid a dra.stic econollllc conntct wi th Ger -

Hopkins Urges Qui~ Action by City I

Federal Council Asks Catholic Bishops Go many over the moratorium ou ill­

lertlst on the D&wes and Youll t loans.

Officials \

By TOM 1'0 ELOFJI' (Mana.clnc EdItor, 'l'be DUI.:r Iowan' Protestants To Ahead With Plans

Cooperate To Get Decency In a note to Baron Bon Hooach . the German amba.aaador, Sir Johu Simon, foreign eecretary, IIUIUJle4 ted tbat the reich "nd 11. . delegato 10 London to dlacuIIB tbe . Ituatlon.

Doubt on the l~ga.llty of portlona of the proJ)Olled plan delayed 10_ Clty'li J:ew 88W8l;e dilPOII1 plant again yuterd8.y, as tb city council met in 8PCClaI 8 lou to consld :c plans drawn up by t he Currie En· gin 1'111;; company of W bster City,

NIDW YORK, June 22 (AP}-A iboycott of objectionable fil ms Willi urged tOday by the Federal Coun­cil of Churches of Chrlst In Amerl­l'a at the same time W Ul H. HaYs, ~notlon pictu re "czar." announced t.hat the Industry had taken steps "to amend 1111 system ot self-regu-1a.lfon."

In behalf ot the m otion ,pIcture J;·roducers and distributors of Ameri­ca , Hays said t he a clion WQ3 taken to strengthen arrangemen lll for "the right ki nd of screen entertainment."

Urres Boycott T he executive committee of the

Federal Council of Churches u rg d members of 25 P rotestant denoml ' 'nations of t he United States and Canada to remain away trom ob­jectionable fIlmll and f rom the thea­ters showing t hem freq uently.

Asserting that protests ot par­(.nt8, chu rches, echools, women's organizations and other groups In­t erested in safeguarding youth had been "treated. with scant respect," ~ he committee declared that th~

.tlme had come tor more drastle ac­t ion.

ExpreS8e& Approval I t expressed approval of t he "a g­

gressive position" taken by lead.erll or the Catholic church today- on ob_ Jectionable tllms, and ot a IIllnllat' "tand by the Central Conference or American Rahbls at a recent meet _ Ina-.

BIOCk-boO'klng and bllnd-buYln@; 'Were pondemned bY the commltt~,

/ilnd It was urged that churchell "exert continued pressure on the In­rluatry and at Wash ington" to se· cure abofltJon ot enforced blOck­ibooklng and blind-buying ot tllms.

"Little Evidence" "The Federal Council of Churche9

can see as yet little evidence ot In­tention by the produce1'8 at m otIon pictures to improve the moral quall­'ty ot fflms," said the committee's !!t atement.

"While t here has been marked ad. "ance In other respects, the inde­~encles, false Ideals ot life , Incite. !ment to' dri nking, gambling and lIell­ealfty, and the cyn ical attitude to­ward the sanctities ot fi fe remaln unchanged. I

"Should Be 'ReIIented" "The s tatemen t 8 0' often made by

representatives ot the Industry that suggestive pictures are prodUCed In ,.esponse to an Insistent publfo de­.mand, the impUcation being that lJub\fo mind lteelf Is Bala.clous. shOuld be resented by' the public. 'There 18 r evolt In all ·Ila.rtll ot the coun try aga inst the character of fUms being forced upon aUdiences."

PARIS, June 22 (AP)-I1'errorlsts ,and prankaters who ha.Ye chiseled

Local Temperatures

WEATHER ]OWA-Increaaln~ C)loudlneel

Sattlrda" JI08IlIbl, roUowed by lleatiered abowers and cooler In northWeit portion, and at ntcht In eIUIt and IODtlt porUonll; 81bl· day probabll, fair with modera.te &emperature, I .---_ ......

CINCINNATI, June 2! (AP~ ,Leaders of three great religious Cal ths moved tOnight to wIpe the d lrt f rom tbe nation'S s liver screens.

Bishops ot the RO)n an catholic church pressed forward to expand their "Leg ton Of Decency ,l a.nd to enforce through t he box office t hllir demands for "wholesome" movies.

Rabbis VoIce Approval

The .11100, strongly worded, was re­garded a.s a n an.wer to threats of Dr. H jalmar Schacht, president of the Rl'lcbshllnk, to CUt ott commer­Cial r ellltions wltb countries wh ich set up clearing hoWles to obtain funds t~r t heir bondholders,

A leader of the Cen tral Conference of Amer ican Rnbbls voiced ap prova.l . ot Ihe Catholic campaign and reo vealed plans of his own fafth to a ct.

Dean Gilmore Upholds U.S.

OhIo P rotestanls crltfc12ed t he state board of cenSOrs for letting too m uch "get by" and u rged com· plete re jection ot pictures portray· ing "vlr tue as vice, or vice as vir· tue!'

"Wholesome or NOlie" What were the demands the R o.

man Catholic committee or bishops . served on the industry wae not made

Constitution Declares for Caution

In Examining New Ideals

known by either s ide, but, in gener · . With a warning that "somep mes a l terms, the clerics declared for temporary resul ts" are obtai ned "at "wholesome" movies or none at the expense of principles," Dean a ll." To make sure, they a.nnounced plans to expand the "Legion ot De. Euge ne A. GIlmore of the college cency" to "every town and city in ot law tcld Iowa a ttorneys in Wat· t he United States," pledging movie· erloo yesterday that th e nation goors to boycott salacious and 1m. should examine neW concep~ of moral shows. Already, they said, more than a mUlion persons have so sworn.

BI.8hops Meet The bishOps-Archbishop John T.

McNicholas of Cincinnati; BishOp John J. Cantwell ot Los Angeles; Bishop Hugh Boyle of Pittsburgh, nnd Bishop Jobn F. Noll of Ft. Wayne, Ind., met here yesterday-. They conferred with Joseph I . Breen, movieland's "czar" of morals, and Martin Quigley, Of New York, publisher ot theatrical magazines.

With th e Ohio synod of the Pres· byterlan church, and the Federal Council ot Ch urches ot Christ In America, a lready moving to e nds slmUar to those ot the new·born 'Leglon" Ohio Protestants In gen·

eral today moved Cor more direct ac· tlon.

Police Study New Findings

Reject Theory Missing Woman Killed By

Odd Devices

Police Seek To Solve New My.tery

government with caution. Addressing t he fortieth meeting

. Of the Iowa State Bar asSoclalfon,

Prof, MII80II LIIdcI of the eoI· Ie&" of law wu re-eleeted seel'eo ta ry·treaalll"llr of the Iowa late Bar _ celallon y6llterday at the fortIeth aonnal meetiog of the ASsociation beld at Waterloo Th ursday and yeeterdSY,

Dean Eugene A. Gfunore of the coUege of law W'IIIl made an altemate repre!lel1tative to the conterenee of bar delegatee that /wtu meet Iq MUwaukee tills fall at the annual conventIon of the American Bar uaociatlon,

the pr'lsldent -eleet of the University ot Iowa. u pheld the Integrity of l M American conaUtuUon.

"A constitution," he asserted, " Is f ra med in general terms. It la aur­flclently elastic to permlt of reaso n­able adjus tment to changing condl. tlone.

"Must Embod:r General Tenu8" "But Jf a C'onstf tutlon means

anything, it must embody In Jl!nel'­al term" aome kind of IIOCIsI philos­ophy. It may well be that we are In a periOd ot remaktng or of essen­tia lly mOdifying this philosophy,"

He made It clear that he Wall talk­Ing " merely as an hlathrlan" on t rends 1r. legislation and Ildmlnlstra­tlon , "not as an advocate or orltlc, nor as a champion ot an old order agalnat a new order."

Though cooperation may be the m eans <'t attaining & jUster social and Industrial order, he pointed out, It Is Wolj) "to look at Borne prinCiples which have been highly regarded u S

essential" tor a aound, s table, and secure !loclal organization ."

"Unusual Period" "Undoubtetdly we are In an un­

ueual period of our national lite. Every " .due In our clvUization eeeUlJ to be undergoing I. reappralaal. A new conception of American demo· cracy III being put torth. Thill con­cept II no longer primarily political, but social, ecOnomic, and Indus· tr!al," ,

Suggestlnl' tba.t _mlngly mere chana-es Jo derree may rea.lly load to more serious chlLngea In kind, he cited government control aa &

moall. of such cba.n£U. "Through a subtle proceu of

n"dual lubetJtUUon and through a. setles of controla of IndlUltry, trana. Porlatlon and credit, It I.e poaalble to &ccompllllh a change In degree 'Whloh In reality will repretlCnt a. change in kind. 1'-'

"Mq Mar1l LIae. . "Thla may well mark the line be.

tween Intlfvlduallllm and coLlectivism, between control and regulation, be­tweell private and oommunal pro.

Former IIarvlIru alumJllls, Franklin D. Roo evelt, now prel!i­dent of thc U. S., journeyed to 1I1c cnmpus of his school '8 old riva l, Yale univel'Hity, nt ~C\V HU"ctl, COllll., to receive an bon­orary degree of doctor or lnws lit its 233rd commencement. !lere is the chief executive between, Or. James R{)wlnnd Augell, Yale president, left, lind James Roo. evelt, his 8()n, right,

President Roosevelt Enjoys Annual Harvard-Yale Regatta

Will Go Back To Work FeR Renames Today, Says II

Executive Frank M'Ninch ABOARD THE U.S.S. SEQUOIA,

Thames River, Conn., Juno 22 (AP) -Presld nt ROQ8evell nJoyed ada)' of complete relaxaUon and plelUturo watching the annual Harvard· Yale regatta from beneath a battered whlto n~hlng Ilat and then remark­ed tonight:

"r am goIng bnck to work to­morro\v,'"

The preslden t, who saw the Yale {reshmAn defeat the :Harvard yenr· ling crew In wblch his son, Franklin, J r. , rowed at number six, spoke with a smile.

News 'TO(lar

Will Continue a Head Of Federal Power

Commi ion

WASffiNOTON, Jun ~2 CAl'~ Frank R. McNinch today was reo nam II federal power commiSsion chairman by President Roos velt, an appolntl'(lOnt tbat by eh nce coin. clded with a now challenge to the power claims ot the federal govern· ment.

In reappolntfng :McNinch to a five He I1lso intimated quite clearb year term. Mr. RoolICvelt Ignored

t b8re would be some newli tomorrow, tbe demand Of Senator BaIley (D. and that wo.s expected to be vetoes ot Bome Il)C(!Bures passed In tbo clos- N. C.) that McNInch ,. who oPDosed Ing ru~h of congress. The larm t be election of the ~mocratlc prel!, m orlg:t\:,e mO l'atorlum measure ha.s dentlal nomInee ot 1928, Altred E. not been signed, but Mr. Roosevelt's Smith, be dropped f!,om appolntllr position lias not been fnillcated. !lvo oUlce.

Tbe president was up early and The Appalacblan Electric Power watched the two morning races (rom company, meanwhile, notified tbe t he ref\l~e's boat, DOdger Ill. 'rhen power cQmmlssto'n that It Intended he returned to tltls ship and spent LO proceed with construction ot a the afternoon 'luleUy with Mrs. dam on the New R[ver, in Virginia.. R oosevillt, m embers of tlte famUY" Th~ commiSSion, 1n aprevloull case and friends, until time for the val'- Involving the 'same company had sHy race Just before twfllght. contended .the federal government

At Floll b Line had control not only over power The SeqUoia was anchored plants on t he navlgable portions ot

throug hout the da)' In the ml'ht of stream.s but over their non·n&vlgable a regu lar contention of aea cratt at headwaters. t he flnb h line of t he morn ing con· Upon the outcome or the Appall.· tests an;) just oft t he s ubmarine bn.se. chlan's challenge may reDose t he

NeWSPapermen w ho visited, the new quesUon of whether tbe federal gov· lIubmarlne C-2 a t doak nearby saw ernment can license or claim the the pres iden t wltb 1111'S. Roosevelt right to lease power .Itea on many knitti ng nearby on the a ft deck of slreflDls, the Sequoia when t hey pl'ered ---- ---throug h the per iscope down below.

Fra nkli n, J r., came aboard late In the a fi (!rn oon with some fe llow memo bers 'f his crew. The taU, huyky youth hac given a good a ccou nt of himse lf and his dlsappoinmen t was as8uag,~d by the Marty handshakes and smiles ot his dis ting uished tath­er and mo\b er.

Woodring May Come' Before House Group

The total tlmaled COlIt Of th. I&W ra·e ay.tem, actordlnc to tbe plan prellCnted to the cauDcll yester~ day by the Currie company , will be $493,N'.66, U Ilompared with $517 ,. 000 In the original eetlmat. drQ.wn up IOv~ral montha aCo.

P repared to Go Abud Tbe celt of th trsatm nt plant

alone will 1>& about $21.,285.91. Th. federal Ilublic works admlnlltrallon II prepared to &0 ab ad with thlt proj t. Howsver, doubt atlll exists on the I IIal1ty or portions of th col· lection Ioyat m and Improvement ot Ralston cree.k, which city Oruclal. and th() cnilin erlne firm eonald t

Men thl parts of tb plan. P. F. Hopkins, Btat.6 public work.

udmlnletrator, accompanied Mr, Currie and M. V. Norrlt of the Cur­rie company, and ellplalned to tbe council the .tand which lhe f!ld ral offlclalll had tak n. Th Currie pilln wlll involve all!: dlvlalonw, U tollow.:

Trunk Sewer &!cUo'\ A: A truck IIno IIIlwer from

J etrersou and Mn.dlson It I' e~ nortll along the eut bIlnk ot Iowa rlv '" Cost, $ta, 1 .91.

section B: A trunk lIne 8011' r from Front al'd Pl't'ntfM atr ta, lIOuth alona- tw. .t!)an k of Iowa Tlvex' to 0. 24 Inch by 38 Inch brick aewer; ulllO 0. "Iphon Une o.cr088 Iowa river. Coat, ,'18,149.10.

Section C: The lIewage tnlatmenC plant. Cost, $264,285.91,

SeeUon D: A .torm W&ter relief: JOhn.sOll .treet trom Ral.ton creek to Blo.lmlnllton .tr t, Wuhln,tGa and Van Buren, and Johnson ond Court ell' eta, Coat, 126,800.2'.

Seetlo" E: A allnltary lOwer Inter .. ceDter; Dodge .treet ayst m; Jetter~ 80n anj Linn .stroet aYllt m, and Wll8hln(fton IItreet. COlt, $8,892.51.

SocUo'\ F. Ralaton creek Imvrov .. ment. ("Ollt, 181,658.11.

Tb tl)tal estimated cost ot tbt ayatem '\\'111 be tbua ,420,·680.51. Till Currl e~tlmlLte add. 10 per cent, ell' $42,068.0", for Incld nta.1 COollte, an~ $80,500 (or lands, rlrht ot Wa.y, In. terest, nnd other charpl, makln c $49S,2H 56 total. It th federalaov. ernment grana the a.mount requeat' ed, 30 p r cent or 1126,204.15, tho city mUlt pay for tbe r maiMer, $367,. 044.41.

The fIrst Q uesllon at io the lellll.lI.

(Turn to OU'I I)

Kvale to Make Investigation

Wants to Know ~'Wliy Ford Om't Get I

Contracts"· ,- ,

W ASHlNGTON, , J une 22 (AP)­ReprellCntatvt Kvale (F.L., XIDn.' Mid today he planned to b ve the :hcuse mflltary a1fall'll s ub-cOlDlQlt,.. tee Invcstlaatlnl' war departmeD( PUrchU68 aBC I'h-In "why D eDIT Ford. can't get government COIl~ t ract •• "

Kvale, • cemmlUee member, goO

nounced hll Intention of goln~ Into Ford', dJlllculUes with the admtnJa­tratlon during an examlnatlon of a rmy contraot apectlcaUona for trucks.

K vale ea.ld be undel'lltood JI'onJ 'Wu comply~ with the motor mano ufacturera code and tb&t apP&nlnti1' "Good Races"

"They were both awful1y g ood races," was the pres ident 's only comme:t ~ after the morning events,

W ASHINGTON, June 22 (A.P)- the ruling which bQnoed hla pro-.

H e wure a graylsb-brown twee;! coat and ta n s lacks, He waved to tbe crew~ a t th4l start of ,each race and freQuent ly ahffted his posit ion on the roredeCk to get . a better vie,,'.

An invitation for B;arry M. Wood- d uct. from government Ute was un .. 'rI ng, IlIIIIls tant secretary ot war, to Just. n ppear before a. boulI& commfttee Ford baa never a1cned the motop

manufa,c turera code a.nd blcla by :investigating war d Oa.rtment pur. F ord dealers tor government con .. ~baees a Ppeared likely today after 'tract. have been turned dowlI by a witness testified tbat be wrote a. Comptroller General VcCarl on u.. contract- Ia.ter lnvesUgatf14 by a ground they were unaccomPlUlled by

NEW YORlC, June 22 (A.P)-The roltee missing pel'1l0nll bureau-.l. Teady Immersed In the my.terioU8 't:!lsappearance of Agnell C. Tutver· ilion- tonight had on its hands an­JOther enlgOla, the cue ot an II year old youth allegedly held cap· tlve In a mid-town botel by four young women,

perty, between conatllutlonal and pIes for r esults 18 being made, or unllonatltutlonal. whether a new set of principles fa

certl tlcatM sbOWing Ford ..... com .. g l'and ju ry-a t Woodring's specific plylna with the motor code, direction. X oCul 11&14 be wu acting 11I1d«

Jack. TuIfI'd&l1, , 1Vbo bact, beelt 'Working aa. a sa.lelll1lan for his f&. !ther'. dress tactorY, was reported .m1l.ID~ alncJ, AJ)rll lit ... _L

"In moat crfaM In the life of In. being evolved. dlvlduall as of natfolW there III pre. "The 81) swer can only be found In 8ented the alternative of attaining h _rehlng examination of prlncl­a. much de.lred and IOmeUmes pies an. I an honest comparison of <temporary retliit at the ezpenae o( the conlilstency of tbose prlnclplee prlnolples. with th03 course ot action propolICd

"III sucb altuallon. It .. dlllleult ~a tile neceaaa.ry way to attoJo the to sa~ Vihetller • bartar l't princ:l· 4ulrt4 n.Ul~" ~ . ~ ...... ~ .

Col. J oaepb o':McM"Ullen, chief of :a n executive order Issued by t.b4t the war department'.s patent section, prCIIldellL testified that the contract was one Kvale said be planned to ..... Involving the purehase by Joseph the attitude ot the war delllU'tlDentl :Silverman , Jr., ot a large quant.lty .and other departmenta on the poat .. of surplUS clothJn .. from the army. 't ion taken by McCarl &Dd udallt

The contract involved. the Bale ot ev, n lay the mattea: tieton _ ;Mrny .utp.lus ~ood8s . ' prql~llt.. \._!-,-,-- ,:_,j~

Three Parties Schedul1te ! I

}, 1, . ' Nex' Week for tudents ~llniveraity Da.n.ce, Men'. and Women's

,~' ,I DiJinerl Jr.'" Entertain Summer. i r. ' Session Pupils, Faculty

Summer students will be feted at thne all-university part-1 ~es pext week" all. of which are given anpu~ly during the first terIPc:,,~f the summer ~ssion. I I

(I' 1}11 men students an'd summer"facitlty staff members will "'be entertain'ec) at the informal dinner Tuesday, and women j will bel slmllartv tlonored' at thel. _..1, ______ ...:..:... ____ _

~ , ! 1 c!inner Thur8da evening. Both 'Dlen -----..... - ______ _

'and women have been Invited by the PERSONALS ~niverslty to a dancc Friday In the Iowa UDion main lounge. Dorothy Ewers and Vivian An·

W. G. BroOks"ot Burlington, chair. thony left' ThUr8day morniDg for lnan ot thAI a!l.untv'erslty men's lu. New York City to attend a home , I economics convention. ]Tnroute they formal dinner at Iowa trnlon will stGp o.t Nlago.rlll Falls tor a day. Wednesday at 6 p,m., announced his They; plo.n to be III New York about Cl1D1m!t.leu yestemaY'. ' l' tw'() ~ks. I Steffey To Art'ange I'nIgram ,

The program will be arranged by I "A. I. Steffey. superlntendent .of Fred B. Smith, who Is assoclll.ted . ~cl!ool! at Knosv1Ue. As8l8tlllg him wltb the Western Electric company wJll be Arvin Donller ~ Port Ar. at Chicago vl$l'ted the college ot en· 'thur, Tex., T. 11. McGeorge of Me. glheerlng yesterday: Mr. smith r·e· chanlcsville, ClIallfe. :f.rMkins of celved his Ifegree tn 1998. Rapid City, S. Dak" and M. G. Davis at Ames; ( John DUlllop,' of Peoria, Ill., 18 ~bQ,lrman of the commlttee on ticket l!Illes. A. O. Qualley of Creston, Don

,,Fbater of Logan, 9Jnd> 'Hepbel't EWgetL breoM of Beltnond w1l1 a81!i8~ him. , Subcommittees CJn sa.il!8 a1'& h$lll ed, by lIfr. Eri!lelbt'echt who, wlth:Le& Lowartilerg- a.hd Mr. Dunlop, is l'{).

llponsltlle fat sates in ' the Qull.d> i-angle, and' Mr. ' 'QuaJley 'W-ho will control sa.fll1l In the Bummer campI Mr, Foster and A. 1\(. lanes wIl 'as' slst Mr. Qualley. ' "

SuliooMnittees Varlou!! departments on #he cam>

pus are repr'e8entea,"tli. the fOllow· Ing BubcommilteesOn sale~; botany· zoology, PilcD KlI.lnbly; chemistry, :Ralph Sllker; 'C()mrneree, TheOdore

ifYepJan; historY, John Greenlee; :journallBm, J. JI . Irwln; ma.the· matlcs, S. T, Sanders; musle; John 'aloom; physics, W. :1'. Poppy; poll­'bcal science, RI\:hard H. Roberts, 1IsyehololW, Pa.ul Greebe. -. The' publlclty cOmmittee 18 headed by Oliver Strike of Toulon, m. Ross

abl of Aledo, Ill., Mr. IrwIn of !Boone, and Ralr>h Bento ot Stan'

,'hope are ~BO members o~ this earn· I mittee. , The menu will he planned by Le· :ROY I{,noer>pel ot Hamilton, III., R. .E. Jonas of Iowa Clty; and K. F, Nolte of Hudson.

LuJMlhobn Tnllllurer r Frldolph Lundholm of Mount Vcr· .non Is treasurer for the dinner.

Irving J: ' MUler who Is employed by the 8l11.te hlgbway commission visIted the conege of engineerIng yesterday. He reoelved his degree in 1932.

.Tames I. Martin vlalte<l the col· lege of euglneerlng yesterday. Mr. Martin 11 a,. 1932 engineering gradu· ate.

Mrs. Ruth Burnham Hoffman of Rockford, III., visited the college at pharmacY' yesterday on ber way to 'Cedar Rapids. Mrs. Hoffman reo celved!' her degree In 1919.

Esther 'Swlsher, 305 S. Summit street, left yesterday to attend a. church meeblng in Chicago. Sbe wlJi a ls\} attend the €entury at Progress el/pO$IUdIl:

'Mrs. Wo.lter Pratt, 503 Melrose avenue, has bad as her guest the last feW' days, Jennie Rice of Coun· cil Blutf!t. Miss Rice will agaln stop In Iowa City on her roturn trip from the exposition in Chicago.

.rane White of Burlington left tor her home yesterday, atter spending a week wltb Marlon Whinery, dtl.ughter ot Dt. and Mrs. F. B. Whinery, 1'023 Killltweod avenue.

Mrs. Evans Worthley, Mm . .T. E .

[",TlIi .lMiLY ,J0;WAN, IOWA em

FIRE SWEEPS CHICA.GO INTERNATIONA.L HARVESTER PLANT

Flying overllead in a speei.nl plane, the photographer obtained thi:' view or the huge fit'e that sw~pt througb the soutb portIon of the Deering wotks of the lnternational Harvester company in ChIcago W('dncsday. Streams from the hos lines of the scores of fiuemcn called out to combat the blaze can be SeCtl. Not aU tbe ruin visible was wrought by flames, s ince wrecking operations have been going on at the plant for , some ~ime, It i ~timated the loss would reach approximate­ly $100,000.

MODELS FAIR BUILDING IN SUGAR Graduate Students Dance, Play Cards

At Summer Party More than 150 gradualo SllmmN'

session stuclents danced In thc grill room Ot' played cards in the newly decorated party lane at Iowa Union from 9 to 12 p.m. yesterday. AI· tbough It was th e first gradu tc festivity cvrr given during summcr session, attendance wa.s larger than at the avcrage winter parties.

Reveal Engagement Of Dr. James Allen To Ruth C. Sanford Mt·. and Mrs. Morrill Bantord, 2281

Meadowbrook dl'lve, edar RalJids, 6,"6 IIn nounclng toda.y the ngage. ment of their daughter, Ruth Col. lin Sanford, to Dr. Jalnes H . Allen, son of 11k IUld Mrs. Q. If. All n at Chattanooga, Tenn. '1'ho wedding will taka place latc this summer.

lIt!SA Sllllfonl Is a grnduate of Cor· ne11 college !lncl of tho nurse's train· illg course of tho Prcsbyterlan has· pltal In New York city, During the last fout' ycars she has becn g neral night supervisor at the Unlverslty hospItal.

Dr. Allen gradUatecl Cram tho Unl· verl\\ty oC Tennessee and fmm the college of medl Ino oC the Unlver· idty of Michigan, At present he Is In thQ opthalmology department the UnIVersity hospital.

Thirty-One 'Attend West Liberty, Iowa

City Golf Tourney

'['hh'ty·one membEH' a na. guests a.t· trnded tho Iowa Clty·West Lluctty women's golt mll.tch at tit Iowll.

l 'Clty Country club Thursday. The

I winners f!'Om Weat Liberty wero 1111'S. Waters, Mrs. Bowden, and Mrs. IIawlier, who received awards Cor having low gross. low net. and tbe fewest number of putts, respcc· tlvely.

or Iowa City'S goIters, Mrs. G. D. KO$cr, won low gross, carol Mar· tin and IIlrs. G. F. Kay tied for low n t, II.nd Mrs. P. C. Coast had tho (ewest number of putts.

Galt balls were given as favors at the hin heon whlen folloWed tile lOUl·nall1Cmt.

Mrs. Marie SiefJers Honored at Bridge

Luncheon Thursday

I Royal Wedding Bells?

Tbe recurrent m'dding ru­mors througbont Europcan roy­al circles again have CClltCI'cd

about Crown Princes.' Juliana of tbe Netherlands, and Prince Bel'til, younger son of the Swe­disb crown prince . On his Ill'­rival in London, however, h I'C­

fLlsed to make a statement to welcoming n ewspapermen.

'36 I(~ppa Phi Meeting Here

Phyllis Mar~in Named Secl'etary For

District

n Irgnles from live chapters of

1':nIlPa Phi, national M thodlst 60·

,'orlly, will mrrt llrro In 193~ tor a .lis trlct cOI1Ventioll, Jt was learned yesl~rday from towa Cily women who retul'llrd tram tho Rora. at Lllk(' Mlnnotonka, Mlnn,

Phyllis Mnrtln, a local delegate, will be secretary of th e 1936 meet. lng, It was decided at th conven. I ;on, knuwn as thl' "Beta Kora" meetlnl\'. Edith Sl\uCelt and Virginia ITaro ot the University of Minnesota w~rc clected Koro. sponsor and Kora )J rcsldcnl. '·C81IcC Uvely.

ClJalllcrR l,<,pr('Sentc<l a t tile meet. Ing were tho UnlvCl'slly of 101'9. 10\\'1\. Slate ('oUrgo, Iowa. Slate 1'enche l's collegc, University or l"oulh Dakolll, and University or Minnesota.

Local dclcgntcs were Agne~

ChrlRt~l1s n, M a ,. jan Ross, Mlsa Mndln, Rosal1o Lln(lbcrll'. Loah Brown. nnd lIlrs. G. W. McMichael. Mrs. McMichael Is .ponsor at tho Unl\'rt's lty of IOlVa chapter and l\Il.~ Brown Is pre.~ldcnt.

1'110 group vlRltec1 at Mlnneapoli&, Northfield, nnil Rochesler on the reo IUI'n trip.

Harry Ruby, Wife Honored at Party;

Third Anniversary

Honodng Mr. and Mrs, Harry Rul>y who cel~brn.tNl their third an· nl\'(,l'sary Thul'Rday, Mr, and Mrs. ,'al ll/111 Moor", Jr" 403 Grahd ave-11tH' , ntcrlalno(] at It surprls& party 'rhursday,

Dorothy Whiteside, Stevens 'Will Marry :111'11. K~nMth Glh"On, Raymond

. Ieml(ol·. and Mr. and Mrs. Ruby wo~ The mal' rlag& or Dorothy Wblle· IJrlze>! II.l bunco which was ulayed

lIfrs. Marie Sievers, GI7 S, Dodge side and 'Vard Stevens, both of Chi. <luring the eVf'nlng. ~tl'pet, was honored 011 bel' birthday cago, wlll I:a1rc place at the home or OUf'. til at thc parly werc !\II', and Thursday at a bridge luncheon II.t frs. Donnld HemHted, Mr. and MI'8. 1 p ,m. in the Dutch room ot the the slstel' and bl'othcr·ln·law of the (leor~e Kondora, 111 1', and Mrs. Les·

a ' bride, Mr. and Mrs. Irving B. Inr O'Brien, "r. and "rs, "rnlla~ awk s Nest. Het' daughters Alice ~ m ......0 I Weber, 233 Grand avenu<" to,lay at Oavlij, lIfr. and Mrs. Memler, Mr.

an<l rene pla.nned the party. noon. The Rev. W. E. Fishel' of 'rhe lUllcheon table wn.~ decorated Marlon will otflclate.

",Ith summer garden flowers, Mrs. Nellie Amish and Mrs. Anna. Shalla won the bl'ldge prizes.

Gucsts at the pal·ty wcre Mrs. Nora Mills. Mrs. Blanche RU)lpert, 1111'S . Mnry Roberts. Mrs. JORle Groh, Mrs. Elsie McLaughlin, Mrs, Amlsb, and Mrs, ShaUa.

MIM -.vhlteslde. dnul!'hl~t' of M'·R. Vlna T. Whiteside of Ackley, is a voice Instructor at the C. mopoliLln school DC Music In Chicago nnd Mr. Stevens Is an lndustl'l' I chemist there.

all<l MI·s. (llhRon, Mr, and 1111'S, 0 ,

W. Penr~on. Eleanor Ballard, and RoIN!'t ;lfathcs.

Iowa Citians A.ttend Program at Cornell

Iowa Cillans who attended the . Tickets for the a11.universlty men's dinner may ,be obtained from the main desk in- Iowa. Union, the .summer seBSlon office, Mid the of· ·tlce or the college of educallon.

Switzer, M:rs. c. H!. Lloyd, and Mrs. C. S. Woodford, allot 10wII. City, &l'e spendlnl!' the week cnd In Mc· Gregol' .

Melodlos for dancers were played by JohnllY Ruby and his orchestra RlIlllors Unfound II ~aY8 En~ol' 1II"0gru Ul pr<ls"ntcLi by Jacquel! Jalali

Dowllwnrrl Bond Trend Continues NEW YORK (AP)--Dr. Hans Lu· nt Ctlrn~1I roll ge at Mt. Vernoa from the' platfot'lO at the north end of tho floor. NEW YORI{ (AP)-The downward ther, German ambasRarjor to the last night Ineluded Prof. and Mre.

Graduates were received and in. trenel iJ\ secondary domestic corpOI" lJnlted State.~, wirclessed th~ ABSO. Haymond Hrugertl , H rry Thatcher

; On tbe roof garden at Iowa. \Jnlon, .women students and faculty mem­bers will haVe their dlnne~ Thurs­day at 6:30 p.m., preceded by 81 reo 'ceptlon In tbe mala lounge at 5 :30. '. Pro!. Frances Zulli, head of the economics department, has been 1lamed general cbairman of tbe din· :nero Heads ot Bubcommlttees at'e:

Prof. E. W. Hlils of the collElge of co.euce attended sessions of the fortieth annual meeting at tho Iowa. Bar W!80cia.tlon In :Waterloo

ate loans was extended In today's elale" Press ionlght from tho II' "1- and 1\11'" Of I '! "'cnger trod c1.,y Emma McCloy, Eth I boncl ma'·)lcl. althOUgh hIgh grade Etell.~ShiP Europa tbat rumor8 he ~;~f.'!~~d Mrs. C'ha;I~1I L. RolJbln~ Stewart, J. Fisher Stanfield, and Leonard Olsen. issues showed good resistance and was not to return to 'Yashlngton an<l family, and tary Carolyn Kuev·

actually closcd higher, were "unCounded." cr. Mn rgaret Hall strom and Titus ,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •••••• iiiii ••••••••• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii •• Evans took charge oC arrangement.~] lI

aude McBroom, principal of the ,University' elementary school, reo

thl5 :Week.

Mr. and Mrs. Ill. J . .Tohnson at Albia, were In Iowa City Thursday visiting with friends, II.Rd making arrll.ngement! for tlie enrollment of

tor the party, which was chaperon­ed by Prof. and Mm. Lanzo Jones and Prot. and Mrs, C. J . Lapp,

Mrs. Fred Mille,' Honors Helen Osb'orn ception; Prot. Edna Patzlg, of the

raphla and plastic arts depart· ment. decorations; Prof.' Elizabeth Jtalsey, bead at women's pnyslcal ducatlon, entertainment; Rutb

Pieper, executive secretary of uni. verslty publlcatrons II.nd the sum· lner seSSion offlOO, publicity; and ':EthYl Martilf, ' executive secretary

their son In the' UniverSity of Iowa. at the open1ng at tbe fall term.

Members ~I Lodge GrQuP Plan Picnic

At B...,man Home

at the political sllience department .For their last meeting until Sep.

The now World's Fail' is u"lswcet" onE', thinks Cyriellc Du lHuth, past.ry chef of the Stevens, the world's largest hotel, and proceeds to model A Century of Progre s Exposition building out of su~ar. IIerc bo is seen putting final touches on his work atop the hotel building, with the Fail' partly in the background. He is working just outside or the Stevens Sky Room, Chicago's new­est, noveL nigllt club, opened especially for the entertainment of Fair visitors this year.

Helen Osborn was honorerl at II. bridge party and miscellaneous shower given by her aUllt, Mrl;. Fred Miller, yestCl'day afternoon at bC't· home, 707 :Melrose avenue. High score prize In bridge was won by Miss Osborn, and second prize by Amallllll McCloy.

nd assistant s'O\:lerlntendent of the tember, members at the Past Mat. tate historical so~lety, tlcketll. ' rons association or Order of East·

Pht. IIIIt Headll Commlttlle' em Star wl1l bave a picnic at the prot. Edna Hill of the hOl'cle eco·home of Mr, And Mrs. C. A. Bow·

omlciJ deputrt'lent, heli/l of the din· man~' 319 Hufcbinson a.venue, Mon· er committee, Will be Mslsted by day at 6 p,m. one Hosman, also at the home eeo· Husba.nds of members will be

, omlcs deparfment, and ElIza.beth ,8'uests at tbe picnic. Committee t~lntz, dietitian !l:t general hospital. members fat the meeting are the

Tickets are available at the Iowa otflcen: Mrs. oln. Manatt, presl. nlon ma1n desk, oftlcell at the col- dent, Mrs. Bertha Sidwell, vice p~esl·

ego o! educatiloD, the 8UmmAll' lel- dimt; and Mrs. Charl~9 Bowman, Ion ofNee', ILlld trom tbe ticket com· !lecretary·treasurer. ittee. • l

' By p~aeui:lng tultlon. receipts at ' the summer scssion oftlce, all stu· A.uxiliary Brtdg~ clents may , recelve tickets to the P v d

niversily dance Friday from 9 to ... t ''''Y .. ester ay p,m. in ,lie math. leutlge a ioWa.

nlon . 7l1nes' fol"' the danders will e plll.yed by .fohnny Ruby and his

()rchestra.

'uup WilJ Attend . Picnic Tomorrow

, " " " l<)wa €Ity Knlght8 of Pythlae wlll

tend t)le' annual spea~r8 bureau Istrlct picnic of the lodge 1l\ West berly tomorrow; An. alteDrtoon' of uuls 8Cld entertalnm~nt will tollow

~ cooperatWe plcJ\tc dlltnet" a.t

oon. 1iIaJ1 gamet!, ra.ces, &I1'd an IblUon ot h"h diving will be

ncluded to the afternoon's dlwr· Dn. BlliClro leIwtng tor the' 1I11l1l1c, .11 ca~ members will have the lolflre

nltanl.. p14lAledo upOn thlJir cars at I tt.y's ,arap" '07 E. WUIIIlIg1IC)lt

treet.

Mrs. Flbrencc PIl9ch won hIgh score priZe at the Kmerlcan Legion auxiliary ,bridge party yesterdaY af· ternoon In the American Legion I!:ommunlty buildIng. Mrs. F. B. V'olkt1ftger received ' the low score prlae. 81x tables Of players attend· ed.

Mrs. George' ;P. tfuli.sh will be host· css at an evenlng party, open to the public, Wedncstlay !l.t I\'el' home, 510 N. VaA Buren street.

Mrl. LhuI".ist To Entertain: Tu~itlay

In College Fatality

~rl. D. H. While t-itle': Party ' ,j •

-, ~ ,

;M~.( ]j); , ~ Wblte ot CoraJvlile ... ve Q . IIUJ'J1I'11M\ pat'ty Wlldll-.cla;y afternoon at Allr home hOllorln. h'llr

Held by Washington, Pa., po­lice, on a formal charge oE mur­del', George II. BartilOlomew,

Couple Horwred i I I top, 48 yeal' old wrestling coach ' and physical education director

If/r •. llverett 1l.lndquU!~ will honor Mrs. F. B. Knight and Mrs. Elmer T. Petors011' at a. 1 o'clock luncheon Tllell8a)" In tbe tount:aln room at Iowa ' UMon. Jlrs. EinliJbt' leaves next week to spend bbo Hummel' In New Hampshire. Mrs, Peterson just 'returned from a five month's visit In Eu~opc. i ,

\ ' -. ------~----

~"hter, Jilorothy, on her tJtteenth

thday. Guests '!"'lie. Xn. 0tIII onklln and Bon, Bl11y; Xl'll, Chris tersoR, Vn. W. J'onlMm> and' cbll·

6ren, Helon, Ka.lJhleen, Lllllaro aIId Robert; Dorotby Keppler, aenevllve iWlellekol Leo, Aniell and! Georll1l White. ,

Serving rofre"hmentR oonoludpq tho evenlns:.

At,~tJlien at W8!;hington and J~£rerson Mr. and Mra. Morrls M. ·IIUlel' of college in the city, admitted en­

lQ",. City; .h~ were mal'rt.d.ln Chi· gaging in a fight with George 00II0 .rune l.I', we... Mftored at an T. Manis, 2~, bottom, femalc Inyomllil reoeptlon' Thur.day evo. nllly at . the' bom.' CIt ]1)1'. and Mrs, inrpel'ROnator and night club aC}' , E. JD. Villar or WollmlWl. tor, , hose dead body was found '

Jnr. MIllet' III rhe 80n ot Dr. ant1 beneath Il piLe of prush DY farm-1\(rlf. Miller. 8erore her marrlago hands. Harthl>lomew told po· Mrs. Miller w'" 'WJlII1o. Jft?rotoah 1 icc tho young (,l1tortaine.r had or 'Wellman, _ .. ~_ ........... a.lt.e.m.t.e.d.t.ol.b.llI.c.k.n.ll1.i.l.hiii"m ....

Seven Negt'oos Killed CATAWBA, N, C. (AP)--Seven

Negl'oes were instantly killed and 30 others injured, some seriously, neal' l1('ro tonight whelt the H'uck on which they were riding erashed into another truck loaded with rayon.

youth Drowns MOBRIDE, S, Oak. (AP)-MlIlon

Brennermlln, 15, ot 1I10brldge, drown ed In the Missouri river neat' hcl' late today and only the beroic efforts of Oeorge Pierson, 14, prc· vented the drowning of a second youth, Donald Byme, 14, who swam ou t to a/ loating "sand bar."

I

Included in lhe guests were Mrs, Irvin Rels, Mrs. R. V. Manatt. Mrs. Mae Osborn, Helen and Clara Perk· ins, Gretchen Kuever, Marjorlo AI· cock, Mm'ga"ot Olsen, MI.~~ McClOY, Mary Pa.rrlen, Ruthel .. lno Smith, Ruth Anthony, PlI.trlcia Smith, and Dorothy Osborn.

Browns Celebl'Ute Anniversary Sundt,y

Mr. and Mrs. ,V. S. BI'own, 720 E. Jefferson street. w1l1 celebrate their fortlelh wedding annlv rsat')I tomort'oW'. Thoy will hav!} as dlnnN' gUORlll Mr, and Mrs. Hubert Miller ~nd childr n, and Olive Brown. Both Mrs. Miller and Miss Brown daughters of the couple,

, . Announcingl the,Opening

'It

Mrs. Williams'

Paltry ,Shop,e , ,. .. ! It' t> , I I •

127 E. College St. (2 Doors W~st of Strand Theatre) .

Satar.4a),', June 23 , ,ort

Mrs. Williams' New Pastry Shoppe will bake

and earn an unusually fine iine of breads,

pas~ries and delicatessen. , .

Dial 3int Dcliverres~ 11 a~m.-4 p.m.

SUMMER STUDENTS ENJOY

SATURDAY and SUNDAY SPI:CIALS I

GHIGKEN DINNER t ,

Served with 'rab veae1lllllie. a.-y potatoe_home baftd Hot lIilelllbtllld tbatIOCldC'-ancls.aboro Coffee. Our ehielmtl ate aD Milk ""-die n.., Baat eI tha 6rtt quality from the- belt paultry I'IIrmIlft till CO\IIIty. It tau. "mother' •• kill" to prepare I dllCIrea ee ford· HopKin. Wiyl

Special Supper '

ROAS't _.SIRLQIN_OF BEEF ~~~;:f,:~fj~ll~' -- 35 M1LK FED CHICKEN f,~~1:!. YeQoI.bl .. -hol t VI, RGINIA BAKED HAM AI .... " IIII~ .ftd loIer .. lth thlt Hlckor, fI.'\II.

EXTRA 'l'IUCK - T.BONE S'1'EAK DINNER SOc Our meata ate IlwlY. "Flm Cut," only the beat c:an pa .. the critical eye of Ford·Hopldn' trained ___ they chooae meata II erltie.lly .1 YClur own mother would.

ne .... ,rt. Inclmlp/l with

---pro~

Bal Ro'

Three; I ,

...

(Col

WA ST three-poh been forn ,or tM nI

They In , 1. Usc 1: comrnlSslO tllO new ~relght t'Il

,'Inls ,\11th I 2. A eu' dustry In ~Iflls of

I Named For !

• chapters 01 McthodlaL 80.

101980 tar a was learned City WOlllon

tho Kora at II.

ocal delegate 10 1936 l1l~et: ~ thl} ConVen. "Beta I{ora"

~ and VirgInIa or Mlnneao~

'Ior and Rora •

I nt the meet. !Ily of [alVa

IOwa 8tal~ rolverslty of UniversIty of

v~r& A8l1eta I Ross, lIU8{J doorg, Leah V. MCMichael • onsor or Ih~ chapter and lit. , MInneapolis ter on Lho re:

i/e Party; 'tiversary'

Mrs. narry hell' third an. Ir. anll Mrs. 3 Grahd ave. ul'pl'lao parly

0, RaYmond 'I. Ruby won I was played

were Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. ,na Mrs. Les. Mrs. Wallace Mem ler, Mr, and Mrs. G. Bailard, and

tend t Cornell

.ttended the r acq Ue.!i Jaw Mt. Vernon

at. and MI'!. 'l'y 'I'hatcher II. Wengcr,

1 L. Robbins nrolyn leuev·

~iU1~Jb9.iUh; '93.' 1 l}bJ)AltX IOlV~i OiA. OlTY

Pro!!ramFor II ,:=] Sen\ s~tio, nIn V TO WAR ON BOOTLEGGER _

Bargaining In '::::::'-===:===========:::::::::c::=m:::I~IIIIIiIIItI""" English Com;-t ~~u,~ing Made

~ree.Pojnt OffielaJ S-etUP to Aid

Builders

. Witne8f1 in Divorce \ i ease Demonstrat~ ,

I 4Thttmb' Greetiq ,,' II t r f ,

LONDON. lune 22 (AP}--A demo

onstratlon of bOw two nOt~d daneera (00llYl1gh t, 19:11, by Ule -Adele A,ittaltll and Tilly L09ch-ex.

ASSQcmtCtl P-l changed greetings In New York with WAS III N G TON, J line 22-A 111; thumlJ-to-l.be-nqea gesture prn.

~brae.po lnt officl!>l urogram 118/3 ,'Ided .t. climax lodU¥ to testlmony llco!> formUlated to make bargatnfll In tlW (llvorce sull o( Edward James for tbe natlon's bome.owno1'8, ' agahist the former MilS LoSCh.

They Include: The ff!llblonable audience In the , 1. Uso by tbo Interstate commerce court 100m gasped a bit as }.fls, commission at power bestowed by Allt.lre, llO W Llldy Cavendish, JIIus· 1M new housing bill to reduce t rllted the gesture from the ~il./les~ 1relght rates on construction mate- ~tand a(Ior aiding /ler tellow dancf\r l'lals with or wltbout a hearing. In refn,tng the c ha~gd ot lamell that I 2. A cut by llle construction In- s he m",conducted heraelf ",Ith I thO duslry In prices of bulldlns mllte. luH and hlindaome Prme Berge Obol· rj~ls oe fl'om lO to 10 P Ol" cent with. ollsky. In fl forbllght. fluesUdas Mrs. "am~

3. S crolary l'crklns was conduct- Sip l ':1 trlck Hutlog." j!Ounsel {or

thl'ee or (our days presenting their CIlSCS to tho SI>eClftl JUry. Ib05 rel'­resentin!; JalUe" maintain In" lbnt bls wICe and the I)rlnce m\seoodu ct­ed tbemsel \ ' l1li III vatlous add In Nt',\, York betll'cen August nn 'l O<.:tob"er, 1931, w'blle l1rs, James "flU

playll)~ !It "The Band WllEon." On tnl> other side. the beauUtul

Vlenne_e dllneer Is conJendlng tbal she is Irnocenl of aU charges. but th nl he:- \\'ealth)' IlU8b~d, a brolber at Mrs. M:llr~hnl Field, was cruel to ber. SIl? Is Il8klng a judicial llepara· til}O, 'JIn"o un(olth[ulne88 18 lhe ol1ly jtrounrl, [or ilJvorce In England.

OLMr " 'Iin_1I Other witnl!'l8e1l lodD.y warn nan­

dolph Churchill, "on of Winston Chu rchlll, IUld Sir Tboma. Bj!eCllarn. conductor of tbo London PhllbllX­monic c,rehestra.

Missing Panama Woman Diseovered . 1n 'reX'as 1I0te}

EL PASO, Tex .• June 22 (AP)­

Exhausted lind her mind clouded. Mrs. SibYl Fldanqu , 39 year old

PortraitofMarionD~vies • : In Exhibit Despite Pro~t

• ti

VENICE, June 22 (AP}--A. WJrt[J,'t ~b1bIUO!1 bad deClined to permIt the at ltfarlull Da\'les, American moUOn Wl\hdra"ll'lll of the lIUIIerican elllllbl~.

IllclUr ... Rctr ... /IlI, malnlld III the bl· allll IIlg!> lUi11i.n omelila were lrY­enillal I-I exhlbillon tonl«ht d"»Ilo threata that It presence would mean Inlf tl6.nlCratel,. lI, \letHe the conlro-1l'lthd 1'1&'. al ot Lhe whole Amtrlcaa verilY. o:x1111111. An SI'ent of Ill'll. FOJ'ee here sall

The exhlbltJon autborlll~ said tb., aha obJ«~d lD the action of It:') 1I0 rlral~. the work ot a Pollab mist. Italian adminis tratIOn In han.::ln« \>rohnbl-! will be removed beCaw.e of the bjectloP8 or Mrs. Jullllnn" the po ralt In tbe entranc to the For('e. tl h'ec tor or the " ' hltney alU&- Amer~!1n pavnJoIl, tMreb)' at Ils cum or Att. own ImtlaUve Inaertlolf a work In

Meaowll\le, thOlle In chal'll:e or the the exl.lblt ot anolMr country.

and could r member her trip only or th pl~nts could allow for pack· vag uely. InJr relief cattle becalm! th lr bUll·

FERA Administrator Contract to Handle

70,000 Head Cattle

WASHINOTON, June 22 (AP)--

tak up tbe retnalnder or their

The. alauchter program togcther wi th the proKf'lUJl of shipping ea1t1e

lhelr ta~ , parttcular in the

jog negotiations whereby labor Mrl!: J'ltne~ asked Ie the p1a,nner ot t osts would be reduced on the basis I\'reetln~; were not rather vul«ul·. wlte of Q, Panamu bWllne II man, WIlB

of giving workm cn continuous om- Well, nit to that, replied Ihe petite found here today til 11 hQte\ to which

MArr)' L . Hopk.lns, rederal OJ y.

gency I' 11ft admJnlstralor, sold !D.

tiay his organlzatlon had contracted for hllndllng 70,000 he d ot c tlIl' a

week In plan ts Ins)'>eCt d by the

outh, ~CCDUDlI tor 200.800 a week , Hopkins aatd. About joo,ooo other. Mcl udlng botb beef and mJlk cows. w01 be 8hlll~ to their 8 tes.

ployment, rather than employment 1.a.d)' Cu.\'endlsh, Amerlplne are more shc had been dlrocted hy man an(1 ,of the SI}Oradle type now current. tlOlJlonlt~,.Uve UIlf,n the .8rltlsh, a woman who kidnaped her trom

n OpkiU8 Mfty Rotuse _ , ," With the! completion of e\'ltlenoe San Jose, Cal.. six daY8 ago. Meanwhile, there were reports Col. A. A. Sprague (left), terbporary chairman Governor Horner of Illinois and Joseph Choate, t\lpay. tjl~ court r04lll1 crowel , eon611- ' '1'\'e been thl'ough Ii lot," she

~hat Harry L . Hopkins, noW federal .Jr. (right), dkector of the. federal alcohol administration, as they appeared Monday in Chicago lutin g a verUable t!\Jihlon l'how, said. "I CIIJl laugh now, but lI€\loral ~mcrgcn~y reilef (llrcctor, ~abedul-' for the opening of the 'fi rst national conference on liquor control. Choate declared that bootie... looked io.waM ta hearlo. the argu- days ago I coullln 't. The kidnapers cd to direct the housing program, . . . ' . " " .. ments 6( ~ brl1l1a\lt stray ot coun- dyed my balr trOna black to red and ~;ould not undertake tbe new as- glUg IS the bane of the legItimate liquor lUdustry. ReductIOn of liquor taxes to discourage the boot- fe1. , I look haggard." flgnm I\t. ASSOCiates said, bowever, Jegger wall Ul·ged. ' , '1'he l/twyers are expected to sllen(\ Sb~ sald she had been (ltucged

bureau of animal Indu try.

Varlou8 etate have contracled

tor ahom $0,000 more to be Ua lied In sta.te In I ted ulan 18. Tbll, he a (1 d, I the fu 11 capacity lhat &11

AppolDtN LIeu OIfk iaJ WINNIPEG. Man. tAt>)-<:arl A .

Melvtn , Innlvetr. today was ap· "olnted r v robr at lh Manitoba and Mlnne.,l& Ill.llrlctl of the Lion Int r1)&tlonal U lh6 tiff Mh n· nual COnvenllOD ot tbe tl.fth diltrlcl bel·e.

,he)' still felt certain Hopkins would -------~:_ ... ------..... ----------------------------------------------------~e called by the president to sel'\lo.

Au thorl ty for the In tors tate com­merce commiSSion to reduce freight rlltes on buDding mllterlals was con ­~alned in an amendment to tb~

commission 's enabling ac~. With the other two points of cut­

'ling material and la!Jor costs, this phase was descrIbed by authorlta­five spokesmen aa a brullo point and the probabilities are it wl\l be fuUy developed before the housing drive Itself bcglns.

Incentive These said that an Incentive tal'

Army JlaUoon;~ts Prepare , For'Stratosphere Invasion

. ! J

• • Date of Projected Flight I SEWAGE I

\

- Depends On

Plant Strikes Legal Weather

J Doubts RAPID CITY, S. D.. (AP}-A

• "gold. lined bowl" In the Black lIllIa the act was the fact building costs (Continued from page 1) will be the taking-oft site when two Iwere unduly blg'h and would.be ty of ~he collection system came darlJlI!' balloonists eoar Into the :home owners could no~ be OXPect- two weel<s ago, when Mayor Harry stratosphere In all efl'ort to reach led to take advantage ot it unless D. Breene received a messllge trom heights never before attained by costs were reduced. In anticipatioN Charle.s C. McCall, chief counsel at :man. of this criticism, the admlnlstratfon the legal division of the PWA In, Washed out through the ages by ~om time ago began Its endeavora WashIngton, D. C. mountain streams. the deep erosion 10 bring cost down. The revlseil Sfmmer law, passed pocket Is literally lined with gold. It

The tentative plans to reduce la. by the state legislature recently, ~s In the old Rockervllle placer ter­bar costs \vould depend on local! pl'ovlded that revenue bonds may be rltory, and a pall of dirt trom ,the Ilgreements a mong un ions, contrac. Issuecl by the cIty and sOld to tho Inewly cut highway shows traces ot tors and otl'lciais, whereby labor feaeual government In security fot' ilbe precious metal. PlIght bc assured ot continuing at a loan co\'erlng the cost ot the sew· I More Important to the projected II lower hourly rate, but a la.rger age plant oat covered by the 30 per Ifight ot 1I1aj. William E. K opner return per week and year. cent grant. The bill pro\'ldes tbat .and Capt. Albert W. Stovens. how·

Not to Allvance Funds "aPl)Urtenances" necessary or con· hver, is the fact that the bowl's Under the housing bill, the g ov- venient for the sanitary disposal of s ides, rising 400 to 550 feet, afford

lernmont Is not to advanCE) tund!\ ,sewage may bo included In such t;nusual protection from the wind. ~or either modernizatiOn or new bonds. iShelter during the flight prepara. building. Every section of tbe mea. These bonds must be paid iOl' tram tloll-ll is of urlmo necessity, lind It ~ure depends on insurance ot lend· tho reve lll.\e of the plant, and 11 is was this consideration which led to iers against loss on t'he private the plan or the ~ounc'l to raise tho selection of the Black Hills slto 11 lunds they advance. Except fOr funds through a rental charge le\'lei'l miles trom hero. modernization, and in tbe case ot on the rate of water usage. Date Uncertain dislreescd home-owoel's. the govern_ Tn MI'. MpCall 's opiolt/n, the storm High natural walls. their slopes mont provides none at the InsuranCe rpllef seWC[', tho try,nk line sewers, s tudded with evergreen trees, ",ur. lund, which Is cont"ibuled by the apd the sanltal'y sewers can Iiot round the bowl on three sldcs, while borrowers 10 payments running to be cllUlsed as necessary apllurten- on the fourth a sma Ii mountain llDoro than ono per ccnt a year. ancos, and can not be constructed stream Is considered almost as good

The lending agenclell througb with a federal loan or g,·ant. ~s a wall because of the tendency 1W}llch Qonowers mlloY apply are The council read and illed the let· of air currcnts to follow wator. Th is hanks, trust companlea, personal fi- tor two weeks ago, but no attempt stream-Spring CrecK-just toucbes ,'lanCing companlos, mortgage com~ was made. to prove the necessity of .. com er at the pocket. It jOgs In, paniCS, building and loan associa- the collection 8ys tenl or to question turns sharply and heads Ollt again. ~ions, lnstallmcn~ lending pom- Mr. McCall 's opinion. InflaUng the huge bag Is a n cx-lJalllcs. and other such In/ltitUtlon" Little I)ifficulty tremely dangerous task, asp clally

• • I

CONGRESS

I~ I Passes Act Aiming I .At Socia] Reform • • (Continued from pap 1)

In Its wa\' on Cl·l minals. '1'hoy mako it Il. Cl'(loru,l ocr nsp fol' u. criminal ~o ~I . \IC;o.,S ~ta to I\ne/l 10 escu.pe prosecutlun for u. (eloIlY, permll a JUl' to brill!; In a dcuth vlll'dict for kldnapln.,. unl 811 tho vlotltn 18 reo IUI'JIM lUI harmed. ml.lke It a tedera l Gl'lll1u to s~,,(f ra.llsqm notes and Jill!. nap lhl c(l(ij l\cross state 1I11~S 81111 ImpOlle ~o yeaI'll' ImprlBOuDlent (or roulJary ot a !Janl: In any way na· tlonuJl y nrrlilat d.

A fM,Jral comnlunlcatlons board witH i:ll'oacl authori ty wlll rel/ulllle Illt I' late t clegl'aph, telephone, ~Ii:'

bles, ,allio, WlrOI S8 alla te\cvl ·<ioll Itl oooflO ratinn with IItlltll commis. s lon~.. 'QIlI:r&SS dlrectcq the com· mlulQh,ts to make IItudles with a vie w to r6('(.mtneutUn~ further Iq81~llk tlan • •

A nOw law regulating airmail lmnSPIJrtutiun ProVld S , for yearly conlrn.c'<I ultd r competi tive blddlno; and IOIVer 1·n.leR fa t· ollr.1'ylog mall. It lluthtl'lz(,8 1\ flv ·mltn commlhsloll to mult " sun'ey ot aviation alid reeonl'l'l~nd le~I"latlve potlcy.

Desl 'l d 10 cebablllto.le the ccon-omle ,. 11,' at 'the American Indian, anotll r ltJ.w 1 ~8'alilles and regUIt.tea a ~Y81olll or trlhal organl~t1011 wltl) 11m II II "OW 1'8. [t protects the land rlght~ ' ur [ndla n!! o.n6 permits tllem to orgllllize fat'mln g' ane) Industrial CooperlLtives and Pl'ovldos tor ex­tension of govel'nmental credit to 8ueh lIt~l'pl· IS".

N!\tlonwld() InvesUgatlon.!! of ratcs chal'3'ud (or electricity and of CQlldl· tloM ~urroundhlg sale and (llatribu· tlon ~! nlille Il t)d ot her c.'Il\lry p ro­ducts w~re oraered by 0\lgl'C8S.

Twq III f.t8Ui'CS Il\lll cat~ a govern· ment jl"Cnd ~ lIlI further away fro nt "hnll(jul lll !~m." A revised law glvcs l'ompletu fl 'oel1o l\1 to the Philippine IHlnnd~ In 1945 01' 800n thel'cnftcr ana nl'ovldQ,~ fOl' w'lthllrl.lwnl by t he Ullll~d Sh\les of a U mllitary base. III the I'''-no, after I ndepen~e

'i'h& ~crll1-l~ rl\Utlc() a now C II lrllllty I"hloh Ilbvollatu the f",nlOuI \'I intt ClI\1~ n d";'1C!l t (Indor wl1lrh the ' nlWl Stales ha(\ au tborily to rn ·

Such an attempt should have peen ln a wind. Even a rtvc-mllo·an·hour made, 1I1r, Hopkins told the council. breet.e might sweep th e siant bal­TlI his opinion, ~here should be U~t1e Ivon out at can trol. dltrlculty In )Jrovlng th~ neoesslty, Supplies P0\1l' In an,<\ therefol'e leg~lIty u~aer the Supplies have been pouri ng into ptate law, ot secUons A, I!, and E, Rapid City by rail for weeks and p~ovldln.g fOI' tr4n~ line lI€\Ve~s and hauled 10 tile bowl by national sanitary sewer Intercepter. guard trucks. The monster bag.

ThougH the legality of sections D ~pable of holdIng 3,000,000 cublo And F, providing for stprm wa-ter re-- feet of gal;, a nd the metal air-tight lIet sewer, and ~alston cr~ek im· gOndola which it 'viii bear aloft provement. is more cloubftul, the have boen complete. While CCC statc administrator expressed the camp workers havo construcled ppillilo,r that action by the counel l roads from the main highway a. alld clly a.~tornex. maoy lIorve ,tp es- m ile . through the tr~es to tho bowl. tabllsh the legality of even these 01\ the Cliffs above t t fClCllities are portions. being ar~anged for 15,000 pcrson~

In fact, Mr. Hopkins has already to watch the activities be))w. Park­d l'~vl\ UP' a ne) sent to' WashIngton a message sottlng (orUi lhe llcee~·

slty of these se~l's. Upon his r~commendatlon that tho city do

IllS) spaces and various concesstons 'Will be provided behind a heavy rail fC~1} constructed along tho ellll' edge, I

likewise, t~e council empowe red I As soop as weather r eports Indl. Mayor Brocnc , CIty Engineer J ohn , cat,e favorable condlllons the nine· F. Spl'oatt, City Attorney Thomas 110111' task of Inflating the glan~ gas E. 'Martin. a nd Mr. Currie to canter bag ""lit begfu . and draft an ansWer to Mr. !\fe' ---...... ---------­Call's letter, setting torth the city's \ ate action ·1)(1 taken by the council need tor the sewers. to clarity the city's position. Out

It Cederal officials refuse lo ac· of Iowa's 131 approved pul1lic works cede to the city's reqllest, the al· p"ojeo ts, l27 ar~ already und erway, tcrnative will be to accept the gran t Io,~a. City's being one of the tour a nd loan fOI' t he tveatmcnt plant, which have lagged. and to construcl the sewers Inlle- The councU approved the CUl'l'le pendently, payl llg for tb em with plaes, whJch had already m et with sewer bonds, Iss ued und~~ another the a pproval of tbe stato depart· state law, ' ment oC health.

Anothllr QueBtlon The plans wero p ropared !Jy the This, however, would raise anoth· Currie oompauy at a aharge of $8,·

er legal question, MI'. Hopkins SUg· 413-.61, two per cellt oe the t tal. gcsted. B~nd" 80ld to the tei'le ra l Of this $:l,OOP was paid at tho tIIne gO\'~rnlll ~n t undev the rfvl6el;l. Sho· t.he plans wel'e contracted, l avin g IHer ia.w a1'8 in a special class al1d the Ility debt to the company $7,.

Draws Up P etition <II> no~ come Within the restrlctlo~S 4l3.61, of t/le cltjl'B l)Qnli~d !Iebt Umltalllon. Wl"~her S8wlI' bonds would oome Upon Ii resolution' proposed by

Alderman Ed. Sybll, tbe coun cil dret\\' up a petltlon to State domp. trOller MUl'tagh to transfer $3.200 from the bridge fund to the general fund. Thl& money w ill I)e used to pay 0. part of tbe Currie bUl , and ~IHY remainder will come out of fed· eral lunds. If the city does Jiot get the! fedet'a l grant, tho council pl edged payment fl'OIll oth er fURds.

\lnd~r thl' ~itrlctlOI\ was. Queltioo, d. , " I I

Though the bonds might be paId through sewev ~entals. tn the SU1e wo,y as ~hc , fedel'a! revenu e bonds, doubt as to their 8~atus ball ··been 1'!l180d ,bY cQnlUc.~lng s tate and te~ ·

m'al COUl't deciSiOns. A s tate decl· ~Ion has held them to boo outside the bonded debt limit, but 0. t ederal decillion h all held 8~ mllftr bonds to be included In that limit, Mr. Hop­kins ,e¥llltllneol fellowln lJ the l coun' cll ml'l'ting. .

~rr . ftopklM urged thltt lmmeill'

t4lI'v81\e tor proleollon ot Cuba'/linde­pon<itllllE\ and , fo~ maIntenance ot law c.n1 ol'~~r. , '

Tllftlorrnw .... T .. 1I .,l'fI!lklent ftnd . . ." -'Ooo;rell8 ' J ' . , ••

The meeting yes tal-day afternoon ,\'a$ attended by Mayor Breene, Mr. HO\lklns, MI'. Cur,'le, Mr . NO I'I'ls, Qe,rge J. Dohrel', city cierI" tty ,E ngh'ieer Spr6ntt, City Attorney MDI-·tin, 'and Aldermen Sybil, .James E. lltronks. M. J . MCGUa.ll, and .Tolt n P. IMemler. ~ Ide l·m e.n .TaC!oh Van rIel' z~c, ROR'

roo B. Ayer", 11M 8. M. Woodwflrrl, ",el'c absen to

)

§ QJ !Bt.

.. AuIl1lllI Joe' I Oife!:- .

I

FiW die-Entire Year . i'

I

* Peat1;lre 91 Your Daily 10wan

That the human nose can detect 6,-561 different odors. I

That black ink is made from white mushrooms.

That a steel bar can be made to float in air.

That man eats more gra tpaR a y-tliin,g' eI e. I·

That the hammer is a machine.

T,hat the praying mantis has 30,000 eyes.

Th~t .blue eyes are colorless. •

. , .

That Grover Cleveland was R Jiang-man. I'

That ahe autogiro is not an airplane. I • ,

That no two peoDIP. eYer saw tbe same . • 'b I., . r;- , I ram ow.

That camefs hair brushes are made of sqtrirrel'fI hair. " . ,. • '. t

That a pea as hoc as the centR e' tlfe sufi would burn up anyone' ~1h.ili: 1.,000 milee. I

.. ,. . ~

That a bottle can be ent in two wit1& ~ '~i~ of M~ary S~i~g.

That tlte lil'St known set ot false teet. was uSed by tlie same tam'Dy 1~ yean. . , .. .' ilf.! Iii ., .

...

~ , t"F~S ar~ ver!#,ed ~Y John ' Hix, a~thor of t'STRANGE AS IT ~pp ~!~~ trh~h ~ ," r~gul'fr ef!~ 1"omjng t~<nut~ OP t~e ~,nt~ud pag~ of . , '

T ( .... ..

60 of

tF

CbeJ ilnUu ~ .. Publ1ahed .very momlng .,xc,pt Koucfay by StudeDt

Blbl1catlon8 Incorporated, at 1lI11-UO low •• vealMo In_ City, Iowa. Fred H. Pownall, DlAotor.

Bury S. Bunker General KII.D&eer William T. Hageboeck, AUI'tant General MaD .....

lllnterea as aecond claaa mall matter at the poIIt ortlae • t Iowa City, Ibwa, under the act of Conlt'eu of Karch 2, IH79.

Subscription rate_By mall, ,6 per year; by o&lTHr, 16 canu weekly, ,5 per year.

THe A.uoclated Preu Ie exc1ullvely entitled to UN for republlbatlon of all news dlspatobell credited to It or not otherwise credited In tble paper and .lao tbIo local n ..... published herein.

All rlgbts of republication of IP8cJal dl.patcllM ber.1n are aIao r_rvedo

EDITOBLlL DEPARTll1UiT Donald 1. Pryor ________ . __ . ___ Editor Tom Yoeelof! ______ . ____ Kan&lflnc lllditor JOhn:". Pryor ___________ ........ Newa Editor ' Ron alIman __________ ._._ TeJ8I1'apb Editor

JW~~IaOm Merritt ----. ____ ......... _ City EIlltor a.... urwell ___ . ._._ Sporu :maltor ~ura E. Reed __ ._ ..... __ .... _ ......... _ ........ SOciety Editor

Ie A. €Iark ..... ___ .......... _._. Chief Copy Reader

BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Erneat C. CusUl __ . ____ . __ Cirolliation :Man ..... Acnes W. Schmidt __ ...... _._ .... _ .............. _ Accountant

TELBPJlPNES EcUtorlai OttJoe 41.1 ' SGel.,. lCdItor 'III

BUllne •• Otlle. 41 ..

, . I , .

SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1934

'1lie Government Take,. Up i :4rt in Earnest ,,'-1

FAINT RUMORS have drifted out of Washington that the federal adminis­

tration is giving serious consideration to the creation or a permanent administra­tive unit, the duties of which would con­sist of administration ot public art work in America.

.A million v~ct's will undoubtedly arise in protesting horror at the thought of spending money on such a useless thing as fine arts, because America has been reared that way. Without any background or tradition of the arts, our nation has arisen on the foundation of a rugged pioneering jndividuaHsm, the chief concern of which is money making.

- But why should the government not take a hand in the fine arts' A million think­ing voices would immediately suggest that from the point of view of good business, as well as from the point of view of cul­ture, such a project would be worthwhile.

European nations have long ago recog­nized this fact. State theaters, bureaus of fine arts, government architectural" licens­ing agencies, are only a few of the ex­amples of such work abroad.

'l'he work of such an agency would reach into every corner of the nation-would in­fluence every hamlet. In place of thous­ands of hideous government buildings thrown togcther by local talent recruited through political affiliation, there might be beautiful structures designed by com­petent and artistic architects.

In place of the "statues"-also of local talent-commemorating a thousand his­toric events, there might be beautiful monuments erected by the best artists of the world, drawn together through the work of a federal agency.

Iowans need not go outside their own state to find the values of government in art. The concrete illustrations of its uses are at hand.

Several months ago, university sculp­tors, under the direction of Harry Stin­son of the graphic and plastic arts de­partment, offered their services to Iowa cities and towns desiring to erect munici. pal memorials or other sculpture.

And here on the university campus, nn­del' the direction of Prof. Grant Wood, much of the best work done by artists working under the federal public works of art projects has been turned out. Here on the university campus a school of art. which is already gaining nationwide fame is growing up under the paternalistic guid­ance of the national government.

For many years, as America outgrew her frontier practicality, we have been headed toward the widespread appreciation of art which Europe has long enjoyed.

The federal pub1ic works of art was one step in thls direction; the national fine arts commission was another. They have proved their value as transitory agencies,

But the need for something more lasting has been demonstrated. So the federal "commissioner of public arts" may be' a thing of the not far distant future.

Secretary Morgent1iau Points tTie Way

, .... , , I

... ~·I

SECRETARY MORGENTHAU of the treasury department deserves the high­

est commendation for his order Thursday prohibiting treasury flroployes from work­ing for the government and a political party at the same time.

In spite of law and the dictates of com· mon propriety, such duplication of pUr&­ly partisan and public duties has become an accepted evil in the operation of gov. ernment in this country, and any attempt to correct it should be met with , audible public approval.

But this should be only the first step in a conscious drive to bring the federal service up to a permanent high level of efficiency, ability and integrity. The same sweeping order should be applied without hesitation and witbout exception to every department and bureau of the national government,

Special emphasis should be given to II purging of the postoffice department of it.s traditional political smell. It should include every employe, from mail carrie:ra to tbe postmaster general.

And this should be only the foundlation upon which to build a l'6spectab19 civil service comparable to that of Gr9ilt Brit­ain, in which every official from the cab. inet down would be in office because he :was fitted for it, and for no other reason.

Oontrary to the Andrew Jackson theory of ipractical politics-"to the victor be­longs the spoils"-the administration witli ~ourage enough to in4~tutEl . • uc~ ! refom:C

would not be committing suicide. Instead it would win the everlasting gratitude of a corruption-weary people.

A Legend Write, It! 'Autobiography

II Life /uu been always in.teresting, bul never easy. "-Bernard M. Baruch.

THUS the Associated Press repeated this almost mythical man's refrain when he

announeed his retirement Thursday from the field of finance, to take up the writ­ing of his memoirs and philosophy.

For many years Baruch has been a fig­ure of almost legendary power and influ­ence, and his life has been a hazy model of stories one used to find in the old Am­erican magazine.

The story of his life has been told over and over again, during tbe brief intervals when he stepped out of Wall street to take part in momentous affairs. But it could be told a hundred times in tedious de­tail, and there would still remain the air of mystery that hangs about him like a fog.

Perhaps, and one fears the probability, his writings will be a disillusionment. A legend should never write its autobiog­raphy. It should only repeat a theme that the populace might turn with profit into good advice: "Life should be always interesting, but never casy."

GOOD MORNING

••• ••• ••• •••

"The real purpose of the press would seem to be to Inform the government of defects that have crept In and point out where corruption has secured lit berth, where serious mistakes have been made, where unlit men have been put In wrong places and where sins are being committed against the spirit or the Oerman Revolutlon."-Vlce-Chancellor Franz von Papen In his now famous speech of opposition to the Hitler nightmare.

"Herr voa Papen's speech contalned fonnuJa. tlORS \whlch might be property understood by lit

small group of Intellectuals, wbo knew 88 we do that Herr von Papen did not mean to un· dermine the present regime, but rather to st. bUIse It, but which when reachlng the broad mU8eti would only lead to unrest."-Statement by Dr. Paul JOIIepb Goebbel's mln.lstry of JII'OII' ..-anda In expla.natlon of ordera prohIbltlnC publication of the speech in Gennllll newspa.­pers.

Evl~ntly the Hitler government will learn how lIerlousJy It erred in muzzling the press only on the gallows, or rather on the chopping block. -

It will learn too late how correct Herr 'Von Papen II. It will Jearn thal without the vital­ity of lit free press no C'Ovenunent can survive the cJepredatioRS of the tennltes of corruption mawlng In ita timbers. And it will enunble IUddenly and inexpllcably like. a bullcllng whoee l&&DClbIons and be&nUI and ralters haVe bee~ turne.. to powdel' from within. , ..

An excellent recipe for blOOdless war WII.8 of­fered thla week In the Literary Digest by one of those mysterious SOUls who publicly confide In editors their opInions and probleml.

'I'be augrestlon Cl'6w. the letter &ald, out of tbe n.vy's recent cll'cll8 off the eastern coast, foUowlne a lone series ot WIW' pmes in which pan of the neet tbeoretlcally annIhlIated tb~ other part, &Ild In wblch admirals ' aad capklnl theoretJealJT were promoted In ,Ieeful abaad~

Why, asks the Jetter writer, .hould not the lI8J'IIe procedure be adopted In the conduot of actual warfare? The only difference would be In the absence of bldodshed and misery. La.­mentable though sllch a. sacrIfice would be, it probably could 00 dispensed wlth If all other requl.ltes of war were fulfilled, And they could be

Battlee both on lantl aDd water coaId bel Judged by a non-eombatant eommlttee 01 expertll I&atIoned In Itrateglc poaltlonl. AnnI_ ud DaVies couJd 10 through all tbelr pretty man­euven aDd make their mOlt tert1ble faees UIiIl have the time of thell' Uvee.

And they could even Iboot their I'UI1I, ruled with paper wadding InBtead of lead, and wll8te enoul'h maney to aa.tlsty the most enthua1a.stlo munitions maker, and make glorloua noises anll cloUdS of amoke, '

'l'be, tlOUId ret farther, e'Ven, than In the wat' Plllee. ud aetua117 .lnk half tbe DaYJ Ia the middle 01 battle, merel, IIIAkIq certain that the eftw WIWI laved beforehand. Alld the amti t!Ould blow up ita PD. with qaamite, AIad If tbe manufaetUIWII of W1II' materIaIa I&W wenl Dot ..uafled, tbeT eouId do a wboIeaaJe Job 01 It. WowIq up wboJo 1II'IIeIUII. No • time,

~

And tbe publlo could bave 1tIJ CUn. JUBt as tn aotual war. It oould pay a.nd pay and pay, and about Itself hoarae lover each point won or 10it. -Ancl wIleD the WIll' ..... oYer, the l!tMeImel( touJcl bold tilell' ... ClOIIf~ce, a.mandlnl Iademal&Jea Ia utronoinleal fIIuree, aDd maid ... • ibouluul aDd _ IIIpala&1oaa &bat -W Dot' ......,., ... carrIec1 .,..

-I, And the atate department, wltb tbe belp or

tbe I18nat.. could eIIter Into nrbose treatle. call1n, for tbe be~ demolition of balt the na­UOII ... pledp of quture peace,

C1DIe8 WID M.T ... 1QfeIU0II .. l1li& ,....,. tIeaI. bae I malnw.. .... u.. le&tee- Writer .. far. ...... of ~ . ,._ -u. 1'17.~ ,

THE t>An.Y IOWAN, IOWA: CITY

$TRANGE' AS~ I ITI/.SEEMS·-By. <Joh~ JHiX~ I

·r. , .... -,Nor . ....a-_dae .• ..r-IMbi •• :,-Pecl_-,eJoP!-'OI'."*-:"1 .... u. s,-'a" 01'.1

(~AHAM~S·

1'0 NOT 6ROW Ot-\ I~e~~~. Me WOf{fH~C~S If f'lcKfP

- . , 'W~fN RIPE ... ' W HOT 6~OW WILP~.c HAve KO 4$EcO'S ••• '

.~ow_ Uf1$((;)e WWM •• ,

~I\CA -1'LA~i -PRoOUCf!i­ONt ~IlNCt'\ .. .-1ffeN PieS,.!.)

Behind The Scenes

in HOLLYWOOD By.Harrison Carroll

HOLLYWOOD, Cal. - Did YOllr Into the country, If Moonbeam can they tuUIII theIr present contract ~agle eye detect II. faux·pas in Joan be proved to be a professional ani· which calls for one more film? Crawtord's new PIcture. "Sadie Me· mal, then he gets a. QuIck vtsa.. Kee"l An eastern socialite writes Olhenvlse, he goes into quaranllne. DIrector Clarence Brown gently KNICK·KNACKS chiding him tor the manner In which Poor Johnny Farrow. He had his the butler and the serving ma,ld Jerry Geraghty returns from LOp. trunks on the boat and M. Q. M. clear off the table. No well·trained don wlth a swell and typIcal story cailed off Its tropical short subject. servantB, he Instsls, would think of abollt Douglas Fairbanks. Seems 11.8 Now he may follow Maureen O'Sulli· carryIng two plates ollt of the room Doug's new rented castle over there van to Ireland. . . . Hal Rosson at the sa.me time. Is a tabulous place. It has no lesEi 18 recovering from whllt might have

Well, Mr. Socialite, Clarence knew than 82 bedrooms, seven large draw· been a tragIc lJIness and J ean Har· thIs, but had to Indulge in a bit ot Jng rooms and a ballroom to accom· low Is talking wIth hIm dally on dramatic license. The particular modate 500 people. the phone. . . . Janette MacDon. Bcene was done without cuts and In his breezy, up·to·the·mlnute aid's cockta.ll party WWl a gay bome· contained only 80 much pertinent way, the star has had the ancient coming for Bob RIchie just back dialogue. H the servants had car· manor equipped for sound projec· from Europe .••. About everybOdy rled one plate out at a time, It tlon and shows pictures every other there and the last gllest (some say would have doubled the length. of the night. It was Jack Oakle) didn't leave tUl action. Strict etlquet was sacrl. The Fairbanks domain also In· nearly midnight. . .. Mrs. Harry tlced to the interest of tight drama. cludes several hundred acres ot pr.!. Rapf, one of my favorite Hollywood

If you can believe hel' frIends, Mrs.

vate shooting range. people, says her son, Maurice, Is With only two-thirds of the castle on his way to Russia and wUl study

open, Doug's household staff con· In a unIversity thero this summer. slsts of 48 servants and they are ... Adrienne Ames' daughter, Bar· kept busy by a constant stream of bara, Is minus her tonslls and do· guests. Ing well at a lOCal hospital. . . .

Believe it or not, the place is said rGlenda Farrell and Helen Ferguson to be larger than WIndsor Castle. are heading east, Glenda to have II.

good time and Helen on ,business.

What femInine star and director

SA 1UU>A lV1JtlN'l' !UJff,g ~;n ---------~1 place OFFICIAL DAILY BULLE1lN \ Po~

• All geael'll Dotleell for the off\clal d.l\., \OU.

.. WIC be In the banda 01 the mUllling ecUtor III TlMI t DaII7 IOWNI by 4 p.ll1. oa the lIN preeeclln, fII'It ,. JloatloD. ItaDI 'or the 1IJIl,el'IitJ' ealen_ tII.- lit reporW to the IIWIImer II8IIIIton olflce, 111 wnnlt, ball, •• tar .. poMIbie In adVIIDee 0( the eve.. N • nodc:e. wPI be aeeepted unl_ typed or leclhl-, writ. tell, NoUClei wUl NOT be aoeepted b., telepbooe,

Vol, X. No. %%8 Jone n, USf

University Calendar Saturday, June %3

6:00 a .m. Nature walk with Il"IClal attention given to blrdJ anI! trees. All pel'8onJ! Interested meet on the eaat stepa of Old CapItol

8:00 a.m. Excursion to the United Stat6f\ arll6nal, the new dam ovec the Mississippi river, and the Davenport museum at Daven. port. Leaves trom the lIouth entranoo ot East hall.

General Notleet

P'G~M\l Membel'll of chapter. of PI Gamma Mu. naUonal honorary eoclal lClenCi

fraterulty, from other campUIBS are Invited to see Etban p, AlIea, 11"­dent ot the Iowa ChapteT, for 81lmmer program on the Iowa campllS. VI'. Allen 18 avallabl. dally at 10 and 1:50 in room 815. liberal arta buUdlng.

PRlllSIDFm'l'

Ph.D. In EQIIsIi The preliminary examination for the doctorate will be held Monday An4

Tuesday, July 23 and 24. Readln, llaUi ehollld be handed In at my ofnce by July a. NORMAN FQERBTER

Graduate Majora uuJ Mino ... In HIItOl7 All majorl! and minors In hlatory who expect to come up for II. higher

degree at the July Convocation are uked to consult wIth me promptly. W, T. ROOT

To All Studellta Who Espect to Grad1Iate at the ll_ of tlJe FInt Tel'lll of tbe S_ 8eaaion of 1134, July 111, 11134

Every student who expect. to 'receive n. de,ree or II. certificate at tilt University Convocation to be held TbunIday, July 111, 1134, sbould maQ hIs formal application on a card provided for the purpoae, at the regl .. trar's ottlce on or before ~turday, June 30, 1934.

It t. ,f utmost lmp<Jrtance that each atudent concerned comply with this request Immedlatel7. tOr othAlrwlse It II very likely that II. .tlldent who may be in other respects Qual1fled will not be recommended tor Jll4. uation at the 010lle of the present semester.

MakiUC application for tbe degree, or oertlflcate. Involves the JlllllMnt of tbe graduation," ($16.00) at the time tbe aJlPllcation Is made-the pay. ment or this fee being a necessary part of tbe application. Call at the registrar's ottlce for the CIIJ'd. H. C. DORCAS, Registrar.

RooIn A_odAtIona In. Chk .. o Faculty and students or the University ot Iowa, through Invltallon

trom the Ulllver~Ity ot Chicago, may secure room. and meals In the new college residence haUs, at reasonable rates during their vlalt& to Chi· cago thIs summer. The halls face the midway plalsa.noo at Ellis avenue. Reservations may be ma.de by wrtttng Mr. William Ma.ther, bursar, Unl· vel'1!lty of Chicago, and mentlonlllg your affiliation with this university.

SUMMER SESSION OFFICE

Iltrd IlId Tree Walk A n persons interested In the nature walka each Saturday mornlnr,

with e.speclal attention given to birds and trees. are Invited to meet on the east steps of Old Capitol at 6:00 a.m., Saturday, June 23. 1l'. J. LAZELL

Conflicting Views Heard In Hearing on Age for Newsboys

WASHINGTON, June 22 (AP}-A Catholic prleat, a. PrlllOB warden, n. newsboy and an a8lllstant secretary cf labor, expressed confliCting vlew8 today In an NRA hearing on a pro­posal to forbid boys under H to sell or deliver nlJWllpapere.

These were tour of the more than two score persons Whose Ide811 on .110

proposed amendment to the news­paper and the graphic uts codell were presented In a bearIng befOre George Buckley, II. dlvLslon NRA ad­Inlnlatrator.

The amendment '11'8.11 drafted all III

result of a survery ordered by President Roosevelt. It would sup­plant the provlsloll8 jn tho present codes under which children of any lage could sell or deliver newspa­pers.

All lltunmulzed by Elilha Ran­Bon, general counsel for the Ameri­Can Newspa.per PLlbllahera' aSllocls.­tlon, the publishers' J)08IUon Wall

that no one Iron-clad rille OOIlld. be i:raWD for all the neWIIP8pera In the country.

He contended seUlnl' and dellver-

Ing newspapers was beneficial, tee. 'Ufylng:

"The average scholaf8hlp8 01 -newspaper boys 18 so milch higher than the averae& for the achoola they attend that we are Inclined to take a IItti credit for It.

"NewsPaper publishers are not eelflsh In their attitude on tblt problem. It is not a commercial propoeltlon. It Is not cblld labor bT uny 8tretch or the Imag1natlon."

The tlubl1shel'll, tle 1Iald, would -prefer to let the code stay at It la.

The Catholic prI at who te.tined lor the publishers '11'8.11 the Rt. Rev. Msgr. John L. Beitord, paator ot the Church ot th Nativity In BroolcJyn.

He said chlldrelL who sell and de. II vel' neWSPapers torm "habIt. ot In. dustry, ot thrift," and help their tamJUea. . "To take away from them thi ,Ight to earn something just b&oI caUI& tbey are little, jUlt bec&u .. /they are young seem. to me certain­Ily to Ibe an InfrIngement of IIber. ty."

!

, -former

fe'ael 1Ii~

Jfoeent plB

.Ity comntltt "ere annou r cell M. Cnml

er'. appoln tl gope 8ml

ctlved her E ,0 to ()debo J;DSIIsh and ,chool.

Anotner J{lngerY of Dorrnal trail high school

orace' IJ&Cbe lor's will teach Township 111. Her Domlca, U~·

In

Patrick Campbell delays her depar· tll1'9 for London chiefly to see whether her famolls white Peking. ese, Moonbeam, wlil stay jn the tl. nal versIon of "The Green Hat," or whether his scenes will decorate the cuttlng·room floor a8 they (\jd In "Rlp·TIde." The actreSB worships her pet and dreads the red tape of trying to get by the strict English reglllations about admitting dogs

long aSSOciated in their picture et· DID YOU KNOW; F. R. Relent StriJCe IQ Mill Perk1nlt. telegrapb tonight that , he was JaT. Jng the appeala for federal aid U. the weat COII.8t lon.,horeman'. strike before 8ecretary ot Labor Perklna.

torts are mutually tired of the com· That Toby Wing's real first names blnatlon and will solo it 118 Boon as are Martha Virginia.? NEW LONDON. Conn., (AP}-

Pre81dent Roosevelt notitled Gov.

THE'OLD HOME TOWN

, DO NT., MIND HIM

R'J\ltfrtd 11. S. Pot" .. Ol!l")

WHOOPEE~! \ ~OT IT .....

STANLEY ll'rank H. Merriam of C&llfornla by

II Was~j~gtol1 Bystander IJ

By IWUU!: SIMPSON W A8JnNOTON-Desplte all the acres 118 Ilaalnet tho nearly sa,OOI),·

perturbation 1n government clrclell 000 thle year . over the drought .Ituatlon, there Is The cotton situatIon Itu no rel&­an undercurrent of optlmlam among t10n to th drou&'ht. The AAA mell agricultural adJultment admlnilltra· trace the tmprov ment thel'll to tlon 1nslders as to how It help. ttie grower cooperation plua I'owrn· fann relief program to work out. ment mon tary polloy and will 1&1 It makes 1935 loom l1.li a year of prlvat Iy that th ,ree.le.t probable promise to them. use of th Iinglo non·voluntuy el. :

No one Is ready to ~y 110 out m nt of th tarm prOllr&ID, tb' loud tor publlcatlon, but the Intima.. llankhead cotton bU!, Is likely to be tlons are that the AAA group tore. mor that ot a. reserve po"r to IIOOS upward revision or acreare re- compel continued COOP ration t~ str1ctlons and alma.t nonnal pro. an active weapon. ductlon on the major tann fronts • • • next year. ~lOI'I For I."

To that extent the droul'ht of 1814 Altohther. It Willi lit much mON, hll.8 been • boon to the admlnlstra. ncourallng picture farm·belt Demo­tion fann plannel'll. It bid. fair at cratIQ congresl m mbe... w.1'Il III .. present to go tar toward eUmlnatln, to g t oC AAA U they prepared to the wheat ,urplu., or at leut to. 10 home for tho campal,nln,. The, ward holdln, it to a poInt where were shown eVidence. amon, other. It wUl become lit valuable areno)' In thlnl" that th farmel'll of tb. , preventing tuturo boom production drought stricken areu wers beeiD' sprees, a. the I'overnment men .. e nlng to reallae lh crop Inaranct the thin,. a"pect of th Ir /loverllment con'l

It their private ealeulaUonl aN! right, I lit workable nonnal major crop carryover .tatus can be at· talned next ,ear, whloh III at leaat & year ahead of the earllellt pOIIII. blo previous estimate of probablll· tles,

• • •

There la len certainty about the corn· hog program, yet eYen there optlml~m prevan.: wblle on the oot· ton tront the unde~over talk aI· ready I. about an aore"e Ilmlta· tlo,! rallltld nellt )'tllr to IOme"here bet""" .. .ooO,~ ~ , •• 000.800

tract •. The farm plannel'll have cOIIterul.,)

ed all along thal the pollUcai .treol, of til drought would be Intlqence4 In that ("hloh.

The more Important polltlcal COII~

side ration ot the optimism Imoall the fann plannerl, however, hu If do with next year's hoped tor rto luatlon In produotlon teltlictlon .. That Ie when the real te.t for 3" Rooaevelt pneral program will ., goln.: when prellmlnarlH tor un presIdential baltle will lta~~ Wh ~ the farmer thInk •• boat t~{ new deal then will be 'n mort In!i,! portant polltlcallJ than 1111 ~

&Q4tt1 • • . _ ~---

and tree. CapItOl '

dam oVe~ at Daven.

11 .

n~ reI&­AAA !pell

t here to , overll '

wJl\ 11&1 problbJe

~" .. " .aJn' el. tilt

to be to

t~n

Placement Bureau Announces Positions for Iowa Graduates

Former Students Will Teach in Colleges,

High Schools

R'ecent placements by the unlver-

, lIy cornntlttee on recommendationS

were announued yesterda.'Y by Fran· ttl M. Camp, directol' ot the tench·

e'l a,ppointmell't bureau. !Jope Smith ot Atlantic, who r •

celved Mr B.A. degree In June, wUl (0 to Odebolt where she will teach English and dramatics In the higil ,chool.

Anotner graduate ot June, FIl¥O J{lrtgery of Fontanelle, will teach normal training and history in the high IlChool at M:urray.

Gets Illinois Post Orace' Corn 011', who received ller

bachelor's degree In January, 1934, will teach next year In the Bureau Township hlgb school at Princeton, 111. Her subjects will be home eco, nomica, general science, and Eng· uab.

A. Kingsley Elttreim, Decorah, will teach high school math maUCH and banel at Manly. Mr. Elttrelm received his B.A. degree f"om ;r,.u· ther college and will receive his M.S. degree, here during- the summer.

Physical education will be taught at Iowa Wesleyan college, .M t . Plcl\1!' anI, by Miriam 'Vaggoner, who re­ceived her M.A. d gree tram the university In January, 1984.

I rwin to Buena Vista Joaepb J. Irwin of Boone will be·

come a. member of the English de· partment of Buena Vista. college, S\ol'm Lake.

Eleanpr Norton, A Igona, will teach hlslory In the high school at Marsh· alltown. Miss Norton received her Io!.A. degree in June.

Marlon Norris, Iowa City, will teach speech correction in bOth ole­mentary and 11lg h schoois In Super­Ior, WJa.

German and psychology will be taught in Waukon Junior COllege, Waukon, by A. F. Koester, of Con­toy. Mr. Koester received his M.A. degree In June.

Goes to Evnnston Helen Orlner, B.A., 1931 who 11o.s

bIlen teaching In the Bchcols at Wa· terloo has accepted a position In the elemenhtry schools of Evanston, Ill.

Miriam Gunter, Rock Lake, N.D., wlU teach second grade In the echools of Shorewood, Wis. Miss Gunter received her B.S. here In 1933 and wJII receive her M.A. duro ing the summer session,

~, . Johnson Writes Of

StuUerers' Problems In School Magazine

A 'thorough understanding of the

Itutterers' problem by teachers

would be ot greatest aid to the 800 ..

000 stuttering children In the pub·

lie schools, according to ''Vendell

Jobnson ot the SPeech department in &II artlc[e, "Aiding the stuttering

pupil," published In School Execu· tives ~agazfne for June.

Mr. Johnson urged that teachers aid the stutterer to stutter ~asllY and loosely rather tban trying to conceal It, for It is Impossibie ~or tbtl puPil oot to stutter. Teachers Mould not tnslst on tho stutterer reclUn&, ellcept as he Is able to do 80 without emotional sll'aln and eMuld never change a left· handed pupil \9 thIS use of tbe right hand.

Ac.cordlng to Mr. Jollnson, there a.re now 30 stutterers, ranging In age trolllj 10 to 36 years, hetng treated In th university speecb c1ln. Ic. Thirteen at these are from ltates other than IOWa and imo .s from Hawaii. This enrollment I·ep· resents approxImately 0. 65 I>G~ cent

'l Increaso over \alit summer's enroll· ment.

...... Oassical Club Elects

Alverda Doxey Head

Alverda. Doxey was elect d ptesi-4ent of the CllUIslcal club at Its lr16eting T burSday aftel·noon. Other otIIoera are: Fanny Howcll, Lydia 510[m, and E, I'. SilLven, each ot :lrbom will shar tho dulle. of vice president; and Ruth Sage, secre­tary.t roasurer.

Mias Holm will preside at tbe lJext meeting ot HIC (' Iub, JUliO 28.

C'raduate College To Still OfIer Scholarship

The Robert T. Swalne graduate ICholarshlp tor . tudy at ]-!orvo}d, orfered here In recent Y8llrs, will ¥aln ~ given n xl ~r, It WIUI ~nounce(l y sterday by Dean carl E, Beaahor of tne "racJuato college.

The BCholarshlp Was orron ously omitted trolYL th now catalog of t~. unlve~8Ity.

,'I HI

~ma Professor, Family Visit Here o

., ,Prof. and Mrs. n. L . E)(lwardll, and ~~Udren are v isiting t'rlend3 h re

from

Old Capitol By TOM YOSELOFF

'l'hls story is true, as the powers lllllt bo In one at the aororlUcfI now uI>el'allng can attest. Ono of the girls In the dormitory awoko about Imldnlght recently, to tlnd a face peering In at the window. She leb lOOse a horrlflcd sureeeh, which nwoke the household .

"{ want to talk to -~-," tho face said,

"You can't talk U) bel'," tll0 girl answered, subsiding II. IiUJe-, " she's asleep,"

)Ju t the face W IlS not ))e!·sWld· eil by such simple logic.

"J goltu. ta lk to her," and tJlI~

man behind U.e face climbed h1 the whtdow. U e went tb.rough the cl.onllit~ry, looking for the woman in question. Failing t.o fi nd h~r there, he went through t he halls, peeri ng into every room.

'I'he Coml)1otlon nad awakened the !!nIgh tier powcrs, lind they came 1<cu l'ryil1g out (prob,dJly In pajamlls). The uPshot or the matter was that the man, who, it scemed, had wooed lIle cup of bacchus a bit too ardent­ly, wus seized by the nupc or tho IIcck, 01' a compal'atvc part of tho anatomy, und wus ejected.

'1 'h is deP6rtlllent bas hw.nl thc histo.·y Ilf Iho cnth'c aJTlli.·, but you wouldn't be interested.

Minus the "bl'Uln trust" : It is U'U Il that Iowa City Is pO"SeSRI'd of Ita uwn minluture "brain trust," \Vhlch consists of Prot. Jllcob Van ~er Zec of the poltlclli science cle­partment, and prof. S. M. Wood­ward 0[ the college ot engincerlng, who are members of th city coun' e ll . Yesterday, when the city cOUn· ell met In a speclai session, both the university men were absent. Wh[cb lett tho Iowa City "brain tru8t" Iminus Its brains ...

CIlffiPUS \~e\\'s on a hot FI:i. day IIortenlOon: The water from the hoses at various poinhl on (he campus often falls IIll un· heedJng paved walks '.. and uften on' beedlng passersby , •• Those bald spOts 00 (Jle ctlmtyUs !leern to illllicale that U,e art. lficlal aids to u. beo.utif'uJ In.wn a)lplled last winter were of little use '" ThOse two men look com fortable, lying on the steps or Schaeffer hall (ot course they can't be seen from 0111 CapItol, but we waU,ed the campus yes· terday aftunoon) .•. On the East hllll camPUS, laborers p,rll still clearing away the wreck· ace of tbe storm of two weeks ago. "

By the lime this reaches your breakfast cotree, the early birds will 'have arls n. And with them the early-binl-viewers. Who will be waiking with Prot. Fred Lazcli of the school ot joul'Oallsm, on bls weekiy bird Walk.

' Ve are withholding the namo uf the college of Iu.w Ilrofessor who painted his kitchen ret·ent· ly. He took 011 h is clothing, II) IL\'old getting pain t on if, alld got down on his hands an,l )IDees, moving backwa.rd Ilnd bl'lJshlng. the pain t on after him. Nalun.J ly, he SOon !lalnl· ed Illmselt Into the cornm', and he starWd to puzzle over sol u· Uon. Stepping gingerly, he traclul(l across t.tlll kitchen to the door, aga.ln covering h is t racks wit h Pain t after h im.

That tlnlsbed, he poured several gallons of gaSOline Into hIs bathtub, (u\d bathed-and burned. Was he red

c~ .. week end. EXTRA , f rotl',.or Edward8 18 h (l,(1 at the -:--L""A-u""HEL " lIARJl1( p~nic, dOPaI·tmQllt at Mlanll II,pl. In ~~,raitY, Oxford , Ohio. I10 ~r,~ {I,ed "OLIVER TIlE ErOHTfl" I hk' Ph.D, degree from lhe UnlVer- j \:;;;;;;80;;M1;n~u~t.e;8~0~r~F;un;;-;;;;;;;'1 -'II of J,o.,. 11l 1'" .•

'tHE DAILX IOWAN, JOjVi ' CJreY t&! E2- ___ _

BYRD SHIP A.GAINST FAIR LIGHTS

Silhouette of the brave ship, City of New York, that carried Admiral Riehard E. Byrd and bis sturoy erew into tllC wastes of the Antarctie on tbat first expedition llnder the Sonth(lrn Cmss. It is bere seen standing against the bright lights of the lagoon at tlle new World's 1!'ail' in Chicago, where the colorful lighting ('x­cites £a ,'orable eomment.

"Off the Record"

Unofficial Doings From Washington, D. C.

By , lORJD AR.NE Harold l ckc.s has acq lIired a for- Uy the "tather of the fc(]pral N­

mldable list ot titles Including "sec· serve act," Senato.· ell)'tel' OIass of l'elnry of thp InterIor" since he lefb

L. Jung Leads Discussion On Judaism Here

Internationalism Hope, Desire of Jews

Says Rabbi

Internationalism is the hope and deslre of all Juda.lsm, Rabb[ Leo

Jung of th Jewish center, New

York city, said in a roundtable In

senate chamber ot Old Capitol yes·

terdaY afternoon.

"Judaism 18 a system of life and in fundamentals remains unafrected by clime or tlrne," lj:lld Rabbi Jung. "Jt manltests itself [n the Rystems, a ttitudes, and methods of J ews wher vel' they live.

Plan Special Tour Of Government Dam,

Locks at Davenport lIlaJ. n. A. Wheeler, dlatrlct en­

gin r ot Rock Island, Inforrood Ihe A:ltenslon dIvision yesterday that a IIpcclaj tour of the new government <1&111 and locks at Davenport h bi!en arranged for the summer 1-

l'lon excurSIonists who will \,Islt Hock Island and ])Qvenport tOday.

A specJnl &Ulde will talce membi!r. d the tour trom the Island out over the locks and dam.

Lieut. Cot. A. G. GlI\esple, com­.mandlng officer at the Rock laland urs nal, baa arranged for a special guide to show the group the pointe of interest on the laland.

E. K. Putnam, director of the Dav nport museum, and O. E. Klingaman, u.sslstant director, will conduct th visitors through the museum.

Tho excursion will shtrt at B o'cloclc thi.s morning trom tbe 1l0Ulh eentral entrance of East hall. Resl. dents or Iowa City as well as 8um­mer session students are welcom to loin In tile excursion,

Piper Talks On Robinson

Characterizes Poet As "Courageous" In

Addreu

"Courageous.1I "iron1sUc," "poe.­Be ed of a mysllc quality and a oe." kind of sincerity," were ph,,"s used to cholracterlfle EdwIn Arlin&'t.oD Roblllso'l. In an addresa by Prot. Ed· win Ford PIper last nlcht In bouae chamber ot Old CApitol.

ROblnson's oharacters are at"1Ied In hls l,hlloaophy, ha\'e pow r ot v[slon, crusb oppOSItion and utter trutbs, In Profesaor Piper', opinion. His poems were 88.ld to be not senti­mentally but Intelll&en",y ."J1lten with a point of view.

"He WII3 able to deta,ch hlmaelt from the subject, doean't Identity hll1lSelr wllh tbe reader and prevenU thread",. from doln~ so," decla reel Profes15or Piper.

In th" poem, ''Tbe Man Against

"Judaism links dally lite In all aspects to Cod, and God conscious· ness Is behind li1\. We all surrer from lack of social Imagination and have com(' to Icnow mi .... ry of the world exists because we don't know our neighbors," June, July, August Popular

The task ot the Jews be said Is that of creating 0. feeling at wei· fare tOr all mankInd.

For Correspondence Studies The orthodox and reform trends

in Judaism were mlsnamNI but had June, July and August ar the one thIng In common-the oolll't lilost popular months tor corr~".

that ODd Is the center of th" uni · pond£'nce study according tOHelen verse and central menning ot J ewry, \VlIIlamll, dIrector of correspond. Rabbi JUllg dl'Clared. nee sluely In the university axten·

The pllllanthroplc International ilIon ,Jlvlslon. movement was characterized as be· Ing all eUort to ,lislle[ the povel·ty About 1,100 students trom more ot and to support tho Jews who than 3u slates arc now enroll d tor WE're cont"onted with government tbe IG2 courses In 23 d partmenta ,le,·sceutlons. It i8 non ·th 'lsUc In ,,!Tl'red by cor'·,espondence. Jmpllclltlon. Engll~IJ, ed ucal\on, and econo-

Rabbi Jung hIlS been a guest ot rnl('s-comml'rce dCllartments hay!)

f<oclology, history, and potlUcal 801-

(nee departmentl. Two weeks for ev ry credIt hour

IR the minimum tim tor the com· pletton of II. courlOe and no more I han 10 aem Iter houra ot cr!'llit may b ram d hy Corrf'spnnO nce In thp nine montll a~emlc y r, university rul .. specify. Oraduate redlt III w~1I a8 undergraduate may

te earnl'd by correspondence.

his IJI'Other, Prof. Moses Jung or til<' 8clllJoi or r 1I"lon, thlK week. ITo will return to his WOrk III New York city, tomorrow.

Corre.pondence study, by means of which the advantag6ft or tbe uni­versity are brought to men and women who cannot come to the

I h grcu.t 8t number of COUl'l &--32, classroom, Is no longer u expen-19, and 10, r('spectlvely. ~(\le as formerly, for th~ rlltes have

BetwePIl nine Ilnd 13 are otTer/'ll teen r~duced from 1. ,50 to ,. per III ROJllllnc~ I .. nlfuages,

the SkY," reterred to lUI RobhlllOU" ,",ateet poem, every man waa ",po. resented u IIvlnl on a hili apI~ blA ban lunaet. aald ProfKllOf Piper. H "' d e:ltrael. from It to U1uatrate tbl. ~rtlon_

Robln'mn 'If AI pictured AI belne skilled 1r> handliDl ph raael, and U one whQ "meuufed penonallty In terma of feelln, the UU tb, UvtDl It. and 8eil1IlC It."

Portlonl ot the pOems, ''Tbe Van Who Died Twice," ''Tbe Man From Strattord," and other. were read bY ProteallOr Piper In IUpport of hlll be. lJetL

Tbe )oCture wu the tlrat Of s eerlel! to be given under lhe auap~s ot tbe lI(·hool Of reU.lon each Friday e,·tnht" Of bOlb Bummer -mo""

WSUI PROGRAM

YOI' 8uncJaT 9:15 p.m.-FamIliar hymns pro­

gnun.

Ida. Lu plno and lUchard Arl n who furnlsb the lovo Int r at In "Come on M;arl n a" now ahowln .. at the Var'Uy theatr • RotCoe :K&rna, Toby '",In .. and Monte Rluo &1'&

lured In the supportln~ CUt. Chicago rOt· WashingtOn. Virginia. SOllle tim" ngo Baruch Ill'llt OIass tttl'iy, "u gillS! ut milk and 3. little.

11 valuablc backgammon srl wltb the 1"88 convel'lIatlon, 111,'ul't'." But it seems Chlcllgo hIlS not

heard of him yet. On a rush trip through bls home

town Ickes had to scnd a telegram to his executive adminiatl'ator ot the, /)11 code. HB sent it collect.

A week later the admlnlstratol' thad to "O.K." the telegl'aph com­!lany's blll mailed trom Chicago.

Across the bottom Was wriUen: "Ho.ro[d Ickes not knOwn here."

There is a. rumOl' that several senators an.~ "new ilealers" lU'e lllembe.'S of \Vashlngton's new­est llU,list ('olony rOt· males.

The "nUll .. nest" i8 supposed to be OU top of a !lwl\J1 ky office buililing, ami ror fear of prying eyeM the roof hilS bern enclosed by a high fence.

Mrs. HuC'o L. Black, wlte of tbo scnatOi' from Alabama, just hait­)bellrd her 12 ycar old son, lIugo, Jr., when he announced several wceks ago that he was going to be In a play at bls scbool.

"Fine, Son," she saId, and went on with her work.

But SOOn 1\11'8. Black began to wond~r why he wasn't reheal'sing 'a.ny lincs uroull(l the Ilouse , or ask­i'lg for 3. costume.

"Son, what Icind of a part Is I~

you have h\ this play," she asked. "Why, Mothel'," he said, "I'm tb()

III nd legs of a horse."

Stl'llight'81>oken Em ily Newell Blttir, once vice chairman or the Democratic pa"ly national com· rniLree, has been 80 qulet l ately that a fliend stappecl her at a. tea. t.o MY:

"You llsua.lly ha.ve 80 bee in ,'our bonnet. ' Vhat 18 it now'"

" I '1ll boo·jng a. wife," !\fn . Il'hllr rllSponded demurely, ,

promise at beating the senator. Baruch has been hel'e several

limes since. Each time the two have 1lad a baclcgammon tOUrnament. EaCh tlmll Baruch bas lost.

Hugh • Johnson will Imvs to keep an eye on Cluren Il ·Dar· row, chalrmlln of Lhe NRA reo view board.

Darrow I' turned from a con· ferclWle wllll Johnson rec~ntly ehuckllng ber'L1lSe he hall wal\(· fll out IIbsenl.milldedly with Lhe gel1e1'8I'S hat.

Mrs. Harry Payer, wi[c of the Cieveland attorney whO reslgnell f"om tho nl"C, told this one on her. ;;elf In one of those tra sessions where the ladles exchange "husband :notes," I

It seems that Payer, when he has Q law tangle on his hauos, can con .-I centrate for hours on end.

M ra. Prayer nollced him In such a mood one ev('ning so she sat quietly ,and read tor three hours. Then sbe rose to retire, and said:

"Betore I go up, Js there anything ,'ou want?"

"yes," said her husband dcllb~r-

Casino Johnny Ruby

And His 10 Piece Band

TONIGHT Onler Is I,ept at a ll times

Bernard Baruch, one of the ~oun. ;;~~;~~~~~~~;;~~ 'try's better known finanCiers, Is alowly being pushed Into a come~

15 to 20 Degrees Cooler Washed Air

Last Times

TODAY Al)I m STORJCAL nOMANCE OF TU E LIFE OF W YATT EARP, TIm WEST'S M.OST WIDE LY KNOWN PEAOE OFJo' I OER.

FRONTIER MARSHAL

with

Starting Tomorrow

WARNER BAXTER

In His Latest "SUCH WOMEN

ARE DANGEROUS"

ImUiD Today Sunday

Mon., Tues,

2Big New Features

Only costs you

26C Afternoons Evenings

No.2 Feature 1\ Thrilling Cowboy Show

with

Hoot Glbsoa

In the

"Fllhting P .• rloa"

Plenty of Action ' also showln ..

A Silly Symphony Pathe News

l\1'rs. HOOter ('umminn ha.1 boon kept in ~ whirl by h r hti R' band's flYing b'h)S to receive honorary coUege degrees.

"1\0 accumulates 111('10 faster tlian ~ Uwnnolll el(>r in hoi w~LLher," she 8IJys of ihs nt. 10"ney general.

Since !\fra. Frnnklln D. RooBPvclt hC!'ome "flrllt lady" Rho has truvl'led 33,000 mile" through 28 stutes.

.1~:I.kJ(.].lS' •

[ ~I : trl ! ~ il i Do As YOll l'lease, But

Don't Get CaUght!

~ ~~ 'I"HCEI DIIU . Ifl I . IILLII lUlU ~ I \'OlNOIl aooll' L UUCI C"IOT

• • ...I~ .J!.!.LlI D A.J

• dd.1I. A U.mcUv,," •

Duk_ For A 1>97 "l\(UBJcul Sklt"

-I.a1Al New_

• &, '4,.11 J : I elSA YOUR NEXT BIG SCREEN

THRILL

HAROLD BELL RIGHT

BRINGS YOU

Cinde)JeUo, Every Day in The Daily Iowan.

j -

Modmt high-/Jowntd civiliZAtio", •• Of

primiti"" 1IIolI",ai" Ii/t-which is dos" to th, rtM SlcrltS 0/ thl hllmA" heart? Ma Cinderella ruled with an iron hand o,:"er a tribe of mountain hilJ-biUies, yet underneath, with beautiful simplicity, she believed that some day a fairy godmother would take her away from the primitive Ozark mountains and elevate her to the glamorous life of the big city.

She 6na1Jy did go to the city. But the ooIy fairy godmothet involved was Ma Cin­derella herself ••• for it was the mountain woman who saved her city son's modem romance from complete disasterl

Harold Bell Wright's genius gives you In MIl Ci"dlrtll4 a magnificent womao-a great mother who will will your bean completely. Don't miss it.

Tum to Page 7 Every Morning in The'

Daily Iowan.

J I ;;1) ,tit t I j Sid

r Yal~ D.efeats H.arvard • In Anf1:ual Regatta Before President Roosevelt; core crean (Story OIt page

8'.OB II II s. p 0 R T 'S II 4

"Hello-Howza Boy~Goodby'" Champ ~axie Meets IOWA CITY, lOW A SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1934

--~~~------------~--------------------~----------------------~i~--------------~------~------------------------------~------~~--------------------Ex.Champ Primo: Verdict-Draw.

By J\fOltRfS WATSON (AlllIOClated Press Spol'lll WriteI') . , NEW YORK, Juno 22-The new

iklng of tlgbt paid a visIt to the 0111 'today,

PANTHER QU ALIFIES I~ JAViELIN I .. ~ * * * I. * * * * * * . ' * * * . * * * .

, PrImo Carnera-the old king-lay abed In the Columbus boapltal, his 'broken ankle encased In plaster-of· parts and hung up on a. rope, like

TRAYNOR BECOMES PIRATE MANA.GER Kelly ·Bros. Nip Iowa Supply; Brady's Take Loss , ~ J

p. leg of beef. M a x B a e r-the now klng-re­

iIlplendcnt In a tailored checked coat, stepped briskly across tho thresh- • old, accompanied by 'a girl trlend, several ot his retinue and a couple more even harder to Identify.

Boone Coal., Ke1ly Bros .. , Auto Star in London Meet U.S.C. Leads Qualifiers for Supply Lead Loop With Two 'National Collegi'ates With l~;

Very Rot Victories Each; Falstaff Next Louisiana State Gets in Six

. PrImo grinned. Max grinned. tIhey shook 'hands. '

"Well,boy, bore I am," said the' marge Venetian.

"Whew!" sald Max, "It's hot In bere."

The crowd In the room waltM for ~ore. PrImo looked around. Max looked atound , "Yes, sir, boy, here 1 am," saId Primo,

"Certainly Is hot In here," said Max.

Silence, Max's face lit up. He reached Into

Itho crowd alld pulled out & 19 year old boy, almost aM ,big &8 the PrImo.

"Meet my brother," he said,

"Pleased to moetclla.," I!a.ld the Primo wavtrig his great hand for~ !Ward,

The fallen tight monarch motlon­~ for his own brother to step up,

"Meet proudly.

my brother," he said

"Sure a 10tta. brothers .. round," fiald Max.

Fluent Conversationalists "Yeah," said the Primo. A dapper little man stepped up.

"Now boYs," he sp,ld with a. note of enthusla8m that seeDMd to be trying to overcome thc oppressive Iheat, "th~ photographers want to come 10 and get you shaking Ihands." , "O.K." said Max, , "O.K." echoed the Primo.

Another \jaIl club decicJed to wap managers in the of the pennant stream, when the Pittsburgh Pirate tried to end a long losing streak by supplanting George Gib on with Harold "Pie" Traynor, veteran thjrd baseman, to add another field play­ing manager in the major leagues. Here are shown Pie Traynor in uniform being congratulated by ex-Manager Gibson, right, while Club President William E, Benswanger, center, says "hello" to the cameraman.

Brady's Groeery Falls To Auto Supply 6-2 ~

Kelly's, 3-2,

W. L. Pct. Boone Coal Co ................. 2 0 1.000 Kelly Bros. .. ................ .... 2 0 1.000 Auto Supply ................. ... 2 0 1.000 Falstaff Beer .................. l' 0 ] .000 Swaner's ....................... ... 1 0 1.000 Elks ........................... ..... ... . 0 1 .000 Fl'y Bros .................. .. .. ..... 0 1 .000 iowa Supply .................... 0 2 .000

Pirates Take Boston 7-6 in Stormy Game

Birkofer Pitclles for Winners; Umpires

Suffer Brady' s Groce\-y ............ 0 2 .OOO! PITTSBURGR, June 22 (AP) _ A. and P. Food Stores .. 0 2 .000 I Rat h Blrkofer the ph'a tes' hefty

Last NJ«h4.'s ~uIts p ,

A t S I • OJ d' '" 3 southpaw who Is pitching his first u 0 upp y ~; ",ra y ~ ",,1'ocl\ry . 1 t 6 I

!Kelly Bros. 3' IOWa Supply 2. year as a ~egu ar, won a 7 0 v c·

G 'M d tory for P,ttsurgh over th e Boston ames on a.y Elks VB. Fry 13ros. Braves today in a t orrid battlo In Falstaff Beer vs. Swaner's. IWhitCh tbhe umpll'oo frequently were

n rou Ie.

Bf' JAKIE MAOO Those who cast aside apprehen·

slons of inclement weather and hied

themselves to City pavk last night worl" spectators ,to Auto supply a.nd Kelly Bros., alias Dixie Ramblers,

pounding another victory to their victory columns. Before a large

crowd and on a slippery turf Auto Supply defeated Boady's Groce ry, 6·3, ,vitil Kelly Bros. ta.klng th eir

The Pirates put a cross a. three· run scoring drive in the sixth and this coupled with Blrkofer's steady chucking, was enough to win. Only yesterday the recruit leff hander was knocked out or the box In the fourth toning by th e :araves. H e came back in ' a relief rolc In th e fourth today, and the Braves touch· eel. him for only two h its thereafter.

Argue With Umplre8 Boston bclabo red HeInie Meine

with a five run attack in tho long nlghtoap win over Iowa. Supply, 3·2. fourth Inning, In whieh play w as

Cla.rk, lhe Auto Supply chucket, delayed for 15 mlnlltes whlie the had things his own wa.y tor the players arg ued wi th the umph·es.

The picture men trooped In? dragging tripods behind. Max lean- Sche~ule Mississippi Valley ed down and whispered to tho form-

With one out and Shanty Hoga n better part of the first game, strlk· on first for the Bra ves, Pitcher Ing out nIne men and allowing only Betts lined t o IIarry L avagctto who five hits, three In the final stanf.a. trapped the bali. Umpi re Rig ler He ran tnto a little troubl& to th~ ruled Betts out, but Umpire Mager· seventh when the Grocery boys kurth overt'uled him , a llowing a

~r champion. Primo wblspered back. N T f L J I "I hope you-." The rest ot it et ourney or ate u Y

>was secret between them. They double play . The Pirates left the scored two runs on thel .. three hits. field but Manager Bill McK ech nie didn't say anything out loud about --------------+

their tight In Madison Square Gat'­(len ibowl, where Max tooll: tbe 'be~vywelght boxing title away from the other a week ago.

Snp,p, Sna.p, Snap The pbotographers snapped them,

shaking hands, snapped them whls­Ilcring, snapped them culling each other on the chin and snapped Max examining the Injured ankle.

Waiting between pictures seemed n little painful, ~xcept when one got iln Idea for something to say, . "Your thumb hurt?" asked Max 'wlggling hl8 own and frowning at It.

fiNo, yours?" "Little bit." Max grabbed onc or the Primo's

toes. "Primo," he said brightly, "~reo

member when you wel'e a kid and ithey said this little pig went to mar­ket and this Ilttle--"

"Leave go them toea," roarod Primo.

"O.K., boy, O.K.," said Max, play. ;tully culrlng his fist across tho oth­er's chin.

'rhe picture business seemed to bo over and there dWn't seem to be ~nythlng else to say. . , "Well, take ca.~e of yourself,"

"Yeah, boy, take care of your oWn selt"

Iowa Athletes Earn Awards

Reward for Record Year in Victory

Column

Expect Close to 100 Players to Enter

Annual Mfair

Amateur players of tbe MIssls· /SippI Valley area will play for rour

(['he victory put the team tn a. protested hard a nd long, and fin ally three·way tie with Boone Coal ancj Magcl'kurth reversed himself and Kelly Bros., who came Up' with the let Rigler 's decision s la nd. Tho lellders by their victory In the sec' Bra.ves went on to IIcoro their five ond game. runs.

Three Bun Spree Another Squallble The wlnne~s got one run In th e The a rgument had hardly cooled

llt'st Innln .. ; when Zud Schamm I when anoth er was started In th o championships In the University of " t alng\l)" and ~·me. home on Lutol'll's fifth . With one run acro"s, the Iowa 's ennis tournam ent July 25, .. ~,..

' rror. The second run was SCOl'elI Pirates got Into a jam with Mager· 26, 27, and 28. Pro!. E. G. Schroeder ot tho In thO third Wh~n Rut!, who got to kurth over Gus Suhr's drive to tho

As rawardll In the University of Hawkere pl1yslcal education depart. 11rst on an error, came home on th e rig ht field scrcon. The hit scored Iowa's record breaking year of vlc- ment, tournament manager , yester. \lrror that let Clark on base. The. Pa.ul Wancr and FI'cddle Lindst rom tories, Hawl{ey~ athletes in 1n33-34 day announced the dates for t he ~ig torth inning three run spree dashed tor the plate but mea nwhile r eceived a total Of 291 varsity let- fourth annu al affair a nd said that was manufactured when Tipton and Suhr was being put out a t seco nd ters and froshman numerals. he expects close to 100 players from AI E;rbe singled, Wegner got to firs t tryIng to stretch the hit . Mager.

The official grants, an lncl'ease about five statcs to entcr. on an error by Albright that ll-Iso kurth ruled Lindstrom crossed the over tb?sc of the previous year, In- Singles titles fOl' both men and scored Tipton, and Elrbe and Wag· plate after th e putout and that the eluded 88 major letters, 36 mmor women will be d~clded. as will the ,ner came home when Cooney threw rUfll did not count, letters, and 168 numerals, but the champIonships in mcn's doubles and wild to first. 'Ihelr final run came The whole Pirato t eam swarmed tot~ls were short of the reeor,ls eR- mixed doubles. The women's doubles In the seventh when O'Leal'l( about the umpire and refused to reo tabllshecl sovcral $eaSOllS ago. event has beCll replaced by mixed Singled, Tipton went to flr~t on an sume play until the arbiter pulled

Grill AWHrd. Lead doubles In the 1934 tournament. , errol', and Erbe singled him home. Ills watch.

AHho'lgh t1'sck men earned the most major letters, 19, more a.wal'ds went to football players than to mell In any other sport. The gl'ldde rs rccelved 61 lotters and numerals, While track anq flold men werl) granted £9, and baseball players 36. Swimming, with 29, and baskatba.iI, 26, were nelCt In line. .

No o(hlete received a.wards III

Defending champions are expected 'rhe losers scored In the third In· Fotrest Jensen and Bill Swlfl to appear In three events. Ed Davis nlng wh n Cooney walked, advance~ were ej ected from tilo Pirate bench of Peoria, III., star Bradloy Tech to second on a pa..ss ball, and camq In the sllCth tor "razzing" Mager. three.sport athlete, won the men's home on BrIsbois' single. Their two kurth. singles last summer, and Thelma tun rally in the seventh was the reo Battel' les: R.H.E. Kenefick of Eagle Grove was the suIt Qt Rosenberger's single, atl er· Boston ................ 100 500 000-6 9 0 women's tltllst. Frank Brody and 1"01' that let Miller to first, a fi Id· Jay Fink, both of Dos Moines, are ~r'8 choice th/l-t tilled the baset!, and llkely to defend their doubles hon. Cooney's slnille /lCoclng Rosenberger OI'S. and ¥lIIer,

Announceemnts of the mcet soon ,At Er·be lead Auto Supply with

Plilsburgh ........ OOZ 023 00·- 1 13 2 Ba.tterles : Betls, Mangum, Smith

nnd Hogan, Spohrel'; Meine, Blrk· ofer and Padden.

Ou t.·tanding event in th o v­enth annual international track meet between the combined forces of Cornell and Princeton and the Oxford-Cambridge team in London, July 21, if; the mile l'llD which will feature Bill Bon­thron, above, captain of tho Princeton team, and Jack Love­lock, inset, Oxford flash who 'c t a new world '8 reco rd to beat Bonthl'on in the meet last year.

Cincinnati in 4t02 Loss

Pool's Bunt Turned Into Double P1ay

For PhUlies

iCINCI NNA'rI, June 22 (AP) - A bunt that failed today cos t the Cln' clnna tl Reds a cha nce to make throo s tl'alght fo,' the f ll'st time since the season opened. As a result, the Phlllies won, 4 to 2, In 10 InninGS.

With two on a nd none out, Harlin POOL a ttempted a bunt that the al~rt Phlls turned Into a douhle play, ant1 'omoroak y filed out to sha tter Redland hOI)cs.

The Phil s won Ilt last In tho tenlh as Allen beat out a !lun!, Todd doubled. and Jeffries slngled both run ners In.

Score by Innings: R .H.E, Philadelphia .. 000 000 110 2-4 11 ~

Clacln naU .... 010 000 100 0- 2 8 1 Batteries: ColHns and Todd; Klein'

Detroit Bumps Wa~hington for II to 3 Victory

Gain Clear American Lead 8S Yankees Fall to Indians

WASHINGTON, Jun e %2 (AP) -

The Tlge1'! cla.wed an ]l·3 victory from the Washington a enators t o·

day at Griffith stadium. Clevela nd's

4·1 triumph over the Neiv York

Yankees gave Detroit clear title to

the league Ie dershlp. The Tigers roared loudest In the

eighth Inning when they SCOred nine runs and drove Burke f rom the mound.

~Janush Hitless The viSitors rang up 14 hits to

Washington's seven. Ha nk Gree n· berg knoc ked a t riple for DetrOit but was the only player aside t rom the pitchers not to SCOre & run, Heinie Ma nush, Washington slug· ger, went hitless.

Score by Innings: RoB.E. Detroit .............. 000 010 0Q1-11 14 0 W8.shinst on .... 001 110 000- 3 7 1

Batteries : Fischer, Hamlin a nd Hayworth ; Bu rke, Milligan, McColl and Phill ipS,

Yankees Fall To Cleveland

Gamez Pounded From Mound a Team

Loses, 4-1

NDW YORK, JUlie 22 (AP}-Tho thirteen jinx caught up wit h Ver· non (Lefty) Gomez tOday and the New York; Yankees' ace I [t hand l' dropped hls second game t the sea· son atter winn ing U games. T he Indians evened up the series by defeating th Ya.nkees, 4 to 1.

Since the opening game of t he season against tho Athletlrs when he was replaced In the sixth Inn ing, Gomez had finished every game In which he sta.rted until today. The southpaw star received ragged . up· port throughout tho • ven Inn lng~

he was on the mound, hl8 t m· mates making thr e errol's .

HIlt! Well Sc:aHered

Oregon Athlete Hurls Javelin 220 Feet

11 5·8 Inches

T.A)S fiNO ELES, Cal., JlIlIt !2 (AP}-Jow!\ns In tbo N<.'AA lIleet at Los Angeles:

Qualified l'fari, Pllnthtl', University of

lown, In lhe Javelin, Dilltance: 20 .. f~~t 10 3·4 inches.

Failed to Qualify D an Of IOWI\ and Wt sling 01

1o",. Mille In thl' 110 yard dll$l. Wlllll rr's tillle their heat :48.3.

C'relzllwyer of 10wI\ in the %2& YUI'(l low Illtrlllcs. Winner's time hlA heat :24..1 . Ou~e of Inwa stat e In tf16 88t)

yard rU/l. WIoUlcr's Ume his Jlea! J :53.8,

By RRI,\N BELL

(Assoe!ate,1 'Press ports WrlllIr) ME~lOUlAL COLISEUM, Loa

AUJOcles, June 22 (AP)-I n an at~.

le~lc seltlng hallowed by reCOl1l llr akin>; Olympic games two yean ago and with ghosts of footbaU g(tm s of other yeo.fS Oll every ~Ide, ~I the T:Oj~ll~ oC the University of S()uthern California dominated the , [jr~t day of th national colles.at! field and t r[ltk events. I

Thlrty. fhe thuusand persons It­day S;1.V thc Trojans Ilua!ify 13 weA

lor thij finals, almost a~ many as lIS two ci<l.<l" , rivals combined. Blall. tord, :!rl'll athletic too of Southern CnttrO"nla and 1.('. A.A.A.A. cham· ]Jlon, ylllccO clght men in lbe chRrm· eo !'Ircl .. , \\ 11111.' L,)ulsillnu State Uu!· ve,:slt)', defending champion, haJ 91 IU,'\IVOI'S \Vh Jl the tiring fill lhe <lll~' cnoco along both fronts.

- t'heu IIfld (J roan Part" \nij or the two CaliforDll

""hools found pi nty to cheQt bul Iher were gronn" (rom the SInn· (ol'll ~'nl> when two of Its slara rulled 10 (lLlalify In the low hurdlel and (I uil.rlt'r. Sak Klo}> stock didn't cem 'n COl' the lows Itfler he had won hl.:i h"llt In t h hl,h8, nnd Allen ' Blackmnn wus shut out In lilt! (Illlhe~.

Tho ""rojttns' 11llUai success ex· ceell d (XI>cclatlnll. The Lou,~.ana Tigers 8uff red a 8 thack when bl' .Tlll·k '1\,rrnlltG could not push thl ,1I~us I;,r enough to coutlnue In thlJ \\. ht (;ompetltlon Il!though he \\8)

on lY fln'-e IShts of an Inch belli,,,l John L~·l11o.n'8 rccord \)I'cnkl ng shot put.

'l'wo l'tconls \\ent by th bOaril.<. ' I,} mUll )lullllllt (h shot 53 (ce t 1 ~. I Inch's \ hll Hob I'ltrke of the Unl· .crslly or Oregoll tosscd the javelin ~~O ( t 11 G-R 11I,' hl·as. l ,yman's !lUI

WIIS It UI'W N. ',,\ .. \. a nd \~ol'i<l I\'C'

Beach,

iuches

Monte Pearson, th" India ns' south. ont '.i'h" w(lrhl n'mru of G~ Ccet paW' twirler, kept th soven Yank 7 1'-8 jilt hell I l"'lti loy Z. llelJa~1 qualify hits Willi ecattered, a.tter th& "¥nnkH j, ,, t h" 1>~('ll 1Il(l •. (I( ' reel tl,ls y~ar , lor t~e put three slngl 8 together to send Wit h 'J'or"lInt!' Jool,II11S It murk 01 ii t I\'lnnlng Earl Combs across the pla te tor Cell t 1 1 ~ Int'hrs. The N.C.A.A. rcc, Hardin hl their first and only run In th 000 of "~ fcct 10 Inclluij wus madO' ... ben he olXinlng Inning. Pearl!On was nevI l" loy '1 'orr'lllCl' lUI L YN'I'. 'I'he !JIg rer. quartel' again 1n danger. lo \v Cl'om Uul<m UO" lIc, Ln. , }lu t tM Metcal fe III

Oldtim'er Back To Ring Game

throe varSity sports, but sill; men toOk ~/l6 m~jor "1" In two bl'allcheM and five achieved a major and mtnor letter.

will be sent to about 250 play~rs of three hits Qut of foul' times at the Iowa and adjacent states. Any ama. plate. BrisboIS helped along Brady's teur Is eligible and entries will clos~ cause with a. ~oublo and a triple. July 24. Trophies Include several ~l'ady'S were only able to get two

The Indians pick ed up a run In shot 03 (N· t 7 1·11 Inch 8 tollay. 'the apeedst'Jr.

P Dean Hurls hans, Derl'lnger and Lombardi, the ~ Inntng on singlet by lInl. twO Il'lnntA Wi ll renew thell' huWe thall j(>; . .. • • ~nd ';rroaky and an Infield out. Ben wi th th 16 pound ba ll tomorrow V.S.(

Two·Sport ~len Numerous h cups and statuettes. Its In six Innings. Winners or two major letters TI h' Ball 0

Since tbe tournament occurs Just II " arne 9 h V· ' f I Giants Humbled I Chapman's wild throw ga.ve them w1th vc, y hullcution thut the reWd Soutlh)rn (

t Ictory or I • • andt.h e~ ~ th third whllo IDl)b will lJe u'ackl'd lIIla ln before !lie), l3 men In el CIHCAQO, June 22 (AP)-Thelo' Seed's single drove two mor hOme 'tltlt, 140, one In t were: llichard Crayne o! FairtiellJ, ..... K llv t> I S I ! a week after !h~ Iowa amateur meet ~ .. e e y . t'~0II,. owa upp Y 1'0.'

'l'om Moore of Waterloo, and 1:Ier- "~ht 41 ht II h In Des Moines, It is expected that cas WM a...... • gat e way nard Pttge of Newton, football ano tbrou h K ,I B d 'lr t numerous st8.1·s of that competition g, e y ~os, score • s

Ca d· a1 7 2 moet humilia ting defeat of ibe Sea" In tne mth. 20 Fed 1 I !l.8 I .. cl,eN One In tho sl r In s.. - I son was plastered on the wOl'ld Score by Inning.: R.II.E. Dob Parl,e, s lar qUQl·terbltck 01 In the Jaw hi I champion NoW York Giants today Cleveland .......... 011 002 000-4 10 1 the Or'llon W b(l,IO(s , \Vus lloill/r 1111 jump, Itllll 0

NE "2 P) Wil track; C'hristian Schmidt of Dysal't I tl "1 I th W YORK, June. (A ~ • will Include the Mississippi Valley n Ie secon.,. nn ng on ree er· r lind Ch'<lrles )Iau of Bl·ltt, baseball r G I h d th lIam A. Brady, a leading figure 0 affair on thell' schedula. It Is the 0~8, . au oc er 8co~e e run. ST. LOUIS, June 22 (AP}-Paul

d • I he-' nnd ilW'lI(,' an(l David Fla«e of Wau- . Iowa Supply colleot&" one r n In the glo.!JlOrou8 ay, 8. bOX ng w " "only athletic event at the unlverslty u.. u Dean pitched the Cardinals II) their John L. Sullivan roared his offerH 1(01'1, track and oross country. this summer. their ha.lt when Johnny Murphy got /I cond vfctory In three game9 today to lick any man In tho house and One major and one minor letter on first on an error, and Dwight PVCI' the Brooklyn Dodgers, the St. Gen\lemnn Jim Corbett set new went tv Harold Swaney of Grinnell, All Am. Hoover Singled to drive him in. The Louis t eam winning, 7 to 2. It was fashion" In the fight world, came football and basketball; Mark Pan- • encan j!lupply boys coll~tod another in Paul's ninth victory against one de-back to th. game today. thel' of! Bu~l1nglofl, track a.nd foot. tnll fourth. when Bunge tripled and ;feat. His brother, DI~zy, has won

Joining with his old frlena Char· ball; all;) Max Wlagerhof Of Sully, Net Fm' als 1· n caDle In on. Hoover's ~lelder'8 choice. ,10, 80 between them th e Dean bro-ley Har.ey In aile management aaet Kennetll Wilcox or Sioux City, and Kelly Broa. staBcd a rally In the lihers havo accounted tor mo,'e than backln" (If young Steve Ramas, one Leo Campisi of Rool[tord, III., track , "venth with t)Vo out and game 'bait ot th e Red Birds' 35 trIumphs. Of the leading eont~nder8 for Max 'and er089 country. Ross Frasher of English Meet almos( lQllt, W,s,tklns wl!)ked, Dav· , Managel' Frank Frlscll hit safely Baer's heavyweight crown, the 71 Colfax Vlon a minor letter In both .. .Ingled, and Malone Q1Quted a ;fIve times In five tl'lps to -the plate, year old dean of theater promoters back and g'ymnastlcs. • ~ hard lingle tQ drive In, the two. The /hIs safeties 'Including two double", depoait9d his persona.l chOck for $2,- LONDON, June 22 (AP}-In what wll1ners protected their lead by a.nd three singles. Rip Collins hit his 500 Ith th N Y k t to thl U I I 'Quclchln. a Jut of the /leventh 16th home,' o! t he season ott Ray

w e ew or B a a e 0 HOME RUN amounted to a practice session for often.t!l. Johneon struck out, Dull 'Bengo with Frisch on base, whllp COmm18&IOn to guarantee Hamas's \Vlmbledon and the Interzone D~v18 challenge for a title match, STANDINoCS d Iroundod to third, and Black)l\er AI ~ClPez, Brooklyn ca10hor, found

"Bill I~ doing this because he be. . .., cup ..2la1', Frank Shields and SI nely popPed ou~ to pitcher ShanJlon, ~can for a clroult wallop in thl) ------------. B. WOOd, Jr., tOday defeated the r "Red", Malone led the Kelly boys fourth Inning.

lIevM h Ha.mas," explained Harvey, HOme Runs Yesterda.y A I t te G " mer Clln eamma s, eorge ru.. with two out of fOllr attempts at the Brooklyn .......... 001 100 000-2 8 3 his own wa.lrus-Ilke appendagos Klein Cu~ I Lo t J Le - t , ... ~ .......... .... ............ .. .. t, :'., and /Iter onOC MI, re- plate and Caaey Jonet and Bunge I'St. Loul- ............ 001 121 02°- 7 14 0 quivering with excitement 8.8 he an- Oit Glan'- 1 t I I A I I Q , ... ...... .. .. ............................ spect ve y, n the &11- mer can aem - coli acted trlpl,1III tor Iowa Supply. , Batteries _ Benge, He~rlng and nounced Brady'. return to the box- Coilina Cardl 1 ' 1 • , na II ... .... .. , ...... .. ........ finals of the Queens elub tourna-I :$oth hurlefl g&.ve up tour hits, ]"opez; P . Dean and . Delanc(lY. Ing wo"". 'tHe halln't had anythlnlJ CvYler, Cu~ ............... : .. .. .............. 1 t to do ",lth boxln" stllce h •• ~'te] Lo men. I Blackmer ilvlna two up to the BOV· • I

~ pe'!, DOdgers .............. .............. 1 So haral'8ed by the umpire's de- enth In!Jlnc, I Tie Game out wlt~ 'Xex, Rickard 19 promote thd V',auglla,n, :Plrate8 ........................ 1 I I th t h fl II d ddt Jack Dempsey-Georgell CaJ1)t\ntler 11 c II ons a e na y emal) e a 'core \ly Innln.lI: R. H . E . • ____________ .

PePlll'r, rowns .. ...... .... ................ 1 that omclal "It yOU can't see them' A.to Supply ........ 101 800 1-6 9 1 PTIJT"ADffiLPJTIA, JUM 22 (A Pl-tight In 1921 but he Is 80 taken with Tile [.eadera' I' Lo II ask us ond we' I tell you,' tt fe Brady's .. ...... .. .. .... OU1 000 2-8 G 6 , he Athletics and St. Louis Bl'owns Steven and thinks 80 highly oe his JohnMon, Athletics ...................... 21 an easy prey to the towering Nllw , Batteries: Clark. and Tipton; AI· .played to (Jl S.S ~Ie today. Darll:ness ability that he 18 backing us to ,win Gebrlg, YaaKeee .......... ,~ : .......... 18 Y/l ker 6. 3, 6-4. bright ",nd Cooney, • .und storm halted tlu~h' game In the the championship. ;I{leln Cuba . 18 h ' I rd , .. .............. ................. T e Wood-stoefen duel wal (1 10. Soo .. bf Innln~8: R. H, E. first half o~ the eighth.

"I wouldn't exacly say that he III ott, Glonts ......... .. .... .. ................. 18 fought ~attle with the polished gam~ Kelly Br08 ......... 010 000 2-1 4 8 'St. Louis ............ 100 003 00-8 3 1 o!,-manalror, bll~ h. I. turnlahlnlf Bonura.,. White &ox ................ ~17 of tto. )lew York.., ,1_11,. wearlllll JII'II'a "IlPply ... ... 010 JPO 0-2 4 5 Philadelphia. ........ 000 300 0- 3 3 ! the 1II0lj.8Y all4 wI'll . dooldlW latlll .FQu..Athlatlcs_ .... ~_ ......... ~ ....... 18 delw,,"",- bl .. dtleCltIiM ,GaIUfH'it1Pt HaHerles: Shllnnon antI Mnher r II Ue.~And~ew8, MeM And lVhat y,:e')I do !lltb ~\lr Q1Vld!l1dIlJ'~ Qolltu,. ~fI1l'1la.., ~-.... ~-.. -... ~_ .. _-,-.. _.-'~ . • J _ ••• _...: ~1a.ckwQ[ ~ ~Ua . _____ g~PlBleli B~l\ton I1n!1 ~Ol'l!' .

as th o third place Chicago Cubs, In- New lork ........ 100 000 000- 1 1 8 s turr wit h til j velln betore IJ(I Stanford's I

splrod ])v their 4 to 0 overthl'ow at dl t Ib t d t , .' • Batteries: Peal'son Itnd Pytl k; iHlm (olk tor hla 110me Iii In Long s r u ,l , Carl Hubbell yesterday, conUnued on It dl Gome1., Grimes and Pick y. (PIOal6 turn to page 7) '0 S%8, (

W1 1S-hlt rampage that brougbt ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiii,iiiiii 1he 220, one 111em a 15 to 2 runaway victory. th high I Whil e Bill Leo, six foot three L.S.U, had

frcshman right hander, shut out the no In tho 44' (Jlan'ts until he had III 15 l'un lead s. one In tl ~!' tho eighth lnnlng to rHn the e In the j rhamplons ' string' of 8corelpss In­'nlngB here to 19, his mates, led by {' huck Klein, disposed of Southpaw Watson Clarlc with two-run clusters In ·tho second and third frames and then cOntinued their bombardment .agalnst Clydell Oastleman tl1e rost of th e route.

Klehi. hit his 18th hOme rUn or tho campaign off Cutleman with tho bases filled In the fourth and drove ,In a fifth rUn with a sevenlh In­ning Single. He also COntributed a lIouble, a walk and a ~tol on bl!.so.

Tho Oiants' first tally oame In tho eighth W11~1l Richards slnglod and later 8cor~d on Critz's Single. Mel Ott lined a home run over tho right (lid screo n for the 01&nt8' oth~r l'Un lind his 18th circuit drive, tie· Ing 111m with Klein for the leagu(\ loac1ersh Ip. ~ VI YQrk ........ 000 000 011- 2 11 4 Chlcagb ..... .. .... . 022 .00 &00-16 18 0

Buttel'les-Clnrk, Castlrmnn aM Ano~lJ~O, RlclI&rd!l; Lee I'MJ , .... '

Aca~emy Steak Dinner 'Alway, Hit tlie poe !

Try On" Today!

DUll 2161 for Free Delivery •

fteACADENY ........... Who Won-AhvA,'" Il\lll '16'

Plett. l'llcl12SJ .. __ . _, ___ ., ...................... ..

IIfornla at M., rndlal IInol~ 00(1 am Mal'ql eaehers at I I, NuLrd Db oma. A, &: exae "nd Fr All Ihree

ave fresh t. orrow. TlIC mper, and lied (\,1 10 ( y. l3ue I

aulter hn~ I

urlg WpbHt' rniG and J( na Stllte II

liote. Sou III DrMnal1 I.U. l .8K 01 lII& Gvent.

ee.p 1)

SATURDAY JUNE 28 t9M -

oosevelt Watches Yale Crew Score Great Regatta Victory Over Harvard in Record Time

~ean Sweep ~ored By :Yale; Franklin, Jr.,

Loses Shirt NI" By EO\\' ARD J. NEIL (ASllOCll1ted Press 8Il0l18 Writer)

NEW LONDON, Conn., .June 22 (8, The, Associated Press) I (AP)-Pr aldent Roosevelt broultht All members of baseball's lilg

~ stunning new deal to the "hames Si~, tram the leader, Heinle Manush this evening as a. gl'eat Yale val1liey to tlie Senatore down to slxth-~Jght crushed Hal'vard In record Bill Terrv at the Oiant's lost ground batlerlng time In a fitting climax yesterday. to 010 greatest tegatta 1n aU tbe 81 Marill~h tailed to get a hIt oul at years ot this hoary rowing rIvalry. four tilnes at hat against the Detroil

It was the tlrst vIctory tor Ed Tigers, uulf his average fell from .417 Leader's varsity In tour long Y'Jll's to .410, while the other place-holel­~nd the brawny boy. In Blue went ere diU little better. oil the way while they were o,bout The standIng: It sweeping the 1'I"9r clean for the G AB R H Pct. ~Y'4 program, and wlndin .. up for. Jl'anuflll, Senators 60 251 49 103 .410 ;b& helleCit of the chief execuUv't Gehrin;;,'r, Tigers .. 69 229 1;8 91 .397 ,and a. crowd ot fully 100,000 w,J.th I Travis, Pirates ...... 56 200 60 76 ,371 the greatest performance In all the Va-ughan. Pirates .. 52 202 GO 76 .371 73 races since thO compeUtlon start- ]\if d'W1 led 58 242 53 88 ell In 1862 on Lake Wlnnep_ukee , ee c' , ar s .... .3~5

N II hi Terry. GliIn'U ..... ,., .. 60 232 47 83 .3,8 JII 'ow amps re.

Break R«ord The Ells, stroked by Johnny Jack·

~on , Bon of a New Hayen publlsh-~~ er, pulled down fout' miles ot swlCt ' u=_ " lend perCect watel' from Bartlett's '~ cove to the railroad bridge In 19 I

anlnutes, 51 4-5 seconds too pull the I • '

lJIark under 20 minutes tor the first lime and blast b)' over 10 secondll NATlON,u, Ll!:AGUl! the record of 20:02 set by Harvard W. L. In 1916. New t'orlt ....... .", ...... 39 21

Harvard. tralilng tor all but the St. LouIs ....... _ ........... 35 23 brletest of scconds just a Ctel!' t ho Chleai!'o ...................... 36 20 start, also came down the river, 1'Ioston ....... _ ............... 31 27 lammed wltb more pleas6re boaU jil~burg'b ................ 29 21 than ever have viewed the cllllNdo l'Irook1Y'nr .................... 26 34 ,pectacle 'belore. In 20:01 3-5, three I l'hiladelph.la ........... 22 35 {ull lengths behind at tbe tlnlsh (,"b\ctnnatl' .................. 16 40 ~ut still tWI> flfths of & Becond un- Yl!lltenJ'ay's Results der the Old record. Pittsburgh 7; BOston 6.

mves Up Shirt Cbleago f5'; !\Tew 't'ork 2. The president, bringing to a. Phlladelp'bla +; ClhCldnati 2.

close So day full ot i!xcltement, tun St'. LolliS' 7: Brooklyn 2. Md adulation, proudest In New GaInes 'I'oda.:r London's recent history, rode down Boston at Pittsburgh. the rover oohlnd the varsities on N'ew Yorl{ at ChICago. ~he referee's bOat, the Dodge III, Pl\lIadelphia at Clnelnnatl. just as he dId thIs morning when Brooklyn at St. :z:.oU18. Ills 80n, Franklin. Jr., pulled ' the No. 6 oar In the Harvard shell that bowed to the Yale treshmen by a. 16ngtb. forcing 180 pound&, six toot ,our Inch junior to give up his shirt 10 his Eli rival at No.6, Ted Griggs, o[ st. Paul, to hie great disgust.

It was Yale's tlrst clean sweep or 'he three races on the program Iince the 'big Ell eights or 1928 and 19Z9 rowed the Crimson fleet olf tile Hvcr. Yale won the junior varsity /iCe, second two mUe event or th~ morning. by a {ull three lengths.

U.S.C. LEADS.

National Collegiate. Qualifiers

.------~------------.

AmntlOAN LEAGUE W. L.

,Detroit ........................ 35 24 New York .................. 341 24 lIoston ........................ 32 28 Washington .............. 33 29 Cleveland ... _ ........... .29 21 (3t. LouIs .................... 21 30 Plitladelphla .............. 23 35 Chtcago ...................... 21 Sa

1'I'l8ter'da.y's Results Boston 11; Chtcago 1. Cleveland 4; New Yorlc 1. Detroit 11; Washington 3. st. LOllis 3; PllUo.delPhla. 3

canel! In 8th. storm). Gaines Today

Detroit at Washington. St. Louis at Philadelphia. Chicago at nost-on. <:Ievela.nd at NeW York.

Pct. .650 .603 .574 .584 .518 .439 .086 .286

Pct. .593 .686 .533 .532 .518 .474 .397 .356

(gl\mc

(Continued from PlLI'e 8) • -I t1: .1 So It G1>es Beach, only a few miles tl'om

coUseum, His toss of 220 tuet 11 5-8 inches broke an N.C,A.A. re~ord

which had 8tood slMe 19a8 when lA~ Bartle:t of Albion thre,v It 216 te~t

. -------------------------. BOSTON, Jun~ 22 (AP)-Thc Red <Shx continued their terrltlc hitting 1M they swamped the Chicago White iSo", 11 to 1, loday to make It thre!)

7 Inches. out of four in thl) current scrles Berni" !\foore. conch ot the Loulsl- which will end tomorl·OW.

anlans, who 'swept io a surprls\ll;j -StarUng early against their form­victory at Chicago last year was el' teammate. Mliton Gaston, the none too optlmlBtla after the pt'ellu}. Red Sox slammed out 18 hits In aiL Inary (vents. "We dldn·t bdlllJ l"Jtteen of these were mado olf Oas­enQugh tncn." he sald. "I~ looks !ton wllo I1nall1 surrendered the llke So~thl'rn California Is out in !mound dUtills to Joo Hevlng. [ront. and maybe Stanford." Letlty Oslermueller, Who has been'

TlI& track where OlympIc r&conls turnlshlng Boston with somo brll· lell In I csoundlng fashion two yeAl" nan'll p1tchhli!' of late, was efrcetlvo ngo wu~ lightning fllst today IIl\d ' tllroughOUt. The only run he a1low­the Mla~k on the book sbould be In, led caml) lri the fifth frame when

we bOal'u~ • G3 fret 7 3·1 or the Unl· the jnvelln

I'u. tense when tho more serlou8 uUBI- Eva!" Swanson nIcked him. for III

wOl:ld I'I'c' ness of running comell IIp tomorrow. triple to the left field co'tner and r. " tnel Most ut the slars were satisfied 10 or, cased the plato later on an lntield

ot U" v , 'out. z Jleljn~Z qualify today und save thel" .~ , C' r tor the finals. Glen CU llnlnghanl In Everyone ot the lted SOlC hit sate-this Y a , ('\ t wlnntnG" an 880 yard heat, Glenn W, Ro,l .Johnson contr1butlng a dou-

a fllurk a 1 Hardin In tho 220 yard hiGh hurdle... biD and tW() alnglea and Lyn Lal'Y N C A A. ret· h

. . ' 10' "hen he was second Ilnd In tb~ t ree one-we wallop8. JImmy WU8 mal, quarter mile Ileal he won 'DAlph iVykes, manager at the Pall! H6se,

'1'1 iJigJc' ,~ Ie I' tletealfo In the dashes and othOr t.elt>e<l Cbe Red Sox by making two IJIl \lut II 'lid tll ow .. 'l'he ipeeds!'Jrs seemed to do little mON! w r s, today. Ihan ICi' Chibago ............ 000 010 OOO~ 1 9 a their /!lI ttle.' n t 011 1dO '0' 11 18 0 VI U.S.C. Plilces 1'3 Men ... os On .............. 0 u ~

tomort'll South~rn Cl.l.lltol'llla today placed Batterle8 - Oaston, l!tcvlng and thO IOC,)I'll 13 men In eight events. tIIree 1\\ tl1e Shea; Ostermueller and R. Ferrell.

before t./teY 440, one In the 880, two In the 1001 One In the shot, two In the 2:10, olle In the low hurdles, two JII the broad Jump, ILad one In the disc.,..

Stanford's eight In alx event. were dlstrlbut8!l, two Itl the shot, two In

Wre8tler Cllarged :With Evading die . · lmmt,JratioD Laws

the dis/JUS, olle i n tho 100, one In J(ANSAB CITY, 'Kan.. June 22 1he 220, one In the ja;velln, and on. (AP)-J.. wrestler, k\l tlwn In the

Iho hlJrh hurdl 8. rln,. as Mike ' Brendel but In private L.S.U. had "Ix left In al" events, lite as Mlhaly Orgobanyl, an A US-

ne In Lho 440. one In the hlgb bu.u- ' trlan, 10 under arrest here on . one In the 880, one In tlle ahot, oba.rgOS of ~Vadlnr the immlgrathi'n e In tho ja.velln, nnd one 1n the laws. Authorltkls will seek his d~-w hurdl s, )IOrtatlon. ' Siv unlversltlea qualltled t~o OrgOhanYI and a woman, g iving ch. The ,vore Ulllvereh,r .. oJ the n~mo of MarglU'ot Ratty, 22, UCornla at Los Angelo~, 1eXIIs A, were afJ'lIIIt.ed bore TuelidaY. Bo~h M., Jndlana, Washington 8tate, gave aa their address a hotel (t\1e

IInohl nnd Kansas. Two .. re len J.>laz&l in Del Moines, 10.. 011\ Mal'qu tte. Ra.n.... StMa Poll¥ 8fi.hi questioning brou;;ht enehers at Empor ia, Den18()O, Mla- out that they wer not thon man and I. Notra Dame, Manhatt.ll, Oklo.- wire but they were married Wed­oma A. "M., Tula.ne, Aub_rll, nosday and the woman WIl8 roleased exae fOnd Fresno State. trom custlldy. o rgobany I remaln-Ali three oC the loaalng teamn ed In j.1l pending p. hearing.

ave f"esh talent available tor 10- +u~horltle.1 said that h~ overstay­orrow. The distance runneMl, hlg\t ed his t ime peTmltted In thIS country, 'mJ)tlr~ and pol vaulter. wel'll nob 'Nent to C,nllda where be was 0.1' .

lied Ill1 to display tllelr wart'_ to· reated, jumped hl.!! bond there and Y. Bua Deacon, Stantol'd POl1 retul'nd )lore without permission. ulter Mil clone l4 feet, 2 Inche".

errls WebRtl' r or SOuthern CIUl. rnla and J ohn Sander. 0-' Louls­no. Str.tc al' conslaol'ed talr two Iter&. Southern CaUCornia Wt.s I1J men nan III rno htlth j\lrn ilia S.U. l .aM m (l(,", "" S"'Wl\rt In, the

low.ns Are Jlllected D£& MOINES (AP)-Flve Iowa.

men ..... elected at the 01081ng 86\1' alo. pf ,he W;c8tern Grain and Feed &aler. lUI.oclation here today to adMl .... r the oouaty elevator a nd

_1JI1i~.o.vlen.til •••••• ".!IIIII ... u_, .. oSlauon code In tbe te.te

THE lf~Y rowAN', IOWA Cl'!"f --

SKIPPY-It Doesn't Always Work

MA.MA PAID ~RAUSME"r'E~ WHAT SHe OWEO t4IM TCOAY AN' HE WAS So HAPPY AE

Gi).\IE HER A 8/tG OF ~AYWAS . NtC€. . . -

Wauwatosa Hurler Has No-Hit Hahit

MILWAUKEEl. Wls (AF)-Pllch­Ing no-jilt games may repl'esenL thP. zenith (,f achievement to mo.st base­ball hurlers, but to Casey Dropp o( the Wauwatosa All-Stars It's prac­tically a habit.

Recently he hUI'led three no-hit­ters within 0. week, an(l his record over a period of four or five years Includes 24 games In which the Oll­position fallcd to get 0. hit.

CANDY.

Saints Win CEDAR RAPIDS (AP)-St. Jo·

seph won th aftetnoon game trom Cedar RapidS here tOday 9 to O. Letty Geno Ledford reached the dOOI'steps of tho nO·hlt. no·run hall of fame In the opening game bl' holding the Raiders to one hit. It was a sharp b11\st from Dick Esrey's bat In the fourth inning which Shortstop McIsaacs tailed to handle. Only two other meo reached th·st base. Two bases on balls were giv· en to l!llcksllot and Anderson.

r Explanation Of ·1 t'Straq8 AB It SeeDI8"

Christina, queen of Sweden {rom 1632 to 16114, WIU! also king of Sweden. She became queen at th age of six, In 1632, upon the death ot her father. Gliatavu8 Adolphu . who was killed In the battle of Lut%en. From that Ume until 1644 8he ruled und r 0. regency headed by the ChancellOr O"enstjerna.

When she Willi 18 ahe became queen In her own right, and six years later. In 1650, she assumed

Tables Turned the title oC "king of Sweden," be· Dempsey Out LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)-Mrs. c'arl coming both king and queen. She

NEW YORK (AP)-Jack Dcmp· Rohman oC Lincoln turned the tablea deolded to abdicate tho {oJiowing sey. tormer heavyWeight boxing on Mrs. C. R. Bangh of Omahu. JII Y ax. but was persuaded to remain champion, today left the Polycllnlo winning the 1934 Nebraska womon" on the throne. Three years later hospital, which . he entered Wednes· colf championship here this atter- When 6he again decided to abdicate clay tor treatment ot an Infected noon, ·1 and 2. The tourney was she found that most everybOdy was [Inger. For a tlme It was feared an playecl at the Shrine club, scene <If In !avor or lhe Id08.. Her appoint· operallon would be necessary. the LIncoln open last fall. ment ot about 500 nobles during her

MA CINDER.ELL~ , Harold Bell Wri t l

SYNOPSIS

Dian. Carrol-young artllt and wealthy orphan, more interested il\ her work than society-visits the little village of Pine Knob in the Ozarks. Her 8unny disposi­tion melts the ulual frigidity of the m.,untaineers towards IItrang· era and they accept her at one of tb, Uhome folks"-all except Ann Haskel, whose word is law 10 Pine Knob. Diane, nevertheless, is fas­cinated by Arm about whom she

'has heard conflicting stories of renero.ity and hardness. The mountain woman seems to be avoiding Diane, but her Jood-for­nothing steplfon, J eft Todd, fol· lows the artist eve tYWhe re. Ann has a son ()f her own. John Her· bert Haskel, whom she sent away years ago, following the death o~ her first husband. Diane's b~st friends amon$. the mountaineers are "Uncle Jimmie" and "Aunt Josie" Cartwright who have prom­illed to "protect her from the an­noying Jeff. One day, Ann comes upon Diane painting in SHady Creek Valley and brusquely asks: "Wllat be you a-doin' hyear?"

..niane apo!ogi:reB for trespassinJ' Ann'e demeanor changes immedi­ately and she says: "You're wel­cnme. I got sense to see you ain't a-hurtin' nobody."

all gotl We-uOll don't know nothin' the fortune which Diane Carrol in­an' got less ; you-una know every- herited from her father-wall so thing an' got everything. We-uns literally true that the artist smiled air mostly a-doin' the best we know: at t he thought. It would be quite you-uns ain't a-givin' a doggone. uselesl, she reflected, to explain that You ahould take shame to your- she was a very wealthy young se'ves, bein' like you be with all the woman and, therefore, could not be chance you've had." reasonably cbarged with painting

Diane flushed. "Evidently you pictu res for money. And besides, haven't a very good oJ;linion of us." Bill Carrol's daughter preferred al­

"You're durned right I ain't. I ways to stand on her own feet. With sure like folks what's got some- her it wae a matter of pride-pride thin' to 'em. I'd a sight ruther have not understandable to many, per­'em right down bad than w have haps, but-well-as those who knew 'em jest plum' nothin', like you- her best sometimes remarked, uns. Take your funny little drinks. "That was Diane." Now, wllat do theY' amounti to7 H "You're a likely-lookln' young I war a-wantin' to drink, I'd h'ist woman'" said Ann. "How come you me a ~od hefty snort of r6a.llicker. ain't !tot no man to be a-Iookin' An' I d take her straight. Look at after?'" them cigareets you're all the time "It i. al1 I can do to take care of a-suckin-Jest paper an' fancy myself," Diane returned, with a. store terbaccer. Me, I smoke a. rl1al .hade of bitterness, meaning far pipe an' r6IJ~ terbaeeer-Iong green h h what I raise an' cure myse'f. Fish- more t an t e mountain woman in' with little poles no bigger'n a knew. With her knowledge of life

'11 . h ' k bel ' fl' I and ber downright honesty the WI er SWitc ,an mil. e- leve les heireu of tha Carrol fortune had If a body wants fish. let him git to long llillce faced the truth that ber work an set him a trot-line, or t.ke pride in being valued for herself him a gill' all' kill hisse'f a real I ld 't I'k I It I mess. An't nothin' w maka-belleve a ene wou qUI 41 1 e y resu n

. k h" 1" I her remainint atngle w the end of fishm'-a- etc ID ~oor Itt,e m n- het days. nies what ain't big nough w smell- " 'Peays like "au got .01116 sense," up tho skillet even. You-uns ain't J

a-livin' real; fou're jest playin' at adlTlltted the other. "But hit'd be livln'; hit's al jest make-believe w right smart more deeent, 'cordin' to you. You dOll't even dress teal. Go my way of thinlcin'd if you was to 'round ha.'f the time a-wearill' git yours~lf marrie regular 'stead

CHAPTER VIII. funn}' man-clothes-the balance of of playfn' 'round with the men like Presently Diane said with quiet t he time you ain't got on 'nough to ~ou r,OUIIi' citY wimmen do theae

enthusiasm: "I'm awfully glad you wad a shotgun." aye, d h th O "Bu· Mrs. Haakel, don't "ou Diane was furious. "Are you a-

happened to find me ere 13 think"'::" .. Iiberately tuin&' to insult me, Mrs. morning, Mrs. Haskel." Haskel1" abe demanded.

The mountain woman looked at "Yoo hush till I've done said my "You can take hit or leave hit." her sharply before answering. Then lillY. You-uns can't even take keer retorted the mountain woman, again the artist saw the shadow of of your menfolks. They're poor crit- harshly, flI knew what I've aeed a smile. . ters, them Lodge men. Menfolks eve ..... summer them Lod .. e folk8 has

"What i8 thar 'bout me a.hap- mostly air. Four out of five hus- . .. P penin' to ketch you hyear that bands ain't worth keepin': t'other been a-hellin' 'round this nei~hbor-makes you ~ad 1" one wouldn't be if hit warn'e fer hood. I ain't a plum' fool jest cause

"I h t' +. kn some womaR a-loA'-<'ft' af"-- him. I've lived my life in the woods." ave i!n wan IlIg "" ow .. 'v"....." Somethinlr in the mountain worn. you ever since I came," smiled Dt- Every woman'e jest natehally got an's \lbice _ something, perhap8, ane, "Ive heard so much about w take keer of some man, BOOll or hi h D' h If h d h ht f "ou." late. Seems like that's what Gawd- w c lane erse a t oug 0 , certai:n of th. vacatlonist&, caused

"Jimmie Cartwright is a gabby a-migbty made 'em females fer. th ' 1 •• th hid·...., t" n h S ' P HI·t mostl!.. happeOll, LA., that the e gtr w Bmo er er n 1"1 "0. 10 • old fool. She's anot er. 0 8 appy ¥ wv "I don't care what you thlDk you

Giles. Talk their dad-burned heads man a woman's takin' keer of ain't k M H k I" h 'd I . , h'~ Ii W the one ahe', --thinkl'n' mo.' now, rs. as e l 8 e sal ,ea m-off, gIVe em a. a c ance. I e- .L.

U.... ~ •• If. / You certainlY do not know

uns in the backwoods air most y a IN ~ me." t~illin', nO-'count, eome-daY-(f()-day- "Very aoorlJ Mra. Haskel," Diane "Meblle not-yet," eame the rrlm Gawd-send-Sunday, lot. This hyear returned, witn spirit. "But I cer- retort. "Got ant folkS! have you?" countu's all right-natcilally. Hit's tainly object w your putting me in Almost againllt her will Diane the folks what's a-spoilin' hit." the do-nothing-but-pretend cla8s. I told briefly of her childhood under Her face softened and her voice work, and I work hard. My father Aunt Je .. lea'i r.ardlanship; of her was not 80 harsh. "These h-ar was a worker too. No one ever f th h' d th I d

,,~ accused Bill '.tanol of not lIV1'n" a er, IS wor an e r comra e-. / )OOs an' mountains an' valleys an' \j .. hi _. h r atudent da"'" and that , . . , real, a- fioU call It. And he tauft e p;.... • "u l streams an sprmgs th.ey am t no- • .he was now alone in the world.

ways like we-una wba.t's a-livin' me to ive the lame way. Y "TIle Jut of t'he Carrola.· Ihe said, among 'em. Hit would sure be a friends ~re all people who work fer unconsciously using a phrase whicb Gawd-a-mighty's blessin' if folks everything thO)' have and who value h d bee t I to h . d b th could only be an' live like tbe treel. above everythln~ el .. the realitiea a . II pu n er mm y e now wouldn't hit?" of life.'" .wnea of Ann Haskel and her son.

The many tales she had beard The mountaiJl 'WOman looked at The older woman ,poke heavily: her shrewdly "Be you a-takin' "YOd lure bad a chance w be IOme-

about Ann Haakel rued tht'CIuJrh keer of one o~ them Lodlre menT" thln'-with 1\ d.ddy like that an' Diane's mind: Her despotic rule "Indeed I am notl" .choolln~ an travelln' an' all. We-over the eounflrysldefthe ~escue of "Bell '1ou"re a-thlnkfn' 'bout U1\l what's horned an' raised up Pappy Giles and his invalid wife; some man '1ou'd like to be a-taldn' hyear In these backwooda ain't got the night-riilers; the newcomers keer oft" no slch chance. I used to read 'bout she had forced to move on; the poor "I am not. I am too Interested In IIlch tJainrs In bOoks when I was a people IIbe bad helped; libe undeslr- my work." ' yonng wonlan 'bollt yoor age-I atilet!' alIe had drlvell out: hel' boy, th rt f thin th t the -laat of the Haskell, whom she "Meantn' them tlitchen you're mean. e so o . gil a you

,had Pllt 8Q completely out of the all the time a-paintin"" war bbmed to an' that you've bee,n backwoods lifemand out of her own "Meaning exactly that,- Diane. brou§ht liP amonrst. But thar

retorted .harplll. "..rn t lIever no way fer _ w have life as' well'. ,en IIhe had lim "Huh I Don't 'pear w be much 'em. I !mowed a man once-be osed diseovered the artist in that place, work 'bout hib, 'cordin' w m'1 wa'1 to come an'!ltay with we-uns a 8pell and had made hn presence known of thinkln'" evel7 f.U to hunt. He used to teU to Diane, she had been .1 the Lodge "I 8uppo;e not. Snt perhaps that 'bout .icb tblnrs like '1ou're a·tell. people described her-suspicious, Is because you know so little about in'. Seemed like I could mighty nigh liard, dangerous even. But now, as It." tlellllCl hit aU whllJl , I war llatenin' to

Ithneth.?':! ~:athrte:'f hae:h!:::t!i~ Oil reckon you dalle said hit,- ad- him. He uaed to lend me boob. too. g -# mitted ADD Hasbl. with an odd An' write me letten, sometimes. He

wilderness, sbe seemed to relax~ &mile; and there wu a curious never married. I never knowed tD lower her guard, u it were. It wiatful look on her rurltd face, wby. Ally weman would 'a' been was u if she felt that ahe might and a atrange. eageme.. in her mlahty plOud to bave him father Ilafely snatch a moment's test. And voice .. she added: "I'd ,nre .d. her cHildren .... Her voice sank w a Diane, with the true artist,'. vision, mire w h.ve you ten me 'bout hit dreat'f hopelellll monowne whieh dow all at Qnce somethinw wonder- -'bout what you call '1our work, nearl'1 brought tears to Diane', tully' flne and strong fn ~a1. hard, t mean." I eyes. "This hyear ain't no fitten dncompromiaing, weath.r-beaten PaTtI" In th~ IIJllrit of defend- P~ w ralae up a cbild., No~ if face. ' The womatt muat haw been ing he~ agai~t the charge of he, I'Pt~ bloOd, bit ain t. BIt'll beautiful In her youth\.. with • uselessnesa, and p,artly witb a de- do fer so e r~ght e!'ough. You ~elt strollg, wil'!,. free IOrt 01 beauty. lire to ' help thl, backw.oods woman natchall can t apod a ro~en alg&', If the boy, .lohn Herbertl, w.s anr to undentalld .. little that real !iv- nohow. ut hit sure aln t nowa~1 ~l::e, :~~ w~:td :o~\~e:~retob~a; III( wall no. whoU, material alld fitten ~d~ raise U:P ,~':i f~ • ... the lut of the n· ' kel.. ' utilitarian .. ab. I.W it, Diane w at" :ome In l! t eJ '14 ...... talked of aTt and of tho.. who had a chance.

Aloud, ahe said, gentl'11 "But labored and .acHftl!ed in its ,llBrvice. An~ IUddeDly Diane Carrel'l un· God created human beinp' u tru1r. Ann Hukel listened intentl,. derstandlng heart went out w this u He made the trees, didn't HeT' "Soyousee,"th.artiltCODcluded, moontaiQ woman whe was reveal-

"fofot lilie the'1 be, a. tilda't. He "l)ne tIluat ... orlt and work hard, w iq 10 mueh more than she reali~ only give 'em their lltan. Folk. accomplish annbl.1I; worth while In of her lIfe tragedy. The Jrlrl, mostly make themse'ves.' What a the arts. 'DaDbJinl' .lmpl'1 counts strangel1 llJlough, felt a Idnship body make. of hlmse'f depend, a for nothing at all." with her-u If between them there rot on the chance he gits. Some- "u _,_ JI I 'I k was some bond-as if beneath the times hit depends on somethin' else n..... mm e OWl '1ou ma e a 8Urf.ce thinrs ot their lives which -aomethlu' nobody can't newa,. ript .mart of lI!0ner with your were so tar apart there Jived some­belp; like, fer Inatance, "ha, ~it'l pl~el'll. kDo rouT I _ .. tl1inr which was tlleil'l in common.

'jeat natchally ill the breed. :t ou· I., rna e enougn, uian. an- Bill Carhll" daUghter. and Ann all at the Lod,e down yonder,you're Ilw4lred, abortly, "Bu~ If the money Haakel, too. were ",isten under the . ' hetti mOl'll! ttifHiI· an' worthlen I irlake ... 111'1 onl'1 Interest In skin." 'eveD tlian wa·una what war bomed. ntlne,. [ would never .... In touch (To Be Continued)

~~~~i\Ci~~rA~~~~e: .~~~~.~~ ~.!·:~~f,!1l~- .'1

HeLLO, MIST€'R KRAUSME\-'E'R: r WAS PASSIN' BY AN' l1-toU~H'"r tD DRoP 'N' AN' PAY l

YA ' 'THE Fou ReENTs,

I

reign, and ber s IIIng lind mortgag· Ing Crown property to provide tor them, had brou ht about a. decld d change In public opinIon. Sho I~fl

lhe throne. therefore, 1n 1654. Her cousln, ·ltarles Gustavus, bccame

I ow.:; VA.~

one tiny bit ot her oncl' ml~hty

klngdom-flhc ret In II t~ right to rule, 8S a law unto he", It, ov r her o,,-n 110u'*lhold. Also. by the t~rms of her abdication, she w gIven an tncom for lltl'.

king as Chnrles X. Chl'latina remained

Sh lived abrol\d ror yea , reo sovereign or turning to Swed n twIce In vain

bd c lion-Sweden

he no·

ItTry a Want Ad and Savell Classified Advertising Rates

ito. GC One Day I '!'wo Days I Three Dayal Four :Oan I Plve Db- I 'I LID..iIOharltel Cash ~~II'~L Cuh ICharee Worde CUb Charge CUh . Charge C~lb dbarr • . ~

UI! to 10 I , I .IS I .I~ I .11 I .SO I . .1' .88 .51 .46 .Ie .e' M 10 to 15

• 1 .IS ,,16 .n .IO ...1' .eo .77 .70 .88 .tt .to

18t020141 .a. .~ .'f'f • .'70 .eo .8% 1 1.03 1 .14 1 1.1'f 1.: HI 1.11 t1 to IS • .fb .4& ••• .to 1.14 1 1.04 L 1.80 J 1.11 J 1·.4S I: 1.&1. 1M at tll so • .~1 .M 1'.11 1.10 U9 U6 1 1.58 I ] .41 1.74 1 1.tl "14 31 to 85 , .n .6f us J.a0 1·03 1.48 I 1.~S I 1.86 2.01 t. L4 us UJ 38 to 40 8 •• ·S .15 1.85 1.$0 1.S7 1.'70 I 1.09 I 1.90 Ul I, • J.,. I.,.

1.9! !.t4 us U8

Jt(lnltnulD chlU'p Ilc. 8peelal lonlr twtn rate. fur­nllhed on reQueBt. IJach word In thl a4vertl8cment mutt be counted. The prefix •• ""or Sale." "For Rent." ''LoIt." ant! similar ones at the belllnnlnll ot a~ IIJ'8 tn be counted In the total number of warde In the n~, Th~

number IUId letter III a IIllnd a4 ve to \Ie _tee .. onf. word. qlemlrle" ditITIlll1, .00 _ 1&'" .UAII __ ........ column Irlch. 15.00 per ftI.mTh.

CfI'IlIIIltll'd adverlilln .. In by • 11 . .. wtI! '" ,IIMI •• , the f~\JowlnJ[ mornlnw.

Musical and Dancing 40 DANCING SCROOL-BALLROOM

tango, taP. Dial 6767. Burkley hotel. Profcssor RouJrhton.

24 Apartments and Flals 67 FOH nENT-3 Rool\! FURNISH­

d Apt. l~1nst tloor. Oar8.lre. 400 N. Clinton. PhOne 2964.

Rooms Without Board 63 00. ;ron RENT-MODERN APART·

m nt.-bot water and tr1 .. ld&tre.

FOR RENT-ROOMS, ESPECIAL-ly doslrable conditions. Graduato,

daculty, or business porson pre­Jerrod. ;p.crmanent deSirable. Dial 6818.

Rooms

BARRY TRANSFER 1II0vluJr-Br, r p

Fr I,M Storage

Cro ('onntry naul/nc Ula! 6-173

Closo In. Dial 2511.

i~OR RENT APARTMF.NTS-UN­turnlshed. InQuire at tho Econo­

my. 217 So. DubUQue.

FOR RENT- 8 and 4 room mod rn apartml'nt., ell turnlllhl'll, new-

1;<> dN~orllted . Private ooth. S~ 1. Bravcrm n. Dial 2820. TOWN AND GOWN RESIDENCE

hotel. Rooms with or without board. Dial 6186. Local Instruction-Classes 89 .. \l;t2~:rMElNT FOR RENT-DIAL

Automobiles for Sale 9

lI'on SALE-SEDAN, GOOD CON­dltloi1. DIlli 2744, 825 N. Dubuque .

For Sale Mi8eeUaneoul!I

FOR SALE-Ii) FLAT SAXA· phon!' Ilnd pOl'tab11l Victrola. Cn.ll

;\Ietz er 3169.

Employment Wanted 34

Now Is The Tunll To Jll>gl ler

Irish's BusIness College E. WashlnA10n St.

pccial Fin! hlnl; ('In. 88 In Oregg ShorU,a.nd " Typing for teaeher and Il1gh School stu­dents.

Lo t and Found 7

FOR REN'l'-C LElA N, NEWLY decorated. strlcU>, modern apUt·

mcnU. Dial 6418.

Locksmitla

WANT£D AU kind or lock and key WOI'k. Douse, car, trunk , el4:.

NOVOTNY' :14 So. OIlntoll

WANTED-WORlt AS Cl"ate1'Olty. 10 years

Dial 5116.

ooK IN LOST-BLUE AND WllI'l'E SILKI~~~~~~~~~~~~~ xperlonce. dress Tllursdny. Dial 3347. Re- Houses t~ KeDt 71

VVanted--Laundry

ward.

LOST DLUolOND RINO. 9322. Reward

PHONB.

FOR RENT-DESIRABLE lU!l8[­donce on Soutb Lueas; • rooms

and 81eeplng porch, built In garago. Dla t 3441 or 8585.

WANTED-STUDENT LAUNDRY. ROll.8onabl~. Called for and de­

lIverod. Dial 224G. Housekeeping Rooms 64 FOR RENT - MODERN ErG II T ----------------------FOR RENT-FIRST FLOOR UN. room ,",us . 2 lot., trlllr, cistern

lind well. Dial 4702. WANTJ!)D-LAUNDRY. REASON­

able. Dial 6419 .

WANT.JllO-LAUNDRY Dial 6682

WORK.

turnlBhed II II' h t hOusekeeplnll' rooms. 630 S. Dubuque slreet.

• Special Notices 6 F'LOOR W A X E R S, VACUUM

FOR RENT-FURNI8HED houee. Very deelrable. Dial .t77,

Jewelry and Repairin, 55 cl aners for rent. Jaokson Eloc· W.ATCII BEP.A.lRINc) - REASON-

Heating-Plumbing-Roofing trio comPany. Dla.15465. abl . A. 4 Bilfmaa.

WANTED - PLUMBING AN D heating. Larew Co. 110 S. GUbert. norlll rn Towa.. No

Phone 8876. Write AC, clo Iowan.

Quilting IT DOESN'T IIA VE TO BE A Jl.IO add to be seen. You saw till. one

WANTED-QUILTlNO. DI&I JU8. dJdn't you1

DO YOU

NEED

MONEY?,

Money to Loan 37

TO

--At Reduced Rates -

WE

HAVE

ALI.! YOU

NEED

In Aceordanee- With the New State La~

We specialize In LoaDs to Teaehers. Borrow Money for Present Needs and Pay Back. During the School Year in Small Payments. Your Contract Is the Only Col­lateral Needed. Only 1 to 12 Bours Needed to Com­plete Transaction.

Our Loan Service .. Conl1dentlal &lid Frlendlr

Personal Finance COe DIal ... 7·M lSO~ E. Washhlgton-UpSta\1'8 Dial 4·'·%·,

En'raue IIo$wee. WUllArds and Demby Boot Shop

- " -.. _ _ ___ l.. ,C 0 ,ul }J ..0 .. jJji 3

Auto Repalrbw 12

Motor, brake, c:arb., .. eaerator & tarter lIfniee. wIIeel al~,

ete • .lIlT mab 0I~. DIal .11. Rear of lIOIloUIee.

.moo NlPAIB SROP

Electrical GooM

Vacuum CleIIlftI Oeaeral II:IeetrIc 00 ...

New Mot« 1)11_ ....... 0 ...... Ii ................... .. .arIriet.

Reliable Eledrie Co.

SUlTS-DRESSE,S­

TOPCOATS-HATS

Any Two for

LeVora's Varsity Cleueni Cu!i and CaI'I7

~u.c....-

%3 E. W........,. ow etA

GO of

.. ."-,,

-Solon Camp CCC Workers

To Aid In Chinch Bug Fight

Kraschel Announces I I Transfer to Keokuk Resigns German POlt

County

CCC workers at the Bolon camp 'WIll aid Keokuk county farmers In :fIghting tho chInch bug InVllslon. It was reported by the A8IIoola.ted PreM last night.

All workers at 8010n and at Os­~aloosa. now engaged In erosIon con. trol will be sent to Keo~uk county. where farmers a~ In desperate :need of help. accordIng to LIeut. Gov. Nels G. Kro.schel.

AuthOrity to make the shIft came from Washington, D. C .• last nIght.

Aeordlng to local relIef officIals, It Is not prob8lble that the change wllJ slow progress 011 Lake Mac· brIde dam. because workers atrect­~ by the order have 'been doing erosIon con trol work only.

Approximately half of the Bolon workers wll1 remaIn to complete the )lew state park. it Is believed.

The men w\ll return to their camps after their job of construct. Ing and maIntainIng ohlnch bug \)arrlers Is flnLshed.

Cub Scouts Get Awards

Billy Raymond Given Third Year Medal

At Meeting

Thirty-two Cub 8cOUts ot low ..

City received awards before all audl· ence of more than 100 persons In

Iowa City high /lchool auditorium

lost night. B\1ly Raymond was gIven a thlril

year award. the tourth to be given In the history or Cub Scouting In Iowa CIty. John Amish and Eugene Larew received first year gold, awards. 22 cubs were given the fIrst year honor, and nIne received the second Yl'al' badge.

Dean Teeters Speak9 The a<ldres8 ot the evenIng waB

dellveroJ by Dean W. J. Teeters. ]lresldent ot the Boy Scout council, followIng the presentatlon of awards by Art!lur E, Boss. pack master.

Kenneth Bennett gave an ilour's exhlblLlon of magic and Carl and Kenneth Smykll. twIn brothers, sang th\'Ce duet.~.

BoY13couts Staton Browning. bon· aId Ohl, Eugen!> Bogan. Joe Mc­G Inn Is, !lnd Whetsone Lallorts a~­

slated M,'. Boss In the presentation cerem~ny

Receive Awards Those receivIng tlrst year a wards

were ~:lly Plass. John Amish, 1)011-aId Sexton, Kendall Thomas. Max NIgh, 'l'ommy Johnson. Lester Pow­ers, Dale Blelehter, Bob Towner. John i:>chuppert. Bobby Nagler. Charle~ Ellett, LoUis EI~hler,

RIchard DIckens. Kenneth Mu\!ord, Herl, rt Davis, Kenneth Smykll, Carl Smykll. Arthur Heusenkveld. Cbarles Jobnson, Henry JIoeltje. and Jimmy Hanna.

Second year awards were present· ed to Kendall Thomas. Donald Pierce, Arthur Kanlll<, WillIam Mc­Olnnls, Roscoe Thoen. Richard Mc­Creecly. Vergln Bmlth. Hubert Hoell­je, and Charles Walden.

·City Suspends Ordinance on

Firecrackers

Climaxing reports of a split among members of the Nazi gov· ernment, Frallz von Papcn, above, vice chancellor in the German cabinet, bas submitted bis resignation to Chancellor Adolf Hitler.

4~()U~r:.

Tlil: T(),.·N u"th

BILL MERRITT

!\logic Kenneth Bennett. the young magi·

clan who kept the atLentlon ot a. buncll ot resL1ess Cub Scouts tor nearly !lll hour last night. never lets bls audience do the dictating.

While performing a. very delicate trick in which he seemed to pick eggs out at the all' and drop them Inlo a derby hat. he asked how many eggs he should get. The ans­wers ranged anywhere from 10 to 1,000. Not at 0.\1 baWed, he cooly held Ull his hand and announced that four was the limit.

Mastor Bennett Is someWhat of a philosopher too. When one of his l"'cks went wrong he remarked, "some tricks are harder for the mllglclan to do than fOI' the audl· ence to tlgul'e out."

Rabbi Leo Jung Habbl lAla Jung ot New York city

related his expel'lellces In Palestine and the ncar east at a gatherIng at the Iowa City Jewish CommunIty center last night.

8!~90ba.ll VS. ewage Council members round It hard

to concentrate on the plans for 0.

sewage plan t yesterday Ilfternoon wllh the [Ire department·s radIo In the next room blarIng out a play by play account of the Cubs' batlle willi the ' Giants.

ShillY Badges Membel'~ ot the pollee departmllnt

al'e considering the purchasing ot cll t'omlum plntttd badges to wear 011 theh' coats and caps. Tho Idea be· In g to gIve the force a snappier ap· pearanco.

McClintocks Will Be Faculty Guests

At Church Meeting

Dr. Ilnd Mrs. J. T. McClintOCk w\ll The ordinance forbidding the be tac·.IlIy guests at a meeting of

shoothl5' o[ firecrackers In Iowa City the 'Vcstmlnsler Fellowship tomor­wlll be puspended trom July 3 at 6 fTOW nIg ht at Lhe Presbyterian p.m. to July 4 at 12 p.m. the city church. Frances Benska Is chaIr. counell decided yesterday atternoon, .man of the supper commltten.

Olher business whIch came before The Hev. W. P. Lemon wlll pre· the mo~t1ng was a petition of John Wallace to erect a news 8tand on the parking north of Washington klnd we~t ot Clinton street. The pe­tltlon waf referred to the street and alley committee.

Joe VltOllh was granted permiSSIon to trans[er hIs olass B beer permit dcrORS the street to 119 S. Dubuquo street. Maude StImmel' was grant­ed a cllls8 B permit for a build In" at 801 RIverside dt·lve.

Second reading or the ordinance wblch rl.'duces the license fee to be paId by sidewalk vendors ot refresh· ments trom ,75 a year to $80 Wll! approvooi by tbe council.

California Fruit Exchange to U8e

Iowa City Photos

A photograph at Iowa. Avenue bridge and the west aide of the cam· PUB ",,111 appear In tbe national ad· vertlalng of the Calltornla FruIt el[' change, accordln. to a .. ttar re­ceived yesterday by D. W, Crum. lleoretary oe the Chamber of Com· merce, trom Lord and Thoma. Ad· vertlslng agency.

The agency wrote Yr. Crum aev­eral weeks ' qo and ukod tor pic· ture8 of various Iowa City ecenC8. An airplane view of Iowa City and the picture accepted were subm,lt· ted.

It Ie not known whether the plo· turt'!! wlll be ueed In maaaalnea or tor ~OIter~ _ ___ .

sent a lecture on LessIng's "Nathan the Wise" followIng the supper 'hour. Dorothy R08e Disher of Talljl.­hassee, Fla" w1l1 be In charge of do· voUon~.

"Fundamentalism" wlll be dlll­cussed by Prof. E. H. Lauer at the Ul1lve~~lty claBs conducted In the church audltol'lum tomorrow mOTlI· ing, "Ood our contemporary" wm be the suJolject ' of the sermon dellv· ered by the Rev. Mr. Lemon at the lfIlornlng. worllllip at 10:45.

Local Merchants To Plan 4:H Club Rally

A committee of 20 trom the Iowa. CIty Merchants bureau will meet with the members of the Johnson county farm bureau In the fl1nn bureau rooms on tho eecond floor ot the 'Post office bul\dlng Monda.y night to make plans tor the ,,·R club rally In August. D. W. Crum, secretary o( the merchants bur~u, announced yesterday.

Wheat Shows Gains CliICAOO (AP)-Contrasllng wIth

perdl.tent tumbles of late, wbeat to· day ,coI~d mOderate galna after reaching a new jew price record un· equaled I\ln06 May 24.

ElII'aped PrllOne ... ClIPtured lM'. DOOGE (AP)-Four federal

prls~ner8 who eacaped trom the Webster county Jail June • bave been 'lrrested o.t Shreveport, La .• Sherltf Robert Waldburll'er Will notl.

fleU to Ja!:.

.". ...

" DIXIE DlJGAN~A Sly Hint

SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 198fd

By J. P. McEvoy and J.IL Strlebel

NOw WMI' HAS UNCLE BeV\fY GOT IN MIND? 6-Z~

Foulois) Censure. Recalls Trial of Gen. Mitchell ' . ~

r CORAL VILLE NEWS T Honor Court Funeral Service For IDchard James

This Afternoon Army pursuit l>w.nes:./

• .Mary Francis Is visiting at th: Gives Awards home Of Anlel\a Woodward In Iowa

CIty for a few days. To 39 Scouts Mr. lind Mrs. Jess Westwlck ot

Erie. Ill .• are spending the Hummer with Mrs. Woestwlck's parents, Mr. ant.! Mrs. Edward Koser.

Mr. and Mrs. C. M. WOlfe ot Tlf·

Bestows I Honors Rotary Camp

Last Nignt

At

Funeral sarvle for RIchard B, Jam s. 3. son Of Mr. and Mrs. Ellll D. James, 019 E. ,(~l1cge Btmtt. who diM Th ul'sday evenIng In l

locaL hospital. wlll be held at the McGovern funeral hOme at 2 o'clock this attrrnoon.

The Rev. Ha.rry b. Henry, paa. ' tor of the Firat Methodist church. fin spent Wednesday evenIng with

l(r. and lin's. J. A. Brandstattor. Thlrty·nlne Boy Srouts of Iowa will offlcla.te.

Mary Crumley and Ruth statter spent Tuesday with In Cedar Rapids.

City. Williamsburg, North English, SurvivIng hIm besides hIs pllrentl BI'and. ILnd Marengo recelvM awards lit II. lire a 81ster, Margar t Ann. and two friends court of honor Which closcd th brothers, Ellis, Jr .• o.nd Edwllrd.

Mr. and Mra. WlggO .jen8lln. Mr. and Mrs. ChrIs Peterson ot Pleas· ant Valley township, and Mr. and Mrs. Otis Conklin of Iowa CIty spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. D. H. WhIte.

Eugene Henderson Is spending a few days wIth friends near Wind· man.

Mary Helen Nortman Is spend' Ing a few days witb Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Evana ot Penn townshIp.

Leo WhIte has returned hoine after spendIng the last two weeks with his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mfs. Wlggo Jensen ot Pleasant Val· ley townsblp, _ _ " oM ".1

,second session at the Rotary·Boy I'lcout camp last night.

Dean Berry and Richard Zenlmlre of Marengo and Bruce Warner ot ~orth Engllsh receIved the Engle Scout badge, tho highest alVaru In scouting. John BrOWn ot IOWa City completed 25 hours ot communIty \!Iervlce to gailt the medal given tor Ihat honor.

Robel''!. Brown. DavId Carlton. ann iOarth Hlte. or Marengo. aod Russell Jones of Williamsburg were Invit­ed Into the Order ot the Golden Sun. :honorary camptng organIzation. Norman Warner ot North English recclved the Star Beout award.

Officers ot the court were Ben.

King Cole, Local Horse, Wius Prizes

King ColI', from tho Indian Look· out stablos here, wou two pl~ at the Dt>H Moines horlleehow and race m t yesterday. '),he horse placed flrMt In tht· gelding class and second In the Indica' class.

Today. KIng Cole will be entertd In thl' pall' class. /lnd tomorrow. In lh. (lve gaited open class stake.

I3lelchtrr. Jay Townsend, and Rob· crt WhIte.

Reil Cross swlmmcrs buttons were given to lIIax Townsend. Kennel~

Burky, and Jack Fetllg, all 01 low~ City.

Maintaining its old tradition of "raising the roof", the U. S. army air service again hBS made the front page, with a con,ressional committee assailing Maj. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulols' handling of the air corps, and callinr upon President Roosevelt to

dismiss him. Back in December. 1925. Bri,. Gen, William "Billy" Mitchell. assistant chief of the army Hying service, was court·marti8led for his open criticism of the aeronautical defense corps, and demoted ~ith a hel\.Y)' censure.

Vacatlon Bible school of the In· terdenomlnatlonal Sunday school at CoralVille opened Monday morning In the Coralv\lle church.

The schOOl wlll continue for three

ZEontmlre: distrlot Scout commls· sloner of Iowa county; E. D. War· /'Icr, member or North Engllsh I3cout council; John Bcllstlne, memo ber of Marengo Scout cOuncil; Glen U. Fordyce, court secretary; and Byron Mann, ot!lcer ot the day.

William MahanJlah ot 10\\111. City received his tend rfoot Imilge anil Nell Annstrong of Iowa City reeelv­cd his second class badge. Three Iowa City Scouts receiving Cl rs t class badges were Kenneth Burkey, Jobn Brown. and Robert White.

The last lIesslon ot :Boy Seout <amp will open tomorrow noon 1rith l:!couts registered from four low, CIty troops IlDd a troop In WellmaD, SeouL Executive Fordyce sald,

Red Raspberry Ice Cream

WABHING'l'ON, D. c., (lIN}-The :action of a house of reprcsentatl ves committee on army all' purchases In vigorously censurIng Maj. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulols and demand­,ng his removal as chief of tho fly. 4ng corps. recalls to oommentators ,\m~tlca.·t; prolonged III luck wIth aviation.

This 81 r~t~h of hard luck reached ~ h1i:h J;pot with the court·martlal of Flrl/l'. Gen. WillIam (Billy) MIt· chell In 1925 and was cHmaxed )early last spring whon 11 army fly· ers perLshed during the brIef pe· rlod the army flew the airmail..

From tbe early years of the twen. tleth century wben U. S. military "uthorlUes scoffed at the experl· ments of the Wright brothers wIth theIr fragile airplanes 110 that the llayton, ObIO. pIoneers were forced to tu rn to France for ' recognition ~nd assIstance. this nation hu re­garded the heavier. than-air flying machIne \IJ! a toy at best.

Publicized Nea-Iect Even during the World war. when

aJrplane construction ' took a glgan· t 10 rise, over half a billion dollars was dISSipated In aSIlOmbUng a'n· liq ue crates and obsolete models that were actually dangeroull to ny. Ot the famed DeHavlta.nd ahlps. only 100 reached France out of tho

Edward Dorow, Last of Klutas Gang, To

Face Kidnap Charge

KANSAS Cl1'Y, June 2.2 (AP)­Edward Dorow. dCllcrlbed by officers aft the last membo!' of the notorlou9 Jack Klutas gang. was In custody tonight and hellided back to Chlcag.l to face kIdnapIng charges.

He waIved extradltlon he~e today after his captu~e 1n 0. hotel room.

Bert Gray and DIU! Kenny, Chi· cago oftlcers, trailed the gangster's wlte here and trapped Dorow wben he met her. .

Dorow at tlrst retulled to open the t.!oor of the hore\ room where he and Mrs. Dorow had gone but changed hls mind when the oitlcet·s threatened to shoot) From Dorow oWeara rold they took $22 and un· del' the mattreBs found '480 1n UO bills Which thoy believed to be pal·t of the $55.000 ransom paid last July by James ',Hackett. kidnaped mlnols .rambler.

Dorow will be tried tor the abduo· tlon of liackett.

Announces New cee Quotu WA9HINGTON (AP)-New York,

Callfor'lla and T'exas w1ll receIve the laTteet Quot ... ' oC )lew recruits In the civilian conllflrvatlon corps wblch will add 100.000 young men. war vetera/ls and experienced woOdllmlln to lhe force durIng July u repll1cemenla for men who have dropped out <w will be dIscharged prior to July 1. The etate quotas III· olude.: Iowa. 2,814; 80\fth 'Dakof-a 1,314.

StOClk. Decline

weeks from 9 to 11:90 a.m. every thousands manu(actured, and with 'wall, his superiors had him court. mornIng except. Saturday /I.Ild Sun' I he armistice. consLructlon na.tural. martlaled. I I . day, ly slumped tremendously. At an elaborate trial In Washing·

It was loft. Lo BrigadIer General ton, D. C., he was found guilty on Mitch 11 to pubJlclze Amcrlcan inellf. (lght charges of InsUbordInation. "{crence alld neglect tor aircraft. Blld was suspeniled from rank and

As a young I}'lan he had learned duty on haIr pay. He resUmed In. to fly. and while the U . S. watched I H2G. several months later. and tour­the great war as a neutral. General cd the country preaChing his neW" "BlJly" remaIned In Bpaln as an of· faltb of a. powerful aVlatlon depart­flclal observer , When this country ment. ontered the war, he was the tlrst HIs labors have borne trult. Ad­U, S. oftlcer flghtlng In the lines. nllral Joseph Reeves, chlet of tbe He form ed the nucleus ot the A.E.F. combined U. S. fleet, Ls a flyer, and air corps and helped to push it on .many otber st.aJ't oftlcers ot the war LO top notch cl11clency. I and navy departmenta bave becOme

ReturnIng home, Mitchell became .nlr-mlnded. assistant chlcf of the a.rmy all' serv-I General Foulols, who was roundly Ice. meanwhile preachIng tho gospel Rcored by the house committee for of a unIfied and separa.te depart-I !'ccommendlng army flyerll for nlgbt \Ulent or aeronautical defense to the: duty during the ai,rmall period when unLted r sentment and anger ot the I ~he pilots had only little flying time. navy, war and commcrco dCfoart- is himself one of the old echool .nents. aviators. TraIned In the dayS when

Always the two military divISions heavy men wc~ thought Impmc. ,have cOllaldcred avlo.tlon as merely I tical for mllltary pllots. the 140-Ifl, supplementary weapon. If they pound ohlef Is perhaps tbe oldest even believed It that much, And avlatet' stili active. when MItchell proclaimed the "in· Whether PresIdent Roosevelt asks competenoy" and "criminal treason· for Fouiols' resIgnation. or the gen· i> ble negligence" of tbe departments cral Is fQrced to go through MIt· 'atter the disastrous crash of the I (,holl'8 expel·lence. or ta exonerated. navy illrlglble. Shenandoah, jJl Obio hIs case scems to bear the Imprint during 1925. alld the untortunate 1 ot the al'my all' servIce's hectic tra.. flight of the P. N.-9 planes to Ha.- dIllon.

Junior Chamber Of Com.merce Engages

Bands for Fourth

A 25 piece band. to be made up ot members oC lhe University of Iowa band and th Iowa Cily hIgh

school hant!. wlll play thl-ee concerts for the Junior Chamber oC Com·

merce l"Ollrth of July celebl'lltlon In City park, LouIs Measner. chalnnon of the commllLee on bamls. an· nOunced Yi'RtCI·t.!ay.

DUHlY ](,N\loll'S dance band hIlS been engagl'd to \lIllY for u. taxi dance In th(' l)(lvlllon In lhe aft r·

1I00n and for a ballroom dance In the even ing.

The concert band"under the dlrec· tlon of Lloyd Swartley of the musIc tlellnrtmont of Iowa City high >;chool. will play at 10 a.m .• 2 p.m., Ilntl at 7:30 p.m. • ,

{.nther ' Group Convenes AMES (AP)-Delegates from Iowa,

Kansas. Nebraska. and Texas gath­ered he~e for the tenth dIstrIct con­vention ot the young 1peoplo's Luth. er lea~'I~ cOJlvention being helll to· day, Saturday and Bunday In COIl­ne('tlon wIth the convention of the

Mr. and Mrs. Owen Morgan and son Owen. Jr., alld Edward Myers of Coralvl\le Heights werll recent vIsItors tn Des Moines.

Mrs. Martin ot Blairstown Is vis· I tlng at the home of her sister. Mrs. Owen RUlldall 01 coralvl\le Heights.

Playground Group Gives

First Play Children In the supervised play­

ground dramatIc group presentetJ their ~II'st play, "Tile Open Road:' at the recreation center last night, and plans were made 101' the stl.l.rt ot another production.

Memhers of the play CWlt were Pa. tl'lcla ~lc:Ylckel', Una Butler. Vernoll 13othel1. Paul Trl.l.vls. nDd Meyer Markov!t~.

Margaret Connor of the speech de· partm6tlt directed the presentation.

Children G to 12 years old wilJ t~l'

out for parts In the next play at 4:30 p.m. Monday. according to Lu· ella. Reckmeyer, playgl'oulld dl~ec.

Hompr Musgreve, supervisor. wit organize 0. kltlenball league at 7 p .m. Monday at the playground.

Grace Van Wormer Leaves for Meeting

Gr!lce Van Wormer. acting dlrec. tor of unIversity librarIes, will leal'e today to attend tho fifty ·slxth an­nual convention ot the American LlbraFf a88oclatlon at Montreal. Co.nada. June 25 to JUno 30.

SATURDAY SPECIALS Choice Beef Pot Roasts

lb.

Lean Pork Butts

Ib, 130 Fresh Picnlrs

w~ Retllf"MlfI

R!frhl' Tv QIf~nUll ...

The r.lmll

Beef Arm Roast lb. lie

Smoked Picnics lb. lie Armour's Star

Lard

Ilbli. 150 ~

Fresh Cut HlUIlburger

Ib, 6e Fresh Ground

SausaJe lb. 60

Boned and hailed .alb or Rump Roast

III, 140

Veal Roasts Ib, 90 Ring Bologna

Ib, 110

Veal Chops Ib, 100

NEW YORK (AP) - Th. .10w downw/4l"d .drllt of atock prlceB IJe..l came a ,harp decline today under a

1tIaVJ: ~.t.bour' "ural of MlUDI.

Buehler Brol. --------..... ~ ~--------~

Merit badges were awar(led to th following: Lloyd Pierce of Iowa City. publIc health; Arlo Yocum of Iowo. City. bird study and ssJety; Robert WhIte of Iowo. CIty. person!ll h~allh; MelvIn Witte of WllUllms­burg, swimming; Hu~sell JOn!'s, llu!). lle health; Evan Parry ot W\lllJlm • burg. metal work ; F rank Eddy ot Marengo. safety. camping. bird stuily. and civics.

Robert SmIth of Mar ngO. leath r craft; David Carllon, campIng. eafe. ty, and bIrd IILudy; RIChard Z nt­mIre. campIng and bIrd studY; CUf­ford B~rry ot Marengo. signaling ; Dean BerFf. cooking. clvtes, wood carving. camping. and llatety; Garth Hlte. cookIng: Howard Bellsteln of ,\1arengo. leather craft; NOlman Warner, publlo health, p~r80nal

Ihealth, and flrat aid: Bruce 'Varner, life aavlng, and wood carvIng.

Iowa City Scouts to reoelvo be· ginners Red CrDas 8wlmmlng but· 'ton were: Jobn PaulUs. Don PIerce. John Brown. Rob~rt Beck. K nneth

(By Sl<h .. fll's)

Featured At Our

Fountains This

Week.End, or

Phone for fa t, courte·

ou delivery service.

Whetstone's Three Home-OWned StOI'ftl

'lin «lU1H CLINTON ST - ~)Nr 315S

GOLDEN DAYS . ,. By Hummer's Cartoonist

You'll never be "8tunlf" " 'hen ),011 telephone four onil!t' tG TIlE HUMMER QROCtm COMPANY. We'lI IItnd the IIUIIt

tho~ rOOd8 that YOU would IJellll't ••. "1111 deliver)'" ON TJMB.

Sunkist Lemons, 300 si.ze, per dozen .................... 29c Sunkist Navel Oranges, 176 size, per dozen .. _ ..... 3ge Quart Mason Jars, (without caps or rubbers), per dozen ........ __ .......................... ,., ...... , ... , ... ............ 4ge Porcelain Lined Jar Lids, p r dozen ...................... 23e Jar Rubbers, per doz n ...... . _ ... _ ......... .. .......... _ ...... __ . .4e Toilet Tis8u , Jenny Wren brand, 750 sheets,

6 for ...................................... ...................... , ........ 25e Peas, Early June Variety, Wcbst r'II,2 Cans for .. 2Se Coffee, Hummer brand, per lb, ............................. .lk Coffee, Del Monte brand. per lb . ..... ,. ................... ,.29c Fly Spray, pint bottles ................ _ ........................ __ .2k Half Pint Glass Bowl Sprayers, each ....... ........ _ .. .lk Mineral 011, ,pint bottles .......................................... 26e

finder I'l'f~l~ent

ilrongly leadership dramatic

pon was c without IIU

plue the ger of bla great

'Pro Durllli 1I

IeIslo!la, Prl U841 Of perII' t1entlal ;lOWI le,13lallon. Ihe (\rl~e I

Thus hd WOt authorl l.y ov e~rgo~l'y r nillonill crl drought.

To Lhd nl leneral au PI] Ucan ,lOa to lor orUoe In 11M ot I he )) the ldmmlsl Icted.

Aa a flna! Inr conKr II! Qul In 0. 81 PfOgram of Illltlon whl mit to ~('lfgl

'-cI1l,Y-('

IlIdepelltll'nl

IlES M'O

Blepa tl)WRI

In ... . talew

IndeplllI~"nt

In De8 11"ln to whlt,h 1111

tlothlllIf. f.1I

flI.lt!" "lllel) ,lied.