Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1939-06-30 - Daily Iowan: Archive

6

Click here to load reader

Transcript of Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1939-06-30 - Daily Iowan: Archive

"

FIVE CENTS

Painter Dies Owen R. Morl'an killed In rau

rrom third story IIC&ffoldin&". (Scc Siory, Pare G)

Iowa City's

IOWA CITY, IOWA

•

Fair, Warmer -

IOWA-Fair COda)' ..... io~: warmer In w l ..... -u. wa)'

..... In ella1 poriiOD io ___ aw.

M ornin, Newspaper

FRIDA y, JUNE SO, 1939 VOLUME XXXVlIl NillffiER 237

, ,

Senate Votes 'Mu .. f' Clan e In Neutrality

Diamond Lil Arrives at 'The Palace' 'Poland To Protect Corridor; Mea ure' Fate till Uncertain

After Struagle

Places Mandatory Embargo on Shipment Of 'Lelhal Weapons'

WASlflNGTON, June 29 (AP)

-After deaUng a jolting, it per­haps temporary, blow to the' ad­flIlIlistration by voting for a man· datory embargo on the shipment of "lethal weapons" to nations at wa'<·, the house knocked ofr work, shortly before midnight tnnight, on the hot issue of neu­trality law revision,

For 13 hours, the chamber h~d sat in session, arguing at length over the best way to slay out of the wllr so many membt,ts fear may break oul abroad. The climax of the voting on II host of amendments came when Rep, Vorys (R-Ohio) succeeded in getting a favorable vote of 159

to 157 on an amendment re­quiring the president to embargo arms and munitions (but not '·Implements of wa-r" ) destined for beiHgerents.

Asked Freer Ha.nd

A numbcr of handsome gentle- we u ed to say) in this street men dressed in their authentic I scene. From left to right the best (even to sideburns and whis- group includes Roy Kosa , H. I. kers) greets Diamond Lil (Mrs. Jennings, Carl Strub, L. D, Ware­Roland Smith) as she arrives at ham, Mrs. Smith, Earl Snyder, J. "The Palace" (Smith's caie, as , Harold Simmen and Terry Mc-

England Again Warn Reich G. B. Threatens Force Against German Moves

Halifax Tells World Of British Policies Should Hitler Strike

• • • • • • • • • •

Situation AtAGlance

Poll h Lead r AffiIm Right

t

WASHINGTON, Jun 29 (AP)­

To Sea Olltlet The pr ident'l powt'r to devalu. By The Associated Pretlll the dollar w nt bllck Into tha ad-

LONDON - Forell'n Secretar)' mInistration mon tary bill to-I.ord Halifax warns Germany that T ' H D! h night und r clrcumst nc which Britain Is re olnd to use force CU810n Ull8 lU~ still It'ft th rutl' ot that bill un-101 resist any rurther anresalon In Over City of DallZig /'ertaln.

urope; Britain' new prOl)08a .... to 0 Stricken trom thf' measure by ovitt Russia for alUanct reported AI! Polf>S Take ath 1'1 coaUllon of h rd-monf'Y rf'pub-

to Inolude &,uaranteflB to Latvia, IIcans from th f'B. t nd lilver LONDON, June 29 (AP) Estonia, Finland, ae_llUIl, 8wll- GDYNTA, Pol nd, Jun 29 (AP) democrats, It WI! rt'ported over

Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax 7erialld, Neill rlands, as well -"Poland, through h r pr Ident th Indignant protr t of both fac-In a speech plainly meant tor Poland, Rumania, Greect t.Dd and through massed d mon tr _ tlons by th mIght of luperior G d 1 d to I ht th t 1 urkey. tions ot her ""opl , today affl·rm~" voting strength on n nate-hoUM

erman ears ec are n g a l'ARIS-F I I Is .,.. qJ con terence committe. "in the event ot further aggr s- . renc I reee ve rellor h r "eternnl right" to a corridor R-mov. Oth.r Prov'.'one

sion we are resolved to use at once the whole of our strength In fullillment of our pledges" to Europe's smaller states.

or 600,000 G e r m a. n r_rvlsls . ~ ~ ~ "" --ca.lled 1.0 color, urI' Poland 0'1 to the Balltc sea and expressed In ddlUon, thl' administration automatic IlJiSlslance In case or hel· determination to detend the (OJ·c removed from the bill • fighting, one she has. prohibition on fulute pureha 01

GDYN1A, Poland - Poles lake The declarations, In nav/1l week tor Ign silver and reduced, trom h to d t d D 1- d P Ush 77.5 cenls 10 70 c nil, the pric'

The fOI·eign secretary repented oat e en anz .. an 0 celebrations, came at /1 time when on d me -tIc i1v r wrllt n Into the urrldor which Pre Idenl l&,nace , .

again and again that Britain was Masclekl Clllls " the all' IUId lIun IlenslOn rlln high over the fol ot bill by th a low t coal-'Iprepared to meet force with force of our existence"; reporls head . 0'1 the Free Cily of Dam.!g, which ltion. - on a day In which London heard German arUllery muc,led Inw lies lit the head ot the so-called Th conter n r port now will

Govern . Both the cafe Dnd the many rumors of an impending 10 to both hou e for ratification. Da.n~I, tor "Free Corps." PoUsh corridor (Pomone). customers are "decked out" tor na~i coup In Danzig this week end. M So The m a ur mu t be pa by

G C II d 'A C I 0 OW - vlel pro))a,auda zig, which Is within the midnlaht tomorrow, or th -2,000,. the Iowa City centennial celebra- ermal'l8 a e ... II or8 chi t, hlnUn, at further )til Ian .. tion which opens officially Sun- The warning also was voiced os obJecUons to Brill h-Fr ncb pact. customs syslem, and the 000,000 exchongp stablllz tion ~d

diplomatic quarters close to the aY8 negotlallons have ,one Into dor were laken Irom Germany and the devaluation pow rI, th day. French governmen~ reported 600,- "blind alley." and riven to Poland lor a B of which arlO continu!d by the

000 German reservists had been measur as It now stands, will die (The neutrality law now on

1he statute books calls for an embargo on arms, munitions, and instruments of war. The admin­I~tration desi-red to knock this etT'bargo out of tile law entirely, pleading for a freer hand lor the ~re6i(.lent in conducting jn~ffi· .. na ti onal afflli rs).

Wiggalll To Lecture called to the colors, while nazi DANZIG-Dansl&, bOWl no sur- outlet after lhe World war. R aut.omatlcaUy. party formations and German reg- ru.ce Indlca.tlons ot tension or mU- turn of Dan:tli. to the reach Is Consequ ntly th It ups affect-ulars were infiltrating into Danzig. lta.ry preparations; reporls of Gu - avowed nazi aJm. ed, ani red by th n w d v 100-The French press had printed man tamll-aUoD denied. Ib Reported AnniJI6 m nt a w I) by II V rbal drub-

Tonight -----------------------------------------------.

By exempting "implements ot v. aI'," legislatc,,·s understood 41:1t they were exempting such arti­cles 8S aIrcraft, trucks and oil, a:lhough Vorys himself indicated that the meaning of the phrase was not clear.

Administration forces were con­fident that the Vorys embargo cruld be deleted from the neu­

Fugitive Killer Shot tQ Death

• Ray Olson Confesses Killing 2 Deputies, Denies Aid ill Flight

trality revision meaSUre before it CABLE, Wis., June 29 (AP)­c?me to a final vote, tomorrow BuUets from veteran woodsmen's (J.. later. hal·d-shooting deer rifles killed

Give Conrrell8 Power Ray Olson today as the slayer of

O. K.'S MACI.EISH

Senate Approves Poet's Appointment

WASH[NGTON, June 29 (AP) -The senate confirmed today the nomination of Archibald MacLeish, the Connecticut poet, as librarian of congress. The nomination was approved

64 to 8 aHer Senator Austin (R-Vt), had protested that MacLeish was not qualified as II professional librarian. Another imporlant change made two deputy sheriffs made a last

in the bill would give congress, mad a ttempt to escape from pos-as well as the president, DU"'''1- semen who lor two weeks had ~ d ority to declare Ulat a state ot trailed him ,throu.gh the wilds 01 necommen s war existed abroad and U111t Ule northern WISCOnsin. neutrality law pofovisions should As he lay dying, Olson conless- Q · I D f be put int.o effect. ed kiWng the deputies and gasped . me (. 'e ense

With the consent of the ad- II denial that he was given aid mini tration leadership, the house. during his spectacular flight. A1Y31· nf:!t Foes dt'leted a provision enabling l"te The odor of tobacco smoke led ~ ~ president to keep American ships to the fugitive's undoing. He out of combat zones. stole into the fllrm home of WASHINGTON, June 29 (AP)

The VorY:il embar~o plan was Wheatley Anderson late yesterday, _ On the eve of his -reti rement approved by Rep. Fish (R-NY), cooked food, changed clothing and a~ the army's chief of staff, Gen­r;mking minOrity member ot the smoked several cigarets. cral Malin Craig recommended foreign affaIrs committee, who Members of the Anderson fam-

I ddt d r today that five "small, seasoned, previously la avoca e con In- lIy noticed the smell ot smoke hard-lhitting" army divisions be ~atiOl~ ~f the embargo contained upon returning Irom a fishing created to strike with lightning In eXisting law. tr' Th t·fled th th i ' Calling the Vorys plan a com- .Ip. ey no 1 e au or - rapidity agaInst invaders. promise, Fish asked for and reo lies and a posse sUITounded the They would be lnIantry-ar-c .. ived support from both repub- (apm bUildings. tillery divisions, Dnd would be lican and democratic ranks. Shoptly after dawn, Anderson a\ aHable tor inslant dispatch to

He said specifically it would und a deputy went to an outbuild- seize or hold naval and air bases exempt (rom the embargo evel·y- ing and called upon Olson to sur-! alld to destr~y ene,:"~. bases. t'llng "except leUlal weapons." render. He dashed from the: F?ur partial diVISIOns are lie mentloned as expected oil shack, and as guns blazed sped aVOIlable now for such purposes. h ucks and nlr~rntt. " 100 yards across a clearing and I To expand them to full peace-

Forbids Shipment into a patch of cutover timber. time sttengt)1 and create a firth , (Undcl· tile pl·esen t law the Then he ruced lOr the shore 01 hp.....I:t:(!ommended that 1,800 of­

shipmenl or arms, ammu~ition Lake Namakagol1 and made lor a I ficers and 23,000 men be added and implements of war to light- rowbout. Possemen sta tioned at '0 the army. ing nations is fafbidden. The Ilhilt point ended his flight with a N-o-lhl-n-'-C-o-lUI-tr-u-c-t1-ve Vorys plan WOuld forbid the linal blast. I ROM E (AP) _ The official 6hipment of materials failing into Olson, . known ulso as . AUgu.st Stefani news agency last night thl! fIrst two 0' these catelorles" Buelo, was sentenced to Wtsconsm charllcterized British Foreign Sec­but not of "implements of war.") state prison in 1933 for burglary retary LOl·d Halifax' speech as

The house still had another alld was discharged three years "devoid of any constructive pro-ch::lnce to vote the Vor),!! pro- later. posal whatever." posal down before the final de- ,_ ____ ___________ _ ______ _ c).]on on the neutrality -revision bill as a whole,

Earlier the chamber, by a whopping majority, decided that Ihis country should have sorne sort o! neutrality law.

Louisiana University Scandal Probe Widens; Involve Others?

widely a suggestion thllt a British- MEl'Z-I-' rencb observers Dote Reports r ached GdynI from bin, admlnl.t red to th m on French-Polish warning be given Increased German II-oop move- Danzll tl1l1t a Quantity of munt- Tu day by Pr .Id nt R t'velt, Theme of Talk Germany. meDts alon, Sle .. fried line. bons was taken trom eost Prus- were In an ex IIcnt po ltIon to

Halifax referred several times BERNE-Swiss IIOOlallst news- sia to the Iree city la t nllht. filibu,ter the mf'lIsure to d tho

To Be Trends In Population Author Will Conduct Round.Table Session Tonwrrow Morning

to the possibility that Britain's al- paper says empty ltalillon troop The munitions allel dly Included Some lellisiotors cia I' to the sttu-Illude mIght not be understood I oars movln .. iJlto Germany. 16 artillery pieces. (In Warsaw sUon thought that might be done. "els where" and declared: I TU:NTSJN - JIlPane e artll.Y ye terday un,conUnned repotts Rllverlte ~Detll

"The threat of military force is spoke m II sayS little will come of said that Danzll was relnforeln" The conferee's d elslon, how-holding the world to ransom and nefotlaUons with 8rltlllh to end h r police with recruits reported ever, had Ih effect of "vln, the our immediate task is to resist ag- blocka.de. to be well ·tralned G rmans form- ,Jlv r nd of th coalJtJon an In· gresslon. I want to emphasize .. .. .. Ing a " free corp." cr 1\ ot 5.36 nts In th Iver that tonight with all the strengt.h F J R President Ignace Mo clcld In prl ,as comp r d with th 64 .64 at my command so that nobody ~ rene 1 eport a speech broadcast from W rsaw cents th tr asury Is now p yin .. may misunderstand it." declared the corridor and Its SCI1- lind of leavlna the repubU on end

Calla Germany 'Isolated' R· h' T coast were "Invaluable" and were of the week's vollna deal complete-Emphasizing Britain's I rot elC s roops "the ail· and sun of our existence I)" out In the cold.

Dr. Albert Edward Wiggam, strides toward preparedness, Hali- as a state." It raised the question at once roted lecturer on the human tax at the same time countered 'On The Move' While Moscicki spoke 80,000 whether the coalitIOn would now sciences and their ben·ring upon German charges ot "encirclement" Poles, many of t.hem trom Dan- stick toe ther or be split apart by Ihe making or a happier world, by British alliances by declaring zig, massed at thIs port, near the the sop thrown to the Silveri tea, will deliver the second out-of- Getmany was isolating herself. PARIS, Jun 29 (AP)-Ffench free city, and took this Oath: who, many think, could not as-doot~ Friday evening lecture to- "Germany is isolating herself diplomatic quarters heard re- Pole. Take Oa.th sume the position or rJUbusterln. r-ight at 8 o'clock on the west and doing it most successfully ports tonight that 600,000 re- "We swear to defend the eter· an Immediate increa in the pro-aoproach to Old Capitol. • Bnd completely. She Is isolating servi Is had b en called to duty nal right 01 Poland to the Baltic duct of the sllv r min s of their

Tomorrow at 9 a.m. in the herself from countries economicnl- in Germany and it was reliably and to protect the maritime future state. hlluse chamber of Old Capitol, he Iy by her policy of autarchy (self reported FI·ance had assured Po- of our country, to maintain an In- Senotor Adam (D-Col), a I ad. will conduct the usual Satltrday sufficiency), poUt\cally by a pol- land or automatic military ilS- vincible guard in the mouth of the er in the sliver Itoup nd one 01 nJot·ning round table for the dis- icY that causes constant anxiety to sislance in event ot aggression. Vlstula, to increase continually the confer ,wa outright In hi. cllssion of his lecture and re- other nations, and culturally by French agents were said to have achievements on 81'11 and on shore prediction that th bill would not l:Jted themes. her poUcy of racialism." reported to Pa-ris that "men and and to defend and protect our pass, but there w:l~ In his accom-

In his lecture tonight Dr. Wig- officers of the Germany army" brothers on the other side of the panylna statem nt a malt Indica· gam will discuss "Who Shall GermanI, Pole. as well as nazi party formations frontiers who are an integral part tion at 1 ast that It would not ~ II .hedt America?" He will deal were secretly moving Into Dan- of our naUon. So help us God," blocked by the Ilver people. with the great population trends Blame One Another zig, the free city 011 the Baltic The Vistula as It empties Into 'I Am Oppoeed' in this count, y and consider how FREE CITY OF DANZIG, June which Germans decla-re will "re- the BaUlc runs thrOUlh the cen- "I am opposed to it:' he all8l!ft· we can remedy them to build a 29 (AP) - This picturesque old tllrn home to the reich" nnd ter of Danzig. Similar ceremo- ed Indignantly as he letl the con. g.ea ter AmeriCa. tree city slept placidly in the which Polish spokesmen say is nies took pl9ce in all towns ot terence room. "1 think that the

Spea.ker To Confer Baltic bree:ze tonight - guarded rut of "the sun and air ot our Poland. bill should be taken buck to the While in [owa City, Dr. Wil~ by what it called an "augmented existence." In Gdynla the crowds shouted hou e for separat votes on the

gnm will seek to confer with Dr. pollce force" but showing on the Some ot the reservists called "We want Danzig," lind as Dan- senllte' amendments. Harold M. Skeels, Dr. Beth Well- surface no indication it again had l:P, these repot·ts said, were being zig Poles paraded enthusiaam "Do you think tht>re will ~ IT.un and othe·c membel·s of the become a ward rum In Europe's used to lUI the places of Close mounted and the shouts changed 11enjthy debate In the nat 1" M rhitd welfare station about game of power politics. sent to Danzig. to " We wJLI take Danzil!" I was aaked. whose work he is preparing an "I do," he replied emphatlcalb'. a l"licle for the Ladies Home Jour- Louis, iana Swears In New Governor, Earl Long 1"1 think the bill will not pall." nal. I He went on to make It c1eer,

When Dr. Wiggam published 1 however, t hat he "The New Deca logue of Science" I would form no part of any In 1923, he sprang overnight I buster. He would explain hi. po-into world-wide porominence as slUon In 10 minuts, he said, and an interpreter of science and as then \Iote a,ainst the conference /I socia l and poll tical philosopber. report.

"The New Decalogue of Scl- "Will the coalitJon .tand to-ellce" was shortly followed by gether now?" was another q_ "The Fruit of the Family Tree," tion put to him. o~ which PrOf. Edward Ross or "I had no coalltion with aft,. Il,e University of Wisconsin said, one," he answered. ". had DO

"Why read fiction when YOU can occasIon to trade myself oU. But, rcad Wlggam?" il I were one of the republicaDl,

A Distinction I would see that the bill did not These guve him the distinction

of being lhe first writer to ha...ve two non-fiction "best - sellerS" ru nni ng at the same time, and

pass."

By a vole announced liS 195 to 66, it tumed down a proposal BATON ROUCE, La., June 29 by Representative ~Ilen ~D-~u) I (AP) _ Loui~iana State univer­to wipe all neub·altty legislation

funds and lost it in disastrous .. ! once placed him SOlidly and sf·curely among America's lead·

Senatol· TowJlllend (R-Del), die onl,y republican member of the senate conference commUtee. cs.­elined to say there would be • filibuster, but did assert in em· phatic tODes that the rep\Jt)I1CaDI would "{iaht it t.o the end." df the statute books and "throw sity's mllllon-doll:w scandal soon

this country back on Internationa l may involve several persons as low." 1, accomplices or the school's lugi-

Allen Offers Repeal . tive former preSIdent, Attorney Allen, a foreign affairs com- General David Ellison hinted

mittee member, offered his re- strongly today. pul bill liS a substitute for the While the police or lwo nations udmlnistration's neuh·allty bill hunted loll, bald 01'. James Mon­which would abolish the existing roe SmIth, lind II special grand embargo on arms shipmenb to jury cut slowly Inlo the tllngle dis­lJelllger nh but would impose closed by hi~ flight , Ellison said: cHtain restrictions ot dealing 01 "Every lime we examine u wlt-Americans Witil bcllJgel·ents. nCbS new numes are brought in for

After disposing ot Allen's bill, us to summon," the house agreed on a voice vote rt WIIS indicatcd police already to glve coni':ess, as well a:s the were shlll"ing by with a warrant pl'l'8ldent. power to declare the for at least one or Smith's tormer existence of a .tate of war be- II'Issoci3tes who has been question­tween foreign naUons. The re- ed by jurors seeking to learn if­.trictlons In the neutrality law and how - the educator, a Huey would become .f!lICtive when a Lon, protege, borrowed ,1100,000 • tate of war was recoanat4. . from three b~ as univerlitJ

speculatJon. illg men of letters. While the grand jury went into Tn addition, in collaboration

a recess that will last until after with MI·s. Wiggarn, who collab­the July 4 holiday, the university's .ta tes on ull of his books, he board of supervisors met to ex- writes a dally, illustrated, popular amine school records which Gov. social science newspaper feature, Earl Long today said had been "Let's Explore Your Mind," which even more thoroughly "doctored" I.eaches a Circulation of ten mil­than was first supposed. lion every day throughout the

U, S. Attorney General Frank l 'niled States and Canada. He is ·Murphy announced in Washington n!so a constant contributor to po_ Smith's income tax record was un- pular maga~ines , del' examination and dozens of ru- In recognition of his dlstin-mors on the educator's where- guished achievements a numbf'r abouts wet·e received while FBI or honorary degrees have been men stood by ready to enter the bestowed upon Dr. Wiggam by case here when ordered. rolleges and universities,

Latest, and apparently one of , the most seriously received, of New Apeementa • reports on the fugitive was trom ROME (AP) - Several com- "' .......... --..- ODIII1 ~aatIot I • .. lAacI, reurlDl OoY ....... lAdle ... a... ~ ....... Detroit, where police were in- mercial agreements between ·Italy While Low.uma officials continu- cused of bilking three big banks I to right, Mrs. Lone, Supreme cUned to believe Smith and his and Bulgaria were al/lJled last eel their hunt tor Jamea Monroe out of $500,000, a new governor, Court Justice John R. Land, retlr­wife fled into Canada Tuesday af- night. Their nature Will not d.\I-.lSmlth, reallJ*! prealdent 01 Lou- Earl K. Long, was . sworn in at ing Gov. Richard Uche and the I ternoon in a newl,y purchued car. closed. .. ___ ___ lIia1aa State \lDlverlitJ, who iI &C- Baton ROUIe. Photo ahowl, lett, new lOvunor, Lolli. • .

The BTTllnaemenl was voted at a hurry-call meetina summo .... after it was lellrned that if ac:tioD were to be taken in the hO\.l,lle i9-mOrrow. the conference report .... t.o be filed before that bocb'" ad­journed tonl'hl

Dixie Clipper Ends Crossing

NEW YORK. June 2t- CAP) , -The Dixie Clipper, caJT1iDI ' the first commercial atrplaDe passerllers aCTOSll the Atlantic:. landed at Usbon, Portugal, at 2 :10 p.m. (EST) today, Pall Ameican .~ feput ....

~~~~~~~======~:~~~~~~~~~==~~==~~~~ IOWAN old Massachusetts slogan during TUN I N GIN

every morning ex- the opening oC its annual tour- Stewart Says .. "i,~~:~;;~;b~;'YrtA!~Sj~tudent Publica- day convention in San Francisco I at 126 - 130 Monday, 100 years to the day after Llnte Entltuslum

City, Iowa. the beginning of teacher training 18 Shown for New

second class mail postofflce at Iowa

, under the act of con-~al'Ch 2, 1879.

- - -- -Ibsl'rit.tio,n rates-By mall, $5

by carrier, 15 cents per year.

P---, AasOC!iated Press Is exc1u­entitled to use for republi­. of all news dlsPitches

to it or not otherwise in this paper and also , news published herein.

DEPARTMENT Ryan .............. Manager Sehmldt, Office Mgr.

TO government

Frank Murphy of Mich­

an address last week at

in America. Spendlnlr PrOlrram And because the N. E. A. will

rededicate itself to the MaSSa­chusetts ideal, increased signifi­cance is given the fact that the 12,000 del ega t e s, representing every degree of educational afflu­ence from the .lItlle red school­house to the radio-equipped and streamlined academy, will also devote several convention sessions to a discussion of the fundamen­tals of patriotislh in a democracy.

America is threatened today by a large number of radical groups and organizations. The ideologies 01 these groups, for the most part contra ry to the traditional CDn­ception of patriotism, can be spread most easily through the na­tion's 26,500,000 public school pupils.

It is therefore desirable, if not absolutely necessary, that Amer­ica's 870,000 teachers be ground­ed firmly in the principles of de­mocracy so that they can combat more eifecti vely the subverslve ideas introduced among their pu­pils.

In short, the slogan with which the first century o( teacher train­ing began may weil be paraphras­ed in these words as the second

. By CHARLES P. STEWART Congressional comment seems

to me considerably less than en­thusiastic relative to President Roosevelt's plan for the federal gturranteeing, up to nearly four billions, of self-liquidating invest­ments in improvement projects throughout thl! United states. It's agreed that an Impl"Ovement, which ultimately wiU pay for itself and ylet ddividends, while doing so, is all right. The question that's raised is, "Will many such pro­jects do that?" There are plenty ot congressional sl:epties, to judge from what they SAY.

For in:stance: Toll roads? It's quite generally

conceded that they ought to be profi tabte in the east, where there's lots of traffic. But way ou t west, w!tel"e t,'affic is skimpy? If the westem roads prove to bE; h).3ers the eastern ones will have to bear their share of the loss. On an average, will there be any ma'rgin of proflt?

Would-be farmers, who want to buy farms? Some of them, thrifty chaps, will do well, but ot'!1ers witl go broke. How will they average up?

Localities that want to build century begins-"As is the teacher courthouses and city haU,? These so is the nation."

f'difices are nice to hav!!, but they :l'te not dividend-paying. Neither

More Than are 'hospitals and waterworks and

A Ba'''eball rewers. They're fine to have, but '" are they self-liquidating?-ex-

Champion cept In the very long run? Park, N J ., declared: ANNOUNCEMENT that Lou And Latin All)erican govern-

family income should be ments, already in default on thei'r Gehrig is suffering from chronic ehligations? Well, they already

. or the public pay roll i d f It D th t k bl! reduced , And at this infantlte paralysis was a crushln/l me n e au. oes a rna e

the most immediately step SE:ems to be an

on the public pay roll." lIoveJ~nnl\erlt employes know

pay cuts mean. They have them before. People in pri­industry know what happens

the go~ernment employes ' reduced. It means they follow

further declared: "In-4,000,000 employes, less

3,doo,oOO should be plenty, instead of $6,000,000,000 per

less than $5,000,000,000 suffice."

Murphy thinks he can solve g&vernment'~ fin an cia I

by dismissing a million . Doesn' t he know an­

mllllon unemployed will a problem of relief that

. be a greater problem than the countl'Y now faces?

doesn't Murphy know that "'~lrnl1nerlt employes have always

underpaid? Doesn't Murphy that the high efficienc,y i.A

IIf'lrh'npt,t ranks could never be by reducing the staff ?

intends to run for the o~ vice president next year

ld sing another song in a key.

Howe-ver if we are to consider lime of fistlculfs purely (rom 'viewpoint of color, there is

be said about the "Brown Although Galento was

~nAid .. r...t the white hope, most agree that Louis was

.. WhU.PRt. of the two. Louis is ialraeter'lud by clean wholesome

quiet. and reserved per­and good natured sports­

~~p. Joe Louis Is a fine model manhood. He is not

radlo and 50 other trills In education today were un­

when Massachusetts odopt­slOlan in founding the na­

flnt normal BChool In 1839. Int'rod.l1ct:lon of new methods,

Hti<!hl,er. has brought little, If any, ~~;8e In the importance of the

this rea.on it seems hl,hly ...ul~llI'late that the National Edu­

" •• oc:l.'ion will IItress the

blow to American boys. This fact them look like good financial riSks?

IS proved by the thousands of

messages Gehrig has received from boys since his afflictioll was revealed. It is also indicated by the keen interest youngsters dis­play in the treatments being taken by the Yankee captain.

Does the feeling boys have for Gehrig result only from the fact that he starred at bat and afield while playing in 2,130 consecutive games over a 15-year period. The answer of close observers is un­a nimously and emph'atically, "No!"

youth's concern for Lou Gehrig results largely from the fact that he has long been a sYmbol to boys. That symbol embodies good sportsmanship, clean living, cour­age, hard work, cheerfulness, in fact nearly all ot the characteris­tics boys like t(l believe their heroes possess.

Whether he meant to or not, Lou Gehrig has probably had a grea ter inf luence on youth than any other figure in contemporary sports. And now that he has been forced to lay aside his glove his loss is a personal loss to every boy interested in the great American game.

Gehrig may never play again but America's boys will not soon forget him. And the influence he has had on them will make better America's men of tomorrow.

Grand Rapids And Something About Equality

THIS CAMPUS has asked itself

A private banker, asked {or an extension of credit, is pretty in­Q~liiilive. Will the U. S. govern­ment • be adequately so? Won't unreliable folk like me, iHust.·a­tively, be able to get ourselves underwritten by Uncle Sam, without much investigation?­:lnd tl\en die or otherwise dis. v:;>pear, leaving nothing but a finllncial vacuum behJnd?

Capitol HIU SkeJMical These are the queries I hear

P1.it on C\lpitol Hill. The Republicans are the most

cutspoken doubter:s, of course. They're unanimous. Anti-New !;leal Democrats (like Senators Byrd, Glass, Bailey, Clark and Tydings), are equally standpat­tcri~h .

But there also are quite a few ' emi-aritl-New Deal Democrats who ,have their compunctions. They're not quotable. Yet every_ l·ody knows which side they're on. In the last analysis how they will vote is problematic, but they I re no safe betting for the New Dee I.

And there are ultra-Progres_ siYe;J who dissent from some de_ tilils of the Roosevelt lending nrogram. Sem!tor Johnson of California, for one, can Ix gambled on to oppose loans to defaulting American go vel' n­ments. He has a law against it - a particularly pet law to him.

"PrOl" and "Antis" Anti-New De'll DemOC'rats are

as sore as the Republicans are at the presidential introduction of the self-liquidating issue at the present moment.

The Democratic "antis" reckon that it was shot in at the last minute, with no time to argue it.

"What is Americanism?" Their theory is that it was As we remember last spring's cto"e deliberately.

discussions, no onp. ever complete- The Republicans think so, too. ly decided. We think we've struck The idea is that the thing won't on something that is self-explana- have had time to fizzte by e8'dy tory regarding Americanism - )940, that It will look good then, something we are glad happened and that it will make a cleanup and something that shouldn't· have in November, regardless of the

tuture. happened. . That's what the Republicans . The National Conference .of So- ,are afraid of. They have had, in

Clal Work chose Grand Rapids for Vlnshington, what was known as its 1940 convention. In chooalng '''rhe Capitol Dally," which has the Michigan city, however, the ;ust popped. "Lack of working social workers struck ' a blow to capital," it announces, "forces race prejudice. temporary suspension. Meal\­

Two principles govern the choice while helpful suggestions frOlT1 of a meeting place for this con- subscribers will be gratefully re­venti on. It plans to meet In a ruf- celved." terent geographical section eaCh The Democrats. in short, appeal year, to give social workers from to the antl-N~ Deal Republi­

aU parts of the United States an opportunity to attend. It is also pledgt!d to "achieve progress In nondiscriminatory treatment of all its delega tea."

Things didn't work out just right this year, to the discredit ot the middle west, which was slated for the 1940 meeting. No large city in the area would llUarantee full hotel privileges to Negroes.

Grand Rapid., in the north tral area, promised tull hotel And dIning room privileges, The prin" cipal of human equallty, the dele­gates decided, was more Important than the other.

Small as the Negro delegation at the convention ii, the principle Is one worth upholdln" es~lally when it Is a principle that hu found no place In that fonn of tyranny known as falcl.m.

The Japanese are In 8 lpot be­cause they put up a "No Parkin," sign in ChIna and noW the ~­ern nJitlons have lI!ked' to see their b8d,~ of ~uthol'lty. 1 t

Looks are deceiving. Mill\)' a mild, meek-appearin, acl,ntlat isn't really hliPpy unless he I. smash in, an atom, - •. ,

Cans.

Says Girls Of Today Mak~ T,hett Own Rules

OMAHA, Neb. (AP)- After 44 yean as a teacher and dean of lt1ris, JessIe Towne of Omaha Central high school. Is "tremen­dG~ly optimIstic about our boys and girls."

She obsenred, 8S she announced her retirement from 8 life-long ca­reer of <leaHn, with the younger ,eneration, that "we adults can't be proud of the job we'll be sur­rendertn, to them."

She finds present day girls more frank, leu repressed and more friendly . and .Incere than their pr~rl, but re,arda their llvft as ruled by convention all Iron-bound 81 durlllll any , other ,eneratlon.

':Their ·eonventlons are not what thell' ",others teuh them, but what &II the other members of the 10unaer aenerlltion do," she de­clared.

"Sm:)cs, curls, lon, hair, short half, ,J1\tel:"bul ?lIl\Cel\l ci,areta­

evel'1Ooe else In an adoll!scentl • adopt them, be or aile' must

to th'e conv~t1ons. If the doe.n't wI.h to conform, her

beeomM' Vet'T unhapPY,"

i

A MAN ABOUT MANHATTAN By George Tucker·

NEW YORK - That rumbling terrific destruction to a large, explOSIOn around Broadway fol' thick steak. several rccent nigh ts was just * • • Brodetick Crawford return ing "I remember when I was a kid from Hollywood and his actor pals trouping in vaudeville with moth­sent their wives home early and er and father," he reminisced. set out to give him an old-fash- "Sophie Tucker was on the same ioned home - coming celebration. bill and in one stand we all went The Broadway boys, when they out for dinner together. play, play rough and this marked "I was crazy about these little the lirst time "Brod" had been oystet crackers then, much pre­back to the Rialto since he scored ferring t hem to condy, When I such a resounding hlt with hlg. asked for iome Sophie calJed the performance of the giant, hulking waiter back. Lennie in the drama, "Of Mice "'Waiter,' she said. 'Bring the and Men." ·little boy some oyster crackers.'

Now he was back after playing "'I can't serve crackers with-the army buddy of Gary Cooper out oysters,' the waiter answered. in the new Samuel Goldwyn pic- "'There are seven of us here,' ture, "The Real Glory." And there Sophie ordered. 'Bring seven 01'­

was a parade of par ties, fiestas, ders of oysters wilh oyster crack­and "Brod" was pretty sure that ers.' one of the folderols included the "When the waiter served the World 's fair.

"It must have," he deduced. "My feet hurt so."

Your correspondent had just come from Sophie Tucker's party when I bumped into Crawford in a restaurant where he was doing

seven orders, Sophie said, 'Now take the oysters away and leave the crackers.' "

"Thal's the way Sophie is. When she wants something for some­body she usually gets it."

Crawford's chief trouble when

HEAL TH HINTS By Logan Clendening, M. D.

:1e lett Broadway for Hollywood was to keep from being typed in Lennie loles <111 the lime. After quite a tussle, he thinks he's fin­ally succeeded.

• * • "But, you have 10 take some far

measures to convince them that you can play a varicty of roles," he ~aid.

"In the Goldwyn picture I play a big, tough army lieutenant and on the face of it U'e role was very much in the same mood as Lennie. In order to soften the part they had me go around picking nuct smelling orchids all the time. I could never I'esist an orchid. Well, that Wi,lS all right until some of my p[lls snw it and now I will confess 1 have been laking a lot of what I think is very unfunny rib­bing by their yelling 'Flower Boy' when they sec me."

Crawfol'd has one exacting men­tor in helping him gel started on his acting coreN'. That is his mother, comedienne Helen Brod­erick.

of St. Paul's in the hone of pleas­ing the Dean."

For any permanent cure fol' re­current fever bUst rs, science has been silent Now, howev r, comes an announcement which seems to

This column is often, in fact,. cal school or hospital of any rem- have every show o[ authenticity, regularly, embarrassed by re- edy (or sweating fect (I know that being vaccinjlted "against quests which it cannot even at- now) and had never even con-I smallpox will prevent recurrences. t t t . ' One patIent thub reported was emp 0 answer. And the re- sldered t he subject. tortured with recurrent aUacks o[

quests seem so simple, too. If we were asked to stop the nex t war, As to fever blist rs, we know herpetic eruptions on the lips for we would not be so embarrassed preUy w II that th!'y arc probab ly five years. AftCI an ordinary because that is a complicated, due to the severe irri tation of a smallpox vaccination they stop­man-sized job, but we are asked nerve ganglion. Til skin bUst r ped, and have not recurred for

is simply an external maniIesta- severa l yea rs. to print a cure fOl' fever blisters. tion of th trouble way back be- At any mte, here is a definile

Lately we have been deluged by hind. The reasol' they hurt so cU I'e for fever bl tt l somewhat peremptory demands 'b erg Bugges e(. for a cure tor canker sores in the much is that th yare due to And, at any rate, vaccination mouth. Now that would appear nerve pains. aga inst smallpox will not hurt

Palliative Remedy you simple. Canker ~ores are those Of course, I know about usi ng D~ctol's who wish to relieve little, white, painful areas that up- camphor ice and c,lmpho-pheni- the il' patients will find the rcfel'­pear on the tongue and cheek ; que, but these arc simply pallia- ence to the original ,1I'licic in they come and go, and while they live. Their usc rem inds me of Nor thwest Medicine 38:15:1939. are there they hurt. Now I haven 't wha t Sidnry Smi th sa id to the the shghtest idea of the cause of littl e gir l who was patting a turtle. The man nt the n xt desk says them, nor how to make them go "My dear," remari<ed the canon, folk who J'a is eyebrows ha l'vcst away any sooner than when they "you might as well rub the dome nothing but iIl-(eclings. lIet good and ready to. If they __________________________ _ were canc~ sores instead of ca n~ ker- if they were something big SCOTT'S SCRAPBOOK and dangerous-I could tell in a minute. And it iso't only me; I have tried to get advice from othel' doctors in order to assuage my readers' angUish, but none of them knows any remedy for canker sorCJ.

No One Knows It has been the same way with

fever blisters, I don't any ony­thing about them and nobody clse who ever practiced medicine knOWR anything about them. If you asked a doctor about ulcer of the stomach, or heart failure, or diabetes, or brain tumor, you would get a long discourse on treatment. But for fever blisters -only a disdainful shrug.

You would think that doctol's would begin on slmple things and gradually work up to the tough ones, but the rule seems the other way around. It reminds me of my fir.t patient. I was just out of my hOlpital training and could hondle a prolapsus, or an en larged spleen, wl'th' the greatest of ease. When 1 rllced the first patient I expected lomethlnl colossal. What ~he said was, "Doctor, I have swentini \ mt.,1 r had ·DeVer heard In medi-,

By R. I. Scot!

with D. Mac Showers

MAlty MARTIN Dladc so nluC'h of B hit In

her firs t BPPI'RI'O Irc as "Girl of Ule Week " on ' he "Raymond Paige, 99 Mell and a Girl " pro­gram over CBS tlmt she returns for another guest ~hot tonlghi when the show Is aired at 7 u'cluck.

A Stepi1C'n F(lster mecijey has been se lected as the "Me lody Hnll oC F'amc" contribution on the Raymond Poigc progrum this evening.

Inl'ludcd In the group will be !lOh Susannah," IfSwanee River," "Old Folks at Home" and "Camp­tUWII Races."

Other orchestra I numbers arC' "La Rosita," "Vienna Dl'cn ms," "Nola" and "Russinl1 Fantasy."

A NEWSl'AI'ER story, "Safe In the Fold,"

will be dramatl~ed over the "First Nighter" drama program tonighl at 7:30. Tht' story was- written by Ralph Hunter and Mickey Davis.

NBC's regular behind - the -scenes fe(l ture, "The ABC's of NBC," th is evening at 5:45 over 1he Blue network will spotUghl tho International scene pickup conversa tion featuring Max Jot'­dan in Switzerland, Fred Bale in London, Paul ArciJinal'd in Paris and H . R, Baukhage In Wa~hing-ton. I ----It will be a. four -way hookup, an unusual thlll!: In radio, even today .

MORE ODDlTIE from Bob Ripley's "Oddi­

tOl"ium" on the New York world's [air grounds will be described this evening at 8:30 on Bob's regular weekly broadcast.

A n alleged criminal who was pardoned by Lhe governQr when the latter turned out to be t.he one who was the supposed victim Is central charac\.er or the dramati­zation on Ripley's sho tonight.

Also on the program ~ll be Capt. A lien G. Fnlby of the El

P flRO police forc(' and Alfred t . Smith, nlso of EI PRSO, who saved each oth(,I's lives unde/' identical ci rcumstances.

",IOIINNY PRESENT " .. , offers a nl'w dramatic lerlea,

"The Pert('ct. CrIme," when I. chanA'C8 from Us relulu Satur­day nilM spot. 10 F'rldays at 11 :3', th first Friday prol"nm beln, at 6:30 this evenln .. ,

The fi rst story, written by Mal( Mar in, concerns the murder 01 an CQucslrienn by her husband. Music is undf'r the baton of J ohn­ny GI' en who introduces hIs new­est composition, " You and Your Love," assist d by the Swing Four teen.

PIONEER WOMEN In politiI' and lovernment

wUl be the theme or the "WOIMD In the Makin .. of America" pro­I(ram oller th NB · Blue network today at 12 noon,

Mrs. Ed na G Ilhorn of the Na­tional Lcagu of Women Voters will speak, t th conclusion of the program from hlcago,

The broadcast will dramatlze in­ciden in the Ilves of Abigail Adam, wit oC on pr Id ni and mothel of anolh r, Anna Dickln­son, the (u'st WOlT'an to campaign lor th cl ction of public offi­cials; Ruth Bryan Owen, f irst wo­man Amem:an minister to a for­eign !'ourt, and Frances Perkins, the {\rl>l woman to become a mem­ber of the prrsident's cabinet.

Al\tONO TilE BE T For Friday

tl-CUles ervl e concert., NBC-Red.

6:3O--Johnny Presents. CBS. 7- 1'lantation part , NB -Btlle. 7- WaUztlme with Frank MIUYI,

NBC-Red. 7- 99 Men and a Olrl, CBS. 7 :SO-Death VaUey da.y~ NBC-

Red. 7:30-Flrsl 'Nlghter, CB . 8-GUY Lombardo, NBC-1tecL 8-Grand Central tallon, CBS. 8:30-RolMort L. Rlldey, CD , 9 - Dan e musll!, NBC, CBS,

m .

OFFICIAL DAILY BULLETIN Hems In \.he NIVER tT Y LEND 1\ an M'.btd. uled in th(' summer ion olllce, lV-D, East han. Ut-IDS Cor the GENERAL NOTI E,' are depolllted with the ca.mpu editor of The Da.Il, Iowan, or ma.y be placed In the btlx provided for Lhelr de­po~i t in thl' offlccs of The Dally Iowan. GINE1IA1-'O'rI (,E' must be at Tlte Dally Iowan by 4.:31 NIL

thl' day precedln t: first J.ubllcatlon ; notiCe:! will NOT be accept \AI U y t leDhon, and musl bf\ 'fVPED or LEGIBLY WRITI'EN and IONED bJ a. rc pon I bl~ Der 0 11 .

VOL. XII, No. 333 Frida , June 30, U39

Univer ity Calendar MOllday, J Ullp 19 io Ion led by Albl'rt Edward WI,-

Saturday, Jut, 1 gam, hou. h~mber, Old Capitol. Textbook Exhibit undcr the 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.-All-Univer­

auspices of Iowa Bookm n's as- sity recreation night, women's socialion, room W-3, west wing, !icld. East hall. l\lond iLY, Jul 3

Friday, June 3f) 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 m.; 2:00 to

4: f)O p.m.- Concert program, Iowa Union music room.

4:10 p.m. - Chemistry lecture, "Problems in Cellulose Chemis­try," Prof. E. Heuser, chemistry auditol·ium.

8:00 p.m.-Summer session lec­ture, Albert Edward Wiggam, author oC "Why We Behave Like Human Beings," West approach, Old Capi tol.

aturday , July 1 9:00 a.m.-Round table discus-

Cia, es su pend d; Ins t ea d classe will be held on Saturday, July 8.

Tuesda , Jul , .. Independence day; cia es sus­

pended. Wednesda." Jul, 5

3:10 p.m.-C mpus Corum, "The British Empirc and the War Crisis," Prof. W. Ross Livi ngston, leader, house chamber, Old CaP­itol.

7 :00 p.m. - P hysics d monstra­tion lecture, "Television," by Prot. Joh n Eldridge, physics audJtot­ium, physies building, room 301.

General Notices Sununer Session Instructional

Staff Ku rt Lenser will cond uct u six­

man footba ll clinic begi nning July 5. Th is clinic is open to all stu ­dents registered in the universiLy wi lhout extra fees. Class work wi ll be conducted in the theory as well as lhe practical cnd of six-miln foo tball ond the work will take p lace in the [j cldhousc daily at 4 p.m. The fil'st class will m et J uly 5 in the gymnasi­um at the north end of the f ieldhouse.

E. G. SCHHOEDEn

Phi Epsilon Kappa There will be no meeting of

Phi Epsilon K II P P a Monday, July 3.

JULtEN BURKNESS, President

Library }fours The university libraries will be

ciosed Monday, July 3, and Tues­duy, July 4. Reserve books may b withdrawn for ovemight use at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, July 1, and will b due at 8 a.m. Wed­nesday, July 5,

GRACE VAN WORMER, A~ti ng Director

Universlly Lccturtll Prof. E. Heuser of thc Institule

of POP!!I' ChemIstry, Appleton, Wis., will lecture In the chemistry auditorium June 28, 29 and 30. For specifiC detalls s~e the offIcial dai Iy bulletin.

PROF. P. A. BOND .-Tribute to Prores or Potter

just compleling 44 years of serv­Ice to the univ rsity, w llt be hi the senate chamber of Old Cap­itol, Thursday aflernooll, July «, at 4: 10. Letters of congratulation will be rend from classical col­leagues i 0 Iowa and th roughoUt the nation . Friends of P rofeJllll" Potter and olh 1'5 int r sted are i nvi ted to attend.

ROY C. FLICKINGER

ocI.al Dance Clasllel Social dance classes wlU not

me t Monday, July 3. The date (0 1' th next I s n is Wednellda" J uly 5, Th schedule !o~ tilt l'emalnlllg lessons is as followS: '

Wcdne day, July 5. Monday, July 10, WednesdllY, July 12. Monctay, July 17. Wednesday, July 19, Mondoy, July 24..

ESTHER FRENCH '

~creatlonal Swlmml ... The recrealional swimming at

the wom II'S gymnasium pOOl Tuesday and Thursday evenl" will be discontinued tor the rest of the Slimmer sessIon. AnY­having paid fees tOl' these hOUI'l may swim during the reere.donaI hout's as 10Uows:

Monday, Wednesday, Frld.,-5:00 to 6:00 p.m.

Tuesday, Thursday - 4:00 to 6:00 p.m.

GLADYS SCOTT

Play cI ..

A lJ'lbule meeting in I O.C of

There wU\ be 8 p\lI.y clad, he" at th women's gymnBslum ev" Thursday art rnoon from 3 \0 , 0'c1ock, An bo)'!! and glr18 f_

agC!! oC 8 to 10 yenrll arC! eU­(SM BUU,J:')'IN pace ') - . PI·O!. F ranklin H, pott.er, I II

,

'.

.' r

FRII

Ann 01

Dndet Will SUP} With Lat« On Child

Four RadiI courses for If nounced und! ship of the 10

starch statlor velopment dl State college State Teache Falls.

The purpo to supply par material on from the ch ters and to organizing

The four dealing wi ing with children, children cents. two

a copy selected Questions sent to the will be a.t amlthl!r

P .T.A, the rlub fulfilling units.

To meet who cannot vidual plan whereby one ruvidu61 istration sired. which reading sent out. ual with the air in

The first

wlll be rung at athletic the women's

Students change 01 p night will gymnasium house

Field volley will be with social and indoor side lhe

Committee week's play Ecklund, ,Publicity; activities; clal room, ,ame room.

These ed from the men's education del' in charge of entertainment illf the games

Women Will

T

noon,

1989

3 Instead

•.

Sa turdaY, , J

.' I

FRIDAY, JUNE 80, 1~89 THE DAILY IOWAN. IOWA CITY PAGE THREE

Announce Four Radio Courses Under Child Welfare Groups

'Daisy, Daisy Can You Tell Me?'

Will Supply Parents With Latest Material On Child Development

Four Radio ChIld Study club courses for 1939·40 have been an­nounced under thl' joint sponsor­ship of the Iowa child welfare re­search station and the child de­velopment departments of Iowa State college at Ames and Iowa State Teachers college at Cedar Falls.

The purpose of the courses Is to supply parents with up-to-date material on child rearing direct from the child development cen­ters and to aid communities in organizing study gl·oups. . The four courses offered are (1)

dealing with the tamily, (2) deal­ing with infants and preschool children, (3) guiding school age children and (4) guiding adoles­cents. Each course is planned for two years with 12 meets in each annual ser es. The 1939-40 courses are the first hal! of the cycle.

Each course consists of a short presentation followed by a round table discussion broadcast every two weeks through the radio sta­tions of the University of Iowa and Iowa State college, WSUI and WOI. The broadcasts concerning the family and school-age child are given on alternate Tuesdays at 2:30 p.m.

Those dealing with the infant and preschool child and with the adolescent are given on alternate Thursdays at 2:30 p.m. Parents may enroll either under the group plan or individual plan, but are urged to complete the two-year cycle in any course chosen. It is permiSSible to register in one or more courses.

It was also announced that if 10 or more parents wish to organize a study group, they may enroll in the Radio Child Study club and choos a leader who will report names and addresses of the leader and the members to the Iowa child welfare research station or to Itatlon WOI in Ames.

Each leader will be supplied with advance material including a copy of lhe presentation and a ielected list of rearling references. Questions from groups may be sent to lhe welfare station and will be considered over the radio at another meeting.

P .T .A. study groups enrolled in the ('lub receive credit toward fulfilling the goals for P .T.A. units.

To meet the needs of parents who cannot join a group, an indi­vidual plan has been devised whereby one may become an in­dlvidu&.l member by paying a reg­istration fee in each course de­sired. Advance copies of the talks which open the discussion and the reading references will then be sent out. Questions from individ­ual members will be combined with others and considered over the air in the same manner.

The first broadcast in the fami Iy series will be Tuesday, Oct. 3 and the infant and pl'eschool series will open Thursday, Oct. 5. Guid­ing the elementary school child discussions will start Tuesday, Oct. 10 and guiding the adolescent on Thursday, Oct. 12.

Summer School Play Eve. Held Activities Take Place At Athletic Field And Women's Gym.nasium

. The second summer session aU· university recreational play night will be tomorrow evening begin­ning at 7 o'clock on the women's athletic field and at 8 o'clOck in the women's gymnasium.

Students are asked to note the change of pl::Jce. This week's play night will be in the wamen's gymnasium Instead of the field house gymnasiums as previously announced.

Field games including archery, volley ball, softball and others wlU be played on the outside field with social danCing, card games and indoor games taking place in­side the gymnasium later.

Committee chairmen tor this week's play night are Zelpha Ecklund, reception; Zella Gril!in, .publicity; Ruth Buchanan, field activities; Marjorie Paulus, so­cial room, and Velma Duncan, game room.

These committees are appoint­ed from classes in recreation in the men's and women's physical education departments. They are In charge of all arrangements tor entertainment as well as conduct­ing the games and other activities.

Women Golfers Will Tee Off

T his Morning Playing their regular Friday

morning tournament the members of the Women's Golf association will tee off promptly at " o'clock thl. mornln,.

Mr •. Elton Titus Is chairman ot the da,,', activities. Luncheon will be Hrvad .t the clubhoUle at noon.

Virgil Palmer To, peak Today

T u E'ngineers I Virgi l M. Palmer, superinten­

dent of the industria l engineering d~partment of tile Eastman Kodak company in Rochester, N. Y., will talk to the executives and engi­ne rs attending the summer man­agement course today an the sub­ject "The Work of the Industrial Engineer in the Development and I Manufacture of New Products."

Palmer heads a staff of indUS- I triul engineers whose chie! con- , cern is improving methods of re-I ducing costs in Kodak park, a pillnt consisting of 80 main build­ings covedng 400 acres of ground and employing over ]0,000 people.

Palmer will present the indus­trial engineer's approach to the problem of setting up manufac­tUring methods for new products. He will include cases of the small Small Elizabeth Gilmore Holt job-shop type as well as of pro- ' ducts made by the millions. two year old granddaughter of

Club To Ask Dues Payment

President and Mrs. Eugene A. Gil-more, 102 E. Chul'ch street, ex­amines a posy which sh~ picked in her grandmother's garden, as she and hel' mother, Mrs. John B.

Holt of Atlanta, Ga., rest for a moment on one of the benches in the garden. Mrs. Holt and "Bet­sey," who have been visiting here the past month, will leave Sunday for New York City, where Mrs. Hall will sail July J2 lor a six­week tour at EUIQpe.

Program Chairmen Of Woman's Club To Meet July 17

Visitors Arrive Here '" '" .. '" '" '"

Delinquent dues for the Iowa City Woman's club must be paid before Saturday, according to an announcement made yesterday by Mrs. George Robson, treasurer. Failure to do so will mean that the names of delinquent members will not appear in the new year book, she said.

Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Pntyn Will Be Guests In Memler Home

Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Pruyn Qf.D. C., Philadelphia , Cleveland and Sioux City will arrive here tomor- Chicago. ' row to spend two weeks visiting • • • in the home of their son-in-law Mrs. Mary Caito of SI. Louis, and daughter, MI'. and Mrs. Ray MQ ., is visiting in the home of her

Mrs. H. J . Thornton, yearbook chairman, has called a meeting of all department program chairmen for July 17 at 2:30 p.m. in the clubrooms of the community build­ing. All complete department programs for the coming year must be turned in at that time.

Memler, 134 Parsons avenue. sister-i n- law, Mrs. Henry Corso, • • • 112 \4 Washington street.

Any Iowa City woman who de· sires membership in the club may obtain a membership blank from Mrs. L. C. Jones, membership chairman, phone 5522. .

TODAY With

WSUJ TODA Y'S IDGHLIGBTS

A special Iowa City centennial prllCram at 8 o'clock this evening will feature Interviews of Iowa Citlans In costume for the centen­nial celebration. The persons will tell the history of t heir outfits and I describe tbem to listeners.

Prof. Edna lffil of the home I economics department will speak I on "Food" at 11 :15 this morning on the regula r weekly program of the "Problems of the Consumer Buyer" series sponsored by the home economics department.

Mrs. Homer Stanhope and son, Ronald. and daughter, Janet Lee, of San Diego, Cal., who have been visiting here, and Mrs. Stanhope's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Memler, 130 Parsons avenue, will motor to Dixon, IlL, Sunday to spend the holiday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Memler's son, Mer­ton Memler.

• • Mrs. J. W. Croneweth of Sigour­

ney arrived Tuesday to visit in the home of her sister, Mrs. J. R. McVicker, 1117 E. College street.

* • • Arthur Goldberg, 125 N. Gilbert

street; Archie Saltzman, 503 S. Van Buren street, and Sam Shul­man, 946 Iowa a\'enue, returned horne Wednesday from a three week tour of the east. They visit­ed in New York City, Washington,

Church Group Worker

• • • Margaret A. Meuller ot Omaha,

Neb., and her sister, Mary G .. Mueller, and brother, Lewis F . Mueller, 420 E. Jefferson: street, returned from Wisconsin Monday evening where they have been va­cationing for the past few weeks.

• • • Mr. and Mrs. H. L . Feay, daugh­

ter, Joyce, and son, Herbert, of Albany, N. Y., arrived yesterday for a short visit In the home of Mrs. H. E. Feay, 422 Bowery street.

• • • Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taylor, 228

S. Summit street, returned home Tuesday night from Avoca where they spent several days.

• • • Dr. and Mrs. Fred Jarvis and

children, 222 Melrose court, are leaving soon lor Seattle, Wash"j where Dr. Jarvis will practice me­dicine. He has been a member of the staff of the department of surgery of the uni vcrsity hQspital.

• • • Irene Christensen, who recently

completed post graduate work at Barnes hospital in St. Louis, Mo., has returned to take up her duties as supervisor of the orthopedic op­erating room of the university hospita l.

• • • Prot, Frank L. Mott, director at

the scbool of journalism, will read another Installment from his Pullfzer prize winning book, "History of American Magazines"

! I Mrs. Sam Smith , 322 N. Clinton street; MI·s. Carrie Brown, 815 E.

I Buwtington street, and A.da B. Culver, 114 E. Fair'child street,

I spent yesterday in Marsha 1Il0wn.

this afternoon at 4:30.

TODAY'S PROGRAMS 8- Morning chapel. 8:15- Federal symphony of New

York. 8:3~Dally Iowan of the Air. 8:40-Morning melodje~. 8:50-Service reports. Grace Taylor of SeC City has been 9- Within the classroom, Eng- appointed student worker for the

Ush Before 1600, Prof. Hardin Westminster foundation of the Craig. Pl'esbytel'ian church, according to

9:50 - Program calendar and an announcement made yesterday weather report. by the Rev. Ilion T. Jones, pastor

10-Homemakers forum. of the church and director of the 10:15- Yesterday's musical fa- foundation . .Miss Taylor will as-

vorites. I sist the Rev. Mr. Jones with the 10:30- The book shelf. student activity program. She is lI- Album of artists. a graduate of Morningside college 11 :15 - Problems of the con- in Soiux City. Last year she taught I

sumer buyer, "Food," home eco- English and directed dramatics in nomiC!) department. the Correctionville high school.

11 :30-Melody mart. While in college she was active in 11 :SO-Farm llashes. religious, musical, athletic and 12 noon- Rhythm rambles. social groups on the campus. Miss 12:30-Today in Iowa Cily. Taylor is the successor to Har-12:35- Service reports. riet OttQ, who Wll.li married in I- Musical serenade. February to the Rev. Stuart M. 1:10 - Within the classroom, Patel'son of Greeley, Col.

Popular Ballads, Prof. John W. Ashton.

2--,Iowa City centennial pro­gram.

2:1()-Within the classroom, The Classical Period, Prof. Philip G. Clapp.

3- Manhattan concert band. 3 :15- Magazlne notes. 3 :3()-Illustrated musical chats,

Liszt, Concerto for piano In A major.

4 :30 - History of American Magazines, Prof. Frank L. Matt.

5-Concert hull selections. 5:15 - Government and social

welfare, Jack T. Johnson. 5:30-Musical moods. 1i:5~Dall, Iowan of tbe Alr, 6- Dinner hour concert. 7- Chlldren's hour, the land of

the story book. 7:3()-Evenlni musicale. 7:45- History In review, L. O.

Leonard. 8-Iowa City centennial pro-

gram. 8:80-Sportstirne.

Quilting Party Makes Debut 10 Guests Entertained Yesterday Mternoon At Kent Residence

Mrs. Frederick Kent and Mrs. Kirk Porter entertained 10 guests at a centennial party and quilting bee In Mrs. Kent's home, 302 Richards street yesterday. Guest of honor was Bernice Cox of Minneapolis, Minn., who is visit· ing her sister, Mrs. George Robe­son.

• • • Grenythe Rosemund and Betty

Lew of Muscatine visited friends in Iowa City yesterday afternoon.

• • • Dr. and Mrs. Roberl Barton left

yesterday for Ann Arbor, Mich., where Dr. Barton plans to study dermatology. He has been a mem­ber of the University hospital staff.

DOllble .worth

DOUBLE SIZE

LARGE BOTTLE

12 ounces

DRINK

su.N.smNE

POP • FRUIT PUNCH

• ORANGE

• ROOT 'BEER

• STllAWBERRY

Manufaotured By

Iowa City

BOHling Wk8.

1:'5-DaU7 10W1'D 01 Uae AIr.

The guests spent the afternoon quilting. In the middle of the afternoon the hostesses served lemonade and at the close at the social hour they served tea, old­fashiQned cookies and old-fashion-I ed pepperminlB and horehound I drops. . ". ------'!'---IIJ!III ......

R. M. Perkins Reveals Facts For Session Officers Will Hear Secret Service Head, FBI Representatives

The chiel of the United States secret service, the director of the Chicago police scientific crime detection laboratory and men from the Federal Bureau at In­vestigation nre among the out­slate experts named Cor the University of lowa's peace offi­cers short course.

An 'Official' Centennial Observllnce

Prot'. R. M. Perkins of the col- unb()nnet~, h(~)p kirts, s t raw . Iowa City centennlal. The group I oftlef', the l'OUllly treasul .-'. of­lege or law, director at the third an- hul~, plnid skirts and even panta-,' piclur d includ s the employe~ of !ie , lill.' Joh II ('ounty Red. nual course, yesterday allnounced Icttes htl ve bt-~n donned by the th county. e~gin .r·s office, the offrce, the l:(JUllty clelk's facts about the personnel of the officers and cmIlIo\"('· or the John- county auditor oUlce, th county I I ' U affair ot July 17 to 21. son ~ounty c',urth(;us<, a~ a part of mperinlendent of school' office, 1 th", tlJU~lty )< 1'( I a Ie

Frank J . Wilson, chief ot the their "official" oL"rrvance of the the county board of sup rvisor' I the hcnfr" offie . United States secret sel"vice, will ----- ---

speak, while the F. B. I. repre- i t.tllilllL RilCil'·l,il IOld R esiclellls sentatives will be Kenneth Logan . - . - . - .- 3 190 E ) on and A. T. Potter. PeFlCe Elliltf'llltl'Ol" n · Invited To Jo;n Another angle will be presented.. .. by Harry D. Smith, district su- ummer tndent Total Par(u1e jllondu pervisor of the bureau of narco- Ruth Subotnik and Patricia Eq Is 1938 tics, Minneapolis; and Maurice 1. Sleezer, who have b en attending ua Ryan, post office inspector in the Grinnell Institut of lnt rna­charge, St. Paul, Minn. tional RelatJons and the Y.W.C.A.

PeJ1:oruJ who have bet!'n dents 01 Iowa ity or

Fred E. lnbau, director of the summer camp at Lake Gen va, Chicago police scientific crime de- Wis., are now at Lafayette college teclion laboratory, will be another in Easton, Po., where they wllll'e­distinguished speaker. The dlrect- ceive training for n community or at the University of Nebraska peace education project. Th y will ~hort course for peace ofIicers, be in Easton until July 9. The ses­Prot. James M. Reinhardt, also sion opens tad a y. Both are will speak, as will Rex Andrews members of the un i vel'S i t Y at the Madison, Wis., dep31·tment Y.W.C.A.

Enrollm nt in the UniveT&ily or Iowa summer session IS prac­tically equal 10 that oJ th 1938 a<.sslon at the corre pondlng time.

The current towl I 3,190, It was reported yest rday from th dike at Regisr.ar H. C. Dorcas. Ot this number, 2,916 or enroll_ ed al th collegIate level, while Ule remaining 274 are s tudents II ' the all-s tate music and speech groups.

county for 80 years or more Invited to rldt' in the ''''rllflrUUIIfI

p rad at 10 a.m. Monday. Tran. portallon tor these

on will be furnished by City automobil d alers. will call fol' Ul m between" 9:30 n. m. Monda if the r .. Rilct"'lnt.,

at police training. Aft l' th clo. at the course More than 20 other speakers they will b station d in som

also will contribute to the pro- community for. even w ks where gram, with about 35 topics to be they will cS!'ry on a community taken up in lectures and demon- p ace educatIon PI·oject.

WIll phone 2285 before

------ Tho. e living ou Id Iowa moy phone that number and

D. KpY8pr Returns dlll'inls whell' cars m y call

F E . T· Ih m In th city. strations before/ several hundred Iowa law enforcement ofticers.

Maryetta Baker Awarded Prize

rom. astern rr p

1

The par d will Ii ~ mble at int'l ,('tion of East Coli g Girl COld Members Dorothy Jane Keyser. daughter llbert 5tr,·\: by th

of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Keyser, 128 1 bulldillg. 01 wcal Troop 10 E. Fairchlld stre t, r turned ho~ The cornmitt, hu A.ttend Vacation Camp last night aft I' on ext nded viSIt d ile to hu\' all til

In Boston and th east. to wke un uctlve p rt in After the close of school Mi. S parade.

Eleanor Pownall, daughter 01 Keyser, who will b 8 junior stu-Maryetta Baker, NI of pam-I P rof. and Mrs. Fred Pownall, 1602 d nt at W !lesley co il g In

Tnlly.lli Club To Meet TOlno

N. Dubuqu Rtre 1 Shirl Y IItll'- Wellesley , Moss., next year, at­eroy, was announced yesterday as ' tenderl a houseparty at SOia more the winner of a $500 first prize per, daughter of Prof. and Mrs. beach on Cope Cod, was a house of an essay contest sponsored by' Earl Harper, 324 Hutchln. on ave- guest in the Richard Coolidge the McFadden Publishing com- nue; Anne Cassat, daughter of home In Boston while she attend­pany of Chicago. Mrs. Paul Cassat, 1110 E. 011 g ed Harvard un Iv I'slty CQmmence-

Miss Baker's essay was on the street; Mal'llyn Sidwell, daught 1'1 ment w k activitIes, and waS II topic "The Future of the Amer- of Mr. and Mrs . A. B. Sidwell, 223 m mb r Qf a house party glv n by ican People." She explail)ed that Melrose avcnue and Lois Irwin, Olive Coolidg at Nantucket. Sh she wrQte it during the Christmas daughter or Dr: lind Mrs. O. C. was also a illest of M rein Karn

Mrs. FAiith Williams, Woodlawn apartrn nlB, will entertain the rnembers of the Tally ·hi bridge dub tomorrow at 7 p.m. In her hom .

holidays last winter because she Irwin, 619 N. Governor street, are In J acksdnvill , Mich. had nothing else to do with her now attending Potl.l.Iwalamle Hills Mi 9 Keyser s rved as a brides-free time. camp in Elkhust, Wis. mold at th w dding of Courtney

A representative of the publish- The girls, who are all members Wi lson and HUih Deane, which

J

CedfJr Rapids Couple Get Marriage Licen.e

ln, company will arrive in Iowa of the local Girl Scout troop 10 took pl~ce Jun 21 In t~e Horvard n. Nl'i\ on Mill r is..u d a mar­City some time this week to pre- of the university junior high univerSIty chapel. MISS KI'Y er rloge Ii n· y 1 rday to R lph sent the first prize check to the school, will be gone several and the bride weI' clpssmal s at K Wood, 23, nnd Wlnitr d Wyck-winner. we ks. Wellesley. (rf, 19, both or ~Il': R;iplds.

================~======~============

DON'T BARGAIN HUNT I • Save your shoe leather! Save your tim ! A & P Supet

Markets permit Low Prices Everyday that spell Renl Thrift for Families Everywhere!

Fine

Paper Napkins Pk ... 5 of 80 C

Ann Paa'e

Salad Dressing

~::" 25c

Armour',

Corned Beef

2 ~~' 35c

Low Prices

QUALITY MEAT Mealy

Beef Boil

Ib.8c Round Bone Pork

h'd Roa t

lb. Ilc Choice Cuts

Beef Roa t

lb. 15c ALL PRICES GOOD

FRIDAY, SATURDAY

and MONDAY

Roseclale 23 BUTrER .......... lb. C Sultana Peanut 2-lb. 19 BUTI'ER .......... Jar C Nectar Green ~4- lb. 15 TEA ........... Pkg. C Bokar 2 l-Ib. 35 COFFEE Baa'S C Encore Stuffed 4 ~ os. 19 OLIVES .......... Jar C A&P Grapefruit 2 46 011. 25 JUICE Cans C Gold Medal 5 Jb 22 FLOUR .. ... ~I C AJl«eJ Food 29 CAKE , eacb ". '''''' C

Fruits! Vegetables!

lceberr

LETTUCE Head 7c

-------S~~t------

LEMONS Dosen 29c

---Flrm.al;;----TOMATOES

2 IhI. 19c

NOT AGAIN For

I ·

100 YEARS Will Iowa City Have A

Centennial or luch a

SALE NEW ARRIVALS IN

SLIPS

98c

BETl'ER GRADE

BWUSES

FABRIC

GLOVES

SUMMER

SLA.CKS

88e

SUMMER

DRESSES

98c

.$2.95

OJlERALLS

'1.59 1ge ... --------------~ Special Regrouping 0/ Higher

,

.

Priced Dresses $1.96 New 8tyles - in sheers and swing spun furies. Sizes 12 , to 42 •••••••

Rerru!mber-We're Quiltin, lor Good

THE

.Phyllis . Herrick SHOP

Botel J.IlIl'8OD BuiJdin,

MerrittB, erl", Hall and D' Antoni Quart.er-Final Golf Winners \

BITS about:

Sports BF

J. DENNIS

SULLIVAN

-

D A I L Y

PAGE FOUR

---------------------------- t

lOW A N

FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1939

Semi-Finals Today ~ Title Play Tomorrow Hall, Iowa State, Lone Iowa Player Left in Tourney

By GEORGE S. MILLS

A. Yankee Rookie

Art Manush, rollicking co-cap­tain of the 1939 Hawkeye base· ball team, is rapidly becoming a sensation with Canton, Ohio, in the Middle Atlantic league which is classified as bei ng of the class C variety.

Fistic Fall Showing Planned DES MOINES, June 29 (AP)­

It will be east vs. west and north vs. south in tomorrow's 36-hole semifinals of the national colle­giate gol1 tournament on the Wa-

* * * * * * * * * ... * * konda course here.

His hitting, slightly under the .300 mark, has been timely, many of the blows going for extra bases and driving in ru ns.

A clipping from a Canton paper has this to say about Manush:

'''The prize play oC the game was turned in by Art Manush, newest Terrier acquisition, when he went far to his right to pull in Wolfe's low liner aiter a falling, shoe­string clltch in which he rolled over several times but arose in time to peg to first for a double play which nipped the visitors' uprising."

Although Art collected but one hit in this game, it was a double which chased in a run. He lat.er walloped a fly ball to the distant corners of the park to drive in another tally.

Canton currently paces the league, having won 34 games while dropping 20.

After his disastrous bout with J oe Louis in Yankee stadium Wednesday night Tony Galento, :fortunate in being still among the living, averred as how he would have made short shift of the champion had he not been both­ered with "something in his eye."

By SID FEDER . Galento blood-and-thunder thrill-NEW YORK, June 29 (AP)- er of last night coming off prob­

The he~vyweight fashion parade &bly next June il both get by, momentarily in the off-season reatured a day Iull of listie de­aIler Joc Louis' four-round tech- vclopments, that included: nicaL knockout over Tony Galen- Changes Plans Lo, was made ready for lall show- 1-Loui", his only mark from ing tod'lY with det.ails virtually Tonys' thunderous left-hand shots completed fa,' two September a deep bluish bruise under the bouts. ',ight eye, revealcd that he went

Thc Associaled Press learned into the ring last night with the that these two bouts, looking to- intention of letting the fight go ward a meeting between the vic- alout 10 rounds, and changed his tOI",5 next spring, would be: m:nd when he was floored in the

PastoT-Louis? thil,d session; I-Champion Louis in Detroit 2-Joe Jacobs, Galento's man-

against Bob Pastor, the ex-New nger, disclosed that Tony w::lsn't York university Cootballer who as serious about bis training foJ' went 10 'rounds aboard his bi- Louis as had becn made out. rycle with the Brown Bomber "WllY," Jacobs said, "he was out LWO years ago. aimost every night till one or two

2-Galento again:st the only o'clock, and he smoked cigars and other outstanding challenger ol <i'rank beer the same as always:' the moment, California Lou Nova, 3-Revelation by the fists of "'ither in Philadelphia or New Galento and Max Schmeling York. (three years ago) that the Brown

Arrangement of these bouts, P.omber's chin is vulnerabLe, which would find the alTeady caused just about every Iighf talked-of rema tch of the Louis- manager to hurl a challcnge at

the champion. Even Joe Gould at a "hotter" Ilght and said that spoke his piece on behalf of a until Tony went down under a return go for Tommy FaTr, who r~urderous attack in the fourth I03led 15 rounds with Louis. Pro- he had no idea of stopping the Thoter Mike Jacobs lurned thumbs bout. "Even whcn he's hurt." down on this one, sinc~ it involv- the veteran officlal explained, ed holding the fight in London. "Galento always is dangel'ous un­Another challenge came from til he's knocked cold." Mclio Bettina, recognized in New Fight Site York state as light heavyweight Only major detail lill lcft in CHampion. the path of the Louis-Pastor con-

A Pauper test was negotiations for use of 4-Promoter Jacobs announced Briggs' stadium, home of the De­

lhat gross receipts from the troit Tigers' basel:/aLl club, and crowd of 34,852, plus $50,000 from. tills was expected to be ironed radio and molion picture rights, out without too much difficulty. b':ought the total groos proceeds Louis said he didn't care who from last nights' fight to $333,- he fought, although he explained 302.68, from which, after federal ~e understood the winner of the and state taxes were deducted, recent Nova-Max Baec bout, I.uuis collected $114,332.87, thus ~"hich was Nova, was to get the 1;r inging his total ring earnings shot. uver the $1,500,000 mark. Ga- "Y'know," he added, "I'd like lento's "cut" was $50,020.63. to take on MI'. Galento again.

5 - Referee Arthur Donovan, I hit him harder with more who has been the third man in punches than J ever hit anybody. the ring in all Louis' figh1s here, l-Iova or nobody else would be decided he had never officiated as tough as him."

Mack III as A's Win, 8 to 6

In the upper bracket H. R. "Ren· nie" Merritt of Yale meets War· ren Berl, the StanIord sophomore. In lhe lower bracket Billy Hall of Iowa Slate college will be pit­ted against Vincent d'Antoni of Tulane.

The semifinalist victors will battle it out for the national col­legiate golf championship over 36 holes Saturday.

Berl, a par-shooting fool from the west coast, put Bert McDow­eU of Louisiana State out of the tournament by a 2 and 1 margin in the quarterfinals this after-noon.

The match ended on the 17th green where Ber! dropped a 12-foot putt for a birdie deuce.

Merritt reached the semifinals by defeating Lee Ramsel of Lou· isiana State, one up on 19 holes. Hall outlasted Stewart "Skip" AI· exander of Duke to win on the 20th green. Alexander three­putted on the second extra hole to bow himself out of the tour-nament.

D'Antoni caught Art Floberg, the Beloit giant killer, on an er­ratic afternoon and won as he pleased by a 4-and-3 score.

McDowell, who lost the title to

Cubs Move Up on Terrymen With 7-6 Win Over Cardinal

JohnnIe Burke on the 37th green P F I 'fl I a year ago, put up a vallant bat- Boston ounds rene 1 noll

Tony had something in his eye 112 C f G H I ~~ ~~~h~om~t~i~g ~~t~~-thO~y:ct, I MAJOR LEAGUE ! on erence ames on aw { Aroused Maclis

tie but never eould cateh Ihe Terry's G;a, .. t.s Late Redbird, Rally westerner after the sixth hole. " " The Stanlord shot maker ,01 off F 8 2 W' To IU.8ur VI tory to a shaky start, missing a 15- or to nt

!~l~n~~l~~r~:~:~c~:~eor~~~ i __ S_TAN~D_IN_G_S_~j 1939.1940 Baslietball Schedule Get 17 Safeties thousands of knuckles the pudgy one has ever had the misfortune of encountering.

inch putt on the third to go two ST. LOurS. June 29 (AP) down. NEW YORK, June 29 (AP) -

The ordinarily light-h1tting Bos­ton Bees swarmed onto lour pitch­ers for 16 hits today to beat the New York Giants 8 to 2 and inter-

Chicago's Cubs mo.ved within I

g~m of the third pi ce St. Ltlu Cardinals toda wi lh a 7 to • ~ ,eto' y but nearly lost out in a Cletermined Cardinal rally In ~ e

National League W L Pet. G.B.

Cincinnati ...... 38 22 .633 New York ...... 35 28 .556 4'1.. St. Louis ........ 33 27 .550 5 Chicago .......... 34 30 .531 6 Brooklyn ...... 29 29 .500 8

A 21-game schedule, including . tpn home games and two with team:s ncver met before , will be played by Ule University of Iowa's 1939-40 baSketball team.

Dec. 11 - Denver at Iowa City. Dec. 16 Wayne at Detroit. Dec. 18 - Butler at Indian-

"polis. Dec. 30 - Marquette at Mil­

waukee.

Qout Four Bo ox Hurlers in Building Eight Run Total

McDowell was over par figures on both the fourth and fifth, how· ever, and Berl squared the match. The westerner sank a 15·footer [01' a birdie three on the 423-yard sixth to take the lead for the rest of the afternoon. rupt the Terrymen's string at five eighth and ninth .

The big blow in th

When Galento hit the deck the count became seven down and one to go. The one to go is the California youth - Lou Nova -who sat at ringside, witnessed thc &laughter and had the temerity to declare tha t he will rna ke the champion "jump from the ring" when he Caces him in September.

Pittsburgh . 27 31 .466 10 Boston .......... 25 35 .417 13

Coach Rollie Williams Thurs­Clay announced the official cro:d of a dozen conference games and nine non-conlerence encounters. Ti,e season opens Dec. 2 when C::orleton is played at Mason City in a high school gymnasium dedication game.

Jan. 1 Jan. 6

City.

Berl was five over fours for straight victories. Despite the BOSTON, June 29 (AP)-Minus

Toledo at Toledo. the 105 holes he has played in the loss the Giants were able to re-Minnesota at Iowa the services of their venerable tournament thus far, and four of I main in second place as the Cubs

('ighth inning uprising WI

Johnny Mize's el venth hom run rf the year d:lving In stuarl MlOrtin a'1t'ad of him after JimlIl1 Brown had scored on T rry Moor's acri!ice fly Enos Slau. ghter hOml!red fnr thl' Card In the ni[lth, then . outhpaw Larry rrench throttled them.

Philadelphia 19 38 .333 171h Yesterday's Results

Boston 8; New York 2. manager, Connie Mack, who was t~ose extra shots were made in again downed St. Louis. stricken with an attack of acute hiS two matches today. The Mc- . . indigestion, the Philadelphia Ath- Dowell-Berl card: The Bees bunched SIX hits for

Jan. 8 - Indiana at Blooming­Not as rugged as Galento, not nearly the puncher, Nova will not last with Louis any longer than the champion desires. Two rounds -if Louis is so inclined-should dispose of Nova. Then what? The Bomber will have whipped all the top flight heavies of the world.

Chicago 7; st. Louis 6. Philadelphia at Brooklyn (night)

ton. Jan. 13- Michigan at Ann letics rapped out 17 hits to over- McDowell out ...... 434 546 453-38 six runs in the second inning,

come the Boston Red Sox, 8 to 6, in-544 535-43 when Debs Garms and Buddy -postponed. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati - not

scheduled. American League

W L Pet-G.B. New York .... .49 14 .778

Arbor. Jan. 15- Chicago at Chicago. Jan. 29 - South Dakota State

at Iowa City. Febb. 5-DePauw at Iowa City. Feb. 10 - Wiscol')Sin at Iowa

in the opener of a two-game series Ber! out ................ 445 453 443-36 Hassett hit homers, to chase today. in--554 535-42

Bob Johnson b[,tled in four runs Squares Mateh Rookie Manny Salvo and added a lor the A's, two of them on his Merritt reached the 18th tee one pair o! tallies during a rainstorm 11th homer of the year with one down to RamseL after the Louisi- in the ninth.

Guess they'll have to cut off one of his arms or a leg ' in order that some one of his o/lponents will have at least a chance of leaving the ring alive after taking bis terrific wallops .

Boston ........... 33 24 .579 13 Detroit ..... 33 29 .532 15 ~

Wayne university of Detroit and DePauw of Indiana are teams never before met by Iowa in basketball. The home schedLlle uf non-conference games is em­bpllished by an inters.ectionat c')ntest· with Denver university.

In the conference race, Iowa lIiIl play two games each with Minnesota, Indiana, and North­western; will take on Wisconsin, Illinois, and Ohio State at !lome, <:nd Chicago, Purdue, and Michl­gan abroad.

City. Feb.

on in the third. Nelson Potter ana State sophomore had rammed Deacon 0 ann Y MacFayden 12 - Ohio State at low .. scored his sixth pitching victory of in a 7-footer for a deuce on the showed his skill wMn men were

the year, against one defeat aL- 17th green. Lee hooked his next though he had to be relieved by drive far to the left in the woods, Henry Pippen with two on and however, and the Yale youth two out in the eighth. Jack Wi!- squared the match on the home son was the fil'st of Iour Boston hole with a par four.

Chi ogo lost no tim In f lIlna (In Bob Weiland In lhe first Inn· ing, coring three l'un!J bt'fore Paul Dean cam to the l escue. Dilly H I'm n', triple, .Augit' G • lan' inIi Id blow and Gien R

Yankees Split Doubleheader

Cleveland .. ..32 29 .525 16 Chicago ........ 31 29 .517 16% Philadelphia .. 26 37 .413 23 Washington .. 25 40 .385 24% St. Louis ... ..18 44 .290 2·91~

Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 8; Boston 6. St. Louis 9, 5; Chicago 3, 7. New York I, 7; Washington 2, O. Only games schcduled.

The Complete Schedule: Dec. 2- Carleton at Mason

Cily. Dec. 8 - Millikin at Iowa City.

City. Feb. 1.7 - MinOfsota at Minn­

eapolis. Feb. 19- Indiana at Iowa City. Feb. 24 - Northwestern at Ev-

aeston. Feb. 26 - Purdue at Lafayette. Mar. 2 - Illinois at Iowa City. ;Mal'. 4 - NorL"western at Iowa

City.

With Senators WASHINGTON, June 29 (AP)­

The unpredictable Washington Senators, a poor sevenlh in the American league, kept ahcad of the World Champion New York Yankees in their private rivalry today by snatching the first game of a doubleheader 2 to 1 in 12 in­nings before getting shut out 7-0 in a six-inning nightca.p.

Nationa.l League Cincinnati at Chicago - Vander

Mect' (4-5) vs Root (0-'2). Boston at New York - Posedel

(6-5) vs Gumbert (9-2) 01' Mel­ton (4-6).

Swaner"s Dairymen Take Over City Softball League Leadership

Philadelphia at B roo kl y n {night) - Higbe (4-3) vs Fitz­simmons (l-5).

(Only games SCheduled) . American League

New York at Wnshingotn -Hil­debrand (4-3) vs Carrasquel (4-4).

Philadelphia at Boston - Beck-

Le V ora's Score 25 Runs Against Light and Power

Beat Co. G, Former Pace Setters, To Move Out in Front

Swaner's Dairymen, launching

NEW YORK AR IL I[ 0 A t; man (2-1) vs Dickman (I-I). _____________ Sl. Louis at CLeveland - Kra-

Collecting 17 hits which lhey a 12 hit attack that netted 12 l'llnS, took over the lead in the City Softball .league last night by handing the soldiers trom ('0. G-former league leaders­a 12 to 7 pasting, the seeond set back of the season tor the gual·d:smen.

Crolottl. II ........... 3 I 01

0 I 00

mel' (6-6) vs Hudlin (7-4). converted into 25 runs Cor a new Rolt •. 3b .............. l 0 • I I D ' R' league scoring record, LeVora's H.nrlch . rl .......... .. l 0 D a 0 0 Ch icago at etJ'Olt - Igney DJ.\Ianlo. cr ...... ... G 0 11 ~ 0 ~ (3-4) vs Rowe (2-5) 01' Newsom Cleaners slaughtered the Light Dlck.y. c .... ........ . (0 6 0 v

S.'k.lrk. 'r ............. 0 0 a 0 0 (7 -5). and Power entry Jast night by a Oordon. ~b .... ........ 0 3 G B 1 f 25 1 0 the Cit p k Dahlll'ron. lh .......... ( 0 0 a I 0 score 0 - n y ar Rufr'ng. t> ............ ~ 0 2 1 a 0 Chisox, Browns Split diamond.

TOl81s •.... , .. •. 88 -;- 7.36 81 Tony Ausich, Len Velander, ' - Two out when winning ,'Un wA. CHICAGO, June 29 (AP) ~ Emil Sulek and Bill Goldsberry

.cored. _ Clint Brown's relie!lpitching sa,\IVi!d paced the attack on the hapless WARHrN(\TOl'i AB It II 0 i\ Fl (1 homer-studded 7 to 5 victory Power boys, each collecting thl'ee W""l. of ..... ... ...... 6 1 2 a 0 0 for thc Chicago White Sox in the safe blows, two of Ausich's being

. Pri chard. lb .......... 5 0 0 14 1 0 second game of tiJeir double- of the rouod-trip variety. Lowl •. 3b ............. 6 0 ~ I 5 I} header with the St Louis BoThe Cieaners romped oCf to a 'Wlghl. rl ............ 6 0 I 2 I 0 • I' wns 1'ro.I.. ... ............ 6 0 I I • 0 today, after the Bro.wns had .as- £lying stal·t, icing the game Ln the lly>lr. Zb .. ............ 3 no .! II 0 SlI'I'ed themseLves an even split opening frame with a five-run 1lI.\81.1I1l. If ........... 6 0 0 , 0 0 f.rro ll . c ............. • 1 ~ 4 30th rough Bob Ha t'ris' six hit 9 to flurry. ' Lolon"rd, p .......... ~ ~ _ .2 ...: ~ 3 victory in the opener. Score by inDln,s

Toto.l ......... .. 42 2 8 36 16 0 AD KilO A )oJ L & P ........ 000 000 1- I 4, 11 New VOI'k .8~,:,: I:~ . I : '~"~~o 000 000- 1 ~ I ,OU'~ LeVora's .... 513 673 ' - 25 17 I W •• hlnglon ... .. ... 100 IWlO 000 00 1-: lI orrner .••.. . , .. . ..... 5 I 3 0 3 Batteries _ AhiU, Curran and

Runs hatl.d In - DIMllgglo. Wrlllht. I ",,,h •. tf •.. ..•••.• .• • 6 ~ 3 2 0 I ' d I b ] ...... 1.. Two ho," hll. 'O"dOIl, 1'r8.vl.. McQUinn. 'h ... ... .... 6 I I 10 0 Moore; Sater an App c ceo Threfl )Hue lJltlll- WCtil. R.toito. Sl\C!'I .. (lu 11I1g-hN', H ." .... . .. 'I 0 J 3 0 fJ C • .........c r08f'tll, Dnhlgren. Houril'h', r.r~n ~ t~Jrrl" :1l1 .. : .... ~ .: • . ·. 5 1 03 0 , .. d. D •• hl. Vl.y..-I.owl.. My!' .. and JlOK '. cf . .. . ... • ...•.. 5 ~ 0 3 0 Connie Mack III Pr'chard. l.Alft 011 ,,. •• 8 ,"'fow Yorl, R: "!)Indol. t' . ............ 4 2 I 8 0 \V •• hln,lo" II . R •• CH "" h~II'-0ff il",·n l/II"". 2" .... ... .. • D 2 I 0 BOSTON (AP) -Connie Mack, Rulfln., 6: orr J.t'onArcl ~. Struck 001 - Hllr .. l .. ') ............. 3 0 0 3 manager of the Phl'ladelphl'a A.lh. ~y Iluftlns ~; hy ' .ronord 2. II I, by - - - - - _ ~ pllrhnr-by l,conO'i! (CrQ"ottl). Wild 1·01.1 •.......... lO 9 16 21 1 l letks, was ill at a Boston hotel pll C' h- l.('onarrl .

U",plre-<l,leve. SUIIlOl,·,·. and 1-<011.. l'tIlI'AIIO All K It 0 i\ to: I (Copley Plaza) today and under 'flo,, " 1:31 . lreatment by Dr. Edward O'Brien, AIt_.I'.nl· . 7. DOO. II ny ... 011 ............ ,I 1 , 4 6 II ed i H' ill

.,...,..nd lh .. "e ",,1,,'1. III ............ 4 0 II Ifi 0 0 R Sox phys ciano IS ness No", york .. .... ........ 010 003 1 7 0 1'r.,,·lrh. or .......... 4 0 a a 0 0 was described as a "stomach ail-W,.ltlngloon ............ OliO 00 032 Itllllrilfr. "f ........... ~ 0 0 0 I 0 " , t" (Coil ed at enll or 6th. darkne •• ), WAlkPr. II ............ 3 ~ I 2 0 0 I men.

,Ipplln, ..... .... .. .. 3 0 0 1 2 0 ----.-----.-----M"N"I ... ah ...... .. .... l 0 0 0 4 0

How To Be A pprec:I'*ed 1',·coh. c ...... . ....... 3 I 0 2 , I lIom~ ,Ull - Bcrll,·qIHO. Hloltn bOIl"-"'"' 1.(0(1. I~ , ... . ...... . . , . ... II I I n t Q Krrevl(·h . Kn1'rlf lce8·- Ui llnrht'r, .hr·

LONDON (AP) _ Fred Waller, Hlrl nlttlcher • . ....... . 1 0 0 0 o· 0 ,'1 .. I(uhel" W.lk",·. Duuble pIAy~l l.Ytl' - _ - - - - 111111 l":uheL I~ft on bjue~"'t . l ,oul8 7:

18, a London schoolboy, has found '·01',1 •..... . .... a2 ~ '%7 IX I Chl(,""" R. 13 ••• •• on "all ff liarrl. thow to be honored in his own ' - 118UI'11 ro r ~ .• r In 9th . 4: ure I..,. I. HU'uck oUl- bY H~rrl. 7:

H(·car .. hy Innlu .. " hy Leo I. ~ country. He and a schoolmate pre- ~l . I"ul • .......... .. ... O~: I)QO 002 ., t n'lIlro.- R"",,,,,,1 ,, " ,1 llu""~'~ .• 'tendAd to be French tOtlr,'ot5' ~· ltll'lllr~ ........ . .... .. !NIO , ORO 000--1 Tim. 2116 .

" ... In Hun" hfllle~1 I" __ lh.rr nPI' 2, 1 ~IU'hM'1 '" .11I nttllnr' .. R.Onn oll tl1\lItl f'l l , t ondol1 and weI''.! "never before ~IHI"lnn. (,Iltl 2. 11.eIl'·,llnn a. 1\ IIh.l. .....'(lntl Ii.m .. treated with so much respect." J{r.~\'l r h. "''''hr 'rw .. h.~ hi' . 1'11(,1 . ~t . l.n"l .......... lOft nOI oo_~ ,3

W"ll\ur, jAlU. 'Ih .... b~ •• II 1\- 1.. ab •. (;lIk"HO ...•.... . , 911 001 ~o.-I P

Holding a 4 to 2 margin when they came to bat in the 1;.1" 1. of the fourth, the Dairy workers Illshe'd out with 5 'runs and s~cked the contest with 3 mOre in the sixth.

The soldiers were held scoreie;ss until the third, when an error allowed Ted McLaughlin to. romp in with their initial tally.

Two mote 'runs were added to the SOldiers' total 1n the fifth on Bob White's single and a triple by Ed Prizler.

Another rally in the seventh Pl shed th ree more tallies across for the fo,'mer pace setters, bu t with thc bases loaded Ted Wat­kins lined to Turccek for the final out.

Melvin Greazel, on the mound for' the winners, helped win his own ba ll ,arne by driving in .t runs. Score b InaJnn R H Ii: G'O. G ... ......... 000 120 3- 7 7 2 Swaner's ...... 130 503 x- 12 12 2

Patty WIlli MINNEAPOLIS, (AP)- Patty

Ber, of Minneapolis, defendlnll champion, moved a step closer to a second stl'aillht women's trans­MissIssIppi Ilol! title today when she crushed Jo MacRae of Ames, in II secQnd 'I'OUnd match, 7 and 5.

pitchers and was charged with the Rennie got another par IouI' to defeat. win on the 19th while Ramsel

The elderly Mack, who will be was taking a five.

on bases, scattering nine hits and leaving 12 Giants stranded. One of New York's runs was a pinch homer by Joe Moore in the sev­enth and the other came on three singles and an error in the sec­ond,

. '11's dr>uble a counled t l' tht Sl'or . Gabby Hartnett hit h eighth homer of th n in the third.

( ' 111(' \1.0

II ",",t. J h I I I I I I I • 77 years old next December, be- Hall the former IOwa amateur

I

' H08TON came ill shortly after the team's champion, and Alexander were aU

All R II 0 ,\ t; tf f'r,"~n !b . '" •••. 1 0.1". II ............ ".

arrival this morning and spent the even with 385. on the first nine. Gktmo. rr ...... . .. .. .. 8 1

I d . h' h t I b d h'l th H ..... tt. Ib ........... 5 I ay III IS . 0 e e '. w lee The Iowan weni one up on the Simmon •. If ........... l 0 : 13 3 I

o n Rf'),noill .. I'r ., ...... J UarUH't1. (:; •••••••••.• •

~ ~ ~!t~~!!n .c l ~r tl: ~.:::::.:::

• I * • I I 1 • I I I • B I 10 • • I 3 • team was dtrected by hiS son, Earl. lOth where he sank a 25.footer Cooney, or ............ 11 II

H' d'U as n t '0 S Wt"Hl. d. It .........•.• 0 ~ U o 3 % ' I , 0 I I 2 J !

II I) HHrtt'lI. A ............ 1 o U I ...... " ................ 4

• n • • o 1 U S 18 con 1 on w 0 sen u to save his par four. The lanky Cucclnolio. 2b ...••••.. 1 I

enough to warrant removal to a Duke lad squared It with a par MAj .ok' . 3h ...... , .... 1 I • I) 1,'r~l\('h, J1 ; U

h 't 1 d D E J O'Br · WorlUer. 3b ........... 1 I OSPI a, an r .... . .. len, four on the 11th, oDly to lose hl.s MIII . r . .. ............. 5 % II U 8 0 o U 1 0

Red Sox club phYSICIan mdlcated advance again when he took a six 1.0"0<1 C .............. 5 Connie would be back on the on the par five 13th. M.",cF.yd.n. " .. ...... l 1

"fit " ................. 1 I bench tomorrow. Alexander again became even 'rot"'* ... . .... .. '41 8 16 ~7 II I M MMrtl n. Ih ........... 1 I

"(lore. t:t · 4-. •••••••••• 1 •

S t 1 I I I ~ . . J 1 0 , I • ~ 1 • I 4 • n I I • 0 •

l'lLlLADEU'lUA All R I( 0 i\ E with the board by capturing the NEW l 'ORK A6 K K 0 ,\ E "11 111...... ......... . I ~1"t1wltk, If •• , ........ 4 oli n 16th with a par lour and the Lodlglanl. 31, ......... 5 . 3 3 1 0

S'.berl. Ib ............ 6 I Z 16 0 playcrs split the next three holes Miles, ,r ........ ... ... 1 ~ Z 2 0 before the Duke youth's fata l Joltn.on. It ........... 6 1 3 60 th tt th 20th h I 11 "),0 •• C .............. 6 0 : 1 1 ree-pu green on e 0 e.

g~~l'~~~~in . Cib .::::::::! ~ ~ ~ ~ it ~lnOb:~: ~! ani~:J'~~~r t::c~~ Ambler, Y8 ............ <4. 1 2 J 0 ~IOLLcr, " . . ... .. ...... 30' 0

0 10 O~ ~ ing the turn all even with d'An-

, ppcn. p .... ..... ... ~ _ _ _ _ _ toni. The Beloit golfer was over To!"I. .... .. .... lO 8 17 27 16 1 par on three of the final six ho les,

IIOSTON /\11 R if 0 A E and when he did get a par three

varcy . 2b Cnlnll'r. ro r .... 1 • • ••• , · 6 \ ·OHllllk. It ..... ..... . . 6 William .. rf ....... / .. 4 1i'lnn .... y. 1b ." ..•..••.. 6 Berger. ;lh ..... ... .... 4 r' eu(·oek. c . .. .. ...... • a \Vlhwn, 11 ,., .......•.. 1 OolohoU68. U •.. , ••••.. 0 Ooerr • . ....... " .... ,1 'l·a.bor •• ' ..... . ....... 1 I lo\' lng. 1) •• • • ••...• •• • 0

2 0 on the short 14th, d'Antoni sank loa 15-footer for a deuce. ~ ~ For the second straight after-

2 11 I 0 noon a heavy shower forced tour· ~ ~ ~ ~ nament officialll to halt play fot' o Q 0 0 more than half an hour. o 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 I " 0 0 o 0 I 0 Norfolk WiltS

'1'01,,10 ...... .. .. 40 6 13 ~7 11 0 · - OaLLcu rOI' UI,lIcho uH6 In rll h . ·.- Ballttd rnr H8.gh" In 8lh.

SIOUX FALLS (AP) - The Western league leading Norfolk Elks broke their three game los­ing streak last night with a 10· Inning 7 to 6 win over Sioux Falls.

Roon~ hy luning" I'hll.~.lllhla ........... 012 032 OOO-R }So'aloll .. ....... . .... ... 010 110 120- 6

RUrls hulled In--.lohnl!lun • • l.iOdlglaol .

Chlo .... ab ........... 5 0 I 2 1 I'ad .. "tt. c •.•.••• ..• ~ . , JUI·itfi. I .............. 6 0 0 1 •• ,- l nurh lflr, rt ., ....... 4 I Punning', C ............ 5 0 1 Ott. rt ... , ............ :t t1 (I

Bohura, lb ............ 6 0 0

% 0 (jUt1Mlt'.". , b •. , •••••• 1 fI ,. n Ow,.n oil. b •••••••••• f • 1 n o n \\of"Uri""» P .,., ....... n n o • •

DClma.r e. ct ........... .. 0 1 o n Ft. fJ,·,'ll, II •.•. , •.•• I 0 o e I n I 0 I ~ I

Ilipili c. Ie .... .... . , ... 3 0 I I) f) Kin. • •.•• , ••.••..• t ft Kampourlll, 2b ........ a 1 1 a II n ,,·IM. " ••••••• , •••••• 1 ~

1 11 ll)·rl a ••• •••••. , .• f G o • 0 Sa.lvo. II .. , ....•...... ~ I) 0 Castl eman. 1) ... ........ 0 L 1 n ----T-·M oore ........... .••.. 1 1 l o 0 To'.'... .. . .. U I It n • 1 I.ynn, I) .•.. , ••.••...•. 0 It 0 I II • IlJtt l l'd for f' U('lln In lh O· Ofl,. •• • •••.•.•••..•• t () 0 n •• - I,,1I'f1 t nl nutlf'rlflk' In •• tot Coffman, p ........... 0 0 .U 1 ••• - )tan for {Javl. In Ith.

'rolOlo .......... 3fl ! 9 Z1 II 2 .--...nIlUfid rOt· IlMtlem"n In 1l'h. .·- Ba.lled (or l.ynn In lh

8t'or0 II,. Inn in&"" 1108t.On .. ,.............. 0" .. uno Oll ~ Nf"'w york ., •••.••.... , 1)10 oon lAO

Rune ba\lr-ll In -4)111\1("1' 2. OHflll~ S, II RMIiJ('U, Chlo'Ull, Monl'l'. nAVn. 'rwn IJH88 hll-.(: IICQII1f1l1l1. 1'h"-" h(,,~," hll'" Ko.mpourl tJ, lJunl\ln~ . 1I01Tl(, I un" O.nm8, I ... _~lt . )taft1'f'. llnublfl tlll.v" MllIel' pnd tt,UI"J'U ; KR'''IHlur1~ ltd"· urn .• Iur"of!l And .BohUrL. l-4eU on lu .. "'·_

·Ne.., "Yo rk 12; l\OMlon 11 IIul . un lHlll8-Qrr l ~h";.· I!'fl.Yflf1n 4; of( 1oC"lvll 1: ntf ('MellemRn 1 : orr l,yn" 1. Htrtlf'k out-by Ma.cFA)'df"n I : h)" 1o)'hn 1 tUU

rr Snlv{t 4 In I J ~~ Innln ,, ; flU (M"" lIe man 9 In K 1·:\: tiff I~ Y1\" 1 "1 1 orr

offmftll :& In 1. Mil by plteher~y )1«. .... "'Yllf'n (Ka.mnoul'lp;) . 1.I)llnl(' ~h('h(,1 t!R)VO

ro",. by.,.' .... e hl.o." . ...... ... ~1 Bon '01-1 >II. , ,,U'. .. • ... . tI(1 ~O. 011

HIl"'" hllllt'{1 In II ttln .. n ...... 1.1\. 0 H.u"' .... 11 I, ~I " u.htf'r I, nlltt",~I(\ • • tllltln,.tt 2. \10Ilr" , Hal'l "wo htl" hit. (; Ru.",.'11 1. UIIIllln . urown. Mltlughlrr, ". ~hultn . Thl. ""flfII hi ""nn&n 11 0m rUl1~ H(t.rtllet.l , 'MI.",_ I"lhu"hl"r t'4IU"t-tf ll' .. 1t- "'( Wltfit"''-'. '' M "", Hrynlll.l" I . Ilullh lr plttY l"lUrld hnt1 Mia". 1-04 fl on h,,,,(O 'hkAIO I : t4j 1";",f1ll'. I\IU'" "n h ll. lh. orf 1") 11('.1 n 2:; oft 11" vb t ~ ru,1< O\lt I.r. ~: hy I' I).klt I. 1111 Mf \ elload 1 In 2·:1 l"tlnln.i HH 1'. Ur.tn , 'n T t 11 nft n .VI. I In I; nil V-' 1~ In I 1·1: Ofr ~'r. nrh ~ In 2 I. lilt IW pll'~'" h,· \V("IlIU''IIt (lilr. un, Win"'". I\,t fl. "1" ·I,f'\. tJu"h~" 1,IlI·h"f fo" nd

" llIulr ........ ··U f! "'.lt. Hlrr Anrt Mt)r,," , '1"Imn 1.17 . t)fflt·'"1 rlllf,1 "11~nflIUtn' J.I.' SI~bf\rL. Mllo8, Amb lt' t. Crtuner 02. l"ln­

ney 2, WllIhll1lM, '·onln. '('WI') bl:lte hit» - LOdlgla.nl. Mil ... ", Ch(llpmM.n. Qre)" CrHtllf'r, \VIIIht..mif. "hreft balo hlt­et'onln. nome ru,,~.l ohnA4)n. \-Vlllln mI!!. HLol(':n baKfi- Ji'lnlJey. S8l.'rlrlup- PoHf'r T:)ouhlo PIIi.)'B -:'1'bnln. Ctlrey a n d F'ln· !l ey: BH.trPy flnd 11'lnnf'Y. l~rt on hll~. - PhIIAtlell}hla 7 ; 'BoHtnn 9, Bneett on halls tr 1:)f)lt('!' 1 ; orf Jl ll11'I'n 1; oft UR.Kby I. ~trucK out- hy Potter 2. 1I11..-otr POll.r 12 In 7 ~·3 Innln .... : ofr PIPP t'il I In 1 1.:1: orf -WlIlI)o1\ 9 tn " (none out. In tJl h) ; orr Oul('hoU88 ! (n 1: orr BuiJy 5 IA H: ofr Hoving I In I. \\rll{1 pltch-PutllW. Wlnnh\K Illt('hf'r­J»nll ~ r. 1~"ln~ flll c hflr~Wlh,on .

Berg Advances in Golf Tilt/ UllIplrf'8 - .PIPKraA. Qui nn k ll d Me ..

(lOW" n . "'·(me 2 :01. Attrnc1"'I\('O s,noo .

'Manassa Mau.ler fU NEW YORK, June 29 (AP)­

Jack Dempsey, former world'" heavyweight boxing champion, underwent an emergency ap­pendicitis operntion at Polycllnk hospii.H1 here tonight.

He wus taken 111 yesterday, but his condition did not become nl­(I"'ming unliJlate this afternoon.

MINNEAPOLIS, June 29 (AP) - ·-Obstacles barring the path of f.lvorltes leading to the 13th an­nual Women's Trans - Mississippi Golt tOlJ',-nament title will get rougher lrom now on-the ob­sfncles being the favorites them. selves.

WI th one exception all t he loading players swept throug~ to victory .for a second stra i(ht time in match play; today to give promise of plenty of tough com­petition In FrldllY's qUB'rterfin­also

&err WI", As was expected, Patty Berg

of Minneapolis, defending ham­pion, made short work of J MacRae of Ames, in hCI' second round match , 7 And 5. Miss Bcrll !Shot even women's par thl'ough t:,e 13 holes to continue an out. st~ nding exhibition of golf whicll started Tuesday when she won the medal with a :record 74 over the Minneapolis country club COw·se.

The on ly match play huving a temblunce of an upset cume when Mrs. P. L. Pepper of Do<bon, Mo., defented Mrs. Lilllnn Zech 'O( Chicago, • tournament vetel',

(\n, 2 and I . Mrs. Pepper will rneet MIss Berg Friday.

Two former tournament cham­pions, Marion Milcy of Lexlnl_ ton, 'Ky., who won the event In 1935 lind 19361 Dnd 'PhylUs Buch. enan of Denv r, 1933 winner, lid­\'onced ' nd wIll m t In one ot l'rldey's tea tures.

MJ' Miley shot 8 one over ptIr 38 on the ri" st nine to '1I1n a one hole edge ovef ShJtley Al\n .Tohnson of . Chicago, .nd u..n went o.n to win, 3 and 2. MI. Bucbn'nsn 11180 won, 8 lind 2, :frotn MI88 "lit Grant, Cu~hlnr, 0ItJ1I., yuunist r.

t . Kind 4 . Tmil ' . Portl

tltle, courl

8. Bulk tlmb<

10 Troy conti:

. :l4,r 13. A \lUI 14. Over 160rga

hearl 16. Lancl

me8.E 17. Late 19 Foot

1. Chin cret ~

2. Cape eDdc lach-

3. Ch18_ tratc • cit.:

, . ,Wllt.

Terry Slau­

rd In Larry

I I I I 0 , T 0 • 0

, • • I

• I • .. I • • I I "

0 , • n , , • I 0 • • • ~ I 0 , 0 a -- ..... n • I

'I~

• lamA Yo JUNE 30, 1939

Spider's Old Tricks Copied By Science

To Ensnare Worms COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP)- lmitat­

Ing spiders, man Is making a web

the eggs. Thus two generations of Insects are eliminated.

Trick lemonade also is being used in the spri ng war on WOI'ms, lhe University of Missouri reports. The lemonade is mixed with bran,

100d enough to fool a fly. Paris green and wllter and cut Worms, not flies, are especially

Invited into the imitation "pal'lor" bul flies have been caught there too.

Dr. Leonard Haseman, Missouri entomologist, designed lhe web to halt the spring mig"aLion up tree trunks of Ule tree-eating cankor

worms like it as well as tender ' tomato shoots. It kills them over­night.

25,000 Sm' mOltS

WOI'ms that live in Missouri wood5. LUBBOCK T (AP) _ Th It consists of a b, t of low-grade ' ex. e

cheap callan rastened around the Rev. J. M. Morrow, 77, a Baptis t trunk. The hooked fect of ins cts minister, has delivered 25,000 sel'­are imprisoned in lhe cotton. Once mons and addresses in Texas. He trapped , they in ,mediately lay started preaching in 1880 and his eggs. only sermon outside of this stale

Alter mig"atory season tile band was one delivered at Marietta, Is removed and burn d , destroying Okla.

lOW AN W AN'f· ADS * * * * * *

~ ARTMENTS AND FLATS li'OR S.ALE-R.A.D1U~

RENT - NEW TWO-ROOM FOR SALE - RADIO-PHONO-apartment. Pri- graph. Many late recordings.

bath, gas stove, electric re- Very reasonable. Box 178 Daily frigerator, 324 S. Dubuque. Iowan. -

SUB-LET FOR 2 OR 3 MONTHS - 3-room furnished apartment

LOST AND FOUND

near hospital. Dr. Dean. Dial 3111. LOST - PHI MU DELTA PIN.

!'OR RENT - THREE IN ONE Reward. Call extension 8401.

unfurnished apartment. Ideal LOST - PARKER ' FOUNTAIN lor one person. Electric refrlger- pen name on barrel. Reward. ator. Dial 4935. DiaL Extension 8435.

WA.NTED THESIS SUPPLIES ASHES, RUBBISH, HAULING. APPROVED BOND THESIS PA-

Norton. Dial 6687. per. Carbons. Williams Iowa ------------ Supply Book Store. LAWN MOWING. DIAL 3001.

WANTED - WORK BY STENO-MISCELLA.NEOUS

grapher experienced in research HEATING, ROOFING, SPOUT­and calculations. Dial 6822. ing. Furnace cLeaning and re­FOR R E NT _ HOUSES AND pairs of all kinds. Sehuppel't and

Koudelka . Dial 4640. apartments. Wilkinson Agency. _____ _ Dla15134. WA..~ED-LAUNDRY

WANTED - PAINTING JOBS WANTED-Student Laundry. Dial for afternoons and Saturday. 4632.

References. Dial 3512. WANTED STUDENT LAUNDRY.

TYPEWRITERS Prompt delivery, p ric e 5 to

RE- please. Dial 5529. I TYPEWRITERS- RENTALS, pairs, mimeographing. College

Typewriter and Letter Shop. Next to Daily Iowan. Dial 5375.

WANTED - STUDENT LAUN­dry. Shirts LOco Free delivery.

Dial 2246.

PLUMBING WAN TED - LAUNDRY, REA- I P~L-UMB--IN-G, HE A TIN G, Am sonable. Special on curtains and

Conditioning. Dial 5870. Iowa bedding. Dial 5797.

City ?lumbing. AWNINGS WANTED - PLUMBING AND IOWA CITY AWNING CO. ESTI-

heating. Lurew Co. 227 E. mates free. 110 S. Linn street. Washington. Phone 9681. Dial 3895.

ROOMS FOR RENT F- O- R- R- E- N-T--O-N-E-R- O-=-O- M-:-=F--=-OR

light housekeeping or sleeping. 731 Bowery.

FOR RENT - LARGE COOL room. Double or single. Dial

7315.

FOR RENT-ONE DOUBLE, ONE single room. 259 Woolf Ave.

FOR RENT-ROOMS WITH OR without coo k: n g privileges.

Sleeping porch. Dial 3385.

MEN WANTED WANTED - MEN TO LEARN

tire welding trade. O. K. Tire Shop. 219 S. Linn.

USED CARS

USED CARS

1937 Terraplane Coupe 1937 Plymouth Coupe 1937 Terraplane Brougham 1936 Plymouth Coach 1935 Terraplane Sedan 1935 Graham Sedan 1933 Plymouth Sedan 1930 Ford Roadster

BECK MOTOR COMPANY 11-13 E. Washington

Read the Wont Ads

Daily Cross Word Puzzle

t ~ I

~ ~ ~ ~ I 2 3 ~ 4 ~ 6 ~ % ~ ~

~ '1 I

~ 8 q ~ :/::;

10 II .- 12

13 ~ 14 ~ 15

~ ~ 16 fi 17 18

~ ,q 20

~ ~ %:2 21 0 Z2

I ' 23 ~ 24 ~ ~ Z5

26 V; 27

3 ' 32

~ 3 4 1- •

~ ~ 36

ACROSS t Kind of hat • . Imitate 7. Portuguese

title or courtesy

8. Bulky Umbel'll

10. Troy weight containing 24 grains

animal 2\ . Employ I 22. Walking

sticks 24. All correct

(lIIangl 26. Paet 27. POtIIIcsses ~. Thecryof

a dove 31. Indifferent

28 ~ 33

~ 35

~ 37

11. Pronoun 12. Attempt 16. Reverence 18. A diving

bird

.

19. Summoned by 8. bell-boy

20. Hooded jacket wom In tbe Arctic

22. H'!ad cover­Ing

2q 30

~ ~ ~

23 . Closes 24. One of a

people of anCient Italy

25. A plaything 28. Indefini te

article 29. A vegetable 30. Full at ore 32. Back 33. Ught after­

noon r(lp8.llt t3 . A support U . Over (poet.1 t5 Organ of

34. A short lance "Dlwer to prevIous (.uzzle

hcarlng 35. Eagle', ne8\ 16. Land 36. Me8.llure of

me8.llure dl.t.nce 17 . Late In India 19 Foot of any 37. Diminutive

of Anne DOWN

t . Chlnesc Ie· cret 8QCtety

2. cape at eut ead of Mu­lachulctts

3. Chief magi,. . \ tratc of

aclty , . , Wlde-.~.

5. HawaIIan food

6. Large motM 7. River of

Scotland 9. DarknellS

10. One Of the strands of yam

•

BA'::!E BAlL TODAY

-- 'l"'RE DAIt,Y I WAN, IOWA CITY

I~ii ~9fs~~LEYS PARTV AND SI-lE WANTS A

QUARTER

CHET IROTTE~ .... v.lHO VISITED ~E "'fV..IO 61~ FAI~51 RETURNED HOME Tol>AY W/714 A PAIR OF PE~MAN ENT SOUVENIRS- FALLEN ARC~e5

I m-' ' . BOAR., ')~ AND ;.bMROOM

A14. LAOS ,- t Wt>..S 01.)1 TO Ct.MP PUI=I=LE V'i::STtP'OA.'f ANO II ?EALL'f E'l-CEEOS M.~

DRE.,D..t.f\S O~ t. "ACt.TlO'" ?ESO'KT! ......... I4M-M-A Spo.rw,UNG BLUE LAo,t,E BEGGING FO? BATI-IE:P.S AND 'BOt.,EPS,-............... l=IS~ l.Et:>.PIt--lG IN ANTICIPATION 0'1=-

TIO ·BIT 'BA.\T,-.,..........-A COZ'( . CLUeI-lOUSt:: 1'0 WELCOME AND

RELA)I.. TI4E !-lAPP\' GUESTS t:>..T T\..IE ClOSE: 01= DELlGHT~UL

OA.'<S ,--

BY GENE

AHERN

t>.NO Tl4E PA. iEG A-?E 1l'IS A. WEEK'?

I4M-W. " MAYBE iL.L.

SWITCI4 MY VACATION

iP.\P ~I

PAGE FIV'B

8Ui WI-I/l-.' ABOUT il-lE.

MOSQUI1'OES Ai YOU~ SWA.t-AP

CA-MP 2-OCt,iT ,E.LL

ME. ~EV GIVE /:>. H\/lSSAGE INtOiEt:>..O OF

A ~IIE .\ \

PAGE SIX THE DAILY IOWAN, IOWA CITY FRIDA Y, JUNE 30, 1939

City Council Awards Contract For Iowa City Paving Program To Horrabin Contracting Co.

Where Painter Met Death 'Birthday Play~ Tickets Readv

Nine Good M~n-and RpflrriP(/

Three Streets, Alley Included in Newest Improvement Project

The William Horrabin Contract­ing Company was awardpd a con­tract to pave three streets and one alley in Iowa City at an adjourned meeting of the ci ty councfl last night . The low bid was for $11 , 071.40.

The Haegg Construction com­pany, Cedar Rapids, made the only other bid on the undertaking.

Work on the projects will be started in sbeut 10 days, Fred E. Gartzke, city engineer, said.

Improvemen ts wIll be made on Seventh avenue from the north line of College street to the south line of Morningside drive, Black­Ilprings circle from the paving in place on Rider street around Blacksprlngs circle to the point ot beginning and on Harrison street from the west line of Capitol street to the east line of Madison street.

The alley running from Linn Iltreet to Gilbert in the block be­tween Ronalds street and Brown atreet will be paved.

The improvements are a part 01 a city paving project recom­mended a year ago. Last year action was postponed when a PWA request of approximately thirty thousand dollars was re­fused by the federal government.

The council June 12 approved and passed a resolution of neces­sity for the paving, overruling lome objections to the program.

Property owners of the adjoining propel·ties will be assesesd tor the cost of the projects . '

Bulletin-.. (Continued from page 2)

gible to attend. Children should wear pIal' clothes and rubber soled shoes. The class will be limited to 30, Make your re.ervation at the office of the women's gymnasium before Thursday .

LUCILLE KERBER

A.ll-UniversUy Play Night The second play night will be

held on the women's field Satur­day, .July 1st, instead of at the fieldhouse as stated on the posters. The usual program of recreation­al sports will be conducted out of doors. This will be followed by square dancing, social dancing, and table games in the women's gym-nasium.

FLORENCE OWENS

- -'---1 Chief Requests , 1id of ~llJtorists I

H (Ire TorllOtTm,v I . -' . ~ -

lown City ml} tori s l~ Hre asked '.ly Chief of Pc.lice Frank BUl'ns 10t to park 011 Washington s,reet . dw'?en Clinton and Dubuque ;

-. tn'pts a~tt!I' 4 J) m. tomorrow. \ Thl' s!rcel will be blocked off I

for thc certlenn l ~ I slreel dance I to be held during lhe evening.

Motorlsls are asked not to dou­lJ le park on lhe sll'cets or to dou- ' 'Jle purk and then leave their cars I unoccupied lor severnl minutes. I

"Street activities due to the centennial have caused numerous \ troffic jams and tie-ups and dou-. , ble parking by motorists only I adds to the problems," Chief

Admissions to [, C. I Centennial Pageant Go on Sale Today

oJ

T:ckots f :' "O ld St'me Capitol r:~m' mbel'~. " the 11 iqtnt'ical cen­\C' rniol prgeunt. t'1 bl' glvcII 'I:ondny niqht on th ~ r!l m::>u ~ . w ill i)(' ( I RI·' le t'Ii ., mf)l'I1ing at e1e I, ·g ' . b;" c€ntpn:1i ,,1 headqUlll"! \H" l nrl Whf" I Jne' s l'fJ. I . The

• tickf'\s will s(' 11 at 5~ r pl' ~s f I I I"dults and 21 l' f' nl~ (11' chll l'f,n . I

A 10 cC' nt admi. !·il-l1 will be 'I Chl ' gt'd for tho Ci ly park cele­

bruli on July 4. If arcomp'lDied I 'y p(ll',' nt~, chil ,It·P"l u" tler 12 • yeors rId wiJl be admitted fr e.

Pulrl-n tit-ket:, whidl are uVlli l­, .. ble ot Who I lone's and l'l ? log cbbin . '!Iii 1 admi ' the [lul'ch;Jser :0 the Centpnninl ball , the pag~

( ront all<l the rity p&.'. lc Admis­flOn 10 the ball i s by pa tron k€t only.

Burns said. I Shown above is the dangling I c;'lIsing the accident. prainly scaffolding from w~lich Owen R\ v:;'ible is paint which was splaL-e o. ROt ,Morgan, 38, fell and met instant tered on the buildi ng as t~e

OUnCI eJec 8 death yesterday morning while . sl'affolding fell. A fellow painler ,

Civil Servin? W ill Give Exams Stt'lunch and stiff as a posed tin- \ the centennial log cabin. The \or lhree innings W ill be played

'i'or 10 POSl'tl'ons I type of the days which they rep-, Bar Flies, who opposed the Red Sunday at 3 . p.m. at the Cit, " " park. Luter In the ufternoon a

.., painting windows on the third Roy Call;), was able to grab a

Code SectlOon floor of EastJawn, girls ' durml- rope on the opposite end of the , tory. Encircled in the picture is scaffold and lower himself to the resent are these members of the Noses, were managed by "Bud ' team com poseu uf members ot u..

Open competitive examinations Red Noses, one of the two local I Emmons, and the Red Noses by I Whiskers club will play II n. -for 10 positions have been an- ; baseball teams formed. by the Cyril Katzenmeyer. Newt Mulford inning mu t~h with the local Moose

the coupling that gave way, ground.

Members of the cily council passed an ordinance last night rcpe;)ling section 777 of the 1936 I'lunicipal code, which provided tl.at all per:3ons serving beer in Iuwa City be licensed.

. . . . . . . . .. .......... . I nounced by the United States , members of the Centennial Whis- umpired the· game which wns I lodge team. Rec'ei pts from the

M M t I t t D th civil service commission. Appli- k I'S club, who played a game! played under the rules of ]00 games will puy f or "whisker" organ ee s ns an ea I cations must be on file in the last night on the diamond opposite years ago. A repeat performance prizes.

The council at its meeting granted 55 cigarette permits, 10 class B bee: permits, one hotel class B beer permit and seven class C beer permi ts.

Wh S ffoldin flf' Rope Brealrs ~~mc~is~~~n~:te~f~~:~ ~~;h~~~ton, ---- ---- J tlli l skid -;;clwheel at the rear. en ca ~l ' 'Positions include chief occu- 1910 Airplane To Be Displayed Har tman h;)s cxhlbitl'd lhe1910-

,,~ pational therapy aid (arts and • model plant' thl'Ough thl' country

United Air Lines To Place Additional

Planes on Schedule

Coralville Resident Killed While Painting At Girls' Dormitory

Owen R Morgan, 38, Coralville, met instant death yesterday morn­ing when the scaffolding upon

- -- which he was working at East-United Air Lines announces an lawn girls' dormitory broke.

pdditional westbound trip from Morgan, former mayor of Coral­Chicago to Jowa City three day, ville, and Roy Calta, 15 W. HaJ'­a week effective tomorrow. rison street, were on the ladder

The 'new schedule leaves Chi-I scaffold about 35 feet in the air cago at I :5 1 p.m. each Wednes. when the rope came loose, hurl­dRY, Thursday and Friday and ing Morgan to the ground. arrives in Iown City at 2:57 p.m. I Calta was able to grab a rope The three - day - a _ week flight on the opposite end of the scaf­c.ontinues to Des Moines, whl;'fe it fold and lower himself to the tp.rmin;)tes. ground. Except for a rope burn

The new flight is in addition tQ on his right arm he was unhurt. United's regular daily service Neck Btoken tlirough Iowa City with a depar- Morgan was one of a crew lure to Chlcago at 6:37 p.m. and which . was painting third story a westbound departure to De! window frames of the building Moines, Omaha, Neb., and the ; when the accident happened. His Pacific coast at 8:57 p.m. death was caused by a broken

neck received when his head

ft) $2300 St Eli A MOO I A· S d during the l;;:sl f~w years. Paul Mrs. Pauline Morgan; three sons, cra s, '. a year, . za- t UDIClpa lrport un av ~"aw, loca l Jlyinu instr uctor, se-beth's hOSPItal, D. C., dej:lartment .. Owen, Jr ., 16 ', Allen, 10, and Car- f th .• . A l' t t l " l'I .. n·d Hn·;tmtll\ ami lhO! plane tllr o e In,el'lOr. pp Ican s mus tel', 7: his purenis, Mr. and Mrs. b& between 21 and 55 years old. Ic,wa Ci ly'~ c·l'ntenru li l.

GI od . POS1' tl'ons open in the depart- The 1910-model airplane owned The plane can take off oniy - - -J. W. Morgan, enwo ; two SIS- \ j 1. 1...' . N '1 mellt of agriculture are silvicul- Ly A. J. Hartman, Burlington, when ele wind velOcity is not lluge L"aJ\lo\ n'lnes ters, Mrs. R B. Talbot, CounCl turist, $3 ,800 a year, also principal, vrill be on display at the Iowa greater than five or 10 miles an Two Adminjl<!lrators

Bluffs, and Mrs. George Webb, (· ·t 'c'pal I' port Sunday $5,600, senim', $4,600 a year , asso- 1 y . mum I a r . hour and fli(s at un uLtitude not Glenwood. ciate $3200 and assistant $2600 mornll1g as part of the centen- In Di .. trif'l Court , , " ; I 1'-' Ii ttr ti The over 100 feet, The plane fljes

The body is at Beckman's; fu- a year bureau of plant industry n n . ce eUla .on . a ac ons .. neral arrangements have not been and fo;est service. Applicants fOl'IIiUbhC ~nd vIsiting Iowa aVlat~rs at 40 miles an haul' at. top I J udgl' 1I11rul<l D. Evans in dis· made. .. . .. who WIll attend the centenrual speed, Hartman said. \ t ,'ict court Yl' terday appointed

the. pnnclpal. seruor and sl lvlcul- aviation breakfast: at 7 a.m. Sun- Because of its age and con. r1artha A. Pau lus Il nd Joseph tunst grades must not be o.verl day are invited to inspect thl slruction, the plane is govern- P .lUlus administro trix and ad-

Change Starting Time 53 years old, fol' the assocIate pla~e. . nlent licensed with res l~·iclion.> lnillistrator ~ .. espcclively on a Of PdT . h grade, not be over 45, and for the Hartman who was a baUoon concerning its flight. The pilot's \lund of $5.000, of the state 01

ara e Olug 1 assistan~ grade, .35. \ o:,censioni:5 t before the time of seat is in the open between the their father, Mirhnel Paulus. Mr. . Full IDformatlOn may be ob- lhe airplane, built the plane prior WlDgS and his feel rest immed- Paulus died in Scott township

The costumed centenm al parade, tained from the secretary of the to 1910 just a few years after iutely back of the motor du:dng Saturday. originally ~cheduled for 8 o'clock United Stales civil service board\ the fir~ t hist('J;'y making flig!1t flJght. The c(.urt admitted to probate tomght, WIll start one hOllr later of examiners, at the post office of the Wright brothers in 1903. The fuselage i ~, uncovered and the will of .Tuhn P . F igg and ap­because of the lec~ure by Dr. AI-I in Washington, D. C., or from the! Arriving here tomorrow after- the plane is braced with many pointed Clenn D. McCarty adrnin­bert Edward Wiggam on th.e secretary of the Umted States noon, the plane will make a flight sU'anded cables and wires-near ly i ~trutol' with will !lnnexed. Bond west approach 10 Old Capitol, It civil service board of examiners between 7:30 a.m. and 8 a.m. Sun- twice the number used on mod- \\11;; sc·t Ilt $100. M'. Figg died has been announced. at the local post office. I clay if weather permits. (',n planes. The plane has both ill I(.\Va City Fd>. I, 1936.

.YRAnl o'clock in the morning and I , 2 struck the' edge of a ceme.nt air and 4 in the afternoon. Entries vent a~ound a basement wmdow, may be plio ned to the women's I accordmg to County Coroner Dr. I

Holiday July 3 and 4 I gymnasium, exchange 723, or sig- GeOl·.ge Callahan. There will be no classes Mon- natures placed on the entry chart MIS. Mary McCull~y of East-

AIR CONDITIONED

LAST TIMES TODAY

day, July 3, and Tuesday, July 4, on the bulletin board at the wo- ~w~ang~ Ma~ke ~. M;~'er, :~o t~' b t I '11 S t d men 's gymnasium. as In on s r e, w ness e

u c asses WI convene a ur ay, accident Miller who was stand-July 8, to make up the work mis- MIRIAM TAYLOR lng ben~ath the 'scaffolding when ,ed Monday. . I h d

P. C. PACKER Ph.D. Keactlnr In German I~ gave way, saw Morgan fa I ea For the benefit ot graduate first to the ground .

Recreational Archery The range will be open for

shooting from 9 a.m. to 4 p .m., daily for those who own their own equipment. Others interest­ed in shoaling please see Miss Mosbek or Miss Frost at the women's gymnasium.

ELLEN MOSBEK

Badminton Tournament Anyone interested in playing

Badminton is Invited to sign up for the women's or men's single's badminton tournament to be play­ed off at the women's gymnasium begJnning July 5. Rackets and shuttle cocks will be provided and may be checked out for the game from the main office. The courts will be avaHable for 7, 8 and \I

Cedar Park Ball Room

Cedar Rapids

Sat. & Sun., JuIY 'I, 2 Battle of Music Each Night

WIT THOMA aDd his 11 Prlnce-ToniaD'

GARY WAYNE

Direct from Hotel Tulia Tu .... Ok~oma

Genii 410 Ladtetl S8c DantliDl 8-1

Jaek Randall ... "TRIGGIR IMiTH"

~tudents in other fields desiring ~rs. McCulley had Jus.t told . the

to satisfy the language require- ~~I~~e~'sfi!'~ ~~~~~e t~~e~lg~~e ~!~ ~ent for .the Ph.~. degree, rea~- the end of the scaffolding drop . 109 ~xamHlatlOns 10 German Will Mrs. McCulley and Miller were be g~ven as follows: splashed with paint, spilled Witll

FrIday, July 7, 2 p.m.-For the dislodging of the scaffold. those who must be ready for the University Employe qualifying examination in their Morgan had ben a painter for own field early in the summer the grounds and buildings depart­session. ment of the university for 15

Thursday, Aug. 3, 2 p.m.- For years. He had lived in Coralville all who desire to take the test for the last seven years and was at that time. a resident of Iowa City before

Friday, Sept. 22, 3 p.m. that time. All examinations will be given He is 8urvivied by his widow,

in room 104, Schaeffer hall. H. O. LYTE

''THE FIRST TARZAN HIT IN 3 YEARS" I

WARDROBE GIRL "Maloal 10'"

I ,

ENDS TODAY SHEARER - GABLE In

"IDIOT'S DELIGHT" PLUS CO-HIT "FIGHTING

THOROUGHBREDS"

~%., tli' .j STARTS TOMORROW

SATURDAY 3 BIG DAYS

BIGGEST FIGHT

ATTRACTION IN

SCREEN mSTORY!

Joe Louis -V •. -

Tony Galento HEAVYWEIGHT FIGHT

~

-AND-

Paychek -VI.-

See Both Fights Round By Round, Blow By Blow

PLUS BIG "'~E'ATURE

-

.,ilh

. .\0"'" ~~i;\\~~' ~~!!l "'~"\t"'Il' ._c."'."1 .... ~

Plus PET~ tORRE

in "MR. MOTO'S

LAST WARNING"

STARTING

TOMORROW CENTENNIAL

SPECIAL I

OF THE

CI§coKID .1'"

IYIIII U., . (II" .OM"O

Summer Needs PRINTED RAYON CRE,PES,

tubfast colors, crown test­ed, values to 69c, choice, yard .............. ........... ....... 3ge

A. B. C· CLIPPER CREPE PRINTS, former prices to 79c, choice, yard .......... 49c

PRINTED BEMBERG SHE E R S, 9Sc quality, yard .......... ..................... . 6ge

ANTI CREASE SPUN RAYON NUB SACKING, 9Se quality, yard ........................ ..................... ....... .......... 69c

DRESS LACES, values to $1.19, choice, yard ........ 79c

SANFORIZED IRISH DRESS LINENS, choice, yd . ..... .. ......... ....... _ .. _ ..................... ..... ........... ..... .......... 59c

SPUN RAYON SHANTUNGS, solid colors or prints, values to 59c, choice, yard ....... ............................... 39c

New White BAGS

WHITE BAG S in stunning new styles ............................ 9Sc

WHIT~ BELTS ............ 59c to $1.00

Odds 'n' Ends Sale! FA B RIC GLOVES,

choice, pair ........ 25c

SALE! BLOUSES $1.98 Kinds, choice .................................................... $1.49 $2.98 Kinds, choice .................................................... $1.98

SALEJ JEWELRY ~ne Group $1.00 Kinds, choice .................................. 69c

SLACK SJrrS SANFORIZED HOPSACKING, shirt and slacks to

match ..... .... ........... : ............................ ...... $1.98 to $2.98 SPUN RAYON SLACK SETS, light weight

................... .......................... .................... $2.98 to $3.98 (lSeeond Floor)

WOMEN'S, GIRL' Or BOYS' ANRLET'l'BS, pair 15c to 25c

WOMEN'.

SA'rlN STRIPE RA YON CREPE CAMI OLE TOP SLIPS ....... .... . .... .., ..... 79c

SALE! BET'l'ER QUAUTY MEN'S PAT'l'ERN SHIRTS, broken sizes in 1.69 kindH, choice ...... 98e.

by Holeproof, pair ............ " ....... ... ... . .................... 25e

MEN'S SANFORIZED WASH SLACKS . .. . ........ 98c

SALE! WOMEN'S RUN-RESIST SILK HOSIERY, pair ................. ................. . ........ .............. ................. . 39t

SALE I NEW corrON WASH FHOC)(S, stunninl[ new styles ............................. ...... . ....... 9 e to $1.98

SALE!

TOILETRIES LUX, LIFEBUOY, or

PALMOLIVE 17 SOAP, 3 for ........ C

KAYSER WHITE

F ABRle GLOVES

$1.00 Kinds .............. 6ge $1.50 Kinds .............. 98c

DeRAYMOND'S J COLOGNES, large lZ, oz. bottles. l\1imzy, Pin It Deviltry (di contlnu" !!tyle), $1.75 $1 1 value .. •

NATIONALLY AI;lVEll· TIS E D TOlLETRIES, discontinued 1 packing!<l .... '2 PRIC'

PI_ . SWANS "No"I»," Comecl)' Carteo. HIIIIY HUll • UHf ""M"'I '''''_· .. '1MUf

SHORTY PAJAMAS, printed batiste or eotton --------.~8wL~~----- LA

• ..... TH 01' A NATION" • _____ Tl_ST_N_I:_W_I-____ ~ A 10lIo c..w"' ......... crepe ............................................................................ 78c - - -~- - - -- - - - .:.