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Des Moines Tribune from Des Moines, Iowa • 12

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Des Moines, Iowa
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12
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TWELVE DES MOINES TRIBUNE THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1935. Believe It Or Not By Ripley Jokai BUDDHIST MONK MOR 15 POSSESS ALLOWED 8 TO THINGS NOTED HUNGARIAN WRITER WROTE 30,000 WORDS DAILY BOWL FOR 66 YEARS! RAZOR HE WAS EDITOR OF 4 NEWSPAPERS AT THE SAME TIME STRAINER AND WAS THE AUTHOR OF 465 BEST SELLERS" NEEDLE GIRDLE On HIS GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY and All the Cities and Towns in 3 ROBES SOS Made Him an HONORARY Hungary CITIZEN And WHITE PEPPER EVERY ADULT BOUGHT 100 COPIES OF HIS BOOKS 15 BLACK PEPPER RIPENED 9-42 GRAVESTONE Bip' IN GLENWOOD CEMETERY, Lockport, N.Y. 8 1551. Kong Festes Greet Butte An explanation of the cartoon above is printed elsewhere on this page. On Broadway By Walter Winchell Man About Town.

Buddy Rogers will middle-aisle it with Mary Pickford in six weeks. The merger may happen in London where he is due at British-International films. Billy (Hollywood Reporter) Wilkerson, whose frau recently divorced him, and the oof'ly pretty Marilou Dix, are suffering from ardent hearteries. Tip to Rudy Vallee: The Fay Webb matter is being readied to explode in your kisser when you arrive on coast in October, for that new flicker! Are the Tommy Howells being silly after all these The smart-alecks figured it was Joan Blondell's kid sister, Gloria, that Dick Powell called to see all these months. But it is Joan he goes for! Watch that romance flower.

In the munitions lobby circles (at the Capitol) it is rumored Sec'y of War Dern is plotting his resignation. The fables right along linked an MGM biggie with Eleanor Pow(wow)ell. The fact is that Roy Del Ruth, director of "Broadway Melody" wants to "groom" her. The Del Ruths' splitigation is due soon. They gave Cupid the gong long ago.

Mrs. Esmond O'Brien will come to a potent decision when she returns from Yurrop. The Abe Lyman-Joe Moss rift has been hemstitched. Vanity Fair is plotting to make it a femme's mag starting with the December issue. June Knight wants the town to know that her honey is Tommy Lee and that he isn't wooing Kitti Gallian.

It's a blessed she-vent at the M. J. Bluestones. Add Babble: The Ernest Lehmann, Jrs. (Sally Starr), who eloped two weeks ago, are having it The Wm.

F. McKees (the banker, and she was June Harrah, society sculptress), are unwinding. She has two weeks in Reno to serve. The Paul Berlenbachs, he's the ex-champion, have reconciled, in Chicago! Reginald Gardiner, reported a click in "At Home Abroad" (he was discovered in England by Beatrice Lillie) is her honkydooly. The Robert Weeds, he's the promiment architect, are imaging.

Savings Banks will shave it to per cent by Jan. 1, or sooner. Dorothy Mackaill's new poopeedoodle is a Wall Streeter, whose tag here would cause too much trouble. But they insist Nancy Carroll will marry Quentin Reynolds! David O. Selznick (the male Barbara Hutton) presented 11 Gs to Saratoga dice tables before they folded.

"Jock" the. Whitney, who doesn't need a benefit, won $8,000. "Jubilee," which ribs Britain's King and Queen--shows them holidaying incognito doing fort the things they've al always wanted to do the last 25 years. And how they do carry on! Binnie Barnes of the screen expects her spouse on the coast to amicably arrange matters. She probably will marry Don Alvarado, whose ex-wife is persistently reported to have welded J.

Warner in England two months ago. "Chip" Roberts (Morgenthau's ass't at the U. S. treasury) whose freedom will arrive on the 16th, is seen plenty in Washington with Evelyn Walker of the horsey set. She chucked him a birthday poddy the other night, London talk says the lowdown on why Yankee chorines were almost deported, is that some of them were too fond of members of the Royal tribe.

Rosalie Fromson, exZiegfeldian, is in Spain castinetting: with one of the London Woolworths. Frances Stutz says she's now Mrs. Peter Leather, he's a The newest cosmetic fad, due next week: a deodorant lipstick, for gals who lap it up and smoke too much. Mary Brian is being adored by Donald Stuart, the juvenile lead in London's click, "Stop and Jean Adams has betrothed herself to a Major. The H.

Duprees (Lucille Bowman) of Dempsey's spot, will three-it in A greenhouse full of orchids to the French Casino's "Folies Parisienne" -which F. Ziegfeld always yenned to produce. The Frank Luthers (Zora Layman) are dwelling in separate tepees. Three Nazi profs arrive on the Europa to lecture in U. S.

colleges on Nazidom's alleged culture. Margaret Perry just wired from H'wood to have her winter things and fur coat shipped. Is it that chilly out there among the snobs? (Copyright, 1935.) TODAY By Arthur Brisbane CENATOR LONG was buried "in a tuxedo suit," such as he rarely wore, in a sunken garden on the highest knoll in the park surrounding the skyscraper state capitol that he built as his monument. Nothing is seen from the grave, high or low. It is remembered now that when Senator Long told other senators men were planning to murder him "the senators laughed." Senator Long's widow will not follow the custom established and ask appointment to fill her husband's place in the senate.

She would not accept the position if appointed. She thinks he would like her to stay home and look after her children. One of Senator Long's secretaries thinks he can prove that Weiss, the murderer, was one of a group of murder conspirators. In another direction, it is suggested that a monument be built in honor of Weiss. Opinions in America differ, but there will be no such monument.

THE League of Nations Great Britain TN took a forceful stand in the ItalianEthiopian crisis Wednesday, demanding that league members fulfill "obligations to resist, as a unit, unprovoked aggression." If all league members would resist "as a unit" that would solve the problem for Britain and France. They would not find themselves in the unpleasant position of fighting Italy alone. Mussolini could hardly hope to overcome all members of the league although he might try, TARY SLATE, pretty, only deterM mined to picket for her "white collar" fellow strikers in New York, had herself chained and padlocked to a post, wrists fastened behind her. Police. could not move her and she made a fine speech while girls rubbed her wrists, squeezed too tight by the chain.

By and by police with a "hack-saw" freed her, sent her home in triumph. Her idea was borrowed from Mrs. Pankhurst, who chained herself to iron railings near the house of commons in her successful fight for woman suffrage long ago. The marvelous determination of women, far exceeding that of men, is always a delight. TISS GILDERSLEEVE, dean of BarM nard college, found England "economically cheerful," with her unemployed below two million, as against our 12 million.

How do you suppose England reduced her unemployed to two million? Some attribute it to the five billion dollars in gold, borrowed from us, not repaid. But that money went to building battleships, airplanes and other useful things and also, to give the Sassenach his due, to make up for bad debts of England's allies in the big war. Two commonplace news items: The number of ships bringing bootleg whisky from England is increasing. Another man, body riddled with bullets in Greater New York, was slumped on the rear seat of an automobile. Police said "somebody on the front seat must have turned on him suddenly." One bullet went close to a telegram signed "Margie." "Gang revenge" the police say, and that's enough.

TAYOR LA GUARDIA of New York is arresting citizens for making a noise at night under the interesting theory that people are entitled to sleep during darkness. He even will forbid loud speakers on "political trucks" if they make too much noise at late hours, also "yells and shouts, accompanying crap games." Why do "crap-shooters" yell and shout while at "upper class" gambling places, the voice of destiny, at Rouge Et Noir, 19 languid, low, barely heard above the clicking of the ivory ball. (Copyright, 1935.) The Tribune's Readers Say: (These letters are from Des Moines Tribune readers. The views expressed may differ widely from The Tribune's OWn views. Confine letters to 200 words or less and write only on one side of paper.

They will be shortened if lack of space requires. You must give your name and address. Contributors are limited to not more than one letter a month. Letters cannot be returned.) CRITICS ASSAILED. To the Editor of The Tribune: Senator Dickinson and Former President Hoover have been firing the first guns of the on-coming political campaign of 1936.

It appears from the speeches and writings of these worthy gentlemen that the Republican party arguments for support are to be based on the Constitution, liberty, foreign trade and criticism of the AAA. The people of the middle west and other parts of the country are too wise to be fooled by such discussions and fears. Everybody knows that the Constitution needs amendments from time to time to keep up with the changing conditions and needs of the nation. It has been changed 21 times since its adoption and still is a pretty good document as it is today. In all of this concern over the loss of the liberty of the people, there is no thought whatever of the liberty of the common people.

It is only the liberty of the "rugged individuals" that is behind all of this talk. The masses of national voters will not allow such talk about the loss of liberty to influence their action at the polls. The proposal to dispose of farm surpluses by increasing foreign trade is absurd in the face of the extent and growing ambition of all foreign countries to become self- sustaining, both agriculturally and industrially, and in the face of outstanding foreign obligations to this country of about 000. Such a proposal, has little value either from an agricultural or industrial viewpoint. What do Senator Dickinson and Hoover have to offer substitute for the AAA.

Do they wish to kill it and throw the farmers and the nation as a whole back into the bottomless pit; or do they have a constructive substitute? The people want a constructive, helpful program; they refuse to be fooled by useless talk about the Constitution, liberty, tariff, foreign trade and inane criticism of the AAA. If the Republican has a constructive substitute for the AAA, let's have it in plain English. Why not adopt the plan of increasing the home markets by promoting legislatively and financially new uses for agricultural products? Why not plan to use our surplus cereals, fruits and vegetables of the entire country for producing power alcohol for motor fuel, our slash pines of the south for producing paper and rayon, our soy beans of the midwest for making oil for paints and plastics, and our girasols of the plains for making levulose? Such a plan would put purchasing power where it would revive the business of the entire nation. W. Hanna, Ankeny, la.

VETERANS IN THE STORM. To the Editor of The Tribune: President Roosevelt seems terribly interested in the the veterans who lost their lives in Florida hurricane, now that the majority of them are in the Great Beyond. Now the government will have to pay the bonus; not to those who have earned it, but in many instances to ones who have grown up since the war. In many cases, the veterans have no next of kin, in which instance the government will be that much ahead. It seems to me that the government does things when it is too Jack Mann, 1155 Ninth Des Moines.

NEW NAMES WANTED. (Sheldon Sun.) We hope that both parties (or three parties) give us new faces and new names from whom to select our next president. We want new leaders, new ideas and above all, men who will actually administer the office along the lines suggested in their party platforms. In the past several years both parties have been conspicuous in disregarding their platforms, once they were in power. So we hope Smith and Hoover will not be taken seriously as 1936 presidential timber.

Horoscope If You Were Born Sept. 12. A good many people may find you rather hard to understand, because, perhaps, of your being inclined to be reticent regarding matters of a personal nature. You are usually very successful in concealing your feelings, if you wish to give no indications of what they are. You may have comparatively few intimate friends, but those you have are probably very devoted and loyal.

You should be successful in business, for you are a steady and untiring worker. You keep your plans to yourself and you do not voluntarily offer advice on matters in which you have no personal interest. Much of your spare time is spent in study, in hopes that added knowledge will help you advance. Des Moines Birthdays. Sept.

13. Evelyn Louise Ash, executive. Jerome D. Bowers, executive. Lester William Drennen, editor.

Edward B. Fisher, fireman. Russell Chase Fraser, artist. Edwin Morris Wheeler, musician. Loren M.

Thompson, insurance executive. Fred Bumpus, statistician. I Des Tribune Published every day except Sunday by The Register and Tribune Company, 713-15 Locust and entered at the postoffice of Des Moines, as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. BY MAIL IN IOWA- Tribune, one year, $5.

Sunday Register, one year. $5: payable in advance. BY MAIL OUTSIDE OF IOWA- Tribune. one year, $6. Sunday Register, one year, payable in advance.

BY CARRIER IN MOINES- -Tribune and Sunday Register, 15 cents week. Tribune, Morning Register and Sunday Register (thirteen papers a week). 25 cents a week. BY CARRIER IN TOWNS OUTSIDE DES MOINESTribune, 15 cents a week. Daily Register, 15 cents a week.

Sunday Register, 10 cents a week. Do not pay carrier in advance. AUGUST CIRCULATION, NET PAID. Daily 1 Register and Tribune 270,585 In Des Moines, daily 82,987 Sunday, Des Moines Register 270,384 In Des Moines Sunday .46.087 More daily circulation in Iowa than the next ten Iowa newspapers combined. More Sunday circulation in lowa than all other Iowa Sunday newspapers combined.

The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and all the local news published herein. All rights of republication on special dispatches herein also reserved. A SMALLER CONGRESS? One "good place to apply the horse and buggy days," is proposed in a letter to The Tribune by 0.. A. Ontjes of Grundy Center.

"Talking about constitutional amendments, why would it not be well to offer a constitutional amendment to reduce the number of congressmen from 435 to onehalf, or 218, which would still be twice too large?" Mr. Ontjes asks. Congress Too Large! Mr. Ontjes, who sat in several sessions of the Iowa assembly, may be presumed to know something about legislative bodies. And while there may be difference of opinion as to his declaration that the "only statesmanlike legislation enacted comes from the senate," not many will question that at least in many instances "the large house membership is a bar to progress." The average cost of a congressman is about $20,000 a year and that of a senator $38,000, Mr.

Ontjes mentions, making a total of about $1,300,000 a year. If a more wieldy and efficient national legislative body could be formed by a reduction in size, the saving on a "per member" basis would be the least of the benefits, though not negligible. But only congress can effect the change and congress is not likely to. However, if ever the situation arises when each congressman in a single session feels that he has acquitted himself so well that his re-election is assured no matter what redistricting might be ordered, then the Ontjes proposal might get a hearing. The Nebraska legislature did vote itself out of existence.

But the prospects are not encouraging. Which does not for a moment argue that the idea is not a grand one. NOT MEANT AS INSULT. Dr. Gustav Mueller, acting German consul, is greatly agitated over the refusal of leading New York hotels to permit display of the Nazi swastika on their premises.

He says such action is a violation of international amity. If the doctor really thinks the management of a New York hotel would offer a gratuitous affront to a foreign nation on political grounds, he is underestimating the strength of the good old "profit motive" in America. Depend upon it that those hotel managers didn't bar the swastika because they disapprove the Nazi scheme. They were merely guarding against disturbances of the peace and possible destruction of their property. We regret as much as anyone this tendency of humans to become apoplectic over the mere matter of displaying or not displaying certain emblems; it indicates that we have not yet traveled so very far from the days of savagery and totem poles.

But the condition isn't peculiar to New York. In Berlin, for example, there isn't any promiscuous flaunting of the soviet flag, either in hotels or elsewhere. FOR SAFETY'S SAKE. The arrest of three North High school students for hitch-hiking on the city's streets, in violation of the ordinance, may seem severe at first glance. But the ordinance is there for a very good and specific purpose.

It is there to keep youngsters out of traffic accidents. And the only way to make the ordinance accomplish that purpose is to enforce it. The only way to enforce an ordinance, it may be added, is to enforce it. That is what the police traffic department has set out to do. If there are students so far from school that they simply can't walk, and no other provision can be made for their transportation, that is a problem that needs to be taken up with the proper school authorities.

It is no excuse for so littering the main thoroughfares with "thumbing" youngsters that motorists are constantly avoiding them by a hair's breadth. The ordinance NEEDS to be enforced, and sensible parents ought to be supporting it. OR PEPPER MARTIN. Recent governors of Kentucky, in case anyone's interested, have been Flem Sampson and Ruby Laffoon. In the primaries the other day, the Republicans nominated King Swope and the Democrats nominated Happy Chandler.

If Diz Dean or Ozzie Nelson ever enter politics, they ought to move into Kentucky. Congress cast a lugubrious eye on plans for a doughnut-shaped five-mill piece. Come, come, men--one must look at the coin, not at the hole. David Lawrence Says- Delay Likely in New Deal Suits Little Chance for Decisions Before 1936 Election Day Indicated. BY DAVID LAWRENCE.

WASHINGTON, D. seven out of ten of the recent acts of congress are believed by competent attorneys to be unconstitutional, the chances are that not one of them will have been passed upon by the supreme court of the United States between now and the presidential election in November, 1936. This arises out of the fact that the average time elapsing between the passage of New Deal legislation and decisions by the LAWRENCE. supreme court passing on their constitutionality has been fifteen months. It is possible, of course, with the proper amount co-operation and with the elimination dilatory tactics on both sides of for an issue to be presented to and decided by the highest court in from six to eight months.

But it took 20 months and 15 days from the passage of the gold clause default for the cases to be brought and argued and decided through the lower courts to the supreme court and it took 23 months and 11 days from the time of the passage of the national industrial recovery act for a test to be made in the Schechter case. DELAYS FOR GUFFEY BILL. The Roosevelt administration was inclined at first to ward off tests but did help finally to expedite the Schechter case and the gold clause suits. There are indications that the administration will try to avoid as long as possible a test on the Guffey coal law and on the Wagner labor relations act. This is because organized labor wants to get the machinery of the laws grooved so as to obtain the maximum benefit from the acts irrespective of the outcome of the suits on constitutionality.

Politically, it will be important if there are no major questions of constitutionality added to those already established by the seven acts of the Roosevelt administration which violated the Constitution. Those who have been hoping that the supreme court would furnish a basis for the introduction into the next presidential campaign of a constitutional amendment that could be considered to have been approved in principle if the Roosevelt regime is indorsed again at the polls are doomed to disappoint- ment. AAA CASE COMING UP. There are pending, of course, for decision in the October term of the supreme court this year two important cases affecting constitutionality. One is the Tennessee Valley Authority Act, which has been upheld by the circuit court of appeals and in which the New Deal probably will be sustained, and the other is the agricultural adjustment act, with its processing taxes, on which the New Deal seems certain to lose.

The Roosevelt administration is trying to have the cases brought on the agricultural control law before it was amended at the last session tied into the cases that will be brought under the AAA amendments but it appears doubtful that the courts will care to decide anything but the issues arising out of the original law. The administration has in effect conceded the unconstitutionality of the AAA as originally drawn, because the amendments recently pressed upon congress clearly show the anticipation of an unfavorable decision. From the standpoint of national progress, it is much better to have a constitutional amendment, if it is to be proposed, acted upon separately from other elections and controversies. It would not be surprising, on the other hand, if the opposition to the New Deal raised the issue constitutionalism anyway in the next campaign. Should the president be re-elected, would he consider then that he had received a mandate to propose an amendment to the Constitution permitting a strong centralized control over manufacturing, agriculture, and production generally? (Copyright, 1935.) 20 Years Ago From The Tribune Files of 1915.

Stewart Heads Y.M.C.A. Graham Stewart of Chicago has been elected by the board of directors of the Des Moines Y.M.C.A, to succeed J. H. Fellingham, who has been forced by ill health to resign. Mr.

Stewart was secretary of the Oak Park, Y.M.C.A. for seven years and from there was called two years ago to take over the charge of financing the new Y.M.C.A, college in Chicago. The members of the committee who elected him were Dr. T. P.

Bond, STEWART. F. L. Miner, A. M.

Piper, and C. E. Lynde. Trolley Negotiations Snagged Negotiations between the Des Moines city council, the street car company and a special committee from the Chamber of Commerce have struck another snag. Efforts to draft a new franchise which would be acceptable to all interested parties had reached the place where capitalization figures and clauses pertaining to service had been approved.

Then the impasse was reached when Mayor Hanna declared he could not support the franchise. if it contained the purchase section as then outlined. This section provides that the city may purchase the street railway system when it wishes to at a valuation of five million dollars, plus the money the company shall have spent on extensions. Emil Schmidt, president of the transportation company, and, the Chamber of Commerce committee declared that the company could not sell bonds if the franchise afforded the possibility of the city confiscating the plant. Daily Iowa Almanac U.

6 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 299 WEATHER BUREAU DAILY WEATHER MAP SEPTIREN 18, 1905. 302 HIC H- 299 298. 300 Oclear Brain snow cloudy Continuous lines (isobars) pass through (isotherms) pass through points of equal Shaded areas show regions of precipitation Licenses to Wed in Iowa. CEDAR RAPIDS- Joe. W.

Dolezal; 30, City, H. and French, Helen Marie Rejman, 23; Wilfred 27, Marion, and Ruth C. Svacka, 23; George F. Hackert, 26, AIburnett, and Gladys Mildred Little, 24, Ralph F. Ellsworth, 33, and DoroGillispie, 29; J.

W. Parker and E. C. Boone. Emery, and Ethel J.

Shaffer, 21; Mose B. both of Tama; Fred R. Mauch, 22, Alexander and Bessie Clark, Fairfield; Joe F. Hladky, 25, and Jane Miller, 20; Anson Smith. 25, and Alice Sander, 19, both of Clinton; Arthur D.

Schwartzen-1 truber, and Lois Fenton, 21: William Robert Jr. 21, and Leone Sedlik. 19; Don Hennessey, 32. Monticello, and Blanche Kinley, 30, Coggon. CORNING- -Chester Lacox, 23, and Helen McKee, 18, both of Nodaway, CRESCO- John H.

Owens, 26, Cresco, and Irene M. Reis, 21. Bonair; Rudy Doerr, 24, and Leone Wilkes, 24, both of Riceville; Milton Kach. 19, and Hedwig 24. Waucoma, and Beatrice Ridgeway; Ed Zahasky, Pinter, 24, Gerber, both of Protivin: Clarence Koch, 34, and Frederica Bearson, 32.

both of Goodhue. Minn. DUBUQUE- -J. George Eichhorn, 21, and 25, Lorraine C. Close, 22; Louis A.

Rhomberg, and Nadine F. Conlon, 25; Thomas W. Lane, 32. Patch and Dorothy Ann Palmer, 20, of Grove. FORT MADISON- -Torrence Scotton, 29, and Cherryl Hamberg.

19, both of Mount Sterling; Maurice P. Thomas, 23. and Isabel Maxine West. 19; Christ Mertens, Cottonwood, and Mary Neuweg. West Point: Francisco Reyes and Esperanza Estrada.

GLENWOOD- -Clyde Knudson, 21, cil Fred Bluffs, D. and Violet Norris, 21, Faye Sidney; Burkhart, 25, and Davis, 16, both of Council Bluffs: Virgil R. Pierson, 38. and Violet Bert. 38, both of Omaha, Benjamin R.

Hoden, 21, and Dorothy Louise Lindsey, 20, both of Council Bluffs. GRUNDY CENTER -Fred J. Luppen, and Grace Nederhoff, both of Wellsburg. INDEPENDENCE- Guy L. White, 29, Stanley, and Opal E.

Lillibridge, 19, Oelwein. IOWA CITY--David A. Paul, 26, Gilman, and Irma Odella Young, 25, Clarence. JEFFERSON Frank Potter, 38, and Eva Ott, 25, both of Jefferson; Hareld Smart, 21, and Bertha Cunningham, 18, both of Boone; Marvin E. Brunner, 24.

and Margaret Irene Leonard, 23. both of Jefferson; Duane Alvin Kiner, 20. Jefferand Opal Lewis, 18, Churdan; Earl Silver, 23, Perry, and Laura Lorena Batties, 24, Jefferson; H. V. Magner, 22.

Paton, and Bernice Vinchattle, 23, Slifer. MARENGO- -Arthur Henry Schmidt, 24, Norma Anna Katharine Walter. 21, both Iowa county, NEWTON--Byron Brodersen, 22, Newton, and Lola DePenning, 20, Reasnor; Elmer Hoy, 24, Rhodes, and Clara Pike, 18. Mingo. NORTHWOOD William Latham, 28, and Sylvia Wobschall, 19, both of Waseca, Cornelius Emery Verdoorn, 23.

and Gwendolyn Ardell Pickell, both of Hollandale, Archie Stadler, 24, and Eva Durand, 29, both of Faribault, Walter L. Soare, 33, Wayzata, and Corrine M. Brackett, 27. Minneapolis, Elmer Forsberg, 21, and Edna Kolman, 18, both of Minneapolis. OTTUMWA--Harold Sleezer, 25.

Sioux City, Elmer and Hughes, Nancy Eldridge, 18, Sigourney; 23. Eldon. and Mary Weir, 21, Ottumwa; J. J. Boldosser, 72, Hedrick.

and Mary 0. Carbelner, 65, Lucas; W. T. Sheets, legal, and Mrs. Lillian Ray, 59.

SAC CITY--Leo T. Wolff. 23, Early, and Marcella Hazelhoff, 23, Schaller. WATERLOO- Floyd A. Grimm, 35, and Ruth Colton, 34.

Iowa Deaths. ALBIA Mrs. Millie Weller, 42. CEDAR RAPIDS--Michael Hobel, 85, harness maker; Mrs. Ethel De La Hunt, 33: Peter Swanson, Princeton.

Mrs. Anne E. Chadima, widow: Mrs. Annabell Pratt, 82; Miss Vera Helbig. 41, Marion; Henrietta Pulsifer, 72, in Arizona; Robert L.

Gillam, 78; Egmundy Suchocki, 47. in Chicago. CLEAR LAKE-Mrs. Emily Jane Tripp, 83. widow.

CLINTON-Mrs. Sophie Byers, 95; Charles Madsen, 57. meat dealer; Edward A. Beach. 63.

American Express employe of Chicago, Ill. CORWITH- -Samuel Lightner, 88; Shirley Kay, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Gourley. DENISON- Victor Hedman, 83.

Odd Fellows Home, Mrs. York. P. Jay Wiggins. Casper.

Jepsen. 93; George Zea, Denison. DUBUQUE rs. Caroline Bloc, 52: Leo Brimeyer, 50, Balltown; David McCurdy, 56. GOODELL- Mrs.

Thomas O. Letch, 60, widow. COLFAX-Lewis Main, 76. CRESCO- -M. Leslie O'Malley, 67, former Cresco business man, died in St.

Paul, Minn. FORT MADISON- -Charles Franken, 88; Mrs. Katherine Tucker Scott, 73, at Los Angeles, Louis E. Metcalf, 60: Miss Mary J. Burleson.

74; Herman J. Jansen, West Point: J. P. Mrs. Salyars, 73; Mrs.

Josephine Conradt, 76; Minnie H. Mattox, 47, Monroe, H. B. Johnson, 78. at Warsaw, Ill.

INDEPENDENCE Mrs. Mehitable Morse, 91. widow. IOWA CITY--John O'Connor, 72; Emil Selkin, 67, Keystone, retired; Max Whitaker, 27, Cambridge, laborer. JEFFERSON -Lewis Thornburgh, 75, drayman, at George Rippey; John U.

Perkins, 47. Churdan; Manning, 64, at Salt Lake City, Utah. KANAWHA- George Foster, 72, drayman; Larry Dean Atchison, 1. MARION- Wallace, 35, in Riverside, Cal. widow.

MASON -Mrs. Abbie Watts. 89. MORNING SUN -Ralph Long. 20.

in car accident at Worthington, Minn. OAKVILLE- -Feldon Ukoof, 63, at Louisa county home. OTTUMWA- James M. Hill, 85; Mrs. Elsie May Wymore, 70, at Long Beach, Jack Shelton, 35, auto salesman.

RICHLAND--Jacob Jones, 87, retired merchant. REINBECK--Mrs. J. N. Lage, 75, housewife.

SAC CITY- -Nora Myrtle Joy, 51: Emma W. Nutzmann, 51, Wall Lake; Jackie Lee, infant, Schaller; Eliza Hillmer, 62, Lytton; T. M. Noe, 52, depot agent. Des Moines Deaths.

WAGNER-Mrs. Ida 83, of 209 Fifty. eighth died Thursday at home. WRIGHT Theodore, 76, of 1430 Beaver died Wednesday at home. LYTLE -R.

28, of 732 Eighteenth died Thursday in Iowa Methodist hospital. ANDERSON- Grace, 46, of 2614 S. E. Sixth died Wednesday in Iowa Methodist hospital. SHIVERS--Mr.

and Mrs. Carl. 1225 Thirty-first a daughter Wednesday in Iowa Methodist hospital. SMITH- Mr. and Mrs.

Carl, 1826 St. Joseph a daughter Wednesday In Broadlawns General hospital, KLEMM- Mr. and Mra. Louis, Newton. a son Wednesday in Des Moines General hospital.

Marriage Licenses. THE FOLLOWING MARRIAGE LICENSES were Issued district court clerk between noon Wednesday and noon Thursday: Name and residence Age Raymond Johnson. Des Molnes, and 25 Mildred Coellner, Des Moines. .18 Donald W. Chadwick, Anita, la.

Gladys Bell, Anita, 20 Divorce Action. THE FOLLOWING DIVORCE PETITIONS were filed with the district court clerk between noon Wednesday and noon Thursday: Charles E. Wagner vs. Mary Wagner. Reta Pauline Moon Va.

Wayne E. Moon. Blanche Hubbard vs. R. W.

Hubbard. Catherine E. Helm vs. Glenn C. Helm.

Constantia May Smith vs. Charles Elwyn Smith. Divorce Decrees. Divorce Decrees. THE FOLLOWING DIVORCE DECREES were filed with the district court.

clerk between noon Wednesday and noon day: Lovie Palmer from Roy Palmer, Ada May Custer Jack Custer, Catherine E. Helm from Glen C. Helm. points of equal air pressure. Dotted lines temperature.

Arrows fly with the wind. of .01 inch or more during last 24 hours. Fair weather prevailed over most of the country except showers in the east gulf and south Atlantic states and at scattered places in northern Minnesota, northern Montana and in Saskatchewan. Temperatures have risen to about normal or higher in the southern Rocky mountains and northeast to the Great Lakes, due to the influence of a center of low pressure that has moved from the northern plateau to the middle Missouri valley. Somewhat cooler weather follows over the northwestern states.

C. D. REED. Iowa Temperatures. SHRDLU ETAOIN SHRDLU SHRDLU SH Lowest temperatures during the 12 hours and highest temperatures and preeipitation during the 24 hours ending at 7 m.

Thursday: PreStation. Low. High. cip. Alta 54 82 .00 Carroll 54 81 .00 Estherville 51 84 .00 Fort Dodge 54 .00 Inwood 54 85 ,00 Sioux City 58 84 .00 Atlantic 54 80 .00 Clarinda 52 78 .00 Creston 51 77 .00 Des Moines 55 79 .00 Lamoni 53 77 .00 Council Bluffs 58 78 .00 Charles City 52 80 .00 Dubuque 60 80 .00 Forest City 53 82 .00 Iowa Falls 50 82 .00 Marshalltown 49 76 .00 Waterloo 54 81 .00 Albia 56 80 .00 Burlington 56 80 .00 Cedar Rapids 52 79 .00 Davenport 58 82 .00 Iowa City 52 81 .00 Keokuk 56 80 .00 National Temperatures.

Lowest temperatures during the 13 hours and highest temperatures and precipitation during the 24 hours ending at 7 a. m. Thursday: Station Low High Precip. Boston 56 72 .00 Calgary 36 54 .00 Chicago 60 80 .00 ,56 84 .00 Detroit 54 80 .00 Duluth 46 66 .54 Edmonton 42 46 .02 Galveston 76 82 .00 Huron 54 86 .00 Indianapolis 58 78 .00 Kansas City 60 00 .00 La Crosse 54 00 .00 Little Rock 60 .00 Los Angeles 62 .00 Louisville 54 .00 Minneapolis 1 82 .00 Orleans 80 .12 New Oklahoma York 58 58 74 80 .00 City .00 Phoenix, Ariz. 102 .00 Rapid City.

S. D. 00 88 .00 St. Louis 62 80 .00 San Francisco 54 68 .00 Seattle 52 70 .00 Shreveport 66 84 .00 Springfield, Mo. 56 76 .00 Tampa 78 90 .00 Winnipeg 40 54 .01 Washington 60 78 .00 Sunset and Sunrise.

Sun sets Thursday 6:29 p. m. Sun rises Friday .5:52 a. m. Light all vehicles 6:59 p.

m. Highest temperature year ago today. 84 Lowest temperature year ago 65 Precipitation year ago today. .90 Traffic. Following is a list of persons arraigned on traffic charges in municipal court between 11 a.

m. Wednesday and 11 8. m. Thursday. Names, addresses and dispositions are those which appear on police and court records.

Before Judge C. S. Cooter. The following were fined 31. each for parking an automobile without a lighted tail-light: R.

C. Chumbley, 2809 Cottage Grove ave. Don MeCrea, 1445 Thompson ave. M. E.

Weber, 517 College ave. J. 8. Olson, 900 Forty-second st. Charles M.

Hare, 1809 Twenty-seventh st. Leroy Mahaffey, 1402 Eleventh st. C. K. Jacobs, 2600 Kingman bivd.

Marie Crowell, 1803 Mondamin ave. The following were fined $1 each for parking an automobile overtime: B. J. Carney, 606 Grand ave. A.

Tillier, 1305 Locust st. E. Nelson, 16 Thirty -fourth st. Leland S. Forrest, no address given.

A. M. Watson, 1113 Southern Surety bldg. C. Cover, 717 Fourth st.

T. F. Beeson, 3422 Beaver ave. R. J.

Smith, 1026 Sixteenth st. Archie Hogatt, 1124 Sixty-eighth st. A. M. McCrae, 515 Franklin ave.

Russell Hansen, 3818 Fourth st. C. W. Graves, 3223 Oxford ave. Des Moines Marble Co.

James McLennan, Victoria hotel, C. A. Kannor, 211 High st. C. E.

Gibson, 1234 Forty-sixth st. The following appeared on other charges: G. H. Lookie, Harlan hotel, parked overtime, dismissed. T.

M. Smull, 1537 Tenth Illegal parking, dismissed. E. R. Bennett, 540 Forty-sixth parked overtime, dismissed.

Ferrell, 1427 Fifth no tail-light, dismissed. John H. Cook, 814 Lincoln no talllight. dismissed. Robert Howell, 1309 Ascension legal parking, $1, suspended.

Mrs. A. Bredy, 627 Polk disregarded school stop, $2, paid. Milton Frey, 2409 Elizabeth 110 operator's license, dismissed. Woodrow Lynn, 918 Pennsylvania parked in restricted area, dismissed.

C. K. Jacobs, 2600 Kingman no safety inspection, dismissed. Leonard Dawson, 814 E. Thirteenth overloaded truck (arrested by state highway patrol), $100, suspended.

Clyde W. Gates, 318 E. Holcomb speeding 50 miles an hour, $25 or six days. Don Radcliff, no address given, illegal parking, $2, paid. 0.

Burrows, Indianola, speeding 40 miles an hour, $15, paid. Mrs. H. E. Klembers, 4812 Pleasant parked overtime.

$1, paid. Thomas J. Lenan, Adelphi, speeding 40 miles an hour, $15, released to pay. Charles J. Leasley, 2807 Des Molnes speeding, 40 miles an hour, $15, released to pay.

Ralph Townsend, 719. S. E. Seventh double parked, $2, paid. Harry Cohen, 935 Fifth double parked, $2, paid.

B. J. Glenn, 411 School parked in restricted area, $1, paid. Charles Pye. 2615 Kingman parked in hotel entrance, $3, paid.

Mrs. Will Mathews, 1500 Clark double parked, $2, paid. Births. Accident Record. (As reported to Des Moines police.) 1935 1934 Accidents to date 489 589 Injured to date 595 778 (As reported by Coroner William Carpenter.) Deaths to date 26 19 Explanation of Ripley Cartoon.

The Genius of Hungary- -Jokal Mor (1825-1904) Hungarian patriot, statesman, novelist, poet and sculptor, 18 one of the most prolific writing geniuses of all time. For 66 years he wrote 30,000 words dally He edited tour newspapers at the same time and wrote 465 best sellers. His novels are in a class by themselves. He was also a member of the Hungarian senate and a first class orator. When he celebrated his golden anniversary as writer in 1888, 3,932 cities and towns of Hungary bestowed on him the freedom of their city.

The government published his collected works and every adult Hungarian bought 100 volumes. In his youth. he was condemned to death for revolutionary activities against A tria. An ingenious ruse on the part of his wife saved him from the hangman's noose..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1907-1982