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Des Moines Tribune from Des Moines, Iowa • 11

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Des Moines, Iowa
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11
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Des Moines Tribune The Published Register and every day Tribune except the Company, postoffice Sunday 713-15 by of set Des Locust Moines. and as entered second at class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. BY MAIL, IN one year, $5: periods year. 50 cents 8 month.

Sunday Register, one year. periods less than one year, 50 cents month, payable in advance. BY MAIL OUTSIDE OF IOWA-Tribune, one year. periods less than one year, 60 cents month. than Sunday Register, one periods less one year, 60 cents a month.

payable in advance. BY CARRIER IN DES MOINES-Tribune Tribune, and Morning Sunday Register, 15 cents a week. Register and Sunday Register (thirteen papers week), 25 cents a week. BY CARRIER IN TOWNS LOUTSIDE, DES MOINES -Tribune, 15 cents a Register. 15 cents week.

Sunday Register, 10 cents week. Do not pay carrier in advance. AUGUST CIRCULATION, NET PAID. Daily Register and Tribune ....257,889 In Des Moines, daily 80.558 Sunday Des Moines 249,356 In Des Moines, Sunday 44,560 More daily circulation in Iowa than the next ten Iowa newspapers combined. More Sunday circulation in tows than all other Sowa Sunday newspapers combined.

The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the ase 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. CIRCLE OF SILENCE. The Tribune is printing here a simplified showing, with a ring around it, the map central part of London. The map is reproduced partly because It may interest Tribune readers to get an Idea of how the great British capital is laid out, with its many historic and familiar But the main interest is that all places.

the area within the black circle was made, government order, a "zone of silence" by at night between 11:30 o'clock and 7:30 in the morning. And subsequently, after a highly successful test the zone was extended to the CLOCK TON LA A DISTOR ROTOR Cress Peckham LEWISRAM NARDS WORTS dulwich HOTEL London, England, zone of silence. The original test WAS in the area 10 miles wide, including of the main part of London, with railway stations and all, that is enclosed in the "circle of silence." Charing Cross is the center. The area called CITY, which means the financial or "Wall Street" district, is just to the right of the center. Westminster, with its abbey, is to the left and below the center.

By order of the minister of transport every car driver, private or commercial, was forbidden to sound any horn or other warning signal between the hours mentioned. Reports of the experiment have all been favorable. It didn't eliminate all noise, but it showed "a decrease of what had been an outstanding noise in a general volume of noise." Hospitals were enthusiastic. The whole idea, of course, is based on recently proven facts about the injurious effects of noise. A year or two ago a thorough study was made in New York, all noises being measured and recorded as 80 many "decibels." Tests showed that much of our city noise is preventable, and that the effects of the noise on human health and efficiency are tremendous.

And the Anti-Noise league of England has pointed out that noise seems to keep on increasing. "Nearly every new thing," says J. B. Priestley of the league, "seems to be a nolsy thing. Hardly anybody is busy inventing quietness.

The same minds that contrived all the wonderful ingenuities of our time could, if they were compelled, also contrive ways of silencing them." It is a reasonable argument. And the "zone of silence" experiment is Intelligent. Americans were apparently first to surscientifically the volume and sources vey of city noises. The British are the first to something effective about it, at try doing least in a public way. By and by we may find that if reducing the jangle and clash of unnecessary sounds in our offices makes for better results, ing the same thing OUTSIDE our offices is worth while, too.

HELP FOR NOME. It is not difficult to understand why Nome's population of some 20,000, at the height of the 1900 gold rush, melted away to 852 by 1920. For Nome is as far north Iceland, or the northern reaches of Hudas bay. It offers a mighty bitter winter, son isolated it is from civilization with 1 ice as floes 30 feet high piled on the beach. So the destruction by fire of the row on of old frame buildings calls for very row action by both governmental and prompt private relief agencies in the United States.

The harbors will be ice-locked within another month, and meanwhile a large proportion of the 1,000 or 80 inhabitants are apparently homeless. But it would be presumptuous to assume that Nome will not be rebuilt in anything like its olden "splendor," if splendor it was. The coast of Bering strait provides a lucrative fur trade, the nearby gold placer mines are still being worked commercially with profit, salmon abound in the cold rivers, and reindeer and fox ranches are becoming an important industry. The western Alaska coast requires a trading community of some significance. The chances are that Nome will grow, although perhaps slowly, into a more important city as Alaskan industries expand.

Certainly it will be restored in a more admirable and permanent form than that in which it originated. A Detroit butcher is mystified because oracksmen broke into his safe but took no money. Has he counted the pork chops! In 1776 those who wanted liberty had to Night for it. In 1934 those who want liberty have to write for it, SEPTEMBER 20, 1934. THURSDAY, DES MOINES TRIBUNE BELIEVE IT OR NOT- BY RIPLEY BRIDGE FOR 34 YEARS PARTNERS AND STILL ON SPEAKING TERMS! R.R.

RICHARDS AND F. S.EATON -of Detroit BIRMINGHAM GRAVESTONE -Akron, LOVE Ohio. THE INSCRIPTION THIS SPOT A LOVE WAS BORN ONE YEAR AGO TODAY -FOR ME IT WILL LIVE ON AND ON BUT FOR HER ITS PASSED AWAY. ALL 9 MEN ON THE CLUB MADE A 5 PUTOUT 11 ODD IN NUMBERS U. SUCCESSION TOTAL 1930 32 32 9-20 An explanation of the cartoon above is printed elsewhere on this page.

WALTER WINCHELL On Broadway Man About Town. The Ward Line is plotting to blast back and will argue that Martin Conboy, the Federal District Att'y, has no legal right to probe the matter-since the law says that such an inquiry must be conducted by authorities in the district in which the ship goes ashore. In this case it would be Asbury Park It's a girl over at the Fred Warings There goes the stork to the Leopold Godowskys (she is G. Gershwin's sister) Roscoe Turner, speed king of the skies, socked Roger Q. Williams, trans- Atlantic ace, at Floyd Bennett Field Satdee Morton Downey socked a flip Britisher at Reuben's Sheila Barrett, will marry (or has she?) Newton B.

Baker's law partner, Patterson, who commutes by plane from Cleveland almost daily Why was the door to Capt. Willmott's Horror Castle cabin sealed up instead of merely locked? Dr. William Lewis, formerly of Rockefeller Institute, and Dorothy Northrup are to be blended shortly The ticket backers of "Errant Lady" due at the Fulton tonight, is supposed to have threatened to punch the nose of any critic who roasts that play. The first-stringers, however, will cover two Shubert productions opening the same night This report, however, may send them to the Fulton Robert Garland, the critic, tells intimates he intends to retire from the Broadway scene and try Hollywood. Anna May Wong's father, in a rage because she once appeared in no more than beads, has blocked any marriage plans for Anna, according to West Coast editors, who know the story, but for some reason haven't printed it Grace Moore's boss, the RKO flickers, threw a press party for her and she didn't show up--which is about time one of the stars refused to be bored.

The banker, Harriman, along with some Broadway residents, is now in charge of the library at the Federal pen in Penn. An unconfirmed report is that the Henry L. Menckens are threeing. One of the current show gazettes contains this: "Russ Columbo is happier now that he has a Friday night spot on NBC" Swell editing that One of the Vanderbilt tribe inherits more than a million in cash on Oct. 3d Miguel (Mike to you) Tarafa, a rich Cuban, will be to a Cubanative here on the 30th Pals of Virginia Valli assert her returning from France alone doesn't mean a divorce from Charles Farrell Natalie Schaefer denies splitting from the groom Of all things! Hank Greenberg's most ardent rooters at the Detroit ball games is Hank Ford! Broun's unemployed army of scribes are their first big trouble in Cleveplotting land Lansing Brown, whose gat killed Columbo, is very ill.

Incessant brooding. Orchids to Irvin Cobb's new flicker shorts: The former Ha-Ha and Abbey atmosphere at the Club Kentucky until 4 bells Ditto the Ubangi in the Harlem Jungle The Island "idiots" on the Hi MacArthur movie set, who are hired only to sit in chairs marked: "Supervisor" Orchids to Sybil Bolitho's "My Shadow As I true a document of people who have lost SO dear one The tome's best line: "I a don't know whether it is I or he who is dead." Orchids and a bonus to the mind who thought up this amusing manner of getting the Mae West banned title into print: "It Ain't No Sin" it says, to see Mae West in 'Belle of the Theodore Drieser is doing the Wilkes Barre "American Tragedy" for a mystery mag. Primo Carnera is still hobbling on a cane. The U. S.

got the suggestion to trap criminals (via the income tax route) from a mag article by Charles Francis Coe about 4 years ago West Coast newsmen are cracking down on a paragrapher, alleging his girl friend throws parties at public places (on the cuff, of course) -thus then craft a bad name. Julia Donahue, of the Woolworths, and Orrin Whiteman Coq Rouge it nightly--which certainly is a space-filler anytime. George Conway, ass't corporation counsel of Hilly's office, and Peggy O'Mara, daughter of Dr. O'Mara, will blend on Oct. 27th.

Evelyn Dall, the leading lady at Monte Carlo and Baron Victor de Rothschild will excite the cable dispatchers. When were the first talkies made? HOLLYWOQD (UNCENSORED) tells you next Sunday's installment. Don't miss this exclusive Des Moines Sunday Register weekly photogravure feature next Sunday. TODAY by Arthur Brisbane NIGHTING and strike riots spreading from Maine to North and South Carolina, with 120,000 more men ready to go out, is the late labor news. The trouble reaches as far west at Indiana.

Tear gas and bayonets played their parts. One worker at Belmont, N. is dead of a bayonet wound, another was seriously wounded. Easy to start a fire, sometimes hard to put it out. TT WAS well said by a wise gentleman, formerly a cabinet member, "Nobody would shoot Santa Claus, especially around Christmas time." He meant the New Deal and Santa Claus, Franklin D.

Roosevelt, surely would win at approaching elections. Wisconsin supports the "No Shooting Santa Claus." As this is written, the New Deal is running ahead, with Republicans anxiously inquiring, "Whither are we drifting?" and the La Follette Progressive party promising 8 better New Deal to make the Santa Claus' New Deal look stingy. SLOWLY everything changes. Even the north pole swings around the heavens in thousands of years, pointing first to one star then to another. Among human beings, the bottom rises to the top, the top sinks to the bottom, as it has been written, "He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of low degree." The queen of Holland makes a speech to her lawmaking body at The Hague.

Three members of that body, "Communists," actually rise to shout insults at the queen when her speech is done. What a change from the days that Motley describes in "The Rise of the Dutch Republic." to to to to to to to to A A A OF David Lawrence Says- Dollars Behave Very Much Alike Administration Concerned Over Weakness in Government Securities. BY DAVID LAWRENCE. WASHINGTON, D. the scenes an interesting discussion is going on as to what is causing the so-called softness in government bonds and securities.

Obviously it is matter of the gravest importance when there is any tendency toward weakness in government bonds. The natural inclination is to search for the causes in order that they may be corrected. For all the best laid of plans of economic and social reform can be LAWRENCE. wrecked on the rocks of damaged credit. While the administration is concerned about the erratic behavior, of government bonds in the officials have an unfortunate way of looking for alibis, to blame something else than the trying actual facts.

PRESIDENT IS IRRITATED. Thus it is reliably reported that himself is irritated by the president rather uniform tone of the various market investment services, which in recent and have been advising their clients to weeks sell everything and take a side-line position with their cash. As adviser of the president expressed one, there is an evident similarity not merely in the advice given by some of these advisory services, but they apit with some strong words pear against to the couple new deal, giving the 'impression that they have a propaganda develwhich seeks to frighten the adminoped istration and swerve it from its policies. could be more disastrous than Nothing the point of view that there is a conspiracy on the part of investors to defeat governmental policies. BANKS HAVE CO-OPERATED.

So far as the banks are concerned, they held their government securities rathhave tenaciously. They haven't varied 100 er dollars or a total million, of more up than 6,550 million dollars in the last year or so. There is every sign that they have not only co-operated by holding on to their own government securiof course more and more into ties, shifting short term from long term issues, but they have not broadcast any advice on the general subject. It is well for the administration to beconcerned. All the speeches and decome bates and economic arguments will not dissuade the powers-that-be here as quickly from a mistaken course as a mishandling of the government bond market.

CLARIFICATION LACKING. The truth is the market for government securities has been showing weakness ever since June 30 recorded the largest deficit peacetime for the American republic. On of of that has come no clarification of top government plans as to future spending. It is known that relief rolls are mounting and that, while the new deal has made noble efforts to stem the tide of unemployment, it has raised on the other hand so many serious obstacles to recovery, especially through industrial unrest and strikes, as to induce a deflationary movement. Governments which, like those in America, are essentially political, are usually inclined to see a political reason in every addevelopment.

There is always the versotation to blame somebody for rocking the boat or for conspiracy. With all due respect to President Hoover, for instance, and the way he tried to fight off the deflationary currents, he, too, became a victim of the delusion that "shorts" in the stock market were trying to wreck his administration and it was this belief on his part which really started the stock market investigation. BEWILDERED AND PUZZLED. The crux of the matter is that dollars behave under certain circumstances very much alike, without any concerted action or planning. Thus the advisory services, which tell investors to sell, receive a fee for being right and lose customers when they are wrong.

If there happens to be a unanimity of opinion among persons watchthe investment trend, it because the factors are unmistakable and because the influences in authority refuse to concede the workings of the familiar laws of supply and demand. Today investors are bewildered and puzzled for the simple reason that the government is rather mysterious about its own plans and intentions on the fiscal side. Members of the cabinet make speeches in favor of the profit system, but the administration acts just the same as if it thinks the profit system should be tampered with considerably. The difficulty with the administration's that point it of thinks view it about can the have a profit profit EROtIVS and regulate it as readily as a person adjusts the dial of his radio. How Time Flies Ten Years Ago.

The Des Moines tax levy will be cut 5 mills next year but the decrease is due to increased valuations. The levy will be as follows compared with the past year: State 11.5 11.5 County 29.10 28.10 City 59.64 57.03 School 64.76 63.37 Total 165 160 Twenty Years Ago. The contract has been let to L. H. Hanson to build the $50,000 edifice of the Capitol Hill Church of Christ at East Twelfth and Des Moines streets.

Rheims cathedral was destroyed during the bombardment of that city in the Eu- ropean war. Thirty Years Ago. Army officers should not marry unless they receive the permission of the secretary of war according to Maj. Gen. Henry C.

Corbin, commanding the Atlantic division, Readers of Tribune Say: (These letters are from Des Moines Tribune readers. The views expressed may differ widely from The Tribune's own views.) RUSTING MACHINES. To the Editor of The Tribune: It was Wendell Phillips who said of Abraham Lincoln "I do not like Mr. Lincoln's attitude on slavery but I note that when he stumbles he usually falls forward." I do not like the new deal but in some instances the administration stumbles forward. An evidence of this is the squawk of the business group, that the embarking of the government on the mattress manufacture is hurting private business.

This is a departure the government should have taken many months ago. Private business must have profits. Without prospect of profit business plays the snail. Business performs (more or less) the most vital public function, of feeding, clothing, housing, protecting and furnishing leisure and culture. It has bungled the job.

No group has been so completely discredited as the "big, practical, brainy etc." Yet when steps are taken to let the unemployed perform for themselves what business refuses to perform the latter raises a howl. If business cannot perform this most essential function (and it seems quite evident it can't or won't) let it get out of the way and stop blocking traffic. The other day I watched a gang of relief workers on a grading job. A wheelbarrow brigade was wheeling a few shovels of dirt 200 yards and two shovel men for each wheelbarrow, while machinery would have done the work better in a day what is taking weeks lies in the fence corner rusting. The men who are doing this work are expected to be content with two days of it per week while the business group exercises its liberty which Mr.

Hoover prattles about to throttle production and distribution. Even to the man on the street it is becoming more and more obvious the ludicrousness of a situation in which able to produce unlimited abundance while on the one hand splendid, efficient machinery is rusting in idleness and on the other hand millions of men are rotting in Let it be blazoned sky edlenesthe that all may see the findings of the Brookings Institute, that this nation even with its present equipment is easily able year after year to produce and distribute twice our present output. More and more insistently men are asking if it is easily possible to do this, why isn't it done A. Judd, 814 Bell Des Moines. THE 1934TH PSALM.

To the Editor of The Tribune: I ran across a little thing the other day that I think is far too good for Des Moines people to miss. I saw it in the Deep River Record and wish to pass it on. It follows: Mr. Roosevelt is my shepherd. I am in want.

He maketh me to lie down on park benches. He leadeth me beside still factories. He disturbeth my soul. He leadeth me in the paths of destruction for the party's sake. Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of the depression, I anticipate no recovery, for he is with me.

His policies and his diplomacies they frighten me. He prepareth a reduction in my crops, and little pigs are my enemies. He anointeth my income with taxes, and my expense runneth over. Surely unemployment and poverty shall follow me all the days of my life and I shall dwell a mortgaged house forever. C.

A. Wagner, St. Charles, la. T. R.

PLEASES HIM. To the Editor of The Tribune: I am much pleased with the nonpartisan attitude of Colonel Roosevelt. What he said made it very clear that he is not a Democrat. And what he said allays all suspicion of his being a Republican. He is naturally shocked by the loud-mouthed dictatorial manner of our president as he recalls the sweet gentle persuasive tones of his M.

Shallenburger, 1425 Twenty-fourth Des Moines. Horoscope If you were born Sept. 20- The pen should prove the medium through which you can attain your greatest success. If you do not already possess a edge of the technique of modern writing, study it, as you should be very successful in magazine or journalistic work. Educational work also should offer excellent opportunities to one possessing your disposition.

You are an opportunist, which enable you to succeed where may others would fail. You eventually should have an abundance of worldly goods, as well as the capacity of spending wisely. Home life should appeal to you and bring you the happiness that a solitary existence might prevent. You have a surprisingly strong character, are talented and CApable. Des Moines Birthdays.

Sept. 21. Della B. Caldwell, osteopathic physician. George A.

Kraetsch, Charles H. Nelson, executive." Dean Schooler, executive. Clarence E. Sundberg, executive. Daily Iowa Almanac 301 3ol 3ol 298 297 297 clear 9 snow Continuous lines (isobars) pass through lines (isotherms) pass through points wind.

Shaded areas show regions of Licenses to Wed in Iowa ADEL- -Kenneth Schirman, 21, and Bailey, 21. both of Perry; J. Costello, 24, Dallas county, and Gertrude Katherine Geneser, 21, Dallas Center; Winifred McArthur, 22, Broken Bow, Neb. Joseph Donald Sherley, 23, Minburn, and CORNING- H. Ranney, 21, MasMildred E.

Maas. 20: Vernon B. Ackerman, Mount Carroll, and V. Mercer, 19; Ivan Hoffman, E. 19, French, both Vivian and Cora Lavada of Carbon.

DECORAH-R. R. Sullivan, 29. and Ruth Rram, 27, both of Minneapolis. Arthur J.

Shasky, Marie 32, Goheen, Minneapolis, 27. and Edna DAVENPOR Dietz, 23, Walcott, and Amita Puls, 23, New Liberty. FORT DODGE- Verle Smith, legal, and Genevieve Stevens, legal: Louis E. Letscher, legal, Lime Havelock; Springs, Floyd and J. Vivian Cahill, 25.

Schroeder, and Bernice G. Knutson, 23, Badger; R. E. Baldein, 28, Jesup, and Ceceilia Knigge. 29; Karl Kaderabek, legal, and Dorothy Rydlund.

GRUNDY CENTER- -Cecil Pickering, legal, and Jessie Geery, legal, both of Eldora. HUMBOLDT-Clyde D. Boore and Mrs. Gertrude Crandall Lane. LE MARS- -Woodward Castle, Alta, and Maxine Weaver, Cherokee; Joe Tritz.

Remsen, and Aline Saunders. Alton; Alfred H. Wendte and Esther Coan, both of Sioux City. -Vern Bodie, 31, State Center, and Hazel Bacon, 25. Clemons; Roy H.

Cook, and Hazel M. Ziegler, 20; G. P. Vogt, 27. and Blanche Hawn, 23, both of Grundy Center; Edward P.

Vajgrt, 23. Green Mountain, and Gladys Harders, 18, Gladbrook. MASON CITY- J. Francis Rummel, 23. and and Margaret Winifred C.

E. Cooper, Krefft, 21; 23, Loyal both Jones, of Minneapolis, William H. Dalton, 46, and Frances Chase, 36. -Sam Scafferi, 29, and Cecil NEWTON both of Marshalltown. POCAHONTAS--John Schnetter, 26, AlMabel Zeman, 24.

ROCK RAPIDS- -Mary Winter, legal, George, and Meinert Stratman, legal, Buffalo Rose Genieva Ettmoyle McConkey, SIGOURNEY- Samuel Lyle Sanders. 22, 19. Delta; Matthew L. Carey, legal, Fonda, and Belva Redlinger, legal, Keota. Iowa Deaths R.

Strickle, 77. BLOOMFIELD-Mrs. Dell Ryan, 43. housewife. CLINTON John F.

Nissen, 69, merchant: Nis Peter Nissen, 80, retired farmer; Kenneth Eugene Kahler, infant. COUNCIL, Shelby. BLUFFS Hans J. Clausen, A. Bigalk, 71, retired farmer.

CORNING-Narold T. Bross, 88, farmer, Prescott. CASCADE William Walsh, 56, 1 merchant. DUBUQUE--Isaac Jacobsen, 63, president. Jacobsen Iron and Metal flaymond Otting, 25: James Thompson.

81; William Daniel, 76: Jennie McNulty, 80. DAVENPORT--William Alloway, 59. machinist: W. B. Holliday, a 77.

DECORAH -Valentine Barth, 76, retired farmer. EDGEWOOD- Mrs. W. D. Sevey, 71, FORT ATKINSON William Henry housewife.

Kipp, 3. FORT MADISON- -Mrs. George Horn, in Madison, S. Mrs. Thomas 62; Cooper, 70, of Knierim; E.

B. Wesley, Mrs. A. L. Rosene, 40; Jabez Albigence Adams, '88; Mrs.

Angelia Smith, 83. GRAND JUNCTION--P. C. Gannon, at Milwaukee, Wis. HAYESVILLE- Frank Danels.

59. HE HAMPTON- Christian Kothenbeutel, 87. HUMBOLDT- Mrs. Cornelius DeYoung of Harvey, auto accident. IOWA CITY--Fred Wallbaum, 84: Justice Seamauf, 60.

Des Moines; Earnest Corsepins, 67. Fort Madison; Fred W. Chesmore, 50. retired. IOWA FALLS -Alfred A.

Dunn, 57. farmer. JEFFERSON- Minn. Ralph E. Dobson, 33, at Lake KEOTA- -Loren Reed, 35.

LE MARS--A. T. Stokes, 70; Marshall Friedman, 16, Leeds; E. L. Yeaman, 63, Kingsley.

LAURENS -Fred Schutz, 79, retired farmer. MARSHALLTOWN -Shirley Jean Foster, Infant, at Deaconess hospital; Lucien Kilborn, 82, at Denver. Colo. MASON CITY- -William H. Griebling, 58, secretary of Iowa Federation of Labor; Mrs.

J. Sutton. 62, housewife, died at Austin, Patrician Jean Ferleman, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Berleman: Hiram E.

Perry, 60, salesman. MOUNT PLEANANT- Mrs. Elizabeth Moxley, 70, at Hillsboro. MOULTON---Mrs. Elizabeth Coons, 91.

NEWTON Robert LeRoy Collins, 6 months, son of Mr. and Mrs. Malcom Collins. OSKALOOSA-Mrs. Katherine Martin, 69, widow.

Mason, 70. SIGOURNEY--I. F. Pennington, 84; Mrs. Sophia Brainard.

67. SPRINGVILLE-George Bruce, 81. Mrs. W. Steinmetz, 78; Mrs.

Shaw, 34. WINTERSET. Mrs. Russell Croft, 42; James Salsbury, 15. WASHINGTON- -George Anderson, 56, contractor.

Polk County Des Moines Deaths -George 57, of Broadlawns Fremont died Thursday at General hospital. SHEPPARD Bobbie, 2-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W. L.

Sheppard, Lovilla, died Thursday at Iowa Methodist hospital. EN Mrs. Albert 74. of 643 Thirty -fourth died Wednesday at Iowa Methodist hospital. Births Births HIBBS Mr.

and Mrs. 3927 at Inger- Iowa soll a son, Wednesday Methodist hospital. HINES Mr. and Mrs. Luther R.

R. 5 Des Moines, A son, Thursday at Iowa Lutheran hospital. HECKARD- Mr. and Mra, Chester, 1430 S. E.

Davis a son, Wednesday at Iowa Lutheran hospital. Marriage Licenses THE FOLLOWING MARRIAGE LIcenses were issued in the district court clerk's office between noon Wednesday and noon Thursday: Name and residence. ARe William E. Harris, Des Des Moines, Moines. legal .17 Frances J.

Kingman, Leo H. Betsinger. Des Moines, and. Madeline Dolan, Des Moines Glenn R. Hulbert, Des Moines.

and. Ida G. Shipley, Moines 20 Alan H. Hunter, Des Moines, and Fern Elwell, Des Moines 34 Accident Record (As reported to Des Moines police.) 1934 1933 Accidents date 550 528 Injured to date 781 757 (AR reported to Coroner William a Carpenter.) Deaths to date 20 20 Nate Ware Falls From Truck, Hurt Suffers Hip, Wrist Bruises; Taken to Hospital. Nate Ware, 54, of 3108 S.

E. Fifth suffered bruises about his right hip and wrist when he tell from a truck near First st. and Grand ave. Thursday. Ware was taken to Broadlawns General hospital by police.

Ed Hines, 3108 S. E. Fifth WAS driver, police said. Ware WAS sitting on the rear of the truck and lost his balance. AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT WEATHER BUREAU 300 SEPTEMBER 20, 1934 DAILY 1299 7:00 A.M.

3p0 1301 THIGH 300 298 partly cloudy cloudy points of equal air pressure. Dotted Arrows fly with the equal temperature. inch or more during the precipitation of .01 last hours. portions of the United States, attended by rain or snow over the northern Rocky mountain region. At Sheridan.

the snowfall amounted to seven inches. Helena, reported a minimum so temperature of 22. the lowest ever recorded over early in autumn. An Area of high pressure Montana accompanies the colder change. Mild weather prevails in the southern and in most sections east of the states Mississippi river with a trough of low pressure extending from Arizona to occurred the lake region.

Precipitation also the upper lake region and at scattered in Much southwestern colder Canada and the northwestern weather is overspreading points in Kansas, Iowa and along the Atlantic coast. Charles D. Reed. National Temperature Lowest temperatures during the hours and highest temperatures and precipitation during the 24 hours ending a. m.

Thursday: Station. Low High Pree. Bismarck 40 56 .00 Boise 44 72 .00 Boston 58 64 .04 Calgary 20 34 .00 Chicago 60 76 .00 Denver 48 86 .00 Duluth 44 68 .08 Edmonton 22 40 .00 Havre 26 40 .08 Indianapolis 60 78 .00 Kansas City 90 .00 La Crosse 64 74 .00 Los Angeles 66 92 .00 Memphis 70 90 .00 Minneapolis 48 78 .04 New Orleans 72 86 .00 New York 54 68 .00 Phoenix 76 104 .00 Prince Albert 28 42 .10 Raleigh 66 80 .01 Rapid City 32 60 .12 St. Louis 64 82 .00 San Francisco 54 70 .00 Seattle 50 68 .00 Sheridan 28 52 .88 Springfield, Mo. 66 84 .00 Swift Current 20 38 .01 Tampa 72 86 .02 Valentine 40 68 .02 Washington 54 74 .00 Wichita 70 92 .01 Williston 32 46 .00 Winnipeg .34 50 .00 State Temperatures Lowest temperatures during the 12 hours and highest temperatures and precipitation during the 24 hours ending at 7 a.

m. Thursday: Station. Low High Precip. Alta 47 87 .00 Carroll 50 87 .00 Estherville 45 75 .00 Fort Dodge .49 84 .00 Inwood 43 83 .00 Sioux City .50 90 ,00 Atlantic 87 .00 Clarinda 57 86 .00 Creston 52 82 ,02 Des Moines 83 .00 Lamoni 53 82 .02 Council Bluffs 90 .00 Charles City 78 .00 Dubuque 64 76 .08 Forest City 80 .00 Iowa Falls 52 80 .00 Marshalltown 58 83 .00 Waterloo 57 88 .00 Albia 65 81 .00 Burlington .64 82 .00 Cedar Rapids 63 79 .06 Davenport 66 78 .00 Iowa City 64 80 .04 Keokuk 68 80 .00 Moon's Phases Full Sept. 22 Last quarter Sept.

30 sets Thursday 6:16 Sun rises Friday 6:00 a.m. Light all vehicles at 6:46 p. m. Highest temperature year ago today. 76 Lowest temperature year ago today.

57 Precipitation year ago today .00 Accumulated deficiency In precipitation since Jan. 1 .10.66 Traffic Following is a list of persons arraigned on traffic charges in municipal court be11 a. m. Wednesday and 11 a. m.

Thursday. Names, addresses and dispositions are those which appear on police and court records. In those days, when Philip of Spain ruled the Netherlands, it was death even to offer "a humble remonstrance," and the royal wholesale wrote to the still more murderous Alva, saying that, on murderer, the whole, it would not be well to kill too many of the Netherlanders, as that would interfere with the king's revenue. EW YORK "all set" to establish a lotN' tery and use the of the gambling unemployed, proceeds for the benefit finds religious groups and individual clergymen denouncing the lottery plan as "degrading and shocking to the city's moral senses." It is worse than that. A lottery means gambling, and gambling is a vice that kills the sense of honor and makes thieves.

A man will steal to gamble that would not steal to eat. The late wise August Belmont, head of the eminently respectable Jockey club the racetrack detectives, also controling was a banker. The racetrack detectives ordered to report to Mr. Belmont if were any of his (Mr. Belmont's) employes appeared near the betting ring.

such employe would be discharged Any promptly, because Mr. Belmont knew gambling makes thieves and did not want racetrack betting to make thieves of his emIf they stole to gamble they would ployes. steal from him. New York thinks it has found a way to, the devil around the bush and estabbeat for revenue purposes on A lish gambling basis that the courts cannot "fool-proof" but the city may be mistaken. upset, find somewhere "along the line" It may with respect for the meaning of a judge constitution, the intention of those that the wrote it, and not interested in subterfuges.

(Copyright, Before Judge Russell Jordan. Charles Conlin, 2706 S. E. Sixth parked by water plug, $2, paid. Paul G.

Witt. 1439 Seventeenth parked overtime, $1, suspended, committed to traffic school. N. C. Birch, 812 Maple disregarded boulevard stop, $3, suspended, committed to traffic school.

Verna Ester Olmsted, 4010 Seventieth careless driving, $5, paid. Mrs. Steven Robinson, 2212 Thirty-ninth disregarded boulevard stop, $2, paid. George P. Hamilton, 3106 Amherst disregarded school stop, $3, suspended.

J. S. Harwood, 3210 Beaver parked overtime, $1, paid. L. S.

Emmert, 4053 Plainview drive, parked overtime, $1, paid. 0. E. Christy, 4112 Third no front license plate, dismissed. 0.

0. Reise, 2212 Forest illegal parking, $1, suspended, committed to trafschool. Oscar Stromberg, 1507 Hull regarded, Hanke, school 1206 stop, $3, Sixty-fifth paid. parked overtime, pleaded not guilty, released for hearing. D.

Bosley, 3846 Columbia parked overtime, $1, paid. R. L. Farrand, Victoria hotel, parked overtime, $1, paid. S.

A. Wadney, Ewing apartments, parked overtime, $1, paid. Fred Latham, Walnut parked in alley, dismissed. Audrey Greenley, 813 Grand parked overtime, $1, paid. Ted Gilhousen, 836 Hull parked near water plug, pleaded not guilty, released for hearing.

R. Crowley, 924 Twelfth parked in restricted area. $2, released to pay. J. A.

Morrow, 951 Fifteenth parked in through lane, $1, suspended, committed to traffle school. Frazier Kubanks, 512 S. E. Twentyseventh Street court, parked overtime, $2, paid. J.

A. Hosmer, 115 Eighth parked overtime. $1, paid. Charles A. Conaway, 1120 Sunset drive, parked overtime, $1, suspended, committed to traffic school, Donald Sherwin, 4224 Kingman parked overtime, $1, paid.

A. H. Porter, 1420 Sixth double parked, $3, paid. International Harvester parked in alley. $2, paid.

Samuel Payne, 1405 Buchanan disregarded school stop, $2, suspended, committed to traffic school. Leo Cavanaugh, 501 Twelfth blocked driveway, found not guilty. R. V. Franke, 826 Fifteenth parked in through lane, $1.

released to pay. Wiley Addis, 412 Olinda ave. parked overtime, pleaded not guilty, released for hearing. Mrs. E.

D. Kruidenier, 4124 Greenwood drive, W. H. parked overtime, found not guilty. Barnes, 1601 Thirteenth parked overtime.

$1. paid. E. Murray, no. address given, illegal parking.

$1. paid. Paul Kimberley. 2303 03 Ingersoll parked in restricted area. $1, paid.

Jack Welsh, 1400 Park parked overtime, $1, paid. G. S. Murphy, 638 Forty -first parked overtime, $1, paid. Etta Dresselhuis, 2711 Grand 11- legal parking.

$1. paid. H. C. Bartold, 2501 Beaver parked overtime, $1, suspended.

Charles J. Bailey, 611 Thirty -seventh parked in alley, $1, paid. H. W. Hanson.

900 8. L. building, parked overtime. $1, paid. Mrs.

C. B. Hayden, 718 Fifteenth parked overtime, $1, paid. Excused. (By Roger C.

West, assistant chief of police, Mrs. A. C. Thayer, Altoona, parked overtime, nonresident. Lloyd Hughes, 1110 Eighteenth careless driving, Juvenile, license suspended 60 days, Pat Krappel.

1134 Thirty-first less driving, juvenile, license suspended 60 days. EXPLANATION OF RIPLEY CARTOON, All Possible Outs--An unusual incident indeed in baseball scor ing when all nine players are credited with a putout In a single game, the mathematical chances against It being one in millions. Yet Dick Ludolph, pitching for Birmingham Barons against the Chattanooga Club on May 10, 1930, made that score. Ludolph pitched the first three innings and putouts read in thin order: left fielder. shortstop, pitcher.

catcher, center fielder. third baseman. first baseman. right fielder and second.

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Pages Available:
569,627
Years Available:
1907-1982