Page 8 University Daily Kansan Demo Leaders To Appear Here Charles Rooney, Democratic candidate for governor, and Kenneth Anderson, candidate for lieutenant governor, will be the principal speakers at a party rally in the Lawrence Community building Oct. 24. The plans were announced by Robert Walker, president of the KU Young Democrats, at a meeting Tuesday night. Walker said the rally and dance to be held in comparison with a collective enterprise with the central committee of the Douglas county Democrats. Bernard Rooney, college sophomore, was appointed temporary treasurer of the KU Young Demos. He is a nephew of candidate Rooney. The committee on absentee ballots will be Cecil Witt, college sophomore; Phyllis Bish, college sophomore; Bernard Rooney, and Bob Wilson, college freshman. The committee on coordination is Bill Lemesany, second year law, and Ed Chapman, college junior, Don Dirkss, first year law, Don Meeker, college junior, and John McNerney, college junior. The next meeting will be Oct. 9. Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1952 Labor Party Split On Bevan Issue Morecambe, England — (U.P.) — Britain's Labor party split wide open today and its chairman warned it must reunite or die. Arthur Deakin, the country's most powerful Labor leader, threw the annual Labor party conference into pandemonium by threatening to set up within the party an organization to fight Aneurin Bevan's left-wing bloc. Mr. Deakin denounced what he called Mr. Bevan's "party within a party". Frye Returns From Africa Dr. John C. Frye, director of the Kansas State Geological survey, returned Tuesday from a European and African trip where he attended the 19th International Geological congress in Algeria, Africa. Dr. R. C. Moore, director of research for the Kansas State Geological survey also attended the congress. Dr. Moore has not yet returned from Europe where he spent last year as a visiting professor in Holland. Besides attending the congress, the two men joined a pre-congress excursion which studied the geological and mineral resources of the coast of North Africa. B-29s Wreck Korean Factory Seoul, Korea — (U.P.) — American B-29 superfortress bombed and wrecked a vital chemical plant only 400 yards from Communist China today despite intense Red anti-aircraft fire, some of it from Manchuria. Forty-eight B-29s from Okinawa and Japan dropped 425 bombs on the Yalu river plant at Namsan, which an Air Force officer described as "the most successful target" targets left in North Korea. All the B-29s returned safely. Returning airmen reported excellent results, with numerous secondary explosions and fires pockmarking the 4,750-by-1,200-foot target area. World Photo Co. Pictures Copied on silk finish 20—2$ \frac{1}{4} $ x 3$ \frac{1}{4} $—$ 1.00 35—2½ x 3½—$1.50 Billfold size 12—3 x 4 $1.00 20—3 x 4 $1.50 Send any size photo. Do not send proofs. Original will be returned in good condition. Original will be returned in good condition Please print name, address, number and size desired on back of picture and mail with remittance plus 10c for postage and insurance to insurance to World Photo Co. Box 8133 Plaza Station Kansas City, Mo. Orders filled within four days. Young men's shoe, at young men's prices. Be style-right this season . . . look sharp. Treat yourself to a pair of Pedwin White Bucks, with red rubber soles. Never before so much style at this price! ...But only Time will Tell . . . . . . CAMEL leads all other brands by billions of cigarettes per year! Test CAMELS for 30 days for Mildness and Flavor CAMELS are America's most popular cigarette. To find out why, test them as your steady smoke. Smoke only Camels for thirty days. See how rich and flavorful they are -- pack after pack! See how mild CAMELS are -- week after week! R. J. Revolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C.