v ESTABLISH ED 1922 mmrr air A :43 a tl9 ASSOCITATED PRESS DAY A- J) NIHT XiltRF SERVICE F VOL. XVII. No. 44 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN ; lNlDAY. AUGUTs' 8, 1926 PRICE rive EICNTS I - 4+-a f M EXPECT CHANGE IN MEXICAN LAW WITHNETLISTUE LEADERS SILENT ON ACTION B. OF C. IN THEIR (ONVENTI ON OF ARMY IN CONTROL Hope To Modify R~eligous Edicts By Bill Preparing Ini Interior Departmnt (By Associated Press) MEXICO CITY, Aug. 7.-The irn- passe in the struggle between the gov- ernment and the Catholic Church may possibly be solved through the enact- ment by the new Congress, which con- venes Sept. 1, of religious regulations less drastic thani those which went into effect a week ago-at least that is the hope held at present in some circles. Legislation on the religious subject is expected to be one of the first things takeni up. It may result in congres- sional I reaffirmation of President Calles' yegulations, in a contest be- tween the president and congress on the subject, or in the passage of milder regulations. Bill In Preparation Hope of congressional modification is based on an announcement by theI department of the interior that it is studying and preparing a draft law regulating Article 130 of the constitu- tion, which is the religious section. The department will submit this bill. In some quarters it is pointed out that if the Mexican Parliament de- manded modifications, Calles might gracefully yield, affording an agree- able solution. This is pure specula-1 tion, however, as the p~resident thusj far has not shown the slightest sign of yielding. Mexico entered the second week of the difficulty with each side wiaintain- ing its ground and with priests still absent from the Catholic churches. D~ecline to Comment Both govern ment officials and Cath- olic leaders thus far have declined to comment on the resolution adopted by the Knights of Columbus convention ,at Philadelphia, calling on the Ameri- can Government to raise the embargo on shipment of arms into Mexico. No Mexico City paper has published the, resolution, and the general public is! unaware of it. Reports from Zacapu, state of Can field Will Study In Paris Next Semester, Prof. Arthur G. Canfield, tormer head of the department of romance languages and literatures, sailed from New York yesterday on the steam- ship Republic. lie will spend the se- Smester's leave of absence granted him at the spring, meeting of the Board of Regents in study in Paris, aconiepanied by his wife and daugh- ter Ruth. Prof. Canfield will return to Alin Arbor in4 February as p~rofes- sor of Romance languages. Prof. Canfield has been head of his' department for 26 years, resigning this fspring to devote himself more ex- elusively to research and teaching. His successor will be Prof. Hugo P. Thieme. Cnil a ona udr Prof. Cnil a ona udr land, Vermont, in 1859 and received his A. B. degree from Williams college in 1878. He also took his master's at Willianms in 18S1 and did graduate I work at the universities at Leipzig, IGottingen, Berlin and the Sorbonne. Williams honoredi hinm in 1920 with the honorary degree of L. H. D. Prof. Canfield began his career as instructor in modern languages at the University of Kansas in 1883. In 1887 he became professor there, where he remained until 1900 when the late President James B . Angell offered him the head of the romance language Sdepartment here.! As an active member of the variousI modern language societies and as the# editor and author of several books in the field. Prof. ;Canfield is recognized as an authority. He is a member of the American D~ialect Society, the Modern Language Association of Aml,- eric, the Central section of wh'ich he was president in 1909, the Modern SHumanities Research Society, the So- ciete d'histoire literateur de la France, 1 . f I f I t t t t I i +! i i ( 4 I } I i i } r l i}ii 1 3 t 4 y Will One Succeed The Other? Make Pictures, PlyronOn Hospital Roof Angus M. Babcock, '26, has comn- pleted two weeks work in decorating the roof playground of the University hospital. This playground is the gift of the Ann Arbor Kiwanis club to the !hospital children and consists of a I see-saw, slide, sand-box, and other apparatus, together with benches and chairs, insta Jed at the west end of the huge hospital roof. It is intended to give a recreation place for those chil- dren who are not confin'ed to the wards, Babcock has been painting line large murals of scenes and subjects most likely to appeal to children. There is a Robinson Crusoe picture, aI panel of little Red Riding Hood andI a (most ferocious wolf, a knight with a plunging horse and a waving pennon, the old swimming hole on a busy day, Indians, cowboys, and several others. The painting has been done directly upon the rough brick walls that en- close the roof and the artist has utiliz- ed the colors of the brick in his back- grounds. This unusual treatment has been extraordinarily successful and A-has led to much comment around the ier ospital. It is Babcock's first attempt atpainting subjects of such size, al- though he has done numerous maga- -zinc and advertising illustrations. __. During the last two years of his col- I II i ii it i c LTILICATIOX NOTICE Publication of The Summet Michigan Daily will be disconi- tinuedl with the this issue. The Michigan Daily will resume pub- lication Sept. 28.I i i, The inext woventen1(iiu.Jawilec '-Iil it ni easly reverse the po, tioflsheld1 by tI(,in'W0sto s i h ret uget helr. At (he left is Mr. To onami, leader of he opposit jun inl ie .1 apantes( iit; lt atthe right, Prei Wakatsald. A shdit in ol(ptl would doub1tle-, punt the oppositi pat in i)p0we -r and mak' Vthe ~ ki lIeade r of 0the opposition. 71 N [+7d'~ WVI 1 C N-Id t r CI P"& Y-a T P -r A- ~ rn- . U W Iv the cais, was Societe des anciens testes Iran - and Phi Beta Kappa. In 1924 he president of the Federation of{ Modern Language Teachers. TA'NSLEY O SEA ON BRITISH FLORA, 11 inal Lecture Oil Summi ier lProgrramtTo He lDelivered By Authority Oil vegetaitloli IS ALSO PSYCHOLOGIST A. G. Tansley of Cambridge, itang, whose lecture scliedulej for last Mlon- day was postponed due to his inability tc; arrive here in time, will speak at 5i o'clock tomorrow in the Natural Sci- c nce auditorium. i.r ansley ini con- sideredl an authority in the study of Pritish vegetation and will probably }speak on that subject tomorrow, al- I'. 1 CIU JL( Y 1 ItJJLI ' S I (JIS Il ege career Babcock has been an editor PR F SSO It I H TE T R PLIE f the Inxlander, campus literary niaga- PROFSSO S WTH TST EPLES1zinc. His linoleum cutts have been used for the original covers of that Tests given ro" E ntIy to st udeiitts e - i)mid shta w a an e xmple of a philos- I publication throughout that period. rolled in three 5 r us ,il psychol, ax fophr whlo was sufficienitly familiar iHe is also a miember of Les Voyageurs. showed a w ide dfivri tyor replies itIs political science to carry out IThe classes in 'btginningpsycholog~y destltlairtdtietitofiatexecutive. Igntcpyl7) ,adpsctlf- l x' ue it .*;e d tes(IIheir ad- iE C V TIN SA T law were fthosa u A as subjects. r a t f ie r..id en tby replying3 X 9 9 I N S 9 T The first pt w lofHi e cst c' a , Ii (t i'qnet ion thatlhe was nmore ofqetosilraoi igfr ilt e ntIthan the conductor of a IF R O EBOLDN logial nswr-,,coud ke gvens. Yhe sni r(ltiJ vso] es {.pinion was di- FO T R UID N seconid halfIfas tatd e up of " s n this p)oint too, how ever, for mnents anti flit ci's for wh ich ilere Ii, st udent s maintained that it took Angelo Poulos To Erect Blocek Which wer~e no rea;l atisw t. s anid leOw t lsjIilit V anal fialoeiiito becomne Ipresi- lHe Has Planned For L1lwrty dent wais Fe pestf (d tofupp T(loc,-, entiian it took to lead a.symphony Sre reasons for the,,_ si at- ii eniis and qu(y,,, 'Estr :stee tions, either ,,;ssius w hemptoron s. j Some replies; showed k;een1[ peietsaflnip riirr O HAVE SEJVEN STORES io o th pa t i) l i h-t, A eiswere evidetnce (eithier' J caneless Excavation work in prepa rtion for thitnking or a ns7isuiid ttastiing of is j UET 1A R~T~I the erection of a $0,000 building on q1 iestioli. j UNITHREEIIL WEEKIS TOURIIthe lot otn East Liberty-st., b~~ween the GEEN FORMALLY D FO90GOERNOSHIP IVILL OPPOSE GROESBECKj IN'I i RACE FOR JIEPUBHC(AN NONATION ITITUS DRY LEADER (C01iisock And las.~ei hlae Clear Fileld On lDeiioratir Ticket (8),y Associaej TrsĀ±) LANSING, Aug. 7.-Filing peitions Iwith the department of stte *,), i' n 127,000 signatures, Mlayor Fred NV Green of Iotnia Friday qualified a; : candidate for the Republican nomni- tion tor governor. He will oppose Gov. Alex J. Groesbeck in a two-man race, The time limit for filing peti- tions expires next Tuesda, In view of the fact that no otet candidate has been circulating peti- tions so far as is known, it is cosidi- ered altogethetr improbable that any aspirant could obtain the more than 8,000 naties required and qualify in the short interventg time. o. Groesbeck filed some time ago. At least two other gubenatoria canii- dates will appear in the primary on other tickets, each unopposed. W. A. Comstock has qualified as the Demo- cratic candidat anfd F. E. Titus of Jackson will head the Prohibition ticket 8 The race for the lieutenant gover- norshiip nomination still is unsettled. Fred B. Wells, speaker of te house of' representatives, and Luren D, Dick- inson, former lieutenant governor, have qualified. Lieut. o. George Welsh has not yet field his petitions. Neither has former State Senator ineOscar Riopele of Detroit, who someC theago said he plannied to enter the contest, Ge'ritt Masselink of Pig Ra- ids is the unopposed candidate for the Detnocratic nomination. Pharmacists Will Honor Apothecary PHILADE'LPHlIA, Aug. 7 tA.P)- Brgaier General Hugh M\ercer, in 1whose apothecary shop at Fredericks- b~urg, Va., George Washington had his office in pre-revolutionary days, will be honored by pharmacists at a seies of conventions to be held here beginning Septembetr13. Steps will be taketn by the American Pharmaceutical Association to found a :Museunm of Historical Pharmacy in the new $1,000,000 National hleadquar- tens Building, -which all branches of pharmacy have united to erect in a city to be selectedl at the forthcoming sessIion. General Mercer, who (ied of wounds received at the battle of Princeton in January, 1777, will be extolled as a pa- tronm saint of American pharmacy, pio- neer devotee of science, and martyr to liberty. A pilgrimage will be made to his grave here, where a monument was erected by St. Andrews Society il 1840. SGeneral Mercer, native of Scotland, was graduated from the School of Medicine at the Iuiversity of Abe- deen in 1774. Student Picks Up Youth From River Forrest H-eath, '27. is rep~ortedi in iews d ispatchies as having rescued from the St. Clair river near~ Taslimoo Park William Pritchard, of Newark, Ohio. Pritchard, a steward's helper oh1 thme steamer Leonard S. Miller, complainied of hard wVork andi bad treatment aitd said lie had jumped 01:Z rather than contittue onl the voyage up the lake. iHe was rescued by Heath ins a motor launch with a party of Hine. Franklin _ uga ( .,co, '28, was Mt so inl the paty~. Art Exhibit Opens An exhibition of the work of the class in outdoor sketching will be open to the public in the West Gallery of Alumni ;Memorial Hall from 9 to 12 and from 1 to 5 through this week. 0 F i Michoacan, say that there have bees serious disorders between the popu lace and piolice and soldiers grow~ ing out of the religious situation. Th reports add that the troops arc'Y control of the situation, but that ther were several casualties during th combat. Neither the government no the local newspapers have any author itative details. Little news regarding conditions is other parts of the republic is hemn made available in ?Mexico City, bu apparently, with the exception of loca disturbances, the situation growin; out of the religious controvers seemingly is being calmly accepted b the niass of the people. tio End Ini Sight M Apparently there are no prospects o. a settlemrent at an early date. Tb f priests continue to absent themnselve from the churches, but the doors o many edifices are open 'for worship f pers to enter and meditate and pray. Business circles continue to take gloomy view of the situation, fearfu that the economic boycott institute by the National League for Defense o # Religious Freedom mnay assume mor serious proportions in the capital. SUJMMER. SCHOOL CREDIT COUPONS TO BE MfAILED) 16 Credit for all work done in the Summer session in the College Sof Literature, Science, and the Arts, in the School of Education and in the Graduate school will be recorded and the credit cou- 9 pons mailed in strict accordance with the blanks on file in the re- spective offices of those colleges. Students should make sure that the correct addresses are given on these cards and that a the courses are set down without error. V- )r ! ) ,") i :, I Difference of sopiniont v hsso x tittin replying to the squestion:tIf i'You were1 on the 15th floor of a 20-stor, bIild- ANN AR1, Q I, Miclt., 5Atg. (.-(A. 11.) 1 kovs o1 the Anin Arbor Y. Mi. C. A. Red Top the Starbi yesterday Cuthiberl architects, tractors o: ing anid were its a glenoa t iurryItio ,et'xvill l1.ea 's hre Mond~ay on a three flown, twoJ cleva tit's 51 eppesl for yeou !co s 's ica I iotial Itouilthat wiltotuch at the samte Itileo, onie eirt;,'s) xvsldoitn pin jt s of in tere'stin Ithe east. g ithe are tospek onsomthig eseand the other' empty, whmich f sit' tout' vilhe made by motor coach, eneg woutldl you I a k e ' Some tdss a: sii t ec> party to reach many Poulos, w .tas the final lecture otn the summer cshose the emjpty elesvalt or' becautse it places ttJs~fcslh- oteodnr building fI al program. would ibe more cotifortable, agid ni ig I t 'i m''nt ac cin iibl te, tothrina ryaes TeS g Mr. Tansley is in the cou nttry to at - ibe safer thatn a crowdsed one. (0t,110" Su tmfl ''Itic anti recreatiottalI points all seven stoe i ted theintera ialwBorkicafron- selected the crowded "lift" befauise it will !wisnci luded in the trilp's itimnerary. height. 1 y gress at Ihac, ew ork fom oud lie unlikely lo stop0)againtiĀ«10 l'he boy s will either canmp out at mnighit A bowlin IAugust 16 to 2 3. lieI is the editor ot' } take on passengers. or luuits i Y. N1. C. A. gymntasiums. located in ,tf foen~tJournal on tholo relaticnh iv-th Ignifranmce of physics on rbe part of : From s.1111 Arbor the boys will go to space ont of foremostjournal tudentrelwtionofemiv-s i' edby Akroin. 0., where they will visit the the seconc e mug organisms to their surroundings, soesuet a lno': .,the differenche ini answvers to ',)(,lie 155 'bsrpait hnte ilmv The bur s The speaker has not only achieved dis- tioni of whether heating a brick xvotu d ott ifo Pittsburgh to see the Westing- reinforced of tinction as a botanist and biologist muake it lightet, (Sr' would iven bl5~t o u tisse Elect ric co~mpanty and1( the H. J. a faced b p- but is also known for his work in the mofhtwaebelgtrteal ljlthedutrshr.Wsin-ctalh fil fpyhooy nacodn oequal amount oti(.cold. ton antd tUniontowni, Pa., will be stops stalled. aTDean Kraus of the Summer session, One qumestioninil part two,)xv i s:'"Wily ;otr the way to Frost burg, Mfd., where____- mL Mr. r amtsley's lectur'e siould be ex- 1d0 musicians andtos ots have 51s(ch long thle boys will go through the big coal ''-d ntretig hair?" There> were alntost a