WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1930 T H MICHIGAN DAILY PAGt THREE r FOR POSTAL LIQUOR STATUT~J' flULWUI SAVE EIGHTY-SEVEN IN COALMN FREp Two Perish When Flames Sweep Shafts of Warner's Wolf Run. FEAR DOOM OF TUNNEL, Fre Departnent's Heroic Work Checks Blaze After I !_ 3 i a ii t ( i 3 DR. FREDERICK COOK LEAVES LEAVEN AFTER SERVING FIVE YEAR TERM WORTH PRISON {51 VADI DOCTOR DEFENDS J IBFOR POSTALSFRAUDS ORUUMS ADELIQUORTSTSATIUT Lg UWDRK\L rty ;N " ."5,aC,;:,:.: :iirin :" '; : BUS e S [go M,, 9RTIiR Dean C. E. Griffin Will be First Speaker at Series of Eight Weekly Meetings. ALUMNI TO BE SUBJECT Campus Advertising company Five Hours.I (By Associated Press) STEUBENVILLE, Ohio, March 11.-Cheated of'all but two victims among the 89 men trapped in the sioke-filled tunnels, flames lappedI stubbornly away today in the depths of the Wolf Run mine ofj the Warner collieries near Amster- dam 25 miles from here. Sparks from the electric trolley pole of a train started a conflagra- tion which for hours threatened a major nine disaster, but heroic rescue squads, picking their way through tongues of flames spring- ing from timbers and coal, brought every man but two safely to the surface. Fumes are Fatal. Paul Borkowski, 65, died soon af- tei' he was brought out. He suf- fered from asthma and could not survive the choking coal fumes he, had breathed. The body of Jack Pewoswski, 37, was found beside a door of one. of the mine rooms. Another miner, George Allman, was severely burned on the feet, legs and hips while dashing across a barrier of fire. Two rescuers, Sidney Wales and Arnold Horton, inspectors of the mine, collapsed fromexhaustion after tramping * for miles to search for workmen. Many -Overcome. The 87 others cut off by the blaze were brought out unharmed, al-, though 70 of them owed their lives to the desperate work of the Steu- bnville fire department and mine rescue squads. About a dozen of them were unconscious from the ' intense heat and. smoke when car- ried to the surface, but most of them were able to walk to their nearby homes after they had been reviv'ed. Company officials an- Aounced at midnight that every man had been accounted for. The fire broke out about 4,000 feet back from the main entrance , shaft Monday afternoon and to e-I phone co munication to the mines were destroyed. Department Makes Fast Run. The Steubenville fire department, made a 25-mile run and began pumping water just in time to save the weakened timbers from allow- ing dirt and shale to slide in and block the trapped men. About 70! men were threatened, the rest hav- ing been able to escape or were brought out before the flameg could cut them off. For a time it seemed that theI fire would be the victor, but five hours later it was checked suffi- ciently that rescuers, wearing gas masks, crept through and brought out 70 men, exhausted and gasping for air. The rescue was made barely in time, for less than three hours lat- er the flames again gained head- way nd Fire Chief Edward Green of Steubenville said he feared it would be impossible to save the mine from destruction. Shifts of firemen were kept at their post until night. Kenneth Stuart, '30B.Ad., presi- <.. dent of the Business Administra- tion club, announced yesterday' i ", :' fh= that the club will hold a series of eight weekly forums .under the? leadership of various faculty mem- bers, beginning on March 20. The I I ngeetings, which will open at 7:301 o'clock and last an hour. are open( to all students. Dean C. E. Griffin, of the busi-j ness administration school, will be the speaker at the first forum. Hej will talk on the "Alumni of the School," outlining what good their fifth year spent in the business school has done them, what pro-i fession they are in, and what theirI comparative speed of promotion is. " .*. :.:.;.. iy ::... ....v:::$ ,.:},:.#-rr . ::<=: .:}.:: t :s.: " The , speakers for the rem ainingI .,meetings, who have not yet an- :,.f.. . . ..."7. . .nounced their topics, are Profes- .::"}:.?:.7 ::::.:;., . . . r.:,;,.. f,,sors Rodkey, Gault, Paton, Fisher, Jamieson, and Blackett. His sentence of five years in the federal penitentiary at Leavonworth, Kansas, at an end, Dr. Frederick "One of the Objects of these fo- A. Cook, erstwhile arctic explorer and noted figure, smiles as he leaves the prison gates. Cook, standing be- rums is to show students interested tween two women, as pictured abyve, is telling the newspaper men about his plans for the future. Dr. Cook in business administration what created a furor in the scientific world when in 1908, he claimed to have discovered the north pole, previous the different fields offer," stated to the epoch making trip of Comnmodore Peary. He was sent to the penitentiary five years ago for using Stuart. "Each professor will speak the mails to defraud, and serving Iour.teen months in p rison while awaiting an appeal on his case previous to jon his particular field. They will his permanent assignment to Leavenwor-th. talk about the field from the stu- _..f-..... ..":. : r_---"---- - dents' viewpoint, what opportuni- h i ties it offers him and what his ~1JOAI '.,iiuii Uri 10CIIIII chances of getting a job in it are iRDsentnceofive earsinthefederalafter he graduates from college.1 -is Shown 'by Survey UILThe talks will last half an hour, fand will be followed by discus- ypenCi eniary at oKa s s asions," concluded Stuart.s INeated M aCfuronhsetTn ich a o eisHoLdto leei The different fields of the speak- In the old days at the Univer- eSare banking, investment, ac- Hastings Exhibits New Pictures sity, students didn't have such a Entertainment to be Provided counting, real estite, marketing of Wild Life to Eastern difficult time choosing .their courses Afte Regular Meeting and statistics.h Audubon Society. for a semester's work. Only a few Tomorrow Night. Rev. BraggWill Talk more than a dozen courses were of Aet rurhanelf e r unday TAKEN AT ISLE ROYALE fered and the matter of choice was Aetn, whe wlaurlac igat 8ees oftesneirll x Ingly b uvsimple. Today, how-T elkwstUnlfeanr"our, Walter E. Hastings custodin of raat once easier and more o'clock in the Women's League be discussed by Rev. Raymond B. birds' eggs and honorary men1ber difficult. The University now offers building, members of the Studio Bragg Sunday morning at the Uni- of the University of Museums staff, about 2,000 courses in 12 major club will put aside matters of so- tarian church, He will remain for Hating rEtrn fmBsoNewPctuoro fields and the students faced with Eetbusiness to indulge in an eve- the Sunday evening service of the wfil retiur fston toernorrof the ttproble oo f "W h wil Itake?" ning of social activity, it was an- be l satsent noclockhin the Massachusetts Audubon society there to take?"rnun.Ol fsT ryy. -Reh BraryW llllk where he appeared on a special This growthinathe branches of tnfnte,'hA cmirea of the soent- Aeicaa Youthve ment,?"a higher learning hias kept pace with onfent chairma of the entr a u o the sect,?"H moion icsur progam. Hstindgs the steady growth of the Unhver- There will be bride for those ReverendBragg is now secretary WhoterE. reid sinSthuLyosandofsity as one of An erica's greatest who care to play and music and of the Wesern Unitarian confer- unofficially connected with the TState colleges. According to fig- refreshments. ence with headquarters in Chicago, Museum here, is a member of the ures released by Wilfred B. Shawi The sketch class of the Studio and was formerly minister of the state Board of Conservation at Director of Alumni relations, seven club will hold its rdegular meeting at Unitarian church in Evanston, Ill. Lasiretnstudents entered the University in|8:30 o'clock tonght, in the fourth He is a graduate of the University Lheso. p e wthe fall of 1841, to face a faculty floor studio of the architectural of Chicago and Meadville Theolog- motion program.wHiniwrre composed of exactly two members. uilding. !eical Seminary. to Carry on Sales Campaigns for Retail Stores. Increasing the sales of local mier- chants will be the purpose of the Campus Advertising Agency, whose Michigan branch was established this week in the Michigan Theatre Building. The local organization is associ- ated with more than 20 similar 'agencies in the more important college towns of the country. Aid- ed by the accumulated experience of years of work in this field, the Michigan branch considers itself well qualified to supervise the sales campaigns of Ann Arbor re- tailers. The agency will not accept ad- vertising from any firm until it has conducted a thorough investi- gation of the merchant's individ- ual problems. After an analysis has been made, the type of adver- tising which will have the greatest appealĀ° will be outlined. I The agency is said to offer re- markable opportunities for stu- dents interested in publicity, coim- mercialnart,and advertising. AssociWed Press Photo 1 Dr. Daniel A. Poling, Prominent New Yorker, who Was among the witnesses defending the Eighteenth Amendment before the recent hearing of the house judi- ciary committee in Washington. W E wish to thank our many friends for the kind reception accorded us in our new specialty food shop. Get in your suggestion for a name for our new store. $25.00 PRIZE to the Winner The place where you can get REAL: Spanish Tamales Chicken Tamales Spaghetti with 'Chili Strawberry Nut Waffles Clayton's Super Hamburger WE NEVER CLOSE .C CLAYTON 6111 East William shown at the Massachusetts meet-! ing included most of the new filmsj recently taken by the Micbhgan man concerning bird life and bird habits. This is the second time that the eastern organization has called upon Hastings for his pic- tures which are considered among1 the best of their kind in the coun- try. A majority of the filmy included{ in the exhibit were taken this sum-i mer at Isle Royale, Lake Superior, where the University Museum's staff spent several months in re- search along every branch of sci- entific inquiry. e Last fall, just 88 years later, the last student's registration brought the total to 11,555, which is an in- crease of'over 1650 times its orig- inal number. By including the Ex- tension division and the Summer session the enrollment would be nearly 14,000. Up and down climbs, rather than diagonal walks, were the fashion in the early days. The stairways in the one building on campus,*! Mason hall, led to classrooms, ex- ecutive offices, living quarters for students, library and chapel. At- tendance at latter services was compulsory. ..in the market it's VISION,/ s soft VRI.PrEN ! News From Other Colleges LIBRARY PROBLEM ACUTE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON -An attempt is being m de here to bring about a crisis in the mulch discussed , library question. The Strouble started several weeks ago when the main library was ordered closed on Sunday by the Dean. Hopes are running high here this morning following a decision by an underclassman's activity group to circulate petitions anong the stu- dent body asking that the library be opened on Sunday afternoons. STUDENTS HAVE SPECIAL SHOW dORNELL UNIVERSITY- Good behavior is demanded by one of the * theatres near the Cornell campus for all performances other than the second shown on Saturday night when all in attendance may mis- 4 behave arld "act collegiate." ORIENTAL CLUB FORMED PRINCETON UNIVERSITY - An Oriental Club has been organized here by members of the faculty and student body who are interested in phases of the oriental field. STUDENTS INSPECT PAPERS OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY- DRUGt 207' South Main STORES 723 N. University 217 North Main ThursdayFriday and 1.25 Moone 's Emerald Oil ........ .50 Bru-Aspirin Comp, for Colds- .25 Palmolive Rambler Rose Talcum .50 Dew Crystal Pure Deodorant . . 1.20 Father John's Medicine'.....' 1.00 Frostilla ... x .. . }e e. . .4... . .65 Glycothymoline a . ..... . .98 A39 .17 .39 .98 .89 .43 *'' ! 3 i n a ciga rette *Its STE MAN MAY SAY TOO MUCH, even on the best of subjects." We pride ourselves on Chesterfield's quality, and its blend and cross- blend, the standard Chesterfield method. But what counts is not what we say, but what you taste! And on that subject, Chesterfields speak for themselves TASTE 'above eryt/?/2MILD and yctl SATISFY I I