RS TO HOLD ANNUAL.CONFERENCE LICK SPRINGS, INDIANA, NEXT MONTH HABR WINTER SEEN BY LABOR LEftDER .. . i i .= Today's Radio Pr (Eatern Standard Time) V~ Class a in -EIVED yester- President of A.F. of L. Advises Dividing Available Work Among Laborers., WASHINGTON, May 28.-(1P)- President William Green of the American Federation of Labor sees indications of a hard winter ahead. He believes its effects could be min- I imized by adoption of a four-point remedial program. Asserting that a less than nor- mal increase in spring employ- ment this year forecasts a worse winter than last, unless immediate steps are taken, he proposed Wed- nesday night that employers guar- antee continued work to as many men as possible. "A guarantee of employment to' even a portion of the country's work forces would help business revival enormously and bring relief from anxiety to thousands of work- ers' families," Green said. Compared with spring improve- ment in properous years, he said, "this year's employment gains have been small indeed." He estimated that of 6,300,000 out of jobs in Jan- uary less than 1,500,000 had found work. th,J ies Ruth Lyon, soprano; L il l ian Knowles,Lcontralto; William Miller, Chauncey Parsons, tenors; Arch Bailey, baritone; Leslie Arnold, basso; and an orchestra under the directiln of Josef Koestner will be heard over the National Broadcast- ing chain at 8:30 o'clock. In the premiere of a new series of Pond's dance programs Leo Reis- man and his orchestra will present some of their best harmony over Stations WGY, WRC, and WENR at' 8:30 o'clock. "You Said It," "Sweet and Hot," "Mama Inez," "Egyptian Ella," "Bolero," and "Out of No- where" will be a few of the num- beis which will be played. The popular "Zwei Herzen in I tions WABC, WOKO, and W Takt," "Listen to the Mocking 5:30 o'clock. "The Desert Sor Bird," "Sweet Marie," and "Aloha be sung by the tenor, while;1 Oe" will be the numbers on the' Rich's orchestra will play Boscul Moments program featuring, Don't Know What You're Mme. Alda, soprano, and Frank La-I "Say a Little Prayer for M Forge, pianist, coming over Sta- "You Bet Your Life It's Love tions WLW and WBAL at 6:15 ry von Zell will act as the : o'clock tonight. announcer. Tonight's list of dane supersedes that of any this week with Paul and Fletcher Henderso tras heading the list c good bands. Harry Res tra, Nat Brusiloff, Euge dy, Vincent Lopez, Ge Felix Ferdinando and are some of the othe which may be heard. are Larry Funks', He and Dave Abrams' orcl2 s mainly be-' applications om students z school, ac- L. A supple- ing required vc freshman work of his Columbia Broad tonight is inaugur late dance progi WelchdandeDave A honors in the pr orchestra comes of night and Dave A play at 12:30 o'clo station. day, in- resident itains a nVr aid l r G' Associated Press Photo Some of the governor s who will take leading parts in the annual governors' conference Lick, Ind., June 1, 2, and 3, are shown here. Above, left to right: Harry G. Leslie, of Indiana; Brucker, of Michigan; Gifford Pinchot,,of Pennsylvania. Below: Franklin D. Roosevelt (left), of Harry H. Woodring, of Kansas. at French Wilbur M. New York; r. am pro- eriod on Monday, years, in ents may' nd rooms fore they visors. A AS TRAIN Score Hurt as E Leaves Track Whirlw mpire Builder'1 in Freak ind. New Texas Strikes Make Eastern Pa rt of State 'Oi1 Poor' na-i h A. FARGO, N. D., May 28. - (AP) - room Dashing along at a 50-mile-an-hour ative . be in clip, the crack Great Northern Em- )nday pire Builder, coast train de luxe, ation eastbound from Seattle to Chicago, a re- was picked up like a toy from its' buses. tracks and wrecked by a tornadoa eight miles southeast of here late Wge ednesday. One life was lost, more rthe than a score injured, one probably ts fatally, and scores of passengers. tsshaken up by the freak accident. The death resulted when Andrew Anderson of Monlesano, Wash., was, hurled from the train through a and window and ground to death be- neath the wheels of the following coach. Mrs. Emily Hannan, Seattle, received a broken 'back and was said by physicians today to have a slight chance for recovery. SMrs. N. Troll, Minot, N. D., also was said to be in a serious condi- tion at a Fargo hospital where many of the injured were taken., An infant daughter of Mrs. Hilda mbly Qualley, Winchester, Wash., who also was injured, received a serious- ly bruised head. The train had crossed the North -The Dakota-Minnesota line and was yter- nearing Sabin, Minn., with Engi- vegan neer B. E. McKee of St. Paul at f the1 the throttle. Without warning, as oving if handled in a cradle, the entire eport 12-coach train was lifted from the tance tracks, moved east from the road- er of bed, and deposited with a thud on the prairie, leaving only the engine from and tender on the tracks. ounfl i; LONGVIEW, Tex., May 28.-( P)- Texas has had 36 years of oil field experiences, but the east Texas, strike has. taken its place as unique' among them all. East Texas is oil poor. The Spindletop in 1901 and other rich discoveries came with no such overproduction as now exists to weigh down the market. The new strike was made in the midst of precarious days for the oil in- dustry, with prices at rock bottom. Naturally there was a great in- flux of unemployed, bringing the permanent residents' serious prob- lems of caring for down-and-outers. After six months of drilling the production area had not been defi- nitely determined, and the Texas railroad commission was forced to do considerable guessing in an effort to fix the potential. In the days of the Spindletop ac- tivity near Beaumont in 1901, the Ranger find in west Texas in 1917 and Burkburnett and Desdemona in 1919 and 1920, oil was worth much more, there was no necessity for proration and its attendant slack- ening of activities.I EDWARDOS TO LEAD MEMOHRILPRD Newkirk to Give Principal Talk at Court House to All Military Units. Major Basil D. Edwards, com- manding officer of the University R.O.T.C. will act as grand marshall of the Decoration Day parade. The parade will form at 10 o'clock Saturday morning at the Engineer- ing Arch. Major Edwards and a staff consisting of Captains Arthur B. Custis and Robert H. Lord, Lieu- tenant Richard H. Coursey, Russel J. Darling, '31, and Oscar T. Perkin- son, '31E, and a representative of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars, will head the pro- cession on horseback. Directly behind Major Edwards will march the first division, com- manded by Captain C. A. Powell. This group will be composed of the R.O.T.C. arid band, and-the Nation- al Guard. The second division led by Leo Burns, commander of the Ann Arbor American Legion, and general chairman, will follow the first. It will consist of the G.A.R., Spanish-American war veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Ameri- can Legion, and Ladies Auxiliaries, and the high school band. The parade is to march to the court house where Mayor H. Wirt, Newkirk will be the p:incipal speak- er. Two Men Fined Finding them guilty of disorderly conduct, Judge Bert E. Fry fined Lela McClinton and Steve Arnole, both of 308 Detroit avenue, $15 andi costs apiece. As a further remedy he reiter- ated a request that "some thought- less employers" discontinue "snip- ing at wage standards." A pay- cutting policy, he contended, en- genders a fear for the future that leads men to buy mly necessities. All available work, he said, should be divided pro rata among employes since each man has a "moral claim" to at. least a share. He also suggested that as the relief question "next winter bids fair to be worse than last," immediate plans should be made by the proper agencies. "Unless industry, labor and our governments face this problem now," Green said, "next winter's, suffering may be worse than last." Youth Gives up Navy Caeer to Go to Sea KANSAS CITY, Kan., May 2.- ( P)-Edward F. Railsback, 23, is quitting the Navy so he will have a chance to go to sea. A longing for the life of a sailor sent the young man to the navall academy at Annapolis where he found he would graduate into a land job. Naval reduction, he wrote his father here, makes it possible for some 35 members of this year's graduating class to resign. Rails- back said he would resign and ac- cept a sea going job with a com- mercial shipping company. Edwin Turner Initiated Into Honorary Society Edwin T. Turner, '33, was initiat- ed into Sphinx at their initiation last Tuesday instead of Noel D. Turner as announced in Wednes- day's Daily. Turner made the re- sponse for the initiates at the -ban- quet Tuesday night. DRIVEWAY PEBBLES KILLINS GRAVEL COMPANY Telephone 7112 Annette Hanshaw, featured star1 on the Van Huesen program will sing three songs n t o the micro- :..' shone in the broad- past tonight over * Stations W XY Z, WEAN, and WABC at 9 o'clock. Her numbers will be "Underneath Your Window ''onight," Say a Little Pray- er for Me,' and ...,.. ~ I've Got a Sweet A. Hanshaw Somebody to Love Me." The orchestra under the baton of Eugene Ormandy will play a pro- gram of current popular tunes, treated in special symphonic man- ner. Larry Murphy, tenor, will sing the vocal choruses. Theo Karle will appear in the afternoon program of Roy Atwell's Tide Water Inn coming over sta- igenette, Cavaliers - quartet - WXYZ, The track and field events of the fifty - fifth annual- Intercollegiate A.A.A.A championships at Franklin field, Philadelphia, will be described by Ted Husing from there over a nalion-wide network of stations in- cluding WABC, WXYZ, and WOR. The broadcast will last from 2 to 4 o'clock in the afternoon. 7:15-[ 8:00-Billy Joneesand Ernie Hiar-WJR, WREN, KDKA Cliquot Club, Harry Reser's orhestra- WWJ, WGY, WRC 8:30--LeoRneisman and his orclestra-WGY, WENR, WPCO R~uth Lyon, Joseph Koestner - WJR, WLW, KYW 9:00-L-ois8ennett, Don Voorhees - WJR, WREN,.KK RA Annette Hanshaw, Eugene Ormandy- wxYZ, WEAN, WABC 9:30-The March of Time-WXYfZ, WFOL R.K.O. TheareoftheAir-WWJ, WGY, WTAM 10:0-Fetcher Henderson and his orchestra- WABC, WLBW, WBCM 10:30-Vincent topez and his orchestra - WWJ, WTAM George Olsen and his orchestra - WLBW, WBCM 11:-Paul Whteman and his orchestra - WGY, WR", WEAF oan his orchestra - his orchestra-WGAF his orchestra-WEAI and his orchestra - 5:30--Roy A- WABC, 6 :00--Kat~e WGR, Mme., 6':35-Final1 7 :00-L.ou t Water Inn--WEAN, Ter Swanee Music-- 11:30-1 12:0--Re 12:30- 1:00-1 Da State May Force Cut in Conservatron Menj L A N S I N G, May 28.-(/P)-The state conservation department may be forced to reduce substantially its personnel because of a lack of funds for the coming biennium, according to George Hogarth, di- rector., K^Vf BLit TRAVE L BUREAU A 0 P-F 4IIimmuko -. NN~i~k~~imim We Make Our Last Day- Dollar Day We close the doors Friday night, 10 forever P. M. n General Aset es Birth Control -Its Program. A. Army Fliers Stationed at Long Island Fields NEW YORK, May 28.-(P)--More than 1,400 army flyers, temporarily stationed at five Long island flying field" during the defense maneu- vers, remained on the ground to- day while 650 airplanes were be- ing overhauled and inspected for the flight to Washington via Phila- delphia Friday FII' Ma s tic 2:00-3:40-7:00-9:00 LAST TIMES TODAY III A Pew of Our Many Specials as a I- I I vorce and remar- day executive ses- ' with a decision to .ts report that sec- roval of birth con- ced because of eco- or because of ma- The Player's League Presents controversy the assembly election of a the selection ur Mud:e of "This and That" A Brilliant Musical and Dance Revue Everything new, novel and interesting-ably presented by a huge cast. WhitneyTh. no otner candidates nave ntioned. Dr. Mudge is now lerk of the church and its communicant members. He is slated for re-election to t, that of chief executive f the church. A sermon by ring moderator, Dr. Hugh 1Kerr of Pittsburgh, elec- he new moderator, and or- >n of assembly committees e assembly docket for to- RIGHT SPOT ' 802 PACKARD ST. ~n rI .t? .-4 ' .fl t = . l,. f. T. r. ".M . t ,d .,- - - , 5 2 pr. Ladies' Full Fashion Hose. Up to $2.00 '10 values........... C o r s e t s, Corselettes, Girdles, values up to 01*0 $6.00 go at ...... Ladies' Scarfs, values up to for . Ladies' Wash Dresses -- $1.00 values ,go at 2 for " 1PL't Crepe de Chine Underwear, values up to $4.00, go at...... Ladies' B 1 ou s e s up to $3.00 values, $1.0 go at .... ..$ . Velvet Ribbon, values up to $2.00 yard., go at 3 yards for....:. . .0 French Kid Gloves 1a go at, pair...... 1.00 25 pieces of notions, values up to 20c apiece, 1 00 go at 25 for..... The Bankrupt Stock of the Lyndon Shop - 606 East Liberty Street o p p o sit e June 2nd, 1 93 1 Another Hit for the Girl whose 'Sabra' Won the Heart of the World-and F Scale of Prices: $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 Mail Orders received now. Address Box Office, Whitney Theatre. - ~ - - ~ ~ - -- - - ~ - ~ ~ - this Time It's Laugh - Packed Farce. (9 r NOW . ° 2:00-3:40 7:00-9:00 SHOWING SLIM SUMMERVILLE AND HARRY LANGDON Gay . . . Silken! . . . Hilarious! . . Romance with a Walloping New Kick IRENE DUNNE with; the ever popular CHARLES FARRELL and his new leading lady, the gorgeous continental star E L ISS5A L AN D I - Directed by Alfred Santel ADDEDn Johnny Burke in. 30c to 7 A. UAlG , AI