THL MICHICAN DAILY ROYALTY IS CHEERED AS PARLIAMENT OPENS on liiluorunI Uli higan Lawyers' Association Directors to Make Plans for O rnizing Here. Plans for promoting the incor- poration of the Michigan bar as- soation will be formulated tomor- re when the board of directors of the state association meets in the Lawyer's club, according to PHof. E. Blythe Stason, secretary of the organisa.fin. for strengthening itsdiciplinary j~sction over the entire body of practising lawyers in. the state ftch an incorporation is essential, It was stated. At present only 25 to 30 per cent of the lawyers can be reached through the associa- tion. California, New Mexico, Utah, and Nevada have incorporatd bars at the present. The new plan is tie coming form of bar organiza- tihn, Professor Stason said. The board is made up of one member from each of the congres- stO1 i' distriicts in the state, besides the officers of the organization. Besides the incorporation discus- sion the group will appoint com- mittees, consider a budget and for- mulate plans for the coming year. The 'Alumnus' Features ,.. -Franklin Bush Mead, '06, is just as well known to anlateur hortcul- turists all over the country as- he is to insurance com uany executives. He is a frequent contributor to "House and Garden" and his place. Irisrest, at Fort Wayne, Indiana, is a mecca for gardenis who come tq admire his Irises, Daffodils, Peo- nies and other hardy plants. Incl-. dentally he is interested in etchings ~and Chinese ceramics. Since 1911 he has been with The Lincoln Na- tional Life Insurance Company, ris- ing from the position of Secretary andl Actuary to that of Executve Vice President. He was Founder and first President of The Life Of- fiee Management Association, a pio- neer in the,study of disability i- surance, and a frequent writer and speaker o4~ insurance subjects. --Brut Abel, '92D, early decided that climbing poles as a telephone_ lineman and trouble shooter would. notG take him high enqugh, so he changed his job. His lfe on a fa m near Battle Creek prompted him to. avoid agriculture-though today his: avocation is horticulture-so he turned to teaching, capitalizing on the two years of high school study he had earned by tending furnaces and by being a night telephone op- erator. After qix years in pedagogy he entered Michigan's Dental De- partment. Elk Rapids and Albion, in Michigan, were the scenes o his practice until 1905, when he turned to, Toledo - and orthodontia, his spdcia 1y today. Numerous impor- tarn'offices in dental societies have been given him in recognition of his leadership in the profession, among them the presidency in 1923 of the American Society of Ortho- dontists. -Ella Seass Stewart, '9, while at ' Ann Arbor kor her single6 year of study at the Univeryity (she had earned an A.B. at Eureka College in Illinois, where she later received an A.M. degree) was influonced. greatly'in listening to two wonder- ful women, Susan B. Anthony and Alice Freeman Palmer. Today she is known as a national leader in the campaign to defend prohibition, as the Manager of a Special Wo- man's Department in a Chicago bank and as a local and active Michigan al u m n a. Twenty-five years ago she Was recognized all over the country as an organizer and a campaigner in the National American Woman's Suffrage Asso- ciation and the W. C. T. U. Dramatists Will Use New Revolving Stage (Big Ten News Servicc) MADISON, Wis., Nov. 19.-A re- volving stage, enabling the rapid presentation of a series of expres- sionistic sets, will be used by a uni- versity little theatre for the first time when the Wisconsin Players,I University of Wisconsin dramatic group, opens with "The Adding Machine," this week. FOUNTAI NPB1E Parker, Sh. ffer, Waterm, Conklin, etc., $1.00 and up. A large and choice assori'ent epainaL L, 314 S. Sate Ste., Ann A r. EVEN DEPRESSION WILL NOT DRIVE A MAN TO CARRYING SANDWICH SIGN Local Workers Shrink From Job of Advertising Comedy Club Play. Undismayed at having an eco- nomic depression slip through its fingers, Comedy club has decided, "the show must go on." Presenting "The Streets of New York," dealing with the depres- sion of 1857, because of its appro- priateness to the alleged present depression, the club was consider- ably taken aback when the current depression in Ann Arbor was re- vealed to be nothing more than a myth, apparently a shadow of its former self. After placarding the town for a, week with the slogan, "Poverty is no crime," Comedy club is nowj forced to reveal facts which show that poverty is a crime. The ignominy of poverty is ap- parently such a crime that not one member of Ann Arbor's vast army, of unemployed can be hired to play! the role of sandwich man, carry- ing a sign on his back for 50 cents an hour to advertise the play, which opened last night at the Mendelssohn theatre. Last Monday Robert C. McDon- ald, '32, business manager of the show, called the Ann Arbor unem- ployment bureau and asked to be put in touch with a man, preferab- ly beyond middle age, who could be hired to work for three days carrying an advertising "sandwich" on his back. No results from the bureau have been forthcoming since, Anxious to obtain someone for the position, and with no Comedy club members volunteering to fill the breach, McDonald yesterday answered a want ad inserted in a local paper by a man who seem- ingyc desired work. This particu- lar soldier of the great army of un- employed declined the job when- told that the work would be for only ive hours each day. Besekirsky and Rhead Will Present Concert Wassily Beekirsky, professor of viclin, and 'Mabel Ross Rhead, asso- cite professor of piano in the mu- si school, will combine in a violin and piano sonata recital Sunday afternoon in Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. Hill auditorium had been originally scheduled but was impos- sible to obtain. The artists have achieved not only local, but national recognition for their work in the piano-violin field and gave a number of con- certs last year. Student Publications to Be Shown in Russiak Upon the receipt of a letter ask- ing all Michigan publcations to be sent to the All Nations Press ex- hibition in Tiflis, Georgia, Russia, The Daily, Gargoyle and Michigan- ensian will forward both old and new copies of their publications. The exhibition has been planned by "the Soviet government as a means of showing the historical de- velopment of the press of all na- tions. Michiganwas one of the few trmerican universities to receive he invitation. The Gargoyle has also been in- vited to send copies of its issues to the Cleveland Public library and the Association of National High School manuals. GopmrsWill Brin Hundred-Piece Band for Game Saturda (Spec l to The Daily) MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 19. - Alo: with the 2,000 rooters who will jou ney the 700 miles from Minneapo to witness the Homecoming gan between the Gophers and the Wc verines Saturday, will be the era 100-piece Maroon and Gold band. The M i n n e s o t a organizatic which has had daily rehearsals f the past six weeks on extensi drills, formations and marching d tails, has added the finishing touc es to its program, having prepar. a novel presentation for the se tators between the halves. Under the direction of Allen A bott, the new bandmaster, not on has an inclusive repertoire 1ec, developed, but also a Big Ten me ley, orchestrated by Gopher rAnu cians to fit the formations, will X offered. Last year, the Minnesota bar toured the South and received n< tion-wide attention. The dru majors of the outfit during the la few years have also been looked ul on as among the nation's best. Paintingz the Town Is Costl fr Stud e$ (Bey To nXews Servicc) MADISON, Wis. - cTwomember of. Cardinal Key, interfraternity s ciety at the University of Wiscor sin, whose job is to "paint tl town" and to do it literally eve homeco-ming, were caught in tl act of whitewashing "Buck t Buckeyes" on the brick fenoec Prof. William H. Kiekhofer. Vl fence, which has been painted ever year, must be repainted in its vi gin red to the satisfaction of ti owner, by the two miscreants, they are to escape a $25 fine in posed at the local bar of justice. Assocamedrress Pnoto Thousands lined the streets of London to cheer King George and Queen Mary as their elaborate car- riage was driven from Buckingham Palace to Westminster for the opening of parliament. England forgot' its economic woes for the moment as pomp and pageantry held sway. ILLI OIS CONTISTS University Lawyer Contends Scientific Instruments Are Not Taxable. (Big Ten News Service) URBANA, Ill., Nov. 19.-Prof. Sveinbjorn Johnson of the College of Law of the University of Illi- nois, legal counsel, recently filed a brief in the United States court of customs appeals which may, mean an annual savings of $100,000 to state institutions throughout tle country.-+ The University is contesting the right of the national government to levy and collect taxes on scien- tific instruments for use exclusive- ly for educational purposes by a state-supported institution. In a decision in June, 1929, the United States customs court held that the University was a proprie- tary institution, not a state agent, and could therefore be assessed for the tax. RICHARD NA YSMIHIT SPEAKS BEFORE, MICHIGAN SOCIALIST ORGANIZATION Defense of Capitalism Called eDefense of Brutality.' "Defense of capitalism is defense of brutality beyond description. The story of child labor in the wool and cotton mills of England is one of tie tragedies of history." These opinions were brought be- fore the Michigan Socialist club Wednesday night by Richard Nay- smith, co-worker of Ramsey Mac- Donald and Philip Snowden in the early days of the English labor par- ty, in a talk, "The Growth and Present Position of the British La- bor Party." Naysmith has been in America for 10 years anc is at the present time located in Detroit. He was one of the survivers of the de- funct Socialist party of Michigan. "Labor unions originated in Scot- land a good many years ago. The labor party first was established in Parliament in 1900, with 15 seats, and from that time has increased at every election until the last, when it lost a few seats. This de- feat will do the party good, and will wake the members up," said Naysmith. "The British worker expects the Prof. government to see that he has work to if he supports the government. 1 Unlike America, Britain is at all ( Prof. times faced with unemployment. nomics The Labor party attempts to alle- the seco viate this, and has in a measure the Cos, succeeded. Like all Socialists, they tomorro favor free trade. It is the only fessor R labor movement that is not protec- the rela tionist. ter natioi "Capitalism has served its pur- In cor pose, but it is unsound basically," the Chi, Naysmith concluded. sent on iL. Remer to Speak Cosmopolitan Club C. F. Remer of the eco- department, will speak at nd of a series of lectures of mopolitan club at 8 o'clock w night in Lane Hall. Pro- Remer's talk will center on tionship of economics to in- )nal problems. S punctionwith'this meeting nese Student Club will pre- e scene of play. 1111 ; UPERIOR e / "" A r /l li r , AFTER THE DANCE MILK and ICE CRE~A for Tctsted Sandwiches Fountain Specialties BETSY ROSS SHOP 13-15 Nickels Arcade Special 2-Layer Brick Vanilla-Cream Pumpkin PUNCHES-FANCY MOLD5 0 Phone 2Z3181 We Deliver Dial 5931 The Haunted Tavern II . I r., Tea Room and Gift Shop. Special Football Luncheon and Dinner Saturday. MAKE EARLY RESERVATIONS FOR OUR THANKSGIVING DINNER. 417 East Huron Street Phone 7781 UNI Orato AN onday November 23 ric1 NUAL LECTURE SE Opening Attraction November 23 VERSITY OF MICHIGAN _ _ __ _ _ . t 'IES Monday November 23 Honey Brand Smoked Hams...... (Whole or half) Creamed Cottage Cheese ......... ild Cured Bacon .............. . (Slab or piece) Red, White and Blue Brand Coffee. ... 17c Rafael Sabatini ... 12c .19c ...31c _ _--- __ .- y Plenty of Home Dressed Ducks and Chickens, for Turkey, Geese, Thanksgiving. Author of Place Your Order Early. "Captain Blood" "The Snare" Lecture Subject "Fiction In History and History In Fiction" gEshelbach Market "Sea Hawk" 202 East Huron Phone 4159 r- I d SPAT SEASON IS SAND IKILLINS GRAVEL COMPANY Telephone 7112 HERE $125 Monday November 23 OT Winstc F. Geor Chair Marti America B "HEM NUMIBERS Dn Spencer Churchill amous British Statesman ge W. Wickersham man, Wickersham Committce in and Osa Johnson a's best-know African explorers ertrand Russell Philosopher and essayist Monday November._3 to $500 'II k ,.a v gr -ismIA aI a fair II