.4. ESTABSHE 1890 Cr Ar lod I mo 4all r t u ., ~mzoIc MEMBER SASSOCIATEDL. PRES . .. . ......... VOL. XLII. No. 127 SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICIIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1932 Weather: Mostly Cloudy. PRICE FIVE CENTS -- --. - -.. _ ., _.4.. _. _. I O L Ti ,,2° ' 7s + . ST RTS A. SPECIAL SERMON TOPICS TO MARK SERICES TODAY 11 Ann Arbor Churches to Commemorate Good Friday. BISHOP TO SPEAK Business Houses Will Close From Noon to 3 o'Clock. Good Friday, the day on which is commemorated the crucifixion and death of Christ, will be marked today by services in 11 Ann Arbor churches and by the closing of the stores from noon until 3 o'clock in line with the proclamation of Mayor 13 Wirt Newkirk. The 11 churches which will hold special services are: St. Andrew's Episcopal, First Methodist Episco- pal, St. Paul's Lutheran, Zion Luth- eran, Trinity Lutheran, Bethlehem Evangelical, Calvary Evangelical, First Presbyterian, St. Mary's stu- dent chapel and Church of Christ, Disciples, and St. Thomas Catholic. Dr. Page at St. Andrew's. The Rt. Rev. Herman Page, D.D., bishop of the Michigan diocese of the Protestant Episcopal church will conduct the three-hour Passion service at St. Andrew's Episcopal church. from 12 noon to 3 o'clock. Special anrrangenents have been made to have the choir boys pres- ent for this service. The Rev. Henry Lewis will assist Bishop Page.- At the First Methodist Episcopal church, Good Friday will be cele- brated in a three-hour service of adoration and a sermon from 12 noon to 3 o'clock. Stainer's "Cruci- fixion" will be given by the choir, with Arthur Hackett and Hervey Lyon as soloists. Dr. Frederick B. Fisher, the pas- tor, will preach on "The Modern Cross," a forecast of Christianity judged in the light of the ideals. the courage and the insight shown by Jesus at the time of his trial and crucifixion. Tre Ore Services at St. Thomas. The sermon at the Tre Ore serv- ice this afternoon at St. Thomas Catholic church will be given by the assistant pastor, Rev. John M Lynch. The special services will in- elude the solemn mass of the Pre- sanctified at 8 o'clock this morning and stations of the cross at 7:30 o'clock tonight. At the special serv- ices in the student's chapel this evening, Rev. Allen J. Babcock will deliver the sermon. The sacrament of the altar will be administered at services this evening in the Trinity Lutheran church, with the Rev. H. O. Yoder preaching on "The Redeemer Cru- cified." The two weeks of services at Calvary Evangelical church will conclude at 7:30 o'clock tonight when Rev. F. W. Kim preaches on "The Master's Sacrifice." "Joseph's Tomb" will be the ser- mon topic of Rev. E. C. Stellhorn, (Continued on Page 2) State Duletins THEY'LL LEAD SLIDE RULE DANCE FUNDS WERE TIED UP Jack L. Spencer, '32E, and Miss Antoinette Briggs, both of Orchard Park, N.Y., who will, lead the annual engineers' Slide Rule dance, which will be held in the Union April 1. Miss Briggs will come to Ann Arbor from Elmira, N.Y., where she is a stu dent in Elmira College. Insurgents Gain Control of House to Defeat Sales Tax, 223 to WASHINGTON, March 24.-(A)- tomorrow proposals f o r Seizing House control from party levies o n certain industri leaders, an overwhelming bi-parti- round out the bill so it ma ladfoers, ayovrcthelmingsbiarta enough revenue to balan san force today struck the sales tax budget in 1933. from the billion dollar revenue bill. Postpone Action on Beer It was the most spectacular re- This embraces parts oft volt in years. Flushed with the ministration pr o g r a m p confidence of four previous major earlier. Unable to proceed victories, the belligerent opponents because of the tumult in t of the sales tax swept the pro- governable House, the lea vision out by a teller vote of 223 both sides agreed to postp to 153. tion on an amendment to Loud cheers and applause from tax on beer of 2.75 per cer members and the crowded galleries holic content and forced reeted the decisive action, while journment of the branch ov i White House visitor reported protests. President Hoover was "quite dis- Despite the defeat, Speak )ppointed" at the outcome. ner said amendments to t Excise Levies to Come Next., the slack of about $565 Backed by Democratic and Re- would be offered by thec publican leaders, the 2.25 per cent tee until the bill had been levy on manufacturers sales formed ten on the floor and sent the base of the $1,096,000,000 tax Senate. bill and was expected to yield - --~_ _ $595,000,000. The ways and means enue legislation, has spent three CR0SS POINTS ionths in its formulation. Although gleeful in their stupen- Lous victory, leaders of the insur- ents declined to accept Acting E__ ^hairman Crisp's offer to resign aid turn complete control over to Says Many Were Put on them. A chorus of "No's" greeted Dole by Lloyd Geor ais proposal that he withdraw. The 3eorgia Democrat then announced Bad Bookkeeping. that the committee would submit ____--- Prof. Arthur Lyons Cross. George W .W e h sor of English history, dec GW. W ckersham a talk yesterday afternoon Will Lec ture March 30 England at the Crossroads "bad bookkeeping by Lloyd The final lecture on the series of" the Oratorical Association brings has put many persons ont George W. Wickersham, former at- in England." torney general of the United States, "The main reason Engla to Ann Arbor on March 30. attracted so much attention Better known as the chairman of she did not recover from th President Hoover's commission on of 1921," said Professor Cro law enforcement, Mr. Wickersham er the war, she found he] will speak on some phase of law pendent on the outside w enforcement, Henry Moser, man- 60 per cent of her food st ager of the series, said yesterday. 25 per cent of her raw in The lecture will conclude the The strike in 1926 put the 1931-32 program which presented back in her reconstructi during the winter such speakers as gram," he continued. Winston Churchill, Rafael Sabatini, "The reluctance of the John B. Kennedy, Bertrand Russell, princes to federate, the st Martin and Osa Johnson, and Sir the Hindus and the Mohar Hubert Wilkins. over the franchise, andC Mr. Wickersham will be intro- attitude of 'untouchables', duced by Dean Henry Bates, of the three great problems in I Law School. day," concluded Professor( 153 excise ries to ay yield nce the Tax. the ad- proposed further the un- ders on one ac- levy a ant alco- an ad- ,v<