THE MICHIGAN DAILY 9) URPDAY,I Break Up Wisconsin Milk Strike With Military Tactics CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place ndvertisements with Ciassified Aidvrtising De'partm ent. Phone 1'1.Z14. "C['l' a~siified eluimu cioe at three O'ClOci.( previous to day of insertion. Box numbers lay be secured at no .'xtra charge. Gsh in aidvanice--1!c per reading line (on ba is of ive average words to lie o one'r two nsrios ',iuiin11: 3 lrnes per inse;rtio n. e pe'r reaing ne for three or more tI elephau~nt'r e-1 " per reading tlne fornO or two ln'eri ons. l(, per reading ine for three or more insertiuns. 10 discount If pa i withn ten days from t he atte of last ins rtln. Mijilnun itree lines Pr itsertion. By contract, per ne-2 lines daily, one nt!h. .... .... ..................8c 4 lIes E. 0. D., 2 mont us.........8c 2 ines daily, colleg^e year........... 7c) 4 lines C. 0. !"., college year........ 7 100 iines used as desired............9c 3[;Jines ,used as cdesiredl...........Sc 1,01)00liiwe; sed as desirod ......... 2,000 lines used as desired........6c Tie above rat.es ore per realing line. lsad e night re din lines per inch. Ionic typc, uppcr an(i ower case, A d 6c per line to above rates tor all capital h;etiers. Add 6c per line to kilove for ,old face, upper and lower cse. Add h0c per like to above rates for bold face capital letters. The above rates are for 7' point type. WANTED WANTED TO BUY MEN'S OLD AND NEW SUITS AND OVER- COATS. Will pay 3, 4, 5, to '3, 9 dollars. Phone Ann Arbor, 4306. Chicago Buyer. 34c HELP WANTED HELP WANTED MALE-College stu- dents, four for 15 weeks this sum- mer. Must be healthy, neat, and willing to work hard. See Mr. Nell, 123 N. Thayer, Saturday afternoon only. 440 LAUNDRIES TYPING -Associated Press Photo Bayonets flashed and tear gas bombs exploded as deputized Nat-- Guardsmen resorted to military tactics in efforts to break up crowds of pickets in Wisconsin's milk strike. The picture shows a tear gas barrage laid down as deputies stopped pickets from seizing milk trucks ncir Shawano. TYPING-Notes, Papers, and Grad. theses. Clyde Heckart, 3423. 35x TYPEWRITING--And Mimeograph- ing promptly and neatly done in our shop by experienced operators, at moderate rates, 0. D. Morrill. The Typewriter & Stationery S(ore, 314 S. State St. 101x BICYCLES RIDE A BIKE- -Phone 6553, Russel Reed, Camden Court, opposite Women's Athletic Building. box FOR RENT FOR RENT-Attractive, cool, sinIL rooms for summer. Shower baths. I Shall also have a French table fog those interested in s p e a k i n g French. Prices reasonable. For further information, phone 7796. 437 TWO ROOM -- Cabin, furnished, electricity, wooded lot, 1 mile out- side city, $12 month. Call 8703. 446 MODERN-Apartments for studen s or couples. Quiet single room; double room. 511 Church near Washtenaw. 445 FOR RENT-House suitable for fra- ternity at 1022 Forest. Inquire, Mrs. Spaulding, 210 S. Thayer, 5772. 444 FOR RENT- Southeast section, 3 or 4-furnished room apartment. Pri- vate bath. Reduced summer price. Ph. 2-2829. 443 BRUNETTES INTELLIGENT At Wittenberg University three blonde co-eds tangled with three dark haired, lasses on the subject that brunettes were more intelligent than blondes. The brunettes defeat- ed the lighter-haired girls and so won their point. The question of how the artificial blonde ranks is still open for discussion. MICHIGAIN service. Professor James K. Pollock, xamination schedules posted in R. o. of the Political Science Department, will speak informally on "Present Conditions in Germany." set up on Palmer Field on Sunday and ome wh wih t shot.Men Triangles meets Sunday, May 21, and women who wish to shoot. Men at 5 p. in., Michigan Union. All mem- ramural Building. bers, new and old are requested to be present. e planning to take their Examiner's nti at 7 o'clock on Monday, Tuesday Graduate Outing Club: Meet at 3 >ur Gymnasium at 6:30; transporta- Sunday at W.A.A. building for short walk. Eorse Show will be held on Monday, All members of Phi Sigma on cam- >se desiring transportation from Bar- pus, whether of Beta or of any other ked to call one of the following offi- chapter, are cordially invited to a- oulter, 4718; Betty Lyons, 3718; Hilda tend the Spring Initiation Banquet to be held at the Michigan Union, n, 2-2807. Thursday, May 25, at 6:30 p. m. Tickets are seventy-five cents. Reser- NOTICES vations may be made by calling Jean the students who signed up for the Davidson at 7485, or at 4009 Natural efore Thursday, May 18, please call Science Building, any time up to r or Monday. Thursday noon. Varsity Glee Club: Important re- II, and III report at the Automotive hearsal Sunday afternoon, 2:30, Un- nd 24 respectively, prepared to spend ion. Cars will leave Union at 5:15 can run the test with a section other p. m. Monday for Fowlerville. Icr if you intend to leave your section Final Contest in the Reading of Poetry will be held on Tuesday eve- An examination to test the knowl- ing, May 23, at 8:00 in the Labora- ee of Ph.D. will be offered to candi- tory Theatre. This program is free v, on Saturday morning, May 27, in to the public. The following will take ates should register at least one week part: Agnes L. Anderson, '34, Lester artment of Romance Languages, 112 L. Griffith, '35, Mary Helen McIntosh, 0. '34, R. Curtis Bedell, '33, Wm. A. o candidates in the departments of Dickert, '33, Doris L. Smith, '33. odern Languages and Literature, His- cience, Philosophy, Education. Hindustan Club: Regular meeting, Sunday, May 21, at Lane Hall, 2:30 n: The Various types of subject mat- p. in. >y the School of Education before the lected will be held on Saturday, May Wesley Hall: Prof. Carl Dahlstrom in the Auditorium of the University will speak at the Student Guild at 6:00 p. in. on Sunday, on "Personal C. O. Davis, Secretary Values." Social Hour at 7 p: m. The Oriental-American Group at 3:30 nination in Education: This examin- p. in., will discuss "Education in i of the University High School on Korea" led by H. M. Kim. 'candidate for the Teacher's Certifi- except graduate students who already First Methodist Church: Dr. Fisher such a degree this June. The material will preach at 10:45 a. m. Sunday on ill embrace the work of all the re- "Beshazzar's' Feast." Al, A25, D100, and the special meth- outlines for the several curricula. Harris Hall: Professor Max S. C. O. Davis, Secretary Handman of the Economics Depart- ment will speak at the Hall tomor- ERTS row evening at 7 o'clock on "Life in ert- Economics." Supper will be served ianists, soloists; Chicago Symphony it. ....t. d'Albert . Andrew's Church: Service of .. ........worship Sunday are: 8:00 a. m. The . .Sibelius Holy Communion, 9:30 a. m. Church Pianos and Strings ............Bach School, 11:00 a. m. Kindergarten, I Lee Pattison 11:00 a. m. Morning Prayer and Ser- tn Country Dances) Op. 30 ... Powell mon by the Reverend Edward M. s and orchestra ............ Sowerby Duff. Mr. Pattison t-_ Lutheran Student Club: Outdoor [ount" by Howard Hanson, given by meeting Sunday, at the Island. All Opera Association, Libretto by Rich- who wish to attend kindly be at the Trinity Lutheran Church, corner of Chase Baromeo, bass East William Street and Fifth Ave- George Galvani, baritone nue not-later than four o'clock. No- University Choral Union Mice that the meeting place is not Chicago .ymphony Orchestra Zion Hall but Trinity. Refreshments Guest Conductor vill be served at a nominal cost. ITION Presbyterian Student Appointments of Fine Arts: The fourth annual ex- -Sunday: the direction of Professor Fairbanks, 9:30 -Morning Classes at the jeague Building. Open to the public Church House. 10:0-Morning Worship. Theme, ________"The Lord's Song." TODAY 5:30-Social Hour and Supper. t in the program at the hospital will 6:30-Student Forum. Subject, "Is ata2:45ap.2: i. there to be Destitution in Ann Ar- ague bor?" Lead by Citizens on the Wel- EVENTS fare. ensus" showing how the vast amount Hillel Foundation announces its sus is tabulated by means of electric last service of the year to be held i the Natural Science Auditorium on Sunday morning at the League chap- nterested is invited to attend. el. Dr. Bernard Hellel will speak on "Examinations andSelf-Examina- ay 22, at 7:30 p. m. in 202 S.W. Mr. tion." m Sond, Michigan' s First grid Hero, Returns Here For Visit (Continued from Page 1) form of art," he insists. "Very few. laymen speak their language. They know that I understand what they're trying to do. And I am very proud that I can claim friendship with so many of the artists of the trapeze and mat." Prizes Telegram Mr. Pond reached his seventy-sixth birthday recently, and one of his most prized -possessions is a telegram from the Clarke-Hanneford team, one of the greatest acrobatic teams of today, I got that telegram within a few hours of the notice of my admis- sion into the Royal Institute in Lon- don, and I value the greeting more than I do the honorary society invi- uation. There are 12 Americans who are corresponding members of that' institute, but there is no one else who could lay claim to such a tele- gram. This is what the wire said: 'On this, your seventy-sixth birthday, we wish you a continuance of the health and vigor that enables you to sommersault as well as ourselves. May your backs never get lower and your forwards always be well- turned.' " This architect-acrobat celebrated his birthday with a work-out in a Chicago gymnasium (his home is in Chicago). There he did back flips, 13 back somersaults and five forward, handsprings, astounding the men who were present-wrestlers weigh- ing in for the national wrestling con- tests being held at the time. One of the stories told about him is of the forty-fifth reunion of the ,class of '79. At the ceremonies in Hill Auditorium tumbling mats and a springboard were put out on the stage, and Mr. Pond went through his whole repertoire, which is ex- tensive, for the entertainment of his classmates and other alumni. "I learned most of my tricks when I was a boy in Ann Arbor, spending whole days in the tents when the cir- cus came to town, watching profes- sionals do their feats and then I went home and practiced them, in my amateurish way, in the back yard." The old Pond home, with the Judge Cooley residence, was on the Today Only John Wayne, "HAUNTED GOLD" Sunday and Monday Clara Bow, "CALL HER SAVAGE" spot where the Union is now. "One of the feats I am most proud of was standing on my head on the top of the dome of University Hall, where workmen had left it on the ground before lifting it. An old woman saw me and told my mother, but I was down before she saw me," he chuck- les. It is an interesting note that the STUDENT northwest bedroom on the fourth careful floor of the Union is exactly over' 3006. the site of the Pond bedroom. It is filled with furniture from that room, LAUNDRY the settee and the pictures in exactly Towels f the same positions .as in the old res- idence. DRIVING Rapids' Robert Woodhains Wils If inte Project Speech Coitesi 1 sharing Kraaenl Robert E. Woodhams, '34E, won Grand F the Project Speaking Contest held HAVE-Y recently, it has been announced. He I at Franc spoke on "Arc-welding in Structural sity. He Engineering." Second place was tion. taken by R. L. Price, '33E, who spoke on "The Engineer in Public Life." Eric Walton, Grad., was third with the subject "The Hudson Bay Gulf You Stream Land Project." Plaques are awarded to the win- HOLI ners each year by the Associated 2 Technical Societies of Detroit. - And family washing work at lowest prices. Ph. 6c -- Soft water. 2-1044 ree. Socks darned. 13c NOTICE -To Texas. Leave Grand for Dallas about June 6. crested in travelling and expenses, address. J. J. Van berg, 157 Fountain Street, Rapids, Mich. 447 our snap shots developed cisco Boyce, 719 N. Univer- re fine work is the tradi- 29c WANTEDf. . ng men; experienced salesmen desired. LAND FURNACE CO. 12 E. Washington Last Times Today Helen Haye - Clark Gable 'THE WHITE SISTER' -Coming Sunday- STAGE SHOW EXTRAORD I NARY Henry Santrey and 0Orchestra I I1 MAJESTIC Now! 11 I ISINGERS -DANCERS H COME DIA NS CHAS. CHASE "NATURE in the WRONG" SPORTLIGHT "BLOCKS & TACKLES" On the Screen The Man With The Air-Cooled Tonsils JOE E. BROWN in ELMER the GREAT H EARST WORLD NEWS !i v 'I I FIVE BIG SHIPMENTS JUST IN ALL GO IN OUR COLLEGE-END SALE With All Other High Grade Sport Shoes at MM, -AM " mm 41 $WM $,0 Values Up To $9.00 If I'