THE MICHIGAN DAILY if Te sCases Humorous, Luring Names Found Tu Ie r e u I sIn Washington Student Directory 4 }r I IEft' _11NA diN ed RTI. See a Cloud ready to Smother a tel. 1'WP 11 the distributionl of the 19:2- der Bloom. " .eai Servce Ie ioirudent Directory ast Tuesday And Hurrah! (Charlotte) look at were revealed many humorous names. the combinations: Packard and Ford, s sFkind VMosLt1 v V However it is doubtful whether the Leak and Dike, Shady and Dale, Fd slocal oddities of nomenclature could Black and White, Rains and Sun, rolei tldftsurpass those to be found in the Savage and Pett, Shields and Spear, ~ ~ ~student directory of the University Prince and Rotter. Extencive x-riv e aminations of of Washington, also to be issued to- Not only are there William Sells chests of entering studens aeveal day. and Valentine Samples in this direc- nine car-,; of active tubet:ulosi; dar.' Monickers of distinction and pomp tory but also a Pope, a Person, a Ju- ing the month cf O,:tbr, a report include George Gibson Garlick and dah, a Ham, a Fortune, a Parrott. a from the Health Service hows. These Victoriano Procopio. The prize name Peach, a Christ, a Lamb, and a of them all is Rush Fellows Chase- Leach. are almost entirely foreign students- a man who is active forwards and What more? (John). Well we think Dr. Forsythe said in commenting on backwards. Seasonal changes are its time to Schram, so we'll say Good- the report. A simiiar number of for- present in S. Spring, L. Summers, night! We might say Damm, Heck, eign tubercular students were dis- A. B. Winter, V. Noel and K. Easter. Gee, and Shaw since this is such covered in September a report shows. Lady subscribers will find a tip in Amess. Bye! (Oluf) P. S. The long During the months of September these: William Heaman, Leo Good- and the Short of it is A. Chernias- and October a tendency for the num- man, Roy Oxman, Homer Sweetman, huisky and Kanshing Mu. ber of service requests to remain sta- Boyd Tallman, and Neil Allman. 'I Killer Sentenced Less Than A Week After His Arrest HARTFORD CITY Ind., Nov. 18.- ifT--John E. Moore, 29, was under sentence of death today, less than a week after he shot and killed his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Moore, in their farm home near Pennville, Ind. He pleaded guilty Thursday night to an indictment charging murder committed during a robbery, an of- fense making a death penalty man- datory. Judge E. W. Secrest of Black- ford circuit court sentenced him to die in the electric chair at Indiana State prison at Michigan City "before the hour of sunrise" March 2, 1933. Arrested in Tower, Minn., last Monday, Moore was brought back to Hartford City Thursday. A Blackford county grand jury returned the in- dictment at 6:45 p. m. Moore entered the courtroom for his arraignment at 10:15 p. m. and the sentence was read a few mniutes later. His father, Ray Moore, of Detroit was not in the courtroom for the hearing. He had come from his home when he learned his son was arrested. Best Salesnen Strut Stuff In Speech Class LAFAYETTE, Ind., Nov. 18.-Va- riety is the spice of life and compe- tition is the life of endeavor; acting on this assumption the speech classes of Purdue University recently held a contest to determine the best sales- men in the classes. Each class picked its best salesman and then these men got together one evening and each tried to sell his respective article. Numerous sales were reported, but all were theoretical as each student picked out any article which was either handy or agreeable, the agency belonging to someone else, or no one at all. Lionary in a comparison with simiar Possible descriptions of possessors are months during 1931 and 1932 was these: Blythe, Dull, Wise, Witt, noticed. "Possibly we have reached Sweet, Handy, Noble, Spry, Stout, the point of maximum service which Swift, Boring, Straight, Coy, and is required by our population," Dr. Darling. The following are reported Forsythe stated. "If so it is the first to be good at what their names indi- indication known to us as to the cate: Chas. Puffer, Art Melting, Frank 1 amount of medical service needed by Punches, Loren Shivers, Bob Waltz, any population," he added. Russel Tat and Wilma Nell Harmony. The number of "colds" treated at In the "good old days" the King the Health Service was about 150 less took his Bath in the Brooks, amid than a year ago last October, being the Moss and Pebbles and Fish. To- 1,227 for last month. Eleven cases of day we sit Close to Roses on a Daven- acute appendicitis were treated in port and Argue about Love. On the comparison with six cases for October Morrow we may March many Miles of 1931. to Fry a Herring. Someday we may Students Sit Quietly As Speakeasies Are Raided MADISON, Wis., Nov. 18.-As an anti-climax to the annual Minnesota- Wisconsin football game, Federal dry agents raided nine local speakeasies, popular with students, on Friday eve- ning preceding the gridiron contest. Staged in an attempt to curb drinking over the week-end, the raids were conducted by Federal officers from Milwaukee. Scores of students were in the establishments, and sat quietly by while officials made ar- rests, relying on the fact that local officers have never held students, when making a raid. BREAKS ANKLE Mrs. Sturat Sharp, 131 Harmon Ave., Detroit, broke her ankle yester- day morning when Prof. Clarence L. Meader, R. R. 5, driving a small coupe, collided with the car in which she was riding, driven by Mr. Sturat Sharp. Other services remained about the same as compared with a year ago last October, according to the report. The number of dispensary calls were 10,443. Mt. Pleasant, Jackson Alumni Meet Next Week Several alumni meetings will be held next week throughout the state and will have as speakers prominent men connected with the university, it was learned yesterday at he alum- ni office here. The first meeting will be Nov. 21 I at Mount Pleasant and will bring to- gether alumni from the surrounding district. President Alexander G. Ruthven will deliver the principal address. On Tuesday, Nov. 22, University of Michigan club of Jackson will hold its annual athletic celebration in con- junction with the Michigan State club of the same city. Among the principal Michigan alumni to talk will be Athletic Direc- tor Fielding H. Yost, Coach Harry G. Kipke, T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni Associa- tion, and Ivan Williamson, captain of the football team. Boy Feels That He Is Not Understood, Survey Reveals NEW YORK, Nov. 18.-It's the boy who feels that he just isn't being un- derstood at home and it's father who pays, according to a survey of child- parent relations conducted in the form of a questionnaire submitted to a group of 566 subjects, including graduate students, college men and women, high school and junior high pupils. The median age of the group is 19 years. Of the entire group only 19 boys and 23 girls were found to be perfect ly adjusted at home, the dissatisfac- tion being markedly greater among the men. In families, where both parents had attended college, there was as a whole less friction. Easy- going parents seemed to work greater havoc upon their daughters, while harsh parents had a more devastat- ing effect upon their sons. Father was ascertained to be the easiest mark in monetary matters. Very little training in money expen- ditures was found in the group. h 4 Ay'E',..r ^ * $ ;{; . M1 /" t " 'I 'x a> I ,1y7 t , , r., M ri. Y+jwi y 'Y+i YT :'!" _, '. :Y P:; ly FIRST NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Est. 1863 COMMERCIAL - SAVINGS TRUST - SAFE DEPOSIT TRAVELERS' CHECKS Member Federal Reserve System, Under U. S. Government Supervision ! r BREAKFAST is being served at The Michigan League after PAN-HELLENIC BALL RICH MAN POOR MAN BEGGAR MAN THIEF DOCTOR LAWYER MERCHANT Telephone the for Your Manager's Office Reservation I CHIEF . . . All Know the Value of MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Call Al The Ad-Taker at 2-1214