THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAJ ,H 16, 1935 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is oonstructive notice to all members of the Universitly. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:30 am. Saturday. Stavisky's Widow Indicted In Bank Scandal Hillel Foundation: Dr. Hootkins' class in "Jewish Ethics" will meet at the Foundation at 1:3. The topic will be "The Development of the Bible and Talmud." Coming Events Vocational Series: Students of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: A meeting will be held on Tues- day, March 19, at 4:15 p., in Room 1025 Angell Hall for students in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and others interested in fu- ture work in Business Administration. The meeting will be addressed by Dean C. E. Griffin of the School of Business Administration. The next meeting of the vocation- al series, designed to give informa- tion concerning the nature of and preparation for the various profes- sions, will be addressed by Dean A. C. Furstenberg of the School of Medi- cine, on March 21. Engineering Oper House Commit- tee Heads: There will be a meeting Sunday, March 17, 4:30 p.m., at the Union. Assembly: Important meeting at the League Tuesday, March 19, at 4:15. Monday Evening Drama Section: Will entertain the husbands of the members of the group Monday, March 18, at 8 p.m. in the small ballroom of the Michigan Union. The hostess list includes Mrs. L. A. Baier, Mrs. J. C. Palmer, Mrs. Shorey Peterson, Mrs. G. Y. Rainich, Mrs. F. E. Ross, Mrs. W. E, Bachman, Mrs. J. H. Sams, and Mrs. A. L. Clark, Jr. Michigan Dames: The Child Study group will meet at the 'Michigan League Monday, March 18, at 8 p.m. Mrs. F. W. Peterson will speak onr "Story Telling for Little Children." All those interested, whether mem- bers of the group or not, are cordially invited. Methodist Episcopal Church, Sun- day: 9:45 a.m. -A class for young men and women of college age meets in the balcony of the church auditorium. Dr. Roy Burroughs leads discussions on modern ideals of the church. 10:45 a.m.-Morning worship serv- ice. "What Should I Do?" is the ser- mon subject chosen by Dr. Charles W. Brashares for the second in his series of Lenten sermons. Stalker Hall for Young Men and Women of College Age, Sunday: 12:10-12:40 p.m.- Young people meet at this hour for an exchange of modern Christian and social views. 6:00 p.m. -Wesleyan Guild Devo- tional Service. President Edmund D. Soper of Ohio Wesleyan University will be the guest speaker. He will have a message of interest to every- one. Fellowship supper hour - after the meeting. Harris Hall: On Sunday morning there will be a celebration of the Holy Communion in the Williams Memo- rial Chapel in Harris Hall, at 9:30 a.m. Sunday evening there will be the regular student meeting at 7:00 o'clock. Professor Raymond Hoekstra will be the leader of the discussion. The topic will be, "Value and Re- ligion." Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services of worship Sunday are: 8 a.m. Holy Communion, 9:30 a.m. Church School, 11:00 a.m. Kinder- garten, 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis. Sunday will be the second Choir Sunday and the men and boys choir will sing special anthems. Sunday afternoon at 5 o'clock the Young Peo- ple's Fellowship will meet in Harris Hall. Presbyterian Student Appoint- ments, Sunday: 9:30 a.m. - Student classes held at the Church House. 10:45 a.m.-Morning worship. Classified Directory LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. CLASSIFIED Careful work at low price. 4x ADVERTISING LOST AND FOUND Place advertisements with Classified GOLD-RIMMED glasses ilk black case. Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. Please return to Margaret Wind- The classified columns close at five ham, 1501 Washtenaw or Call 2- o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no 3279. e~xtra charge. Cash in advance lic per reading line NOTICE (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. G.e. 10c per reading line for three or GOLFERS: Clubs rewound, refiished more insertions. and reconditioned by experienced Minimum 3 lines per insertion. Telephone rate -15c per reading line expert. 25c per club, $1.00 for set of for one or two insertions. seven or under. Phone 2-1717. 148 14c per reading line for three or 10% discousert fpaid within ten days WILL EXCHANGE one set of matched from the date of last insertion.golf clubs, one pair of size nine By contract, per line -2 lines daily, one ice skates and electric clock for a month...........................8c canoe. Peterborough preferred. Box 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months ..........3c 13MihgnD ly14 2 lines daily, collegenyear 13, Michigan Daily. 149 4 lines E.O.D., college year ........7c 100 lines used as desired..........9c NEW AND USED CARS - Largest 300 pines used as desired ..........8c 1.000 lines used as desired ........7c selection in the country. Associated 2,000 lines used as desired.......6ce Motor Services, Inc. 31K W. Huron. The above rates are per reading line,' based on eight reading lines per inch. Ph. 2-3268. "Let's get acquainted." Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add 10x 6e per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for -__ ________ bold face, upper and lower case. Add WANTED 10c per line to above rates for bold face - capital letters. STUDENTS with selling ability. Good type above rates are for 7 point wages, steady employment. Apply 200 N. Main. LAUNDRY WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 dol- STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. cago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 9x North Main . 7x 4 -Associated Press Photo. With 18 other persons, Arlette Simon Stavisky, widow of the banker, Serge Stavisky, whose suicide in 1934 started a national scandal in France, was indicted in connection with her husband's operations. She is shown with her .two daughters. County Official Describes Failure Of Old Age Pensions By ROBERT BROWN A sidelight on the much-discussedI Townsend Old Age Recovery plan was given recently in a description of the failure that has greeted the Michigan old age pension plan as it has been put into effect in Washtenaw County. Mrs. Blanche Seabolt, member of the county old age pension commis- sion, and the county clerk recently re- leased figures showing how the plan is functioning. With the complete in- adequacy of the head tax to supply funds, according to Mrs. Seabolt, the county commission has been able only to continue payments on the few pen- sions that were being paid last year, and has been able to conduct no fur- ther investigations into the number of undoubtedly urgent cases which exist.. "There is no use in making further' investigations when there is no money "The Happiness of Misery." Dr. Wm. P. Lemon. 5:30 p.m.-Social Hour and Sup- per. 6:30 p.m. --Student Forum. "What Kind of a Utopian Are You?" Dis- cussion. Congregational Church, Sunday: 10:30 a.m. -Service of worship and religious education. Rev. Heaps will speak on "The Charge of the Three Hundred," continuing the ser- ies on "The Old Testament and the New Times." Prof. Preston Slosson will give the lecture at 11:30 on "Calvin and the Puritans." 6:00 p.m. - Student Fellowship Supper. 7:30 p.m. -Address by Mary Belle Oldridge, secretary of North Central, Region S udent Volunteer Movement, on "Toyh ko Kagawa, Social Reform- er." Unitarian Church: Sunday evening service at 5:15 o'clock. Rev. Marley's topic will be, "Religion According To The Masses," a review of the play, "Within the Gates." Liberal Stu- dents' Union meeting at 7:30. Eugene Kuhne will talk on, "Adventures With the C.C.C." First Baptist Church and Roger Williams Guild, Sunday, 10:45 a.m., Mr. Sayles will speak on "The Last Discourse of Jesus." 12:00 noon, Stu- dent group meets for study at the Guild House. 6:00 p.m. Student Forum in form of a debate participat- ed in by four students. to pay any pensions that might be approved," Mrs. Seabolt said. Yet Washtenaw county, she added,' has led by far the rest of the state Facts, Stories Of 'Paris Gun' T ldl B Miller City's Milk Supply Well Safeguarded (Continued from Page 1) to the dairy it is pasteurized. Cor- in number of pensions granted out of -IL . N-7±Y.1 Y, those eligible, and was the first county to grant a pension under the Before a near-capacity audience in legislation which passed in 1933. Thus Washtenaw county, she said, is one the Natural'Science Auditorium Wed- of the "better off" counties as far as nesday night, Col. Henry W. Miller, the pension situation goes. Even with i head of the departmnt of mechanism that standing, only 180 residents are and engineering drawing, considered on the rolls out of an indefinite but In ngineerinredrawingtconsidered far larger number of eligible persons, F sbCAllied nations on long range artillery, Figures supplied by C. E. Critten-dsridth md"Pr u"th den, county treasure, show that the described the famed "Paris gun" that last payments made under the head shelled the city of Paris from awvan- tax law in this county were on Jan- tage point more than 70 miles away uary 14. Collections reached a high during the last year of the World point in February 1934, then dwindled -War. away to almost nothing until August, Over a period of 44 days the seven when under threat of civil suits, the "Paris guns" built by the German delinquents paid up to reach a peak forces rained shells on Paris, Colonel of $2,754. Miller brought out. More than 250 i i L i l M Pension Rate Low Approximately $1,800 of the $10,- 034 collected so far is used in the distribution of monthly payments to, those persons over 70 years of age whose applications for pensions have been granted. The average sum going' to each of these persons, and on which they are presumably expected to subsist for a month, is $10. This affords an interesting contrast to the $200 a month which the Townsend plan proposes, and shows clearly why that plan is becoming very popular in this county. When in addition it is taken into consideration that the Washtenaw county group has been credited by the Michigan old age pension commission, according to Mrs. Seabolt, with ren- dering highly efficient service and having an extremely low overhead, the situation in other parts of the state and the corresponding amount of popular sentiment in favor of such an at least apparently plausible plan as the Townsend scheme is easily pictured. Funds Exhausted The state appears to be at a dead loss as to where the pensions they have legislated shall come from. The poll tax was proved economically sound and the problem of funds was considered unimportant as compared with administration at the outset of the program, but now, while in some places the administration costs more for a county than the amount of pen- sions issued, no alternative solution has been considered, she said. Mrs. Seabolt's suggestion as to people were killed, approximately $10,000,000 damage accrued, and for the only day during the entire war, on Saturday, March 23, 1918, the City of Paris completely shut down its business activity - all as a result of these "Paris guns." With the tubing on these guns measuring 98 feet, powder used cap- able of 70,000 pounds pressure, shells weighing 228 pounds shot out by a force of 2,000,000 pounds pressure, these "Paris guns" have never been equalled by any of the Allied pow- ers, according to Colonel Miller. where money was to come from to continue the present system of pen- sions when the head tax fund runs out, as it inevitably will, having no income, is to divert a certain portion of the liquor tax money to the sup- port of the aged. Turning some of these funds from the support of the schools to the payment of old age pensions would, -she believes, solve the problem, and cause no further difficulty in so doing. The head tax, she says, is absolutely dead, and something must take its place. iect pasteurization calls for heating the milk to a temperature of at least 142 degrees Fahrenheit for not less than 30 minutes. After heating, an ordinance provides it must be imme- diately cooled t not more than 50 degrees and held that low until deliv- ery to the consumer. Mr. Barnum explained that all op- erations after the milk has been put into the heater are mechanical, in- cluding cooling, bottling and capping. An automatic temperature recorder is attached to the heater and the charts checked regularly by the City Milk Inspector. Samples are taken from each dairy's supply after it has been placed on the wagons and bacteriological tests made to determine the efficiency of the dairy. Records of the tempera- ture charts and the bacteriological tests enable Mr. Barnum to prevent contamination of the milk supply once it has reached the dairy's hand. Will be treated fair and square. Meal Tickets, $6.16 worth $5 The MICH IGAMME RESTAURANT Next to the Michigan Theatre Another nationally acclaimed picture starts today at the Majestic!! ' The golden girl with the silver song ' IRENE DUNNE and America's Dancing Stars FRED r A STIRE SGINGER RO"GERS ail LAST TIME TONIGHT HILLEL PLAYERS Present A Drama in J Three Acts I r *i MICHIGAN 25c 35c Intil 2 P.M. Sundays 25c All Week-Day 'Ufter 2 P.M. Sundays Matinees Main Floor Nights 25c in Balcony on Week-Day Evenings Thrill-packed Romancer "SOCIETY 0011TUR" with CHESTER MORRIS VIR.INIA BRUCE BILLIE BURKE 11-G-M's 's uccessor to "thirnits 17Ii id I r 4f 'I' L1 <_ I An American Family in Moral, Social and Financial Chaos! // . . aov.- ^' F w I 'A' r A Student Written Production "UNFINISHED : I I 11 III E I I 'R A _ " " "LITTLE DUTCH MILL" I