THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRID)AY, MAYl 0 LAT WIRE NEWS DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN a in the ticonstructive notice t al membersat until 3:30; 11-0 a.rn. Saturday. Dramatic Season Choices Are Shown To Be Excellent Ones Classified Directory FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1935 VOL. XLV No. 160 } .. Hamilton Smiles As He Awaits Electric Chair HUNTSVILLE, Tex., May 10- Friday --(1)- Raymond Hamil- ton, convicted murderer, was electrocuted at 1:19 a.m. here today. Joe Palmer, an accom- plice, went to the chair a few minutes earlier. HUNTSVILLE, Tex., May 9.-(P) -Raymond Hamilton, the hoodlum who threatened to "come back and haunt" those who condemned him, faced the electric chair tonight with viciousness ranging from 'teen-age petty larceny to murder by the time he was old enough to vote. At 22, the dapper killer, former lieutenant of the late gangster Clyde Barrow and his cigar-smoking Gun Moll, Bonnie Parker, was sentenced to pay with his life for taking that of a penitentiary guard. The guard, Major Crowson, was shot when Barrow and his reckless consort -later slain with him by offi- cers - freed young Hamilton from a state prison farm, at Eastham, in Jan- uary, 1934. With Hamilton tonight as in the deadly 1934 Eastham break was Joe Palmer, a defiant convict who insisted to the last that he shot Crowson because he hated him and that Ham- ilton's bullets went wild. Springfield Besieged By 500 Hunger Marchers SPRINGFIELD, Ill., May 9. - (P)- A horde of "hunger marchers" trooped into Springfield today with the avowed purpose of besieging the cap- ital until food is assured the state's 1,200,000 unemployed. "sOpen the relief stations," was their slogan. "Feed the hungry." Five hundred men, women and hi- .dren took up a position near the State house but state and city police forced them to evacuate. Under a convoy of patrolmenathey paraded to Reservoir Park in the northeast section. There they established a camp and "dug in"' to await developments. The leaders declared that their fol- lowers would hold their ground until the state's relief organization - inop- erative since Illinois was cut off the Federal allotment lists 10 days ago because the legislature had failed to appropriate the state's shore of the relief costs - was revived. Gov. Henry Horner, seeking to find a way out of the tense situation, speeded to Chicago for parleys with state and Federal relief officials and Cook county authorities. Call Private Air Groups In French Defense Plans PARIS, May 9. - (P) - France brought private air organizations and reserve units into its national defense plan against German rearmament today and moved for closer ties with Italy and Russia.. ,, Reserve units will be mobilized and other organizations called upon, the government made clear. A decree by President Albert Lebrun gave official standing to a "home defense" bat- talion of artillerymen at Lille and placed it under the war minister. British Ministry Asks Plane Building Speeded Notices To the Members of the University Council: The next meeting of the University Council will be held on Monday, May 13, at 4:15 p.m., in Room 1009, Angell Hall. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary Notice: Attention of all concerned, and particularly of those having of- fices in Haven Hall, or the Western portion of the Natural Science Build- ing, to the fact that parking of cars in the driveway between these two buildings is at all times inconvenient to other users of the drive and some times results in positive danger to other drivers and to pedestrians on the diagonals and other walks. You are respectfully asked not to park there and if members of your family call for you, especially at noon when traffic both on wheels and on foot is heavy, it is especially urged that the car wait for you in the parking space adjacent to the north door of Uni- versity Hall. Waiting in the drive- way blocks traffic and involves con- fusion, inconvenience and. danger, just as much when a person is sitting in a car as the car is parked empty. University Senate Committee On Parking in the East and West Engineering Buildings and in East Hall. The Kingdom of God - Play Pro- duction's final offering -of the year will be repeated tonight and tomor- row night at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. The performance tomor- row night will be especially dedicat- ed to the mothers of University stu- dents. Tickets may be procured at the box office of the theater, or by calling 6300.. Admission is 35, 50, and 75 cents. Special rates will be extended to parties of ten or more. Pi Tau Pi Sigma: The Spring For- mal scheduled for tonight has been dropped due to unfortunate circum- stances. Refunds may be obtained from Treasurer Reading. Seniors, Literary: Cap and Gown measurements must be taken prompt- ly at Moe's Sport Shop, official agency for the Senior Literary class. If "Swingout" is reestablished, those seniors desiring to participate must order their caps and gowns without delay. No deposit is required at time of measurement. Camp Counsellors desiring to apply for positions at the University Fresh Air Camp may secure applications from Mrs. Alber in Lane Hall. May Festival Rehearsals: The following schedule of re- hearsals of the University Choral tnion, The University Symphony Or- chestra, and the Young People's Chorus, has been arranged for Hill Auditorium. Members of these or- 'anizations will enter through rear doors: Saturday, May 11, 9:00 a.m. - Young People's Festival Chorus. Sunday, May 12, 2:30 p.m. - Chor- al Union and University Orchestra. Monday, May 13, 3:00 p.m. -Young People's Festival Chorus. Monday, May 13, 7:00 p.m. -Chor- al Union, University Orchestra. Tuesday, May 14, 3:00 p.m.-Young People's Festival Chorus and Univer- sity Orchestra. Tuesday, May 14, 7:00 p.m.-Chor- al Union and University Orchestra. Wednesday, May 15, 8:30 a.m.- Young People's Festival Chorus. Wednesday, May 15, 2:00 p.m. - Choral Union and Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Thursday, May 16,, 9:00 a.m.- Choral Union and Chicago Sym- phony Orchestra. Thursday, May 16, 2:30 p.m.- Young People's Chorus and Orches- tra. Friday, May 17, 9:00 a.m.-Chor- al Union and Chicago Symphony Or- chestra. The schedule of May Festival Con- certs is as follows: Wednesday evening, May 15, 8:15 p.m. -First Festival Concert. Thursday evening,/ May 16, 8:15 p.m.-- Second Festival Concert. Friday afternoon, May 17, 2:30 p.m. - Third Festival Concert. Friday evening, May 17, 8:15 p.m. - Fourth Festival Concert. Saturday afternoon, May 18, 2:30 p.m.--Fifth Festival Concert. Saturday evening May 18, 8:15 p.m. -Sixth Festival Concert. Engineers: It is suggested that all engineers who are willing to cooperate with the Engineering Open House program, and who have not as yet been assigned any specific duty, sign up for service as guides. Posters, for the purpose of recording the names of such, are now on all bulletin boards Academic Notices History 92: Make-up Examination: t Saturday from 10-12 in Room 1025s A.H. Comprehensive Examination In Education: All candidates for thei Teacher's Certificate (except gradu-1 ate students who will have receivedi an advanced degree by June) must pass a Comprehensive Professional Examination covering the Education courses prescribed for the Certificate. The next examination of this kind will be held in the auditorium of the University High School on Saturday morning, May 18, at 9 o'clock sharp. (Students having conflicts will take the examination at 2 o'clock on the same day in Room 4200 U.H.S.). The examination will cover Eduation A10 (or Al or A25, and B20), Cl, D100, and special methods. Students en- rolled in any of the special curricula in the School of Education will be examined on such of these courses as are included in those curricula. Students desiring to take the exam- ination in the afternoon must leave their names with the Recorder of the School of Education, 1437 U.E.S. Reading Examinations in French: Candidates for the degree of Ph.D. in the departments listed below who wish to satisfy the requirement of a reading knowledge during the current academic year, 1934-35, are informed that examinations will be offered in Room 108, Romance Language Build- ing, from 9 to 12, on the following Saturday mornings: May 18 and Au- gust 10. It will be necessary, in each case, to register at the office of the Department of Romance Languages (112eR.L.) at least one week in ad- vance. Lists of books recommended by the various departments are ob- tainable at this office. It is desirable that candidates for the doctorate prepare to satisfy this requirement at the earliest possible date. A brief statement of the nature of the requirement, which will pe found helpful, may be obtained at the office of the department, and fur- ther inquiries may be addressed to L. F. Dow (100 R.L., Mondays and Thursdays at 10). - This announcement applies only to candidates in the following de- partments: Ancient and Modern Lan- guages and Literatures, History, Eco- nomics, Sociology, Political Science, Philosophy, Education, Speech. Lecture Lecture: Is There Any Reasonable Evidence To Support a Belief In Im- mortality? by E. Norman Pearson, of Detroit. Friday at 8 p.m. in the League. The Ann Arbor Theosophi- cal Society invites the public cordial- ly. Events Today English Journal Club meets in the League, 4 p.m. - A full attendance is desired, as the annual election of of- ficers will be held. Program, open to the public, at 4:30: Modern Inter- pretations of Dickens. Leader: Mr. Weimer. Wesleyan Students Guild: Hike and roast . Meet at Stalker Hall at 5:00 o'clock. There will be a small cover charge. National Student League dance will be at the Unitarian Church, tonight. Students and faculty invited to join Resevations and Tiets Here. No Extra Chry KUEBLER TRAVEL BUREAU Authoried- Lcensed - Bonded. Sice '91 OFFICIAL For All Leading Steamship Lines AGENCY Tours, Cruises & Tourist Com's 601 E._Huron, Ann Arbor. Ph. 6412 One of those rare occasions in the- atrical history when an entire com- pany is successfully transported half- way across the continent from New York and still appears intact as ad- vertised, was celebrated at the Pabst theater in Milwaukee the other night when the season production of J. B. Priestly's "Laburnum Grove" opened its run there with all the stars, Ed- mund Gwenn, Melville Cooper, Eliza- beth Risdon, Molly Pearson, and Boyd Davis, the Scotland Yard inspector, appearing as scheduled. The produc- tion will be brought from Milwaukee to Detroit, then to the season here for the gala opening, May 20. Milwaukee reviewers were generous, with their plaudits. Said Richard S. Davis of the "Journal," "Laburnum Grove opens Mr. Henderson's season at the Pabst and a happier start could not be asked. It is given with the skill that can only come from long acquaintance with the roles. And the play itself is a delightful comedy, ingeniously built and soundly fash- ioned." The Sentinel reported, "A thoroughly jolly theatrical visitor from England, Mr. Gwenn, never over-stepped the invisible and near fatal boundry between comedy and farce." In the May Stage magazine, Clifton' Fadiman, distinguished New York critic, nominates "Laburnum Grove" for first place in richness of comedy Forsythe, Raphael To Attend Meeting Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, director of the Health Service, and Dr. Theo- phile Raphael, Health Service psy- chiatrist, will attend the annual meet- ing of the American Psychiatric As- sociation May 14-15 in Washington. Dr. Raphael will deliver a paper before the association on the general subject of mental hygiene. On May 15 Dr. Forsythe will ad- dress the third annual meeting of the Mid-Atlantic Student Health Asso- ciation, also meeting in Washington, on "The Obligations of the College to Maintain a Student Health Serv- ice." AWARD DAMAGES Damages of $2,094.10 were awarded yesterday afternoon to Albert John- son, 1001 E. Huron Street, as compen- sation for a broken leg suffered when he was struck by an automobile on N. Main ttreet. The case was tried in the county Circuit Court and had been under consideration by the jury since Wed- nesday afternoon. Paul and Edward Caris were the co-defendants. Watkins Says PatmaitBill Is Inflationary (Continued from Page 1) be argued, as the sponsors of the bill argue, that two billion dollars would not be a large percentage of increase in our money supply. But this over- looks the adverse psychological ef- fects of initiating this method of fi- nance, so often abused in the past." Professor Watkins called attention to the fact that there is "always the danger and even the likelihood" that further steps may be taken in the di- rection of inflation, and declared that "finally, it should not be forgotten that the issuance of new money adds to the reserves of banks, and that commercial banks are able to ex- pand credit by ten or more times the amount of the new issues. "As matters now stand," he said,f "commercial banks have unused re-, serves to the extent of more than two billion dollars, and on the basis there- of, they are in position to expand the money supply by some twenty bil- lions." By money supply, he ex- plained, he meant credit. The Patman bill, according to Pro- fessor Watkins, by adding two billion. dollars to the currency supply, would Iroughly double the twenty billions to which the banks may expand. "No one can say," he admitted, "when this large mass of bank credit will be called into use or what checks the .authorities will impose. "But other issues aside," he con- cluded, "it is difficult to see any eco- nomic justification for augmenting this monetary and credit supply fur- ther, when that supply is already in some respects excessive and is likely even without additions to offer dif- ficult problems in the future." value; and also includes the Season comedy, "The Bishop Misbehaves," in his list. He says of the perform- ances in "Laburnum Grove," "Mr. Pickwick is comic because he is Mr. Pickwick. In the same way . . George Redfern (Edmund Gwenn) and Ber- nard Baxley (Melville Cooper) seem to me real comic characters existing, in a sense, apart from the plot of the play and from the calculated hu nor of their lines." FOR SALE CORRECTED TELEPHONE NUM- BER: FOR SALE: Master's cap, gown, and hood for sale. Michigan colors. Perfect condition. Phone 4534. 199 HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: An- tique and modern furniture, pic- tures, new domestic rugs, table linen, bedding, chair cushions, drapes, ice box, practically new modern "apartment" gas stove, small antiques and many articles suitable for gifts. Hours 10 a. m. to 4:30; 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. 818, Lincoln Ave. Phone 2-2720. 217 FOR SALE: Must dispose of 2 season tickets for May Festival. Good, second balcony seats. Reasonable. Apply Box 44, Michigan Daily.. WANTED WANTED: Experienced maid for sor- ority work. Apply in morning. 1520 South University. 216 WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW suits. Will pay 3, 4. 5, 6 and 7 dol- lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- cago Buyers. 200 North Main 7x WANTED - House to accommodate 18 to 20 girls. State rental terms and time of occupancy. Box 43 LAUNDRY STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006 LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 4x PERSONAL laundry service. We take individual interest in the laundry problems of our customers. Girls' silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. Call for and deliver. Phone 5594 611 E. Hoover. 2x NOTICE TYPING - Theses and outlines; done by expert; reasonable prices. Rhoda Gansle, 325 Catherine, Phone 9749, or 9574. 215 TYPEWRITING and MIMEO- GRAPHING promptly and neatly done in our own shop by experi- enced operators at moderate rates. O. D. Morrill's Typewriter and Sta- tionary Store, 314 S. State Street. llx YOUR FURS are safest in Zwer- dling's Fur storage. 31 years of unexcelled fur service. Phone 8507. 189 NEW AND USED CARS A.M.S. Inc. 311 W. Huron Phone 2-3267 lox I Ii- .... .1 SPECIAL gIKulIII 11 Today - Saturday TWO FIRST RUNS McLAGLEN and LOWE "GREAT HOTEL MURDER" plus BUCK JONFS "ROCKY RHODES" Sunday - Monday - Tuesday CLARK GABLE "AFTER OFFICE HOURS" for FRIDAY 1 /4 dozen Cinemon Fried Cakes FREE with each dozen 'Pilgrim' Fried Cakes bought (any variety). WAFFLESsmothered in syrup and melted butter, the best you ever tasted . ... 20c Fresh Crisp Doughnuts, that melt in your mouth . 2 for 5c Fancy ICED Doughtmts- .3 for 10c The BEST COFFEE in town, correctly made ...... 5c _ the fun. door. Admission 25 cents at the DIES NiOTHERoY 65c te poun d t WORTHWHILE SPECIALS! City Park Grass Seed.... 30c lb. White Clover.... ...50c lb. 5 blade 10" wheel 16" cut ball bearing lawn mower $7.45 High quality Bonded Paint in Colors............$2.95 U. S. Gov't specification.. $2.75 Also, we solve Sheet Metal, Roofing and Furnace Problems. Coming Events Delta Sigma Rho: Initiation cere- monies will be held at 6:30 p.m. Sat- urday, May 11; banquet at 7 p.m. in the Michigan Union. All active mem- bers and alumni from Michigan chap- ter and other chapters are urged to attend. Reply to Eleanor Blum, phone 4018. Lutheran Students Club members will be guests of the Baptist Guild on Sunday evening, May 12. The Lutheran students will meet at the Parish Hall of the Zion Lutheran Church on Washington Street at 6 o'clock and will go in a group to the Baptist Guild on Huron Street. The dinner will be served promptly at 6:30 oclock. I SCH LENKER HARDWARE CO. 213 - 215 West Liberty Street PHONE 8575 BOOTHS - - TABLES PILGRIM SHOP- (Next to Michigan Theatre) 533 East Liberty Street U I MOTHER'S DAY Sunday, May 12th A LONDON, May 9. - ( P) - The Air ministry urg'dd England's aircraft manufacturers to speed up produc- tion today a few hours after King George had sounded a strong note for peace before Parliament, assembled to pay him jubilee homage. Airplane makers were cautioned by the ministry against accepting foreign orders. Doubling of the home air de- fense force within two years was said to be the government's goal, if the builders can supply the craft. Speaking in Westminster Hall, King George called his realm a "common- wealth of peace." "In these days when fear and prep- aration for war are again astir, in the world," his majesty asserted, "let us be thankful that quiet, government and peace prevail over so large a part of the earth's surface and that under our flag of freedom so many millions eat their daily bread in far distant lands and climates with none of them afraid." DAILY 15c TO 6 P.M. WHITNEY Now Two Excellent Pictures WARNER BAXTER MYRNA LOY "BROADWAY BILL" and Sinclair Lewis "BABBITT" with GUY KIBBEE Extra NEWS - CARTOON We will rail or deliver for you. I Send her G I LBERT'S and SCH RAFFT'S Chocolates ... 60cto $1,.00per pound. MAJESTIC MATINEES 25C BALCONY EVENINGS 35c - Main Floor Evenings --Ending Tonight A SWELL DOUBLE-FEATURE ALINE MacMAHON GUY KIBBEE "WHILE THE PATIENT SLEPT" Showing at 2:00 - 4:32 - 7:14 - 9:46 and EDWARD EVERETT HORTON KAREN MORLEY "TEN DOLLAR RAISE" Showing at 3:20 - 8:20 TOMORROW The Lyrical Miracle SWIFT'S DRUG STORE Phone 3534 Delivery Service ili -1 I MICH IGAN Matinees & Balc. Nights 25c 35c Main Floor Eves. pp I Here They Are .... The Vagabond Three! REAL VALUES in USED CARS JOHNSON- CUSHING,. Inc. Your FORD Dealer 400 West Washington Street E h. ...... m ammmmmassmens ARCHITECT'S PLAY PRODUCTION'S FINAL OFFERING- A Realistic Drama - Thrills! Comedy! Pathos! "THE KINGDOM OF GOD" BAL CN, i u S t f 0 r present JESiS HAWKINS and His VIRGINIANS f1 I I rt' Ki' PicQKA e u V ey . e Pajaedg- 3 famous Stars l, IiAY. FRANCIS "MA, 1rhlhA .D I _ m vwv e IMIIIH1 I " m -1 I