THE MICIG N DATY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1935 U. S..Continues Naval Building WithSecrecy Purpose Of Silent Action Ih Nr Bargaining With Other Air Powers Involved In German 01 ympic Games Dispute WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 - (;') - For purposes of bargaining with other air powers, the United States has flung a cloak of secrecy around the progress of its extensive naval avia- tion building program. Navy officials said today the move was made at the urging of the naval intelligence office, which has met some difficulty in obtaining data on the composition of foreign sky fleets. By withholding information which hitherto has been available to the public, they said, the navy is in a po- sition to use it for trading facts and figures with other governments. As a result, the department is hold- ing in the strictest confidence all in- formation as to how rapidly the build- ing program will be pressed during the present fiscal year, the number of ships to be completed, types and dates of deliveries of aircraft, and the present number of naval pilots and planes in first-class fighting con- dition. Navy spokesmen declined to say whether they were eager to obtain in- formation from any particular for- eign government. They pointed out that virtually every other nation care- fully guards details of its air program. Characteristics of warships have been concealed for a long time, and there have been frequent reports that these; too, have been used to a limited extent forswapping with other pow- ers. The navy and army have an agree- ment, not always rigidly enforced, that details and pictures of new air- planes must be kept from the public until the ships have been in service a year. In its broad outlines, however, the navy'sairplane plan hashbeen known for some time. It contemplates 1,910 first-class craft in operation by the time the program to construct a treaty navy is concluded in 1942. Congress appropriated $26,715,660 for the current fiscal year for up-to- the-minute planes and equipment and authorized contracts up to $6,590,000 additional, to be appropriated when needed. That total of $33,305,660 was $7,- 405;027 less than the navy had sought, officials said. Conservation hsteCtue Plans Foster Contest r 5 1 z r r i T t List Speakers. For Convention Of Press Club, President Ruthven, Three Other Faculty Members Are Included A partial list of the speakers who will address the 17th annual meet- ing of the University Press Club of Michigan on Nov. 14, 15 and 16, was announced yesterday by Prof. John L. Brumm of the journalism depart- ment. The list includes President Ruthven and three members of the University faculty. President Alexander Ruthven will address the Thursday evening ban- quet of the Club on an un-announced topic. Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department will speak on "Neutrality and the Munitions Prob- lem," Prof. Shirley W. Allen of the forestry school will discuss the state conservation problem, and Prof. Wes-1 ley Maurer of the journalism depart- ment will address the general ses- sion of the club on the topic "Spec- trum of Though." Mr. Myrle Row- leder, estate superintendent of adult education, will speak on the proba- tion problem in Michigan. Senator Arthur H. Vandenburg who was previously secured to give the principal address at the Friday eve- ning banquet will speak on the sub- ject "Our Neutrality Policy," Prof. Brumm said. Senator Vandenburg was a member of the Nye-Vanden- burg committee of the Senate which recently concluded an investigation of the munitions industry. Two motion pictures will also be shown, Prof. Brumm said. One will show the procedure of city govern- ment and the other, by Dr. Francis S. Onderdonk, is a motion picture and stills of war and war paintings. * Classified Directory + F' [I I CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with classified kdvertising Department. Phone 2-1214. I The classified columns close at five x clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in advance lic per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more " Minimum 3 lines per insertion. Telephone rate -- 15c per reading line for two or more insertions. 10%, discount if paid within ten days Minimum three lines per insertion. from the date of last insertion. By contract, per line - 2 lines daily, one month................8 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months ........Sc 2 lines daily, college year........7c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months..........8c 100 lines used as desired..........9c 300 lines used as desired..........Sc 1,000 lines used as desired .........7c 2,000 lines used as desired ........6c The above rates are per reading line, based on eight reading lines per inch. Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add Se per line to abovenrateswfor all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upperand lower case. Add 10c jper line to above rates for bold face capital letters. The above rates are for 71 point 'ype. LOST AND FOUND LOST: AT INDIANA game, section three a blue-knitted belt, white tri- angles at either end. Phone 2-2155. 69 LOST: Grey and red Schaeffer foun- tain pen Monday noon between Jor- dan Hall and Economics Building. Betty Bingham, 556 Jordan. 2-3281. NOTICES STATIONERY: Printed with your name and address. 100 sheets, 100 envelopes. $1.00. Many styles. Craft Press, 305 Maynard. 9x CHEF WANTS job in fraternity' house, can furnish best local refer- ences. Box 52. COMPLETE BEAUTY service. Spe- cial Mondays only: Shampoo, finger wave, and manicure, 75c. Open Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings by appointment. Raggedy Ann Beauty Shop. 1115 S. Univer- sity Ave. Dial 7561. 8x TEACHER of popular and classical piano music. Helen Louise Barnes. Call 8469. 2x AVIATRIX GAINING TROY, N. Y., Oct. 22.- (1P) - Ruth Nichols, whose cabin plane crashedI here yesterday, killing her pilot and injuring four others, today was still LAUNDRY STUDENT HAND LAUNDRY' Prices reasonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. 6x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 1x FOR RENT FOR RENT: Suite, east, south and west exposure. Private bath and shower. Accommodates three. Extra rogm available if group of four. Steam heat. Dial 8544. 422 East Washington. 71 MAC'S TAXI - 4289. Try our effi- cient service. All new cabs. 3x in a critical condition. 'Physicians said that she was showing some im- provement. Capt. Harry Hublitz, 41 years old, I the pilot, fought desperately to save the ship before it crashed, it was re- vealed at an inquest. i -I -Associated Press Photo. A reply that there was "no question of religion in European sports" was made by Dr. Theodore Lewald (left), president of the German Olympic committee, to charges by Jeremiah T. Mahoney (right), presi- dent of the American Amateur Athletic Union, that both Jews and Catholics are victims of discrimination. Mahoney suggested Lewald resign. Recalls.Days When University Was Housed In Two Buildings Will Provide Slogans For Use On Signs Placed' Along Highways Aposter contest among the children of Michigan was decided upon at the Conservation Institute 'yesterday afternoon at the Union as the proj- ect of the Federated Garden Clubs of Michigan for 1936. The aim of this poster contest, as deseribed by Mrs. Audrey DeWitt, of the State Department of Conserva- tion, is to provide the department of conservation with slogans, which will be used on signs along the highways, and with ideas for printed posters. Through the children, moreover, the Garden Club intends to educate the parents in the principles of conserva- tion. P. A. Herbert, of the forestry de- partment of the Michigan State Col- lege, addressed the Institute in the afternoon, describing the organiza- tion, ideals and rise of the 4-H con- servation projects in Michigan. The aim, Mr. Herbert declared, of this 4- H club is to give the country children the social training which they often 'are unable to get because they live in the country. Four years of work are organized for-the-members of the club, Mr. Her- bert added. Included in the first year's training is the planting by the member of 500 trees, his learning to recognize trees, and his receiving an elementary knowledge of forestry and conservation in general. Summer camps have been organ- ized, and are in active operation dur- ing the summer, he concluded, for the members, who range from the ages of 12 to 20, and where they may take field trips. This organization is spon- sored by the Extension Division of the Michigan State College. The convention concluded with a tea at the home of Mrs. James In- glis, 2301 Highland Road. SECORD SPEAKS TO ALPHA NU Arthur S. Secord, new debating coach, spoke at the Freshman Smoker held by Alpha Nu, men's speech or- ganization, last night. Paul Von Ber- gen, '37, president of the society, stat- ed that one more smoker would be held for freshmen this semester and that tryout speeches by prospective members will be given soon. B,.- - Days when there was a fence around the campus to keep out mules and cattle, when the University was housed in two buildings, when the appearance of a college man in cer- tain sections of. the "town" was the signal for a fight, are remembered by Mrs. Dora Gates, 1007 Myron Pl., a life-long resident of Ann Arbor. Graduated from Ann Arbor High School in the midst of the Civil War, Mrs. Gates was never able to attend the University, for it was not until 1871, at the insistence of President Haven, that the legislature granted women students permission to enroll. "The University was out in the country then," she said. "There was only one street running from the 'Two Injries, One Fatality In Air Accidents One Michigan flyer lost his life and two others were injured in airplane accidents yesterday. William Klinger, 40 - year - old Grandville mail carrier, walked into the propeller of his hbmemade craft at the Kent County airport, Grand Rapids, and was killed. He had just completed a successful test flight after devoting his spare time for five years, to construction of the plane, and had descended from the cockpit to inspect the motor. At Muskegon, Glen Wilson, 21, was seriously injured when a wing fell from a plane in which he was making a' test flight. The craft plunged 75 feet into a field. Hal Ellington, a Detroit flyer, suf- fered a wrenched shoulder when a landing wheel broke and his plane nosed over in making a forced land- ing in a rain-soaked cornfield near Cygnet, O. His companion, Guy Crit- zer, also of Detroit, was unhurt. Photo-Engraving Exhibit Is Placed On Display An especially prepared exhibit showing the process of photoengrav- ing which was given to the journalism department of the University by The New York Times, has been placed on display on the second floor of Haven H.all. It is a duplicate of a display in The New York Times building at Times Square, and is beng exhibted togeth- er with other engraving displays pre- viously donated by The Detroit News and the Western Newspaper Union. ALLEN TO BE CANDIDATE BATON ROUGE, La. - (/P)- Louisiana politicians were excited to- day over the disclosure that Gov. O. K. Allen had qualified as a candidate for the United States Senate to suc- ceed the late Huey P. Long. Allen Ellender, another Long leader, pre- viously had qualified for the senator- ial vacancy. campus to the business district, andl just a few houses and stores." Recollections of incidents which to- gether are a history of the Univers- ity's development ,are still bright in Mrs. Gates' mind. When the Medical School was established, -she recalls, the lanterns of students could be seen on dark nights in the cemeteries, as the medics searched for bodies. They were required to supply their own materials for study. In 1875 the first dental school ever attached to a state university was added to the college group. It was known as the College of Dental Sur- gery, and occupied a building on the north of the campus which had form- erly served as a faculty residence. She remebers her mother's reason why Mason Hall, one of the first two University buildings, has lasted until the present. It was strongly con- structed, she said, and the mortar for the brick-laying was mixed with milk! Often she was asked by contract- ors to sell the milk of her three cows. "Many a batch of cheese was stopped in the process manufacture," she said, "when the milk was sent away to mix mortar." * T o Quizzed In County Welfare, Supervisors Complain Of Lack Of Cooperation Of Case Workers At the meeting of the county board of supervisors held yesterday, debate on the problem of administering local welfare relief was continued as C. H. Elliott, county welfare relief admin- istrator, and H. E. Spangler, manager of the National Re-employment Serv- ice here were questioned by the board, Mr. Elliott pledged "all the co-oper- ation possible under state and federal laws," and said that the supervisors are encouraged to work with his staff. Several supervisors said that relief case workers had not made regular calls on them, and some said that they did not even know the workers in their district. Mr. Spangler asked this morning for an appropriation of $300 to cover office expenses not paid by the government. He reported that 1,000 of the 2,600 workable persons on his rolls had been put to work on pub- lic projects or in private industry. Martin J. Mol, county agent and chairman of the old-age assistance board told the supervisors that they are required by law to pay the ex-' penses of old-age pension adminis- tration. He submitted a budget of $1,083, and he reported that about 210 cases in the county are receiving an average of $10 to $15 per month from the state agency, there being no federal funds available as yet. i IC GA TP INNLE WORLD S THOUGH large, the Bell System is simple in structure. Think of it as a tree. Branches: 24 associated operating companies, each attuned to the area it serves. Trunk: The American Telephone and Telegraph Company, which coordinates all system activities. Roots: Bell Telephone Laboratories and Western Electric, whose functions are scientific research and manufacture; Long Lines Department of A. T. and T., which through its country-wide network of wires links together the 24 operating companies, handles overseas service; Advisory Staff of A. T. and T., which advises the operating companies on all phases of telephone operation and searches constantly for better methods. Working as one, these many Bell System units en- Why.notcto urfoYk s able you to talk to almost nh rlowe s anyone, anywhere, any time. BELL o TELEPHONE SYSTEM OCgAE Thinking of WATCHES suggests THE TIME SHOP 1121 So. University Ave. -BIG DOUBLE BILL NOW ET IA i . .d it III I - LAST TIMES TODAY "DRESSED TO THRILL" and "KING SOLOMON OF BROADWAY" __Tomcrrow and Saturday WARNER OLAND "CHARLIE CHAN IN EGYPT" "GI NGER" JACKIE SEARLE, JANE WITHERS "TARZAN" No. 7 DAILY 1:30.-11 P.M. WHNEIT N EYf 15c to 6 - 25c After 6 Starting Today FIRST A. A. SHOWING "STREAM LI NE EXPRESS" with VICTOR JORY EVELYN VENABLE '®, Daring Cameramen For the First Time Penetrate Heart of Selassie's Empire to Get the Facts! See the splendor of the court of the Lion King; see his troops in actual war maneuvers; see Ethiopian courts, markets, industries; meet the savage hill tribes; see their weird wedding rites, their war dances! This Evening at 8:15 BORGNY HAMMER presents Loye and Friendship" a New Comedy by Peter Egge and TOMORROW EVENING, Ibsen's Last Play ""hen We ead Awaken" with Arvid Paulson, Irvng Mitchell and a Distinguished Cast. $1.00 - 75c - 50c LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE MICHIGAN LEAGUE BLDG. Accused and accuser chained together; one of the ancient customs of Ethiopia. Your chance to see the capital of Ethiopia from the inside... learn the news behind the news- paper headlines. MATINEE EVENING 2 & 3:30 P.M. NMS TIC 7 and 9 O'clock - -IM J and ~ PAT O'BRIEN if .102 r n or"Q On Adolph Zukor presents sha kam- ne of Haile Selassie's savage fighters arpens his spear for war. I~i --- _' N' 1!