GE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY "OMAR foot Knocked Libraries Add From Box In 26,000 Books League Sanc tions Are Certain To Be Applied, Says Preuss FirstInning Elden Auker Will Start Against Lee In Chicago Today (Continued from Page 1) fielded Rogall's hard smash to the box and threw him out at first. Navin Field was a bedlam of ex- citement as thousands of ardent De- troit rooters went wild with frenzied joy as the Tigers got off to a four run lead. The Cubs played good ball and turned their six hits into three runs, but they were handicapped by in- ferior pitching and outslugged by the Detroit Club. Chicago came into the scoring col- umn in the fifth when Greenberg fumbled Phil Cavarretta's roller momentarily, and then tossed to Bridges at first, who dropped the ball. The official scorer ruled it an error for Greenberg, but the ball reached first in plenty of time to retire. the CHICAGO 'Galan, if . Eierman, 2b Lindstrom, c: 'Hartnett, c .. Demaree, rf. f . Cavarretta, lb 1Mack, 3b ....... Jurges, ss ...... oot, p ...... Henshaw, p ... Xowalik, p .... *Klein ........ Totals ...... Ab R . ....4 0 ....4 0 . ....3 0 . ....4 0 . .. ..4 0 . 4 1 . ...3 0 .. ...3 1 .. .0 0 ....1 0 .. ...2 1 . . ..1 0 H 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 3 2 1 4 0 9 2 3 0 0 0 0 A 1 6 0 2 1 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 To Collection The last school year marked a con- siderable increase in the number of volumes added to the University li- braries through purchase, gift, and exchange, according to Dr. William W. Bishop, University Librarian. More than 26,000 volumes were ac- quired, with the General Library and its branches obtaining 19,880 and the Clements Library 542. The number of volumes received as gifts was especially gratifying, said Dr. Bishop, being 1,410 books more than in 1933-34. Four thousand bound volumes and 28,627 unbound items were added as gifts. A great number of these was received from the botanical library of Parke, Davis, and Company who gave 1,168 volumes and 1,143 unbound items. "It can truly be said," remarked Dr. Bishop, "that no such addition to our re- sources in botany has ever been made before." In addition several volumes were received on the history of medicine, and 99 Arabic textbooks, chiefly on mathematics and geography, from the Egyptian government, and 228 vol- umes on architecture were presented. . In spite of the decreased appro- priation last year the library pur- chased, with the aid of special trust funds, many volumes on the thirteen original colonies, thus materially en- larging available information on American history. Volumes by Dar- win and Cicero on the Council of Trent, the "Nationalbibliothek . . Bucheinbande," the "Annales des Sciences Geologiques," and several other volumes were also purchased. half of the seventh. Cochrane walked. Gehringer hit into what looked like an easy double killing, but Cochrane dove into Jurges and pre- vented him from completing the play on Gehringer. Charley went to sec- ond when Greenberg was hit by a pitched ball and scored a moment later when Fox's smash carromed off Kowalyk's. glove into right field. Greenberg tried to score also but Billy Herman took Demaree's throw and nailed "Homer Hank" at the plate. That ended the scoring for the af- ternoon, but the Tigers missed several other opportunities as a result of poor base running. Rogell tried to stretch lhis single in the fifth when Galan pretended to fumble the ball and he was out by ten feet as he unsuccess- fully attempted a fade away slide. Again in the sixth, White tried to take second when Kowalyk's toss hit him in the back and bounced away. Herman retired him with a quick throw to Jurges although White's great slide made the play close. With the series tied up at a game apiece the teams move over to Chi- cago tomorrow for the third clash of the Series. Manager Charley Grimm has named Bill Lee to start for the Cubs. He will probably be opposed by Elden Auker. (Continued from Page 1) nation must then wait three months before taking action. Professor Preuss is of the opinion that the sanctions will be applied progressively by vote of the council, more and more drastic measures be- ing taken as the situation may call for. "But there is no doubt about it," he asserted, "that if Italy goes to war with Ethiopia, and if Ethiopia ac- cepts the commissions report, both as well as done now, the nations will be obliged to 'sanction' Italy." Professor Preuss said "if," because Italy has not yet officially and form- ally declared war. However, he said in effect, it is probable that the League will act as if war had been declared, because: should Italy, as did Japan in China, proceed against Ethiopia and conquer it, calling the affair a "colonial venture" and not a war, the whole aim of the League, namely preventing international vi- olence, would be perverted. "Italy claims that Ethiopia is not entitled to the protection of the Covenant because she has not lived up to the conditions of membership," Professor Preuss explained. "Musso- lini holds that the continuance of the slave trade in Ethiopia, in face of its outlawry by the League, is the viola- tion. But the slave trade goes through Italian Somaliland. And anyway the remedy is expulsion from the League, and not individual action by any one member. Italy, under the Fascist regime in 1923," Professor Preuss reminded, "championed the membership into the League in spite of Great Britain's opposition. "As for Mussolini's claim that the city of Mussa Ali belongs to Italy, it is shown in Ethiopian territory even on Italian maps." Professor Preuss declared that Eng- land's action in drawing her fleet away, from the North Sea to the Mediterranean shows how seriously she regards the situation in Ethiopia. "England regards Germany's power as a real th.reat," he said, "and it takes something very important to make her withdraw forces from points where they may watch the Rhine- land." He pointed out that the situation in Ethiopia is not unique from a legal point of view with regard to the League. "The same condition existed in China during the Japanese inva- sion," he said, "but France and Eng- land, the predominant powers in the League, did not have a primary in- terest in that zone." Commenting on the Embargo Act passed by the last United States Congress, Professor Reeves explained that it prohibits only shipment of actual instruments of war, a list of munitions set forth by the Munitions Control Board. "It says nothing about raw materials," he advised. Professor Reeves anticipates no dif- ficulty on the part of the United States as long as the war is solely be- tween Italy and Ethiopia. "Should PRINTING LOWEST PRICES PROGRAMS, BIDS, STATIONERY THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown, North of Postoffice ., .. .. O .. ., V t England come in against Italy and at- Italy is a nation of few natural re- tempt to enforce a blockade, it might sources and in event of a war would be mean trouble," he said. in need of wheat and steel from He called attention to the fact that without. Ill call 1I0. 0 the beer vault BUSINESS and SECRETARIAL TRAINING 221 west huron 10-minute delivery service Phone 8200 for air-cooled kegs, cases, bottles. popular brands... $,1.79 a case NEW TERM - - - OCTOBER 7 Beginning and Advanced Classes in Stenotypy, Shorthand, Type- writing, Accounting, English, Dictaphone, Calculator and Allied Subjects. ...33 3 6 24 15 1 *Batted for Kowalik in ninth. FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE 21st YEAR White, cf Cochrane, Gehringer, Greenberg, Goslin, if Fox, df,. Rogell, ss. Owen, 3b Bridges, p DETROIT Ab R .......3 2 c . .. ...2 1 2b .....3 2 lb .....3 1 . .... . .3 0 .. . .. .. ..2 1 4 1 H 1 1 2 1 0 1~ 2 0 1 9: L0 )0 4 A E 3 0 0 2 0 0 2 5 0 8 2 2 2 0 0 3 0 2 0 0 1 2 0 27 11 2 200-3 1 0 *-8 HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE Phone 7831 William Street at State Approved by State Department of Public Instruction. I Totals . Chicago Detroit .. ....... 28 .....0 0 0 .400 8 0 3 0 Pi U 1 0 Earned runs-Chicago 2, Detroit 7. Two-base hits-Cochrane, Rogell, Demaree. Home run-Greenberg. Double plays-Bridges to Rogell to Greenberg; Herman to Cavarretta; Jurges to Herman to Caverretta; Ro- gell to Gehringer to Greenberg. Left on bases-=-Chicago 7, Detroit 5. Base on balls-Off Henshaw 5, Ko- walik 1, Bridges 4. Strikeouts-By Henshaw 2, Ko- walik 1, Bridges 2. Runs and hits-Off Root 4 runs, 4 hits (pitched to four batters in first); off Henshaw 3 runs, 2 hits in 3 2/3 innings; off Kowalik 1 run, 3 hits in 4 1/3 innings. Hit by pitcher-By Henshaw (Ow- en); by Kowalik (Greenberg). Wild pitch-HRenshaw. Losing pitcher-Root. Umpires-Quigley (N.L.) plate; McGowan (A.L.) first; Stark (N.L.) second; Moriarty (A.L.) third. Time-1:50. runner if Bridges had held on to it. Hack advanced Cavarratta to sec- ond as he grounded out, Bridges to Greenberg, and set the stage for Jurges who scored Cavarretta with a looping single. over Gehringer's head. Get Two In Seventh The Cubs added two more in the seventh on Jurges' walk, Kowalyk's slow roller down third on which Owen had no chance, and Herman's single to left. Goslin's throw to the plate trying for Kowalyk was perfect, but a fraction of a second too late. The Tigers came right back in their CALKI NS- FLETCH ER DRUG .STORES ... "... 11, .11 NOTICE! Drop in and let us show you our line of HATS made to order. Reasonable Prices, All Workmanship, All Materials Guar- anteed.t First LOW EVERYDAY PRICES STUDY 50c 1PANA TOOTHPASTE,...34c LAUNDRY L A M P PROBAK BLADES . . . . 20 for 47c BOXES 98C 75c FITCH SHAMPOO . . . . . 47c Fiber - Unbreakable Alarm Clocks LISTERINE, Large Size . . . . 57c Special at 98c $1.00 VITALIS Hair Tonic . . . 67c $2.19 eoe GET YOURS FREE!_MichiganCalendar o vents TODAY! 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