WAGE TWO THE MICHIGEAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1939 ._._. .. i War Veterans, In Revolt, Take Over Paraguay Provisional Government Is Set Up; President Ayala Sends In Resignation ASUNCION, PARAGUAY, Feb. 18. - VP) - Jungle-hardened veterans of the war with Bolivia today set up a provisional government in Paraguay and forced President Esebio Ayala to resign. Ayala, who had fled from his place after loyal police lost a hard battle which raged all day yesterday through the streets of the capital, submitted his resignation by radio from the gunboat Paraguay on which he had taken refuge. The message of resignation was ad- dressed to Col. Camilo Recalde, lead- er of the revolutionaries, who with his followers proclaimed the war vet- erans' hero, Col. Rafael Franco, pro- visional president of Paraguay. Permitted To Land Recalde then permitted Ayala to land from the gunboat and return to his residence with full guarantees. The rebels, headed by Colonel Smith and Colonel Recalde, veterans of the Chaco War, emerged victorious from a series of street battles yester- day with loyal forces. Foreign Minister Luis Riart, ar- rested by the revolutionaries, was held prisoner in the aviation school, the members of which - like the ma- jority of the military forces in Asun- cion - joined the rebels. Colonel Franco, Chaco War hero who was dismissed from the army and exiled by the previous civilian government in connection with al- leged communistic activities, was at his seat of exile in Buenos Aires, Ar- gentina, and was expected to return soon. Troops Surrender Troops which supported the gov- ernment when the rebellion burst in- to the open yesterday, surrendered unconditionally at 10:00 p.m. last night to the revolutionary leaders. The chiefs of the revolution as- sumed absolute control of the situa- tion, with military units quartered outside Asuncion, as well as those within the capital, now obeying their orders. The military rebellion arose in the aftermath of the Gran Chaco war- fare between Paraguay and Bolivia, one group of Paraguayan militarists having expressed dissatisfaction over' the terms under which the civilian government agreed to halt hostilities. Hockey Six Downs St. Thomas, 12 To 5 (Continued from Page i) Motor Magnate Dead Plans Pushed To Give City Softer Water Purchase Of Plant Site Given Final Approval By Council Vote The city council of Ann Arbor voted final approval of the purchase of a site for the new water softening plant Monday night. The acquisition of the site, directly west of the present reservoir at the end of Sunset Itoad, will involve $10,000. Acting on their promise made to Mayor Robert A. Campbell last Oc- tober, that the city payrolls would be raised as soon as the city was out of the red, the council last night voted an increase in salary of five per cent for all city employees. An audit of the city's books two weeks ago re- vealed that Ann Arbor was out of the red for the first time in three years, and in six months might even be $50,000 ahead. A motion by Alderman Wirt Mas- ten that City Clerk Fred Perry and City Attorney William Laird be em- powered to collect from the Home Packing Company meat inspection fees in default for the past two months was unanimously approved. Alderman Masten revealed that the packing firm was nearly $100 in de- fault on a bill of $240 for the past two months, having declared that it would pay no more because it was "not in sympathy with the ordi- nance." The motion provided that meat in- spection for the firm should cease if payment were not forthcoming in two days. The controversy over the exchange of the city's waterworks Park prop- erty for the Board of Education's strip on Thayer Street in back of Ann Arbor High again reached a check- mate when Alderman Leigh J. Young's resolution, calling for ex- change with a provision that Water- works Park should be used for no other purpose than playground or school, was defeated 9-5, ° and the matter referred back to committee. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified kdvertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five )clock previous to day of insertion. Box niumbers may be secured at on 'xtra charge. Gash in advance 11e per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Minimum 3 lines per in- sertion. relephone rate -15c per reading line for two or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. O101 discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. 6y contract, per line -2 lines daily, one month. .... ............8c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months ........8 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.........8 1,000 iines used as desired....... 2.000 lines used as desired.......6 The above rates are per reading line based on eight reading lines per inch Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add 5c per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add *c per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. The above rates are for 7% point typeE FOR RENT - ROOMS FOR RENT: Desirable suite and single rooms for rent. 615 Monroe. Next to Chi Psi house. 310 ROOM for two men. Large pleasant room, third floor, double-deck, single beds. 2 closets, 2 chiffoniers. Shower bath with separate room for lavatory and toilet. "A bargain for the second semester. See care- taker, forenoon. 521 Walnut. 4 312 FOR RENT: Rooms. One single. One double and one suite. 514 E. Jeffer- son St. 313 SUITE with private bath and shower for three men. Additional single if group of four. Steam heat. Dial 8544. 422 E. Washington. 308 FOR RENT: Rooms for women grad- uate students. 820 East Washing- ton. Phone 2-2394. 302 LAUNDRY STUDENT HAND LAUNDRY: Prices reasonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. 6x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. Ix LOST AND FOUND LOST: Alpha Omega fraternity pin between Den and 625 Forest. Re- ward. Phone 2-2861. 316 LOST: Phi Delta Epsilon fraternity pin. Reward. Call Seingold. 2-1682. 300 LOST: One white gold wedding ring, one Theta. Phi Alpha sorority pin, one University nurse's training school pin. Call Union Desk. 298 LOST: Brown Gladstone suitcase, corner Washtenaw and South Uni- versity. Reward. Robert Emmett. Phone 5343. 303 FOR SALE FOR SALE: Library of English classics. 10c to 75c per volume. Many bargains to choose from. 1505 S. University. 7-9:30 p.m. 318 WANTED WANTED: An odd ski or a good sec- ond hand pair. Call 3687. 320 WANTED: A flat-top student desk. Phone 2-2891. 314 NOTICES ONE THIRD OFF on all fur work.; E. L. !Gre-6nbaumi. 448 Spring Street. Phone 9625. 14x FOR BETTER FOOD. Choice meats. Fresh vegetables. Home made des- sorts, 13 meals $3.65. Try Slade's. 608 Hill" Street near State. 306 EYES examined, best glasses made at lowest prices. Oculist. U. of M. graduate, 44 years practice. 549 Packard. Phone 2-1866. 13x SELL YOUR OLD CLOTHES: We'll buy old and new suits and over- coats for $3 to $20. Also highest prices for saxophones and typewrit- ers. Don't sell before you see Sam. Phone for appointments. 2-3640. lox attlewsStudying Pacific Coast Wood Investigating public and private forest management practices, Prof. Donald M. Matthews, of the School of Forestry and Conservation, on sab- batical leave, is now on the Pacific Coast in the pine and redwood re- gions. He is working at headquarters of the University of California. Professor Matthews will move to the Gulf Coast for a similar study of the southern pine region. -Associated Press Photo Roy D. Chapin, 55, president of the Hudson Motor Car Company and secretary of commerce in the Hoover administration, died of pneumonia Sunday in Detroit. Nearing Offers Communism As 'The Way Out' (Continued from Page 1) ¢own Rotary club than one of the most active Communists in the coun- try, told with a smile of his difficulties in finding a place to speak. "There is less and less freedom in America," Dr. Nearing said, "and it is harder and harder for a liberal or a "radical to find a place to speak. The Amer- ican Legion and Daughters of the American Revolution see that you don't get buildings, and if you at- tempt to speak in the street, the police run you in." But he admitted that his life is a "gay adventure." You never know what's going to happen next," he said. Students in colleges and univer- sities, however, Dr. Nearing believes, are becoming more liberal all the time. "Such organizations as this are evidences of it, and it is an encour- aging sign." Dr. Nearing believes that a revolu- tion will have to be abrupt and vio- lent. It amuses him, he said, to talk of Communist violence in a "period when there is so much capitalistic violence," and it is his opinion that the social disruption caused by a revolution "will not be more serious than the present chaos." "To illustrate his point he referred to a house which has gotten so dilap- idated that it is beyond repair, and the only course of action open is to tear it down and build anew. He thinks that Fabian Socialists are really wasting their time," although if they could obtain their objective, that would be fine." He held that Communism does not destroy individual freedom and even declared that "there is more freedom in Russia than under capitalism." He differed sharply with Philip Adler, Detroit News correspondent in Russia, who, in a recent speech here, de- scribed the Russian dictatorship as a place where the individual had little if any political or economic freedom. FOR RENT: Double rooms. Clean and warm. Running hot water. 411 N. State Street. 319 A NICE warm front room. Two win- dows. Completely furnished. 336 John St. Phone 2-1626. 421 BOY'S ROOM for rent. Front, single with dormitory privilege. 1010 For- est. 316 COMFORTABLE single room in a quiet house. 715 E. Ann. Phone 6735. 317 FOR RENT: Single room, one block from campus. 520 Thompson. Phone 7758. 309 GOOD front room. Double or single. 509 S. Division. 296 LARGE warm suite for one or two students. One block from Engi- neering Building. Reasonable. 1118 S. University. Phone 3743. 311 !' MA Iia Till, I HI LL AUDITORUM. at 8:15 TONI GHT THE TIMELY AND THRILLING STORY "Ethiopia's Death Struggle" AS SEEN BY I 5,000 Students Enter Library Each Day As Circulation Leaps I JO)SEF ISRAEL Approximately 5,000 persons enter the Main Library every day, statis- tics compiled by the Library staff show, and the student body is using the Library far more than was the case a few years ago, William W. Bishop emphasized in his annual re- port to the Board of Regents. It is probable, Dr. Bishop states, that at least seven-tenths of the stu- dent body are in one or more of the University Libraries daily for a con- siderable time, according to the sta- tistics taken on April 29 and May 7 of the 1934-35 school year. Furthermore, Dr. Bishop states, the Library is used much more in the winter than in any other time of the year. "If the counts had been made in January, there is no question that the figures gathered would have been greatly enlarged, the report says. The total circulation of the books in the library also showed a great increase over that of 1933-34 and almost equals the number of volumes in all the libraries of the University. In public libraries the circulation gan played good defensive hockey as they held the Canadians until Cap- tain David's return, and then James and Heyliger went to work as Victor passed to Gilbert for three goals in the last five minutes of the period. The third period saw the scoring orgy reach its climax as the slim Canadian whipped in three more goals, two of which came on plays from Heyliger's stick, and one on a pass from Fritz Radford who made his initial appearance last night. St. Thomas, outskated throughout most of the game came back in the final period to avoid the most hu- miliating kind of defeat and banged four goals past Irwin Shalek. Johnny Fabello countered for the Wolverines early in the last period when he took a pass from James, who had rounded the St. Thomas net, and rammed it past the bewildered Con- nor. Larry David got a goal on a well- executed solo dash late in the game when he outmaneuvered the St. Thomas defense and blazed a drive between Connor's arm and the post. The eight-man Michigan squad looked vastly improved last night, and Lowrey believes that the Wol- verines have an excellent chance of stopping Minnesota this week-end. Saves: 1 2 3 Total Shalek ........2 3 3 8 Connor .......10 6 10 26 ALLEN RETURNS Prof. Shirley Allen, of the forestry school, has recently returned from a two-day conference between semes- ters at Washingtoi, where he con- sulted with National Park officials on a training program for the forestry personnel of the National Park Serv- ice. generally exceeds the entire stock,' but in university libraries it seldom approaches the number of volumes. "It is thus evident." Dr. Bishop writes, "that this Library is used very in- tensively by the student body and the faculties." In the circulation statistics, slight decreases appear at but two points, 331 fewer books were drawn for over- night use in the departmental and collegiate libraries, and 233 by mem- bers of the faculty. In all other schedules a marked in- crease was evident. This great in- crease, the report says, is probably a result of the increased enrollment in the University as a whole, but the amount of the growth in circulation - 119,721 volumes - is the largest in- crease ever recorded save that regis- tered in 1920 when an increase of 129,164 was registered. An increase in the use of books in the stacks, the graduate reading rooms, and the departmental libraries "has been a matter of common re- mark among the library staff," Dr. Bishop says. The efficiency of the service at the delivery desk in the corridor of the second floor of the General Library was measured during the week of April 22-27. In this week, 6,107 re- quests for books were handed in at the desk and 4,490 books or 73.52 per cent were delivered to readers at once. Reports of the location of 1,339 others were given to the persons desiring the books. NEW YORK TIMES CORRESPONDENT and PATHE NEWS REPRESENTATIVE Illustrated With EXCLUSIVE MOTION PICTURES SINGLE ADMISSIONS: 75c and SOc TICKETS at WAHR'S Next Week,: EDWARD PRICE BELL - "Interviewving the Leaders of the World" - This lecture will be presented jointly by the Oratorical Association and Sigma Delta Chi. I I _ MATINEE EVENING PERFORMANCES "START PROMPTLY PERFORMANCE STARTS PROMPTLY Phone Dial 6415 for Reserved Seats, Id AT 2:30 P.M. AT 8:30 P.M. Now! TODAY EVENING RADIO PROGRAMSI 6:O0-WJR Buck Rogers. wwJ Ty Tyson. WXYZ Contrasts in Music. CKLW Omar. 6:15--wJR Junior Nurse Corps. WWJ Dinner music. WXYZ Dance Music. CKLW Joe Gentile. 6:30-WJR Duncan Moore. WWJ Bulletins, WXYZ Day in Review. CKLW Rhythm Ramblings. 6:45-WJA Musical Moments. wwJ Musical Moments. WXYZ Lowell Thomas. CKLW Old Bill, 7:00-wJR Myrt and Marge. WWJ Amos and Andy. WXYZ Easy Aces. CKLW Shadows on the Clock. 7:15- WJR Adventures of Jimmie Allen, WWJ Evening. Melodies. WXYZ Captain Tim, CKLW Laugh Parade. 7:30 -WJR KateH Sith. WWJ Studio Hour. wXYZ Lone Ranger. CKLW variety Revue. 7:45-WJR Boake Carter. 8:O0-WJR "Cavalcade of America." WWJ One Man's Family. WXYZ Frank Simon's Concert Band. CKLW Pop Concert. 9 :00-WJR Lily Fong i. Andre Kostelanetz's Music. W WJ Town Hall Tonight. WX-Z Corn Cob Pipe Club. CKLW Rick Roberts' Revellers. 9:30-WJR Ray Noble's Music. WXYZ Twenty Thousand Years in Sing Sin°. CKLW Sinfonietta. WWJ "Spooks." 10:00-wJR Gang Busters. WXYZ John Charles Thomas. CKLW Husbands and Wives. 10:30-WJR March of Time. WWJ-.Speaker. WXYZ Mart Kenny's Music. CKLW Grand Opera. 10:45 Tim Doolittle, WWJ Roy Sneli's Music. WxYZ Gray Gordon's Music. 11:00-WJR Bulletins. WXYZ Baker Twins. CKLW Stardust. 11:15-WJR Abe Lyman's Music. WWJ Dance Music. CKLW Dance Music. 11:30-W WJ George Kavanagh's Music. WJR Claude Hopkin's Music. WXYZ Lowry Clark. CKLW Freddy Martin's Music. 11 :45- WJR Solay. wXZ Enoch Light's Music. CKLW Anson Weeks' Music. 12 :00--WJR Bert Stark's Music. WWJ Russ Lyon's Music. CKLW Hal Kemp's Music. WXYZ Shandor: Joe Rines' Music. 12:30-WJR Milton Kellam's Music. WXYZ Enric Madrigeurra's Music. CKLW Ted Weems' Music. 1 :00-CKLW Jack Hylton's Music. 1:30-CKLW Will Osborne's Music. 0® aj ~es y of Shakespeare I The Melody of Mendelsohn I *The Mastery of Reinhardtl Last Times Today "MUTINY on the BOUNTY" and - "TWO FOR TONIGHT" Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. MYRNA LOY in 'W H I PSaAW" and - "IVORY HANDLED GUNS" 11 ART CINEMA LEAGUE Presents at the LydisMendelssohn Theatre 7 u Warner Bros. present D9 MAX REINHARDT'S Production * * 15STARS * * JAMES CAGNEY .......... Continuous 1:30 - 11 p.m. 15c to 6 --25c after 6 -- Wednesday, Thursday - Wm. BOYD, Judith ALLEN "Burning Gold" with cast of Last Tines Today - 3000 puppets JAMES CAGN EY$3 PAT O'BRIEN GLORIA STUART And I