TWO -Ty1 MvTTA arcL RTDAY, MAY 22, 1r NEWS O1f The DAY Tragedy At Williams College Claims Two s, (From The Associated Press) La do MenSeek Borah Aid, Hit Liberty League The Landon camp extended its right hand to Senator Borah, its chief critic, today, and at the same time, with its left hand sent a jab to the jaw of the American Liberty League. The Landon men are expectantly awaiting Borah's speech May 28, hop- ing that he will not hit at the Kansas governor. Speaking of Postmaster- General Farley's criticism of Landon at Grand Rapids Wednesday, Repre- sentative Lambertson, Kansas Repub- lican declared in Washington yester- day that he considered his governor closer to Borah than the American Liberty League. The, League, Lam- bertson said, "is the baby of the Democratic Shouse and Al Smith. It is the. Landons and the Borahs and Vandenbergs and Steiwers that are articulation for the Republican party today. Not a finger of any of these four has been touched by the Liberty League." Large Air Maneuvers Start At Self ridge The largest maneuvers ever under- taken at Selfridge Field will be begun today by the First Pursuit Group of the Army Air Corps. The tactics will cover a period of two weeks, and, com- manded by Col. Ralph Royce, 100 enlisted men and 33 officers will take part. Oregon Man Admits Killing Wife OREGON, Ill., May 21. -(MP) -Guy M. Tallmadge, 58 year old undertak-; er's assistant, confessed today, State's Attorney S. Donald Crowell an- nounced, that he had fabricated the story of his wife's slaying at the hands of a "ragged hold up man" and admitted killing her because his last six years of wedded life was "a living hell." Held on a murder warrant, issued{ as his 900 word statement was being taken down by investigators, Tall- Madge started to "break," the author- sties said, after he was confronted with a story told by Mrs. Frances Birch, 30 year old widow, who as-. serted he had planned to marry her and had given her a diamond ring. Hands Off Egypt Britain Tells World Beown Named SHe Select Tokyo ele ate Prof. Everett S. Brown of the polit- ical science department has received a letter from the Japan Student As- sociation, informing him that he should help in choosing one student from the University to attend, along with students from 15 other colleges in the East and Mid-West, the an- nual "American-Japan Student Con- ference." This year marks the third time that the convention will be held. The third conference, which will be held in Tokyo from August 1 to Au- gust 8, will be divided into five com- missicns, enabling the visitors to par- take in discussions of economics, pol- itics, culture, religion and natural science. Professor Brown said yesterday that "the general plan is to have a week's conference in Tokyo, followed by a three-week tour of Japan. While in Japan, the delegates will be guests of the Japan Student Association, which will take care of all expenses except laundry and personal expendi- tures. "The rail and boat transportation must; be met by the delegate," Pro- fessor Brown continued, "but the cost of the entire trip should amount to about $400." All those students interested in making the trip should get in touch with Professor Brown immediately, for the selection of the delegate must be made shortly. 4IF fT I'TRIANGLES PRESIDENT Hubert C. Fones, '38E, was elected president of Triangles, .Junior engi- neering honorary society, last night in a special meeting at the Union. Fones succeeds Robert Beuhler in this capacity. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in advance Ile per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per read- ing line for three or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. Telephone rate - 15c per reading line for two or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. 101 discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. By Contract, per line -2 lines daily, one month. ..................8c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months ............8c 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 ............8c 1,000 lines used as desired ..........7c 2,000 lines used as desired ..........6c The above rates are per reading line based on eightreading lines per inch Tonic type, upper and loower case. Add 6e per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for boldrface, upper and lower case. Add 1Oc per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. The above rates are for 7% point type. FOR RENT SENIOR will share with two seniors, professional or grad. students, two- room suite. Summer Session. Piano. $2.75. Box 127. Mich. Daily. 510 AVAILABLE at end of semester. Beaalufi[idly furnished suite with pri- vate lavatory, for instructor or gradiuate student. Phone 9524. 511 FOR ENT: Suite with private bath and shower. Continuous hot water. Also galrage. Dial 8544. 422 E. Washington. 505 SUMMER STUDENTS: Light cool rooms. Special rates. Porter serv- ice. Recreation facilities. The Oaks. 915 Oakland. 7458. 504 Classified mre - o LAUNDRY_ LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned Ca"eful work at low price. 1x EMPLOYMENT EARN WHILE YOU LEARN: The "Hoover Insurance & Trust Service" has a few openings in Detroit and Michigan which offer an excellent opportunity to earn while receiving a thorough practical business train- ing. Juniors and seniors aspiring to a business career should write, Da- vid R. Hoover, 848 Michigan Build- ing, Detroit. 17x LOST AND FOUND LOST: In 2203 Angell Hall: "Europe Since 1870" by Slosson. Finder please call Veenboer at 3318. 508 LOST: Green Parker fountain pen. Finehi. Call 3929. 509 LOST: Schaefer pen; led and black. At library or vicinity. Return to Betty Spangler, 383 Jordan. 507 NOTICES STUDENT TYPING: Expertly done with reasonable rates. 321 E. Lib- erty. Apartment 2. 499 ENGLISH house party, limited to twelve guests. Cambridge (three weeks' university summer courses optional). London and near~by points of interest - Oxford, Shake- speare country, Canterbury, etc. Moderate cost. About seven weeks. July, August. Address Daily Box 123. 463 available at WA RN1NG: Only a reliable furrier cali clean your fors and fur coat without harming the skins. 32 yers of expertl111servicereeom- mends ZWERDING'S FUR SHOP for safe fur cleanialg and storage. Phone 8507. 16x SELL YOUR OLD CLOTHES: We'll buy old and new suits and over- coats for $3 to $20. Also highest prices for saxopihones and type- writers. Don'L sell before you see ,qam. Phone for appointments. 2-3640. lox EYES examined, best glasses made at lowest prices. Oculist, U. of M. graduate, 44 years practice. 549 Packard. Phone 2-1866. 13x NOTICE: We clean, upholster, repair and refinish furniture. Phone 8105. A. A. Stuhlman. 15x MAC'S TAXI-4289. Try our efli- e cient service. All new cabs. 3x ®' 7 --Assuciated Press Photo. Robert Paul Henneberry (left), son of a wealthy Chicago manufac- turer, was shot and killed in his dormitory room at Williams College, Williamstown, Mass.. by a fellow student, Lewis Jack Somers (right), 19, of Meriden, Conn. Somers, who took his own life, was belived men- tally deranged from overstudy. Freshrns fEtGroups, CCC Camps Problems Of Extension Division Daily 1:30 to 11 p.m. 15c to 6- 25e after 6 Now GENE, AUTRY "Singing cowboy" --- -- and RUTH CHATTERTON "Lady of Secrets" ONE ENTIRE WEEK Starts Tomorrow Corresponidence School Is Added to Supplement Regular Work Two of the most important ques= tions facing the University extension divisions of the country were revealed yesterday by Prof. William D. Hen-' derson, director of the University of Michigan Extension Division. Professor Henderson, who recently returned from a meeting of the Na- tional University Extension Associa- tion where the problems were dis- cussed, said those questions were how to deal with the freshman college groups and with the CCC educational projects. The freshman college groups,.which were first founded in Michigan, were organized as a result of the depression in order to give advanced training to youths who could not afford to attend a regular college institution. At present nearly 100 of such groups, being supported by Federal WPA funds, are organized within this state; but only four are under the jurisdic- tion of the University of Michigan, the others being supervised by various educational institutes throughout the state. Materials for study are sent through the Extension Division to the super- visor of the college group, but no credit is given by the University for any work done except after the pas- sage of an entrance examination or after the successful completion of more advanced courses whose prere- quisites were fulfilled in the college group. This year, it was explained, it was1 on May 1. Lesson sheets are sent out by the University, as are exam- ination papers, whih are filled out and returned by the student for cor- rectior). Usually this material is not sent to the individual pupil, but rather to a supervisor who conducts a "center" where five to twenty students meet tro get their material and instruction. At present Michigan has 40 such "cen- ters," 15 of which are located in CCC camps, while only 17 persons are get- ting their material individually. The entire "home study" depart- ment, including the local "centers," is financed by Federal WPA fiulds. Sident fReceives Pilot Appointineni Francis L. Wallace, '36E, president of the Engineering College during the past year, leaves today for Chicago to assume a. co-pilot's position with the United Air Lines. Wallace, whose home is in Freeport, Ill., will be placed on duty on planes going out of Chicago, either on the eastern route to New York City or on the western hop to Cheyenne, Wyo. He holds an unlimited commercial pilot's license and has more than 1,000 hours at the pilot's controls to his credit. EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS --l .4 xperiments Made To Produe (2 onii'docal -Dab Iia Root S w'au.,t The production of a sugar from dahlia roots, which is one and a half times as sweet as cane sugar, will be coinnercially feasible in several years, ai ecording to Leonard A. Delp research associate in the department of en- gineering research. It has been known for several years that levulose sugar can be produced from dahlia roots, but it has never been profitable to do so commercially. Dr. Delp is now making the process economically possible by developing roots which are higher in their sugar content. This is done by judging the 'desirability of roots according to their size, sugar content and sturdi- ness, the judging being done by an- alyzing several hundred types of roots in a rather tedious process and mat- ing the better types. Since the sugar content of the roots now varies from three to sixteen per cent, the object of Mr. Delp's research is to produce a plant whose roots will have the highest possible sugar con- tent. He has also improved and added several steps in the refining process. The levulose sugar is not as de- sirable for a table sugar as it is for jellies, marmalades, and prepared desserts, it was further explained. It will be used as another food product, being of pleasing taste and having a high sweetening quality. The cost of production of dahlias for use in the making of sugar will not be sufficiently low until a much greater acreage has been given to their cultivation. The plants are similar to beets in their action on the soil and in .their growth, and the syrup will be pro- duced at a very nominal cost. Only a few hundred pounds of the sugar per year are being produced at the present time because the process is still in the experimental stage. Dahlias for the experimental work are being produced at Portland, Mich., Delp said. The seeds are planted in a greenhouse in April and set out- doors about Decoration Day, the plants producing a good cluster of roots their first year and a better number the second. There are other products in the dahlia and its root which may also be utilized, according to Delp. These include a food for live-stock from the dried roots after the syrup has been drawn out, an organic calcium com- pound which is very desirable in bone growth, and others which have not been thoroughly investigated as yet. Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin told the world flatly today that Eng- land will stand for no interference in Egypt and will take a firm stand against Anti-British sentiment in Palestine. Shortly before Sir Thomas W. H. Inskip, minister of defense coordi- nation, announced in the House of Commons that the government is sub- sidizing extension of private automo- bile factories to quicken production of military airtlanes, Baldwin de- clared Britain "would regard as an unfriendly act any attempt at inter- ference" in Egypt. "We intend to dis- charge our responsibilities to the full" in Palestine," he said. Arab-Jewish outbreaks near Jerusalem have re- cently caused the wounding of three British soldiers, and a battalion of English troops is enroute there from Cairo. * * * Harold r. Lh(ler, director of the International Labor Office in Geneva, in a report today asserted large scale preparatijons are being pushed "with' feverish energy" throughout the_ world.l Almosi t. fe same time. Winston Church ill, British statesman, declared1 in the Commions that Germany has put 4,000,000 unemployed to work# building munitions or in the army. f Method s Exibited A denOustratioi in tili methods of color photography at 8 p.m. today in Ronm 2O03 N.S. by Prof.. ;. B. Mainsr will featire ftwe exhibit being spon- sored todayv and tomorrow by the bot- my deartment. The progress in the - field of color processing in both still. and motion pictiures of botanical sub-t jects will be explained.a Dr. Dow V. Baxter, Dr. Chester A. Arnold, and Ralph Bennett will alsoa take part. The general exhibit is being con-- ducted by members of tle variousA botanical organizations aid is to be found in Room 3004 N.S. It shows . the different ways photography has been applied to botanical research and teachi.r Several excellent pic- torial enlargements of unusual plants will be on displav. Visitors will .be found necessary to supplement the 6:00-WJR Stevenson Sports. freshman college groups with a cor- WWJ Ty Tyson, WXYZ Key Ring. respondence school. More than 1,200 CKLW Omar, the Mystic. persons have enrolled under this 6:15--wJR Jimmy Allen. WWJ Dinner Music. "home study" department of the ex- WXYZ Day in Review. tension division since it was organ- CKLW Joe Gentile. ized in February, although the num- WJB u Program. ber of active students was only 705 WXYZ The Lone Raiger ________________________CKLW Rhythm Ranibliui'.. 6:45--WJR Boake Carter. e'uWWJ Rhythm Review. Pharmacsts Hol CKLW Song Recital. 7:00--WJR Bea Lille: Lennie 1layton's " Music. One Da es.1 WWJ Jessica Dragolette: ,IRosario Bou rdonu 's Ensemnble. WXYZ Irene Rich. C'KLW -elen.Morn.I (Continued from Page 1) 7:15 WXYZ R u i roit'rercr. - ~ ---- - -CKLW Phil-Mar---':KMush' 7:30.....WJR. Broaidwava rot o tion of the pharmacological properties wx Lou B in synt heio pl'odlwts offered as sub- CTLWVait vue. 5A110--W~jI' Hollywv.ood 1-lti. stitutes for herbal essences. WWJ wait. Time. As a product, of research work hav- CLW Vincent Yu)1' lMu'."'. ing obvious commercial merit, Dr. 8: ww-- WWXCoin't of lunoa ne R stlow. Beal mentioned the coffee-flaking CKWX Fred Waring's Peunsylcanias. process, pressure rolling, designed or- S:- w CKLW MryantField. 9 'DC I,ctAnre KLostelallet", Music. iginally to prevent loss of aroma and' ' WW,) Richard Hiruor's,('ia oJlioim. oxidation of the roasted coffee con- W ,""I""dV% taining imprisoned carbon dioxide. <-K'w wT ,Th Turning from pharmacy to world WWail(y(rjj. WXYZ ~Bobl Cliesler' iif. economics, Prof. Max Handman of CKLW County Chaian. the economics department in the see- 015 -WJR lit Dates in IHiglory. WWJ Mischa Kottlci'. ond talk of the session concluded that 10:00-WJR Dunicanlloo re. the real motive behind Italy's Etili- WWJ AmIos and Aiich. WXYZ :Lowry larir's Mus'. opian conquest is the emotional de- CKLW Baseball Sco'es: Ncw . sie for nti olal prestige, not ecOO1. I-1015-WJR Rhythm. WWJ Tiger i igh 0;: elt n og i plress rc. Mexlodies. In til e co nc lu liv 1 a d d re ss d' h Ww nk lo r o" . (I-,w Cr1 fllim;M''e a ternoon Prof. F'rderick A. Coller 1(131) W.I' it Musi' of tal e sur ger y depa rt unc' t d iscu ssed W X YZ Aol hun T1,0 l ' M u'v . ndesia a Anest is' w ,Ie Crawlord 1I1001 -WJ. " ~ranklasters' Mu ic. Giving sl'horV sidelights on the dis- WW Troupers. covery of one of the progenitors of WXYZ Bker Twins. CKlv Al Kavelin's Music. modern surgery, Dr. Coller outlined 1:15- WWJ Dance Music. the history of anesthesia and sum- WXYz Sport Grams. 1:;30--WJR Don Bestor's Must i. marized briefly the properties of an- wwJ Bob Chester's Music. esthetics now in use. The principal WXYZ Fletcher eder son'sMusic. CKLW Sophie Tucker's Mush'. l'ecenlt development in the field, he 111:45-WJR Meditations. added, is thil application of "basal 12:00--WJR At Close of D wwJ Russ Lyons' Music- doses" by injection previous to op- WXYZ Bert Stock's Music. 'iation. when a slight additional l1W Clde:Tras!'sasi. 12::M (1W T,Joe ISder's M ,it. amo(it of cther sutfices. By this I :00 (2KLW T'I'd Woems' usi:c pra c er th i entital statd ; r(f the pa- -- tien; is sootlied and lou'e favorable $3 000 operat illg cond ii ions are oldamincd, h j stated. I ;' ' id 90 a ' ""5 12td , 12 -t --.l-oro mAaArbor. all good i I Fr ate n iLy Aluumii Aid Poet's Widow HEAFORD JUNCTION, Wis., May 20. - ll')-- A speedy reply to an ap- peal for financial aid today assured the widow of Eugene Field, the poet, that her pictu'esque resort estate would not he lost through a mort- gag' foreclosure. Her sort, Eugenc Field JL, said he believed his nlother would accept the "splendid offer" of the New York alumni chapter of Phi Delta Theta to advance $3,000 needed to satisfy a .judgnent against the 155-acre estate. Mr. Field had invested her savings, :bilout $60.000, in the place. Field was a Ph i Delta Theta. .-Tearing on confirmation of the loreclosure sale was seheduled for Satirn'day. The fraternity's offer was t elegraphed from Philadelphia by J. I. Mitchell, alumni commissioner of the ord'er. It came a few hours before cesso P. Henry. chairman of a civic co10itt e restoring Field's boyhood i'ein liii Stee Louis notified the 80'bh ea +'-old widow, ill with heart disease, ha i! lite had appealed to President Roosevelt for aid in her behalf. Asshtance from the St. Louis group also was promised, the poet's son said.+ Daily News Viewed By Large Crowds More than 10,000 people crowded into the modernistic new plant of the Ann Arbor Daily News last night, eager to see just how a present-day newspaper is put out, as the Daily News celebrated its 100th anniversary. The housewarming last night marked the great advance the Daily News has made since it was the Argus back in 1835. The new building is one of the most efficient and most beautiful newspaper plants in the world. It is complete in every detail, with an engraving plant, morgue and all the other necessary departments of a modern newspaper. 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New York Makers of Amtericat's Finest Swim Suits t t _______.________..._ ___.___ . ..___ -- .__ a LET US FILL YOUR ~ PICNIC BASKET WIT OUR lAGCE VARIETY} OF DELhCATESS N FOODS AND SALADS BRE-AKFAST SPECIALS ! FINCIEON SPECIALS COMPLETE DINNERS 3 andi a Large Variety of I OASTED SANDWICHES Lost Times Today. at 3;15 and 8:15 "Liel" with KENNET1'H Mac- KENNA. Ernest LAW- FORD. Doris DAL ITON and George hOMNES. EFDDWI G ARR "I havc seen the ploy both in New York and Ann Arbor, and I doubt if Broadway saw a better production!" -Thp ptnit Timpc_ i 1 Y 1-c rld, :1,11d r11: oul. olze mile frolla 1-7111'(711 'Piv. 1,.,, - n- ..,.n., I '!1 F/ ;:: x n : l "V/' . -114413 llllf I