mw(5 I fff MiL.,HICAN bAILY THURSDAY, OCT. 1, 1939 TWOI 1'HUXSTIAY, OCT. 1, 193~ ., NEWS Q The PAY CLASSIFIED ADVE RTISING PLEASANT single room, 1% blocks TWO neat and clean double rooms. from campus for graduate girl. 829 $3.50 per boy. 127 N. State. 9790. Tappan. Phone 8321. 42 44 FIRST floor three-room apartment. WANTED: Roommate, male. $2.00 Private bath and electric refriger- week. Block from campus. Grad. ation. For adults only. Call in per- student. 213 S. Thayer. Ph. 5156. son, 813 E. Ann St. 19 41 FOR RENT-Nice warm, double I NICE single room. Private entrance. room. 1208 S. University. Also, Adjoining shower bath. $5. 508 room-mate wanted. 21 Monroe. 42 SINGLE rooms for students. $2 and BOYS: Very attractive suite of rooms up. Mrs. Walker. Jennings House, for rent. 913 E. Huron. Phone 7851. 114 ' rf*in 2A (By the Associated Press) Spanish Government C~om plains To League GENEVA, Sept. 30.-(/P)-The Spanish delegation to the League of Nations tonight published documents charging Italy, Germany and Portu- gal with furnishing arms to the Spanish Fascist insurgents in viola- tign of the European non-interven- tion pact. A note, the documents said, was sent by the Madrid government to all signatory nations of the non-in- tervention accord declaring that if the insurgents had not received armed aid from Germany and Italy the Spanish revolt would have been "crushed at the outset." The communication concluded with a demand for abolition of arms embargoes on the Madrid govern- ment. The charges made specific refer- ence to insurgent receipt of "arms, ammunition and men from Ger- many" and alleged that Italy had sent 24 war planes to Spanish Fas- cists. Longshoremen Strike Settlement Near 4 WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.--)-In a final, last minute effort to forestall the t'hreatening dispute between the Pacific Coast Longshoremen's Union and ship-owners, the Maritime Com- mission today made a second at- tempt to obtain extension of existing agreements expiring at midnight. Rear Admiral Henry Wiley, chair- man of the newly appointed com- mission, expressed "high hopes" of a compromise after dispatching a new series of telegrams to opposing 1ders on the coast. Whether or not differences be- tween maritime workers and their employers are to be submitted to ar- bitration appeared to be the issue in the attempt to for stall trouble to- morrow. Employers were urged by the com- mission to accept without reserva- tions the suggestion for a 60-day ex- tension of maritime labor contracts, with the understanding that the commission would use its influence to obtain arbitration at the end of that time in the event no agreement is reached. Students Talk SDemocracy At Convention CLASSIFIED ADYER1TISING 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 lie per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 1c per read- ing line for three or more insertions. Miniumn three lines per insertion. Telephone rate --I15e per reading line for two or more insertions. Mnimum three lines per insertion. 10t discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. 2 ines daily, college year ...........7c By Contract, per line 2 lines daily. one moth ..... ....................c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months ............c 4 lines E.O.D.. 2 months...............c 160 lines used as desred..........9c 300 ines used as desired...........e 1,000 lines used as desired ..........7c j2,000 lines used as desired....... ..6c lT he abovesrates are per reading line The above raters are rr 7 point type. based on eight read ng lines per inch Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add 6c per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for boldrface, upper and lower case. Add 10c per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. EMPLOYMENT WANTED COUPLE desires job in fraternity or sorority. Man will take job as por- ter. Phone 8873. 34 EXPERT porter service wanted! Fra- ternity house. Permanently or tem- porarily. Call Willis Harris. Phone 6152. 16 HELP WANTED WANTED: Man student salesman to work in clothing store afternoons or mornings. Box 1. 47 WANTED: Girl to assist with house- work in private home in exchange for board and room. Phone 6654. 24 Watkins States Devalued Franc Will Aid Dollar The devaluation of the French franc as an effort to stabilize its cur- rency with those of Great Britain and the United States offers somel insurance against further inflation- ary measures in this, country, Prof. Leonard L. Watkins of the economics department indicated recently in an inte rview. The devaluation measures of the French cabinet will also stimulate world trade, especially as concerns France, whose trade with other coun- tries has of recent years been lagging, he said. The stagnant condition of1 France's trade has been partially re-I sponsible for the devaluation move inasmuch as the move was considered! inevitable and trade accordingly was delayed. "In view of this situation, the de- cision of the French government to* devalue the franc is of first import- ance, not only to France but to the world at large," Professor Watkins said. "The action is being taken not with the purpose of driving up prices, as was the case when the American dollar was devalued, but with the purpose of avoiding a furth- er drastic decline in French prices. "Business improvement in France and in other gold standard coun- tries, which may be expected to fol- low the lead, promises stimulation to world trade in general." Professor Watkins expressed the belief that out of this "gentlemen's agreement" may develop an oppor- tunity for world stabilization. "The announcement that the franc is to be devalued by 25-33 per cent, or cut from approximately 6.6 cents to about 5 cents in American money, STUDENT with car for part time work. Phone 6555. 602 Monroe St. 45 NOTICES PRACTICE piano for rent in resi- dence. Half block from Mosher- Jordan. Rates reasonable. Phone 9829. 39 NOTICE: Everybody selling football programs meet in 318-320 Union 8 o'clock Thursday night. 37 FROM Michigan's leading amuse- ment centers, any size orchestra. Ballrooms, clubs, parties. E. R. Clemons. Phone 4873. 23 MOTHS, bedbugs, fleas, roaches and other household insects positively destroyed by hydrocynic-gas fumi- gation. Endorsed by U. S. govern- ment and health authorities as the surest, quickest, safest and most economical method. We- are pro- fessionals in our line, handle each problem personally, and give a written guarantee on all work. Let us handle your problem. Dial 3113, Kurtis Exterminator Co. 308 May- nard. 11x LOST AND FOUND BROWN LEATHER wallet. Identifi- cation card reading Kenneth A. Mantete, 141 S. Berkeley St. Kala- mazoo, Mich. Reward. Call 5075. 32 LARGE, white cat. Pointed face. An- swers to whistle. Strayed from 2002 Scottwood. Call 4991. Reward. 26 LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at a low price. 6x EXPERIENCED laundress d o i n g student laundry. Call for and de- liver. Phone 4863. 12 confirms the prediction made fre- quently during the last several years that France, despite deep-seated pre- judice against monetary manipula- tion and inflation, would be forced to devalue the franc. A succession of monetary crises and large losses of gold have accompanied the deflation which has persisted in France. It is not mere loss of gold, however, which is responsible for the present deval- uation. France still possesses a gold stock in excess of three billion dol- lars. Were this the only considera- tion, she might have continued the epochal fight to avoid devaluation," he said. "It must be recognized that the monetary poliices of the United States and Great Britain-whatever their intrinsic merits-have contrib- uted to maladjustments in world trade and continued deflation in the gold standard countries. Great Brit- ain's abandonment of gold and de- preciation of the pound against other monies, beginning in 1931, had seri- ous deflationary effects on gold standard countries, France included. Our devaluation in 1933-34 created new maladjustments between our price structure and that of the so- called 'gold bloc' countries and gave a further impetus to falling prices in those areas." Trade restrictions which have been detrimental to international trade may be partially removed as a result of this devaluation, Professor Watkins said. 'iThe action is espe- cially significant," he said, "because it marks the first step in internation- al stabilization of foreign exchange rates an important condition of com- plete world recovery." LAUNDRY wanted. Priced reason- ably. Student and co-ed. Silks, wools our specialty. All bundles done separately - no markings. Personal satisfaction guaranteed. Call for and deliver. Phone 5594." Silver Laundry, 607 E. Hoover. ROOMS FOR RENT NICE room on second floor. To rent single or double. Phone 4531. 509 S. Division. 46 SUITE: Bedroom and study, choice location. Two boys, $8.00. Call after 4 p.m. Phone 2-1249 or 605 Oswvego. 30 'NICE single room. Oil heat, lavatory, hot water. Students can earn all or part of rent. 928 Church. 35 SINGLE rooms and two-room suites with use of lobby $2 to $5 per week. Formerly the Jennings House. 1142 Catherine Street. 2 SINGLE or double room-clean, well furnished. Steam heat. Upperclass- men or graduates. 314 E. Liberty. 36 STUDENT rooms, suite or single. Running hot or cold water in every room. Mrs. Dom, 616 Church. Phone 6738. 27 ROOMS: One block from campus, newly furnished. One suite, two singles, also 3-room unfurnished apartment. Reasonable. Phone 6629 or 2-2061. -38 - - - - Terrace Garden Dancing Studio Ynstructions i n al l forms Classical social )dancing. Ph 9695. M ly Wuerth Theatre Bldg. FOUNTAIN Nationally-Advertised Makes .1 i i4iz E. uaunez ine. i I I While X17 waited, L37talks' 3 1 4U1 ATopqoat That's Positively Unique This label identifies the genuine HUDDER Famous All - Seasons by CRAM IT into your traveling bag - it won't wrinkle S SAMIT into your rumble seat - it will hold its shape 1, HiUG IT! if the wind is sharp-it keeps out cold WET IT! in a storm or shower - it's immune to rain Often Imitated-Never Duplicated 4 '! I z Wahl-Eversharp, Parker, Waterman and Others Priced $100 and up A large and complete assortment. SERVICE WORK a Specialty Student and Office Supplies Correspondence Stationery HEN the class of 1917 was at college, a long distance telephone call took (on the average) more than ten minutes to be put through. This time has been whittled down gradually, so that now the connection is made in an average of 1.4 minutes-nine out of ten of them while you hold the line. But this is only one phase of the relentless effort to improve. Your service is better today because voice transmission is clearer - interruptions and errors less frequent than ever before. America demands fast butf.frP. sure telephone service-and gets it. evrY.s ae r M- WOAEo (S t X40 0 I STADEL WAL lEUt First National Bank Bldg. FOR YOUNG MEN AND MEN WHO STAY YOUNG (Continued from Page 1) At the conclusion of the session, the audience was divided into 10 round table discussion groups. Chairman for the evening session was Frank Cody, superintendent of, Detroit schools. Mr. Rainey deliv-' ered the report of the American Youth Commission on secondary edu- cation. Referring to a recent conference conducted with the aid of Owen D. Young between representatives of ed- ucational institutions and employer groups, he suggested that schools were not able to assume the full bur- den and that employer groups must shoulder part of the responsibility. Several suggestions made to amel- iorate the problem included part time educational opportunities, and the adoption by the schools of an addi- tional period of responsibility, making education compulsory until 18 years of age instead of 16 years., The last day of the sessions will open today at 9 a.m. in the Union. The question for the day will be: "If you had the opportunity, including financial backing, what changes would you make in the high school program to meet the needs of youth?" Eugene Elliott, superintendent of public instruction, State of Michigan, will act as chairman of the meeting. NOW PLAYING Two Features JANE WITHERS "Pepper" with A I0. D. Morrill 314 S. State St. Since 1908 Phone 6615 If You Write, We Have It rCZ4 YOUR LOOSE, CHANGE r , ,, ,; t , , g, - . =- ----- ' "So long, Georgie! Any time you need help just wire us ... same old address... behind the eight ball." 4. Today through Saturday A galloping romdree qof~ a gambler who was too smart to gamble with love. i Students Now that you are away from home, send your picture back to the folks. VIII'. Iro out Ia-- -- Y4 T o- EiesY ,SWIFTLK - SAFELY - ECO4 ha .. - -i 1 Adelph fukor presents r RAFT en( ha ve oug g t bunch of heels n't got brains ;h to understand a guy's fallin' for a real dame." 4 144/e &aj I? Let that dependable college pal, Railway Express, pick up and ship your laundry home and back for you every week. You will find it glossy going easy, fast, inexpensive. Merely notify the folks you will send the pack- age by Railway Express, and ask them to return it the same way. You can send it collect too, you know, and while on that subject, we can add, only by Railway Express. The folks will understand. It saves keeping accounts, paying bills, to say noth- ing of spare change. You'll find the idea economical all round. The minimum rate is low - only 38 cents - sometimes less. Pick-up and delivery by motor vehicle and insurance included in the shipping charge. It's the same with shipping baggage or anything else by Railway Express. So arrange your shipping dates by nhone call to the Railwav Exnress went and D o lo r e s C o s t e llo B til IRVIN COBB I and I I El - 9 - .a w , M _Iqm , lq% a lk IL REM.-A-M