WAGE MO ; " t'II~MICH TA bDAft rRMAY, OCT. 21, 1936 PAc~E TWO ~ FRIDAY, OCT. 2, l93~ NEWS Of The DAY Annual Parent Institute AMeets Here Nov. 5-7 Noted Educators Secured To Address Sections W Annual Meeting The seventh annual Parent Edu- loosevelt Defends; (Continued from Page 1)- --- -- -,--- ~ - - tw n z icy" and "reversed the policy of the previous administration." It cost money, he said, but the peo- pie knew in 1933 that it would. "I had promised," he said, "and my administration was determinedato keep the people of the United States from starvation." (By the Associated Press) I Austria Repudiates Treaty Of St. Germaine VIENNA, Oct. 1.-('P)-Repudiating the post-war Treaty of St. Germaine, Austria today called 8,000 youths, aged 21, to the colors for a period of compulsory military service. Backed by a promise of full Italian support from Premier Benito Mus- solini, the Austrian government bold- ly took the treaty-breaking step de- spite earlier warnings that stiff pro- tests would be forthcoming from the Little Entente. The action was conservatively esti- mated to have raised Austria's fight- ing forces to 50,000 men in active service, with an additional 10,000 in reserve and 100,000 trained in the old private armies. In contrast moth the sizeable force, the Austrian army until 1933 was well under the 30,000 allowed by the Treaty of St. Germaine. White Sox Triumph Over Chicago Cubs CHICAGO, Oct. 1.-(P)-Chicago's hustling White Sox picked up today 'where they left off two years ago, and with Vernon Kennedy permitting the Cubs only four hits, belted out a 5 to 1 triumph in the opening game of the Chicago city championship series at Wrigley Field. Donor Of Fund Dies Of Heart . sease In N.Y. Alfred J. Brosseau, donor of the Brosseau revolving student loan fund which amounted to $100,000 at the time of its acceptance by the Regents, nine years ago, died of heart trouble Sept. 24 in Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York City, it was learned here yester- day. Until the time of his death Mr. Brosseau was actively engaged in the automobile industry as president of the Mack Brothers Motor Car Co. and affiliated organizations as a director in the Equitable Trust Co. of New York. Although never a student here, Mr. Brosseau was interested in the Uni- versity, it was explained. Figures tendered Dr. Frank E. Rob- bins, assistant to President Ruthven, yesterday revealed that with a cu- mulated interest the Brosseau loan fund now stands at $116,464. During its nine years of existence 2,531 stu- dents have benefitted by it to the ex-, tent of more than $250,000. Uinfair Trial Only i I t x T i f x T I cation Institute will be held in Ann j Then, in a remark which was ge- Arbor Nov. 5, 6 and 7, sponsored by erally believed to have indirectly re- the University Extension Division in ferred to Col. Frank Knox, Repub- cooperation with the Michigan Con- lican Vice-Presidential candidate, he gress of Parents and Teachers, it was added that the 13 billion computa- announced yesterday. tion is "technically and morally just Several out-of-town educators as as correct as telling you good people well as many of the University of here in Pennsylvania that none of Michigan faculty, have bten secured your bank deposits or insurance pol- to address sections of the Institute. Thwere sound" Prof. Hughes Mearnes, chairman of The President spoke from the ball the department of Creative Educa- park of the Pittsburgh Pirates, and tion of New York University; Mrs. led right off by comparing the New J. K. Pettengill, first vice-president of Deal to a ball club. the National Congress of Parents and He said he was going to talk about Teachers; Dr. O. R. Yoder of the the box score of the government- Ypsilanti State Hospital; Dr. Ed- a story of the "fight to beat down uard L. Lindemann of Washington, the depression and win recovery." D.C.; and E. L. Bowsher, director of "From where I stand," he said, "it education of the State of Ohio De- looks as though the game is pretty partment of Education are among well in the bag." CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. 'rhe classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no cxtra charge. cash in advancelc 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 insertions telephone rate - 15c per reading line for two or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. Ir tdiscount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. 2 lines daily, colege year ..........7c By Contract, per line -2 lines daily, oneC mouth.......................8c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months ............ 8c 4 lines E.O.D.. 2 months ,............8Sc 100 lines used as desired ..........9c 300 lines uised asdesired............8c 1.000 lines used as desired .........7c 2,000 linesvusedtasdesired ... .6c The above rates are per reading line The above rates are for 7? point type. based on eight readerg lines per inch Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add (Sc per line to above ratesrfor all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10Oc per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. 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 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. 14x FOR SALE NOTIUES EVENING classes in shorthand, typ- ing and bookkeeping. Ann Arbor High School. Begin Monday, Oc- tober 5th. Registration fee $4.00 per semester. Classes from 7:00-10:00 p.m. four evenings per week. For further information call 5797. 55 HOME-COOKED MEALS. Weekly rates on lunches and dinners. 523 Packard. 2-2320. 53 PROFESSIONAL Beauty Service. Soft water shampoo, wave--50c. Juanita House of Beauty. Juanita Schanz, 410 Wolverine Bldg. Phone 3023. 55x PRACTICE piano for rent in1resi- dence. Half block from Mosher- Jordan. Rates reasonable. Phone 9829. 39 MOTHS, bedbugs, fleas, roaches and other household insects positively destroyed by hydrocynic-gas funi- gation. Endorsed by U. S. govern- ment and health authorities as the surest, quickest, safest and most economical method. We are prlo- fessionals in our line, handle each problem personally, and give *a written guarantee on all Work.. Let us handle your problem. Dial.3113, r urtis Exterminator Co. 308 May- nard. Ix LOST AIMDO10Jfl7 LARGE, white cat. Poirited face. An- swers to whistle. Strayed from 2002 Scottwood. Call 4991. Reward. 26 ROOMS: One bick from campus, newly furnished. One suite, two singles, also 3-room unfurnished apartment. Reasonable. Phone 6629 or 2-2061. 38 PLEASANT single room, 11/ blocks' from campus for graduate girl. 829 Tappan. Phone 8321. 42 FIRST floor three-room apartment. Private bath and electric refriger- ation. For adults only. Call in per- son, 813 E. Ann St. 19 FOR RENT-Nice warm, double room. 1208 S. University. Also, room-mate wanted. 21 SINGLE roos for students. $2 and uip. Mrs. Walker. J'ennin'gs house, 1142 E. Catherie. 2 TWO neat and clean dduble rooms. $3.50 per boy. 127 N. State. 9790. 44 WANTED: Roommate, male. x2.00 week. Block from campus. Grad. student. 213 'S. Thayer. Ph. 5156. 41 BOYS: Very attractive suite of rooms for rent. 913 E. Huron. Phone 7851. '40 ROOM in private home, large front, room. Graduate student. Reason- able. Phone 8102. 52 bOUELt ROOM well furnished, has lavatory, 'fight be rented as single. Also 'desirable front single room. 514 Foi'est Ave. 49 WELL-FURNISHED uite, two blocks from engineering arch, has wash bowl in sleeping room. Also at- tractive single room. Phone 7396. 50 SUITE in basement, comfoftable and complete separate ett rance, wwash basin, showe' and toilet. Reason- able. Phone 7396, ask for person in charge. 48 SUITE newly furnished, fireplace. Washbowl in sleeping room, toilet just outside sleeping room. Private entrance and porch. 633 Church St. 51 .- W ISE Students will eat sensibly. At the R. & S. Restaurant, well- balanced meals with that home cooked tang are served at rea- sonable prices. Drop in tonight for dinner. R.&S. Restaurant 605 Church Street the guests scheduled to speak before' the Institute. The opening session of the Insti- tute 'will be conducted at 10 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 5 and will continue until Saturday noon. In addition to the addresses, conferences, lunches and banquets being scheduled, the In- stitute will include a tour of the campus on Friday afternoon, Nov. 5. At 9 a.m. of the first day of the Institute, registrationuwill berheld. The fee, it was announced, for one day or one session will be 50 cents. For the entire Institute, the charge will be $1. Bob Elbel Writes1 Then he launched into a descrip- tion of declining national income in the early days of the depression, re- marking that "the only way to keep a government out of the red is to keep the people out of the red." "We had to budget the balance of American people before we could bal- ance the budget of the national gov- ernment," he said. "That makes common s e n s e, doesn't it?" Discussing the eight billion dollar figure, he said it was arrived at by charging off against total increase in. the debt an increase in government assets. Gundry Addresses Young Democrats George T. Gundry, Genessee coun- ty clerk, and candidate for state au- ditor g'eneral on the Democratic tick- Typewriter; Rentals .; HELP WANTED STUDENT with car for part time work. Phone 6555. 602 Monroe St. 45 ROOMS FOR RENT SINGLE or double room-clean, well furnished. Steam heat. Upperclass- men or graduates. 314 E. Liberty. '36 302 SOUTH STATE STREET Repair Service Supplies KRAKAUER condition. Phone 5025. piano for sale. Fine Twenty-five dollars. 54 ( New Varsity Song Bob Elbel, nephew of the famous Louis who wrote the Victors March, has just written a song entitled Men of Michigan. Prof. William Revelli, director of the University of Michigan band has aided Elbel by writing the interludes and helping round out the melody. He also is adapting the tune for the band which will soon feature it. The opening chorus: "Ye mighty men of Michigan- We're here to cheer for you! We're proud that you belong to Michigan! We know your name and fame will live forever! Hail to warriors old and new Your valiant deeds make history! Wave high the Yellow and Blue and ride the tide to victory!} edge was usually found in wash-rooms. "I have worked with 20,000 young people in my years as an educator. and I have not yet found that it - et, spoke last night in the Chambei responsible attitudeethe adolescent is of Commerce Hall before the Young reputed to have. They simply have Voters League. no guidance in some subjects that is The meeting of the League, a Dem- very important and that should be ocratic group organized here last discussed in our high schools." week, was under the direction of The mysteries of sex can be better Charles Conlin, and included also a discussed before the adolescent pe- parody on the radio feature, "Mich- riod, Mr. Beatty said. Then, the most igan Speaks." intimate details about the processes Gundry, who, at the age of 28, is can be explained, but at adolescence, the youngest county clerk in the when the emotions and desires are state, spoke on organization and the keyed up, the subject can no longer part of youth in American politics. be looked upon impersonally. He stressed the importance of or- "Important too, is information on ganizing precincts so as to bring out the standards of living. I know of every voter at election time, and to many instances where young women disseminate campaign material and don't even know how much it is cost- information. ing their parents to clothe them. Young men, too, sometimes spend in WWJ.Court of Human Relations. CKLW Viennese Vagabonds. 10:00--WJR Royal Football Round-Up. WWJ First Nighter. WXYZ Shop Fields' Music. CKLW LittlerJack Little's Music. 10:15-WJR Governor F. D. Fitzgerald. CKLW Bryant Field, Speaker. 10:30-WJR Democratic National Com- miittee. WWJ Red Grange. WXYZ Lowry Clark's Music. CKLW Kay Kyser's Music. 10 :45-WJR Musical Program. WWJ NBC feature. WXYZ Communist Party. CKLW National Democratic Party. 11:00--WJR News. WWJ Bob Chester's Music. WXYZ George Kavanaugh's Music. CKLW Trans-Radio: Freddie Mar- tin's Music. 11:15-WJR Songs You Remember. CKLW Mystery Lady. 11:30-WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Leon Navarro's Music. CKLW Horace Heildt's Music. 11:45-WJR Lions' Tales: Goodman's Music. 12:0O-WJR Ben Bernie's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Shandor: Jack Douglas' Music. CKLW Leighton Noble's Music. 12:30-=WJR Artie Shaw's Music. WXYZ Bobby Grayson's Music. CKLW Louis Prima's Music. 1 :00-WVJR Meditation. CKLW Horace Heidt's Music. 1 30-WJR Musical Nightcap. Conlin & Wetherbee HART, SCHAFVNER & MARX CLOTHING SUPE R IOR UNDERWEAR THE BERG HAT SHIRTCRAFT SHIRTS 18 EAST WASHINTON a1 Cause For Protest (Continued from Page 1) ceive a fair and impartial trial, ac- cording to Professor Preuss. "While international law is indifferent to the treatment a nation metes out to its own nationals, it cannot recognize the judicial . action handed out to aliens if the standards of that na- tion's system does not come up to the standard recognized by civilized na- tions." If the United States can prove that the trial was not up to the level of that required by the rules of inter- national law, it is in a position to de- mand damages for injustice done to one of its citizens. This the United States has done on numerous cases in which American nationals have been arbitrarily tried and sentenced. in foreign countries, for instance Mexico, Professor Preuss explained. "There is also reason to believe that nationals of other nations do lnot receive a just trial in the People's Court," Professor Preuss said, "be-1 cause the court is made up of five Nazis, only two of whom have to possess any judicial qualifications whatsoever. The People's Court is in reality a party court and can metes out penalties in conjunction with the wishes of leaders of the National So- cialist Party." "The People's Court was estab- lished soon after the aquittal of Tor- gler and the Bulgarian defendants, upon whom the National Socialists tried to place the blame of the Reichstag fire, by the Supreme Court j of the Reich," Professor Preuss said, "and its establishment can be di-I rectly traced to that aquittal." t Speaker Contends SchoolsMust teach Problems Of Marriage Beatty Explains That Rate have his wife work. Such arguments Divorce Would Be should be ironed out before mar- Of D~orc Woud Beriage." 'Greatly Reduced "There is the question of make- up that causes rifts in marriage hap- Because a wife had gurgled her piness. If the woman uses lipstick and rouge plentifully, and the man soup, because a husband had left dislikes them, there will be unpleas- . antness unless talked over before after a morning shower or left his the wedding-not afterward," Mr. tooth brush off the hook, many a Beatty warned. matrimony has been upset, in the Outlies Problems opinion of Willard W. Beatty, presi- dent of the Progressive Education As- "If you are the sort who likes dis- sociation who spoke yesterday in the plays of affection, gentle caresses and Union before the American Youth a kiss at morning and night, and your Commission. mate is more reserved emouionally. a Education foi marriage and the rough voyage may be aheaa. Or home, to be undertaken by the high if you are a cold fish yourself and school, was declared a pressing need don't like. being 'pawed over.' how by Mr. Beatty, who named three are you going to react to an affection- areas into which such information ate personality? A thorough educa- should fall: Economic-the under- tion in our secondary schools on the standing of living standards andeliv- psychology of human relationships stingsts;pshoflving aandrsand would help to ease these problems. ing costs; psyhologicalunderstand- People thinking of entering marriage ing howpeopl thin-kysdowathge should understand fully certain psy- along with them-physiological-the cooia atrM.Bat e structure of the human body. chological matters, Mr. Beatty b- c lieves. They should understand' that Studies Would Be Aid if their tastes are fixed in different Such studies in human relations, directions, there should be a pause rarely obtained in the American before making the important deci- home, would do much to decrease sion. They should be sure that it the divorce rate that is at present is not a momentary physical attrac- one out of seven, he said. Young tion that will soon play out. people dc not discuss many vital Turning to the need for physiolog- problems in the period of courtship ical education, Mr. Beatty reminded that should be thrashed out. the audience that in former days One of the most frequent disputes "there was no instruction on sex arise over the question of whether matters, and a young man was sent the wife should continue working 'from the room when a di'ty story after the wedding, Mr. Beatty said. was told. However, when he became "Often young wives insist on keeping about 18 years old lie was no longer, a job in order to help out with the sent from the room, but allowed to family budget, and the proposal stay on the assumption that som.r clashes with the determined pride of where, somehowv, he had picked up the young husband who refuses to the necessary knowledge. This knowl- 'a. a week-end, more money than they could earn themselves in a week: Col- lege men who go to dinner, a foot- ball game, supper, a play afterward, and then a night club, often spend more than they could make them- selves in an entire month. Marriage on such a basis wouldn't leave enough to buy the layette for the first baby." Eugene Elliott, superintendent of public instruction, State of Michigan, was chairman of the meeting which concluded the two-day conference. Brief addresses were also made by Samuel C. McCutheon and David M. Trout. 1EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS 6:00---wJR Stevenson News. wWJ 'Ty Tyson; Dinner Hour. WXYZ March of Melody. CKLW String Ensem-ble. 6:15--WJR Rubino '-Rea. WXYZ Fact Finder'. CKLW News and Sports. 6:30- WJR Jimmie Allen. WWxJ Bulletins:; Odd Facts. WXYZ Day in Review. CKLW Vincent Ycrk's Music. 6:45-WJR Renfrew of the Mounted. WWJ Moorish Tales. WXYZ Lowell Thomas. CK{LW Rhythm 'T'rio. 7 :00--WJR Willian Hard. WWJ Amos and Andy. WXYZ Musicaper. CKLW~ String Trio. 7:15-WJR Popeye the Sailor. WWJ Presidential Poll. CKLW Bill McCune's Music. 7 :30-WJR Goose Creek Parson. WWJ Edwin C. Hill. CKLW Variety Revue. 7:45-WJR Boake Carter. WWJ Football Fanfare. 8:00-WJR Broadway Varieties. WWJ Jessica Dragonette. WXYZ Irene Rich. CKLW Captain Frank. Hawks. 8:15-WXYZ Singin' Sane. 8:30-WJR Andre Kostelanetz' Music. WXYZ Death Valley Days. CKLW Show Window. 9:00-WJR Hollywood Hotel. wwJ Waltz Time. WXYZ Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians. CKLW Raynmond Gram Swing. 9:15-CKL Phil Mrley's Music. 9:30-WXYZ Twin Stars. Rem embeor T his Num ber ... . 30310 f I', MICHIGAN NOW! I I This telephone number will bring to you the prompt, efficient service of Ann Arbor's finest Cab Company, RADIO Cabs. the -Added - MARCH of TIME ALL CABS EQUIPPED WITH RADIO Service At All Hours :. 1$ Office: 611 N.I4th St. Phone: 3030 MATINEES 25c NIGHTS 35c SUNDAY "GORGEOUS HUSSY" 1111 I f I Last Times Today '-- - -1 CLAIRE TREVOR * "STAR FOR A NIGHT" JANE WITHERS "PEPPER" STARTING SATU RDAY ! HERVEY ALLEN'S INSPIRED NOVEL! THE MAJOR EVENT OF THE YEAR Saturday 25c Till 5 P.M. Sunday! 20c Till 2 -_- . _ . . l Superior MILK-ICE CREAM ARMORY NEWLY DECORATED FOU ND 0 FoU f nor Thought! POULTRY and STEAKS . :. THE GIANT AMONG BEST-SELLERS TAKES THE SCREEN IN ITS STRIDE . u' " I'arnerBros. er s ne From the book that thrilled 3.000 ,0 readers, by HERVEY ALLEN FRDWRIC MARCH !.I 11 !I I