THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCT. 6 ,1937. PRISONER ATTEMPTS SUICIDE MARQUETTE, Oct. 5,-(R)-Rob- ert Turner, 22, transferred to the Marquette Branch Prison September! 23 with 21 other inmates of the State Prison of Southern Michigan, was prevented from committing suicide this afternoon when a guard cut down a rope of bed sheets. CEassiied Dfrectory Place advertisements with Classified 806 Arch. Nice clean one room Apt. Advertising Department. Phone 2-3241. for houseekeping for student or The classified columns close at five business woman. 77 o'clock previous to day of insertio~n. _____________________ Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. 2 ROOMS at 608 Monroe. Single, Cash in advance only 11c per reading 500Dobe3.0ac.Cl61. line for one or two insertions. 10c per $5.00. Double, $3.00 each. Call 6118. reading line for three or more insertions. Close to law school. 78 (on basis of five average words to line). Minimum three lines per insertion. CENTRAL, well furnished, newlyf NOTICES decorated for one or two. Steam ________ __________________ heat. 2-2159, 314 E. Liberty. 72 IEVENING SCHOOL classes in typing, shorthand; bookkeeping, languages, SOUTHEAST SECTION, 4-room apt. English, history, art, woodwork, Private bath, refrigeration, garage. sewing, sports, and others. Regis- Phone 2-2829. 71 tration, Monday evening, Oct. 11, __-- Ann Arbor High School. Registra- SINGLE ROOMS for men. 533 tion fee. For further information Thompson. Back of Michigan call 5797. 76 Union. 69 TYPING, neatly and accurately done. LAUNDRY Michigan's Gas Supply Is Held AmpleIn State! Detroit Engineer Testife ; Before Utilities Board On Ann Arbor Case LANSING, Oct. 5.--(AP)-Charles M. Miller, Detroit engineer, told the State Public Utilities Commission to- day Michigan gas resources are ample to supply the entire lower pen- insula with fuel. Miller, an engineer employed byI the Independent Natural Gas Pro- ducers Association of Michigan, testi- fied at a hearing of the Washtenaw Gas Company's application for per- mission to supply its Ann Arbor cus- tomers with gas piped from Texas. The association is resisting the appli- cation, contending the market for Michigan gas should be expanded. Miller testified he had conducted an exhaustive study of Michigan's gas resocurces that convinced him' there is an ample reserve. There is sufficient gas, he asserted, to supply the city of Detroit and every other lower peninsula community. Engineers have disagreed on the question in the past, some contend- ing the extent of the state's gas re- serve has been greatly overestimated. The Washtenaw Gas Company is seeking permission to tap a pipe line from Texas that now supplies the city of Detroit. The hearing will be resumed to- morrow. Commission members indi- cated no decision would be reached until a fact-finding committee has completed a report of its studies of Michigan's natural gas resources. New Junior High School - Opened For Inspection Doors of the Slauson Junior High School, newest addition to the Ann Arbor Public School system, will be opened to the public for general in- spection Monday night, it was an- nounced yesterday. Rollar B. Finley, principal of the school which was opened for classes three weeks ago, outlined plans for the event yesterday. The new build- ing was constructed at a cost of ap- proximately $400,000. TRIED FOR MANSLAUGHTER BAD AXE, Oct. 5.---P)-Herbert Wright, 32, Tuesday faced trial for killing Clement Janke, 21. NEWS IN BRIEF convention, would be the winner of D~enver any such battle. CHECKING ST. GEORGE-J. y( - Warren Madden, chairman of the Ci g National Labor Relations Board, ad- IN TIME OF PEACE - Colonel vised the American Federation of La- Frank Knox, Republican candidate bor yesterday against trying to fight for Vice-President last year, de- the CIO by amending the Wagner scribed as "magnificent" President Labor Disputes Act. The company Roosevelt's speech here yesterday. union, Madden told the Federation Y- _ IP Through College The Faculty German Table which proved so successful last year, ac- A prehistoric mastodon, dead at cording to Prof. Henry-W. Nordmeyer, least 25,000 years, may be instrumen- chairman of the German department, tal in sending an up-state farm ladI will be reorganized ath12:10 p.m., to the University.I Monday, Oct. 11, in the Founider's The boy is Robert Hughes. The Room of the Michigan Union and fossil remains were discovered near will continue every week. the boundary line of his father's farm The luncheon .s an interdepart- at Assyria Center, 20 miles northeast mental affair for any faculty mem- of Battle Creek. Because the bones her who is interested in German con- were found close to an adjoining versation whether he speaks the Ian- farm, Mr. Hughes immediately called guage or not, Professor Nordmeyer a lawyer from Hastings to definitely said. The luncheon will be conclud- establish ownership. The lawyer, in ed in time for 1 o'clock classes. turn, notified Dr. George M. Ehlers -- of the Museum of Paleontology. Dr. Ehlers and Mr. Buettner, prepara- teur, spent the weekend at the site unearthing the remains and wiring and taping them for temporary pres- ervation. 11_STARTING TODAY! rehistric Bones Announce Mleeting May Finance Boy Of German Group President IH To Isolate Los Angeles in sTHE BiRTh OF AN IE-im production plans of Vittorio Musso- 1 lini and Hal Roach encountered legal tine' difficulties here today when Dr. Re- nato Senise of Italy filed suit in W Superior Court, declaring he is the War criginator of the idea they are fol- lowing. EXPERIENCED laundress doing stu- dent laundry. Will' call for and deliver. 4863. lx SILVER LAUNDRY Phone 5594-Call For and Deliver MEN'S LIST Shirts .........................14c Shorts ........................ 4c Tops .......................... 4c Socks (pr.) .....................3c Pajamas .......................10c CO-ED LIST Slips ..........................10c Dresses .......................25c Panties ....................7c up Handkerchiefs.................. 2c Handkerchiefs .................2c Pajamas ....................10c up Hose (pr.) ..................... 3c SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Individually Done-No Marking LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. LOST AND FOUND LOST: Black fountain pen Friday night between N. Univ. and Liberty on State. Phone 7859. 70 FOUND: Link brilliants bracelet near Pretzel Bell. Telephone Morrison,' at 5017. 66 j When the members of the Museum (Continued from Page 1) gAll. oints staff arrived on the scene, Mr. Hughes _ __had erected a sign-"Mastodon-10c of the Kellogg Anti-War Pact outlaw- MEAT MAKES NEWS- -In Chi- a look." Saturday's receipts had al- ing war as an instrument of na- cago: Betokeniing possibility of meat ready netted him $78. tional policy. price declines, the nation's slumping Dr. Ehlers considers this to be one Regardless of what Mr. Roosevelt livestock markets reflected yesterday of the best and oldest mastodon spec- may have in mind, observers here the force of consumer resistance tootest andodedinsthenspe generally considered his address a six-year high butcher shop quota- amens ever discovered in the state powerful stimulant to present inter- tions. and he hopes that it will eventually national efforts to forestall threats In New York: A conference be- be brought to the University Mu- to world peace presented by both the tween Commissioner of Markets Wil- Mr. Hughes intends to sell the fos- Sino-Japanese crisis and the civil liam Fellowes Morgan, Jr., and rep- sr. Hugesentendme enosg strife in Spain. resentatives of the Federation of Ko- sil to se mus an mk ogh _______ she Bucher ened lte estedaymoney to send his son to college. ------------- sher Butchers ended late yesterday Thrmascnss ferbr, without a settlement of the strike The reains co t o erb, Classics Professors Ithat has closed 3,000 butcher shops in tusks, shoulder blade, foot bones, ribs, Atthe _city, andothr _boes _otetuearhed Speakers At Oxforl In Boston: Protests of thousands ofa hyr Massachusetts housewives that meat POSTOFFICE VETERAN DIES prices are soaring beyond reach of William J. Miller, veteran of many Prof. Campbell Bonner, head of the the family pocketbook last night were years service in the postoffice died Greek department, and Prof. Henry thrown into the lap of the Federal early yesterday at his home after A. Sanders of the Latin department government by Gov. Charles F. Hur- I an illness of four months. He was read papers entitled "The New Hom- ley. 79 years old. ily of Melite and its Place in Christian - - - - -- - - !Literature" and "Acti Pauli," respec- tively, at the Congress of Papyrol- ogists held at Oxford, August 31 to September 3. Prof. John G. Winter, head of the Latin department, presided over one of the sections. Others attending from the University were Prof. War- :.. . ren E. Blake of the Greek department 4;: and Herbert C. Youti of the library I OpP institute. ain9oeo Representatives totalling 170 at- Vp s tended the congress from every Euro- Aolph Zukor Preseoedc pean country. SOU T SEA The firsiflaming : 100 din of the q 6ois}t Civil War! r "m .j y 7 oa o r. r 'o r a 1 1. I 1± I!, Where's Charlie? Turn to page 3 FRANCES DEE -Henry Wilcoxon Harry Carey -Olympe Bradna Porter Hall * Robert Cummings - Virginia Weidler - Joseph Schildkraut Color Cartoon Matinees 25c and Novelties MI CHIGAIN Nights 35c A Paramount Picture Extra MARCH OF TIME PARAMOUNT PICTORIAL NEWS OF THE DAY },