THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, NOV. 13, 1937 Reduced' Meat Mussolini Sees The Tragic Side of War S. Spanish Week To Begin Here NextMonday DAILY OFFICIAL will speak to the Episcopal Student Wheat Damage Fellowship Sunday night at 7 gp.m. on "A Trip to Hudson Bay-57 degrees u BUJLLET INT N.L." His address will be accom- panied by motion pictures taken on the trip. Refreshments will be served. (Continued from Page 4) All Episcopal ytudents and their .r W. Brashares will preach on "Health." friends are cordially invited. Drive For Funds BringsI Movies And Ambulance Stalker Hall: Class at 9:45 a.m. Trinity Lutheran Church corner of o isA uSunday. Mrs. George Carrothers will Fifth Ave. and Williams St. Services+ To Enlist Local Support speak on "Medical Work in the Or- Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Sermon by the pastor on "How Shall I Know." (Continued from Page 1) ient." Wesleyan Guild meeting at 6 1 - - - -- p.m. Prof. John Shepard will speak Lutheran Student Club will meet in the Union Ballroom on Thursday. on "Ways of Preventing War." Fel- Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in Zion Parish Martin North, Hollywood writer, will lowship hour and supper following Hall, corner of Washington St. and speak at the showings. the meeting. Fifth Ave. The speaker for the eve- With Ernest Hemingway as nar- ning will be George Miley, D.D. of rator and Joris Ivens as film editor,: First Presbyterian Church meeting Toledo. He will speak on "The Chris- "The Spanish Earth" will be present- at the Masonic Temple, 327 South tian Church and the Role of Religious ed by the Art Cinema League at 8:15' Fourth Avenue. Education." p.m. evening performances on Fri- 10:45 a.m., "Yourself Incorporat- day and Saturday and at 3:15 p.m. ed" is the subject of Dr. W. P. Lem- Unitarian Church: Dr. Eustace matinee on Friday. on's sermon at the Morning Wor- Haydon, professor of religion of the ship Service. Music by the student University of Chicago, will speak at man of the joint committee working, choir under the direction of Dr. E. 11 a.m. Sunday on "Man's Search for in cooperation with the Peace Coin- W. Doty. The musical numbers will the Good Life." mittee of the Progressive Club, of be as follows: Organ Prelude, "O 6:30, p.m., buffet supper, Dr. Hay- which John G. Flowers, '40, is chair- Lamm Gottes" by Karg-Elert; solo, don will conduct a discussion period man, and the Ann Arbor Committee "How Beautiful Upon the Moun- on student problems in religion. for Medical Aid to Spain, which is tains" by Harker; Anthem, "O Lord 8:30, church party, music by Cam- headed by Prof. John Sundwall of the Maker of All Things" by Mundy. pus Commanders. the department of Hygiene and Pub- 5:30 p.m., Westminster Guild, stu- lic Health. dent group ,supper and fellowship Ihour. Mr. Hackly Butler, world trav- * GIFT BOXES- eler, will speak on the topic "Bali, University Airs Angkor and the Taj Mahal" at the * PARTY CANDIES meeting at 6:30 p.m. r r Wn'Pn ATc Increases Price Argentenian Frost Causes Four-Cent Increase Here CHICAGO, Nov. 12-(P)-Frost damage to Argentina's wheat crop, which traders analyzed as a sharp stimulant to United States' exports, sent world wheat prices soaring today Reports of heavy damage that may cut the Argentine exportable surplus 50 per cent, according to some pri- vate estimates, touched off a wave of buying that whirled Chicago wheat values upward about four cents from near the lowest level in more than ! two years. Argentina usually is a major com- petitor for the world's wheatnbusi- ness. Thus, a crop failure in the Southern Hemisphere is looked upon as decidedly buoying to higher prices in this country as well as over the world. Read Daily Classified Ads Sympathy shows in the face of It Duce as he interviews the widow of a "volunteer" slain in the Spanish war. The picture was taken at a special Roman ceremony. He awarded medals to 85 Italians who fell in the war in Spain. Museum Assistant Returns From West Volney H. Jones, assistant curator in the Division of Ethnology of the Museum of Anthropology returned yesterday from a six-weeks field trip in northeastern Arizona where he has been studying ancient agriculture at the ruins of Awatobi. Mr. Jones brought back adobe bricks and other materials for study. While in New Mexico, he visited var- ious archaeologists of the region. The expedition was carried on in coopera- tion with staff members from the Peabody Museum of Harvard Uni-, versity. Philippine Club To Hear Professor Hayden Speak The Philippine-Michigan Club will hold its annual banquet and dance at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Union, it was announced yesterday by the president of the organization, Gre- gorio Velasquez, Grad. Prof. Joseph R. Hayden, chairman of the political science department and former governor-general of the Philippine Islands, will address the society on "Two Years of Philippine Commonthwealth." Dancing will be; held from 9 to 12 p.m. GUTHE GOES TO EAST Dr. Carl E. Guthe, director of the' University Museums, left yesterdayl for New York to attend the annual meeting of the Board of Trustees of the Laboratory of Anthropologists Students Counseled Not To Stay Awake For Meteor Shower Prof. Heber D. Curtis of the astron- omy department yesterday issued his annual statement advising students not to stay awake for the current meteor shower. The shower which began yesterday morning is believed by astronomers' to be the remnant of comet 1866 I. Its 33 year period should have pro- duced the most recent brilliant dis- play in 1932. Though amateur star-gazers all Ierr the world will watch the heavensI for something unexpected, ProfessorI i Urus explained that the display would probably not be worth staying awake for. Professor Curtis, basing his state- ment on statistics, expressed the opin- ion that another brilliant shower may appear at an unpredictable time in the future. Ann Arbor Resident DiesI Of Sudden Heart Attack 2 Plays Today' Serialized Skit, 0. Henry Story Comprise Program "The Michigan University of the Air's" radio program at 9 a.m. today includes the presentation of two dra- matic sketches written and directed by students in Prof. Waldo M. Ab- bot's radio course. The first 15 minutes of the pro- gram will be devoted to the fourth serial of the story entitled "Joan and Jack at Michigan," with the following cast: Nancy Schaefer, '39, Bob Cor- rigan, '39, who have been and will be the principal characters throughout the entire story, Clayton Hepler, '38, Ella Mountain, '39, Esther Nelson, '38. and Ted Grace, '38. The remainder of the broadcast will be a dramatized version of 0. Henry's short story "The Last Leaf." The students participating in this skit are: Bill Kelly, '39, Mary Bell, '39, Mr. Hart, graduate student, and others. Morley Baer, '38, will be the stu- dent announcer for today's broad- cast. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church. Services of worship Sunday are: 8 a.m., Holy Communion, 9:30 a.m., Church School, 11 a.m., Kindergar- ten, 11 a.m., Special Armistice Serv- ice with address by Prof. Preston W.1 Slosson.I Harris Hall: Prof. Allen F. Sherzer " 0 f L E PECAN BARK ALMOND TOFFEE PEANUT BRITTLE f ,.. 719 North MacDiarmid's' uanaiesLL~ University I I I William J. Clancy, 71 years old, 415 K 'KING, QUEEN VISIT OLD SCENES Lawrence Street, general contractor j LONDON, Nov. 12. -- () - King and lifelong resident of Ann Arbor, George and Queen Elizabeth decided died suddenly of a heart attack yes- today to visit the scene of their terday at his home. , courtship. Breaking a routine of Mr. Clancy was engaged in con-: week-ends at Windsor Palace, they struction and real estate activities motored from Buckingham Palace to for many years and was contractor the Hertforshire countryside at St. - for a number of the larger buildings Paul's Waldenbury, where Elizabeth in Ann Arbor, including Observatory spent much of her girlhood and Lodge. George, then "Bertie," wooed her. Iii I. 1- Ii, - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ' CHURCH DIRECTORY 0 ? I HILLEL FOUNDATION East University and Oakland. Dial 3779. Dr. Bernard Heller, Director. 8:00 P.M. - Forum Speaker: Dr. J. W. Stanton Topic: "The Background of the Palestine Situation." FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 East Huron. Rev. R. Edward Sayles, Minister. 10:45 A.M. - Sermon. 6:00 P.M. -- Student meeting. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 South Division Street. Sunday morning services at 10:30 a.m.Sun- day school at 11:45 a.m. Free public reading rooms at 206 East Lib- erty, FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Stalker Hall - Student Headquarters. State Street between Washington and Huron. 9:45 A.M. - Student class. 10:40 - Worship service. Dr. Brashare's subject is "Health" 6:00-8:00 P.M. - Wesleyan Guild meet- ing and fellowship supper. "Ways of Preventing War" is Prof. John Shep- ard's subject. UNITARIAN CHURCH Onr R-ata anti Nrmn mfrPote ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Corner Fifth and Williams. 10:45 A.M. - Sermon. 6:00 P.M. - Student meeting. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH (American Lutheran Church) Washington Street and Fifth Avenue. Rev. Ernest C. Stellhorn, Pastor. 9:00 A.M. - Sunday school. 10:30 A.M. - Service in English language, with sermon by the pastor. 5:30 P.M. - Meeting of the student club at Parish Hall. TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH East William at South Fifth Avenue Henry O. Yoder, Pastor. 10:30 A.M. - Church Worship Service. Sermon, "How Shall I Know" 5:30 P.M.- Lutheran Student Club meet- ing in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, sup- per at 6:00 and forum hour at 6:45 with The Rev. George Miley, D.D., of Toledo speaking on "The Church in the Field of Religious Education." BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH 432 South Fourth Avenue, Dial 7840 Theodore Schmale, Pastor. 10:30 A.M. - Morning Worship. Sermon topic: "The Matter of Making a Choice. 7:00 P.M. - Youth meeting with program by friends from Dunbar Center. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH III I Iiii|| I