PAGE EIGHT THE 1-1 1CTIT AN DAILY S D.Q.Y. MAY 19. 1940 T~lE M1UsIIl a f. 1 4lIblAI L1NlA AY lBd \ l' Alll " ITII\ R l il AiJ 2l1 V Ii - -- --._.-..._.__-.---- .- - _______________________ ___________________________ .._______w__ I ANI)Y LE IVM ICIRECTORIY Annual Session Of Museums Daily Reporter Rides The Rails With Hobo Emperor Jeff Davis 1 ._._ ________.___ . __a__.__, _ _ .._._. _ _. _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ .. . JUNE (4AnDIATES ONLY! fe a Pnent Pimmn TiIF MAGAZINE Fall Y-a---52 Issuess $3.50 (instead of)$5.00 Mailed Anywhere homer Hayden 715 Hill Phone 3582 - MOVING - ELSIFOR MOVING & STORAGE CO. Local and Long Distance Moving Storage -Packing -Shipping Every Load Insured 310 W. Ann Phone 4297 l handy Service Ad verti sing Rates Cash Rates . 12c per reading line for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Charge Rates i5c ipr reading line for one or two insertions. 13c- p snr reading line for three or more insertions. Five average words to a reading life. Minimum of three lines per insertion. CONTRACT RATES ON REQUEST Our Want-Advisor will be de- ii ;hted to 0assist you in composing your ad. Dial 23-24-1 or stop at the Michigan Daily Business Office, 420 Maynard Street. STRAYED,ST, FOUND Group Planned LS -A Mu Pi Eplon~r sorOrc oieityioygggyji g Move here~g pin, probably near the Library. Call 3318. Reward. 444 From Detroit May 241 £-OST-Fratcrnity pin with initials BBK probably vicinity of Morris The 35th annual meeting of the Hall. Finder please call 2-1405- American Association of Museums Reward. 438 will be held jointly in Ann Arbor and WANTED-TO BUY-4 Detroit, May 22-24, it was announcedj yesterday. I interview Obtained On 11 Of'[wilight Limuite Yields Facts About Character Of Tramp King COLLEGE OULINE SERIES "THE STUDE NT'S PRIVATE TUTOR" ANCIENT HISTORY ANCIENT, MEDIEVAL & MODERN Hst BACTERIOLOGY, Pri.&G rat.of.. ery BIOLOGY. General CHEMISTRY, First Year College CHEMISTRY, Organic....... CORPORATION FINANCE * ECONOMICS, Principles of EDUCATION, History of . ENGLAND, Hstory of........, EUROPE, 1500-1848 , H,,ry of EUROPE, 1815-1939 istory of GEOLOGY Principesofo . . GOVERNMENT, Ameican JOURNALISM. Survey of . LATIN AMERICA, H iory of LITERATURE, English, To Dryden LITERATURE. EnglshSince Mion, MIDDLE AGES, 300-1500, History of.. NATURAL RESOURCES of United States . PHYSICS, F Nst Year College... . POLITICAL SCIENCE .... PSYCHOLOGY, Educational . . PSYCHOLOGY, General.. .. . SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS; Oullines of., SOCIOLOGY, Prncp~e, of , 4r STATISTICAL METHODS ..A. ,M STUDY, IBestih~Io,I.,of........... UNITED STATES, To 1865. History of UNITED STATES. Since 1865, HistIory of, WORLDO, Snce 1914, Hsory of ZOOLOGY, General...,.. . $ .75 y . 1.00 1 .25 75 *1.00 .,1.25 -.75 . .75 .79 .75 .75 1.00 .75 1.00 1.00 1.00 I .00 .75 . .75 * .75 . .75 .75 * .75 *1.00 1.00 .60 .75 . '.75 w1.00 UNEXCELLED FOR QUICK THOROUGH REVIEW IWA HRM'S* Bookstores 316 South State St. qIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for your discarded wearing apparel. Claude Brown,512 S. Main Street. 146 ANY OLD CLOTHING-PAY $5.00 TO $500. SUITS, OVERCOATS, FURS, MINItS, PERSIAN LAMBS, DIAMONDS, TYPEWRITERS, & CASH FOR OLD GOLD. PHONE SAM-6304. SUNDAY APPOINT- MENTS PREFERRED. 359 TYPING--18 ITYPING-L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., Phone 5689. 374 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416. 34 HELP WANTED COOK OR COUPLE for small fra- ternity starting in fall. State ex- perience, references, salary. Box 5, The Daily. 445 EARN during vacation, $5.00 and up daily selling article appealing to housewife. One at least and per- haps more for every home. Write /for information to Slp-Lok. Inc., 53%2 West Huron Street, Pontiac. Michigan. 442 ARTICLES FOR SALE-3 FOR SALE-Girl 's bicycle, balloon tires. New last summer, $16.50. Call evenings-2-3559. 439 FOR SALE-From owner, Franklin Olympic car; good running order; good tires; also outstanding for winter. Phone 2-3515. 449 A BARGAIN you can't duplicate---40 scenic acres overlooking beautiful valley-including well built six- room house--only four miles from Ann Arbor-Sacrifice for cash, $2500. Call owner evenings-6196. FOR RENT TO RENT for Summer seven-room furnished house. Available June 15. Call 2-3643. 428 FOR SUMMER: 3-room furnished apartment for two or three per- sons. 515 Church. Phone 4373. 447 FOR RENT--Cottage, Portage Lake. Five rooms. Clean, well furnished, electrically equipped. Ph. 2-1405. 448 425 SOUTH DIVISION Apartment for graduate students or business people-also a single room--phone 2-2352. 440 WOMEN STUDENTS: Very pleasant rooms in approved house for sum- mer term opposite Rackham Bldg. 917 E. Huron. Phone 8671. 443 LAUNDERING-9 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 16 MISCELLANEOUS- 20 WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 13 WISE Real Estate Dealers: Run list- ngs of your vacant houses in The Daily for summer visiting profes- sors. Dial 23-24-1 for special rates. hI The convention will open in Detroit Wednesday, and will come to the Uni- versity of Michigan Friday. The opening session of the convention will feature a symposium on the "New Public Museum." Meeting in Annj Arbor the delegates will visit the Uni- versity Museums, and discuss the problem of study for museum work. Arrangements for the convention are being made by Clyde H. Bur- roughs, secretary of the Detroit In- stitute of Arts; Fred L. Black of the Edison Institute; Miss Margaret M. Borayton, curator of the Detroit Children's Museum; Robert T. Hatt, director of the Cranbrook Institute of Science; Arthur S. Hampton, cur- ator of the Detroit Historical Soci- ety, and Carl E. Guthe, director of the University Museums. The symposium on the "New Pub- lic Museum" will include a talk byl Mr. Edsel B. Ford, son of Henry Ford and chairman of the Arts Com- mission of the City of Detroit, who will talk from the angle of a trustee. His address will be followed by speeches of a director, a curator and an instructor. New Publicity Head David Lachenbruch, '42, was ap- pointed chairman of The Daily Pub- licity Committee of Congress, Inde- pendent Men's Association, at a spe- cial meeting yesterday. (This was written after a trip from Jackson to Ann Arbor with the King of the Hoboes, by his favorite mode of travel.) By DAVE LACHENBRUCH The Twilight Limited puffed into the Jackson depot arbout five minutes late. I had arranged to meet King Jeff Davis at the eastern end of the platform and ride as far as Ann Arbor with him. He was coming from Mil- waukee and heading for the Hoboes of the World Convention in Windsor, Ontario. When the engine wheezed to a stop, I was confronted by a jovial, oldish- looking man whom I mistook for the engineer. "I'm Jeff Davis," he an- nounced. I introduced myself and looked at the train for the first time. "This is a passenger train," I ex- claimed. "How long do you think it would take, son," he explained toler- antly, "if I rode from Milwaukee to Detroit on the freights?" As the train started to pull out, Jeff pounced up onto the front plat- form of the first passenger car. He held out his hand and I scrambled after him. We crouched for a while on the car platform listening to the engine pick up steam and gazing at the coal heaped up on the tender in front of us. Presently Jeff shouted: "We're going up onto the tender-- it's more comfortable." We jumped across the gap between the car plat- form and the tender and climbed a short slender steel ladder. We were sitting on a flat ledge behind the coal pile. I was holding on tightly with both hands, while Jeff calmly rolled a cigarette. "This is the water tank," the King explained. I was just beginning to enjoy being jounced about when Jeff started to migrate again, this time to the top of the coal pile. "Come on," he shouted, "I think we hit a scoop around here." I reached for my pen- cil and yelled, "Where?" My question was answered abrupt- ly. There was a terrific din in my ears. I realized that I was being drenched with an enormous amount of water at considerable pressure. My first thought was that a fire hose was being squirted full force in my face. "That's the scoop," Jeff ex- plained. "You see, the scoop's on a hinge in the roadbed, and when the train comes by the force of the air splashes the water up into the tank. Yoare sitting on the tank." Without even saying "tanks," I climbed in my moistened state to the top of th coal pile where Jeff was. We were getting near Ann Arbor and the Emperor suggested that I'd het- ter "hop off" when the train slowed down. I couldn't jump, so he pushed me and I landed in the grass, shocked but uninjured. I could hear him taunting me from the tender. "Give my regards to Mademoiselle Yvette," he was shouting. He went on to Detroit and is now in Windsor, but the whole campus will have the opportunity to hear him discuss "A Hash on Life" at 8 p.m. next Tuesday when he speaks in the Union. Clark Speaks On Difficulties Of Job Misfits (Con tinued from Page 1) ing and guidance can do much to develop these qualities." Stressing personality and appear- ance in job qualification, the seniors of Jackson High School conducted a forum on successful vocational preparation. The forum pointed out the importance of physical and men- tal aptitude in vocational planning, marking particularly the value of choosing a preferred type of work. Statistics showing that every man spends 5 to 10 years before making the final choice of his life work were cited as proof of a need for more vocational guidance training. The speaker warned that in choosing a vocation one should not think of it in terms of a well-known personage who has made a success in that par- ticular field, but should think of it in terms of one's own chances for success. s li DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN out for yourself. ; ; t ,. t .1 t Arms Budget Will Not Reduce Social Spending, Smithies Says By CHESTER BRADLEY bad public policy to allow sections The U.S. economy can withstand of the economy to profit from the the strain of the increased arma- national emergency. ments appropriations recommended Furthermore, it will be advisable, to Congress by President Roosevelt as recovery advances, to finance the Thursday without reducing the so- bill for arms to an increasing extent cial service expenditures, Prof. Ar- by taxation rather than by borrow- thur Smithies of the economics de- ing, Professor Smithies pointed out. partment declared in an interview if sound policy is to be followed. yesterday. Finally, if the government is tor Professor Smihies added that no become the chief customer of a j11stifiea ion exjs~ Cotton flays are here aga vr..r.. t........w.. M,.M M'. ' ° r" ". _ f , J ~ . : $? 3 -a¢S y , $ ? y' S 7 %' 7i a i f } 7A F }. {" 'S' r .,...' . L " y 4 %d !r g,:. st1nsar.nie t ted %; at I COLLINI Ir h - - dle Stripes Forever t fI ' . - X/ I I I LASTEX PANTIES stled by You're ready for active or spec- tator sports in this clever action- F 7 , /7 /: j it. 7/ / / / // / ., "'. i 47,2 Coo/ (nd Reres/nA summer suits of "MOUNTAIN AIR" ' 3 f { { t' F~' :; > r _.,o-".a^ /' ott 3 s ;i f f : t -< -w: i, "h '<, }. t ry No more worry to wear, now t are "in." For there's nothing ciously cool, yet styled cotton. materials you'l spun rayon, do voile, eyelet pique, batiste, able linen, sha seersucker. Stc at COLLINS for able summer! $4.00 to / '6 S>1 about .what / hot cottons worm dray's like a deli- beautifully / Among the I find are atted swiss, embroidery, non-crush- rkskin, and Eck up now o comfort- X19.95 KEEP COOL as a cucumber in these -1piecers. Styles and colors to wing you into summer with compliments hom your friends. Of spun rayon with white raindrop pattern on pas- tvls or navy, or solid sun-drenched tones. Sizes i-20. Others of soun non-crush linens and 795 Sketched from COTTONS featured at COLLINS from $4.00 to $19.95 frce pantic. RUIIpr-oof crotch. lightly boned to prevent rolling. Self-edged top and bottom give smooth lines. $3.50. Also in foundation, $5; girdle C , 1,7 I ,) a, I i _'" N .. I JIZ S :) C(, 1 , A ).: