SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1924 THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THRRM T H E S U M M E RwMuCH I G A N D A I L Y 4a a .. - - - - - - a~fU'IiU ow r San tos Objective Of Brazilian Revolutionaries .. ...... :.: :"Y.1"': ::1 4::. '::: fi ;L}" .." ......r:;A'::::":" ::::.", ,, .:" - :,.; '.:".":::.:::::':;'114 :1"}}i:.''i+" ' "t 4^, ... ............................:: .:......... . .r . . . . . ." :.3.*.* '{tff: +°vo: :..: };...:.}j}.:. x :::::......::..:"}: {n . :..:::: r ::::::: ::...,.., ::::.:w::.. . . ............ .......... . ................. t .**~. -, t AT THE THEATERS Screen-Today Majestic-The Shepherd King"; "Hang On," an educational comedy; Kinograms. Orpheum-Harry Carey in "The Miracle Baby"; Century com- edy; Fox news. Wuerth-James Kirkwood and Doris Kenyon in "You Are Guilty"; comedy; Pathe news. Stage-This Week Garrick (Detroit) - Bonstelle company in "The Awful Mrs. Eaton." GROOMES' BATHING BEACH Whitmore Lake Refrcshments Of All Kinds Watch Page Three for real values. Try Classified ads for big Results. l -,- - .,_ r v r /$ ((i I I 1 £ I f . r . ... .. .. ... ...ea ...v r."m !.Y t /WJ4VDP 4 ..... r. .-N. The city of Santos, seaport of Sao Paulo, Brazil, coffee center of Revolutionists equipped with modern guns and planes, and having as are hold off government forces and pushing the fight toward Santos. the world, may soon be another Verdun. their object the secession of Sao Paulo, This is a view of Santos harbor. Tokio, July 18.-Both houses of the Diet passed the supplementary esti- mate totalling 265,000,000 yen for the coming fiscal year. mom II coming fiscal year. J1T. SIHOTIELL TO T A LL ON WORLDDISARMAMENT, James Thomas Shotwell, professor of history at Columbia university, will give a lecture on "The Proposed World Treaty on Disarmament and Security," in the Natural Science aud- itorium, next Thursday at 8:00 o'- clock. This will be given under the auspices of the League of Women's Voters and Professor Reed of the political science Department. Professor Shotwell is well fitted to discuss this subject, as he was Chief of the Historical Division, of the Am-' erican Commission to negotiate peace in Paris during 1918 and 1919, and he is also a member of the Organizing committee of the Institute of Inter- national Affairs. He has served as a member of the council on Foreign Re- lations in New York and as PresidentI of the International Conference of Historical Sciences in Brussels, 1923. Later, he lectured to the Nobel In- stitute at Christiania. In 1922, Western University confer- red on Professor Shotwell the degree of L.L.D. He has been editor of the Carnegie Endowment Fund's "Econ- omic and Social History of the War", which is a work of 150 volumes, since. 1919. He has contributed to the En-' cyclopedia Britannica and also to the History of the Peace Conference and to the publication, "The League of Nations Starts", an outline by its or-! ganizers. This lecture is open to the public. Mexico City, July 18.-Armed rebels have captured the railway. station at Jalapa, Vera Cruz, carrying off money and merchandise. Federal troops pur- sued them as far as the mountains. Classified Ads work wonders. Try Tie Summer Michigan Daily for re- sults.-Adv. CLASSIFIEDSb TYPEWRITING and MIME OGRAPH- ING promptly and neatly done. Any- Carried Dispatch Ar ranging Final Surrender In '65 =1 "The Now Showing James Kirkwood in "You Are Guilty" Coming Sunday ON THE SCREEN-- Tom iix in "LADIES TO BOARD" ON THE STAG1$- Cliff Nichols and his original "YOUNGER GENERATION " Now Showing Harry Carey in "THE MIRACLE BABY" Comedy and News Coming Sunday Herbert Rawlinson in "JACK O' CLUBS" Soon Jack Hoxie in "The Red Warning" I SH EPH ERD KING~ From the great stage play by Wright Lorimer and Arnold Reeves ---- ALSO - -I HANG ON" SUNDAY "Those Who Dance" Big business needs big men 1 A Christie Comedy Kinograms bii S There is room and need for capable men in all the allied activities of big business. But nowhere is there greater need or greater opportunity than in that very essential service to all business - Insutance (Fire, Marine and Casualty). Insurance, as a profession, affords con- tact with the most vital activities of the commercial and industrial world. t: The Insurance Company of North America, the oldest American Fire and Marine Insurance Company, has been an integral part of big business since 1792 and the earliest beginning of national affairs. Out of this long experience it urges those who are about to choose a calling to con- sider the world-wide influence of the insurance field. Insurance Company of North America PHILADELPHIA and the Indemnity Insurance Company of North America write practically every form of insurance except Life ei '-.: 11 , " ' , ti \J a - " -- . 't; F 4' l ? ;'. Y, R thing from a postcard to a book. Sixteen years experience on college work 0. D. XORRTILL, 17 Nickels' Arcade LOST LOST - Small Gold Fountain pen. Downtown Thursday. A. T. 0. crest., Finder please call 1287. GRAY HAND bag, trimmed in green beads. Monday night. Call 452 or 1205 Hill. Reward. HELP WANTED CARRIER for Michigan Daily. Call 960, ask for Haight. TYPEWRITING THERE is always a last minute rush. Take your work to 0. D. Morrill, 17 Nickels' Arcade, at once, have it type- written and avoid disappointment. Watch Repairing FINEST Watch Repairing in the city. Arnold's State Street Jewelry. TYPE WRITERIS-All makes Sold, rented, cleaned and repaired. Havie you seen the new CORONA Four? The greatest typewriter pro- I duced in the last twenty years. 0. D. MORRILL, 17 Nickels' Arcade Watch Page Three for real values. It Sfi i i K 1- t i I t el g9 er John A. MooreI Bloomington, 111., July 19.-A pic- turesque figure at the national en- campment of the Grand Army of the Republic in Boston, in August, will be John A. Moore, of Bloomington,I the last survivor of the group present when General Joe E. Johnston, sur- rendered the Army of the Tennessee to General W. T. Sherman at Durham, N. C., April 26, 1865. This surrender, coming tendays af- ter the surrender of Lee to Grant at Appomattox, ended the Civil war. Moore was an orderly and carried. the dispatchesaback and forth, which finally led to the meeting of Lhe twoj generals. Moore was a trooper of Kilpatrick's famous regiment of Indiana cavalry- men, and was one of the thousand vol- unteers who twice trailed General John H. Morgan, the Confederate raider, to his capture. Morgan was irst caught after a long chase through Ohio, and was imprisoned in the pen- tentiary at Columbus. Escaping six months later, he reorganized his band and again Colonel Kilpatrick was de- ailed to capture him, succeeding at Greenville, Tenn. Moore participated in both of these pursuits and is be- ieved to be the last survivor of the roops who twice captured the notor- ous Confederate leader. Moscow, July 18.-All Soviet prison- rs convicted of minor offenses will be given vacations to participate in gath- ring the harvest. N WL'_ Caps off-to the Winners in the $250 Prize Contest. 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