PAL}s 1'pUit THE SUNNIER MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1931. . PAGE FOUK THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 19S1 Daily Official Bulletin Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Dean of the Summer Session until 3:30, excepting Sundays. 11:30 a.m. Saturday. VOLUME XI SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1931 NUMBER 29 Student Recital Series: Mr. Stanley Fletcher, pianist, and Mr. Ken- neth Osborne, organist, will join their forces in a program to be given in Hill Auditorium on Sunday afternoon at 4:15 o'clock. The general public is cordially invited to attend. The program follows: Bach, Fantasia in G Minor; Schmitt, Prelude; Mulet, Toccata, "Thou Art the Rock" (Mr. Osborne): Liszt, Sonata in B Minor (Mr. Fletcher): McKin- ley, Cantilena; Vierne, Finale (Symphony No. 1) Mr. Osborne. Charles A. Sink The Chinese Student Club will have a picnic at Whitmore Lake on Sunday afternoon, August 2nd. Members who are interested to join will please meet in front of Lane Hall at one o'clock Sunday afternoon. Transportation to Whitmore Lake will be provided. Sunday Evening-Outdoor Union Church Service-Ernest H. Oli- phant will speak on "Tolerance and Complacency." 1432 Washtenaw Avenue. League House Heads: Signing out slips for the first four weeks were due July 21. Please bring them to the undergraduate office in the League. Katherine O'Hearn The Men in Education will hold a picnic at Pleasant Lake on Mon- day, August 3rd. There will be transportation for all and every man is expected to attend. There will be good food and plenty of it. Pro- fessor Sharmon is in charge of the games. The group will meet in front of the University High School between 4:00 and 4:15 p.m. Those who have cars wil be at that point to pick up those who need trans- portation. Secure your ticket early! Thomas Diamond Cancellation of Monday Afternoon Conference on Education. Be- cause of the Education Clubs' picnics to be held on Monday afternoon, the afternoon conference scheduled for 4:00 p.m. on that day will not be held. The Women's Education Club picnic will be held on Monday, August 3 at the Fireplace. Cars will leave the University High School at 5:45 p.m. Make reservations by calling Miss McHenry at 4838 before Sat- urday. Lydia McHenry The Southerners Picnic has been postponed indefinitely. W. R. McGehee Students wishing eye refractions at the Health Service are ad- vised to secure their appointments before August 6th. Warren E. Forsythe, Director Faculty, School of Education: There will be a meeting of the Facul- ty of the School of Education on Monday, August 10th, at 12 o'clock sharp at the Michigan League Building. A full attendance is desired. C. O. Davis, Secretary Comprehensive Examination for the Teacher's Certificate: The comprehensive professional examination required for the Teacher's Certificate will be given in the Auditorium of the University High School on Saturday, August 15th, from 9 to 12 o'clock. All students expecting to secure the Teacher's Certificate at the end of the Summer Session are required to take this examination. Full details respecting the nature and procedure of this examination can be had from the Recorder, School of Education, Room 1437, University Elementary School. C. O. DAVIS, Secretary MEXICO-UNITED STATES CLAIMS BODY UNSUCCESSFUL AS TERM NEARS END ROVING THE SPORTS WORLDI (Continued from Page 3) the leads and supporting roles in the Meanwell cage movies. * * * Glenn Thistlewaite, Wisconsin's head football coach, is teaching in Ithe summer session. When that is over, early in August, he is plan- ning to take his family to a North- ern Wisconsin resort where he willl rest between whipping troutl streams and exercising a set of left- handed golf clubs which the Badger football team gave him at the close of the 1929 season. * * * Guy Lowman, who coaches the Badger baseball teams and di- rects the activities of the Four- Year Coaching and Physical Edu- cation course, will probably motor east for two or three. weeks in August, chiefly to visit his son who is to become a member of the Yale faculty this fall and who has just returned from a period of graduate study in Europe. ~* * Tom Jones, veteran coach of Wis- consin's track teams, has not yet decided what he will do in the month between the close of summer school and the opening of the Uni- versity in September, but it is a safe guess that he will divide his time between fishing and golf, his chief recreations. in the summer selling insurance. Irv Uteritz, coach of Wiscon- sin's "B" football team in the fall and the freshman baseball team in the spring, is spending the summer in Madison and playing ball with the Madison Blues. , * * Rube Wagner, assistant varsity] line coach, is working in Milwau- kee and Francis X. (Bo) Cuisinier, who will succeed Guy Sundt as frosh football coach, is a captain of life guards in the South Parks system, Chicago. What Trainer Bill Fallon does all summer is more or less of a mys- tery to his associates. Bill comes from Boston an devery summer, af- ter finishing his work with the Bad- ger crew at Poughkeepsie, he dis- appears until it is time for him to get out the arnica and adhesive tape for the football campaign. It is understood that Bill takes his family to some remote spot on the Maine coast and "leads the life of Reilly" for three months. No one in Madison ever hears from him during that period. FOOD HURTS MANY AT PICNICGROUNDS, Eleven Taken to Hospital, Two Seriously Ill; Ptomaine Poisoning Is Cause. READING, Pa., July 31.-(IP)- Stricken while attending a picnic dal, nearly two score persons were suffering from ptomaine poisining today, 11 of them in hospitals. Several hundred persons were at the park restaurant. A short time later many became violently ill Victims were taken from the merry- go-round and other amusements, others collapsed along the midway and others swooned while seeking seclusion i nremote parts of the park. Screams from the suffering and cries of those who frantically tried to minister to them threw the huge crowd into wild confusion. Am- bulances rushed the seriously ill to hospitals. i ADYERTISiNi HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX spring and summer suits at half price Friday and Saturday. Con- lin and Wetherbee, 118 E. Wash- ington. WANTED--By starving University graduate, job requiring poise, personality, and ability, compen- sated accordingly. Reply D-13, The Daily. FOR RENT-A clean well-furnish- ed liveable apartment, of 4 rooms near U golf course at 1339 S. State St. Phone 3403. HART, S C H A F F N E R & MARX spring and summer suits at half price Friday and Saturday. Con- lin and Wetherbee, 118 E. Wash- ington. LOST-Lady's green fountain pen near campus. Finder please call 3652. WANTED-Good cottage at near by lake. Have desirable property to exchange. Phone 22839. 30, 31, 1,2 LOST-White gold watch chain with Michigan pendant and nail clip attached. Lost perhaps a month ago. Call Michigan Daily office. NOTICE-Can take two to Wash- ington, D. C., leaving Saturday. References exchanged. Phone Tullar at 3735. HART, S C H A F F N E R & MARX spring and summer suits at half pricenFriday and Saturday. Con- lin and Wetherbee. 118 E. Wash- ington. PATENTS Sell your patent or invention by exhibiting your model or drawing at the Second and Greater IN- TERNATIONAL PATENT EXPO- SITION, CHICAGO. Thousands of manufacturers and patent buyers will inspect new devices and patents for marketing. Very low rates. If you have no model, drawings and description will do. Send for free pamphlet. B. Ham- ilton Edison, Managing Director, International Patent Exposition, Merchandise Mart, CHICAGO. We have all makes Remington, Royal, Corona, Underwood A LETS GO! GREATER MOVIE SEASON! PREPARE TO BE SHOCKED! George (Mike) Murphy, Badger crew mentor, has been visiting in the east since the Poughkeepsie regatta, June 16. He will return to Madison about August 1 to get everything in readiness for the fall rowing campaign which will start in September. * * * , Joe Steinauer, who has been a fixture in the athletic department since the days when he trained Bill Juneau's fotball teams and who now tutors the Badger swimmers and directs Wisconsin's extensive intramural athletic program, is an inveterate fisherman and spends most of his summer luring the de- lectable pike and the gamey bass from waters within driving distance of Madison. Coach George Hitchcock, wrest- ling mentor, is spending his vaca- tion in an extended motor trip through the west. Guy Sundt, Wisconsin freshman football and track coach, who will be vaarsity backfield coach this fall, spends his spare time I CARTTER'5 I L. III I Hot Weather WASHINGTON, July 31.-(AP)-I American member, brought about The Mexico-United States general claims commission apparently will die without satisfactorily ending its work unless renewed before Aug. 31. Upwards of $600,000,000 in priv- ate American claims against Mexi- co are imperiled as the commis- sion, after a troubled history, en- ters the final month of its legal life. Fred K. Nielsen of Nebraska, the an interruption of the last sessions of the group by objectinlg to pro- cedure followed by his Mexican and Panamaian colleagues in disposing of American claims by dismissing them. He took vigorous exception to the methods of the other two com- missioners, who, working together, found wayes of eliminating the American member from delibera- tions over commission's activities. 0 R 0 A T £i 15 CENTS 0 A K L A N D SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Colored duco finishes. Price $60 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 BRIG HT SPOT 802 Packard Street Today, 11:30 to 1:30 Veal Croquettes Creamed Potatoes, Peas or Potato Salad Cold Meats Jello Coffee, Milk 5:30 to 7:30 Broiled T-Bone or Sirloin Steak Pork Chops Lamb Chops Mashed Potatoes Tomatoes, Spinach 35c 1111 Michigan Repertory Players TO IGHT THE PULITZER PRIZE PLAY "ALISO 'S HflUSE'' Smart Styles---Low Prices! Just the opportunity that many women have been awaiting -the chance to select stylish apparel to finish the summer at much lower than usual prices. These special values offer all that could be desired in smart style at little prices. Wash Silks and Cottons $4.45-$9r95 SGreyFabric Gloves 95c O Full Fashioned Chiffon ° Hose 88c Silk & Wool Skirts $1.95, $2.95 * Batiste Blouses $1.29 JACOBSON'S ausse9 fa' MICHIGAN LAST TIMES TODAY "Never The Twain Shall Meet" With CONCHITA MONTENEGRO LESLIE HOWARD C. AUBREY SMITH Peter B. Kynes immortal love story of the South Seas. Directed by W. S. VAN DYNE the man who made LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE 11 All Seats 75c For Reservations Phone 6300 uAlk "TRADER HORN" STATI10 ERY Several hundred boxes with fancy tissue Originally priced $1.00 to $2.00. linings. "PARTNERS" Comedy Act NIGHT CLUB REVELS" Musical Revue PARAMOUNT NEWS SUNDAY Sale Price 60c The Box Vniversity ED. G. ROBINSON w A H R'S II JAMES CAGNEY in a Itt WI A TI'T' /r NXTVVPP I11 o1 11