THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4ty Concerts, Student Recitals Announced for Session le / CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 4> . Elinor Wortley Plans Graduate Recital Monday Suminr Students Invited To Attend Musicale in Oill Auditorium Talented Musician Chamber Music Class to Make Appearance Hera On August 4 Miss Elinor Wortley, advanced organ student under Prof. Palmer Christian,' will give a graduation re- cital at' 4:15 o'clockaMonday in Hill auditorium. Summer Session stu- dents and townspeople are invited to attend. Miss Wortley, whose home is in Windsor, Ont., was graduated from the University with the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1931 after mak- ing a very creditable record. She is b member of Pi Beta Phi sorority and before coming to Ann Arbor had studied music at McGill university and in Detroit. She possesses a bril- liant style, excellent musicianship and a fine technic, according to music school facul-ty members. Outstanding Numbers The program which she will play on this occasion includes two out- standing, pieces of organ literature, the Bach, Passacaglia and Fugue, and the Franck, B minor Chorale. The program in full is as follows: Menuett et Gigue en Rondeau, Rameau Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor, Bach Adagio (Symphony VI).... ..Widor Allegro (Symphony IV) .......Vierne Choral in B minor........... Franck Prelude.:.................Schmitt Concert Variations .. ,.. ...Bonnat Complete Series Other concerts to take place dur- ing the Summer Session are as fol- lows: Regular faculty concert by Joseph Brinkman, pianist, and P a m e r Christian, organist, at 8:15 o'clock Tuesday night, Aug. 2. The program will consist of American music. Student recitals will be given by the chamber of music class at 8:15 o'clock Aug. 4 under the direction of Pi of. Hanns Pick, and at 4:15 o'clok Aug. 5 Guy Filkins, organist, will be heard in a graduation recital. John Fuess, organist, will give his gradua- tion recital at 4:15 o'clock Aug. 8, and Frank Collins, Jr., will offer his organ recital at 4:15 o'clock Aug. 11. Circus Plans Program~ For Crippled Children Crippled children at the University hospital will be entertained by per- formers and clowns from the Hagen- beck-Wallace circus next Tuesday when the big show arives in the city for two performances. : Transportation to the hospital for the performers will be furnished by members of the Ann Arbor Kiwanis club. Alton P. W. Hewett, chairman of the Kiwanis child welfare commit- tee, said yesterday that the circus had gladly agreed to entertain the confined children. SWIM at Newport Beach Portage Lake THE CRIMSON-STAIN MYSTERY 0 Black and bloody tales of weird brutality emerged from the Campus Laundry. Shirt fronts and collars were continually found spa ttered wi th gobsof gore. Police bclievel that the undergradls were careless with their raspberry jam. imagine their con- s"ernation.iwh}en it eveloped that stu- dents dislike raspberry! Then suddenly, the stains ceased. Swank had come to owr"Swa'k lookerlik " a pin, ut isn't. 'Vet it keeps your collar trimly in place, Swank has no poinots-and that's its big point. You don't. transfix your collar, and punch it full of ,oles. You don't stab your neck and thumb, and make theselook:as though you had caressed a cactus. No putncture'. ?ains, or pink stains. Jewelers' or men's shops. Plain, fancy and sport designs in various lengths. Gold-filled or solid gold. 50 cents to $10. hI Midst of B ttle Police $top Ex-Soldier Picketers aemies of Hitler Organize To End Nazi's Rush to Power BERLIN, Germany, July 28.-(AP) -Antifascists of Germany, led chief- ly by Philip Schneidermann, veteran socialist campaigner, and Karl Hoel- termann, head of the republican reichsbanner, are waging a bitter war against Hitlerism in the closing days of the campaign leading up to the July 31 reichstag election. Planes, trucks, motorcycles and radio are the modern devices used to disseminate anti-Hitler propaganda to the remotest farm house. Soap-box oratory at city street corners, spell-binding at thousands of mass meetings, huge parades with banners, placards, music, symbols and u n i f o r m s demonstrate the strength of the army of voters pledge, to uphold democracy. Woment conducted 'house to house canvasses; youths, when not on "field duty" drilling and marching, distribute pamphlets and newspapers by the million. Irk parades the "schufo," shock troops of the reichsbanner revived since the ban on political uniforms was lifted, lead the way. Behind them come men, women and children in more or less orderly battalions, singing republican songs and shout- ing defiance to fascism. The "iron frontfrs," as these anti- fascists call themselves, have a new scarlet flag. It shows three diagonal darts, representing the will to pierce Hitlerism and symbolizing "activity, discipline and unity." Another device is a new salute, a balled fist raised high. It shows what the iron front thinks of the fascist salute of the brown shirts, an open palm at arm's length. The darts have a good practical application. Drawn through one of "the thousands of nazi swastikas painted on every back fence in Ger- many, they completely obliterate it. On the other hand only a full can of paint can overcome the darts. Also a few deft daubs can change the swastika into a caricature of a wildly retreating nazi. Leaders of the social democrats and of the centrists parties are high- ly encouraged by the showing that their campaign forces are making in the provinces and smaller cities. "We never have been in ar better fighting mood," said Hoeltermann. "It is as if we were just back from a long vacation." So the fight has become bitter. Hitler has been made the subject of uncomplimentary phrases. TYPEWRITERS, all makes, bought, sold, rented, exchanged, repaired. O. D. MORRILL, 314 So. State. --c TYPEWRITING AND M I M E O- GRAPHING promptly and neatly done. O. D. MORRILL, 314 So. State St.--c LOST AND FOUND LOST -Green Parker fountain pen. Finder call 3506. Liberal reward. -0 LOST--Pair of glasses in case. Find- er call Michigan Daily, dial 21214. --1 LOST-Not if your furs are stored here. Our policy protects your furs completely 12 months. Zwerdling's Fur Shop. Complete fur service since 1904.. -c WANTED WASHING AND IRONING WANT- ED-Will call for and deliver. Soft water used; washing done separate. Phone 2-3478. -c WANTED-Laundry. So f t water. 21044. Towels free, socks darned. TYPING-Theses a specialty. Call M. V. Hartsufl, 9087. -0 the law. Oklahoma' ' Past Governors California, on July 1 ,had the great- est number of licensed pilots, 3,497. , - . Ii Are Active in State Politics N" OKLAHOMA CITY, July 28. - (AP)-Oklahoma governors may be impeached, but they live through it. As the commonwealth prepares to celebrate the silver annivarsary of its statehood* this fall, it finds all eight of its past chief executives active -in business. Charles N. Haskell, first governor of the state who took office in 1907 when the capital was at Guthrie, made and lost a fortune in oil. Now he is interested in gas distribution systems at Muskogee and Sapulpa. He is still 'active in politics and was a delegate to the 1932 democratic national convention. Robert L. Williams, second gover- nor, is federal judge for the eastern district of Oklahoma. Lee Cruce for years has engaged in law practice at Ardmore, Okla., and is interested in hotel properties there. J. B. A. Robertson opened a law office in Oklahoma City following his retirement from the governor's chair. J. C. (Jack) Walton, first Okla- homa executive to be impeached, has turned his attention -to the oil in- dustry. This year he re-entered state politics as a candidate for corpora- tion commissioner. Ed Trapp, Walton's successor, now deals in oil and gas leases and royal- ties. Henry S. Johnston, impeached and removed by th 1929 legislature, re- turned to law practice at Perry, Okla., but the following year ran for the United States senate. His race v7as unsuccessful. But this year he filed as a candi- date for the state senate, hoping to defeat Jo Ferguson, 'who voted to remove Johnston as governor. W. J. Holloway, who took the chair upon Johnston's removal, remained in Oklahoma City when his term ex- pired to open a law office. Meantime the incumbent Gover- nor Murray, against whom threats of impeachment have frequently been made but never carried out, has his hands full politically. MAJESTIC LAST TIMES TODAY The First Soviet Talking Picture { o 0 t s . N, , 4 ,, -. It's so Easy to Replenish Your SUMMER WARDROBE, i in The Collins Shoppe.. . CLEARANC Crepes ... Chalk Crepes... Chiffons Shantungs ... Sheers ... Organdies (bought to sell at $16.75 to $25) 95 Prominent educators claim "The Road To Life" to be a Necessary Leson to every person interested in sociology, biology or political sci- ence, as well as a most valuable document of the greatest experi- ment of cowtemporary times. "The ROAD TO LIFE" _4n intimate picture of Rus- sian social problems told dynamically to thrill you - Nu Increase in Prices 25c until 2 P.M. Evenings 40c . REMEMBER: English Titles make this pieture as readily under- standable as the silent films of a few years ago. ~7&~LW42zrSppe East Liberty at Maynard "Exclusiveness without Extravagance" INTO A MODERN WOLD 0 R IDE at' MULLISON SA DDL E STA BLES . OUT WEST HURON ST. PHONE 7418 NOW- - also - LAUGHS AND THRILLS C¢YFOR EVERYONE "Fast CARTOON p dF S AND NEWS CompanionS" 25c Until 2. P.M. Race Track Melodrama of 3c A fter 2the sort that entertains 30c Aftr 2 % very minute! 40c Nights MI!H X41 _-- STEPPI NG 7 . U 71 LC 1ET PRICES I v IN 18 YEARS Finding Our Prices So Low Many Bought Two and Three Pairs I w- Fitting the service to the customer's needs . . , 1500 Pairs Shoes Must Be Sold For Cash in Just Three Weeks CET TO THIS SALE AT ONCE Bell System service is custom-made. Each of the 65,000,000 telephone calls handled in the average day must meet the exact wishes of the person making the 9all. Telephone men study a customer's com- munication needs, then advise the type of equipment that fits them best. For depart- nent stores they may recommend the "order turret" -- a special switchboard for taking orders by telephone. Thus they enlarge the store's service and simplify ordering for the customer. They develop equipment and plans for brokerage houses, police departments, nation-wide sales forces -- and all manner of business firms. The telephone industry continues to grow by fitting its service more and more com- pletely/ to the user's needs. For men with insight and the ability to coordinate, the opportunity is there4 : I I I