31, 1932 THE MICHIGAN DAIAILI SoIutb Amxexican Conties Begiu War Preparation Serious Strife See Next Week as Parag ay and Blivia Mobilize Rebels Stubborn Brazilian Troops Hammer Along Three- ided Front In Sao Paulo BUENOS AIRES, July 30-(P)- War preparations maturing in ,Bo- livia and Paraguay and pedicting , more serious strife next week led a list of troubles which caused intense apprehension in Souht America to- day. The two nations were mobilizing economically- and otherwise, with ,a patriotic zeal which threatened a clmax to the 60-year-old quarrel over the largely unmapped patch of wilderness in the Gran Chaco.. In Paraguay no such fervor was known since she held Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay at bay during a five-year war in 1865. Bolivia was under virtual military rule and hast- enin'g soldiers into the southern Chaco, where the swampy. jtngles offered a most inhospitable battle- field. Rebels Prove Stubborn The status of the Brazilian' civil war remaiied largely unchanged, in spite of the activity of the federal troops, along the northeastern front which i the key to effective domina- tion of the Sao Paulo revolt. The federal troops continued to hammer along a front on three sides of Sao Paulo but they had not yet approached nearer than 125 miles from the city, from any angle. The hardet drive was toward Cruzeiro,. where they hoped to crush the main rebel army. The rebels minimized gains of the federals in the south, made over the rolling coffee plantatiois Whersjwift advance is iippossible. The cessation of export trade was pinching 'S'o Paulo, while ,io de Janeiro was feel. ing the deprivation of food supplies from the rebel city and the loss of- its contribution of the- raajor portion of the national revenue. Society Loyal to Rebels Professionhl and socle ° Iasses in Sao Paulo stood steadfastly loyal t- the revolution, spurning all offers for an inconclusive peace, and prom- ising to resist indefinitely. The break between Argentina and Uruguay was still unhealed a'd -al- though rumors that conciliatory con- versations were under ' way were heard iii, Montevideo, Argentina '/maintained that Uruguay, iwvhich broke off the relations, must extend the olive branch. Communist manifestations which the Chilean government gave Friday as its reason for surrounding the presidential palace with nachine guns faifed to materialize, but talk of a cabinet shakeup persisted. Vice-President Smt Returns from Vacaion Shirley W. Smith, vice-president and secretary of the University, is back in his office after a nrreontlVs va- cation'at Gloucester, Mass. ojE f 6 LiitN SADDLE STABLES OUT WEST HURON ST. PHONE 7418 Troops Hold Back Veterans in Washington Riot Large Crowd Expected at Baseball Game Men's Education Club to Hold Picnic t Pleasant Lake, Near Saline 'zi±s Associateta iress eepnoto shows troops with guns and bayonets holding, back the so-called bonus veterans during the riot' in Washington in which one veteran was killed and sev l injured. E. P. Be-kwith Is on.,Way to New ork City SoJe Survivor of Ill-Fated Carnegie Group Returns Rome SEATTLE, July 30.--(P)-Relating a story of tearing, winds and biting cold, ice and sleet, Edward P. Beck- with, last man of the ill-fated Car- negie institute -cosmic ray expedi- tiona to Mount McKinley to return to the states, was enroute°to New York today. He arrived, yesterday on the steamship Yukon from the north. Beckwith, cgnsulting engineer of the 'General Electric company, was the last man to see Alan Carpe, leader of the party, and Theodore Koven, youthful scientist, alive. They fel to death last May in a' crevasse on the icy slopes of the mountain. "I had' lown in an airplane over the ' base damp established'! at the 6,000 ifoo't level to drop -supplies," he said, "and then had flown to the 11;- 000 foot level where Carpe and Koven were making a base for the cosmic ray experiments. . "everal days later the accidentl happened. Apparently' they had headed for the lower camp and, as usual, Carpe would not use the guide rope.s e * Few Signs o Depression asi Hollywood Resumes Business One of the highlights of the an- nual Men's Educational club picnic tomorrow at Pleasant Lake near Saline will be the finals in the base- ball series which have been rpnning through the Summer Session. Advanced registration for the af- fair indicates that many will attend, and many others are expected to sign up tomorrow. Cars will leave the University high school at 4 o'clock for the lake where the educators will play baseball, "barnyard golf,"' and volley ball. Dean J. . Edmonson and Prof. Fred C. Ayer, of the University o" Texas, will make short talks durinig the afternoon., A revamped Faculty team will try to take the Teachers into camp while the Superintendents will try to con- tinue their winning streak by taking the Principals out of first place. The Superintendents have bene sweeping everything before them since they started their march by defeating the Principals two weeks ago. The league standing is as follows: W. L. Pct. Principals ............ 5 2 .714 Teachers .............4 3 .571 Superintendents .......3 5 .375 Faculty..............3 5 .375 There is a possibility that the league season will be extended if there is a tie for first place Mrs. Maggie R. Norvell, keeper of the New Canal lighthouse, La., has been retired after 41 years of serv- ice in the district. SWIM at Newport Beach Portage Lake 6 MICHIGAN NOW 44k ait r 2 RICH ARD DIX Shws"Roar o The Continuous Today ,,a~n dragon" ~~. ' . " - 4 j HOLLYWOOD, July 30. A- ( ) - Olympiad visitors are seeing a Holly- wood a-buzz with activity that smacks little of depression and the blues. Many studios are as busy as in the old days, and it's not a show for the benefit of visitors. They probably won't realize they are witnessing the greatest struggle of the nation's fifth greatest industry to preserve its future. The usual summer lethargy is dis- placed by feverish activity. Crowds haunt the casting offices. Produc- ers are mounting their guns for a desperate onslaught on fall and win- ter box office fortresses. Paramount, under the new leader- ship of Sam Katz, is in the vanguard of the attack. Efforts are being made to have every picture outstand- ins.m . To see Cecil B. de Mille aiound again, in -his wake a horde of Ro- man ladies, street rabble, black slaves, humble Christians, in a return to the old spectacular days of the films. He's working on "The Sign of the Cross." j The average number of employes working daily at this studio is 2,000. Mechanical workers employed have been increased by 300 per cent over a normal production period. Four- teen pictures are scheduled for Au- gust. Within the next six weeks Fox will have 16 productions under way, including "Cavalcade," which means 12,000 days work to be distributed to extras. Radio in August will have from five to ten pictures at work. Chief in interest is the "The Conquerors," Ann Harding-Richard Dix vehicle. "Rasputin" at M-G-M, starring the three Barrymores, is another bright spot. Al Jolson's "The New Yorker" and Eddie Cantor's '*The Kid from Spain" are making things hum at United Artists. Universal shortly offers "Merry-Go-Round," "Laughing Boy," "The Road Back" and "Gaglistro" for the job-hunters. Warner-First National studios re- sume activity Aug. 1. MAJESTIC Now Showing ,o A ~ FOA CC ::.'::::{:: s 7r f R,9 IS Y ?_''-Ti- --o -.-- i7 A - - n¢cam m I IT Kid 0 I1 ( A C1ooI Phce to Eat) s . BREAN-FAST .* IJNCi_ -- V ININ ER REGULA'K, MNER'. I,.. . . . .50' SI J NY CHICKEN DINNER . 65c NOON LUNCHEON .. . 30c ( Six eckies Cleaned and Pressed JI i 0 OPIN ION 1,111:jll l'i I I ImIll llillillilim ipplio "INN' 111M, 1111, -M ,. . ,," I Cash alld Carry, or Cull and(1 Deliver for Cash. Any Sweater Cleaned and4 Hand- Cash and Carry or Cal and Deliver for Cdsh in 24 Hours with the Baltic Sei Between DROP in at the campus restaurant and order a t:owl o( Kellogg's Corn Flakes and milk or cream. Add some fruit, if you like. It's a treat. Just the dish to satisfy that touch of bedtime hunger.' And so easy to digest, you'll sleep like a log. 1 Kellogg's Corn Flakes are delicious for breakf'ast, lunch, any time and 'anywhere. Ask for them at your fraternity eating house or the college dining-hall. .usinessmen, industrialists and engi- neers- 600,000 of theta-regularly read the McGraw-Hill Publications. More than 3,000,000 use IYcGraw-Hill books and magazines in their business. 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