TilE MI COJIIG AN.-DA It~l ks Continue- dy Advance ~r EarI- Fall Bonus Seekers Board Train at Johnstown for Home States Orchestra to Give Concert At 8 Tonioght Ti eral M oto rs Gos 'To' $16 Per Sh are ; Autio Siwcks RFse All St itinter Sessioit Group Play Under Direction David Mattern to of R ais Join Spirn'i Dejzroit Aiutiobile (lieh e Sales in Fall NEW ,OK, Aug. 8.-P)- Fw million shares had been traZ0ed in on the New York stock exchange at 1:30 p. m. today. Up to that hour, the Dow-Jones average fpr 30 industrial stocks 1(0tijuped 2.92 points, 20 rails were up 3 points and 20 utilities averaged up 1.58.. aW YORK, Aug. 8.-()-After a setbaIl in. the first hour, shares re- bopn de4 with renewed vigor in the NeW York stock exchange today. Trading proceeded in heavy volume and numerous advances of $1 to $5 over Saturday's final prices had been recorded before midday, boosting the general level of shares to the highest sinfce March. Losses of $1 to $3 in the first hour were quickly regained. W tors forged ahead in the most imyf'sgive manner in months, Gen- eril Motors rising $2 to above $1'6 Chrysler advanced $1.50 to $12. Nash ros'e $1 to $15. anta Pe rose more than $5 to $4 Union Pacific regained an early lo, of more than $3 to advance $3 to $6. Case regained a loss of nearly $2 to advance $4to above $53. Amer- ican Can rose more than $2 to well above $50. American Telephone ad- vafdcd' inore than $1 to above $109. U. S. Steel crossed $43 for a gain of abuit' $2. Ffrst vise in Auto Shares It Was the first emphatic upturn in the automobile shares since early in t}e year. While automobile pro- duction is being curtailed during August, Detroit advices to Wall Street indicated that executives were hope- ful of a good pickup in sales during the autumn, if upturns in the mark- ets ay be taken as evidence of a geer"al restoration of confidence. T he tock exchange's trading ma- chinery was overwhelmed and the tic.er fell several minutes behind actu4a transactions on the floor. Co1ton. was the most spectacular commodity in today's markets, ris- ing $1.25 or more a bale in the early trading as traders responded to re- ports that a movement was under way to have the mill interests, with the aid of banking support, take over holdings of the farm board and the cotton co-operatives. Democrat Registration Doubles in California SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 8.-(P)- Democratic registration for the Cal-~ ifornia state primary Aug. 30 is con- siderably more than double the party primary vote two years ago. Regis- tration figures from all but 6 of the states 58 counties prove the situa- tion. Taking the six counties into con- sideration, the Republicans have lost 91,748 potential votes, or 5.95 per cent of their registration in two years, while the Democrats have gains of 563,141, or 129.5 per cent. The Democrats gained 18.29 per cent over the registration for last May's Presidential preference pri- mary, compared with a 4.03 per cent increase for the Republicans. _____________________________.... ..x........ ... . . (Associated Press Photo) Many members of the "bonus army" who set up a new camp at Johnstown, Pa., after their retreat from Washington, finally decided to follow advice of leaders and go home. A group of them is shown boarding a train. Kidnapped Banker, Released; Feared Dying of Wounds SPRINGFIELD, Ill., Aug. 8.-(/P)- Near death from loss of blood and exposure, his body bruised and lac- erated, John B. Colegrove, aged pres- ident of the defunct Taylorville, Ill., bank, lay in a hospital here today and related' how he had been at- tacked in his home, kidnapedebound and. gagged, and then, after being carted miles in an auto, tossed into a weed patch where he was left to die. Colegrove, under penitentiary sen- tence resulting from his bank's fail- ure, remained in the weed patch from late Friday night until early Sunday, when he managed to loosen the ropes with which he was bound and make his way into Springfield to the home of a friend. Meanwhile Christian county offi- cials, where the kidnaping took place, were questioning two suspects, one of them a depositor in Cole- grove's bank who lost $6,000 when it closed. Colegrove was too weak to attempt their identification. State's Attorney Harry Brundy of. Taylorville, who recently obtained a. one to three-year sentence against Colegrove for accepting deposits when knowing the bank to be in- solvent, obtained from the 65-year- old banker details of his abduction. He told the state's attorney he Was attacked inthis home, where he lived alone, by two men as he was lighting a lamp. He struggled with his assailants, he said, but they over- ;owered him and carried him out of the house and put him in an auto. The kidnaping was reported by neighbors who had heard the banker screaming and saw him put into the car. American Holdings in Danger In Bolivia.Parat'uay Dispute ASUNCION, Aug, 8. - (iP) - Large foreign investments, including many American dollars, are in the path of the Bolivian and Paraguayan forces clashing in the disputed region of the Gran Chaco. Two of Paraguay's three largest land-owning groups hold millions of acres there. The-Carlos Casada, Ltd., has hold- ings approximating 9,410 square miles or more than 6,000,000 acres. 'These are embraced in a huge rec- tangle in the eastern portion of the disputed region. Tex Rickard's Land Over to the westward is the prop- erty of the Paraguayan Land & Cat- ble company; organized in New York in 1912 and fostered by Farquar, the English builder of railroads. Spread irregularly over 5,690 square miles, the company has title to more than 3,600,000 acres. The late Tex Rickard was manager of a portion of this company's prop- erty near its southern edge until about 1915. The company's property extends eastward. to the "false course of the Plicomayo." This line got its name when the original surveyor of the southern Paraguayan boundary came out of the large swamp known as the Estero Patino, by the wrong channel. The boundary was supposed to reach to the Pilcomayo, wherefore the surveyor's line, when the error was discovered, came to be known as that river's "false course." Argentina has rather mildly dis- puted Bolivia's claim to the wedge water-soaked territory between the the river and its "false course," but the affair might effect Argentina's position as between Bolivia and Par- aguay. The Paraguayan Land & Cattle company's properties as a whole are only slightly developed. It expects, however, that some day it will be able to raise many cattle there. British Score Success An allied British-owned concern, the Paraguayan Cattle Farms, has operated successfully just east of the New York company's southern hold- ings, feeding beef animals which are shipped to three canning factories operated by the company in this capital. The secon - !su- est Paraguayan land-holder is the Industria Para- guaya. Its acreage is east of the Paraguay river and therefore out- side the disputed region. The Casada properties have scarce- ly been touched thus far by the out- breaks in the Gran Chaco, but the Paraguayan Land & Cattle com- pany's holdings have been crossed by Bolivians foraging and exploring. The company has reported that some of its fences have been cut. The Bolivian penetration in this direction is taken here as an indica- tion of a plan to drive a wedge to- wards this city. This, Paraguayan authorities say,:is..proof that access to the navigable Paraguay river, as an outlet to the Atlantic, is not the sole motivation for Bolivian aggres- sion. They point, too, to the fact that several years ago Bolivia tried to per- suade the American and British cat- ile interests to switch their allegi- ice from Paraguay. SWIM at Newport Beach Portage Lake David E. Mattern and the Sum-' mer Session Symphony orchestra will present a program of special selec- tions at 8:15 o'clock tonight in Hill auditorium. The enrollment at the School of Music this term is made up of a large number of professional musicians who have come to Ann Arbor for special work. These musicians have joined the orchestra, and have aid- ed the development of an organiza- tion of excellent musical proportions. The general public is invited. The program follows: Overture to "The Secret of Sus- anne"..............Wolf-Ferrari Symphony No. 1 (The Rustic Wed- ding) .................,Goldmark In the Garden Dance Concerto No. 4 for Violin........ ......................Vieuxtem ps Andante Adagio religioso Finale Marciale Mr. Kuersteiner "The Little Sandman," from "Han- sel and Gretel".....Humperdinck Evening Prayer, from "Hansel and Gretel"............Humperdinck Concerto No. 5 for Piano . Beethoven First movement Miss Bentley In Venusberg, from "Tannhauser" ........ ..................W agner tates New York Stand. On Waterway Project WILLIAMSTOWN,, Mass., Aug. 8. -(P)-Outlining New York State's position in the development of the St. Lawrence waterway, Belos M. Cosgrove, vice-chairman of the power authority of New York Sate, today told the Institute of Politics that the power developments of the project must not be considered as merely incidental of the navigation improve- ment. "The State," he said, "can not consider any attempt to impose on the power project conditions which would deprive the people of the full. advantages which are theirs by right of title to the power resources." Asserting that the State's agents can not consent to any arrangement which burdens the hydro-electric project with excessive costs, Mr. Cos- grove said that if that were done "the value of the people's title to the power resources would be dissi- pated as truly as if the title were actually alienated." MAJESTIC Scientist Notes Contradictions in Cosmic Ray Study AUCKLAND, New Zealand, Aug. 8. --{P)-Apparent contradictions in the behavior of cosmic rays have fur- nishednew riddles for Prof. A. H. Compton of the. University of Chi- cago. After taking observations at a height of 7,000 ft. on Mount Cook in New Zealand the professor car- ried out similar measurements at a height of 7,300 ft. on Mount Kos- ciusko in Australia, the measure- ments giving similar results to those in New Zealand. "This was not exactly what we had anticipated," the professor re- ports. "It was thought that the radiations would be less intense in Australia. "The position is that when we were near the equator, for instance, at Hawaii, the intensity of the radia- tions was considerably less than those measured in New Zealand, so that we were somewhat at a loss to explain how their intensity in Aus- tralia should be the same as in New Zealand." After further measurements in Panama, in the Andes, and in Mex- ico, Professor Compton expects to return to the United States in Sep- tember. Prophetic Monk Failed To Forecast Columbus PARIS, Aug. 8-.-(iP)-Prophecies of Father Theodosius, a Franciscan monk, who in the year 932 predicted what the world would be like a thousand years later, were mostly wrong., Professor Charles Richet, mem- ber of the French Institute, recent- ly read the manuscript which has been preserved by the University of Ravenna. "In 1,000 years," wrote Father Theodosius, "the human race will still be on earth, contrary to the pre- vailing superstition that the world will end in 1,000 A. D." From that point on the learned monk went wrong. In fact he over- looked Columbus, for the- world he foresaw was about' what prevailed prior to Queen Isabella's historic trip to the pawnbroker. "Man will be unable to penetrate the jungle, the desert or the icy wastes," he wrote. "He will never know the lands beyond the routes of Alexander The Great." Father Theodosius having thus shut out Dayton, O., from his vision, failed to see the Wright brothers for he said: "It is folly to believe that man ever will conquer the air." Nor was he much better in con- juring up a world ruled in 1932 by benevolent monarchs or one in which "Mohammedanism will disappear." TYPEWRITERS, all makes, bought, sold, rented, exchanged, repaird. 0. D. MORRILL, 314 So. State. TYPEWRITING AND M I M E 0- GRAPHING promptly and neatly done. O. D. MORRILL, 314 S. State St. -C LOST AND FOUND LOST-Not if your furs are stoed here. Our policy protects your furs completely 12 months. Zwerdling's Fur Shop. Complete fur service since 1904. -e WANTED WASHING AND IRONING WANT- ED-Will call for and deliver. Soft water used; washing done separate. Phone 2-3478. -c WANTED-Laundry. S o f t water. 21044. Towels free, socks darned, -c WANTED-Half-time or full-!ime business position. Young woman with business and Univ. train:ug, through experience in acaden.- routine. Box No. 1' TYPING-10 cents page. Phone Miss Icheldinger, 3808. FOR SALE FOR SALE--Chevrolet sedan, run only 4,700 miles, excellent coui tion, bargain price. Phone 9562 Peace Prospects Lapse In Dispute Over Chaeo ASCUNCION, Paraguay, Aug. 8. (P)-Prospects for peace in the dis- pute between Paraguay and Bolivia over the Gran Chaco appeared more remote today following the shooting down of a Bolivian airplane over the Paraguayan lines on the frontier. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ;I CHAIUC BEAUTY SHOPPE 1 . Y Shampoo and Finger- Wave .... Oil, Shampoo and Finger Wave . . Rinses, any shade . . . 50k 75c 25c SPECIAL! 7.50 Gabreleen Permanent $5.00 First three days of the week during the month of August Phone 2-2757 205 Michigan Theater Bldg. 25c to21P' M. -Last Day- G;EORGE BANCROFT and WYNNE GIBSON "LA I-D Y A NDIIGE uN T" Starting Wednesday Wallace Ford- - Leila ivams'- Roscoe Ates in "F R EAKS" : . ";? fi . .,<. r6: .; % =S ::t":.t. :: ' tl : t1 r Here, MER sm oke a PIPEFUL of good tobacco is ds- tinctly a man's smoke. Th women (long may they wave!) have ' .. i -Extra Added-- MI C 1 IG AN Stan Laurel and Now Showing Oliver Hardy Frank Craven's Stage in Success "BEAU HUNKS" "THE FIRST YEAR" Games i-- ti-- Paramount News JANET GAYNOR and CHARLES FARRELL night? Just drop in at- er a howl of crunchy-I RICE ruits or honey added. KRISPIESy gest, you'll sleep like READY TOE AT KE L±Dco pC AN rurishing rice bubbles ream. Fine for break- k that this "different" ty dining-room.' dining-rooms of Americanl are made by Kellogg inI M. d.T A It's All ini a Lifeti 1 .Balance" ends. 2.In n e r cap air- sealspoint. 3. Gold- filled ball .', clip. 4. Gold- filled re- inforcing band. 5. Double- action self filler. 6. Rubber reservoir. 7.Dead-air c h in ber sac. 8. Special feed regu- lates flow. 9. So I id 1 4-karat h ea v y gold nib. 10. Cen- ter-sawed iridium point. taken over most of our masculine privileges. But pipe smoking still belongs to us. In every w,, of life you'll find that the men a SheafWrs,the ONLY ken uine Sheafer First in American Colleges A survey made by a disinterested organization shows Sheufle first in fountain pen sales in 73 of the 119 leading American colleges having a regis- tration of 1700 or more. Documnents on this in- vestiation av ailble to unyone. The pipe is not for Just bel /, ,1 *t, fyp Do YOU ever get hungry late ati the campus restaurant and ord crisp Kellogg's Rice Krispies.. Enjoy with milk or cream-f It's delicious-and so easy to di a top! Try it tonight. Kellogg's Rice Krispies are no that actually crackle in milk or e fast. Treat for a quick lunch. Ask cereal be served in your fraternit The most popular cereals served in ther eolleg. eatin chiib and fraternities Y oU don't have to take anybody's word for the difference in a Sheaffer Lifetime'. Just pick it up and you know! 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Or for a special Here's the smoke for sampic packet,m a . write to Larus & Bro. Co., 105 S. 22d St., Richmond, Va. Sample is free EDGEWORT H SMOKING TOBACCO Edgeworth is a blend of fine old burle with its natural savor enhanced by Edge worth's distinctive and exdusive elev- enth process. Buy Edgeworth any- MIL"TAWKNE