TH E MICHIGAN DAILY SaTURDAY, ................. III I I 1 11 1111111 11 11111 11 111 1 11 111 l I III 1p 'ickets Break This Way, Folk Camp at Shaft Show uart Of Coal Mive Commander Donald B. MacMillan Lecture: Motion pictures of the Arctic and the progress in exploration will be shown in Hill auditorium next Monday evening. The pictures Will be accompanied by a vivid word- picture by the dean of arctic explorers-Commander Donald B. MacMil- lan. This isthe secdnd special feature to be presented in Hill Auditorium this summer. The tickets are priced to cover the actual cost of bringing these attractions to Ann Arbor. Tickets may be secured at the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre box-office. Excursion No. 9-Greenfield Village and Fqrd Airport: Visit to Henry Ford's early American village at Dearborn, containing examples of village architecture of one hundred years ago, and Thomas A. Edison's original Menlo Park laboratory; and a trip through the Airplane Division of the Ford Motor Company. Opportunity for a fifteen-mile ride in a trimotor plane will be given in connection with the Airport visit at a $1.50 rate. The party leaves Wednesday afternoon, July 27, at 1:00 from Angell Hall, State Street. Round trip by motorbus, $1.00. Reservations must be made before Tuesday, July 26, 5:00 p. n. in Room 9 University Hall. Students driving in private cars must also secure ticket reservations in Room 9 University Hall. Graduate School: Students enrolled in the Graduate School will not be permitted to drop courses after Saturday, July 23. A course is not offi- cially dropped until it is reported in the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell Hall. Students who have changed their elections since submitting election cards should call this week at the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell Hall. Tliis involves the dropping and adding of courses, the substitution of one course for another, as well as the change of instructors. G. Carl Huber, Dean College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and School of Music: The time limit for dropping courses without reord exxpres this week. Begin- ning Monday morning, July 25, courses di'opped 'will be recorded with E grade. Faculty Concert: The following program will be provided at the con- cert in Hill Auditorium, Tuesday evening, July 26, at 8:15 o'clock. The general public with the exception of small children is invited without ad- mission charge but is requested to be seated on time. The program follows: Dohnanyi, Concertstueck (Prof. Pick and 'Prof. Brinkman; Brahms, Trio Op. 101, C 'minor (Allegro energico, Prest6 non, assai, Andante grazioso, Allegro molto) (Prof. Besekirsky, Prof. Pick, and Prof. Brinkman): Marx, W Idseligkeit; Strauss, Traum durch die Dammerung; Ravel, Nicolette; Ja nefelt, To the Harp (Modern Scandinavian); Hallstrom, Black Swans (Modern Scandinavian) (Miss Lewis): Tansman, Serenade (Introduzione e allegro, Canzone, Scherzo) (M r. Besekirsky, Mr. Pick, and Mr. Brinkman). Charres A. Sink Men and Women of the University: All students are invited to attend the dance sponsored by the Men's and Women's Education Clubs Saturday, July 23rd. Dancing from 9:00 until 12:00 in University High Sclool Gym- naiun. People may attend unescorted. Admission 25 cents. J. W. Kelder Women's Education Club Meeting: Monday, July 25, at 7:15 at the Michigan League. The feature of the evening will be aelection of humor- ous readings given by Professor Eich of the Department of Speech and General Linguistics. All students of the Summer Session and wives of men students are invited. The meeting will be at 7:15. instead of 7:30 as formerly announced. Tennis Match: Frankie Parke has had to postpone his tennis match which was to be played/in,Ann Arbor today. It is expected that it will be played sometime soon, however, and the date will be announced later. The Southern Club: Its annual Summer School picnic will be held' on Wednesday, tJuly 27th, at Portage Lake, price fifty cents. The group will leave from in front of Angell Hall at 5:00 p. m. Transportation will be furnished. A committee will attempt to telephone all Southerners whose names are listed in the directory. We hope, however, that anyone Who plans to attend will take the initiative to call University Extension 371 and notify the committee if he can furnish an automobile or wants transporta- tion with someone else.s Jammy J. Darby, Mrs. B. L Smith, Mrs. W. G. Manson, Conrad 1Tempjeton,' and Jackson Sharman, Clhairman. Presbyterian Students: Professor Howard Y. McClusky will conduct -the meeting Sunday evening at the Church House (1432 Washtenaw). So- cial hour at 5:30. Unitarian Service: "What's On Our Young People's Minds" will be the last of three addresses by the Reverend W. H. Gysan, Unitarian Minister to students in Greater Boston, at the Unitarian Church at 10:45 Sunday morning. Liberal Students Union: Robert C. Angell, of the Department of Socio- logy, will speak on "Marriage and Its Problems in Modern Life" to the Agreement Reached With Hoosier Laborers; Work TemporarilyDropped DUGGER, Ind., July 22.-(AP)-- More than a thousand union sym-I pathizers whose presence about the! Hoosier coal mine held 27 unorgan- ized workmen in the shaft for two days slowly broke camp early today as officials supervjsed removal of the beseiged diggers. Under terms of an agreement reached at a conference Thursday night between Gov. Harry G. Leslie and representatives of the two labor groups, the mine will be maintained but will not be worked temporarily. It has been running on a co-opera- tive basis, to which unionizpd groups objected. t A 'detachment of national guards- men will be brought from Shakamak State park, 10 miles from here, where three companies have been held in readiness to maintain order. ' Gov. Leslie intervened in the con- troversy at the request of Sheriff Wesley Williams, who feared dep- uties available to him would be un- able to handle the situation. Had peaceable methods failed, the gov- ernor said, it would have been nec- essary for the state to declare mar- tial law. Liberal Students Union, Unitarian Church, corner State and Huron Sts., at 7: 30 Sunday evening., There will be refreshments and a social hour after the discussion. Reformed Students: Church serv- ive will be conducted Sunday morn- ing by Mr. B. Kruithof at the Phi Alpha Kappa fraternity on 1000 East Ahn St. The Service will begin at 10 o'clock. St. Andrew's Church Sunday Serv- ices: 8:00 a. m. The Holy Commun-l ion; 9:30 a; i. Summer School of Religion fo. children, 11:00 a. m. Kindergarten; 11:00 a. m. Morning prayer and sermon, bythe Reverend Henry Lewis, 'The Problem of Self- Control." Classes in Religious Instruction: 10:00 a. m., Harris Hall, Christian Biography, leader Miss Elleh Gam- mack. 8:00 p. m., The Rectory 725 Oxford Rd., Christian Philosophy of7 Life, leader the Reverend Henry' Lewis. ?' r. ' 1 ' K vii'-?' ib.. - } , .Y : The Greatest h Here August 2 A circus comes to town. The great Hagenbeck-Wallace per- formers, tricksters and entertainers will be with us Tuesday, Aug. 2, for afternoon and night performances, according to an announcement made yesterday by advance agents of the show. Clyde Beatty, the youthful subju- gator of jungle beasts with the cir- cus, is 100 per cent material for one of those Ripley "Believe It or Not" cartoons. Beatty, who will thrill local audiences with his daring feats, looks more like a successful moving picture star than a wild animal trainer, but he possesses more nerve than 10 heavyweight fighters. Handling and presenting over 30 Royal Bengal and Siberian tigers, as well as African lions, twice daily is Beatty's task. Another outstanding feature will be "Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt." Many Roll Their Own; Tax on Papers Rising WASHINGTON, July 22.-(AP)- That more people "rolled their own" last fiscal year is shown in the treas- ury departtient's analysis totaling the drop in tax receipts for 4ie pe- riod '4t $807,499,711. The taxes on cigarette papers rose $258,676 to $1,700,502. Russian Film To Open Here On Wednesday 1'Road to Life' Is First Soviet Motion Picture With English Titles "Road to Life," the first Soviet sound film with English titles, will be, shown at the Majestic treatre July 27, 28 and 29, it was announced here yesterday. The show, a Broad- way success, is a startling drama of Russia's "Wild Children." Maxim Gdrky, noted Russian writ- er, describes the show as "the astounding history of the moral res- urrection of hundreds of young peo- ple who have been re-born from so- cially dangerous into socially useful citizens." The picture recounts the real story of a group of homeless children, and how they were reclaimed from a life of crime by sympathetic treatmnet.' The picture was described by several faculty members here as one of the finest shows produced in Russia. The show, they said, is not Russian propaganda, but is a true picture of Russian life as it actually was and is. University of California at Los Angeles had 180,000 volumes in its library. Cab Companies Oppose Use of Meter System Rates charged by taxi drivers at the present time will be established permanently if the city council adopts a proposed ordinance being drawn up by Alderman William Hol- lands, chairman of the ordinance committee. At a recent meeting of the com- mittee, the representatives of 25 cabs, operating in the city, voted down a proposal to adopt the meter system. Under the new ordinance the amount of insurance required of the cabs will be reduced from $10,000 to $5,000. 4 - BRIGHI 802 Packar Today 11:3 Bacon, Eggs Chop Suey veal Loaf Mus Roast Beef Potatoes a] Pineapple C] with Jelly Ice Cream Coffee 30 rSPOT rd Street 0 to 1:30 and Toast with Rice shroom Sauce and Pork nd Spinach l'eese Salad Sandwich - Cake Milk c 7 7:30 ef Steak >s- Jelly h Roast Beef Pork ese, Cold Meats, nd Tomatoes led Potatoes ach - Cold Slaw Tce Cream Pie ea Milk C 5:30 to Sou, Cubed Be Pork Chops Vegetable wit] Roasta Cold Plate of Che Cucumbers an Mashed or Fr Tomatoes -'Spina Cake - Melon -I Coffee Te Oc~ 0- MIChIGAN REPERTORY PLAYERS present FINAL PERFORMANCE TONIGHT AN UNUSUAL PLAY - A SUPERB CAST A twentieth century Anrican walks into the past-lie sees eighteenth century England through the eyes of the present- 0 e knows the future-a stran ge situation-novel ani, in- genius. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE W Single Admissions 75c Phone 6300 Q}C"Yti:Z " C:Jt t"G"c C ^ .ltG''tC <)C C> t) t) t) '_.'' <" t)C ~ } ""?tG'" I C{" . i {.;-. 1 Eich to Give Readings Before Education Club Prof. Louis M. Eich, of the speech department, will give a program of humorous readings to members of the Women's Educational club at 130 o'clock Monday night in the League. i tI _ssolves -problei 16 ;at ms: ----------- =- t 11 "My 24 Yeairs of Arctic Exploration by COMMANDER DONALD B. MACMILLAN { Explorer, Scientist, Humanitarian, and Foremost Authority on the Arctic Exceptional Motion Pictures Make This Lecture Doubly Attractive f This is not "just another lecture." The man himself is today considered to be the leading authority on the Arctic.X The authentiL motion pictures which accohpany make this feature both highly interesting as well as educational. Gas heat solves both the problem of the sales manager, who must meet the public taste with delectable hickory-smoked meats, and of the engineer, who must contrive to handle the 'production eco- nomically. The use of gas heat eliminates the fuel problem, and insures 4