SUNJDAY, AUG~. 9, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE THREWN i Hymns To Be Sing By Audience At Third Campus Vespers NEWS of Th e DAY (Wrom The Associated Press) 'Blue' Army Pours Into Western Michigan ALLEGAN, Aug. 8.- (/P) - Troops of the "Blue" army, near- ly 24,000 of them, continued pouring into western Michigan preparatory to launching inten- sive theoretical warfare to defend the rich Great Lake and Middle Western area from a hypothetical attack of allied Red and Brown nationsadvancing from the East and South. Severely testing every phase of army communications, transport and offense mechanism, the vast maneuvers converging in this area tonight will continue until August 22. Troop ships, troop trains, motor convoys and air- craft all were pressed into service to mobilize the greatest armed force the Middle West has ever seen since World War days. Mob- ilization is expected to be com- plete Sunday. Schmeling Returns For Braddock Bout LAKEHURST, N. J., Aug. 8. (P)-Max Schmeling, former heavyweight champion from Ger- many, returned to America abard the Zeppelin Hindenberg today to prepare for his 15-round bout with Jimmy Braddock, cur- rent holder of the title, in Sep- tember. Despite a 12-hour delay in the landing of the big airship, Max was full of enthusiasm over air travel and was more inclinedto discuss the ship than to talk about the boxing business. He was full of confidence in his abil- ity to whip Braddock and become the first man ever to regain the heavyweight crown, but said he would have to train longer and harder for the champion than he did before he knocked out Joe Louis in June. He was accom- panied (as usual, by his trainer, Max Machon. Schmeling, apparently in good condition, said he was feeling fine, but was anxious to begin his training. He pointed out that Braddock's defense would be somewhat stronge rthan Louis' and hence he would need more preparation. Max was still undecided about the location of his training camp. Wreckage Of Missing Hines Plane Found FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Aug. 8.- ()-John Hajdukovich, prospec- tor, flew here today with word he and two companions found the Arthur F. Hines plane, missing with Pilot Hines and three pas- sengers almost a year, on a barren mountain range 175 miles west of here. Bearing the motor plate from the plane he said was found on the mountains, Hajdukovich told of discovering the ship burned and only a few bones remaining. The numbers of the plate checked with those of the orange- winged ship in which Hines, Mr. and Mrs. John Lonz and Alton Nordale, all of Fairbanks, took off from Dawson, August 19, 1935, to Fairbanks. Their ship vanished en route and an airplane search in which many of Alaska's famous aviators joined failed to disclose it. Haj- dukovich said he, Bill McCoinn and Carl Tweiten found the plane at about 5,000 feet elevation on the range rising from the Healy River, a tributary of the Tanana. CCC Fire Fighters Receive Reinforcements HOUGHTON, Aug. 8.-(GA)- Three hundred CCC enrollees left for Isle Royale today to join crews battling several forest fires on the island. The new force brings the total crew to nearly 1,200 men. An attempt 'by a naval sea- plane to make an aerial survey of the fire today was balked by heavy smoke, according to infor- mation received by C. E. Shevlin, representative of the National Park Service. It had been planned to direct efforts of ground crews by radio from the plane. Crews fighting the fire are using power pumps and have strung approxi- mately 15,000 feet of hose. Shov- els and other equipment are being sent to the island daily. -r VflewA/ITEDC There's A Wideness There's a wideness in God's mercy, Like the wideness of the sea; There's a kindness in his justice, Which is more than liberty. For the love of God is broader Than the measure of man's mind And the heart of the Eternal Is most wonderfully kind. If our love were but more simple We should take him at his word; And our lives would be all sunshine In the sweetness of our Lord. Lest We Forget God of our fathers, known of old, Lord of our far-flung battle line, Beneath whose awful hand we hold Dominion over palm and pine: Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Lest we forget, lest we forget! The tumult and the shouting dies; The captains and the kings depart; Still stands thine ancient sacrifice, An humble and a contrite heart: Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Lest we forget, lest we forget! Far-called our navies melt away, On dune and headland sinks the fire; Lo, all our pomp of yesterday Is one with Nimevah and Tyre! Judge of the nations, spare us yet, Lest we forget, lest we forget! For heathen heart that puts her trust In reeking tube and iron shard; All valiant dust that builds on dust, and guarding calls not thee to guard. For frantic boast and foolish word, Thy mercy on thy people, Lord! Jerusalem The Golden Jerusalem the golden, With milk and honey blest, Beneath thy contemplation Sink heart and voice oppressed: I know not, O I know not What social joys are there; What radiancy of glory, What light beyond compare. They stand, those halls of Zion, All jubilant with song, And bright with many an angel, And all the martyr throng; The Prince is ever in them, The daylight is serene; The pastures of the blessed Are decked in glorious sheen. All Hail The Power All hail the power of Jesus' nam, Let angels prostrate fall: Bring forth the royal diadem, And crown him Lord of all- Ye chosen seed of Israel's race, Ye ransomed from the fall, Hail him who saves you by his grace, And crown him Lord of all. Let every kindred, every tribe On this terrestrial ball, To him all majesty ascribe, And crown him Lord of all. O that, with yonder sacred throng, We at his feet may fal! We'll join the everlasting song, And crown him Lord of all. Dear Lord And Father Dear Lord and Father of man-kind, For give us our feverish ways! Reclothe us in our rightful mind; In purer lives thy service find, In deeper reverence, praise. In simple trust like theirs who hear. Beside the Syrian sea The gracious calling of the Lord, Let us, like them, without a word, Rise up and follow thee. O Sabbath rest by Galilee! O calm of hills above, Where Jesus knelt to share with tlhK The silence of eternity, Interpreted by love! Drop thy still dews of quietness, Till all our strivings cease; Take from our souls the strain and sttr. And let our ordered lives confess The beauty of thy peace. Lord, For Tomorrow Lord, for tomorrow and its needs I do not pray; zep me, my God, from stain of sin Just for today. Help me to labor earnestly, And duly pray; Let me be kind in word and deem, Father, today. And if, today, this life of mine * Should ebb away, Give me thy sacrament divine, Father, today. 3o for tomorrow and its needs I do not pray; Still keep me, guide me, love me, Lord, Through each today. U. S. Sweeps Three Places In Decathlon Morris, Clark And Parker Give America Triple Win In Event For First Time !Continued from ige !) in the trials by Owens, Ralph 'Met- calfe, Foy Draper and Frank Wy- koff the best answer to his critics besides denying sharply that even slightest prejudice was involved. Jesse's return to action as lead-off man forecast the brown Buckeye bul- let's acquisition of the much prized fourth gold medal, but to bystanders, it seemed like the Americans were "pouring it on." The dispute hinged mainly on Dra- per's selection over Stoller, who had been assured he'd compete on the basis of trials and did not learn until this morning that he would be benched on his 21st birthday anni- versary. Glickman bitterly assailed the coaches for favoring the Californian inder the circumstances which seemed likely to develop, further repercus- sions before the 1936 Olympic books are closed. Rivalry Amo'ng Mates Morris, whose triumph marked the fourth successive time the Olympic winner smashed the world decathlon record, had his teammates to thank for the rivalry that spurred him through the last five events. The Americans were one-two-three from the start and absolutely domi- nated the gruelling test of versatility, achieving the first sweep any nation ever enjoyed in Olympic decathlon competition. Clark, the San Franciscan who paced the first day, holding a thin margin of two points over Morris at the end of five events, yielded the lead to the Coloradoan at the outset of the final program and never there- after menaced Morris. The former national A.A.U. cham- pion Clark, was 299 points behind the new champion with a total of 7,601 poThts, but safely stood off his fellow Californian, who hails from Sacra- mento, Parker faltering in the 1,500- meter run and winding up with 7,- 275 points. This was nearly 200 points better than the nearest European contender, Germany's Erwin Hube, who amassed 7,087, overhauling Holland's Reindert Brasser with 7,046 points and Switzerland's Armin Guehl with 7.033 points. Jarvinen Out The lustrous all-around "Zehn- kampf" as the program identified the decathlon overshadowed all internal as well as competitive activity spread over the vast Reichssportfield, ,at- tracting Saturday crowds close to 200,000 including another capacity throng and Chancellor Adolf Hitler in the main stadium. The history-making sweep by the Americans, which was a rare tribute to Brutus Hamilton's coaching, had the crowd excited as well as their Eu- ropean rivals staggering. Only 17 of the original 28 starters finished, the chief overnight casualty being Fin- land's Akilles Jarvinen, 1932 runner- up and former world record holder. Morris settled all doubt about the outcome, barring accident when he topped the day's first two events, the 110-meter hurdles, which he ne- gotiated in 14.9 seconds, and the dis- cus, which he threw i41 feet 47/64 inch. These performances relegated Clark to second place and left Morris only his world record to argue with. The Coloradoan's unprecedented speed in the track events featured hisshowing but he was remarkably consistent throughout, slipping from top flight only in the pole vault where he fin- ished tied for 12th with a flight of 11 feet 5 13/16 inches. All told Mor- ris won four events and was among the first five in eight events. The LENS By ROBERT L. GACH Those of you who own cameras that only give you six or eight pictures to the roll, by no means have to avoid the type of candid pictures that I have been talking about for the last two days. In fact you may even find that the large camera has very de- cided advantages. But if you own a camera of the split 127, split 120, or 3 mm size you should consider the following plan. Very often a series of consecutive but unrelated pictures can be put to- gether to tell a story. The following example is a description of a page of pictures in last month's Leica Photo- graphy. Two monkeys are used in the first picture one of them is holding a cam- era to his eye as if he was about to take a picture but he has his hand over the lens. The title is something like this. "I'll show those fellows that they don't need a sunshade I'll put my hand over the lens and keep out all the light." Then the next shot shows him looking at the film which is blank, then the two monkeys are shown looking at the film, next they are testing it by trying its taste, and in the last picture they are looking very sick, and have decided that it was the film that was to blame be- cause "it didn't suit our digestion." Try giving the baby a chance to act out some story. Shoot as many pic- tures as you can showing different positions and still more important, different expressions, and then see if you can assemble them. Called To Shoot Picture A clever person can work wonders with a group of pictures like this, and they never have to be taken with the story planned out in advance. About a year ago I was called upon to shoot a picture of a well known orchestra leader drinking a glass of beer. It was to be a portrait that would be used in an add. I took three shots and decided that they were all the same quality so I printed all 'three and took them down to the ad- vertising company's office. One of the stenographers asked to see them. After she had looked at them for a couple of seconds she said "How did you ever manage to think of this clever sequence?" Boy! That looks good-it is good! Now where can I get this glass filled up again. I didn't tell her that, until she mentioned it, there had been no thought of a se- quence but they were used that way in the ad and it packed an awful wal- lop. (This is a confession and I hope she reads it). In a similiar fashion your snap- shots can be assembled to be much more than just pictures. Try it. It's great fun. Vespers Program SECOND VESPERS Sunday, Aug. 9, 7 p.m. Musical program directed by Prof. David Mattern, University School of Music. Summer Session Orchestra: Prelude and Adagietto, L'Arle- sienne Suite No. 1.......... Bizet By The Assembly : Lest We Forget .........Kipling Invocation by Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, University Counselor in Religious Education. Summer Session Chorus : Praise The Lord...Christianson When The Sun Had Sunk to Rest-.....: Old English Noel By The Assembly : Dear Lord and Father of Man- kind ..............Whittier There's a Wildeness in God's Mercy ................Faber String Orchestra: Music of the Spheres ....... .Rubinstein Summer Session Chorus: Oh, Blest Are They ........ .Tschaikowski Summer Session Men's Glee Club: Fight For Thine Own . .Faltin By The Assembly: Jerusalem The Golden..... Author unknown All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name ...... Author unknown Bernard R. McGregor, soloist : The Lord Is My Light .. Allitsen Summer Session Chorus: Build Thee More Stately Man- sions.............Andrews Sanctus (St. Cecilia Mass) .. ........... Gounod By The Assembly: Lord, for Tomorrow and its Needs ............... Palmer Benediction by Dr. Blakeman. U. Of M. Expedition In Selucia Unearths Ancient. Claim Deed Over 2,400 years ago Shelibi, a citi- zen of Babylonia, bought an "estate" from Nabubanapli, getting for his protection a receipt, or quit claim deed, which any modern lawyer would be hard put to find fault with. Hard-baked on a clay tablet, Sheil- ibi's deed was found by the University of Michigan expedition to Selucia on the Tigris, a remnant of Neo-Babyl- onian civilization. Translated by El- len W. Moore, of the University's de- partment of oriental languages and literatures, it reads: "A total of one- third mina, two and one-half shekels of white silver, the purchase price of his estate, Nabubanapli, descendant of the potter, has received from Shel- ibi, descendant of ... nasir, according to the full amount of silver. He is paid; he is satisfied. Further legal claim he does not have. They shall not reopen suit, nor against each oth- er go to law. Whenever in future days, among brothers, son, kinsman, household or relatives of the family of the potter there is one who arises and concerning that estate brings suit or causes suit to be brought, changes the contract, makes a claim and speaks, saying, 'that estate was not given and that silver not received,' such claimant shall restore twelvefold the amount of silver that was re- ceived." APPOINTED ST. JOSEPH COACH ST., JOSEPH, Aug. 8.-(P)-Harry Less, Fremont high school coach for eight years, was appointed Saturday as head football coach and athletic director at St. Joseph high school here, replacing Ronald Finch, who will coach at Saginaw. Legion Member Says New Cult Is Under Way DETROIT, Aug. 8.-( )-Earl Ang- stadt, one of the three Black Legion men convicted of falsely imprisoning4 a fellow member, said tonight a "new and greater" organization is being formed by the "better element" of the Legion "to uphold the constitution, combat communism and work for the betterment of the community." From his jail cell, Angstadt told newsmen he had received this in- formation "from people on the out- side" who were important men in the old Black Legion, but did not become embroiled in the crimes charged against the secret society. Angstadt, an Ecorse steel worker who awaits sentence on a conviction of forcing Robert Penland, a fellow employe, to attend a Black Legion meeting, said the new society will not be announced "until public indigna- tion over the Black Legion has died down." The new group, Angstadt said, will use a hoodless black robe and tin- foil-covered wooden sword instead of the gun and black mask used by the Legion and will seek a state charter, Angstadt said that when he joined the Black Legion he though it was "similar to the Black Knights, an off- shoot of the Ku Klux Klan to which I belonged in Youngstown, O." Major Leagues- AMERICAN LEAGUE W L New York .......... 69 34 Cleveland...........59 48 Chicago .............58 48 Detroit ..............57 49 Boston ..... ........54 53 Washington.........52 53 St. Louis ............37 69 Philadelphia ........36 68- Yesterday's Results Chicago 9, Cleveland 7. Detroit 9-5, St. Louis 7-10. New York 9, Philadelphia 4. Washington 2, Boston 0. Games Today Chicago at Cleveland (2). Philadelphia at New York (2). Boston at Washington. St. Louis at Detroit. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L St. Louis ............64 40 Chicago.............61 41 New York..........59 45 Pittsburgh ..........53 50 Cincinnati ..........49 43 Boston.............48 55 Philadelphia .........39 64 Brooklyn............39 64 Yesterday's Results Chicago 3, Pittsburgh 2. New York 3, Philadelphia 2. Boston 4, Brooklyn 2. Games Today Pittsburgh at Chicago (2). Brooklyn at Boston (2). Cincinnati at St. Louis (2). New York at Philadelphia. Pct. .670 .551 .547. .538 .505 .495 .349 .346 Pct. .615 .598 .567 .515 .480 .466 .379 .379 SUNDAY DINNER 12 Noon to 8 P.M. Chicken Soup or Tomato Juice Roast Chicken, Dressing 65c Chicken Fricassee, Biscuit 55c Grilled Tenderloin Steak 55c Grilled Sirloin Steak 50c Virginia Baked Ham, Raisin sauce 50c Roast Leg of Lamb, Mint Jelly 50c Roast Beef 45c I Grilled Pork Chop, Apple Sauce 40c Miashed Potatoes Parsley Potatoes Corn on Cob Buttered Peas Sliced Tomatoes Fruit Salad Rolls Lemon Pie Peach Sundae Cocoanut Pudding Watermelon Coffee - Tea - Milk Bright Spot 802 PACKARD I I"= e ,.I TODAY - 25c Till 2 P.M. Now Playing! W MAJElTIL 25% Reduction On GOSSAR D Cloaked in Greatness as the first woman in white! The Heroic War Nurse who renounced the man she loved . . . to love all mankind! WARNER SILK SKIN NEMO FOUNDATION GARMENTS and GIRDLES ? . ,ff" - . w.ooas " iv ige- .r-ct " vona.