SA4TUJRDAY, JULY 11,41936 THE-MICHIGAN DAILY ."~ PAGrE TfREE J.'.1 g I'l 1 NEWS Of Th DAY (From The Associated Press) WPA Wkers Absorbed By Private Industry DETROIT, July 10.-(P)- Works Progress officials reported today that 19,000 of the 25,289 WPA workers who have found new jobs within the past three months have been absorbed by private industry. Another 20;090 persons eligible for. WPA jobs obtained work in the automobile, lumber, minning, agriculture and other industries before they could be assigned to WPA projects. The Upper Peninsula's demand for labor in private industry led WPA officials to believe that "the spurt in employment is more than just a seasonable one." Four More Held In Legion Quiz DETROIT, July 10.--(P)-Four more names were added today to the list of 15 already held for trial on charges of conspiring to mur- der Arthur L. Kingsley, Highland Park newspaper editor, in a Black Legion plot in 1933. John Godwin and William Keeler, suspended policemen; Roland Hasselback, suspended fireman; and Mathias O. Gunn, suspended Detroit street railway employe, were ordered held for trial after an examination. Storm Raises Havoc. In Port Huronr PORT HURON, July 10.-(A')- A severe wind and rain storm bringing a precipitation of an inch and a half in less than an hour failed to break the heat wave in this area tonight. After the storm cleared, the temperature hovered at 90 de- grees. Power lines north and west of Port Huron were blown down by a wind estimated to have reached nearly 80 miles an hour, more than a hundred trees were down in the city, and an 80-foot smoke- stack at a foundry fell. Major Leagues. F. D R. Leaves For Two-Week Vacation Trip President Will Cruise On Maine Coas; To Dedicate New YorkBridge Today WASHINGTON, July 10. - P) - President Roosevelt headed north- ward out of the capital's sizzling heat tonight, bound for a two week's vaca- tion cruise on the Maine coast to pre- pare him for the campaigning ahead. The air cooled train was a welcome haven for the Chief Executive after a busy day clearing up pressing gov- ernmental business before his depar- ture set for soon after midnight. Another full day awaited the Pres- ident tomorrow. He will dedicate the $64,000,000 tri-borough bridge in New York at noon; go by train to Hyde Park to be guest of honor at a Roose- velt home club celebration in the afternoon and later attend the wed- ding of Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen. Ickes To Make Trip Secretary Ickes will accompany the President to Hyde Park after dedica- tion of the gigantic tri-borough bridge, crossing the East River to con- nect Manhattan, the Queens, and the Bronx. It is a PWA project. Monday night the Chief Executive will leave Hyde Park by train for Maine, where he will embark Tuesday on the 56-foot schooner Sewanna, with three of his sons, for two weeks of cruising and fishing off the coast of Maine and Nova Scotia. James, John, and Franklin, Jr., are the sons who will accompany their father. To End In July Toward the end of July, the Pres- ident plans to bring the cruise to an end at Campobello Isle, New Bruns- wick, where he and his mother main- tain summer homes. After a day or two there, he will leave by train for' Quebec, where he will visit with Lord Sweedsmuir, governor general of Can- ada, July 31. The President's plans for after that were still indefinite tonight. He will return to Hyde Park from Quebec but he said today he did not expect to do much campaigning during Au- gust. About the middle of August, he will head west for an inspection of the drought regions in Minnesota and the Dakotas. Former University Students Are Wed An announcement of interest in University circles is that of the mar- riage of Virginia Dae Cluff, '35, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Joseph Cluff, of Detroit, to Carl Stan- ford Forsythe, ,Jr., '35L, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl S. Forsythe, of Jack- son, o. The wedding took place on July 6. Mrs. Forsythe, after her graduation from Miss Newman's School in De- troit, attended the University, where she was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journalism society. Forsythe graduated from the liter- ary college in 1932, acted as city editor of The Daily, a member of Theta Delta Chi fraternity, and Sphinx, Michigamua, and Sigma Del- ta Chi, honor societies. Mr. and Mrs. Forsythe plan to leave today for the east, stopping at Jackson to visit Forsythe's parents. They will live in New York after Sept. 1, at the Windsor Tower, Tudor City. Madame Minister' To Be Wed Today NEW YORK, July 10.-()-Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, minister to Den- mark, will be married Saturday in the vaulted Episcopal Church at Hyde Park, N. J., to Captain Boerge Rohde, of the Danish King's Court, with President Roosevelt and Mrs. Roose- velt looking on. The vows in the international ro- mance will be read by the Rev. Sam- uel M. Shoemaker, rector of New York City's Calvary Episcopal Church, at 4 p.m. (Eastern Standard Time) the President and Mrs. Roose- velt will entertain at a wedding sup- per. feminine counterpart to her hus- band's title, Kammerjunkare - gentleman in wating to King Chris- tian X-said she would continue to sign herself "Ruth Bryan Owen" in her official .and literary work. ;Prospecive-Queen? -Associated Press Photo. Frederica-Louisa-Thyra-Victoria- Margarita-Scophia-Ogla-Cecilia-Is- abella-Christa (a b o v e), grand- daughter of the former Kaiser, has been mentioned as a possible bride of King Edward V1I. CCC Workers Will Plant 85 Million Trees Director Says Michigan's Quota Is Nearly Double That Of Other States MUSKEGON, Mich., July 10.-(P)- Eighty-five million trees will be plant- ed in Michigan during 1936 by CCC workers, Robert Fechner, director of tonight. "This year alone, during your planting seasons 85 million trees grill be planted on publicly-owned forest lands in Michigan," he said. "That is nearly twice as many as will be planted by the CCC in any other single state in the nation." Fechner said Michigan has received a "large share" of the benefit from the work of more than a million and a half young men and war veterans who have engaged in CCC projects in the country since the work was start- ed April 5, 1933. Veterans in Projects At present, he said, some 325,000 young men and 25,000 war veterans are engaged in conservation projects in slightly more than 21,000 forest, park, soil erosion and other outdoor camps. "Today in Michigan there are 77 CCC camps," Fechner said. "That is about a score more than were assigned to the state when the corps originated in 1933. "In each camp there is an average of about 155 enrollees. They are working to protect and restore your national and state forests; to pro- tect and promote wild life; to make fishing better for those who enjoy it; to develop and add facilities for recreation in your natural and state parks. Planted Trees "They have planted millions of trees on areas that not long ago were burned-over stump lands. Since the first CCC camp was established in Michigan in 1933,amore than a mil- lion and a quarter acres of land suitable for reforestation have been added to publicly-owned forests in your state. "The land I speak of was once cov- ered thickly with magnificent forests and virgin pines, hemlocks and hard- woods, and much of it will be again as a result of the work of the CCC.' Fechner has accompanied by Fred Morrell, acting chief of the United States forest service, who is a member of the CCC advisory council. RENO'S TOO HOT, THQUGH DES MOINES, Ia., July 9.--(P)-- A new drought threat was reported today by Judge Frank S. Shankland Tempers get shorter in hot weather he said, and divorces are more fre- quent. - ~ - - ~ - - GOP Discusses Party Program On Farm Issue Hope Questions New Deal' Platform; Farmers To Receive Bounties' TOPEKA, Kans., July 10.-(P)- Two participants in the significant Landon-Lowden conference contrib- uted views to the discussions of Re- publican farm plans today, one em- phasizing anew that bounties would be paid farmers and the other ques- tioning the New Deal's program. Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas, who sat at the luncheon table while Gov. Alf M. Landon and Frank O. Lowden talked farm problems yes- terday, said the Illinois leader had "faced squarely a fact that some folks are trying to dodge for fear it will arouse antagonism in certain quar- ters." Continue Bounties "The bounties to farmers who co- operate in a national oil conservation program will have to be continued," Capper quoted Lowden as saying. The presidential nominee affirmed this statement at the press conference where it was made by Lowden. Rep. Clifford R. Hope of Kansas, who also heard the Landon-Lowden conversations, issued a statement at the governor's office in which he said President Roosevelt had made the "astounding inference" that a 10 per cent increase in wheat and corn acre- age had been part of the administra- tion's farm plans "all along." "Until the President spoke," Hope said, "no intimation had come out of Washington that the administration had any other idea in mind than a reduction in these crops. Now that the drought is threatening a scarcity of food and feed crops and it appears that the reduction program was a mistake * * * the administration is attempting to get out in front and lead the parade the other way." No Comment By Alf Hope, who is ranking Republican on the House Agriculture Committee, said that a month ago the farmer who reduced his acreage "was doing the right thing according 'to the adminis- tration program," but that today "the ones who rejected the program are extolled by the president." Beyond saying that he enjoyed the conference very much, Landon had no comment today on the farm views outlined by Lowden. His July 23 ac- ceptance speech is expected to deal with the farm problem particularly. Col. Frank Knox of Illinois, his running-mate, was expected for a conference Wednesday. French Club Hears Talk By President Gertrude Gilman, president of the French Club, spoke Thursday night at a meeting of that club held at Le Foyer Francais on observations she had made on her three trips to 3 France. Miss Gilman, speaking in French told of her impressions of Paris and of life in general in the cities and in the country. She spoke also of the habits and attitudes of the French peasants. Life. at Grenoble, where a Universi- ty is located in the Alp mountains, was discussed by Miss Gilman, as well as trips to Provence, Normandy, Bretagne, Mont Saint-Michel, Al- sace and Lorraine. The next meeting of the French Club will be held on Tuesday, July 14, which is a national holiday in France commemorating the storming of the Bastille during the days of the revolu- tion. At this meeting, Prof. Rene Tal- iamon of the French department will ,speak. dents of the Summer Session and friends, should be made at the Sum- mer Session Office. These reserva- tions should be made preferably by Tuesday, July 14, in order to assure hotel accommodations, but will be accepted up to Thursday noon, July 16. A deposit of $8.90 for railroad fare will be necessary at the time of the reservation. Attention: Foreign Students: I wish to urge as many foreign stu- dents as possible to take advantage of the trip to Niagara Falls, July 17, 18 and 19, but to emphasize the nec- essity of their registering in the Sum- mer Session office not later than Saturday noon, in order that proper arrangements can be made with the Immigration authorities. I All such students must, of course, have with them their passports and such extensions of stay as may have been required in their particular cases. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students. August candidates for the Master's degree in the School of Music: The following is the tentative list of can- didates for the Master of Music de- gree at the close of the Summer Ses- sion. If your name ,does not appear here, see the Director of the School of Music. Walter Herman Bloch Floyd Vincent Burt Chester Newhall Channon Mary Christine Cotner Florence Lillian Leach William Hugh Miller J. Thomas Oakes John Andrew Otten Sister M. Teresita Schulz Dorothy Louise SuttonC The Annual Picnic of the businessl and professional women's clubs will be held Saturday afternoon. Members are invited to attend, and summer school students affiliated with bus- iness and professional women's clubs, in other communities are also invited. Reservations are to be made by tele- phoning Miss Grace Rash, 5343, or Miss Jessie Pickell, 8421. Weekly Reading Hour: Monday evening, July 13, at 7 p.m. in Room (Continued from Page 2) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Summer Session, Room 1213 Angell Hall until 3:30: 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. 302 Mason Hall, Professor Eich will ) read from James Hilton's story,C "Goodbye, Mr. Chips." The publicj is cordially invited. f Foreign Student Reception and Tea: All foreign students enrolled int the Summer Session are invited to an informal tea to be given by Prof.s J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students, and Mrs. Nelson in4 the Grand Rapids Room of the Mich-, igan League next Sunday, July 12 from 4 to 6 p.m. Students enrolled, for the first time are especially urged to avail themselves of this opportuni- ty to meet other foreign students and members of the faculty in the inter- national groups. J. Raleigh Nelson.! The University Bureau of Appoint-I ments And Occupational Information has received announcements of Unit- ed States Civil Service Examinations for Chief, Principal, Senior and Topo- graphic Draftsman, salary, $1,800 to $2,600; Head Principal and Senior Photographer, Optional Branches- General ' Commercial Photography, Wet Plate Photography, Portraiture, Clinical Photography, Motion Picture Photography, Aerial or Mosaic, and Scientific Photography, salary, $2,000 to $2,600; Photographer, Assistant, Junior and Under Photographer (Wet Plate or Dry Plate), salary, $1,260 to $1,800; Principal, Senior, Assistant and Lithographic Draftsman, salary, $1,620 to $2,300; Inspector of Scales and Weighing and Assistant, Bureau of Animal Industry, Department of Agriculture, salary, $2,000 to $2,600. For further information concerning these examinations, call at 201 Mason Hall, office hours, 9 to 12 and 2 to 4 p.m. Conference on Religion, July 12, 13 Prof Wilhelm Pauck, Chicago Theological Seminary, will deliver three lectures--the opening lecture, Sunday at 8 p.m., at the First Con- gregational Church upon "Our Cul- ture and the Outlook for Christian- ity." Two lectures upon "Unrealized Spiritual Resources of the Bible" will be given by Prof. Leroy Waterman, one of the translators who produced "An American Translation," (1927), 2 p.m. Monday and Tuesday. A Symposium by men representing Medicine, Religion and Psychology will discuss "Common Problems of Religion and Mental Hygiene." 3 p.m. Rare manuscripts will be exhibited Monday by Prof. Henry A. Sanders who will give two lectures upon "The Epistles of Paul in the Third Cen- tury," Monday and Tuesday at 11 a.m. Most of the sessions will be in the Grand Rapids room at the League. Open to all members of the Summer Session. E. W. Blakeman, Counselor in Re- ligious Education. 9 a.m., Early service (conducted in German). 9:30 a.m., Church School. 10:30 a.m., Morning worship with sermon by the pastor on "Increase of Faith." First Presbyterian Church: Meeting at the Masonic Temple, 327 South Fourth Ave. Dr. Robert Worth Frank, of the Chicago The- ological Seminary, is the preacher for the period of the summer school. He will speak every Sunday morning at the worship service at 10:45 a.m. This Sunday his topic is "The Recoil of Judgments." Summer Session Students are re- quested to reserve Sunday evening, July 12, at 5:30 for a complimentary plate supper to be given on the lawn of the new church site at 1432 Wash- tenaw Ave., just belond the intersec- tion of South University Ave. Prof. Howard Y. McClusky will speak on the theme: "Our Immediate Past." Congregational Church: Service of worship at 10:45 a.m. Mr. Heaps will speak on "The Wisdom of the Human Body" with particular reference to the recent pronounce- ments of Dr. Richard Cabot. Grace Johnson Konold ,soloist, will sing Hamblen's "Cast Thy Burden on the Lord." A special invitation is extended to Congregational summer students. Summer School Students: The reg- ular Sunday evening meeting for Episcopal students will be held this evening at the cottage of Mr. F. J. Davidson at Whitmore Lake. Cars will leave St. Andrew's Church at 5 p.m. All students and their friends are cordially invited. Stalker Hall: Wesleyan Guild meet- ing Sunday at 6 p.m. Prof. Preston Slosson will speak on "Christianity's Answer to International Questions." Fellowship hour and refreshments following the meeting. First Methodist Church: Morning worship at '0:45 a.m. Dr. William E. Harrison, Superintendent of Ann Arbor District, will preach on "The Mood of Emancipation." First Baptist Church, Sunday: 10:45 am., Morning worship. Ser- mon by minister, Rev. R. Edward Sayles, on "The Difficulties of Faith.',' The Church School meets at 9:3, a.m. Roger Williams Guild, student or- ganization, 6 p.m. in the parlors of the Guild House, 503 E. Huron St., opposite the church. Prof. Leroy Wa- terman will give the first of two spe- cial. addresses, speaking on "An Un- tried Religion: The Old Testament." Next Sunday evening the second de- velopment will be, "An Untried Re- ligion: The - New Testament." Op- portunity for questions will be given. A social period and refreshments will follow the program. TO HIKE 1,000 MILES KALAMAZOO, July 10.-VP')-Bel-1 den Hoyt, 79 year old Richland town- ship farmer, said Friday he would start a thousand mile hitch-hiking trip Monday to visit his brother Os- car at Stafford, Kan., on his 90th birthday. Hoyt was at one time a prohibition candidate for governor. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L New York .............52 24 Detroit ...............42 34 Boston.............43 35 Washington ...........41 36 Cleveland ............40 38 Chicago ...............36 39 Philadelphia ...........25 48 St. Louis.............23 48 FRIDAY'S RESULTS Washington 5, Detroit 0. New York 18, Cleveland 0. Chicago 8, Boston 2. SATURDAY'S GAMES Detroit at Washington. Cleveland at New York. Chicago at Boston. St. Louis at Philadelphia (2) NATIONAL LEAGUE Pct. .684 .553 ..551 .532 .513 .480 .342 .324 1 EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS 6:00-WJR Stevenson Sports. WWJ Ty Tyson. WXYZ Olympic Eliminations. CKLW Blackstone Trio. 6:15-WJR Carl Rupp. WWJ Dinner Music. WXYZ Day in Review. CKLW News and ports. 6:30--WJR Song Stylists. WWJ Heinie's Grenadiers. WXYZ Key Ring. CKLW Sherlock Holmes. 6:45-WJR Musical Program. WWJ sports Parade. WXYZ Rubilnoff-Rea. 7:00-WJR Saturday Swing Session. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Town Talk. CKLW Al Kavelin's Music. 7:15-WXYZ Sandlotters. 7 :30-WJR Al Roth's Syncopators. WWJ Meredith Wilson'sMusic. WXYZ Goldman Band. CKLW Variety Revue. 8:00-WJR Bruna Castagna Orchestra. WWJ Jamboree. CKLW Turf Talk. 8:15-CKLW Serenade. 8 :30-WJR Salon Moderne. WWJ Smith Ballew: Victor Young's Music. WXYZ National Barn Dance. CKLW Music Hall. 9 :00-WJR Your Hit Parade. CKLW Gems of Melody. 9:30-WWJ Springtime. WXYZ Ferde Grofe. CKLW Lloyd Huntley's Music. 10:00-WJR Bob Crosby's Music. WWJ Sport Celebrities. WXYZ Ted Lewis' Music. CKLW Baseball Scores: News. 10:15-WWJ Tiger Highlights: Evening Melodies. WXYZ Karl Spaeth. CKLW Mal Hallett's Music. 10:30--WJR Hal Kemp's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Al Donahue's Music. CKLW Grif William's Music. 11 :00-WJR Little Jack Little's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Jimmie Jenkins. CKLW Tommy Dorsey's Music. 11:30-WJR Bernie Cummins' Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Henry King's Music. CKLW Joe Sander's Music. 12:00-WWJ Dance Music. 2 wXYZ Les Arquette's Music. CKLW Dick Barry's Music. 12:30-CKLW Guy Lombardo's Music. 1 :00-CKLW Horace Heidt's Music. Bethlehem Evangelical South Fourth Ave. Schmale, pastor. Church. Theodore .. w .. '. r .s- "aM )>. Chicago ...... St. Louis ..... Pittsburgh New York .... Cincinnati Boston ....... Philadelphia . . Brooklyn ..... W ...... . .46 47 .........42 ..........39 38 36 28 24 L 27 28 34 35 35 41 47 52 F .E .f r .. t .. .. .. .. Pct. .630 .627 .553 .527 .521 .468 .373 .316 in- I""rrw"!u+irw ' " ; . "4 . 1 f t ,,. _ .- , / F , .5rd l /!' t J G' 1 :3 o ,. X Ts' ' ' ~ / r r sq F 4 .. / ! J ffrti { 'f li , __ . . SEEK F.D.R. FOR SPEECH GRAND RAPIDS, July 10.--(P)- Young Democrats of Western Michi- gan started petitions Friday to urge President Roosevelt to include Grand ,Rapids on his fall itinerary. The pe- titions will be circulated from Tra- verse City to Kalamazoo. FRIDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 6, Brooklyn 2. Boston 4, Cincinnati 1. Philadelphia 9, Pittsburgh 6. New York 4, St. Louis 4 (game complete). SATURDAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. Boston at Cincinnati. Brooklyn at Chicago. New York at St. Louis. 11 iT = r MICHIGAN REPERTORY PLAYERS present "POST ROAD" Mitchell and Steele's MYSTERY COMEDY III II' E U II U. BENJAMIN FRANKLI, -~~vPaxerMarx Or, wporld c 'f its greatest writers ;j dioren& 4Franklin. o ~ t his %eu. oWvvx ran m .signert 'Declazion of tip hd ,;rt, " uting ,tWMr-b*i tworld. advaa menti41, e X21an di3tia... !!! I III if I 11 l