lJESDAY, JULY 21, 1934 L-- MICHIGAN DAILY TilE MICHIGAN DAILY - .- --- -- t -- --mmmmummommm I NEWS Of The DAY (From The Associated Press) Japan Angry Over Chino-U.S. Agreement TOKYO, July 21.-(Tuesday) -(A)-Reports of an agreement for a large American credit to China to purchase airplanes, au- tomobiles and railway rolling stock were contained in dis- patches from Shanghai printed in vernacular newspapers today. A majority of the papers treat- ed the reported plan as a menace to Japan's interests in China. The Nichi Nichi's correspon- dent asserted that Arthur Camp- bell, a United States financial representative, and T. V. Soong, president of the Bank of China, signed the agreement at the United States." consulate at Shanghai July 15. "Since the credit was virtually used to bolster China's national defense, Japan cannot overlook it," the newspaper said. Pilots Will Begin Tour Of Michigan MACKINAC ISLAND, July 20. -(A)-Forty members of the Sportsman Pilots' Association were here tonight for a two-day meeting that serves as an inter- lude in their leisurely air tour of Michigan. The airmen, traveling in 17 planes, left their ships at St. Ignace. Heading tfhe tour is Chester H. Warrington, national president of the association. The flight will end at Detroit next Monday. Madrid March Is Predicted In Spanish Revolt Barcelona Bombing Kills 200; Government Claims It Has 'Upper Hand' (Continued from Page 1) Montana barracks in Madrid revolt- ed but quickly submitted. "The situation in general has im- proved today. "The Spanish government is send- ing news by radio in Spanish, English, French and German every hour from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. (EST)." CEUTA, Spanish Morocco, July 20. -(OP)-Gen. Francisco Franco, leader of the Spanish military rebellion, told the Reuters (British) news agency correspondent here tonight his aim was to save western Europe "from the menace of Russian Communism." By ELMER W. PETERSON (Copyright, 1936, by the Associated Press) BIARRITZ, France, July 20. - (IP) -A battle between Spanish rebels ad- vancing from Pamplona and workers armed by the government appeared -probable tonight at the important northern city of San Sebastian. I As this correspondent left San Sebastian with more than 300 for- eigners, including some other Amer- icans, all roads into San Sebastian were barricaded with sandbags and metal oil-drums. There were reports the insurgents had blown up several important bridges as they moved on the city. Gangs of workers raced through the streets of San Sebastian in comman- deered autos, with shotguns and re-1 volvers pointed menacingly out of the1 windows. Sounds of constant sniping were heard almost everywhere in the city. No estimate of the number of dead or wounded in the region were avail- able in San Sebastian, although it was generally considered high. Before the bus caravan left San Sebastian, the tourists heard the gov- ernor of the Guipuzcoa department,k in a radio broadcast, appeal to leftistf workers to help defend the city fromf the approaching rebel forces. Peasants and children along thek road over which we traveled to the frontier shook clenched fists in ap- proval at the red flags flying on the radiator caps of the busses.z Frequent stops were made to re-f move the makeshift barricades from the roads. Communist workers who built them helped clear a passage for the busses. Major Leagues Nine Persons Lose Lives In Crossing T ragedy At Dundee Directory Lists Nearby Places Of Recreation Wasatenaw County Map AbLo Available As Guide For Summer Students For the benefit of those summer students who have not yet discovered where to go and what to do in the line of summer recreation, a map of Washtenaw County and directory of places of interest is obtainable, free of charge, at the League or Union desks or at the business office of the University, it was announced yester- day. The map and directory lists every kind of recreation possible in these parts. For those who like to spend their leisure time on or near the water. there are suggested places for canoe trips, picnicking, boating, and fishing and bathing. On ,cooler days when hiking is en- joyable, .seven different hikes in the vicinity of Ann Arbor can be taken. Twenty golf courses are also listed, the first six being in the immediate vicinity of Ann Arbor. Those who are fortunate in having cars may make use of the eleven in- teresting drives from Ann Arbor to suggested places such as the Huron River Drive, along which can be seen the old dams and mills of the early settlers of Michigan. The Map and Directory also lists 58 scenic and historic places in Washtenaw County, including lakes and camps and pro- jects such as the Ford Cooperative Farms and the Waterloo Project. INVESTIGATE FIRE SERIES CARO, July 20. - (P)-Sheriff George J. Jeffrey began today an investigation of fires which destroyed farm buildings and livestock on three farms within a six-mile radius within three nights. One of the blazes was at the farm of Prosecutor Bates Wills. -Associated Press Photo. Nine persons, members of two Pennsylvania families, lost their lives in this automobile, shown after it was struck by an Ann Arbor railroad train on a crossing near Dundee, Mich. The wreckage was strewn along the right-of-way by the train and the bodies of the victims were hurled into the nearby Raisin River. Parker And Brackett Plan Tour Of Resorts To Continue Painting Former Michigan Commits Suicide Woman CHICAGO, July 20.-(AP)-Mrs. Edith Kinsey, 37, formerly of Grand Rapids, was taken to Lakeview Hospital today after, the police said, she swallowed poison in a taxicab in front of her home. An unaddressed, pencilled let- ter found in her apartment, po- lice said, told of her intention to "die other than God planned." It cited financial difficulties. Jack Terman, who told au- thorities he was a friend of the family, said the woman was the former wife of Elmer Kinsey, a Grand Rapids real estate man. He said they were divorced four years ago. Near the letter was a list of stock investments, with this quo- tation: "This list of $133,000 is now worth just $3,250. It's all I have to offer." Dr. Blakeman's Son Drowns Near Here (Continued from Page l) the spot where his body was recovered is about 30 feet deep. The boys had gone out to a cot- tage owned by William Stevens, 17 years old, who had built the diving bell. Sheriff's officers were unable to notify Dr. Blakeman until last night, as he had left the city after visits to Patterson Lake and the Boy Scout camp at Dexter. The Blake- man home is at 5 E. Harvard Place. Upon being notified of the tragedy last night, Dr. Blakeman said he was unable to believe that it had hap- pened as reported. "My son has been attending summer camps ever since he was a little boy, and learned to swim when he was four years old. He, Baldwin, and Stevens, were all members of the Ann Arbor High School swimming team," he told The Daily last night, ."and he was cap- tain of it. "Furthermore, the beach out there is being carelessly run. I can't be- lieve that it happened as you say it did. I've talked to the doctor, and a good swimmer, and it can't be right." He said that he had gone to a park in Plymouth with friends from Baltimore during the afternoon, and had returned at about 6 p.m., but had not gone to his home. He left no I word when he went away because there was nobody at home. Play Production Director And University Graduate Paint For Own Tastes The artistic scheme of Oren Parker, art director for Play Production dur- ing the winter season, and Donald Brackett, a recent graduate of the University Art School, is doing very nicely according to the two sun- burned painters who just returned from Charlevoix, Mich., where they found ample material to keep them busily sketching for a solid week. They plan to make a tour of re- sort sections, there to do oils and water colors of their surroundings, and then set up exhibitions in the hope of selling enough paintings to finance them to California. "We discovered right away that it doesn't pay to paint with the idea of the public in mind at all," Mr. Parker said. "Now we paint an ar- tistic setting if we ourselves think it is sufficiently artistic. We're getting grand training this way. We're learn- ing to paint and also giving the public better painting to boot," he con- tinued. The partnership of the two artists FARM HAND PLEADS GUILTY COLDWATER, July 20. - ( ) - Stanley Marsh, a farm hand, pleaded guilty Monday to slaying Jacob Bishop, 72-year-old farmer, a week ago and was sentenced to a life term in the branch State Prison at Mar- quette. State Police Lieut. Van A. Loomis said Marsh confessed killing Bishop to rob him. READ THE WANT ADS New Yo Clevela Boston Detroit Chicag( Washin Philade St. Lou AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. ork ............58 30 nd ...........49 39 .48 41 .. . . .. . . 46 40 o...............46 40 gton ........ .45 41 ?lphia .........28 57 is ....... . . ....27 58 Pct. 659 557 539 535 535 523 329 318 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Detroit Boston at Cleveland. New York at St. Louis. Washington at Chicago. NATIONAL LEAGUE pionship bracket and which will play in the first flight. Threengames will be played this week in the intramural softball league. The schedule is as follows: Tuesday, Tigers vs. Braves, Cubs vs. Reds, Bees vs. Giants, Yanks vs. Cards, and Indian vs. Dodgers. Wed- nesday, Tigers vs. Indians, Dodgers vs. Reds, Cubs vs. Braves, Bees vs. Cards, and Yanks vs. Giants; Thurs- day, Cubs vs. Indians, Giants vs. Dod- gers, Tigers vs. Cards, Bees vs. Reds, and Yanks vs. Braves. The men's doubles tennis pairings' are as follows: Finley-Olson vs. Neil- son-Gardner, Briggs-Wright vs. Kas- alopoff-Coleman, Panzarella-Lau vs. Coulter-Reider, Thomson-Aroian vs. Zimmerman-Anderson, Taylor-Grein vs. Bell-Miles, and Routh-White vs. Jones-Graban. The standing in the softball is quite unique in that this type of easel-travelling has only been at- tempted before by groups or schools. Single artists don't care to move around as much since it is difficult to arrange exhibitions and get acquaint- ed in the various communities. "We painted steadily for a week in Charlevoix without getting acquaint- ed with anyone at all," Mr. Parker went on. "So we finally decided to go to the Artisan Guild Theatre, which is a branch of the Detroit group, and there, happily enough, we. found theatre people we both knew. Mr. Hudwick, director of the group, helped us to arrange an exhibition at the Belvidere Hotel there, the largest in Charlevoix, and he's also giving us a spot on the program and an exhibition in their lobby." Recalls Experience Mr. Parker smiled as he recalled the numerous interesting experiences that they have had during their Northern tour. "One day a mischiev- ous-looking little urchin came along while I was painting on the dock," he said. "I expected him .to pull a trick like pushing me in the water but he just stood there and looked at the painting rather quietly for awhile, when suddenly he asked me, 'Hey, mister, you didn't paint like that when you were little like I am,did you?' " Some of the work of the two cam- pus-artists has been on exhibition in the lobby of the Women's League. Their painting features something of the color of the impressionists which is painting simply with the pure, primary colors of red, yellow and blue, such as Paul Honore, the cele- brated mural-painter of Royal Oak, under whom they are both studying at the present time, utilizes. Estes Park Next Stop The pair will return to Charlevoix to set up their exhibition and try to' earn as much as possible before they undertake their next jump which is to Estes Park, Colorado. Both of them do oils and water colors and Mr. Brackett also does wood-blocks. Their versatility makes it possible to satisfy any kind of order that they might get. They plan to make notes' all the way to the coast and spend their time in California, which will include some observation in Holly- wood, in studying the rural scenery and the beauty for which California is noted. "We plan to have a full exhibition at Hudson's in Detroit in the fall," Parker said, "which will include all of our paintings and notes." SHIRTS $1.15 ea., 3 for $2.95 Values to $3.50 POLO SH IRTS 79c ea., 3 for $2.35 $1.00 and $2.50 :Values HOSIERY Fine Quality Imported Wool Summer Weight 20% Discount WH ITE LINEN SUITS Now $13.95 upward Values from $18.50 Small Charge for Alterations t- Quantities are limited - All from our VAN BOVEN'S Annual Summer CLEARANCE SALE ALL MERCHANDISE IS SEASONABLE GABARDINE SUITS 20% / Discount W. Chicago .............53 St. Louis .............53 Pittsburgh ...........44 New York ............45 Boston ..............41 Philadelphia .........33 Brooklyn ............30 L. 31 33 41 41 46 52 55 Pet. 631 616 518 506 471 388 353 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at New York. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia. Chicago at Brooklyn. Cincinnati at Boston. Tennis, Golf, Figure On Intramural Card The intramural program for this week was announced today by Ernie Smith, who is in charge of the ac- tivities. The second round of the men's singles tennis tournament will be played at 4:15 and 5:15 p.m. today. The doubles tourney will start to- morrow afternoon at the same time. An all-campus golf tournament will start this week, with threesomes be- ing played Wednesday to determine which players will play in the cham- league : Reds ....... Yankees ... Tigers Cubs ....... Cards..... Giants ..... Braves ..... Bees..... ............ ............ ............ ....... .. .... ............ ............ ............ ............ W. L. Pet. .3 0 1.000 .3 0 1.000 .2 1 .667 .1 2 .333 1 2 .333 1 2 .333 1 3 .250 0 2 .000 0 0 .0001 0 0 .000 TROPICAL WORSTED SU ITS 20% Discount SLACKS, Now $2.15 $2.95 Value Small Charge for Alterations TROUSERS Flannel and 4abardine ZO% "Discount il MEN'S FOOTWEAR Now $4.85 up Values to $12.50 Dodgers........... Indians ............. I .: --- 1 Typewriter,,; Rentals RIDER'S 302 SOUTH STATE STREET . f . r STATE STREET Repair Service Supplies I' *---. U __ I U I . . Eat in a Clean, Cool Atmosphere 00 -00 -0 00 SPECIAL LUNCHES and DINNERS 25.c, 38c, 45c III I F I I