THE MICHIGAN DAILY Federal Trade Commission To Work With New NRA i I --Associated Press Photo. Arrangements for the Federal trade commission and the skeletonized NRA to carry out with industry voluntary code agreements supplanting the code structure invalidated by the Supreme Court were made by President Roosevelt at a White House conference. Among those attending were, left to right: C. H. March, E. U. Davis, James O'Ncill, NRA head; G. S. Ferguson and W. A. Ayres. Mrs. Harry L Hopkins Enjoys Excitement Of Washington Life WASHINGTON, July 5 - (P) - matye friends where she can knit - Pretty Barbara Hopkins drove back usually for Diana, the Hopkins in- from New York with a four-month- fant - and where she can discuss old cocker-spaniel beside her as a gift the boks she and "Harry" read aloud for her two-year-old daughter, Diana. to each other in the evening "Name, please?" said her husband, The "new deal" practically shang- Harry L. Hopkins, the relief adminis- haied her husband for a while, and trator. will again as the new works-relief "The kennels call him 'New Deal,'" money begins to flow into the hopper. said Mrs. Hopkins, "but I'm naming But she contents herself with aid Mrs Hopki "bbooks, baby and some driving which him for you."she "adores." And that's nice, because 'S 'at so? And what's that?" her husband hates driving. asked Hopkins. Her husband takes one wifely wor- "'Buffer,' " said the lady, "you ry off her shoulders. If he says he'll know - between things." go to a dinner, he goes. She drives "That's what you think," said to the office and picks him up, drives Hopkins. "For that you have to lis- home, slips into a lemon-yellow satin ten to the speech I'm writing." just in time to see the relief adminis- "Delighted!" said Mrs. Hopkins. trator emerging from his room with And she can look really "delighted." his white tie in place. She has a warm, fleeting smile that But the other worries are hers. She changes expression and still stays a buys the shirts, the socks, the thous- smile. She's slender. Her skin is and and one things - all except the ivory. She uses no rouge, but her lip- ties. stick and fingernail polish match. "Washington has cut out Harry's She's one of the prettiest of the "new golf and my swimming, and we can't deal" wives. have many of the picnics we love. What's more, she's one of the most But the place is so exciting I wouldn't elusive. She doesn't like "mob" social miss it," she says. life. She prefers small groups of inti- Mrs. Hopkins knows boats from stem to stern because she was born in Port Huron, Mich. Her name was RIAN CHURCH Barbara Duncan. She took two years I at Ann Arbor, and then went to New T EM PLE IYork for a hospital course which she followed with welfare work for chil- urth Avenue dren's health clinics. MAN W. KUNKEL, Assoc. Minister "There wasn't anything exciting ock (Communion Service) about my work," she says. "I just col- 4o.] 1 1. A Present H e 1 lected funds. I guess the only thing P I can boast about doing is swimming e Church House, 1432 Washtenaw the St. Clair river at home when I )OKS AT RELIGION was 10. But, at that, father sent a boat to follow me, and he sat on the Y, Director of Social Service. bank wtih his binoculars and shout- M~eeting at 6:30 ed directions." Sahara Plans Lighthouse To Guide Camels Man's Second Victory In Taming Of Desert Near Famous Gas Pump ALGIERS, July 5. - () - The first lighthouse ever to be built in a des- ert soon will send out a beam of light to guide camel, motor and air caravans across the Sahara's track- less waste. Erected a few feet away from Bidon V, famous gas pump in the heart of the desolate Tanezrouft re- gion, the new lighthouse represents man's second victory in the taming of the Sahara. Bidon V, an emergency filling sta- tion for thirsty planes and cars en route across the desert, was the first conquest. Equipped with a powerful gas-lit beacon, pivoting on a tall slender metal pylon a hundred feet high, the lighthouse can be seen 30 miles away on clear nights. Heavy metal tubes of "bottled gas" have to be transported hundreds of miles across the desert to supply the new station with power. Electrical lighting was inadvisable because of the heavy expense involved in wiring the new station to the nearest power- house, several hundred miles distant. The new beacon is named after General Vuillemin, flight commander who safely led a squadron of French planes across the Sahara in 1933. '0(d Dobbin' Gets His Way In Texas DALLAS, Tex., July 5. - (P) - Old Dobbin still has the right-of-way in Texas. .Horses enjoy superior rights over automobiles under a pre-machine age law. The law is still on the books, a number of motorists have learned to their surprise. Not only is the owner of a horse pro- tected on the roads, but should a thief steal an animal worth but $5 he is penalized with the same severity that would follow theft of a $1,000 auto- mobile. Motorists must slow down on ap- proaching a ridden or driven horse, and must stop if the ride or driver signals. POLICE COURSES FAVORED EAST LANSING, July 5 -- () - The Michigan State College gave ap- proval in principle Tuesday to the curriculum for the proposed police training school to be added to the college courses in the fall. The faculty took two or three weeks to study the curriculum in detail. The State Board of Agriculture at its meeting July 12, will pass final judgment on whether the course ac- tually shall be installed at the fall term this year. A majority of the members have expressed themseves in favor of it. - Shanghaied by a Silly Salt? \' }r j t (3ol0 CIGARETTES 4 ti t x -Wr fAs f3£ # Ebf A L k -------------- Whe mretireeA fL inne-r TnrnvPC be. Ra fl1-