THE MICHIGAN DAILY Charlevoix Will Be Setting For '35 Title Quest Koesis, Captain-Elect Of Michigan Golf Team, To Defend Amateur Crown 'Pro's' Also Meet Both Events To Be Over The Belvedere Country Club Course CHARLEVOIX, July 10. - (P) - Jake Fassezke, Jackson professional, and Charles Kocsis, Detroit simon- pure, will defend their respective titles next week in the Michigan Open and Amateur golf tournaments here. Both events will be over the Belve- dere Golf club's course. It will be the first time that the Open has been awarded to a city north of Grand Rapids, although the Charlevoix club was the site of the amateur cham- pionships in 1930 and 1931. The Michigan professional golfers' association and the Michigan state golf league are joint sponsors of the Open tourney, which will take place July 15 and 16. The entrants will compete for $500 in cash prizes, the awards to be made on the basis of 72 holes of medal play. The .29th Michigan amateur will open July 18 with a 36-hole qualify- ing round. The thirty-two low scorers will qualify for the championship flight. Hapsburgs Are Granted Their Old Privileges Diet Unanimously Revokes Punishment And Gives Back Property VIENNA, July 10. -(P) - The Fed- eral diet unanimously passed a bill today revoking punishments against the former ruling family of the Baps- burgs and restoring to the Hapsburg their confiscated property. As soon as President Miklas signs the measure, it becomes a law. By it, the Archduke Otto, Europe's most-discussed young man, regains his ancestral properties. Otto Is Busy It was reported today that he has adopted the brain trust idea for work- ing out imperial aims. A monarchist just returned from a visit to Steenockerzeel castle in Bel- gium, seat of exile of the pretender to the Austrian throne, said today Otto is organizing a quasi-cabinet of the best monarchist minds. This informant said the archduke is thoroughly in agreement with official statements of the Austrian govern- ment to the effect that "restoration is not a question of the moment for Austria." It is in furtherance of this plan that he, is rounding up advisers to coordinate tendencies in Austria and other succession states toward an ul- timate reunion of the Danubian states under the historic Hapsurg sceptre. .Hapsburgs 'Take Their Time' With Otto only 22 years old and the family wealth restored, the Hapsburgs can afford to take their time to avoid "selling out cheap," that is, accepting a limited restoration in Austria only under conditions binding their hands for the future. His advisers have agreed that the European situation is extremely liquid in tendencies, not only in Austria but also in other succession states, streng- thening daily the historic pull of Hapsburg tradition on the minds of Danubian populations. Close Touch Sought It is to keep in close touch with all these trends and to coordinate them that the monarchist brain trust is being formed. The archduke is said to have been assured the Austrian government's cooperation, with Austria to continue functioning as a nucleus around which Danubian empire sentiments may crystallize. Another step toward a social setup prevalent in pre-war times was sched- uled to be taken here soon with pas- sage of a law officially restoring old titles to the nobility. Whatever It is- Johnson Likes It NEW YORK, July 10.- (P) -Under the reign of Gen. Hugh S. Johnson as Works Progress administrator in New York City, "boondoggling" will continue to be one of the emphasized relief projects. "Boondoggling," a craft which weaves useful objects out of leather and old rope, was a subject of heated contenition in the recent investigation of the city's relief administration. SENTENCED 32 YEARS LATE SEVIERVILLE, Tenn., July 10.-! How They Keep Cool In The Tall Corn Belt orman Bright Races To New 2 - Mile Record, Breezes By Pace - Setter In Last Lap; Peacock Beats Owens Again NEW YORK, July 10. --(4) - A new star has appeared in the track firmament, and his name is Bright. Norman Bright of Bellingham, Wash., who wears the colors of the San Francisco Olympic club, raced to a new American two-mile record! last night on the rain-soaked track of New York University at Ohio field. Bright allowed Joe McCluskey toE make the pace until the last lap, when he breezed by the leader like a dash man and breasted the tape 30 yards in front in the new American time of 9 minutes 13.2 seconds, more than two seconds faster than the former! mark of 9:15.4. Eulace Peacock, the latest Negro speed sensation, turned in his third victory over Jesse Owens of Ohio State in the century dash, but Owens evened matters for the meet by taking the broad jump. Peacock, fast on the getaway, was nearly overhauled at the tape, winning by a scant foot in 9.7. Her Nose Is Safe All You Have To Do Is Say "Tag' To A Whale To Win $5 LONDON, July 10. -(P) -There's $5 in it for anyone who bags an Ant- arctic whale and finds a small steel. number plate concealed somewhere n the beast's blubber. It isn't a gag. The royal research ship William Scoresby just 'has returned from a 30,000 mile trip through the Antarc- tic, during which it "tagged" over 800 blue, sperm, humpback and fin whale. The metal plates were shot into the whales with an elephant gun. There is a price on every plate when returned to the British Colonial of- fice with details of the spot where the whale was killed, and the date. Twen- ty plates already have been paid for. Fear that whales are being killed in certain areas in such numbers as to make hunting trips unprofitable was the reason for the voyage. The mark- ed whales will show how the great beasts of the sea migrate. Michigan State To Need More Money EAST LANSING, July 10.-!P)- Michigan State college will ask the state board of agriculture Friday to approve a budget of $1,272,903.47 for salaries and maintenance and an ad- ditional $11,750 to make up the bal- ance of its fund for extension work. The Federal government has pro- vided $178,000 as a matched fund for extension work. The state has ap- propriated only $166,250. The addi- tional $11,750 must be provided as the state's share or it will lose the Federal benefit. Last year's budget for salaries and maintenance was an even $1,000,000. In recovering from nis baffling and persistent batting slump, Lou Gehrig of the Yankees gained 43 percentage points in the month of June to hop over the .300 mark. Johnson &Cushing YOUR FORD AGENTS at 400 west Washington SaGjR Good USED FORDS When Betty Shaw, (above) goes swimming in the hot sun at Santa Catalina Island, Calif., she wears a 'nose shade," the latest aid to beauty for prevention of a blistered nose. RETURNS TO SUMMER HOME After a short stay in Ann Arbor which was taken up by routine mat-; ters, President Alexander G. Ruthven' returned yesterday to his summer home, near Frankfort, Mich.J I -Associated Press Photo. When the temperature got up in the nineties in Des Moines these three girls got themselves a 400-pound cake of ice and laughed at the weather. Left to right: Lillian Yeglin, Belle Mogolov and Ruth Caplan. Max's Romantic Knockout Isn't F mal; Separation Is Planned i i Watch Repairing! HALLER'S Jewelry State and Liberty 1934 TUDOR 1933 4-DOOR 1931 TUDOR= 1930 COUPE 1930 ROADSTER 1929 TUDOR mww 1 1 WASHINGTON, July 10. - UP) = The Max Baers are a very hap- py couple and reports of a rift in their recent marriage are "all' wet." At least, so said Max upon ar- riving here by plane today from New York en route to Johns Hop- kins Hospital in Baltimore to have his injured hands examined. NEW YORK, July 10.-(P) -Max Baer, leaping a hundred paces ahead of the gossipers, says that he and his bride of 11 days are parting. The bride was somewhat ahead or behind with a paradoxical com- ment: "We are very happy." For what conclusions that can be drawn from the facts, here they are: The former heavyweight boxing champion, accompanied by a girl who! was formerly believed engaged to him, met a group of friends in a midtown restaurant last night, and said of himself and bride: "I'm Jewish and she's Catholic, so it's no go. The marriage is on the rocks." Mrs. Baer, the former Mary Ellen Sullivan, who married him in Wash- ington, D.C., on June 29, was in- formed last night of the statement Bank Surveys Show Boost In Saving Deposits, at the Baer cottage in Long Branch, N. J. She laughed and said: "We are very happy. I talked to Max at 5 o'clock today and if there was anything wrong then, he failed to mention it." As to her husband's being in the company of his former fiancee, Mary Kirk Brown, Mrs. Baer said: It's all right with me. I just didn't want to go to the city." Mrs. Baer's father, James P: Sulli- can, Sr., said at Ithaca that he had heard of nothing about a rift, "I don't know anything about it," he said. "Besides, if they have de- cided to separate because of religious differences, that's their business." Friends quoted Baer as saying he left his bride last Monday after her insistence that they be married again by a Cat holic priest. They were mar- ried by Judge F. Dickinson Letts. "She said as long as I was not a Catholic and we had not been married in a religious ceremony, she was really not my wife. in the eyes of the church. That was why I left her and came to New York." It was because he was Jewish, he said, that he refused to be party to a second marriage. "I didn't know she took her religion so seriously," he added. Though apparently cancelled by his later statements, Baer's first asser- tion when asked about the report that he and his wife were separating was: "My God, I hope not." He planned to fly today to Balti- more for treatment of his hands, in- jured when he lost his championship to James J. Braddock. Only 82 Left! InOnly On**e and One Hlalf Days-, Over 290 Copies Have Been Sold! Be Sure To Get Your Copy of the STDT *DIRET R Today! state Financial R11JriASei' 11 n( Marks 52.59 Per Gain This Year e ort Cent lHe will be a patient in Johns Hop- kins hospital, and his right hand may be operated on. His left hand is expected to heal with a splint. LANSING, July 10. - (IP) - Ray O. Brundage, managing secretary of the Michigan Bankers Association, said today the Michigan public is laying a large financial backlog against ad- versity. He said a survey of banks in the state showed savings deposits have in- creased 52.59 per cent in volume over last year and the number of deposit~s has increased 46.31 per cent. He em- phasized that the canvass did not reach every bank in the state, but that it reached what he considered a "true cross section" of the banking industry. Brundage said the survey indicated these increases in representative sec- tion of the state : In western Michigan, total savings 53.75 per cent, number of depositors 33.25 per cent; Central Michigan, sav- ings 44.80 per cent, number of de- positors 75.80 per cent; Southern Michigan, largely rural, savings 44.25 per cent, depositors 48 per cent; Thumb district, savings 15.66 per cent, depositors 20 per cent. The greatest increase was in De- troit, Brundage said, where the vol- ume of savings increased 104.50 per cent. The smallest increase was in the upper peninsula, Brundage said. There the gain in total savings was 3.5 per cent and in savings accounts it was 5.8 per cent. He attributed the small increases to the depressed con- dition of the mining industry. PAGING 'SUITCASE SIMPSON' BOSTON, July 10. -- (P) --- This athletic age apparently is not so com- plimentary to the feet. Ruth Kerr of New York, the only woman in the country who styles shoes for both men and women, said hereathat shoe sizes are getting big- ger and bigger every day. "The average woman's foot has x- pande from 51/ to size 7," she said, "and the average man's foot size is 101% as compared with 9% in the old I! L I Sorority Will Initiate 16 At RitualsToday Formal initiation will be held for 16 pledges of Pi Lambda Theta, women's honorary education sorority, at 5:30 p.m. today in University Elementary School Library. The cere- monies will be followed by a formal banquet at the Lantern Shop. Miss Marguerite Hall is in charge of ar- rangements. The list of pledges includes Sarah Breese, Lenore Bader, Marian De- maree, Esther Gerber, Marie Har- rison, Judith Jiminez, Evelyn Miller, Elinor Philips, Lena Schermann, Charlotte Turnbull, Cynthia Ruggles, Helen Reily, Alice Torrey, Evelyn Jones, Frances Thornton and Ger- trude Muxen. Sponsors for each pledge at the initiation ceremony include Lyda Mc- Henry, Freda Meyer,aEthel Wooden, Ethel Gr'aham, Elizabeth Ferguson King, Amanda Zwener, Hazel Rick, Olga Wright, Isabel Jackson, Grace Miller, Blanche Rousseau, Ruby Strickland, Helen Hayes, Roxie An- drews ,Firth, Mildred Webber, and Cleo Murtland. The DINING ROOM of the Theta Xi Fraternity 1345 Washtenaw has additional accommodation i Complete List of Names, Addresses d T~'h n umb r falnts and Faculty Members of the Uni'versi.ty. r wr n A ! rl I ri P HON E OR DE RS P OEPhone 2-1214 and a Stud nt Directory will be delivered toyour door. A charge of 10c will be added to cover delivery service. it IIif I