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July 17, 1935 - Image 4

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1935-07-17

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T HE MICHIGAN DAILY

THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1935

I womww

Mrs. Waley Is
Sentenced To
20-Year Term
Kidnaping Accomplice Is
Ordered To Detention
Farm At Milan
TACOMA, Wash., July 17. - (P)
- Mrs. Margaret Thulin Waley,
19, convicted in the George
Weyerhaeuser kidnap case last Satur-
day, was sentenced by U. S. District
Judge E. E. Cushman today to serve
20 years in the Federal detention
farm at Milan, Mich.
Judge Cushman denied her motion
for an arrest of judgment and a new
trial after overruling the govern-
ment's objections to the motions be-
ing filed more than three days after
her conviction.
Chief Defense Counsel John F.
Dore submitted his motions without
any more argument than he had
fnade during the trial last week.
Mrs. Waley showed no outward
sign of emotion when called to the
bar for sentencing. She stood mute
when Judge Cushmansasked her if
she had anything to say why sen-
tence should not be pronounced.
Neither the government nor defense
attorneys made any recommendations
about the sentence.
Mrs. Waley had tried twice to plead
guilty to the Lindbergh law conspi-
racy and kidnaping counts under
which she and her husband, Harmon
M. Waley and their fugitive co-de-
fendant, William Dainard, alias
Mahan, were indicted. She said Sat-
urday she was satisfied with the con-
viction verdict and U. S. Marshal A.
J. Chitty said she told him before
the jury came in that she hoped
"that jury won't acquit me."
Her husband pleaded guilty last
month and was sentenced to 45 years
in prison. Waley has started his
sentence at McNeil Island Federal
prison near here.
Department of Justice agents are
pressing their search for Dainard. He
was last seen June 8 at Butte, Mont.,
when he abandoned an automobile
and $15,155 of the $200,000 ransom
with which Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Wey-
erhaeuser, jr., bought back their nine-
year-old son the night of May 30.
Continuance Of
AAA Assured
By President
Functions Until Supreme
Court Rules On Validity
Of Processing Tax
WASHINGTON, July 17. - (A) -
The Senate voted 49 to 33 today to
strike out of the AAA bill a 35 cent
a bushel processing tax on fiaxseed.
WASHINGTON, July 17. - (A) -
Assurance that the AAA would con-
tinue to function at least until a
final ruling by the supreme court on
the validity of processing taxes was
given today by President Roosevelt.
That was his comment on the deci-
sion of the circuit court of appeals at
Boston yesterday holding the taxes
unconstitutional.
Mr. Roosevelt said at his press con-
ference he thought it would be a good
thing if the AAA amendments now
before the senate are passed. A vote
may be reached this afternoon.
He agreed with their general ob-

jective and has so informed congres-
sional leaders.
The President turned over to the
attorney general inquiries whether
the AAA processing taxes can be col-
lected in the Jurisdiction of the Bos-
ton court pending the final decision
by the supreme court.
DETROIT, July 17.-(P) - Giles
Kavanaugh, collector of internal
revenue, said today that processing
taxes enforced in Michigan under the
AAA have brought more than $10,-
000,000 into the Federal treasury in
the last two years.
PHILADELPHIA, July 17. -(P) -
Federal Judge William H. Kirkpat-
rick today ruled the Agricultural Ad-
justment Act unconstitutional.
"I am holding this act unconsti-
tutional on the grounds that it in-
volves an invalid delegation of pow-
er," he said.
The decision upheld a petition of 22
firms to restrain the government
from collecting processing taxes.
Second Picnic And
Swim To Be Friday
Dr. Margaret Bell of the Depart-
ment of Physical Education for Wom-
en announced yesterday the second
of a series of picnic swims to be held
this Friday.
The picnic swim will be held at

Map Of Recreational Facilities And Resorts Near Ann Arbor
Br igh ter, To W,014 La. t
The accompanying map of Ann
Arbor and vicinity has been es-
pecially prepared by the Daily forland yokee
students of the Summer Session
showing the nearby pleasure re-
sorts, bathing beaches, and dance
pavilions. The roads indicated are
the shortest routes to the various
points.
Dance pavilions are located atc
Whitmore Lake, Island Lake, Sand Port1e tie
Lake, and Walled Lake. PublicL e
swimming beaches are located at 1
Whitmore Lake and Portage Lake.
The Portage Lake beach also pro-
vides facilities for picnics. Out-
door swimming may also be en-
poyed along the Huron River which
is indicated on the map. For the etroiti
distance between Ann Arbor and Dexter
Dexter the river is accompanied by
the Huron River Drive.
The road to South Lyon, called
the Pontiac Road, is gravel. It
branches off Broadway to the left
just beyond the concrete bridge 5wi ,j Wh a .estwood)
over the Michigan Central Tracks an)c P *f ;an toDotyoil
and the river. To get on the road
to Portage Lake go west on Huron To Velvor
St. to the fork juYt inside the city lnf
limits and branch right onto Dexter
road. North, Main St., is the road
to Shitmore Lake and Island Lake,
and South Main St., is the road to
Saline and Sand Lake. The West-
wood Symphony Gardens are just
east of Wayne on Michigan Avenue.
We recommend that any students
interested in attending any of these TO Toledo
places tear out this map and saveo
it.
T E 0 cts
send L oke

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
A.H. until 3:30: 11:30 a.m. Saturday.

VOL. XVI No. 21
THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1935
Summer Session Glee Club: Meets
this evening at 7 p.m. in Morris Hall.
All men who are interested are in-
vited to attend.
Tea For Faculty Wives and Women
on the faculty today, 4 to 6 o'clock.
Michigan League Garden.
Summer Session French Club: The
next meeting of the Club will take
place tonight at 8:00, in the "Second
Floor Terrace Room," Michigan
Union.
Professor Arthur G. Canfield will
give a talk on "Balzac." There will
be charades, songs and dancing.
Graduation Recital: Mona Hutch-
ings, student of Professor Wassily
Besekirsky, will give a Graduation
Recital this evening at the School of
Music Auditorium, at 8:15 o'clock, to
which the general public, with the
exception of small children, is invited.
Raymond Kondratowicz will play the
accompaniments.
Teacher's Certificates Candidates:
All students in the School of Educa-
tion, Literary College, College of En-
gineering, and Graduate School who
expect to receive a Teacher's Certifi-
cate at the end of the Summer Ses-
sion and who have not filled out an
application blank for this purpose
must do so immediately. ""The ap-
plication blanks are available in the
office of the Recorder of the School
of Education, 1437 University Ele-
mentary School. The attention of
students in the Literary College is
called to the fact that this applica-
ion is in addition to the application
made to the Committee on the Teach-
er's Certificate of that College.
The University Bureau of Appoint-
ments W) Occupational Information
has received notice of the following
U. S. Civil Service Examinations:
Principal Statistician and Sr. Sta-
tistician (Div. of Vital Statistics) -
$4,600 to $5,600.
Assistant to Senior Statistician (Bu-
reau of the Census) $2,600 to $4,600.
Agent, Antinarcotic Act - $2,600.
Jr. Poultry Aid to Sr. Poultry Aid-
$1,400 to $2,000.
Notices are on file in 201 Mason
Hall.
Mathematics Picnic for Graduate
Students and Friends Friday, July
19. Meet at 4:00 p.m. on Angell Hall
steps. Sign up in Math. Library
before Thursday noon, if possible.
Women Students: The department
of Physical Education for women
will hold a picnic swim on Friday,
July 19, leaving Barbour Gymnasium
at 5:30. Women students wishing to
attend are asked to register in Room
15 Barbour Gymnasium, by Friday
noon. A small fee will be charged.
Southern Club: A watermelon cut-
ting for members of the Southern
Club will be held in the garden of the
Michigan League at 7:00 p.m. on
Friday, July 19.
Married Students: All married stu-
dents and their families are invited
to a picnic and pot-luck supper to be

held at the Island Friday afternoon,
July 19. Activities to consist of base-
ball and other games will begin at
5:00. Bring your own dishes, sand-
wiches and drink and one dish to
contribute to the supper. This pic-
nic is under the auspices of the Mich-
igan Dames.
Biological Chemistry 120 will meet
in the West Amphitheater, West
Medical Building on Friday, July 19,
at 7 a.m.
Professor Charles L. Jamison of the
School of Business Administration
who was scheduled to speak on Wed-
nesday will give his lecture on Friday
and will speak on the subject "Sal-
aries and Services."
Coast Guard
Allotted Work
Relief Funds
Roosevelt Also Apportions
$453,800 For Building
Of Several Hospitals
WASHINGTON, July 17. -- (M) -
President Roosevelt today allotted
$5,263,995 of work relief funds to the
coast guard for 51 new patrol boats
and reconditioning of a number of
shore stations. He also apportioned
$453,800 to the veterans' administra-
tion for construction of several hos-
pitals.
The appropriations included $68,-
000 for reconditioning station build-
ings at Hancock, Mich., and $64,660
for rebuilding the telephone lines at
Delaware, Saulte Ste Marie, Newberry
and Calumet.
The largest item in the coast guard
building program is $582,000 for seven
80-foot patrol boats, which will re-
place ancient 75-footers now to be
withdrawn from service. Four cap-
tured rum runners used by the coast
guard also will be replaced with 65-
foot high speed patrol boats costing
$209,000.
Others are:
Eighteen 38-foot cabin picket boats,
$226,000; two 62-foot harbor craft,
used as ice-breakers, $126,000; five
"crash boats" for aviation duty, $37,-
000; ten 26-foot motor boats to be
carried on cutters, $60,000; five 60-
foot boats for harbor craft, $263,000.
The allotments followed announce-
ment of one more proposal for a
change in the work relief machinery.
Secretary Ickes suggested reducing
the 4 per cent PWA interest rate
where private lenders charge "exorbi-
tant" interest. This is an attempt
to obtain a substantial amount of
state and community PWA projects.
Many city officials have expressed
preference for projects carried out
by Harry L. Hopkins' works progress
administration, because of easier
terms.
Effects of the present 4 per cent
rate will be studied by a subcommit-
tee.
J. M. Gentry of Enid, Okla., mem-
ber of the state highway commission,
is the first white child born in Grant
county.

FHA Will Push
Campaign For
Moder'iZation

Careers And Personalities
Of Our Senators; Frederick Hale

To Urge Use
Loans For
Factories

Of Federal
Repairs On

WASHINGTON, July 17. - OP) -
Embarking on a nation-wide selling
campaign, the Federal IJousing ad-
ministration is intensifying efforts to
open up a market of gigantic poten-
tialities to the durable goods and
building industries.
Seven experts from FHA have been
assigned to the key centers of New
York, Boston, Philadelphia, Pitts-
burgh, Detroit, Chicago and Cleve-
land. Officials said today they will
seek to stimulate wider use of federal
financing facilities for modernization
of industrial and commercial plants
and dwellings.
Main objective in the campaign,
officials said, is the release of a pent-
up demand for materials and ma-
chinery which has been accumulat-
ing since the 1929 crisis 'to the point
where economists say it now is the
greatest in the country's history.
Published estimates say that if all
outworn and obsolete plants and
equipment were modernized and all
homes needing repairs were improved,
the value of goods and services thus
required would aggregate from $2,-
500,000,000 to $100,000,000,000.
The new campaign began recently
when the heads of more than 100
trade and industrial associations met
with housing administration officals
and received and intensive lecture
course on added federal financing fa-
cilities made available to the factory
owner and commercial operator
through a recent amendment to the
housing act.
This gave the housing administra-
tor authority to insure loans up to
$50,000 in addition to smaller loans
for construction and repair of homes.
The housing administration does not
lend money but merely insures loans
made by approved financial institu-
tions.
Edmonson Talks At
Chicago Conference
CHICAGO, July 17. - James B. Ed-
monson, dean of the School of Educa-
tion at the University of Michigan,
addressed the opening session of the
Conference of Administrative Officers
of Public and Private Schools held
here on the University of Chicago
campus. The opening session was
devoted to a discussion of the general
topic, "The Professionalization of Ed-
ucational Administration," with Dean
Edmonson speaking on the aspect
of the problem subsumed under the
title, "The Better Utilization of Pro-

WASHINGTON, July 17. -(P) -
In a Senate dominantly Democratic,
Frederick Hale of Maine holds his
seat as heir to the conservative-Re-
publicanism of two senatorial ances-
tors, his father, the late Senator Eu-
gene Hale, and his grandfather, Zach-
ariah Chandler of Michigan.
Slight, graying, mustached, Hale
ranks as a Senate veteran in his own
right, adhering to his family's con-
servative standards. He is starting
his fourth term, re-elected by the
narrowest margin of his long political
career. His father served 30 years,
retiring undefeated in 1905. Hale
assumed his seat March 4, 1917.
The elder Hale served as chairman
of the appropriations and naval af-
fairs committees simultaneously. His
Quake Takes
Lives Of 49
In Formosa
144 Also Reported Injured
In Upheaval Centering
Around Shinchiku
TAIHOKU, Formosa, July 17. - (P)
- Forty-nine persons were killed and
144 injured, polce estimated, in an
earthquake centering in southern
Shiinchiku province today.
Police reported the Japanese em-
pire's third fatal tremblor in three
months destroyed 244 buildings. As
the earthquake shook the same area
in which nearly 3,000 persons died
April 21. Seismologists said today's
temblor was one of a series of after-
shocks to the April disaster.
Telephone and telegraph lines were
disrupted, and railway lines and
bridges were damaged, but officials
predicted that normal traffic could
be resumed within a day.
An alarming shock startled four
prefectures in southern Japan about
an hour before the Formosan quake,
but did no damage. Lighter shocks
were perceptible in Taichu and Tain-
an and ships at sea recorded tremors.
Expeditions of police, physicians
and relief workers immediately en-
tered the quake-stricken region,
where villagers had hardly recorered
from the April disaster. They bore
food and medicines to meet a reported
shortage.
The second blow was received with
stoic fatalism by the inhabitants of
the region, who are racially Chinese.
Property damage was estimated to
be slight, many of the destroyed
buildings having been weakened by
previous earthquakes.
-- 2

son likewise has headed each, and is
now ranking minority member of
both, as well as of the rules com-
mittee.
A bachelor of 60, he lives while in
Washington at the home his father
owned, where he lived as a boy. In
Maine, he makes his home at Port-
land where he practiced law prior
to 1917.
An enthusiastic golfer and hunter,
he belongs to the Burning Tree coun-
try club, Washington, and the Au-
gusta (Maine) country club. Hale
is a familiar figure on many other
courses- in his state. He shoots from
the Chesapeake bay duck blinds and
in Maine forests.
Born in Detroit, Hale attended
preparatory schools at Lawrenceville,
N. J., and Groton, Mass., and was
graduated from Harvard. He started
to practice law in Portland in 1899,
and served as a state representative
in 1905.

2 p.m. Majestic Theater, "Strangers
All" with May Robson and Preston
Foster, and "The Winning Ticket"
with Leo Carrillo, Louise Fazenda and
Ted Healey.
2 p.m. Michigan Theater, "Charlie
Chan In Egypt" with Warner Oland,
and "Orchids To You" with John
Boles.
2 p.m. Wuerth Theater, "Living
On Velvet" with Kay Francis, and
"I am a Thief" with Mary Astor.
7 p.m. Same features at the three
theaters.
8:30 p.m. Lydia Mendelssohn
Theater, "Bird In Hand" by the
Michigan Repertory Players.
Canoeing every afternoon and eve-
ning on the Huron River, Saunder's
Canoe Livery.
Dancing at the Blue Lantern Ball-
room, Island Lake featuring Clare
Wilson and his orchestra.
Wild cherry timber is in great de-
mand by cabinet makers because it
takes such an excellent polish.

VAN BOVEN'S
SUMMER CLEAR..ANCE SALE.

Change To Smart Summer Comfort

Enjoy Great Savings!!!

Linen and Tropical Suits in Colors .....20% Discount
Large reductions on all sport shoes, all-white and two-tone
- - .1

A Large Selection of Fine Quality
NECKWEAR
(TWO GROUPS)
69c each - 3 for $185
$1.00 to $2.50 Values . . . . 40 Dozen to select from.
$1.15 each - 3 for $2.85
ALL SILK FOULARDS and REPPS
$1.50 to $2.50 Values.... . 25 Dozen to select from.
HOSIERY, 3pair$1.00
Lisles and Silks. ... 50c and 75c Values

.L

SPORT SHIRTS,
Special lot ..... 79c

Pienty of large sizes.

(All others 20% Discount)

... Fine Quality...
KAW HATS $1.79
Former Values to $5.00
Special Lot of Fine Quality FELT HATS $3.45
(Values from $7.00 to $8.50)
.. .Men's BEACH and
L O U N GINOG RfOtBE S
20r ,Discousnt
Cottons, Terry Cloth, Flannel anda Silks in this group.

Imported WOOL HOSIERY

20% Discount

I -.-. -

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