THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, Ji Farmers Organize Own Produce Market Balloting For Football Stars Ends July 25 Three Michigan Players Certain Of Position On All-CollegeTeam Maintaining relatively the same positions, the cream of the nation's senior football harvest of last fall went down the home stretch this weekend for the honor of represent- ing collegedom against the profes- sional Chicago Bears at Soldiers' Field, August 31. The balloting will conclude Wednesday, July 25, and Michigan is almost certain to be rep- resented by three of her outstanding players of the past championship sea- son. When the final selections are made, two players for each position will be picked from the highest two or four in their divisions, as the case may be. As the vote stands now, the first team should include: Ends, Skladany 'of Pitt. and Smith of Washington; tackles, Krause of Notre Dame and Schwammel of Oregon State; guards, Rosenberg of U.S.C. and Schammel of Iowa; center, Bernard of Michigan; quarter, Laws of Iowa; halfbacks, Lu- kats of Notre Dame and Everhardus of Michigan; fullback, Sauer of Ne- braska. Reserves would be --ends, Canrinus and Petoskey; tackles, Wistert and Torrence; guards, Corbus and Jones; center, Gorman; quarter, Pardonner; halfbacks, Feathers and Sebastian; fullback, Mikulak. Twenty-two men in all will go into training in Chicag'o on Aug. 15 under a coach to be elected in another poll early in August. Coach Has'Complete Power Of course the team mentioned above does not necessarily stand, even if elected in that position. Whereas Michigan now has two potential first- team men and 'two reserves, all or none of them may seeservice in the game, depending on the whims of the coach elected. There is also some doubt as to whether all of the players elected can compete. Chuck Bernard, almost certain of the center berth, may be prevented from playing by personal complications. All votes should be addressed to the All-Star Game Editor, Chicago Trib- une, should include an eleven man team of last year's senior players, should be signed by the voter and mailed before Wednesday, July 25. Anyone who desires may bring his se- lections to The Daily before Tuesday noon and they will be mailed to the Tribune in a bunch. Yesterday's voting resulted as fol- -Associated Press Photo Their sales curtailed by the Minneapolis strike of truck drivers, farmers in Robbinsdale, Minneapolis suburb, set up this temporary market to get their produce before buyers - and yet remain out of the strike area. Bleriot Recalls Channel Flight; Discusses Future Of Aviation Reign Of 'Boris 1' O f Andorra Ended Before Well Begun BARCELONA, Spain, July 21.-(P) -The man who would be king rode today in a police car instead of a royal coach. Stalwart detectives ac- companied him instead of a body- guard. The reign of "Boris I," pretender to the throne of the little state of Andorra, crashed before it began. The charges were plebian; disturbing the peace and being an undesirable alien. Thus falls the curtain on a comedy that diverted Spain until the gov- ernment decided it was not funny any more. "Boris," in reality Boris Skossy- ref, a Pole, appeared not long ago, speaking six languages. He declared himself a knight-er- rant and proceeded to lay lavish claims to the throne of Andorra. Thereafter he occupied the center of an imaginary court in Seourgell, "awaiting the call of his people." "Boris" scattered royal prerogatives and proclamations hither and thither. He was considered harmless at first and an amusing visionary, but finally the government decided to close his performance. Andorra is a touchy spot these days because the rivalry between French and Spanish interests in the tiny principality between them. The pretender was arrested Friday at Seo de Urgel and ordered brought here. He may be deported. Greenberg Is Star As Tigers Win, 4-1 (Continued from Page 1) Flohr walked Auer and forced him in. Again in the sixth Greenberg came through with a d juble to open the inning, but was subsequently caught between second and third and called -out for offside play. Before the in- ning ended, however, Doljack scored on Auker's single to center, making the score 3 to 0. But that was not the end for Hen- ry. With "Indiana" Wilshire in the box and Hayes catching for the Ath- letics, he polled the ball to the farth- est corner of the park to score Geh- ringer. This ended the scoring for Detroit, and a perfect day in the Field and at bat for the lanky first baseman. Where To Go Afternoon 1:00 -Michigan Theatre, "The Life of Vergie Winters" with Ann Harding and John Boles. 1:00-Majestic Theatre, "The Key" with William Powell. 1:00 Wuerth Theatre, "Men in White" with Clark Gable and Myrna Loy. 3:00 - Same features at the three theatres. Evening 7:00 - Same features at the three theatres. 8:30-- Sheridan's "The School for Scandal" by the Michigan Repertory Players, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Canoeing on the Huron every af- ternoon and evening. Dancing at the Blue Lantern Ball- room, Island Lake. LONDON, July 21. -(AP)-Two one- time co-workers, friends no longer, are presenting enigmas to British pol- itics - one for his temporary exit from the affairs of state, the other for his promise to return to the arena. One is Prime Minister Ramsay. The question people are asking about the prime minister is: "What if three months fail to give the relief to his eyes that is expected?" Snowden has given them a different riddle: "How does he propose to make his announced return effective?" His announcement created scarce- ly a ripple in the London press, par- ticularly since he said in it some- what the same things he uttered when he left the national government near- ly two years ago and later in one of his rare speeches in the house of lords. The concensus is that he may make himself into another one-man party, sniping away with the gibes and scorn that made him the center of sharp skirmishes in the commons. Whether his barbed tongue has been dulled, the country has yet to learn. One critic made the suggestion that his comeback must be the emptier because he no longer has Winston Churchill sitting in the same chamber as a target for his shifts. Heavy Trucks Must Go Faster Or Get Off Road LANSING, July 21. --(kP)-"Crawl- ing" trucks will be banned from the highways if a new ruling by the Mich- igan Public Utilities commission is enforced. All trucks under the jurisdiction of the commission must be loaded so they can make at least ten miles an hour over the steepest grades on their routes. Complaints were filed with the commission that heavily loaded trucks moving up hills three and four, miles an hour constitutes a hazard and in- convenience, as faster moving vehicles are unable to pass them with safety when the highway ahead is not vis- ible. CAPITALISM TRIUMPHANT POMPTON LAKES, N. J., July 21. - (P) - The contents and equipment of the old municipal power house, where Howard Scott, chief technocrat, first elaborated his theories of tech- nocracy, will go under a bailiff's ham- mer July 30. British Riddle Presented By Ex-Friends M'Donald, Snowden VISCOUNT SNOWDEN I was using crutches, because of an accident several weeks earlier at Douai. "The government sent a torpedo boat and a torpedo destroyer to pick me up in case of accident, but the plane soon outstripped them. I could see clearly a submarine which was submerged in the channel. "In landing the plane was damaged, but I wasn't hurt. Journalists -and English officials greeted me." Bleriot showed a photograph, which pictured him in a pre-war automobile beside Lord Northcliffe, who donated the cup and the $5,000 which con- stituted the aviator's prize. Smashed Up In Tests Bleriot smashed ten crate-like con- traptions in test flights before he ac- complished his channel hop. "I must confess that I am proud," he said, "that the plane in which 'Codos and Rossi twice flew the At- lantic is of the same mechanical con- ception as that in which I flew the channel. "The airplane, of course, is still far from its final form. I envisage the day when aquatic autogiros, for in- stance, fly the Atlantic. The auto- giro principle would eliminate the present difficult take-oilofma sea- plane from the water. "Stratosphere flying is possible, but is far in the future and is unlikely to be used for passenger service. If something went wrong while the plane was in the stratosphere, if the cabin cracked for instance, the occu- pants would be lost. May Visit United States "Except for sport flying, perhaps the next generation won't see much greater speed or altitude from air- planes. Lindbergh and I agree that a speed of 155 to 160 miles an hour is the best for regular commercial flying, including that over the ocean." Bleriot has not flown the chan- nel since 1929, on the twentieth anni- versary of his famous hop. He has not piloted a plane for ten years. His health has been poor lately- he is 62 years old - but if it improves, he intends to visit Canada in August for the Jacques Cartier anniversary. If he does, he hopes also to visit the United States and see Lindbergh, who owns a piece of the propeller of Bler- iot's , channel-crossing plane, ex- changed for a strip of fabric from Lindbergh's "Spirit of St. Louis." EINSTEIN DEFENDS THEORY WATCH hILL, R. I., July 21. --UP) -Prof. Albert Einstein, commenting on the announcement of Prof. Em- manuel Carvallo, French savant, that the relativity theory had been dis- proved, said that certain of the find- ings on which Carvallo based his criticism were in contradiction with the experimental results of other in- vestigators. MacDonald, who has obeyed the in- structions of his physicians to seek rest for his over-worked eyes in a three-month holiday; the other, Vis- count Snowden, who has announced his return to politics. Careers Parallel MacDonald, son of a .farm worker, and Snowden, son of a weaver, made their first ineffectual bows in politics the same year; worked side by side as architects of the labor party; stood shoulder to shoulder in the first labor government, then in the national gov- ernment - and parted company. By coincidence they come into the news again at the same time. o CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY 1 I lows: ENDS Skladany, Pittsburgh .,. Smith, Washington .... Canrinus, St Mary's ... Petoskey, Michigan ..... Manske, Northwestern .. Devore, Notre* Dame .... TACKLES Krause, Notre Dame .... .... 23,469 .......22,922 ......17,233 ......13,070 . . 12,743 .. 10,019 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISINC Phone 2-1214. Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box Numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in Advance-11c per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two Insertions. 10c per reading line for three or Minimum three lines per insertion. days from the date of last insertion. Minimum three lines per insertion. By Contract, per line-2 lines daily, one month............8c 4 lines ..,2months. c 2 lines daily, college year ...7c 4 lines E.O.D., college year . .c 100 lines used as desired .... 9c 300 lines used as desired ....7c 1,000 lines used as desired ... ,c 2,000 lines used as desired .., .6c The above rates are per reading line, based on eight reading lines per inch of 71, point Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add 6c per line to above rates for all capital letters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10c per line to above rates. for bold face capital letters. Telephone Rate-15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 10% discount if paid within ten more insertions. LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 1x WANTED WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 dol- lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- cago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 North Main. 2x FOR RENT FURNISHED APARTMENT and large double room, shower bath. Continuous hot water. Dial 8544. 422 E. Washington. 37 PERSONAL LAUNDRY service. We take individual interest in the laun- dry problems of our customers. Girls' silks, wools and fine fabrics guaranteed. Men's shirts our spe- cialty. Call for and deliver. Phone 5594. 607 E. Hoover. 3x Read The Classifieds 29,995 Schwammel, Oregon State ....20,211 Wistert, Michigan..........13,796 Torrance, Louisiana State ....10,005 Mehringer, Kansas..........9,046 Rosequist, Ohio State ........ 7,482 GUARDS Rosenberg, S. California......23,582 Schwanmel, Iowa ...........21,376 Corbus, Stanford.............17,211 Jones, Indiana..............13,924 Hupke, Alabama............12,009 Gailus, Ohio State...........9,651 CENTERS Bernard, Michigan..........18,953 Gorman, Notre Dame........16,836 Vuchinich, Ohio State ... 8,902 QUARTERBACKS Laws, Iowa ..................19,939 Pardonner, Purdue ..........14,484 Griffith, S. California ........11,836 HALFBACKS Lukats, Notre Dame ..........23,561 Everhardus, Michigan ........18,868 Feathers, Tennessee ..........18,018 Sebastian, Pittsburgh .........10,192 Cramer, Ohio State .......... 9,869 McNeish, S. California ........ 9,842 FULLBACKS Sauer, Nebraska .............30,178 Mikulak, Oregon .............21,062 Hecker, Purdue .............. 8,144 QUINTUPLET TO GET RADIUM CORBEIL, Ont., July 21. - (P) - Radium treatments at some time in the future are planned for Marie, youngest of the Dionne quintuplets, it was revealed today after what was heretofore called a birthmark was identified as a naveus type of tumor. i 1 featured sunday dinners I roast stuffed turkey dinner sizzling sirloin-steak dinner complete dinners complete dinners i