THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Doctor States tiring Vacation Often Big Help Man Who Comes Back To Rest Up Is Not So Foolish After All WASHINGTON, July 12. - (R) - Lupe Velez To Divorce Her Movie Tarzan Nazi Activities t The man who "comes back from h vacation to rest up" may not be t fool his friends think. Taking an old gasoline buggy acr the boundary lines of six states a: back again may be just the "rest" t man needs, says Dr. William A. Whi psychiatrist and director of St. Eliz beth's Hospital here. "Most persons become tired a worn out, not through work, b through constant little annoyance says Dr. White. "Problems that seem colossal home take on a trivial look to the m or woman driving down a peacef country road hundreds of miles fro the daily struggle with small grie ances. "A small-town business man mig come back rested from two weeks late hours in New York. A New Yor er might come back rested atfer hi ing energetically two weeks throu the mountains." But the length of a vacation is a most more important than the su roundings, Dr. White believes. He does not look with favor o dividing the vacation into little thre day intervals taken during the yea "During a vacation of two wee to two months, energy can be 'store up for the remainder of the year says Dr. White. "But when a perso rests only a few days at a time he doesn'tnaccumulate enough energ What he does store up soon is di sipated." Liquor Prices To Remain Up, Distillers Stat( Claim Lifting Of Impori Limit Will Not Reduc Bootlegging NEW YORK, July 12.--(/P)- Re- gardless of unlimited importations o: liquor, Americans will continue t pay existing prices for their drink unless taxes are lowered. This was the consensus today o several large liquor distilling com- pmnies following the announcement of the Federal Alcohol Control Ad- ministration that unlimited amounts ,of liquor could be brought into this country for two months beginning Sept. 1. The announced purpose of the move was to "combat bootlegging and bring down domestic prices." The distillers said, however, that it would not do this. All asserted that the Government's action merely would extend the present situation; unlimited importations have been al- lowed for about three months now. Prices have not been appreciably lowered and the bootlegger still is getting along pretty well, the dis- tillers declared. Chain Store Tax Law Is Now Before State Court The State Supreme Court is now considering the legality of the chain store tax law. In event the law is held to be valid, 28 of the larger chain store organizations will be required to 'pay the Department of State $1,- 298,000 as 1933 and 1934 taxes Soon after the law became effec- tive, suit to prevent the collection of the tax was started in Wayne county circuit court and has been appealed to the higher court. Pending deci- sion the companies involved have been compelled to deposit bonds and securities to guarantee payment of the tax in event the law is upheld. REDECORATE CAPITAL In preparation for the Texas cen- tennial observance in 1936, a squad of painters has commenced redecoration of the interior of the capitol at Aus- tin. his he oss rnd the ite, za- end ut s" at pan ful m 3v- ht of °k- ik- gh 1- ir- on e- ed n -Associated Press Photo Charging that he was a violent, cursing, furniture-wrecking hus- band, Lupe Velez of the films filed divorce proceedings in Los Angeles against Johnny Weissmuller, screen actor and Olympic swimming cham- pion. Their marriage has been marked by a series of temporary separa- tions, always accompanied by voluble explanations. Explain Stand Of U. S. Press Gen. Johnson Says That NRA Is Not To Blame For Everything WATERLOO, Ia., July 12. - (P) - Hugh S. Johnson, the NRA adminis- trator, said in a speech today that recent events in Germany had shown him "more clearly" why newspaper publishers have insisted in writing into their code "a clause saving their Constitutional rights." "I say that thereis no reason for their fears," he added. "A few days ago, in Germany," he said, "events occurred which shocked the world. "I don't know how they may have affected you, but they made me sick -not figuratively but physically - and very actively sick. "The idea that adult responsible men can be taken from their homes -stood up against a wall - backs the rifles - and shot to death - is beyond expression. Unthinkable In Cultured Lands "I have seen something of that sort in Mexico during the Villa rav- ages and among semi-civilized peo- ple or savages half drunk on sotol and marajuana - but that such a thing should happen in a country of some supposed culture passes com- prehension. "I know the normal reaction of this on NRA efforts. It is that, if power of any kind can be seized, there is no limit to its application. "For a long while I thought sin- cerely that the newspaper insistence on writing into their code a clause saving their Constitutional rights was pure surplusage. "As a lawyer, I am very sure that Constitutional rights guaranteed for the benefit of the public cannot be signed away. "But I now see more clearly why these gentlemen were apprehensive. No Reason For Fears "Knowing the situation backward and forward - I say that there is no reason for their fears. "No power exists in this Admin- istration that has not been freely granted by the Congress, and the cool thoughtful man in the White House seeks nothing more. "Stories about subversive influ- ences in our Government are just plain bunk. If there were any I should be among the first to know them ind to shriek to high heaven about them. There is no such ani- mal." "NRA is like the whipping boy at the court of Henry VIII. It is blamed and cussed for everything. I am get- ting a sort of Arnold Winkelried com- plex - I seem to be getting all the spears of the phalanx --not only in my breast but at all parts of my anatomy until I am quite sure that I know what a pin-cushion feels like." Ii BOX SCORES NEW YORK .. L if tt ,s s. 9 lympic Games Sponsor Says There Is Too Much Competition LAUSANNE, July 12. - (/P)- Ath- letics are a "healthy passion," but there are "too many international competitions and championships" says the world-famed sponsor of the Olympic games, Baron Pierre de Coubertin. He sends a "message to American youth" in this fortieth year of the modern Olympic games because in the United States, he says, "his life work has been understood and appreciat- ed" more than anywhere else. "On this solemn occasion (fortieth anniversary celebration), w h i c h closes the cycle of my public activi- ties, I specially desire to send an appeal to American youth to take up and help to make fruitful the in- heritance I pass on to them. In do- ing so I evoke the memory of Theo- dore Roosevelt, of William M. Sloane and of Andrew D. White and of so many American friendy who have worked willingly with me, understood+ me and sustained me throughout that long period in which I have had to struggle throughout the world - and particularly in France - against the lack of understanding, of public opin- ion ill prepared to appreciate the value of the Olympic revival. I should like also to mention James Sullivan and Elwood Brown.' "Whatever may be said, there is nothing excessive in the devotion of youth everywhere to muscular per- fection. If it is pursued with pas- sion, it is a healthy passion. But where there is exaggeration is in the increase of international competi- tions and championships. That is why sustained effort should be made to limit the number of these meet- ings. The quadrennial Olympic games are necessary and adequate to main- tain at the right level the spirit of emulation among nations. "The relation between that ques- tion and peace between nations, and between individuals, is a close one. "Dear friends beyond the seas, I hope that you will work to strengthen what I have accomplished and to complete what I have left unfinished. "I thank you. I have the deepest faith in the destiny of your great country which I still admire and love in the twilight as I did in the dawn of my life. "Pierre de Coubertin." I i .I Ii II Where To Go Afternoon 2:00 -Michigan Theatre, "Private Scandal" with Phillips Holmes. 2:00 - Majestic Theatre, "Jimmy the Gent" with James Cagney. 2:00 -Wuerth Theatre, two fea- tures, "The Search for Beauty" with Buster Crabbe and "Darlc Hazard" with Edward G. Robinson. 4:00 - Same features at the three theatres., Evening v s C r t AB Siamese Twin May Find Wedded Bliss In SpiteOf Clerk NEW YORK, July 12. - (/1) - The clerk who wouldn't give Violet Hil- ton a license to marry will have to tell the court why. Violet, who is the right side of the 26-year-old Siamese Twins, 'won an order Wednesday from the supreme, court directing the clerk to show cause why the license should not be issued. Daisy, the one on the left, took little interest in the court proceed- ings. She hal wedding plans of her own, being engaged, she said, to mar- ry an English publicist. Violet's "heart" is Maurice Lambert, musi- cal director of the Hilton sisters' vaudeville act. In court Wednesday her attorney, Irving Levy, argued: "The ruling of the city clerk's of- fice that Miss Hilton could not wed because she is a Siamese Twin is ar- bitrary. She is leg'ally, mentally, and morally fit to wed.": Crosetti, ss .....3 Saltzgaver, 3b ..3 Ruth, if ........4 Gehrig,lb......3 Chapman, cf-rf .4 Dickey, c ......4 Hoag, cf .......2 Combs, cf ......1 Heffner, 2b ....4 Broaca, p .......2 *Rolfe.........1 R 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H 0 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 TB PO. 0 7 1 1 0 3 1 4 1 4 2 3 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 A 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ii I 7:00 -Same features at the three theatres. 8:15 - "Both Your Houses," by the Michigan Repertory Players, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 9:00 - Social evening, Michigan League building. Canoeing on the Huron every af- ternoon and evening. Dancing at the Blue Lantern Ball- ,room, Island Lake. BANKER DIES WITH ROBBERS MIAMI, Okla., July 12. - (IP) - A county bank president died today with two bank robbers, one of them named by officers as "the old man of the mountain." Totals ....31 2 6 6 24 7 0 DETROIT AB R HTBPO A E Fox, rf .........5 1 1 1 1 0 0 White, cf.......3 1 1 1 2 0 0 Goslin,If......4 0 1 1 0 0 0 Gehringer, 2b ...2 1 0 0 1 6 0 Rogell, ss ......3 0 0 0 3 4 0 Greenberg, lb ..3 1 0 0 9 0 0 Owen, 3b......3 0 1 1 0 1 0 Hayworth, c ....4 0 2 2 11 0 0 Rowe, p ........4 0 2 2 0 0 0 Ii 1 Totals ....31 4 *Batted for Broaca 8 8 27 11 0 in ninth. ii EXCITING SALE MIDSUMMER' FASHIONS Printed chiffons, sheers, white and pastel crepes, striped tub silks, string faces- frocks you'll wear for two-more months this summer, and again next season! Misses', women's and half sizes 12 to 44. 1Three Groups 1.01 aarAV W a aasR 4 /tA am t r ____ Come Visit Our LEN DING LIBRARY Choose from 500 I BOOKS at Jc a Day she Loves Me Not,.....Edward Hope Peking Picnic ......... 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