THE M ICHIIIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JULY To Succeed Langer nt-Associated Press Photo In the most chaotic condition that ever confronted North Dakota, the state's supreme court supple- mented its decision ousting William Langer (left) from the governorship by an order that Langer deliver to Ole H. Olson (right) the office of governor. Langer had defied the court by invoking martial law throughout the state. National guardsmen guarded the skyscraper statehouse (above) at Bismark, and stood in readi- Michigan Grid Stars Still In Race Results as announced yesterday in the balloting for the all-star amateur football team, which will meet the Chicago Bears in a regulation game August 31, at Soldiers' Field, Chicago, follow: ENDS Skladany, Pittsburgh .........16,452 Smith, Washington ..........15,346 Petoskey, Michigan ..........12,361 Canrinus, St. Mary's . ........11,432 Manske, Northwestern .........9,143 Devore, Notre Dame .........8,619 TACKLES Krause, Notre Dame........21,867 Schwammel, Oregon State .. . .14,136 Wistert, Michigan .... ......10,748 Torrance, Louisiana State ......7,809 Rosequist, Ohio State.. .....6,992 Mehringer, Kansas ............6,718 GUARDS Rosenberg, U.S.C. ...........16,638 Schammel, Iowa ............15,120 'Corbus, Stanford............11,843 Jones, Indiana ...............10,384 Gailus, Ohio State ...... . ..... 9,186 Hupke, Alabama ..............8,296 CENTERS Bernard, Michigan ...........14,737 Gorman, Notre Dame ..........12,716 Coats, U.C.L.A. . ...............5,506 QUARTERBACKS Laws, Iowa................13,418 Pardonner, Purdue ...........11,386 Griffith, U.S.C . ..............8,412 HALFBACKS Lukats, Notre Dame ..........15,887 Everhardus, Michigan.. ....15,156 Feathers, Tennessee ..........14,662 Sebastian, Pittsburgh .........7,712 McNeish, U.S.C..............7,657 Wilson, St. Mary's........... 7,419 French Cabinet Threatened As Parties Clash Movement Is Started By Ra dical Socialists To Oust Tardieu PARIS, July 19. - (/P) -The "truce cabinet" of Premier Gaston Dou- mergue was split wide open today by a fight between adherents of the right and left, and the precipitation of an eventual cabinet crisis was threat- ened. A move to oust Andre Tardieu, former premier, was started among the Radical Socialists, who are ad- herents of Edouard Herriot, another former premier and cabinet member. Tardieu's friends said that he in- tended to stay in the cabinet just as .long as Herriot remains. Earlier in the day, Doumergue was believed to have averted a cabinet wreck by spreading the words that the "boys must be good." He made a lightning decision at a railroad station last night and sent his friends to tell former Premiers Tardieu and Herriot and Camille Chautemps and party leaders that Tardieu's charges that Chautemps and Radical Socialists knew the late Serge Stavisky was swindling the country must be limited to a contro- versy between Tardieu and Chau- temps, without involving parties. Resignation of Herriot and other Radical Socialists from the cabinet was threatened because of Tardieu's charges, which they said broke the political truce under which the Dou- mergue cabinet was created in the grave days of last February. IMAGINE CHAGRIN Gene Bernetti, on a parole from Jackson Prison where he was sent for breaking and entering, was sen- tenced recently to from two to five years in the same prison for stripping a car. Chief Executive To See Hawaii For First Time Roosevelt To Try Luck At Game-Fishing; To Also Visit Kona Section HONOLULU, July 19.--President Roosevelt is the first president to visit the Territory of Hawaii, although these islands have been an integral part of the United States ever since 1898 when Hawaii, at her own request, was annexed by the United States. On his Hawaiian trip, the President will first visit the off-the-beaten- path Kona section - the "heart of old Hawaii" -along ,the western coast of the largest Hawaiian island, which is named "Hawaii." Roosevelt will try his luck at the excellent game-fishing along this picturesque coast, angling for the ahi, a'u, aku, ahi-pa-laha, mahimahi, kaku and ulua - Hawaiian names for the tuna, swordfish, bonito, albacore, dolphin, baracuda, and pompano. The record black marlin swordfish catch here on standard tackle is 568 pounds and 12 feet, 3 inches. Roosevelt will be rhet at Kona by Governor Joseph B. Poindexter, who will escort him during his entire Hawaiian tour. Poindexter, a resident of Hawii for 17 years, was appointed by the President justrecently-this appointment of the governor being one of the few differences between the political status of Hawaii, as a full-fledged Territory, and that of one of the states. After this first day in Kona, the USS Cruiser Houston will steam to the other side of the island where the presidential party will land at Hilo, main port of Hawaii island. They will motor to the volcano area of Hawaii (U.S.) National Park, and drive to the brink of the central Halemaumau firepit down inside the famous Kilauea crater. This will make the President elig- ible for membership in Hui-O-Pele, a fire fraternity with its rolls limited to those who have paid homage to Madame Pele, benign Hawaiian fire goddess. He will receive a Pele certifi- cate, sealed by volcanic fire. On his third day in Hawaii, the President will land at Honolulu, the cruiser being escorted to the harbor by hundreds of army and navy planes flying in an aerial Aloha, and by a fleet of native outrigger canoes. From Honolulu he will be taken on the 90 mile drive through the pineapple and sugar cane country that circles a major portion of Oahu island. Shakespeare Topic Of Reynold's Talk (Continued from Page 1) sion for realism a great deal more than our own." Various evidences of stage proper- ties are offered to us, Professor Rey- nolds said. He cited evidence that trees were on the stage in Macbeth, as well as other properties. In ad- dition he read from a list of proper- ties belonging in 1598 to the Admir- al's Company of which Shakespeare was a member. Included in the list were such objects as a rock, an altar, a tomb, a steeple, and a throne. The Elizabethan theatre, he de- clared, had at least one power which we seem to have lost, "the power of listening to spoken poetry and re- sponding to it." Luncheon Is Held Moore Is By Dean Bacher Be Condu Mrs. Byrl Fox Bacher, dean of wom- en during the Summer Session, en- tertained 11 guests with a luncheon Thursday noon on the Garden porch of the League. Several of the women here for the summer are from the administrative departments of colleges and univer- sities in other states. It was Mrs. Bacher's wish to acquaint her guests with some of these women in the University here. The following women were her guests : Miss Frances Johnson, Miss Elizabeth Pfohl, Miss Ruth Pfohl, Mrs. Leona B. Diekema, Mrs. Martha Ray, Dr. Margaret Bell, Miss Elliot Bell, Miss Hannah Logasa, Mrs. Louis Hopkins, Miss Ellen Stevenson, and Miss Ethel McCormick, who is in charge of Summer Session social ac- tivities. Mt. Holyoke Alumnae Meet At Dinner Here The Mount Holyoke Alumnae who are on campus this summer enjoyed a dinner, last night in the grill-room at the Michigan League. Fifteen were present, including two faculty mem- bers from Mount Holyoke. The alumnae range all the way from graduates of two years up to graduates of 25 years. Miss Esther Colton was in charge of the dinner which was served at 6:30 p.m. Prof. Earl V. Moore, director of the School of" Music, is to be guest con- ductor of the High School Orchestra at the National Music Camp, at In- terlochen State Park, Sunday and Monday, July 22 and 23. Dr. Joseph E. Maddy, professor of public school music in the School of Music, is president of the camp which was founded a number of years ago and attracts each summer' the best talent of high schools all over the country. Dr. Moore each year conducts the choral performances of the camp, but this year will be the orchestral con- ductor and will present Schumann's First Symphony in B flat major at the Sunday afternoon concert and again at the time of the coast-to-coast broadcast at 9 p.m. eastern standard time, Monday, over the WJZ network of the National Broadcasting com- pany. Other guest conductors to appear at Interlochen and to be heard over the broadcast this summer are: How- ard Hanson, director of the Eastman School of Music, Ossip Gabrilowitsch, director of the Detroit Symphony Or- chestra, Carl Busch, former director of the Kansas City Orchestra, and Dr., Maddy. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY To actor lochen f CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 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-llc 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............c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months. Sc 2 lines daily, college year ...7c 4 lines E.O.D., college year . .7c 100 lines used as desired ....9 300 lines usedas desired ... .c 1,000 lines used as desired ....7c 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. 10o discount if paid within ten more insertions. Read The Classifieds LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 1X NOTICE NOTICE: Shampoo and fingerwave Monday and Tuesday 35c. Balance of week 50c. College Beauty Shop, State St. Phone 2-2813. 44 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 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Phi Beta Pi pin. Nam Millard Roberts. Reward. 45 LOST: Alpha Omicron Pi pin near Women's Athletic Building. Reward. Finder please call 5371. The Grea test News In This Morning's Daily - - - BETTER FROCKS ... 22,522 .13,102 ....6,824 trolled by Langer supporters by more The department of physical edu- than a two-thirds majority, while in cation will hold the second picnic the Senate the margin was a few swim this Friday afternoon leaving votes short of two thirds. Barbour Gymnasium at 5 o'clock. Reports were heard of possible mob The group will go to Portage Lake violence, but on the surface all was where they will swim before the sup- calm. Rumors were current that Lan- per. ger partisans were concentrating in The charge for the food and trans- various sections of the state ready to portation will be 25 cents. There will march on Bismarck to rally around be an additional fee of 25 cents for the Langer. bath house and bathing privileges. ri r) :11 in three price groups Summer Frocks, many of which arrived this month. Ellen Kaye Frocks included. Goodyear's Pre-Inventory GROUP NO. 1 Cfo "LEARANCE We're taking Inventory next week, and the FIVE DAYS before, we are devoting to a store- wide clearance of summer and seasonable mer- chandise -also all odd lots of staple goods. COATS-SUITS-DRESSES Dresses for sport and day- time wear- cottons and wash silks. I GROUP NO.2 H'oneycomb sheers- Silk piques - Lentheric prints. GROU NO. 3 White and pastel crepes and sheers- navy travel sheers and some formals sheers and some formals in organdy, crepe and satin. $795 $10 HATS and FOOTWEAR For WOMEN and CHILDREN There's plenty of opportunity here to finish summer with a style thrill -- and for supply- ing the home with needed staples - all at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES I 1-WHITES] Summer Blacks, PASTELS HATS~Browns and Grays39: $ea Values Blouses,Sweatersto s .$2.95$ ea. SILKS and WOOLS SKIRTS Values to $3.50 $1.95j 0 NI