THE MICHIGAN DAILY A THE MICHIGAN DAILY U .........I r Sculptor Commemorates Will Rogers Union, Company Leaders Plan Conference; Food Jobbers Fill Orders BUFFALO N. Y., July 29.-(P)- Committee for Industrial Organiza- tion pickets patrolled three strike- closed packing plants today as union and company leaders planned a peace conference tomorrow.. At the same time, the territory's wholesale food jobbers, a paralyzing, eight-day truck drivers' strike ended, worked feverishly to fill a rush of retail orders. One house reported it delivered more sacked sugar today than in any time in its history. All 44 houses affected said their delivery facilities were taxed to the limit. The truckers, American Federation of Labor affiliated, went back to work with a contract which their presi- dent, Howard F. Toy, labelled "a just and equable settlement-one of the bestrever written in this city." Drawn up through the voluntary mediation efforts of Dr. John P. Boland, first head of New York State's Labor Board, it established a minimum scale of wages, maxi- mum working hours, overtime pay, preferential hiring and vacations. During their eight-day walkout, the truckers clamped an embargo on re- tail deliveries that badly depleted storekeepers' stocks of butter, eggs, canned goods, flour and other staples. Hugh Thompson, CIO regional di- rector, called concurrently a strike among union meat packing members, but illness forced him out of tomor- row's conference. The meat packers yesterday sub- mitted a. contract calling for exclu- sive collective bargaining rights, a modified closed shop and wage and hour adjustments. Michael Cohn, counsel for one of the three affected plants, said em- ployers' representatives had drafted counter proposals to be presented at tomorrow's meeting. Ralph Martin Reported Dead From Drowning He Was One Of Two Men Caught By Undertow In Attempted Rescue Ralph A. Martin, 35 years old, of Western Springs, Ill., whose drown- ing at Saugatuck Tuesday night was reported to Ann Arbor police in an attempt to notify his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Martin, who live here. was one of two victims in the rescue of an unidentified 12-year-old girl who had been caught in the Lake Michigan undertow, it was learned yesterday. Martin and Frank Hooper, 23 years old, of Streator, Ill., the other drown- ing victim, swam out with three other men, and reached the drowning girl first. They began to tow her to safe- ty, but before they reached shore they became exhausted and sank. Other members of the party towed the girl in, but were unable to save the two men. Martin's body will be brought here for funeral services andrburial at 2 p.m. tomorrow. (Saturday). He was born in Ann Arbor in 1901, grad- Mrs. Alben Barkley County To Get More License Fees In 1937 Total Received Will Be $83,341.07 To Almost Double That Of 1936 Washtenaw County will receive a sum nearly double the total last year as its share of automobile license fees for the second quarter, according to the sums vouchered yesterday by Murray D. Van Wagoner, state high- way commissioner. The total the county will receive is $83,341.07, as compared with about $44,000 received from the state last year. Ann Arbor's share is up from $9,168.82 to $17,131.26. The weight tax returns for the entire state in the three-month period were nearly $5,- 500,000. It was pointed out that no settle- ment has been made yet for gasoline taxes in either the first or the second quarer. Payment of the first install- ment is due soon, and because of the size of the check the county received it was at first thought that the gas voucher had been combined withthe weight tax payment. Read Daily Classified Ads Dance Teacher Plans Modern Dance Program Miss Katherine Manning of the Humphrey-Weidman dance group in New York City will give a lecture demonstration on modern dance at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in the dance studio on the second floor of Barbour Gym- nasium, it was announced yesterday. Miss Manning is an instructor in the department of Physical Educa- tion for women this summer, and during the year dances as a member of the Humphrey-Weidman dance group and assists Miss Doris Humph- rey of the group. Beatrice Lovejoy, '37, former stu- dent manager of the modern dance club at the University, will assist Miss Manning in the demonstration. The event is scheduled to last half an hour from 8:30 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, and all summer school students in- terested are invited to attend. TYPEWRITING MIMEOGRAPHING eromptly and neatly done by expwt- ,aced operators at moderate pricam. 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State titre"i Mrs. Alben W. Barkley, wife of the newly elected senate leader, at last is mistress of "The An- gles," long-desired mansion near Paducah, Kentucky. Irish University Confers Deoree on Dr._Bishop (Continued from Page 1) - ... 1 Will Rogers, America's famed humorist, would probably have poked fun at the idea of himself in bronze, but here is Jo Davidson, the dis- tinguished American sculptor, finishing a model of Rogers for a shrine in Colorado Springs. Linguist, Psychologist Do Not Conflict In 'Meaning'.Discussion Woodburne, Price Lead Luncheon Conference Is Held ByInstitute (Continued from Page 1) stated, must consider the history of the word as it came into the lan- guage, somtimes with different senses at different periods of borrowing, but must consider as more important the actual usage. An example cited was "lark," which before 1700 was often applied to birds vaguely resembling the true lark, just as a child calls a cow a dog. The historical dictionary must recognize this meaning. "Church," "puritan," and "beauty" were also named by Dr. Price as words with interesting histories before 1700. "The historical dictionary must give in a definition not only the core of meaning these words have, such as you generally recognize now, but also the peculiar aura or emotional as- sociation, for it is this latter that really is important to the dictionary user. Even the precise meanings of a color like blue or gray was probably different three hundred years ago from what it is now, to say nothing of the symbolic meaning so frequently significant in Elizabethan literature. Although the meaning of a made3 object is easy to define, stated Dr. Price, for its meaning is its function, plus occasionally its appearance and the manner of its use, the meaning of an idea is harder to determine. It was here that he got in a dig at the philosophers. In the recent book, "The Meaning of Meaning," Richards and Ogden, according to Professor Price, stated that "goods," for in- stance, really has only one meaning. Numerous illustrations to show the unsoundness of such an idea were ad- vanced by Dr. Price, who asked whether "good" has really the same meaning when applied to "bed," "baby," "kick," and "God." "Ogden and Richards," he remarked, "may say these are only arbitrary nuclei of meaning, but people who use a dictionary want to know precisely what these nuclei are, for they are really distinct meanings." eating from Ann Arbor High and one section. Since then six young later, in 1925, from the University of priests have studied aththe University Michigan. Since his graduation he to learn the modern librarian meth- has been a certified public accountant ods. with the Edward A. Gore Co., of Chi- One of the foremost in his field, Dr. cago. Bishop came to the University in 1915 from the Library of Congress, in Washington, D.C., where he was sup- Thesis Instruction erintendent of the reading room from 1907 to 1915. Previously he had been Published By Good head cataloguer of the library of Princeton University 1902-04. "An Introduction to Thesis Writ- Dr. Bishop was graduated from the ing," a book which represents the University in 1892, receiving his mas- standards followed in the presenta- ter of arts degree in 1893. tion of term papers and theses in The University of Ireland degree the education school, has recently was conferred July 8, along with pre- been written and published by War- sentations of like honors to Dr. Hugh ren R. Good of the School of Edu- O'Neill Hencken, of the Peabody cation. Museum, Harvard University; Prof. The manual is intended to give in Carl W. von Sydon, of Sweden; Prof. concise form the essential guidance Frederick N. Robinson, of Harvard, needed in perparing summaries of was also given his degree insabsentia. professional literature. whether for Dr. Bishop's plans to go to China term papers of the graduate theses, within the next month, his trip con- and to give assistance in the poduc- tingent on the outcome of the pres- tion of superior manuscript. ent strife there. I SUMMER CLEARANCE of All SPRING and SUMMER HATS at very attractive prices. ALL WH I TES Reduced $1. O$2.50 DANA RICHARDSON 309 South State Street -- At the Dillon Shop SEA BRIGHT, N. J., July 29.-(M)- Wilmer L. Allison, a tenacious Texan who wouldn't be beaten, and Bobby Riggs of Los Angeles, who hasn't lost a match this year, gained the finals of the 50th annual Sea Bright invi- tation tennis tournament today in a pair of thrilling five-set matches. Allison, whose current comeback campaign has resulted in triumphs at Spring Lake and Longwood, de- feated Frank X. Shields, former Davis Cup star, 1-6, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 7-5. Riggs disposed of Jiro Yamagishi of Japan, the last foreign threat in the grass court classic, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 2-6, 6-3. CLIPPER STARTS FOR EUROPE BOTWOOD, Newfoundland, July 29.-(P)-The Pan-American Clipper III took off from Botwood Harbor at 5:05 p.m. (E.S.T.) today on her sec- ond eastward, trans-Atlantic flight in preparation for a regular commer- cial air service between Europe and \" N' 1 a WHAT ! ? No Arbor Spring Water in the house? Call them im- Have You mediately. be ruined! Our meal will ARBOR SPRINGS WATER CO. 416 West Huron Dial 8270 I LOST Something. Find it III .r s. - Three-Piece . .. that will be worn on the Country's Smartest Campus as seen in Harrper's Bazaar They're not only stunning to look at, but practical, too. The two-piece suit can be worn early in the fall ... the blocked lapin topcoat, when it grows cooler for the games . . . the top coat itself over your other frocks ... and the entire ensemble, through- through II SKETCHED . . . 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