-SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 193;1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1937 PAGE THREE "NEWS Of The DAY (By The Associated Press) Swindle List Grows In Farm Land Fraud ST. JOSEPH, Aug. 13.-WP-While six persons awaited examination here on charges of defrauding a Berrien County farmer of $105,000 in real estate transactions, a Saginaw Coun- ty farmer disclosed today that he, al- so, had had dealings with some of the defendants. The defendants, held under $10,- 000 bonds each after their arraign- ment in justice court, are: George M. Reynolds, 45; his secretary, Mary Gilles, 30, and Bert Spencer, 51, all of Saginaw; William Carrell, 55, and Byron W: Voorheis, 50, Bay City, and James J. Morehouse, 50, of Birming- ham. Their examination was set for Wednesday. Lansing Picketing Ends As Firm Wins LANSING, Aug. 13.-(/P)-Picket- ing of the Lansing Company, shut down by a sit-down strike July 15, was abandoned Friday and the man- agement announced the firm was op- erating at a capacity sufficient to meet seasonal needs. The sit-down strike wa ended by police and sheriff's officers who.evict- ed strikers from the premises in ac- cordance with a .circuit court injunc- tion shortly after the strike was called. Picket lines were formed after the eviction but the managment said the company continued operation and regular slipments to customers. A number of the striking employes have been reinstated at their own request, company officials said. Railroads' Workers Win Pay Increase CHICAGQ, Aug. 13.-(RP)-Repre- sentatives of the 14 "non-operating" brotherhoods today unanimously rat- ified an agreement with the nation's railroads providing a wage increase of five cents an hour. The vote was announced by George M. Harrison, chairman of the Rail- way Labor Executives Association. The higher scale will be retroac- tive to Aug. 1, h said, for the 800,000 members of the unions. The unions tad asked an increase of 20 cents. B.M.O.C. Does A Lot Of Work, LittleStudying By ROBERT I. FITZHENRY In Gotham Race er .Be l New German J kWedding, Will F Be Held Today Rev. Leech To Perform Ceremony At 3 P.M. In . Chapel OfLeague The wedding of Elsie Alkin Pierce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Lit- i tell Pierce, to Edward Griffith Begle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ned G. Begle, of' Greenwich, Conn., will take place at 13 p.m. this afternoon in the League r Chapel. The Rev. Frederick W. Leech of St.. SAndrew'sEpiscopal Church will per- # form the ceremony. A reception in the League Garden will follow. j Miss Pierce "will be attended by her sister, Sarah Pierce, as maid of Here is the German flying boat honor. Jewel Wuerfel and Cornelia air service with eight survey flights t Begle, a sister of Mr. Begle, will be launched from a catapult ship. A t bridesmaids. Robert Young will act the sea. as best man and the ushers will be- I Robert Pierce, brother of the bride, Iand John Wehausen. The bride, who graduated last June, IusiC Taught B affiliated with Delta Gamma sor- Cmre) ority, was a member of Wyverri, Mor- Y tarboard, Alpha Lambda Delta and Phi Beta Kappa. She was manag- Backed by Tammany for Demo- Mr editor of The Daily meof iea CHICAGO, Aug. 13.-(A')-"The cratic mayoralty nomination, Sen. Theta fraternity, Sigma Xi and Phi boy who blows a horn never will blow Royal S. Copeland hurled bitter Beta Kappa. He received his mas- a safe." words at the New Deal ter's degree in June. On that theory the Chicago Boys' The couple will live in Princeton, club is teaching hundreds of under- N. J., where Mr. Begle will serve as privileged youngsters how to play mu- an assistant in the mathematics de- sical instruments. It's part of a pro- partment of Princeton University. gram of crime prevention. And does it work! It has been a revelation to the directors. Even girls are dlamoring to get into the boys' clubs for music lessons. Five clubhouses are maintained throughout Chicago for underpriv- Theatre: Michigan: "Slim," with ileged boys. Some 3,000 lads assemble Pat O'Brien and Margaret Lindsay in them nightly to practice shop work, eand "Men in Exile," with Dick Pur- dramatics, athletics and, now, music. cell and June Travis; Majestic: "Ever Six hundred boys have been attracted from back alleys and street gangs in Since Eve," with Marion Davies and the few months since music was add- Robert Montgomery; Wuerth: "The ed. Great Hospital Mystery," with Jane Steering young toughs to a piano, Darwell and "This Is My Affair," with horn or to singing classes is not easy, Barbara Stanwyck and Robert Tay- says Howard Tooley, musical direc- lor; Orpheum: "Isle of Fury," with tor. Their first reaction is that music Humphrey Bogart and Margaret is "sissy." But once that impression Lindsay and "Mad Holiday," with is overcome the boys go the limit. 'fEdmund Lowe and Elissa Landi. The bands all follow the same pro- Play: Repertory Players produc- gression, by choice, Tooley says: they tion "H.M.S. Pinafore." start with marches, shift to dance SDaneBn amusic and wind up on "highbrow" Islanciake and Bal tLanternlea classics. By the time they have com- and Lake apleted this evolution, he adds, they ant Lake. _______ ___ DAILY OFFICIAL I BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2)' ment to meet the Committee at this In the midst of New York's red- meeting. hot mayoralty race stood Mayor La Guardia, not a Democrat, nor Senior Engieerig Students: All yet strictly G.O.P. students who expect to complete the requirements for the B.S.E. degree at should be a character builder, while the end of the Summer Session should others hold the view of Dr. Hutchins fill out the diploma application blank of Chicago who says that the uni- in the Secretary's Office, Room 263 versity is a community of adults sin- West Engineering Building, before \l. gularly designed for intellectual ac- Aug. 31. tivity. C. B. Green, Nothing For Something Assistant Secretary. Whatever the verdict or wherever the medium lies, certain it is that First Mortgage L o a n s: The extra-curricular activities at Mich- F. M.g . as igan can and have been developed University has a limited amount of academic funds to loan on modern well-located almost to the exclusion of acade Ann Arbor property. Interest at work. By his fourth year the extra- current rates. Apply Investment Of curricular tycoon has an impressive ce, rates. Apply Ing, Of- score of class cuts, low grades and fice, Room 100, South Wing, Univer- conferences with the dean to rem- sity Hall. inisce upon. And what has he gotten from his slaving?-nothing, most of the time. For three years he can read proof, run ads, lick stamps; sell tickets and attend caucuses in a de- lightful, wholesome, cut-throat com- NOW - DOUBLE BILL !- petition with his classmates for the privilege of presenting himself as a candidate for the one vaunted posi- tion. If he wins he's a full-fledged B.M.b.C. with all the attendant ad- vantages, but if he loses the penalty is a hard one, he must go back to Vol I his studies-where he left off in high school. TYPEWRITERS FOUNTAIN PENS Student Supplies with 314 SOUTH STATE STREET =PAT O'BREN -HENRY FONDA AA-SAY-ESTRT WIN . A ELL Mac I1AL I' ________and WHERE THERE ARE NO TEN 4 COMMANDMENTS...AND A popping at the former MANCANDOHIS WORST! nd every few days a isrepeated to give you another chance. nd Globe PANTIES-in I They sold to 89c. ow 53c -4 for $2.40 Plane Being Tested For Atlantic Hops i t Major Standings -11 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L New York ...........70 31 'Detroit .............58 42 Boston ..............58 42 Chicago............60 45 -leveland ...........47 51 Washington.........46 53 St. Louis............2 68 Athletics............30 69 Yesterday's Results Detroit 7, St. Louis 6. Philadelphia 4, New York 3. Cleveland 7, Chicago 3. Washington 3. Boston 0. Games Today Chicago at Cleveland. St. Louis at Detroit (2). Boston at Washington. New York at Philadelphia. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Chicago ............66 37 New York ............59 43 St. Louis..........56 44 Pittsburgh ..........53 48 Boston ..............50 54 Cincinnati..........41 58 Brooklyn...........40 60 Phillies.............42 63 Yesterday's Results Chicago 22, Cincinnati 6. New York 5, Philadelphia 0. Boston 5, Brooklyn 2 St. Louis 4. Pittsburgh 1. Pct. .693 .580 .580 .571 .480 .465 .320 .303 Nordineer which was scheduled to enter the race to establish trans-Atlantic to New York. The 17-ton flying boat, powered by four giant diesel motors, is win seaplane, the Nordwind, also will participate in the test trips across Pet. .641 .578 .560 .525 .481 .414 .400 .400 Boys' Clubs vention Program have been turned pretty definitely from the gutter. A club has not been formed for girls yet, but they have been so in- sistent that classes were opened to them. Tooley and several assistants are kept busy directing four brass bands, three orchestras, four singing clubs, ;four harmonica bands and one Ha- waiian orchestra. Every night except Sundays, groups practice, experiment and perfect their technique. They are directed by paid instructors who understand child psy- chology as well as music. The youngsters give concerts at- tended by hundreds of Chicago cit- izens. "It gives them a goal," says Too- ley. "They are the driving force. We merely guide them. They buy their own instruments, at ten cents a week, through our underwriting with deal- ers, or they work for them. "We never sing a song to the words 'We don't want,' or 'I can't.' All our expressions are 'we will,' 'I can.' Eventually the positive, constructive viewpoint on life is instilled and the boys feel they can do anything if it is right." Police Commissioner James P. All- man approves the project. "If it were not for the splendid work being done by the Chicago Boys clubs," he asserts, "there would be a much greater amount of crime in the city than is now the case." .ReadDailyClassified Ads 14-- .iI A HOME MEAL HOME COOKED at REASONABLE PRICES EAT at Kruger's Kosher Delicate ssen Restaurant STATE STREET - Head of Liberty y-._,... I,.r 'B If the first two hours of his morn- ing are religiously devoted to achiev- ing the chic "studied carelessness" of eastern colleges, if his vocabulary is amply provided with the current cam- pus jargon, if he's a back-slapper ex- traordinary, if he's an inveterate fre- quenter of certain local restaurants, and beer emporiums at the accepted hours, if he staggers -from the weight of his many offices and his pin-laden vest and above all if he's barely elig- ible or still better on probation; if he qualifies on all counts, his species is undeniable. Yes, he's undoubtedly a B.M.O.C.-a Big Man On Campus. A B.M.O.C. it is alleged is a menace to the common student, an exploiter of his pleasures, a symbol of the class struggle, a veritable campus dic- tator, with his following of underclass flunkies bowing. and applauding. He Loves Him Consider the monopoly he holds on campus activities as he bounds from meeting to meeting, chairman' of this and director of that, the ex- alted lord of student government, athletics, the Union and publications; the pace-maker of every campus ac- tivity-except the classroom which he condemns with righteous scorn. Upon the subject of his status of the B.M.O.C. and of extra-curricular activities there are two schools of t)ought, some believing with Dr. William A. Neilson president of Smith College that the campus is or -: li I' i i i i lI SELLIN i BARGAINS are still r Laura Belle Stock a breath-taking special people who missed it 1. Rogers Run-proof c every size and style. N