ESTABLISHED 1890 Y. Ar U :43 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. XXXVII. No. 28 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1926 EIGHT PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS CHARGES NEWSPAPER TQOK $35000 BRIBE IN OREGON ELECTION ALLEGE THAT KU KLUX KLAN MIXED IN ELECTIONS IN ISSOURI MC NARY CLOSES QUERY Senator King, Democrat, Utah, Sent To Arizona T Investigate FraudThere BULLETIN (By Associated Press) PHOENIX, Ariz., Oct. 28.-Sen- ato Ralph N. Cameron, Repub- Hlean, Arizona, whose charges that money was being sent iitq the state to defeat him for re- election led to the decision of Sen. James A. Reed to investigate Arizona's senatorial campaign ex- penditures, today telegraphed the Missouri senator that lie would suggest subpoenaing harry Cliand - ler of the Los Angeles Times, Will Irwin, novelist, and Steven T. Mather of the national park serv- ice, to appear at the hearing here Saturday night. (By Associated Press) PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 28.-Gossip overheard in the smoking compart- ment of a pullman car was the founda- tion of charges that $35,000 was paid to the Portland Morning Oregonian for opposing the canlidacy of Sen- ator Robert N. Stanfield of Oregon, it was developed today by Senator Char- les L. McNary of Oregon as he closed his investigation here into senatorial campaign expenditures in this state. . The information regarding the smoking room gossip came in a tle- gram from Water Hayes of Washing-, ton, D. C., former secretary to Pres- ident Roosevelt. * George Putnam, publisher of the Salem Capital Journal, who brought about the Oregon inquiry, testified yesterday that he had learned of the alleged $35,000 transaction in a con- versation with Hayes when the latter visited the Capital Journal offices at Salem. (By Associated Press) ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. 28.-Activities of the Ku Klux Klan in both state and national political affairs covered a wide range, the Senatecampaign funds committee was told here today by half a dozen members and former members of the hooded order. High points in the testimony in what Senator Reed, Democrat, Mis- souri, announced were the closing ses- sions of the three election investiga- tions into campaigns in eastern states, included: That high officials of the Klan inter- ested themselves in the election con- test from Minnesota and Iowa, involv- ing the Senate speech of Sen. Thomas D. Schall, Republican, and former Senaor Smith'W. Brookham*', Republi- can. That William S. Zumbrunn, general counsel for the Klan, and active di- rection of the camaig of Senator James E. Watson, Republican, Indiana, for renomination in the primaries last May. That Dr. Hiram W. Evahs, imperial wizard of the Klan, was deeply inter- ested in Watson's campaign and made a number of visits to Indiana for poli- tical conferences with Klan leaders. That William S. Zumbrunn is the legislative agent of the hooded order at Washington, looking after such matters as immigration restrictions legislation and the seating of senators. That $400 of Indiana Klan money was used to defray the expenses of In- diana Klan officials to Washington last December to discuss the appoint- ment of Pharles Orbison as corpor- ation ccunsel of Indianapolis. Senator Will Speak To Alumni Tonight MOIRE THAN THOUSAND ALUMNI TO ASSEMBLE] 'T NATIONAL BANQUET; SPECIAL TRAINS CARRY TEA3I AND GRADITATES PhIL ADE-PIIIA BAND, TO t Royal S. Copeland, '89M, United States Senator from New York and former mayor of Ann Arbor, who will speak at the National Mich- gan Alumni banquet at Philadelphia tonight. le will head the official delegation of alumni from Washing- ton. THOMAS BLACK GVS OR0ATORY TESTIMONIAL'I Detroit Attorney Provides F ndowment For Prizes For Contest On New Testament IS MICHIGAN GRADUATE Announcement of a new testimonial oratorical contest, to be known as the "Black New Testament Contest" wasi made yesterday by Prof. Richard D. T.l Hollister of the public speaking de- partment. The contest wil be endowed permanently to furnish prizes of $100 to the first place winner and $50 to the second place winner in addition to gold and silver medals. Thomas E. H. Black, '14L' Detroit attorney, has{ furnished the testimonial in apprecia- tion of the work which the public speaking department did for him while he was in school.I The contest will be conducted along4 Hines similar to those of the Atkin- son memorial contest. E. E. Fleisch- man .of the public speaking depart- ment will have charge of the New Testament contest this year and has announced that preliminary trials, open to any undergraduate student in good scholastic standing, will be held soon after the opening of the second' semester, while the final contest will be held about the middle of March. The speeches may be given on any. theme for which the substance is drawn from the New Testament; whether it be a discussion of char- eters, incidents, teachings, or religious ideails found there, or even a discus- sion of modern problems in the light of these teachings. Originality andj I sincerity, rather than fidelity to tradi- tional orthodoxy or religion, should govern the students' choices of sub- jects, in the opinion of Mr. Fleisch- man. The aim of the contest and of its founder is to stimulate interest in the New Testament scriptures on the part of college students. Speeches must not be over 1800 words in length and any students de- siring further information should see Mr. Fleischman at once. Hoover Puts Day On National Committee Edmund E. Day, dean of the School EX=GOVERNOR TO SPEAK Mayor Will Extend Welcome For Cityt At Official Ceremonies This Afternoon With special trains from Detroit,t Minneapolis, Pittsburg, Toledo, Cleve- land, Chicago, and Ann Arbor carry- ing alumni from their home cities, the1 committee which is arranging the Na- tional Michigan Alumnus dinner to- night at Philadelphia is looking for an attendance of more than 1,000. Thet last train left here yesterday after- noon, carrying the band and several University men: It will reach Phila- delphia this afternoon in time for its passengers to take part in the Michi- gan day festivities of the Sesqui-Cen-a tennial exposition. The Varsity band will entertain with a half-hour pro- grain this afternoon. Hon. W. Freeland Kendrick, mayor' of Philadelphia, will welcome the( Michigan visitors at the official state ceremonies near the Forum of the Founders at the exposition. Forrher Governor Chase S. Osborn will also speak at this time. At 7:30 this evening in the ballroom of the Bellevue-Stratford hotel, over 1,000 graduates of the University willj meet in their first national banquet since 1911. At this time, President Clarence Cook Little, Shirley W. Smith, secretary of the University, Robert A. Campbell, treasurer of the University and mayor of Ann Arbor, Senator Royal S. Copeland, President, James R. Angell of Yale, Edwin Denby, and several of the Regents will speak. Col. David J. Davis lieutenant-gover- nor of Pennsylvania, has been asked to officiate as toastmaster. Entertainment has been arranged by a committee of the University of Michigan Club of Philadelphia. The 1 Varsity band of 72 pieces will playa I during the dinner. Wives of those present will attend the banquet but Will occupy seats in the balcony of the ballroom, and will be served there. SSpecial trains will be ready early to-, morrow morning to take the alumni to Baltimore for the Michigan-Navy game. Dean Mortimer E. Cooley of the College of Engineering, left yesterday for Philadelphia to attend the alumni banquet and the football game at Baltimore Saturday. Both Dean Cooley and his son are graduates of the Naval academy and have been invited to a luncheon given by Admiral Nulton, superintendent of the academy. AMERICA MUST BE RESEARCH LEADER, WH ITE MAINTAINSl American Girl Is Hero When Quake Strikes Armenia, LEN INAKANT, Armenia, Oct. 2.-1 An American girl's heroism saved1 many lives in the great earthquake which devastated Armenia last Fri-I day night. Miss Edna Steiger, a, slender nurse from Williamsport, Pa., was sitting at a fire place talking with another American when a terrifying rumbling, like a stormy sea, was heard. She saw chimneys topple and the earth open, followed by the crash of collapsing walls and shill cries. The nurse thought only of her hos- pital at Kara Kilissa, four miles dis- tant, where she had left scores of crippled patients. She jumped into an automobile and speeded across the broken road. She reached the hospital, to find it partly in ruins. Against the entreating of her companion, she ran into the trembling buildings, and with the help of natives dragged out the terrified patients until all were re- moved. Then, learning that an Armenian nurse still remained within the totter- ing walls, she returned and carried her stricken Armenian associate to the threshold of the hospital and fell, fainting,*as the third quake leveled the structure to the ground. Miraculously she escaped the fall- ing debris, but her sister nurse was seriously injured. GILKEY WILL DISCUSS WHAT IS IN RELIGION METAL CUMBINATIONS WILL BE SUBJECT OF UNIVERSITY LECTURES SPEAKER, WILLIAM GUERTLER, IS WORLD FAMOUS METALLURGIST WILL SPEAK TWICE Lecture On "'The Corrosion Resistance Of Metals" Will Be Dedicated To Professor Campbell Dr. William Minot Guertler, director of the Metall-Instiut der Technischen Hochschule, Charlottenburg, Germany, will give two University lectures here Nov. 1 and 2. His first lecture will be dedicated to the late Prof. E. D. Camp- bell, head of the chemistry department who died last year, will be on "The Corrosion Resistance of Metals." The next day he will give "Systematic Pro- cedure in Establishing the Limits of the Utilization of Metal Combinations in Technical Practice."! Dr. Guertler is one of the Iest krawn metalurgists in the world. Af- ter his high school education, he stu- died at the Institute for Technology in Hanover and Munich, and at ther Universities of Munich and Gottingen. While at these latter institutions, he came under the influence of Profes- sor Tammann, the famous chemist. Upon receiving his doctor's degree in 1904, he became Tammann's assistant. In this capacity, he worked out, in cooperation with Tammann, the first constitution diagrams of binajy alloys. I I ,, . I' a 1 1 Former Regent Runs Against Fred Green WILLIAM A. COMSTOCK WILL BE SPEAKER ATnipAlf t,11011go 11AUser,'iAnu o ress-3 unuay Does Research Work Convocation, Spoke To Students After this, Guertler did research At Geneva Conference work of his own, in which he estab- lished the inherent laws by which the HORNBERGERTO PRESIDE properties of alloys are connected with the inner structure of the alloys.o According to word received yester- These studies brought him the honorI day from Dr. Charles W. Gilkey, of obtaining the "venia legendi" from day rom r. Carls 'X. Gikey the Technical Institute of Berlin. "What Is There In Religion?" is theTh In 1908, Dr. Guertler carme to the a subject which the Chicago minister United States and was appointed re- r has chosen for his address Sunday search professor at the Massachusetts morning in Hill auditorium. The serv- Institute of Technology, where het ices Sunday will comprise the fourth gave lectures until 1909. student convocation of the fall series. Several years later Guertler asso-1 Dr-Gilkey. has been in Ann Arbor ciated himself with the firm of thec several times and is well known to Leitz Optical company in Germany, for1 many Michigan men and women the constrUction of a large micro- through his talks at the student con- scope for use with metals.r ferences held at Lake Geneva, Wis., The next five years he devoted tot during the past three summers. He research work and to the writing of ar has served as university preacher at text book. In this connection, he stu-3 every leading university in the country died several hundred thousand pages and is continuing his addresses be- of printed matter of International for various college student bodies literature on the binary system of several times each year. Iron-Carbon, and sifted the result into In the opinion of Theodore Horn- a compilation of 1,000 pages. berger, '27, who arranged the convo- In 1911, he founded the Internation- i1 cations this fall, Sunday's speaker is al Journal of Metallography, which the most interesting of any who have had contributors from every country: addressed the student body this fall. prof. E. \D. d rnpbell, to whom Dr. During his stay in Ann Arbor, Dr. Guertler is dedicating this first lecture,' Gilkey will be the guest of Mr. and wrote many articles for this journal. Mrs. James Inglis of Baldwin avenue. Enters German Institute Hornberger will preside at the con- He entered the Metall-Institut der vocation Sunday. Robert Graham will Technischen Hochschule in 1914 and again be the soloist and Dalies Frantz assumed the, management of the in- will be at the organ. tenor equipment. That institution is i now the finest of its kind. DELA Y IN OPERA At present, Germany is interested in LL three newly developed inventions of POSTER EXHIBIT Guertler and his cooperators. They are: _ -first, a new aluminum alloy of higher Display of the winning posters for strength than duraliminum; second, "Front Page Stuff," the 21st annual a new kind of silver alloy showing the Union Opera, which was to have been mechanical properties of steel; andl made this week in the window of third, a very simple method of gaining Graham's store on State street, has Muntz metal directly from mixeds furen PShnUtI UriodU ita ores. MuINORA1I1, 1 1 EIIINI NOMINEE FOR GOVERNOR WILL, GIVE PUBLIC ADDRESS HERE TONIGHT BURKE WILL PRESIDE Candidate Is Graduate Of University In Class Of '99; Has Been Mayor Of Alpena William A. Comstock, '99, Democrat- ic choice.to oppose Mayor Fred Green of Ionia for the governorship, and for- merly a Regent of the University, will be the principal speaker at a public meeting and Democratic rally to be held at 8 o'clock tonight in the Armory, Fifth avenue and Ann street. William A. Comstock, '99, George J. Burke, 07L, Democratic Democratic candidate for governor nominee for the State Supreme court, of Michigan who will speak tonight and an Ann Arbor resident, will pre- at a public meeting in the Armory. side at the meeting, according to an Mr. Comstock, who has served as Re- announcement yesterday by George P. gent of the University in 1913-15, and Cantrell, '21L, secretary of the county as mayor of Alpena, is opposing Mayor Democratic committee. The guber- Fred Green of Ionia, Republican natorial nominee will be the only gubernatorial candidate. speaker, however. Mr. Comstock was born in Alpena, Michigan, and attended school there 41111D I flflN TO until he entered the University. After his graduation he succeeded to his father's interests in banking, mining, and railroad activities. He has been SPK HERE TONIGHT alderman and mayor of Alpena, and in 1922 directed the successful cam- paign of former Governor Ferris for A. D. Helser, Royal. Geographical senator, while he was chairman of the Society Fellow, 'Will Tell Ex. state central committee of the Demo- perlences In Lane Hall Talk cratic party. He was a member of the Board of Regents of the University WORKED AS MISSIONARY "rom 1913 to 1915, being appointed by the then Governor Ferris to fill a vacancy. He Is now one of Michigan's A. D. Helser, A. M., representative two representatives on the National at the Internati6nal Conference on Democratic committee. Africa, held last year in Belgium, will Have United Support speak to the Student Volunteer group Mr. Comstock, with Gerritt Masse- at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the Upper link of Big Rapids, were unanimously nominated by the State Democratic room at Lane Hall. .convention last spring to head the Mr. Ilelser is a Fellow of the Royal ticket in the elections this fall. Both Geographical Society of London, hav- were unopposed in the primary ele- ing been elected to the order in re- tions held in September and have the .{ support of the united Den Grati l " cognition of his wonk done in the ex- sypportnd the uasin i, plhration of North Central Africa, ty behind them. Mr. Masselik is,'at which he accomplished while doing present, vice-president of the Ferris misionary work in the heart ofthe The nominee for governor, beldes continent. His book "In Sunny Nigeria" is considered by critics a' being an alumfius, is an ardet sup- 'one of the best on exploration and mis- 'porter of the University, acording to sionary endeavor since the days of Horatio Abbot of Annh Aor, who is Livingston and Stanley. chairman of the State Democratic Mr. Helser is the first of a group of committee, and former postmaster. Ie internationally known missionaries wil make a rapid ktrip through the which the Student Volunteer group county this morning, speaking at Dex- plans to have speak here during the ter, Chelsea, Manchester, Bridgewater, year. Saline, and Milan in the morning and Thomas M. Iden director of the Ann afternoon, and returning to Ann Ar- Arbor Bible Chair, will present an- bor in time for the rally tonight. The other subject of special interest to candidate has spent most of his time, Sunday school workers in his class on thus far in the campaign, In Detroit "How Jesus Taught". "A Survey of and Wayne county and the trip to Ann Jewish History After Bible Times" Arbor is one Of the few journeys that will be studied by a class under the he has made outside of that district. direction of Rabbi A. K. Finkelstein, of (Mr. Burke, who will preside at the the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation in .meeting is a local 'attorney and well- Ann Arbor. 'known in State "Democratic circles. A course planned exclusively for' Shortly after leaving school here he young women will be given by Mrs. was a member of the State' con~tit- I Herbert S. Mallory. The class will tional convention that drafted the study the "Social Development of the present Stateonstitution. He is the Child." Mrs. Mallory is director of the Democratic nominee this year for the social service department of the Michi- vacancy on the bench of the Michigan I gan State Psychopathic hospital. Supreme court, for which office he will Two discussion courses have been oppose Justice Ernest Snow of Sagi- arranged. One to be led by Prof. John naw, who was appointed by Groesbeck, E. Kirkpatrick, recently of Olivet col- but who has the support of the Green lege will, be limited to 15 students Republican faction for the office. who will form a "Student Inquiry Fear General Apathy Group"; the other, which will be led The candidates fear the apathy of by men of the faculty and social or- the voters at the general election next ganizations in Ann Arbor, will dis- jTuesday and especially those in the cuss "The Boy, His Nature and Needs". out state districts, where there has been little campaigning or interest UNION ATTRACTS shown since the primaries nearly a month ago. That is one of the chief GREAT THRONGS, reasons for the visit which Mr. Com- Istock Is making to the county today. Both parties are afraid that there will r be less than 700,000 votes cast In the Facilities of the Union were taxed election, because the interest In the to their limit by the all day throngs campaign has lagged, geneilly, since - which crowded the building last Sat- the primaries. urday, according to statistics com- pleted yesterday by the department BROWN. P RINCETON in charge of Walter Kuenzel, '27E, -recording secretary. PROFESSOR, W In a full day check on the number LECTURE MONDAY - of persons using the Union, it was e found that 25,337 persons entered the I building from 8 o'clock in the morn- As the first of this year's lectures e ing until late at night. This total is for the seminar on "Moral Issues of , almost 12,000 more than the Minne- Modern Life,"= Prof. Philip Marshall s sota game record of two weeks ago. Brown, professor of international law t In addition to keeping an entrance at Princeton, will discuss the "Lau- k tally, the department checked other sanne Treaty and Our Relations With a Ibranches of the Union, each total the Near East" at 4:15 o'clock Mon- Y showing a large increase over the pre- day in Natural Science auditorium. Y vious week. Tap-room users amount- The seminar is given by the School of p ed to 2,186, while 1,477 were served tReligion. d dinners in the other dining rooms.1 Professor Brown has spent the r The swimming pool drew an enroll- I period since his graduation from Wil ment of 208, the billiard room 194, and liams college and Harvard university .. ,_ ----I --- . 1___ -1A0,,no fi na wih Ar..mm-,o+4 f I f j 1 t i jl 4. i ' , c . i , r E Prof. A. H. White, head of the chem- ical engineering department, ingad- dressing Iota Alpha, honorary grad- uate engineering society, last night, declared that the United States can I retain its superiority in the industrial world only by efhicient research work. America, asserted Professor White, has gained his high position in the world because of its great advantage in natural resources, and on account of the higher standard of intelligence of the American leaders and workers. Professor White expressed curiosity as to what the future might hold in store for America. The advantage in raw materials will not last long, he said, but scientific konwledge is in- creasing. "Will the curve of Ameri- can ascendancy go up or down?" ask-I ed Professor 'White. He emphasized the fact that the answer depends on those of the coming generation, who ean hold the advantage only by scien- been postponed for a snort peru ,L was announced yesterday by E. Mor- timer Shuter, Opera director. The postponement was caused through necessity of starting engrav- ing and printing work on the winning design, submitted by William Warriolt, '27, which will take at least 10 days. IAs soon as the engraving is complet- ed, the display will be held as pre- viously announced. Athens, Ga.,-University of Georgia has launched a campaign to wipe out child illiteracy in Georgia by 1930. HART. '30D. WINS CLASS PRESIDENCY Raymond A. Hart was elected pres- .ident -of the sophomore dental class by a margin of 13 votes over M. H. Launs- berry yesterday afternoon. Launs- berry was the only other presidential candidate. The remaining officers elected were: Harold Burke, vice-president; Victor Rein, treasurer; and H. S. Sheehan, secretary. 1 ST. LoUIS,' Ariz., Oct. 28.--Senator King, Democrat, Utah, was requested ,i Busiess Adminisration has ac- to-nightcresearch work inl tonight by Senator Reed, Democrat, cepted the invitation of Secretary of well as pure sciences. Missouri, chairman of the Senate Commerce Herbert Hoover to act on camp~aign funds committee, to prioced an advisory committee to cooperatet at once to Arizona to investiga e with the domestic commerce division 'DR. M ANSF1I charges of excessive expenditures in of the department of commerce. TIHAT the senatorial campaign in that state. The object of the committee is to Senator Reed's telegram was in re- establish closer contact between the sponse to one from Senator King, say- department of commerce and the field (By Associated ing that he was holding himself in of trade and commerce, to render bet- LONDON, Oct. 28. readiness to conduct the inquiry as ter service to the businessman and the with Mars may be not a member of the campaign funds com- public, and to advise the domestic all, for Dr. Mansfield R mitte. , commerce division in its efforts to don attorney, who bee. The Missouri senator had previously eliminate waste in distribution. Dean ist years ago, declares telegraphed to Senator McNary, Re- Day's position on the committee re- friend in Mars, Ooma publicn, Oregon, asking that he make quire his presence in Washington at from whom he has re the investigation if possible after the intervals. and who has kept hi Portland, into the Oregon senatorial what is going on in conclusion he now is conducting at -i pB N wplanet. campaign Ar l yIe i Now he knows the Requests for an inquiry into the sen-1 Lc Ytimately he asserts, atorial contest in Arizona betwen Sen- If Features Alumnus of whatthey look like, ator Ralph H. Cameron, Republican, ---reat and can vouch fe the applied as ELD ROBINSON, LONDON ATTORNEY, CLAIMS HE HAS COMMUNICATED WITH PEOPLE OF MARS r r Press) Oomaruru, presumably in reply, while f -Communicating f he was being interviewed relative to thing new after the failure of other persons to get Robinson, a Lon- into touch with Mars last night. He ame a telepath- declared that astronomers have only s that he has a themselves to blame as, "they simply ruru, a woman, do not know how to play the Martian'sI ceived messages game." im informed of As to Oomaruru's latest communica- the mysterious tion, the attorney remarked: "Oomaruru is a particular friend of Martians so in-'the director of Mars' largest wireless as to be aware station . He has just explained to me , and what they why only the sign, 'MM'came through or the fact that last evening. He said that, as their of last night-"Opestinipitia Secom ba"-for mere mortals here, for hi said, "Oomaruru surely understands.' From his knowledge, which he avows was received from Mars itself Dr. Robinson described the Martian. as people from seven to eight fee tall, with large ears, a wealth of blacl hair and almond eyes, giving them ai -Oriental caste of features. Not onl; do they drink tea and smoke, but the; have automobiles which hop and ski over the ground, and almost fly, an the stiffer the wind blows, the faste the car goes. c r E 3 r