ESTABLISHED 1890 Jr ItV 4. aIM IMEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. XL. NO. 174. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1930 EIGHT PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS CIlTY WILL HONOR AMERlA'S HEROESt I TRIBUTETODAY Day's Celebration to be Opened with Military Parade at 10 O'clock. PILOT OBSERVES PREMIER FLIGHT HOBBS SPEAKER OF DAY Storms Cause Airship AIRPLNE PINEERSto Delay ScheduledVAU OFMTR' TO RETRAE T Over Cuban Port' USINESS LA RS (yAssociated Press) B1 HAVANA, Cuba, May 29-Wireless riifli-r messages from the Graf Zeppelin OF FL IN night indicated tat the big ar ship might cancel her scheduled flight over Cuba and skip the stop Glenn Curtiss to Fly Over Area at Havana. They said the Zeppe- Motor Magnate Reiterates View Covered in Box-kite Plane an was encountering heavy storms That Industry Depends ont Coveed n Bx-kie Pane and was delayed many hours. Twenty Years Ago. The messages were received by Men of 55 or More. - Louis Classing, general manager of TAFT LAUDED FIRST TRIP the Hamburg American line here. PRAISES MODERN YOUTH, They added that Dr. Hugo Eckener, To Fly Luxurious 20-Passenger commandr of thehe rthi old Contends That Youth and Age Liner From New York would head directly for Lakehurst Have Mutual Need for to Albany. and New York instead of stopping' Each Other.' jat Havana. (By Asscuated ess The Cuban visit was referred to (By Associated Press) ALBANY, N. Y., May 29.-Twenty as a "detour" on the trip from Per- ,DETROIT, May 29.--Henry Ford years ago today Glenn Curtiss nambuco to Lakehurst. believes "more than ever" that' made an "incredible flight" from' business and industry must de- Albany to New York City in an !1 airplane which resembled a box REPend on the leadership of men of, kite. Tomorrow, at the control of;CImature years. He told the Associ- a luxurious 20 passenger plane he ;'ated Press today that he found no' wi l retragt 20 years ago occasion to change his previously Bny2 his fl ndht2 measgomdeexpressed opinion that if all men in 2 hours and 32 minutes, Mr. ____I Curtiss won a prize of $10,000 post- of 55 years and older were remov- ed by the New York World. In the Literary College Students Can ed from industry "there would not' i t i t I Varsity and High School Bands Will Furnish Music for March. City-wide tribute will be paid to the honored dead throughout Ann Arbor today in observance of the annual Memorial to America's heroic soldiery. Over a dozen mili- tary units, including more than 1,000 men, will be included in the parade at 10 o'clock which will open the day's celebrations. Major Basil D. Edwards, com- mander of the University R. O. T. C. unit, will lead the large mili- tary assembly in its tour' of the city, aid will act as marshall of the day. Major Edwards will be as- sisted by two division command- ers, Major Ralph Loveland and Captain Carroll Powell. Each of these men will led a section of the parade on its march. Veterans to Parade. Forming at 10 o'clock in frontofI the Armory, the parade will in- clude all available veterans of the three recent wars in uniform, Boy Scouts, and other patriotic organi- zations in the city. Two bands, the University varsity organization and therAnniArbor highoschool unit, Mwirll furnish music for the march'I which will proceed west from the Armory to Main street, then south to Packard and' from there to; White street where the parade haltat triangular park. In case of #in; the parade will finish its tour at' Yost Field house where the scheduled speeches will be given. #or. MH. H obbs, of the geology dertment, has been selected as the speaker of the day. The re- mainder of the program is in charge of Justice Bert E. Fry, chairman 'of the Memorial day committee of Erwin Prieskorn post, No. 46, of the American Legion, the or anization sponsoring 'the cele- bration. Invocation will be given by Rev R. N. McMichael, pastor of Trinity Lutheran church, and chaplain of the Legion. Lawrence C. Leever, commander of the local pest, will give a short address, and the program will be closed by Rev. Allen J. Babcock, assistant at St. Mary's Roman Catholic chapel for students Community singing is scheduled, and Will be under the direction of Capt. W. Trevithick, of the Salvation Army. G. A. R. Veterans to Drive. First in the parade will be Com- panies I and K' of the Michigan National guard, headed by Capt. Philip C. Pack. Civil War veterans will follow the Guard unit in an automobile while the official car of the city will be next in line in this division. University R. O. T. C. atudents and the Michigan band will conclude thefirst unit of the parade. The secoid division will include, Veterans of the Spanish-American War, the American Legion, and the women's auxiliaries of the various patriotic units. In the third dvi- sion, which will be led by the An Arbor high school band, members of the Boy Scouts, Sea Scouts, Girl Scouts, and other civic organiza- tions will march. Detroit.Man Killed in Saline Accident; Two Seriously Hurt Russell Doyle, 14030 Glenwood Ave., Detroit, was fatally injured, and his wife, Faye Doyle, and a borther-in-law, Eldred Paddock, are in University hospital in a crit- ical condition as the result of an automobile crash which occurred late last night on U. S. route 112 about two miles east of Saline. The acident took place, it was reported, when Richard V. Ma- loney, 6536 Lakewood Ave., Chica- go, driving east, slowed down his car to avoid smashing into an au- tomobile that had suddenly stopped 4cc : Vc )" " :}"" '' 3 tI i , jI 1 i 1 ,i . ; I r I I 7 'FORDCHAMPIONS BADGERS TO MEET SAGE IN INDUSTRYWT i TMRW VVULI LU I UlDi lIIIUVV ONFRYIIMN Associated Press Photo Glenn H. Curtiss, Who today observes the twen-- tieth anniversary of his flight from Albany to New York in a box kite plane by piloting a modern 20-' passenger air,mliner over the same route.! ANGUIN TO PPEAR IN WILOE'S 0DRAMA Role in, Lady Windemere's 'Fan'1 Is Rated Her Outstanding l Comedy Achievement. I AMY LOOMIS IN CAST Entering the second week of the I Dramatic Festival at the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre, Margaret An-- glin will appear as Mrs. Erlynne in "Lady Windemere's Fa~n." Written' b y Oscar Wilde, "Lady Windemere's Fan" is ranked by metropolitan cri- tics as'Miss "Anglin's outstanding achievement inmodern comedy. In addition to playing the star role,1 11Miss ,Angln has also personlly di-" rected the "entire production. "Lady Windemere's Fan" opens Monday night, June 2, and plays every night next week with three matinees at 3:15 o'clock on Wednesday, Thurs- day and Saturday.{ In support of Miss Anglin in "Lady Windemere's Fan," Ains- worth Arnold will appear as her! philandering lover, Lord Augustus Horton. Mr. Ainsworth took the= part of Creon this week in the "An-] tigone". Amy Loomis is cast as Lady Windemere; Lewis McMichael as' Lord Windemere; and Robert Hen- derson as the third member of the1 triangle, Lord Darlington. Lillian Bronson will appear in the famous comedy role of the Duchess of Ber- wick, and Claire St. Claire will take her daughter, Lady Agatha Carlylse. Other members of the cast will in- elude Victor Adams as Hopper;1 James Trent and Edward Powell as f Cecil Graham and Dumby; Eliza-] beth Whittier, Richard Kurvink, Marjory Field, Sylvia Adams and Edward Fitzgibbons. "Lady Windemere's Fan" is a complete contrast to the "Antig- one," and will present the entire Dramatic Festival company in a completely new light. While the "Antigone" is poetic melodrama in the classic style, "Lady Windemere's Fan" is a light modern drawing- room comedy, filled with beautiful Imodern gowns and sparkling ret partee. It is plentifully filled with the brilliant epigrams which have made Oscar Wilde famous. S"LadyWindemere'sFan" will mark Miss Anglin's final week with the Dramatic Festival company. She will be followed during the week of June 9 with John McGowan's pop- ular comedy of back-stage life, "Ex- cess Baggage," with Togo the orig- inal "slide-for-life" artist. SOCIETY TO HOLD ANNUAL MEETING Members of the Washtenaw His- toricalsociety have been notified of the annual meeting of the society to be held at 7:45 o'clock Monday night in room 3024 of the Univer- sity Museums building. Reports and elections. of officers will be laid before the meeting, as I well as committees. Dr. Carl Guthe, director of the museum of an- thropology in the, university mu- seums is president of the society. and Geneva Smithe, secretary of the mnsem ig s eietarv-tras- Henry Ford, Automobile king, who yesterday# big cabin plane tomorrow he will f Avoid Rush by Classifying; 4 be brains enough left to carry on." told the Associated Press that he be flying for no prize but will make' Office Open Next Week. Not Reflection on Youth found no occasion to change his the trip, probably, in a little over " ssnrti former contention that the exis- an horp PAlI E TI This is no reflection upon the tence of modern industry depends' an hour. PLAN IS NEW THIS YEAR youth of today," he said, "I think t en o of men of Trip Created Excitement. that while they are different, to- on the retention of men of 55 His first flight created much ex- "Over one half of the students I day's youngsters are a fine lot and years and older as leaders nbus-, -i t1h h N Hress enterprise. citemnent. with the New York -ex- are decidedly not headed. for per- _________ Times running a special train over in the literary college who are ex- odtiodeoreover, they have great- the New York Central track to pected to return next fall have er opportunity today than the 0 keep pace with him and eager on- registered for their next semester's youth of 40 or 50 years ago." -H lookers lining the river for miles. classes," stated Prof. Daniel L. Mr. Ford was asked whether he Ion Ne York according to aRich, in charge of classification. jhad always conceded the wisdom c o u n t a tk t h er d n g t i m ei c , i t h eg eoro o fs ifto p sn . a d l w a s tn cwi l lh e iav o i d c u naa tg r e atme t hd e a l t o so fI tu n-la v o do fg ra g e.a l fNu -B IGag .T E N GTT EMN.T ESI S were swarmed with people. Te "twlavdagrtda fun "You did not think that back in World said "they saw Curtiss fly certainty waiting and standing in 1894 when you began tinkering down the river like a flash, faster line if the students who expect to with your horseless carriage, did than any bird and with strength return next fall classify now. The you?" Rexinger, Curtis, Yutzy, Turner and equipose comparable to that of fice will be open for that purpose "I always had older men for ' Clash in Race for Net an' eagle. one more week, closing Saturday friends and I always went to them Title at Chicago. William Howard Taft, then pres- for advice. I could cite them one __ ident, said this flight will live students to get into the sections after another. Oldhmen understood MICHIGAN MEN BEATEN the gnrtest. mIhat they desire, since 76 sections- my idea bette than young men _ in the various departments have did. With mature years, I realized 'Ry Associated Press) Although Mr. Curtiss made two been closed already and many i more and more thevalue of that CHICAGO, May 29.-Captain stops on his-' first flight, one atotesaefligu. advice. I .realized that in my youth' ,others are filling up.p~ Rexinger of Chicago, and Cu~tis of Gll's Farm' near Poughkeepsie and EryI hadn't 1Nowwetrnkeilmetind l a e u ex aly classi iatiolahelps the de -1hnt uegnedehohr ''Nor thwstern, will meet ri i oe )artments arrtaing6their-schedles "ot n g nedec te, way, he will fly tomorrow without for the next year; the number ofs Mr. Ford went on., "Youth must semi-finals match of the Big Ten a stop from Albany to Governor's enrollments shows whether more look to age for its°education, and tennis championships tomorrow Island, which he will circle before sections will be needed or not. age educates youth because youth morning, and Yutzy of Minnesota going to Valley Stream, Long Is- Professor Rich requests students; interests it. and Turner of Illinois will clash in land, to land at the Curtiss field finding conflicts in the different Youth Needs Restraint. Three other planes will accompany departments report them to him Referring again to the need of the othe. him F at once, so that they may be cor-i mature minds in industry, Mr. The quartet today fought their Flight Shors Contrast. rected at once. IFord said: "Young men from 301 way through the first two rounds The fight tomorrow will be one "This is the first time we have years on are the best executives-I i to reduce the original field of fif- of contrast. The bamboo has given tried early classification," said mean they are well fitted to carry teen players. Rexinger defeated way to featherweight metal and Professor Rich in concluding, "It i out the plans of an organization balsa wood. The rubberized cloth tc has been optional this year, but we but the best plans originate in old- Heleniak of Minnesota in his sec- doped fabric and the engine has .have been very satisfied with the er heads. The best parts of a young ond round, 1-6, 6-4, 10-8, after elim- become free with a thousand horse results." executive's experience may be the inating'Fay of Purdue, 6-2, 1-6, 6-0 power at the reach of the throttle jway he is held back by the wiser in the first round. Yutzy elimin- The art of flying, to a great de-j G. plans of older heads. There can be ated Brayton of Northwestern 6-1, gree, reposes in a board full of Proessors to G ve an excess of action and insuffi- 6-2, and defeated Paul Stagg of instruments and the accomplish- . ciency of wisdom. Between them, Chicago, in the second 8-6, 8-6.1 ments of aero-dynamic engineers. Testimony on LDrugs youth and maturity provide both"' Courtis drew a first round bye The progress of flying in its twc .rAsked whether one hundred per and moved in the semi-finals by decades ' appears to advantage ii or Senate Inquiry cent education would not result in taking a long hard battle from the carrying capacity of Curtiss one hundred per cent demand for Okerbloom of Ohio State, 11-9, 1-6, original ship and that of the trans- Two members of the faculty of "white collar jobs" with none de- 6-4, while Turner scored victories port making tomorrow's flight. Th( the pharmacology department of j siring to do the less pleasant tasks, over Brown of Ohio State and Siegel ship used in the first flight stag- the medical school, Dr. C. W. Ed- Mr. Ford said: "It is a fortunate of Wisconsin. Brown fell by scores gered under the weight of its pilot: munds and Dr. Erwin E. Nelson, thing, perhaps, that we never can of 6-2, 6-0, and Siegel by 6-1, 6-4. three planes will carry 50 persons. have recently accepted an invita- be 100 per cent educated, or any- Other first round results, Hele- A luncheon by the Albany Chai~. tion from the United States Senate thing else. Constantly changing niak'defeated Hammer of Mich- ber of Commerce will be given committee on the department of: conditions and a striving for bet- igan, 6-2, 2-6, 6-4. Curtiss before his departure. At- agriculture to come to Washington ter things answers that question." Stagg, Chicago, defeated Brace, tending the luncheon and accomn- and testify before a hearing to be Michigan, 8-6, 6-2. paning him on. the flight will be conducted by the Senate committee CRESSEY SPEAKS 'Siegel, Wisconsin, defeated White, several of those active in his firs" into certain illegitimate practicesCn New York flight.-in regard to drugs alleged to the ON FUTURECHINA Purdue, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4. department of agriculture. Drs. Ed-Ob lom -4ae- at BUSINESS GROUP munds and Nelson will appear be- Believes Country Will Never Be 'Bauh, Wisconsin 6-46-2 WILL MEET HERElndfo e the committeenextTWiedesday Industrially Great. DR. STORER PLANS For some time charges have. been "That China will ever become a WORK IN ZOOLOG Y Varied Program Arranged for made against the department of' _. Alumni Conference. agriculture, one of these specifi - great industrial country appears! cially declaring that this depart- I rather doubtful to me, declared Dr. Tracy I. Storer, professor of More than one hundred are ex- ment, which is in charge of drugs George Babcock Cressey, recent fonga AgrieUtur fmty av-s pected to attend the second annual by the provisions of the Pure Food professor at Shanghai University, i Calif., is spending several days in alumni conference of the school of and Drug Act, was countenancing Shanghai, China, in his lecture 'Ann Arbor working on the' amphi- businnss admitistration tomorrow,ature into the United "Nature's Gifts to China," which bian and reptilian collection at the which is to include group discus- ifro aueit h ntdUiest uem ecmst sions of business problems, lunch- States, as well as their dissemina- he delivered last evening in the Na-, UnnvArbor m s hingon, D.. eon at the Union, attendance at the tion throughout the country. These tural Science auditorium. Ann Arbor from Washington, D.C., h ghe nscn a ta~eecharges culminated in an article "China," said the lecturer, "is, in- wher he has bee ndongwoko Michigan-Wisconsin baseball game.chrecumntdianatce "hnsidheltrrii- a similar nature in the national and a banquet where Dr. Edmund, entitled "Profiteering in Poisons" deed, rich in coal deposits, but it museums. E. Day, Director of the Social written by Senator Wheeler, which takes more than coal to build in- Dr. Storer, who has done con- Science Division of the Rockefeller appeared in a recent issue of Plain dustry." These coal deposits were siderable work in the vertebrate Siendaincneome enoJTl magazine. It was as a result I explained by Mr. Cressey as bein olog oki h t onatoadfre eno zoology field, recently presented a the business administration school, of this article that the Senate com- of third importance among those papey iewdrCtybreda will bsek adinstaijshol mittee ordered the investigation. iof the world. The factor on which paper in New York City before a The program opens with a gen- The two local pharmacologists the speaker based his opinion that m er sesionrat theBnsst A n- were invited to appear, since for: China would never become noted in logists, which Dr. Lee R. Dice, cur- istration building, where the alumni several years they have been fairly a manufacturing way was that she ator of Mammals of Michigan mu- ill bwlcomed and the even closely associated with certain is so decidedly lacking in iron ore. seum of zoology, attended. While of the conference explained, phases of the work of the agri- Both coal and iron, according to in Ann Arbor Dr. Storer will be Group discussions will begin at cultural department. Mr. Cressey, are essential to in_ the guest of Dr. Dice. Golock dinsthoni. Mbe s at dustrial progress. 10 o'clockin the morning. Members China's output of antimony and Wisler Plans Summer of the busisess admistration fac- gten does, however, rank as ulty leading the various groups and , eat e M ai third in the world, it was explain- of Research in North their topics are: Prof. Merwin H. ! -- _ -Wh leima eh n mak Wisconsin to Seek Revenge for This Year's Only Defeat in Big Ten Circles. BEST LINE-UPS TO PLAY Compton to Hurl for Michigan; Farber or Somerfield to be Box Choice for Visitors. By Joe Russell. Thirsting for 'revenge after the 10-4 surprise drubbing which Coach Fisher's varsity nine handed them last Saturday at Madison, a band of determined Badger baseball players will, invade Ferry Field at 2:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon. The Wolverine victory last week was a severe blow to the Badgers, who had expected to cinch the title at the expense of Michigan, and the invaders will have to win tomorrow to claim the championship. Championship at Stake. With so much hanging in the balance Wisconsin is sure to pre- sent its strongest line-up here and will bend every effort toward humbling the only team which has defeated them in Big Ten competi- tion this season. Up to the time of the Michigan game last week the Badgers had won seven straight contests, and needed only one more win to gather in the laurels which the Maize and Blue won last sea- son. This victory they expected to take from thei'r opponents, who had compiled anything but an im- posing record, but as so often. the case advance dope did not seem to bother Coach Fisher's crew and they pounded Farber and Sommer- field hard far 14 hits and 10mruns. Compton May Pitch. The Wqlverines seemed to find their batting eyes against Wiscon- sin, and the game with Cincinnati Wednesday. sharpened . he u .up. considerably. As a result, the set- to tomorrow appears to be some- thing of a toss-up, with the never- say-die spirit of a Michigan team pitted against a powerful club. Compton, who let the Badgers down with but seven hits last week will in all probability be given a chance to show his wares again. He has been pitching consistent ball all year, but his performance against Wisconsin was by far the best exhibition he has turned in. PROBABLE LINE-UPS. Michigan Butler, rf. Superko, 3b. Tompkins, cf. Hudson, lb. Straub, lf. Myron, .ss. Truskowski, c. Daniels, 2b. Compton, p. Detroiters Wisconsin Winer. cf. Matthusen, 3b. Poser, If. Ellerman, 2b. Mittermeyer, rf. Griswold, c. Schneider, 1b. Werner, ss. Farber or Sommerfield, p. Charge New Commissioner Violated Own Code (By Asoiated Press) DETROIT, Mich., May 29.-Less than twelve hours after Mayor Charles Bowles had. discharged John M. Bischoff as commissioner of buildings and safety engineer- ing, and tendered the. appointment to Joseph T. Wolff', it was revealeA tonight the new appointee is fac- ing charges of violating the city building code he was named to en- force. Wolff is charged in the complaint filed by the department of build- ings and safety engineering with a violating the city code in failing ! to place masonry between the first floors and ceilings of basements in five houses he built. The new com- missioner secured a temporary. in- junctionrestraining the building's department from interfering with completion of the houses in que§- tion, but a hearing on the petition for a permanent injunction is pend- ing. He said tonight he would seek to have the cases quashed. Mayor Bowles said tonight his in- vestigation of Wolff's fitness for the 2 commissionership had not revealed the charges pending against him and that he knew nothing about them.