Thle Weather Light Snow today; tomorrow cloudy. Not much change in temperature. Yl e IjEtfr igan BIaitt Editorials A New Danger... Who Will Debunk The Debunkers?.. . VOL. XLVI No. 73 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1936 I PRICE FIVE CENTS t Varsity Is Victorious In Hockey Michigan Team Outplays ilderton Athletic Club To Win,91 Vic Heyliger Makes 5 Goals, 4 Assists Fisticuff Display Featured As Climax To Smith. Given Tussle By FRED BUESSER Completely outplaying a Canadian hockey six which failed to live up to the reports of its own publicity de- partment, Michigan's Varsity hockey team overwhelmed the Ilderton Ath- letic Club, 9-1, at the Coliseum last night in a game which was dis- rupted in the second period by a free for all fight which featured Bert Smith and Joe Given in an old- fashioned pummeling match. The fracas started when Smith and Given began to rough it up in the Wolverine defensive territory. Smith landed on Given's schnozz in a pure- ly defensive move and as both boys went down on the ice, Given's brother leaped on Smith. Players from both teams joined in as substitutes flocked out on the ice to get into action. Referee Paddy Farrell worked his way into the melee and grabbing the orig- inal belligerents by the scruff of the neck, broke up a riotous scene which had spectators howling with glee. Both Given and Smith were given minor penalties and the game was resumed without further trouble. Heyliger .Leads Scoring Vic Heyliger, Michigan's Concord flash, once again led the Wolverine scoring parade, figuring in each of the nine goals Eddie Lowrey's men piled up. Five goals and four as- sists were Heyliger's modest scoring aggregate as he wove in and between a pathetically weak Ilderton defense to give Goalie Chapman a very un- happy night plucking pucks out of the twine. Chapman, however, played a good game in goal and robbed Mich- igan of at least four other scores when he smothered shots from the sticks of Berryman and Heyliger. The Ilderton team played indif- ferent hockey during the first period while Michigan, starting with a rush rammed in five goals to get off to 'a comfortable lead. The crowd was scarcely settled in its seats when Heyliger skated around the defense to take Captain Larry David's pass in the clear and blaze the first counter of the game past Goalie Chapman's leg. Fabello Gets Tally Fabello, who played a great part of the game at his old wing position. got the second tally of the game when he drove a hard shot past Chapman from just inside the red line. Hey- liger made the play. Berryman scored twice on beautifully executed passing plays between himself and Victor as the Ilderton defense was caught napping. The Michigan defense ws air tight throughout the game. °David, Smith, and Simpson took turns bouncing Ilderton forwards who as- saulted the Michigan goal. Ilderton lacked speed and this, more than any- thing else, accounted for their com- plete rout as time after time. they were left behind when the Wolverine forwards broke down the ice. The lone Ilderton counter came in the first period when Robson took a pass from Keen and looped a shot from the red line that passed Low's right arm. Lowrey made frequent substitutions throughout the second and third pe- riods as Griggs, Simpson, and Fa- bello alternated with the starting sextet. Irving Shalek played goal for the major portion of the third period and turned in a creditable per- formance although he had no diffi- cult saves. Michigan scored three goals in the second period to lead 8-1 and con- tented themselves with a lone tally in a rather dull third stanza., Hauptmann Seeks To Go Before Court TRENTON, N. J., Jan. 8.-(P)- Gov. Harold G. Hoffman said tonight that Bruno Richard Hauptmann had ..,,, f A n , n n rin f_ n nn~~ Roosevelt Had Premonition Of Supreme Court RulingOn AAA Dr. Max Feet, Adviser Un Birthday Ball, Reveal: Talk With President By FRED WARNER NEAL The revelation that Presiden Robsevelt anticipated with certaint b the 6-3 Supreme Court decisio against the AAA as long ago a Thanksgiving, was made last nigh by Dr. Max M. Peet of the Medica School. Lunching with the President in Washington, Dr. Peet said the Chie Executive told him that he "expected the 6-3 decision" declaring the adt unconstitutional. Dr. Peet, one o0 the four medical advisors at the President's Birthday Ball Commis- sion on Infantile Paralysis, was one of a group of medical men conferring with President Roosevelt at the White House at the time. Shortly after that, Dr. Peet had a long, intimate talk with him at Warm Springs, Ga., home of the President's Infantile Paralysis Hospital. Dr. Peet, who has won wide recog- nition as a surgeon, said he found the President "exceedingly cheerful and quite certain the Democrats will win the coming election." President Roosevelt is a splendid character who doesn't put on a bit of dog," declared Dr. Peet, who is a Republican. During the Christmas vacation Prof. John L. Brumm, chairmn of the journalism department, also talked to President Roosevelt. At- tending the Eighteenth Annual Con- vention of the American Association of Schools and Departments of Jour- nalism in Washington, Professor Brumm was one of a group that in- terviewed the President. Speaking chiefly of his relations with Washington newspapermen, President Roosevelt told the journal- ism professors that he had hardly Local Jackson Day Program Held At Union Mrs. McDonald Criticizes Editorial Attacks Before Young Democrats Criticizing certain American news- papers for their adoption of an edi- torial policy inconsistent with what appears on their financial pages, and defending every phase of the New Deal, Mrs. Christine McDonald, vice- chairman bf the State Democratic Committee spoke before 150 Demo- crats assembled at the Union last night celebrating Jackson Day, sponsored by the Young Democrats' Club. "Readers of many of our American newspapers must find it amusing to read of our nation's prosperity so clearly shown on the financial pages and then turning to the editorial page find articles condemning the very policies that gave birth to this evident prospeity," declared Mrs. McDonald. Discussing the recent decision of the Supreme Court invalidating the AAA, Mrs. McDonald pointed out that the farmer's opportunity to produce at a fair return is gone af- ter the previous legislation had lifted him out of his poverty. "Henry Ford stops manufacturing his quota of automobiles when he knows he can't sell them," Mrs. McDonald cited, "and naturally one cannot expect the farmer to continue. producing when he knows much of his produce will be pure waste." Former Governor William A. Comstock spoke next and made the plea in his talk for better harmony and unification in the Democratic Party in Michigan. "When the Democratic Party took over the state in 1933, after years of being a minority party, numerous po- litical 'big heads' appeared in Lans- ing seeking jobs and certain grants which were refused. Disgruntled, these same individuals deserted the party and became enemies," he said. House To Vote On Bonus Bill Friday WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. - (P) - House consideration tomorrow with a vote probable Friday today was assured cash bonus legislation. The rules committee gave the right of way on the floor to the full pay- ment bill backed by the big-three veterans' organizations. It will be called up tomorrow and allowed four hni-,ofLyna1 debnate. a any difficulty with the correspond ents and that, with few exceptions S they respected his confidences, Pro fessor Brumm related. The Chie Executive said the main trouble cam when Washington dispatches were t edited by the home office of a news y paper to aid its editorial policy, ac- n cording to Professor Brumm. s The President holds two press con- t ferences a week, and the most seriou 1 betrayal he has ever had, he told Professor Brumm and the other z journalism teachers, was when a re- f porter took a short hand account of some off-the-record statements and this paper published it on the front page. The President's pressconfer- ences are very informal, Professor Brumm related, the reporters verbal- ly asking the President questions which they have not previously sub- mitted. Professor Brumm and his col- leagues chatted informally with (Continued on Page 2) Coughlin Aims Attack On New Bankino Laws Radio Priest To File Suit To Test Constitutionality Of Federal Reserve Act WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. -(R) - Shaping a new assault on bankers, Father Charles E. Coughlin an- nounced today he would file suit to test the constitutionality of the Fed- eral Reserve Act. The Detroit radio priest told re- porters after a 20-minute visit with President Roosevelt that the purpose of his court action was an attempt "to refer to Congress and to the people control over money." He described his talk with the Pres- ident as "purely social" and not con- cerned with whether he would sup- port Mr. Roosevelt in the coming elec- tion as he did in 1932. "We just avoided that subject," Coughlin said. The priest added, however, that he did not "intend to keep aloof from the next presidential campaign," but would center his fire on the congres- sional elections. In New York, Senator Thomas (Dem., Okla.), said he was advising the priest on the litigation, asserting that recent Supreme Court decisions, particularly in the Panama Refin- ing Co. case and Schechter Poultry case (NRA) have cast "strong doubt on the Reserve Act." Thomas is a leader of Senate inflationists. "Congress has the right to coin and issue money," Coughlin told report- ers. "I can't find anywhere in the Constitution that it may delegate that right without restrictions." He added that 99 per cent of all money was privately owned and con- trolled. Federal Reserve Board officials ex- pressed little concern over the im- pending suit, one spokesman assert- ing that "the act has been tested several times and came through, each time, with flying colors." In the coming elections, Coughlin said his National Union for Social Justice would "try to get those men out of Congress who do not agree with the Union." Fail To Create Substitute For AAA Machinery WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. - UP) The White House and a Congress committe mulled over the AAA prob- lem today without finding a substi- tute plan for the farm machinery in- validated by the Supreme Court. Two developments served to break lightly the paralysis that the court's AAA ruling had cast on the farm administration. In a formal an- nouncement the AAA said it inter- preted the decision as not affecting marketing agreements, orders or li- censes urider the Adjustment Act. Secondly, reflecting its belief that Monday's decision did not determine the question of refunding processing taxes already collected, the Govern- ment telegraphed all United States attorneys to leave in status quo in-, junction suits involving that point. The government awaits a supremel court ruling on a challenge of the validity of an amendment prohibit- ing the filing of such suits. The challenge was made in eight cases I- S, 'f to Morgan Tells Of Arms Deal' With England f e Great Britain Contracted To Take Output Of U.S. Plants, Financier States s Appears In Senate r In Munitions Quiz Morgan Group Sold Allies $363,000,000 Before America Entered War WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. - (P) - The virtual wartime operation of sev- eral American rifle factories by the British government, after negotia- tions which found J. .P. Morgan sit- ting down with the British war coun- cil, was revealed today by the Senate Munitions Committee. The arms companies concerned. it was testified, were Winchester and Remington. In addition, Committee investiga- tors disclosed that the State Depart- ment, with the 1916 election ap- proaching, withheld from publication for three weeks a British note re- ceived in the course of the con- t'oversy over 1ritish interference with American commerce. Evidence to this effect was brought out during the protracted sessions today, with J. P. Morgan and sev- eral of his partners on the witness stand for the second consecutive day. Banking Interests Involved Both Morgan and Daniel W. La- mont, one of the partners, testified that important banking interests stood to lose heavily unless the rifle contract settlements were satisfac- tory. On thesenbanks, it was tes- tified, they depended for floating a contemplated British loan of $300,- 000,000. The rifle contract provided a high spot in a day which produced evi- dence that companies in which Mor- gan was interested sold the Allies $363,000,000 worth of goods before the United States entered the war. In all, as purchasing agent for the Allies, the Morgan company engi- neered the purchase of $3,000,000,000 of goods for the Allies at commission of $30,000,000. In the matter of rifle contracts, Morgan, on Sept. 18, 1916, wired his British representatives to communi- cate to British authorities a message which counseled against canceling rifle contracts because of possible ef- fects on British financial operations in this country. Stephen Raushenbush, committee investigator, contended that this amounted to a "threat" to the British that unless the rifle contracts were satisfactorily settled, support for the coming loan would be withdrawn. Concede Weight Of Contracts Neither Morgan nor Lamont would agree absolutely, but readily conceded the importance of the rifle contracts to the successful flotation of the loan. "The financial interest at the mo- ment was the important thing," said Morgan, booming out the word "the." "We weren't advising Great Britain to do anything they shouldn't do," said Lamont. "We told them that if they wanted to go on they .would have to satisfy the financial commu- nity they were going to deal fairly with the rifle manufacturers." For a second day, the committee sought to trace the effect of the war loans to Allied Nations on America's later entry into the conflict. The hearing developed early into a running verbal encounter between Raushenbush and Lamont, with Mor- gan sitting passively and seeming to have a tremendously good time. At one point, however, his interest ap- parently wandered and his head nodded. "Are we neglecting you, Mr. Mor- gan?" Raushenbush asked. The financier started. "Why-uh, no, sir," he replied and then, regaining his composure, he added with a chuckle: "I don't feel it in the least." Get Habeas Corpus For 'Communists' SEATTLE, Jan. 8. - (P) - Superior Judge James B. Kinne today ordered police chief Walter B. Kirtley to ap- pear in court tomorrow with six men arrested in a raid on a "Communist college" and show cause why they, Great Britain, France Mass I Battle Fleets 1 Dispatch Warship Force To Mediterranean In Two Weeks Move Concurs With Oil Sanctioii Debate British Spokesmen Call United Fleet Movements A Coincidence (By The Associated Press) Great Britain and France will send formidable lines of warships near and into the Mediterranean within the next fortnight, it was disclosed Wednesday. Significantly, the maneuvers are simultaneous with a meeting of the League of Nations Council Jan. 20 to take up the dangerous issue of an oil boycott against Italy. Italy has been reported unofficially to feel that such a sanction would mean war in Europe. The French fleet will hold maneu- vers in the Mediterranean. The 21st British destroyer flotilla, along with four first-line battle craft, will hold a "spring" cruise around Spain and Portugal. Although it is customary, the Med- iterranean fleet will not join the Atlantic maneuvers, because of ten- sion this year. British spokesmen said it was a coincidence only that the French and London fleet announcements came so close together, but the military leaders of both countries, pledged to mutual aid in case of an attack, have been in close consultation. Emperor Haile Selassie has ordered his chieftains not to risk a general mass attack, but to continue their guerilla tactics against the invading Italians, it was learned in Addis Ababa. Sealed orders have been sent to the chieftains, along with instructions for raising grain to feed the war- riors. Despite the approach of the rainy season, Rome heard unofficially that Premier Mussolini may send 100,000 more troops to Africa - where he now has at least 250,000. A Reuters (British) News Agency dispatch said Ethiopia claimed it had "completed" a recapture/of the Tem- bian district west of Makale, on the Northern Front. 'State Of Union' Speech Worth $1,000 To GOP COLUMBUS, O., Jan. 8. -0P)-A group of Columbus Republicans of- fered today to contribute $1,000 to- ward the Democratic National Com- mittee's deficit if Postmaster Gen- eral Farley would have President Roosevelt appear once more before Congress and deliver another mes- sage on the "state of the union." . C. C. Crabbe, former attorney gen- eral of Ohio, said, "We feel that the President's speech the other night did the cause of Republicanism much more good than harm, and the cause of Democracy much more harm than good." Roosevelt Opens Campaign; Asks Popular Support Music Doesn't Go 'Round And Round' For This Professor The music may go "round and round," but to one of the professors in the psychology department it doesn't make any difference. The professor was explaining the auditory system of the human body to his class. "The sound goes in here and then down and around," he was saying, when his listeners' laughter interupted him. The professor's feelings were hurt at this. Desist this nonsense, he said in effect, and proceeded to lec- ture on the proper attitude of classes and how they should not laught at a professor's remarxs. Evidently the professor was not jazz minded and had not even heard of the popular song about how the music goes. But it didn't matter to the class members. For them, the music went "round and round." Blizzard Raises Total Snowfall To Five Inches Storm Yesterday Followed' Monday's 3-Inch Total; More Today' The second hard blizzard of the week blanketed Ann Arbor in more than five inches of snow yesterday. The snow storm began shortly after 2 p.m., yesterday, and although the weather bureau at the University Ob- servatory reported nearly a half an inch of snow fell, the total snow- fall on the ground was five and a half inches, the bureau said. The weather bureau's rapidly fall- ing barometer indicated that more snow is possible for today. More than three inches fell Monday, that storm being termed the hardest of the year. There is little indication for a change in temperature, which was recorded last night by the Observa- tory at 30.8 degrees above zero. Low- est for the day was 26 degrees, and1 the highest was 32 degrees, the Ob- servatory reported. CHICAGO, Jan. 8 - (1P) - Snow and rain supplanted severe cold in Winter's midwestern repertory today. Snow fell in Minnesota, Michigan, Iowa and the northern portions of1 Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. Rain fell in the southern sections of the latter fourt states. Still more snow was in prospect for most of the north central states.I The season's coldest wave was routed from all states except Mon- tana, Wyoming and North Dakota. The mercury sank to 20 below at Rock Springs, Wyo. Jackson Day Celebration Draws Nearly 2,000 To $50 A Plate Dinner Says Justice Will Be Done Farmers President Concludes By Saying Administration Will Not Retreat WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. - (R) - President Roosevelt, clearly aiming across party lines, tonight formally opened the Democratic presidential campaign with an assertion that "the basic issues will be the retention of popular government." Referring briefly to the clashing philosophy in the Supreme Court opinions on the overthrow of the AAA as likely to reverberate for years, and touching on the aims of his ad- ministration in general, the chief executive concluded: "We will not retreat." Speaks To 2,000 Speaking directly to a Jackson Day gathering of nearly 2,000 Dempcratic leaders and adherents, who paid $50 a plate for their dinners, and by radio to hundreds of other Demo- cratic dinners throughout the coun- try, Mr. Roosevelt urged all to get "at the truth," behind "the smoke of charges and counter-charges of a national campaign." Twice the President emphasized that he sought to speak to citizens regardless of "political affiliations," and once urged as "essential" a "or- ganization among all those, regard- less of party, who believe in retain- ing progress and ideals." Briefly referring to the Supreme Court's AAA decision, the President declined to say what would be done. He promised, however, that "justice" for agriculture would remain an ob- jective. Mr. Roosevelt mentioned the "two momentous opinions" of the court, apparently referring to the majority and minority opinions on AAA and the philosophy of the three justices who voted to uphold as against the six who declared the farm plan in- valid. Refers To AAA In so doing he renewed the em- phasis placed by others in the ad- ministration since the court's decision on the fact that the minority opinion both hit at the majority's theory of government and contended that it had exceeded its power. Here is the President's complete reference to the AAA: "I know you will not be surprised by lack of comment on my part to- night on the decision by the Supreme Court two days ago. I cannot offer offhand judgment without studying, with the utmost care, two of the most momentous opinions ever ren- dered in a case before the Supreme Court of the United States "The ultimate result of the lan- guage of these opinions will pro- foundly affect the lives of Amer- icans for years to come. It is enough to say that the attainment of justice and prosperity for American agricul- ture remains an immediate and con- stant objective of my administration." The President drew analogy be- tween his administration and that of Andrew Jackson, to whom he re- ferred as a "man who fought the people's fight." He drew laughter and applause from his audience when he added significantly: "And history repeats itself." Four Killed As Bus Hits Heavy Truck HUNTINGTON, Ind., Jan. 8.-() --Four persons were killed torlight as a passenger bus crashed into a heavy motor transport truck on a bridge seven miles south of Hunting- ton. Three were killed instantly and a fourth died in a Huntington hospital. All the dead were passengers on the bus en route from Fort Wayne to Indianapolis. They were identified as: Henry Muelhauser, of Chicago. Laura Aline Bryant, 23 months old, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Bryant, of Monroe, Mich. Wiliam . Harvevnof Nw Vrr Hobbs Sees Use Of Greenland Route For Tran s - Ocean Flights By DON T. SMITH Professor Emeritus William H. Hobbs of the geology department, who has spent many years in the Arctic region, believes the future will see huge airplanes of the Clipper size reaching their destination - wheth- er it be London, Paris, Hamburg, Berlin, Oslo, or Stockholm - over a northern route through Greenland. Since the first airplane flight of any success back at Kitty Hawk in 1903, man's wings have so strength- ened that today they carry him across the wide Pacific, from the new world to the old. The China Clipper's epoch-making flight of last month has opened a regular com- mercial schedule between America and China. Not satisfied until he has spanned the Atlantic as well, man has experimented with various routes between this - country and Europe. It is fair to assume that the east- ward trans-Atlantic flights have gen- erally set out from near New York City because that route is the tra- No part of his cargo can therefore be given over to passengers or to profit-yielding freight. The west- ward flight against a prevailing wind and against the drift of the weather is even more hazardous. On the other hand, according to Professor Hobbs, the flying route from, say, Chicago to Europe re- quires no single hop of over 900 miles and no overseas stretch in excess of 600 miles. The Chicago-Stockholm route lies close to a Great Circle, of-' fers marked features for checking the course, is already provided with radio and weather stations, and, with ad- vance knowledge, fuel can be sup- plied at convenient stopping places. In the near. future the emergency landing fields and light and radio beacons may be expected at even closer intervals. Baffin Bay to the westward of Greenland, and the Greenland and North Seas to the eastward, are prob- ably less shrouded by fog than are the waters of the more southernly route. which lies along the common