The Weather Mostly cloudy today; tomor- row snow; not much change in temperature. f 41, 4Ht r4 t 9 an aiiH Editorials _:: ',ca idcnt _ s 0 The Spot . . Give Ijiem Their Course On War ... VOL. XLVI No. 14 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Bonus Law 'yReady For Vote Today Four Amendments Beaten In Session Containing Involved Debating Treadway's Motion Is Defeated Twice Veterans' Groups Back Measure Which Gives Delay Inducement WASHINGTON, Jan. 9. - (P) - Legislation to pay the soldiers' bonus was steered past amendment stage tonight in a surprise move which brought grumblings in the House and assured a quick vote tomorrow. After five hours of debate had de- veloped sharp disagreement over methods of payment -an important question but extraneous since the bill leaves it open Chairman Mil- ton Coughton (Dem. N. C.), of the Ways and Means Committee de- clined to stop work. Instead, a roll call which Speaker Byrns described to reporters as "the damndest fool thing I ever heard of," was ordered to bring absent members back to the floor. Four Charges Defeated Four amendments were proposed. Two were beaten decisively, and two were ruled out of order. When the House adjourned, long after dusk, the only motion pending before a vote was one by Rep. Treadway (Rep., Mass.) to return the bill to com- mittee with instructions to write in a provision for paying the bonus with relief funds. The House voted twice against Treadway's proposal in the form of an amendment, defeating it first on a standing vote 116 to 48 and again on a teller vote 118 to 43. Not so much as a single comma was changed as the measure stood tonight, with the powerful backing of three veterans organizations. * Provides Immediate Payment It provides that veterans adjusted service certificates shall be payable at once, but offers a three per cent interest inducement, until 1945, to veterans who decline to cash them immediately. The understanding of most House members-including Democratic and Republican leaders-was that amend- ments were to have been postponed until tomorrow. Many members de- parted for dinner under the impres- sion that none would be presented to come up today. During debate, as Representative Vinson (Dem., Ky.) who introduced the bill pleaded with his colleagues not to "confuse the issue' by quar- reling over methods of financing, that question was laid squarely before the Senate. Hauck Claims New Evidence On Hauptmann Man 'Resembling' Bruno Said To Have Been Seen Near Hopewell TRENTON, N. J., Jan. 9. - (P) - Anthony M. Hauck Jr., prosecutor of Hunterton County, disclosed to- day that he is in possession of the signed statement of a man who said he saw a man and a woman, re- sembling Bruno Richard Hauptmann and his wife, Anna, near the Lind- bergh Hopewell estate about 11 months before the kidnaping. David Moore, the man who gave Hauck the statement, also gave him the names of corroborating wit- nesses, all of whom are being checked, Hauck said. C. Lloyd Fisher, one of Haupt- mann's attorneys, said he understood Moore went to Flemington while Hauptmann was in jail there and could not identify the carpenter as the man he had seen. Hauptmann's case comes before the Court of Pardons Saturday morning. Shortly after Hauck's disclosure, William Conklin, press representative of Gov. Harold G. Hoffman, an- nounced that the Governor had re- ceived a letter about two weeks ago rar ".T T Fa11rnr" and de- Research Reveals Confidence In U.S._Newspaper Advertising 5,000 People In 21 States Are Questioned To Test Pulse Of Public Opinion NEW YORK, Jan. 9. --() - A high degree of confidence that news- paper advertising is reliable, found in a wide cross-section of the Ameri- can public, was reported today by Charles C. Stech in an advertising research study. More than 5,000 persons from coast to coast were asked 15 ques- tions about newspaper advertising by a corps of young women. The ques- tions were put to oil field workers, professors, radio announcers, physi- cians, housewives, lawyers, bartend- ers, beauty shop operators and many other categories. 21 States Covered The survey covered 21 states and 122 occupations. Five hundred an- swers came from California. Kansas, Michigan, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Massachusetts, Ohio and Wisconsin furnished more than 100 answers each. "To the question," Stech reports, "which do you usually consider more reliable, statements given out by men elected to public office or ad- vertisements in your daily newspa- pers?" 85 per cent favor newspaper advertisements. Papers Favored Over Salesmen "Answering the question, 'which do you usually consider more re- liable, claims and statements made by salesmen or advertisements in your daily newspaper?" 88 per cent declared for newspaper advertising. Even the majority of salesmen ques- tioned agreed that newspaper adver- tising was apt to be more reliable and dependable than the average sales- men. "Eighty per cent of those ques- tioned asserted that in their opinion advertisements make daily newspa- pers more interesting. "Eighty-four per cent said they get helpful ideas from newspaper ad- Sert) sing. "To the question, 'Are you misled John Gilbert Dies After Heart Attack i; your beliefs and purchases by the advertisements in your daily news- papFrs?' 59 per cent said no, 11 per cent said rarely,' 26 per cent said 'occasionally' and 4 per cent an- swered frequently.' These results would indicate that the experiences of the average consumer show a sub- stantial confidence in newspaper ad- vertising. "In answer to the question, 'Do you feel that a concern which spends money to advertise its brand is more lkely to keep its product always up to standard than a concern which does not spend money to advertise its product?' 85 per cent said yes, which indicates one reason for the popu- la ity of advertised brands." Convention Of Dems Is Given Philadelphia Wins Out By Successively Bidding Over Chicago And San Francisco WASHINGTON, Jan. 9. - (/P) - After a spirited and almost unpre- cedented "poker game," with table stakes so high as to all but wipe out the Party's deficit, the Democratic National Committee late today picked Philadelphia for its 1936 National Convention. The Pennsylvania city, never be- fore the scene of a Democratic con- vention, won out over San Francisco and Chicago when its representatives finally waved a certified check for $200,000. Then, to meet higher bids, Philadelphia concessions estimated to raise the total to between $250,000 and $300,000 were offered. Party Chairman James A. Farley announced that the national con- clave would start June 23. The Re- publican Party will meet in Cleve- land beginning June 9. Before the bidding started, Farley, in opening the National Committee's meeting, predicted a "campaign of defamation" financed by the "largest slush fund on record." In presenting their case, Philadel- phia's spokesmen stressed the fact that Independence Hall and the Lib- erty Bell are there. "We'll ring anew the Liberty Bell," shouted Mrs. E. G. Miller, Pennsyl- vania national committeewoman. "This time not only for political free- dom but economic freedom.", High party officials said that they expected President Roosevelt would go to Philadelphia to accept re- nomination much as he did when he flew to Chicago to address the 1932 convention. The "poker game" parlance was of- fered by the bidders themselves as the contest between cities became hot, heavy and high-priced. The Quaker City bid $200,000 be- sides offering convention facilities free. San Francisco went the bid better. by $1,000; but other considerations made it to no avail. Chicago, with a $150,000 offer, was soon left behind. The last convention in Philadel- phia was that in which the Republi- cans 36 years ago nominated William McKinley. Long before the "poker game," the National Committee adopted a reso- lution indorsing President Roosevelt and the New Deal. Only one loud, booming "no" marked the vote. i organ Tells Government's WarActivity Financier Reveals That U. S. Bought British War Debts From Morgan's Senate Planned To Program For Farm Aid Is Taking Form New Composite Plan To Act As Successor To Nullified AAA Conference Of Farm New Victory Ethiopians Claim On Southern Front Force Disclosure Leaders Is CalledI HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 9. - (P) - The spectacular and tragic career of John Gilbert, romantic idol of the movies, ended suddenly today in death from a heart attack. The last half of his 38 years he spent in Hollywood. Here he knew the utlimate of success and failure, in both his personal and professional life. He was married four times; be- loved by many women, and by turns admired and sought after -then alone and forgotten. Despite his four marriages and his friendship with many women -the latest with glamorous Marlene Diet- rich - Gilbert recently had declared his love for Greta Garbo was "the most real thing in my life." When death came today, his only companions were his doctor, a nurse and two firemen. They stood beside him in the bedroom of his mammoth, silent home that stands in the hills between Hollywood and the ocean.- Their efforts at rescuscitation were futile. LOST BOY FOUND IN DESERT INDIO, Calif., Jan. 9. -() - Twelve-year-old Alfred Altman, of Brooklyn, was found in Painted Can- yon by sheriff's deputies today, ap- parently none the worse for having been lost since Tuesday afternoon. Accounts Made Of Lloyd George's Settlement Of American Finance Battle WASHINGTON, Jan. 9. -(P).- Beating the Senate Munitions Com- mittee to a punch, J. P. Morgan & Co. revealed today that the United States government took $294,000,000 of British war debts off its hands in 1918. Senators investigating the com- pany's handling of a $3,000,000,000 supply business for the Allies had planned to force this disclosure. They wanted1 to show that American tax- payer's money was used to clear the British obligations from the Morgan files. But George Whitney, partner in the banking house, took the offensive with a declaration that the Treasury took over the indebtedness because it was about to be refunded and this government wanted to issue a new Liberty Loan without competing against securities paying a higher in- terest. Tells Of Lloyd George Deal Earlier Morgan had astonished the committee with an amiable account of how Lloyd George settled an in- tense American rivalry for European war business -in favor of the House of Morgan. With the Morgan's already hold- ing the prime commercial prize of the war -the purchasing agreement with Britain-and negotiating a sim- ilar arrangement with France, com- mittee correspondence showed how William P. Bonbright & Co. made active efforts to forestall the Mor- gans and obtain the French agree- ment. As the rivalry approached a con- flict, Bonbright's Paris branch cabled the home office. "English finance minister in Paris conferring French minister of fi- nance. Partner Morgan-Harjes & Co. due. Remember English minister of finance induced French minister of finance to give Morgan-Harjes & Co. business. Therefore must clinch our bargain before partner pulls ace from sleeve." British Helped In Loan Morgan laughed loudly. "What do you know of this, Mr. Morgan?" "Well," he replied,- still chuckling, "the British were intensely interested in seeing that there was no competi- tion between companies which held agencies. They had great difficulties in making adjustments. "Lloyd George felt that it was necessary to get things in one hand. He told me so." "You didn't need an ace up your sleeve, did you Mr. Morgan," Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg inquired. "No," Morgan replied, laughing again, "I didn't have an ace up my sleeve and was glad I didn't have to produce one." Kiwanis Convention To Be Held Today More than 200 delegates from Ki- Swanis Clubs located in various cities and towns throughout the state will convene today in the Union for their annual state convention. A short meeting was held at the Union last night, but the conven- tion proper will not get under way until this morning. During the course of the two-day convention the delegates will hear speakers from the individual clubs as well as the report of the state president of the Kiwanis clubs. It was estimated by officials in charge that more than 60 clubs would be represented at the meeting. 20 Houses Must Be 1 Dismantled By WPA Edward C. Pardon, director of the University building and grounds de- partment, yesterday announced that work of dismantling buildings on the site of the new graduate school and campanile and preparing the ground Soil Conservation May Be Utilized For Permanent Crop Control (Copyright, 1936, by Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Jan. 9. -A com- posite administration farm aid pro- gram utilizing domestic allotment as. a stop-gap and soil conservation for permanent crop control took shape' tonight amid growing dispute over the form of AAA's successor. Conferences of administration; leaders, it was reported authoritative- ly, have centered on such a plan, with a final decision deferred pending to- morrow's conference of 70 farm lead- ers summoned to the capital by Sec- retary Wallace.3 The word given reporters after a long White House conference was that no proposal had been discarded, and none agreed upon. Two Senate Republicans introduced concrete leg- islation while a Senate Democrat urged currency expansion to support, the farm crisis. Other developments in the confu- sion which still surrounded problems created by Monday's Supreme Court decision included: 1. An open letter from George N. Peek, former AAA administrator, attacking reciprocal trade agreements and agricultural production control. 2. A farm organization spokes- man's private assertion that two pow- erful farm groups would oppose any plan for a constitutional amendment. 3. One Senate resolution propos- ing an amendment permitting federal regulation of agriculture; another to permit quicker amendments. 4. A "three-way farm bill intro- duced by Senator McNary of Oregon, Republican leader, calling for export debenture, domestic allotment, and equalization fee plans. 5. A bill by Senator Cary (Rep., Wyo.), to provide for federal pur- chase or lease of the 15,000,000 acres, retiring them from production. 6. A secret meeting here of di- rectors of the American Farm Bu- reau Federation, with no conclusions reported reached. Some quarters believed the report that administration favor was for placing domestic allotments into ef-, feet immediately, with long range soil conservation, might offset some dis- sension expected to be voiced tomor- row. Under the domestic allotment pro- gram, which could be swung into op- eration with very little delay, the government would pay farmers a cash subsidy on that portion of their crops grown for consumption in this coun- try. There would be no restriction on production. Excise taxes on food products pos- sibly corresponding to the invalidated processing tax, might be enacted to finance the payments.e Expansion of the present soil con- servation program to take submar- ginal and barren land out of culti- vation of cash crops was seen as a means of achieving what production control might be necessary. University Is Now Owner Of Sundries For Home-Building University ownership of slightly used building materials is growing by leaps and bounds since wreckers began to clear the site for the new carillon and graduate school. Although various wrecking com-- panies have bought the majority of the formerly private residences, the University has reserved at least one apartment building, as well as the foundations and other subterraneanI portions of all buildings. As a result it now possesses practically intactt a large amount of bathroom fixtures, kitchen equipment, plumbing, and other appurtenances of the well-ap- pointed home.t From the foundations have been extracted several tons of cut redI granite, part of which has been soldr to the St. Andrew's Episcopal Church.I Concrete blocks in large quantities1 will also be forthcomink.c Still another by-product of the wrecking operations is fire-wood fromI the trees cut down. This will be dried and devoted to the dormitoryt fireplaces.- Jury Convicts Mrs. Rowlandt Of Conspiracy Court Refuses Plea For Sentence Stay; Woman Maintains Innocence 'HARRISON, Jan, 9.-(P)-A Clare County circuit jury of 12 men con- victed Mrs. Elizabeth Rowland to- night on a charge of conspiring to murder her two small daughters.' Judge Ray Hart sentenced to serve three anda half years in the De- troit House of Correction, denying" a stay of execution in order that at- torneys might appeal. Rising to receive sentence after her attorney Joseph Naumes had moved that the verdict be set aside as "not1 warranted by the evidence," Mrs. Rowland protested vigorouslyto Judge Hartz that she was innocent, declaring tearfully she did not con- spire to kill the children. "The plans were made after my children left home," she insisted. The jury de- liberated six and a half hours. "My conscience is clear," Mrs. Rowland said to Judge Hart. Mr. Belder (Prosecutor Theodore G. Belder) has not done justice to me. I didn't know what I was answering when he questioned me after he got me from my husband." Her attorney had previously claimed that she had been unfairly tricked into incriminating state- ments, pointing outthat 'the defen- dant had a mental age of 11 years. Ferrin Rowland, her husband, hanged himself in his cell last fall after confessing the murder of his two step-daughters so that he and his wife could "go places." Reported Success Follows Former Gains Made In Northern Sector 50,000 New Troops Have Left Italy Mussolini's Men Rumored In Mutiny Against War And I Duce ADDIS ABABA, Jan..9. -(P)- Ethiopia claimed a smashing victory on the southern front Thursday, in the wake of Wednesday's major suc- cess in the north. Officials in Rome admitted, mean- while, that sudden stimulation of troop movements to the war zone was in response to urgent requests from Marshall Pietro Badoglio, com- mander of the expeditionary forces. More than 50,000 fresh troops have left Italian ports within the last few days. Informed sources in Addis Ababa. reporting the southern victory, said a strong Italian push in the Dolo sec- tor was thrown back in a far-flung battle involving more than 100,000 soldiers. Repulse Italian Drive Ras Desta Demtu, Emperor Haile Selassie's son-in-law and commander of the southern armies, was reported to have wired the government that he had frustrated a fresh Italian attempt to invade the rich Rift valley west of Dolo. Participating in the engagement were 60,000 Ethiopian warriors against 18,000 Italians and 25,000 Somalis, the report said. Reports from Harar 'an Dessye of victories by other Ethiopian chief- tains in the same sctor were be- lieved to have referred to 1-6iidents of this same battle. Troops of Dedjazbayenne Mered were said to have surprised an Ital- ian column, killing a number of So- mali troops and capturing six tank, six mchine guns and a radio post It was announced at Harar that warriors under the Fituari Taffal had captured the Italian post of Ka- rale after a bloody battle in which many Italians, both white and na- tive, were slain. Heavy Rains Aid Natives An official announcement at Addis Ababa Thursday confirmed Wed- nesday's report that the Fascist in- vading northern army had aban- doned the Tembien region west of Makale in a "precipitous" fashion. Heavy rains were understood to be washing out roads and adding to the enemy's discomfiture. The govern- ment said the Italians abandoned one tank and one truck "without resist- ance." Despite the flow of troops to East Africa, Italy is keeping several regi- ments along the French border, it was disclosed Thursday. Fascist of- -ficials professed no alarm, however, over forthcoming French and British naval maneuvers in the Mediterran- ean. Reports of Italian mutiny against the war came from new sources. The South Tyrol News Agency reported in a dispatch .to Vi-na from Inns- bruck that two Itaan soldiers were killed and several wounded at Me- rano when an officer fired on men who refused to leave for East Africa service. Mutineers Riot Against Duce The rebels, it was said, tore down pictures of Premier Mussolini and thrust bayonets through him. The same dispatch said 1,650 army recruits had fled from the South Tyrol to Austria and Germany to escape service. A similar report was published in Munich, and the Prop- aganda Ministry in Berlin admitted "a few may have arrived." In Washington the Bureani of Mines reported sharp increases in No- vember exports of American gasoline to Italy and her African colonies. Shipmen directly to the war zone of 109,716 barrels compared with 25,- 714 barrels in October and 78,284 barrels were sent to Italy, which re- ceived no gasoline in October. The report centered attention on Presi- dent Roosevelt's demand that trade with belligerents be held to normal figures. Approval Of Last Amendment Is Discusse d By E. S. Brown Dr. Stanton Sees Little Hope In Chinese Student Movement By FRED WARNER NEAL Ratification of the Twenty-first (Repeal) Amendment to the Consti- tution - by state conventions which, for the most part merely recorded the dictates of the people rather than being deliberative bodies - "will serve as guide posts to future ac- tion," according to Prof. Everett S. Brown of the political science de- partment. In one of the first and most com- plete surveys of the processes by which America placed its stamp of approval on the prohibition repeal amendment, Professor Brown, writ- ing in the December issueof the American Political Science Review, just out, describes the conventions state by state and step by step. The ratification of this amendment in the spring of 1933 was the first in history of the convention method. Approval proponents of the theory of congres- sional power, Professor Brown cites former Attorney-General A. Palmer Mitchell, and as the leading oppon- ent, Rep. James A. Beck (Rep.-N. Y.) and the late Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana. Their argu- ments, as told by Professor Brown, centered around whether or not the convention proceedure is a Federal power, and if it is, whether or not the Constitution meant to give Con- gress direct governing power. The opponents of Congressional regula- tion, held in the words of Senator Walsh, that "varying local condi- tions made it necessary,- as well as constitutional, for each common- wealth to work out its own basis of representation" in the ratifying con- ventions. The latter view won out, Professor Brown points out, and the states By BERNARD WEISSMAN The anti-foreign movement among' Chinese students that twice in the' past 20 years has repulsed incursions on Chinese integrity won't meet the same success in its present resistance to the spread of Japanese influence, Dr. John W. Stanton of the history department declared last night. He expressed the opinion that the universities in North China will be gradually put under Japanese dom- ination until student patriotic riots such as have been occurring in re- cent weeks will no longer be possible. At present, he explained, Chinese students are allowed more freedom to vent their feelings than even American students, with the single exception that the spreading of Com- munist doctrines is not permitted. Although student influence has spread to other universities through- out the country, and led to wide- spread boycotts and cooperative ac- tion by merchants and laborers, he explained. These riots in 1919, which were carried on with unanimous enthus- iasm by thousands of Chinese stu- dents, led to the growth of a greater nationalistic feeling, On May 30, 1925, he continued, stu- dents again took the lead, this time in fighting against the handling of strikes in the textile mills by Brit- ish and Japanese interests. This outbreak, originating in Shankhai and also spreading swiftly to other parts of China, led to the Revolution of 1925 that swept Chiang Kai Shek into control of the national government, Dr. Stanton declared. But Chiang's attitude has changed to one favoring Japan since that time,