THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAI THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA Van sweringens Buy Back Railroad At Auction Threaten March On County Jail New Jersey Public Utility Dispute Angers Crempa Sympathizers PLAINFIELD, N. J., Oct. 1. - (P) - An angry, muttering crowd milled about the bullet-marked home where the body of Mrs. Sophie Crempa, 41, still lay unburied today and threat- ened to march on the Union county jail in Elizabeth to demand release of her son, John Crempa, Jr., 17. Mrs. Crempa was slain last Thurs- day in a battle with deputy sheriffs who sought to serve her husband with a citation for contempt of chancery court. Crempa had long defied an in- junction restraining him from dam- aging power lines of the Public Serv- ice Electric & Gas Co. which cross his property. Delay in freeing the son and Crem- pa, Sr., who is in a hospital suffer- ing from bullet wounds, caused a sec- ond postponement of the funeral to- day. Feeling among neighbors and rela- tives, already high, rose as authorities still deferred action on the release. Stanley Pryga, chairman of the cit- izens' protest committee, addressed a crowd of several hundred persons from the porch of the Crempa home in Scotch Plains shortly before noon. The committee was formed in Fal- con hall, Plainfield, Sunday night. He said : "If the husband and son are not released by 1 p.m., 750 Polish-Amer- icans will form here in columns and march on the jail in Elizabeth. We will demonstrate and demand release of the boy." Police and deputies were sprinkled through the crowd. County Dole List Shows Sharp Drop An abrupt drop in the Washtenaw County relief roll load was reported yesterday by C. H. Elliott, county relief administrator. At present 2,050 persons are receiving direct relief, a drop of 25 per cent from last month's and a new low for the past 15 months. A "boomlet" in Ann Arbor industry and the re-opening of the University were cited by Elliott as causes of the lighter dole. Government projects have absorbed 444 of those on relief, and private industry has provided jobs for 200 others. -Associated Press Photo. Control of the three billion dollar Van Sweringen railroad empire passed once again to the Van Sweringen brothers, O. P. and M. J. Van Sweringen (left to right) of Cleveland, when the two former real estate salesmen, aided by outside interests, bid $8,121,000 for the key securities dangled over a public auction block in New York. The auction was staged by a banking group headd by J. P. Morgan and Company on default of loans amounting to, with interest, some $50,000,000. increase In Use Of Library Books Shown In NewLibrary Report Plans Made For Permanent SCA Freshman Club President Ruthven Among Speakers At Meeting Of 160 Rendezvous Men Freshmen who attended the Ren- dezvous Camp sponsored by the Stu- dent ChristiandAssociation met last night in the auditorium of Lane Hall, and plans for the permanent organi- zation of a Rendezvous Club were made. The Rendezvous Camp this year was one of the most successful of eleven of such camps sponsored, S. C. A. officials said. More than a 160 freshmen attended and the program was planned to give the new men an opportunity to meet with several of the University faculty men as well as to acquaint them with the various student leaders. President Alexander Ruthven spoke to the incoming students and other faculty men on the staff included: Prof. Howard Y. McClusky, Dr. Theodore Hornberger, Prof. F. N. Menefee, Dr. Warren Forsythe, Prof. Philip Bursley, Dean Clarence Yoak- um, Dr. E. W. Blakeman, Mr. Emory Hyde, and Stanley Waltz. The campus leaders who talked briefly on each of the extra-curricu- lar activities were: Wencel A. Neu- mann, '36, president of the Union; Norman Williamson, business man- ager of the Gargoyle; Thomas Kleene, '36, editor of The Daily; and Russell F. Anderson, former president of the S. C. A. Larry Quinn, '36, directed the camp for the second consecutive year. Inheritance Tax Collections Rise LANSING, Oct. 1.- P)- The au- ditor general's department reported today an increase of $426,415 in in- heritance tax collections for the first eight months of 1935 over the corre- sponding period of 1934. Deputy Auditor-General Gus T. Hartman said collections amounted to $1,690,695 for the first eight months of 1935. In the corresponding period of 1934 the department collected $1,- 264,279 in inheritance taxes. The amended inheritance tax law which increases the tax on nearly all brackets adopted by the 1935 legisla- ture has not affected present tax collections, Hartman said. The law became effective on inheritances from properties of persons who died sub- sequent to June 6 and is not reflected in today's report. With the advent of this semester the University Extension Division, or- ganized in 1911, begins its twenty- fourth year of service to the people of the State of Michigan. Organized for thehcombined pur- poses of promoting the cause of 'edu-: cation and the advancement of cul- ture throughout the State "and" to serve communities in so far as the technical and expert knowledge of University specialists is available, the Extension Division has done much to stimulate the adult educational movement through the medium of formal study courses of University grade. The work of the Extension Service is varied and extensive. Extension lectures by members of the University faculty on a wide range of subjects is offered. Educational radio pro- grams are broadcast from the camp- us over the facilities of WJR in De- troit. The Michigan High School Forensic Association which conducts state-wide interscholastic contests in debating, original oratory, declama- tion, and extempore speaking is un- der the direction of the Extension Division. In addition to these extension di- visions, a health education program is conducted undpr the auspices of the Joint Committee on Public Health Education, and the University. The work of this committee is to carry on a health education program in the State through a medium of the organizations interested in health. Non-credit and credit cours- es are also conducted under the di- rection of the Extension Division. Non-credit courses are organized to meet the needs of students who are interested in special fields of uni- versity grade. Extension credit courses are con- ducted in the same manner as are the corresponding courses on the campus, so far as credit, hours, and instructional requirements are con- cerned. One of the most interesting ser- vices is the Library Extension. This service is engaged primarily in study- ing current, civic, social, and general educational problems. Attention is given particularly to the needs of Michigan's secondary schools. Severe Cold Keeps Fitzgerald At Home LANSING, Oct. 1. - (1P)- A severe cold confined Gov. Fitzgerald to bed in his Grand Lodge home today and prevented a conference between him and the state liquor control commis- sion on proposed new regulations. George L. Clark, the governor's secretary, reported that the chief executive was under a doctor's care and may not return to his office this week. University's Extension Division Covers Wide Range Of Service Bricks Ely 4s Longshoremen BeginWalkut Mobile, Ala., And New Orleans Are Scenes Of Disturbance NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 1.-(1P)- Tear gas and bricks ushered in the International Longshoremen's As- sociation strike at Mobile, Ala., today, while New Orleans police dispersed groups of picketers and arrested 18 Negroes. The strike, effective last midnight, was called for New Orleans, Mobile, Gulfport, Miss., and Pensacola, Fla. No trouble was reported at Gulfport and Pensacola, but picket lines were established. At Mobile, picketers threw bricks and wielded clubs to snatch arrested longshoremen from police who in- effectively used tear gas in an attempt to rout them. J. L. Rogers, a police- man, was slightly hurt by a brick. Members of local unions are now employed on the docks here, at Mo- bile and Pensacola. The I. L. A. is seeking recognition as well as an in- crease in the hourly wage from 75 cents to 85 cents. I.L.A. spokesmen have declared that ships loaded in the four south- ern ports by non-union labor will not be unloaded by I.L.A. longshoremen in other ports. The libraries of the University showed a marked increase in the use of books this last year over preceed- ing years, it was revealed by Dr. Wil- liam W. Bishop, University librari- an, in his annual report. 119,721 more books were used in 1934-35 than in 1933-34. The total circulation almost equals the number of volumes in the libraries which is especially noteworthy since the library hours were decreased dur- ing the past year. An interesting experiment was made last year in which it was shown that about 5,000 persons entered the Main Library daily. Dr. Bishop ventured "It is probable that at least seven-tenths of the student body is in one or more of the University Libraries daily for a considerable time." There was also a decided increase in books acquired by the libraries dur- ing the past year. In June, 1934, there were 900,671 volumes in all the li- braries while in June 1935, there were 926,396. The General Library had more than half of the sum total of books included in all of the Univer- sity libraries. Another test was made to deter- mine the efficiency of the service at the delivery desk of the General Li- brary. For 95.44 percent of the books asked for, the reader was either giv- en the book or referred to the loca- tion of the book at once. 98.97 per cent of the books were accounted for after some search. Only 1.03 per cent required a longer time or were not found. In commenting upon the increased service of the libraries during the past year in spite of the reduction in hours, Dr. Bishop says "It is evident therefore - what has long been a matter of common observation-that this library is intensively used by the student body and the faculties." WOOLWORTH HEIR DEPORTED ROME, Oct. 1. - (1') - A young man, identified by police as James Donahue, one of the Woolworth heirs and cousin of Countess Barbara Hut- ton Mdivani Haugwitz-Reventlow, was deported from Italy last night for, cheering Ethiopia. Baroness HaugWitz-Reventlow re- mained in Rome. Officials said she had told police that she "wished to remain in Italy and sympathized with the Fascist regime" and that she and her husband were "admirers of Premier Mussolini."f I - BUSI.NEsSSand SECR ETARIAL TRAINING NEW TERM - - - OCTOBER 7 Beginning and Advanced Classes in Stenotypy, Shorthand, Type- writing, Accounting, English, Dictaphone, Calculator and Allied Subjects. FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE 21st YEAR H AM ILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE Phone 7831 William Street at State Approved by State Department of Public Instruction. f ' ' I i _ .A.. ----_ - _-----_--_-_--_--- I ______ . - a .. . . 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