The Weather Generally fair, somewhat warmer today; tomorrow some- what unsettled. Y i t gatt Regretful Reminder No. 2 .. . The Farm Problem... . Editorials VOL. XLVII No. 11 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, OCT. 9, 1936 PRICE FIVE CENTS Fascists Gain New Foothold Near Madrid Stronghold In Northwest Falls After Fortnight Of Heavy Fighting Intervention Hope Voiced In Capital Threat To Destroy City Is Made As Franco's Lines Are Drawn Closer CEBRFROS, Spain, Oct. 8.-()- Fascist soldiers drove Gen. Julio Man- Gada's government troops out of Na- valperal, their mountain redoubt northwest of Madrid, in a final bloody push today which crowned two weeks of constant attacks.] The last surge started at dawn, when over 1,500 bombs were dropped on government lines in front of Na- valpera, which is 45 miles northwest of Madrid and about 10 miles north of Cebreros. A squadron of insurgent bombers came and went "with terrible reg- ularity," authoritative sources said, dropping their loads and then re- turning to fascist-held Avila for more. Insurgent artillery shelled the vil- lage as the bombing planes swooped low, machine-gunning the govern- ment soldiers. The defending artillery squads stuck to their field pieces, but their fire was "weaker than that of the fascists. General Mangada's armored train, endeavoring to silence the insurgent guns, sent barrage after barrage into their lines. Hand-to-Hand Struggle; When the shelling and bombing ceased, the fascists, who were re- ported to be mostly brawny moors, leaped to the assault and a bitter hand-to-hand struggle ensued. The government militiamen were slowly driven from the lines they had held for close to three months. Their retreat was orderly, fascist officers said. The number of gov- ernment casualties was not known. MADRID, Oct. 8.-(j')-The gov- ernment fought the handicaps of weather as well as insurgent attacks tonight while taking new drastic measures to protect the city. Fighting in several sectors, par- ticularly in north and central Spain, was severely hampered for both sides by penetrating cold and rain. In many places cannon bogged into deep mud and were extricated by long teams of mules. Supplies Needed The government appealed again for more blankets and warm clothing for the militia in the Guadarrama Mountains as the cold intensified. Russia's ultimatum it would inter- cede openly on the Madrid govern- ment's behalf if other signatories to the European "hands off Spain" pact did not cease supplying arms to the fascists, bolstered government hopes for outside aid. Its expectation of favorable action, voiced in official circles, received heavy editorial support. "Once the powers realize the folly of non-intervention," the newspaper El Sol declared, "the government's victory will be but a matter of hours." BURGOS, Spain, Oct. 8.-(,')- Fascist leaders tonight threatened "to blow Madrid to pieces" unless it surrenders to the insurgent legions almost within shelling distance of the capital. "We recommend that the civil pop- ulation do everything in its power to makethe government surrender, read circulars showered on Madrid from fascist warplanes. "The greater the resistance the greater will be the attack," they read. "Madrid will be bombarded, intensely from both land and air." Madrid Boxed Fascist lines tonight boxed Madrid on three sides with only the eastern sector open. Some units of the troops on the' southern side were almost within shelling distance of the capital. Steadily the southern and bottom side of the box was stretched longer past Madrid. The strategy then was, to march troops on this line due north, completely boxing the capital. The insurgent juggernaut under Gen. Francisco Franco rolled swiftly. Legislators To Attempt RevisionI Of General Property Tax System Stason Of Law School To Assist In Drafting Of Proposed Measures A definite attempt to rehabilitate the property tax structure of the State of Michigan in order to mod- ernize it and to make it more equit- able will be made during the next session of the state legislature, Prof. E. Bythe Stason of the Law School said yesterday. Vernon Brown, member of the State House of Representatives from the second district of Ingham county, and chairman of the sub-committee on general taxation of the legislative council, was here the early part of= this week conferring with Professor Stason regarding the drafting of some of the bills which will be brought before the legislature during the session beginning in January. The legislative council is composed of members of both houses who de- vote their time between sessions of the legislature to the study of prob-I lems that are likely to arise at the coming session. One of the most significant of the Swedish Flier Off For France After Crash Rescue Ship Will Arrive At La Rochelle Tuesday; Plane Is Abandoned j proposed statutes to revise the prop- erty tax structure of the state, ac- cording to Professor Stason, will be a bill enabling the state to hold tax sales in order to get rid of some of the property now possessed by the state because of delinquency in the payments of taxes on such property. The 1935 session of the legislature passed a bill that made the publish- ing of descriptions of the property to be placed on sale by the state un- necessary. This law was ruled un- constitutional by the Supreme Court of Michigan last May. Another law must therefore be passed, Professor Stason said, in order to make tax sales legal. "A change is also proposed in the system of assessment of property," Professor Stason continued. "At present," he said, "property is as- sessed at its cash value, but it is the desire of the sub-committee to base the assessments partially on the rev- enue-producing capacity of the prop- erty." Also,. Professor Stason added, some dissatisfaction has been voiced regarding the system of assessment review by township boards. A bill advocating county boards of review will be proposed before the next ses- sion. 'Provisions will also be attempted so that the state can make what are called "scavenger sales," Professor Stason said. "Because of moratorium legislation during the depression years and the Supreme Court's de- cision this spring, no tax sales have been held in this state since May, 1931. Consequently, much of the property cannot bring an amount at a tax sale equal to the accumulated taxes on it. The state wishes to dis- pose of some of this property to the VALENTIA, Irish Free State, Oct. 'highest bidder, regardless of whetherI 8.-W)-Cheated of victory but unin- I the price comes up to the amount of jured, Kurt Bjorkvall, 31, Sweden's (Continued on Page 2) Trans-Atlantic flier, was enroute to- night to La Rochelle, France, aboard anufacturers the French trawler Imbrin. Bjorkvall abandoned his big red Tol H od 2-Da and blue Bellanca plane to choppy seas, 100 miles off the west coast of Ireland, where he was rescued-yes- M eetin H ere terday after being forced down 1, 000 miles short of his goal on the 4,500-mile hop from Floyd Bennett 100 Representatives Will Field, New York, to Stockholm. Attend OSession [ The Imbrin, which spotted Bjork- pening vall's plane wallowing on a moonlit Of Industrial Conference sea late yesterday, set out for its home French port after the crew had More than 100 representatives of failed in attempt to salvage the plane. Michigan manufacturing concerns News to Stockholm of the flier's are expected to attend the opening safety brought tears of joyful reliefI session today of the Industrial Con- to his widowed mother, Mrs. Hanna ference on , Education and Research Bjorkvall, and to Maud Dickson, theE pretty 18-year-old Swedish girl whom which opens a two-day meeting at Bjorkvall, just before his take-off, the Union. said was his fiancee. Training of college men for indus- Capt. Jean Marie Dillic of the Im- try and a conference on research will brin wirelessed the vessel's owners feature the meeting today. Delegates that Bjorkvall was tired and "not ! at the morning session will hear ad- eating." dresses by Prof. H. C. Anderson, The ship, he wirelessed, would con- chairman of the department of me- tinue its fishing, and probably arrive chanical engineering of the engineer- in La Rochelle Tuesday morning. ing college, and F. M. Zeder, vice- A crowd of 10,000 had waited in chairman of the board of the Chry- vain for Bjorkvall at a Stockholm sler Corporation. airport. Prof. A. E. White, director of the Final E f fort Is Prepared y Candidates Roosevelt Opens Swing Through Middle West; En Route To Omaha Kansan Plans New Assault On Budget President's Program Not Definite; Knox Starts CampaignIn East Aiming to be seen and heard by thousands upon whose votes the pres- idential election may turn, President Roosevelt and Governor Landon are back at active road canpaigning to- day in the Central West. ' The President scheduled the first of a long series of train stops at Du- buque, Ia., this morning. He is en- route to Omaha, Neb., where he will speak tomorrow night. Accompany- ing him are Secretary Wallace and several western Democratic senators. Landon will open up in Chicago to- night with another attack on New Deal budgetary policies. Like Roose- velt in Washington, he spent much of the time before his departure from Topeka yesterday in last-minute preparations. Pending the expected clashes be- tween them, political attention dwelt meanwhile on the activity of other prominent party figures. Col. Frank Knox, Republican vice-presidential nominee, said in Delaware that New Deal leaders were raising a "smoke screen" against his insistence that present government policies endanger insurance and savings accounts. With the passenger list swelled by an increased number of reporters and photographres, and a larger of- ficial party, the Roosevelt train was the longest since he took office. Officials said while his St. Paul program was indefinite, the President probably would make a speech at the tSate Capital and motor to Minneap- olis, just across the Mississippi river. There was some talk of conferences with political advisers from the state, where the Democratic candidates for governor and senator withdrew with an announcement to solidify Demo- cratic and Farmer Labor support be- hind Mr. Roosevelt. Dean Receive Life For Black LegionKilling DETROIT, Oct. 8.-UP)-Dayton Dean, stocky, talkative two-gun killer whose lurid disclosures of Black Le- gion terrorism aided the state's fight to stamp out the hooded night-riders, received a life term for murder today from a circuit judge who called Dean's victim "a martyr to the cause of civil and religious liberties." Dean had pleaded guilty to shoot- ing Charles A. Poole, young WPA worker, on a lonely country road last May 12 on order of a Black Legion superior officer after false gossip that Poole beat his wife, an expectant mother. Seven other Black Legion members who were convicted of first degree murder for the Poole killing will receive mandatory life sentences to- morrow. Four convicted of second degree murder will be sentenced Sat- urday. The prejudice against certain ra- cial and religious groups, which the Black Legion was charged with bor- rowing from the Ku Klux Klan, was denounced today by Judge Joseph A.. Moynihan who termed the killing of Poole "a sad commentary on our form of civilization." Prof. Earl V. M~oore (seated at piano) and J. Fred Lawton Pep Meetin Tonight Features Lawton, Moore, YostAnd Band "Varsity," in a manner of speak- ing, will be rewritten tonight, 25 years after its original composition when Prof. Earl V. Moore and J. Fred Lawton enact on the stage of hill Auditorium in'three scenes the circumstances that accompanied their creation of this famous Michi- gan song. On this Varsity Night "program which will also serve as a pep meet- ing for the Indiana game tomorrow, Regent James O. Murfin of Detroit will speak as one of the men who first recognized the possibilities in "Varsity." Michigan's Varsity Band under the direction of Prof. William Revelli and the Varsity Men's Glee Club under the direction of Prof. David Mattern will provide the program with musical entertainment,, accord- ing to the Men's Council. The program will begin at 8 p.m. and will last about 45 minutes, Miller Sherwood, '37, president of the Men's Council said. Co-Authors Of 'Varsity' To 'Re-Write' It Tonight _ i $135,000 Bond Issue Will Be Voted On Today Voters of Ann Arbor will go to thea polls today to approve or reject the, $135,000 bond issue for a new school on the north side of the city, and to vote on the proposal for increasing the tax limitation of the school dis- trict. A large crowd is expected to visit the polls because of the interest' created last week by the many argu- ments for and against the expansion of the school plant. If the proposals pass, $135,000 worth of negotiable bonds to be re- tired within five years will be issued to build and equip an elementary school in the fifth ward. Also the tax limitation will be increased be- yond the limit imposed on local tax- ing units by the state constitution. This would mean an additional levy of not- more than a mill for the next five years. Only taxpayers may vote on the bond issue, but parents of childreni who are listed on the school census may vote on the tax limitation pro- poral. If the proposal is approved, it will mean abandoning the present Don- ovan School. The plot of land where it is now located will be turned into a park. A I F F _ "r onnrmo department of engineering research; R. A. Hayward, president of the Kal- amazoo Vegetable Parchment Co., and J. H. Hunt, director of the new devices section of General Motors Corporation, will speak at the after- noon session. Alex Dow, of Detroit, president of the Detroit Edison Co., will speak at a dinner at 6:30 p.m. on "National Defense," and special laboratory demonstrations will be held tomor- row morning. FARM PAYMENTS WASHINGTON, Oct. 8.-(-)-To "Avoid possible deficits," the AAAj said tonight, initial, payments to farmers who participated in this year's soil conservation program will be limited to 90 per cent. Franklin Pictures " Silly Sort Of Life In Ammonia World A hypothetical world where nitro- gen replaced oxygen and ammonia substituted for water was laughingly depicted yesterday by Dr. E. C. Franklin of Stanford University to point a lecture on ammonia given by him in the Chemistry Building. In this world, vwhose existence, Dr. Franklin emphasized, could not be belied by any known chemical or physical principles, inhalation dur- ing breathing would draw inhapure supply of nitrogen, and exhalation to remove waste gases would be unnecessary. Instead of carbonated water there would be carbonated ammonia, except that the carbon dioxide for the carbonation would no longer be an oxide but a nitride. Alcohol, too, would be of an ammon- iacal nature, and in place of the one generally palatable alcohol which the indulger now knows under various disguises there would be two alco- hols containing potentialities for bev- erage use. As examples, he pointed out, garlic corresponds to many perfumes after these substitutions have been made, and the distinguishable odor of the skunk is akin to other perfumes hav- ing their oxygen changed to nitrogen. No difference whatever, he noted, would be made in the aroma of rotten eggs, and the gas responsible for that aroma probably would become a widespread cooking medium in a worl dwhere oxygen was eliminated. Brucker Files Suit In Answer T1o Hook Claim IRON RIVER, Oct. 8.-(/)-Com- ing here from Iron Mountain Wilber M. Brucker, Republican nominee for U. S. Senator, reiterated the state- ment he made in Iron Mountain earl- ier in the evening, that he would file a law suit Friday in Ironwood against Congressman Frank E. Hook, of that city, as his answer to Hook's charge that Brucker was affiliated with the Black Legion. Brucker, denying emphatically any sort of affiliation with the Black Le- gion, said he was absolutely opposed to the principles attributed to that organization and said that during his active work in the American Legion, "the only legion to which I ever be- longed," I fought tooth and nail against the Ku Klux Klan when i1 Choral Union Racketeers Are HitB Moore, Moore Says Many Students Join Union For Tickets; Tryouts Still Open. Assurance that all persons interest- ed in joining the Choral Union will be given tryouts was given yestrday by Earl V. Moore of the School of Music. At the same time, Professor Moore stated that for many of the tryouts, joining the Choral Union is little more than a "racket." One of the difficulties of organiz- ing the Chorus, Professor Moore said, is the problem of weeding out those persons who are trying to join for the sole purpose of getting free tick- ets to the Choral Union concerts. That this situation does exist, he added, is evidenced by the fact that after the last concert in the spring, a large number always drops out of the chorus. It is for this reason that all last year's attendance records are being checked so that these persons may be kept off the Chorus this year. Professor Moore emphasized the fact that no section of the Chorus has been closed to tryouts permanent- ly. In answer to letters received by The Daily complaining about the manner in which the tryouts are be-' ing conducted, Professor Moore ex- plained that certain sections of the Chorus, the soprano in particular, will accept no tryouts for a short time because they are overcrowded. When the other sections have be- come larger, he said, the crowded sections will again be opened, and all tryouts will be given a chance before the list of the Chorus is assembled. _Professor Moore expects that the Chorus will be smaller this year than last, when it included 400 persons while the number of tryouts this year is larger than it has been for a num ber of years. A new system of num t bering tryouts was inaugurated yes terday to prevent the congestion which has occurred during the las few daXs, and this is expected to save students the time wasted waiting in line, Moore, said. World Court Elects s Dr. Manley ludson Intervention Not Certain, Says Russian Government Workers Demand Planes And Bombs For Spanish Comrades, 'Not Butter' Britain Concerned Over Soviet Threat Communist Motives Are Assailed By Germany; Crisis MayDevelop MOSCOW, Oct. 8-(A)-(-The Krem- lin, informed sources said tonight, has not yet decided to send munitions into Spain to aid the Spanish gov- ernment against the fascist insur- gents. Nevertheless, reliableuinformants said, the Kremlin was under consid- erable pressure and having difficuty restraining a wave of sympathy for Spain which has developed during the last three months. The government continued mass meetings of workers for donations to be sent to Spanish women and chil- dren, but in many quarters "airplanes and not apples, bombs and not but- ter," were demanded for the Spanish "popular front." The Government tonight denied it had acted precipitately in issuing an ultimatum to abandon the neutrality pact unless Germany, Italy and Por- tugal ceased actively aiding the Span- ish insurgents. The government spokesman said the ultimatum had been decided upon only after the situation became "in- tolerable" through continued inter- vention onbehalf of the fascists in direct violation of neutrality. Soviet officials placed full blame "for the failure of the agreement" on the lack of "backbone of England and France" which the officials said they hoped had been stiffened by the ulti- matum. LONDON, Oct.8-(/P)-British officials labored tonight to quiet Rus- sia's outburst against Germany, Italy, and Portugal, in which the Soviet government charged those countries with aiding the Spanish insurgents in violation of the neutrality pact. If the three countries named by Russia should report at Friday's ses- sion of the neutrality committee in London, many persons believed, one of the gravest crises since Germany defied the Locarno pact might be created. British Anxious British officials expressed greatest anxiety lest the Russian ultimatum might result in a showdown fight be- tween fascism and .communism in European countries. Recriminations at Friday's session, government leaders feajred, might make a wreck of the committe which Britain and France worked so long to set up. The "premature publicity" given Russia's charges outside the commit- tee sessions plainly angered British officials, who said the pact signatories were pledged from the beginning to 'work privately. The Russian ultimatum, delivered to signatroies Wednesday, declared Russia would abandon the neutrality pact unless Germany, Italy and Portugal ceased aiding the Spanish insurgents. Soviet Bluffing? If the Soviet government is only "bluffing,"dinformed observers said, a long and bitter period of diplo- matic bickering was ahead. On the other hand, if the Kremlin meant business, it was said, and in- tended to back up the Spanish Madrid 1 government with guns and planes, Europe was "dangerously near the brink." e Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden abruptly closed his Monaco vacation and hurried homeward to take the r diplomatic helm of his country. - He was to confer Friday with France's Socialist Premier Leon Blum in Paris, on possible concerted action if a crisis should arise. t The Rome government remained e discreetly silent on the Russian ul- timatum today, with informed circles denying that Premier Mussolini had violated the non-interference act at any time since Italy signed. BERLIN, Oct. 8.-(A")-The Ger- 1 man foreign office tonight attacked Love Wings Over Jordan Hall; A Bath Towel ForFlying Suitor By ELSIE ROXBOROUGII Love will find a way! Even if it has to use wings. Particularly is this so when the male partner is a Deke with ex-I travagant ideas and the son of the president of the Stinson Aircraft company's airport. Thus is explained the airplane, which circles Mosher-Jordan Hall weekly, and the response which it elicits-a bath towel waved frantical- ly from a window. The amorous aviator is Bernard De Weese, '34, and the waver of the these flying spells getting the best of him, he telephones Miss Bryce, and in no time at all, he's away up high, far over her head, while she hangs out of a Jordan Hall window, vigorously waving her bath towel, lest he be dispirited in thinking his aerial prowess unappreciated. Recently De Weese executed a dar- ing "left wing over," much to Miss Bryce's horror and chagrin. Fear- fully she grabbed up her favorite bath towel and rushed to the screen -but in vain. It would not budge, and there was her future dodging around sideways amid the clouds. the Soviet Demarche in London as GENEVA, Oct. 8.-(/P)-Dr. Man- an attempt to save a "comintern ley 0. Hudson, profe sor of inter- venture" in Spain. nationna lw a tHrvaird University A foreign office statement said that