0 weather Occasional showers or thunder- storms today and tomorrow Y Lw igan Iait Editorial The Postman Always Rings More Accomplishments OfThe WPA . . . VOL. XLIX. No. 173 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1939 PRICE FIVE CENTS Gibb Arrested; Wins Release After Posting $5,000_Bond Warrant Issued By Payne Charges Former Clerk EmbezzledCity Funds Luella Smith Named To Succeed To Post Emmett M. Gibb, resigned county clerk, was arrested last night on a charge of embezzlement of public funds. Gibb was required to post a $5,000 bond. The arrest was ordered in a warrant issued yesterday afternoon by Justice Jay H. Payne and author- ized by Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp. The examination is set for Monday, June 5. Bond effecting his release was furnished by four friends. Mast Signs Complaint The complaint was signed by Carl Mast, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors, after a conference with Rapp. The Board had authorized Rapp to initiate criminal and civil proceedings if he deemed the action warranted. Resignation of the county clerk Tuesday brought to a halt removal proceedings instigated after an audit of the county's books showed a short- age of $5,706.86 in the welfare fund. At the time of the ouster hearing, a special tribunal composed of Circuit Judge George W. Sample and Circuit Court Commissioners Albert W. Hooper and Lee N. Brown made a finding that there was a discrepancy in the accounts of $5,549.55 and pos- sibly $5,706.86 for which Gibb was responsible. Mrs. Smith Is Clerk At the same time, Judge Sample appointed Mrs. Luella M. Smith, dep- uty county clerk, to succeed. Mrs. Smith announced yesterday that she would do so only on condition that a special audit be made of the clerk's books. James D. Whitman, auditor from the auditor general's office who made the original audit of the county books disclosing the shortage, and two other State examiners will begin the audit Wednesday, Mrs. Smith said. Mrs. Smith may file her bond and take the oath of office today or Monday, she stated last night. Letter Carriers Parade Streets By Torchlight Mayor Sadler Welcomes State Postal Delegates To 40th Annual Meeting They danced in the streets last night in the letter carriers' torch light parade, danced with green and red sparklers waving in their hands. To the tune of the Detroit Letter Carriers' Band and the Washtenaw County Drum and Bugle Corps, near- ly 1,000 letter carriers and their wives, in town for the 40th annual conven- tion of the Michigan State Associa- tion of Letter Carriers, marched from in front of the Union to Moose Hall, where they were served a club lunch. Earlier in the evening, delegates had attended the first meetings of the convention. They spent the after- noon in registering and seeing the city on special sightseeing trips by automobile. Delegates were welcomed at the convention's first session last night by Mayor Walter C. Sadler and Wal- lace N. Mueller, president of the Ann Arbor branch. John C. Austin, presi- dent of the Michigan State Associa- tion of Letter Carriers, replied for the visitors. A parallel program for wives of delegates was conducted by the Michi- gan State Ladies' Auxiliary. Mrs. Edith Lau, president of the Ann Ar- bor branch of the auxiliary, wel- comed the women, with Mrs. Alma Poppeck, president of the auxiliary, giving the response. Both groups met in the Union for an entertainment program after the (Continued on Page 6) Army Weighs Sentence Of Draft Law Dodgerl Student Dies Yesterday WILLIAM A. DEVEREAUX 0 * * Student's Death Laid To Worry And Bad Health William Devereaux, '40, Married Nash Heiress In February Ceremony William A. Devereaux, '40, was found dead yesterday afternoon in a garage behind his Brooklyn Ave; apartment. Friends attributed his death, a suicide, to poor health and general despondency. Reports that he was worried about his courses in the Uni- versity were denied. It was the tragic end to his mar- riage last February to Marjorie Ruth Wilson, granddaughter of C. W. Nash, automobile manufacturer, and daugh- ter of a director of the Nash-Kelvin- ator Corporation. They were married Feb. 11 in Ben- nington, Vt. The couple then returned to -Ann Arbor after a short honey- moon, taking an apartment at 1426 Brooklyn Ave. Devereaux then re- sumed his studies at the University at the beginning of the second semes- ter. Mrs. Devereaux told police her hus- band had left their apartment at 10:30 a.m. yesterday, saying he was going to burn some newspapers, and did not return. Cowboys Whoop It Up In Welcoming Royalty CALGARY, Alberta, May 26.-(/P)-~ The old west lived again in modern Calgary today with brightly-garbed cowboys and cowgirls and Indians in full regalia whooping things up in a thunderous ovation to King George VI. and Queen Elizabeth. There was a skirl of bagpipes, too, but this Scottish touch in honor of the Queen was almost lost in the sea of 10-gallon hats which greeted the sovereigns upon their arrival aboard their royal special. It was a sun-splashed riot of color presented by the men and women from the cow country who came in their high-heeled boots and gaudily colored shirts-red, blues and bright oranges. Vandenberg Receives Bid As Candidate State Republicans Endorse Senior Senator To Run For President In 1940 Delegation Offers MichiganBacking WASHINGTON, May 26. -(W)- The Michigan Republican congres- sional delegation's request that Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg be the party's candidate for president in 1940 was formally presented to the Senator to- day. A statement made public by the group expressed their belief that the senior Michigan Senator should be drafted for the nomination. The statement was signed by the 12 members of the delegation and called the Michigan Senator's atten- tion to the recent indorsement of him by Gov. Luren D. Dickinson, other Republican State officers and members of the legislation. It was indicated by members of the delegation that a formal answer was expected. Vandenberg's secretary said that he planned to reply in a few days. The statement said: "The Governor and other Republi- can State administrative officials of Michigan and the Republican mem- bers of the State Legislature, Senate and House, as representative of the official Republicanism in Michigan, in statements addressed 'to the Re- publicans of the United States,' de- clare that it is their 'united and unan- imous belief' that you 'should be drafted for the next Republican presidential nomination'." Navy To Begin Lifting Squalus Salvage Workers To Use Huge Steel Pontoons WASHINGTON, May 26.-()-The Navy's technicians gave approval to- day for the use of pontoons in the job of raising the sunken submarine Squalus with its burden of 26 dead. Great steel floats already at the scene off the New Hampshire coast will be sunk alongside the Squalus and then filled with air in the at- tempt to lift the vessel 240 feet to the surface. Compressed air also will be em- ployed to make the helpless hulk more buoyant, under plans which were given official endorsement at protracted conferences here. Navy divers hurriedly stripped all impedimenta from the decks of the U.S.S. Squalus today to pave the way for the lifting of the submarine- bier of 26 men still entombed under forty fathoms of water. The tragedy of the Squalus was not permitted to delay the Navy's expan- sion program. Bids were opened to- day for three more submarines of the same size and general type of the Squalus, along with proposals for the construction of a smaller sub- mersible and four 1,600-ton destroy- ers. Regents Give Athletic Post; Accept Gifts University Cut SiOL, _.-- II / Former Football Made Alumni Of Board In Captain Member Control Approves General Budget $5,000 Establishes Medical Lectureship The University Board of Regents yesterday appointed Paul Goebel of Grand Rapids, captain of the 1922 Varsity football team, to a three year term as an alumni member of the Board in Control of Physical Educa- tion. Prof. Ralph Aigler of the Law School and Prof. Clifford Woody of the education school, were re-ap- pointed for four year terms. Aigler is chairman of the Board. Accept Gifts The Regents also accepted $10"490 in gifts, granted leaves of absence to several faculty members and con- cluded routine business at their regu- lar May meeting. Largest of the gifts was $5,000 from the estate of the late Victoria Mor- ris which will be used to establish the "Roger S. Morris Lectureship in Medicine," in honor of her husband, former professor in the philosophy department. They also announced the retire- ment of Prof. Horace W. King of the engineering college, effective June 30, 1939. Make Appointments Prof. John W. Bradshaw was ap- pointed acting chairman of the mathematics department for 1939- 1940 during the temporary absence of chairman T. H. Hildebrandt. Prof. William L. Ayers of the math- ematics department and Prof. Chester S. Schopfle of the chemistry de- partment were appointed members of the executive board of the Horace Rackham School of Graduate studies for one year. President Ruthven, Dean Clarence S. Yoakum, Dr. James D. Bruce, Prof. Carl E. Guthe, Prof. Henry S. Hulbert, and Prof. Willard S. Wilcox were ap- pointed to the board of advisers of the Institute of Public and Social Administration. Appoint SRA Board Joseph E. Hooper and James E. Inglis, of Ann Arbor, were appointed as member of the board of governors of the Student Religious Association. Inglis will succeed himself for a four year 'term, and Hooper was chosen to fill the term of Emory G. Hyde, who has resigned because of illness. Student members who were chosen on the SRA board of governors are Roberta E. Moore '40, and James M. Vicary, '40. Grover C. Gillsmore and John T. Craighton, of New York City, were appointed to the board of governors of the Lawyers Club. Student Plots To Enter Meet Smick Allows Boilermakers Only Two Hits Triple Scores Tying Run In Ninth; Bailey's Balk Gives Varsity Victory LAFAYETTE, Id., May 26.-(Spe- cial to The Daily)-Danny Smick, Michigan's unpredictable mound ar- tist, pitched and batted the Varsity to victory for the second time this week, as the Wolverines staged a spectacu- lar ninth-inning rally to whip Pur- due, 5-3, here this afternoon. Smick, who chalked up his sevepth victory of the season, gaze the Boiler- makers only two hits, both triples, but almost handed the losers the game by committing four errors afield. Determined to atone for his mis- plays, the giant hurler stepped to the plate in the first half of the ninth with Michigan trailing 3-2 and Fred- die Trosko on first base, and prompt- ly slapped out a long three-bagger to tie the score. Pitcher Bob Bailey then proceded to balk Smick across the. plate with the winning run. Pete Lisagor's walk, a sacrifice, an in- field out and a wild pitch by Bailey cinched the game for the Varsity. Third baseman Mackiewitz's triple with two men on base in the first in- ning gave the Boilermakers an early (Continued on Page 3) School Aid, Michigan State College Funds Reduced As Legislature Adjourns Members Go To Appropriation '97 As Senate Of Flying Club Detroit Today Chinese Publisher Addresses Shanghai Alumni Association (Editor's Note: The following article was delayed in transmission through the war zone. J. B. Powell, the speaker, is the dean of oriental foreign cor- respondents, serving in China for more than 20 years as Chicago Tribune cor- respondent and editor of the China Weekly Revue.) SHANGHAI, April 25. (Special to The Daily).-China has been fighting the battle of the United States since the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese hostilities in 1937, declared Mr. J. B. Powell, editor and publisher of the China Weekly Review, in a speech be- fore a meeting of the University of Michigan Association inrShanghai. "While we have been passing the buck about the Pacific," the noted editor said, "the Chinese people have been actually fighting with all the means in their power to preserve their territory, their institutions and national life against the most bar- barous form of warfare yet designed by man, a form of warfare which carries us and the world generally back five or six centuries. "How many of us realize that China has been fighting our battles all this time, suffering losses in killed and' .:n1~lr in rat. --- .. - n - -,vn m - e some school or hospital, that those bombs actually are dropped on us. "And when I make this statement, I do not mean on our mission prop- erty. I mean that when those Jap- anese planes drop those bombs on a Chinese city, that it is only prepara- tion for similar expeditions to our territory, first the Philippines, then Hawaii, then possibly Alaska, or Cali- fornia, Washington or Oregon. "If we do not stop them here, we might not be able to stop them there when they get ready for us." Commenting on the attitude of foreign powers on China's struggle, Mr. Powell said that in recent weeks, especially since the occupation of Hainan Island by the Japanese, there had been noted changes. The policy of the United States, he declared, has undergone funda- mental changes, and the new naval program, including the fortification of t* Guam Island is a direct reply to the Japanese. The change, he added, is partic- ularly noticeable in the Philippines. The Commonwealth is seriously thinking of strengthening its defense ..1 i.., mo ..1 . 4... ..... .. .. C1 ... Nine members of the Flying Club will go to Pontiac today to compete in the Detroit Mid-West'Intercollegiate Air Meet today and tomorrow. The meet, sponsored by the University of Detroit, will be held at the Pontiac Municipal Airport. The members of the club hope to repeat the fine showing they made at the intercollegiate meet at Gam- bier, O., May 6 and 7, where they tied for first place with the team from Kenyon, which was competing on home grounds. Students representing the club at the meet will be Dan Ranney, '40E, president; Leslie Trigg, Glenn Brink, '39E, Louis Goldman, '39E, John Rin- ek, '39E, Larry Rinek, '40E, Edward Martin, Alexander McRae, '39E, and R. Scott Royce, '39E. Britain Anticipates Soviet Acceptance (By Associated Press) Great Britain anticipated last night a quick and successful termination of the two-month-old negotiations to align Soviet Russia with her and France in a three-way mutual assist- ance agreement. London sent detailed new proposals f Unc.-v nne - m rla fb ..irc ef 'White Steed' To Open lere Next Tuesday Paul Vincent Carroll's "The White Steed," a hit on Broadway this year, will be released for the first time outside New York when the play opens Tuesday at the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre, the third presenta- tion of the 1939 Dramatic Season. Awarded the 1939 Critics' Circle Prize for the best play by a foreign author, "The White Steed" portrays the turmoil created in a small Irish village when the old canon has to give up his active care of the parish to a new young priest. Whitford Kane, noted Irish actor, plays the role of the canon. The supporting cast includes Jo- anna Roos, Nora Fintry, Wesley Addy, Clancy Cooper, Mary Morris, Ethel Morrison, Hathaway Kale, John Car- mody, Staats Cotsworth, Edgar Kent and Charles Trexler. "American Landscape," with Harry Irvine, closes its run today with a matinee at 3:15 p.m. and the evening performance at 8:30., Dr. Mayo Dies Of Pneumonia Furstenburg Terms Death Blow To Profession The death yesterday of Dr. Charles H. Mayo, internationally famous sur- geon and co-founder of the Mayo Clinic, came as a blow to many of the physicians inthe medical school. When informed of Dr. Mayo's death from pneumonia, Dean Albert C. Fur- stenberg of the medical school, com- mented: "He was a very famous sur- geon whose loss will be de'eply felt in the medical profession. In addition to being a skillful technician he was a man with profound research in- stincts. His accomplishments in sur- gery will not fail of lasting recogni- tion." The Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.,- was founded by Dr. Mayo and his brother, Dr. William J. Mayo. Ensians Go On Sale Distribution of the 1939 Michi- ganensians will continue today at the Student Publications Building DR. WILBUR M. SMITH t . * *. Smith To Tallh In Union Today Noted Authority To Speak On Belief In Bible t Dr. Wilbur M. Smith, prominentS Chicago Bible authority, will speak tonight in the north lounge of thet Union in a program under the aus- pices of the Michigan Christian Fel- lowship.l His subject will be "The Bible-To Believe It Or Not." He is an active1 member of the Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis, of London, England, and is an associate mem-'t ber of the American Schools for1 Oriental Research. He is a contribut- ing editor to "Bibliotheca Sacra," and has published a list of Biblical litera- ture published in Great Britain andt America from 1595 to 1931. After more than twenty years as a' pastor in the Presbyterian Church, Dr. Smith was recently appointed to the faculty staff of the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. M ichigan Beats Ohio Wesleyan Net Team, 5-2 Tobin Upsets Harry Zink; Squad Meets Duquesne Today In Home Finale Michigan's tennis forces tangled with Ohio Wesleyan in a four-hour marathon yesterday at the Palmer Field courts with the Wolverines' greater stamina deciding the match in their favor, 5-2. John Kidwell took top honors as far as number of games played was concerned, since his singles and doubles matches totaled 70. Kidwell easily won his first set 6-1, but lapsed in the second, and it went to his opponent, John Rowe, 6-3. The third and final set went 16 games and Kidwell finally emerged on the long end of a 9-7 score. Kidwelland Jim Tobin lost the number one doubles match to Harry Zink and Tracy Jones, 8-10, 6-2, 7-5. It looked as if the Wolverines would come out on top after they took the first set but the steadiness of the visitors coupled with their accuracy gave them the match. In singles, Jim Tobin met Harry (Continued on Page 3) Executions Begin Spain's New Era MADRID, May 26.--(')-It was officially announced tonight that the Nationalists' specially constituted councils of war and permanent mili- tary tribunals had sent 688 persons before firing squads since the fall of Madrid March 28. The councils, formed by officers of the Madrid army of occupation, con- demned 1,000 persons to death, but the sentences of 312 of them were commuted to prison terms by Gener- alissimo Francisco Franco. nmfiraa n of th mi.vfr+nalea Annual Amount Now Stands At $4,475,000 (By Associated Press) The Senate approved a $101,797 cut in the University appropriation as it passed the general budget bill last night just before adjourning for. the current session. This action reduced the annual appropriation to $4,- 475,000. Michigan State College had its ap- propriation reduced to $2,500,000, a cut of $133,477. The Senate voted down the confer- ence report on school-aid appropria- tions. This action leaves in effect a continuing appropriation of $43,- 000,000 provided in an act by the 1937 Legislature. Total As Anticipated The budget bills as approved by the House of Representatives totaled $102,920,808, approximately the same as anticipated revenue. The effect of the $43,000,000 continuing appropri- ation for school aid would be to thow the "pay-as-you-go" Republican bud- get out of balance by approximately $4,750,000. Democrats joined solidly in defeat- ing the conference report. Sen. Ches- ter M. Howell, (Rep., Saginaw), whose motion to increase the school aid ap- propriation, touched off the battl&~ over school aid appropriations, ex- pressed hope that the Senate Would not concur in the conference report. Sen. Carl F. Delano, (Rep., Kala- mazoo), made a motion that the bill be tabled, but was ruled out of order. The formula for school aid set up in the bill was assailed, by Sen. Clyde -V. Fenner, (Rep., Detroit), who termed it "dishonest, deliberately dis- honest, and one that hurts the small one room schools along with those in the larger cities and favors those which do not need it." Bill Fair Compromise The bill was called a "fair com- promise as it was reported by the conference committee" by Sen. M. Harold Saur, (Rep., Kent City), but Sen. Earl W. Munshaw, (Rep., Grand Rapids), whose urban district ad- joins that of Senator Saurs, told him that the first ward of Grand Rapids, a part of Senator Saur's district, would lose "thousands of dollars un- der the proposed formula." Senator Shaw estimated that the formula would shorten school terms by as much as six weeks or two months. The Senate acted shortly after the House prepared to adjourn after voting to give the public schools an annual appropriation of $38,250,000 and the aforementioned grants to the University and Michigan State Col- lege. The Legislature adjourned-more than 26 hours after the scheduled time-amid reports that its mem- bers would have more work to do when they return for the sine die adjournment June 29 or face a special session. Book Exchange To Open Soon Texts Submitted Now To Be Held Till Fall Term Reopening of the Student Book Ex- change Thursday, June 7, for con- tinuation though examination period in its full capacities in acceptance and sale of used books, was an- nounced by Robert Ulrich, '41, chair- man of the project. The Exchange will continue the sys- tem of used book handling. Books turned in for sale this spring will be kept by the exchange offices till the fall reopening, according to Ulrich. The project, organized on the Michigan campus for the first time last semester features an actual cash return of 90 per cent of the sale price to students whose books are sold. Pa- trons of the exchange are encouraged to ask no more than three-fourths of the new price, but no definite stipu- lation is put on this practice. A $2,600 turnover for the midyear exchange I