C, 4 .*ummt x THE WEATHER FAIR, CONTINUED COOL TODAY cla ;, ,7 :t - ASSOCIATED PRESS DAY AND NIGHT WIRE SERVICE VQL. XV. No. 11 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1924 PRICE FIVE CENTS NO NOMINATION RACHER AS 27TH BA[LLOTIS C~ MCADOO LOSES 2.5 VOTES, SMIT GAINS IN RACE RALSTON, DAVIS MAKE UPWARD STRIDE, SAID Bryan Backs Ralston On Coven*io Floor As McAdoo Voting Takes Marked Slump New York, July 1.-r(By AP)-On the 27th ballot in the democratic nat- ional convention tonight there was no nomination. The leaders of the ballot stood this way: McAdoo, 413; Smith, 316.5; Davis, 128. On this ballot McAdoo lost 2.5 votes, Smith gained 5; Davis gained 3.5. The net result was that Smith touched a new high water mark; McAdoo touch- ed a new level, while Davis remained about near his high' mark. A conference of leaders in the North Carolina delegation with convention officials on the right of the delegation to cease voting as a unit for McAdoo agreed late today that under the state laws and the rules of the convention the individuals of the delegation may vote their will, regardless of the pri- mary result. Chairman Max 0. Gardner of the North Carolina delegation announced after the conference that the dele- gation would "stick with McAdoo for a few more ballots." A number of the delegates express- ed themselves favorable to John W. Davis and a break in the North Car- olina ranks early in the night ses- sion was freely forecast by members of the delegation, including some of these who hade been parties to the conference. Senator Samuel M. Ralston, of In- diana, was lomming up tonight as a possible compromise candidate for the Democratic national convention. When the convention after 12 ballots more, making 27 in all, recessed, John W. Davis of West Virginia, had made such gains that William Jennings Bryan openly declared war on the West Vir- ginian and went about the convention floor working against him. The con- vention was to resume tonight. VIOLIN, ORGAN SOLOISTS ON CONET PGRM Miss Emily Mutter and Harry Rua- sell, organist will be the soloists at the concert this evening, given in Hill Auditorium on the regular program o Faculty Concerts. Miss Mutter. pupil of Antony J. Whitmire of the violin faculty, and has played in many of the music centers of the country. Tho very young, she is recognized as a musician of considerable promise. Mr. Evans, a graduate of the School of Music, and a member of its summer faculty, has not ben'heard here for some time, since withdrawal to Bay City where his. work has won him considerable prominence. The program follows: Suite Gothique ..........Boellmann Chorale; Minuet, Prayer, Tocata. Mr. Evans Praeludium and Allegro... .... ............... Pugnani-Kreisler 0 Believe Me ............... .... Transcribed by Helen Ware Scherzo Tarantelle, Op. 16....... .................Wieniawski Miss Mutter Pastoral in F ...............Bach Caprice in G Minor .........Crackell Andantino in D flat .........Lemare Mr. Evans Zigeunerweisen ............Sarasate Miss Mutter Catari! Catari!............. Cardillo Conce-t Variatibns......,. Bonnett Mr. Evans Accompaniments by Miss Donna Esselstyn. The menace of the packs of wild dogs that roam the Australian plains and tear out the throats of sheep was recently described by the Victorian minister for lands. The Egyptions made glass long be- fore the birth of Christ. K. K. K. Candidate. .Fails By Narrow Margin In Maine Hard Year Faces Wolverine Gridmen Is Present Prospect Prospects for a successful gridiron season at Michigan next fall, while good, are not considered as certain as last year. Loss of eight letter men, four of them stars of the first magnitude, and the h6avy 1924 sched- ule will undoubtedly be greatly felt. Indications are that Michigan will have a strong, well-balanced team, with considerable power. But it will lack the brilliant stars of the 1922 and 1923 elevens. Several men will be available for each position, and keen competition is promised for the regular berths. Of the eight letter men lost by grad- uation, four were great stars. Rlipke and Blott were. All-American play- ers, and Muirhead and Uteritz were among the best gridiron stars Mich igan has had. In addition Van der Voort, Neisch, Vick, and Curran, all valuable men have graduated. Their, loss gives Coach Little a big problem this fall. Of the letter men of last year the following will be available this fall: Babcock and Kunow at tackle, Brown at center, Slaughter, Steele, and Haw- kins at guard, Marion at end, and, in the backfield, Captain Steger, Rock- well, Grube, Herrnstein, and Miller. Of the A.M.A. men, Parker, Wither- spoon, Palmer, and Merle Baker will be on hand. Seven of the most promising mem- bers of last year's strong freshman squad will not be available. Bowles, Cook, Stuart, Arnold, Baer, Hamilton, and Morrison are among those lost by eneligibility. There are a number of strong contenders, however, from the freshman team who will bid for pos- itions this fall. Considered by positions, the 1924 squad lines up well. At center Coach Little will have Brown, who was Blott's understudy last year, and Mad sen, 190 pound freshman from Oak Park. Others in line are McIntrye, McMillan, Coventry, and Jones. At guard, Slaughter, Steele, Hakins and White are veterans. They will face stiff competition, however, in Keller, a Waite high product, Dewey, Ullman, (Continued on Page Three) Frank M. Farrington A plurality of only 1700 votes won the Republican gubernational nomina- tion in Maine for Frank M. Farrington (above), Augusta, over Ralps Brew- ster, Portland, who was supported by the Ku Klux Klan. STORM TOLL NOVJ 88 INOHIO AREA1 Halt Work On Theatre As Nearby Wall Threatens To Collapse; Search Continues WILL BUILD ULTRA-MODERN .- CITY ON RUINS OF LORAIN Cleveland, July 1.-(By AP)-The list of known dead in Northern Ohio's tornado Saturday has reached 98 with indications that this number probably will be increased, according to compil- ations made by The Associated Press. Lorain, O., July 1.-(By AP)-De- spite the unwavering belief of several city officials and military authorities that all of Lorain's dead are not ac- counted for, the list this morning re- mained the same as last night, a tot- al of 72. But the Red Cross in check- ing the dead and wounded, found 1' persons unaccounted for. Work of clearing the wreckage of the State theater, under which offici- als believe are a number of bodies was stopped at 9 o'clock last night because of the danger that an adjoining four- story brick wall might fall. Efforts were concentrated in digg- ing through' the lobby of the theater, where three floors from an apart- ment above dropped. The body of a woman was taken from there Sunday morning and it is thought a young girl who had been visiting her and who is missing, still is in the debris. The efforts of thousands of wreck- ers and relief workers with hundreds of trucks and wagons has not begun to scratch the surface as far as remov- ing the millions of tons of wreckage is concerned. Fifteen hundred Ohio National Guardsmen are in possession of the city. The detachment of Cleveland policemen which had been here since Saturday night returned home last night.I Mayor Hoffman said Lorain will not be repaired, but rebuilt. "We plan to erect one of the most modern cities in Ohio after the ruins of the old are cleared away," he said. TOUR OF FORD PLNT MADl THIS AFTERNOON, MISS WEAD TALKS~ TO [LIBRARY1BODY University Books Donated by Regent Hubbard Depict "Imaginary Voyage" FANTASTIC TRAVEL TALES INCLUDED IN COLLECTI)kN Saratoga Spring, N. Y., July 1.- The "imaginary voyage" as a literary theme is no where better i llustrated than in the large collection of books recently presented to the University of Michigan by Regent Lucius L. Hub- hard, Eunice Wend, curator of raret books at the University library, toldf the C'0 fdogue Section of the Ame ican Library association today. The "imaginary voyage," the speak- er said, is as old as the Odyssey andt as modern as the novels of H. G.t Wells,. It encompasses the purely fan- tastic travels that are the basis of such works as Cyrano De Bergerac's< Voyage to The Moon, the undergrounds adventures of Niels Klim, and Swift's "Gulliver's Travels," the scenes of which are laid for the most part on1 this earth. Realistic voyages form another larget group, in which it is difficult to dis-t cern truth from fiction. The speak-1 er called Defoe's "Robinson Crusoe"< the "shining example of this form."1 This work brought many imitations, both in England and the continent and was followed nearly a centuryf later by Johann Wyss famous "Swiss Family Robinson."1 The "voyage" volumes, the speakerf said, are written for amusement, for instruction, for deceit. for satirizing1 existing conditions (as in Gullivers1 Travels), an( for "philosophic con- sideration of the ideal commonwealth.', WENLEY aIES PROBLEMS FACING TECHERS TODAY1 Pro.. Robert M. Wnley, of the phil- osophy department, was speaker last night at the second meeting of the Men's Educational club, held in the Michigan Union. e spoke to thel group on the problems of education that are facing teachers today. Com paring the 1lrofessional class of teach- ers to Sampson, who was bound by bonds of brass and ground in his prison cell, rthofessor Wc Iey went1 on to say that the bonds that boundt educators in the present day were the limits of our human knowledge, and the vast development through which that knowledge has passed in the last century. The one hundred inventions which most affect our lives today, the speak- er declared, were unknown before the middle of the 18th century. It is the necessity to adapt ourselves to this vast change which faces the men and Women of this day. Only a severe financial crisis will relieve the head-; long pace at which we are traveling.1 GRIFFIN LAUDS 1 Explains Dawes' Stand, And Need Of Change In Economic Structures, of Germany BEST FEATURE, TREATMENT OF GERMANY AS DEBTOR The Dawe, plan for German repar- atian problenr; is the best tling that has been made, according to Prof. C. E. Griffin of the Economics d part- ment in his speech yesterday after- noon on the "Economics of Interna- tional Payments with Special Refer- ence to Reparations" in the auditor- im of the Natural science building. His speech was entirely an explan- ation of the Dawes plan with regard to Germany and how her economic structure ought to be changed to meet the necessary requirenuents of the re- parations. The Dawes plans is the best proposal put forward so far, he said, because of the changed point of view. Thlj point of view, Prof. Griffen went on to explain, was the one of the business man instead of the previous views that dominated the Allies in their dealings with Germany. Dawes takes into consideration the economic plan and builds this idea up into a sound and constructive plan for the payment. The Dawes plan does four things, (1) establishes an international bank for the storing of money, (2) Mort- gages German industries and rail- roads, (3) establishes a moritorium for two or three years and, (4) sep- arates the two problems, viz. the col- lection of the debt and the payment of it to the Allies. Complicated as, is the collection of the debt from the Germans, the sec- ond problem, that of paying this debt to the Allies, is the really difficult one confronting the allies and Germany. For Germany to pay the debt, it will mean the development of a large ex- port trade with other nations. As her former field is gone, this means a de- velopment of new fields and invasion of them by German firms. Despite this handicap, the plan has an advan- tage in that the business is left in the hands of the German business men and not in government hands. Another angle to the Dawes plan is that it means that the Allies will have to take an interest in German trade and help it grow, which means a reversal of their former policy of trying to have the golden eggs from the goose after killing it. It will also mean that they will have to aid Ger- many get back on her feet so that she can pay back her debts to the Allies. The best thing about the Dawes plan, concluded Prof. Griffin, is that it treated Germany more as a debtor rather than an enemy. Without waiting for customers to come to him, a Mexican shoe peddler in Los Angeles, Calif, ties his stock about his shoulders and goes out after business. Dean Discusses League Drive For Building Dean Jean Hamilton is enthusiastic over results obtained in two and a half months' intensive campaigning for the League building and endowment fund, she said Monday before she left for her vacation. "The first proposal for our great campaign", she stated, "was made at the annual Detroit alumnae luncheon on March 1. On March 3 the nucleus of what was to be the national cam- paign held its first meeting, and on March 8, plans having been decided upon and policy formulated, the ac- tual work began." $606,000 Pledged For more than two years the League had been working on the fund for the women's center on the campus with the result that $53,000 was pledged when the drive started this spring. "But now we have $606,000 pledged," Miss Hamilton said. "Of that amount $70,834 is in the bank for the League, so that we have in cash more than as much as had previously been pledged! during the long campaign. Add to that the amount that will come in on, July 1 when most of the first pay-~ ments on memberships are due, and1 you will realize the immediate suc- cess of the spring drive." The dean went on to say that the $207 asked of every Michigan woman was simply the figure obtained by di viding $1,000,000, which is the sumi needed to begin building, by the num- ber of women that the campaign com-t mittee could reach. That numberi was determined by sending out ques- tionaires to 9200 women; with in six weeks 4628 of them had been return- ed. They showed what Michigan wo-c men are doing and consequently weres used almost entirely for campaign pro.-. paganda.d Average Membership is 40 Per Cent t "The average membership for citieso throughout the 12 districts organiz-c ed is 40 per cent," Dean Hamilton not- t ed. "The whole state of Delawarew ranks 167 per cent; nine cities, includ- t ing Monroe, Grand Rapids, Green- ville, Grand, Haven, Saginaw,tHolla{d, i in Micihgan, and Kansas City, Miss- ouri, are 100 percent to 167 percentw subscribed, and nine others have fromn 75 percent to 100 percent of theirs quotas. Special gifts are counted up-n on to fill out the probable fourth' of.the t fund that cannot be paid by Michigan d women." s "Memberships for women who have4 left the University are now available a at $50; more than that must be paid,4 though, if the League building is. everu to be a reality. Practically everyone recognizes that, and graduates are be- ing given three years to pay their pledges." Dean Hamilton will do some cam- paign work in New York City, now 77 Percent subscribed, while she is on her vacation. YOST ENUMERATES PHYSICAL TRAININ6 EQUIPMENT NEEDS UP-TO-DATE GYMNASIUM, TENNIS COURTS AND TANKS NEEDED COMPULSORY TRAINING FOR ALL MEN DESIRED Preparing Men For Useful Service School's Responsibility To Taxpayers Speaking on tfie subject "Atheetcs in Relation to Endurance and Public Health", Coach Fielding H. Yost, dir- ector of Intercollegiate athletics, last night continued the series of lectures being given in the University this summer. Mr. Yost told how man-pow- er is developed for the various ath- letic teams and the qualities that go to make up the best men. Coach Yost said, "Consciously or un- consciously, the thing for which we are all striving is happiness. Happi- ness comes from success and the on- ly way to succeed is to give service. Service i the mother of reward." Tells Physcal Education Ideal He then outlined the qualities that constitute ability, reliability and en- durance. "Ability consists of think- ing, remembering and imagining," Mr. Yost said, "And remembering is the thing that we too often have trained in us at the expense of thinking and imagining." From the development of man-pow- er Mr. Yost proceeded to give his con- ception of the 'ideal program of phy- sical education for a university. He said, "Only when we have every stu- dent engaging regularly throughout he year in the right kind and amount of motor activity will we have dis- charged our full responsibility to the ax payers who send their boys to us with the expectation that at college hey are prepared for a life of useful ervice." Mr. Yost's program would nclude an allotment of time by each tudent in the University for exercise which would be compulsory. Mr. Yost enumerated what he con- iders to be our immediate pressing needs in the line of physical educa- ion. They are: a large and up-to- late gymnasium with at least three wimming tanks; improvement of our [0 acre tract for intramural athletics: bout 50 more tennis courts; increased eating capacity of football stands; a iniversity golf course. Need Consistent Athletics Some statistics to show the number of students pa'rticipating in athletics and physical exercise at the present time were given. About 5,770 take part in intramural activities while in- tercollegiate and freshman sports claim 1,344. Mr. Yost said, "The pro- gram at Michigan reaches in some way approximately all the students but the difficuly lies in het fact that with most of them, participation in physical exercise is not, regular. Un- fortunately facilities are not available to accommodate all the students that would like to take part in athletics and games. Many will participate for a week or two and then drop out be- cause of lack of room, encouragement or proper direction. "If we are to have students that will be physically fitted to lead their most useful lives we must have more grounds and buildings, a more com- plete program-anda larger staff for physical education and athletics." WHAT'S GOING ON WEDNESDAY 1:00-Excursion No. 3-Ford Motor company-Corner of State and Packard. 4:00-Bible class, Upper room Lane hall. 5:00-Lecture in French-Les pre- miers rapports intellectuals entre la France et l'Amerique, Prof. Gil- bert Chinard. Natural Science aud- itorium. 7:00-Meeting of Phl Delta Kappa, room 302, Union. 8:00-Concert-11Mr. Barry Russell Evans, organist, Miss Emily Mutter, violin, Hill auditorium. THURSDAY 4:00-Bible class,. Upper room, Lane hall. 5:00-Niagara Falls and Its History. (Illustrated). Mr. C. R Hussey, Na- tural Science auditorium. 7:00-Choral Union rehearsal, School of Music. 8:00-Educational motion pictures, Na- tural Science auditorium. The poned taken third from this summer excursion, post- last Saturday, will be afternoon. Mr. Carlton Wells will have charge of the group, who will tour the Ford Motor com- pany's Highland Park plant. Special guides will be provided to conduct the party through the plant. Those taking the trip will meet at Packard and State Sts., to take the 1 o'clock interurban for Detroit. The tour will be completed by 4:45 and the party will return to Ann Arbor at 8:45. ~About $2.50 will cover the bill in- cluding dinner in Detroit. CHINARO TO LECTURE 11IN FRENCH THIS AFTERNOON Professor Gilbert Chinard, head of the Romance languages department of Johns Hopkins University will speak on "Les premiers rapports intellect- uals entre la France et 1'Amerique", this afternoon at five o'clock in the Natural Science auditorium. In hi stalk Prof. Chinard proposes to emphasize the importance of the early relations between France and America and the latter's influence on France through the ideas of Benja- min Franklin, Jefferson and Washing- ton and other great statesmen. He will also show ho wthe ideals' of dem- ocraey were fostered in France at the timeof Napoleon through America. FRIDAY National holiday-University suspended. classes Allahabad, British, India, July 1.- The American Army world flight ex- pedition arrived here today from Cal- cutta.