ESTABLISHED 1920 &Iir 'uwmr A& -AIL- 41P 4 t AWOff r juAMP 1 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS i VOL. X. No. 30, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 1.930 PRICE FIVE ORMT - - . ----- --- - ------ I MICHIGAN PLAYERS WILL APPEAR NEXT IN 'CONSTNT WIF' W. Somerset Maughan's Brillian Comedy Will be Presented Four Times This Week. WINDT DIRECTS STAGING Florence Tennant, Harry Alen to Have Leading Roles; -Matinee on Friday. W. Somerset Maugham's brilliant comedy, "The Constant Wife," will be the sixth summer public presentation of the Michigan Rep- ertory players of the Play Produc- tion department, opening at 8:15 o'clock Wednesday night in the Ly- dia Mendelssohn theatre. Per- formances will also be given at 8:15 o'clock Thursday and Saturday nights. Only a matinee will be given on Friday. Valentine B. Windt, director of Play Production, is in charge of the staging of "The Constant Wife." Mr. Windt, this summer, has also directed the mounting of "Holiday" and "The Guardsman." Play Opened in Cleveland This sophisticated drama by Maugham was first presented at the Ohio theatre, Cleveland, on November 1, 1926, meeting with in- stant success. Ethel Barrymore ap- peared in the original company as Constance Middleton. C. Aubrey Smith had the role of Dr. Middle- ton, her husband. The part of Bernard Kersal was played by Frank Conroy. Maugham is also the author of "Rain," "The Circle," and "The Let- ter," which was made famous through the performance of the late Jeanne Eagels. In the local production, Florence Tennant, one of the best known actresses in campus dramatic cir- cles, and who has also had exer- ience playing with a stock company in the East, will have the part of Tennant has achieved notable su- Constance, the Barrymore role. Miss Tennant has achieved not- able success both in the presenta- tions of Play Production and Com- edy club, having given notable per- formances in "Granite," by Cem- ence Dane; "Children of the Moon," by Martin Flavin; In Play Produc- tion's staging of "The Constant Wife" here more than a year ago; and ni this summer's presentation of Philip Barry's "Holiday," in which she appeared as Linda. Allen Is in Cast Harry R. Allen, Who has been seen this summer as Johnne in "Holiday" and as the Guardsman in the Molnar drama, will appear in the part originally played by Frank Conroy. Arthur Secord, re- membered for his parts in Gals- worthy's "Escape" and in "Close Harmony." Pauline Bauersmith, from Carnegie Institute of Tech-lgwohsbe enti summer in "Close Harmony" and "The Guardsman," has also been cast in this week's production. Reserved seats are now on sale in the box office at the theatre. All tickets are priced at 75 cents. CHINESE RETREAT BEFORE INVADERS Thousands Flee as Communists Advance Towards Yangtze. (By Associated Press) SHANGHAI, Aug. 2-The Yangtze river cities of Hankow, Hanyang and Wuchang, with a joint popula- tion estimated at several millions, today lay in the path of China's advancing bloodcrazed revolting armies and Communist forces. Thousands of terrified Chinese, bearing their property, sought re- fuge in the barricaded foreign con- cessions of Hankow as Communist armies moved toward the tri-cities, fresh from the conquest and de-1 struction of Changsha. The cities were under martial law. The capital at Nanking also was under military rule. -Changsha still was reported oc- cupied by remnants of looting Red STUDENT TOUR WEDNESDAY TO VISIT AMERICANA MUSEUM AT GREENFIELD f With a tour planned that will include a visit to Greenfield village, Henry Ford's Museum of Ameri- cana, with its examples of early' American architecture, and Edison's original Menlo Park laboratory, the seventh excursion of the summer session will leave the campus for the Ford Airport at Dearborn, on Wednesday. Because of Mr. Ford's efforts in gathering together memorabilia of the past century in one vicinity, Greenfield village has become one of the leading show places of Michigan. Here on the Michigan countryside he caused to be con- structed a typical central Michigan town of forescore years ago, and to perfect the illusion the nation has HOOVER TO CONFERI ON HOME FINANCIN C - - - i been scoured for articles of all sorts then in use. Perhaps the most famed of the buildings erected in the village is t he Edison laboratory brought piecemeal from the East, in which was staged the rediscovery of the incandescent lamp during the Edi- son Golden Jubilee last year. A copy of the train in which Mr. Edi- son served as a news butcher, and. which brought President Hoover and the inventor to the celebra- tion, is also preserved here in the Edison group. To more modern-minded people the airport itself will perhaps be of greater interest. Including such fa- cilities for modern commerce as a dirigible mooring mast, a revolving beacon, shops, hangars, and service equipment, this is one of the larg- est and most completely equipped commercial airports in this country. In the hangars are many inter- esting exhibits, such as the plane in which Commander Byrd made his epochal flight to the North Pole, and "The Pride of Detroit," the Stinson monoplane in which Schlee and Brock flew from Detroit to Tokio. MEARS NOW READY FOR ATLANTIC HOPI Y i ; 'BESEKIRSKY, MAIER WILL APPEARHERE ON JOINTPROGRAM New Head of Violin Department Has Had Wide Experience on Concert Stage., Canada's New Premier Favors Higher Tariffs TWO WOMEN HELD FOR INVESTIGATION ON BUCKLEY CASE Marjorie Mansell, Entertainer at Detroit Radio Station, Detained for Bond. POLICE SEEK HOFFMAN Attempt to Find Wealthy Youth Believed Acquaintance of Second Woman. TO MAKE LOCAL DEBUT National Meeting Convened President to Discuss Building Work. by SEEKS COST REDUCTION (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.-Coordi- nated effort to remove influences which are depriving thousands of Americans of the advantages of home ownership has set in motion today at the direction of President Hoover. Privately financed, and with its studies directed at co-ordinating and stimulating private effort rather than seeking relief through legislation, a national conference on home ownership and building has been called by the president. A score of associations represent- ing the majority of the interests touching on the problem were in- vited to detail their chiefs as mem- bers of a planning committee which will make up the confer- ences program. Mr. Hoover pointed out that fi- nancing conditions surrounding home building have been extremely bad and are particularly in need of adjustment, but this, he said, would be only one phase of the conference's work. "Greater comfort and reduction in cost of construction in many parts of the country through im- proved design, the better layout of residential areas are all of first im- portance," the president said. "The expansion and betterment of' homes in its bearing upon comfort,' increasing standards of living and economic stability, is of outstand- ing importance." STUDENTS OFFER ONE-ACTDRAMAS Three one-act plays were pre- sented by the members of the Play Production classes in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre yesterday aft- ernoon. Holders of season tickets for repertory series and theirs guests attended the matinee per- formance. A stylized Russian comedy, by Chekov, a negro spiritual play by' Eulalie Spence, and a satirical com- edy by Alice Gerstenberg composed I the program. Student directors in the staging of the plays were Seward Reese and Mrs. Rachel F. Kent for "The' Boor;" Mrs. Ethel McIntosh, Edna Johnson, and Agnes M. Thomas for1 "Fool's Errand;" and Mrs. Jose- phine C. Barnes and Helen Allan for "He Said and She Said." Properties and staging were han- dled by members of the stagecraft classes. (By Associated Press) Reports that he has a feeling!, that he, or rather, it will be unset-; tled and decidedly warmer today. I He is shown above fleeing to Whit- , Prepares for 1,900 Mile Jaunt Dublin in Longest Lap of Round-World Flight. tol LANDS AT HARBOR GRACE (By Associated Press) HARBOR GRACE, N. F., Aug. 2.- John Henry Means, who twice in a comparatively short lifetime has broken the round-world time rec- ord only to see it again shattered, was poised here tonight for the longest step of his latest efforts, 1,900 miles across the North Atlant- ic from this airport to the Baldon- nel airdrome in Dublin, Ireland. Mears dropped out of the sky at 1:55 o'clock p. m. in his red and silver monoplane, The City of New York, after a scenic flight from Roosevelt field, N. Y., in the unus- ual good time of eight hours, 15, minutes. The distance was 1,1501 miles.1 With him were two passengers, Henry J. Brown, 31-year-old air mail pilot, who acquitted himself perfectly in his first long over- water test and Tall-wind II, a ter- rier and a gift to Mrs. Mears from Mary Pickford. If all goes well, and there was every prospect tonight that weath- er tomorrow would see it as near to ideal as possible over the. dead, stretch of the fog shrouded North Atlantic which they must next ne- gotiate, the flyers hoped to be off at dawn. The world's record for the cir- cumferential Journey they have un- dertaken is 21 days, 8 hours and 26 minutes, and it belongs to thel Graf, Zeppelin which made the mark last year. Mears and Brown hope to cut it to 15 days. School of Music Program Will Present Noted Partner of Lee Pattison. Prof. Wassily Besekirsky, violin- ist, and Prof. Guy Maier, pianist, will unite their artistic efforts in a miscellaneous program of violin and piano numbers at the School of Music concert to be presented at 8:15 o'clock next Tuesday night in Hill auditorium. This concert will mark the Ann Arbor debut of Professor Besekir- sky, who has recently been appoint- ' ed head of the violin department of the music school, succeeding Prof. Samuel Peirson Lockwood, who h e 1 d that position for nearly a quarter of a century. Studied at Moscow. Prof essor Besekirsky has had a notable cre as a concert violin- ist and has also been associated with some of the leading ensemble organizations. He is a graduate of Moscow conservatory and was in charge of a violin department of the Odessa conservatory, where he made an excellent reputation. He has given many concerts through- out music centers of Europe. At the outbreak of the World war, Professor Besekirsky was va- cationing in America preparatory to a full concert schedule which was to take him throughout conti- nental Europe and Great Britain. On account of the war, the tour was abandoned, and he decided to remain in America. He won dis- tinction with the Russian Sym- phony orchestra, the Rhode Island trio, and in concert performances under most of the great. conductors of this country as well as in gener- al concert appearances. Mrs. Rhead Is Accompanist. Professor Besekirsky will be ac- companied at the piano by Prof. IMabel Ross Rhead of the piano faculty, who has won distinction as an ensemble player and as a solo perf ormer. Professor Maier of the piano fac- ulty likewise has won distinction as a concert artist throughout three continents. Phi Delta Kappa Group to Give Noon Luncheon All members of Phi Delta Kappa, national educational fraternity, will hold a luncheon at 12:05 o'clock Tuesday noon in the Union, as the first meeting of the. organization during the Summer Session. W. C. Darling, of Saline, will pre- side. Tuesday's meeting is intended to be a get-together for the ben- efit of all members of the organiza- t ion who are in residence on the campus. R. B. Bennett, Conservative leader, who sur- prised all Canada when he snatch- ed the premiership from W. L. Mc- Kenzie King in the recent election. CUP 'RACE HONORS Morgan Nichols Boat Finishes Three Minutes in, Lead of Enterprise.' WHIRLWIND' IS THIRD (By Associated Press) NEWPORT, R. I., Aug. 2.-Weeta- moe today defeated the three other aspirants for the honor of def end- ing the Americas cup over a 37 1-2 mile course, from New London, Conn., to Newport. The course rep- resented the opening run of the eight-day New York Yacht club cruise and it was sailed in a light southwesterly, air as a broad reach and except off of Point Julius, in a smooth sea. The Morgan Nichols boat crossed the finish line more than three minutes ahead of Enterprise, sailed by Harold S. Vanderbilt. The only boat seriously to contest the Nich- ols was Weetamoe. Whirlwind, sailed by Landon K. Thorne, was unable to finish bet- t~er than a bad third although her rig had been radically changed since she last met the cup candi- dates off here. She was nearly 15 minutes behind Weetamoe, Yankee, the Boston, and only non-New Yorker came home last following Whirlwind by approximately five Iminutes. Vanity, the unsuccessful candi- date for defense of the famous cup a decade ago, furnished the great- est surprise of the day's sailing. With Resolute, the successful 1920 defender, Vanity started five min- utes later than the new cup boats but she finished ahead of both Whirlwind and Yankee. English Actress Will Give Readings Monday With a program that will include two dramatic recitals, Miss Elsie Fogerty, L.R.A.M., of the Central School of --Speech, Training. and Dramatic Art, Inc., located at Lon- don, England, will appear at- five o'clock Monday and Tuesday nights in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. The subject announced for the Monday recital is the "Speaking of English Verse." Tuesday's presenta- tion will be an interpretation read- ing. (By Associated Press) DETROIT, Aug. 2. -Police today tightene their hold on a young woman whom they say knows the voice which lured Jerry Buckley to his death and took another into custody for questioning. kMiss Marjorie Mansell, entertain- er for radio station WMBC, the sta- tion for which Buckley was the mil- itant politcal commentator, was ordered held for 48 hours more un- den the equivalent of $200,000 bond after a hearing this morning before Judge Henry S. Sweeney in record- er's court on a writ of habeas cor- pus. The latest woman to enter the case is Miss Ethel Bronson, said by police to have been with Buckley 24 hours before he was shot down, on recall election night. Second Woman Held. She was taken into custody this morning and questioned most of the ,day. With her detenton, police revealed they had been looking since shortly after Buckley's death f or a girl referred to by Buckley as his "Smiles" girl. They did not di- vulge the part she was supposed to play in the case. Meanwhile the police said they were continuing their search for Egbert M. Hoffman, scion of a wealthy family, whose bank book showing average daily deposits of $2,000 for recent weeks was found in Miss Mansell's apartment. Hoffman Made Statement. IHe had not been found, but his. attorney, Fred A. Behr, said Hoff- man had made "some sort of a statement" to police commissioner Thomas Wilcox. The attorney of- fered an explanation for the dis- covery of Hoffman's bank book in the raided apartment. Hoffman's secretary, he said, lived with Miss Mansell. She fre- quently made deposits for him of rents collected for his mother, whom he described as a very weal- thy woman. The large sums of money repre-. sented in the book were principally legitimate, he said. It is perfectly natural that his secretary should have taken the book to her home. and then to have forgotten it. She left early this week for her vaca- tion and no one knows where she is. Hoffman, he added, knew Miss Mansell only because his secretary brought her to the office. LAURENCE GOULD WEDS M IS S RICE Famous Geologist, 'Wife Leave on 10-Day Tour of Canada. Prof. Laurence M. Gould, of the geology department and geological director of the Byrd Antarctic ex- peditions, was married last night to Miss Margaret Rice at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mr. Herbert Rice, in Barton Hills. The marriage culminated a ro- mance which started on the camp- us of the University more than WiX years ago, at which time Miss Rice was' a student in a geology course given by Professor Gould. A license to wed was secured by Professor Gould on June 27, Immediately up- on his return from the Antarctic. The marriage was in the garden of the Rice home. Details of the affair were carefully guarded and only the immediate family of the couple were present. The Rev. . ficlated. Following the wedding, the couple left for a 16-day tour of Canada. They will return to Ann Arbor and then go to New York where Professor Gould will contin- ue his work on the findings of the Geological Curiosities of Put-in-Bay Region Inspected by 100 University Excursionists Minor casualities marked the trip of 100 Summer Session excursion- ists to Put-in-Bay yesterday under the leadership of Prof. William H. Hobbs, of the geology department. A charging bull found many of the members of the party in the way and adjusted the matter by knock- ing one young woman over in his field through which they had tres- passed. A 41-inch rattlesnake was exhibited by some islanders which had been killed on the path fol- lowed by the party but a half hour before their arrival Upon leaving the dock at the is- land Prof. Hobbs led the group across the island through fields and up and down dale to the cliffs on the further side which illustrated the wave cutting action of the wa- ter. Proceeding along a narrow and precarious path at the edge of the cliff and then turning inland, east and west striations of the original glacier and the three famous caves on the island were viewed succes- At the caves, the heat of the day was relieved by the cooled air un- derground and water from the wishing well. Commodore Perry, in 1813 during his naval engagement with the British, is said to have de- posited many valuable for safe- keeping in the Perry cave which is the largest on Put-in-Bay. Mineral laden water which has been dripping at the rate of 1 inch every 100 years has formed many curious stagmite features, such as a petrified man, a cauliflower, and a replica of Mt. Vesuvius, in Main- mouth cave where there is also a wishing well 200 feet long by 100 feet wide. Crystal cave is known as one of the most unique of its type and is formed by prismatic crystals of blue clestite or sulphate of stron- tium which make solid walls of crystal in clear cut brililance. Many of the party ascended Coin- 'modore Perry's memorial monu- ment to get a bird's eye view of the E 1 I Ii I BASEBALL SCORES American League Detroit 13, Chicago 2 Cleveland 12, St. Louis 4 Philadelphia 9-8, Boston 2-7 Washington 9-3, New York 8-5 National League Boston 3-5, Philadelphia 2-4 Pittsburgh' 14, Chicago '8 St. Louis 9, Cincinnati 8 New 'York 8, Brooklyn 6