......._,..... ESTABLISHED 1920 07 4 P O'ummtr l3Irbian :4IaitjI MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. X. NO. 23. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1930 PRICE FIVE CENTS x WELSHCharges Rail Head, With Office Steal AS ADMINISTRATON ATTEIMPTS 'TR I CKS' Early Candidates Certification~ Eliminates Gov. Green From Gubernatorial Race. BALLOTS ARE CHANGED. Former Candidate Hints Action: in Deleting Green Name Was: Political Racketeering. (By Associated Press) LANSING, July 25.-Premature and secret certification of candi- dates for the Republican nomina- tion for governor by the state de- partment was revealed today amid cries of "trickery" and "conspiracy"r -.. .. from supporters of Alex J. Groes- beck and George W. Welsh. The certification removed Governor Green as a candidate but proposed to leave Welsh in the race. The certification was set, public- ly, for Friday byClark Brown, head of the compiling and election divi- sion. Thursday afternoon, immedi- ate certification was ordered by John S. Haggerty, Secretary of State, and bitter political enemy of Groesbeck. By this sudden move, Welsh's name was certified to coun- ty clerks as a candidate, although it was known he planned to with- draw. Attempt to Split Vote The name of Governor Green, who has not publicly withdrawn since petitions were filed for him, was not certified. If it was an at- tempted coup to place Welsh's name on the ballots, thus splitting the Groesbeck vote-and benefitting the administration candidate, it' has failed. Welsh promptly sent telegrams to all county clerks; de- manding ,that his name be kept off the ballots. According to Emer- son R. Boyles, deputy attorney-gen- eral, he has complied to all legal requirements and his name must be kept off in counties where the printing of ballots has not started. As far as could be learned no coun- ty has started printing the ballots. Ballots Not Printed In his telegram to county clerks, Welsh said: "This action of allowing the1 name of Fred W. Green to be taken off the certification and keeping mine on, smacks of political rack- eteering. I trust you will not be- come a party to this apparent con- spiracy." KING IN QUAKE STRICKEN AREA (By Associated Press) POTENZA, Italy, July 25. -Five new earthquake shocks were felt today in the quake-stricken area of southern Italy as King Victor Em- manuel arrived on the scene to guide and comfort his harrowed subjects. The first shocks closely succeed- ed one another at about 10 a. m., bringing new terror to the worn and sleepless populace. Three briefer ones followed at about three in the afternoon. All were felt throughout the devastat- ed districts and were especially strong at Malfi, a community that already has suffered most severely. PUBLIC BUILDINGS WILL BE FINISHED (By' Assocated Press) LANSING, Mich., July 25.-The State institutional building pro- gram, contemplating expenditure of more than $20,000,000 in four years, wil be kept going as rapidly as possible, despite a $4,500,000 def- icit in the State general fund, State officials said today. The fund never before has been in the red that amount at this season of the year. The bulk of the State property tax has been collected and for the bal- ance of the year.only fees, which less than meet expenses, and the $7,00,000 corporation tax, will pro- duce revenue. Other funds may be Gifford Pinchot, Ex - governor of Pennsylvania, who is seeking re-nomination, re- cently charged W. W. Atterbury, president of the Pennsylvania rail- road, with an attempt to steal the nomination by fraudulent means. SEEKS TO ENLARGE STATE DEPATMENT Secretary Stimson Asks Larger Appropriation to Broaden Foreign Services. NEW EMBASSIES NEEDED (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, July 25.-Intent on expanding the State Depart- ment's internal organization and the foreign service aboard as rapid- ly as possible, Secretary Henry L. Stimson again has asked the Bud- get Bureau for an increased appro- priation covering virtually all phas- es of America's diplomatic activi- ties. . Pending approval by the bureau and President Hoover the figures will not be made public, but it is known the secretary has asked for the full authorized fund of $2,000,- 000 for the construction of build- ings to house American missions abroad. In line with President Hoover's policy of reinforcing the American foreign service in Latin-America, the secretary's estimates include a provision for 18 new foreign service officers in various cities in South and Central America. This would represent an increase of 10 per cent in the personnel in the Latin-American field. A request has also been made for a consider- able increase in non-officer per- sonnel,. such as clerks and stenog- raphers. The estimates also include an ad- ditional $13,000 to be added to the $147,000 now contributed annually by the United States to the sup- port of the Pan-American Union. Allowances now include funds to cover expenditures for official re- ceptions. Flying Fraulein Falls With Slight Injuries (By AssociatedPress) BERLIN, July 25.-Thea Rasche, Germany's flying fraulein, was in- jured today when her plane crashed en route from Templehof to War- nemuende. The plane fell from a height of 120 feet and was wrecked. Observers on the Templehof field said the girl flier probably went into a sudden gust of wind which threw the plane off balance while FORMER DICTATOR SENT TO UNNAMED PROVINCIAL TOWN Once Strong Man of Lithuania Is Exiled to Remote Part of Native Land. BRANDED PUBLIC ENEMY Professor Augustine Waldemaras Was Known for Sharp Fights With Pilsudski. (By Associated Press KOVNO, Lithuania, July 25.- Prof. Augustine Waldemaras, for- mer premier and virtual dictator of Lithuania, has been banished to an unnamed provincial town by order of the commandant of the Kovno district. The one-time strong man of Lithuania, who on more than one' occasion caused the whole mach- inery of the League of Nations at Geneva to halt while he fought to regain Vilna, now a Polish city, for his country, was pronounced "a danger to public order" in the de- cree of deportation issued by the commandant. The authorities declined to di- vulge the name of the place to which the former premier was ex-' iled. Motor lorries removed his be- longings from his home which was sealed. Began Career in 1917 Waldemaras, who is now in his forty-eighth year, became an in- ternationally conspicuous figure during and especially after the World War. Prof. Waldemaras' political ca- reer began in 1917, when he took part in a congress of Lithuanian leaders in Leningrad, then St. Pe- tersburg, and led the faction which stood for Lithuanian independence. During the Bolshevik revolution he escaped to Berlin, where he was interpreter for the Ukranian lega- tion, his knowledge of nine modern languages besides Latin and Greek soon made him an indispensable factor at the legation, and he clev- erly used his position to make pro- paganda for a free Lithuania. Clashes With Pisudski At the Versailles conference in 1919 he was the official representa- tive of his fatherland. He was deep- ly grieved, however, when Vilna was awarded to Poland. From then on the fight to establish Lithuania's claims to Vilna became his absorb- ing object in life. . Waldemaras became premier in 1926. His clashes with Marshal Jo- seph Pilsudski and foreign minis- ter August Zaleski of Poland en- livened the sessions of the League of Nations for several years. His professional disquisitions on the historical development of Vilna, on the other hand, caused exaspera- tion in League of Nations circles eager to get on with business. Meanwhile he was able to main- tain himself at home only by run- ning the country under a dictator- ship. This brought him much en- mity. In May, 1929, he had a nar- row escape from death when a bomb was thrown at his party as it was about to enter the State Theatre here. His aide-de-camp and his step-son were killed. (By Associated Press CHICAGO, July 25.-The mix-upt over the Bamberger-Watkins ba- bies was ironed out at an early morning conference today at whichI it was decided that the babies of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bamberger( and Mr. and Mrs. William Watkins( were never mixed up at all. This decision, reached by agree- ment between the parents, was op-( posed to that of a group of sci-t entists who late Thursday decided that the babies had been switched! at Englewood hospital, where they were born.' Dr. Arnold Kegel, health com-l missioner, was astounded when in-1 foarmed of the parents' decision.1 HUMBLE TRIBUTE' PAID1TOBUCKLEY Thousands of Detroit Citizens Visit Bier of Murdered Radio Orator. HOLD FUNERAL TODAY' (By Associated Press) DETROIT, July 25.-Thousands of men, women and children today and tonight paid their tribute to Jerry Buckley, slain radio orator, walking in a never-ending line past his bier in the living room of his Pasadena avenue home. This spontaneous procession, which started last night grew throughout the day and showed no signs of diminishing as the hours for closing the home approached. Police etimated the csrowd at 50,- 000 or more. The family announc- ed that no visitors would b receiv- ed after midnight, when prepara- tions would begin for the funeral, tomorrow morning at St. Greg- ory's Catholic church. In the meanwhile, police were holding a man and a woman whom, they consider important figures in the investigation of the killing.. The man is Jack Klein, motion pic- ture operator, who was sitting be- side Buckley in the lobby of the LaSalle hotel when he was killed by three gunmen early Wednesday morning a short time after he had completed announcing the results of the mayoralty recall election over station WMBC where he was political commentator. Klein fail- ed in an effort to secure release on a writ of habeas corpus. The woman's name was not re- vealed. County Prosecutor James E. Chenot said that he was seeking through her a man she said inti- mated to her in . advance that Buckley would be killed. GILLESPIE QUITS AS COMMISSIONER (By Associated Press) DETROIT, July 25.-John Gilles- pie, storm center of the admini- stration of Mayor Charles Bowles, who was recalled Tuesday, resigned today as commissioner of public works, eliminating himself from the fight Bowles will make for re- election. "The whole thing is that I'm sick and tired of this mess," Gillespie said, "and I'm not going to start into this new row. He said he would consider whether to pursue the case further in the interest of public policy. The parents, apparently in com- plete accord, took tle babies and went home. They said the inci- dent was closed as far as they are concerned. The parents had demanded an investigation following the" dis- covery that an adhesieve tape on the back of the Bamberger baby bore the name "Watkins" and that a similar tape on the Watkins baby was marked "Bamberger." Tlyey now believe that the tapes had been washed off at the hos- pital when both babies were being bathed and that a nurse, in haste, had put them back on the wrong infants. The shape of the ,babies' heads was responsible for the final agreement. The Bambergers' ba- by was their third: The Watkins baby was a first-born. A commit- tee of physicians who met with the parents Thursday night agreed that a temporarily oval-shaped head, such as the Watkins baby has, is natural in the case of a first born. The Bamberger baby's head is round. MEETINGS ATTRACGTj ATTENDANCE OF 99 Graduate Education Conferences Bring Prominent Educators to Ann Arbor. I Bamberger-Watkins Babies Mix-up Solved IBILL TILDEN WINS by Parents Without Help From Scientists - L H I 1 VALUABLE, SAYS KRAUS Dean Edward H. Kraus of the Summer Session yesterday an- nounced that the total registration on the part of out-of-town alumni of the School of Education in the past week of Graduate Conferences was 96. This number does not in- clude any local alumni of the school who may have attended the lec- tures. Of the total number, 84 were men and 12 were women. Their occu- pations were varied, 37 being super- intendents of schools in their dis- tricts, 23 being principals, and 14 being teachers. There were also three supervisors, five- representa- tives of normal schools, seven rep- resentatives of the state depart- ment, and seven who are classed as visitors. Michigan led with 83 registered, Pennsylvania was second with four, and Indiana was third with three. Ohio had two representa- tives, and North Carelina, Missouri, Illinois, and Holland each had one. "From the reports I have had, and from what I know of the con- ferences, it is safe to say that the work which the School of Educa- tion has done has been a very suc- cessful experimert," Dean Kraus stated yesterday. "The conferen- ces brought a splendid group of people to Ann Arbor who would not otherwise have been here. They should be continued." Greenland Explorers Start for North Today William S. Cowson and Max Demorest leave Ann Arbor by train at 3:27 o'clock today for the first part of a trip to Greenland. On July 30, they will sail from Nova Scotia on the Canadian govern-' ment steamer, Beothic, to the is- land. The two men are taking equip- ment with them for a' year's stay. This equipment includes materials for a hut and provisions. of DAVIS CUP PLAY Defeats Jean Borotra in Four Sets Before Crowd of 10,000 Persons. LOTT LOSES TO COCHET Dividing of Victories in First Day Leaves Fate of Outcome Hanging in Balance. By SMITH REAVIS A. P. Sports Writer PARIS, July 25.-Big Bill Tilden, veteran of 10 Davis cup campaigns, hung a French scalp to his belt to begin his 11th today. He defeated Jean Borotra, and Borotra at the top of his form, in four sets, 6-2, 7-5, 6-4, 7-5. Thus he justified his last-minute inclusion in the invad- ing American forces and did it with such decision that not a soul in the 10,000 who watched the opening of the 1930 Challenge round had the 'least doubt who was the better. Two hours later little Henri Co- chet had taken his revenge for Wimbledon by sending y oun g George Lott to the showers with a straight set defeat 6-4, 6-2, 6-2. The score when the evening shadows settled over Auteuil was America-i, France-1, and the fate of the Davis cup for 1930 still hung very much in the balance. The doubles match will be played tomorrow and the final pair of singles Sunday. Stadium Is Filled Despite more than a hint of rain and a hot, muggy day, there wasn't a vacant place in the big stadium when Tilden and Borotra began the usual preliminary ball slugging. As the veteran umpire, Nicolas Redel- sperber climbed into his little pul- pit, a warm, dusty wind blew slaunch-wise across the courts. It seemed to bother both players a bit. Like a couple of wary boxers each felt out the other's ability in the early stages of play. They stuck to the base lines, stroked faithfully down the lines and played safe re- turns for position rather than try- ing for kills. Big Bill was on edge, nervous from the outset: His eager- ness made him net and out balls that normally he would have shot across for winning points. Borotra Breaks Through Borotra, on the other hand, soon had the measure of the couit. He played for position and let the big Philadelphian do most of the run- ning. Games followed service until the fourth when the bounding Basque broke through. He won the next two easily. as Bill continuously over-drove the lines. Tilden seemed to find himself in the seventh game. He stopped Bor- otra's service with three nice place- ments, but he couldn't keep the pace and his own errors convicted him in the final game of the set. There was joy in the French camp and lots of bets were made on the strength of Tilden's erratic play that' Borotra would at last over- come the jinx that has followed him ift Tilden- matches. That joy grew and flourished for the major part of the second set, for Borotra, sure and' accurate varying the depth and pace of his ground strokes, and impeccable at the net, took the first, third, fourth, fifth and seventh games to lead, 5-2. It was the critical point of the match, and Tilden, casting aside his nerv- ousness, rose to meet it. MISSOURI BANDITS HANG FOR SLAYING I it was rising. Her injuries were to be slight. said I VETERAN PLAY PR( BIRTHDAY IN (By Associa ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 25. -David Belasco celebrated today an event which happened in' San Francisco 76 years ago, and called this the blithest birthday he's ever had. It marked for him the end of a theatrical season-his fiftieth-odd' -in which his only production, a boisterous little farce called "It's a Wise Child," made profits compar- ing favorably with any play he ever has produced. It marks the begin- ning of a season which has him chuckling in anticipation. One hundred fifty-two candles, alight on two towering cakes, and ODUCER SPENDS USUAL ACTIVITY ted Press) But "The Governor," his white hair awry and both eyes fixed on' "Dancing Partner," which he is try- ing out here for Broadway, said he'd spend today "cracking the whip." Between times, maybe, he'd have a bite of cake, and maybe even a slice of lemon meringue pie. Both are forbidden him now by his doc- tor, except on great occasions. In recent weeks the veteran pro- ducer has almost lived in the the- ater, toiling over "Dancing Part- ner." On the flower - decked stage: music, gaiety, bright-frocked girls. Down in the dark auditorium, scrib- BASEBALL SCORES (By Associated Press) American League New York 14, Detroit 7 Philadelphia 14, Cleveland 1 Chicago 6, Washington 5 St. Louis 6, Boston 3 National League Boston 5, St. Louis 4 New York 3. Pittsburg~h 1 [Our" :katherMan (By Associated Press) _ KANSAS CITY, July 25.- Three bank robbers who sprayed bullets into a National Republican Con- vention crowd in a. downtown di&- trict here two years ago, were Ihanged simultaneously today for killing James H. "Happy" Smith, victim of their fire. __.. . _- They were Tony "Lollypop" Man- (By Associated Press) giaracina,. Carl Nasello, machine States that the sun will continue gunner for the' gang, and John to beam as usual, but that things Messino, driver of the bandit car. wil be washed up a:little by local One of five buttons pressed by