'i!1® A 8 IMMaRGAN DAILY tIAMMAY, AUGUST 14, 1931 m UIOIER Ifl(~IGAN DAILY F'~RIDA~, AUGUSt!' 14, 1931 r e e e iominso . t Moday g T. d e si= tanby the iIAS is {e~tr+1 y iteatPublications. 'eAoetotd Press is solusively entitled erepublication of all news ds.. Z rited to it or not otherwise oeditod 15t paper ad the local news published herent. Ail rigbts of republication of special AMS""her e s e a sered. Datered at the Aa Arbor, Michigan, pest efieo "s seonad .class matter. Subscriptien by carrier, $1.50; by Gail, Oti s: Press Building, Maynard Street, Ama Arbor, ichigan Telephones: EditorIal, 4925; usines 2-3*14..- EDITORIAL STAFF MANAGING EDITOR HAROLD 0. WARREN, JR. iditorial Director ........... Gurney ' illias ASSOCIATE EDITORS C. W. Carpenter Carl Meloy ~.Cltbb Sher M. Quraishi ba~r a Sanl ilea nor Rairdon ssneManchester Marion Thornton P_ (NA S srsy torial was loud in its praise of the red up things yet another time method found effective for ridding with a vigorous attack on methods Grand Rapids of communists: of police in larger cities. "Members of the American Legion Again, the answer is, that it is seized eight of the demonstrators well for such conditions to be ... drove them several miles out brought to the attention of the pub- of the city, spanked them, tossed lic, but the government has wasted them into a creek and made them money on its efforts if nothing is. crawl through it, and then warned to be done. Yet because in the face; them to stay out of the town if they of the prompt denials of the au- didn't want any more." thorities involved in every instance1 What price the constitutional of irregularities reported by ther right of peaceful assembly? What commission, it has become impos- price for that matter, the amend- sible to ascertain the truth in the. ment giving Negroes equality? Are matter. the "reds" not continually blamed i If action is taken, and there is for trying to give Negroes the rights doubtless some cause for immediate they supposedly already have? steps, the officials in question must It is true that the cases mention- be given a fair chance to answer, ed in the editorial are to be deplor- the Wickersham charges, which will ed. It may be that hundreds of mean nothing short of a second in- Negroes have attacked white wom- vestigation on a court procedure en. But is it not equally true that basis. This-might easily have been thousands of colored girls have done in the first place, thus sav-' been attacked by white men? And ing the expense of a double inquisi- has a white man been lynched for tion into the various branches of OATEDROLLV THIS MORNING A r nerhis crime? It would take a long, law enforcement. BUSINESS STAFF long search to find one that has But it would be unwise for the BUSINES MANAGER been punished if at all. public to leap too hastily to the con-. WILLIAM R. WORBOYS When a Negro is seized from a jail clusion that brutality used on crim- Assistant Business Manaer .. vernon Bisheo and lynched, we read in the news- inals is altogether unsound. If a A5 ties Manager.........Crl t papers, "police put up a valiant constitutional amendment is adopt- Accounts. circulation........Thomas Muir fight to save the prisoner, but the ed, as the commission suggests, it Night Editor-GURNEY WJJAM mob was too strong." We suspect should not limit police too much, that the police were really upstairs for a certain amount of third de- FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1931 playing poker. gree is almost necessary for deal- Condemnation of a large group ing with certain criminals. And THE NEGROES for a few isolated crimes of its if an inquiry is held, those who are AND THE REDS members is the result of sensation- to act as judges should remember al or bigoted journalism. In such that police officials base their ac- T IS an ill omen of considerable cases as those under discussion, tivities upon long experience, and import that the press of Amer- would it not be better to disregard the observation of an outsider Ica can, in this age of passable en- racial classification, and say that a might be considerably biased by Republican had been attacked by sentiment. lightmerit, swallow whole and re- a Democrat, or a Methodist by a The only police commissioner who lay the bigoted vaporings of what Baptist? was frank enough to admit the use we call our statesmen. The Daily holds no brief for com- of strong arm methods made a per- An exceptionally aggravated bit munism, or against the white tinent reply to the commission's of propaganda, to our mind, is the Southerner. But it does hold that report: "What are we to give our editorial BLOOD ON THE MOON if a governmental system is to be baby killers? Ice cream cones?" from a Detroit newspaper, which retained, that the rights it guaran- Even the members of the commis- was reprinted as an interesting tees the people be enjoyed in fact, sion admitted that some weight phenomenon in yesterday's Daily. and not on paper only. And it holds must be given arguments favoring It polted out that "race war" that there is no time at which an extended questioning or a "slap on was raising its "ugly head" in Ala- aggressive and unbigoted attitude the face" since they did get "re- bama, through the efforts of Ne- in the nation's press is so greatly sults." groes, backed and instigated by needed as the present. So let there be action to follow "reds." up the Wickersham reports, but "Chicago has already had a taste let it be of a character based on of it-three Negroes killed and a KT O h rIcareful consideration of causes policeman's skull fractured in a jVVh tO IS rather than on the abuses them- colored riot . . . ;" the editorial selves. stated. It went on to bring up the Scottsboro and Birmingham rape GENTLEMEN FLYERS A NEW YORKER cases, and charged "reds" with in- AND FLYERS stigating them, and also with jost- AT LARGE ling decent people on the Detroit (Chicago Tribune)0 streets. The formation of the United By Mark Barron Oh, the dear, sound, fine, out- States Amateur Air Pilots' associa- NEW YORK, Aug. 13.-The under- standing, solid, stolid, mindless lit- tion is made known in New York, world of Chuck Connors' day has tle Caucasians who invent back-al- and when the organizers have com- changed its derby hat and gaudy ley gossip. Oh, the dear, noble, pleted the work of refining and de- garb for the conservative evening patriotic, pusillanimous, old-woman fining the catagories the country clothes of polite society. politicians who put it into speeches.' will know who the amateur pilots A stranger, having assimilated Oh, the dear, guardians-of-public- are and what makes one and who his knowledge of New York crimi- welfare, the newspapers. the professionals are and why. Mr. nals from tales of the gaslight era, The fololwing is a dispatch given John S. Reaves, head of the ama- would be dissapointed if he went out recently by a world-wide news teurs, says that it will be a difficult looking for them today. agency: and often an individual question to True, if he walked along the "Communist agitators who have distinguish between gentleman and Bowery or through Hell's Kitchen, advocated racial and social equal- flyer, but as a general principle the he could still see rough looking ity for Negroes in the South were gentleman will have no pecuiiary specimens who look as if they would blamed by police today for the fat- connection with the business and commit murder for a dime. al shooting of a society girl and the he wIll fly his own plane for pleas- They are merely bums, who can't wounding of two others by a Ne-Iure. afford to look any better. They are gro." Col. Lindbergh, it is announced, not the boys who live outside the This was obvious propaganda; will be an amateur. When he was law, gleaning a violent living from the news lay in the shooting, not in Slim Lindbergh and flew to Paris robbery, highjacking, extortion, anybody's opinion of who caused he was a professional, but ama- kidnapping and murder. The Bow- it remotely. teurs will take the broad view that ery and Hell's Kitchen are the It is quite true that America is he has since arisen above that. The scenes of few major crimes in this threatened by racial war-it is so philosophy of the amateur status age. because the "decent" people, the' in various enterprises recognizes The underworld of today has Anglo-Saxon stock, are not con- that if there is a pecuniary element moved uptown, half hidden in an tent with having the upper hand, it will attract excellence. Money environment of society, gayety, but must continually express in in- has a genius for finding and de- wealth and big business. In fact, tolerance their fear of losing it. veloping the best in any line of en- the under and upper worlds run Capitalism is, in spite of the de- deavor. It will ignore caste and so- together in such confusion that it pression, a firmly established sys- cial stratifications, is difficult to distinguish where one tem. It is in no danger, and will Many American patterns of gen- ends and the other begins. be in none for decades. Yet cap- tility have English deriviation, and You'll find the reigning czars of italism is a jittery old maid-look- it is a sound doctrine of the English the underworld operating in the ing under the bed to see if soviet- that a gentleman should not do Fifties and Sixties, around Park and ism has crept in - peering out of anything to well. He should be ret- Fifth avenues and in Harlem. They windows with a white scared face icent, but more than that, he should rule over magnificent pleasure -magnifying tiny things like rapes not be brilliant in any performance, clubs, secret but available to those and mass meetings in her imagina- good but not too good. He should who have the price. The decora- tion until she works herself up into: ride well but never as well as a tions vie with those of a king's pal- a screaming hysteria. jockey. He may play billiards, but ace; there are dining rooms and There is no RED MENACE, and should be no wizard. Whatever he cocktail bars, music and dancing. e _ _ _f t' , IS LITERARY EVENING We opened our mail the other morning, and found this letter from a Detroit paste company, singing the saga of the paste much in the manner of Carl Sandburg: * * * We are supplying a very smooth paste for the mailing room. The number of newspapers ordering our paste is continually grow- ing. This paste is very smooth and a wonderful sticker. We are putting this paste up in 250 lb. barrels at $4.00 per bar- rel, or in large tubs at $2.00 f.o.b. Detroit. The motor trucks drop this off at your door*, and we are confi- dent you would like it. Try it and see. * * * *We are strongly considering or- dering a tub of it just to see the truck climb the 22 steps to the Daily office (Press Building, Maynard street-come see us some time.) We might add, in case there is a copy- right, that we are indebted for the above poem to the Michigan Paste and Mfg. Co., W. G. Hodge, pro- prietor, O. J. Hodge, Manager, Manufacturers of Perfection Moist Paste, Mipco Dry Wheat Paste, N.P. Dry Corn Paste, Glues and Library Paste. * * * "Mipco," in case you're interested,, seems to be composed mainly from' the initials of the company. It had us stopped for a while, though, be- cause logically it should be Mpmc, if you'll pardon the whooflism. But they couldn't fool us long. Still, we are a little bit doubtful about the N.P. Dry Corn. ADVT. DEPT. Don't miss, by the way, "Camille in Raoring Camp," at which aud- iences simply raor and raor and raor and raor. * * * HOW IN HEAVENS NAME CAN WE THING UP MORE NAMES FOR, r i r; yl sl ,, _, ti r 1 J 1 S 't; l , ! i . S'I 'GE COMING IN PERSON SUNDAY, AUG. 16 30 Beautiful Girls MISS EASTERN MICHIGAN AND THE BATHING GIRLS OF 1931 A Snappy-Peppy Revue 30 Dainty, Charming Bathing Beauti es1 U Classy Dances Special Song Hits ON THE SCREEN MARION DAVIES in "Five and Ten" And Bobby Jones in "Trouble Shots" STAGE SHOW ONE DAY ONLY M HLIGA N H WillYou Become a Business ExeCute Are you prepared for business? Do you know enough about Finance, Management, Production and Distribu- tion to QUICKLY develop into an ex- ecutive in the business world; or will you, after leaving college, drudge along for years in the"school of hard knocks" and possibly never achieve the business success you desire? In just nine months you CAN prepare! Babson Institute offers you exactly the kind of training you will need most when you are out of college and on your own. Here you may receive a practical and thorough training under the direc- tion of business experts. Here you will learn business fundamentals and gatin practical experience in the application of those fundamentals. Practical Training at BABSON Institute Students at Babson Institute keep regu- lar office hours. They dictate reprts take part in conferences, and .fudthe fundamental laws of business. Ba Institute is a place for work, not play; for the kind of "bras--tachs" training every ambitious young man wanes! The instruction is intensive - no wasted time on trifles. You owe it to yourself to fid out how dw Babson Institute Course may provi"e a dires route to businew achievement for you. Snd for a copy of our booklet, 'Training for business Leadership" which gives full information. It will be sent without any obligation on your pare. Next term opens March 28 Mail Coupon for FREE Book rE BABSON INSTITUrF+. *Div. KUS 3Babson Pwk, bass send me, without obligation, 4Tra'inmag5 * for Business Leadership" and complet particulate about Baboon Institute. Coll1115. ! Address ----- --------------------------------U * a - ---------------------------------I - rc- Add------------------------------------------ * a I..~ .. ... mimmusiium es 'k I T r r) DEPARTMENTS How in heaven's name can we think up more names for deport- ments? * * L ROLLS OBJECT LESSON DEPT. (4~ i* men. m LAST TIMES TODAY "FORBIDDEN ADVENTURE" .. STARTING MAJETICSTURDAY every thinking person knows it or suspects it. RED MENACES are worked up in the popular mind for the purpose of getting politicians into office. "Give me my job, and I'll protect you from the RED MEN- ACE," says the politician. He gets the job, and sets out to enforce parking laws or outlaw boll weev- ils. The RED MENACE is forgotten by him and by the public until the next campaign comes along. Communist agitators want an- other form of government, but they want it peacefully. And when it comes, as it may, it will develop di- rectly from tremendous trusts- which are the backbone of capital- ism. Communism-supposing its advent-would become the rule as small private enterprise is forced out. And there will be no strug-,x gle, no invasion of Russian myriads.' The revision will be within the con- stitution, which allows for a change of government by legal methods. The previously mentioned edi- does there should be the withheld' quality, implying that perfection is undesirable. That permits lesser men to prove their inferiority by the excellence which is their super- iority, and it gives dilettanteism an otherwise unattainable merit. It is placed above competition, which would destroyit. , These standards protect gentility from the law of gravitation. Even if the gentlemen flyers have hard work in getting off the ground they will have the most distinguished flights and they will be protected from grueling competition to which the pecuniary rewards always sub- ject their honest seekers. WICKERSHAM REPORT (Daily Iowan) The Wickersham commission, apparently bent upon spreading as much consternation in the ranks of officialdom as is possible, has stir- You'll find the underworld in lux- urious gambling casinos which spring up in the Park avenue sec- ,tion faster than the police can close them. Long, luxuriously decorated rooms are crowded with a smart crowd of celebrities playing roul- ette, chemin de fer or baccarat. Dis- appearing machine guns hidden in overhanging balconies guard the players against raiding highjackers. The underworld leaders are not the "dese and dose" type of the Chuck Connors school, attired in clothes that shriek like the rain- bow wired for sound. A friend, now operating a resort in the northern wilderness, drops a line to say the echo he hired re- cently is down with laryngitis. Mayor Jimmy Walker, who has been ailing off and on for some time has taken his passport photographs to Carlsbad for a diagnosis. -Detroit News Necktie * * * WHO IS LITTLE YVONNE FAGAN? * * * CLASSIFIED ADVT. LOST-$10,000 diamond ring; has no intrinsic worth, but valued as a souvenir. Call 4925 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,Oshrdlu * * * WHO IS LITTLE YVONNE FAGAN? * * * DAILY POEM G. B. Shaw Says the giraffe Grew his well Known neck By sheer will-power Which we doubt Because, well, why would any- one want a neck like that? * * * / Mmmmmmm. That good. Let's try again: wasn't so YOUNG AS YOU FEEL DAILY POEM Loud we praise the Summer Ses- sion, For our stay has helped us all. Soon that damned thing will be over; It's a fine world after all. * . . WHO IS LITTLE YVONNE FAGAN? PLTSCH WHOOFLE "IN Dorsw Lucien Uttideid ADDED FEATURES "JUNGLE GUS EDWARDS HEARST ,, COLORTONE WORLD GIANTS REVUE NEWS