J The Weather Fair, slightly warmer extreme southeast portion Friday; Sat- urday fair increasing cloudiness. LL Official Publication Of "The Summer Session k VOL. XIV No. 34, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1933 S S U City Not Fully Represented In Washtenaw Ann Arbor Is 41 Per Cent Of'Population; Has Only 21 Per Cent Of Board New York Police Clash With Farmers In Milk Strike Municipal League Surveys Counties Report Shows 11 Counties In State Are 'Grossly Under-Represented' Ann Arbor is listed as one of the Michigan cities "grossly under-rep- resented" on its county board of su- pervisors in a report released today by the Michigan Municipal League. The city, with a 26,944 population out of Washtenaw County's total of 65,530, is allowed to elect only seven of the 32 supervisors. In other words, with 41 per cent of the population, Ann Arbor has only 21 per cent of the representation. Washtenaw is one of the 11 coun- ties in which the League finds this condition acute. The total urban rep- resentation, including Saline, Ypsi- lanti, and Ann Arbor, is only 12 against 20 rural supervisors, while the total urban population is 38,- 096 against a rural population of only 27,434. The rural districts are therefore allowed one representa- tive for 1,372 people and the cities one for 3,175. Say Legislature Failed "While it was apparently the legis- lative intent to give cities representa- tion on county boards of supervisors in proportion to population, the Leg- islature has obviously failed to apply this p r i n c i p 1 e uniformly," the League's report states. Michigan .is one of four sates with large boards of county supervi- sors selected on a township-city basis. Each township, regardless of its pop- ulation, is entitled to one representa- tive on the county board, by Con- stitutional grant. Cities are given representation on the county govern- ing board according to various legis- lative formulae enacted by a rurally controlled legislature, according to the League. Was Agricultural Plan When Michigan was predominantly an agricultural state, the selection of county supervisors by townships was not inconsistent with the prin- ciples of representative government. But as the state became industrial- ized and cities grew from a position of relative unimportance to one of pre-eminence, adjustments were not made to give cities a voice in county government in proportion to their relative populations in the'county. As a result, city taxpayers, with but few exceptions, pay the greater part of the cost of county govern- ment, but play' a minor role in the determination of its policy. Further- more, the successful attempts that have been made to increase city rep- resentation on the county boards of supervisors have mainly served to make these bodies more cumbersome and unwieldy. The state constitution is the foun- dation upon which representation on county boards is built. Section 7 of Article VIII reads as follows: "A board of supervisors, con-' sisting of one from each organ- ized township, shall be establish- ed in each county, with such powers as shall be prescribed by law. Cities shall have such rep- resentation on the boards of su- pervisors of the counties in which they are situated as may be pro- vided by law." A confusion of statutes relating to city representation on county boards has followed this constitutional pro- vision, the report says. The tabulation shows that the ur- ban population exceeds the rural in 22 of the 70 counties having both rural and urban populations. Rural representation on the board exceeds the urban representation in 58 of the 70 counties. Excluding the one county withan equal urban-rural represen- tation, 11 counties, with a population predominantly urban, are grossly mis- represented on the board of super- visors. Lansing, Traverse LOw Other outstanding examples are Lansing, in Inghain County, with 67 per cent of the county's population, and 33 per cent of the representation on the county board: Traverse City. -Associated Press Photo This unusual action picture shows New York state police as they clash with a group of farmers near Zoonville, N. Y., during a bit of disorder in a milk strike. Milk was dumped as farmers sought to keep it away from market in their .campaign for higher prices. Prof. Bennett Will Speak On Housing Plans Has Made Study Of Work Being Done In Nations Of Europe Extensive large scale housing pro- jects under way in various European countries will furnish material for a lecture at 5 p. m. today in the au- ditorium of the Architecture Build- ing by Prof. Wells I. Bennett, who return recently from a 10 months trip abroad. Professor Bennett, who has been absent from the University on leave during the past year, made a study of the work being done in England, Holland, Germany, and in other countries while he was in Europe, and will illustrate his talk with scenes of the projects being under- taken. According to Professor Bennett, similar works will be started in the United States in the near future, to be partially financed' by Federal appropriations under the $3,300,000,- 000 public works fund. Of this amount $25,000,000 has already- been ear-marked for use in subsistence housing projects throughout the na- tion, he said. Federal funds, Professor Bennett said, will be available for two classes of undertakings. The first is the lim- ited dividend corporation, which may realize a maximum of five or six per cent on its investment and may borrow up to 70 per cent of the total cost from the government, while the other . class includes outright grants to municipalities. The entire building program will be under the direction of Robert D. Kohn, United States housing director. 2nd Round Of Golf Tourney Is Postponed A heavy rainfall, which left the Barton Hills Country Club course soggy and the sand traps partially filled with water necessitated the postponement of the second round of the women's city golf tourna- ment originally scheduled for yester- day morning to this morning. Eight competitors are left in both the championship and championship consolation flights, while all but four women have been eliminated from play in the other four brackets. In today's championship battles, the match between Miss 'Jean Kyer, medalist and finalist in the state tournament, and Mrs. Harold Scarth is expected to furnish the fireworks. The other three tilts are almost fore- gone conclusions. Mrs. James Cissel should have little difficulty in dis- posing of Mrs. John Bergelin, while her daughter, Miss Jane Cissel, Uni- versity senior, will piobably win handily over Ms. Harvey Emery. The Special Lecture Series To Conclude Next Week A talk by Prof. Albert C. Jacobs of Columbia University on "A Changing Conception of the Fam- ily" next Monday afternoon will open the last week of the Summer Session special lecture series. Prof. Rene Talamon will give an illustrated lecture Tuesday after- noon on "Chateaux of Touraine," and the special series will close Wednesday with Prof. Arthur E. Wood's talk on "Social Welfare in a Changing Society." 'Local Barbers Cooperate With. tecover Code Haircuts in Ann Arbor barber shops will cost 50 cents starting to- morrow, it was decided at a meet- ing of the heads of the various shops yesterday. The action was taken as a result of an agreement to shorten hours in accordance with the na- tional recovery committee's code.:. Barber shops in the city will be open a total of 52 hours per week. The - rise in the price of haircuts is necessary in order to meet a salary increase which the national code pro- vides for journeymen barbers, it was said. The cost of barber shop equip- ment has also increased with the installation of codes in the various industries, according to local shop owners. The barbers plan to meet again to- night to discuss a minimum wage guarantee to be paid employees. Lindberoiis Still Reconnoitering In Far North NEW YORK, Aug. 3.-P-Colonel and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh made a 600-mile round trip reconnoitering flight today between Holsteinberg, Greenland, and the ea'st central part of Baffin Land, Pan-American Air- ways was notified. A message from the steamer Jel- linge, mother ship of the Lindberghs' air mapping expedition, said the couple took off from Holsteinberg at 7:30 a. m. (E. S. T.) and crossed the Davis Straits. The east central portion of Baffin Land was surveyed from the air and then the Lindberghs began the 200 mile return flight eastward. Wilson To Discuss Disarmament Today Dr. George Grafton Wilson, pro- fessor of international law at Har- vard University and a member of the teaching staff of the Conference of International Law here, will de- liver a lecture on "Disarmament" at 8 p. m. today in Room 1025 Angell Hall. Dr. Wilson will discuss the accom- plishments of the Hague Peace Con- ference, the work of the Washington National Conference, and the work of the conferences for the General Disarmament Conference of 1932. He will also show the relationship of the general world situation to the problem of disarmament and the re- lationship of the problem of disarma- mient to recent treaties, su ch as the Kellogg Peace Pact and others. Several Dead As BadFlood Perils Denver DENVER, Aug. 3.-(P)-A cloud- burst that ripped apart Castlewood Dam roared down on Denver today and left in its wake at least two per- sons dead, several missing and a wal- low of twisted debris. Damage to buildings and merchan- dise in Denver store basements and to property, crops, livestock, high- ways and railroads in outlying ter- ritory will run around $1,000,000, ob- servers believed. Hundreds of persons-probably 5,- 000 in Denver alone-were driven from homes. The cloudburst which caused the irrigation dam to give way, sending a billion gallons of water to deluge a wide area, was one of four torren- tial rains and five hailstorms that struck Southeastern Colorado within 24 hours. Swollen by downpours the Arkan- sas River was out of its banks in Southern Colorado and Denver & Rio Grande Railroad tracks were washed out near the west entrance of the Royal Gorge. Mrs. Bertha Catlin, 21 years old, employed on a ranch near Frank- town, four miles below Castlewood Dam, was thrown from her horse and drowned in a swirling creek. Franktown was directly in the path of . the deluge that cascaded from the dam. Tom Casey, 80, was found drowned in a deep hole in the rear of a Den- ver residence, where James Boyd, who found his body, said Casey went to survey the flood destruction. Wolaver Calls Land Laws Of State Archaic No State Mortgage Laws Have Been Passed In 75 Years, He Says Talks On Summer Session Program Believes That Not Enough Consideration Has Been Given Mortgagor By E. JEROME PETTIT Mortgage laws in the State of Michigan were declared "archaic" yesterday by Earl S. Wolaver, asso- ciate professor of Business Law, who told his audience in Natural Science Auditorium that "there have been no mortgage laws passed in this state for the past 75 years." Speafiing on the regular lecture series .of the Summer Session, Pro- fessor Wolaver explained why the present defaults in real estate bonds were not as serious as they seemed. "A default," he stated, "is only a breach of contract and does not mean that the bonds are worthless. It may mean one of many things, that the taxes or the insurance on the property covered by the bonds has not been paid, or that the interest payments have not been met. But it does not mean that the bonds are worthless." Cites Seriousness Professor Wolaver, who is a mem- ber of the governor's commission ap- pointed to study real estate prob- lems in the state, discussed the out- growth of the real estate bond situ- ation in Michigan and pointed to the present figures available to dem- onstrate the seriousness of the mat- ter. "of the $449,734,000 in real es- tate bonds issued in the state, ap- proximately $334,974,000 worth are now in default," he said. i "The decline" in traveling, which has cut down on the hotel income, to- gether with the inability to reduce expenses as it is done in other com- mercial concerns, has a lot to do with the present situation," he declared. "The accumulation of taxes has not helped any and the seriousness of the housing situation speaks for it- self." Difficult to Collect Professor Wolaver explained that before a foreclosure could be made on real estate bonds it was necessary for 100 per cent of the bonds to be turned in. The difficulty of acom- plishing this brought about Public Act 111 which was passed by the legislature declaring that a majority of bond holders could act for the entire group. This act was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, however, and the difficulty of collecting the bonds before taking foreclosure action still remains. The commission of which he is a member was appointed, Professor Wolaver explained, to devise some means of supervising the collection of bonds and the foreclosures of the mortgages which they covered. A plan now under way provides for a state body to act as a central agency for such matters and should prove successful if given enough power, the speaker declared. Both Parties Need Protection "The mortgagor and the mortgagee should both be protected in such matters," Professor Wolaver said," "and though opinion differs, I believe that, so far, too little attention has been given to the rights of the mort- gagor. There can be little question that, if given the right to do so, he is the one in the best position to make his business profitable so that the bond holders can collect what is coming to them. Any legislation af- fecting the matter should take this into consideration." Officers Return Three Runaway Chelsea Boys Three young Chelsea boys who were last seen entering ,a swiamp near Chelsea Tuesday night were picked up by Sheriff's officers yesterday and returned to their home. The boys were Robert Savage, 9, Henry Carr, 12, and Alexander Dow, 10. Savage and Carr, wards of the Michigan Children's Aid society liv- ing with Mrs. Frank Dow near Chel- sea, were found by Deputy Clyde Bennnt tlast niht nn +-o aiino MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS By the Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE w washington.............. 63 New York............... 60 Philadelphia.............49 Cleveland................ 51 Chicago............47 Detroit ..................47 Boston.s..............44 St. Louis................39 Thursday's Results Philadelphia 7, New York 0. Washington 8, Boston 4. Cleveland 7, St. Louis 2. Chicago-Detroit, wet grounds. Friday's Games, Chicago at Detroit. (Only game scheduled). NATIONAL LEAGUE W New York ................ 58 Pittsburgh................57 Chicago............. ... 56 St. Louis ..................54 Boston.................. 51 Philadelphia............. 42 Brooklyn ................. 40 Cincinnati............... 41 Thursday's Results L 35 38 49 53 52- 53 53 67 L 39 45 46 46 50 55 56 62 Pct. .643 .612 .500 .490 .475 .470 .454 .368 Pct. .598 .559 .549 .540 .505 .433 .417 .398 Other developments today included: Clearing of the way through a for- mal interpretation for big employers of labor under contract, including newspapers, to obtain the NRA offi- cial insignia without altering existing wage and hour terms, so long as they comply otherwise. Award of millions of dollars worth of shipbuilding by the Navy to ship- yards which will operate under a thirty-two hour week. WASHINGTON, Aug. 3.--(P)-A basis for settlement of the Pennsyl- vania coal strike was reported im- minent tonight after another con- ference between John L. Lewis, presi- dent of the United Mine Workers of America, and Hugh S. Johnson, ad- ministrator of national recovery, who has undertaken to mediate the dif- ficulties. The renewed negotiations were car- ried on after an earlier conference had broken up in an apparent dead- lock, with both the operators and the spokesmen for the miners re- fusing to yield. However, during the night there was an apparent return of confid- ence among the conferees, although officials declined to be specific about their intimations that a basis for an agreement was near. It was reported that President Roosevelt from Hyde Park had taken a hand in the negotiations by tele- phone and was directing the final effort to bring the conflicting ele- ments together and end the disturb- ance which has led to bloodshed in the bituminous fields of Pennsyl- vania. Redefer To Talk On School Movements Frederick L. Redefer, executive secretary of the Progressive Educa- tion Association, will lecture at 4:10 n. m 'Priri, v n 4,D,.p.n 1 I99 TT4niv . - Guards Of Mayo Grandchildren Told To Shoot And Then Explain. Boston 3, Brooklyn 0. St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 1. (Game called end sixth, rain). Chicago 2, Cincinnati i. N e w Y o r k-Philadelphia, threatening weather. Friday's Games Brooklyn at Boston (2). New York at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Pittsburgh. (Only games scheduled). Last Tour Of Season To Be Held Saturday The last of the Summer Session Excursions for this year - the eleventh of the season - will take place Saturday morning when a party of students under the direc- tion of Prof. Wesley H. Maurer of the journalism depaitment goes to ROCHESTER, Minn., Aug. 4-(P)- Guards told by one of the distin- guished Mayo brothers to "shoot first and make explanations afterward" patrolled the family estate tonight after what he said was an attempt to idnan one or mnr of hic mnd.- The nurse, Miss Marie Langseth, said she was awakened early Tues- day by the sound of an automobile approaching the young Dr. Mayo's home at Mayowood, the estate three miles from here. She believes the engine had been shut off after the nl,. ,r'h.pA - 'a h,, aaan .A ,a 4- f I" I