The Weather Partly cloudy to cloudy, un- settled; south and east por- tions, cooler west and north portions today. L G Sir i4a I 4aitiJ Editorials Youth And Public Service . Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XLV No. 30 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUG. 4, 1936 PRICE 5 CENTS Spaniards' Battlefront Is InNorth Government Forces Say They Captured La Zaida In Renewed Attempt Fascists Advancing; On San Sebastian Rebels Are Augmented By Added Forces Of 10,000 Troops From Pamplona MADRID, Aug. 3. - (P) - Loyalists and rebels tonight pushed the battle- front of Spain's bloody civil war into the north, rebel troops withholding for the moment direct attack on Ma- drid. Government forces claimed cap- ture of La Zaida. to the south of. Zaragoza, in a renewed attempt to quell that center of revolt. Fascists advanced toward San Se- bastian, determined to rout loyalists. in that northern area and insure against attack from the rear when the long-prejicted march against Madrid is begun. Ten thousand troops from Pam- plona reinforced Gen. Emilio Mola's. rebel forces for the San Sebastian. encounter. Mist and fog halted ar- tiery fire for the day and limited action to brief guerrilla encounters. While troops massed in the north- ern area for what promised to be major battles tomorrow, smaller rebel forces left to maintain positions in the mountains claimed capture of Guad- arrama City and Navalperal. Control Points These two cities were regarded as control points of two of the threei passes leading to the Spanish capital from the north. The rebels claimed also capture of Torrelodonnes, 12 miles from the city. The Madrid government wireless station announced arrest of thee Bish6p of Jaen. He and some of his relatives were imprisoned in his ca- tledral. Lolayists admitted seizure of about 1,000,000 pesetas (nominally about $130,000) belonging to the bish- op's sister and 8,000,000 pesetas ($1,- 000,000) from the bishop's palace. The government asserted that it held complete authority in Madrid and that construction employes had returned to work. Officials declared no reports of military movements henceforth would be announced ex- cept those of definite leftist victories. Leftist forces, increased by enlist- ,ments from nearby rural provinces, surged into the jagged mountains in another effort to oust the foe. Confidence of success was tem- pered somewhat by admissions time would be- required to restore the na- tion to normality. But, the leftists insisted, "we will win in the end." Grave Situation "We do not deny that when the re- bellion first broke out, we found our- selves in an extraordinarily grave sit- uation," observed Julio Alvarez del Vayo, loyal socialist leader. "Since then, however, there has been a great change. Many regi- ments have either deserted or inpris- oned their officers and come over to our side." Government warships renewed ac- tion in the Straits of Gibraltar with bombardment of the fort at Ceuta, Spanish Morocco, where the revolt began. The ships drew away to seek shelter behind a British cable ship when the fire was returned. Other craft shelled rebel concentra- tions 30 miles east of Gibraltar. (France indicated she might de- liver arm'sto the Spanish government ifvher proposed tripartite neutrality, agreement is not accepted quickly.I (Authoritative sources said that Great Britain's adherence would be assured tomorrow, but there was no indication when Rome's reply would be received. (French fear of a new fascist dic- tatorship if rebels are successful led to the proposed tripartite neutrality. France feared Italy might aid the Spanish fascists, and this fear was heightened by appearance in Morocco of Italian planes.) Gyroscope Subject of Today's Lecture rM., ann ,-m .m silect ure Second U. Of M. Student Submits Name In TrichiganPoliticalRace V. Johnson AnnouncesI Candidacy In Republican Nomination Primaries Vernon C. Johnson, '37, of Iron Mountain, the second student to an- nounce his candidacy for membership in the State Legislature, has enlisted in the primaries for the Republican nomination for State Representative from Dickinson County, a northern peninsula district. Johnson, who is 25 years old, is the first undergraduate to enter the pri- maries, the other student, Edward Litchfield, who has filed for State Senator from the, fifth district in De- troit, being a graduate student work- ing for his P.H.D. The chief plank in Johnson's plat- form is the adoption of a state Civil Service as outlined by the Civil Serv- ice Study Commission headed by Prof. James K. Pollock of the political sci- ence department. He also intends to advocate the extension of educational faciilties for northern peninsula students. "Be- cause so many families are on relief in the district, many young people with special ability are prevented from going on with their education," ,he said. "Therefore we believe that the state should make direct grants to the local school boards to aid such students, or that the colleges and universities in the state should great- ly enlarge their scholarship grants." Other points in his platform are the appointment of a special plan- ning board by the State government to deal more specifically with prob- lems of the northern peninsula, clos- er cooperation in the district with the State agricultural department, which would increase the amount of acreage available to farmers, and more extensive methods of forest con- servation. Johnson, who will receive his de- gree in political science in February, will oppose the Democratic incum- bent, Phil Rahoi, 6 other Democrats and 4 Republicans in the primary election. I Week-End Auto Death Toll 2; Third League Tea Dance To Be Held In Ballroom The third League tea dance of the summer will be held from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in the ball- room of the League. Those who will pour at the tea are Mrs. Louis A. Hopkins, wife of Dr. Hopkins, director of the Sum- mer Session; Mrs. Louis M. Eich, wife of Professor Eich, secretary of the Summer Session; Mrs. Byrl Bacher, acting dean of women.for the Summer Session and Mrs. Martha L. Ray, assistant to the dean of women. Music for dancing will be fur- nished by a three piece orchestra selected from Al Cowan's regular band. Mary Andrew is in charge of the tea dance. There will be no admission charge. This summer tea dances have been held for the first time since 1931 and 1932. At each of the first two tea dances given this year, there was an attendance of more than 360 people. Teachers Will Meet Today In N.S. Auditorium Joint Federation Meeting Is Open To Public; Will, Discuss Academic Issues A joint meeting, open to the pub- lic, will be held at 8 p.m. today in the Natural Science Auditorium by the American Federation of Teachers and the Michigan Federation of Teachers. Both of these organizations are af- filiated with the American Federation of Labor. According to Prof. Norman Nelson of the English department, the meet- ing will take the form of a brief dis- cussions by several speakers followed by an open forum in which the public will have a chance to express their views on academic freedom, tenure, organization and other problems con- fronting the teaching profession to- day. Among the visiting speakers on the pogram will be Mrs. Frances Comfort, president of the Detroit local, who will speak on the subject, "The Func- tion of the Local," and Arthur Elder, president of the Michigan Federation of Teachers, who will talk on "The Functions of the Michigan Federa- tion of Teachers." Prof. Robert C. Angell of the so- ciology department will also address the meeting. Prof. John Shepard of the psychology department will speak on "Effects of Economic Changes on the Status of the Teacher." Detroit Defeats Tribe As Rowe Gains 13tI Win Schoolboy's Pitching And Hitting Important Factor In Tigers'_9-4 Victory DETROIT, Aug. 3. -- (/P) -- Detroit turned back Cleveland 9 to 4 in the only major league game played to- day to shove the Indians ten full games behind the pace-setting New York Yankees. Mel Harder, aiming for his 14th win, started for the Tribe. He was ineffective and was removed for a pinch hitter in the seventh after yielding 11 hits and eight runs. Bob Feller, 17-year-old recruit pitched the seventh and eighth and gave up two hits and one run. Rowe, continuing his hitting streak, got two hits out of four trips to the plate, but Gerald Walker was the in- dividual batting star with a double and two singles in five times. Al Simmons got a double and a single in four trips and Charley Gehringer two out of five. The Indians took a two-run lead in the second inning on Vosmik's single and Knickerbocker's homer into the upper right field stands. The Tigers got one of those runs back in their half on a pass to Goose Goslin, a single by Simmons and a force-out by Owen. Detroit pushed over four runs in the Food Studies By Chemists Are Deseribed Mechanization Of Farms Add To Food Supplies Of Man, Lewis States Science Increases Yields, He Declares Sugar Beet Regions Owe Much To The Industrial Chemist,_Speaker Says The importance of the chemist in developing new foods was empha- sized yesterday by Prof. Howard B. Lewis, director of the College of Phar- macy, in the first Summer Session j lecture of the week. Professor Lewis' spoke on "The Chemist and the World's Food Supply.", Two factors were stressed by Pro- fessor Lewis as being the most im- portant in increasing the food supply of the nation while the total crop acreage remained stationary. The first of these was the rise of the gasoline era. Professor Lewis stated that the substitution of motorized equipment for transportative and other agricultural tasks enabled farm- ers to place on the market for hu- man consumption products which had theretofore been utilized to feed agri- cultural stock. Science Helps Farmers The second factor mentioned by Professor Lewis was the increased improvement in the methods of an- imal husbandry. Scientific knowl- edge has enabled farmers to secure more from the same number of stock and more from the same number of acres. He added that 55,000,000 crop acres have been added to the nation's total since the World War. Absence Makes Losses, Of Right Control For Laxity And Report Shows Speaking of the improvementsI 4 Are Injured Detroiter Killed In Crash On Washtenaw Saturday; Others Critically Injured Two persons were dead and four in serious condition as a result of Wash- tenaw County automobile accidents over the week-end. The dead were Morley Alfs, 19 years old, of Detroit, son of William A. Alfs, general attorney for the Michigan Central Railroads and part owner of the Detroit Lions; and John Cos- grove. 75 years old, Willis farmer. Alfs died at 1 a.m. Sunday in St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital, three hours after he was admitted there, from a skull fracture and chest injuries suf- fered in a collision on Washtenaw Avenue two miles east of Ann Arbor. Ruth Thompson, of Addison, who was injured in the same accident, is in critical condition in University Hos- pital, with fractures of both legs, a thigh fracture, and a broken arm, together with a possible skull frac- ture, and Delmar I. Allman, 46 years old, of Ypsilanti, is in serious condi- tion in St. Joseph's with chest in- juries, as a result of the same col- lision. State police are not yet sure of the manner in which the two cars col-1 lided. Miss Thompson was riding in Alf's car. Cosgrove died at Beyer Memorial 'Hospital in Ypsilanti as the result of a collision Sunday afternoon at the intersection of Willis and Textile roads, when a car driven by his wife, Kate Ccsgrove, failed to stop at Willis Road, a through highway, and was struck by a car driven by Ever- ett Bock, 22 years old of Tecumseh. Mrs. Cosgrove is in serious condition, as is Bock. Also injured in the same accident were Lorette Radjcuski, 14 years old, who was riding with the Cosgroves, who suffered shock, cuts and bruises, Mrs. Everett Bock, 24 years old, who received a broken knee-cap and Or- made in the field of animal hus- bandry, Professor Lewis said, "In 1900 the averagerannualwproduction of putter fat per cow was 145 pounds; in 1930, 180 pounds. In the five years preceding the depression the number of dairy cows was only five per cent greater than 10 years before, yet the production ofmilk was 25 per cent greater than before." Yield Improved Another factor of importdnce in the recent improvements of food sup- plies has been the bettering of the yield and character of the staple veg- etable foodstuffs, Professor Lewis said. He cited statements by Secre- tary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace which indicated that through newly developed corn strains the grower will be able "to produce our present supply of corn on 90 million acres instead of 100 million."1 "Another striking example of the improvements due to the combined efforts of the plant breeder and the industrial chemist," Professor Lewis continued, "is seen in the sugar beet industry, of particular interest to resident- of Michigan." Through ap- plication of science to plant breeding, the speaker said, the sugar content of beets grown in the United States has been increased to an average of 15.75 per cent as compared to the eight per cent, or less, contained in the original sugar beet plant. SLAYER AIDS IN GUN HUNT EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill., Aug. 3.-/P) --Constable John Hamilton dived into Pittsburgh Lake here today helping officers search for a revolver police say he admitted using to kill his secret wife and her escort. Pollock Group Hits Waste Of State's Income Civil Service Commission Says State Government Lacks GoodManaging Score Time Waste By State Employes Taxpayers' money as well as state employes' time are wasted regularly because the state administrationhas no adequate supervision of hours of work, sick leaves, and vacations, the State Civil Service Study Commission, headed by Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science department here, charged yesterday. Continuing their investigation of the political "spoils system," the com- mission said, in a report preliminary to its official statement to Gov. Frank D. Fitzgerald, which will include its draft of the proposed state civil serv- ice law, that the desirability of sys- tematic regulations concerning sick leaves, vacations, and hours of work are too obvious to need recounting. The commission, which is composed in the majority of University of Mich- igan undergraduates, stated that it is not generally realized that the ab- sence of such regulations can be defi- nitely costly. "A lenient department head," the report read, "who permits his em- ployes to work seven instead of eight hours a day or two take three in- stead of two weeks' vacation by his action has given away twelve and one-half per cent and about three per cent respectively of what the tax- payers' money has bought and paid for." The commission further reported that in the absence of right control in the matter of absence from duty because of illness inevitably makes for laxity and therefore greater losses. "How much greater this loss can be is inaicated by the case of the city which, by doing nothing more drastic than requiring employe's to take phys- ical examinations once a year and a full explanation of all absence due to illness, reduced its annual payroll loss for sickness from 1.25 per cent to .75 per cent," the report said. The commission calculated that if Michigan adopted this plan a corre- sponding saving to the state of $75,- 000 per year would result. Liquor Commission Mav BeChallenged LANSING. Aug. 3.-(U)-I. L. Col- burn, secretary and treasurer of the Michigan Beverage Retailers Associa- tion, threatened today to challenge in the supreme court the state liquor control commission's authority to en- force its regulations. He said he was instructing members of the' association that they should disobey recent regulations, with the promise that a fight would result if the commission attempted enforce- ment. Colburn said members of the asso- ciation objected particularly to a a regulation announced last week which would prevent beer retailers from cashing workmen's pay checks. He said a limitation placed on the number of brands of beer out-of-state that might be carried in stock by any regulation announced last week Squeezing Charged To 23 Oil Concerns And 58 Indivi*duals Put-In-Bay Excursion Is Last Trip In Series The trip to Put-in-Bay on Lake Erie tomorrow will be the tenth] and final excursion of the Sum- mer Session series. Chartered busses will leave for Detroit at 7:15 a.m. tomorrow from the east entrance of the Natural Science Building and will go directly to the "Put-In-Bay dock on the Detroit River. Here the party will board a steamer for the island. The entire trip, ia- eluding bus and steamer faresj and meals on the boat, will 1 amount to slightly below $5. Put-In-Bay is one of a group ofe islands located at the western endr of Lake Erie, about 60 miles south-i east of Detroit. Geologically, Put- in-Bay is of interest for its rug- i ged limestone shore line, for its surface evidences of glaciation andr for its caves. Prof. Ralph L. Belknap of the geology depart- r ment is the director of this ex- cursion.t On the island is located Per-t ry's Monument, a tall granitet shaft 352 feet high, commemorat- ing Commodore Perry's naval vic-t tory of 1813. The group will arrive back in Ann Arbor at about 9:30 p.m. to- morrow. All reservations for thist last excursion must be made be- fore 4:30 p.m. today in Room 1213~ Angell Hall.t Save CCC Camp As Fires Roar On IsleRoyale Additional Fighters Held In Readiness As North Wind Fans Flames ; MARQUETTE, Aug. 3.-UP)-A for-; est fire burning on Isle Royale, in Lake Superior still roared on today over cutover lands, but after two days of fighting a crew of 600 men suc- ceeded in checking a fire which en- dangered the CCC camp on the island. Two new fires broke out on the island, and were burning on a stiff northwest wind. Arrangements have been made to send additional crews of CCC workers to the island if they are needed. A fire in Alger County which burned over 3,500 acres and endan- gered the town of Traunik was re- ported under control today, after it shifted on a north wind. A force of 400 workers still fought the blaze which came within a quarter mile of the village.. A fire in 200 acres of the Hia- watha Forest near Ensign was brought under control today. Workers said the Traunik fire would cause heavy damage if the wind shifted to send it into heavy timber. It already has destroyed several homes and other buildings, as well as timber and log stocks. Rain fell at various places along the fire front Sunday night, but was of little aid in checking the roar- ing flames, in pine and other highly inflammable timber. The village of Filion, ten miles north of Bad Axe, was menaced to- day by a fire which started on the farm of Ralph Schmidt and swept through woodlands and over pastures toward homes of the village. Volunteer workers from Kinde, farmers and Filion residents turned out to form fire lines and battle the creeping blaze. The fire was within a half mile of the village late today. Army Prepares For.. Annual War Games FORT KNOX, Ky., Aug. 3.--P)- While 20,000 troops assigned to the unmotorized army received intensive training and detailed instructions to- day in preparation for war games, Col. Bruce Palmer, commander of the U. S. Indictments Under Sherman Anti Trust Act Name Trade Journals Price Manipulations Laid To Operators Artificial Rates Devised Through Buying Pools, Government Alleges MADISON, Wis., Aug. 3.-()- United States District Attorney John Boyle announced tonight that a Fed- eral grand jury had returned indict- ments against 23 major oil compan- ies, three trade journal publishing companies and 58 individuals charg- ing violation of the Sherman Anti- Trust Act. The indictments were the result of an extensive investigation by the spe- cial Federal jury into a complaint of the National Oil Marketers Associa- tion that major companies were at- tempting to "squeeze" independent dealers out of business. Boyle said the names andsidentities of the de- fendants were being withheld until warrants are served. Boyle said the specific charges are that the defendants "combined and conspired," beginning February, 1935, and continuing to the present, to in- crease and fix prices of gasoline sold in interstate commerce, mainly in ten states of the middle west. The grand jury's report, made to Federal Judge Patrick T. Stone, was a partial one delivered to the court July 28 and not made public until today. Jury Recessed The jury meantime has recessed until Aug. 19 when Boyle said the investigation would be resumed. Previous to the July 28 recess the jury had returned another indict- ment against William A. Tracy, of Fort Worth, Tex., bulk sales man- ager of the Sinclair Refining Com- pany, charging perjury. Boyle said that the 84 defendants were named in a single true bill charging that gasoline prices were manipulated by means of two con- certed buying programs or pools, one operating in the East Texas and the other in Oklahoma and the nearby mid-continent fields. The indictment charges, Boyle said, that the defendant companies acted in concert to purchase large quan- tities of gasoline in spot transactions from independent refiners at artificial prices which are maintained as going market prices. Boyle said the companies involved sell large quanities of gasoline in Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, Il- linois, Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Iowa, Missouri and Kansas. Charges Of True Bill He said the true bill charges that sales were made in these states under long term supply contracts in which the price of gasoline to the jobber is determined by the average of the spot market prices as published in the Chicago Journal of Commerce and Platt's Oilgram. It also alleges, he said, thatkby rais- ing and fixing the spot market prices through a buying program, the major companies boosted prices which the jobbers were required to pay for gas- oline under their contracts and there- by exacted large sums from the job- bers. Boyle said the grand jury found that the effect of the buying pool was to raise the retail price of gas- oline to consumers. Two of the trade jounal publish- ing companies named in the indict- ment were the Chicago Journal of Commerce and Platts' Oilgram. Boyle said they were charged with having participated in and aided the alleged conspiracy by publishing the agreed pool prices as open market prices. The grand jury began its investi- gation May 4 on instructions from Attorney General Homer S. Cum- mings at Washington, to whom the complaint of the National Oil Mark- A 'Noisy' And A 'Good One,' Says Director OfO'Casey Play By ELSIE ROXBOROUGH "Juno and the Paycock," Sean O'- Casey's Irish folk-play, which will open at the Lydia Mendelssohn* Theatre tomorrow night with Whit-; ford Kane, the guest director of the Repertory Players and actor of in- ternational renown in the role of the "Paycock," is "a very noisy show," according to Hiram Sherman the di- rector of this seventh presentation of the season. "The Irish certainly make a lot of noise," Mr Sherman said. "And 'Juno and the Paycock' is a corking good show. It's not a well-made ,- - . ..r.i r +- +, n iTi v o+ e - was given the distinction of being considered "the greatest Irish dra- matist, since Synge." "The characters are all remark- able people," Mr. Sherman went on. "Captain Boyles is Juno's lazy hus- band who never woks and spends his time in strutting about the town 'like a Paycock,' while Juno is in a class by herself. She is hard-working, sharp-tongued, yet capable of going on her tragic way without grumb- ling," he continued. Those who go to see this drama that so vividly portrays all the vices and virtues of the Celtic people asl