'UESDAY, AUG. 18, 1936 THt MICHIGAN 'h-ATT. V WAGE T _ 8 1 '! Y i~~~b .I l'.SM 1. , V2l 1 1,I 1LT .. R'iA 'i i THRV 141a i i f I Spanish Loyalists Rout Rebels From Somosierra NEWS Of The DAY (From The Associated Press) -3Men Convicted In Bannister Extortion Case NEW YORK, Aug. 17.-(G)-A general sessions court jury con- victed three men today of extort- ing money from Harry Bannister, actor-producer, under threat of making public affidavits which would have tended to impute shame to the former husband of Ann Harding, the actress. Judge Morris Koenig will sen- tence the men Sept. 3. They are Jerome A. Jacobs, 48, a New York attorney; Harry Hechheimer, 63, a former attorney who became a salesman, and Raymond Der- ringer, 39, a motion picture ma- chine operator who testified he had been hired to obtain affi- davits favorable to Bannister during the latter's child custody dispute with Miss Harding. Hechhimer has a record for a previous conviction on an arson charge and faces a sentence of from 10 to 20 years. Jacobs and Derringer could be sentenced to from five to 10 years in prison. Bannister testified to compli- eated financial deals whereby the state accused the trio of extort- ing $1,800 from-Bannister. During the trial Humbert Fu- gazy, sports promoter, testified that Bannister had paid $2,000 to escape death threatened by a gunman and that Hechheimer, then Bannister's attorney, had arranged for protection. Private Averts Fire At Camp Custer CAMP CUSTER, Aug. 17.-(/P) -Quick action by Private Louis Cowan of Rockford, Ill., who leaped to the wheel of a blazing automobile and drove it out of range of a gasoline tank truck, averted what might have been a serious fire tonight. Cowan, a member of Compaiy E, 108th Quartermaster Regi- ment, 33rd division, National Guard, stood nearby as the car was being refueled. When the fuel ignited, he took the wheel and drove the car to the other side of Highway US12. Private Robert Gibbs, of the Eighth Illinois Service Company, was burned about the face and hands in the fire, and was treat- ed at the Camp Custer Hospital. The automobile was part of the equipment of the Eighth Illinois Infantry, a Negro regiment. Demand For Townsend's Arrest Refused CLEVELAND, Aug. 17.-(')- The arrest of Dr. Francis E. Townsend, white-haired advocate of a $200 monthly pension for everybody over 60, was demanded today-and refused-when he failed to appear for a deposition hearing in a receivership suit against his organization. Ben Sacharow, attorney for the Rev. Alfred J. Wright, former Townsend director, in the suit for receivership and an accounting of $1,000,000 in Townsend funds, asked the arrest. Common pleas Judge George W. Kerr refused the demand after receiving as- surance, he said ,that Dr. Town- send was ill in Chicago. Judge Kerr continued the case -the same one from which Dr. Townsend walked indignantly last month only to be returned by a deputy sheriff for further questioning-until Thursday. He announced, after a telephone conversation with Dr. Townsend's physician in Chicago, that he was satisfied the pension plan founder would appear at that time. Predict 60 Billion National Income WASHINGTON, Aug. 17.-(W) -Ernest G. Draper, assistant sec- retary of commerce, predicted to- day that unless there is some ma- jor change in present business trends national income produced this year will be close to $60,- 000,000,000. Although acknowledging "it is terribly difficult to give any defi- nite figures," he said a prelim- inary study of various statistics had indicated the total would be between $58,000,000,000 and $60,- 000,000,000. This would compare with $52,959,000,000 last year, $81,034,000,000 in 1929, and $39,- 545,000,000-the lowest figure p . r .i : : " i i . ..^ - ^ --s ks As Spain's bloody revolution wo almost deadlocked with both sides Loyalist salute at Madrid before a rebel forces were routed. Bottom, turing Sonosierra. 'Chalk Dust' Is On Modern Edu( (Continued from Page 1) pion of the Lydia Mendelssohn the- atre with forty-seven players in the cast. "It's like calling the role for the NRA," Mrs. Baird laughed. "Yet I feel that the authors must have had a burning desire to do this play. I think that a lot of school teachers will wish that they themselves had written the play after they see it." Clarke and Nurnberg have obvious- ly strived, through satire, to elucidate upon the numerous faults of the high school administration, and they have spared none of the most salient points. They have satirized such bug- bears as politics in the school system, academic freedom and freedom of speech. The play has many ele- ments of Lewis' "Main Street" in Delay Charged In '34 Recount Case DETROIT, Aug. 17.-()-Chester P. O'Hara, Assistant Attorney Gen- eral, charged today that the 18 men convicted of fraud in the 1934 election recount are "deliberately delaying their appeal" and he asked the Mich- igan Supreme Court to cancel their bonds and send them to prison at once. O'Hara made this charge after a hearing before Judge W. McKay Skill- man in Recorder's Court on a motion by Robert E. Plunkett, Defense Coun- sel, for another extension in time to prepare a bill of exceptions for the appeal. "If this case is not heard in the October term of the Supreme Court, it will not be heard for a full year," O'Hara protested. Among the defendants are Elmer B. O'Hara, former County Clerk who resigned recently as chairman of the Democratic State Central Commit- tee; State Senator Anthony J. Wil- kowski, Recount Committee Chair- man: and Bruno Nowicki, now a Democratic candidate for State Sen- ator. The recount was of votes cast for Attorney General and for Secretary of State, for which Major-Gen. Guy M. Wilson, who died Sunday, was a candidate. Judge Skillman adjourned the hearing, and directed Plunkett to get the Supreme Court's permission to postpone the appeal. BRIDGE PLANS APPROVED WASHINGTON, Aug. 17.-(I)- The War Department approved to- day plans of the Michigan State Highway commission for a bridge across Saint Clair River at or near Port Huron, Mich. The department said original plans were modified to increase the length of the main span from 850 feet, as formerly approved, to 871 feet. Typewriter; Commander Of Fighting '32nd' DiesSuddenly Major-General Guy !Wibso, Succumbs In Flint; Wa World War Hero FLINT, Aug. 17.--tP)--Major-Gen eral Guy M. Wilson. post-war com mander of the Thirty-Second divisio who was decorated by two nations fo gallantry in action during the Worl War, will be buried Wednesday wit] military honors. Death terminated his career las night, as he seemed to be recovering from heart disease which had pre vented him from commanding his di vision during the Western Michiga war Maneuvers. He was 59 years old and had beei ill for two months. Two weeks agc he returned home from Hurley Hos pital. A relapse two days ago inter rupted recovery, but his death wa unexpected. Fought in Mexico Interested in military affairs sine early manhood, Wilson, then a majo went to the Mexican border with thi 125th Infantry during the campaigi of 1916. His battalion was retaine in federal service and he went t France in 1913 with the 125th in. fantry, attached to the Thirty-Sec. ond Division of Wisconsin and Mich igan National Guardsmen. Major Wilson led his troops i three major offensives. He was al- most constantly under fire from Ma to November, 1918, except for a pe- riod of recuperation from a shrapne wound suffered during the attack a Juvigny. His men fought troops of 23 Ger- man divisions and captured 2,15 prisoners and were the first to gain a foothold on German soil. The French government -twic awarded him the Croix de Guerre with palm for conspicuous gallantry in action, and made him a chevalie of the legion of honor. His own government awarded him the Distinguished Service Cross. He was with the Army of Occupa- tion in Germany until April, 1919, be- ing advanced there to lieutenant- colonel. Became Brigadier-General In 1923, he became a brigadier- general in the army reserve and in 1926, he was commissioned majo general, in command of the Thirty- Second Division, the highest rank possible for a national guard officer, General Wilson gave full credit for his military successes to his men He refused to seek the Democratic nomination for governor in 1920 and consistently declined to run for public office until 1934, when he was de- feated by a narrow margin for Secre- tary of State. He was one of the organizers of the American Legion in Michigan and served as the third state depart- ment commander. Delegates attending the legion con- vention in Lansing stood for one minute in silence today when word of General Wilson's death was re- ceived. Former Governor Wilber M. Brucker, in a brief eulogy, character- ized him as a "courageous soldier and officer of great executive and military ability." n 1- st 1- .Ti 1 to The LENS Some people like to experiment with effects they can get with very extreme contrast, very dark against white and the other way around, but this calls for a good deal of exper- ience. If you are taking a portrait of a blond person against a very black background you are apt to have the background jump out at you and distract you rather than being the means to making the subject import- ant. Artists can do this for they know how to use lighting, or panels so that the whole background will not be the black kind of black, but will vary. in tone so that against parts of the body, that should not be accentuated too much, have the background shad- ed into them, and other parts that would be lost in the background (ifR the subject is wearing dark clothes) are brought out. Another thing to notice, is that contrast is in the right place. A light haired person in dark clothes against a white board fence, will have her clothes the center of attraction, be- cause her head and hair are too simi- lar to the background. In most cases you want the face rather than the clothes. Often you are torn between two loves. You want a picture of a cer- tain person and you also want some lovely apple blossoms. Apple blos- soms, or a tree or any thing for that matter can make a good background, but you must decide which is to the most important, the person or the tree and make your picture accord-, ingly. If it's the tree that is most import- ant, or a fountain, or statue or build- Roosevelt Sees Anti-Aircraft Guns In Action Exhibition With Newest Equipment Makes Him Wish U. S. Had More HYDE PARK, N. Y., Aug. 17.-(A') -A wish that the nation had more modern anti-aircraft guns was voiced by President Roosevelt as he viewed a regiment outfitted with the army's finest equipment for smashing enemy airplanes. The President had one of the eight three-inch anti-aircraft guns of the Sixty-Second Coast Artillery set up in an alfalfa field on his estate. Col- onel Frank E. Ferguson, commanding the unit, which was moving from Fort Totten, Long Island, to Fort Ontario, near Oswego, N. Y., told Mr. Roose- velt the gun was the largest and highest-powered ever perfected. "These," the colonel said, "are the first teeth we have had to show an enemy invading us." Wishes U.S. Had More The President, who had pledged the use of his powers to keep the nation out of war in an address Fri- day night at Chautauqua, N.Y., re- marked: "It's the first time I've ever seen- one. I wish we had more of them." Later he added that he had noticed that not many planes were being brought' down in the civil war in Spain. Colonel Ferguson tgld him that was because there were no guns in Spain like those developed here. The regiment is the only one in the Army fully equipped with the most up-to-date devices for smashing air attacks. In addition to two batteries -Associated Press Photo. ore on toward its second month of warfare, loyalist forces and rebels were claiming minor victories. Top picture shows government militia giving the dvancing to the battlefront at Somosierra, 30 miles to the north, where the victorious government forces erected this battery of guns after recap- Clever Satire rational Methods showing the cruelty of small-town gossip. "Miss Sherwood," who seeks to get away from her life of pettiness and "chalk dust," into a life of tranquil- ity, finds that the fulfillment of her life is in trying to help others fulfill their own. There is the mechanical principal, "Dr. Harriman," who in- structs his staff members to "go up the stairways marked 'up' and down the stairways marked 'down.'" There is, too, the inquisitive, assistant prin- cipal, "Mr. Madison," who is most en- grassed in counting the window-poles of the rooms himself each night and who finally comes upon a handsome checking system which looks like a "perfect bell-shaped curve." In one of the most uproarious epi- ,sodes, "Mr. Rogers," is locked in the Ladies' Restroom with "Miss Wil- liams," and his horror is intensified by the fact that a fire-drill is con- ducted at the same time, thus pro- hibiting his escape. Clark and Nurn- berg have made street urchins and paupers parade through their play with startling realism. Mrs. Baird feels that they have discovered some- thing quite definitely in the prosaic lives of school teachers, and set it upon the stage for everyone to see. Return Of Cult Member Sought By Prosecutor DETROIT, Aug. 17.-()-Prose- cutor Duncan C. McCrea's office pre- pared papers today seeking the ex- tradition of Virgil F. "Bert" Effinger from Lima, O., on a charge of hav- ing six hand grenades while visiting here a year ago for a Black Legion meeting. McRea, who sent a warrant to Lima for Effinger's arrest, was notified by a city attorney there that Effinger was not to be arrested until formal requisition papers arrived or a repre- sentative of McCrea appeared to swear out an affidavit. Effinger was called by McCrea a "major-general" in the Legion, in charge of this part of the United States. At Lima, Effinger said his only knowledge of charges against him in Detroit were "hearsay" and that he would fight extradition. "I have nothing to fear," Effinger said. "I will stand on my constitu- tional rights." i MAW 11 Major League AMERICAN LEAGUE W. New York ..........74 Cleveland ...........64 Detroit ..............62 Chicago .............60 Washington .........58 Boston............58 St. Louis............42 Philadelphia ........39 L. 39 52 52 56 56 57 71 73 YESTERDAY'S GAMES Chicago 7, Cleveland 3. Washington 7, New York 5. Only games scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Chicago. Boston at Philadelphia. Detroit at St. Louis (2). New York at Washington. NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. St. Louis ............68 44 New York..........66 46 Chicago .............65 46 Cincinnati ...........55 57 Pittsburgh ...........57 55 Boston.............51 60 Brooklyn...........45 66 Philadelphia ......... 40 71 YESTERDAY'S GAMES Brooklyn-New York (post rain).. TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Pittsburgh (2). Philadelphia at Boston. Brooklyn at New York (2). St. Louis at Cincinnati game). AIS Pct. .655 .552 .544 .517 .509 .504 .372 .348 Pet. .607 .589 .586 .491 .509 .405 .405 .360 poned, (night 6s : IIUflAN -PROGRESSIroidS he-AGESPJ I:- -- -- CARRIER PIGEONS ing then your problem is a different of the 3-inch guns, it has sixteen 50- one that will be taken up later- calibre and the same number of 30- composition, but as long as the person calibre machine guns, eight search e is the important factor you only need lights of 3,000,000 candle power each to remember what I have told you. and eight sound locaters. r Simplicity is important. Watches Regiment Applebblossoms, or atree can make The President watched the regi- 1a fine background, but if you also ment move up the Albany Post Road have a wheel barrow, part of a barn from an open car at the entrance to - and a fence, then you are spoiling it. his estate. _ Limit your background, keep it simple The President spent the rest of the _ and have some degree of contrast day looking after details of adminis- with your important subject and re- tration affairs and preparing for a member that the subject is the main trip through states devastated by interest in the picture, and it isn't drought, scheduled to start from one of these cartoons asking you to Washington a week from tomorrow. r see how many objects you can name The evening was reserved for a sthat begin with "B." party, to celebrate the twenty-second birthday of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., . at the family home on a hill above SWIMMER RESCUED the Hudson. SMACKINAC ISLAND, Aug. 17.-) Not a single conference was on the -Sighting a drifting rowboat, coast- day's program, which was held open guardsmen headed toward it and res- because of the birthday. Presidential cued Aubrey Trainor, 16, of" Sault assistants said, however, they ex- Ste. Marie, as he was about to go pected to arrange a number of ap- under with cr.amps. Hit boat, equip- pointments for tomorrow and the ped with only one oar, drifted out of remainder of the week. Mr. Roose- control and he was trying to swim velt expects to return to Washington ashore when coastguardsmen arrived. next Monday. PARIS PICKS And if you are wise, you will certainly pick it for your first Fall dress! See how it lifts up your spirits and your ward- robe after a Summer of pas- tels. ,t is the one color you can't make a mistake on-- whether you choose crepe, wool or satin! It's the one color you can count on wheth- er you take size 14 or 44. You can wear it starkly black with your pearls... or you can dash it up with a bit of neckwear, or a bright belt. Our collec-j tion brings you black alive and glowing . . and at a price that makes buying a joy! Street Dresses Date Dresses Dresses for Sports or Classroom C A' r l 4 C E [I TiHE CARRIER PIGEON, uncanny in its perception of distances and places, was perhaps the first medium of fast news dispatch. It was a vital link in the evolution of co- operative gathering and dissenina- tion of news. As early as 1840, the carrier pigeon was an important unit in disseminating news. TELEGRAPH AND RADIO have sup- planted the carrier pigeon, and through these new media of word and thought transmission The Associated Press has become an even greater instrument for the en- lightenment of the world. Read I" Rental i . 11