)UR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, AUG. 20, 1936 Max Schmeling Refuses Match With Joe Louis German Boxer Asks Fight For Heavyweight Title Against Jim Braddock Title BoutDelayed Specialist Says Champion's Hands And Elbows Unfit For Immediate Fight NEW YORK, Aug. 19.-(P)-The fight front was no man's land for the Brown Bombing Joe Louis today. ! Flushed with his three-round comeback knockout of Jack Sharkey last night the young Detroiter found himself in the position of being all dressed up with no place to go. Max Schmeling flatly refused to consider a return bout with Louis and, the way things are shaping up, it will be a long time before Champion Jim- my Braddock will be in a ring with Schmeling, Louis or anybody else. Braddock's injured left hand was examined today by Fred Albee, as- signed by the New York State Ath- letic Commission to determine wheth- er Braddock should be granted a postponement of his scheduled Sep- tember engagement with Schmeling. Dr. Albee said he would recom- mend at least a month's postpone- ment. However, the commission will make a decision on his recommenda- tion at its meeting on Friday. The specialist asserted the title- holder is suffering from subacute ar- thritis in the injured hands and both elbows. The growth in the left hand has been there for several years," he said, adding, "it is my belief that the pain Braddock has been exper- iencing for several weeks was caused by the close proximity to the growth." Meanwhile ^Louis' managers and friends began pulling all available wires to get Schmeling back into the ring with the Brown Bomber. They regard Louis a sure bet to avenge his June defeat by Schmeling and get set to tackle Braddock next summer. To all of which Schmeling replied "nothing doing" in his best English. "I am here to fight Braddock for the title," he said. "That's all I'm interested in. There is no point in meeting Louis again except for the money and I don't need that. "If the Braddock fight is post- poned, I'll go back home and return when he is ready.' Promoter Mike Jacobs was flooded with offers for the Bomber's services. Lew Tendler sought to book Joe against Al Ettore in Philadelphia September 14, and Elwood Rigsby, Pittsburgh promoter, wants Joe to go against Al Gainer or some other contender in the Smoky City the first week in October. Joseph Triner, chairman of the Illinois State Athletic Commission telegraphed Jacobs urging that a return Louis-Schmeling match be made for Chicago, pointing out there are 500,000 Germans in Chicago and another 500,000 in the area between Chicago and Milwaukee. Jacobs said he might accept some of the offers just to keep Louis busy. The fight experts were divided on the extent of Louis' improvement since the Schmeling fight, but Schmeling left no doubt as to how he stands. "Joe was in worse shape for this fight than he was against me," said Herr Max. "He still can be hit with a right and I saw other weaknesses last night. Max said Sharkey fought a dumb fight. "He was always easy to hit with a right," he said. "His biggest mistake was in trying to mix with Joe." While W. 49th Street fought and refought last night's battle all over again, both principals left the city. Sharkey went to the offices of the 20th Century Sporting Club, collect- ed a check for $35,621.67, then left by auto with his manager for Boston. Disappointed over his failure against Louis, the former champion said he probably would never fight again. Louis left by train for Detroit. He will rest there a week, then go back to Stevensville, Mich., to start work for any fights that may be made for him. Joe's share of the gate was $42,746, or 30 per cent. Sharkey's cut represented 25 per cent. The official attendance was 27,374 and the net gate $136,285.76. Richberg Is Named In Inj rnetion Suit LANSING, Aug. 19.-(R)-An in- junction suit filed in the Ingham County Circuit Court here today named Donald R. Richberg, former NRA administrator, and three others as defendants, as owners of a hotel property here. Michael N. Nakfoor of this city asked that they be enjoined from attempting to dispossess him of the Strand Hotel. He contended they Michigan's'Washington County' Uncovered By WPA Historians Territory Fails Test Case To In Survive State's Supreme Court MARQUETTE, Aug. 19.-Mich- igan, one of the few states without a county named in honor of the first President, once had a Washington county which failed to survive a State Supreme Court test of its brief exist- ence. The revelation of a "Washington county" in Michigan was made by WPA workers making a state and local survey of historical records in the Upper Peninsula. Delving intd the documents of early Marquette county, project work- ers discovered assessment rolls for a "Negaunee township, Washington county, L. S. Michigan." From an original copy of records of "Teal Lake Township," found in the Negaunee city building, and from old copies of "The Michigan Re- porter" and the "Mining and Manu- i t f t 1 c i 1 l 1 t 1 { } l 1 7 . Corn Prices Up To Highest TopF Since Post-War Farmers, Giving Up Hopes For Crops, Salvage Yield For Fodder,_Roughage CHICAGO, Aug. 19.-()-Cornf prices jumped to the highest peak since the post-war period today as1 weather bureau crop experts reported the drought was growing worse in the) farm belt. Quotations rose as high as $1.37 a bushel on the Chicago Board of, Trade, again passing wheat in re- versal of normal market conditions.- The previous high was $2.17 in 1920,1 with an all-time record of $2.36 in' August, 1917.7 Corn futures, wheat, oats and rye hit 1936 highs in the wake of reports of continuing heat in Western plains. Although the weather bureau saw thundershowers as possible relief for stifling Kansas and Oklahoma to- night or tomorrow, the bureau's crop observers said general conditions in the drought region were growing steadily worse. "Devastation became more wide- spread" in the corn and wheat grow- ing states during the last week, the bureau's weekly bulletin asserted, de- scribing recent hot weather as "de- cidedly unfavorable" to crops. "There will be little corn in most of the plains states, much of Mis- souri, parts of Iowa, and in some areas east of the Mississippi River," the bulletin continued. Farmers, it said, were everywhere giving up hope of a crop and mak- ing efforts to "salvage as much as possible for fodder and roughage." Water and feed for livestock were reported "increasingly scarce" with "forced movement of stock contined in many western and central sec- tions." Rain fell in "appreciable amounts' only in very small, scattered areas during the week, the bulletin said, and there gave but "more or less re- lief." The plains area through which President Roosevelt's drought relief committee was passing was described as hardest- hit because of continuous heat for weeks. Increasing requests for movement of livestock came from farmers in Iowa despite showers in that state. The interstate commerce commission in Washington ordered a 25 per cent cut in railroad rates on cattle ship- ments from Oklahoma and Kansas to Texas. Favorites Push Ahead Toward Tourney Finals CHARLEVOIX, Aug. 19.--(P)- Seeded favorites without exception pushed through to the quarter-final round of men's singles today in the eleventh annual Michigan Riviera tennis tournament, although some of them encountered stormy competi- tion. Harris Coggeshall of Des Moines, defending champion, dropped a set to Howard Stephens of St. Louis be- fore winning, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4, in a third round match. Ernest Sutter of New Orleans, National Intercollegiate champion, dropped a set to Ernest Byfield, Jr., Chicago, his second round opponent whom he defeated 6-8, 6-1, 6-3. then proceeded to breeze past Al Thav of Detroit in the third round, 6-1, 6-0. William Reese of Atlanta, Ga., fourth-seeded, was extended by Mil- ler Sherwood, Grand Haven, winning 3-6, 6-4, 6-4. facturing News," workers then got the history of Washington county. These sources show that Washing- ton county was created by public act on February 15, 1867 and the town- ship of Negaunee by the same au- thority on February 27, 1867. The territory included in Washington county included parts of Marquette and surrounding counties, includ- ing all of Negaunee township. But Washington county was fated to a three months' existence. In March, 1867 the Marquette county bpard declared the office of county treasurer vacant because the incum- bent resided in Washington county and Matthew H. Maynard was ap- pointed to the vacancy. This action precipitated a suit in the State Supreme Court, William L. Stoughton vs. Maynard, in which it was held that the creation of Washington county was not valid; that since there could be no Wash- ington county, the territory was still Marquette county; that hence the county treasurer resided in Mar- quette county and that hence the ap- pointment of Maynard did not hold. A decision holding the county of Washington invalid was given by the State Supreme Court on May 25, 1867 -a little over three months after the county was created-and that was the end of Washington county in Michigan. At present, there are 20 persons employed on the survey of historical records in the Sixth WPA district. One or more workers are employed in Menominee, Delta, Dickinson, Iron., Gogebic, Marquette, Baraga, Hough- ton and Alger counties. Workers will be stationed in Keweenaw and On- tonagon counties in the near future. The project, with Walter Moyland in charge of the district, began March 7, and since then scores of misplaced records, some of them val- uable, have been found. A survey of church records also was inaugurated in Marquette county recently and church records in other counties will be examined. University Men Give Speeches At Health Meet (Continued from Page 1) Trial Is Begun In Asheville Coed Murder Eight Witnesses Testify In Opening Session Of Martin Moore Case ASHEVILLE, N. C., Aug. 19.-(P) Eight witnesses testified today in Superior Court as the prosecution be- gan weaving the web it hopes will send Martin Moore, Negro, to the gas chamber for slaying Helen Clev- enger, New York University student, in a hotel room here July 16. Most of today's testimony merely established the circumstances of death, leaving until tomorrow ef- forts of Solicitor Zeb V. Nettels to get into the record a confession which Sheriff Laurence E. Brown said the tall Negro made when arrested 10 days ago. J. Scroop Styles, court-appointed defense laweyr, told newsmen the de- fense would challenge the document, claiming it to have been obtained under duress, that leniency was promised and that the defendant was not legally under arrest when he signed it. Styles created a flurry when he asked go be relieved after Sanford W. Brown, another Asheville attorney, announced he had been retained by Moore's sister. The court appointed Styles and Thomas A. Jones, Jr., last week when the Negro was represented as without funds to employ counsel. Judge Phillips admitted Brown to defense counsel and induced Styles and Jones to continue. Opening state witnesses were: Prof. W. L. Clevenger, rotund N. C. State College Dairy specialist with whom his niece, 18-year-old Helen,I was traveling, who told of finding her shot and battered body in her room at the Battery Park Hotel.j Carillon Bells Receive Final Trial Concert (Continued from Page 1) 'Welcomes Probe' Steel Industry To Benefit By Large U.S.Navy Bids For New Destroyers And Submarines Called By NavyDepartment NEW YORK, Aug. 19.-(R)-Indi- cations of further demand for heavy steels appeared on the industrial hori- zon today as the U. S. Navy de- partment opened bids for new de- stroyers and submarines. Analysts say the navy's plans to step up its fighting strength to full treaty limits by 1942 will help ma- terially to quicken the pulse of the shipbuilding industry. They also explain that while ship- builders have for some time leaned heavily on U. S. Government con- tracts for naval ships, there have been some large private orders. In the latter classification the outstand- ing commitment is the projected tanker construction for Standard Oil of New Jersey. The. Navy department's action served to present what economists termed a favorable contract between the expansion of heavy industry in the United States and abroad. While much of the industrial mo- mentum of foreign countries, notably Germany, France, Great Britain and Italy has been derived from the fas- ter pace of naval and armaments ac- tivities, the durable goods industries in this country, they emphasize, have been recovering with comparatively little help from these quarters. Meanwhile the electric power and steel industries continued to give evidence of their increasingly ro- bust condition. For the week ended Aug. 15, elec- tricity output turned ahead contra- seasonally to score a gain of .7 of 1 per cent over the preceding week and a rise of 14.3 per cent over the like week of 1935. A further sharp rise in the price of scrap steel and the steady gait of incoming orders for steel were im- portant straws in the wind noted by "iron age." EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS 6 :00-WWJ Ty Tyson. WJR Stevenson Sports. WXYZ Easy Aces. CKLW Marley's Orch. 6 :15-WWJ Dinner Music. WJR Heroes of Today. WXYZ Day in Review. CKLW Joe Gentile. 6 :30-WWJ C. C. Bradner. WJR Kate Smith. WXYZ Gray Bros. Orch. CKLW York's Orch. 6:45-WWJ Soloist. WJRBoake Carter. WXYZ Rubinoff. CKLW Song Recital. 7 :00-WWJ Rudy Vallee. WJR Symphony (7:15). WXYZ Dance Music, CKLW Old Vienna. 7 :30-WWJ Concert Music. CKLW Ozzie Nelson. 8:00-WWJ Showboat. WJR Warnow's Orch. WXZ Death Valley Days. CKLW Reichman Orch. 8 :30-WJR Musical. WXYZ Wilson's Orch. CKLW Bradford's Orch. 9 :00-WWJ Music Hall. WJR Concert. WXYZ Big Broadcast. CKLW Recital Hall. 9:30-WJR March of Time. WXYZ Drama. CKLW Aaronson Orch. 10 :00-WWJ Amos and Andy. WJR News: Scores. WXYZ Buddy Rogers. CKLW Scores; News. 10 :30-WWJ Melodies. WJR Lions' Tales; Orch. , WXYZ Dance Music. CKLW Ted Weems. 11:00--WWJ Northwood Inn Orch. WJR Benny Goodman. WXYZ Shandor. CKLW Shep Field. 11 :30-WWJ Dance Music. WJR Barnett Orch. WXYZ Henry King. CKLW Horace Heidt. 12:00-WWJ Webster Hall Orch. WXYZ Dance Music. CKLW Ace Brigode. MANERO LEADS FIELD LAKE PLACID, Aug. 19.-(A)- Finishing up in the rain late in the afternoon, Tony Manero of Greens- boro, N. C., national open champion, posted a 69 to jump into the lead in the Lake Placid open golf tourna- ment at the halfway mark today with a 36-hole total of 143. Equalling the competitive course record on his second tour of the course, Manero passed Matt Kowal, of Utica. Eye Glass Frames Repaired. Lenses Ground. HA LLER'S Jewelry State Street at Liberty I - _____________________________ 4 -Associated Press Photo. Working in his shirtsleeves at a typewriter in Baltimore, Dr. F. E. Townsend said the congressional inquiry into his old age pension organization would help inform people of his work. He admitted there has been some dishonesty among his helpers. 3 Men Caught In Restaurant Theft' HOWELL, Aug. 19.-(P)-State Po- lice who answered an emergency call found three frightened men lined up at the end of a rifle in the hands of Patrick Tobin, a World War veteran who accused them of having at- tempted to rob him this forenoon. Tobin accused Newt Upchurch, 25; J. P. Henderson, 21, and Wilbur Mil- ler, 19, of having attempted to loot slot machines in his restaurant known at Pat's Canteen, on US-16. ----------- Dr. James D. Bruce, director of the department of postgraduate medicine and chairman of the division of health sciences at the University of Michigan, who was unable to reach Marquette today, Dr. Herman Rieker, assistant to Dr. Bruce and associate professor of internal medicine at the U. of M. outlined the setup of the division of health sciences at the University. Because of death in the family of Dr. Hugo A. Freund, president of the Michigan Children's Fund, who was to present the medical profession at the symposium, his paper was read by Dr. Penberthy. Others who took part in the dis- cussion were: Nursing-Miss Louise Knapp, R. N., professor of public health nursing, Wayne University. Pharmacy-Dr. Howard B. Lewis, director of that college at the Uni- versity of Michigan. Dentistry-Dr. Paul H. Jeserich, professor of operative dentistry, Uni- versity of Michigan. Public health-Dr. John Sundwall, director of the division of hygiene and public health, University of Michigan. The conference, sponsored by the University of Michigan and the Michigan Children's Fund, was pre- sented in conjunction with the an- nual meeting of the Upper Peninsula Medical Society, Farmer-Labor Leaders Hope For 1940 Party WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.-(A)- While the major party campaigns proceeded apace today, the attitude of leaders in the Farmer-Labor and Progressive movements raised new possibilities of potential import in the present and future presidential contests. Meeting at Madison, Wis., mem- bers of the executive committees of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor organ- ization and the Wisconsin Farmer- Labor Progressive federation decided not to endorse any presidential can- didate this year as a body; but to set out after Novemberl toward national establishment of a new party. Some of the participants had advocated support of President Roosevelt for re-election. Apart from that conference, Gov- eror Floyd B. Olson of Minnesota ac- cepted an invitation to join Senator Robert La Follette (Prog.-Wis.) in sponsoring an attempt to unite in- dependents for work "to prevent re- actionaries from capturing the pres- rather sharper than intended finally. They are then tuned by flattening them. This is how it is done: A bell is stood, bowl downwards, on a table. Then it is marked off in five sections by drawing lines around it. Each section between the lines gives off a different note. It may happen that three of the sections ring true. and that two are out of harmony-the second and fourth, for instance. To get these two sections into tune, metal has to be cut away from the interior of the bell. But take away too much and the bell is ruined. It takes ver.y little indeed to overdo it. The 24,000-pound Bourdon bell for Ann Arbor is more than six feet in diameter, with sufficient room inside it for a number of men to stand upright. The bell is held in an enormous grip while the metal is reamed out. The vibrations of the lower rim of the bell are always the greater, grad- uating downwards the nearer you approach the top. In the process of accurate tuning a simple tuning fork plays a vital part, but the tuner also has delicate vibrational test in- struments to aid him in his work, When the bell is declared perfect .by the tuner, it is passed on to the sandblaster, who, garbed in a sheet- metal suit, applies sand under terrific air pressure until the bell is bur- nished and stands forth a thing of beauty. Fifteen minutes is as long as the sandblaster can work at a stretch. i - - - i When, You EXCHANGE =LAMPS 41 * Please bring your electric b111 It is easy to exchange your burned out lamps for new ones at any Detroit Edison office. There is no charge for lamp renewal service. (The cost of lamp renewals is included in your electric rate.) If your BURNED OUT lamps are not the sizes you wish, we will gladly exchange them for other sizes. The only requirement is this: When you exchange lamps, bring with you your most recent electric bill for identification. This rule requiring identification through your electric bill is partly for your protection, since it keeps others who are not Detroit Edison customers from getting lamps which you pay for in your electric rate. Also, this practice discourages wasteful lamp renewals and provides the Company with the necessary records on lamps passed out. The Detroit Edison Company will gladly advise you on the correct sizes of lamps for your ,needs. Keeping your sockets filled with lamps will mean greater comfort and convenience in your home, and will insure adequate light for safe seeing. Note: Lamps are renewed without extra charge only for residential and commercial customers paying lighting rates and in the following sizes: 25W, 40W, 60W, 100W, 150W, 200W, 300W, 500W, and three-lite lamp, 100. 200-300W. .i 'i. M By ARBOR SPRINGS ON TO VICTORY America has again sent her champions across thesea to fight in her name. They have not betrayed her trust, but brought her victory. The battles were fought in the sports arena of Berlin where picked athletes of all nations competed in tests of skill, speed and stamina. Other countries had their share of victory but the greatest and most sensational records were made by the representatives of own U.S.A. Why be sluggish, dull and slow when you can be active and full of pep. The Arbor Springs Wa- ter Co., of 416 W. Huron, har- bors the secret of perpetual vitality. It can be yours for the asking. Phone 8270 now and your supply of natural spring water will reach you promptly. This pure water has a delight- ful taste and its effects are in- i I I