The Weather Scattered showers today; to- morrow fair; moderate temn- peratures. - --.a C 14r Official Publication Of The Summer Session Editorials Economic Demands Paramount .. . VOL XVI No. 36 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1935 PRICES IVE CENTS 200 Storm Meat Plant In Riotgin Attempt To Seize Storage Rooms, Destroy Meat Of JohannCo. Police Exchange Blows With Women Three Women And One Man Arrested And Taken To Headquarters DETROIT, Aug. 2. -More than 200 men, women and children changed the peaceful picketing of the J. Johann Packing Co., at 17170 Mitchell St., into a small-sized riot when they attempted to storm the storage rooms to destroy the meat Friday afternoon. Twenty officers from the Davison Station broke up the picketers, but not before blows had been exchanged between the embattled women, the packers and police. It was the latest development in the uprising of women in protest to soaring meat prices. The militant housewives ran into difficulties when they attempted t6 pour kerosene over the meats of a wholesale packer and as a result three of them, in addition to a man, were arrested, charged with disturbing the peace. Arrested were Mrs. Hattie Krewik, 45 years old, of 13975 Mitchell St., the mother of five children; Mrs. Gertrude Ross, 40, of 3928 Mitchell St.; Mrs. Leona Zskowski, 47, of 178 McDougall and Fred Tzko, 51, ofj 13563 Arlington Ave. The women were taken to Police Headquarters, while Tzko was held at the Division Sta- tion. Owner Repels Charge- Johann, proprietor of the packing house, who repelled the charge of the women himself before police arrived,, locked the doors of the office and re-~ fused to give a statement.- According to Mrs. Krewik, one of the women arrested, Johann pusheda her so hard that she fell to the ground. She was taken to Receiving Hospital for treatment, and the arm which she said was broken was found to have been but slightly bruised. Tzko was arrested because he led1 the attack on police. In the course of the fight the picketers poured1 over the officers the kerosene intended, for the meat. The picketers represented an or- ganization of housewives in the Da- vison district which has headquart- ers at 13249 Maine St. Mrs. Mary3 Koza, of that address, is the president of the group which has declared a, sympathetic strike in co-operation with Hamtramck and Lincoln Park women. They seek a 20 per cent re- duction in prices. Dealers In Sympathy "The dealers around here are in sympathy with us and are even giv- ing us meat if we really need it," Mrs. Koza said Friday. "There are about 150 families with us, and we picketed 20 stores all day. We will keep it up until we get some kind of results." A 20 per cent reduction in most markets was the chief development in the Hamtramck strike Friday. A chain grocery company started the reduction and other retail dealers fell in line. two hours after housewives had started their day's picketing. The dealers said that the cut was due as much to competition as it 'was to pressure from the picket lines. Jury Inquiry Impends Lincoln Park women Friday an- nounced plans for launching a state- wide campaign against high beef, veal, lamb and pork prices. All of the markets which had not agreed to close during the strike were pick- eted again Friday. Jewish markets in the Oakland Ave. and Westminster Ave. district were closed Friday, while women in Wyandotte organized to co-operate with sister strikers all over the city. Meanwhile Duncan C. McCrea, prosecuting attorney, announced Fri- day that a grand jury inquiry into meat prices in Wayne County is im- pending. McCrea said that evidence that meat retailers had been tamper- ing with prices by a price-fixing sys- Mysterious 'Mr. K' -Associated Press Photo. When Mayor La Guardia of New York, refused to issue a license to Paul W. Kress (above), German masseur, he precipitated a contro- versy which has taken on an inter- national complexion. Kress said he would appeal to the courts for the license. Bachnan Drops To Second In All-StarVoting Kipke In Fifteenth Place As Slip Madigan Takes Lead In Coaches' Poll CHICAGO. Aug. 2.- Edward Mad- igan of St. Mary's (Calif.) took the lead today in the poll to pick a staff of coaches for the college All-Star football which meets the Bears Aug. 29 at Soldier Field. Madigan owes his lofty position to statewide support in California, which never does anything halfway in sport. In San Francisco alone, Madigan to- day received 94,670 votes. Tiny Thornhill, of Stanford, for whom 15,- 975 were cast yesterday, has urged his friends in the remaining days of the poll to concentrate on Madigan, the only coast coach who appears to have a change to win. Charles Bachman, of Michigan State, who dropped to second place in the face of the California land- slide for Madigan, still is riding high through Michigan, Florida, Kansas and several Midwest cities. Thou- sands of votes for Bachman reached this office today from radio station WJR, Detroit, over which Gov. Frank D. Fitzgerald spoke in Bachman's be- half Wednesday night. The Florida Times Union, of Jacksonville, turned in 2,305 first place votes for Bach- man, and Grand Rapids added a thou- sand. The Press, which is handling the poll in Grand Rapids, expects to have at least 25,000 before the final precincts have been heard from. Sev- eral voting booths have been opened in the downtown sections for Bach- man. Candidates who have more than 500,000 points are: Edward Madigan, St. Mary's (Cali- fornia), 839,898; Charles Bachman, Michigan State, 837,728; Frank Thomas, Alabama, 835,838; Dr. C. W. Spears, Wisconsin, 810,384; Elmer Layden Notre Dame, 810,228; Bo Mc- Millin, Indiana, 807,631. Bernie Bierman, Minnesota, 791,- 675;; Francis Schmidt Ohio State, 656,019; Jimmy Phelan, Washington, 609,591; Robert Zuppke, Illinois, 601,- 885; Jock Sutherland, Pittsburgh, 554,841; Dick Hanley, unattached, 539,980; Lynn Waldorf, Northwestern, 537,987; C. E. Stanford, 433,791; Harry Kipke, Michigan, 382,165. Marimba Artist To Appear At Union Tonimlht Jim Mulhall, marimba artist of the National Broadcasting Company, will make his second weekly appearance at Union membership dances when he entertains on tonight's program. Dancing will start at 9 p.m. and end at midnight. Mulhall will present a series of numbers during the intermission on his "magic woodpile." Bob Steinle and His Melody Men - *, r 1. T3,-. .. ..1-, flO *Ilring New German Treason Law HitsPapers Foreign Correspondents Confronted By Fresh Restrictions Swiss Reporter Is Law's First Victim Hitler's Rise To Supreme Leadership Celebrated Throughout Reich BERLIN, Aug. 2. -- (') - A new and wider definition of treason, start of a campaign to restrict foreign cor- respondents, and a statement from the propaganda ministry that it is "self-evident" that in Berlin and the entire Reich "there is complete order" marked the first anniversary today of Adolf Hitler's rise to supreme leader- ship in Germany. Pilgrims from all parts of the Reich flocked today to the Tannenberg memorial to pay, on the first anni- versary of Paul von Hindenberg's death, their respects to the war-time field marshal's memory. On their day of remembrance, which is also the day of Hitler's as- sumption of supreme leadership, the Nazi leaders not only asserted that there is peace and order, but also took steps to preserve it against "state en- emies," against offending Germans, if any, and against foreign misunder- standings. Death For 'Treason' The new definition of treason, out- lined by Roland Freisler, state secre- tary for justice, was complicated but apparently to this effect: That any oposition to the Nazi party, by di- rection or indirection, by commission of acts or omission of acts, amounts to the crime of volksverrat, or breach of faith with the community, and is punishable by death. Freisler said that the edict applies specifically to Germans who owe allegiance, but added that foreigners who offend in the same respects expose themselves to severe penalties. A campaign by the German pro- paganda ministry against foreign cor- respondents who incur its displeasure claimed as its first victim today Ernst Klein of the Basie (Switzerland) Nachrichten, a Protestant newspaper. He was ordered out of Germany with- in five days. ' Correspondent Warned The foreign correspondents gen- erally were in agreement that their situation is becoming increasingly difficult. The Klein case was the first explosion, but many foreign corres- pondents who have been in Germany more than a dozen years received warnings that their reports on the German situation were displeasing. Several dailies have started a fea- ture under the caption "Daily Lie," where in some foreign report is branded as erroneous. A large French agency editor (Havas), for instance, was pilloried therein for reporting under a Vienna dateline that a Vienna paper claimed Oberammergau would abandon the Passion Play and bring instead a performance depicting a Germanic girl seduced by a Jew. Tax Boost On Incomes Over $50,000 Near WASHINGTON, Aug. 2. - (P)- Swiftly rejecting a series of amend- ments, some of them radical, the House all but agreed today upon that section of the $276,000,000 tax bill that would boost rates on individual incomes over $50,000 a year. A final decision on that point in the wealth tax measure was post- poned until tomorrow. But after the closing of debate on the bill the rapidity with which amendments were voted down today indicated lit- tle possibility of an upset which would change the measure as record- ed by the Ways and Means Commit- tee. In brief, the bill would raise from 30 to 31 per cent the tax on that por- tion of an individual's income between $60,000 and $56,000. It then would set up rates all along the line until Senate Seeks More Utility 'Whisperers' Roosevelt Says He Is Not Surprised At Charges Of His Insanity President Doubtful About Death Clause Letter Tells How Official Of Electric Bond & Share Endorsed Campaign WASHINGTON, Aug. 2. - (P) - A letter from a utilities official calling E. P. Cramer's program for destroying the New Deal "very pertinent" start- ed the Senate lobby committee today on a drive to fix responsibility for the recent whispering campaign against President Roosevelt. As a part of his program, Cramer, a New Jersey advertising man, sug- gested the utilities launch a "whisper- ing campaign designated to create popular suspicion that the New Deal- ers and especially the New-Dealer- in-chief are either incompetent or insane." Asked at his press conference if he would comment, President Roose- velt first replied in the negative. Then he smiled and said that probably the least surprised man in the United States at that testimony was him- self. He did not expand on what he] meant by that remark. The President added he hoped the, utilities bill would be enacted at thisI session, but declined, to say whether he would insist on the clause for com- pulsory abolition of holding com- panies, declaring that was too much of an "if" question. From the files of the Electric Bond & Share Co., the committee obtained a reply to Cramer's letter, signed by, G. G. Walker, assistant to chairman C. E. Groesbeck. It apologized to, Cramer for the delay in answering him, termed his suggestion "very per-; tinent," and promised they would be taken up "in more detail" in a few days. Groesbeck, in a statenmnt yester- day, said he had never heard of Cra- mer. He denounced the idea of a whispering campaign as "too ridicu- lous" and said neither he nor any of his associates would "tolerate" such a proposal. 100 Battle Police In N.Y. Relief Riot NEW YORK, Aug. 2. - () - More than 100 relief demonstrators en- gaged in a savage but brief melee with police today following a verbal tilt between their leaders and Mayor Fiarello LaGuardia in front of City Hall. One woman, later identified as Mrs. Sarah Santer, 50 years old, was knocked down and trampled on dur- ing the free-for-all, but not seriously hurt. The disorder began with demands for a 40 per cent increase in home relief as the Mayor arrived for the day's work. Samuel Insull Denies Pensions Restoration CHICAGO, Aug. 2. -(/P) - Reports that Samuel Insull, Sr., had demand- ed restoration of pensions totaling $21,000 a year, brought a formal de- nial today from the deposed head of the two-billion-dollar Insull utili- ties system. "Any talk about my making a fight for the pensions is pure bunk," In- sull said in a brief statement at his apartment. (*- Mrs. Bauer, In Seclusion, Is Not Told Of Zenge's Arrest In Chicago Goes To Cleveland For Funeral Rites Widow Is Reported Near Collapse; Has Not Yet Met Husband's Mother CLEVELAND, Aug. 2. - WP) - The young bride-widow of Dr. Walter J. Bauer was in seclusion today, un- aware that her former sweetheart, Mandeville Zenge, 26, had been ar- rested in Chicago. Friends and relatives shielded Mrs. Bauer, a nurse, from all questioners. Mrs. Bauer arrived here with her husband's body last night. William and Joseph Bauer, brothers of the slain man, accompanied her from Chicago. She is on the verge of a nervous collapse, the brothers said. William Bauer said he had spirited the young woman away and that she did not go to the home of, her husband's mother, Mrs. Katherine Bauer. Joseph Bauer said the women will meet for the first time tomorrow, at funeral services for the slain man. Burial will be in Cleveland cemetery. "We are trying to keep from my brother's widow the information that Zenge has been arrested," William Bauer said. "She is near collapse. She is a wonderful girl and she has our complete sympathy." He said news of Zenge's capture was also kept from Bauer's mother. The doctor, formerly a chemistry teacher in a Cleveland high school, was educated here. Italy Accepts New Methods Of Arbitration GENEVA, Aug. 2. - (IP) - A three- point agreement among Italy, France and Britain as to methods for set- tling the Italo-Ethiopian dispute without war was announced tonight by Capt. Anthony Eden of Great Britain. The three points are: 1- Arbitration will be resumed by setting in motion peace machinery provided in the 1928 Italo-Ethiopian treaty of friendship. A fifth, neutral member will be added to the existing Italo-Ethiopian Conciliation Commis- sion. 2- England, France and Italy will hold a conference somewhere in France as soon as possible to discuss possibilities of a broad political set- tlement of the Italo-Ethiopian dis- pute. 3 - A meeting of the League of Nations Council to consider the whole subject will be held Sept. 4. At the Council meeting next month, Eden explained, Italy will refrain from voting and from taking part in the discussions. Earlier it had been disclosed that the three nations were in virtual agreement on ways to avert war in Africa, although details of the plan were not disclosed. Quizzed In Murder Local Officer Accompanies Flint Man To Chicago For Identification 4 Witnesses Link ZengeWith Crime Hotel Guest May Recognize Jilted Suitor As 'Man In Dark Glasses' Identified by four witnesses as the man who fled the scene of the pen- knife murder of Dr. Walter J. Bauer, University student, Mandeville Zenge, 26-year-old carpenter, was in cus- tody last night, while a man left here on his way to Chicago to view the suspect in an attempt to identify him as "the man in dark glasses." Oren J. Guiett, of Flint, who was a guest at the Jennings House here at the time of Dr. Bauer's abduction Tuesday, left Ann Arbor early last night accompanied by Detective Eu- gene Gehringer of the local police force. Guiett stated that he is confident that he will be able to identify Zenge if he is "the man in dark glasses" who registered at the Jennings House under the name of Jones and who vanished from the hotel at about the same time as the kidnaping. Given Adjoining Rooms Records at the hotel show that Guiett, Jones and Dr. Bauer were as- signed to adjoining rooms on Monday and Tuesday, the day of the abduc- tion. Guiett, who said that "Jones" aroused his suspicionsvbecause he apparently never removed the dark glasses, added that although he had several times spoken to Jones, the man never replied. Asked last night if he will demand that the case be returned to Wash- tenaw county for prosecution, Prose- cuting Attorney Albert J Rapp stated if any suspect is convicted of the crime in Illinois, he will receive cap- ital punishment. In this state, Mr. Rapp said, the maximum penalty would only be life imprisonment. Guiett is the only witness who will go to Chicago from Ann Arbo. He andtGehringer will arrive there late this morning, after stopping over tonight at Sturgis. Four Identify Zenge Meanwhile, in Chicago, Capt. Dan- iel Gilbert announced that both Charles Mantel, nightwatchman at a parking area near the scene of the brutal mutilation, and newsboy Her- man Eichner, who was knocked down by the man fleeing from the car, had positively identified Zenge at a police line-up. It was also reported that Harry and Harold Anderson, attendants at the filling station where the death car stopped in the driveway early Wednesday morning, had said the Kirksville, Mo. carpenter resembled the man who ran from the car and vanished into the night. Zenge was seized early Friday at a taxi-cab garage in the vicinity of Cicero and Madison Sts., where Chi- cago ' detectives spotted him after several hours of waiting. Anranonymous telephone call from a Madison Street flophouse informing police officials that Zenge was staying there was received at midnight Thurs- day, Capt. Gilbert said. Had Checked Out Hurrying to that address, detec- tives learned that Zenge had already checked out. However, a roomer had heard. the suspect make a telephone call and had written down the num- ber. The police traced the call to the scene where the carpenter was later taken into custody. Zenge refused to admit his identity until confronted with a picture of pretty Louise Schaffer Bauer, bride- widow of the mutilated graduate medical student. His father, a Missouri farmer, J. Andy Zenge, also refused to.identify his son when brought face-to-face with him. After continued question- ing, he broke down, however. At the time he was captured, Zenge was dressed in clothes which he had picked up at a second-hand store. In his pockets, officials found $4, and 5kgfl ,mnrp 1x7Oc r~nnpolodin hi-, chr oz. Pen-Knife Murder Suspect Held For Identification; Bride-Widow Is Shielded -Associated Press Photo. Mandeville Zenge (above) was seized by Chicago police yesterday and questioned in the murder of Walter J. Bauer, University student, and husband of Mrs. Louise Bauer (below), for whose love Zenge was Bauer's unsuccessful rival. The story Zenge, who faked a suicide, told police was described as "in- coherent." Major League Standings Campus Queen Will Lead Grand March At League Dance Tonight AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Detroit.............59 37 New York..........53 37 Chicago ............51 39 Boston.............49 45 Cleveland...........46 45 Philadelphia........39 47 Washington.........40 56 St. Louis...........31 62 Yesterday's Results St. Louis 10, Chicago 8. New York 9, Washington 4. Cleveland-Detroit, rain. Only games scheduled. Today's Games Cleveland at Detroit (2). New York at Washington. Philadelphia at Boston. St. Louis at Chicago. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L New York ...........61 33 Chicago .............62 38 St. Louis ............56 39 Pittsburgh ...........55 44 Brooklyn ...........43 52 Cincinnati...........43 54 pet. .615 .589 .567 .521 .505 .453 .417 .333 Michigan's first Summer Session campus queen will reign over the formal prom to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight today in the ballroom of the Michigan League, after patrons at the dance have cast their ballots for one of the four nominees an- nounced yesterday. Janet Miller, Mary Stirling, Jean I Coler, and Jane Fletcher make up the list of representatives in the voting for the queen. The four were selected loons decorating the ballroom, it was announced by Jean Seeley, chairman of social activities, yesterday. A large bouquet of flowers will be pre- sented to the queen shortly before pictures of the queen and her court are taken. Chaperones for the affair include: Dean Alice Lloyd, Walter B. Rea, as- sistant to the dean of students, and Mrs. Rea, and Prof. and Mrs. Ben- nett Weaver. Pct. .649 .620 .589 .556 .453 .443 i