The Weather Thunder showers, somewhat warmer in southeast portions today. Tomorrow generally fair LL Sir igarn 4:3attij Editorials Pugilistic Justice... J. Gordon Alanybucks Has His Troubles .. . Offcial Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XVI. No. 42 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1935 -~ r PRIE: FIVE CENTS 3,000 Are Expected At Dance Summer Social Season To Reach Climax Tonight In League Ballroom Admission Charge Will Not Be Asked Bridge Tournament And Floor Show To Provide More Entertainment By CHARLOTTE RUEGER This summer's -social activities will be brought to a climax when the stu- dents and members of the faculty at- tend the farewell party to be held from 9 p.m. until midnight today in the Michigan League as the guests of the Summer Session. Plans have been made by the so- cial committee to accommodate more than 3,000 persons, Jean Seeley, chairman of activities, announced yesterday. A variety of entertain- ment, in addition to the dancing in the ballroom, has been arranged for the affair. There will be no charge for attendance. Promptly at 10:45 p.m. the spot- light in the ballroom will be turned on a large cast of entertainers who are to participate in the special floor show which has been planned for the party. Dancers, singers, and other featured artists complete the eve- nings program with Al Cowan's or- chestra furnishing the music. Bridge Contest Included A contest for both tables of auc- tion and contract bridge is to be held in the Ethel Fountain Hussey room for those who do not wish toc participate in the dancing. Michigan playing cards and other campus sou-r venirs will be awarded as prizes to th -hlgh scorers in both garnes .t Although the League Garden is us- ually closed to men, it will be openi on this occasion. Three juvenile dance artists, all1 stars of the recent production, "Jun- iors on Parade," will be featured as the main attractions in the floor show which is being sponsored by Royf Hoyer. Petite Nancy Corey will openI the show with one of her own inter-I pretations, "Waltzes of Yesteryear.", Many Dancers She will be followed by Dickie Gauss doing a progressive waltz se-1 lection and Patricia Burd in a musical comedy and tap dance number. Helen Cook will end the dancing portion of* the program when she presentsI a syncopated rhythm tap step to the tune of "Here Comes Cooky." Edward Katzennmeyer, soloist for this year's Mardi Gras, will be fea- tureol in several song specialities. In addition to the show, Al Cowan's band_ has arranged special novelty selec- tions. Hostesses for tonight's dance in- clude: Maude Airey, Joscephine Al- lensworth, Ruth Archibold, Dorothy Armstrong, Kay Bevis, Jane Biddle, Catherine Burns, Helen Bush, Dor- othy Carr, Myra Chauncey, Peg Conk- lyn, Thelma Cooper, Faye Dibble, Mary Alice Emmett. Marguerite Garber, Dorothy Gies, Mary Ellen Hall, Eileen Ischeldinger, Pearl Ischeldinger, Rosemary Klug, Selora Messing, Louise Paine, Elva Pascoe, Jennie Rosenthal, Kay Rus- sell, Emma Schmidt, Jean Seeley, Viv- ian Springer, Sophie Stolarski, Helen Stetson, Frances Thornton, Ona Thornton, Violet Villany, Margaret Warner, Rita Wellman, Dorothy Wi- kel, Helen Ziefle, and Laura Jane Zimmerman. Politicians Named In Judge's Warrant DETROIT, Aug. 9. -(P) - Judge Arthur E. Gorden of Recorder's Court issued two warrants today in the witness tampering phase of the case against 50 politicians who are charged with "vote-stealing" in the legislative recount of the 1934 State election. Those named in the warrants are Charles F. Dexter and Daniel Schlopp, Jr., both charged formally with "in- citing and attempting to procure a witness to commit perjury." Ethiopia Seeks War -, - 1 &mc nt- but a 11,000 In Ohio City Marooned By Flood Water Nazidon May Strike Next At Jewish Trade Congress Passes Roosevelt's Social Security Program Forbid Gentiles To Business Dealings Jews In Brunswick Have With AAA Fines Farmer -Associated Press Photo. A 7.1 inch rain sent flood waters raging through Coshocton, O., marooning her 11,000 citizens except for wire communication. This air view shows water higher than in the disastrous flood, cutting off all highways into the city. Some streets were under 3V fedt of water. America1 Anuto Manufacturers To Be Hit By Japanese Curb Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE TOKIO, Aug. 9. - P) - A cabinetr decision made it likely today thatf considerable interests of American automobile manufacturers in Japan would be subjected to a system ofl rigid government regulation because< of the army's determination- to con-. trol industry of vital importance to7 its military program. The cabinet approved unanimously1 the draft of an automotive industry control law for presentation to parlia-t ment early in 1936.< . If passed it would affect the status and business prospects of assembly plants of the Ford Motor Co. at Yoko- hama and General Motors at Osaka,t where American companies have in-t vested millions of dollars. Gen. Senjuro Hayashi, minister of war, urging the cabinet to approve1 the bill, stressed the vital role of the automotive industry to the Japanese Empire's defense dispositions. Automobiles would be the secondl large American industry in Japan tot suffer government control owing to military importance. Japan's pe- troleum, control law has been affect-i ing seriously the Standard Vacuum Co. and has been subject to Japanese Officials Sure Jury To Indict Zenre Monday Young Missourian Is Calm. Despite Tlightening Net Drawn About Hin CHICAGO, Aug. 9. - (P) - On the basis of what prosecutors termed one of the strongest chains of circum- stantial evidence in their experience Mandeville W. Zenge, twenty-six- year-old Missouri carpenter, was re- ported indicted today by the grand jury for the mutilation murder of his rival, Dr. Walter J. Bauer. Assistant State's Attorneys Charles S. Dougherty and Edwin J. Spiro in- dicated the true bill, voted after the grand jury had heard four additional witnesses, would be returned Monday. Zenge continued to maintain his stoical calm and steadfast protesta- tions of innocence. Shortly before the grand jury's ac- tion became public, William Leinert, a cab driver, testified before the grand jury. Leinert was seized with Zenge 48 hours after Bauer died from a crude operation. Prosecutors said Leinert's testimony was "satisfac- tory." Testimony formerly given by Louise Schaffer Bauer, widow of the slain man and former sweetheart of his and American diplomatic exchanges I for the last year without an agree- ment.C The Ford and General Motorsj plants for five. years have turnedt out approximately 80 per cent of allr the .automobiles sold ,in Japan,. about. 10,000 apiece annually. The cabinet bill provides that com- panies organized for the manufacture of automobiles and parts must be li- censed and subjected to government control with the majority of shares Japanese-owned. Respecting companies such as Ford and General Motors, which were op- erating prior to the promulgation of R the law, the bill says: "Their vested rights will be respected." However, any expansion of such companies will become subject to all the law's pro- visions.P This apparently blocks Ford's plans for a new factory at Yokohama un- less the majority of the capital is1 Japanese-owned, a suggestion which1 Ford hitherto has refused.1 Local financial writer said the cab- inet's action would hasten the pros-, pective consolidation of General Mo- tors with the Japan Industry Co. and predicted that Japan Industry would hold 51 per cent of the stock in the consolidated concerns. Japanese Industry, a rapidly ex- pandinrg holding company, includes in its holdings the Nissan Automobile Co., which manufactures the small Datsun cars now appearing in the export markets. A statement by the ministry of commerce pointed out that foreign- owned assembly plants produce al- most all the passenger cars in Japan and that therefore it was impossible for Japan to establish a national au- tomobile industry unless adequate measures to foster it were taken. Colorful Shower Of Meteors Near LOS ANGELES, Aug. 9.--(P) - Sparks will fly when the earth, ram- bling along its orbit at 19 miles a second, goes through a cloud of ce- lestial dust this weekend. This cosmic cloud, an oval ring whose long diameter is several billion miles, is whirling at some 50 miles a second. The result of the contact will be ce- lestial sparks. It is the richest an- nual display of showers of "shooting stars," the perseid meteors. Persons who stay up after the set- ting of the moon - that's after mid- night - may expect to see 60 or 70, meteors an hour. Saturday, Sunday and Monday nights are expected to be the best showers this year. Look to the north for them. They came from the direction of the con- stelaltion of Perseus. Detroit .......... New York ....... Chicago ........ Boston ..... :... . Cleveland ....... Philadelphia ..... Washington..... St. Louis ........ W. .....64 .....57 .....52 .....52 .....50 ....41 .43 ....34 L. 37 40 45 48 50 52 57 64 Pct. .634 .588 .536 .520 .500 .441 .430 .347 Yesterday's Results Detroit 4, Chicago 3. New York 3, Philadelphia 2. Cleveland 5, St. Louis 3. Only games scheduled. Games Today Cleveland at St. Louis. Chicago at Detroit. Philadelphia at New York (2). Washington at Boston. NATIONAL LEAGUE Luther Asks That U. S. 'Understand' Hitler's Fear Of Greater Unemployment Seen As Main SemiticHope BERLIN, Aug. 9. - RI) - An order )ublishedNby the Peasant leader for the Free State of Brunswick indicated oday that Nazi policy may now be :efinitely directed at depriving the Jew of doing business with Gentiles. Hitherto, Nazidom has maintained that the Jew was not to be interfered with commercially. Gustav Giesecke, the Brunswick Peasant leader, issued an order de- laring: "Whoever as a German Peasant engages in trade with the Jew, or >therwise maintains a connection with him, commits treason and to his blood ives comfort to the deadly enemy of he German people, the Jew." Threaten Removal Giesecke said that he would re- nove from positions inhthe Nutritive Guild any found guilty of, dealing with the Jews and instructed sub- leaders to report on farmers' com- mercial relations with Jews. The ultimate goal of Nazi state- raft, is, if possible, to eliminate the Jews altogether from Germany. Julius. Streicher, and other anti-Semitic leaders, leave no doubt as to that. There are numerous considerations, however, which prevent an immediate realization of this "totality" program. For instance, Jewish business is still so vital a factor that the immediate elimination of the Jew in commercial moncerns would draw in its wake the dismissal of thousands of Aryan workers. Figures Cheering Germans, turning from the worries of Jew baiting, were cheered by Gov- ernment figures which indicated that unemployment in the country had been cut off $1,754,000 in July. The number receiving doles was reduced by 63,000 to 904,000. NEW YORK, Aug. 9. - (P) - Dr. Hans Luther, German ambassador to the United States, arrived today from the Fatherland with the declaration that "it is absurd to talk about re- ligious intimidation" in Germany. "If only the great evolution in Ger- many were understood in America," he said, "it would be of great interest to the American people." He added that people in Germany "are al- lowed to worship in whatever church they choose." Nearly 100 police officers were de- tailed about the pier where the Ger- man diplomat disembarked from the steamship New York en route to Washington, but there was no dis- turbance. A. A. U. To Probe Status of Jesse Owens As Amateur CLEVELAND, Aug. 9.-(P)-Lou N. Bloom, president of the Northeast- ern Ohio division of the A. A. U., said late today that a meeting of the ex- ecutive committee would be called for either tomorrow or Sunday to investi- gate why Jesse Owens, Ohio State athletic star, is receiving pay from the Ohio Legislature as an honorary page when the Legislature is not in session. Bloom said he believed that if Ow- ens is receiving pay from the Legisla- ture without working for it his am- ateur standing is in jeopardy.' At the meeting, Bloom said, the en- tire matter would be investigated. He said Owens would be asked to ap- pear before the body. Earlier in New York Dan Ferris, national secretary of the A. A. U., ruled that Owens' amateur athletic standing would be jeopardized "if Owens did not actual work in the Ohio State Legislature" and was receiving pay. 350 Social Workers To fa t-3i' It-uvs.' A i'ug t 1 New York ......... St. Louis ......... Chicago ........... Pittsburgh ........ Brooklyn .......... Philadelphia....... Cincinnati........ Boston ............ Yesterday's -Associated Press Photo Because of alleged non-compli- ance with his 1934 corn-hog con- tract, W. P. Adams (above), owner of a 6,400-acre farm near Debolt, Ia., was fined $3,040 by the AAA. He was charged with planting wheat on his 647 retired corn acres before acreage restrictions were rdlaxed. Approval Of Bill Without Record Vote Brings End To 7-Months' Conflict Calls For Nation's Greatest Tax Load Many Believe Bill Will Be Ruled Unconstitutional Despite Precautions WASHINGTON, Aug. 9. -(w) - Congress today granted the Roose- velt administration authority to em- bark on the most extensive social experiment ever conducted in the na- tion, intended to safeguard millions in their old age and in times of stress. The grant of power was extended in the social security bill, which re- ceived final Congressional approval in the Senate without even the for- mality of a record vote. Thus ended seven months of turbulent debate and backstage negotiation. Regarded by President Roosevelt as the most important of all his legis- lative proposals, the bill not only would steer America on a new social course, but would impose the great- est tax burden ever approved by Congress. W. L. ..66 36 ..62 39 ..66 42 ..57 49 ...46 56 ..46 57 ..45 59 ...26 76 Results Pct. .647 .614 .611 .538 .451 .447 .433 .255 New York 3, Philadelphia 2, t Pittsburgh 1, Cincinnati 0. Brooklyn 6, Boston 5.t St. Louis 3, Chicago 1. Games Today Boston at Brooklyn.t New York at Philadelphia (2). Cincinnati at Pittsburgh. St. Louis at Chicago. Detroit Ekes Victory From Chicago Team, Greenberg Scores Thirty-E First Home Run ; Whitef SoX Drive Tigers Hard DETROIT, Aug. 9. - (Special) -I Schoolboy Rowe, after emerging from a ninth-inning Chicago rally, par- tially redeemed himself to his many critics yesterday when he pitched the Tigers to a 4-3 victory over the White Sox. Detroit remained 5 games ahead of her nearest rival, New York, who yesterday whipped the Athletics, 3 to 2. The White Sox counted their first run in the fifth inning. Hank Greenberg scored Gehringer and White to bring the Tiger total to 4 in the fifth when he made his thirty-first home run of the season. Washington, after being walked by the Schoolboy, scored on Dykes' single to left center. Simmons drove Rad- cliff in for the third and last White Strike Against 'Security Wage' Moving Slowlyi Work-Relief Program It Threatened By Action Of New York Labor NEW YORK, Aug. 9.-(AP)-Or-a ganized labor's general strike against t the Federal "security wage" in New. York City, with its potential threat to the Government's huge work-relief program throughout the country, ap- peared tonight to be getting off to a slow start.C Union leaders insisted, however, that it would be in full swing byu Monday. Administrator Hugh S. Johnson de-t clared that all strikers who had not returned to their jobs by Monday night would be dropped from the pay-1 roll. In changing the deadline from to- night to Monday night, Gen. John- son said he wished to give the strik- ers the week-end to think things over. Reiterating his charge that the strike was Communist-inspired, he said: "In this case the Government is the employer. Therefore it is a strike against the Government." Works Progress Administration of- ficials estimated that 727 workers out of a total of 15,000 union and 85,0000 non-union employees were on strike. This-was fewer than the 770 report- ed to have been out yesterday, before the Central Trades and Labor Coun- cil voted to suport a general strike The Government is paying skilled workers $93.50 monthly for 20 six- hour days, or at the rate of 78 cent. an hour. Organized labor demand. the "prevailing wage" of $1.50 ar hour, even though, under the old Works Division, this allowed them only $60 a month, for five days' work The American Federation of La- bor contends that monthly earning. of skilled craftsmen could be limited to the $93.50 "security wage" but that the hourly rate should be kept'at the prevailing local scale to prevent that scale from being broken down in private construction. The minimum wages tends to become a maximum, FederatioA chiefs contend. Thomas Murray, president of the Council and chairman of the exec- utive strike committee, said that all of the 15,000 union men probably would walk out Monday and predicted that they would be joined by many non-union workers. Representative Traux Drops Dead In Capital WASHINGTON, Aug. 9. --P) -- h Rep. Charles V. Traux, of Ohio, It would provide old age and un- employment benefits for an esti- nated 25,000,000 workers and appro- priate handicapped mothers and chil- dren. Proposed In January President Roosevelt recommended t last January to secure "the men, women and children of the nation against certain hazards and vicissi- udes of life." The Senate's calm aproval of the igantic measure today was in strik- ng contrast to the bill's long and 2ontroversial course. The only point at issue was the Clark amendm'ent to exclude private pension plans, and even its author, Senator Bennett C. Clark, (Dem., Mo.), acquiesced in its elimination. Administration leaders expressed a oelief that the striking out of the Clark amendment removed one of .he major constitutional hazards from ,he bill. But there were still many nembers of Congress who forecast that part or all of it would be in- validated by the Supreme Court. The section most frequently -chal- lenged on Constitutional grounds was ,hat authorizing the creation of a nationwide old age pension fund by the levying of a 3 per cent tax on ,he salaries of the workers up to $3,- 3000 a year. Fifty Billions By 1980 This fund, which by 1980 is esti- :nated to reach the, total of almost X50,000,000,000 is expected to provide pensions for retired workers of 65 gears 'and older up td $85 a month. To supplement this system, the ?ederal government would offer ;rants of $15 a month, to be matched ay the states, for all needy aged not ;aken care of under the contributory 'ystem. Similar grants would be made or needy blind, regardless of age. The government also would levy 1 3 per cent payroll tax against em- >loyers of eight or more persons out f which deductions can be made up 'o 90 per cent for payments to state unemployment insurance systems. Police On Hand As Housewives Renew Boycott DETROIT, Aug. 9. - (P) - Picket- .ng housewives renewed. their seige if numerous Detroit butcher shops for the third straight weekend today, out police were on hand to see that they did not molest purchasers. The threat of a meat shortage in Detroit, which had been predicted by Emil Schwartz, director of the Na- ional Retail Meat Dealers Associa- tion, unless the boycott were ended, aparently was dispelled by the police action. Although almost half the stores vemained closed in some of the shop- ping centers where pickets have been