The Weatherh Fair Tuesday and Wednes- Ti day; somewhat cooler east por-V Lion Tuesday.W Oficial Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XVI No. 44 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1935 Editorials hought And Action .. . irtue In Democracy ... PRICE: FIVE CENTS 5 Killed, 20 Injured In Ohio Interurban Train Crash Little Man___________ ____ Tax Boost TakenOut Senate Finance Group In Sudden Decision Turns To The Big Incomes $1,000,000 Class To Be Hit Hardest Action Taken Amid Storm Of Bi-Partisan Criticism; Low Incomes Exempted WASHINGTON, Aug. 12.-()- Tax boosts on little incomes today were ripped out of the Administration .tax bill in a striking reversal of Sen- ate Finance Committee sentiment. Swiftly, the committee voted to limit heavier income levies to those over the $1,000,000 class - the figure mentioned by President Roosevelt in his "wealth distribution" message. Both actions were taken amid a storm of bi-partisan criticism of Sat- urday's committee action, which would have brought incomes as low as $800 a yearwithin the reach of the Federal tax collector. Frequently, the prediction was heard that such a. step, if approved by the Senate itself, would mean no tax bill. The motion to reconsider which preced the reversal was made by Sen. Alben W. Barkley, (Dem., Ken.) who was a weekend fishing compan- ion of President Roosevelt. At first he was defeated by an 8 to 8 tie but on a second ballot won reconsideration by 9 to 7. The LaFollette amend- ment then was eliminated by a vote. of 8 to !6. After revising other rates in the House bill, the Committee approved the completed draft without a record voe.t House Objection Indicated Just before the Committee acted, on the income clauses, Speaker Jos- eph W. Byrns had lunched with Presi- dent Roosevelt and predicted flatly that the House would not accept higher taxes on small-salaried per- sons. He added that he had not dis- cussed the tax rates with the Presi- dent. But his view was echoed by leaders in both the House and Sen- ate. It was in this atmosphere that the finance committee reversed itself. Chairman Pat Harrison, (Dem., Miss), proposed the substitute to raise surtaxes only on incomes over $1,000,000. The House surtax in- creases began at the $50,000 level. How much revenue wouldbe lost by the Harrison amendment was not es- timated immediately, but it was be- lieved to be a large lump of the $450,- 000,000 which the bill was estimated to raise with the LaFollette amend- ment included. Estates Levies Raised Even after today's reversal ,the Finance Committee bill still substi- tuted highest estate levies forthe House inheritance taxes proposed by the President, modified the House excess profits taxes, and increased the existing capital stock tax. It ac- cepted the House graduated corpora- tion income tax rates. Leading the parade of protesters against the LaFollette rates prior to their elimination,. Senator Joseph T. Robinson, the Democratic leader, had said the committee revision "mater- ially complicates the situation" and 'probably will cause a prolongation of the session." Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, (Rep., Mich.) commented - before the La- Follette amendment was removed that if a tax bill is insisted upon at this session "you need all the reve- nues proposed by the Senate Com- mittee amendments and a lot more, because even the Senate Committee amendments will not pay the Presi- dent's deficit for 30 years. "I consider it absolute folly," he said, "to waste the public resources to pass any tax bill which is not di- rectly tied up with budget legislation. The whole problem should gb over until next winter when convalescent economy on the one hand, and in- creased revenues from better busi- ness on the other will show what new taxes are necessary to balance the budget and restore the public to a solvent basis." -Associated Press Photo. Five persons met death and 20 others were injured, many seriously, when a work car and a passenger car of the Cincinnati and Lake Erie Traction Line collided head on near Springfield, O. Tho crash was one of the worst in central Ohio In more than a decade. One of the women fatally injured can be seen in a car window. Vagabond King Held Over For Second W e e k Postpone Friml's 'Firefly'E Indefinitely; 'Naughty c Marietta' Is Next DETROIT, Aug. 12.-For the sec- ond time during the Opera Under the Stars season this summer, a produc- tion has been held over for a second week. "The Vagabond King", which opened its engagement at Navin Field last Monday night, Aug. 5th, will continue to hold sway for another week. The bening 'of riml's "Firefly" has been postponed. A week from Monday, Aug. 19th, will see the open- ing of "Naughty Marietta", whichc will be presented due to the demand of opera-goers. "The Vagabond King" has proven itself to be more popular than anyf other production presented this sum- mer, even surpassing "Rose Marie"I which was the other show to enjoy a two week's engagement. The stirring "Song of the Vaga- bonds", and the beautiful "Only A Rose" are naturally the outstanding hit songs of the show. The large col- orful mob scenes as well as the high- ly comic moments interspersed in the, great story based on McCarthy's "If I Were King", all combined tomake a spectacular presentation of this thrilling favorite on the outdoor stage. A brilliant cast is to be seen in this musical show. The leading role,t that of the gay poet, educated mur- derer and thief-Francois Villon, is7 played by Paul Keast, who has starred in this show many, many times. The lovely voice of Gladys Baxter is heard in the role of Lady Katherine. Others in the cast are Leonard Ceeley, Bart- lett Simmons, Nancy Welford, Robert Long, Hope Emerson, Barnett Parkerr and Sandra Ward. Internationale To Plan World IPeace Program MOSCOW, Aug. 12. -WP) - A world-wide program by Communists to prevent war will be drawn up at the Seventh Conference of, the Third Internationale now in session here, delegates decided today. The committee announced it would embark tomorrow on a discussion of asserted preparations for an "im- perialistic war" by several counties. In an article in the official party magazine, Bolshevik, yesterday, Earl Browder, American Communist, stat- ed the Communist party intended to become the leader of the united front in America against war preparations and fascism. Browder told the Congress that .Communists in the United States would seek the leadership of a pro- posed workers and farmers party against "the dangers of fascism." The Soviet writer, Karl Radek, in an article today in the newspaper, Izventia, accused German Nazis of m.itavrv erioPnn and as- Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE , Detroit ............. New York .......:.. Chicago............. Boston ............ Cleveland........... Philadelphia ........ Washington ....... St. Louis ........... w 66 59 52 54 51 43 44 35 L 37 42 47 49 51 54 59 65 Pet. .641 .584 .525 .524 .500 .443 .427 .350 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No game scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES Washington at Detroit. New York at Cleveland. Boston at Chicago. Philadelphia at St. Louis. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York .......... . St. Louis .......... Chicago ............ Pittsburgh .......... Brooklyn ........... Philadelphia ........ Cincinnati .......... Boston ............. w 67 63 67 59 48 48 47 27 L 38 40 43 51 57 58 61 78 Pct. .638 .612 .609 .536 .457 .453 .435 .257 Army To Hold Its War Games" At N. Y. Camp Movements Are Said To Be Greatest In Peace Time HistoryOf U. S. PINE CAMP, N. Y., Aug 12. -- (A) - Soldiers from 12 eastern states and the District of Columbia converged on this sand plainland today for what were said to the greatest war games ever held by a peacetime American army. More than 60,000 regular army and national guard troops - A number. equal to half the peace strength of the American army -- will take part in the mock combat of the first army from Aug. 17 to 31. The concentration will be the first test under actual war conditions of the new field organization alignments worked out by the War Department for the primary defense of the Na- tion in the initial stages of an emer- gency. The largest body of troops will see action in the 100 square mile area surrounding Pine Camp near Wa- tertown in north central New York. Approximatly 40,000 soldiers from th regular army and the national guard of Nw England, New York and New Jersey will be stationed here. An additional 20,000 troops will be held in strategic reserve to the main body at Mt. Gretna and Indiantown Gap, on Pennsylvania's national guard reservation. Virginia, Mary- land, Delaware and Pennsylvania na- tional guardsmen will join regular' army units there. The third concentration will be at Fort Devens, Mass., where a regular army peacetime brigade of 1,600 men will be held as additional reserve. GOVERNMENT CODE WASHINGTON, Aug. 12. - (N) - Imposition of code wages and hours on any industry dealing with the Gov- ernment or operating with Govern- ment money was provided in a bill passed without a record vote today by the Senate and sent to the House. Local Woman Is In]jucred As Plane Crashes Mrs. Laura Brunton, Wife Of Graduate Student, Is In Plane Accident Injured Pilot Is In Critical Condition Plane Wing Brushes Tree And Plunges Into Ground At City Airport By THOMAS H. KLEENE The wife of a Summer Session ;raduate student, Mrs. Laura May Brunton, 22-year-old woman pilot, was seriously injured soon after 8 p.m. yesterday when the monocoupe plane she was driving hurtled to earth at the local airport. Mrs. Brunton's plane crashed to the ground when its wingbrushed against a tree near the airport as she urned a pylon. Physicians at St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital, where the crash victim was aken, last nighthdescribed her con- lition as critical. Although the full extent of her injuries had not been letermined, her left leg was cut off at the ankle, and it was feared that Mrs. Brnton had received internal inuries., The plane did not catch fire, de- spite the fact that the fusilage was completely sprayed with gasoline. Mrs. Brunton, who had been flying for more than two years, was prac- ticing the circling of pylons in prep- aration for women's handicap compe- tition to be held soon. George Downs, chief pilot at the local field, was flying another plane just ahead of her. She had .125 flying hours and a private pilot's license. Her husband, Frederick K. Brun- ton, University graduate student in he Summer Session, was at Iron Mountain yesterday inspecting cop- per tnines In that vicinity in conne- ton with his University work. Mr. and Mrs. Brunton are residents of Butte, Mont. Old Methodist Split May Be Repaired Soon Evanston Meeting Plans To Reconcile Differences Of 100 Years'_Standing CHICAGO, Aug. 12.-WP) -Solution of century old differences that split Methodism into three branches will be sought in a conference opening tomor- row' with the hope that reunion can be effected by 1944, centennial of the major schism. The meeting will be held in Evans- ton, where 17 years ago the move- ment to bring back into a single fold the Methodist Episcopal Church (Northern), Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and the Methodist Protestant Church was begun. Even if a plan acceptable to the three delegations is found during the conference, it would require years, interested persons pointed out, to get final ratification of the groups be- cause of the wait for general confer- ences and the intricate problems in- volved. Dean James A. James, a member of the first group which met in 1918, and of the northern delegation to the three day meeting opening to- morrow, expressed the belief that ten- tative plans have advanced to the point where ratification is a possi- bility. The first of the major schisms came in 1828 with the formation of the Methodist Protestant Church because of a dispute over lay representation. The second and larger split in Meth- odism was in 1844 over the question of slavery, a division along territorial lines rather than one of thought. Leaders of the three delegations were Bishop Edwin D. Mouzon, Char- lotte, N. C., Southern Church; Bishop William F. McDowell, Washington, D. C., Northern Church, and the Rev. Dr. J. C. Bloomfield, Pittsburg, Methodist Protestant Church. The membership represented by the three churches exceeds 8,000,000. Groom And Bride Dep't _- Challenges Roosevelt Howard C. Hopson Arrives In Washington To Testify At House Hearing Group To Convene For Witness Today YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 7, Cincinnati 4. Only game scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES No games scheduled. Zenge Indictment Returned By Jury CHICAGO, Aug. 12.-- (A)-- An in- dictment charging Mandeville W. Zenge with slaying Dr. Walter J. Bauer, University of Michigan stu- dent, was returned today by the Cook County Grand Jury. Assistant State's Attorney Mal Coghlan said that Zenge would be arraigned tomorrow before Judge John C. Lewe in Criminal Court. Jo- seph E. Green, Zenge's attorney, has indicated that he will ask a contin- uance. Meanwhile Lieut. Otto Erlanson, head of the Homicide Squad, was re- tracing the route over which the slay- er of Dr. Bauer drove here from Ann Arbor, after kidnaping the victim there. -Associated Press Photo.$ The assertion that the adminis- tration should reveal before Con- gress adjourns whether any Con-2 stitutional changes are contem- plated was made by former Presi-t dent Hoover, shown as he passed through Chicago enroute -to Newc York. He said "Primary libertiesc of the people have been trampledt upon" in the last two years.t Repertory Unit Produces Last Show Tonhght 'Kingdom Of God' Will Be Presented Twice To Conclude Season "The Kingdom of God," the story of a Spanish nun whose simple faith and idealism aids her in overcomine all the sordid difficulties of her lifej will be the last presentation of the Michigan Repertory Players. The play will open tonight at the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre and will also be presented tomorrow night. This offering written by G. Mar- tinez-Sierra and translated into Eng- lish by Hawley Granville Barker, has 30 intricate speaking roles, and, ac- cording to Valentine B. Windt, direc- tor, "each role must be well played in crder to effectively contrast the char- acter of the nun, Sister Gracia. "'The Kingdom of God' is a great literary play," Mr. Windt said, "and is outstanding for its sympathetic character portrayals. Although it is set in a religious atmosphere, the characters are human and realistic.' The plot deals with three crises in the life of Sister Gracia, a membei of an aristocratic Spanish family and the granddaughter of a marquis who gives up the life of a debutante to become a nun. Each succeeding scene shows the deterioration of the background of her life, Mr. Windi said, but her sense of idealism and faith triumph over -her hardships In the first act she is a 19-year-old -urse in an asylum for old men, in the second she is shown in a home for wayward women, and in the last act she is an old woman of 70, in an asylum for delinquent children. "This play admirably portrays the unique quality of Spanish religion," Mr. Windt stated, "since it shows the people regarding their religion with a sense of proportion, although it is always in the background of their actions. "The nuns in the play are not mar- tyrs," he said, "nor are they subject to any hallucinations about their work, but they are merely intensely human characters, who have devoted their lives to charity." O'Connor Refuses To Say Where Official Is Found After Long Hunt WASHINGTON, Aug. 12. -(4)- Howard C. Hopson, dominant figure in the Associated Gas and Electric System, long sought as a witness in the utilities lobby investigation, was brought to the capital tonight to tes- dify tomorrow before the House Rules Committee. The fugitive from the House and Senate lobby quizzes had foiled all previous efforts to locate him. As the, hunt became hotter, Committee leaders threatened to call in the De- partment of Justice's G-Men to trail the utility magnate. Only last week charges were made and denied that Hopson was being harbored by Patrick J. Hurley, secre- tary of war in the Hoover Cabinet. [he committee's agents dramatically descended upon Hurley's manorial estate near Leesburg, Va., but failed to find their quarry. Hurley branded the "raid" an outrage and inquired: "Why don't you search the White House?" Hurley, a lawyer, has represented Associated Gas () Electric in its fight on the utilities bill. Testimony Eagerly Awaited Hopson- isknown as the master mind of the big holding company. His testimony on the amount spent by the corporation and the methods ased in its battle to defeat the meas- are has been eagerly awaited. Chairman John J. O'Connor of the House Rules Committee announced opson's arrival. He told newsmen: "The Committee will meet at 10 A.m. tomorrow, and unless Hopson ias a physical collapse or soniething he will be there as a witness.' O'Connor declined to say where :-ommittee investigators had found the long-missing witness, but it was known they had been looking for him in New Jersey. "All I know," O'Connor said, "is ;hat I got a telephone call from my .man who said he was with Hopson and had served a subpena on him and ne would appear before the Com- .nittee tomorrow morning." He added that at least one of his :nen would stay with Hopson over- night. The Senate Lobby Committee, leaded by Chairman Hugo Black, al- so has been looking high and low for Hopson. Lawyers To Testify Utilities Magnate Is Finally Brought Before Committee i Faint Hopes For Preservation Of Stresa Front' Are Yet Held ROME, Aug. 12. - (VP)-Faint hopes for the preservation of the "Stresa front" prevailed in informed circles today as Italy's delegation prepared to depart for the tripartite conver- sations in Paris Thursday on the Italo-Ethiopian controversy. Similar skepticism greeted reports from Addis Ababa that Emperor Haile Selassie had agreed to cede some land to Italy in exchange for a heavy loan or an Ethiopian outlet to the set. These sources had no hesitation in conceding that the accord with France, Great Britain and Italy achieved at Stresa four months ago in the fact of German rearmament was in imminent danger of collapse as a consequence of Britain's attitude toward Italy's East African policy. , That treaty provides for the eco- nomic settlement of the Ethiopian problem by arbitration by the three great western powers. Italy contends, however, that she has never been able to enforce the terms of the treaty because of what is regarded here as lack of Ethiopian cooperation. That creates the feeling that the Paris conversations will be barren of any beneficial diplomatic settlements . News of Ethiopian's reported offer of a "strip of sand" arrived here on the heels of stories that Italy had acquired a new and powerful weapon for aerial attack and in the midst of expanding her military prepara- tions. 1 T - ." Digging into the activities of law- yers in connection with the utilities All, Black announced resumption of nearings tomorrow with the follow- ing witnesses: T. Justice Moore, Rich- nond, Va.; M. J. McCruden, Phila- delphia, Duncan Robertson, New York, and representatives of Sullivan and Cromwell and of Simpson, Ihacher and Bartlett, both of New York. Meanwhile an accumulation of evidence has been piling up which the committee expects to put to use in its forthcoming investigation of lobbying on the tax bill. There is already a big file of it, members said, principally copies. of circular letters sent by corporations to their stock- holders, urging letters and telegrams to Congressmen. Investigators said they were sent in, for the most part, by the stockholders. With prospects for a pre-adjourn- ment agreement on the utilities bill concededly dwindling, Senator Bur- ton K. Wheeler, (Mon.,Dem.), today predicted "'an overwhelming licking" for the power companies if the issue is settled by the public. His assertion was prompted by a statement by Philip H. Gadsden, chairman of the Committee of Pub- lic Utility Executives, challenging the Administration to take the power is- 7.,000,000 Will Pay Taxes If Bill Passes WASHINGTON, Aug. 12.- (/P)-_ Tax experts estimated today that if tha enate Finane Conmittee's tax