/III Y// I®YY 111Y /I iY , t ' t gan tit Editorials Jones On Lovett... Thirty-Hour Work Week... Official Publication Of The Summer Session = ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1935 PRICE: FIVE CENTS _______________________________________________________________ U ~U U Goodrich Is Querulous On Return Home Keeps Asking Detectives 'When Do We Eat?'; His Concern Is For Wife Girls May Identify Attacker Of Lillian Police Guard Will Keep Demonstrators Away On Arrival In Detroit NEW YORK, July 5. -(P) -Quer- ulously demanding "when do we eat," Merton W. Goodrich, trap drummer, was bundled aboard a train early to- night and taken back to Detroit to face a murder indictment for the psychopathic slaying of 11-year-old Lillian Gallaher.' With him was his wife, Florence, re- turned as a material witness. Accompanying them were two De- troit detectives, a police matron, and prosecuting Attorney Duncan C. Mc- Crea, carrying with him what he said was a full confession by Goodrich and a "trunkful" of evidence. Mrs. Goodrich showed her first emotion when she bade good-bye to New York detectives John Kaiser and Charles McGowan. Tears streamed from her eyes, saying: "You've been awful good to us." Goodrich, pale, nervous and un- shaven, drummed his fingers nerv- ously on his knees as he repeated an admission made earlier to McCrea that he had assaulted five other little girls. Goodrich reiterated that he was glad to go back "and get it over," but added that his chief worry was to have his wife freed of suspicion. Goodrich, minus belt and suspend- ers but with his shoelaces returned to him, was placed in a compartment with Detroit dectectives Harry Scher and George Brandon. Mrs. Goodrich was in another compartment in the same car with Matron Laura Camp- bell. it ws planned to return the couple by airplane to Detroit,but Goodrich's terror at the prospect of going up in the air caused a change of plan. Meanwhile preparations wen for- ward in Detroit to arraign Goodrich in Recorder§ Court Monday. A large detail of officers will be on hand to meet him tomorrow and pre- vent any demonstration by spectators. Eleanor L. Hutzel, head of the Women's Division of the Detroit Po- lice Department, said Goodrich will be viewed by a number of girls who were attacked prior to Lililan's at- tack. Ho Hum-26 More Bills For Louisiana BATON ROUGE, July 5 - to) - Sen. Huey P. Long, personally driv- ing ahead his '26 new "dictator" leg- islative measures, today shepherded them through a House committee in 42 minutes and listened as the House put them through first reading. The same routine precision that marked six other special sessions of the Louisiana Assembly within the past year was in evidence as Long prepared the road for quick rubber- stamp action by a Senate commit- tee. A series of bills included in the new batch virtually will complete the Senator's conquest of New Orleans. Mud Puppies of. Prehistoric E r a on Display Here Two prehistoric mastodons and an elephant from Michigan, of com- paratively recent age, and a group of ancestral mud puppies, a rhinoceros and a set of dinosaur footprints, the latter all millions of years old, are recent additions which may be seen by summer visitors to the Hall of Evolution in the Museum Building. The mastodons on exhibition came from near Birmingham and Ypsilanti. These great mammals, in appearance like shaggy-haired elephants, were common ini the lowlands of Michigan up until perhaps 15,000 years ago. The true elephants were more rare and were upland dwellers and died out sooner. The museum specimen was found near Union, in Cass County. Amlateur fossil hunters may distin- guish them most easily by the teeth. The mud puppies form one of the most interesting exhibits among the recent displays. Some 400,000,000 years ago these amphibians were buried and preserved in a drying pool in Texas. Today their skeletons are found to resemble in many respects the common mud puppy of Michigan streams. On a slab of rock about a yard square, brought from New Mex- ico, are preserved the dinosaur tracks. The six prints are those of a strong, almost bird-like hind foot. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE New York . . Detroit ..... Chicago .... Cleveland ... Boston ..... Philadelphia Washington . St. Louis .... W .........43 .........44 36 .........37 36 .........28 ..29 19 L 25 29 23 31 34 37 40 48 Yesterday's Results Detroit 16, St. Louis 1. Cleveland-Chicago, rain. New York-Washington, rain. Games Today St. Louis at Detroi. Philadelphia at Boston (2). New York at Washingon (2). Cleveland-at Chicago. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L New York............47 20 St. Louis............39 29 Pittsburgh..........41 32 Chicago.............38 32 Brooklyn ............32 36 Cincinnati ..........31 39 Philadelphia ........29 39 Boston... .........20 50 Yesterday's Results Brooklyn 14, New York 4. Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 0. Only games scheduled. Games Today Brooklyn at New York. Bostonat Philadelphia (2). Chicago at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati at St. Louis. Pct. .632 .603 .563 .544 .514 .431 .420 .284 Pet. .701 .574 .562 .543 .471 .443 .4261 .2861 Party Planks Explained At Youth Parley Representatives Of Five Groups Are Cheered At Meeting In Detroit O'Brien Speaks For Roosevelt Program Responsibility For Future Revolution Rests With Extreme Right - Tyler DETROIT. July 5. - (/P) - Dele- gates to the American Youth Con- ference listened tonight to expositions of the principles of the five major political parties of the United States. One after another, representatives of the Republican, Democratic, So- cialist, Farmer-Labor, and Communist organizations, took the platform be- fore 3,000 delegates and visitors at the Cass High School. Each one was re- warded with vociferous applause. U. S. A. Haggablom, an assistant prosecutor of Detroit, opened for the Republicans with the statement that "the party was governed by law and believesthat wherebminds clash, there s where progress begins." Patrick H. O'Brien, a former at- torney-general of Michigan in a Dem- ocratic administration, followed with a. defense of the New yeal as "an at- itude of hospitality towards every measure that will improve and uplift the lot of mankind." August Tyler, the Socialist speaker, saw clouds on the politicalhorizo with the warning that "if the reac- tonaries insist on letting out only a little of the fresh air of truth then the responsibility is on them for the bloody revolution that will follow." "We don't want a bloody revolu- tion," Lester L. Johnson, Farmer- Laborite, replied in his turn. "We can organize and have a revolution with- out bloodshed." Clarence Hathaway, editor .of the, Daily Worker, was frank with a pro- posal of "revolution to end the de- cayed capitalistic system. We must choose poverty, slavery, or revolu- tion." Reporters who were attempting to judge attitudes of the Conference on the basis of applause were thrown off stride when a wild and prolonged outburst - the most noisy of the evening - greeted an announce- ment that the press tables had con- tributed $2.40 to a collection to de- fray expenses of the congress. Cranbrook Tour To Be Held Today Summer Session students will have an opportunity to visit the schools of the Cranbrook Foundpgtion, in Bloomfield Hills, Mich., when the third University excursion leaves at 8 a.m. today from the steps of Angell Hall. The excursionists, who are under the direction of Prof. Louis J. Rouse of the mathematics department, expect to return to Ann Arbor about 5 p.m. They will view the several schools and have luncheon at the Devon Gables Tea Room-in Bloomfield Hills. Jury Chosen For Mrs. Waley's Trial TACOMA, Wash., July 5. - (A)- Blond Margaret Waley, haggard and fidgety, went on trial today for the $200,000 kidnaping of little George Weyerhaeuser and saw a jury selected speedily to decide her case. Fourth Summer Session Dance At Union Tonight The fourth in a series of special Summer Session dances for members of the Union will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight tonight in the ballroom. Tickets will be sold at the main desk at 40 cents per person. Bob Steinle and his Melody Men will furnish the music for darncing. Steinle has arranged a new group of specialty numbers which he is presenting for the first time this week-end. Stanley G. Waltz, general manager, announced yesterday that a special system of cooling the ballroom was also being attempted for the first time at last night's and tonight's dances. She'll Rough It United States Will Avoid Delving Into Ethiopian Matters -Associated Press Photo. Undaunted by possible lack of aesthetic surroundings, Lo Vern Wilson, Berkeley, Calif., poet, says she is going to the Matanuska col- ony and write an epic poem on American rural life. Hostesses Are Announced For Dane Ton ight B tl ti V, tt Fifth Social Evening Summer Session To Held At League Roosevelt Men Take Time Out From Troubles At Home ToShape Policy Note Is Dispatched. To Haile Selassie U. S. 'Loath To Believe' That Any Non-Pacific Means Will Be Used WASHINGTON, July 5. ---(P)-- The administration took time out from its domestic troubles today and sought to take this government out of possible complications in the cur- rent Italo-Abyssinian quarrel. To Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethio- pia - who had appealed to the United States to invoke the Kellogg pact - the State department dispatched a note making clear this this country proposed to take no immediate, if any, part in the controversy. The note expressed gratification that the League of Nations was acting and declared the United States was "loath to believe that any but pacific means would be used by either Italy or Ethiopia. London Welcomes Appeal Of, Bel 'Hottest Day Of Year,' In Many Parts Of Nation (By The Associated Press) It was the hottest day of the year in numerous eastern points yesterday but thundershowers cooled most of the Midwest. Three heat fatalities were recorded -one in Detroit and two in Ohio - as the mercury took its 1935 peak for Boston at 90, Omaha at 95, New York at 87, Toronto at 86, and Chicago at 89. A sudden thundershower accom- panied by high winds tumbled the mercury 20 degrees within a short time after the year's high was at- tained in the midwest's metropolis. In Boston's suburbs 95 degrees was at- tained. Hostesses for the fifth Summerc Session dance, to be held from 9 p.m. tonight until midnight in the LeagueI Ballroom, were announced yesterday by Miss Ethel McCormick social di-1 rector of the Summer Session. Al Cowan's orchestra, featuring Mary Morrison, will play for the dance. Electric fans blowing over t bowls of ice in the concourse will beb used to keep the rooms cool.o The hostesses will include Lenores Auvand, Katherine Bevis, Jane Bid- dle, Marion Bertsch, Lena Brammar,s Henrietta Cherrington, Margarete Conklin, Margaret Cowan, Murielr Curtis, Faye Dibble, Dorothy Dorsey,X Georganna Elson, Beth Emery, Mary Alice Emmett, Catherine Ferguson, Dorothy Gies, Frances Hall, Mary El- len Hall, and Myra Hilbert.C Others will be Pearl Icheldinger,C Rosemary Klug, Jean Lillie, Barbara Lutts,. Helen Menneken, Barbara Midderdorf, Grace Miller, Louise Paine, Virginia Pelhank, Mary Eliza- beth Porter, Shirley Potts, Charlotte Rueger, Kay Russell, Jean Seeley, El- laine Shanklin, Clara Sisson, Vera Smith, Gerda Stanger, Berna ine Stowe, Julie Taylor, Frances Thorn- ton, Dorothy Wikel, Jewel Wuerfel, and Laura Jane Zimmerman.I Detroit Wins Over Brownies By 16-1 Score DETROIT, July 5 - (Special) - Detroit's man-eating Tigers, who re- cently have been gobbling up just, about everything in their way, gained a half-game on the league-leading New York Yankees today when they lswamped the hapless St. Louis Browns, 16-1. The victory - the eighth consecu- tive for the Tigers - left them only a game and a half behind New York. Detroit's barrage of 15 hits included 1 two home runs by Henry (Hank) Greenberg, the larruping first base- man; triples by Leon (Goose) Goslin and Bill Rogell; and doubles by Pete Fox and Marvin Owen. Hank's hom- LONDON, July 5. - W) - Great Britain, obviously relieved to yield the spotlight in the Italo-Ethiopian con- troversy to the United Staes, took ad- vantage of the breather thus afforded today to seek to dissipate French and Italian suspicions aroused by her peace efforts. Steps were reported being taken to disabuse Rome and Paris of their ap-. parent idea that England had already charted the course she would follow in trying to force Benito Mussolini to give up the idea of an African war. In view of the House of Commons" vociferous attacks onsCapt. Anthony Eden's peace negotiations in Rome - that involved his "tentative offer" to cede part of British Somaliland to Ethiopia in reurn for concessions to Italy that might placate Il Duce -- the Foreign Office welcomed Ethiopia's latest appeal to Washingon. The Foreign Office was reported planning to use it pi-eparing for next week's Commons debate fand trying to check France's drift toward Italy by convincing Premfer Pierre Laval of the urgency of collective action to save the League of Nations. A lid of secrecy on Britain's future actions was clamped on tighter than ever, however,eas result of the hor- net's nest stirred up in the foreign press and the House of Commons by Britain's policy. Officials emphasized that only through such joint conver- sations as those going on in Paris could solution of the difficult and deli- cate problem be reached. Sheer Formals And Tailored Linens Dominate Fourth Dance. Cotton and sneer informals vied with tailored linen suits and informal crepe dresses for popularity at the fourth Summer Session dance held last night in the ballroom of the League. More than 300 Summer Session faculty members and students thronged the ballroom and the con- course of the League in spite of the intense heat. Among the faculty members who were seen was Miss Ethel McCormick, director of social activities for the summer term. She chose for the occasion cool-looking printed chiffon formal with a floral design in shades of yellow, brown and inson in a tailored white linen suit with a blue blouse. A light pink crepe formal was worn by Jean Seeley, president of the League. Her dress featured a deep cowl neckline, and with it she wore a contrasting belt in a magenta shade. Mary Helen McIntosh selected a two-piece crepe dress in dusty pink, with unusual pleated sleeves, while Jeannette Putnam was seen in the ballroom in pale yellow chiffon with a wide sash. Frances Thornton wore a green and white checked gingham formal, ac- cented by a white belt, collar and bow at the neckline. Checked gingham has also the choice of Lucille Johnson, who was seen in blue and white. Her Enrollment For Forestry Camp At Record High Camp Filibert Roth Opens Seventh Season With 50 Per Cent Increase IRON RIVER, MICH., July 5 - (Special) -- Camp Filibert Roth, the summer camp of the School of For- estry and Conservation, has opened its seventh annual session at its new camp 17 miles northeast of here with a record enrollment 50 per cent greater than that of last year. The new location is in the Ottawa National Forest on. United States Highway 2. The camp itself is an abandoned lumbering camp on Gold- en Lake. Birch, maple, and hemlock trees abound in this heavily wooded vicin- ity. Students at the camp report that, with the nearest "neighbors" six miles away, "the boys are enjoying a real forest life." The national forest, together with the natural environ- ment, provides an ideal set-up for the courses offered. Students at the camp