THE MICHIGAN DAILY ' Rebellion i luzi: Slain Austrian Chancellor Lying In State Appears Broken After Four Days N azi Members Continue Battling In Provinces, But To No Avail Italy Is Watching Foreign Governments No Longer Fear A General European War (Continued From Page 1) tionary activities had been directed In Maiei*s home they said they also found subversive Nazi propa- ganda and multigraphed, directions to Nazi Storm Troop detachments, After a defeat of the Nazis at Eibis- wald the peasant population of Styria, which is generally regarded as a Nazi stronghold, immediately began talk- ing about revenge and indicated that they were awaiting news from Ca- rinthia as to the developments there. Meanwhile, the Heimwehr and the Catholic Storm Troops in Graz, the capital of Styria, were celebrating their victory. They made wholesale arrests of Nazis and even of Nazi sympathizers. They raided clothing stores in search of neckties and other wearing appa- rel with the colors of the German flag. People in the street, even girls wearing dresses showing the com- bination of black, white, and red, were compelled to remove the colors. Nazis Beaten A milk dealer arriving in Graz from Andritz reported that more than 100 Nazis had' been arrested there. He said that they were stripped of clothesand received terrible beatings as " the first treatment." Bitter fighting took place in the vicinity of the festival city of Salz- burg during the night. At Liefering, not far from the German border, a Heimwehr commander was killed and six of'his men wounded during a skirmish' with Nazis. The fighting in and around Lamp- rechtshausen was especially heavy. Clashes also occurred at Mandling, where a Heimwehr detachment was attacked by Nazis, who were beaten off. Another sector of conflict is east- ern Tyrol. Feldkirchen and Klagen- furt, Carinthia's picturesque capital, are centers of civil war. The Govern- ment is rushing troops in increasing numbers to that section in an effort to stamp out the revolt. Carinthia is a tangle of barbed wire. It is jammed with gleaning bayonets. The wounded are pouring in from neighboring battlefields. There was no serious fighting in Vienna itself today. Guns, however, bristled everywhere, evidence of fear that the Dollfuss funeral might be an occasion for fresh outbreaks. Casualties 3,000 Casualties since the revolt began are still estimated at close to 3,000, but there are no official figures. Authorities express confidence that the revolt can be crushed before it has a chance to develop into a con- flagration compelling the intervention of one or more neighbor nations. There is no attempt to conceal the fact that Italy is fully authorized to rush her troops across the border if the Nazi uprising becomes too pow- erful for Austrian Fascism. The jumpy atmosphere in Vienna was graphically revealed when a brisk and lengthy exchange of shots developed between two Government forces during the night. A lorry of Fatherland Front troops skirmished with pro-Government police and Heimwehr patrols because of mis- taken identity. The entire district was thrown in a panic. Thousands Weep Thousands wept freely tonight as the bronze casket containing the body of their assassinated Chancellor was borne in a long funeral procession at the ancient cathedral of St. Stephen.' Even the foreign diplomats pres- ent, inured to funerals of state, gave vent to their emotions, but Frau Doll- fuss, who entered the Cathedral sup- ported by Prince Ernst Rudiger von Starhemberg and Fritz Stockinger, minister of commerce, was dry-eyed. Only the privileged could enter the somber Gothic edifice to hear Theo- dore, Cardinal Innitzer pronounce the funeral oration. He spoke with great emotion of the hopes which had animated the Chancellor May 1 when# he attended a service there which, he hoped, would mark the begining of a new era in Austrian history. The common people outside, along1 the route which the procession had taken from the city hall, were not ashamed of their grief. Tears rolled down weatherbeaten faces. Peasants and the women of all classes sobbed as the procession passed.1 Two old peasants, clad in simple7 black, had a place of honor in the procession. They were the parents of Dollfuss, the man who rose froms humble birth to be dictator of the' nation. -Associated Press Photo This Associated Press picture, telephoned from Vienna to London and sent by radio to New York, shows Engelbert Dollfuss, former Austrian chancellor slain by Nazi revolters, as he lay in funeral state in the Chan- cellory at Vienna. Tigers Regain Lead; Trounce Chicago 11-1 'Schoolboy' Rowe Allows Sox Three Hits; Swats Three Himself The Detroit Tigers climbed back into the number one position yester- day behind the three hit pitching of Lynwood (Schoolboy) Rowe as they trounced the Chicago Sox, 11 to 1. Rowe's thirteenth victory of the season came while the Athletics were splitting a double-header with the Yanks at Philadelphia and gave the Tigers a slight percentage-point mar- gin of the New Yorkers in their hot race for the American League pen- nant. It was a big day for the Schoolboy who is almost single handed in keep- ing Detroit in the race. Besides al- lowing only two singles and one double in nine innings, he got three hits, two for two bases, and drove in three runs. The Bengals, smarting under two consecutive drubbings by the Boston Red Sox at Navin Field, started off with a bang yesterday batting around in the first inning to amass five runs before the Sox came to bat. Three Chicago errors didn't do the Detroit cause any harm. The Sox got their single counter in the fifth on a walk and a single. The Bengals forced across single runs in the fourth, and fifth, and got two each' in the third and ninth while Walker, Rowe, and Owen were all fat- tening their batting averages with three hits apiece. Where TO Go Afternoon 2:00 - Michigan Theatre, "Circus Clown," with Joe E. Brown. 2:00 - Majestic Theatre, "Shoot the Works," with Jack Oakie. 2:00-Wuerth Theatre, Zane Grey's * * * Von Starhemberg Urges Austria To Remember Dollfuss VIENNA, July 28. - (R) -The spir- it of the assassinated chancellor En- gellbert Dollfuss was invoked today by Acting Chancellor Ernst van Star- hemberg to plead "before thenThrone of God" for Austria's independence, as thousands lined up before the city hall to pay last honors to the mar- tyred chancellor. Other hundreds of thousands lined the streets through which his body was carried. "I am not saying farewell to you, beloved leader, comrade and friend," declared von Starhemberg at the casket for his predecessor, "for, as a Catholic, I know that only that which is mortal of you will perish. You will continue to live. "Already, you have entered the proud history of our fatherland. "I implore you to be our mediator before the Throne of God, the All Highest." - Candle light around the catafalque, brouht white-red cloth in which the coffin was wrapped, the blue uni- forms of the members of the old im- period army, the gay bluish-grey of the Heimwehr men, the gold dress uniforms of the diplomats - among whom George S. Messersmith, United States minister, in his plain cutaway looked conspicuously democratic - the field grey of the regular army, and the purple and gold robes of the clergy - all presented a picture in the midst of which the gently sobbing and desolate Frau Alwine Dollfuss, clinging to the arm of von Starhem- berg, seemed bewildered. President Wilhelm Miklas arrived in the presidential automobile to be greeted deferentially by high gov- ernment officials. He was followed by a procession of 13 army motor trucks heaped high with floral tributes from every part of Austria. Promptly at 2:30 p.m., a chorus as- sisted 'by a brass band chanted a dirge. Then Miklas mounted the ros- trum. "Never in all my life has it been as difficult to speak on an occasion of. this kind," he said. "A damnable crime has taken from us Engelbert Dollfuss, a true Austrian and a true German who by blood and race was tied to his native land." GOLF SCORES Championship flight: Woody Mal- loy d. Carol Lovelace, 8-7. . Championship Consolation: Dr. Eugene Hand vs. W. Sharfman (Sun- day). First flight: Louie Wenger d. Bob Austin, 2-1. Second flight: L. Smith d. Art Decker, 7-6. Third flight: Walter Lahde d. Carl Weise, 3-2. Fourth flight: L. K. James d. T. K. Haven, 7-6. Fifth flight: H. Boyd d. S. Polk, 4-3. Sixth flight: H. J. Rogers d. R. A. Savage, 1 up. Junior championship: Ralph Fris- inger d. Ben Katenmayer, 2 up. Government Is Losing Money By The Millions Deficit Is Twice As Heavy As Last Year's, But No One Is Worrying Yet WAHINGTON, July 28. - (P) - Secretary Morgenthau, returning Monday after a month's vacation, will find that the deficit is growing more than twice as fast as at this time a year ago. Between July 1 and 25, treasury figures showed today, the government spent $244,293,998 more than it took in. The deficit for the same period last year was $101,360,234. The treasury view is that this is not a ground for worry. The situation is considered a temporary one, involving emergency outlays designed to speed recovery. It is in line with President Roosevelt's budget message in which he outlined large borrowings this year for recovery. He added that the budget should be balanced in the fiscal year beginning next July 1. Emergency expenditures from July 1 to 25 reached $224,813,039, nearly seven times the figure for the same period of last year, in spite of credits of $50,626,398 from the Reconstruc- tion Finance corporation this year as against outgo of $22,738,671 in 1933. The overdraft on the nation's in- come is expected to increase much faster in the next few months, with $6,414,019,043 down on the President's program for emergency spending, if needed, during the fiscal year. About $1,000,000,000 of this will come from the Treasury's cash bal- ance, now at the abnormally high fig- ure of $2,477,262,857. The remainder must be borrowed, adding to a debt that stands at $27,190,253,203. The largest item in the emergency spending is $126,000,000 paid out by the federal emergency relief admin- istration, for drouth and other re- lief. Emergency conservation payments of $36,197,716 are nearly two and a half times the 1933 figure at this date. Agricultural adjustment admin- istration expenditures of $7,305,470 compare with credits from this source of nearly five times the amount last year. POOR LITTLE KEETS! The youthful Roman emperor, Elagabalus, thought common food was not good enough for his pet dogs and had servants throw them pheas- ants and parrakeets. Exceptional Month-End Sole All sDRESSES Drastically Reduced 2 Groups 8.95 and 12.75 Plain Crepes, Sheers, Prints. BoceKnits both in Suits and Ouiesses Lighter and darker ' colors. Sizes 14 to 44. Group - $5.00 Prints, Sheers, Tub Silks, White =and Pastel Crepes, Voiles, String ,( Laces. Sizes to 44. 2 Groups es C7 n c 4 "Thundering Herd." 4:00 -.Same features a theatres. Evening 7:00 -Same features a theatres. 9:00 -Same features a theatres. t the three t th,,three t the three * Canoeing every afternoon and eve- ning on the Huron River at Saun- der's Canoe Livery. Swimming, picnicing, and dancing at Newport Beach, Portage Lake, near Dexter. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) changing attitude toward Love and Marriage." At 12:00 noon, a group of students will leave the church parlors for a picnic at the, University French Air Camp at Patterson Lake. Interested students'should call 8292 for reserva- tions. At 7:30 p.m. Rev. Walton E. Cole will speak to the university group on the subject "Religion in our Time." This will be, a summary of the past meetings and a look toward certain =mmediate acts and possibilities. .This Will be t4he last meting of the surd- mer for this group. All are cordially .nvited. BRIGHT SPOT 802 Packard Street Today' 12 Noon' to'8 P.M. FRIED and ROAST' t.. I I C1'