..FTH1E MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUG UJST 5, 1 Austria Mourns Dead Chancellor Dollfuss; Killer Is Hanged Airplanes Losing Fascination- So Pilots Tour For The Sights AI -associated Press Photo A sad Austria, torn by civil strife, paid tribute to its chancellor, Engelbert Dollfuss, who was slain during the Austrian Nazi putsch in Vienna. The above picture (left), shows the procession accompanying the state hearse carrying his body to the city hall to lie in state. Otto Planetta, Austrian Nazi and confessed slayer of Dollfuss, is shown in the other picture as he was led to his cell in Vienna between two guards shortly before he and another conspirator were hanged following trials growing out of the assassination. * c+' Federal Crime Dollfuss Death Seen Rousing World Insistence On Peace I ?SON Roosevelt far away in the Pacific - Writer) wrote their horror of the deed into 4.-(')- messages of condolence.J dead, mean They wrote more than that. Both han he in phrasing and in the quick, perhaps iow provided concerted, timing of their communi- ce as 20 years cations, they wrote large the 20-year- ided the first old lesson of Sarajevo, the dread of all lives by the peoples that another world conflict, est it. So in- more terrible, might be brewing. rid revulsion "Hands Off Austria" of the little In 1914, diplomats and statesmen ecital of the failed tragically in their effort to beat inner of his out the war flame or even to limit emed to be- its spread. That lesson, learned at which leaders dear cost, apparently moved Paris, London, Rome, The Vatican, heads of ty, the heads states everywhere, to waste not a en President moment. At all costs, they seemed to say, the wounds that bled Dollfuss dead must not be allowed to bleed iino civilization itself to death. Did Mussolini, perhaps, in that re- Oh ported fury of international tele- j phoning, set the stage for this new peace technique? Or was it an un- oonst prompted concert of action in a mo- ment of world peril? The latter seemed to be the case as message after atosphere message was made public in the strik- ing series of "condolences" that rep- rnmander resented so much more than mere in- In China ternational courtesy. It makes little difference. The (P) - T. G. universal message seemed to be mmander, U. "Hands off Austria." It meant that xpert of that whatever conflict ensued must and he calls "lots would be localized; that the tragedy hein Chieset of 1914 must not be repeated. Peace Demanded C. Fordney To what extent did this actually cended 61,237 serve to still the feared storm of Pan- tury of Prog- German agitation? What may be st November, the ultimate product of Austria's in- it water urge ternal turmoil around which cluster n sea duty. such ominous forebodings for the ight - him to world? These are questions historians the U. S. S. will decide. For the moment, how- osquito fleet" ever, what seems most significant is n interests on that there has arisen above the noise the Yangtze of lesser internal and international conflicts a common world demand he said on that world peace be respected. had been 10 Had any such world psycholoyg ex- on a ship and isted in 1914, the World war might tting aboard never have been. Yet it took just such a background as the assassina- lifferent from tion of Dollfuss to give opportunity air craft. but for it to find vent. -Unit Will Rival Scotland Yard Expert Detection Methods Enlisted To Aid Justice DepartmentOperations WASHINGTON, Aug. 4. - (P) - The department of justice is creating a laboratory for scientific crime de- tection that will surpass Scotland Yard's. To translate clews into evidence in the national war on evil-doing, it will have specially designed microscopes, precision instruments, violet ray de- vices, fluoroscopic machines and many other aids to the modern sleuth, of- ficials disclosed today. The division established its first laboratory in 1932. The new one will contain equipment far superior. Calling the department of justice the American Scotland Yard is an understatement from some stand- points. For example, the department has on file 4,400,000 fingerprint rec- ord cards as against only 500,000 at Scotland Yard and about 1,500,000 at the Paris Surete. Scotland Yard, of course, confines its work largely to the London metropolitan area, and does not cover the nation. Sorting over 4,400,000 record cards would be a herculean job if it were not for the fact that prints can be divided and subdivided according to characteristics. A new system, ap- plied only to 22,000 cards thus far, picks out the desired ones automati- cally. Invisible writing is old stuff to the laboratory experts. A'violet ray ma- chine brings out the hidden imprint of acid. A special microscope compares mi- nute markings made on bullets when projected through a gun's barrel. The apprehensions of a high of- ficial who received some time ago a suspicious package through the mail were allayed by the fluoroscope. It showed the parcel contained a gift gavel, not a bomb. CONNECTED, HUH, SEPARATED! An ocean once connected central Asia via Persia and Asia Minor with the Alpine area of Europe. -take the family to the hut for dinner today... a few specials roast stuffed turkey dinner 65c fried spring chicken dinner 65c sizzling sirloin steak dinner 65c sizzling t-bone steak dinner7OC I I No Wonder Many Are Buying Two and Three Pairs for Fall Wear I 4 I I