THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, a; ," °. William Vare, Ex-Political Leader. Dies Heart Attack In Atlantic City Comes After Six Year Illness ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Aug. 7. - O/P) - William S. Vare, Republican na- tional committeeman and for years the colorful leader of the Republican organization in Philadelphia, died suddenly at 11:30 this morning at his summer home here. He was 66 years old. In ill health for the last six years, the former congressman suffered a relapse about a week ago from the heat. This was revealed Monday night by his son-in-law, Dr. John J. Shaw, who said earlier today he had shown improvement. Vare suffered a heart attack and passed away in 20 minutes. Vare, who was elected to'the United States Senate in 1926 and was refused a seat after a three-year fight on charges of excessive campaign ex- penditures, was stricken with a par- alytic stroke in 1928. For many days, his condition was critical but he ral- lied to continue his fight for the seat in the Senate. Despite his illness he continued his political activities in Pennsylvania until recently when he was deposed as the leader of the Republican or- ganization in Philadelphia. Vare was the last of three brothers who were active in Philadelphia poli- tics. The first was State Senator G. H. Vare, who controlled wards in South Philadelphia. When he died, Edwin S. Vare succeeded to his seat in the state senate and became a political power in the city, and after the death of Sen- ator Boies Penrose, a factional foe, Ed Vare became the undisputed leader of the city organization. When he followed Penrose to the grave, William S. "Bill" Vare became the leader. Camp News CAMP FILIBERT ROTH The climax of the sixth week of school in the Forestry Camp came last Tuesday evening when the faculty and students were guests at the an- nual banquet given them by the Mu- nising Rotary Club. The dining-room of the Beach Inn, which fronts beau- tiful Munising Bay of Lake Superior, was the scene of this particularly en- joyable occasion. Prof. Robert Craig, Jr., introduced each student, the latter standing at this time and giving his home ad- dress. In addition, Professor Craig presented Prof. Donald M. Matthews, Ralph Wilson of the 1933 forestry class and Charles Stoddard of this year's class, the latter two being as- sistants here in camp. Both Mr. Wil- son and Mr. Stoddard gave short talks on forestry gubjects. Noted Aviatrix Killed When Plane Crashes In Ohio Zuppke Leads In All-Star Grid CoachVoting S m all Margin Separates Leaders As Kipke Rises1 To Fifth Place1 Bob Zuppke of Illinois yesterday seized the lead in the vote for a coach of the all-star football team which is to play the Chicago Bears this month, but the race continued as close as ever with four more days of balloting. About 2,000 points, based on fans' preferences for first, second and third choices, separate Zuppke in first place and Harry Kipke of Michigan in fifth. Jimmy Crowley of Fordham, who had led in the previous day's tabula- tions, dropped to fourth place, behind Zuppke, Noble Kizer of Purdue, and Dick Hanley, Northwestern. The first five were followed by Lou Little, Columbia, Doc Spears, Wiscon- sin, Slip Madigan, St. Mary's, Ossie Solem, Iowa, and Elmer Layden of Notre Dame in that order. Just 67 points separated Zuppke, in first place with a total of 8,673 and Kizer. Hanley had 8,529, Crowley 85,- 520, and Kipke 83,569. Although Zuppke led the field in total points, Noble Kizer was a slight favorite for first choice by the fans, receiving first preference by 16,542 to 16,537 for Zuppke. Kipke of Michigan received his support from first prefer- ences of the fans, receiving 16,386, but fell behind for second and third' choices. President Sees Drouth Areas, Hears Reports Fitzgerald Pat On Conservation Plan dictates the policies and personnel and field officers are chosen through examinations rather than because of political influence. It is understood other candidates for state offices LANSING, Aug. 7.-(7P)-Frank have been requested to go on record D. Fitzgerald, candidate for the Re- on the question. publican nomination for governor, today answered the demand of sports- EXPECT SIXTH CHILD men's organizations for a statement ROME, Aug. 7. - (P) - A report of his stand on ",politics in conserva- tion." from Riccione that the Mussolinis will He declared he favors retention of have a sixth child about Februry was the present system under which a received with delight in the capital staggered conservation commission today. I CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY I I -Associated Press Photo Mrs. Frances Harrell Marsalis (inset), co-holder of the women's refueling endurance flight record, was killed at Dayton, O., when her light biplane plunged to earth during the 50-mile feature race of the national women's air meet. The ruins of the plane are shown. CLASSIFIED 4 ADVERTISING Phone 2-1214. Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to cay of insertion. Box Numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in Advance-11e per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or Minimum three lines per insertion. days from the date of last insertion. Minimum three lines per insertion. 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Dial 9061. 63 WANTED: 2 or 3 passengers who can help drive and share expenses to Seattle or vicinity, leaving Aug. 17, returning Sept. 15. Phone 3204. WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 dol lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- cago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 North Main. 2x WANTED: Young man wishes trans- portation to New York or Phila- delphia after Summer Session. Phone 4121 Ex 386, between 8 and 10 p.m. 65 WOULD LIKE transportation for two to Vermont or New Hampshire at end of Summer School. Phone 2-2725. 67 LAUNDRY. LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. Ix LOST AND FOUND LOST: Pi Delta Theta pin in or near Women's League Bldg. Finder please address Norma Green, Wom- en's League. 6f University Has In Possession Rich College Song Literature Strikes At Meddling The University of Michigan num- bers among its most prized posses- sions a rich literature of college songs, which for the most part, are the re- sults -of original contributions by members of the University student body and faculty. In some instances, such as the "Yel- low and Blue," the songs are not original as far as the music is con- cerned as a University production, but the text of the poem, however, was here written by a former member of the faculty, Charles M. Gayley, and thus has stamped the "Yellow and Blue" as definitely a Michigan prod- uct. Other songs, "Laudes Atque Car- mina," by Prof. Albert A. Stanley, hisC many other compositions, and the' songs by Prof. Fred Newton Scott, written 30 or 40 years ago, have come: to be 100 per cent University posses- sions. The advent of football's popularity in the early years of the present cen-; tury resulted in the writing of what is probably Michigan's most popular song, "The Victors," by Louis Elbel, who was then a student of the Uni- versity and now a resident of South Bend, Ind. Out of the Michigan Union operas have come a number of prominent ad- Cite Reasons Asia general feature of the program, several students coming from various sections of the country gave their rea- sons for selecting the University of Michigan, Forestry School for their formal training, this group including Ralph Neafus of New Mexico, Albert Tegge of Connecticut, Willard Hilde- brand of Saginaw, Roy Semeyn of Ann Arbor and Lee Yeager of Missis- sippi. Hildebrand gave a very interesting account of his last summer's trip to Alaska with Prof. Dow V. Baxter, pro- fessor of Forest Pathology in the School of Forestry and Conservation. Semeyn proved to be the comedian of the occasion in a witty account. of camp life in general. Neafus, in a brief description of cowboy life on the Southwest Plains, assured the group that "New Mexico was in the United States and that timber production and conservation was of vital impor- tance in maintaining the limited wa- ter resources of his native state." Rotarians To Visit Mr. W. A. Munro, in behalf of the Munising Rotary Club, has accepted Professor Craig's invitation to visit the camp next Tuesday afternoon, at which time the annual baseball game between the students and Rotarians will be played. A special program is being prepared by the students and faculty to be rendered after the ban- quet in the camp mess hall. Mr. John Guthrie, General Inspec- tor of the CCC camps throughout the United States,, was a Filibert Roth visitor last week while covering the CCC camps on the Hiawatha National Forest. Charles Mony of the 1934 Forestry class, now in charge of the CCC branch of the white grub survey here in Upper Michigan and David Bauch, a former forestry student and at pres- ent a timber cruser on the Superior State Forest north of Newberry, were other visitors. Complete Big Project The biggest project of the session in Forest Mensuration is now being brought to completion, every student spending Wednesday and Thursday of each week in crusing and mapping a Two Scientists Challenge Heat FlameTheory Puzzled By Which Comes First; Bureau Of Mines Upsets Original Idea PITTSBURGH, Aug. 7. - UP) - Science has a new puzzler - which comes first, heat or flame? A theory announced today from thej U.S. Bureau of Mines challenges the! common belief that heat always is first. It shows how flame can pre- cede heat, and probably does in ex- plosions of gas, such as drives your automobile. The theory analyzes anew the fa- mous "flame front" vhich modern ultra rapid cameras have shown in burning, gases. Even an explosion is not the simultaneous flare of all the gas, as it seems to the eye. Instead a layer of flame, only a two-thousandth of an inch thick, spreads over the gas. This layer is the "flame front." It spreads through the gas at tremen- dous speed, but always as a "front." That is, the layer in burning itself out spreads to the unburned layer adjacent. The question has been how the fire spreads. The universally ac- cepted theory has been that heat from the flame front flowed into the adja- cent thin layer of gas, heating the un- burned layer to its "ignition point." Thlsheat flow is challenged in the new theory, described in the Journal of Chemical Physics by Bernard Lewis, physical chemist of the Bureau of Mines and Guenther Von Elbe, University of Virginia. They point out that a flame front is known to contain highly energized atoms and "radicals," the latter small bunches of atoms acting together. Some of these energized particles pass out of the flame by diffusion into the unburned gas adjacent. There they set up chemical reac- tions at ordinary temperatures, that is, in gas hot enough to burn. These reactions lead to combustion. Further- more this kind of spread of the ex- plosive flame is said to be faster than by heat alone. ditions to the repertoire of the glee clubs and the student body in general. The first opera written and produced by men only appeared in 1908 and was the product of the collaboration of Roy Dickinson Welch and Donal Hamilton Haines, the latter then a student, now instructor in journalism in the University. Mr. Welch is at present professor of music at Smith College. For almost 25 years, the operas con- tinued one each year, and in most cases there was one outstanding com- position in each production that has outlived the year in which it was cre- ated. Among this list can be men- tioned Willis Diekema's "Friar's Song," "College Days," by Earl V. Moore, "Men of the Maize and Blue," by A. J. Gornetzky, and "The Bum Army," by Mr. Moore and J. Fred Lawton. The last two authors are also well-known for their popular marching song, "Varsity," written in 1909. Guards Fight I Among Selves In New York PEKSKILL, N. Y., Aug. 7. -- (P) - Two companies of National Guards- men turned their bayonets and gun butts on one another in a free-for- all at Camp Smith that led today to an official inquiry. A 20-year-old Guardsman, Private Alfred Fleming of New York, who was to have matriculated at West Point1 in the fall, is in serious condition from a bayonet wound in the skull. Half a dozen other officers and sol- diers are injured. The fight took place Thursday night when a group of guardsmen, singing and shouting, aroused sleepy mem- bers of another company. Words passed and the battle was on. It did not become generally known until Monday night when Lieut. Col. I Ames Brown, second in command of j the 71st regiment, announced he would preside at the investigation to- night in the regiment armory at New York City. See Return Of 'Higher Cost Of Living' Again CHICAGO, Aug. 7.-The "high cost of living" today appeared to be on the way back and traders were quick to assert it was all the fault of the drouth. Around the Board of Trade and at the Mercantile Exchange traders Monday saw prices broadened and trading was heavy, particularly in small sales. "It is simply the recognition of the general public that the cost of food and living is going to mount," said B. W. Snow, crop observer for a large brokerage and commision house. "As I see it, the worst effects of the drouth have not been fully realized." Roosevelt Receives Direct Pictures Of Relief Problem First Vast DR. ROBERT A. MILLIKAN * * Millikan Says Paternalism Is Biggest Threat Warns That 'Excess Of Government May Spoil1 The American Dream' SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 7.- (P) - Too much paternalism, says Dr. Robert A. Millikan, is a more serious threat to Americanism than Com- munism or Naziism. Paternalism, the cosmic ray au- thority said in a radio address Mon- day night, weakens "self reliance, dis- courages private initiative, diminishes opportunity.", "Excess government may spoil the American dream," he warned. "The American dream is that this country may always remain a land of freedom and of opportunity for each individual to rise to just that position of power and influence to which his own character entitles him; a land in which the standard of living of the common man is just as high as is compatible with the total productivity of the country; a land that has so intelligent and informed an electorate that social changes, however far- reaching, can always be brought about and only be brought about by con- stitutional ballot methods * * *'' The scientist warned against the threat of rule by the bullet instead of the ballot, declaring "freedom of speech and of the press are our most priceless heritage." External as well as internal influ- ences might spoil the American dream, he said. Among the external influences he listed "Russian fana- tics." "Nazi emotionalists," "Japanese or American jingoes," and interna- tional war. PERSIA MAKES FIRST FILM TEHERAN, Aug. 8. - (P)-The first all-Persian film has just been shown in Teheran. All the scenes were filmed in the city or the surrounding country.' GLASGOW, Mont., Aug. 7. - (,P) - President Roosevelt got his first di- rect picture of the vast drouth relief problem, which confronts his admin- istration, when he rode for 200 miles through the completely . burned-out, area of eastern Montana and listened to the reports of his subordinate offi- cials who are trying to help the farmer. He was told, for example, that the drouth problem today is three times greater than when Congress ad- journed in June, after appropriating $525,000,000 for its relief. In a little over one month since the expenditure of this money began, more than 20 per cent of it hag been disposed of and, according to Law- rence Westbrook, chief assistant to Harry L. Hopkins, Federal relief ad- ministrator, the present appropriation certainly will not last beyond Jan. 1. And, Westbrook said, upwards of 500,- 000 farm families in the drouth re- gions must be sustained from govern- ment funds at least until the first 1935 crops are harvested next June. The extent of the government task may be realized when it is stated that 60 per cent of all the land in the United States now is included in the emergency drouth area, embracing all or part of 24 states and directly or indirectly affecting 26,000,000 people. Between 300,000 and 400,000 farm families, something like 25 per cent of the total in the emergency drouth areas, now are receiving direct fed- eral relief. Of this number, perhaps 10 per cent, Westbrook said, never can hope to regain a living from the lands they occupy and must be moved else- where. Force Playoff In Education League The Superintendents forced a play- off in the Education Club Softball League yesterday by defeating the Principals, 9 to 8. The Principals will meet the Edu- cational Research team, captained by Rome Rankin in the championship game Thursday on South Ferry Field. Schram and Singer formed the battery for the winning Superinten- dents team in its second win of the schedule over the Principals, while Bakken and Galaspie formed the bat- tery for the losing team. Bakken performed creditably on the mound, but faulty support in the field lost the game. Score by inrfings: Principals .......... ....100 042 1-8 Superintendents .......303 010.2-9 "WHEN A FELLE.R- NEEDS "A FRIEfNW ... here's a friend, indeed Placed on the market a few months ago this pipe mixture made many friends be- fore it had a line of advertising. Said one smoker to another: "Try a pipe. ful of this mellow mixture. I've paid much more for tobacco not nearly so good!" Aged in the wood for years ..., there's not a bite in a barrel of BRIGGS! But B RIGGS would much rather talk in your pipe than in print. Won't you try a tin and let it speak for itself? FOR RENT "COTTAGE IN THE WOODS." Newly decorated. Two adults. Rent re- duced if taken now. 1245 Ferdon. 66 FOR SALE FIVE TUBE portable radio. Sacrifice. 5970. Mr. Tudek. l BOOKS -- BARGAINS Additions daily to our Bargain Table of REFERENCE BOOKS I . }