Now How Hitler I Escaped Death In Nazi Raid Fears Of New Uprisinj Keep Nazi Troops 0 Their Guard (Continued from Page 1) Seldte told leaders of the organs zation that he had had a long 'con ference with Lutze and that frater nal co-operation would prevail here after. Less than two weeks ago, Hitle turned down a Storm Troop deman - from some of the men who sinc have been executed - that the Stahl helm be dissolved. Throughout Silesia, which was par ticularly disturbed by the killing o the powerful Heines, intense effort were made to impress the public tha the "second revolution" is over an that there is 'nothing more to be ex- pected except loyal Nazi co-operation Commander Herzog, who succeede Heines as Storm Troop chief for Si- lesia, indicated that his forces would not be reduced and the students who were serving compulsory terms must continue in the ranks. In this connection, however, it was recalled that until Lutze's statement today the policy had been to soft- pedal reduction of the uniformed party force. Papen Still In Office The staus of Vice Chancellor Franz von Papen, close friend of President Paul von Hindenburg, remained un- changed. He was still in office, and there was no inidication that he would be removed immediately, as Hitler had' planned to do before his visit by airplane to the President's country estate. Presumably, the plan for von Papen to. take a leave of absgnce was not changed. Three members of the vice chan- cellor's staff, one of whom had pre- viously been reported dead, were re- leased from, police custody today with- the announcement that they had been absolved from suspicion of traitorous activities. Reports that Michael Cardinal Faulhaber at Munich was nolested or placed under guard were denied, and it was stated that an official communique to that effect would be forthcoming. One of the economic steps of a rather drastic measure so far as in- dividuals are concerned was an ap- peal for all unmarried persons under 25 to give up their jobs in favor of married .men. The young men were appealed to offer themselves for farm labor and the young women to give up factory or office to prepare for "later duties as German housewives and mothers." Among its other troubles Germany found itself in a "newspaper war" with Switzerland, as a result of the banning of Swiss papers because of their accounts of Hitler's "liquida- tion" of the opposing Storm Troop leaders. - d e f .s t d d a 0 t L t t tj sf g hi t m ti la a t f, t pr in t de a fo a V ve sh re hil im ge p re ti THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE To San Francisco Waterfront Scene Of Battle t :7 6 Constitutional Changes To Be On Next Ballot Deadline For Petitions To Qualify Proposals Was Yesterday At 5 P.M. LANSING, July 6. - (1P)-Six pro- posals to revise a state constitution were assured a place on the November general election ballot yesterday as the deadline for qualifying proposed amendments passed. No more petitions to qualify consti- tutional proposals were accepted after 5 p.m. yesterday by the department of state. 1 The latest proposal to qualify is that paving the way for the enact- ment of a graduated income tax law by the legislature. A delegation of farm and real estate leaders filed pe- titions containing 206,398 names with the department of state Thursday to qualify the proposal. The income amendment would also permit the legislature to abolish the so-called uniform rule of taxation. ,It could classify property for tax pur- poses into real, personal and intang- ibles. Revenue from the proposed in- come levy would go to the schools. Repeated efforts have been made to place an income tax measure on the statute books and to incorporate it in the constitution, but all have failed. The Michigan State grange has been a persistent advocate of the tax for years. The income tax proposal will oc- cupy No 5 position among the pro- posed amendments on the November ballot. A proposal for the non-partisan election of judges will have'the top position among the proposed consti- tutional amendments. It was sub- mitted by Walter M. Meek, of Detroit. Two constitutional changes to re- . strict gasoline and weight taxes will1 appear as the second and third pro- posals. The first would limit the gas- oline tax to 2 cents a gallon while the second would place a maximum of 35 cents a hundredweight on the Weight tax, the same as it is now.1 Both proposals are sponsored by theI Automobile club of Michigan. The No. 4 proposal provides for op-1 President Roosevelt's Mother In England -Associated Press Photo Mrs. James Roosevelt, mother of the President, is shown at South- ampton ,England, with Robert W. Bingham, American ambassador. She was invited to visit the king and queen, and chatted informally with them over the teacups. Crime Group Will Organize In Washington Unprecedented Congress To Wage War On Vice To Meet In Fall WASHINGTON, July 6.-(W)-- A crime congress of unprecedented scope will sit in Washington next fall to assist the government's fight. against kidnapers, gangsters, and other evil-doers. Attorney General Cummings, in a speech to the National Press club, said today that with the approval of President Roosevelt he would in- vite representatives of every state to a "crime conference of nation-wide significance.", "It is my purpose," he said, "to issue a formal call for the conference to be held during November or the early part of December. During the summer the complete agenda will be worked out. "The conference will consider prac- tically every aspect of crime and ap- proach the problem of law enforce- ment in a way never before at- tempted." Surveying his department's fight on crime, he hit "unscrupulous lawyers" and "crooked officials" who seek to protect criminals. Answering critics of the new deal in general, he said -"it is not a viola- tion, but rather a vindication of our form of constitutional government." GOLF TROPHY ON DISPLAY The National Intercollegiate golf trophy, won last week by a Michigan team composed of Chuck Kocsis, Woody Malloy, Cal Markham, and Dana Seeley, went on display yester- day in the window of Slater's State Street store. GRID STAR DIES HOUSTON, Tex., July 6.-()- Johnny Young, 22, of Houston, half back on the Notre Dame football squad, died in a hospital here today of a kidney ailment with which he was stricken two weeks ago. He would have been a senior at Notre Dame in September. -Associated Press Photo San Francisco's waterfront was turned into a battleground as furious fighting broke out on several occasions between striking union pickets and police. Many were reported shot and others were injured by tear gas or flying missiles. This picture shows police rushing into the fray, and one of the knocked-out strikers may be seen lying prone on the street. YESTERDAY VIENNA -Bombings occurring overnment buildings with result heavy damages caused Catholic st roop leaders at Klagenfurt to nand that the government take ion against the Nazis. * * * EAST LANSING -Herman H. H aday, secretary of the state board griculture, tendered his resignati ,o be effective Jan. 1, 1935. FLORENCE, Ariz. - Manuel a red Hernandez, brothers, paid w heir lives for the murder of an ag rospector when they were execu the lethal gas chamber of t ate prison. ABOARD U.S.S. GILMER-Pre ent Roosevelt, on his vacation v ge, prepared to stop off at San Ju r a friendly call on the Puerto R ns. BRAWLEY, Calif. - The Imper alley, which furnished the Unit Mates with two-thirds of its win egetables, faced a serious wa Lortage. LANSING -Petitions bearing t quired number of signatures w ed with the secretary of state, th suring a place on the Novemn eneral ballot for the income tax pr osal. NEW YORK - The stock marl ,mained dull as trading activity co nued slow. in Ling orm de- ac- al- i of on, ind ith ged. ted the ~si- oy- an ic- ial ed ter ter he ere us ber o- ket in- Rumor Says Kocsis Will Play In Open SAGINAW, July 6. - A hundred golfers, including every outstanding professional and most of the ama- teurs in Michigan, are expected to compete in the Michigan open golf tournament here Monday and Tues- day of next week. Mortie Dutra, Detroit, will defend his title. Al Watrous; Detroit, four times champion, and Clarence Gam- ber, 1932 title-holder, have announced their challenges. Chuck Kocsis, state amateur and Big Ten champion, and Walter Hagen are likely entries. The 72-hole medal score tourna- ment will be played in legs of 18 holes. Wimbledon Singles Title Won By Perry (Continued from Page 1) its hands for a countrymen only after he had overwhelmed his rival at love in the second. Lot And Stoefen Win Improving with every * match, George Lott and Lester Stoefen, American Davis Cup players, joined Helen Jacobs in the effort to salvage a few titles for the United States in other assorted finals tomorrow. The original American Davis Cup pair swept through the Australian-Ger- tional types of home rule government 'for counties. It is backed by the Mich- igan Municipal league. A joint resolution adopted by the legislature broadening the jurisdic- tion of justices of the peace in De- troit will be the last proposal on the ballot. Under it Detroit justices would have exclusive jurisdiction in civil cases up to $1,500 instead of $500 as the present restriction. man combination of Harry Hopman and Daniel Prenn, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3, 8-6. They are expected to make all kinds of trouble tomorrow for Jean Bo- rotra and Jacques Brugnon, the vet- eran French team, in the final. Bo- rotra and Brugnon knocked out the highly touted British team of Ian G. Collins and F. H. D. Wilde'today, 7-5, 3-6, 6-2, 6-4. On the strength of her Wightman Cup victory, Miss Jacobs, American champion, is a slight favorite to beat Dorothy Round, the English girl, in the women's singles final tomorrow and the United States is certain to share in the women's doubles with Elizabeth Ryan, former Californian, and Mme. Rene Mathieu, of France, pitted against Dorothy Andrus, of Stanford, Conn., and Mme. Jung Hen- rotin, of France, in the final. The other final tomorrow is be- tween Henry (Bunny) Austin and Mrs. D.,C. Shepherd-Barrow, all Eng- lish combination, and the Anglo-Ja- panese team of Miss Round and R. Miki, in mixed doubles. Miki, in mixed doubles. September. - i Switzerland Bars Papers The Foreign Office was advised that three German papers - Hitler's Voel- kischer Beobachter, Goebbel's Angriff and the Boersenzeltung -had been barred for two weeks. If the German ban remains on after that date the retaliation will con- tinue, it was indicated, although this was said to be the first time Switzer- land ever placed an embargo against a foreign newspaper. Plans of French Minister Andre Francois-Poncet to carry any further his protest against the intimation that France was the "foreign power" in- volved in the Roehm plot appeared to have been abandoned in return for the generous publication in the Ger- man press of his vigorous denial. 2 t British To Back Up Locarno Peace Pact LONDON, July 6. -- (AP) - Military collaboration of a technical nature in lieu of Franco-British defense alliance emerged today as a possible answer to French attempts to gain security guarantees. The Associated Press was informed that France and Great Britain had already exchanged private views on the matter.o The French foreign minister, Louis Brthou, will raise the point officially next week on ,his visit to join in pre- liminary naval conference conversa- tions, and expects to carry home a formal affirmative reply.B s Barthou will ask the Bri tish to state formally whether they will stand by all that the Locarno Pact implies, and the British will make an affirmative reply. France has not asked and does not expect, it was learned, any sort of political defensive alliance with Great Britain, not because the French do not want it, but because months ago Brit- ain plainly informed Paris that the Locarno Pact was the only one to which she wished toadhere. RAGGEDY ANN D r":A 1I-r"T\/ Conn /\1 Zuppke Concedes Mich igan A Chance In BigTen Fight MINNEAPOLIS, July 6. -(P)-The Western conference football race, still three months away from the opening game, looks like a toss-up to Bob Zuppke, veteran Illinois grid stra- tegist. In the Twin Cities today for an annual visit with his brothers, Zuppke was not hesitant about saying he con- sidered nine teams as possible title- contenders, with Minnesota and Michigan given a slight edge. Agreeing with critics that the Go- phers should be strong next fall Zuppke took exception with others who were counting out the Wolver- ines because of their heavy losses through graduation. "Michigan should never be counted out," he said, "They can lose an en- tire team and still come up with a powerful aggregation the next season. Even so great a center as Bernard will not be missed with this man Ford coming up. Ford was held in the background only because of Bernard's great play. He undoubtedly will prove himself the outstanding pivot man in the conference." Zuppke believes his own team will be strong enough to cause the others plenty of trouble, and he looks to Northwestern, Purdue, Ohio State, WisconsinIow a, and Chicago to be in the running all the way. I' i t For Faculty and Student Informration NOW 0 SALE at WAHR'S BOOKSTORE NEWSSTANDS MICHIGAN LEAGUE MICHIGAN UNION \ } 3 BRIGHT SPOT' 802 Packard Street i STUDENT PUBLCATIONS BUILDING And from CAMPUS SALESMEN SI I 6 I