V. AUGUST 19, ;1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY _ _ - ------ - NEWS- Of The DAY (By The Associated Press) The News Of The, World As Illustrated In Associated Press Two Army Officers Ote As Plane Falls MAIDENS, Va., Aug. 18.-(U)-A failing motor forced a high ranking army air corps officer and a staff ser- geant down to their deaths in flames in a pasture today. Army air corps investigators camc here tonight to study the charrec !xreckage and receive eyewitness ac- counts of the crash, which Powhatar Ocunty Coroner J. E. Tilman at- tributed to "engine trouble." The two fliers, Col. William C McChord of Lebanon, Ky., in charg Qf operations in the office of the chief of the corps, and Staff Sergeant Michael J. O'Connell of Alexandria. Va.,. encountered a deep ditch as they glided to an emergency landing in a dairy pasture at the Virginia indus- trial school for boys. Russian Planes Seek Lost Comrades MOSCOW, Aug. 18.-(AP)-Three rescue planes flew northward today in search of Pilot Sigismund Leva- neffsky's lost trans-polar plane while the icebreaker Krassin headed to- ward Cape Barrow with four more planes and dog teams. The flight committee said "noth- in# recognizable" had been heard fromLevaneffsky's radio. Plot Zadkoff to Cape Wellen, Pi- lot Grazianski left Krasnoyarsk for budinka and Pilot Golovih flew from Kazan to Sverdlovsk. The Krassin lifted anchor at Cape Schmidt and steamed toward Cape arrow. Wife In Second Day Of Sit-Down DE7TROIT, 4pug. 18.-(MP-Mrs. Jo- sePhine Smith McCoy, 17, ended the second full day of her sit-down strike ihi the parked automobile of her estranged husband tonight and said sle was reuared to stay indefinitely. She insists that Jseph McCoy, 23, the husband who, she said, left her twice after their marriage on May 1, "come back to me and reach a defi- nite understanding about our future." James Mills Tells Of Chinese Battle (Continued from Page 1 high explosives and incendiary bombs dropped by whole squadrons of Curtiss Falcon-type Japanese bombers. The magnificent Shanghai civic center, a special tarket of the Ja- panese bombers, was perforated by air bombs. A new group of classic Chinese-style buildings, it had cost $5,000,000 in gold to build. I estimated that at least 30 Japan- ese bombers formed the roving squad- rons .that bombed an area approxi- niately 15 miles square, all within greater Shanghai itself but all out- side the international areas. Several Japanese shells fell near the RCA-Victor factory while I was watching. Every window was shat- tered. I learned later that all Ameri- ean employes of the plant were safe but that it was feared many Chinese workers had been killed. Courtis Cites World's N e e d Of Cooperation The need of the hour is techniques that will make possible understand- ing, harmonization, unification and tmobliation among men, Prof. Stu- art A. Courtis of the School of Edu- cation told a group yesterday in the auditorium of the University high school. The available materials today, such as parlimentary law, courts, the bal- lott and debate, are unsuitable for co- operation among them, he sard. He went on to state that man has made great but unconscious progress toward the ideal state, but at present progress is stalled from lack of techniques adequate for the situations his progress has created. Where To Go Theatre: Michigan: "They Wanted to Marry," with Betty Furness and Gordon Jones; Majestic: "Born Reckless," with Rochelle Hudson and Brian Donlevy and "Espionage," with Edmund Lowe and Madge Evans; Wuerth: 'Romeo and Juliet," with Norma Shearer and Leslie Howard and "Step Lively, Jeeves," with Ar- thur Threacher; Orpheum: "Call It -71 a sj 1 f t T x t x x I WOOSUN 9 Greewk 4 JAPANESE HEADQUARTERS 8 This Associated Press map shows the war, in and around Shanghai, the Whangpoo River where a ni river indicate Japanese warships ir denote Japanese land positions; wh ul cations. It was through this flare-ui woinwn were taken to Woosung to b J Z >.c YS 7 all RX S 1 w 1 to tI oa Pictures I House Records Quick Approval Of Housmg Act (Continued from Pag u) 4a Sing companies, foreign corporations, and multiple trusts to avoid tax lia- bility. The Senate approved without de- bate four amendments drafted by the finance committee. They are designed to: 1. Exempt oil and gas royalty companies from levies applicable to holding companies. 4MG CWAN 2. Permit deduction of "reason- able" sums for debt retirement from the taxable income of personal hold- ing companies. 3, Avoid unnecessary expense and inconvenience in the filing of reports by multiple trusts. 4. Bring,. federal regulations on iTTLEtrusts in line with state laws govern- ing capital increments. - . Leaders predicted the bill wuld be adopted tomorrow with virtually OT NG \no debate. It reached the floor after Chairman McKellar (Dem., Tenn.) of the post- office committee had succeeded in sidetracking the McCarran Air Trans- 0 z 2 port Bill indefinitely. __ _ MDebate on that measure, empower- ing the interstate commerce commis- the location of the main stage of sion to regulate air lines as it now vith arrow pointing to spot along does railroads, had been going on ;ht battle raged. Boats in the intermittently since Saturday. McKellar denounced the aviation battle position. Black diamonds bill today as tending to create monop- diamonds show Chinese troop lo- oly, while Senator Wheeler (Dem., battle area American children and Mont.) argued the present system of ard the steamship President Taft. regulating air mail carriers has "led to nothing but graft, corruption and %EAD THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS political chicanery." --_____________________- One of the larger flour mills of Tientsin is shown here engulfed in flames after it was fired by bombs dropped by Japanese airplanes in the "unofficial" Japanese-Chinese war. The theatre of war has now shifted to Shanghai, endangering the lives of persons living in the International Zone. , Y P 4 : t M Xa Opal Sturgell (above), 18-year- old Berea College sophomore, was fatally wounded as she walked on the college campus with William Anderson who told police "some- United States Senator Royal S. Copeland (right), one of the Demo- one jumped from behind a clump cratic candidates for the mayor's office in New York city, opened the of bushes and began firing." George Senate debate on the nomination of Senator Hugo Black to the Supreme E Wells, a college senior and form- Court by raising the Ku Klux Klan issue against him. Copeland said er suitor, was sought. he was "outraged by this proposal to put a Klan sympathizer" on the bench. He is shown with Senator Arthur Capper, of Kansas, on the Sente subway before the opening of the session. F.D.R. Speaks W George E. Wells (above), 20, SOn Democracy hite House Advisers A re Not detry- wwriting Berea College stu- OncsoughtrcatyBerea, Ky., as At Dare ete DisguisedNow en er ro Door a suspect in the ambush slaying of At D re ete Disuisd~owEntr~rnt oorOpal Sturgell, 18, a sophomore at Berea, on the college campus. A murder warrant for Wells was Quotes Lord Macauley's By SIGRID ARNE adviser. He's unique for the friends signed by M. L. Sturgell, father of WASHINGTON, Aug. 18,-()- I the slain girl. Doubts Concerning New Wuhe has in both pro and con camps. FomOf GoMen-at-the-keyhole are agreed that Wallace, Hopkins And Hull ormO Government Washington's political Garbos, hiding Secretary Wallace gets a free hand several times through brilliant senate behind the iblack-glasses of anony- with agriculture; Relief Administra- investigations. MANTEO, Roanoke Island, N.C., When new bills finally are drafted . mity, are much rarer now than in the tor Hopkins with the unemployed; the geb fin alfromdrofici Aug. 18 ()-Herresomehigh y ys of Secretary Hull with international they get a final perusal from Soici- lights from the address of Presidentho policy. That is, they get as free a tan G ney Gnery Re r a c- Roosevelt: Most of the group that i hand as the President can give, con- Lord Macaulay wrote in 1857 to in and out of the Whbie House dis- gress considered, since congress votes (ontinued on Page 4) an American friend .. . "I have long guised, as they thought, In enigmatic the money and okays most treaties. smiles, have graduated to routine jobs The trio obviously enjoys the respect been convinced that institutions pure- or left Washington and confidence of the chief in the FOUNTAIN PENS ly democratic must, sooner or later, . White House. Student Suplies destroy liberty, or civilization, or The men now cerdited with helpig When the question of labor policy both." the President form policies are, for comes up, the picture is slightly un- D M orn the most part, well-known and hold orthodox. Adviser No. 1 is not Secre- "E D . E Ajobs that demand such a duty as ad- tary Frances Perkins, but battling 314 SOUTH STATE STREET Almost, methinks, I am not read- . th.d.Sen. Bob Wagner of New York, who,__ ing from Macaulay but from a reso- visig the President. after five years of using the spurs, is lution of the United States Chamber Garner Returns now galloping down the home-stretch, of Commerce, the Liberty League, the There's the administration's "No" Roman style, on his two favorite National Association of Manufac- man, Vice-President Garner, who horses: public housing and wages and turers or the editorials written at the rushed back from his Texas cactus hours. He has a running-mate in behest of some well-known newspa- patch to bury the court bill with little Sen. Hugo Black of Alabama, who -NOW per proprietors. ceremony. Garner's "No's" are sup- has furthered Roosevelt objectives posed to be attuned to that intangible- (Quoting again from Macaulay) thing, public opinion. He advises on She Had the Background, "Your Constitution is all sail and no public policy, but it's a policy seen He Had the Foreground anchor. . . Either some Caesar or through the eyes of a master-politi- Hh F g n Napoleon will seize the reins of gov- cian. (5- Y e' I° ernment with a strong hand, or your There's Jesse Jones, RFC - head republic will be . .. laid waste by bar- since the Hoover days, who, with - NOW! - TWO FEATURES! -- barians." , Bernard Baruch, the New York fi- nancier, is supposed to discuss with * That, my friends, with all due re- the President where's the money com- spect to Lord Macaulay, is an excel- ing from and where should it go. lent representation of the cries of Jones has loaned millions to in- alarm which rise today from the dustry but with a hard-boiled "Pleaset } throats of American Lord Macaulays. Baruch is the perennial Presidential . . . Their anchor for the salvation of remit" look when, interest falls due. the Ship of State is Macaulay's an-__ chor: "Supreme power . . . in the hands of a class, numerous indeed, but SWIM PICNIC select; of an educated class, of a class NEWPORT which is, and knows itself to be,. deeply interested in the security of BATHING BEACH property and the manitenance of PORTAGE LAKE F order." dr t ce n tainment! WATER ._ is an important part of 1 frr any lunch or dinner. Edmund E Mag VANS DRUGS = BILLOWY SUDS >> CLEAR WATER RINSE LUSTROUS HAIR N NOT SOAP - NOT OIL gen Billowy Suds.. Banishes Soap Film... Leaves How. .- Soft, lustrous SY 8SMALL SIZE - 1