The Weather The outlook is for local show- ers today and tomorrow in the lower lake region. C, .4 r ict Tan esast Official Publication Of The Summer Session Editorials Till We Meet Again .,.. Is This A Solution? .. . I VOL. XLVL No. 46 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUG. 20, 1937 PRICE FIVE CENTS Law On Child Labor Passed Unanimously B U.S Senate. Follows Suggestion House May Agree To Separate Child Labor Ban Tax Law Loopholes Bill IsApproved WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.--()- Legislation to outlaw child labor shot through the Senate today with unani- mous approval in an 11th hour ef- fort to save that phase of the Ad- ministration's buried labor standards bill. The surprise action followed a sug- gestion that the House might agree to a -separate Child Labor ban this session even if it does not act on the Senate-approved Wage and Hour Bill carrying a similar prohibition. Carried To Caucus Demand for enactment of the Wage and Hour legislation in its entirety was carried by some advocates to- night to a caucus of Democratic rep- resentatives. They forced the caucus after a coalition of Republicans and southern Democrats in the House Rules Committee had blocked the leg- islation, and leaders had abandoned hope for it this session. John L. Lewis, chairman of the Committee for Industrial Organiza- tion, visited the Capitol a short time before the Democratic conference. He told reporters he was just "pass- ing through" but added the CIO is vitally interested in immediate pas- sage of the Labor Standards Bill. Agents of the rival American Fed- eration of Labor also were observed talking with leaders. The separate Child Labor Bill car- ries the same language incorporated in the child labor section of the Sen- ate-approved Wage and Hour legis- i OldAmbulance Company Trained On Ferry Field To Hold Reunion All Europe Is Suspicious Of Portugal's Act ThreeGroups Organized 20 Years Ago To Hold' Commemoration Of '17 (EDITOR'S NOTE : The following story of Co. 591 of the U. S. Army Am- bulance Service during the World War, which is to hold its reunion here Aug. 28 and 29, was written for The Daily by Dewitt C. Millen, '05, former news- paperman and author of "The College Cut-Up," a book about the University life. Mr. Millen was a member of the company). By DE WITT C. MILLEN Twenty years have passed since three companies of the United States Army Ambulance Service trained on old Ferry Field. Those companies were 589, 590 and 591. One hundred and ten young men worked hard to get into condition for the World War. In June, 1917 the three companies were sworn into the United States Army in the old Michigan Union building. The cellar of the present Michigan Union was being dug. One hundred and ten men marched down State Street, Ann Arbor, in the rain, to the Michigan Central Depot, where they entrained for Allentown, Pa. In Allentown 6,000 men from the large universities of America went in- to training for the War. Out of 6,000 men, 1,000 were picked by French officers and United States Army of- ficers for front line duty in the first war zone. The Michigan company, known as United States Army Ambulance Co. 591, was the only company picked to Electrification Is Planned For Farms Of State Program Formulated At State Capitol For Special Legislative Session go with the first 1,000 men to France. It was the old Michigan spirit of htard work, fine condition of the men, and their superior drilling that placed them with the first 1,000 men. Com- 4 pany 591, with companies from Yale, Princeton, Harvard, Cornell, Wis- consin, Chicago, and California left Allentown Aug. 21, 1917, for New York City, where they embarked on7 the transport ship Baltic, for the War.J After 24 days on board the Baltic, they were attacked in the Irish Sea by a German submarine. The boat was struck by a torpedo but was repaired, and the Baltic steamed into Liver-o pool, England, the next morning. After an all night march Companyl 591 reached Southhampton. They a then crossed the English Channel to O France. After a few weeks training (Continued on Page 4)a t Graves Namesh l Wife To Follow Black In Senate Vote Is Planned Later To c Select Successor For RestA Of Term - WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.-UP)- Gov. Bibb Graves, of Alabama, an- c nounced today the appointment oft his wife, Dixie, to succeed Hugo L.a Black as senator from Alabama. He announced at the same time thep calling of a special election for Aprila 26, 1938, to select a successor for then rest of the unexpired term.h Graves' announcement was madev in a formal statement given out fromo Black's office in the Capitol at thet same time that the newly confirmedf associate justice announced his resig-s nation, from the Senate. Governor Graves said in his state-n ment that he did not desire to maket an appointment that would "give any, one candidate for the position any ad-l vantage before the people to present his candidacy." -r He said that his wife would serve° only until a Democratic candidate had been selected and that then thata party candidate would become sen- ator. "In my judgment," he added, 'Dixie Bibb Graves is in all respects the best fitted to serve in this ad in- terim appointment and to carry out the policies above mentioned. "I am,. therefore, appointing her as senator from Alabama to fill this position until the Democrats of Ala- bama shall select their senator." Bradley Holds Lead In Yachting Races CHICAGO, Aug. 19.-(P)--Ralph Bradley of Peoria, Ill., sailed his sloop, Blue Bill, to victory in the fourth race of the series today to take an apparently safe lead in the competi- tion for the Great Lakes Star Class yachting championship. Bradley piloted his craft over the 10-mile windward-leeward course on Lake Michigan in one hour, 31 min- utes today, to raise his point total to 44. Twin Star, entry of John T. Pirie III of Chicago, finished second in 1:31:27, with another Chicago sloop, E. E. Raymond's Dolphin, third in 1:31:35. Ibis of St. Joseph, Mich., sailed by Phil Upston, fell to seventh place in today's race, but remained in second place in the standing with 37 points, to 36 for Twin Star. Blue Bill could finish as far back as sixth in the final race tomorrow and still win the title, U. S. Refuses Demands Of W arring States Restrictig Evacuation Of Americans ClzechisAsh Working To Maki k If Germany Is o Behind Scenes e 'Rhineland' lation. Prohibits Goods Shipment r It would prohibit the shipment in interstate commerce of goods madef by children under 16 years of age and, in the case of hazardous industries,t under 18. Merchandise made by chil=1 dren would have to be labeled plain-t ly.1 The first prohibition is similar to1 that which Congress enacted in 1916 and the Supreme Court killed in 1918. President Roosevelt said re- cently that it would require a reversal of the old Supreme Court ruling to become effective. The second is a new approach,i based on a recent decision of the1 High Tribunal that Congress hasf power to ban shipment of prison- made goods into a state in violation ofz its laws.i Pass Tax Bill{ In its rush toward adjournment, the Senate not only approved Child Labor legislation but as quickly2 passed the Administration's bill to close tax law loopholes. The measure, which some authori- ties said would save the government $100,000,000 a year, already had re- ceived House approval. It is designed to check the use of personal holding companies, foreign corporations, mul- tiple trusts and' incorporation of per- sonal talents to avoid income tax li- ability. Tigers Defeat Chicago, 12-4, In Short Game LANSING, Aug. 19.-)-A sim- plified rural electrification program, to be presented to the special session of the Legislature next winter, took form today. Administration leaders indicated they had decided to discard a con- troversial feature of the program that was discarded by the regular session, hoping this would strengthen their hand. Authoritative sources said the pro- gram, minus the discarded section which would have sought to encour- age the formation of new co-opera- tives, would provide: 1. Public utilities commission jur- isdiction over the extension of power lines by private and cooperative rural electrification projects. 2. Permission for two or more municipalities to combine in organ- izing power districts to provide cheap electricity to residents. 3. Authority for municipalities to issue self-liquidating bonds against municipal utilities properties, but not against other resources of the muni- cipalities. It was understood the simplified program had the endorsement of the Public Utilities Commission. Joseph M. Donnelly, commission member, said the program would be built about ;a simply worded bill that would com- pel utilities to obtain from the com- niission a certificate of public con- venience and necessity before ex- tending any rural power line. This, he said, would permit the commission to determine whether a private or co-operative enterprise should receive the sanction when there was a contest, and would end "cut-throat competition for territory between them at the expense of the farmers." Portugal Hints At 'Third Party' Acts LONDON, Aug. 19-(P)-Portugal's one-sided severance of diplomatic re- ations with Czechoslovakia became a red flag tonight for the suspicions of all Europe. Czechs, in Praha, their capital, asked if Germany is working behind he scenes to make their strategic, hemmed-in country a "future Rhine- and" in a coming struggle between he two great political camps, Fas- cism and Communism. Authoritarian Portugal blamed a "third party"- presumably Soviet Russia-for influencing the Czechs to fail to fill an order for machine guns, official reason for the breach. Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy sympa- thized. Within 24 hours, however, other capitals of Europe had supplanted Portugal's expressed motive for the break with strong ideas on deeper causes-militant interest in the Span- ish war and the often-expressed theory that Germany is preparing to attack Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakian authorities ex- plained their armament industry had peen unable to supply Portugal with new Bren machine guns because it had been swamped with Czechoslo- vakian and other previously-placed orders. Then Praha's suspicions turned to Germany's and Portugal's friendship for Insurgent Generalis- simo Francisco Franco in Spain. Bluntly, Praha questioned Lisbon motives for this "unprecedentedhac- tion" and sought to discover whether Germany inspired the moveras a pre- lude to pouncing on the Czechs. Sources in Praha intimated the move might be a German effort to weaken Czechoslovakian resistance to aggression; then, by consolidating a central Europe Fascist bloc, bring about a showdown on the Spanish situation. English Women Tennis Champs Seek First Win NEW YORK, Aug. 19.-(P)-Seek- ing their first victory in seven years, the English women's Wightman Cup tennis team will take the court at Forest Hills tomorrow afternoon with a line-up that is 50 per cent veteran, 50 per cent recruit and 100 per cent hopeful. The six English girls-Kay Stam- mers, Ruth Mary Hardwick and Mar- got Lumb, in singles; Freda James, Miss Stammers' doubles partner, and Evelyn Dearman and Joan Ingram, the No. 3 doubles pair-are hopeful of ending not only the series of Unit- ed States triumphs in this particular rivalry, but also the 1936 series o American cup victories that already f have absorbed the Ryder, Davis and America's trophies. Ranged against the six invader will be an all-veteran array of fou Americans. Heading the defendin contingent will be National Champior Alice Marble, with Helen Hull Jacobs Mrs. Sarah Palfrey Fabyan and Mrs Marjorie Gladman Van Ryn as hei partners. The two-day program of five single,, and two doubles matches, decided or a basis of four victories, will ope tomorrow with two singles and on doubles. Nation Sweats With SHigh Temperature (By The Associated Press) Enervating heat plagued the natioi on both sides of the Mason-Dixon lin syesterday. Temperatures rose into the 80's an, 90's in the East, South and much c the Midwest. High humidity double discomfort. Planters in the important section of the Corn Belt were cheered by re viving rains but in most of the Sout farmers scanned the skies in a vai s search for signs of showers neede Wilkins Starts Hunt For Lost Soviet Airmen, Flying Boat, Bought Soviet Government, EquippedHurriedly By Is NEW YORK, Aug. 19.-(P)-A 17-k ton flying boat bearing Sir Hubertf Wilkins, veteran Arctic explorer,1 headed into the Northwest today on1 the first leg of an expedition to search for six Russian transpolar fliers who have been missing sinceI Friday. Sir Hubert alighted at Toronto Harbor at 2:30 p.m. (EST). Port Arthur, Ont.. was the next scheduled stop before the long flight into the Arctic wastes where the Russians were believed to have been forced down. The flying boat, the Guba, was purchased by the Soviet government yesterday and equipped hurriedly at North Beach airport for the rescue attempt. It has a cruising range of approximately 4,000 miles and can remain aloft 20 hours without refuel- ing.' Late this afternoon, after refuel- ling on the Toronto waterfront, thel plane took off for Port Arthur. + Sir Hubert, comnissioned by the+ Soviet Embassy in Washington to di- rect the expedition, was accompanied by Herbert Hollick-Kenyon, Canadian flier who will serve as chief pilot, Russell Rogers, the ship's regular; pilot, Raymond Booth, radio opera- tor, and Gerald Brown, mechanic. The expedition planned to set up its operating base at the mouth of the Coppermine River, on the edge of the Arctic Ocean. Sir Hubert said he would continue the search for several months if necessary in an effort to find Sigismund Levaneffsky, "the Soviet Lindbergh," and his five companions on a projected flight from Moscow to California. More Slot Machines Are Ordered Out LANSING, Aug. 19.-(P)-Attorney General Raymond W. Starr today or- dered a cleanup of slot machines in Benton Harbor and St. Joseph. He demanded that Berrien County Pros- ecutor Edward A. Westin notify him not later than Sept. 1 that this had been done. The Attorney General disclosed his order as a House of Representatives investigating committee announced it would invite Governor Murphy to as- sist its inquiry into the gambling racket in Michigan. The committee f stood in recess until Tuesday. Its chairman, Rep. Carl F. DeLano, Re- publican, Kalamazoo, said the invita- tion to the Governor to appear and s personally lend his advice would not r be issued until later in the week. i I , 1 Students Asked To Donate Text Books Students of the Summer Session are once more urged to donate text books to the text book lending library to be put in operation next semester by the faculty committee in charge. Books of all kinds used in regularI University courses will be accepted for the library, according to Prof. Erich A. Walter of the English department, chairman of the committee. The li- brary is designed to aid students in financial straits who would otherwise have difficulty in obtaining neces- sary text books. The project was begun last spring,. at which time a number of contribu- tions were made by students of the regular University classes. Education Work Called Success By Prof. Davis Many Projects, Keep School Summer Sessi Courses Busy In on Termed "hugely successful in its t summer program" by its secretarye Prof. Calvin O. Davis, the School of w Education has completed eight weeks a of important conrerences, special course and conventions.d The first special meeting conducted b by the education school this summer i was the League College, a two-weekV conferenec held each year in a univer-r sity near the convention city of the annual meeting of the National Edu- cation Association. It was held here from July 5 untilf July 16, and offered a course entitledc "Current Studies of Selected Prob- lems of Professional Organizations."v There were four major topics of the course: "Taxation and Schoolf Support," "New Demands on thee School," "Teacher Welfare," andf 'The Teaching Profession" and "Se-t lected Economic Developments." C In the middle of July, the second annual conference on Remedial( Reading was held. At this meetingt several prominent men in the fieldk of reading were brought here fort this meeting, and several facultyt members participated in it. The eighth annual summer educa- tion conference on "The Implications for Michigan Education of the Work of the Educational Policies Commis- sion" was held here July 19, 20 and 21. Among those taking part in this were Dean James B. Edmonson of the education school, Eugene B. El- liott, state superintendent of public instruction, and Dean Clarence S. Yoakum of the graduate school. A lecture course, taking up modern educational trends and open to the general public, was also offered by the school during the summer. These lectures were held at 4 p.m. every day. t in the auditorium of the University high school. town the Whangpoo river today by tender to the liner President Hoover. Japanese warships bombarded Poo- ung, across the river from the In- ernational Settlement, as the third evacuation of Americans swung under way. Aircraft zoomed and dived in attack against Chinese positions. It was estimated 1,000 women, chil- dren and men in all would be taken by tender to the President Hoover at ts anchorage at Woosung, where the Whangpoo empties into the Yangtze river. Two Missions Bombed This stand was taken as the United Sattes Consulate General was in- formed of the bombing of two Ameri- can missionary properties in the Shanghai region by Japanese planes, without los sof American life. Meanwhile Japanese m a r i n e s fought tenaciously in Shanghai's eastern district early today to keep from being swept into the Whangpoo by the most impressive Chinese drive of the undeclared war. The Japanese lines, with masses of Chinese infantry surging against them, swayed back toward the river, but held against the Chinese attempt to thrust a disastrous breach through them. The evacuation of American women and children from Shanghai, (Continued on Page 4) Driver Is Killed As Own Truck Runs Over Him Thrown From Cab As Car Strikes Stone In Road; He DiesImmediately 4 Consulate And Navy Insist Japanese And Chinese Keep Whangpoo Free Vaccine Is Rushed To Combat Cholera SHANGHAI, Aug. 19.-P)-United States authorities tonight firmly re- jected Japanese and Chinese measures which would impede the evacuation of Americans from Shanghai. The Japanese Navy was notified in decisive terms that the United States would not agree to restrictions on traffic on the Whangpoo River, Shanghai's highway to the sea. Of- ficials said similar rejection would be given a Chinese notification consid- ered tantamount to demanding with- drawal of foreign naval ships from Shanghai harbor. American Consular and Naval of- ficers made it clear they would de- mand that the Whangpoo, avenue by which nearly 1,000 Americans already have fled Shanghai be kept entirely open. Refugees Flee Fleeing from embattled Shanghai as Japanese warplanes dived over- head, American refugees streamed Public Administration Institute Offers Novel Type Of Training 7 t i 1 CHICAGO, Aug. 19.-(Special to The Daily)-Behind the hitting of Rudy York, the Detroit Tigers today captured a 12-4 victory over the White Sox, in a game called in the seventh inning because of rain. York drove home eight runs with, his 20th and 21st home runs, and stood a good chance of breaking or tying the major league record for, runs batted in during a single game, when rain started to fall. It started to rain when the Sox had two out in the seventh, and had the inning been completed the score would have been 15-4 instead of 12-4. However, the game reverted back to the end of the sixth, and the Tigers lost three runs they had made in the first half of the seventh, and York didn't receive credit for the two runs he had batted home in that inning. Big Intramural Sports Program Proves Popular Summer Feature With 12 organized sports and a host of other sponsored activities, the Summer Session Intramural pro- gram, under the direction of Ran- dolph Webster, has been the most successful in its history. Complete records of the summer's competitions were released by Mr. Webster yesterday, and at the same time announcement was made that the Intramural building will close at 6 p.m. today until the class of 1941 floods into Ann Arbor for Orienta- tion week. Running from July 12 to Aug. 11, swimming proved one of the most record of the toasted. Six individ- uals took part in this elimination which ran from July 21 to Aug. 10. Badminton, the sport introduced to Michigan fans only a few years ago, had eight entrants, the best of whom proved to be Robert LeAnderson. Runner-up was L. W. Olson in this series of play-offs which took place between July 19 and Aug. 4. Fifty-six students entered the ten- nis singles competition, which will be finished today. The tennis run-off began July 22, proving the most pop- ular of summer sports. In the tennis doubles 38 entrants By STAN SWINTON thority are rapidly realizing that an For that group of students who intelligent man can make a stab at mix an interest in their fellow men administrative work, but not as good with the usual desire for good pay, a stab as a trained one, he says. the University offers training for an Functionally, the training course important new field-that of effi- provides for its men to enter public cient, planned municipal and state administration. Generally the pre- administration, according to Prof. velant social attitude, which may be GeorgeC. S. Benson of the political an outgrowth of the depression, science department and the Institute makes college graduates more likely of Public and Social Administra- to enter public life, Professor Benson tions. believes. "I'm no prophet but I haven't One present student, for example, much doubt that most of the better upon graduation could step into an governed municipalities and states important job in a family business will have well-trained men in gen- but instead, because he is interested eral administrative positions within in police administration, is going to a few years," Professor Benson said work up in his chosen field from the and pointed out that already such lowly post of patrolman. men fill the professional posts of Work of the type the Institute does 1 1. n aa ,f k - -, oi irhi-an Tn 18 82 In a freak accident yesterday after- noon Fred W. Wagner, 57 years old, of Ann Arbor, was killed instantly when his own truck ran over him. Wagner, a truck driver who lived at 319 S. 7th St., was driving along the Platt Road a half mile north of US-112, hauling gravel, when his truck hit a large stone in the road and swerved sharply. The driver was thrown from the cab of the truck and under his own vehicle, dying when the leftsrear wheel passed over him and crushed him. The truck continued on to side- swipe an oncoming truckndriven by Clifford M. Butler, 112 Kosh Ave., Ann Arbor, before it stopped. Butler was not injured. The accident, which occurred at 5:30 p.m., was handled by the Ypsi- lanti detachment of the state police. Dr. Bradley M. Harrih, Ypsilanti coroner who was summoned to the scene of the crash, pronounced Wag- ner dead and ordered his body taken to the Stevens and Bush Funeral nme in Vnsilanti