/ P #-u mmier SUBSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY 1~Apf Iit MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VIII, No. 14 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1927 PRICE FIVE CENTS / FORT MADE TO FIND, LER 0F OHIBGINS IIRISH FREE STATE NINE ARRESTED ON SUSPICION IN DUBLIN FOR COMPLICITY OR ACTUAL MURDER ENTIRE STATE MOURNS No Light On Mtive Of Crine, Jury Returns Verdict Of Wilful Assault (By Associated Press) DUBLIN, July 11.-While the Irish Free State moi rns the death of Kevin O'Higgins, the government is making every effort to find and punish his as- sassins. Civic guides made nine ar- rests in, Dublin today of men suspect- ed of complicity or of the actual mur- der. They will be arragned in the police court tomorrow. No light, however, has been thrown on the motive for the crime. The Re- publican leaders "have publicly repu- diated responsibility for it. On the other hand, ,fears that the assassina- tion of the vice-president of the coun- cil might have a serious aftermath in the way of disturbances have happily not been fulfilled in Dublin, and Ire- land generally remains calm. On all sides expressions of horror at the crime and sorrow over the loss of a great 'statesman . and lover of his country are heard. Professor John McNeill was the principal witness at the inquest to-I day. His testimony was r purely formal description of the tragedy as he witnessed it. The medical testi- mony proved that anyone of the many body 'wounds, was sufficient to cause death, and Professor lVIcNeilI said he realized the moment he approached the stricken minister that the wounds were mortal. The jury returned a verdict of wil- ful murder and adder a rider condemn- inrg in the strongest terms the cruel crime and trusting that the murder- eis would be brought to justice. Cabinet Convenes The' Free State cabinet was called into seskion immediately to decide on the necessary steps in what is looked upon as a serious situation, for the sla'in official was regarded as a bul- vark of the Free State cause. He had only returned to Dublin last Friday from a League of Nations conference at Geneva. He had conducted a vigo- rous country-wide campaign in behalf of the government candidates in the recent parliamentary elections. FOUR OF EVERY TEN STUDENTS HOLD DEGREES I Holders of degrees enrolled in the Summer ession numbers 1,547 accord- ing to a report given through the of- fice of Dean Edward H. Kraus, head Summer session number 1,547 accord- words this is 41 per cent of the total number registered for summer work. This report shows an increase over last year of 2 per cent. In the 1926 Summer session there were 1,288 or 39 per cent of the total number of students who held degrees. This per- centage has been increasing hteadily from 21 per cent in 1921. Two of the students hold four de- gress, thirteen hold three, 227 hold two and the remaining 1,305 hold one each. This makes a total of 1,855 degrees held by students in the Sum- mer session.' The majority of the total number of degrees is held by students in the graduate school, necessarily, 1,217 be- ing in this school. School of Educa- tion have a total of 172, which is three less than last year, medical school 157, literary school 157 and on down to the School of Business Ad- ministration which has 22. r Concerning the different degrees held 1,154 are bachelor of arts, 287 bachelor of science, 171 master of arts, 54 master, of science, 8 doctor of phi- losophy and a great many have less than ten holders. DANCING CLASS TO MEET TODAY The class in Social dancing for pen and women will meet this evening from 7 to 8 o'clock, in the Barbour gymnasium. The fee is $1.50 for six ROCKFORD PLAYER S SCORE AGAIN IN JOVIAL LINE OF "CR ADLE SNATCHERS" A Review, by Jack Davis 'BBY(NSTAL11N REAR OF AMERICAN AT BRITISH OPEN TILT Raise the eternal triangle to the third 'power, make three of the party college boys with college lines, plaster! the whole well with a broadside of sunny and shady wisecracke-and there you have "Cradle Snatchers," in. which the Rockford Players set a crowd of sides to rocking in Sarah, Caswell Angell hall last night.I The play, as the advance publicityl promised, concern three disappointedl wives who reverse the old wheeze "youth will be served" to read, "youth will serve;" three fraternity lads who serve as decoys; and three superan- nuated but frisky husbands who go out shooting all night and come back with-chickens. It is a lot of fun, this play; but not written for production before children who, as Brunetiere says of Balzac's stuff (or was it Brunetiere -or Balzac?) eat their bread in slices small. The dialogue is decidedly racy: a fusillade of very fast cracks kept the aduience roaring, and-there were a few stray ones which zipped over most of the heads present. (That one, for example, about Henry being "21 next January; my mother was June bride;" where Miss Kearns introduces the neat business of counting rapidly necking parties, for example, within the compass of one act: one off-stage, the protagonists staggering in with (to put it conservatively) an unkempt ap- pearance; and one immediately fol- lowing, run off in the most approved manner, with davenport and ukelele and hyper-effervescent highballs-not Ito mention three sensitive husbands 1 who enter most unpropitiously. Overlooking the ridiculous rough- ness of Jose Vallejo in the garden scene (off-stage), and a quaint ref- erence to "the frat house," and the fact that Joe College gets $25 a piint for his blood (instead of a quart- and that only about twice a year)-I think the situations and dialogue can' be vouched for as fairly good Ameri- can collegian. But that doesn't mat- ter-it's funny. Because of the nature of the dia- logue, there are parts in "Cradle Snatchers" where the most mediocre acting would get a hand; but the players rose admirably with their, lines. There are other places, in- deed, where there is grave danger of a drop if the acting is not ingenious and well directed: and these are car- ried off well. Of the whole company1 it must be said, however, that requi- JONES RETURNS CARD OF FIRST QUALIFYING ROUND 76 IN BAFFLED BY WET GREENS Bill Mehlhorn's 73 Equales Par For New Course, Three Strokes Ahead Of Champion (By Associated Press) {T. ANDREWS, Scotland, July 11.-j Bobby Jones, failing to play quite up to the brilliant golf of his practicel rounds, returned a card of 76 today for his first qualifying round of the British Open Golf Championship in his campaign to regain the open crown which he won so dramatically last1 year. Bill Mehlhorn, another American who started early, had a round of 73. Both cards were well within the limit estimated for qualifiers. Mehlhorn's was considered partic- larly good, as it was made over the so-called new course which most golf- PLENIARY SESSION OF NAVAL PARLEY WILL BEDELAYEDIL (By Associated Press) , GNEj;scaePrs)POPULARITY AS PHASE GENEVA, July 11.-The delegates to the Tri-partite naval conference had a day for private consideration of the OFWORLD LITERATURE intricate problem confronting them, for the pleniary 'session, open to the BOOKS RETAIN POULARITY BE. public, which it was intended to call, CAUSE THEY DIVERT FRO IM was postponed, in tribute to the mem- TRUE LIFE ory of Kevin O'Higgins of the Irish Free State. Thus the time for its final determi- QUOTES FROM EMERSON nation of the host important problem i Literature Lives When Containing confronting the delegation, that re- Love Of Humanity And Force lations to cruisers has been extended. eOf Actual Existence W. C. Bridgeman, first lord of the British admiralty, made it clear to the "What is excellent, as God lives, is Associated Press correspondent to- 1 night that any agreement at Geneva permanent," quoted Professor Thomas to succeed must, in his opinion, be E. Rankin, of the Rhetoric depart- based primarily on an accord to limit: ment, using these lines from Emer- drastically the number of 10,000-ton son as the text for his lecture on cruisers. He explained that if the "Permanency and Popularity in Lite- United State and Great Britain, as rature," which was delivered yester- between themselves, could agree on day afternoon in the Natural Science the number, and Great Britain was auditorium. already exceeding that number, the .A book is popular," continued Pro- British admiralty would cease build- fessor Rankin, "because it satisfies ing, in order to permit the Amgerican the reader's desire to escape from navy to catch up. actual things. A book is permanent because it forces contact with life. NIAGA A [A LS T IP jExcllency must set us mentally free." Professor Rankin cited a story told by William Beebe of how in Dutch Guinana he came upon a crevice in a log wherein a mist of moving crane flies could be seen. These flies were found to be in constant motion for Prof. Mather Details Features Whichl Impressed Group; )IodN 0f. !. more than 1,000 hours and probabiXi continued so for an indefinite period. Falls Noted "This story might be compared to the 47 ON THIRDdEXCURSION aeic discussions along the sub- 47 f VNTHR EX1UR 10I\ject. of my lecture," stated the pro- fessor. According to Professor Kirtley F. fessork Mather, of the geology department the ftessor a i hcoalncluded that after all it was the love of humanity Niagara excursion, of which he was which a book bore that determined the conductor, was a "howling suc- whether or not that book would live; cess." Forty-seven students of the and he then ompleted Emerson Summer session left here Friday and quotation: returned yesterday, taking part in the "Hearts are dust, heart's loves will re- affair. i main - - i Y t on her fingers,) site smoothness was lacking here and ers consider even more difficult than And then, there are situations. Two there-gestures tended to become the championship layout itself over+ wooden, and the awkwardness in- which Jones played. Mehlhorn's 73 cident to silent intervals of a charac- equalled par for the new course. His O Rter on the stage was not always over- card follows: NEmIDEA.GIOutEt .N........ 4 5 5 3 2 4 4 4 3-35 ! It seems to me that what the Rock- In..........5 4 4 3 4 5 4 4 5-38-73 ford' Palyers need most of all is an effort to work out of themselves, or the young Atlantan. The birdies sim- rather to change themselves and their Palma Of Secret Service Says Ford buiness with the varying parts to'eptye}would t coni and he played the Retracted Statement Without which they are assigned. It is notice- missed more without a single one. He Outside Influence aIe from wcek to week that Miss for 3's that than half a dozen putts ________________for____s__that would have helped him Loomis puts her hand to her cheek in draw level with the exacting par I STOPS ATTACKS ON JEWS 1 such a way, Kiss Horine raises her standard for ,which he was playing. eyebrows and her voice in a particu- of these putts were short, the (By Associated Press) , lar modulation at }a particular time, onE of the eleventh being about three NEW YORK, July 11.-Henry Ford's Mr: Henderson elevates his eyebrows Ieet short and the others ranging from retraction of attacks on the Jews in with vigor and regularity, Miss eight to 20. Bobby, however, plugged his Dearborn Independent grew indi- Hughes tosses her head, and so on.: away and even without any particular rectly f'om published "inaccuracies" These are all good pieces of business, ' pay of brilliance kept his card bwith the United State butit would be well to vary them . m.u ntintoo high. His partner, having to do ~~more. Paul Faust seems to sin the , i.A htob fDrhseot Secrets Service department, Joseph A. least in this matter, for he makes a shone Jones on the trip out, turning Palmahead of the field force of the visible endeavor to change his man- in a 3(, but could do no better than secret service in New York, said to- ner definitely from role to role. ,5 on the homeward journey, for a day. Bob Henderson came out of the in- ;1. Mr. Palma, in a statement reviewing genue class last night as Jose Vallejo, The Atlantan took his par fours at! his connection with events leading to the Brooklyn-born and college-bred the third and fourth holes, the latter the retraction, said he took up with ,Spainsh osteopath. He and Paul Faust lFig well earned with a single/putt Harry Bennett, chief of the Ford sec- and Franz Rothier were convincing a, a difficult down-hill angle after his ret service, certain inaccuracies and decoys; Misses Loomis, Kearns, and second shot over-shot the green. He asked where he got the information.-( Horine were excellent wives. (Amy dropped another stroke to par at the He was told that Bennett's department is a dear in grey hair), Samuel Bon- bug fifth hole where he was bunkered had nothing to do with it, the organi- nell, Charles Edgecombe, and Rob-] and took a 6. He covered the trip out zation of the Independent having its ert Wetzel, the husbands, splutter and in 38, two' above par. own information. wave their arms in the air no end; His card follows: This leads, said Mr. Palma, to a Evelyn Olson, Gladys Dunn, and Dor- Out ........4 5 4 4 6 4 4 3 4-38 conference with Mr. Ford, when an othy Letts take parts as flappers. In ..........4 3 4 4 5 4 4 6 4-38-761 ., 1:4....zr, d f,, i n7 v nni tnlr to r~ in I editor was called in and told to print nothing until the paper had full proof in its possession. Mr. Palma said this gave an oppor- tunity. to bring up the question of articles about the Jews in the Inde- pendent when Mr. Ford said that he was really surprised at some of the statements that had been made in the' Independent. Mr. Palma quoted the motor manufacturer as saying he was "for the Jews" and "the Jew is es- sential." ''he suggestion from either Mr. Palma or Mr. Bennett, Palma's state-; anent said, that the attacks be stopped met prompt acquiescence and wheels were set in motion. ACCOMMODATIONSj ARE INCREASED' Several important changes are be- ing made in Helen Newberry Resi- dence. Two residences on Maynard St., the Stoughton and Parmelee houses have been leased by the dor- mitory as annexes for the overflow. Each of these ,houses will occom- modate 14 girls each. The girls will be under the direct supervision of. Helen Newberry, and they will board at the dormitory. The chaperones for these annexes have not yet been an-l nounced. Another change is the enlargement of the dining room. -The north porch of Helen Newberry is to be enclosed and added to the dining room in or-. der to accommodate the extra girls from the annexes. The dormitory and the two annexes will constitute the new Newberry "family." The annexes will be ready for occupancy in September. English Entry For Transatlatic Flight From England To New York And Return' They arrived at Niagara Saturda Theyingartri atniagaran Saturakday Heart's love will meet them again." morning after a night on the lake and__________ var ous poi ts of interest in and iO around Niagara. were visited. Among TOMORROW IS DA the many places that were inspected OF FORDSON TRI under the leadership of special guides were the Shredded Wheat factory, and Tickets for tomorrow's excursiont the Carborundum works. Special rates the River Rouge plant of the Fo were secured for passage on the areo-' Motor company, directed by Mr. Ca railway and it was announced that ton Wells of the Rhetoric departmen over half the party took the trip. The must be gotten at the Summer sessi entire group rode on the famous office, Room 8, University hall, by "Maid of the Mist" to the Horseshoe o'clock tonight. The round-trip fa falls, and all but three made the trip 1 by bus is $1.00. Busses will leave fr through the "Cave of the Winds." All Angell hall, State street, at 1: in all Professor Mather stated, "the o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Thw group were good sports." who wish to drive their one cars m The sight that impressed and fisci- follow the busses or meet the par nated the group as a whole, was the at office number two of the Ri model Niagara Falls, Professor Ma- Rouge (Fordson) factory. ther said. The model is an exact re- The various units to be visited w production of the Falls, built on a scale be in operation, according to inform of one to 100 feet. Use is being made tion received by Mr. Wells, wh: of this minature Niagara to determine will make the visit more interesti the life of the falls and how it will be The River Rouge plant is concern possible to utilize the power more chiefly with the conversion of r I fully and increase the beauty and material. Among the things to life of the great cataract. The model seen here are the blast furnac is so constructed, that it is possible where only a handful of mena to show how the flow of water can be needed to manufacture the large qu regulated to prolong the life and at tities of steel used in the Ford fa the same time increase the efficiency tories, the foundry, where both mo I of the water power of Niagara Falls. ing and the machining of castingsa Professor Mather said That the peo- to be seen, and the glass plant, whe ple who live there are solely depend- the Ford method of casting plate gl ent on the revenue obtained through in an endless unbroken strip is us the power and sight-seeing facilities At the tractor plant the assenbly 1 of the Folls, and they are very much can be seen in operation from beg interested in experiments that geolo- ning to end. The ore docks, co gists and engineers are working on oven, electric furnaces for recaimi to increase the life and beauty of the scrap steel, and other departmen Sspot. will also be visited. The River Rouge factory is one Y- P to rd [l- nt, on 6 are omi 15 ose ay rty ver 'ill ma- ich ing. ned aw be are tac- ld- are ere lass ed. lute in- oke ing ants of BYRD PAYS VISIT TO VER-SUR-MER (By Associated Press) VER-SUR-MER, France, July 11.- Commander Richard E. Byrd and hisl companions, Noville, Acosta and Bal- chen, paid a farewell visit today to the village of Ver-Sur-iMer, wher'e their plane, America, made its first landing in Europe ten days ago, and the entire villege tramped out to wel- come them. Commander Byrd, accompanied by the ever-faithful Balchen, journeyed to the lighthouse, where they were re- ceived by the keeper, Lescaut, part of whose wardrobe had served to clothe at least one of the airmen. The journey was a continual progress of applause and acclamation, Byrd hav-# the largest industrial plants in the United States, larger, for instance, than the famous Krupp works in Oer- I many, said Mr. Wells, and should be interesting to both' those who wish to gain a general view of industry and those interested in particular phases of engineering. OurVeath er 4j -Says h believes it will be fair and wVarmer today. DORNIER-NAPIER "WHALE" FLYING BOAT This huge flying boat which Captain F. T. Courtney, English flying ace, hopes to fly from England to New York and return has been flown by the 'Captain and his wife from Friedrickschafen, German, to Calshot, England- 800 miles. The photo shows flight Lieutenant W. M. Downer and Captain and Mrl. Courtney at Calshot, England. ing to sign more than 200 photos. AI