t i AE MI CH IG AN D A LY
FRIDAY,
16,
V ,DY
ISN RESfENT
a1 Assembly Efects New
ider Under Provisions
of Constitution.- -
SUCCEED ZAMORA
atholicists Engage Police
Church Is Sepiarated
iirnn Government.-
JOBLESS STONE LONDON POLICE
as
ADRID, O~t i5.fP.-pi 's
w presidcnt, Manue Azan, plc'&
tWp the r ins of government to'day
an atmosphere of reiious dis-
tson fraught with danger Lo'r the
ture of the republic.
Under the provis ons of the nervw
ristitution, he wais designated by
e national assembly Wednesday
ght as leader of the radical op-
sition to succeed Niceto Alcala
mora, who resigned with hs
binet in protest against anti-
urch legislation,. He reappointed
e former cabinet with only two
.angeBs.
President A an ; 1o: the As o-
ted Press ihi _. "7i republic is
movable. We ue a:; st rong as if
r fundamcn i s missin con sists
fabricating a grea , strong, pros-
rous republic with peace and jus-
e for .. The govrnment %s1
publican but the republic is or
SSaniards."
XDemmstratioiis Follow.
The change in aut.hority was ac-
xnpanied by vigorous demonstra-
ns against the church and by
reats of revolt against the gov-
fnient, Bands of Communists and
ti-clericals ranged. through the
'eets, shoufing violenCe to C th-
cism andl the Jesuits. Police en-
ged in running fight.s with tihem.
dozen or more were badly beatern
d a score were arrested.
The government received hun-
eds of expressions of protest over
e constitutional articles separat-
th&e church arnd state and sub-
:ting some religious orders to dis-
ution.
Some opposed the measures as
> harsh and others as too lenient.
znors of revolution drifted down
>m the strong Catholic provinces
Basque and .Navarre.
Casares Quiroga, former minister
marine, was advanced to the
nistry of the interior to take the
sce of Miguel Maura, resigned,
d Jose Giral was named tb the
sated post. Senor Maura promised
led the Catholic groups in d-
ndffg revision of the religious
fcle inthe constitution.
A Victory for Socialists.
Neither as a Catholic nor a
itician could I approve the con-
tition which attack'ed religion,"
said.
1he resignation of Alcgla Zamora
s interpretcd as a defeat for the
ht faction of the assernbly;
ich had favored a republic sini-
to the United States and France
d as a triumph for the left' wing,
ich leain toward Socialist con-
itions of government, property
enor Agana is 50 years old, a
~ver and aa ndirer of Ankerlcan
This picture shows a group of men hurling stones at police during
a recent unemployed demonstratlon in London. Police retaliated by
drawing their batons
rioters were injured.
and making a massedl charge.
Several of the=
ENTRY IN COUCIL
pposes Inclusion of American
Dekegate in Discussions
on Manchuria.
TOKIO, Oct. 15.-(J)-The Japa-
nesc foreign office today instructed I
its delegation in Geneva to use eve-
ry effort to see that the proposal
for including an American repre-
sentative in the League of Nations
council during discussion of the
Sino-Japanese trouble be dropped.
The proposal caused more or less
commotion at the foreign ministry,
which lost no time in sending in-
structions to its Geneva represent-
atives.
The foreign office took the view
that, under the circumstances, it
should make Japan's attitude clear
at the earliest possible moment,
officials feeling that the Japanese
public would not tolerate "America
and the league working together
in the Manchurian tangle, which
is purely an affair between China
anl Japan."
The spokesman for the foreign
office said:.
"There is all the difference in the
world in America as an outsider
keeping itseli informned as to the'
league's ctiv~itiescompared with
its participation in the council's°
sittings,"'
In connection with the foreign
office's contention that public opin-;
ion would no, approve of America
taking an active role at Geneva,
the spokesman emphasized that it
was "most assuredly not due to any
unfrien dliness on the part of. Jap-
an. but more as a matter of prin-
ciple."
The spokesman asserted that two
Wa'shington memorandums (pre-
sunwahly. notes urging peace and
propoig, confinement of troop ac-
tivities in Manchuria to the re-
quirements of international law)
had been withheld from the Japa-
nese public on the ground that ti\J
nfighu stir up anti-American feel-
ing.
The spokesman referred to simi-
lar instancessin which he said Jap-
anese opinion was easily inflamed
when it was felt that outsiders were
interferring in this country's af-
fairs.
GOU]LD EXPLAINS DEFERRED IRUSHlNG
REGULATION T'GPUZZLED FRESIfMEN
Rushees May /lt; re All Houses fraternity may issue as many invi-
to Wh 'ich They ° are A sked, tations as it desires."
A fraternity may engage orches-
He Says. tras for the open houses, Gould
stated, if the members of the or-
uFreshmen found themselvessin achestra are all members of the fra-.
quandry yesterday as the bids for tern i. Th:is is covered by article1
fraternity open pouses began to three, section one of the rushing
roll in. rules.
The phone in the office of the I "Entertainment of freshmen by
Inter-fraternity council was kept Ifraternities during open house per-
humming most of the day by anx- iods, rushing week, and days set
ious freshmen asking if they could aside during the first semester,
go to more than one open house in shall be entirely within the houses'
a day if they could go to open shall entail only moderate expen-
houses for which they did not have diture, and only active and alumni
invitations. members of the fraternity, pledges,
Fraternities were also in many and visiting freshmen may be pres- I
cases, at a loss to understand how ent."
a freshman could accept several
invitations for the same night. Armed Police Used
They also wanted to know if they
could secure orchestras and enter- by Gove rno L ng
tainers for the nights on which .yG
they would hold open house. oStion
Howard. Gould, '32, secretary
treasurer, of the Inter-fraternity ----(
council, answered most of the ques- BATON ROUGE, La., Oct. l5.-('P)
tions. Freshmen, he said, could go --With a flourish of arms and the
to as many open houses as they citation of precedents, :Fluey P. Long
wished providing that they were held the capitol against the siege
invited to them. They are not re- of two other claimants to his job
quired, he said, to stay at any of governor today.
hoAuselonger than th ey desire. Meanwhile, Louisiana's executive
According to rule two of the bi- M n 1ic 11;i t ,; xctv
laws, he said, "A freshman may cx- regime became a complicated affair
cept invitations from diffcrent of governor's, lieu tenant-governors
houses for the same dn y antsll and po lics.
not be requ(tired L to s taylor thtan I t 1 r ~; uti 1;l ~ ih
he desires, at a particular house. A .ga s armed state high-
----- _ - Iway police alout the entrances to
the sta t e apito , in t ioffice of
LoveI to Gie Lunch thle secret'ry of' t.te and at the
for R. 0. T. C. Group executive man.on td prevent Licut.
-- -oV. Paul N. Cyr fromi' entering to
Col. A. H. Lovell, assistant dean of press his claim t& the executive.
the engineering school wil iv. a chIair.
luncheon to the mnembers of the Cyr, for years a political enemy
military affairs committee next of Long charged the governor's
Tuesday at the Union. Colonel recent elect i ir t1 ' the United States
Lovell is chairman of th2 commit- senate .vacated the stat1 office.
tee. I Long 1; either1 gomiior; or he is;
,: e mi ae iator," Cyr declared, "but he is
Dean JbesepotBursley, rmit. Wil- ol. both senator, and governor't
liamn J Hbbs head of t e geology Tuesday, Cyr voluntarily took the
departmHent oeaw on leave of ab- governors oath before a deputy
departentnow. Bon, lea of a- clerk at Shreveport, informed Long
senc)-Prof. A. B ak, hoad of thle by letter that he was the governor
hisntoryndepartment. nowlt on av now and ordered Long to surrender
of absence, Prof. EBlytheDr Fson,k and "divest yourself of the appear-
of the law school, Dr. Frederick'A.,ance of chief executive of Louisi-
DEMIIMJg RALLY
Former Governor, Mayor Walk.
er Open Noisy Demonstration
at Tammany Hall.
NEW YORK, Oct. 15.-(P)-Tam-
many braves are on the warpath
again.
Spurred by the oratory of for-
mer Gov.. Alfred E. Smith - the
"happy warrior"-and by Mayor
James J. Walker, 4,000 Manhattan
Democrats crowded the TammanY'
wigwam Wednesday night in a
n o1 Sy, demonstrative campaign
pow-wow.
The objectives set for Manhat-
tan Democracy were two-fold:
Election or re-election of Tam
many office-seekers and vindica-
tion from the criticism that has
grown frong the Seabury investiga-
tion into city offices.
Former Gov. Smith, who was
hailed as "our next president,"
went into the qualification of sev-
.eral candidates running for office,
and warned that this was not an
"off-year" election even tihoug~h no
presidenthi 1 candidte to be
chosen. Hd didnot criticize the
Seabury investigators, nor did he
mention national politics.
District Attorney Thomas C. T.
Crain, elderly, gr.y-haired prose-
cutor, recently absolved of charges
of inefficiency in office, was chair-
man of the meeting. He hit. at
the city investigation by .the Hof-
stadter committee as "aspersions
upon the character of our city gov-
ernment that must be answered."
The city investigation he called
the work of "men unable to make
headway in public life and are
venting their spleen on those who
can."
Mayor Walker painted Tammany
as a great humanitarian organiza-
tion, which "will see to it this win-
ter that not one man of necessity
will be begging on the streets for
something to eat or a place to
sleep."
E ecutive Clemency Refused by
Governor for Man Who
Prevented Bi-eak.
ChICAGO, Oct. 15.-(/P)-Barring I
a last-minute reprieve, Frank Bell
will die i the electric chair at the
county jail early Friday morning
despite the plea of the jail's war-
den, David lTM neypenney, for clem.-
Cncy. 'our other men, convicted of
murder, are scheduled to be exe- I
cuted at the same time,
Moneypenny pleaded for Bell's
life before the state board of par-
dons and paroles but Bell was
denied executive clemency by Gov.
L;uis L. Emerson Wednesday fol-
lov~i g the board's recommendation
that there be no interference with1
the execution. The board also re-
fused clemency for Charles Rocco
and J'ohn Popesque, who were con-
victed of the murder of Courtney
R. Merrill, a south Chicago banker.
The warden argued that Bell had
saved his life by tipping authorities
of an attempted jail break planned
by William Lenhart, since executed
for 'the slaying of a restaurant
owner.
Richard Sullivan, convicted with
Bell for the killing of Christ Patras,
a restaurant man, did not seek to
escape the death penalty. The fifth
man scheduled to die is Frank Jor-
dan, who slew two Chicago police-
men last April while fleeing from
private detectives who sought tot
arrest him for a bank robbery at
Kewanee, Ill.
A net increase of 85 percent was
shown by customs collections in
New Orleans for August, as com-
pared with the same month in 1930.
M CHIGA
Family of Nine Live
for M th s i ae
The rocky, musty cave, deep ip
the West Virginia hills, where a,
widow and her five small chidren
and three "roomers" had made
their home for months, stood de-
serted today, while the authtxrities
sought "real" homes for the little
ones, and aid for the mother.
Meanwhile, bright-eyed, c'urly-.
headed Jesse James Hinkle, one
year old, and. Alice, three; Albert
six; Alma, eight, and Ulah, ten,
munched warm food and wore new
clothes, in the care of probation
officers.
Mrs. Hinkle doesn't know what
she'd have done had it not been
for the fact that she found three
unemployed men to board ands
"room" with her. They couldn't pay'
her much rent, of course, but with;
what little they gave her she man-
aged to buy some food. to go along
with the berries and roots they:
found in the mountains.
W. T. Farley, McDowell county
probation officer, was trampling
through the hills when he came
upon the cave. Smoke was rolling.
from the hole in the{hill. Going- up
to the entrance he found the
woman cooking on a battered stove.
Germany's biggest spring, at:
Rhumesprung, pours forth about'
100,000,000 gallons of water a day.
A 'European corn borer" wasstill.
alive after being sealed for a year
in an airtight jar at Springfield,
Horse vehicles and horses caused
50 accidental deaths in Wisconsin°
last year, compared to 18 for air-'
planes.
Colluer , hiead 41 the department 04 ana."
surgery, and the members of the n.-
military department. Pres. Alexan-
der G. Ruthven is expected to be
present at the luncheon. i I
U CTERIR
,
1
.
1
-.
AFTER TH E DANCE
for
Toasted Sandwich4s
Fountain Specialties
BETSY ROSS SHOP
13-15 Nickels Arcade
tILKA an4 ICE C. EAM
SPECIAL BRICK
VANILL A AND ENGLISH TOFFEE
PUNCHES-FANCY MOLDS
We Deliver
Dial 5931 j j'
Phone 23181
l
' I'l
,i
or 15 Days Only-Star g Today
._._ _T _._-- .r i
crt- r
i
,F
i
CONRAD NAGEL
OROTHY MACKAILL
SHE Starting
b~ Saura
'4
Sow Prs. 11
si
o Prs
o
4 4
O ' nce tricked, twiceu
~waxy:..d ust she
;pay a second time
with tears for suwr.
:rendering hei
Wc arc greatly overstocked on Fall Footwear ~--Fall buying has been very slow, so we are forced to slash
prices until one-half of our stock is turned into cash. A tinely sale just when you need Fall Footwear--
PRICES ON MEN'S SHOES
PRICES ON LADIES' SHOES
r,
z aCd' '"+e,
n koSt is Ke
tcC ,.
1
!
P
r
L
' ON THE STAGE
K AR L FREED
~The Clown Prince of Mjisic"
100 Prs. New $1Q.Q0 Shoes, cut to. .. . . . .. .$7.90
3 Lots o1f $10.00 Shoes, cut to .. .. . ... .. .. . $7.45,
150 Pr . New Fall $9.0 Shoes. $7.45 and $6.90
7 Lots New Fall $8.50 Shoes ... . $6.9Q and $6.45
100 Prs. $6.00, $7.00 &): $8.00 Shoes $4.90 and $5.90
125 Prs. of Fine New $10.00 Pumps or Oxfords $7.85
200 Prs. New $8.50, $9.00 Pumps and Oxfords $7.45
150 Prs. of $8.00 Pumps and Oxfords, now. .5
100 Prs. of $7.50 Pumps and Oxfords, now $5.85
Cia s"."oo~a $6.00, $700 and sasa
I,
tLET'S DO THINGS".
Boy Friends Comedy
«... T; .II. ,
A CHA RLES IROERS
PROa~z( TTONa
SEE THE NEW FLORSHEIM SHOES AT THE NEW R P1)1 J e CPE PR I
:
,
II
i
ii .
t