1 , ~THE MICHIGAN DAILY ---- LES ERPPPWTED JITR plNEW UPHEAVAL Resignations of Mexican Cabinet Accepted by Presidenit Qrtiz Rubio- WILL SUCCEED AMARO President Calls Irrecocj iales New and Major Problem. in Capital. MEXICO CITY, Oct. 15.-(')- Former President Plutarco Elias Calles emerged as a dominant fig- ure in the Mexican government again today folowing the resigna- tion of the cabinet owing to "in- creasing political unrest," President Ortiz Rubio appointed Calle, Mexico's "iron man," to the post 9f minister of war in succes- sion to Gen. Joaquin Amaf'o. Wed- nesday night he accepted the resig- nations of Mipister 4f Interior La- zaro Cardenas, Minister of Agricul- ture Saturnino Cedillo, Minister of Communications Juan Andreu 1- mazan, and Genii Amaro, but re-" fused that of Minister of Finance Montes de Oca. "In recent days," the president said, "there has developed a new and major problem, especially in the capital, organization from.agi- tationu of various irrecnciables in the political camp.1 'Tder such circumstances I felt it my duty to present to the con- sideration of lny collaboraters and political councilors the necessity of finding a solution. Reports Uo-operation. . "As was to le expected I found among my coiaborators the sanest and highest spirit of co-operation, disinterest and isacrifice for the re- alization of this view, in order to leave the chief executive free to continue to reorganize the govern- ment." Gen. Calles pedged his full strength in aiding Iresident Ortiz Rubio to stabilize the government. He said he felt it .was an hour of need for Mexico,.and that he would act in accordauc with his nessage to congress dept. 1,;19$, ip wh~ajric he warnied hat the ,rule: o3 he "man on horsebaekl was over in Mexico. Calles first returned to power in March, 1929, when he accepted temporarily the post 9f minister f war in order to put down the sco- bar ;revolt which threatened the ife of the ortes Gil government. A year ago he asserted his authority in Monterey to prevent a serious political situationi oer a dispute of power. Took .C 9nig 4 of s.. Three months ago lie came out of retirement to become president of the Bank of Mexico and promul- gate the "Calles monetary law" which returned 1l\exico to a silver currency basis and was designed to stabilize the curr_ y The exact nature of the political crisis that caused the resigngtion of the government was not ex- pjained., 'It was considered partly econom- ic but mostly political. It had been rumore d tor days tait action wo.uld soon be necessary to curb the am- bitious plans of various Mexican politicians who were considered to be threatening the stability of the government. It was generally be- lieved that reorganization would steady the situation. Public School Instructors Being Paid in Script Good at Only Few Stores. CHICAGO, Oct. 15.-(/P)--A pro- posal to close Chicago's schools for lack of money is being considered by some of the city's army of 14,000 public school instructors. The proposal was made Wednes- day by Clyde A. Crowley, one of the thousands of Chicago's teach- ers who have not reecived any real money for their services since last spring, due to a tax muddle. In- stead they have been paid until re- cently in scrip, acceptable in ex- change for merchandise at some Chicago stores. Speaking at a southside rmass meeting of about 4,000 teachers,. Crowley, a high school instructor, said it might be well to close the schools to give the pedagogues a chance to seek other lines of en- deavor to keep the wolf from the door. He added that rorthside teachers also had the plan under consideration. Cheers greeted the proposal, but no action was taken. It is to be connsidered a in ate another meet- T ROUBLE ZON E MEIA OITE T EHT ATUNlIlJ Organizations Devoted to Fight x/ of Tuberculosis Will Hold Annual Conference. , STwo Michigan organizations de- CN sE cHAN, , ' CHvoted to the fight against tuber- S0UTHERN RY 'UdN \culosis will meet at the Union to- day for their annual combined . Y r 5 . conference. A RT u R .-, ',The Trudeau society, composed of I, & .\doctors who specialize in tubercu- -r-' . ;losis, will hold a special session in the morningat the University h9- pital and will join the Michian, Tuberculosis association at noon in Map of Manchuria, scene of the Union for luncheon. C h i n e s e-J a p a n e s e difficulty. The society will hold a separate Trouble arose over alleged boming meeting at 1:30 o'clock in the U- by Chinese of a bridge on the Chin- ion. Following a dinner, the Tuber- ese Southern railway. culosis association delegates will be greeted by Dr. B. A. Shepherd, Rehearsal ills Held' Kalamazoo, president. Three addresses will follow the. for Presenting of association's business :meeti ng at 1 o'clock. Dr. D. S. Brachman, of De- Yorktown Surrender trait, wilspl.ak at 1:30 o'clock .on "High Scho;ol Tuberculoin .Studies."'- A. W. Thompson, of the depart- YORKTQWN, Va., Oct. 15.-(IP)- ment of public instruction, will dis- Red coats hold the redoubts,, re- cuss "Co-operation in Health Edu4- inforced by green-clad Hessians. cation" at 1:45 o'ciock; and John Within rusket range flutters the Lee, also of the department, will. fleur-de-lis of France, side by side talk on "After Care and Rehabil- with the blue and buff-clad conti- itation in Michiga," at 2 o'clock. nentals. Yes, and the Virginia mili- io in ragged buckskin shirts. Dean W ard, Rickert tNGLISH SLUMP BLAMED ON WARN The Cities Service Program with Britain Must Balance Trade to Jessica Dragonette, the Cavaliers, Heal Blow Dealt By a piano duo, and Rosario Bourdon's /Great War, orchestra dominates tonight's radio broadcast with its lavish choice of LONDON, Oct. 15.-('P)-Great numbers to be sung and played. Brt, aigbaaedhru- Opera, light opera, sons of not so Britain, 9having balanced.he bud- long ago, and even one popular get, is trying to balance her trade number will all be heard on this and make her exports pay for the presentation of the National Broad- imports. casting company to come through Otherwise England will be eat- WWJ at 8 oclock. ing her capital. I Other programs to come through 1 jf (Eastern Sty I'. - . rETime) ; " Armour program on the air, also over WJR with Joseph Koestner's Bookmakers Testify Ti orchestra, a piano duo as guest art- Was Constant Bettor ists, and an all-star group of vocal- Seldom Won. ists. Waves of Melodies emanate fom WdJReat 10:45 o'clock with CHICAGO, Oct. 15.- SVictor Arden wielding the baton and Tom Brown, tenor, singing the phonse Capone, "public choruses. Castle Farm orchestra spendthrift and alleged inc ends the WJR broadcast at 1 o'clock delinquent, has a new c from Castle Farms. distinction as one of the Columbia presents Cassi worst pickets of race hors ' Clubi pesns asi ~i1E s The b~ig ga'ng commander and Freddie Rich appearing on the costant a d heayy nde WXYZ outlet at 9:45 o'clock on the ies of bookmiakers have test same program. Foremost among the his trial for evading incom personalities to be heard over Co- but he "seldom won." ev. bumhasis Tosmha Sei an. S lumiais ~shaSedel at 10 " _ ,_, _ .,. , . _ _ the stand Wednesday and e (2J + i i Outwardly her troubles date from the war. Just across the rib- bon of sea that makes England an island lie the nation's war dead. Up in the black north country, down in the pit-scarred valleys of Wales, along the low banks of the Clyde are England's other war yic- time-cotton anad coal, steel and ships. These are Britain's heavy indus- tries, at the core of its economic difficulties, and their wounds must be healed before depression leaves England. All were fiourishing before 1014. During the war all bent their ener- gies to its needs. Markets were ne- glected, improvements in equip- ment delayed, trade trends passed by, new technique unstudied. The war ended, British industry turned to resume its cold proud place in the world. Its old place was not there. Collieries found oil and 'water- power had become the source of much of the modern world's energy and that reparations in kind were cutting away a big slice of the trade that once was theirs. Shipyards learned that the world had built ships so feverishly during the war that it had plenty, that' other nations had developed their own yards, and that warships,. which once made shipbuilding hum, were no longer stylish.., Steel foundi other nations with lower production costs, faster sales organizations, advan.ced designs,, and a curtailed market. the WEAF chain of the N.B.C. thrugh WWJ are "The Eskimo Night Club" with Harry Reser's or- chestra at 9 o'clock, Pond's dance program with Leo Reisman's or- chestra furnishing the music at 9 30 o'clock, and the R KO Theatre of the Air at 10:30 o'clock which however, will not come through WGY and WTAM. Vincent Lopez at 11:30 o'clock and Lew Conrad and his orchestra at 12:30 o'clock will also be heard through the De- troit station WWJ. S ?eL }' r s 1 L From the York menacing cannon threaten the heights from the fleet at anchor. The tiny village of York- town is again beseiged, but no shot and shell will tear through its state- ly homes or break its ancient trees. This was the scene presented to-I day as troops went through the{ final rehearsal of the stirring inci- dents preceding the surrender of Lord Cornwallis, which will be pre- sented before the thousands attend- mg the sesquicentennial observance of the Battle of Yorktown, Oct. 16- 19. Far into the night workmen la- bored to complete the setting for the celebration for which commis- sions of the state and nation have planned for more than a year, to Addre~ss eeting Dean Marcus L. Ward and Dr. U. G. Rickert, School of Dentistry, will both deliver papers at a dental con- vention to be held in Memphis, Tenn., October 17-23. Dr. Rickejrt will deliver an ori- ginal paper, "Metastatic Leaslons in Relation to Primary Foci," before the American Dental Association on Tuesday, October 20. Dean Ward will discuss a paper written by E. W. Patton, Birming-' ham, entitled: "Predental.and Den- tal Educational Objectives," at the meeting of the National Association of Dental Examiners, Saturday, October 17. I Second only to the Cities Service broadcast is Paul Whiteman and his. Paint Men to. comrae throu~gh th e WJZ branch of NC over station WJR at 10 o'clock. \illy Jones and Ernite Hare, the Interwoven Pair, begin their radio monkeyshines at 9 o'clock through the WJZ outlet, WJR. Nine-thirty o'clock finds the fOr Princeton Game Plans for a Michigan smoker in New York City preceding the Prince- ton game were announced Wednes- day night by T, Clawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni association. 'The Michigan alumni and sup- porters in New York will meet at 7 o'clock on the night of Friday, October 30 at Suesskind's New York Tuirn hall at the corner of 85th street and Lexington avenue. A regular German dinner is being planned for the event and a largeI turn out is expected. a'cIoCks. Talks by football coaches come at 10:30 o'clock to be followed' by the Mills B~rothers. After mid- night, programs from.Columbia are heard from WABC, among those, Ben Bernie at midnight, Connie's Inn orchestra at 1 o'clock and Dave Abrams and lis orchestra at 1:30 o'clock. FA CULTY TO TALK A T A LUMNI MEE T Prominent faculty members of the University of Michigan are to address members of the alumni club of Idearborn on each Monday evening in November acording to a statement yesterday by Wilfred B. Shaw, Director of Alumni Relations, The meetings are fo be held in the Dearborn country club. Among the speakers are Prof. A. Franklin Shull who will speak on, "A New Conception of Evolution and Heredity," W. C. Rufus who will speak on, "What We See in the Sky," Prof. Kenneth T. Rowe, whose subject will be "Modern American Drama," Prof. Arthur S. Aiton, whose subject will be, "A Lost Cen- tury in American History' and Prof. W. J. Gores who will speak on, "Modern Interior Decoration." The tangelo, grown in Florida, is a cross between a tangerine and an orange.< ed his losses at more than $2( for four years. Not one of said Capone made a net proJ a race meet.ng. The defendant fairly beam this. eimpyadmittedly at his request. The Capone yers conAend these losses, ,$. in 1924; $47,000 in 195; .$55,Q 1926 and $90,000 in 1927, mu deducted from any income the ernment iay have proved. None of the "bookies" h.d records, some admitted theil ures were not much more Suesses, but all were postivoe o thing-"he lost." One grew. philosophical ant'4paid of the ting gentry as a whole, "they ly always lose." But Capone was no ord loser. He wa a much-sought- customer, th testimony sh one wha was willingly given without security, one who wa required to step out of his headquarters to settle up - bookies all went to him, aid all obeyed his wishes in hap only currency. Even at this late date, the I ies" said, they were glad to res to a summons from " Scarfacf Not Vated at Stadium EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 15.- Al Capone has been invited tc away from Northwestern ur sity football games in the fut ChoraI Union Concerts wr ". ' x n . 4, . . , Are they as good as when tlhe ruffles came down to th~e ankles? OOD?. . . You bet they are! Maybe the girls are even better. Anyhow, cigarettes are a whole lot better. No doubt 1.bout that. I , They used to be made by hand- Now it's machines; no hand but yours ever touches them. They used to be packed in expensive, highfalutin' cardboard boxes- Now the quality is in the cigarettes. The U. S. Revenue Tax used .to be a penny a package of twenty- Now it's six cents a package of twenty. Tobacco used to be dried by air- A/ow Liggett & Myers alone has thirty- frye drying maclines of the latest type, with a daily capacity ofover 2,000,000 pounds-and overfour miles ofware- houses for tobacco storage. john _________ in Song Recital Wed . EVE. Oct. 21I SINGLE TICKETS $1 .00-$1.50-2.0o-$250 SEASON TICKETS (10 Concerts) $6.00-$8.oo-$10.00-12.0o ON SALE AT SCHOOL OF MUSIC BETTER-they're miles better! Everything used in the ,manufacture qf Chesterfield ciga- rettes is the best that money can buy or that Science knows about. CHESTERFIELD TOBACCOS - both Turkish and Domestic - are mild and ripe, the best that money can buy. AND THE wAY Chesterfield tobaccos are blended and cross-blended is like making a new and better-tasting kind of tobacco, with greater smoothness, more mildness and a more pleasing aroma-1-a fragrance and flavor not to be found in any other cigarette. CHESTERFIELD gives you the benefit of all the world knows about the production of better cigarettes. Nobody smokes a better cigarette than Chesterfield. r ,, ; ., , . _.._....._.r: _rs om