THE MICHTCAN DATLY ti...-... U S AND RuSSIA'S CHANGE IN FE ELING C NG I 11N IS LEAGUE WOR Word Is Given by Ambassador Dawes That America Will Not Assist. RUSSIA OPPOSING JAPAN, Scientist Announces News of Sure Cure for Bald Headedness Bald-headed men need no longer be the butt of a lot of humor. In fact bald-headed men need no longer be. The curse of a shiny head is well on the way to becom- ON ORL AFFIR Cache of Dynamite in Subway Lock er Italian Foreign Minister Path of Preliminary Ceremonies. Starts Government Relaxing Stand or Japanese Evacuation in- Manchuria. By P. L Lipsey, Jr. PARIS, Nov. 17.-IP)-Portents of changes in the attitudes of the United States and Russia today threw fresh anxiety over the Leagu of Nations council which is facing the test of its dozen years existence in an effort to restore peace in Manchuria. Reliable indications appeared overnight that the United States was relaxing its firm stand for Jap- anese evacuation of the disputed area and that Russia is beginning to bestir herself against Japanese military activities close to the Si- berian frontier.' The members of the council, without the Chinese and Japanese representatives, met privately at the Quai d'Orsay shortly before noon. The meeting followed private individual conversations of Ambas- sador Charles Dawes and Chairman Briand with the Chinese and Japa- nese spokesmen, Dr. Sze and Am- bassador Yoshizawa. Dawes May Not Aid. The impression gained ground that Ambassador Dawes and the United States government are not inclined to co-operate closely with the league in its efforts to settle the controversy, and a report was received from a high authority that Maxim Litvinoff, Soviet commissar for foreign affairs, has filed a pro- test at Tokio regarding Japanese army movements in the region of the Chinese Eastern railway, which ~in the Russian sphere of influ- ece in Manchuria. This news led to the belief that Russia would not keep her hands off the situation indefinitely if the league and the United States failed to halt the Japanese advance. Gen. Dawes denied himself to qgestioners but the impression was gained at his headquarters that the United States government now re- grets having worked with league Waders so intimately at the last session of the council and believes the more prudent course now is to forg t the request to Japan to ithdraw her troops by a fixed dte. The French press had adopted an attitude frankly favorable to the Japanese and expressed the be- lief that the great powers, except Germany, are beginning to regard Japan'as the defender of the valid- ity of existing treaties and a pro- tection of the status quo. Ma churian Rumor. Intiiations from Manchuria that Russia is showing concern over Japanese moves there reawakened talk of Soviet intervention "to save China from the invader."] Dr. Sze, Chinese spokesman, has given notice that he expects action from the council and will noilonger be satisfied with promises. Chinese sympathizers now suggest that if the Nanking government can't get help from the league and the United States, its next move will be to accept Soviet assistance to de- fend its territorial integrity. 1 Compromise Discussed, In certain quarters it was said that. a so-called compromise plan discussed Monday night amounts1 to an effort by the great powers to1 rebind China to the old treaties under which the great nations en- joyed special privileges of extra- territoriality in Chinese territory. The Chinese position is that treaties were concluded under pres-I sure and are invalid and that so far as the Sino-Japanese "treaty" of 1915 is concerned the position has received United States support. The Chinese are determined reso-, lutely to maintain this position but have said they are willing to arbi- trate the question of the validity of the disputed treaties. This issue touches the question of the validity of the World war peace trbaties and has aroused ap- CHICAGO and Return $700 Good in Coaches Only Going Fridays and Saturdays Returning from Chicago not later than midnight Monday ing obsolete. Dr. Norman Bengston, a young doctor who has experimented in the laboratories of, the University of Illinois recently, has discovered a means to replenish nature's sup- ply of hair. Treating 16 patients, ranging in age from 19 to 60, Dr. Gengston has restored hair to all of them, and a result of these successes, has been mobbed by hundreds of bald students, men and women, who want to have the 'miracle" worked on them. The recreation is done by inject- ing pituitary extract, derived from the posterior lobes of the pituitary glands of sheep, into the scalp. DFPRESS1ON( FAL TO URiT FRE I 1 v WILL CONFER THURSDAY To Commence His Discussions With Hoover After White House Dinner. Discovered in Time NEW YORK, N o v. 17.-(P)- Enough dynamite "to blow up half the town"-cached for a time in a coin-in-the slot locker of a busy downtown subway station-h a s been found by police in time to thwart what they charge was a plot to blow up barges on the Man- hattan waterfront. Five men are under arrest. Po-' lice, said the dynamite had been stolen, carted through the busy city streets and cached against the hour when it was to have been used to destroy barges in a war- fare between rival factions among harbor workers. ADV ISES NATlj IO1 A 19 CPTiu i"'j i:- 'ON WISCONSIN' NE2 S ENDS W-RIT ER'S C MADISOIN, W',Nv 1.-A- though "On, Wisconsin," w e 11l- known football song of the Univer- sity of Wisconsin, has paid to its Milwaukee publishers more than $50,000, its composer, William T. Purdy, whose children are attend- ing the university this year, and its author, Carl Beck, '10, never re- ceived more than $15 in royalties on the song, it was disclosed in a recent interview with Beck. The two men who, according to Beck, at a time when they were so hard pressed that they used post- age stamps to pay for a meal, scraped together $50 in credit back in September, 1909, used the credit to finance the first edition. Beck designed the cover himself and wrote'most of the words, Purdy do- ing the music. The inspiration had been a $100 prize offered by a Saint Paul music house for a new University of Min- nesota song, but when Beck heard the first strains of the new music, his loyalty to the Badger institu- tion, which he was attending, prompted him to convince Purdy to use it for Wisconsin. The first copies were printed and taken by Purdy to Madison on the Will Publish Leaflet on Debate Principles TS BIG FORTUNE; HILDREN TO SCHOOL eve of the Minnesota game in Octo- ber, 1909, when it was presented do the students at a mass meeting by Jack Wilce, fellow Deke of Beck and Purdy. The song immediately took hold, and students sang it over and over. Publication was arranged for with the Milwaukee house on a royalty basis. Later, along about the begin- ning of the war, the publisher, hav- ing been approached by phono- graph and player-piano companies, induced Purdy, who was hard pressed at the time, to part with the copyright for $100. "The publishers of an all-Amer- ican college song book," said Beck, "have tried. for years to include 'On, Wisconsin,' which John Phillip Sousa is said to have called the finest of college march songs. Wis- consin's representation as a univer- 'sity is not for a moment considered by the publishers, who are reported to have demanded a cash payment of $500, five times the amount for which the. ownership was sold 17 years ago." "I believe that the students and alumni should hurl a challenge on the ppblisher. The song has be- come more than a piece of prop- arty. I dedicated it to the univer- sity and the state. The moral re- sponsibilities are no less than the property rights. Has the new legal owner the right to deny Wisconsin PSTHOMIIRE P I Straw Vote to Determine Ba for Social Function of Class. Committee appointments for sophomore literary class and date for the Sophomore Prom w announced last night by Herr Everhardus, president. The Prom will be held Decem 11, at the Union. Charles R. B gess, '34E, is chairman. The following committees h been appointed. Ticket committee; Philip B simmer, '34, Wallace Graham, distribution, and Lester Harri '34, William Giefel, '34, William I Roy, '34E, sales. Advertising committee; Jar Doty, '34E, Robert Moreland, John Boden, '34E, Bernard S( nacke, '34. Floor committee: Robert Ho '34, and Render Morgan, '34. Fa committee: Jane Cissel, '34, Mar Gidings, '34, and Harry McGavi '34. Invitation committee: Mar Littleton, '34; and Decorations co mittee: Georgia Geisman, '34. During this week a straw v will be taken in the sophom ciryss to determine upon the oreh American Agriculture All for Comeback, Report Indicates. Set By J. F. Cox EAST LANSING, Nov. 17.-()- The essential soundness of American agriculture is demonstrated by its strong resistance to the demoral- izing effect of low prices and low yields ove widespreadeareas due to drought. In spite of heavy drafts on the reserves of capital, fertil- ity, and equipment of individual farms, and the sapping effect of long continued low prices and in- crease in credit restriction, agri- culture is in a position to make a rapid comeback in keeping with improvement that may develop in industry and business. - Higher wheat prices have had a widespread effectinchanging the viewpoint of the farmer. Apparent- ly the bottom has been plumbed and instead of the pessimism ac- companying a downward price trend, farmers'and others who de- pend on farm profits are thinking in terms based on our improved price. They are hopeful that beans, potatoes, meat and milk will be af- fected favorably, by the rise in wheat and that these products also have reached the lowest possible. price and will experience an up-. ward-trend during the winter and spring. The determination and confi- dence of Michigan farmers to maintain those agencies that ac- company an effective farm and community program are shown by the fact that 61 out of 65 Michigan counties have continued to support their county agent, home economics and 4-H club work. Strong gains have been made in the co-operative movements affiliated with the Farm bureau. prehension among the French, Pol- ish and little entente diplomats. TOKIO, Nov. 17.--(P)-Gen. Mah Chan-Shan, the Chinese command- er in Manchuria, his submitted a set of counter-proposals to the Japanese general, Honjo, dispatches from Mukden said today, but is standing his ground south of An- ganchi with no indication that he intends to withdraw. Dispatches from Harbin earlier in the day indicated that Gen. Mah had accepted the Japanese demand that he withdraw, but the Mukden report of the counter-proposals said he would fall back only if the Japanese evacuate the Nonni river sector and give guarantees that Gen. Chang Hai-Peng shall not be permitted to use the Taonan-An- ganchi railway. PEBBLES KILLINS GRAVEL COMPANY "W WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.-(P)_ Received with warmth and splen- dor, Italy's foreign minister, Dino Grandi set today upon a path of preliminary ceremonies before for- mally offering President Hoover his country's "contribution to the common work for the common good." So the statesman described the purpose of his 'visit in a first ut- terance upon Washington soil. For tingly, his earliest rendezvous this morning was at the marble shroud of the Unrnown Soldier. Chief thought in Grandi's visit is the preservation of the peace for which the warrior gave his life. Late in reaching the capital Mon- day night, the 36-year-old minister and Signora Grandi were welcomed with the full honors due foreign guests of the nation. A few min- utes later they were presented to President and Mrs. Hoover at the White House. Informal greetings were exchanged in English and the couple hurried off to Secretary' Stimson's home for dinner and a night's rest. Signor Grandi will not discuss world problems with the president until after a formal dinner at the White House Wednesday night. Meanwhile he has defined the gen- eral purpose of his visit in a state- ment to the press and in informal chats by, the fireside at "Woodley," the Stimson home in fashionable northwest 1Washington. He ta1ked after dinner with Sen- ator Borah, and unlike Premier La- val of France, his immediate pre- decessor in that scene, Grandi found himself in fairly close ac- cord with the outspoken chairman of the senate foreign relations com- mittee. The other guests afford- ed them 25 minutes of undisturbed conversation. The Versailles treaty gave them common ground, for both want it revised. National Committee Advocates Standardizating Requirements in State Systems, After nearly two years of re- search, a Federal department of education has been advised by the National Advisory Committee on Education, whose number includes Dean J. B. Edmonson of the Uni- versity School of Education. Although Dean Edmonson, Frank Cody, superintendent of Detroit public schools, and other members of the advisory board voted against the recommendation, it was car- ried, 38-11. Cody and Dean Edmon- son, the only Michigan members of the board, are two of the state's outstanding educational authori- ties. The, department of education, as recommended by the committee, would be headed, by a full-time cabinet member. Tendencies to- ward over-centralization of the de- partment, however, were advised against, and it was stipulated that the department would have no leg- al or financial power "by which it might control the social purposes{ and specific processes of education." Questioned about the difficulty of adjusting school credits in the case of indilriduals that transfer from state to state, Dean Edmonson said that there. was similar difficulty, in some cases, when the individual changed schools within the state of Michigan. Sigma Rho Tau, forensic society fair representation, where gain tra which will be engaged to p of the engineering school is pub- should not be a factor?" at the Prom. lishing a series of leaflets which Ji iJIilliiIililIIIIII[IT111111111111111111III111111!1 IiII1111111111111llht IiI 'IMa4ign~ will be bound together in looseleaf TEACH THEM TO SAVE containers to be used in training of debaters, The series of papers will be writ- ten by various debate coaches in the university and will discuss= t principles of debating and ways of training the speaker. Prof. R. D. Brackett, director of Sigma Rhor Tau is editing the publication. The first of the papers for the booklet will be distributed to the stump speakers society at its regu- #lar meeting Wednesday night. Alpha Na Gives Names of Accepted Try-outs . . . And Here's How- Alpha Nu held, an open forum ENROLL them as members of the Christmas Savings Club, discussion last night in the chapter w loom in Angell Hall, upon Michi- a with iinstructions to save a small sum from their allow- r-n's post-season charity football ance each week. They'll be delighted at the substantial game. amount they find at the end of th e year to buy their 1932 Memerr :tp into the society has Cey been extended to the following: Christms gifts. Eric W. Hall, '35, Robert S. Ward,= '35,' Lawerence G. Clayton, '35, Charles Bronson, '35, Donald E. LwsDeyo, '35, 'Wr'5heaton L. Strom, '35, F raI rs nu 4,' Lewis Kearns, '35, Walter Morrison, Fecs De 35, Wdadhet nL o, '35, 2 SGoddard Leight, 135, James B. Huron at Main Street 330 South State Street Em-,an, '35, Joseph L. Whaitmnan, '35, Nick Anikeof, '34, Doalad Elankety, Me erFd alR s veS tm '34, Bernard E. Konopka, '34, Stuart Member Federal Reserve System G. Bowers, '34, Fred A. Braman, '33, i Gilbert Groehn, '33, Fremont C. ---- Voss, '32, and James H. Curtis, '32. INSANIT Y TREATMENT EXPLAINED TO NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 17.- pressed, generally untidy, had to (A-)-The story of a man aroused in be coaxed to eat and was fearful four minutes from eight months but could give no excuse for tear. stupor by a new insanity treatment He was given sodium amytal and w i t h in three minutes showed was told to the National Academy slight restless movements, in four of Sciences at Yale university to- minutes he was talking distinctly day. E and responded promptly to com- The new insanity treatment is mands, was active and alert. Later the first practical application of a he became drowsy, slept normally' recent Cornell university discovery and awoke refreshed. that mental trouble is due partly His improvement lasted only dur- to certain elements of 'the brain, ing the effects of the drug. But the colloids, becoming either too the treatment revealed that alco- watery or too much like over-thick holism was not his real trouble. syrup. For the watery state sodium He had a dual personality case. amytal is given, and for the coagu- One other alcoholic was treated, lation sodium rhodanate. receiving sodium rhodanate, and Warning was given that the new showed definite improvement. Aj treatment is not a cure-all, al- few of the insane recovered suf- though a real addition to previous ficiently to be paroled home. Oth- methods of treating insanity. ers improved in lesser degress and Results of this new method upon some were scarcely affected. 46 persons in Willard State hospi- Dementia praecos, said Dr. Lang, tal were reported by H. Beckett is improved by sodium amytal; Lang, M.D., and John A. Paterson, and maniac depressive insanity M.D. They tested the discovery an- "definitely improved" by sodium I nounced last spring by Dr. Wilder rhodanate. Split personality cases D. Bancroft of the Cornell chemis- prove to be due to an overwatery try department, who worked the condition. idea out theoretically with aid of A new slant on birth control was a Heckscher foundation grant. furnished by J. S. Nicholas, who The man who "came back" was reported successful experiments in listed as an alcoholic. Dr. Lang said growing rats outsde their normal he had been in stupor, was de- places in the mother's body. Dressmaking ETIYLENM. DICKENS and Designing with Tailoring Individual Features. Hemstitching and Alterations.4 Dial 2-1129 for Appointments 620 East Liberty Dr. Blakeman Lectures Before Student Group Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, Uni- versity' pastor of the. Methodist church met a group of methodist and presbyterian students at Lane hall yesterday and spoke on "The Outlook for American Protestan- tism." A class is to be formed to meet at Lane Hall every Tuesday afternoon, with the goal of "Toward Under- standing in Religion." The mem- bers vill become directly acquaint- sd with all the -various sects in Re- ligion. r These classes will be conducted by University pastors. r _ , ---- /i (Y , 1 ? . .; , r , //1 C. Events d All programs are given in Hill Auditorium u n I e s s otherwise noted. The afternoon concerts Vare g i v e n without admission Scharge. .wwi Berg om * t s Telephone 7112 I .9' Books FrChildren You know that this is National Children's Book Week We shall be happy indeed to have you inspect our two large stocks of BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED CLASSICS AND OTHER ATTRACTIVE JUVENILES- WASSILY BESEKIRSKY, Violin, MABEL ROSS RHEAD, Piano, Nov. 22, 4:15. THE REVELERS, James Melton, ist tenor, Phil Dewey, baritone, Lewis James, 2nd tenor, Wil- d Glenn,dbass, Frank Black, Director and Pianist, Dec. 3, L A U R A LITTLEFIELD, So- prano, December 6, 4:15. THE "MESSIAH" by Handel,I University Choral Union, Uni- versity Symphony Orchestra. Soloists, Earl V. Moore, Con- doctor, December 13, 4:15. DETROIT SYMPHONY OR- CHESTRA, Ossip Gabrilow- itsch, Conductor, Dec. 15, 8:15. II; DON COSSACK RUSSIANi ! CHORUS, Serge Jaroff, Con- ductor, Jan. 13, 8:15. DETROIT SYMPHONY OR- CHESTRA, Dr. Rudolf Siegel, Guest Conductor, Jan. 25, C A FIVE DOLLAR BILL TAKES AWAY A REAL HAT AND PUT TWO TO FOUR DOLLARS IN YOUR POCKET. Another shipment just. received. Previous lots sold completely.. Tinker and Company South State Street at William Street