THE MICHIGAN DAILY TIMU Leaders In Farm Relief Confer On Plans -Associated Press Photo Three midwesteners who are leaders in new mi-venients for farm relief are shown discussing plans in Washington. Left to right: George N. Peek of MoLinc, Ill., administrator-designate of the new farm bill; Gov. Floyd B. Olson of Minnesota; and Secretary of Agriculture Henry AN a-iace of Iowa. Issuance Of Scrip Is No Cure' For Economic ills, Says Gault, credit on the part of the institution which issues it. If for any reason such scrip, issued by any community, can no longer be exchanged, the only way the people have of getting rid of it is to sell it to speculators who anticipate early redemption of paper. The only other alternative is to hold the scrip until it is redeemed, but then funds are frozen altogether. If employees who are payed in scrip cannot pass it at its face value and have to sell it at a discount, it represents a reduction in wages, Pro- fessor Gault said. Tennessee Also In Path Of Storm; Many isjuredl As Houses Collapse (By The Associated ?Press) Tornadoes along the border of Tennessee and Kentucky Tuesday night brought reports of death to 67 persons and injuries to scores of other persons. Kentucky at noon had reports of 33 dead and Tennessee 28. They were: In Kentucky: Monroe County, 11; Adair County, 2; Russell County, 20.I In Tennessee: Overton County, 32;, Wilson County, 2. j Beaty Swamps, in Overton County, near Livingston, Tenn., was hard hit with 26 known dead. Twelve bodies had been brought from that section to Livingston among them being those of Mr. and Mrs. Una Cole and their seven children. The report of the Russell County dead came to the Kentucky Advocate at Danville through the Red Cross. C. C. Gore, a Livingston attorney, said that 26 perished at the little community of Beaty Swamps, about 10 miles from Livingston, and that heavy loss of life was reported from Bethsaida on the Overton-Pickett county line. The storm hit first at Tompkins- ville, where between six and ten persons were killed and a score in- jured. One death occurred at Co- lumbia, Ky. Near Lebanon, in mid- dle Tennessee, two Negroes lost their lives in a heavy windstorm. Returning from a trip to Beaty Swamps, Gore described the country as being "swept so clean that it looks like the Argonne Forest." "Houses were blown away and trees blown down and piled in heaps," he continued. "The country oads are so muddy that cars and ambulances can't run and the main highways are blocked by trees. Many families are injured so seriously that they can't be removed from their wrecked houses." M ath Story Doubted; Police Look At Facts Grand Jury Will Convene To Hear Evidence; Look For Accessory In Crime HARWICHPORT, Mass., May 10.- (A)--Chief of Police Emulous E. Hall of Harwich--dissatisfied with the de- tails of Margaret "Peggy" McMath's kidnaping as re-enacted by Kenneth Buck-today pursued his own inves- tigation. Meanwhile, Barnstable county of- ficials arranged for the convening of a special session of the grand jury May 15 to hear evidence in the case. Hall said he discovered Peggy had not remained in that section of the low, dirty, Bank street cellar pointed out by Kenneth during his re-enact- ment of the kidnaping Sunday. He said he had secured from Kenneth a more "complete confession which differed in some respects from the one Buck originally made to state of- ficials." And the chief hinted at seeking a warant for a "man who might be connected with the plot as an acces- sory after the fact." Hall Tuesday visited the back street where the child stayed for two nights after her kidnaping May 2. He searched the cellar thoroughly and later announced his dissatisfac- tion with Kenneth's re-enactment of the abduction. The order to convene a special ses- sion of the grand jury was issued by Judge Edward F. Hanify of Fall. River and was announced by District Attorney William C. Crossley from his office in that city. Crossley said Kenneth and Cyril Buck, Harwichport brothers now held in $100,000 each in Barnstable county jail, would be brought to trial "as promptly as the law allows" in the event the grand jury returns indict- ments. Kenneth, charged with kidnapping and extortion, and, Cyril, charged only with extortion, both pleaded not guilty when arraigned Monday. Plans for defense of the brothers were uncertain. Attorney James F. Kiernan, after a conference at the jail, said he would not take the case of Kenneth but that he might defend Cyril "if statements he made were corroborated by Neil C. Mc- Math, father of Peggy." U. S. A proves Grreat Britain' s Tarffroposal LONDON, May 10.-(JP)-A note from the United States Government was received today giving qualified assent to the world tariff truce pro- posal as revised by the British gov- ernment. N. E. A. Meet Change Fouoht By Edmonson Education Dean Against Boycott Of Chicago, Century Of Progress Dean J. B. Edmonson of the School of Education yesterday de- clared himself as emphatically op- posed to the movement among teachers to change the place of meeting of the National Education Association from Chicago to some other city. This movement "to boycott Chi- .ago and the World's Fair," the dean said, is to protest against the unfair discrimination practiced against the Chicago teachers, by denying them pay for almost a year. He voiced his sympathy for the eachers of Chicago in "their unfor- tunate position," but stated that "it would be an unwise thing to treat the Centuryof Progress as a Chicago affair only, because it is national and international in its scope. And there should be no antagonism aroused against it. The exposition is a great educational project." Dean Edmonson said he is in hearty accord with the sentiment expressed in a recent editorial in the New York Times, whi~ch stated: "The National Education Associa- tion should find Chicago with its Exposition of the Century of Prog- ress the best place for meeting this year, not only because Chicago can- not let her teachers go unpaid with the world as her guests, but be- cause the extraordinary contribution of teachers in these lean years may be there most fitly celebrated." Classes To Be Excused For Spring_ Games All freshmen and sophomores will be excused from their classes after 3 p. in. tomorrow and all Saturday morning in order that they may par- ticipate in the tug of war at 4 p. m, tomorrow and the spring games at 10 a. m. Saturday, it was announced yesterday by Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assistant to President Ruthven. The permission was granted by the deans of the undergraduate colleges. Freshmen will report at 3:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Union, where Union committeemen and Student Council representatives -will check all fra- ternity men to determine the winner of the first lap of the Greene's cup race for best proportional atten- dance at the tug of war and the games. Fraternity men must take their identification cards. The sophomores will meet at the same time at! Waterman Gymna- sium. Fraternity members must take their identification cards. More Than 2,000 Throng Campus To Hear Band Concert A crowd estimated at more than 2,000 filled the plaza and steps of the plaza and steps of the General Library, the Diagonal Walk, and the campus surrounding the bandstand last night to hear the Varsity Band inaugurate its May series of Wednes- day night outdoor concerts. Prof. Nicholas D. Falcone and a group of four student directors pre- sented a varied program comprising the works of Wagner, Bizet, Sibelius, and others. Because of the opening concert of the May Festival which occurs next Wednesday night there will be no band concert that night. Bandstand concerts are scheduled, however, for May 24 and 31. The band will also play for Lantern Night tomorrow night, for Swingout Tuesday, for a military review May 18 at South Ferry Field, and in the annual Me- morial Day parade. State S.C.A.'s To Open Convention A special three-day conference for State Student Christian Association officials will be opened tomorrow at Camp Ohiyesa, the Y.M.C.A. camp near Clyde. Among the prominent men who will attend this conference are Dean Thomas Graham of Oberlin College, Edward B. Shultz, regional secretary of the Y.M.C.A., central field, Dr. George Sleighten of the staff of the Ford Hospital, Detroit, who will speak as a representative of the Ox- ford movement in religion, and Rev, Frederick B. Fisher of Ann Arbor. Students from Ann Arbor who will attend are Jule Ayers, '33, president of the local S.C.A. and chairrhan of the State Student Conference, Lyle Passmore, '33, secretary of the local S.C.A., Sherwood Messner, '34, Wil- liam Knight, '36, Gilbert Anderson, '36, James Bauchat, '35, John Turn- bull, '36, Theodore Schultz, '35, and Gordon Stow, '35. POUJ'NA.IN PENS Parker, Sheaffer, Yfatexnw, Conklin, etc., $1.00 and up. A large and choice assorane t 314 S- State St., Ana. Arbor. Japs Gaining On Chinese In Winning Drive Yungping Occupied After 10 Hours Of Fighting; Battle Near Great Wall TOKIO, May 10.-IP)--Japanese dispatches from the North China front today said that the Japanese Army had established control at the Lawn River, the western border of the area below the Great Wall where hostilities have raged the last few days. The important city of Yungping was occupied after 10 hours of fight- ing, according to a dispatch of the Rengo (Japanese) News Agency. Yungping is on the left bank of the Lawn about 25 miles south of the Great Wall and only 105 miles north- east of Tientsin, which is the center of an international area. Aahatma Gandhi Weak After Three Days' Fast PIONA, India, May 10.-(P)-The Mahatma Gandhi began the third day of his scheduled three weeks fast today under care of a physician. Fears for his life were increased as he admitted suffering severe hun- ger pains. Dr. Margaret Spiegel, a German Jewess, broke her counterfast today. She started it in an effort to force Gandhi to give up his fast, declaring he would violate his religion if he let her die. DINE, DANCE and BEER to READE PIERCE AND HIS ORCHESTRA PULLEN'S CAFE 216 S. Fourth Ave. (Just West of Division St.) THE ALLENE DINNERS ---- LUNCHES LEADING BRANDS OF BEER SERVED IN THE DINING ROOM AND IN THE TAPROOM Beginning Sale at 6 P. M. Tonight Get Your BOTTLED BEER at KOLANDER'S DRUG STORE Main at Madison Phone 9101 ____________ij- - Be Assured of Quality Merchandise and Still Secure Your Economy By Attending fi-- RA- E i )I~iG SA LE In reply to the many inquiries coming into the Summer Session of- fice, Dean Edward H. Kraus stated yesterday that scrip will not be ac- cepted in payment of Summer Ses- sion fees. The Board of Regents considered the matter at its April 28 meeting, Dean Kraus said, and directed "that student fees for the coming Summer Session would not be accepted inj scrip or tax anticipation warrants." Headquarters of Norman H. Davis, American representative, explained the American answer "places no ob- stacles" in the way of acceptance of the revised text by the eight principal nations of the world today or Thurs- day. Further conversations with British officials were necessary, however, and this was provided at a luncheon attended by Mr. Davis, Walter Run- ciman, president of the Board of Trade, and other members of the British government. Mr. Davis was to discuss further procedure in the notification of the other governments concerned. It was believed this would involve con- vening of the organization commit- tee of the world economic confer- ence this afternoon or Thursday for formal approval of the truce text by the eight powers. ~~- [ I- IL i Today as always there is no substitute for Quality and the best is the least expensive in the end. Reductions offered in our SALE on Fine Books and Stationery and a host of other items too nu- merous to mention guarantees true SAVINGS. A COMPLETE SET OF JAMES BRANCH CABELL, including such well-known works as Jurgen, Figures of Earth, Something About Eve, Beyond Life, Etc., will be given away FREE. This Unusual Offer is a limited and numbered edition priced at $180.00. Inquire at either of our stores concerning this FREE OFFER. MICHIGAN DECORATIONS I RICE'S RESTAURANT ! iWlBe I Sale ends Sat., May 20. It will pay you to attend! "At Both Ends Of The Campus" [ f v K i n l m i i 6JR i s 4:), v r r E 1! E II! i I i ® a 0 R I o 9 I