TIHE MICHIACWAN DAILY SATURDAY MAY li O'Brien Orders Renewal Of War On N. Y._Gangs Rackets Must Be Driven Out Of City, Police And Attorneys Are Told Another Man Killed Recent Triple Slaying On Broadway Arouses City Officials To Action NEW YORK, May 26. - (P) - Racket bosses grown so bold that they send their killers forth to do battle under Broadway's bright lights stirred New York to a new drive on gangs today. "Stiffened spines" was Mayor John P. O'Brien's prescription for a social malady that is killing scores and draining millions from New Yorkers' pocketbooks every year. Calling in the police commissioner and the five district attorneys in the city, he demanded more backbone in enforcing the law. "Racketeering in all its devious ways must be driven out," he said, "and racketeers either expelled or sent to Jail." Another Man Slain Even as he spoke, racketeers were riding another foe to death. Unlike Wednesday night's battle on Broad- way, when two women and one man fell before "bullets big enough to kill an elephant," the latest killing oc- curred in the byways of Brooklyn. John Friscia, linked by police with the rich slot-machine racket, was done to death in an automobile, and flung into the street. When passers- by found his bullet-torn body, one hand still clutched an arm-strap ripped from the tonneau of an au- tomobile. He was described as a pal of George Kennedy, shot to death Tuesday night with Kitty O'Brien, a showgirl, in a Long Island apart- ment. Strife in the slot-machine racket was blamed for his shooting, too, and detectives surmisedFriscia died because he knew who com- mitted the murders. Three Women Victims Kitty O'Brien was one of the three women who have fallen victims to gang fights in three days. The other two were wounded Wednesday night when two carloads of hoodlums bat- tled each other in a racing skirmish down Broadway. Stray bullets hit them as they walked along the side- walk. Detectives are proceeding on the theory that fight was another epi- sode in the enmity between Dutch Schultz, fugitive beer boss from the Bronx, and Waxey Gordon, who ruled the outlaw beer trade over much of New Jersey until Federal men caught him recently on a charge of dodging income taxes on a millionaire's wealth. Hospitals are still on the watch for two occupants of one of the cars, which crashed against a fence after the fight. The men, trailing blood, escaped in a taxi, and it is believed they will apply for medical aid for their wounds. Detectives from Elizabeth, N. J., came here to investigate a belief the Broadway shooting was connected with the killing at an Elizabeth hotel of Waxey Gordon's lieutenants, Max Hassel and Max Greenberg. Petting, Jazz Banned By Youths' Congress CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., May 26. -(P-Petting, cosmetics, jazz, and hitch-hiking have been banned by the Young Peoples Congress of the Seventh Day Adventist Church in session at Collegedale near here. The congress voted petting was to be shunned except by those betrothed and young people in their "teens" were characterized as unfit for en- gagement or marriage. Hitch-hiking was declared un-Christian and jazz music to have a demoralizing influ- ence. National Guardsmen Called TO Rouf Strikers Delaware Will Vote On Repeal Question Today Nevada Also To Decide In State-Wide Election Of Delegates To Meeting WILMINGTON, Del., May 26.-(P) -Tiny Delaware adds its voice to- morrow to the national chorus on the theme of Prohibition repeal. Voters in the state's 222 precincts will select 17 delegates-at-large to' the convention that will meet June 24 at Dover, the state capital. Observers said the vote in Wil- mington, which has about half of the state's population of 225,000.1 probably will swing the result in fa-' vor of the wet delegates. Wilmington is the only place in Delaware now where the sale of 3.2 is legal, due to passage of emergency legislation at the recent session of the legislature. Other political sub- divisions will decide by local option June 6 whether they will permit the sale of the brew. Delaware, with the exception of Wilmington, went dry by local option, in 1917. Wilmington remained a hot- bed of wet sentiment. RENO, Nev., May 26.-(P)-Ne- vada, so-called "wide open" state, which ten years ago dropped its own brief experiment with Prohibition, will take its first step tomorrow on the question of repeal of the Eigh- teenth Amendment. At precinct mass meetings, dele- gates will be elected to county con- ventions set for June 10. The county. conventions in turn will elect dele- gates to a state convention called for Sept. 5 to ratify, or reject, the Congressional resolution proposing repeal of the Prohibition amendment. Pennsylvania News Gives Job-Hunting Hints To Graduates Since getting a job in such a ques- tion of vital importance to students who are graduating this year and to ,those who desire summer employ- ment, the Wharton News, published by the University of Pennsylvania, is devoting its June issue to the subject "Opportunities for Employ- ment." Expert advice concerning job .hunting will be included. The price of the issue is 25 cents. W. C. Graham, author of a re- cently-published book, "How to Get a Job During a Depression," will give some practical hints in hunting for work-an important part of his sys- tem which has been successful in over 75 per cent of the cases where it has been tried. Roger Babson, well-known busi- ness writer; Dr. Emmett Welch, of the University of Pennsylvania's in- dustrial research department; Dr. Arthur Morgan, president of Antioch College; William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor; and Edward Filene, of the Filene Store of Boston, are preparing other features. Opportunities offered in such spe- cific fields as aviation, the chemical and electrical industries, public utili- ties, and department and chain stores, will be discussed by leaders in those fields. Opponent Accuses Mitchell's Lawyer NEW YORK, May 26.-(M)-Flar- ing tempers featured Charles E Mitchell's income-tax trial today as it plodded on through a financial maze. Clashes between Federal Attorney George E. Medalie, prosecuting Mitchell on a charge of evading $850,000 income taxes, and Max D. Steuer, defending the former inter- national banker, reached a climax Thursday. Medalie twice accused the defense lawyer of falsehood. Steuer was preparing a defense against the government contention that Mitchell established a tax loss of 758,500 in 1930 by a "sham" sale of 8,500 shares of Anaconda stock to W. D. Thornton, president of the Greene Cananea Copper Co. The government charges Mitchell repurchased the stock later and that Thornton was merely a dummy. PHONE Holland Furnace Co. for your FURNACE and CHIMNEY SPRING CLEANING The Clean, Efficient Way -Associated Press Photo National Guardsmen are shown dispersing strikers at textile mills in Manchester, N. H., where they were called to assist police. The strike outbreaks in the mill area continued, and a short time after the picture was taken rioting broke out anew and scores of civilians and police were injured by flying stones. Civil Conservation Corps Will Carry Out Improvement Work Lake and stream improvement will be carried out from four Civil Con- servation Corps camps in Michigan, using as a basis for their operations plansrsubmitted by Carl L. Hubbs, di- rector of the Institute of Fisheries Research in the Museum of Zoology here. The plans were prepared by the in- stitute and submitted through the Michigan Department of Conserva- tion to Earl W. Tinker, divisional United States forester in charge of the work of the C. C. C. in Wiscon- sin, Minnesota, and Michigan. Two of the Michigan camps are lo- cated in the upper peninsula. They are that in the Escanaba River region, and the Mackinac State Park near Garnet. Hardwood State Forest near Wolverine and Higgins State Park near Grayling are the two camps in the lower peninsula where work for the betterment of fishing conditions will be carried on. Crews of 10 or 15 Civil Conserva- tion Corps men will be used in the work and will probably be under the direction of trained ichthyologists. The work will consist of building bar- riers in the river to cause pools, of fixing covers and shelter devices of various types so that the fish condi- tions in streams may be improved, according to the institute's plan. The barriers and deflectors used in this work are made of logs and gal- vanized wire and constructed inex- pensively. It is then possible for the maxi- mum amount of money spent on the project to be turned over to the labor used, according to the plan. Detroit Police Hunt For Youthful Gang DETROIT, May 26.-(P)-Detroit police today intensified their roundup of members of the youthful "screw driver gang," following the death of Patrolman Barney Fox, 26, from wounds inflicted during a gun duel a week ago in which Nick Jeftazek, 17, was slain. Eugene Les, 17, is held on a break- ing and entering charge. Authorities said he admitted numerous petty thefts. 100 ENGRAVED CARDS and PLATE $2.25 - Any Style - DAVIS & OHLINGER >109-111 East Washington St. Phone 8132 second Floor The number, size, and attractive- ness of the sheltered pools limits the capacity of streams for adult fish, itI is stated in the institute's outline, and for this reason the work on stream improvement will be largely devoted to constructing devices for creating pools. Ornithologist Here To Study Bird Collections Dr. Harry C. Oberholser, chief bio- logist of the United States Bureau of Biological Survey is in Ann Arbor for two or three days to study the bird collections in the Museum of Zoology, it was announced yesterday. Dr. Oberholser, who has been with the Biological Survey for over 40 years, is a distinguished ornithologist and author of many treatises on the subject. Spcial Sunday Supper CHICKEN AND T-BONE STEAKS Beer by the Glass lOc -- By the Bottle $15c RICE'S RESTAURANT 120 West Liberty (Just Across Main St.) I . } TEDISON COMPN THE DETROIT GENERAL OFFICES 2000 SECOND AVENUE DETROIT, MICHIGAN May 22, 1933 TO THE CUSTOMERS OF THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY 1 letters addressed to our . ghth of a series ofweekly 1e townships in the sou This istheei 5g villagean 500,000 customers in 29 cies, 58chig ai te souh"' eastern corner of the State of Michigan:isirodncdfru There are power houses in which electric en d at Connors Cree ub steam power, at four different places: at Deiray d outh onPort Huron: Detroit: at MarysVille on thebStl r River, towTren o othrason and on the Trenton Channelof . Theset arie interconnct nb.y laid under-s named is the largest of the out in the ountry' n caebyaeneighboron. lines on high steel towerst ihpower o ant can help ouls ground in the cities, eh O o hside ero directly from the power houses to your hseThe electric current does nitching stations and substations wherethe houe onecios.There are 164 evemstr ou ra omd to an intermediatepresr highpressure current is received and transformed twhichtere of 4800 volts, to be distributed to the transformerss w ehave one that yo. of 480 Voit, to b i d ood tthing in busyness. ead-.."h Too many rules are not ag b i . W hadnetT me Sclose to being observed as if it were holywrit. as it soun -s. Te pretty M No Fail. That is not always as s ifmpAdt ound S i Service Must Nat dFail." and snow make it a difiorris. We must keep storm and lightning and sleetan snwmk itadfcutjb Adatso stom ndlihtin a ithm)are not our only -ar.we must have enoug God (as our legal friends call them) ar n u on woter how sudden and the lans i coditon. We must keep our lines in rep airt ems aeeog tepats in condition. d frcret omb ed o generators to meet unforeseen demands for curretor nwe must everrhwsdead it takes two years to build and install a generatto e ms t y erbeeandyor te uaexpet e mti the unexpected turns out to be creadty and te the unexpected. Sometimes rs. In that crse we must well, you can say theorest. hInai sdoothat ceaU themes ndge srvice going smoothlYd again.r the mess and ged by us are thoroughlY 000 horse-Power sem The men employe u e rhl trained to control and reat and test the lines andrmachines. Whether Edison bemann,assig nhe toe is tubn rafv mere fuse plug, the Edsnmaobi.e ose hti turbine or a five amp t know his job and must attend faithfully social, ob. The Detroit Edison Company is an mportn factrn he cacom- .merialandindstral life of Detroit and southe asern Michigan. It eoni0 .mercia and industriand fuy appreciates that it could not ex its unique positionalandthulhysapp ofthe etomityisn oman' interests are identical hwithefthose ofet support of e etro unitonCompany strughyoursuccess.table price-- customers . We cannot succeed except itsg o r u c s . Th r f r , w belevetha wesholdrender adequate electric service at an acceptalesurce abpricve that ieshfar. Byth measurek that we accomplish this, ourow sucs a price that is fair. -yth h one way that we can will be measured.tob because we know i successful business. Arc You Planning a Picnic or Canoe Trip? THE MiCHIGAN LEAGUE Wilt Put Up Your Lunch Delicious Home-Mode Sandwiches Deviled Eggs * Fresh Potato Chips V44. 1%L'rn c< I - , President II I