THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vave Of Unrest tirs Spain As .6 Are Killed xtrenist Organizations Attack Industrial Cities Without Forewarning Domnb French Station utbreaks First Occur In Oviedo When Miners Kill Engineer MADRID, Jan. 9.--(P)-A wave of tremist unrest sweeping through e young republic of Spain left a toll 16 persons killed and a large num- r wounded today, while an unesti- ated number were under arrest. Striking suddenly and without Lrning, the different extremist or- nizations apparently were operat- g under a co-ordinate command. Ze attacks occurred mainly in in- .strial centers of the country rough Sunday and Sunday night. om Oviedo, in the northwest, iere striking mine workers killed an ctrical engineer while he was go- g home, the outbreaks carried rough Sallent, where a civil guard s killed, and on to Lerida and rcelona, with seven killed in each the latter two northeast cities. Sallent is near the textile center Manresa, where the bloody extre- st rebellion occurred in January, 31, just three months before the public wasrproclaimed. Extremist Imprisoned All armed forces were called out cope with the uprisings. Scores extremists and Communists were Inrisoned in various citics. Pblice nted that the monarchists, whose ortive revolution was quelled in A.n- lusia last August, and Communists -re responsible for the outbreaks. It wvas estimated that thirty-five rsons were wounded, including five Possible Winners In Rivalry For Cabinet Posts Plan To Issue. Announcements For Two Years Idea Expected To Save Publication Money For Education School The faculty of the School of Edu-r cation decided, at a meeting yester- day noon in the Union, to issue their new scmester announcements on a two-year basis. Professor C. 0. Davis, secretary of the School of Education, said that this would probably neces- sitate the issue of a supplementary announcement, but that the new plan would save publishing expense. A great deal of the announcement does not change, he explained. It was also decided to reduce the descriptive material pertaining to the courses offered. Notice was given the group of the appointment of Professor Davis by Dean J. B. Edmonson to represent the University at a five-state confer- ence which will be held Jan. 13 at the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. William J. Cooper will speak at the meeting which is to be held for the discussion of possibilities of unifying, teacher certification requirements. The faculty also have decided to give a faculty-senior party which will be held Tuesday, Jan. 17, in the Women's Athletic building. The main purpose of this reception, which is being managed by Dr. Edgar .0. Johnston, sponsor of the senior class, and Frederic Fenske, class president, is to bring about a closer understand-. ing and friendship between the mem- hers of the faculty and the students. Capture Robbers Of Indiana Bank Canada Moves For World- Wide Wheat Parley At Ottawa WINNTPEG, Man., Jan. . Plans are afoot for conducting a world wheat production conference . in Ottawa, Jan. 17. Already premieres of three provin- cial governments, Canada's prairie wheat farmers, and students of the wheat situation here and in the United States have given the sug- gestion unqualified approval. The chief wheat exporting coun- tries will be asked-if the dominion government acts on a suggestion the three premieres made recently-to send representatives to the round-* table discussions, dealing with over- production and low prices. . Argentina, Australia, the United States and Canada would be invited to join the conference. Farmers in western Canada have ! long stressed a belief that increased production of wheat is fallacious in view of present conditions and de- clare that the problem can be dealt with only through co-operative ac- tion by the largest wheat exporting nations. Delegates to annual meetings of three prairie wheat pools two months ago asked the Canadian government to call: such a conference in the belief it would stabilize wheat prices and solve marketing problems. Proponents of the move believe that If the production of wheat can be justified in accordance with needs of importing nations, the world wheat flood could be checked with consequent improvement in world prices. Two Additional French Liners Are Danawred Investigation Under Way Into Mysterious Cause Of Atlantique Fire PARIS. Jan. 9.--(A)-Two more French ocean passenger ships were reported damaged today, one by fire, as preparations were made to dry- dock the burned Atlantique at Cher- bourg. An investigation into the myste- rious fire which broke out on the At- lantique last Wednesday and which took lives of 18 members of its crew already was under way. An inspec- tion awaited drydocking of the ruined 4 ,000-ton liner. Two fires were re- Ported still smoldering, which was ex- pected to delay drydocking until Wuesday. : The 23,000-ton trans-Atlantic liner Urance was damaged Sunday by a Fire a Le Havre, where she had been hocked for the past few months. Firemen and a skeleton crew put it out. Officials said it apparently was (aused by a short circuit. The French passenger ship, Ang- Ior, in the Mediterranean and far east service, was reported held up to- day at Saigon as the result of the breaking of a propellor blade. Mar- J;eilles steamship officials who were }ending new ports to the ship, denied a rumor that the accident was the result of sabotage. Nationalist newspapers have in- ,fisted the burning of the Atlantique was a criminal act and have pointed o other mysterious fires which de- stroyed four French merchant ships n the past four years. Survivors of ff Atlantiaue said the fire spread with unusual speed. The Georges Phillipar, which burned last May off Arabia with a considerable loss of lives, was be- lieved a victim of incendiarism and herfire has remained unexplained. .-Assoiatcd Press Phot ; In the opinion of some of those close to President--elect Roosevelt two Cabinet posts have been definitely allocated, the Treasury portfolio to Senator Glass of Virginia and the Postmaster-Generalship to James A. Farley, chairman of the Democratic National Commit ee. Other cabinet possibilities that have been discussed for various posts include Senator Walsh of Montana for Attorney-General and Governor Dern of Utah, Owen D. Young, and Newton D. Baker for various other positions. involved soldiers and [adrid and in Cara- yndicalists attempted icks. One person was even arrested. There attempts to storm dlice stations in other pital of the province syndicalists attacked acks but were repell- and dispersed crowds riumph in Barcelona. extremists attacked oad station, throwing quickly driven away ated Is Claim e out between the guards at San Au- and in front of the ,Is said the uprising had been for several weeks and that f arms and bombs had been Armed guards were placed police headquarters in Ma- rcelona and -other cities long .ny outbreaks Sunday. Au- said today they believed the it was collapsing. from frustrated attempts to the artillery barracks and Vientos Airdome, where sol- >unded one extremist, Ma- quiet. Reinforcements were the war ministry and offi- ings in strategic points. Shots Kill Six Kentucky Feud HESTER, Ky., Jan. 9.-P')- nen were listed today among ?ersons known to have been recent sporadic outbreaks of in the secluded double creek f Clay county. htest casualties in disorders es attribute to factional dif- among residents of the hill were reported Sunday when Lapps, 25, and Esther Smith, slain by rifle bullets fired velling from nearby hills. was among a group of men with murder in connection ral killings recently. He had used with the others in the >f Willie Wagers and Ford t was disnmissed when wit- led to identify him. y Lipps and Mies Smith were one of Lipps' father-in-law ith with several other per- m bullets fired through the ruck them. None of the as wounded. Engineers To Hear Anderson SpeakOf Trip Detroit Engineer Also To Talk Before Meeting Of A. S. M. E. Students Marshall Anderson, Grad., winner of the Charles T. Maini award for 1932 of the American Society of Me- chanical Engineers, and Mr. A. N. Goddard, president of Goddard and Goddard, Inc., Detroit, and chairman of the Detroit section of the A. S. M. E., will be the principal speakers at the meeting of the student branch which will be held at 8 p. m., Jan. 11, at the Union, according to announce- ment by Prof. R. S. Hawley, of the mechanical engineering department and faculty advisor of the organi;a- tion. Anderson will describe his trip to New York during the Christmas holi- days, during which he was presented with the $150 pie before thean- nual meeting of the A. S. M. E. The title of the winning paper was "Ap- prenticeship and Vocational Train- ing." Anderson was also selected to deliver a message to President Hoover from the officers of the society. Anderson's prize paper gives Michi- gan the distinction of winning the award for two consecutive years. Robert Klise, '31E, won the 1930-31] contest, according to Professor Haw- ley, who characterized the Charles T. Main award as the most important prize in the engineering world for college or university students. Mr..Goodard's subject will be the "Present Status of Engineering." He' is well known in engineering, Profes- sor Hawley said. Instrument Will Measure One Millionth Of An Inch SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 9.-One- millionth of an inch, a unit so small in comparison a human hair would appear the: side of a tree' trunk, is too small for anyone but an engineer to take much notice of.. These latter fellows are very muh interested in their millionths of all inch, however, and are quite excited over the inven- tion of a new instrument which by the use of light waves can measure accurately to that degree. Margaret Mann Given . Leave For Semester Margarct Mann, associate profes- sor of library science, has been granted sabbatical leave for the sec- ond semester of this year. She will make a special study of library science -intruction in European cen- ters, particularly France, Germany, and Southern Europe. , .mn1 Mary Prescott Parsons of McGill University, Montreal, who formerly studied in Paris, will substitute for Miss Mann during her absence. Lack of respect on the part of adults toward their moral and social' obligations was named as the cause of the "lack of conception of duty" which the children of today are ex-i hibitink. The assertion was made by Prof. Stewart A. Courtis, of the School of Education in a radio talk Sunday through the University Broadcasting Service. "When both individuals and na- tions refuse to. pay their debts of honor, when treaties are regarded as mere scraps of paper, when'tdxes' are not collectable," said Professor Cour- tis, "where do children get such ideas of character and social co-operation as they may possess?" "Is not the schoolman right when he claims he is working against greater handicaps than any previous generation, and with less support and Blames Parents For Children 's Lck O C onetion ODuty --oi Census Bureau Reports State Operating Cost Per Capita Outlay More Than Doubled After 11 Years, Summary Shows WASHINGTON, Jan. 10.-U()- How the per capita cost of operating and maintenance of general depart- ments in the state of Michigan more than doubled in the last 11 years is shown in a report made public today by the bureau of the census of the department of Commerce. In a summary of the state com- piled by the bureau, the per capita cost for 1931 is shown to have been $14.98. In 1930 it was $13.80, while in 1918 it was but $7.25., The per capita figures for 1931 are based on an estimated population of 4,901,000. The payments for opera- tion and maintenance of general de- partments hi 1931 totaled $73,417A22, including $27,210,417 apportionments for education to the minor civil divi- sions of the statle. The payments for operation and maintenance cf public service enter- prises in 1931 amounted to $270,425; interest on debt, $4,567,658, and out- lays for permanent improvements, $30,604,222. The total payments, therefore, for operation and main- tenance of general departments and public service enterprises, for inter- est and outlays were $108,858,727. ARSON? ASHLAND, Wis.,-(M)-The after- math of a fire which destroyed the Jerry Meyers home was a banquet of sauerkraut and baked potatoes. Although wheat is the staple crop of Turkey, tobacco is considered the money crop. P 1lee Capture Ohio Phantom In Gun Battle! TOLEDO, 0., Jan. 9.-(P)-South- ern Ohio's "phantom gangster," sought four years by police and en-a emy gangsters, was in the hands of{ the law today, with bullet wounds in his jaw, cheek and arm. The "phantom," whose name is Robert Zwick, 33, of Cincinnati, was captured here Sunday in a gun battle with police, after he had wounded a policeman who tried to arrest him and a woman companion. Zwick, who was given the nick- name of his elusiveness, is under in- dictment in Cincinnati for the killing of Marshal Peter Dumele in a pool- room holdup Easter morning, 1928, and is named for questioning in a dozen gangland slayings and several bank robberies and other crimes in southern Ohio, northern Kentucky and southeastern Indiana. Zwick and the woman were taken into custody by Policemnan Jay Ma- guire, who found them in a parked automobile, but when they approach- ed a police call box, the woman hand- ed the gunman a pistol and he shot the officers in' the thigh. Maguire returned the fire, hitting Zwick once. co-operation from the home and the church than ever before?" he asked. Professor Courtis explained the mod- ern school does not stress absolute perfection in writing, contrasting this with the practice, in vogue lur- ing the last century, of hawing chil- dren copy large books full of perfect handwriting, Modern educators are attempting to treat each child as a distinct case. he said, since children are so differ- ent by heredity. "What is needed most of all is more scientific knowl- edge of child development upon which to base our plans. If we would increase the chances for children to receive intelligent assistance, we must see to it that in these days of cuts and 'eliminations, money and men for research and experimentation are not the items cut," said Professor Courtis. WEITE CLOUD, Jan. 9.--(X-Four Indiana men, captured after one of the largest man-hunts ever held in Michigan, today faced charges of murder growing out of the robbery of First State Bank of Kaleva last Thursday in which Ellsworth Bill- man, the cashier, was slain. The four men, captured Saturday night on the fringe of a swamp in Osceana County, also will be charged with bank robbery. Three of the men were to be ar- raigned in Manistee today. The fourth, Wayne Robertson, alias Wer- ner Thompson, of Indianapolis, is in a hospital at Hart suffering from a bullet wound, inflicted by Lyman Spalding, 60 years old, a member of a civilian posse which encountered the men near the swamp. The other three men are Mike Zellers, 28 years old, of LaPorte, Ind., and Robert' Benamana and Ifenry Shelton, both of Indianapolis. Police said Sunday night that Benaman had confessed firing the shot-that killed Billman. During questioning Sunday.Zellers told the police that the robbery had been planned to obtain money to help in the defense of Al Winekee, 27 years old, of South Bend, Ind., who is .awaiting trial, at Cadillac on a charge of robbery armed. Three other men were involved in the case Sunday night. They were Walter Danks Henry Gaw and Wil- liam Gaw, all of Brethren, Mich. Police said they were suspected of having helped the robbers elude the state police. Five detectives then rushed from a nearby hotel and aided in the cap- ture. Tired? Thirsty? ungry? CALL 3494 Sodas - Sundaes - Shakes Cokes - G-Ales - Orangeades Tasty Sandwiches Prompt' Delivery Columbia Book Theft Not Thought Due To Students= NEW YORK, Jan. 9-Tme recent loss of a Sir Walter Scott manuscript- from the Columbia University Library is not thought to be due to any stu- dent, yet the annual disappearance of several hundred volumes from the library shelves indicates that perhaps it was taken by someone in school. Ralph J. Miller, librarian, said that these books would form an excellent nucleus for a private .collection. "New books, books with exceptional bindings or illustrations, or books no longer in print are the ' favorites of these student 'borrowers'," said Mr. Miller. "The greatest losses occure in books on history and literature, while we never lose volumes on religion or music." Wisconsin Ski Devotees Build New Campus Slide MADISON, Wis., Jan. 9.-Ski- jumping is expected to regain its popular place among outdoor sports on the University of Wisconsin cam- pus with the recent completion of a new ski slide built on' the campus by the Wisconsin Hoofers, an asso- ciation of students and faculty mem- bers devoted to outdoor sports, Switzerland has only broadcasting ,stations.' 4 + . two radiol . Watch our windows for SPECIALS IN CANDIES The Best Quality for just a Little Less- _____._.......... ...... ----------- , Bets Ross Shop In the Arcade We Deliver Dial 5931 .. The Farmers and Mechanics Bank The experience of more than fifty years is at the service of the customers of this bank. Let this experience help you in your trust, savings and commercial transactions. FARMERS AND MECHANICS BANK State St. at Nickels Arcade Main and Huron Sts. Calkins-Fletcher Drug C9. L '4 I.I Fraternity and Sorority Group Pictures The time available for group pictures is very short. Make your appointment now in order to secure a convenient time. JST PUBLISHED- "CHEMISTRY TRIUMPHANT" This is the title of a new book the author of which is WILLIAM J. HALE of Washington, D. C., and formerly Professor of Chemistry at the Univ. of Michigan. Have You Tried The Michigan League Apple Pie? GRILL ROOM Photographer A& __NI ___w II I t 'r -