retaner slightly warmer; ly, probably rain i, colder in west. LY Sfr ian ~Iaiti Edit( Riso-Ame: Haze Clear] orals eric=n lug , 'IV No. 26 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1933 P PRICE FIV I I' iony To Graf Zeppelin To Leave Miami For Chicago Soon Open Choral Union Season Orchestra To Play st Concert Of Year 1 Auditorium Mflk Dumped As Mid-West StrikeOpens Plans For Picketing Of Sioux City Market Are Announced By Farmer Most Iowa Sectors Still Get Produce Roosevelt o TakeControl Of Retailers Protective Chain Group To Prevent Price Hiking By Retail Merchants Chain Stores Will Remain Under Code He Attacks NRA From I Daladier Gel Adverse Vo At Capacity Audience Expected At Event Dr. Serge Koussevitzky To : Conduct Program For Third Consecutive Year The Boston Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Dr. Serge Koussevitzky, will inaugurate the 55th annual series of Choral Union Concerts when it takes the platform at 8:15 p. m. today in Hill Audito- rium. Approximately 5,000 persons, com- pletely filling the huge auditorium,, will attend this initial concert of the 1933-1934 series, according to Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the School of Music and of the University Musical Society, who has arranged the series. The Boston organization, which gave a concert last night in Orches- tra Hall in Chicago, comes here with its full aggregation of 110 musicians to inaugurate the Ann Arbor Choral Union series for the third consecutive season. Now in its 52nd year, the orchestra has been under the baton of Dr. Koussevitzky for eight seasons and has been recognized by leading music critics throughout the country as the leading symphony group in the na- .. . .. . .. _ .-......_ ,. ~ --Associated Press Photo The Graf Zeppelin, piloted by Dr. Hugo Eckener (right) left Fried- richshafen, Germany, on a triangular flight that will bring her to Chi- cago. Having touched two points in Brazil and then Miami the big ship is proceeding northward via Akron and thence on to Chicago for a courtesy call at the Century of Progress'Exposition. The Avenue of Flags at the fair is shown below. Among Dr. Eckener's personal guests on the trig is Lieut-Comm. J. L. Kenworthy, jr., (inset center), com- mandant of the Lakehurst, N. J., air station. Plan For ManagfedCurrency Is Explained By Prof. Watkins But Trucking At Council Bluffs Falls Off; Duluth Wheat Imports Lower DES MOINES, Ia., Oct. 23.-(iP)- Reports of milk dumping and picket- ing marked the first direct thrust of the national farmers' strike at pro- duce marketing today. In Wisconsin, farm pickets spilled portions of a load of milk en route to a condensery at Vesper and an-f other at Neilsville, permitting only 800 pounds of milk to reach the lat- ter town's condensers during the day. Plans for peacefuly picketing all highways leading t the important Sioux City market in northwestern Iowa, a militant farm sector, were announced by W. C. Daniel, president of the Woodbury County Farm Holi- day Association. Pickets turned back many livestock trucks bound for Sioux City. The initial marketing day of the strike, which started at noon, Satur- day, revealed little pronounced effect, however. Most Iowa markets reported milk, grain, and poulgy products re- ceived in average volume. An ex- ception was Council Bluffs, where produce trucking dropped off sharp- ly. At Omaha, Neb., livestock truck- ing also was diminished but the rail shipments brought the total receipts to about the nornal expectation. Grain receipts at thie Omaha ex- change were also curtailed. Because of North Dakota's wheat embargo, receipts of 49 cars of spring wheat at Duluth, Minn., were the smallest since the ntw crop started moving to markets. ' Southern and eastern Wisconsin markets receipts were normal. Several dozen small cheese factories in the Fox river valley near Appleton and a number of creameries in four northwestern counties were closed. Chicago, Minneapolis, and South St. Paul dealers reported "no effect." Although 21 states-are listed with membership in the National Farmers Holiday Association, sponsor of the strike, only six thus far have joined in the movement. They are Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Illinois, and Wisconsin. personnel virtually un- Lt has stood for a num- the orchestra opened its Koussevitzky's tenth in Oct. 6, in Symphony , with a program in- thoven's Third Lenore ahm's Third Symphony; nes by Debussy; and 'oem of Ecstacy." r. Koussevitzky will di- rers in the presentation program which opens Kleine Nachtmusick," a le, consisting of an al- Vill Discuss k Of Stravinsky '. Moore, musical direc- chool of Music, will de- Iress on tonight's con- Boston Symphony Or- LO a. m. today, in Room ditorium. The general vited, without admis- to hear this analytical of Stravinsky's work, per, "Le Sacre du Prin- included in the pro- might's concert. Dr. By RALPH G. COULTER In an explanation of managed cur- rency and an interpretation of the President's monetary policies, Prof. L. L. Watkins of the economics de- partment said yesterday that he considered the most significant part of the President's talk Sunday night to be the implicit rejection of infla- tion. "Now that the long-awaited an- nouncement of the administration on monetary policy has been made, it is seen that the President has definitely rejected revaluation as a means of getting prices up to the desired level, and that revaluation is to be utilized only after prices have risen," Pro- fessor Watkins said. "By implication he rejects out- right inflation and promises to get prices up by credit expansion and by other means now being utilized. Reassurance on this score may do something to stop the flight from the dollar and promote a revival of long- term investment. "It is possible also that the au- thority now given to the R. F. C. to buy and sell gold on the world mar- ket may signify the intention of try- ing t6 control in some measure fluc- tuations of the dollar in terms of for- eign currencies," he declared. "In his radio speech on Sunday night President Roosevelt repeated the two objectives to which he had called attention in earlier state- ments: (1) getting prices back to the pre-depression level to ease the burden on long term debtors, and (2) stabilizing the value of the dol- lar permanently at this new level," Professor Watkins said. "He stated that we are definitely working in the direction of a man- aged currency and he promised that once prices are brought back to the , romance, minuet and trio, and- e, in G-major, written by Mo- Stravinsky's "SAcre du Prin- s," is next, and to close the ram Brahm's First Symphony in nor will be presented. order to facilitate the handling ie large crowd which gathers in foyer of the auditorium before :oncerts, Dr. Sink has advised all ers of season tickets to detach t No. 1 before entering the audi- m proper. In the past, he has ated, many of those possessing n tickets bring all 10 of them te concert, making it necessary he ushers to hold up the lines searching for the proper num- old level, they will be kept stable at that level for the next generation. "He does not make clear the pre- cise means through which this sta- bility is to be maintained but im- plies that the currncy will be man- aged along lines proposed by Mr. J: M. Keynes, the British economist. (Continued on Page 2) 4 ' Coalition Party Chooses A Slate To Face State William Renner, Elizabeth Aigler, Russell Fuog To Head New Ticket The campaign for junior class of- fices, which entered its final tages last night, found a new party oppos- ing the State Street ticket in the lit- erary college. William Renner, Alpha Sigma Phi and Varsity football player, will head the ticket, while Elizabeth Aigler, Delta Gamma, and Russell Fuog, Phi Delta Theta, will run for secretary and treasurer, respectively. The can- didate for vice-president will be an- nounced later. William Blaser, Delta Phi, Gar- goyle, and Sphinx; Charles Brown- son, Sigma Nu; Sydney Frankel, sports assistant on The Daily and in- dependent; James Eberle, Alpha Tau Omega; and Francis Landers, Phi Kappa, will run for the J-Hop chair- manships. The Coalition party is a combina- tion of the old Washtenaw party and several former State Street houses which have broken away from the ranks. Although the party has been organized more than a week, candi- dates were chosen only last night. There will also be a junior class election in the College of Architec- ture tomorrow, although no candi- dates have been announced. Times and rooms for the elections will be announced in tomorrow's Daily. Bicyclist Stops Here On World Journey V. C. Armaos, a citizen of Greece, and a graduate of the University of Athens, lately a correspondent for #t- n-, zn 7n t , y- e .errrr __ _.F L.. Adverse Farm Sentiment Leads NRA To Advance Local Tribunal System WASHINGTON, Oct. 23.-(P)- Under the pressure of adverse farm sentiment, NRA today pulled out of the country's villages and small towns and announced a protective chain of local tribunals to keep mer- chants from hiking prices too high. This first major change in the in- dustrial recovery program was taken under an executive order by Presi- dent Roosevelt, forecast by a single sentence in his Sunday night address to the nation. An exception under the order was the chain store which, wherever lo- cated, will remain under code regu- lation. Also small factories, those do- ing interstate business, and those em- ploying more than five persons still have NRA watching over them in the otherwise exempt towns of 2,500 or less. The order issuance coincided with promulgation of the retail trade code which emerged with a price control provision stripped of the 10 per cent mark-up fought by farmer and con- sumer representatives alike, but so phrased as to give the merchant sub- stantially the same protection against destructive price cutting by competi- tors. (By Associated Press) The country's financial markets sharply reversed their recent down- ward trend today in response to Pres- ident Roosevelt's plan for controlling the price of gold. On the New York Stock Exchange,1 share prices had a general rise of $1 to more than $5, closing some- what under the highs as traders took profits. Gold mining issues, however,' were buoyant all day, Homestake soaring $40 to $340 and finishing at the best.1 Grain markets were strong.p Wheat's net gains approximated four1 cents a bushel, and final prices werei around the top. Cotton at New York, after rising nearly $1.50 a bale, re- duced its improvement to 35 cents to 65 cents net. Minor staples were? generally higher, silver futures rising half a cent or more. Koch, Local Mason, Dies At Age Of 75 John Koch, Ann Arbor mason con-' tractor who built many University buildings as well as fraternities and sororities, died at 12:30 a. m. Mon- day morning at 714 Miner Street. He was 75 years old and had been retired from active business for four years. Among the University buildings Koch constructed are the Dental' Building, the old Medical Building,f Alumni Memorial Hall, and the south department of University Hospital. He also built the wall around Ferry1 Field.] Koch was born in Germany andc came to this country when he was 25 years old. He had lived in Ann Arbor since 1886, and served four terms as an alderman from the sec- ond ward on the Common Council.i -Associated Press Photo The agricultural areas were de- scribed as a "seething mass of un- rest" by Gov. Charles W. Bryan of Nebraska in an attack on the na- tional recovery and farm relief pro- grams. Hull Plans Tour To WASHINGTON, Oct. 23-()P)-Si- multaneous trade expansion drives along both the Russian and South American fronts appeared the goal, of the United States today with the disclosure by Secretary Hull of plans for a good-will tour below the equa- tor during the Soviet recognition dis- cussion here. Varsity Band Plans Concert At Exposition I 'Fighting Hundred' Will Play In Hall Of Science Court After Grid Game One of the first concerts by college bands at the Century of Progress Exposition will be given Sunday by the Varsity Band in the court of the Hall of Science. The concert, which will occur on the band's week-end trip incidental to the Michigan-Chicago football game Saturday at Stagg Field, will take place at 2:30 p. m. Prof. Nich- 'olas D. Falcone has chosen a varied program of classic and semi-classic numbers to be presented before a crowd of fair-goers which may num- ber in the thousands. The band will entrain at 7 a. m. Saturday at the Michigan Central Station, arriving in Chicago at noon. From its hotel on Jackson Park the unit will march to and from the Chi- cago game and will then be given free time to visit the exposition. Fol- lowing Sunday's concert the band will re-board its special train in the Twelfth Street Station, arriving in Ann Arbor at about midnight Sun- day. This will be the band's only out- of-town trip this year, according to Herbert G. Watkins, business man- ager. Last year the unit went to Columbus and in 1931 to Princeton. The roster of bandsmen and officers expected to make the trip will num- ber about 110. Under the direction of Lieut. R. R. Coursey, drillmaster, the "Fighting Hundred" is planning a series of pre- cise maneuvers which, officers hope, will outshine those of the white-clad Chicago band. These are planned to include the diamond goose-step for- mation which attracted so much at-I tention Oct. 14 at the Cornell game. Saltzstein A Good-Will South America Chamber Of Deputies, Count Of 329 To 2 Repudiates Premier Open Breech Wit Blum Brings Acti Cabinet Chief Is Defea Fighting To The End Balance National Bud BULLETIN PARIS, Oct. 24.-(Tuesday)- The French cabinet headed by mier Daladier was overthrown vote of 329 to 241 in the Char of Deputies early today and its n bers will resign. Premier Daladier apparently reconciled to defeat when he op broke with the Socialist party. The Premier denounced I Blum, Socialist leader, to the plause of the chamber in to which rarely had been heard ti Indirectly charging that the lionaire Blum was compromising Socialism with the capitalists, Premier declared: "I never had capital or capita to defend; I never gave in to demands of anyone!" Premier Daladier went down to feat fighting to the last for a anced budget in order to save franc. He immediately prepared resignation. The chamber threw the mini out, unmoved by Daladier's iml sioned warning that failure to st a budgetary balance would mean inflation was inevitable "within or six weeks." The deputies refused Dalad proposal to cut the salaries of ernment functionaries. To LeadI Yo-Yoists In Place Of Captain Bursley Because of the ineligibility of Capt. Gilbert E. Bursley, '34, the Varsity yo-yo team has selected Robert Saltz- stein, '34, a former bench-warmer, to lead the outfit to the Ann Arbor Daily News' City Championship and the pennant-if the newspaper in ques- tion provides a pennant. San Loco Mindanao, Grad., trainer of the University yo-yoists, an- nounced yesterday that Bursley's scholastic record of three incom- pletes, two conditions, and a C had not been improved sufficiently thus far this year. Saltzstein expressed himself as be- ing "very pleased" with his new posi- tion, and said he would master the yo-yo in the same way he conquers the Problems of Life in the Outside World. Extra bleacher seats erected Sun- day for the City Championships were torn down yesterday when ticket sales were not up to expectations. Nudist Colony Leader Before Elderly Jury ALLEGAN, Oct. 23.-(R)-The question of what constitutes inde- cent exposure tonight arose as the principal issue in the trial of Fred P. Ring, nudist colony proprietor, the first case involving nudism to enter Michigan courts. Before a jury of elderly men- several of whom were asked by defense counsel what kind of bath- ing suits they permitted their daughters to wear-Ring's trial PARIS, Oct. 23.-(,T)-Torn be tween two fires, Premier Edouar Daladier conceded a point to Social ists in his budget-balancing projec today and then faced another batt] in the senate over government econ omies. While soldiers stood guard outsid the Chamber of Deputies building he accepted a compromise cuttin the wages of functionaries about ha] ,he original demand he had mad n his budget and anti-inflation pro gram. He accepted the compromis in an effort to persuade Socialist to approve other economy measure: While throngs of irate persor -rowded the neighborhood and en gaged in demonstrations, in whic 200 persons were arrested, the dep aties went on with their debati which may mean the life of the gov ernment. M. Daladier's opponents called th 2ompromise a "capitulation" and pre pared for a new struggle after a evening recess. Gin Goes TO WGse As Raid Scare Hits GraduatesGuest, "There's a liquor raid on." This message flashed from hous to house Saturday night, and fra ternity men wildly rid themselves c the incriminating liquids. Much of : went to waste, many bottles bein emptied into the drains. Alumni wer blamed for the most part for th presence of illegal beverages in th house. At one house, an alumnus quit willingly volunteered his automobil as a convenient depository for th excess refreshment. Later, when th scare was over, it appeared that th alumnus had carelessly forgotten I remove the brothers' liquor before h drove away. Everyone seemed to know tha some other house was being raidec Nobody had -seen a Federal agen but they were on numerous occa sions "coming to our house next according to the messages which wei turning up. A check-up late Saturday showe that no houses had been enterec both the police and the houses bein canvassed to ascertain the truth c the charges. Fraternity men lost their confi dence in reports, and later rumor 1- Michigan Chapter Wins epskin On O.S. U. Game 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' Maintains Supremacy In Dramatic Field or illegalrhas been )ne form or another :r many years during s and the like, but . Epsilon fraternity ttle exciting game of 'ious chapters of the walls of the house are pskin trophies which ated" reluctantly by, branches of Sigma ing the past decade eems, consists of bet- ind ' h har +nha have to put out some $8 or, $10 for a skin for the Ohio Gamma boys. Following is the telegraphic corre- spondence carried on concerning last week's bet: Michigan Alpha Oct. 17-7 a. m. WILL BET ON GAME STOP AN- SWER IF YOU ACCEPT BET. Ohio Gamma. Ohio Gamma Oct. 18-8 p. m. WILL GLADLY ACCEPT SKIN STOP WILL LOOK NICE BESIDE CORNELL'S. lU'phan em By A. ELLIS BALL Dramatized from the famous novel of Harriet Beecher Stowe by George L. Aiken, "Uncle Tom's Cabin" which will be presented here by Play Pro- duction, has reached a height of suc- cess rarely equaled in the annals of American drama. From 1852 until 1929 there was scarcely a night when the play was not being presented somewhere, whether in a large the- atre or on an improvised stage of the town hall of some mid-western "Gopher Prairie." And during all that time, Mrs. Stowe saw the play only once on the the same enthusiastic applause of the opening night in Troy. Like the showboat of the Missis- sippi and the circuses of P. T. Bar- num, the Tom show was a yearly event. The billings, the caliope, the parade, the animals and the tent, and the general atmosphere of the per- formance gave it the elements of a circus. Many versions of the play sprang up and it developed much in the way of a folk play. Some companies had two Topsies or two Lawyers. A com- plete script has to be worked out for each production, especially for the colorful auction scene, for which no