T HE MIHIGAN -D AILY nreement Is Flyer Breaks Transcontinental Speed Record Anticipated In Mine Troubles President Roosevelt Signs Wage And Hour Pact For Steel Co. Mines CLAIRTON, Pa., Sept. 30. -(P) -The seige of Clairton by 4,000 striking coal miners was called off suddenly today so the miners may study the coal code agreed to Friday night. CLAIRTON, Pa., Sept. 30.-()- Hope for early termination of spreading labor unrest grew today as word filtered slowly through the tri-state industrial area that Presi- dert Roosevelt had signed the wage and hour agreement for steel com- pany coal mines. It required hours for the nearly 100,000 striking miners and steel workers to grasp the significance of the agreement, but a feeling devel- oped that work may be resumed Monday, the effective date of the bituminous coal code. The first group to hear of the pact-several hundred miners en- camped outside Clairton preparing for a descent upon the big Carnegie Steel Co. plant this morning-burst into wild cheers, disbanded and headed for home. State Police Present Half a hundred state police under the leadership. of Sgt. Frank Gleason brought the word to the picketing miners.f Standing in the middle of the highway, silhouetted against gleam- ing campfires on the hillhides and wreathed " in fog issuing from the Monongahela river, the miners lis- tened to a telegram from Gov. Gif- ford Pinchot, urging them to call a halt to their picketing. "The President and the operators have signed an agreement," read Sgt. Gleason and the hillside echoed with shouts from the miners. Pinchot Requests Order The officer said Gov. Pinchot wanted them to go to their homes and be ready to resume work, and in five minutes the several hundred miners from Fayette, Washington and. Greene counties had piled into the trucks and started away. , The spontaneousness of the min- ers' response, and their announced faith in President Roosevelt and Gov. Pinchot, gave rise to the belief that state police intervention would help send all the men back to work. Several thousand men still held forth in Clairton-miners from Fay- ette 4nd Washington and other cou- ties-determined to bring about the closing of the Carnegie company's plant, but leaders felt they would heed the call of the President. The streets presented a picturesque sight as the men lolled around camp fires awaiting entrance or exit of any of the plant's 8,000 employes. Pickets Clash Earlier in the night, before the signing of the pact by which the H. C. Frick Coke Co. and other coal- mining steel firms agreed to the col- lective bargaining provisions of ^the coal code, pickets and company dep- uties clashed. A controversy arose as a group of miners on three trucks pulled up to the front of the mill. After the miners refused to move, the deputies released tear gas, quickly dispers- ing the "invaders." High Points Listed 1. Henry Ford remained silent as labor troubles mounted in scattered assembly plants. His Chester, Pa., plant was closed after a walkout. Strikers at the Edgewater, N. J., plant shook clenched fists and shout- ed "rats" Friday at men still work- ing. There was labor trouble too in the Richmond, Calif., factory. Threats of a "big push" to the great Dearborn, ,Mich., plant were heard. 2. A truckload of miners riding home from work was ambushed late Friday at Madisonville, Ky. Six were wounded by gunfire from behind' bushes. 3. Many other strikes were still in progress, including one involving 10,000 auto tool makers in Michigan. 4. Some new strike calls were sent out, including a summons to 300 gar- ment workers in Cleveland. 5. NRA mediators and others{ pressed for settlements. Among the disputes concluded was a month-old strike of button workers in Newark and Hoboken, N. J., and Pittsfield, Mass. WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.--(IP)-- The NRA and farm administration apparently w.ere at odds today over the government's policy toward price fixing by the huge retail trade busi- ness. n ugh S. Johnson was expected momentarily to approve a retail code designed to stabilize prices by pro- -Associated Press Photo Col. Roscoe Turner, who set a new west-east transcontinental speed record by flying from coast to coast in 10 hours 5 1-2 minutes, is shown as he was greeted by his wife as he landed at Floyd Bennett field, New York. Louisiana Family Believed 1 Be Kidnapped;_Suspect Is Held (Continued from Page 1) river and with Cox aboard ill in his stateroom police were called to quell a disturbance among disgruntled members of the crew. Finally the difficulties leading to the suit were settled and the boat proceeded to winter quarters at Man- istee, Mich. Friday Cox said neighbors in New Orleans told him that Mrs. Cox and their son and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Goertz, left last Satur- day in the family automobile. The day before he said Mrs. Cox had withdrawn $9,000 from their joint bank account. NEW George Chicago ORLEANS, Sept. 30.--(?)- M. Cox, New Orleans and shipbuildler, whose wife, son hibiting retailers from selling at less' than wholesale cost plus 10 per cent. A similar provision proposed by the food and grocery branch of the business-prohibiting retail sales at less than a 7 1-2 per cent mark-up over wholesale cost-was slated for flat rejection by the farm adminis- tration. Both codes eventually must re- ceive President Roosevelt's approval. Should Johnson sign NRA's retail charter today as officials predicted, it would go immediately to Hyde Park for promulgation, while hearings pre- paratory to final drafting of the gro- cery code do not begin until Oct. 9. WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.-(YP)- Renewed threats of dissension today promised difficulties at the Amer- ican Federation of Labor convention next week over the way it has been trying to organize workers since the recovery act became law. One strong branch of the Federa- tion-the metal trades department, which represents around 700,000 men -was seeking support for a resolu- tion that would condemn the present American Federation of Labor pol- icies. When the recovery act was signed, the federation immediately sent men into the field to seek new members because of the law's new guarantee of collective bargaining minus coer- cion from employers as to what union a man should join. I 3,000 Charters Issued To speed organization,sthe Federa- tion issued, said President William Green, about 3,000 new charters. But the unions to which these charters were issued. were affiliated directly with the American Federation of La- bor, and not through one of its sub- ordinate international unions. The metal trades convention, whichended just Friday, insisted that continued chartering of these' "federal unions" would "completely demoralize, if not actually destroy, the various international unions' charter rights guaranteed by the American Federation of Labor." So it adopted a resolution "pro- testing as vehemently as possible the further continuance of the disregard of charter and jurisdictional rights by the American Federation of La- bor and affiliated international unions." and parents-in-law, have been miss- ing from their home here since last Saturday night, said today that a man had phoned from Chicago Fri- day night asking if his $25,000 re- ward offer for the safe return of his family was authentic." The caller said the family was "well and happy." Caller Was Wentz Cox said the man who called from Chicago said he was George Wentz. The shipbuilder described Wentz as an acquaintance of long-standing. He said he was a former actor and show- man of New Orleans and Chicago. The Wentz phone call was put through to the Cox home here at 11:30 p. m. after Cox had retired, and the Chicago caller talked to a night watchman at the residence. "Wentz asked if my $25,000 offer for the safe teturn of my family was authentic," Cox said today. "The watchman said he did not know any- thing about the case but succeeded in holding Wentz on the phone for about 15 minutes while the call could be traced over another telephone. Wentz told the watchman that my family were all well and happy but declined to give any other informa- tion until the $25,000 reward was paid." No Communication, "Have you communicated with Wentz since?" Cox was asked. "No, I don't know how to reach him," Cox said. "Then you are negotiating with Wentz?" "I am not negotiating with any- body." "Have you posted the $25,000 re- turn of my family." Asked about the Chicago deten- tion of a man who described himself as William Davis of Louisiana, Cox said he only knew Davis slightly as one of his former ship employes. Cox On Vacation Cox, 55-year-old former malt dealer, returned from a five-week va- cation in Cooperstown, Ill., this week to find his home here deserted. A watchman at the home reported that Mrs. Cox, 27, and Mrs. J. T. Goertz, had driven away from the residence on Lake Ponchartrain late last Sat- urday after making plans to spend a week-end on the Mississippi coast. They did not return and could not be located on the coast.: Friends of the family sought to convince Cox that his family had merely gone on a vacation of their own to some undisclosed spot, but Cox enlisted police aid in a search for them two days ago and Friday announced the $25,000 reward for their safe return. Mrs. Cox, a second wife and the shipbuilders' former secretary, with- drew $9,000 from their joint bank account here the day before she left. Cox said she also had jewels valued at $10,000. PRINTING-Lowest City Prices THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown - 206 North Main Next to Main Post Office Dial 2-1013 WE SELL TYPEWRITING PAPER Metal Shares Lead ecovery In all Street Big Flurries In Market As Speculations On Future Monetary Policy Go On NEW YORK, Sept. 30--P)-Nerv- ous financial markets dipped and rallied spasmodically today as trad- ers confusedly attempted to form some conclusion as to the Govern- ment's future monetary program. Stocks received support after a sharp sell-off and, under the leadership of Metal issues, climbed back to higher territory. The close was steady to firm. Transfers approximated 900,- 000 shares. Equities started out in a full and irregular fashion. Another drive started on American Telephone and some of the leaders. The Telephone issue slumped to 115%, but displayed resistance with o t h e r depressed shares, and soon came back to around 120 for a net gain of about 2112. U. S. Smelting spurted some 7 points. Grains were soft for a while, but they rallied along with cotton and some other commodities. Bonds were mixed. The dollar was a little easier in foreign exchange dealings. Homestake Up 10 Points Shares of Homestake Mining, on a few sales, got up 10 points, while American Smelting, Cerro De Pasco, Done and McIntyre Porcupine ad- vanced 1 to 3 or more in final trans- sactions. National Distillers was off about 4 at one time, but recovered most of the decline. Stocks up frac- tionally to around 2 points or more included Union Pacific, St. Joseph Lead, Western Union, Allied Chemi- cal, Celanese, General Motors, Con- solidated Gas, U. S. Steel, U. S. In- dustrial Alcohol, J o h n s-Manville, New York Central, Chrysler, Case and Santa Fe. Fresh reports from Washington that the Administration would soon define its fiscal policies did not create any unusual market excite- ment owing to the fact that rumors of an announcement of this sort have been floating around broker- age and banking circles for the past several weeks. . Stabilization Necessary That stabilization of the dollar at some officially deprecated gold point, would eventually be a neces- sity if business and industrial im- provement were to continue, has for some time been accepted as a foregone conclusion by some finan- ciers. At what point tpe dollar may be pegged, however, is the question that has been wrv ,, ing the brows of speculators. 'he A'aerican mone- tary unit, as measured in terms of European gold currencies, has re- cently been hanging between 65 and 66 cents. Considering the decline in stocks which has taken place during the past 10 days, the shrinkage of $19,- 000,000 in brokers' loans for the week ended Sept. 27. was less than had been anticipated. Two Mexicans Arrested As Contraband Carriers Driving through town yesterday with two bundles of Marijuana weed, two Mexicans, Fred and Teofilo Schavez were arrested and are being held for investigation by Sheriff's officers. The two men, who gave their ad- dress as a farm near Bellvue, offered no explanation of the weed which is a powerful drug wholesaling at $40 a pound. The cured weed is made into cigarettes which sell for about 25 cents apiece. The Schavez farm will be investi- gated to ascertain whether the weed is being grown there. Samples of it are being tested by authorities. China Seeking, Culmination Of Strife InTibet PEIPING, China, Sept. 30-Coin- cident with renewed attempts to set- tle the long standing feud between the Dalai Lama and the Panchan Lama, temporal and spiritual heads of Tibet, respectively, the Chinese National Government is making an effort to restore its position in Tibet to what it was in the days of the Manchu dynasty. High officials of the Chinese Gov- ernment's Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission have announced receipt of a telegram from the Dalai Lama welcoming the return to Tibet of the Panchan Lama, who, support- ed by the Nankin authorities, for years has been in virtual exile, oc- casionally visiting Nankin and Peip- ing, but spending most of his time on the fringes of Inner Mongolia. More Than 100 Eating At Co-Operative House (Continued from Page 1) the Co-Operative was able, during the school year 1932-33, to discharge almost all its debts incurred through the purchase of capital equipment, Manley said. Four faculty men and townsmen assist in the direction of the house's activities. They are Prof. William W. Denton of the mathematics depart- ment, Prof. Harold J. McFarlan of the engineering college, the Rev. Ed- ward W. Blakeman, director of the Wesley Foundation, and the Rev. Al- fred Lee Klaer, associate pastor of the Presbyterian Church. It is not necessary to eat at the Co-Operative on a semester basis, according to Manley. Students may obtain weekly tickets for $3.50 or may come in at any time for a single meal. -Associated Press Photos For the first time in the history of the Grand Army of the Republic, its leader is wearing two commander's badges. Russell C. Martin (cen- ter) of Los Angeles, who was named to the post last year, was re-elected at the 1933 St. Pail encampment. At his left is Thomas H. Peacock of Minneapolis, senior vice commander. Also shown is David Foster of Fort Wayne, Ind., chairman of the executive committee. SUDDEN SERVICE " r A r r+ IImri rr o, FIRST NATIONAL BANK AN D TRUST COMPANY Established 1863 OLDEST NATIONAL BANK IN MICHIGAN EVERY BANKING SERVICE AVAILABLE DOMESTIC - - - FOREIGN Under U. S. Government Supervision Member Federal Reserve System 11 Students Supply Store 1111 South University Avenue Engineers' and Architects' Materials Stationery, Fountain Pens, Loose Leaf Books Typewriting and Pound Papers college Pennants, Jewelry Leather Goods II INOT ICE ELECTRIC LAMP RENEWALS THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY exchanges blackened and burned-out lamps for new lamps (in the usual sizes) without extra charge under certain service agreements. 11 III 11111 7t