THE MICHIGAN DAILY Amendments For Tax Bill To Alter Act Senate Finance Committee Adds $72,000,000 more To $238,000,000 iree Die As Fire Sweeps Texas Hotel Ineome Taxes May Jump 50 Per Cent LaFollette Proposal Will Increase Levy On Higher Income Brackets WASHINGTON, April 3.-(A)- Amendments that would radically re- write the $330,000,000 tax bill appear likely to keep the Senate busy for the rest of the week. Chairman Harrison of the Finance Committee had the right of way at today's session in bringing forward the committee alterations that added about $72,000,000 in estimated rev- enue to the $258,000,000 measure passed by the House. After that the field will be open for individual amendments, of which about 15 will be pushed forward. If all were adopted the income tax rate would be increased by 50 per cent and taxes on salaries and bonuses above $75,000 would reach 80 per cent. LaFollette Would Increase Taxes Senator La Follette (Rep., Wisc.), who proposed the 50 per cent in- crease, would raise normal income taxes from 4 to 6 per cent, and in- crease the surtaxes on the higher brackets to a maximum of 71 per cent on incomes of over $1,000,000. Senator Gore (Dem., Okla.), who offered the proposal to cut down high salaries by the high tax, would allow no deductions above the $75,000 mark. Other amendments would increase income taxes 100 per cent in time of war, levy a 10 cents a pound tariff pn imported copper, abolish the one cent a gallon gasoline tax and repeal the excise tax on candy. While the Senate worked with taxes, the House today had another chance to get at private bills, an op- portunity long awaited by some mem- bers who have up measures to help individual constituents or small groups. Note Business Improvement The Treasury jotted down plans to- day for a billion dollars of April fi- nancing, and at the same time noted tangible evidences of business im- provement. Secretary Morgenthau said the method for retiring the billion in called fourth Liberty Bonds on April 15 would be announced tonight. After a talk Monday with the Federal Sys- tem's open market committee, he added in the same connection: "The committee seemed to be in a cheerful frame of mind over business conditions." Figures published today from Treasury and other quarters threw these items into relief: 1. A forecast by the 13 shippers' regional advisory boards that freight loadings for April, May and June would reach 4,376,725 carloads, or 10.7 per cent more than the 3,945,568 car- loads for the second quarter of 1933. Jones Is Optimistic 2. A weekly statement by the Fed- eral Reserve Board that member' banks in 91 major cities had made1 $4,000,000 more in loans other than those made on securities, although loans on securities dropped $39,000,-l 000.I 3. A recent Federal Reserve Board compilation showing a $10,000,000 drop in member bank reserve bal- ances. Previously, increases in reserve balances had caused officials consid- erable worry. 4. A statement by Jesse Jones, chairman of the Reconstruction Cor- poration, that with an unused lending1 power of a billion dollars and loan< repayments of $250,000,000, since Jan. 1, the RFC could finish the year with- out going to the Treasury for moret money. Jones told newspapermen Mondayr that business is better and credit eas-t ier. He estimated the RFC's require-t ments would run $500,000,000 below1 attributed this to improved conditions. Nursery School To Stay t Open For This Summer The nursery unit of the Univer- sity Elementary School will be in operation for a six weeks session from July 2 to August 10, during the Sum- mer Session of 1934, and will include a full day nursery school program. The educational program, daily health inspection, medical examina- tion, lunch services and other serv- ices will be carried on by members of the regular staff, and will be of- fered for children between the ages of approximately two and one-half to four and one-half years. -Associated Press Photo A midnight fire that razed the three-story Longview, Tex., hotel resulted in the deaths of three persons and injuries to many others as they jumped from the blazing structure. This photograph shows the ruins a few hours later. isconsin Cam pus Leaders Object ' o Vote Against Jews MADISON, Wisc., April 3. - (Big Ten) - An undercurrent of objection against the race prejudice exhibited during the recent elections by the decisive defeat of Jewish candidates for office was voiced last week by various campus leaders at the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. Many students who refused to be quoted directly expressed themselves as disappointed over the fact that the Wisconsin campus. supposedly the most liberal in the country, should allow differences in race to distort the honest opinions of voting stu- dents. Approval For 10 CCC Camps is Received LANSING, April 3-Word has been received by P. J. Hoffmaster, super- intendent of State parks, of the ap- proval of 10 CCC park camps in Michigan for the third six-month enrollment period beginning this month. The approval was received from the national director of emer- gency conservation work. The State Park camps approved for the period from April to Septem- ber are: Bay City State Park, two camps; J. W. Wells state park camp near Menominee; Ludington State Park camp, north of Ludington; Hayes State Park camp, southeast of Jackson; Muskegon State Park camp, nine miles north of Muskegon; Hartwick Pines State Park camp in Crawford county; Wilderness State Park camp, Emmet county; Dodge- Bloomer State Park camp, on Cres- cent Lake in Oakland county; and Mackinac State Park camp. Requests have been filed by the parks division for the establishment of three additional camps, two on Isle Royale for the construction of fire lines, trails, telephone lines, fire towers and other projects, and one near Levering, a joint park and for- estry camp. No word as to the ap- proval or rejection of these applica- tions has been received. Dr. Creaser To Leave For Federal Position Dr. E. P. Creaser, curator of the division of crustaceans of the Uni- versity Museums, is leaving Ann Ar- bor to take a job with the United States Bureau of Fisheries. Dr. Creaser who has been with thea Museum since 1928 will go to Lee- town, W. Va., on April 15 to attend a conference of those engaged in1 the new Federal project of stream improvement. After this conference Dr. Creaser will go to the White Mountains and the Green Mountains in Vermont and New Hampshire where he Will work on the stream improvement survey being made by the United States 'Department of Fisheries in co-operation with the United States Forest Service. Mathematical Manuscripts On Exhibition In General Library University students have an op- portunity at this time to view a col- lection of ancient and oriental mathe- matical manuscripts equaled only at Columbia in this country, according to Professor Louis C. Karpinski of the mathematical department who has been instrumental in preparing this exhibit, now in the lower hall of the general library. The manuscripts, books, and de- vices on display were gathered by Pro- fessor Karpinski while he was on sab- batical leave last semester. They were purchased by him personally in book- shops and other appropriate places in Athens, Cairo, Jerusalem, Beirut, and Constantinople. Dr. Max Meyer- hoff of Cairo gave valuable assist- ance there in selecting the Arabic manuscripts and works which consti- tute the finest part of the exhibition. The purchases were made possible for the University through the philan- thropy of Tracy W. McGregor, Wash- ington, D.C., member of the American Historical Association. Mr. McGregor is interested in the University by vir- tue of his position on the Board of Governors of the Clements Library President Will Extend Holiday Into Next Week MIAMI, Fla., April 3. -(P) -Presi- dent Roosevelt sailed into new south- ern waters today, determined to con- tinue his happy vacation cruise into next week. His ship was pointed south late Monday after a consultation with Congressional leaders had assured him there was no need for his re- turn to the capital this week. With the word "all well and happy" the yacht Nourmahal proceeded to its new base today, in the vicinity of Elbow Key Light, Cay Sal Banks. The President's two elder sons, James and Elliott, were en route to his fishing ground from here by naval plane. They expected to return tonight. To keep fueled for the extendedj trip, the destroyer U.S.S. Ellis was joined today by its base ship, the* destroyer U.S.S. Tattnall, which set out from here Monday night to over- take the Presidential party. In extending his fishing cruise, the President set the record for recent years in absence from the capital during a session of Congress, but his close contacts by radio with Capitol Hill gave him the needed assurances to go on for a few more days. The trip originally was scheduled I to end on Friday. In all probabilityS Mr. Roosevelt will remain on the open seas until late next week. of natural history. The original Mc- Gregoi fund is dedicated to the pur- chase of Americana for the small colleges of the United States which otherwise might find difficulty in de- veloping collections of historical lore. The University of Michigan has be- come eligible to draw from the fund only through a rare exception made under the express wish of Mr. Mc- Gregor. The visitor to the library will find in the collection, besides the first class Arabic display, Chinese, Hindu, Greek, Egyptian, and Hebrew manu- scripts and books. Some of these are comparatively modern works. Many are on subjects other than pure mathematics, such as astronomy and physiology, but all are more or -less related to the field of mathematical science. Probably the most interesting por- tion of the exhibit, certainly the most valuable, is the Egyptian section, which includes several bits of ancient Egyptian mathematics inscribed on Papyri at the beginning of our Chris- tian era. According to Professor Kar- pinski these are of the greatest value to the field of mathematical science. They have been studied and written up by Frank Robbins, assistant to President Ruthven, in articles which have caused a great deal of attention in the mathematical world. Dr. Robbins and Professor Karpin- ski have co-operated in writing ar- ticles on various other of the manu- scripts presented in the display and these too have caused much comment abroad. A reprint of one of Professor Karpinski's articles in a Turkish mag- azine is included in the exhibit as in- dicative of foreign interest. Extension 'Of White Cross Drive Sought An extension of the White Cross seal campaign for the benefit of crip- pled children until the end of this week was announced yesterday by Wilfred Shaw, campaign director. About half of the county quota of 100,000 seals have been sold, and there is high hope that the entire quota will be filled by Saturday, Mr. Shaw said. This is the first year in which the public has been the object of a di- rect seal-selling appeal for this cause. Formerly, state and local societies have been supported only by private contributions, but revenue from this source has declined the past two years. Receipts of the campaign will be equally divided between aid for crip- pled children in Washtenaw County and state and national societies for such work. Illinois Ballot Will Be First New Deal Test Off-Year Primary Is Seen As Indicator Of Relative Sirength Of Parties WASHINGTON, April 3.-- (')- A nation-wide ballot box test of the "new deal" will start a week from, today. Illinois voters, lining up for the first of the primaries of the national off- year elections, will inaugurate activ- ities that in the next seven months will reach into every state. November will finish the election of 35 sen- ators, about the same number of gov- ernors, and the entire House. Republicans are voicing openly the hope that the usual off-year tide will restore them to many offices they lost in the Roosevelt landslide of 1932. Democrats predict that gains in the Senate will offset an immaterial loss of seats in the House. The Illinois primaries next week will mark the start, but will give little indication of the outcome of the whole race. There is neither a guber- natorial nor a senatorial contest in that state this year. Speaker Rainey brought the White House angle strongly into the picture, however, when he reported advices from his friends that financial in- terests in New York were planning to donate in an effort to defeat him because of his stand for Rooseveltian measures. In addition the Illinois primaries will 'see the choosing of party candi- dates for 36 other house seats. In the 1932 elections, the Republicans lost their majority of the Illinois House delegation when the Democrats won six new seats. The battling will get underway in earnest next month, with primaries in six states. The firt comes May 1, in South Dakota and Alabama, where governorships are at stake in addition to House seats. The first Senatorial contest will be reached in Indiana May 8, with Sen- ator Robinson, Republican incumbent, fighting for re-election. Democrats are planning a warm fight to gain this seat, and three majority House mem- bers - Ludlow, Pettengill and Mrs. Jenckes - are reported to be angling for the Democratic nomination. The next week in May will witness the climax to a warm contest in both parties in Pennsylvania. Gov. Pinchot is seeking to wrest the Republican nomination from Senator Reed, while there is an equally warm fight in the Democratic ranks. Joseph Guf fey, national committee- man, and Roland Morris, former American ambassador to Japan, both are after the Democratic nomination. The gubernatorial contest also is be- ing fought strongly on both sides. The same day, May 15, Senator Kean, of New Jersey, meets his first test in the Republican primary. He probably will be faced in the fall by Gov. A. Harry Moore, a Democrat. Ann Arbor Alumni Attacks Roosevelt -Associated Press Photo Something of a furor was caused in Washington when a letter was made public quoting George W. Christians (above) of Chattanooga, Tenn., as saying he told President Roosevelt that the latter would be "only the Kerensky" of America's revolution. Christians is a founder of an organi- zation called the Crusaders for Eco- nomic Liberty. Report Asserts N e Uprisinsis Due In France PARIS, April 3.-(R) -Definite assertions that an armed revolution in France is being prepared by both rightists and leftists were made today. The secret service and judicial po- lice under Judge Saussier, investigat- ing magistrate, are known to be hunt- ing hidden arsenals but Desire Ferry, the editor of the newspaper, La Lib- erte, owned by former Premier Andre Tardieu, says the hunt is "too late." Thousands of rifles -some persons estimate the number to be 14,000 -- are reported to have been smuggled into France before Marshall Petain, minister of war, induced the cabinet to order a close watch of the fron- tier. The Communists plan, said Ferry, to isolate Paris by a general strike, concentrate "12,0000 shock troops" in north and southwest Paris, and then move in to capture "the Elysee, the ministry of the interior, telephone centrals and the city hall" supported by guerilla warfare by the unorgan- ized elements of leftists. Final Feature Of Art Cinema O pens Ton ight The final presentation for the Art Cinema League, "The Road to Life," jwill be shown beginning at 7:15 p.m. Predict Delay In Starting Of Welfare Work Elliott, Local Official, Says Shift From CWA May Retard Work Slightly Delay in getting the local welfare construction projects fully under way was predicted yesterday by C. H. Elliott, county welfare administra- tor. Although work will begin Wednes- day as planned, it will probably not be in full swing until Saturday, be- cause of the difficulties involved in shifting from CWA to local welfare work, he said. Those of the 1,085 men left jobless by the discontinuance of CWA work here last Saturday who will be given work by the welfare administration will be notified when and where to report. Investigation of those fami- lies who have been forced on to wel- fare lists is being carried on by social case workers, according to Elliott. Trouble loomed, meanwhile, over the wages to be paid the welfare workers. The wage scale adopted by the commission representing busi- ness, labor, and the welfare admin- istration, was rejected Monday by Louis Nims, state work division en- gineer and state welfare commission member. He declared the wages were too high, and intends to further ex- plain his objections in a letter soon. Fred Norris, representative of or- ganized labor and chairman of the special commission, yesterday de- clared his intention of proltesting Nims' action on the ground that the state authorities do not have the right to refuse to accept the wage scale. Henderson Troupe Begins Broadcasts Inaugurating a new series of dra- matic radio features over radio sta- tion WTMJ, Milwaukee, next Sun- day, from the plays of the Milwau- kee Dramatic Festival, under the di- rection of Robert Henderson, will be presented for five consecutive Sun- days beginning April 8. The program will be broadcast from 2 to 2:15 p.m. (EST), and will include the same stars who will ap- pear in the Ann Arbor season. The first broadcast will present Violet Kemble-Cooper and Rollo Peters in the second act love scene from du Maurier's "Peter Ibbetsen." COUNCIL TO MEET The Engineering Council will meet tonight at 7:15 in the M. E. Com- puting Room. Include a SNAP, CRACKLE, POP course Syo i iaOUr Pap - THERE is nothing easier "to take" than a bowl of Kellogg's Rice Krispies. So crisp and tasty. And the way those toasted rice bubbles snap, crackle and pop in milk or cream just tells you to "Listen - get hungry!" A great breakfast cereal. Ideal for lunch with fresh fruit added. And after a hard evening of study, Rice Krispies satisfy hunger and promote sound, restful sleep. i I i .I tonight in Lydia Mendelssohn. The- Spring t atre, and will continue with two per- ____ formances nightly through Saturday. Members of the University of Mich- While "The Road to Life" is un- igan Club of Ann Arbor will hold deniably Soviet propaganda, accord- their annual spring partyr at 8 p.m ing to Jack Seidel, '35, director of the Tuesday, April 10 on the second floor organization, the film is interesting of the Union, according to plans re- from the artistic and historic point leased yesterday by T. Hawley Tap- of view. ping, general secretary of the Alumni The story deals with the problems Association, confronting those who set about to LaverneTaylor, '31Ed, has been reform and educate the post-War or- appointed general chairman of the phaned children in Russia, and how entertainment, which will be con- they were solved. The plot is based on ducted in conjunction with the Ann actual incidents of the "wild boys" Arbor Association of University of of Russia. Michigan Women. - Preliminary plans formulated at a Su meeting of the committee yesterday include billiards, bowling, ping pong, dancing and a buffet supper follow- ing the one hour progmam of speeches T YPEWRITERS and entertainment in the Pendleton 1 30 South State Street Library._ ___ 4- 4 0ROUND TRIP Special Student Rate - Three Fast Deluxe Coaches Daily NEW LOW FARES TO ALL POINTS PHONE 9142 CAMPUS TRAVEL BUREAU - CHUBB'S 10 A.M.-8 P.M. h1, _______ II SEVERAL HUNDRED VOLUMES OF NON-FICTION INCLUDING BIOGRAPHY, TRAVEL, POLITICS, ETC. Regularly Priced from $2.50 to $5.00 0" 1 Now $100 per)C Book 11 11 A