SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY United States Is Increasing It s Silver Purchase Treasury's Report Shows Sharp Rise In Foreign Silver Buying Give No Explanation Radi PicureShog-cli'g Assass i lloingiShoti Inflationary Talk Heard In Wall Causes Concern Being Street WASHINGTON, Oct. 12. - () - A sharp increase in the purchase of foreign silver has been made by the treasury department, it was disclosed in official sources today. The disclosure comes at a time when the government's monetary pol- i y commands increasing attention because of inflationary talk in Wall St. There was no official explanation for the move, but Congress meets in January and if the faster pace of buying were maintained until then, it might help forestall criticism from sil- verites in Congress. The silverites favor a vigorous pur- chasing program to attain the goal set by the silver legislation passed at the last session. This provides that even- tually silver shall attain a ratio of one-to-three with gold a backing for the nation's currency. More To Be Bought If purchases were continued at the pace of a few weeks ag, the buying program probably would extend over two years or more. Approximately 1,- 000,000,000 ounces have yet to be ac- quired before the one-to-three ratio is attained. When President Roosevelt national- ized domestic silver, estimates of the amount of metal that order would bring to the treasury ranged as high as 200,000,000. The receipts to date, however, are only about 94,000,000 ounces, and treasury officials said they did not expect them to go much higher. Though there are various conflict- ing opinions as to the possible effect of this silver program, advocates of increased use of the metal in the monetary system have contended it would increase commodity prices and property values. Higher Prices Needed President Roosevelt feels that some- what higher prides are needed. This was made clear Wednesday and as traders studied the declaration Thurs- day, attempting to guage the possi- bilities, bullish sentiment caused stocks and commodities to advance. Two other incidents Thursday at- tracted the attention of the monetary- minded, although observers could not determine just what they mean. If anything. 1. Prof. George F. Warren visited the White House. He is a leading ad- vocate of the theory that devaluing the dollar increases the price of goods. Officially, he merely lunched with the President to report on a recent tour he made of Europe. 2. Senator Bulkley (Dem., Ohio) after calling at the White House said. that further devaluation of the dollar is not an "impossibility." The remark was made recently under a stream of questions from reporters, and he denied talking monetary policy with the President. Scout Rumors Published reports that officials are considering a plan to reduce the con- tent of the silver dollar were scouted in informed treasury circles today. Al- though the President has such power, there was said to be no indication that he intends tQ use it. Under the Thomas amendment to the AAA, he is empowered to cut the silver's content to any extent neces- sary to "stabilize" domestic prices. The gold reserve act also conveyed authority to reduce it in proportion to any decrease in the dollar's gold content, without reference to price levels. If this were done, and the mone- tary value raised from $1.29 an ounce to a higher figure, correspondingly less silver would be needed to achieve the one-to-three ratio. Complete Plan For R.O.T.C. Rifle Team Organization of the rifle team of the Unive:!sity R.O.T.C. was an- nounced today by Capt. R. E. Hardy, of the military science department. Captain Hardy will coach the team, which will be composed of sophomore, junior, and senior members of the: unit. No team captain was elected at the close of competition last year. The 1933-34 team set up a better than average mark for this year's team to try for. They placed eleventh' out of 70 competing in the Hearst Trophy contest last year, and fifth in the corps area. This fall, appli-' cations have already been made for entry into both of these events. Plans -Associated. Press Photo This Associated Press radiophoto, rushed by plane from Marseilles to London and sent by radio to New York, shows the scerne of King Alexander's assassinaticn a split-set'ond after the fatal shots had teen fired. The assassin may b~e seen on the running bcard of the royal car, hobdino his arms about his head to protect himself against the saber of the mounted officer at left. Landscape Design Graduates All Hold Jobs, Survey ShowsI The fact that all men, graduates of the landscape design department are now actively engaged in some kind of professional work in this field was announced in an interview yesterday by Prof. Harlow Whittemore, head of the department. The department, Professor Whitte- more pointed out, also has quite a number of calls for men graduates and cannot fill the positions at pres- ent. 'In addition a number of stu- dents who have already found work as landscape foremen and designers have put off returning to the Univer- sity for this year. A considerable number of graduates are now em- ployed by the government in both State and national developments sup- ervising the work of such organiza- tions as the CCC and FERA. For example, 56 of them are em- ployed in Michigan State parks alone, four in the Great National Park in Tennessee, and others are scattered all over the United States employed iil diverse fields of landscape design. Arthur Stellhorn, '33, and Don Walp, '33, are now filling the impor- tant positions of directing the layout and development of the new Roose- velt State Park in North Dakota. Pro- fessor Whittemore opined that this job is a tremendous undertaking and will require much time and labor as the park is about 60 miles in length, running along the Little Missouri River. This project is under theCCC and was originated so that the farm- ers and their families would be reliev- ed from the terrible drought condi- tions which now exist in that region. Three more men are employed in High Russian Churchman Is Slain In Home Archbishop Found Dead As Villa Burns; Inquiry Opened As To Death RIGA, Latvia,Oct. 12 - --Doc- tor Pommer, archbishop of the Rus- sian orthodox church, was found slain in his villa early today. The villa was ablaze when a fire brigade found his body, covered with straw. Doctor Pommer was a strong opponent of Bolshevism. Police have; made no arrests in the crime. The archbishop's body was badly burned, but a wound was clearly vis- ible in the forehead. Police opened an inquiry to deter- mine whether he had been killed for political reasons or personal venge- ance. It was considered possible also that he had been slain by a burglar who might have beenhsurprised in the act of robbing the home. The archbishop, whose full name was Johann Pommer, was to have ap- peared today as chief witness in a suit against several persons accused of embezzling church funds. Firemen said virtually all furniture in the residence, located in a Rig suburb, had been smashed before the house was set afire.} Mathematical Club Elects the Tennessee Valley project in land- planning and improvement work. Russell Ratcliffe, '33, and Jeff Conger, '33, are directing the work of 10 CCC camps in soil erosion control in the lands about the proposed lake of the Norris Dam. Their work is also to help relocate, on suitable lands, the farmers who Bombs Destroy Spanish Rebel. T r oopTrains MADRID, Oct. 12 -OP)- Spain's air attack on rebels in the mountain- ous province of Asturias was described as highly successful in dispatches to- day from the north. A troop train carrying insurgent Emmons And Morrison Back From Capital Two Men Chairmen Of Committees On Highway Research Board Professors Roger L. Morrison and Walter J. Emmons of the transporta- tion engineering department have re- cently returned from a meeting of the Highway Research Board, a division of the National Research Council, held in Washington, D. C., last week. The meeting was attended by the main committee chairmen of the board, Professor -Morrison being chairman of the highway transporta- tion economics committee, and Pro- fessor Emmons heading the project committee on the correlation of re- search in mineral aggregates. Founded By Lincoln The National Research Council is a subsidiary of the National Academy of Sciences, an instiution for the ad- vancement of scientific progress founded by President Lincoln in 1863. In 1916 the Academy offered its serv-, ices to President Wilson in case the United States should enter the World War, and out of this movement the National Research Council was es- tablished in 1918. The perpetuation of the Council was insured by a decree from Presi- dent Wilson, and in 1920 its activi- ties broadened to include what is now the Highway Research Board. The activities of the Board are devoted to the coordination and advance- ment of scientific knowledge concern- ing highway transportation facilities throughout the country. Elected Vice-President Professor Morrison attended earlier in the week a meeting of tpe Institute of Traffic Engineers in conjunction with the National Safety Council. He was elected vice-president of the Institute. At the.meeting results of the nationwide city traffic survey conducted under the FERA were dis- cussed, and ways and means of con- tinuing the survey were considered. The traffic survey now being con- ducted here in Ann Arbor is a part of this national city traffic survey. Inlay Study Begun In Dental College In connection with the new specifi- cations laid down by the Bureau of Standards, Dr. Marcus L. Ward, for- mer dean of the School of Dentistry and at present head of the metallurgy department, is carrying on an exten- sive study of various amalgams to be used as fillings. In an interview yesterday, Doctor Ward explained that the market is being flooded with so many different types of amalgam that manufacturers must have their products approved before they can be sold. The metal- lurgy department, through its modern testing equipment, is acting as a con- sultant fora number of these con- cerns, he said. Among the other experiments tak- ing place in the metallurgy laboratory is one dealing with the amount of adhesion of the cement used with gold inlays. Another study is being made to test the durability of rubber and rubber compounds. _. are to be bought out in order to flood reinforcements to Mieres and Oviodo, the river valley. among the last rebel strongholds, was The department also boasts of three destroyed by bombs from government graduates who are heads of landscape planes. departments in other state colleges Madrid was informed there were and universities. These . are in Ore- 100 dead and injured as a result. gon, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. More than 300 bombs have been Four others are directors of land- dropped on leftist strongholds in theI scape extension work in Indiana, Wis- mining districts, army leaders said. consin, Maryland, and New York, Infantry forces have had difficulty respectively. penetrating theregion because re- _____________ treating rebels are blowing up roads and bridges and taking all provisions il o S owith them. Time bombs were left in some instances. 1At home the government offered L ndin - M eet protection to workers who would re- turn to their posts in defiance of the eCiyt general strike, launched with the ex- At City Airport tremist revolt a week ago. Students To Compete For, Prizes In Plane Contest This Sunday A spot landing contest for airplane owners and students of the Univer- sity will be held again this Sunday at the Ann Arbor airport. This meet, J. E. Downs of the air- port explained, is one of a series! which were begun last Sunday when a straight spot landing contest was held. The winner in the last contest among the owners was Otto Haisch who flew a Waco. In the handicap student contest, Fred Hunt was awarded first prize and Henry Wight- *man won second place. The students both used Great Lakes Trainer and Aeronca planes which were furnish- ed by the Ann Arbor Air Service. The meet this Sunday will be some- what of a deviation of last Sunday's type of spot landing but the type of approach will be announced at a later= date, thus causing contestants to practice all types of spot landings. The prizes that will be given in the owner class will consist of five dollars.j In the student class for first prize the contestant will be allowed to take the plane.up for a half an hour; sec- ond prize will be one quarter of an hour in the ship. Other contests to be held in the near 'future will consist of bomb- dropping and figure eights as well as spot landing. Seven-Year-Old Boy's Body Found In Trunk JERSEY CITY, N. J., Oct. 12 -UP)I - A blue-overalled seven-year-old grammar school boy, John Feeney, Jr., was found strangled today and cram- med into an old trunk in a small, ramshackle squatter's shack near the abandoned bed of the Morris canal. The rope with which the little boy had been strangled had apparently been picked up in the dumps sur- rounding the shack. It was lighter: than ordinary sash cord, and had been twisted tightly about the boy's neck several times. A physician GREEN RE-ELECTED SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 12 -UP)- William Green was re-elected presi- dent of the American Federation of Labor for his eleventh consecutive term at the organization's fifty-fourth annual convention here late today. CRITICIZE WILLIAMS SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 12 -UP)- Clay Williams, chairman of the new NRA board, was criticized by the American Federation of Labor today for what was said to-be his "biased, unfair and inconsiderate position." r _._._ i MIT-- ; i __ j } ---_ .____ !i 1 j i 1 ,, , ' ,d w A G R E E N l i S Y S T E M FOUNTAIN SPECIAL Chocolate Sodas lOc At Our SANDWICH BAR HOME MADE SANDWICHES HOME Specially Featured - MADE BARBECUE SAND BEEF OR PORK -- 10c WICH ti if 111 I I