ix THEM ICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, DECEMBER' SIX TUESDAY, DECEMBER ______________________________________________________________________________________ I Coughlin Plans Entrance Into '36 Campaign Radio Priest To Organize District Groups Against 'Rubber Stamps' DETROIT, Dec. 16. - (P) -- The National Union of Social Justice was projected into the 1936 campaign Sunday as the Rev. Charles E. Cough- lin called upon "20,000 selected work- ers" to organize groups of 250 in every congressional district to defeat "rub- ber stamp congressmen." Speaking over a nation-wide radio hook-up, Father Coughlin outlined the first major political move of his national union but denied that he in- tended to sponsor the formation of a political party. Declaring the reform of the na- tion's monetary system was the prin- cipal objective he said: "The history of seventy-four con- gresses has been a history of con- spiracy against the financial interests of the people of the United States; a history of subservience to the finan- cial interests of Wall Street and to the Federal Reserve banks. Congress Is Extravagant "In the latter days, it is true that this present congress has fed the hun- gry, clothed the naked and sheltered the distressed. But true to tradi- tions of its predecessors, it has bor- rowed credit money from banks -18 billion dollars--whose vaults were almost empty and pledged to these bankers that the people of this nation would pour into those empty vaults not 18 billion dollars, but 36 billion dollars of real American money." Explaining the objectives of his proposed organizations for the elec- tion of congressmen, he declared: Districts Must Unite "Who is so ignorant as not to know that those who concentrate the wealth of the nation and exploit the people have been so powerfully or- ganized as to secure the nomination of either a Republican or a Demo- cratic representative to do their bid- ding? "I say that we must unite in every congressional district to elect repre- sentatives to Congress who will pub- licly pledge themselves to nationalize the Federal Reserve banking system." Father Coughlin said he is interest- ed in "perfecting the two main politi- cal parties" rather than forming a new one. "We believe in rescuing them from the ward healers and the unseen rul- ers of the financial world," he added. "We do not believe in establishing a third or a fourth party which will only add to the confusion." Early Newspapers" Placed On Exhibit Eight priceless newspapers of American colonial days, which have been loaned to the department of journalism by the Clements library, are being framed in glass and will be hung in the editorial room on the second floor of Haven Hall before Christmas vacation. The loan of the newspapers was made through Randolph Adams, di- rector of the Clements library. The list of the newspapers and the dates of the issues are: Boston Gazette and Country Jour- nal, Sept. 30, Nov. 11, and Dec. 9, 1765, April 21, 1766, Sept. 8, 1767, and Feb. 8, 1768. The Boston Evening- Post, Sept. 7, 1767, and The Pennsyl- vania Packet or The General Adver- tiser, Nov. 25, 1780. Held For Investigation Budget Discussed Holding Compa By Roosevelt Aides Too Severe By WASHINGTON, Dec. 16. -(A) - Tv President Roosevelt called in his chief By ARTHUR MILLER financial and relief advisers today The extinction of good and bad for a budget conference, presumably holding companies alike in one fell centering on estimates for "emer- swoop by the Holding Company Act gency" outlays for the fiscal year be- was termed an unnecessarily severe ginning next July 1. I penalty by Prof. Merwin H. Water- Those summoned included Harry man of the School of Business Ad- L. Hopkins, Works Progress adminis- ministration. trator; Harold L. Ickes, Public WorksI Although much criticism has been d strato; He MI leveled at the holding companies, Pro- administrator;Henry orgenthau, fessor Waterman pointed out that Jr., Secretary of the Treasury; Dan- "the companies may have been con- iel Bell, acting director of the budget; ceived in evil, but like children, you Rexford G. Tugweil, undersecretary can't abolish the original sin by kill- of agriculture, and Frank Walker, ing them off." head of the National Emergency Professor Waterman said he held Council. no brief for the pyramid type of com- The invitations to Hopkins and pany, but he held that the stigma Ickes and also to Tugwell, Rural Re- which the industry has received does settlement administrator, left little not belong to all companies, but only doubt the conference was to consider to the least efficient ones and those the outlook for Federal relief de- which "have not justified their exist- mands and what shall succeed the ences." $4,000,000,000 works program. "In the utility industry," he said, ny Act Termed Prof. Waterman "colored as it is at present by a crit- ical light of publicity, there is a great tendency for the worthless and ineffi- cient to stand out as typical. This is not so true in other instances where the bad are not quite so obnoxiously prominent as have been the Insull companies. "It is not that people have lost more money in utilities than in other in- vestments," he said. "It is that more investors have lost more money in holding companies in such a short time that has focused attention on their parent-subsidiary relation- ships." The Holding Company Act's provi- sion to dispose of many holding com- pany properties, Professor Waterman said, is really a killing blow. The companies have refused to abide by its provisions and are waiting the decision of the Supreme Court on the constitutionality of the act, he ex- plained. America Faces War Days,_Nye States SEATTLE, Wash., Dec. 16. - (P) - America, in the opinon of Senator Gerald P. Nye (Rep., N. D.), is fac- ing the most "dangerous days since the World War." Nye, head of the Senate munitions committee, told a public gathering here Sunday night that America "is; setting the pace" in warlike prepara- tions. "No nation is spending, as much as we are," he added. National defense, he said, was be- coming too much "a market for profit." He advocated Government ownership of the munitions industry. "I have no cure-all for the disease which is war, but we can do much to lessen the danger of our being drawn into another war," he said. "First, by tightening and enlarging our neu- trality policy, and then by removing profit from war itself, and prepara- tion for it." Trucking Firm Told To Cease SpyingTactics WASHINGTON, Dec. 16. - (P) - The National Labor Relations Board today ordered the Fruehauf Trailer Co. of Detroit to cease employing pri- vate detectives for the alleged pur- pose of reporting on union activity among its workers. In its first decision affecting the automobile industry, the board also directed the company to reinstate seven employes with back pay. These workers, the board said, were dis- charged for union activity. The company also was directed to stop "interfering" with the organization of its workers. The board cited testimony regard- ing J. N. Martin, described as a pri- vate detective in the company's pay. The board asserted he "passed as an ordinary employe" and was elected treasurer of the United Automobile Workers local. 1 p -Associated Press Photo. Robert Mahan, 22-year old Let- cher County coal miner, was held in Pikeville, Ky., jain in connection with the death of his infant son. His wife charged he held the child's hands and feet to discipline it. Gernman Institute Recognizes Hopkins Prof. Clark Hopkins of the Latin and Greek department has been elected as a corresponding member of the German Archaeology Institute, it was announced yesterday. This honor is conferred by the In- stitute only upon a limited number of scholars of other nations. This or- ganization has been internationally prominent for the promotion of arch- aeology, and under its auspices ex- cavations at Olympia and Pergamos have been conducted. It also has sponsored an extensive series of arch- aeological publications. The membership was conferred on Professor Hopkins in recognition of his work as a member of the Yale expedition excavating at Dura-Eur- opas, where he was field director for four years before coming to the Uni- versity. MILLER TO ADDRESS ENGINEERS A talk on "The Ethiopian Situa- tion" will be given by Col. Henry W. Miller, head of the department of mechanism and engineering drawing, at a meeting of Scabbard and Blade, honorary military society, to be held at 8 p.m., tomorrow in the Union. While You Are Home C hris tmas Vacation-" Be Sure To Take Advantage of the Time To Tell Your Parents that it is No Longer Cheaper to Send Your Laundry Home ! Here Are Some Facts! W HEN you take into consideration the cost of sending your laundry home (express charges) - the time and trouble spent by your family in having your laundry washed at home - and the length of time it takes for your laundry to be returned to you, especially when you are sorely in need of a clean shirt, then, you too, will take advantage of this new, cheaper, certified service that the Ann Arbor Laundries are now offering and that just can't he beat for economy and service. Shirts, handkerchiefs The Alumni Association is prepared to appoint a limited number of studelnts as solici- tors for The Michigan Alum- nus (official Michigan alumni magazine) for the coming holiday vacation. Call at of- fices in Alumni Memorial Hall for information. (Signed) ROBERT O. MORGAN Assistant General Secretary and socks are finished to meet the most critical eye - i II ~ n -- - _ ------_ i underwear and pajamas are washed and folded ready to wear. i GIFTS OF LASTING VALUE! Trumpets, Trombones, Piano Accordions, Guitars, Violin Outfits. Popular and Classic Music. Reasonably Priced. R.C.A.-Victor and Spartan Radios. SchaeberleMusic House 203 East Liberty Dial 6011 - -r ATTENTION STUDENTS The Ann Arbor Railroad has Special REDUCED ROUND-TRIP RATES for the Christmas Holiday Travel return- ing as late as January 9th. Lv. ANN ARBOR 3:05 P.M. ET Arr. TOLEDO... 4:30 P.M. ET Connecting with Lines East and South. SPECIAL TRAIN "RETURNING" Lv. TOLEDO 7:00 P.M. ET, Sunday, Jan. 5th Arrive Ann Arbor 8:15 P.M. SAMPLE BUNDLE (FINISHED SERVICE) 6 Handkerchiefs 3 Shirts 3 Pairs of Sox (Folded - Ready to Wear) 2 Suits of Underwear 2 Bath Towels 1 Pajama Suit Cost 92c Price per lb..0. Minimum Bundle 50c ... lOc Shirts Extra . .. ...loc (Full Dress Shirts are not included in this Special Price) Sox Extra, per pair Handkerchiefs, Extra . 2c - VARSITY LAUNDRY Phone 2-3123 TROJAN LAUNDRY Phone 9495