THE IHI~lciiICWAN I)AIIAY Need Of Change In Tax Set-Ip Cited By Roper Secretary Of Commerce Is Confident That Utilities Dilemma Will Be Solved: CHICAGO, Dec. 1.-(P)-Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. Roper cited the "need of a general revision of our entire tax structure" in a mes- sage to the nation's business men tonight. He expressed confidence the "util- ities dilemma" would be solved, ad- vocated equal responsibility between labor organizations and management, stressed the importance of reducing the national debt as well as balancing the budget, espoused "immediate and constructive" treatment of the rail-: road's financial problems and hailed the projected building construction program. The Secretary outlined his views in an address prepared for delivery before the Commerce Department's business advisory council. To the business and industry execu-! tives who are members of the coun- cil, President Roosevelt sent a tele- gram which said in part: "I am looking forward to meeting with all of you at the earliest prac- ticable date so we may have the op- portunity of talking over the problems that affect us so vitally. I am con- fident that appropriate action can lead to increased employment and more effective purchasing power in the hands of great masses of people still without adequate income." Discussing the tax on undistributed corporate earnings, Mr. Roper said: "Treasury records indicate that the tax did lead to a market increase in the percentage of corporate profits disbursed as dividends during 1936 and there is evidence to show that theJ the tax also caused increases in cor- porate operating expenses in the area of wages, bonuses, advertising, main- tenance, research, etc. "It is already evident that such situations are receiving the sympa- thetic consideration of the Treasury in its recommendations to Congress on the revision of the 1936 Revenue Act, as indicated by Secretary Mor- genthau's recent statement and in the President's message to Congress on Nov. 15."1 Public utilities, he said, were "con- cerned with the degree to which gov- ernment competition may make it im- possible for operating companies to earn a fair return on capital invested while providing for expansion and replacement" and with the effect ofE the "death sentence" on the equities( of holding companies.I Ames Says Religiont Is A Very Vital Need (Continued from Page 1) Student Religious Association, and3 his wife. Professor Ames will continue his series on the theme "The Relation of Religion to Culture" with three ad- dresses today.' He will speak first at a faculty luncheon and will discuss "The Will to Believe" at a public lecture at 4:15 p.m. in the Natural Science Au-r ditorium. At Lane Hall, Professor Ames will participate in one of the regular weekly fireside chats discus- sing 'The Return to Religion." Champion Steer At Chicago Show Murphy To Put Relief In State Before Budget Governor Asks Welfare Victim Of Beating Report Published On Mountain Zone{ Dorr To Accredit State Prep Schools Agencies Of Need For For Appraisal Assistance. LANSING, Dec. 1.-- P)-Governor Ashbourne Orange, a light heavyweight shorthorn from the Okla- homa A. & M. college barnlot, was chosen as the grand champion steer --the highest honor to which Ashbourne Orange could aspire-at the International Livestock Exposition in Chicago. Oklahoma presented the champion, an Aberdeen Angus, last year. The new bovine ruler is shown here with his attendant, Arthur McArthur. Mrs. Leopold Stokowski Sues Famed Husband For Divorce, Concert Conductor's Wife tody of their daughter, Sonia. FilesChargsOfCuelt Mrs. Stokowski today asked that* Fes Charges OYJ CAruleLty Ithe divorce suit papers be sealed and In Courts Of Nevada that the hearing, scheduled for to- morrow afternoon, be closed. She LAS VEGAS, Dec. 1.- P)-Thc fre- also requested the terms of the prop- quently denied separation of the Leo- erty settlement be incorporated in the poidSokwski wa -cofired tdaydecree. poId Stokowskis was confirmed today Stokowski, 54 years old, has head- when the famed concert conductor's ed the Philadelphia orchestra since wife filed suit for divorce. . She has 1912. been a resident of Nevada six weeks. She charged the Philadelphia or- M edicos chestra leader with extreme cruelty.M Plan Although a waiver and a stipulationr denying the charge was filed by Sto- Re search Fund kowski's attorney, C. D. Breeze, he said the action would be uncontested. Adm inistration The Stokowskis have two daugh- ters, Gloria Luba, 10 years old, and! Andrea Sadja, 6 years old, whose Decisions On Novy Project custody was given their mother in a To Be Made Public By property settlement signed last Oct. 8. The marriage, the director's sec- The First Of Next Year ond, took place in New York Jan. 6, 1926. The recent Mrs. Stokowski was Plans for administration of the' formerly Evangeline Brewster John- Frederick G. Novy Fellowship Fund son of the New Brunswick, N.J., sur- for Research in Bacteriology were gical equipment manufacturing fam- drawn up by medical class officers, ily. meeting last night in the Founders Stokowski was divorced by Olga Room of the Union. Samaroff in 1923. She obtained cus- According to Robert O. Morgan Murphy said today that he would place Michigan's "growing" relief needs ahead of a balanced budget. The Governor said he had asked welfare agencies for an "appraisal" of relief needs and had, as a first step in meeting them, obtained fed- eral assurances that at least 5,000 ad- ditional WPA jobs would be made available in this state. Murphy predicted that 10,000 more WPA jobs would be provided this month if the relief problem justified such a course. A further expansion of the work would be possible in Jan- uary, he said. Recent Layoffs Hurt The Governor asserted lay-offs at- tributable to the current recession have deprived approximately 10,000 workers in automobile factories and. allied industries in the Detroit area of their jobs. "This condition may not grow greatly," he added. "I don't want a problem like this exaggerated," Murphy told newspa- cermen in a press conference today, "but I do want it met. It isn't a dif- ficult problem-it isn't anything like relief problems the government has. been called upon to meet before. "The state could, perhaps, get by this year just the way we had planned. But the fact remains that there is a relief problem that is larger than we expected and it is growing. The sensible thing to do is to appraisej it exactly. To Have Reasonable Policy "It will be the policy of this govern- ment to reasonably meet that prob- lem, whatever it may be. We are not going to permit distress and suf- fering in this state." He pointed out that financial ob- servers were predicting a business boom that would contribute through the winter when the Legislature ap- propriated $8,000,000 for welfare pur- poses, instead of granting requests which totalled $10,000,000. "The state," he said, "may find it necessary to increase its allotment. The Federal Government must be more generous with Michigan. And, local communities will have to muster j all of the assistance possible." George F. Granger, Emergency Re- lief Administrator, said the relief case load in Michigan reached a low point of 45,000 on October 8, but now is above the 50,000 mark. In addition to the ERA case load 42,000 persons werehemployed on WPA jobs and"58,- 000 received old age assistance. PUBLISH HISTORICAL ESSAYS A new analysis of the act estab- lishing the University of Michigan in 1817 is presented in a newly published volume of historical essays from the University Press. The analysis, by Dr. Egbert R. Isbell, assistant editor of the University Press, is made in the light of Judge A. B. Woodward's book, "A System of Universal Sci- ence." Six-year-old Larry Kuntz, of Wheat Basin, Mont., shown here resting in a Columbus, Mont., hos- pital, was beaten unconscious with a gun butt by a man and woman who shot and killed his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kuntz. Fire Destroys $20,000 Home Excitement Causes Death Of Nearby Resident Fire destroyed the $20,000 home of Mr. and Mrs. John T. Knapp at 4088 Washtenaw Rd. late Tuesday night and caused the death of a nearby resident, Mrs. Lura Voorheis Britton, from excitement. Sheriff's officers and state police1 were unable to check the flames, al- though a volunteer bucket brigade saved the garage. The cause of the fire was undetermined, but it -appar- ently originated in the rear stairway to the basement. Mrs. Britton became hysterical about 9 p.m. while watching the fire from her home at 4040 Washtenaw Rd. and died an hour later of a heart blood clot despite the efforts of a physician. Regulations adopted by the city councils of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti prohibit fire apparatus or firemen from going beyond the city limits, and they could not respond to calls for aid. "LONGS" BY P R 0' 4 Many m day-wear1 against cool vents colds, colds leadt cooling off. outdoors-] Underwear This two- A". many other. e longer beca placed sepa tection. Wil WOAP OPENING clothes fit b - WERINGKEEPS IT CLOSED SUP6DRT FROM THE OUT yet cannot g VariedWhateve Lengths cW aee For Your length or l Selec'tion }Bring along Price perg TECT YOU! en who face a blast furnace all long underwear! It protects them ding off too suddenly. That pre- and more serious ailments that to. You, too, can avoid sudden -from heated house to wintry by wearing Coopers Y-Front Masculinized. piece Y-Front underwear offers advantages. No buttons. Wears use uppers or lowers can be re- arately. Provides extra back pro- il not bulk or bind. Makes outer etter. Y-Front opening convenient ap. Gives energy-saving support. r his preference as to sleeve eg length, we can ,please him. g his waist and chest measure. garment-shorts and sleeveless and up; Longs and short sleeve and up according to fabric. Of interest to geologists, mining Prof. Harold M. Dorr of the polit- engineers, minerologists, geographers ical science department Vill return to and biologists is a book recently pub- Ann Arbor upon the completion of a lished by the University Press con- trip he will make until Dec. 6 for the taining material on the natural phe- nomena of the San Carlos Mountains purpose of accrediting high schools. of Tamualipas, Mexico, gathered on a Professor Dorr, working with the University expedition in the region. Bureau of Cooperation with Educa- The volume was edited by Prof. tional Institutions, will visit Big Rap- Lewis B. Kellum of the geology de- ids High School, Ferris Institute of partient and director of the expedi- Big Rapids, Hershey High School, Le- tion. It consists of the geological and Roy High School and Morley High biological reports of the expedition's School. staff and laboratory studies of cer- tain groups of organisms from the FISHOW'S WATCH area. The San Carlos Mountains are and comparable in structure and posi- JEWELRY REPAIR tion to the Black Hills of South Da- 347 Maynard Cor. William kota and comprise an isolated na- Watch Crystals 35c tural unit about 900 miles in area. / shirts, oca shirts, 75c Local Red Cross Gifts Total $4,437 Subscriptions to the Washtenaw chapter of the American Red Cross totaled $4,437.98, exceeding the quota of $4,200 set for Ann Arbor, Bruce Palmer, general chairman of the roll call announced yesterday, Total enrollment of members yes- terday numbered 2260 slightly below the quota of 2500. The current total of members is higher than the final total for last year, however. All divisions of the roll call in Ann Arbor showed increases over their re- sults a year ago, Mr. Palmer said. Mastenh & Chase'- 211 South Main Street 300 LOVELY GIGOLETTES SOPH CABARET Trial Of Pawlowskit Faces Adjournment' DETROIT, Dec. 1.--(P)-The trial of Robert Pawlowski, 16-year-old burglar accused of beating Pauline Regal to death in her room Sept. 16, was adjourned this afternoon when1 the prosecution tried to introduce 1 'an alleged confession taken from the suspect after his arrest. Judge Edward J. Jeffries adjourned the trial to allow O. K. Underwood, defense counsel, to study the state- ment. The trial will be resumed to- morrow morning. Detained as a mental patient at1 Henry Ford hospital, Pawlowskik escaped Sept. 15. He is accused of, beating Miss Regal to death while: she slept, thinking she would awaken' and find him stealing 65 cents from her purse. secretary of the Class Officers' Coun- cil, a brochure outlining the object of the project and mechanics of hand- ling it will be drawn up for distribu- tion to medical alumni by the first of the year. The fund was launched Nov. 21 at a dinner given in honor of Dr. Novy, Dean-Emeritus of the Medical School, and in addition to the mon- ey provided for research, interest on the money is expected to furnish a permanent fellowship of about $1,- 500. The fund is expected to mature to $50,000 within the three-year limit set under the Alumni Ten Year Pro- gram Project. The executive com- mittee is composed of Dr. C. Stuart Wilson, Detroit, chairman; Dean Al- bert C. Furstenburg of the Medical School; Dr. Richard Freyberg, Ann Arbor; Dr. George H. Belot, Ann Ar- bor; Dr. Grover C. Pemberty, De- troit; Dr. George A. Seybold, Jack-I son; Dr. Milton Shaw, Lansing; and Dr. A. Milton Humber, Detroit. r -. - Zotos The Ultimate Permanent i She will remember this weekend's FRATERNITY PARTY with F LOW E RS from the CHELSEA FLOWER SHOP 203 East Liberty Telephone 2-2973 R ITALIAN DINNERS by appointment $1.25 $1.50 Phone 958-W Ypsi 407 Marion corner Packard block outside Ypsi The ZOTOS WAVE is unbe- lievably comfortable. It ban- ishes fear and restlessness. Really enjoy the delightful ZOTOS process. GROOM-WELL BEAUTY SHOPPES 615 East Liberty Phone 3773 1205 S. University Phone 4818 r Read The Daily Classifieds i 11 n' Miller's Dairy Farm Stores I' Three Stores 533 South Main 1219 South University HOT FUDGE SUNDAE, with whipped cream ..... BUTTERSCOTCH BLACK WALNUT SUNDAE 620 East Liberty 12c 5c .1 C May We Suggest For Today's LUNCHEON Grilled Veal Potato 39c Chop and Noodles or Vegetable Rolls or Bread Salad or Dessert Coffee Tea 29c Chili Con Carne Milk DINNER THICK MALTED MILKS any flavor-.............. Roast Loin Potato 45c of Pork, Applesauce and Vegetable 39c Frankfurters and Hot Potato Salad Potato or Vegetable I I I II II i momm caucus can for coucmuous ceiel