The Weather Local showers, slightly warmer Thursday; Friday partly cloudy and warmer. LL Official Publication Of The Summer Session s VOL. XIV 14o.39 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1933 DryLaw Bureau Is Abolished Functions Given To Justice Department In Gigantic Merger Program Immediate Savings Close To 5 Million Numerous Other Divisions Are Abolished As Inde- pendent Units WASHINGTON, Aug. 9. - (P) - A new alignment of Federal agencies, which abolishes such familiar figures as the Prohibition Bureauand Ship- ping Board, goes into effect at mid- night tonight under President Roose- velt's 'economy reorganization 'pro- gram. The changes call for more dele- tions from the Government structure than any action since the end of the war. No responsible official should esti- mate how many workers would lose their jobs, but the majority felt that the' number would be less than 2,000. Immediate savings from the reor- ganization, estimated originally to cut yearly expenditures at least $25,- 000,000, will be at the rate of $5,000,- 000 annually as a result of modifica- tions extending the time to Dec. 31, in which some changes become effec- tive. At Hyde Park, President Roosevelt studied reorganization plans present- ed by Cabinet aides and went into the legal phases so that there could be no upset. Where the Ax Falls Here are the divisions abolished as independent units: Shipping Board and Merchant Fleet Corp., acquired by the Commerce De- partrkient. Prohibition Bureau, its investiga- tion and enforcement work sent to a division of investigation in the Justice Department and other duties divided between that department and the Treasury..,. Offices of Public Buildings and Public Parks of the National Capital, National Memorial Commission, Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Com- mission, Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission, Duties to the National Park Service, which becomes the Of- fice of National Parks, Buildings and Reservations. The Bureaus of Immigration and Naturalization are consolidated into a Bureau of Immigration and Natur- alization, while the Federal Board of Vocational Education, heretofore an independent unit, becomes an advis- ory board with its functions placed in a division of the Office of Education of the Interior Department. Major Phases of Plan Major phases of the reorganization plan until Dec. 31 are: Establishment of a Division of Pro- curement in the Treasury to succeed the several hundred units now ob- taining supplies, and formation of a Division of Disbursing in that depart- ment to succeed the 2,200 agencies attending to that duty now. Consolidation of the Bureaus of Internal Revenue and Industrial Alcohol into a Division of Internal Revenue, likewise put off until Dec. 31 or sooner if Secretary William H. Woodin works out a plan. Abolition of the Prohibition Bureau brings to an end its long. effort to enforce the Eighteenth Amendment. Of its 1,800 employees, all discharged, approximately 1,200 are to be re- employed ignmediately in the Division of Investigation. Fire Is Checked In University's Tract SAULT STE. MARIE, Aug. 9.--(A') -The forest fire on Sugar Island was under control today after burning over 400 acres of slashing, burned over acreage and marshes. The blaze was completely checked on the west, south and east and 48 men were on hand to complete the work on the north, according to Louis Smith, fire warden in charge, who returned to Trout Lake. Rio Grande Valley Is Torn By 80-Mile Hurricane -Associated Press Photo An 80-mile-an-hour hurricane caused considerable property damage in the lower Rio Grande valley, twisting buildings and blowing citrus fruit to the ground. This picture shows how a hangar at the airport at Brownsville, Tex., was damaged by the storm. Store Hours Must Not Be Shortened, Johnson Says WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.-(PA)-Cit-f ing that the intent of the Recov-t ery Act was to increase employment,t Administrator Hugh S. Johnson said today, in a statement that no re- tailer could stagger employeehours, enforce rest periods or shorten the hours of store operation without de- feating the purpose of the codes. His emphatic assertion immediate- ly took place among the most signi- ficant yet to come from the NRA,e in view of constant reports as to re- courses for getting around the codes and yet displaying the Blue Eagle. Inquiries on this point have in- creased of late, while the officialsc have plugged ahead at other aspectst of making the law effective. The militant Johnson took timeE off from the opening hearing on 27 codes proposed for the coal indus- try to stress his point as to retail- ers. At that crowded session in the huge Commerce Department auditor- ium, the struggle between union and non-union forces was flushing to a full height. Putting that quarrel on for futuref determination, Johnson insisted that while the agreements signed by re- tail stores and groceries provided that no store, open less than 52 hours Edmonson Calls~ First Meeting OfLocal1 N.R.A' Session Is To Formulate' A Course Of Action For Ann Arbor Drive Dean James B. Edmonson of the School of Education, who was made director of the NRA forces of Ann Arbor at a meeting of the Chamber of Commerce Tuesday night, will act in his new official capacity for the first time at 10 a. m. today when he will meet with industrial and business leaders of the city to discuss the local committee's course of action and to appoint additional officials. Dean Edmonson's first assistant in the recovery work will be Mrs. Edgar C. Edsill, while Frank B. DeVine, local attorney, will head the Ann Ar- bor NRA committee. It is expected that among the first official acts of the forces under Dean Edmonson will be investigation into and action on assertions current throughout the city that localumer- chants are acting against the spirit of the Federal hours code by closing their establishments at earlier hours than formerly. Because of the fact that the sum- mer months 'constitute the season of least activity in Ann Arbor business circles, no radical reforms are antici- pated within the next month. It is expected that all efforts of the com- mittee will be bent on getting all the city's commerceaworking under NRA regulations by fall. Other members of the committee which will work under the direction of Dean Edmonson are William F. Angell, secretary; and Otto W. Hais- ley, Paul L. Proud, and Mayor Rob- ert A. Campbell. Literary Faculty Will a week before July 1, could reduce the store hours at all, the intent was that hours of operation should not be curtailed in any way. In other words, while 52 is a set' minimum, it was explained that if a store had been operating 60 or more hours, it should not curtail its time of being open but rather should em- ploy more people to do the work. "That agreement is a solution cov- enant and its purpose is explicit," Johnson said. "The owners of the stores and the customers who buy from those stores should have but one single purpose, which is to carry out this specific provision which has to do with re-employment through reducing the number of hours each employe works and by keeping the stores open as long as pssible." The statement proceeded: "The insignia of the Blue Eagle must be withdrawn from those stores which either collectively or individu- ally flagrantly attempt to frustrate the purpose of the presidential re- employment agreement." Johnson said that "when employ- ers sign this agreement with their President after reading Section 8, no one could conceivably set about staggering employee hours, enforcing rest periods and increasing the time for lunch without pay, or either di- rectly or indirectly conspire to de- feat the very purpose of the agree- ment by materially shortening the number of hours which the stores had customarily stayed open." In warning the retailers against shortening store hours, the admin-1 istrator quoted the agreement which was provided for them temporarily (Continued on Page 4) Michigan Must Match All Grants Of Federal Relief WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.--UP)-Set- ting one billion dollars as the goal for unemployment relief through the coming winter, Harry L. Hopkins, Federal relief administrator, said to- day that unless slates and cities equal the Government's $500,000,000 appropriation the jobless are going to take a beating." West Virginia, Texas, Ohio, Ken- tucky, Alabama and Michigan, he added, already have been "put on notice" to increase relief expendi- tures or else not to expect any more Federal grants. MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS By the Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE W L" Pct. Washington.............6,6 38 .635 New York...............63 41 .606 Philadelphia...........52 51 .505 Detroit................. 52 54 .491 Cleveland...............52 57 .477 Chicago .................4 56 .462 'Boston................... 46 56 .451 St. Louis.............s42 68 .382 Wednesday's Results3 Washington 4, New York 1. Boston 8, Philadelphia 4. Only games scheduled. Thursday's Games Detroit at Chicago. NewYork at Philadelphia. Washington at Boston. St. Louis at Cleveland. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. New York ................61 42 .592 Pittsburgh ..59 46 .562 Chicago...........59' 47 .557 Boston.. 56 51 .523 St. Louis .... 55 52 .514 Philadelphia...........44 59 .427+ Brooklyn..............42 60 .412 Cincinnati ...... .........44 63 .411 Wednesday's Results Boston 3, Philadelphia 2. Chicago 10, St. Louis 7. Only games scheduled. Thursday's Games Chicago at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati at St. Louis. Boston at Brooklyn. Philadelphia-at New York. Five U.S. Navy Fliers Killed In Honolulu Crash HONOLULU, Aug. 9.-()-Five United States Navy fliers were killed today and another was injured slightly by the crash of a twin-en- gined patrol plane on a coral reef a mile off shore. The dead: Lieut. C. P. Hill, Pilot; body not recovered. Lieut. T. C. Marshal, Pilot under instruction; body recovered. Aviation mate, first class, C. C. Stewart; body not recovered. Radio man, first class, V. C. Hovey; body not recovered. Seaman, first class, L. B. Pitt; body not recovered. The plane was attached to the fleet air base at Pearl Harbor. The only occupant of the plane to escape death was N. A. Tuft, ma- chinist-mate, second class. He was slightly injured, was picked up and transferred to the'naval hospital at Pearl Harbor. Tuft said the accident apparently was caused by tail surfaces of the plane coming off, causing the craft to land on its back. Bombay Editor Finds America Different From Its Reputation By POWERS MOULTON Swarthy of skin and be-turbaned with white cloth, K. Natarajan, noted Bombay editor, was introduced to an American lady. "How do you do," he said, or some such greeting. "Can you read my fortune?" she demanded, thrusting out her palm. Natarajan said that no, he was afraid he couldn't, and wasn't very sure about his own, either. At least, that's the way he tells it. He had run into Americans be- fore, though. On a European tour- ist train, he met a jolly sectarian minister from Georgia who was run- liras. Before we go back I can get it changed into dollars and-have a neat profit." Natarajan doesn't think all Amer- icans are like that, though. We were given a long distance interview with him over the table at a luncheon in #his honor yesterday under the aus- pices of the Hindustan club. The beauty of it was that everybody else asked the questions. "What do you think of America, Mr. Natarajan," asked Dr. Frederick B. Fisher, just as a starter. Natarajan forked at the Michigan League's stewed pineapples, and gave up trying to get it all in one sen- tence. "In the matter of race prej- *,lns. T nmnc. 'rimnrT , rnn, 11o ~hP oaird