THE MICHIGAN DAILY Dry Chieftain Dalrymple Out Of Second Job WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.--OP)--A. V. Darymple for the second time to- day had left a job in which he help- ed the Federal government enforce the prohibition laws. His last retirement-Thursday, be- cause the prohibition bureau was re- organized-was accompanied, by a public statement that as director he had been a victim of "duplicity, double-dealing and double-crossing." In 1920, he was prohibition ad- ministrator for Illinois, Michigan, Indiana and Wisconsin. He then re- ported a "rum rebellion" in Iron County, Michigan, and led a group of his agents to the scene. But no dras- tic action follow' d. Nine months later his resignation was announced from Washington. Then, last April 1, he was made chief of the bureau here. In office less than three weeks he became involved in a dispute aver beer man- ufacturing permits granted to New Jersey gangsters. In that case, he said then, there was a "misunder- standing." His statement Thursday remarked that the controverted permits had been granted' without his knowledge. Three, he said, were approved be- fore he took office, one the second day after he was sworn in and the fifth the same day that he sent out instructions as to how they should be granted.. He charged, also, that he was not responsible for telegrams telling 1,- 800 employed under the prohibition b u r e a u that the reorganization would, automatically, remove them from the payroll. They knew that already, he asserted, and further- more they knew which of them would be immediately re-employed. "It is duplicity, double-crossing and double-dealing such as was indulged in this matter that has been prac- ticed on numerous occasions in this bureau by subordinates since I be- came the director," he said. He also wrote to Attorney General Cummings, under whose justice de- partment the prohibition bureau now functions, that the telegram incident was "another one of the multifarious acts of disloyalty to me while direc- tor of prohibition.", High Wave Siveeps Seven Orphans To Death -Associated Press Photo Seven children from a group of orphan youngsters enjoying an annual visit to the seashore were carried down by the undertow when a high wave swept them from a sandbar at Rockway Beach, Long Island. Some. of their companions, suffering from submersion, were revived by lifeguards. Picture shows a crowd gathered on the beach as guards worked over some-of the victims. Conservation Force Expected Fairbanks Will Remain In England, Is Rumor To Reduce Forest Fire Loss HOLLYWOOD. Calif. AUg 11 -P) NRA Threatens Cheaters With Business Death (Continued from Page 1) take one of these Blue Eagles off of some one's window in a clearcut case. "And that is going to be a sentence of economic death." Closely following a remark by Johnson that "it would be curious" if the Government dealt with firms not coming in under the recovery program, President Roosevelt, at the summer White House, issued an ex- ecutive order that all Government contracts would be cancelled if the contractor did not comply with the recovery code. Government contracts eventually will include a big part of the $3,300,000,000 public works fund.; At almost the hour the presidential order was issued, Johnson, in an ad- dress in Baltimore, said that "the public must buy now, it must buy under the Blue Eagle and it must buy to the full of its reasonable and prudent needs." This, said the ad- ministrator, was "nothing less than the point of success of failure" in the entire recovery program. The campaign, Johnson predicted, would intensify during the next three weeks toward "complete saturation of the country" with the spirit of the recovery program. To 'Supervise Oil Production WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.--(P)-An intimation that the Federal Govern- ment would provide for rigid control over oil production in the petroleum trade practice plan now nearing com- pletion came today from Hugh S. Johnson, the industrial administra- tor, whose aids are writing it. Pending completion of the revised' code, which is a successor to a ten- tative draft submitted to the oil in- dustry about two weeks ago, and until the nevi draft has been seen by theni, Johnson would not comment on details. His intimation that rigid produc- tion control would be included came about when he said the recovery pro- gram did not recognize state lines. He was asked if the Blue Eagle would go inside a state in fixing hours of labor and rates of pay in the oil industry but would stop at the state line on production con- trol. "Let's see if he does," Johnson r'eplied. It was expected in authoritative sources that the revised code would provide for allocating national pro- duction t4 meet national demand among the oil states and that to pre- vent shipment out of a state of more than its allowed share the Federal . (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fifth and last of a series of reports written by the men directing President 'Roose- velt's recovery program.) By ROBERT FECHNER Director Emergency Conservation Work- (Copyright, 1933, By The Associated Press) The President's nationwide refor- estation program is now operating at top. speed in all sections of the country. At the present time approximately 300,000 men, located in emergency conservation work camps established in national forests, national parks, state parks and on state and private- ly owned timbered lands are carry- ltg out work .programs designed to reduce enormously the annual losses caused (by forest fires and the at- tacks of tree diseases and insects. The principal kinds of work being done include construction of trails which will make fire fighting more effective, removal of fire hazards, clearing the forests of brush which spread destructive diseases, fighting insects which destroy trees, building telephone lines, thinning and clear- ing forest areas and general cleanup work. Later in the year the work pro- gram will be broadened to include a larger amount of tree planting in cut-over and burned-over areas and re-vegetation of over-grazed lands. Work to prevent soil erosion also is being carried on at several camps. The emergency conservation work organization was authorized by the Act of March 31, 1933, entitled an Act "For the Relief of Unemploy- ment Through the Performance of Useful Public Work, and for Othe' Purposes." The progress made in this work can be summarized briefly as fol- lows: 7 We have taken 300,000 persons, 1 including young men, war veter- ans, Indians, and experienced woods- men, from the ranks of the unem- ployed and given them jobs at whole- some, useful, worthwhile, healthful work in the forests. The great bulk of these men are from 18 to 25 years ias r ainc, now i nLonaon, wou. of age. stay in England for good. 2. The month cash allowances There was no confirmation. Gos " paid these men and by them sipers cited the prospect that th allotted to their dependents has actor planned to make a talkir brought direct relief to not less than picture version of "Robin Hoot a million persons. Most of the men near London. No =one here would I allot from-$20 to $25 of their month- surprised, it seemed, if Fairbani ly cash allowances to their -families. decided to become a subject of th The Millions that have been king. spent for supplies, such as work- Fairbanks is separated from hi ing equipment and :food, have stimu- wife, Mary Pickforca Their plai lated business in every section of for a divorce, if any, have not. bee the country. disclosed. 4 A work program for the for- ' ests has been launched which COCK AND BULL STORY calls for the completion of such ma- COMSTOCK, Neb., Aug. .1l.-UP)- jor projects as the construction of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Coakley, farn 40,000 miles of trails through the ers near .here, have combatted lo forests, . the building .of 12,00 miles farm prices with. 600 hens. of telephone lines, the improvement Since the first :of ,the year week] of several millionacres through thin- receipts from sale of eggs average ning and the conducting of cam- $20 and they estimate their chicker paigns against tree-attacking dis- and a few cows have netted mor eases and insects on 10,000,000 acres. than $100 a month.t It is hoped and believed that this "They are the best assets we have new enterprise will become an es- had," Mrs. Coakley says. tablished part of our national policy and within a reasonable time will correct the almost criminal careless- ness with which such a large part of l SATURDAY our once vast forest resources were CLEARANCE The forestation, soil erosion, and flood control work that the men of the Civilian Conservation Corps is WHITE HATS performing will pay dividends to the present and every succeeding gen- eration. The fire prevention and fire control work will undoubtedly greatly reduce the losses that have occurred JACOBSON'S in our remaining standing timber due to forest fires. '' Senator Asks Scrapping -Of Monroe Pact NEW YORK, Aug. 11-(R)-Scrap- ping of the Monroe Doctrine in the interest of amity between the United States and Latin American nations is advocated by Senator Key Pitt- man, of Nevada, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a delegate to the World Eco- nomic Conference. "I think that for the purpose of assuring the Latin American people that we are sincere in our announced policy that we will not interfere,'we should make a declaration that there is no longer necessity for the Monroe Doctrine," said Pittman on his arrival from London. "We should say that the Monroe Doctrine is an outworn policy. The purpose of the doctrine was to pre- vent certain European countries from extending their power to Latin Amer- ica. At present the danger of Euro- pean powers attempting to extend their governments to Latin America is negligible." Renunciation of the doctrine, the Senator -said,, would assure Latin- American nations that the United States found no further obligation to interfere in their domestic affairs. Senator Pittman, last of the Amer- ican delegation to return home, spoke as he prepared to hasten to Wash- ington to study the Cuban situation. Although declining to suggest any particular course of procedure, he 0 90 'I Nex Wh+at are the 0 -S Fashion Headlines I for Fall? ov You'll find the answers at JACOBSON's. New fabrics: 'i slipper satins, rabbit's hair woolen. New styles: high nn ~necklnes, tray shoulders epaulets broadened with "fin points" and Gibson pleats. New colors: eel grey, Schiaparell's rustic c browns, and more black than ever. Out of many fall modes- JACOBSON'S fashions for their fresh- ness and wearability. Our Introductory Values May Not Be Possible Later w Others at $22.50 and $2975 0 SATURDAY - An Advance Showing of Fall's Smartest Frocks Featured in Our Famous Fashion Annex AN ELECTRIC range is the cleanest cooking method yet devised. The reason is obvious. A glowing wire furnishes all the heat-pure heat - without smoke or soot or fumes. There is no burning of fuel to leave a black deposit on pots and pans, or to darken kitchenwalls and curtains. Electric heat is actually as clean as sunlight. Here is a stove that you can really keep clean. Your electric range will continue to look new, Many thousand 'electric range owners in Detroit and ,;vicinity will tell you how clean electric cooking is. And once YOU have enjoyed the deliciousness and healthfulness of electric cook- ing, youwillnever again go back toanyotherkind. Even the cheaper cuts of' meats cook to melting tenderness, and there is little shrinkage of weight. This adds to economy and preserves the precious natural minerals of foods instead of losing them io steam. Vegetables cook in their-,own juices. ,And best of all you can cook your dinner while you're out for the afternoon!'