THE MICHIGAN DAILY Indstrial Jobs L0ap To_ High eakIn State Feriod From Junie 15 To July 15 Sees 11% Rise In EuPloyment JANaING, Aug. 12.-(P)--Indus- trial employment in Michigan for the month from June 15 to July 15 has reached its highest peak since June, 1931, the State Department of Labor arid Industry reported today. The usual seasonal declines con- tii ued to be set aside as industry re- spnded to demands for its products. Fqr the first time since July, 1932, the monthly employment report be- gai to creep above figures for the corresponding period of the preced- ing year. The report revealed an increase of 112 per cent in the number of per- sopsi employed over the preceding month and a gain of one-half of 1 per cent over the number of em- ployees during June, 1932. Total Payrolls Mount Inc'reased employment during the mnth brought a boost of 3.' perI cent in the total weekly payrolls overI a year ago and 2.3 per cent over the figures of the preceding month. Aver- age weekly income increased 3.1 per cent over 1932 but dropped 8 per cent under June figures. The latter was attributed to a further spread of earning power through employment of more men. ' For the first time in over two years the automobile industry approached the normal seasonal employment fig- ure. There was a decline of only 4 per cent in the number of employees under the figures of a year ago, com- pared with a normal decline of 2 per cent for the period. Employment, however, showed a gain of 13.5 per cent over the preceding month. Payrolls of the automobile indus- try increased one per cent over a year ago and 1.4 per cent for the month. Leather Industry Gains The leather industry made the greatest yearly stride with an increase of 63.8 per cent in employment. The figure was an increasee of 7.7 per cent over the preceding month. Total payrolls jumped 58.5 per cent for the year but declined 2.5 per cent for the month. ' Lumber employment, including the furniture industry, was up 24.5 per cent for the year and 5.4 per cent for the month with total payrolls in- creasing 34.2 per cent over a year ago and .14.3 per cent over the preceding month. The furniture industry increased the number of its employees 12.2 per cent over the figure of a year ago and 2.3 per cent over June. Football Team At State Faces kiecOnstruction Coach Bachman Must Fill 7 Vacancies Caused By Graduation FAST LANSING, Aug. 12.-The task of reconstructing Michigan State's football team, riddled by graduation last June, has caused Charlie Bachman, the Spartan's new gridiron chief, to remain close to his desk this summer. Throughout the warm weather, when other members of the staff were fishing or playing golf, Bachman has been toiling over a .solution to problemsthat must be answered when his charges gather more than a month hence for the first practice, Faced with the most trying sched- ule a State team has faced in many years, Bachman sees his job as ex- ceedingly difficult. He realizes that all detail work must be completed-so that every minute of the early season drills 'may be put to the best ad- vantage. Opening with Grinnell,. a Missouri Valley Conference team that gave the Spartans all the could handle in midseason last fall, Bachman's team must engage Michigan, Syracuse, Marquette, Carnegie Tech, Kansas State and Detroit. The only soft spot on the list is Illinois Wesleyan. Seven young men who helped Jimmy Crowley gain a pretty fair reputation for himself in the coach- ing profession, have passed from thea campus. Seven stalwarts are, gone from the line and three from the backfield, Bachman's chief task is, finding ends, tackles and backs. Only Art Buss, Benton Harbor senior, is, back for a tackle assignment, and Ed Klewicki alone returns as a regular wingman. ., The backfield corps lists Capt. Ber- nard McNutt, Bob Armstrong, Jerry Jones and Alton Kircher as veterans. McNutt and Kircher played most of the games, with the other two as re- serves. The biggest loss to the team,. of course, if Bob Monnett, and Abe Eliowitz, on whose shoulders most of State's hones for scoring have rested NRA J'omen's Leader Johnson Is Rapidly Becoming Al National Legend For Code Work i 1 J i 1 1 J 1 By SIGRID ARNE WASHINGTON, Aug. 12.-(R')- Hugh S. Johnson is an enigma to those who think government is a matter of politics. Old hands at quibbling come to the capital to stage a hearing for a particular industry. They are anx- ious to sign a code-"Oh, yes," they say, "but these people that work in their homes; we are quite sure they would rather--." When that argument, or a similar one, shows signs of becoming a stub- born exemption fight, the word is taken to Johnson, industrial admin- istrator.. He drops his phones, charts and letters. The meeting is adjourned and the conference committee is taken into a room where the general waits. A Legend Grows Then begin the fireworks. No one is .quite certain what kind they are. They must differ with each indus- try. But the committee comes out convinced of the general's views. The code is signed, and another tale is added to the legend that is rapidly making Johnson the "wonder work- er" of the decade. The secret of the matter is no se- cret at all. Johnson hits from the shoulder. He uses plain language. He talks to business in its own terms. His friends say he has such an un- canny knowledge that he can put an accusing finger unerringly on hypo- crisy. For instance, there was one fight over price-fixing. "But how can the plan work with- out price fixing?i' asked someone. That makes the general impatient. His eyes flash. "What can be simpler?" he barks in a genial sort of way. He has the ability to hit hard and leave the vic- tim wondering whether he has been struck. " kWe are putting men back to work," Johnson says. "Price fixing? Not if we can help .it. How will we know when prices become extortionate? This country knows when extortion begins." No sham, you see. He knows in- dustry from pipe lines to men's col- lars. He began his career in the army, where straight talking pre- vails, But he polished it off with years in Wall street as investment adviser to Bernard Baruch, the fin- ancier. That meant research, with knowledge resulting. Annoying Problems Arise The present job is stupendous, of course. There are more than 600 codes filed and waiting for hearing. This is not only a matter of putting men back to work, but of meeting annoying and multiplying little prob- lems of classifying America's indus- try for the first time. For instance, do knit polo sirts come under the shirt code or the knit-wear code? Do coal mines run by the steel industry come under the coal or steel codes? But give Johnson problems. He likes them. He is so full of energy that he walks when he talks. He rips off his coat. His large, dark eyes burn. His square shoulders are thrown back. He tramps up and down his workman's of ice. ThereI is only a phone, a desk and some di- I lapidated chairs. The door bears no let terin, Two Big Victories Johnson's eyes flash with pleas- ure when he recalls what he consid- ers his two major victories. Child labor has been dropped from the cotton textile industry. Steel men dropped their clause concerning com- pany unions. Those battles were drama. Hun- dreds of men from each industry sat in huge auditoriums. On the stage were grouped representatives o la-~ bor, industry and the consumer. Ar- guments surged back and forth. Heat necessitated the peeling of coats. There was veiled antagonism in the air. Then the general arrived quietly. A Plan For All "Don't forget this depression hits us all," he hammered away, as he does on every occasion. He rolled out figures about the industry that some of the men in it didn't know. "We cannot delay. Purchasing pow- er must follow prices. There is no place here for selfishness. This is a program for the nation-not for a .group or section." And his magic lies in the fact that he believes it. He is convinced that Americans can pull together. Zeta Psi Fraternity Has Summer Session Party Members of Zeta Psi fraternity en- tertained a group of women guests Friday evening at a dance, which was part of their annual Summer Session house party. The guests and their escorts in- cluded Margaret Stinson, Barbara Good, Lois Zimmerman, Alice Mc- Donald, Lorena Fischer, Margaret Cook,'Sarah Fischer, Jeannet O'Brien, -Associated Press Photo Miss Mary E. Hughes, chief of the women's division of the nation- a, recovery. administration,, is shown as she appears at her desk in Washington. Strikers BombE Homes Of Coal, MnHe W orkers No One Is Hurt In Indiana Blasts; Troo s Ready Toc Move Into rea CLINTON, Ind., Aug. 12.-(A)-The bombing of three homes in a Clin- ton suburb, including the residences of two niners who were wounded by a mob surrounding the Bunsen No. 4 coal mine at Universal Friday, added tenseness to the situation at the mine today. The first bomb, which police said was placed in the kitchen of the John Swickard home, ripped off the rear of the house. The others did but slight damage at the homes of Henry Drake and of a family named Holden. No one was injured by the blasts. Swickard, with 12 shotgun wounds in the back, and Drake, suffering painful cuts where stones struck his head and arms, were in Union hos- pital at Terre Haute. They are mem- bers of the Associated Miners' union, and were ambushed in their automo- bile as they drove to work at the Bunsen mine. 1 The mine 'has been picketed all week by United Mine Workers of America sympathizers, seeking to dis- suade the men from working. The first violence at the mine occurred last Monday when Sam White, Uni- versal business man and U. M. W. member, was shot by a mine guard as he joined a group of pickets. State officials watched the situa- tion closely. Gov. Paul V. McNutt said Elmer Straub, adjutant general of the Indiana National Guard was receiving hourly reports and was pre- pared to move troops into the area from Fort Kno', Ky., and Shakamak State park if necessity arose. The atmosphere at the mine was one of armed peace. Guards with guns stood at the entrance to the company property while pickets held positions on roads leading to the mine. Through the night workers at the shaft made their way to the tipple, seeking to avoid concentration of pickets this morning. Meanwhile, Vern Bennett, presi- dent of the Associatejd Miners' Union, telegraphed Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, national recovery administrator, urg- ing action to protect the men at the mine. 'He described Clinton and neighboring towns as "gripped with fear." The Bunsen mine employsappox- imately 250 men. Science To A d Parole System By New Tests CHICAGO, Aug. 12.-(P)-Scienti- fic "parole prediction" is the process through which Illinois hopes to im- prove its penal system and at the same time ease the economic burden of mounting prison populations. For the first time graduate sociolo- gists, who have specialized in penol- ogy and criminology, have been as- signed official positions as "actuaries" of the State Parole Board with a view to putting the parole systems on a more thorough, accurate and sci- entific basis. Correlation of 23 factors-involving the offenses, length of time served, physical and mental qualities of the individual, his background, record and personality-will help four young university-trained experts to supply the State Board with scientifically- grounded recommendations. ESI in I ati r CAMELS are never parched or toa 1ted' FRESHNESS and flavor in a cigarette trace right back to natural moisture. If you overheat or process tobacco so harshly as to dry out all natural moisture you drive out fres- ness and flavor too. Camel never parches or toasts the fine Turkish and mild Domestic tobaccos it uses-they are naturally smooth, cool, mellow, with natural moisture retained. 1 I EUa iv. 1~E ~'QN ~ U't ~~ 9 0.00