dthunderstorms, Thursday; Friday and cooler. :Y IJ~fr ~Iaii Fraternities Prove Worth; Kidnapers Another Round. Official Publication Of The Summer Session VOL. XIV No. 45 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1933 PRICE FIVE CENTS Cubans Need Kipke Says Michigan's Hardest Game To Be With All Opponents 3s As PS Hide Provisional President Is Working To Get Body To Approve Action Promise Safety To Members Who Left Organized Workmen Still On Strike In Havana And. Santiago H Aug. 16.-(IP)--A work- turned out today to be eed of Cuba's new gov- many members have fled the ry or are in hiding in Cuba, g for their lives because they rted the deposed Presidont -o Machado, Congress cannot sent secure a quorum to ratify ency legislation. risional President Carlos Man- e Cespedes, it was learned on authority, planned to give the m his immediate attention. He approval of the legislation in to tackle pressing social, eco- and political problems. as authoritatively reported that atees would be given the frigh- congressmen so that they return to sessions safely. :e conditions along Havana's ront, which have paralyzed nig for two weeks, showed no of improving, despite latest ef- o effect a settlement. e small liners and freighters een able to dock and discharge gers and cargo, but larger ves- awe been forced to pass by the All of the teams in the Big Ten should be a little better than they. were last year, Coach Harry Kipke believes, and Michigan's toughest game will be with Ohio State, or pos- sibly Northwestern, or' Minnesota. At this stage, Harry is sittting at his desk in the Athletic Adnmnistra- tion :Building answering questions on predictions with "on the other hand", answers and mumbling about suicide schedules. Last year, it was Michigan State, Northwestern, and Ohio State. Every- one said that Michigan couldn't come through a start like that without losing at least one game. Consequently, a c - cording to Kipke, the team was all pepped up for a, . bunch of tough battles and worked itself into a form that was to a great extent responsible for the Big Ten championship. This season, Michigan hao just about as difficult a start, he believes, with Michigan State, Cornell, and Ohio State looking for scalps, but, since the drug store coaches have the dope figured with Michigan on top, he wonders if he may not have an over-confident team that will drop a game or two before it is well; underway. Police Headquarters Turn Into A Kennel FOUND--A bulldog with black and white markings wearing a 1933 license inscribed "Ingham County, Number 6225." The owner may, etc. Ifthis story were to appear among the classifieds, it would read like that, but such matter- of-fact, cut and dried statement fails to record the human side of the incident. Two officers, cruising in a scout car near the campus, heard the whine of a dog. Investigating, they discovered one lying in the front- yard of Betsy Barbour residence. They took him to headquarters, fed him, and now anyone who en- ters the office is greeted with the{ dog's whine. Local authorities are of the opinion that the bull dog is the pet of a student, as he seems par- ticularly hungry. "If I had Newman back," he said in an interview yesterday, "I wouldn't have to worry a great deal about winning games. Bill Renner can throw them, probably almost as well as Newman, but can he do the other things? That's what I'd like to know. Everhardus can pass too, but not like Harry." "Michigan is going to use a lot of open work next year and the games should be pretty exciting. Last spring we tried a few plays that combine short underhand forward passes and lateral passes," he said. "They worked pretty well, but we'll need passers." Kipke isn't worrying about his kickers. He said that he plans to use Regeczi and Everhardus but that he had six or seven boys whom he can depend on if necessary. "But it's too early to tell a great deal until we can at least get the invitation list out and see who will be back for fall practice. The list. can't be compiled until Monday when the grades from summer school are available," he said. "And how about that trip to Col- gate which was made a week too soon? Well, I was the only coach in town so I came back to Ann Arbor. I'll return to Colgate next week when the coaches' meeting is going on. I'm a professor, aren't I? I guess I have' a right to be just as absent-minded' as the next fellow.-' Chicago Police ,Try Wisconsin In Kidnap Hunt CHICAGO, Aug. 16.-)-A kid- nap chase started in Chicago by 300 massed police spread to Southern Wisconsin tonight with confident predictions that Touhy gangsters and1 others suspected of kidnaping wouldt be caught. The locale of the hunt was the Wisconsin resort district about 100# miles. north of .Chicago, where gang-, sters long have congregated and sev- eral kidnap victims have believed1 they were held captive. Two score Chicago police were rushed to the region today with ma- chine guns, rifles and bombs. 1 Chief of Detectives William Schoe- maker said that failure of his mobi- lized forces to catch two kidnaping suspects in the suburbs yesterday wast responsible in part to failure of De- tective'Frank McKenna to'arrive on time at a roadside lunchstand at which the ransom was to be paid. As ,a result, McKenna gave the money1 to two suspects, riding in an automo- bile, at some distance from the stand. A cordon of 300 police, therefore, was unable to surround the suspects' automobile. The fugitives speeded about the vicinity for a time and finally escaped in a wood. Texas Bonds Total $300,000 2 DALLAS, Tex., Aug. 16.--P)-TheE Federal Government took the first1 steps today in the prosecution of Harvey Bailey and four others charg-t er with the kidnaping of Charles F. Urschel by ordering them held ont bonds totaling $300,000. Each pleaded not guilty when ar-I raigned in ar improvised court room< in the Dallas County Jail, where theyE had been since their arrest early Saturday morning at a farmhouse near Paradise, Tex.1 Bonds were set as follows: BaileyE $100,000; R. G. Shannon, Wise County farmer on whose land Bailey' was captured; Mrs. Shannon, Armon Shannon, his son, and Mrs. Oleta Shannon, Armon's wife, $50,000 each. about 40 per cent of workmen continued to unions still out were n, bus men, railway HAVANA, Aug. 16.UP) --Bank ac- counts and properties of the deposed{ President Gerardo Machado and his followers were investigated today with a view to requisition by their successors. Secretary of the Treasury Joaquin' O B C secret society, began the probe. as Provisional President Carlos Man- u e 1 de Cespedes' administration weeded out persons suspected of prof- iting by the Machado regime.- It was reliably reported that em- bargoesare planned on fortunes and property of the Machadistos. . The newspaper Diairo de la Ma- rina said Machado sent Mrs. Isobel Galiger, private secretary to the chief of the palace household, to Germany two weeks ago to buy a home for him there. Reports from the Bahamas, where Machado is in exile, said the erst- while president planned to rent a place near Nassau. Where he did his banking was a matter of con- jecture, but he is believed to have substantial accounts abroad. .The de Cespedes government has let the Machadistas know they can expect to pay for any sins commit- ted while in office. M'Donald P al Let Out Of jail By Authorities FLINT, Aug.. 16.-While Balfe, MacDonald, 17-year-old, was await- ing transfer to Jackson Prison, where he will serve from 10 to 15 years for killing his mother, his fugitive com- panion, William Terwilliger, Jr., 16, was taken into Probate Court Tues- day and released to the custody of. his father. The Probate Department will de- cide on Terwilliger's case one week from Thursday. Terwilliger has been held in the County Jail since early in July, when he was returned to Flint with Balfe from Nashville, Tenn. Although he refused to testify in Justice Court and would not even admit he knew Balfe, Terwilliger was held in jail as a material witness. Released for a brief half hour last week to have a tooth extracted, the youth has spent most of his time in a window of the jail on the second floor insisting that he be allowed to go home. His counsel, Ralph M. Free- man, claims the County owes the un- wiin r iiier n facc!0 f9 nr Px arv in A l1.. Gandhi's Fast Makes British Concede Point Ultimatum Draws Quick Response For Political Prisoners In India Will Allow Leader To Continue Fighlt 'Little Brown Man' Given Former Privileges By Government POONA, India, Aug. 16.-()-The threat of a fast until death enabled the Mahatma Mohandas Gandhi to regain today privileges he formerly had as a political prisoner. Thus hewill be able to continue his cam- paign for the regeneration of "the untouchables," India's lowest class. After the Mahatma announced at noon that he would start the fast, the British government came for- ward with a number of concessions. It announced its willingness to pro- vide the Nationalist leader with fa- cilities enabling him to continue, un- der certain conditions, his campaign to better the status of "the untouch- ables." Gandhi's final agreement to the government's terms was awaited this evening. This would enable him to gain his point without missing a single of his frugal meals. He had planned to eat this evening before starting the fast. Gandhi was arrested August 1 as he was about to launch a new civil disobedience campaign. He was sen- tenced to Yeroda jail here for a one year term with his former privileges denied him. The Mahatma had written to the Inspector General of jails asking for the rights he enjoyed during his pre- vious term of sixteen months in Yer- oda jail, which ended last May. He was released then because the gov- ernment did not wish to assume re- sponsibility for 'his , healtr after he started a three-week protest against untouchability. "I might as well be dead if I am not allowed to proceed with my work, which is my very life," Gandhi said in an ultimatum threatening the new fast unless the concessions were granted.' Gandhi has been unable to supply his customary articles to the press this week. It was presumed authori- ties had denied him the privilege of seeing newspaper men. Market Slips A Bit During Day Of Uncertainty NEW YORK, Aug. 16.-(IP)-Fi- nancial markets slipped and fell to- day but, with some late support, managed to get back on their feet and resume their limping jog alng the pathway of uncertain prices. While few bones were broken in the sprawl, many bruises were notice- able. By and large, stocks suffered losses of from 1 to .2 or more points at the close, although during the un- expected spill declines ran as high as 5 points. Released from their minimum price "peg," grains at Chicago yield- ed the full amount permitted for a single day's fluctuations. Cotton was weak most of the day, but final de- clines were held to around a dollar a bale. Secondary bonds generally followed stocks. The dollar was firm in the foreign exchange markets, al- though price changes were usually narrow. Wheat at Winnipeg, now re- stricted to a minimum price, fell about 2 cents a bushel. Commodities were easy. The bulk of the transfer in the share market was sandwiched in the mid-day hour when selling was heav- iest. This total volume amounted to 1,803,260 shares, or'about double 'that of yesterday. The Associated Press- Standard Statistics average of 90 selected stocks declined 2.2 points. The security markets were clearly perturbed by the tangled situation existing in the American and Cana- dian grain pits. Likewise, a wary eye was cast oh the confusion sur- rounding some of the developments of the National Recovery Program which have retarded progress in the drafting of codes for a few of the Force Showd ow. Full Influence Dean Emeritus Mortimer E. Cooley, former head of the Col- lege of Engineering and Architec- ture at the University, who was recently appointed State Engineer under the Public Works Adminis- tration. W ill . Mass Meeting WiBe Held Tonight MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS By the Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Washington ..............72 38 .655 New York ................ 65 44 .596 Philadelphia...........55 54 .505 Detroit..................55 58 .487 Cleveland ....... 56 59 .487 Chicago................. 51 59 .464 Boston..................48 61 .440 St. Louis.........43 72 .374 Wednesday's Results, Detroit 6, Boston 5. Cleveland 5, Philadelphia 4. Washington 5, Chicago 1. St. Louis 13, New York 3. Thursday's Games Boston at Detroit. New York at St. Louis. Washington at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cleveland. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. New York................64 43 .598 Pittsburgh................62 49 .559 Chicago .................. 61 51 .545 Boston................60 52 .536 St. Louis...............61 53 .535 Philadelphia .............46 '63 .4'22 Brooklyn................44 63 .411 Cincinnati .............44 68 .393 Wednesday's Results "New York 5, Cincinnati 0. Boston 6, Chicago 1. St. Louis 7-0, Philadelphia 6-2 (first game 12 innings). Brooklyn 2-7, Pittsburgh 1-11 first game 11 innings). Thursday's Games St. Louis at Philadelphia. Pittsburgh a t Brooklyn. Chicago at 'Boston. Cincinnati at New York. To 1 A mass meeting to make Ann Arbor conscious that there is an NRA and that the merchants here are co-operating with President Roosevelt will -be held at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. The meeting will be addressed by Dr. M. S. Rise, pastor of the Metro- politan Church, Detroit., Prior to the meeting, a parade composed of various units which are supporting the NRA will be held. The parade will start at 7:30 p.m. and will march to Hill Auditorium via Ann St., Main St., and Liberty St. Lindy And Wife May Undertake EnglishFlight REYJAVIK, Iceland, Aug. 16.-(P) -Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh expect to remain in Iceland until at least-Friday, when thye may fly to England. The couple will await their base ship, the Jelling,-due here Friday with supplies. Meanwhile, they will continue their northern aerial route- mapping activities with flights in this vicinity. Col. Lindbergh said last night that England might be their next destina- tion. The distance to North Scotland is about 600 miles and to England. about 850. The Lindberghs slept, last night in their flying machine, off Videy, where they landed yesterday after a' flight from Greenland. They were expected to sleep in the plane again tonight. Entering Reykjavik -by automobile today, Col. Lindbergh went direct to the postoffice to deliver a small postal sack. Only a few people saw the Lindberghs enter the - building,. but soon traffic on the streets was blocked and they had to make their escape by a back door. QUICK WATSON,.THE THIMBLE London, Aug. 16.-(I)-For the first time in the history of the Met- ropolitan Police, three women have been named members of the Scot- land Yard staff of- detectives. Ex- perimental tests of :theie aptitude for criminal investigation proved suc- cessful.I State Engineer Executive To Take Action In Garment Strike Tangle NEW YORK, Aug. 16.-(P)-The first major industrial strike in the metropolitan area since creation of the NRA-a walkout of 60,000 gar- ment workers-was only a few hours old today Then the Government stepped in to mediate. Former Police Commissioner Gro- ver A. Whalen, chairman of the City Committee of the NRA, was au- thorized by the National Labor Board at Washington to negotiate a settle- ment. He will confer with leaders of the workers tomorrow. Whalen said that he had been in telephonic communication with Gen. Hugh S. Johnson and that the NRA administration was in full accord with his mediation endeavors. The strike, which has as its object higher wages and the end of the sweatshop, according to labor lead- ers, affected garment workers in New York, New Jersey,. parts of eastern Pennsylvania and Connecticut. Only Six Arrested The strike started at'10 a. n., al- though the busy garment district be- tween 30th and 40th streets was crowded with strikers, police reported only minor disturbances and only six arrests. The walkout was described as the "most peaceful and satisfactory" of New York's seasonal strikes at the headquarters of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, which had 30,000 workers participat- ing. The 14 halls in Manhattan and Brooklyn where the striking assem- bled to register were crowded. The walkout was reported by labor leaders to have been 100 per cent successful in New Haven, Conn., and in New Brunswick, South River, Lodi, Paccaic and Patterson in New Jersey.- No official word has been received here late today from the Pennsyl- vania strike area. 'Blow To Sweatshops' Labor leaders claimed that the strike would deal a final blow to sweatshop 'conditions in the indus- try which they allege have existed for years. "The President is with us, the pub- lie is with us and the prospect of al- leviating the shameful conditions in this industry is brighter than at any time in the past," said David Dubin- sky, president of the union. "They are striking against a sys- tem that rewards the worker with as little as 32 cents for a garment that retails for $6," said Julius Hochman, chairman of the joint board of the union. Abbott takes Oath Before Circuit Judge Moynihan Horatio J. Abbott, of this city, yesterday was formally sworn in as collector of internal revenue for Michigan. The oath was administer- ed at 10:45 a. m. by Circuit Judge Joseph A. Moynihan in his office, with numerous friends and well- wishers of the new official present. Although the position is one of the largest patronage dispensing posts in the State, there being 150 employes who are largely appointed in the department, Mr. 'Abbott stated that he is not considering any general re- organization because trained men are needed for the work that is done. He added that more than two-thirds of the present personnel are Democrats. Pledges Also Needed Automobile, Coal, Organizations For Oil WASHINGTON, Aug. 16.-(A)- President Roosevelt tonight was moving the Administration and four of the Nation's great basic industries toward an open showdown upon the force of the National Recovery or- ganization. Out of significant conferences at the White House, NRA headquarters and in scattered hotel rooms there came indications that the full pres- sure of the Government was being exerted to bring steel, coal, oil and automobiles under codes at the ear- liest possible moment. Also moving into position for an interpretation by the Administration, which may find its way into the courts, was the collective bargaining guarantee for labor, upon which vir- tually all major disagreements be- tween capital and workers has cen- tered. President Is In Command President Roosevelt took command of the campaign by confering at the White House with Myron C. Taylor, chairman of United States Steel, and Charles Schwab, chairman of the Bethlehem Steel Corp. summoning them after Steel's open break with William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor. Green,, who also s the l.abor ,ad.- viser of the NRA for the automobile code-hearings for which open Fri- day-sat in for several hours at the conference of the auto men with Deputy Robert W. Lea. As the meeting adjourned both Green and spokesmen for the indus- try expressed appreciation for the co-operative spirit shown by the other. The session dealt primarily with the hours of work proposed by the, automobile industry, namely a thirty five hour week with a forty-eight- hour maximum during seasonal pe- riods. Lea said that the open shop labor provision of the automobile code had not been discussed and would be left for the hearing. Whether the NRA will demand that it be withdrawn as a modification of the collective bar- gaining guarantee in the law Lea de- ciined to say. Industrial Leaders Called Out of this round of conferences no formal announcements came. I- portant business men moved in and out of the office of Hugh S. John- son, the administrator, But all were as silent, as was the White House upon the Steel meeting there. However, Secretary of Labor Fran- ces Perkins at whose" office the rup- ture between Steel and Labor's spokesmen took place, moved swiftly to restore peace. She announced that in order to fa- cilitate a quick agreement on the steel code, statisticians and technical experts for the operators and those of the Labor Advisory Committee of NRA would. seek a comhnon under- standing and report to Johnson. With oil men summoned here to- morrow by the administrator to re- ceive the Administration's views upon the code, it was indicated that revi- sions were still being made. Representatives of° some of. the larger non-union bituminous coal producers were called to Washingtont and expected the Administration to renew its request for removal of the open shop clause from their pro- posed code. .. Roosevelt Exerts President Uses Pressure To Bring Nation's Many In- dustries Under Code Confers With Steel Leaders At Capital Many Students In Competitions On Intramural Sports Program Flier Hopes To Cross Ocean If Water Gun And Siren Work The intramural department closes a successful season this week, with many entries in practically all sports offered, in spite of the fact that summer enrollment fell below last year's attendance. The participation in all activities was practically nor- mal, and a great amount of interest was shown. Donald P. Kipp yesterday was crowned all campus golf champion of the Summer Session after overcom- ing a six hole lead to defeat Edgar Galloway in a thrilling match which ended on the 19th hole. A nnthpr ,. nra rar n s u na i n txrl4.-. i..t. to win the championship, 8-6; 2-6; 8-6. The new tank program inaugurat- ed last summer was continued this year with added popularity. Twenty- two men entered the contest, in which individual points were given to each competitor entering and ad- ditional points for placing in each event. The high individual honors went to Charles Thomas, who won six firsts for a total of 600 points. R. Beal finished second with 340 points, and Allen Smith and R. Har- wood tied for third place with 140 NEW YORK, Aug. 16.-(P)--A new wrinkle or two on how'to keep awake while trying to smash a: long-dis- tance flying record will be used by Gen. Francesco de Pinedo on his proposed flight to' nowhere. De Pinedo expects to lift his ton monoplane, loaded with 1,100 gallons of gasoline, from Floyd Bennett Air- port tomorrow morning; cross. the Atlantic, circle Rome and then fly eastward to wherever winds, fate and his own judgment will take him. He has devised two methods for keeping awake, both of which he said altitudes and thus be able to sleep a few minutes at a time without danger of falling into the sea or crashing into a mountain range. The former Italian air staff chief, considered one of the world's best long-distance pilots, piloted a flying boat from Rome to the African coast in 1927. He went from there to Brazil and then came to the United States by easy stages. While he was refueling in Arizona, en route to New York, a spectator tossed a match into the gasoline and his ship was destroyed. He procured a new machine, continued to New WASHINGTON, Aug. 16. -(R) Official reports of a sharp increase factory employment and payrolls, t gether with a new drop in public r lief expenditures, were characteri, today by President Roosevelt and]I official aides as encouraging signs better times. A Labor Department report show that thousands of additional worke the exact number not being knov