THE. MICHIGAN DAILY R- he d is y e e e e e .e a 5 Z -Associated Press Photo With the lifting of the food blockade in San Francisco's general strike, truckloads of vegetables and other produce rolled in to be welcomed by a populace which had been piece-mealing for several days. One of the trucks is shown being unloaded in the commission house district. t i De Cespedes Plans Middle Course For Cuban Salvation Rush Work At Mints Points To Prosperity HAVANA, July 21.- (A) - In an effort to reconcile Cuba's warring po- litical factions, former President Car- los Manuel de Cespedes has launched a centrist party which he hopes will draw to its fold both leftists and rightists. With a platform based on the idea that a "sound, sane, centrist party is the political salvation of Cuba," Cespedes has just finished a tour of the eastern provinces of the island. Himself a proven conservative, Ces- pedes was caught in the currents that swerved the course of three successive Cuban governments from right to left and again back to right. Cespedes' downfall from the presi- .dency, where he was placed after Machado was forced from office in August, 1933, was caused by the "en- listed men's revolution" of September 4, while he was touring hurricane- torn districts of Cardenas and Sagua. He had been in office 22 days when, returning from the interior, he was met at the presidential palace by the then sergeant, Fulgencio Batista, and five members of a revolutionary com-~ mittee - Sergio Carbo, Guillermo Portela, Jose Irizarri, Porfirio Franca and Ramon Grau San Martin. They.informed him he was "through as president." Cespedes picked up hisu hat and walked out of the palace Death For Army Graft New Tammany Head Follows Father's Lead James Dooling Succeed Curry And Fulfills Hi. Family Destiny NEW YORK, July 21. - ) - Olc Peter Dooling's boy - football hero ex-artilleryman, lawyer --has mad good again. In the Happy Hunting Grounds where Tammany Braves go they must have rallied around the olc warrior and pounded him on the bac when his boy, James J. Dooling climbed into the saddle and became the third college-bred man in histor3 to rule Tammany Hall. Dooling's elevation marks the cli- max to the fight that unhorsed Curry It also marks Tammany's accord onc more with a national democratic administration. A Bachelor Leader The victory gives the society d young bachelor for a leader. Dooling is not yet out of his fortieth year He is slender, slightly under six feet and his eyes are clear blue set undei well-defined brows, with his hair a shade darker thanauburn. He i forthright in manner. Dooling was admitted to the New York bar in 1920. He served through the war as an artilleryman. Previous to that he was a football and base- ball hero at Fordham university, from which he was graduated in 1915. His midtown residence is the house ii which he was born. Father Was Sachem Reared in an atmosphere of poli- tics, Dooling's flair for it is part of the legacy handed down to him by Old Peter, a sachem of the Wigwam and one-time congressman, who ruled the lower section of the Fifth Manhat- tan district. At his death in 1931 the leadership passed to his son. In private life the new leader is a sportsman and a lover of the theatre. Like his friend, George M. Cohan, he often spends an afternoon with the Yankees or the Giants, and when Fordham plays football, if he isn't in the stands it's because he is down on the field with the players. He wears his duties as easily as his well-cut clothes, and believes nothing in poli- tics can "be so serious as say, when some opponent has Fordham's back against the goal line. Rising Flood Water Threatens Warsaw WARSAW, July 21.- () -More than 200 persons dead and damage estimated at about$200,000,000 were reported today as the flood waters of the Vistula River reached the very gates of the presidential palace in Warsaw. The deaths and damages have oc- curred during a full week of high waters. Now a flood wave from the Carpathian Mountains menaces the Polish capital. The Vistula has risen to a level of 16 feet as compared with its nor- mal four-foot level, and authorities said that if it rose above 19 feet the heart of the capital was in danger for the levees of the left bank are not expected to hold much longer. Police, soldiers, municipal workers, and civilian volunteers worked madly today in efforts to strengthen the embankments. Hundreds of boats and automobiles have been drafted for the work. The streets of the suburb of Prager and the amusement center, Luna Park, are under water. Seven nearby villages are inundated. Seeks Settlement Lab Theatre Is Repaired In Hopes Of Renewed Activity -Associated Press Photo The Rev. Francis J. Haas (above), federal conciliator, said he was "quite hopeful" of ending the Minneapolis trucker's strike withottt trouble. Exhibit Gone, Iowa Farmer Criticizes RexfordTugwell WASHINGTON, July 21. -(P) - Joseph Indry, farmer from "some- where out in Iowa" after looking in vain for his favorite exhibit at the Department of Agriculture blamed Dr. Rexford G. Tugwell for its disappear- ance. Indry, bronzed, mustached and sus- pendered, explained that "this is my first visit since Hoover got licked." He circles the court of the De- partment's main building, looked into the fountain, peered among the rub- ber plants and then announced: "It jist ain't here." "I used to come down to Wash- ington mighty nigh every year," he said. "Now, when I do come back everything is changed. They used to have a sort of store counter out here which showed you a lot - how to build rat traps, spread fertilizer, and L things like that. "It had pictures and a man could understand it. I never could make heads nor tails of them booklets they sent out. I'll bet that feller Tugwell had it taken out." The exhibit had been removed to another building by official order. Tugwell, under secretary of agricul- ture, apparently had nothing to do with it. But Indry was not convinced "I'm a Republican, I reckon," he said slowly, "though not as bad as some. I've heard a lot about Tugwell. Why, some of the people out my way blame him when the hens don't lay." Crime Conference Will Convene At WashingtonI WASHINGTON, July 21. - () - A crime congress of unprecedented scope will sit in Washington next fall to assist the government's fight against kidnapers, gangsters and other evil-doers. Attorney-General Homer S. Cum- mings, in a recent speech to the National Press Club, said that with the approval of President Roosevelt he would invite representatives of every state to a "crime conference of nationwide significance." Surveying his department's fight on crime, he hit "unscrupulous lawyers" and "crooked officials" who seek to protect criminals. Olson Tiohtens Grip On North Dakota Politics Makes Appointments To Replace Those Made'By Former Gov. Langer BISMARCK, N. D., July 21. - (A) -Swiftly but calmly, acting Gov. Ole H. Olson today tightened his grip on North Dakota's State governmental machinery as political allies of Wil- liam Langer, ousted Governor, hung their hope on a special session of the Legislature. Olson made new appointments to replace Langer associates holding State jobs, while the Langerites beat political tom-toms that sounded a call to continue the fight. They advanced Mrs. Langer as the Republican nominee for Governor if her husband was disqualified from running in the fall by his Federal Court conviction, the basis for his removal. Controls State Committee Langer, in winning the nomination in the recent primary, two days be- fore he was sentenced to serve 18 months in Federal prison for solicit- ing political contributions from Fed- eral workers, also won control of the State Republican Central Committee. This Committee, in opinion of most lawyers, would be authorized to pick a nominee if Langer were barred. That the Langer men were still full of fight was indicated by one of their leaders, Highway Commissioner Frank A. Vogel, who defied Olson's order removing him. Vogel stood on his claim that he could be removed only for cause, and refused to vacate the office. Bert M. Salisbury, Minnewaukan County clerk of court, had taken the oath as Highway Commissioner by appointment of Olson. He awaited legal moves to install him in office. Federal road officials said that they would stand squarely behind Olson's appointee, and would release a grant of $1,200,000 for road building to him. Promises Racket Expose ST. PAUL, July 21. -(P) - United States Senator Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota, predicted today that "an untold amount of graft," which he said existed in North Dakota State departments, soon would be exposed. After two days of frantic investi- gation, a reporter assigned to the case by The Daily's city editor has discovered what is being done to the old Laboratory Theatre. The quest started Friday afternoon, when the reporter called up every- one he had ever heard of who might know about what was going on at the old box-like shack in back of the Union. He called up a total of seven -and didn't get in touch with one of them. Friday night he tried again. This' time he got in touch with one man who referred him to a second who re- ferred him to a third who was not home. Yesterday morning he made nine telephone calls without any luck; all he could achieve was to question a man who insisted he didn't know anything about it. Undaunted, he tried a tenth number, his last resort. He called up Edward C. Pardon, head' of the Building and Grounds depart- ment. It worked! Mr. Pardon not only knew what his hirelings were doing, but he knew why they were doing it. A bit of the history of the Laboratory Theatre might be helpful here. In 1922 it was bought by Mimes, campus dramatic organization, from the Union, which had previously used it for a dance hall. There they evolved, in the following winter, one of the most successful of the many Union Operas: "Cotton Stockings Never Made A Man Look Twice." The title was censored except for the first two words, and with this excellent publicity for a start, Mimes had a most successful year. But by 1929, Mimes was truly in a slump, and when the University of- fered to buy the theatre for Play Production purposes, there were no objections. Two years later the thea- tre was condemned as a fire hazard, and has not been active since. What the busy workmen are doing now is to rip away the old board sides, and replace them with plaster. This was done because some annoy- ing sparrows were nesting behind loose boards, and because there were some skilled plasterers on the wel- fare rolls. Its only a step toward renewed op- eration of the building, Mr. Pardon explained, as the real fire hazards of the building lie inside. It did seem, though, that the shabby exterior in- fluenced fire marshals and insurance agents against the building. So they're going to refinish the theatre, and maybe with a bright new exterior things will look up for the old theatre, and the wheels will start turning again. Party Fight Halts Cabinet In France PARIS, July 21. - (P) -- The future of France, endangered by a clash be- tween Andre Tardieu and Radical Socialist members of the cabinet, was once again today in the hands of 71- year-old "Papa" Gaston Doumergue. Failing to heal the breach within their ranks, the ministers called the premier and former president in to act as umpire. Doumergue will not return to Paris from the south of France until next Tuesday or Wednesday, counting on time to let party passions simmer down. He also has a full week-end to find a solution to the delicate problem with facts presented him by Henri Cheron, minister of justice and vice premier. Five ministers were obliged to be absent over the week-end to accom- pany President Lebrun on an official tour of Auvergne, another reason for the delay in action. Louis Barthou, foreign minister and twice a premier, appeared to be the only dissendent. He demanded that Tardieu, also a former premier, and now minister without portfolio in the polical truce cabinet, resign forth- with. PHILADELPHIA, July 21. - ()- An unprecedented demand for small coins is taxing the three mints to their limit, Director Nellie Taylor Ross declares, adding that it clearly par- allels a steady business improve- ment. .. The Philadelphia mint has gone on a 24-hour day in some divisions and the staff has been augmented, she said. The coining of fifty-cent pieces will begin in Philadelphia after a lapse of several years, and the production of other coins, especially quarters and pennies, will be speeded. Dairy Seeks i -Associated Press Photo CARLOS M. DE CESPEDES New Penalty In China Test On U. S. Mi 1 Cotrol BALTIMORE, July 21. - (P) - A test of the constitutionality of the Agricultural Adjustment Act as it ap- plies to contrql of' milk in the Balti- more territory' will be sought by an independent local dairy in its action set for hearing late this month in United States District Court here. The plaintiff brought Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace into the case when a deputy Federal Mar- shall found him in a Pullman berth! en route through Maryland and served' him with a summons to appear in. court on July 23. The suit resulted from inauguration of the milk control plan for the Balti- more milk shed under the AAA. Op- position immediately came from sev- eral "independent" dairies. They claimed that the plan would work to the advantage of the Fairfield-West- ern Maryland Dairy and of the Mary- land State Dairymen's association. The Royal Farms Dairy, Inc., of Baltimore, began its litigation to test 'the act when it instituted its action in the Circuit Court. Judge Eugene O'Dunne granted an order restraining the AAA from examining the dairy company's books. Washable Crepe FROCKS' It's so hard to find d resses like these at any price-some white, some pastels, some sleeveless, some sunbacks. Sizes 12 to 42 JULY SALE PRICES $5.00 and $6.95 Jacket Frocks White and Pastels Sizes 14toI42 '4 JULY SALE PRICES i 1 NANCHANG, China, July 21. --(A') -Hereafter graft in the sale or pur- chase of supplies for the Chinese army will be punishable by death or prison sentences running up to life, says an edict by General Chiang Kai- Shek, China's "strong man." To warrant the death penalty, how- ever, those concerned must have prof.. ited to the extent of $5,000 or more. Those who take less "squeeze" than that will get prison sentences of fromJ six months upwards. Bonthron Loses To Star British Miler, (Continued from Page 1) 4:07.6 in the Princeton stadium last summer, a mark since erased by Glenn Cunningham's great 4:06.7 mile on the same track last month. It was a stunning upset for the Americans who had been led to believe a knee operation last winter had robbed the New Zealand star of much of his speed. Bonthron only two weeks ago had established a new world mark of 3.48.8 for the 1,500 meters and was thought to be at the top of his form. with his aides, warning his successors that theirs was "the responsibility -before history." Now, almost nine months since he was ousted, Cespedes is campaigning for a new party. Whether he will be a c candidate for the presidency in the December elections has not been announced. On his recent trip, from Matanzas to Oriente, he expounded as'the idea on which his centrist party is based: "That Cuba's ship of state should not be steered to the right or to the left; that a center course is the best." Speaking in all the important towns of the interior, Cespedes called on Cubans to put patriotism above polit- ical or social prejudices. He urged "proven statesmen, the most brilliant intellects, men of seri- ous mind, men of strong arms, ideal- istic youth, laborers, field workers and all other solid elements," to rally to a centrist platform. ,. "Both rightists and leftists have in turn carried the country to the brink of the abyss," he declared. IN *11 1 1-I ARCADE J EWELRY SHOP College & Fraternity Jewelery Watch & Jewelry Repairing Engraving 16 Nickels Arc. Carl. F Bay -'I I 11 Change of Ownership S I I Aj ii GIB AL- wi I A. J T J' Because our exclusive MIcRo-WHITE Cleaning process cleans them thoroughly, leaving no soap curds in the weave-to turn white goods yellow. And our three rnew finishing machines, the only complete unit of its kind in .town, press them just right. 10% DISCOUNT GREENE'S CLEA/VEPS & DYERS IS BOOKS & SUPPLIES i III." 3>t I I i -*A MX- i