FRIDAY, FEBRUIARY 20, 1931 1M41' MCHTCA~1 -,T L R: MAUSS Ti TO w TPING EATHOOS" T ENNESSEE A AE WHO OTAINED r FIRSFEDERA SEEDIAND OD D Students to Travel in Russia, Germany With LilL ia Pargment TOLID BY17T11.o*K*METERR IKI R SPEAK TQOAY Was Rusia~s mbasad r t t otm~I-io~n: rof 'o cat A t? t ev CGeneral Mitchell to Explain Dry Law Methods of His Department. WOODCOCK TO TESTIFY Committee Asks Why Only Dry Agents Are Permitted j to Tap Wire. WASHINGTON, Feb. 1. - atty.- Gen. William D. Mitchell ws asked! to appear today before aIHCuC committee to explain why one bu- reau of his departmen pi. ohibii wire tapping while another permit, listening in on suspceta' telephone conversations.- Rep. John Schafer (Rep., Wis- consin, with other members of the1 expenditurcs committee prepared at the initial hearing of their wire tapping investigation to seek the reason. Regulations prohibit wire tapping in the investigation bureau of the Justice Department but the prohibition bureau permits it. "Somebody ought to tell us why," said Schafer. He and other anti- prohibitionists recently were sue- cezsful in obtaining House authority for the investigation this session after efforts extending over years. T1 Hear Director Woodcock. Besides the Attorney-General, the coninittee planned to hear Prohi- bition Director Amos W. W. Wood- cock and J. Edgar Hoover, chief of the investigation bureau. Hoover testified recently before the House Appropriations Committee that reg- ulations in his bureau prohibited wire tapping. Woodcock told the same committee it was permitted in his branch. Schafer based some of the ques- tions he prepared for the witnesses on correspondence telling of reput- ed wire tapping activities by pro- hibition agents in Cincinnati. One man, who, he said, represented himself as a Federal agent and of- fered a telephone company employe $50 to tap a wire although an Ohio state law prohibits, subsequently was found to be a private detective. Schafer added, however, he had "reason to believe at least one other wire tapper was a prohibition agent." Schafer Attack; Distinction. "I can't see," Schafer said, "why the investigation bureau does not have to tap wires to obtain evidence against the hardened criminals it pursues while the nefarious practice l:: not only allowed but encouraged for the detection of prohibition vio-J lators, who are a much milder class of law breakers." When the annual Justice Depart- ment appropriation bill was before the House, anti-prohibitionists at- tempted to include provisions that no money voted should be used for wire tapping. They were unsuccess- ful. Gas Station Reports Forged Cuerency Here An unidenified man attenmpted to pass a one-dollar bill which had been raised, to $20, at the hunter gasoline station at the intersec- tion of Huron and First avenues, accoiding to police records yester- day. An attendant at the oil station reported the case to the Ann Arbor Savings bank, and it was later call- ed to the attention of the polico. d ise!Y o Wrkn vera1 students ofth Uivr ,. $ . , y or aitMan' Ss ity, under the leadership of Lila arseProtozoa ... . IX, q~I r P~gm it, instructoriiRussian lit- So numerous and varied are the e nife orof. M. 1. hl.. protozoa living in the hum a body Pirgi ent, of the Romance langu- th t each individual migh t 1becall- agsdprtet il.alfo r akn eaeisi r New York City on June 30 for a 1 Robert Tyr(,ner, professor of nlcdi- ne at Johns Ifookns University, tour of Russia sponsored by the csrd "Invisible Open RoadTravel society. Faua o te 1ThianBod,"in thie The group, made up of both men Uni IUrC4ers. slocdand women students graduating :. G .. :of hde i iltra1ti on of Ifrom lathe Uiverity nex~t spring, -iSl5lCWh. w ill s end 23 ciay's in Rusia, visit- in c(c ibig the 25 kinds of pro- ing Moscow, Leningrad, Crimea, irWj whi'h make the human body .Odes ,a, and Kiev. Some of the F"en" he4. Dr. H5egner ook the mnmbers may leave for ' Europe foe import snit ones uu in detail, earlier, and meet the remainder of olling of the work that his been the tourists in Germany. Associated Press Photo done in combating tie ones that Mrs. Pargment, who is a native of c-ause dalt sr.and surymAarizing the prfec S. E. Bazenore, farmer of Shelby county, Tennes se, received the omplishmmts ot the c.ntlstRussia, has perfect command of first federal seed and food loan granted at the Memphis district office. engaged. h Russianatand witsh tongues. In the forceground, left to right, are: J. H. Lynch, district administrator Much has been done, he saidto tory of Russia as well as its pres- in charge; F. MuVchmeyer, disbursing agent, and Bazcmore. control and exterminate these par- nty conditions. The Ol en Road so- _____ _ __- asites, but he stressed the fact thatdT __he__ratestwok__robbly lhes'ciety annually sends small groups gadreas wn probditin s of tourists to Europe, with parti- WsG ahearecalng the " ciis cular attention to improve the cul- hathought they were in the ultimate tural relations between various for- stage of advancement. "We are still eign countries and America. Uni- - - -- ~ioneers," he asserted "and we will versity professors are usually selec- TlFTRES -onnuc to work until mankind ll ted to lead the tours. Prof. W. C. lbtd t e Trow, of the psychology depart- Majestic-Beatrice Lillie in "Are h lo aai [lihiue mnls ya odctdagop Senators and Representatives You There" with John Garrick, 01- p froa, taraite which caues momtheaUniversity.e to Convene ini Honor of gaBalaovlndLlydHailon characterized by Dr. Heg- frmteUnvriy ga Baclanova, and Lloyd Hamilton. ner as probably the most important Particular interest has b e e n Dead Colleagues. Also "Laurel and Hardy Murder of diseases, because its prevalence shown by the excursionists in Soviet Case." in the tropics prevents the coloni- Russia, the travel society reports. (y Associated Press> Michigan-Edmund Lowe a n d I zation of large regions, has been Through an agreement with the WASHINGTON, Feb. 19.---With Leila Hyams in "Part Time Wife." thoroughly studied so that control society of cultural relations with ceremony and in silence the House Also "Barnacle Bill the Sailor," of it has been made possible, he foreign countries of Russia, the today prepared to honor 11 men sound cartoon. said. He related the story of the society has been able to offer a tayn frmep~re by h eath dubmen Wuerth-Lila Lee and Joe Frisco discovery and investigation of this specially instructive trip in that taken from Congress by death dur- Iin "The Gorilla.7' parasite by Laveran, Ross, and country., ing the past year. - Hill Auditorium-Freiburg Pas- Gratti in the last years of the nine- -_- _ Some of the most picturesque fig- sion play. . teenth century. ures of their generation were on the - ,Yet even the most dangerous o Filipino Club Adopts unaswerd grollcalatn crimate GENERAL parasites may have its uses, said Society Constitution unanswered roll call that climaxes Dr. Hegner, of the organism which the annual memorial exercises, University Lecture--Muriel Mase- causes syphilis and the resulting Adoption of the constitution fea- Lee S. Overman, choice of his field on "At Court and in Society conditions such as paresis has been tured the regular meeting of the party for United States Senator with Fanny Burney (1778 to 1840)"; found to be destroyed when the Filipino-Michigan club, held at 3:30 from North Carolina ever since 4:15 o'clock, Lydia Mendelssohn sufferer is given malaria, which is o'clock Sunday in Lane hall. Dis- theatre. allowed to run its course for a time cussion of past projects and new 1895, headed the list. The roll in- Hockey--Wisconsin vs. Michigan; and is then cured. business completed the meeting. eluded Senator Frank L. Greene, of 7:30 o'clock, Coliseum. - - Vermont, who never fully recovered Dancing-Bob Carson and His from a bullet wound received in ac- Orchestra, 9 until 1 o'clock, Michi- r cident in a prohibition enforcement a a e'- kW-sRussia's Am basador t This S Country During Kerensky Regime. Dr. Boris A. Bakhmeterr, former- r I ' p fr( ,n-r of hydraulics and di- rect r of the hydraulics laboratory at the poljyt(chnaic institute at Petrogra d, will discuss "Advanced x h Hydraulics of Open Channels - Princip 1 1 ioblems and Means of > Solution" at 4 o'clock this atr noon in room 311, West Engineer- ing; building. Yesterday Dr. Bakhmeterr spoke before more than a hundred engi- neering students and faculty mem- bers on a similar subject. During the Kerensky regime he was Rus- sia's ambassador to this country. Dr. Bakhmeterr is the author of x° well known books in hydraulics in Pussia and has recently prepared Associated Press Photo a new book on advanced hydraulics in the English language. He was in Cornelius Vanderbilt, jr., enarge of, the design of the large Wealthy author and newspaper hydroelectric power station, Dnie- man, is said to have told a story in px0-Stroy, on the Dniepr river, and Phoenix, Ariz,, about Premier Mus- was also connected with the large irrigational works accomplished at solini that is almost identical with Tuiirkistan. that told by Maj. Gen. Smedley Butler, for which he recently faced S olns Plan to Break courtmartial. __ ____n__ g-Stan ding Cto ',_r i t I 1. I Educators Will Visit Elementary Schools Dr. Edna Baker, president of the National Kindergarten college, of Chicago, and Dr. Warring, head of the pre-school unit of Cornell Uni- versity, will visit the University Elementary school and the Nursery school tomorrow. -r - (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Feb. 19.-The long-standing custom of reading George Washington's farewell ad- dress to Congress is to be broken by the House Monday. Instead of the usual practice, Rep. James M. Beck, of Pennsylvania, noted as an orator, will deliver an address on the first President. FRATERNITY JEWELRY PARTY FA ARCADE JEWELRYSHOP E C(ARLIF. BAY VORS JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST Nickels Arcade .-.A--.w...4...aa .. .. - aa aa...... . a ..a..a. A.w ...aa.. ..ta..J_..a a..aA... - . 2r 4 fight. Others were Reps. Stephen F. Porter, of Pennsylvania; Charles R. Stedman, of North Carolina, last Civil War veteran in the House; Lampert, of Wisconsin; Kiess, of Pennsylvania; Hammer, of North Carolina; Curry, of California; Quayle and O'Connell, of New York,: and Wingo, of Arkansas. The scene prepared was solemn: Dancing-Don Loomis' orchestra, 9 until 1 o'clock, Union ballroom. M AN H1IfT BY INJURIES CAR; FATAL _aotlhe te Negress Arrested by Policc on Homicide Charge. 17 . ao 1 . , I V - y! y The first semi-circular row of seats - reserved for the families of the Charles H. Kager, 521 W. Jeffer- dead; before them a rostrum strewn son avenue, died at 1:40 o'clock with flowers; behind, members tra- yesterday morning as the restlt of ditionaily attired in formal, dark injuries sustained when he was garb. struck by a hit-and-run driver at A patriotic and religious opening the intersection of Washington hymn played by the uniformed street and S. Fourth avenue at Army Band Orchestra, was at the 7:30 o'clock Wednesday night. opening of the program, followed by Police arrested Belle Bolland, a a commemorative prayer, sacred f 50-year old Negress, yesterday on a song and a Scripture reading. Then charge of negligent homicide in two 'speeches pledging the living connection with the death. Mrs. anew to their duties while recalling Bolland, who lives at 1309 S. State the achievements of the dead. street, was arraigned in justice ----- court before 1)iruce jay nI. Payne. Investigation of Road She pleaded not guilty and her examination was set for Feb. 25. Board to be Announced She was released without bond. ---A-ccording to the police, Klager Prosecutor Albert J. Rapp said was run down as he was crossing yesterday that the report of ac- Washington street and dragged to countants who checked records of the curb by an unknown motorisi, the board of road commissioners He was taken to the police station for the special investigating com- a block away by .a United cab com- mittee will be presented Feb. 24 to pany dr iv , anid latr taken to St. the board of supervisors. Joseph's Mercy :iospital. r~' a urn ean - ;_ - '4 4 '4 :,'4. .4 VIOLENT atmospheric disturbance hovered off [Ife-coast of a seaboards state, threatentg to strike with terrific fury. Government observers were able to lu 1 indicate the approximate section like-- - ly to be affected, and into this'danger- ---- - - ous zoie, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS reporters went-by planes and express trains. When the storm broke,',they were on hand to report the news..The outside world was not subjected to agonizing delays, while unveri- fied rumors were rife. Quickly and accmrately came tle vital information to the millions of readers of member newspapers. Preparations necessary to cope with manjor -.ergenciss are part of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS service for newspaper readers-so they may have the jfcts of all news events. .,. _ ,3.. .-. -.._ r.. _ s. a _ . .. The most popular ready-to- eat cereals'served in the dining - rooms of American colleges, eating clubs and fraternities are made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. They include Kellogg's Corn Flakes, PEP Bran Flakes, Rice Kris- pies, Wheat Krumbles and Kellogg's WHOLE WHEAT Bis- cuit. Also Kaffee Hag Coffee -the coffee that lets you sleep. BY 4 P. M. their energy has gone. They listen to the lecture without paying real attention. Naturally the exam finds them unprepared. Loss of energy, ljstlessness, lack of appe- tite are signs of constipation. This condi- , tion is a serious handicap to class and campus life. Yet it can be overcome so easily, so pleas- antly. Just eat a delicious cereal: Kellogg's ALL-BRAN. Two tablespoonfuls daily are guaranteed to give relief. Ask that it be served at your fraternity house or campus restaurant. You'll enjoy Kellopg's Slumber Music, broadcast over WJZ and associated stations of the N.B. C. every Sunday evening at 10.30 E. S. T. Also KFI Los Angeles, KOMO Seattle at 10.00, and KOA Denver at 10.30. A letber New spaper of te Assoceated Press9