FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 17, 1930, ' THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREV FRIDA, OCTBER 1, 190 1 T1r MIHTGA DAL PAGETxRE T . ________________ 1 __ COUTY TREASUREi REPORTFOR YEAF Ticknor ives Ex4pendtures. fo 1929-.30 at Meeting of Supervisors. ROAD PLANS APPROVED L. 0. Crashing and Willis Fowler Re.elected as Auditors for County. Expenditures °for Washtenawx ~county for the fiscal year 1929-30 which ended Sept. 30, were $2,570,- 911.57, Frank H. Ticknor, county treasurer, told the county board of -supervisors yesterday. TIicknor's report, the highlight of the morning session of the s.per- visors, showed a balance in the treasury of $719,504.31. At the be- ginning of the fiscal year last Octo- ber, the county had a balance of $769,347.1.'2, Ticknor said. Auditors Re-elected. Aside from the treasurer's report, Uttle definite action on other mat- ters was taken by the board. Two auditors, however, L. . Cushing and Willis Fowler, were re-elected os members of the county board of tluditors. The report of the road commis- sioners, lacking a detailed financial statement, showed the expenditure of more than a half-million dollars for construction and maintenance of roads. The amount expended, $508,363.81, was less, however, than the amount of receipts, $514,267.10, leaving a balance of $5,903.29. Of this amount, $181,713.88 came from general taxes. .Road Program Given. The report, accepted by the board, was followed by the road program for the following year which, A:' R.I Bailey, engineer-manager of the commission, said; would involve expenditures totalling $164,800. Fred C. Haist, superintendent of the poor, was re-elected for the coming year by a unanimous vote of the supervisors. Haist's report show- ed expenses at the county infirmary last year to be $38,333.98. Credits were $33,549.15, leaving a debit of $4,784.83. Appropriations totalling $25,000-$20,000 for the infirmary and $5,000 for the hospital unit at the county .farm, were asked by Hlaist. Eleven Pessimistic About Ohio Contest; Off Form, Only 34-0 It is a day in the autumn of 1897 -October 16, if you must know- and Ohio State university's foot- bal team has arrived in Ann Ar- bor to do battle with the snarling Wolverines. It is the first game between the two schools. Michigan is pessim- istic, for her varsity has just been held to a tie by the Ohio Wesleyan team, coached by a man named Fielding H. Yost. Ohio State roo- ters expect a tie at worst. The U of M bancl men gather at the Calkins store before marching to the game. The game is swift and conclusive. The Wolves score six times in the first nineteen minutes, and are thereafter content to nurse their lead along by playing defensively. Stuart leads the scring with three touchdowns, and is generally de- cided to be a promising youngster. Next morning The Daily .grum- bles ' hat the team is not yet of championship calibre. Only 34 to 0. Tsk ! Tsk ! Tsk? ...... But that, of course, was in 18,97. BOSTON COMMUNISTS INVADE LABOR GATHERING ASPLC OFFICER ARRESTS WOULD-BE ORATOR, ti " i ............ .... . ...'. Poic inbtl oi omniL v 'tmtdtoivd h ainl o'nino h Amerian Fderaion f Labi Fo fuiy 28mtstecwnunssadplchmmdi yacodo roeta bO eo-osfuh epeaeyoAsde eHtlBrdodwee h eeaio a nss si n7hs w s o e p a e o n e id m c oye u b e k h t o c r ed a a i u l c s t r u h u h country HEALTH uNIT VITAL Support of Proposed County Unit, Under Consideration, Urged by Sundwall. FUNDS OFFER OBSTACLE Refusal of Washtenaw county to support the proposed health unit, now under consideration by the county board of supervisors, "will be tragic," Dr. John Sundwa l, director of hygiene and public healJth of the University, said yesterday. } t KRAUSANNUUN i/S What's REVISIONOF BOOdK{ Going Publication of thse second edition of the baook, "Ta bles for the Deter- Oain ofMerl, has been an- nounced by Dean Edward HI. Kraus, ______- of the pharmacy colleg,,e, and Prof. Theaters. Walter F. Hunt, of the petrology Majestic-"Moby Dick" with John department, authors of the boo.. Barrymnore. The edition is a reference b~ook Michigan-"Let's Go Native" with for the mineralogist and mining en- Jack Oakie and Jeanette MAcDon- gincir. The revised work includes ald. additional useful matcrial, and Wuerth-"Big Boy" with Al Jol- the latest data availa ale on mineral son1. 1determination. Social. Uin- Dancing from. 9 to ? _________ League - Dancing from.. 9 to1 N o'clock. Niiscella neous. Lecture - Dr. Alexander Goet speaking on "Crystalizatio n in Met als" at 4:15 o'clock this :afternoon in room 1041, East Physics, building Foreign Industry Head ringA Inspects Departments Shrei n Yoshi Otsuka, Japanese industrial Th leader, is visiting the University for Svn several days in order to collect data which he will be able to use. on his G return to the far East. He is being a escorted through the various de- partments of the Univer'sity by rep- resentatives from the president's t, office. He is making the inspection Von a research fellowship from the University of Oregon. Otsuka was introdu ^ed to officials here through letters from Dean George Rebec, of Oregon, formerly on the Michigan faculty. Otsuka's major interests center on the social S, aspects of American industry, and how they can be applied, to Japan- ese commercial life. He is remain- Buy ing in Detroit during his fellow- I'Ine * ship in this secton. . i) G t~l _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ?.FREE Everything Murica1 D r ug, Toiletries, CallyStationery, S BALDWIN LINE O PIANOS R be udis EST IC, BRUNSWICK i. DIOS PR be udis dIARTIN BAND INSTRUMENTS 1 Termis to Snit Musc TORES j DS!e Hi~nshaw 217T .RME i Pjjjj 7515'17N. ai 723 N. University Rabbi Bernard Heller Expresses Hope for Success .gn Ntational Chain. BARONIAL COAT OF ARMS IN UNION RESULTS FROM THIRST OF ALUMNUS Edward Rogers Commissioned was enchanted with the sugges- German, Artist to Carve tion. Rogers sent to Ann Arbor Masterpiece. for a drawing of the arms, but ____found that the University had .A thirst of an alumnus, which none. However, he received in- lead. hm to strolliim nttre i'asa uerkeller in Nurnberg, Germany, to, Rabbi Bernard Heller was offi- obtain a stein of beer resulted in cially welcomed as the new director the gift to the University of the of the B'nai Brith Hillel foundation coat of arms which hangs in the yesterday at the student council ex- south lounge of the Union giving ecutive meeting. the room the air of a baronial After committee reports were giv- manor house. en, the rabbi briefly mentioned his The history of the coat of arms philosophy of the foundation, ex- is revealed by Edward S. Rogers, pressing the hope that the Michi- '95L; L.'L. M. (Hon.), '10; L. L. D. gan organization may be outstand- (Hon.) '30, who has written an ac- ing in the national Hillel chain on count of his quest for the heraldic eight university campuses. masterpiece. Members of the council were in-' "Two summers ago," says Rogers, formed also that a, new constitu- "I arrived at Nurnberg very hot and tion, which would be presented forI dusty and with a thirst. In Nurn- approval at the next meeting, wvould berg there is a beer house, the Nas- promote the merit system as the sauerkeller, that has been running chief basis of future foundation since at least 1400, and so I went awards. The first open forum of the there to see if they were still sell- year will be held Nov. 2, the edu- ing beer. They were. There was cation committee announced, with singing, and as most of our college Sam Kellman, 33L, delivering the songs have German tunes, we paper.. Tentative arrangements knew themr and joined in. were discussed for a faculty discus- "'There was an old chap who was sion to be held Nov. 11. Josephine I sitting at the long table near us. Stern, '33, chairman of the educa- I chanced to admire some very tion committee, also announced beautiful armorial carvings on the that an art exhibit of works now walls, and he thereupon explained being shown in Detroit will be spon- that they wvere the work of the sored here this semester. Guild of Heraldic Woodcarvers Reports of the success of the which had flourished in Nurnberg weekly teas that are held on Tues- since before Albrecht Dur er's time., day, Wednesday and Thursday were~ Rogers l earned that only one of made by E. Al Miller, social chair- these carvers was alive, an old man. He stated that the formal l man named Michael D~auer, who no banquet of welcome for rabbi Hell- longer finding castormers for his er to be held in the League next heraldic carvings had turned to the Wednesday is expected to be highly! making of statuettes of Hans Sachs I stead a corporate seal showing a lamp on a pile of books surrounded with rays. The Michigan corporate seal, aft- er scrutiny by the Rouge Dragon Pursuivant at the Heralds college in London and by Mussett, the her- aldic painter at Great Turnstiles Lincolns Inn Fields, emerged ortho- dox heraldry. The crest wasa greater problem but finally emerged in the form of a wolverine. The finished drawing was sent to Bauer at Nurnberg, according to Rogers, where the cold man, as the sole survivor of the Guild of Her- aldic Carvers, collaborated with the last of the Guild of Heraldic Paint- ers, and did the job in final form, making two originalis. One is in the University club of Chicago, and, the other in thae Union. A framed article explaining the-___ origin of the coat of arms will be hung in th Union under the work this week. Il~ - I " F !,I - p 'm I,, sluccessf ui. Over 100 tickets have al- ready; been issued, he announced. SThe Hillel Pr yers, an a djunct of the foundation, reported that a conamittee was reading one-act dlays for presentation. A class in th~e hi .'ory of Zionism is to be start- ed by vukah, another auxiliary so- ciety sponsored by the foundation. The chairman of the editorial board of the Hillel News reported that the paper will be enlarged for coming to sell to tourists. It occured to Rogers that h might conmmission Dauer tocav £ the University coat of arms. Bauer E D U, A~ 0 R'1 ------ FOR MEN AND WOMEN I pill"Poll. 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EDUCATORS I 4"9 I 4CI ildren's Educator Okfords Sizes- 5 to 8--$2.25 Sizes- 81/2to 11-$2.65 Sizes-11 to 2--$2.98 >BOYS' EDUCATORS Educator Arch Elator Patent i strap--snug fitting heel and arch. Same style in Black Kid-'!All sizes AA to EE. Me'n's Educator Oxford in Black or Tan Calfskin, Boys' Educator Oxfords in Black or Tan Calf I I I 1