p a (;r TWO A-cl 'rQV WAIt' t-I TP-A XT t--. A T't %.P PAGE WO ____ * 1711. II nr I c t1 liAIN lUIA 1L Yv'Lr i?'~r'AN -. l . W!GHT SEES NEEOS"CO AS NEW t DUjSTRY. Predicts Increasing PopularityI of Hunting Will Bring New Farm Revenue. TELLS OF CONSERVATION Shows How Farmers Can Raise' Game Birds to Add i to Supply. ...... 'I i 4 } t t ,. "p i 1 : {j{i 9i w "If small game hunting continues to increase in popularity, it will be but a few years before the sports- men of this nation will number ap- proximately 10,000,000, and at the present cost a $204,000,000 industry will soon be developed," said Prof. H. M. Wight, of the School of For- estry and Conservation, yesterd-T. in his radio address on "Game as a Farm Crop." Source of Income. Just as new varieties of fruit. vegetables, and pure bred stock have provided a source of increased revenue to farmers with foresight, so will the management of game forA the pleasure of the big legion of Sportsmen provide an additiona revenue for those who demonstrate OLEY CANE' WILL MAKE DEBUT AS T ROPHY FOR STU MP S AK E RSIIIL TOf DISCUSS TAXES, Members of Timber Industries to Meet Here for Round Table Discussion. SECRETARY WILL SPEAK Forty timber owners and others connected with the forest indus- tries will meet Friday and Satur- day at the School of Forestry and Conservation in an informal round- table discussion of forest taxation, Dean S.' T. Dana stated yesterday. 4 The group is composed largely of nen from the upper peninsula. They will be served a luncheon Saturday noon at the Union at' which time Shirley W. Smith, sec-, 1etary and vice president of the University, will speak. The con- ventions have been held every year since the formation of the forestry school, Dean Dana added. "We will consider the possibilityI of improving present methods by modifying the present Pearson act which provides for the taxation of commercial sorest preserves, or by determining the value of forest property under a modification of the general property tax," he de- clared. "The whole thing resolves itself into whether the situation can be met best by the so called yield tax on forest products when cut, or by getting more accurate valuations under the present system. Under the latter system it might be p or ible to adapt the system used for valueing mine properties to for- GUM SALE SLUMP PREDICTED AS TAR CHEWING BECOMES MANIFEST Unless the Buildings and Grounds boys soon complete their job of patching the roofs of University andj Mason halls, the sale of chewing gum in Ann Arbor may fall off appreciably, it was learned yester- day. The situation is like this: The B. and G. boys are using great quanti- ties of liquid asphalt for the pur- pose of repairing the leaky roofs. The solid asphalt, awaiting its con- version to liquid, is contained in large barrels that have been placed in the corner of the University hall parking place. There it is easily accessible to all those who have a tar-chewing penchent. Officer Albert Thomas, in charge of the University hall parking glace, has noticed a few people hovering mysteriously around the tar barrels and then just as mys- teriously begin chewing. Perhaps it was chewing gum and again it 'MICHIGAN PAMS' ACTIVE IN BOSTON Alumni Club Chiefly Concerned With Childhood Problems. Probably the most unique alum- ni organization of the University is the "Better Papas and Mamas club" which has become known since it was first organized \ last year as the "Michigan Pams." The club originated last spring when a group of Michigan gradu- ates who reside in Boston, Mass., sought to seek a common bond strong enough to hold them to- gether, and upon realizing they were primarily interested in child education decided to organize dis- cussion groups for studying the problems of childhood. After several sessions the group felt justified in appealing to the University for assistance, and ask- ed that a member of the Univer- sity faculty be senthto talk with the members on the subject of child psychology. Margaret Wylie, then of the fac- ulty here and now at Cornell Uni- versity, was sent to Boston where she conducted aseries of meetings. Topics under consideration were the underlying principles of child guidance such as the aims and goals in the intellectual, social, moral, and spiritual education of the child; methods recognized as of assistance in child guidance, and I contributions of modern psychology to the task of parenthood. The club is still active and if present plans materialize a member of the faculty will be sent to Bos- I ton this year to'speak before mem- bers of the organization. Professor A. B. Moehlman, of the politics. school of education, is attending a0 meeting of the National Council on The closest he came to this for- School House Construction at Hot bidden subject was at the banquet Springs, Ark. Professor Moehlman meeting of the Acacia Lodge of Ma- Is a member of this group and plans sons, in their lodge hall at Ker- to stay for the entire length of thechvlaeuanCdiacbu- meeting which will last for a week.cheval avenue and Cadillac boule- yard, where he mentioned crime Two Postal Officials and grand juries. Injured by Mail Bomb "The grand jury," Mr. Brucker said, "is a necessary thing in the (BY Associated Press> great centers of population and RANGOON, Burma, Oct. 22.-Two they should be called periodically native postal officials were injured without waiting for conditions to here today when a bomb exploded get so bad that there is a demand while they were opening a mail for one. The grand jury brings the bag. The bomb was wrapped in a government closer to the people. It parcel believed sent from Bombay. begets public confidence." -v- -_- might have been tar. At any rate, Officer Thomas said that several students have confided to him that they have always borne a distinct yen for masticating the asphalt. "Good for the teeth; good for the digestion," they told him. "What's mere," Officer Thomas remarked, "two professors have confessed that they used to chew tar when they were boys." At that, perhaps the situation isnt unduly alarming. School Building Meet Attended Ny oeilan i<' }' . i ' r. { 9 RADIO TODAY Dr. S. A. Graham, of the eco-. n1omic zoology department, will direct his address over the Uni- versity radio program tomorrow primarily to fruit growers and I ,' i ;g j~. those interested in farm crops. Mortimer E. Cooley, dean emeritu He will speak on the subject, and Architecture (right), and Herbert "What Insects Do to Trees." Engineering and Architecture are sho The Midnite Sons quartet will ho Tau, national engineers' debatin present the musical program. his left hand a cane made from the p ng the campus in 1887, ,which he will p: interest assorn i this work, society, local chapter of Sigma Rho Ta The investigations carried on by forth be known as the "Cooley cane." the University to determine meth- ods by which the annual increase of COOLEY WILL GIVE Ih gamemay be increased have had TO STUMP SPEA marked success, Professor Wight If T M P A said. This investigation, he pointed I out, has already reached a point To Award Stick to Most Active w whee a few of the especially im- 1Se r ndg poartant ways by which game birds i Man of Senior Standing t th Wiaybe increased has been found. in This Society. M Can Maintain Supply. "The three primary requirements Few trophies on the campus have fe for all wild life are food, shelter, so rich a background 'of history a. Professor Wight, "an area must adtaiina h aeodcn y either naturally provide or be made soon to be presented to the Stump p to provide these through out the speakers society by Mortimer E. Cc year, if a good supply of game ani- Cooley, dean emeritus of the Col- e mal s is to be maintained." leges of Engineering and Architec- P Under a system partially outlined, ture, according to a statement p' Professor Wight pointed to the fact made yesterday by Prof. Robert D. Of that through its application, the Brackett of the engineering Eng- in farmer can turn his game birds in- lish department, who is in charge se to a farm crop, the net yield will of the society's activities. Je, as with other commodities, in Not many who have seen the sp direct proportion to the effort and severely plain, beautifully turned pr intelligent attention invested. walking stick in the hands of the S dean have realized that it ,datesb EXPERT BERA TES from the-very earliest period of our st campus history, when a picket m bRUG FIEND CURE fence with a gate in it composed of th posts in stagger formation protect- ca Edmunds Says Pasteur Methods ed the campus from meandering hi Will Not Help Addicts. bovine. T Tradition has it that this fence hi "The Pasteur treatment for rabies: : could not possibly have any cura- tive effect on drug addicts," de- clared Dr. C. W. Edmunds, of the I pharmacology department, of the Medical school, a member of the drug addiction committee of theWARNER National Research council, when questioned yesterday about the gueer case of several Egyptian he.- roin fiends who were recently re- ported to have simulated dog bite in order to gain admission to a Cairo rabies hospital, where they said a drug addicted friend theirs, who had actually been bitten, had been cured of his drug craving. The United States Daily recently carried the story of this incident. It nmentioned that the doctor in charge of the Cairo anti-rabic institution noticed a curious frequency of dog . bIte cases from a particular village of lower Egypt. Since no parts of . - the supposedly mad dogs had been sent to him for investigation, as is the usual procedure in rabies cases, , the doctor became suspicious and } r questioned one of the patients. He ftotnd that none of the victims, all of whom claimed to be hopelessly addicted to drugs, had ever actually been bitten by dogs, but merely had BaD s, the r i caused their village sanitary officer,I to fIt the jaws of a dead dog with Close to her employ a steel spring and with this ma- ; standard among chine to give them the necessary biness woman wh lacerations to send them to the hos- ionaJly involved whom segvshr More than 13,000 4-H club girls she gives her will compete for the title of Ala- ~d e~hls bama's healthiest in a contest cos- life is colored and c ing May 1, 1931. association with thii as the battle ground for many a a.ss rush with the sophomores on e inside trying to keep the fresh- en from getting onto the campus. In 1887 or thereabouts the old nce was taken down and carried vay to some "limbo of the lost" the building and grounds de- artment. At this time Dean ooley was a professor in mechical agineering. Someone in his de- artment with an eye for values ocured a few of the choice bits the fence and t°.rned them out to canes, one of which was pre- nted to Dean Cooley. At the Tung Oil banquet last ring Dean Cooley determined to esent this cane to the Stump peakers society. The cane is to presented to a man of senior anding who has accomplished the ost noteworthy achievement in e organization. This member will rry the Cooley cane throughout s senior year and at the next ung Oil banquet will present it to s successor. Dr. T. Luther Purdom, of the bureau of appointments and occu- pational research, will speak to the Kiwanis club of Flint today on the{ subject, "Present-day problems in personnel work." Tomorrow Dr. Purdom will ad- dress a sectional meeting of teach- ers at the Toledo state school for teachers on "Personnel work and its relation to education.,, These speeches are a part of a series of talks which Dr. Purdom will deliver from time to time in different cites of Mchigan.C us of the Colleges of Engineering gests," he concluded. C. Sadler, dean of the Colleges of These conventions were first wn at the stone stump of Sigma started to enable forestry students g society. Dean Cooley holds in and teachers to obtain a more prac- pickets of the old fence surround- tical knowledge of practical condi- resent soon to the Stump Speakers tions in the field than could be ob- %u. This walking stick will hence- tained through academic methods. Kiwanis Club of Flint ISTORIC CANE Hear Purdom Today COMING FRIDAY-SATURDAY Double Feature Program Call 6300 this Afternoon GEORGE O'BRIAN in "ROUGH ROMANCE" Would you keep your mouth shut if you saw a daring Northern gunman kill a man? LAST TIMES TODAY F1 - ; ail lim I i jsatic NOW PLAYING A drama with music- Greatest in stage or screen history! Entirely in Color with ALEXANDER GRAY BERNICE CLAIRE Noah Beery Alice Gentle EXTRA Sound Novelty "Today and Yesterday" Talking Comedy Other Subjects I - Choral ALICE WHITE-JACK MULHALL INT H ILL AUDITORIUM Single Tickets- $1, $1.50, $2, $2.50 Season Tickets- $6, $8, $10, $12 at School of Music MADALR 4 Distinguished Belgian Soprano in Uni0on onCerc ecretary comes so er-she has set a men. The young o may not he emo- with the man to working hours- that her personal omplicated by her s man. See and hat has started a sies Other Choral Union Nov. 7 Alexander Brailowsky, Pianist. Nov. 20 Don Cossack Russian Russian BRIGHT SPOT 802 PACKARD STREET 5:30 to 7:00 LIVER AND BACON E #boas trovers Male Nov. Dec. Jan. 1~ pp with I .......- . ow- .' -,a Ar AA--l rr .. a Wir i* Chorus. Serge Jarofl, Conductor. SATURDAY