TWO HII MICHI XN DA~TTI ~- THURSDAY, APRiL 30, 1926 - I Hits Townsend Graft LATE WIRE NEWS Senator's Missing Wife * Believed Found LONDON, April 29.-(P)-A woman who gave the name of "Mrs. Draper" and whose de- scriptio'n was believed to tally with that of the missing wife of Eben S. Draper, a former State Senator of Massachusetts, stowed away on the steamer Georgic during its Atlantic crossing from New York and was not found un- til today, ships officers disclosed tonight. Mrs. Eben S. Draper, 42, dis- appeared from a sanitarium at Katonah, N. Y., April 19. On a blotter in a hotel room in which she later stayed was found the name of the Georgic. Today Draper announced he had re- ceived a cablegram from his wife, sent from the Georgic in London. Officers of the liner said Mrs. Draper emerged today from a tank room on the promenade deck and disembarked here. One officer said she "went ashore with a friend." Merit System Is Supported Governor (Continued from Page 1) ashamed of the conditions of pat- ronage existing the first few months I was on this job," Governor Fitz- gerald asserted that "the only way to handle personnel of state admin- istration is through a systen other than by selection by political prefer- ence. All I heard the first few months as governor was jobs. That has got to be corrected. The patronage sys- tem as it exists today will ruin any official and any government. The issue is neither Republican nor Dem- ocratic, but one of sound common sense." The cost of government "must be cut," declared Comstock, who told the meeting that "if there is anything one humble citizen can do to secure passage of this bill, you can count on former-Governor Comstock." Civil service is needed, according to Johnson, "to put the right kind of business efficiency into government." He said Professor Pollock's efforts here are "attracting nation-wide at- tention." Battle Not Finished Professor Pollock, referring to the proposed institution of civil service in Michigan as a "revolutionary change," urged "100 per cent sup- port for the measure. The battle is not finished yet," he said. The association chose George A. Osborne, editor of the Sault Ste. Marie Evening News and son 'of former-Governor Chase S. Osborne, as its presidenL Other officers in- clude Mrs. P. W. Jones of Grand Rap- ids, president of the Women Voters League of Michigan., first vice-presi- dent; Arno R. Schorer of Kalamazoo, second vice-president; John W. Miner of Jackson, treasurer; and William P. Lovett, secretary of the Detroit Citizens' League, secretary. An organization committee, which will meet Saturday in the Union in Ann Arbor to choose a state com- mittee of 50 members and an execu- tive committee of 15, is composed of G. I. Nippress, Saginaw educator, chairman; Dr. D. C. Shilling of West- ern State Teachers College; D. A. Van Buskirk of Hastings, president of the Michigan Educational Association; and Mrs. Harry E. Applegate of Lan- sing. Measure Will Pass Professor Pollock was more than pleased with the meetings. He termed it the "best thing that has yet happened for civil service in Mich- igan." Monday he will conduct a hearing in Saginaw and Wednesday a hearing in Escanaba, in the Upper Peninsula. There seems to be little doubt, sen- timent in the capitkl indicates, that the civil service measure which Pro- fessor Pollock's commission is pre- paring, will pass the legislature. Gov- ernor Fitzgerald said today he hoped it would become law within the first 30 days of the session. But what troubles members of the commission and those who are working for them is that individual legislators may in- sist on apparently inconsequential amendments that may throw off the effectiveness of the entire system. -Associated Press Photo. Jack T. Leasia (above), dismissed manager of the Townsend old age pension organization in Michigan, told a congressional investigation. at Detroit he had been warned by a "higher up" not to push his work too fast because "we want to milk this crowd two more years" Lindberghs Seek Peace In England LONDON, April 29. -(P) - Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh, who suddenly left France today after fail- ing to secure privacy from autograph seekers, landed at Folkestone tonight. They drove away in their automo- bile for an unannounced destina- tion, believed to be their temporary home, Long Barn, at Weald, Kent. The couple had been touring France for six days by automobile, spending most of their time in small villages. They were not recognized until today in a seaside resort near Boulogne. After the flier and his wife went, for a stroll on the beach a crowd followed them back to the hotel begging autographs, so they hurriedly packed and left. RADIO 6:00-WJR Jimmie Stevenson. WXYZ EasyyAces. WWJ Ty Tyson. CKLW Omar the Mystic. 6:15-WJR Jimmy Allen. WWJ The Human Side of News. CKLW Joe Gentile. 6:30--WJR Kate Smith. WWJ Bulletins. WXYZ Day in Review. CKLW Rhythm Ramblings. 6:45-WJR Boake Carter. WWJ Red Horse Ranch. WXYZ Clyde McCoy. CKLWL Song Recital. 7:00-WJR Alexander Gray: Mark Warnow's Music. WWJ Rudy Vallee's Variety Hour. WXYZ Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. CKLW Phil Marley's Music. 7:30-WJR HarryRichmuan. CKLW Little Symphony. 7 :45-WJR Musical Program. 8 :00-WJR Water O'Keefe: Glen Gray's Music. WWJ The Showboat. WXYZ Death Valley Days. CKLW Pop Concert. 8:30-WJR Ed Wynn: Gulliver the 'raveler. WXYZ Rhythm Review. CKLW Melody Treasure Hunt. 8 :45--WXYZ Bob Chester's Music. 9:00---WJR Horace Heidt's Brigadiers. WWJ Bing Crosby: Jimmy Dorsey's Music. WXYZ Big Broadcast. CKLW Recital Hal. 9:30--WJR March of Time. WXYZ Adventures of the Hornet. CKLW Hugo Mariani's Cosmopolitans. 9 :45-WJR Musical Moments.1 10:00-WJR Duncan Moore. WWJ Amos and Andy. WXYZ Sammy Diebert's Music. t CKLW Baseball scores and News. 10:15-WJR Rhythm. WWJ Tiger Highlights: Evening t Melodies. WXYZ Sid Austin's Music. CKLW Kay Kyser's Music.t 10 :30-WJR Songs You Remember. WXYZ International Petroleum Con- vention. CKLW Freddy Martin's Music-. 10:45-WWJ Jesse Crawford. 11:00-WJR Abe Lyman's Music. WWJ Russ Lyon's Music. CKLW Orville Knapp's Music. 11:30-WJR Henry King's Music.k WWJ Dance Music. WXYZDBaker Twins. CKLW Ted Weems' Music. 11:45-WJR Solay and his Violin. 12:00-WXYZ Sam Jack Kaufman's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Lowry Clark's Music. CKLW Bob Nolan's Music. 12:30-WJR At Close of Day. CKLW Joe Sander's Music. 1 :00-,CKLW Ted Weems' Music. HEARST APPEALS TO COURT WASHINGTON, April 29. - (IP) - William Randolph Hearst appealed to the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals today his suit seek- ing to enjoin the Senate Lobby Com- mittee from seizing his private tele- grams. Terrace Garden Dancing Studio Instructions i n a 1 forms, Classical, social, dancing. Ph. 9695. Wuerth Theatre Bldg. Two Prominent Women Bridge Players Held Operation Of Duplicate Bridge Tourney Brings Gambling Law Charges NEW YORK, April 29. -UP)- In a courtroom crowded with anxious bridge enthusiasts, two prominent women players were arraigned today on a charge of violating the gambling laws in connection with the operation of a duplicate bridge tournament. The anxiety of the spectators was traced to a fear that the police de- partment might be contemplating a wide-scale offensive against the nu- merous bridge clubs in the city. Discussing yesterday's raid on a midtown studio, which led to today's court hearing, Police Commissioner Lewis J. Valentine said: "That was nothing more than a gambling house. You can gamble with bridge just as you can with poker, black jack or fan tan. Any club that violates the law is subject to police action.'' The two women taken in the raid were Miss Mildred Lovejoy, 34, who lives in the studio apartment with her mother, and Mrs.Adelaide Neu- wirt, 35. Both have a following as bridge teachers and tournament play- ers. After pleading not guilty they were paroled for trial in special sessions by Magistrate Anthony F. Burke A few hours after the bridge club raid, members of the police gambling squad visited a charity ball in a mid- town hotel and a power game in an uptown pent house. Nine men were arrested at the charity ball, and 10 women and six men at the pent house. All but one woman were dis- charged in the latter case. Commenting outside of court on the case, Oswald Jacoby, a member of the Four Aces championship team, remarked: "Duplicate bridge might be con- sidered a form of insanity by non- bridge players and policemen, but it isn't gambling by any stretch of the imagination." Kansas Profs Average High'C In Student Poll LAWRENCE, Kans., April 29. - UP) -In a recent "Grade Your Profs" campaign sponsored by the Daily Kansan, the average grade for all of the professors voted upon was slight- ly above "C." Over 170 professors received grades and only 80 of them had an average of "B" or better. Twenty-eight had an average of "D" and eight flunked completely. Most of the instructors received their lowest grades in personal ap- pearance, with personality running second. As a punitive measure, it is under- stood thatnthe closing hour of faculty homes will be set up an hour earlier. Eyston Sets World Diesel Car Record BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Utah, April 29.-() -Capt. George Ey- ston, steel-nerved English speedster, set a new world's mark for diesel- poweredmotor cars of 158.87 miles' an hour in an unannounced run to- day. The previous unofficial record for the measured mile in diesel-motored cars, according to AAA officials who timed Eyston today, was 136 miles an hour.r The record-smashing sprint in the Britisher's 3-ton Juggernaut -"fly- ing Spray" - came as a surprise after; several test spins and during a lull+ between rainstorms that left the While Saline Flats sticky. NOTICES ONE THIRD OFF on all fur work. E. L. Greenbaum, 448 Spring Street. Phone 9625. 14x STATIONERY: Printed with your name and address. 100 sheets, 100 envelopes. $1.00. Many styles. Craft Press, 305 Maynard. 9x MAC'S TAXI---4289. Try our effi- cient service. All new cabs. 3x EYES examined, best glasses made at lowest prices. Oculist, U. of M. graduate, 44 years practice. 549 Packard. Phone 2-1866. 13x SELL YOUR OLD CLOTHES: We'll buy old and new suits and over- coats for $3 to $20. Also highest prices for saxophones and type- writers. Don't sell before you see dam. Phone for appointments. 2-3640. lox LAUNDRY LOST AND FOUND LOST: Gl pss, lair of pink-gold full-vue glasses. Last in nleig hbotr- howd of Michigan 'Theatr e. Call MiDhigan Daily, Box 121. 446 LOST: Wlite gold ring, black onyx diamond s Pjin, Friday, April 24th at Music School. Peward. Box 122. 448 LOST: Brown zip)er brief case con taining equity law notes and state_- inents. R-waId for reti rnI of otes.r Call 2-1817, . ET Konopka. No questions asked. LOST: A blue leatir p; ket book c(ntaining wo tic lkes to Baltinore, a leatherw allet and ein dollars. Will be glad to g ive he cash for the return o.(f the wallet, ickets and purse. Call 2-2591. Edith Hooker, WILL party who look lady's bag by mistake from 2 p.m. Ann Arbor bus on April 13, please return or com- municate with Eastern Michigan Motor buses, Ann Arbor, 116 W. Huron. LOST: $15. Wedinesdlay bet.ween ha- ven Hall and Main Street and League. Reward. Phone 3203. Hundreds of single and married people are getting their Spring cash from us--on their own signatures -why don't you? You get the cash without delay. The payments are arranged to suit you and you can have a year or longer to repay. Use this personal money service. Add up your Spring needs and see us NOW. Loans Up to $300 --- 30 Months to Repay! Second Floor Room 208 WOLVERINE BLDG. (formerly Ypsi-Ann Bldg.) Ph. 4000-4001 202 E. Washington St., Ann Arbor PERSONAL FINANCE CO. In Spring Fashions, with or without the button-down collar ... the A R ROW OX FOR D SH IR T in the Latest Patterns at STATE STREET AT LIBERTY 4 rExs &40 Classified Directory S P R I N G N E E DS LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox Careful work at low price. darned lx WANTED WANTED: Young man to wait on table for board. Call 4039. 447 1936 Floods Written In Cycles Of Weather, Geologists Find Scientists Present Remedy To Hold Back Torrents Of Great Watersheds By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE (Associated Press Science Editor) Ithaca, N. Y., April 29. - (P) -En- gineers say there are "50-year" floods, "100-year," "500-year" and "1,000- year." This they find from marks on the lands about rivers. This spring's floods in northeastern United States may qualify under 50- year" levels, possibly even the "100 year" sort. To geologists there is no mystery in why they come, no doubt they will return. They are written in seasonal combinations and weather cycles well authenticated, though seldom read by the public. There is also a remedy within man's control, structures and means to hold back the waters on the watersheds where they gather. Scientifically this remedy is simple. Practically it is dif- ficulty and expensive. Traces Flood Development Typical events of the present floods are observed by O. D. von Engeln, professor of geology, Cornell Univer- sity. These occurred in central New York, near the geographical center of the floods and one of the hardest hit spots. Central New York, furthermore, had a curtain-raiser last July in which the geologists were able to measure more exactly than hereto- fore just what may be expected in present-day communities. "The basic cause of most destruc- tive floods," Professor von Engeln says, "is unduly concentrated rain- fall. In the middle latitudes such concentration results from the de- velopment of cyclonic storms and their failure to move from west to east or from southwest to northeast as is normal. Streams Overburdened "Maintained over one area four to seven days with constant precipita- tion, these storms furnish streams so much water their channels cannot carry it off, and floods result. "In the present flood these condi- tions are aggravated by a snow cover and frozen ground. Everything be- comes surface run-off, immediately delivered to the streams. "These floods are most directly and Made to Look Like New Again I disastrously destructive Io 11 um an tructures -- buildings, bridges, roads, railway tracks. All such additions to the lands( ape by man aie very inse- curely attached to the earth. A com- paratively snail I d}epart ire from nor- rnlal c'ondi tions, and they are wrecked, Flood In 1935 "The flood of July, 1935, and the preserit floods in centsr;A New York attained such high stages that they modified natural cond i ions that have been stable for 50, lys'rhaps 100 or more, years. "It is interesting that within nine months there should be two such great concentrations, when for years no such excess has been experienced. This short-term recurrence indicates the sporadic and coincidental nature of floods. "It is possible that our entrance in the last few yeatrs of the 17-year wet-and-cool period of the 35-year 'Bruckner Cycle' may have sonie bear- ing on these extremes. Great Damage "The great permanent damage of such floods is the vast soil erosion. The waters hold so much silt and clay as to be liquid mud --- fields and soil fertility floating away. "Here again it is human activity- cultivationoof the land - that makes the natural situation unduly unstable. "The remedies now being applied by the government in soil conserva- tion work are admirable," Prof. von Engel says. "But a larger effort should be placed on providing reser- voirs with outlets permitting normal Ilow to go through but, if a flood flow comes, holding it and the soil." MIC H I GA N LOVE ,AT FIRST FIGHT! Sho61d they marry in hate and ;live scrap pily ever F OR Ad i i Continuous 1:30- 11 p.m. DOWNTOWN - Next to Wuerth Theatre The Foremost Clothiers in Wash tenaw County I 15c to 6 -25c after 6 NOW Claude Rains Fay Wray "The Clairvoyant" and DICK POWELL RUBY KEELER "SH IPMATES FOREVER" Extra CARTOON * NEWS X \ 1 lel 1 , . t- I t N O MAJESTIC Today and Tomorrow DOUBLE FEATURES IT'S TOO LATE FOR KID GLOVES! The forces of law and order are at death grips with the underworldf. THE WORD HAS DONE OUT TO F . " Every time clothes cleaned their freshness are and r a. rr _.._- I1 U -- - - I *1 Miller's Dairy FarmStores 1219 S. University 620 E. Liberty A REAL MEAL color are restored. Don't neglect your clothes until Mr. Moth damages your things beyond repair. Phone 8722 today for a positive cure to all moth threats. P~.8722 ""' ;"i''''. I Carl Laemmle presents LOMBARD in FAITH BALDWIN'S LOVE BEFORE BREAKFAST i 11 TYPEWRITERS New and Used, Office and por- 1 -A gripping chapter in -our great war on crime i PRESTON FOSTER ,MARGARET CALLAAN f?91'r f D L A IA IA Alan Mowbray, Ralph i ll i I I in j' (A~. N~~Ai~. I U