2us sulumm ---- DAELT IL TEN SUlfIDE MMIHIGAN DAJI~ m - ducation Looms as Timber Menace MUTE TESTIMONY Above is shown a picture, rushed to Ecorse early this morning and then rushed right back to Ann Arbor again, of the new Press building as it will appear when completed in 1932. When it's done, they won't have to put out papers like this, no, sir. Those hogs dashing down the runway might lead you to suspect that the Board in Control was going to put out hogs instead of newspapers. And why not? We always said that there wasn't any real vent for the student hog-output. GROSSE -ISLE WILL REMIN WILD LIE Refuge for Another Five Years, Conservation Commission Announces. LANSING, Aug. 15-(A. W. O. L.) -Grosse Isle will remain wild life refuge for another five years, Con- servation commission announced. SOCIET Y TOIEDO, O., Aug. 14-Bobby Sampson, crack Chicago welter- weight wrestler, defeated Les Fish- baugh of Newark here last night. Sampson took the first fall with a body pin, but lost the second to Fishbaugh in a series of butts. He won the final with a headlock. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 15-(IP)- Ace Hudkins' 10-round bout here with dynamite Jackson, Santa Mon- ica Negro heavyweight, Aug. 25, was postponed today until Sept. 15 when examination indicated an infection on the former Lincoln, Neb., boxer's arm would not heal in time for the fight. * * * Fay Snyder of 16156 Woodingham drive had been granted a divorce today when she told Circuit Judge Allen Campbell her husband, Ben- nett, wouldn't get out of bed until noon. . When you go to parties, do your friends disturb you by thoughtless little acts which they would avoid if they only knew how they hurt you? Do they scream "Here comes Charlie!" and throw fishnets over you? It means that wour name is Charlie, and that they WANT to throw fishnets over you. If your name isn't Charlie, it's even more serious-write quickly to: MICHIGAN DAILY PERSONALITY BUREAU (Press Building, Maynard Street) $t. ri MENOCAL CAUGHT; TSK, THESE CUBANS Former President of Island Is Bagged en Route to Havana; Revolts Are Tiresome. HAVANA, Aug. 15.-(A)-Captur- ed with 12 of his followers, former President Mario G. Menocal was en route to Havana today aboard a Cuban gunboat and the government claimed that the revolt which he led was nearing an end. With him were Col. Carlos Men- dieta, gray-haired veteran of Cuba's war for independence, and 11 of the island's most prominent cit- izens. They surrendered Friday to the commander of the gunboat Fernandez Quevedo after being sur- rounded by government troops in the province of Pinar Del Rio. President Machado, leading a campaign of pacification in Santa Clara province against those who sought the overthrow of his ad- ministration, radioed orders that the insurgents were to receive full courtesies of political prisoners pending disposition of their cases. The surrender was viewed by government supporters as the turn- ing point of the seven-day revolu- tion which began last Sunday morning. Seventeen other rebels yielded in Pinar Del Rio province, but sharp fighting between revolutionaries and government troops continued in the eastern part of the island even after the surrender of revo- lutionary leaders in the western area. The first rebel victory over gov- ernment soldiery was reported from Rancho Veloz, Santa Clara prov- ince, with eight soldiers killed and numerous casualties attending. Government troops were routed in a brisk battle and awaited further reconaissance before renewing the engagement. Other spirited anti-clamaxes to the Menocal surrender came in brisk battles in the Santi Spiritus region and at various other points in Santa Clara province, where rev- olutionary forces, unaware of their leaders surrender,