THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, ULY 30, 132 'Wheat Queen' Assails Federal Farn Board Baring a husky arm'to prove she is a'real "dirt farmer," Mrs. Ida Watkins, often called the "wheat queen" of Kansas, told the Shannon house committee in Kansas City that "the only thing that will help the farmer is to kick the devil out of the farm board."' Mrs. Watkins operates a 4,500-acre farm near Sublette, Kas. 'Greeks Had 'Fool-Proof' Realty Deals; Carved Contract &n Wall Two Michigan Mete Training For Olympics Three Other Conference Scbools Also Have Pair; Of Trackmen at Village LOS ANGELES, Calif., ,July 29.-- (Special)-The University of Michi- gan stands fifth in the number of men who are in training at the Olympic village here for the various track event. Sharing the place with Michigan are three other Big Ten universities-Indiana, Iowa, and Ohio State. Louisiania Stat, Washington of Seattle, Yale, California, New York university and Loyola also styd in fifth place. Only Stanford, with six; Southern California; five; and Kansas- and Pennsylvania; with three each, are represented by more undergraduates than the Michigan group, a survey. made here shows. Thirty-five schools haye furnished 58 Olympians. These are the men placed by the universities which shared fifth with Michigan: Fuqua and' Hornbostel, Indiana; Keller and Simpson, Ohio State;* Bowman and Hardin, Louisi- ana State; Toppino and' Romero, Loyola; Genung and Jessup, Wash- ington; Churchill and Kiesel, Cali- fornia; Zaremba and Furth, New York university, and Conner aid Warner, Yale. Tolan and Turner are the Michi- gan menin training at the village here with the American track team. Kansas is represented by Bausch, Coffman and Cunningham, and Law- son Robertson, head Olympic coach, also tutored Carr, Dean and Mc- Dougal, %the Pennsylvania athletes, Women Outnumber Men In Columbia's Session NEW YORK, July 29.- (Special)- Women students outnumber men in the Columbia university summer ses- sion, although they are realtively fewer than in 1631, Edward J. Grant, registrar, announced here tdoay in' making public an analysi4 of regis- tration statistics/ of the summer school. Men compose 33 per cent of the total 1932 enrollment of 11,543 while last year they constituted 31.5 per cent of a student body numbering 14,016, Mr. Grant declared. Women enrolled 7,730 or 67 per cent, as against 68.5 per cent last summer, when 'the total was 9,602. Cincinnati's police radio station celebrating its first birthday sum- moned 50 police cruisers to city hall 1ithin 15 minutes. ]_texi o 4 Fauror 1to~ Two Famous British Flyers Wed in London LONDON, July 29.--P--J. A. Mol- lison and Miss Amy Johnson, two of Great Britain's most noted long dis- tance flyers, were married at St. George's church in Hanover Square this morning. Mollison plans to take off on a transatlantic flight to the United States Aug. 7. When Mollison announced that he was going to try the transatlantic flight Miss Johnson said she wanted to go with him. Since then there has been no definite word from either as to vhether they will make the flight together. Amy Johnson is a dame comman- der of the dritish Empire, an honor conferred upon he' in 1930 after she failed in her first attempt at a flight to Tokio across Siberia, but she tried again and made the round trip. Mdllison took something less than nine days for his flight to Australia in 1931, Josephine Olea was selected as queen of Mexico's Olympic team for a celebration in honor of that coun- try's athletes. i recently returned from the excava- tions on the site. Legible After 2,000 Years The contract, still legible after 2,000 years, states that Archidamus had bought the house from Sosion "with a year's grace for deliverance," and that the house was located be- tween those of Pythian and Poly-' xenus. Olynthus was destroyed in 348 B. C. by Philip of Macedon, father of Alexander the Great, and never rebuilt. Houses, streets, money ornaments, implements of all kinds remain just as they were left when the 40,000 inhabitants were slain o' sold into slavery. 'Extra Fare' Styx, Ride' In a cemetery near the city Dr. Robinson discovered that tfour coins instead of the usual one"had been placed in the mouths of several skeletons to pay the fee of Charon, underworld god, for ferrying the dead across the river Styx. Discoveries of mosaics probably made before Alexander's birth and which Dr. Robinson says will alter some conceptions of Greek history previously held by archaeologists were made on the site. Houses Well Built The houses uncovered by Dr. Rob- inson were well built and well planned, and equipped with bath tubs and shower bath arrangements in many cases. There was usually an open court in the center, with a sec- ond-floor balcony looking down upon the court. As a result of the discovery, Dr. Robinson 'says that "the statement: that the Greeks till the Hellenistic age lived in pretty little towns and houses like so many wasps' nests end had no important domestic ar- chitecture will have to be revised." A bronze "pencil and eraser" was found in the ruins. It is in the form of a two-headed crocodile. From one mouth projects a sharp stilus for writing on wax, and from the other a flat piece of bronze for erasing mistakes. Silver and bronze coins from 50 different places were unearthed in- dicating Olynthus had a wide "for- eign trade." i. r *1 TONIGHT AT 8:15 he4hal Crcle" The most unusual play presented in Ann Arbor ! Gorgeous Costumes, Vermillion Lattices, Jade Green Pavilions LYDIA MENDELSSO1N THEATRE All Seats 75c Phone 6300 t r . i I W ) ii HERTZ DRIVURSELF SYSTEM RENTS CARS for Business or Pleasure. Low Rates. NEW EQUIPMENT. Phone 3114 i .ri.y '.oUu1U±UL, !):.;u a . m ikumLl- j4ae we_________come.________________ -I 7MAdh mw THERE'S, nothing better than a bowl of delicious Kellogg's Corn Flakes and milk. So easy to digest, it invites sound -sleep. Dietitians advise it. How much more healtl- ful than hot, heavy foods.. So order Kellogg's when you drop in at the' campus restaurant tonight. Enjoy with canned peaches, or sweeten with honey for an extra treat. Good ... and good for you! V e 7 s Business men, industrialists and engi. neers--600,000 of them-regularly read the McGraw- Hill Publications. More than 3,000,000 use McGraw-Hill books and magazines in their business. (The Business Week Radio Retailing System Electronics, Aviation Product Engineering Factory and Industrial Engineering and Management Mining Journal Power * Engineering and Maintenance Mining World Engineering Metal and Mineral Markets Suddenly the industrial leader awakes to take stock of his plant. He finds that, under his very nose, it has grown antiquated. New days-new ways. Each new machine rings the death knell of old ones now in use. And the steady Itream of new and better tools often takes indus- try by surprise. American Maehiist has taken it upon itself to stave off this day of reckoning intur metal-working plants. It has appointed itself an advance guard of modern industry... scouting for'the new ... bringing wvord of it to the lead. ers of industry ... pointing out to them the wrinkles and signs of age on our industrial brow. J It-doesn't wait for them to take stock of themselves. Every five years American Machinist takes stock for them. And it brings them the cold facts through an exhaustive and rigid nation-wide survey. In 1925, it pointed out that 44% of all machine-tool equipment was obsolete. In 1930, its census set that figure at 48%. It placed that data before responsible men. And it showed them how to bring their plants up to date. There is probably a McGraw-Hill paper covering the in- Coal Age Electric Railway Journal Textile World Bus Transportation