THE MICHIGAN DAILY O'Brien Asksh Speedy Finish For Bank Quiz DETROIT, Aug. 15.-()-The one- man grand jury investigation into the closing of two national banks in Detroit reopened today, with At- torney General Patrick H. O'Brien, in a lengthy address, asking that the investigation into the cause of the city's bank collapse be terminated speedily. The plea of the attorney general, who requested the convening of the jury, came while Wilson W. Mills, former chairman of the board of the closed First National Bank-Detroit, sat in the witness box waiting to take' the stand. It was followed ,by the declaration of Circuit Judge Harry B. Keidan, sitting as the one-man jury, that "I dognot intend to continue this proceeding unnecessarily." "I believe, in the first place, that everyone who has definite knowl- edge pertinent to this matter should be heard, no matter who he is," said the judge. "In the second place, this court is not going to be dictated to by any official, no matter who he may be." O'Brien said he believed that cere- tain witnesses who felt they had a right to testify as a matter of "per- sonal privilege" should be heard, but beyond these men, he said, he wished to defer to the wishes of J. F. T. O'Connor, comptroller of the cur- rency, that the proceedings:end at once. He said that O'Connor had indicated nothing would be done to- ward reorganization of the banks un- til the grand jury had ended its ses- sions and a final decision has been reached in litigation by stockholders to avoid assessment. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER (By University Observatory) Temperature at 7 a. m.; 56.2. Minimum temperature for 24 hours ending 7 p. in., 82.2 at 3 p. m. Maximum temperature for 24 hours ending 7 p. m., 53.4 6:15 a. m. Temperature at 7 p. im., 77.3. Precipitation for 24 hours ending 7 a. m., 0. Total wind velocity for 24 hours ending at 7 p. m., 58,9. 109,972 Names Are Affixed To Bank Petitions DETROIT, Aug. 15.-A total of 109,972 signatures have been tabu- lated by the Detroit Depositors' Com- mittee in its circulation of petitions asking the Federal government to offer a plan to reorganize Detroit's two closed national banks, according to workers in the committee head- qu^,rters. James K. Watkins, retiring police commissioner, who is chairman of the committee, said that Thursday noon has been set as the deadline for the returning of the 60,000 peti- tion blanks now in circulation. "We know many of there petitions have been signed in full, but they are not of value unless the petitions are returned to us," he said. "Our effort for the next three days will be to collect these petitions and tabu- late them." The committee seeks to get as many signatures as possible, on the theory that a large number of sign- ers will convince Washir~ton that Detroit .is united in favor of re- organizing the old banks. Anthony Maiullo, attorney and a member of the committee, will speak for the campaign over Station WXYZ at 9 p. m. Tuesday. PIGEONS DRAFTED RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug. 15.-(R)- All Brazilian carrier pigeons have been drafted into the Army ReservE by a decree which created a Gov-' ernment-supervised association of pigeon fanciers, ordered all bird,, registered with the War Department and forbade ownership of carriers by aliens. CONVICTS CAMP OUT JOLIET, 1Ill., .Au-g.(15.--(A')- In- mates of the Illinois State Peniten- tiary are going to start camping out. Not outside the- walls, but in the prison yard. =Warden Frank Hipp said tents would be erected in the sixty-seven- acre yard at Stateville Prison because of crowded conditions. Desperado Captured --Associated Press Photo Harvey Bailey, Kansas peniten- tiary fugitive, was captured on a farm near Decatur, Tex. Officials stated that his capture would solve the Charles Ursehel kidnap- ing and the Kansas City depot "massacre." Telephone Business Is Reported Much Better NEW YORK, Aug. 15. -(P)- Long listance talk, regarded by many as a luxury only a short time ago, is vetting into the necessity class again. Ielephone and telegraph companies .ook for palmier days now that busi- aess is improving. The telephone industry's major problem now is to expedite reinstalla- ion of telephones disconnected dur- .ng the depression. Wall Street ex- pects the industry, to lay even more emphasis on the intensive sales drive, advertising and employee campaigns which helped stem the tide of discon- nections during the past two years. Telephone installations reached a peak in the middle of 1930. -At that time there were about 17,185,600 sta- tions in service, according to gov- ernment records. Cars Built At World's Fair Nearing 2,000 ChI'AGO, Aug. 15.-Assembly of new autoniobiles in the plant opei-,- ed here on A Century of Progres- grounds by the Chevrolet Motor Com- pany will pass the 2,000 mark l e this month. officials annonced here today. Since, the line was set into mot ion by the light of a cosmic ray j' prior to the opening of the fair, omi- put has held at a steady pace of 24 cars a day, six days a week. In July exactly 600 new Chevrolei coaches and coupes came off the lin; in June 589 were built, and in May 165, bringing the total produced here from the time the line starte through July 31, to 1,354 units. If present schedules are mainta'n- edcar number 2,000 will be comple ed duiing the last hour of the lst day of this month, officials said. They estimated that by the closing of the fair upwards of 3,500 new Chevrolets will have been assembled here. This figure exceeds the totti 1932 production of 11 different au!; mobile companies then in business. So insistent has been the demand for cars carrying the distinction of having been built at the World's Fai that every unit so far produced' has been purchased at the end of tl line and driven away by its new owner. Color options may be spedi fied in advance and the purchaser is given the privilege of going into the assembly pit and helping to build his own car. People have come here from more than a thousand miles distant with the primary object of purchasing a car built at the Fair and driving it home. The huge assembly room, housed in the special General' Motors Ex-. position Building, with a wide bal- cony a. fifth of a mile long completely circling -the assembly operations, is attracting nearly half of all the peo- ple who visit the fair. Among part-time jobs held by Iowa State footballers, waiting on tables for board in men's and women's dormitories is most common. 66'ec 4 has to be a different kind of tobacco from that used in cigarettes... and it has to be made by an entirely dqferent process .. 0 UT in Kentucky, where they have pretty women, fast horses, and blue grass, there grows a tobacco called White Burley. It doesn't grow anywhere else in the world. There is a type of this White Burley that is best suited for pipe smoking. It is neither too thick nor too thin. It is not light and chaffy; at the same time, it is not rank or strong. "U. S. Type 31" is the government classification for White Burley. Since no other pipe tobacco has yet been found which seems to equal White Burley, this is what we use in making Granger Rough Cut. Next, we use the Wellman Method, a famous 1870 method of making pipe tobacco, to give Granger its fie flavor and fragrance. Then, too, Granger is 'Rough Cut"-just like they used to "whittle" their tobacco off a plug with a jack-knife. It smokes cool, lasts longer and never gums a pipe. And finally, we want to sell Granger for 10 cents. Good tobacco--right pro- cess-cut right. So we put Granger in a sensible soft foil* pouch instead of an expensive package, knowing that a man