THE MICHIGAN DAILY Five Coaches Lead Tribune All-Star Poll Crowley Now Holds First Place, With Hanley 2nd And Kizer 3rd The race to select a coach to pilot the all-star team of 1933 collegians who will play the Chicago Bears Aug- ust 31 remained torrid yesterday with five coaches grouped with 700 points of each other according to tabula- tions of the nationwide poll. The con- test closes August 10. Jimmy Crowley, of Michigan Sta and Fordham, moved into first pla with 71,879 points, but was close followed by Dick Hanley of Nort western, Noble Kizer of Purdue, B Zuppke of Illinois, and Lou Little Columbia. Little has 71,266 points. Slip Madigan of St. Mary's w sixth with 61,748 and Harry Kipk Michikan's coach, followed with 60 888. Although displaced for the leadi total points, the veteran Bob Zuppk now the oldest coach in the Big Te in years of service, continued to k the first choice of the fans, wit 13,714 giving him first preferenc Points in the vote are awarded fi first, second, and third preference Crowley was the first choice of 13,69 but gained on second and third pref erences. Big Ten coaches continued to dom inate the polling, with six of them i the first ten'named. Besides Hanley Kizer, Zuppke, and Kipke, Ossie Sol em of Iowa was eighth and Doc Spear was tenth. Other Western Conferences coach es were Clark Shaughnessy of Chi cago, fourteenth, Bernie. Bierman o Minnesota sixteenth, Bo McMillan Indiana, seventeenth, and Schmidt Ohio State, twenty-sixth. Schmid led Sam Willaman, now of Westerx Reserve, whom he displaced at Ohi State, by a slight margin. Continuing his series on the pros. peets for the game, Dick Hanley yes terday pointed out that the profes sionals' biggest advantage would b at the ends, where Bill Hewitt, the former Wolverine end and backfiel star "ranks with the greatest ends o all time." At the same time Hanley pointe out the superiority of the collegians it the middle of the line where Chuct Bernard stands out as "the best center of the last ten years." ite ce ely h- ob of as ie, in ce, en be th ;e. or ~s. 3, f- t- n Y, I- rs - -f a, t, t n o s- e a Hambletonioi, Stakes Be Run August 15 $40,000_Purse -Associated Press Photo Storms which swept the Great Lakes states, bringing wind, hail, rain and lightning, caused heavy property damage and left 10 persons dead in eastern Michigan and possibly five in Ohio. At top is shown the wreckage of a beer garden in Flint, Mich., one of the cities which felt the storm worst. Ten persons fled from the structure a few seconds before it collapsed. Below is the wreckage of a coal mine tipple near Tallula, Ill., after it was damaged by the high wind. Beer Garden. And Mine Structure Ravaged .Byd Harness Derby Draws Year's Top Tr otters . To For Jean Kyer Is Again Winner Of City Crown Defeats Mrs. Stauffer Take Local Golf Title Fourth Time To For Roving Roosevelts Take To Highways,_Skyways, Seaways By BESS FURMAN and there usually are plenty of them (Associated Press staff writer) around the Roosevelts - will provide fWASHINGTON, August 6. - (R 1 The ramblingest family ever to cross laughs for future family gatherings paths insthe White House - these in all the family homes. Roosevelts ! Roosevelt Gatherings Yet the more widely they scatter K ow" atHePark the more closely-knit they become. "Krum Elbow" at Hyde Park will Each trip, singly or in groups, is a hear them first, for the President's family experience, for the entertain- ( own ancestral home is to be the ment of all. Summer White House" in August and As their top-notch mileage amass-' September. And all the close-knit er, Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, once expressed it: "Half the fun of the trip clan, their relatives and their friends By ORLO ROBERTSON (Associated Press sports Writer) GOSHEN, N. Y., August 6. - (/) - Here in the center of a horse-loving county, near where Hambletonian X, grandsire of 90 per cent of all stan- dard-bred horses was foaled, the lead- ing three-year-old trotters will match strides August 15 for $40,000 in the eighth renewal of the Hambletonian stakes, "the Kentucky derby of light harness racing." If the weather is favorable the rambling mile track on the outskirts of this village of 3,500 will be jammed by nearly 40,000 country and city folks. In Orange county the people take their horses seriously, while thousands pour in from the metropo- lises of the east not only to see the trotters whirl around the triangular track but to bask in the "county fa'ri' atmosphere. If History Repeats - Twenty-three trotters still are eli- gible, but not more than 12 are ex- pected to score in the first of the three-mile heats with six of the dozen rating consideration in pre-race dis- tribution of the sport's richest stake. If history pulls its proverbial trick of repeating itself, the name of Mus- cletone, a bay colt owned by the Cold- stream stud of Lexington, Ky., will go down on the records alongside such famous performers as Mary Reynolds, winner last year, The Marchioness, and Walter Dear. In the last eight years five winners of the championship Stallion stake at Cleveland have gone on to take the rich Hambletonian. Musletone won this year, trotting a mile in 2:03%, a quarter of a second faster than the best time made by Mary Reynolds and Brown Berry in their 1933 argu- ment. Had Two Wins Opening the season with two vic- tories at Clevelasd and then coming back to take the featured three-year- old trot at Toronto after trailing in the Matron stakes at Cleveland, Mus- cleton appears to have a strangle hold on the rich stake. The son of Mr. McElwyn, a two- year-old champion trotting colt last year, has shown a tendency to waver at crucial moments, however, espe- cially if forced to come from behind. H. M. "Doc" Parshall of Urbana, O., leading driver for seven years, will handle the reins. On the basis of early season compe- tition Emily Stokes, owned by C. W. Phellis of New York City and driven by Fred Egan, appears to be the horse to beat. The daughter of Spencer, also a Hambletonian winner, roared under the wire a scant nose in front of Henry H. Knight's Reynolda in the two heats of the Matron, after finish- ing second in the Stallion stake. It may be that Emily Stokes will be Egan's medium for evening up for the bad break he got last year when Brown Berry stumbled 40 yards from the finish while leading in the final heat. "Bertha" Has Chance Bertha C. Hanover, champion two- year-old filly last year from L. B. Sheppard's Hanover, Pa., farms, was the winter book favorite and; though she has shown little thus far to justify that high rating, is rapidly rounding into her 1933 form under the guid- ance of Tom Berry. Also rated among the leaders are Martin Dodd's Vitamine; Fay Mack, a stablemate of last year's winner from W. N. Reynolds' Winston-Salem, N. C., barns, and E. L. Mefford's Lord Jim. Noted Cartoonist Dies After Prolonged Illness 11 I Chicago Stock Prices 83 Pct. Above '32Low CHICAGO, Aug. 6. - (R) - Market prices of the four basic American agricultural commodities, produced this year under a government spon- sored program designed to benefit farmers, averaged today at Chicago 21 per cent higher than a year ago and 83 per cent higher than two years ago. The steady and sometimes sharp improvement in domestic grain prices since May has accounted for the bulk pf the percentage increases. The quo- tations, however, still are far below the all-time peaks which belong to the war and post-war era. Prices at Chicago of wheat, corn, hogs and cotton, defined as the basic commodities by the agricultural ad- justment act, showed today the great- est improvement over quotations for a corresponding date in 1932 recorded, so far this year. Wheat prices are approximately 93 per cent higher than two years ago while only .6 per cent higher than a year ago. September delivery of wheat on the board of trade closed at $1.04%-%, near the season's peak in June, and 50 cents better than on Aug. 6 1932. The price gain over 1932 in corn is even greater. September corn, now far above the 45 cents a bushel level at which the government loaned money in the spring on sealed corn, closed Saturday at 72/-1/, or 40 cents higher than the figure for Aug. 6, 1932. The gain is 125 per cent. With corn prices now around the year's peak, there is a 38 per cent improvement over year ago figures. I 't ri d it 0 0 0 s k v e , c r a. , t G i i i i L 5 E e Miss Jean Kyer won her fourth d women's city golf championship Sun- day when she defeated Mrs. Forrest Stauffer, medalist, one up, in the 18- hole finals match played at the Huron n Hills Country Club. A courageous comeback after she had been four down with five holes remaining to play almost won the title for Mrs. Stauffer, but with the match all even on the 18th tee the tourney medalist blew.up and took a costly eight while Miss Kyer was carding a five. At the end of the 13th hole, Mrs T Stauffer was four down to the defend- ing champion. She quickly won four holes in a row to square the match. t On the long final hole Miss Kyer's ex- perience as a tournament player stood her in good stead and she won the match and championship for the sec- t ond consecutive year. Miss Kyer got off to a good start on the lower nine and won four pf the first seven holes before her opponent was able to win one. Mrs. Stauffer took the difficult eighth and the two women halved the uphill ninth to leave Miss Kyer three up at the turn. The 10th and 11th holes were halved but Miss Kyer took the 12th to become four up again and then the 13th was split. It was at the 14th that Mrs. Stauffer started the uphill battle that almost dethroned the old champion. Neither of the contestants carded particularly good medal scores for the round, Miss Kyer pairing a 43 on the lower nine with a 49 on the upper half for a 92, while Mrs. Stauffer was coupling a 46 on the outgoing ,nine with a 48 coming in to register a 94. Women's par for the course is 81.- The championship consolation,' which was played Saturday afternoon over the Huron Hills layout, was won by Mrs. Reed Orr, who defeated Mrs. Reed N'esbitt by a margin of four up and two to play., Bolt Plows Ground, Decapitates Snake JENKINSVILLE, S. C., Aug. 6. - (M) - Strange pranks were played by a bolt of lightning during a thunder storm here recently. First it struck a tree and snapped off the head of a sn~ake hidden in a knot hole. Then it jumped eight feet to a parked automobile and tore two holes in'the top. Still unspent, the bolt plowed a1 furrow in the earth about 10 feet long and showered loose dirt on the top of a house"30 feet away.' After the storm the snake's head was found inside the house; its body was still in the tree. OH MY AND FIE!' HUTCHINSON, Kas. - (A)- Out of 100 "bachelor bundles" wlashed at the Hutchinson laundries, only about 10 contain complete pajama suits, is the silly little things you bring s back to other people." The Roosevelt trails have criss- crossed the continent; dotted the is- land possessions; traversed the oceans y-all in less than a year and a half. The eldest among them, Mrs. James Roosevelt, even now is dashing about Europe, visiting the British king and queen and hobnobbing with scores of r other notables, at the age of 80 years. At that, the President's mother is only paying back the visit of her older sister, Dora Delano Forbes, of Paris, made her last Christmas. Mileage Mystery The youngest of the Roosevelts, Ruth Chandler, daughter of the Pres- ident's son Elliott, is a trascontinental traveler - and by airplane too - at the age of less than three months! In between these age-extremes come the sea-faring President; the air-faring Mrs. Roosevelt; dashing daughter Anna D'all; up-and-going sons James, Elliott, Franklin, Jr., and John; Anna's children, "Sistie" and "Buzzie"; James' daughter, Sara; and Elliott's son, William Donner. Their combined mileage since March 4, 1933, probably would make a statistics worth working for. But it increases too rapidly for computation. One fact-finder figured, after Mrs. Roosevelt had flown to Puerto Rico, that her mileage as First Lady had mounted to approximately 25,000 miles. Back Home As this was approximately the dis- tance around the earth, it was easily remembered and widely used. But already it is passe. Since that time Mrs. Roosevelt has crossed the con- tinent in such will-o'-the-wisp ways that much of her mileage is strictly between herself and her speedometer. And it is mounting daily. She mo- tored west and visited her daughter Anna, prior to the latter's Nevada di-' vorce. Then she went to meet the President in Portland, Ore., after his cruise. Four of the family have traveled in Europe since inauguration day - Franklin, Jr., James and his wife "Betsy," and the President's mother. Four have taken the Haiti, Puerto, Rico, Virgin Island trip; Mrs. Roose- velt in March and the President,1 Franklin, Jr., and John on the cruise,4 just finished, on which they included the Panama canal and Hawaii. 4 One of the heaviest official trains ever assembled, bearing no fewer than 49 reporters and photographers, was scheduled to bring the Roosevelts home. Funny happenings along the way- make it headquarters. The next big family session of rem- iniscences probably will be at Warm Springs, Ga., where on Thanksgiving day the Roosevelts rally around the President's cottage. Christmas time probably will find the Roosevelts all under the White House roof, having parties for all ages, observing scores of family cus- toms, as they did last year. Almost any winter day a family party is likely to be found in the twin town house in New York City where the President and his mother are next-door neighbors. And, of course, there's Campobello, the summer-time retreat romped over by the whole family last year, in New Brunswick. Fish Man Gets Hooking A Caught Free Alarm SHEFFIELD, Eng., Aug. 6. -(') - For using the telephone as an alarm clock to waken his employer, a fish salesman has been fined $25 for "fraudulently consuming electricity, the property of the British postmaster general." Told to awaken his employer every morning on his way to work, the cul- prit used to enter a telephone booth, insert two coins, dial the number of his employer's house, let the bell ring for a short time, and then get his money back. A Sweet Tooth Proves I Petunias, Thugs Divide interest Of Detective st~tD y, w oman ridns LOS ANGELES, Aug. 6.-(I)- Death has ended the long illness BEAVERTON. Ont., Aug. 6.-(W)P- which afflicted Bery Levy, 63, noted A fondness for candy has proved cost- cartoonist. He died Sunday night. ly to Mrs. Ann Elliott, 76-year-old Throughout the world he was fa- Beaverton woman who reported a re- mo'us for his stagecraft in black and markable rejuvenation a few months white and for 27 years he traveled ago. over most of the vaudeville circuits Last May Mrs. Elliott's friends said in the world. Recently he had lived her hair suddenly began to darken here, working in films as an illustra- and grow; her eyesight, which had I tor. nearly gone, improved and a third set of teeth appeared.w Mrs. Elliott's sight is still improving, she said, but she lost the front teethA of her third set. They were somewhatjACK ET soft and broke off when she bit a piece of hard candy. Buh Mrs. Elliott FRO C KS says she can eat "anything." Ideal for Travel and > Vacation Wear CROSTIEA GOL ENavy Crepes - Navy Sheers CU Nand beet root. Sizes 14 to 241. PERMAN ENT 0 Final Clearance Sale Prices WAVE j-$8.95 $12.75 $3.5Q0m etz' Cmp lte rake along an Extra Pair of Hose! This wave is given with a solution ARTCRAFT HOSIERY 1 that rcontains o mmni cr .. v n. n,.A~, ~r.. :i MEMPHIS, Tenn., Aug. 6. -(A')_- What with crime and petunias, Cap- tain Frank Glisson of the police homi- cide bureau has his hands full. This steel-nerved officer, who has looked into the business end of more than one shooting iron, is an en- thusiastic gardener - and is con- cerned about the high cost of petunia seeds. "Why some brands of double pe- tunias," he laments, "sell for as high as $1,500 a pound." In addition to his criminal-catch- I Only Two Weeks Of1 '