FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1937 THE MI C HI+G A N DAILY r. . .. ,.... . .... NEWS Of The DAY (By The Associated Press) Cofnclude Festival Held At Grand Haven GRAND HAVEN, Mich., Aug. 5.- (P)-Coast guardsmen of the tenth and eleventh districts concluded their three-day festival tonight with a colorful Venetian parade on Lake Michigan. Exhibition drills and com- petitions 'occupied the day's pro- gram. A Lake Michigan crew represent- ing the tenth district won a beach drill, "rescuing" a sailor with breeches buoy three minutes and 43 seconds after the order to "out cart" was given. A Lake Huron crew was second. An eleventh district crew from Wisconsin won the capsize race, tak- ing two of three heats. Michigan crews captured other events. Deadlock Again Imminent Over Labor, easure (Continued from Page 1) a special message asking for the en- actment of a new state budget and finance department.Senate leaders protested that he had promised he would ask only consideration of labor .relations, maximum hours for wom- en and minors and teachers' tenure. They claimed that when the special session was called last week they had expected to have submitted only two or three proposals, but got 10. Advised of the Senate reaction the Governor afnounced he will not press for the finance department. He said he would withdraw the message from the Senate and submit it only to the House to complete the record. An identical message was sent to the Senate last Fridy, but was refused by Speaker George A. Schroeder of the, House on the grounds the mem- bers would not accept additional sub- jects. knell Of Spoils Sounded As Bill Becomes Reality Civil Service Is Approved By Governor As Pollock Watches Proceedings (Continued from Page 1) Murphy also declared that special gratitude was due Professor Pollock for his signal efforts in behalf of the merit system. Speaking on the broadcast with Governor Murphy were Professor Pollock, who said that the bill had been impaired in no vital particular by legislative amendments, and Ed- ward Litchfield, executive director of the Michigan Merit System Associa- tion, who in behalf of the associa- tion thanked those responsible for the bill. After the ceremonies, Kenneth C Pennebaker, representative of the Civil Service Assembly of the United States and Canada, said, "Having carefully watched the development of recent state civil service legislation throughout the United States, I can state that the work of the Civil Serv- ice Study Commission under Dr. Pol- locfl unquestionably was undertaken in the most scientific and thorough- going manner which has to date evi- denced itself in this country in con- nection with this type of law." Questioned in regard to the bill, Dr. Pollock said, "The ceremonies today mark both an end and a be- ginning. They mark the end of the legal existence of the spoils system. But they mark only the beginning of the ardous task which still lies ahead of those who desire to bring an actively functioning merit system to the State of Michigan." Other persons present at the cere- monies today included Mrs. Paul W. Jones, Mrs. Harry S. Applegate, Mrs. L. DeCamp Averill, and Mr. Arno S. Schorer, of the Michigan Merit System Association; Harold Smith, state budget director; Raymond W. Starr, attorney-general; George Sch- roeder, speake rof the House of Rep- resentatives; Leo J. Nowicki, lieu- tenant-governor; James Mitchell, representing Public Administratibn Service, of Chicago, and the Mich- igan Municipal League; and many state senators and representatives. Where To Go Theatre: Michigan: "Sing And Be Happy," with Anthony Martin and Leah Ray and the Jones Family in "Big Business"; Majestic, "Wee Willie Winkle," with Shirley Temple and Victor McLaglen: Wuerth: "The Case Father Awarded Custody Of Daughter \ Yankees Trim White Sox 13-8 By 8-Run Rally Win Boosts Leaders' Lead To 9.5 Games As They Sweep Chi-Sox Series 'The Big Train' Pro ves Ie Is YOung Yet This happy reunion took .place in a Chicago courtroom after Superior Court Judge Walter Stanton awarded John M. Hayes, wealty sports- man of Mahwah, N. J., custody of his daughter, Patricia Ann, 28 months old. Hayes is at liberty on $1,000 bond pending hearing on a child stealing charge preferred by the girl's grandmother, Mrs. Charlotte Pendergast, f San Francisco. Farmer Scorns Scarecrow; Now Opens Arms To Feat hered Birds NEW YORK, Aug. 5.-(M)-Fea- turing the continued clouting of Iron Horse Lou Gehrig, who banged out two homers, the Yankees wal- loped the Chicago White Sox, 13 to 8. today by staging an eight-run rally in the eighth inning, thereby sweep- ing the four-game series. The win, which boosted the Yanks' American Lead to nine full games and dropped the White Sox back into third place, was a costly one, since Jake Powell, Yankee outfielder and batting hero of last year's World Series, was put in the hospital by a pitched ball in the fourth inning. One of Monte Stratton's fast ones clipped him high over the left ear and felled him. He was carried to the clubhouse on a stretcher, and then taken to a hospital, after a pre- liminary examination determined he had suffered an injury to the ear. Stratton's arm suddenly went sore in the fifth and he was replaced by Clint Brown. That's when the trouble started for the Sox. Up to that point, they were lead- ing 3-1. Gehrig greeted Brown with his first homer of the game and his 24th of the year with a mate aboard to feature a four-run rally in the fifth. The Sox pulled up afterward to lead '7-5 in the first half of the eighth, but that was the end of their pace-making. The Yanks batted around in the big eighth, scored their eight runs on six hits, one of which was Gehrig's 25th homer with two on, and broke up the game. Phillies Whip Cubs 4-2 Behind Walters CHICAGO, Aug. 5.-(A)-Backing up Bucky Walters' four-hit pitching with a three-run first inning flurry off Clyde Shoun, the lowly Phila- delphia Phillies rose up to knock off the league-leading Cubs again today, 4 to 2. The victory, their second straight here, gave them the series, two games to one. Frank Demaree's 13th homerun, his third in as many days over Wrigley Field's new temporary left field par- tition, scoring Jim Collins, who had singled ahead of him in the fourth inning, accounted for the Cubs' only runs off Walters. He allowed only two other Cubs to pass first base and only one other reached third. Gabby Hartnett's 24-game hitting *-I Walter Johnson, "The ,'Big Train," entered big-league baseball at Washington, D.C., 30 years ago this month as the fast ball sensation of his day. Now he's a Maryland dairy farmer, and he proves to his mirror there's no gray in his, crown. iT Japan Makes Tremendous Plans For Olympic' Games At Tokyo Research Shows InseCts become one of the west's leading Rather Than Crops Are' Destroyed By Birds YOUNTVILLE, Calif., Aug. 5.-(A') -The farmer used to put up i scare- crow to keep the birds out of his fields.. Today. he welcomes many of his; ,feathered visitors. In California he may go so far as to make his land aj legal game refuge, where the birds are safe. The changing attitude is recorded at the state game farm here. Each year when August Bade, superinten- dent, is ready to release tens of thou- sands of young game birds he hear from farmers-not in protest but in, approval. They want the fowl on their own land. "The stomachs of birds have been analyzed time and again by college experts and found to contain mostly insects," Bade says. "Does that in- dicate they're eating up the farmers' crops? What they're doing is eating the eaters. "I can show you vineyards where hundreds of dollars worth of grapes are being saved every year just be- cause quail make their home there. "Some farmers object to pheasants but I have analyzed pheasants' stom- achs and found pheasants' food to be 98 per cent insects." Tougher Than Chicks The game farm here and its com- panion plant at Pomona have hun- dreds of pens where birds are bred and their eggs incubated on a whole- sale scale. The pheasant incubator alone holds 16,000 eggs. Game birds hatch in 23 to 28 days and the recovery of 65 per cent in live chicks is declared better than tht average for domestic poultry. The young birds-and in some cases the eggs themselves-are distributed to sportsmen's organizations and maintain more than a thousand pens, incubators or brooders throughout the state. These bodies raise the birds, then liberate them to stock their own. hunting areas. Pride of the farm at present is the chukar partridge, imported from In- dia in 1929 and now bidding fair to game birds. It is a persistent breed- er-one hen laid 136 eggs at the farmj in a single season-and Bade con- siders it possibly the best of table birds.. Feathered Speedster Another star is the Reeves pheas- ant, which flies 80 miles an hour for a game-bird speed record. "The law allows farmers to band together, and have their land de- clared a legal game refuge," Bade explained. "Because of the chang- ing attitude toward birds we have about 150 such refuges now." But from the farmers comes a warning that the peace treaty doesn't apply to all the winged tribe. "Quail and partridges don't damage anything," concedes J. J. Deuel of the California Farm Bureau federation, "but pheasants are hard on some crops, especially tomatoes and can- taloupes. "Ducks are the worst problem. The government establishes duck refuges and then doesn't provide any feed. ; Millions Of Yens Being. Spent; All Japan Is Sport Conscious TOKYO, Aug. 5.-UP)-Eager to match the 1932 Olympics at Los An- geles and the 1936 Olympics at Ber- lin, Japan is preparing to spend many millions of yen to make the interna- tional sports competitions in Tokyo in 1940 the greatest success yet rec- orded. Having been, awarded both the summer and winter Olympics, the island empire, which never before was so sport-minded, has mobilized vir- tually all its resources to make both meets stand out as epic events in the annals of world athletics. All Japan Anxious In anticipation of the Games, all Japan is becoming sports-conscious. Tens of thousands of Japanese, in- cluding adults of all classes, boys and girls, workmen, policemen, conduc- tors, girl factory hands, geisha girls, cabaret dancers entertainers and even the feminine inmates of Japan's great gay quarters in Tokyo Kobe, Osaka and other large cities, ate busy studying English to enable them to provide for the comfort and enter- tainment of Americans. Although the Games are three years off, hotels, restaurants, tourist of- fices, railroads, steamship lines, mo- torbus services, Japanese inns, road- houses and retail stores, are prepar- ing to put up signs in English for the benefit of foreign delegates. They are also training young Japanese men and women in the "art of politeness," so that visitors may be so thoroughly served that they will leave Japan with the best impressions of the Land of the Rising Sun. Committee Organized The organizing committee has en- gaged Kerner Kingenberger, techni- cal adviser of the 1936 Games at Ber- lin, to act in a similar capacity dur- ing the 12th Olympiad. Baseball and canoeing will be rec- ognized as regular Olympic events for the first time at the Tokyo meet, pro- vided that a minimum of five nations enlist in each event, under a ruling of the 34th annual session of the Inter- national Olympic Committee held in Warsaw recently. TO DETERMINE GRAFT DETROIT, Aug. 5.-(P)-John C. Cahalan, Jr., head of the Detroit of- fice of the state board of tax admin- istration, said today that Gov. Frank Murphy had been asked to authorize a state-wide investigation to deter- mine whether graft exists in the col- lection of the sales tax. 'streak was stopped by Walters. 11 1 . lot NEW THINGS Today and Saturday TWO FEATURES America's favorite fomily dreams of sudden weolth ... and then inds it in each other ..,just like the rest :' 2 of us folks! n There's always something new coming out that strikes your fancy ... some- thing to wear, something for your home, any one of hundreds of different things! Wise women aren't deprived II 11 i