EIULL AI |INL | U L PRACTICABLE BY FN FROMD GGEHEIM PASSENGER SERwVICE INTNDED TO DENONSTRATE SAFETY > AND EFFICIENCY PLANES WILLBE MODERN Line to Aun Between Los Angeles and San Franetso; to lie Equipped With Practical- Factors ' Establishment of a model passenger airline between Los Angeles and San Francisco as an actual demonstration of performance and safety which will be available as an incentive for further development of passenger air- lines in the United States, has been made possible by an equipment loan to Western Air Express from the' Danlel Guggenheim Fund for the Pro- motion of Aeronautics, according to Harris M. ianshue, President of the Western Air Express, Inc., Los An- geles. Planes prchased with money ob- tained under the equipment loan plan 'will be of the most modern, multi- engined design of maximum safety and comfort. They will have cruising speed of about 120 miles an hour with a capacity cargo of nearly two tons. Distance Is 365 Miles 't'he airline distance between Lo Angeles and San Francisco is 365 miles and the time necessary for flight over this route wiU be approxi-. inately three hours. Planes will leave either terminal at 10:30 o'clock in the morning and will arrive at the other terminal at 1:30 o'clock in the after- noon. Airports in both cities are situated within 30 minutes from the business section so that ofice-too- office movements may be completd within four hours, as compared with the 13 1-2 hours now required by railroad. This arrangement, it is pointed out, will permit business men in either city to attend their office in the morn- ing, disposing of important details, 'and then leave for the airport to keep 2 o'clock afternoon appointments in the other. city. 3y combining this service 'with return by fast night trains the round trip can be com- pleted in a period of 24 hours. Western Air Express will provide the latest convenienees for its pas1 sengers on this airline. Lunch will be served in the air and magazines, the latest editions of newspapers and ralio entertainment and market re- ports will be available. To have Modern Planes Negotiations will be 'entered into immediately with American aircraft manufacturers in order to purchase the most modern and up-to-date air- planes for this route. Because the Los Angeles-San Francisco line is de- signed as a practical experiment in aerial passenger carrying it is be- lieved that all aircraft and accessory manufacturers in the United States will cooperate to make this an out- standing success so that it will be an incentive for expansion in this modern field of transportation. THE MICHIGAN DAILY CONCEPTION OF COLLEGE LIFE, BEGUN IN OPENING YEAR, IS MEASURE OF SUCCESS, ANGELL DECLARES "The opening of a new college year are doubtless forms of spiritual ex- ship in col '(e life offers an oppor-f is an event of extraordinary human interest and significance, one fraught with suggestions of romance and ad- venture not less than with anticipa- tions of hard and prosaic work," Pres- ident Angell, of Yale, declared in an address given recently at that Insti- tution in which he pointed out that the conception of college life measures later success. "Through it all run the tangled strands of the individual student life, each with plans and am- bitions, anxieties and fears, doubts and perplexities." "At such a time when our minds turn inevitably to the immediate fu- ture and what it holds of weal or woe, it is su-rely becoming that we should thus come together in public recogni- tion of the faith in which our insti- tution was founded. It is an occasion upon which we extend a most sincere and cordial -welcome to the new mem- bers of our sfudent body. Coming lit- erally from all parts of the earth, many of you are far from home and friends, some of you are perhaps lonely and depressed by the strange- ness of new surroundings and untried tasks. In the few words I shall speak I shall have these new members of our student community especially in mind. "For my text I take the parable of the talent read in the lesson a few moments ago. I do not propose to advise. Advice unsought is rarely welcome and more rarely heeded. Nor have we of ihe older generation made such anunmitigated success of out own lives, or so rectified and beautified the times in *hich we live as to warrant our dictating to others with any great confidence concerning the arrangement of their affairs. But age and experience do bring a certain detachment of outlook and a certain maturity of evaluation of which you of the younger generation may wish to avail yourselves. Moreover, we have some knowledge which you do not possess. In any event, we cher- ish only the most disinterested desire to be of help to you. What One Coneives "As in almost all important human relations, so in one's relation to col- lege, the real crux of the matter lies in one's conception of the problem, whether, for example, -one thinks of his college life merely as a series o events from which he is to gain all that he can of pleasure and profit, or whether he conceived it as an oppor- tunity to play a man's part in a com- plex human situation calling for all kinds of capacity and affording in- numerable chances to grow through the exercise of one's power and through the rendering of service to the institution and to one's fellows. Never was it more imperative than today that one should be quite as clear as to why one is connected with a college, what one means to bring to it and what, on the other hand, one hopes to take from it. "But now what are the talents most essential for an honorable, profitable and happy four years of life at Yale and wherein consists their judicious use?I "I do not hesitate to put in the forefront physical health and vigor. The ascetic and emaciated saint is a bona fide historic figure, and there perience which accrue to a completeI mortification of the flesh. But, unless one is prepared to defend the morbid view that life itself is unworthy and gladly to be left behind, one must look to bodily health as. a blessing to be devoutly sought and %crupuldiisly cherished. A Sympathetic Generation "Our generation is peculiarly sym- pathetic to the distinctly Greek con- ception of .a complete symmetry in the development of our human powers,, with due regard to those of a physical character., In historic Christianity, as in certain other religions of the East, there has at times been much effort to choke and starve the bodily appetites. But, so far as I am aware, when car- ried to an extreme, this has always issued in psychic and moral abnor- malities which clearly look in the di- rection of mental disease. It is true that Christ taught the subserviency of bodily to spiritual needs and ideals, but it is also true that He was ever healing the sick and that He came, and He Himself said, 'that men might have life and have it more abundant- ly., "From its inception, the college has been directed to creating conditions that will foster the intellectual talents which its students bring. And this, has, in general, been conceived, as its principal, and sometimes as its sole function. Here lie spread out for their benefit, to be interpreted by skilled 'scholars, the great literatures of both the ancient and the modern world, and the languages in which they are preserved. Through thesel media one may have contact with that which is best and most enduring' in the greatest souls in human history. "Or one may turn to the products of man's creative industry, his art and the objects of his scientific produc- tion. One may learn of his institu- tions and his thought-political. Moulds Character "Men come to college with charac- ters for the most part still fluid and it is of the utmost consequence, both for their own sakes and for the sake of the college and the larger society beyond it, that they shall be so cir-1 cumstanced as to have exery oppor- tunity and incentive to develop fine, strong, stable personalities. "Without exception every relation- tunity for moral d(evelopinent, the classrooms, the clubs, the playing lield -where you will. The first con- dition essential to real moral growth is freedom to go wrong. The man who is kept straight simply because he has no chance to go astray is not necessarily gaining moral strength thereby. If he is to be a reliabte indi- vidual, he must ultimately learn to stand on his own feet, and this he can only do by facing temptation and mastering it'' Chicago Educator Is Tried As Pro-British E IRCORD CunWDv VIEW HEAVIEST TRAFFIC IN H 'LOCS ' |CITY LAST SATURDAY When alnost 15,000 automobiles the diffi drove through mud and rain to see largestc Mihigan 's opening football game last !tort' of !famliar Avergae Per Day During the lonth of Saturday, Ann Arbor business was It is con August is Estimated at About tied up on down town streets by what many as Five Hundred Peoople Police Chief Thomas O'Brien describ- trilts We ed as the heaviest traffic in the his- ly in Al INEREiSTED IN LE6ENDS tory of the city. Davis, F All traffic records for previous Farme (14y A',{'iitedi c) years and games were broken by an tically st SAULT STE. MARIE, Oct. 5.-The attendance which drove from two to ear pulhe .3,000 more cars than ever visited the according Soo locks, always a Mecca for tour- city before. This extra large number accompli ists, have entertained far more vis- of cars together with the most un- itors this year than ever before, ac-1favorable weather conditions which j3 cording to official tabulation made at prevailed Saturday combined to make ' r0f the offices of the lockman here. The iefficient handling of traffic partic- t ularly difficult and in many cases im- Ul . average per clay during August has possiple. been estimated at 500 people. Under ordinary weather conditions, As high as 1,000 tourists and non- O'Brien states, there * is plenty of COPED residents of Sault Ste. Marie have parking space within three blocks of Professo ! the stadium for all of the cars that been on the locks at one time, watch- mayhe div o one. of the birs inat institute may he driven to one of the big game, ing stately Great Lakes freighters when as many as 25,000 automobiles the Ui11 and passenger ships move slowly are expected to be driven into Ann joined ot through 'the lock walls of massive Abor. who are masonry, according to the tally. Where 25 city traffic officers and a because The Soo tourist camp is breaking like number of state traffic officers ,,u a record this year in entertaining were employed in the opening game ity. tourists, reports from the caretakers there are to be 60. additional state po- Profes say, and all the cabins up and clown licemen at the big games later on in tric chai St. Mary's river, where tourists are the year. This size force will hardly that deaf wont to stop for a night and stay for be necessary for the Michigan State doctorsa a week or more, have been filled most college game as an attendance of not - of the time. more than 40,000 is expected. CIIC Tourists manifest undying interest The heavy rains of Friday night heavywe in the, legends of the Soo, according and Saturday of last week added to pers for to chamber of commerce officials here.. The city and region is steeped in In- dian legend and lore, and provides an irresistable; attraction for romantic humanity. With a group of improved rresh 1islz NZv golf courses added to the halo of an- tiquity the region makes a good com bination to attract the roving thou- sands each summer. Trout ...... .......30c Catfi Construction work on the great Poe Halibut .. . . ........30c Blue lock at the Soo began just 40 years Perc ... 25c Fil ago, residents here recall, and the dream of the Soo that wealth and 'Salmon ...........30c Whit popularity would come to the region Herring ...... ......20c Mach has been in a measure fulfilled. Al- though industrial wealth to a great extent has not materialized, the tour- THE AC ist trade each season provides an anti A A M dote which is pleasing to merchants. 21i North Main St. SYDNEY-Australia will be repre- Open Evenin s--sundaIys an sented by a team in the Davis cup matches next year. ISTORY OF O'BRIEN SAY, colt. problem of handling tU crowds of 'traffic in the hi the city in the new and u': locality of the new stadini servatively estimated that ; 150 cars mired in the di st of the stadium, particula lmendinger's heights and < ischer, and Peech streets. r's living in the locality pra ruck a gold mine. For eves ed out the charge was $3 ai g to O'Brien each haul w; shed in about five minutes. cssor Attacks S. Electrocutio (Rv Associated Presg) NHAGEN, Denmark, Oct. 5. r Knud Sand, director if t of medical jurisprudence versity of Copenhagen, h; her Danish medical scientis denouncing the United Stat of its "electric chair barba sor Sand says that the elE r does not kill its victim, b th results because the pris( refuse to revie the convii A - Ja(k Johnson, form ight champion, has filed i bankruptcy in a local court 6 ley Day William M c A n d r e w, --natiorxally known educator pictured above, is be- ing watched by educators through out the United States as a result o. the Chicago board of education's ef- forts to oust him, on charges of in- subordination and pro-Brftish sym-. pathies. This picture' was taken as McAndrew went on trial this week. t'Nl1N TRYOUTS I Second semester. freshmen or sophomores interested in activi- ties at the Union are asked to see William V. Jeffries, '31L, at the student offices from 3 to 5 ' o'clock any day this week. Pike S. .. .... e Fish . . ... . . kerel... . ... . . 25c 30c 30c .SH GORCERY Phone 81 d 1Iolida3's 111 -S MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE Co. .90 1.j.: All Im f 1 3;: i1? ii 1 71 N 1 ' ,. F .1 \ --- : ., Presen ting / ,+ , College Style 'Display of the FLO RSHEIM Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. (Pronounced Shoe-Glove) .f To the Smart Women of Smart New. York -SHOE r. _s. '" at HUSTON BILLIARD PARLORS (54 extension telephone beside your bed would save all those steps, and would cost only a few, cents a day.7 Wed, Thurs. and Friday By Mr. M. J. Benedict. f }([ S tS tt S r c I You will, of course, want Shu- glovs inmediately. Your favor- ite shop is showing them, in Nude, Gray, Brown and B lack, with, two types of heels, the Universal for military, military high and spiked heel-the Cuban for the lower and flatter -heels. Now, fashion takes a hand in designing footwear protection for women D AME FASHION has taken a hand in footwear protection -brought the chic and charming Shuglov - a featherweight accessory that guards delicate shoes and more delicate stockings. Let it rain . . . let tripping heels splash, as heels will do . . . you no longer worry-either of weather or style - for the trim foot that wears Shuglov is clad with an eye to both. You will see Shuglov on the ;smartest feet of America's smartest streets. Their feather lightness Advaice styles, for the college man as designed by the famous makers of j 1' flt.v Aiir . ^ /