00K TAKES TT Cotton Growers Seek 40 Millions LECS H OTo Market Crop DMER VARSITY CAPTAIN HAS :iTTLE DIFFICULTY IN TAK- SING FINAL MATCH alter K. Wcsbrook, '22L, is the ligan state tennis champion for fourth time. Wesbrook won the Sunday afternoon by defeating z Bastian, of Indianapolis, in four 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. Only in the first set" fla-stian at all threatening and only until Wesbrook was warm- ip. At the net Bastain appeared ave a slight advantage over Wes- k, but iin. the back court. and ral all-round play Wesbrook was k THOMAS AIDSFLINT IN PLANNING STI NEW HIGH SCHOOL WILL IDEAL CAMPUS; HAS Al OF 57 ACRES L. D. Thomas, superinten Ferry field, has returned fro where he has been assisting planning of the athletic plant new high school in that city. According to Mr. Thomas, th which has a campus of 57 ac the best possibilities for an field and stadium that he h seen.. The campus is the forn of a sanitarium, with a heavy of trees and shrubbery whi been left intact for many year new building has been comple the construction of the athle is now in progress. Mr. Thomas will returnt OA REA dent )m FL in t for t e scho ,res, h athle as ev mer s grow ch ha rs. T ted a tic fhe to Fl later, probably in company with Coach Fire and Fire Fighting"; and on July auspices of the Hubhard Fielding H. Yost, to give further ad- 23, Professor Brumm, of the journal- munity league. vice in the building of the field and ism department, spoke to the Rural The last lecture of th stadium. Chautauqua near Tawas City, on "The ranted by the Extension Escape from the Commonplace." DW given by Prof. G. R. S j j . A lecture entitled "What Modern Latin OFpartment, who VE Science Tells Us About Our Teeth," ti Inteinational Chauta LI LI UI UIiUwill beNdelivered by Dr. R. W. Bunt- I1.y .-t Lake Orion, Aug. ing dental college, at the Bay View Noteng more will be Chautauqua, on Aug. 16. d ar;ent until next O of "Making a Man," will be the subject It:e unstomary comprehe int BUNTING, LASHER ,AND SWAIN TO of a lecture to be given by G. Starr ,of le, ,ii es throughout ti he SPEAK IN MICHIGAN TOWNS Lasher at Hubbard take uder the [e rianged. he DURING AUGUST ol, The University Extension division. as has had but little on its program this tic summer with the exception oftwo lec- -. - ver tures in July and three which are to ite be given ;the latter part of Augu t. Ar-" th rangements' have been made for these ve five lectures only because they have NOW PLAYING he been especially requested. nd On July 10, Prof. B. A. Soule, of the A PLAY MADE BY THE ld chemistry department, lectured to the= DIRECTOR OF "HUMORESQUE" Michigan State Fire department at I = int Grand Haven on "The Chemistry of "CHILDREN Of DUS with JOHNNIE WALKER PAULINE GARON Toa- _LLOYD HUGHES Owen Moore in AND A NEW to "THE CHICKEN IN THE CASE" MERMAID COMEDY "THREE STRII< Lee Moran in "THE NOME PLATE" Wed.-Thurs.- William Favershamn in CO1ING T "THE MAN WHO LOST HIMSELF" THURSDAY J n linOt Bert Roach in "WON'T YOU WORRY?" Fri.-Sat.- IN A MILE A MINUTE COMEDY Constance Talmadge in .: . "A LADY'S NAME'' . :.: L U C K '.'.. Jack Coop 'r in "SWEET AND PRETTY" Wesbrook captained the Varsity eam in 1921 and was Conference ingles champion for two years. He oached the Varsity tennis squad in .922. RDAI AmerIcan League New York 5, Chicago 3. Washington 1, Detroit 0. Cleveland 5-2, Boston 4-0. St.' Louis 5-4, Athletics 2-2. National League : New York 17-4, Pittsburg 2-5 Cincinnatti 5-7, Phillies 4-5. Brooklyn 6, St. Louis 5. Boston. 6, Chicago 5. Find that lost pin through the clas- ied Ad" will find it for you.-Adi. No Lectures9 No Written Work At Babson Institute they make a business of teaching business to' college trained men who wish to fill positions of responsibility and and trust without spending years at routine work. Standard office equipment through- oat. No classes or lectures, but a business schedule of work from 8:30 to 5:00 o'clock, including daily con- ferences directed by men with years of business experience, and discus- sions with active factory and office executives at their plants. This re- moves the instruction from the hypo- thetical stage and helps the student to look at things in the same light as a man actually engaged in business. Babson Institute, an educational In- stitution endowed for the purpose of fitting menfor executive responsi- bilities, invites you to send for the booklet, "Training for Business Ladership." Write today. Babson Institute Wellesley Hills, (Subr o) Mass. ' : :d: 1 '4 a S Col. Sloan Simpson Col,. Sloan Simpson, former Texas cowpuncher, is in New York to nego- tiate a $40,000,000 loan to aid Texas cotton growers to market their crop on a co-operative plan through the Texas Farm Bureau Cotton associa- tion. 3 3 y today- Lupino Lane in "A FRIENDLY HUSBAND " Paul Parrot in "THE UNCOVERED WAGON" Wed.-Thurs.- "JANE EYRE" with Mabel Bailin Joe Rock Comedy Fri.-Sat.- Tom Mix in "ROMANCE LAND" Stan Laurel in "CUfFS and COI.LARS" E, "We es Health Notes' I I I _a '...,.I I= Classified Advetsig Rates: Two cents per word per day, paid In advance; fif- teen cents per reading line per day, charged. ' FOR SALE TYPEWRITERS Typewriters of standard makes bought, sold,rented, exchanged, cleaned. and- repaired., 0. D. MORRILL -b 17 Nickels Arcade Phone 1718 1-tfr FOR SALE-Five sectional bookcases with base and top. 824 Arich St. 33-c FOR REN T FOR RENT -- Furnished rooms for' light house keeping. 710 W. Liberty. Phone 930-d. 31-2 LOST AND FOUND LOST--Parker Duo-Fold fountain pen on campus or State St. last week,. Reward. Call 1104, Michael. 33-c LOST-Ring set with two rubies and two opals. Thursday afternoon. Call 2912. 31-2 LOST-Rider fountain pen, Thursday afternoon. Name on barrell. Call Parks, 960 or 558. 31-p-16 MISCELLANEOUS WANTED-Junior male student wants desirable single room with nearby garage by Sept. 15. 'Answer imme- diately. Box C E S., care Daily. 33-p WILL PERSON who borrowed umbrel- I la Friday at 5:30 from library re- turn it to. same, place and avoid! embarrassment., 32-2 Get goon values cheap, thru the Classified columns.-Adv. . . Proprietors of boarding houses in - Ann Arbor might very easily better the sanittary conditions in their es- tablishments if they would watchtwo or three conditions which are given little consideration by the average proprietor, and which dettermine to a great extent the health of the board- ers, according to officials at the Un- iversity Health service. From the standpoint of health the vital features to be watched are safe milk, healthy food handlers, and prop- erly cleaned dishes. It is a very excep- tional dairy from which one might not get contaminated raw milk at any tim e, and the only sure remedy against this danger is to hav. only properly pasteurized milk. All persons who handle rood or utensils should be well in the 'sual sense of the word, and also in the sense of, their not being tjealthy carrier:4 cf disease, as the germs of typhoid fever, diphtheria, and other contagious diseases may )ersist in the bodies of persons who have recovered from the active dis- ease. Failure to cleanse dishes properly after use is a new point to be em- phasized in the spreading of disease. Heat is the important factor in clean- Ing; after the usual washing, dishes should be boiled for a few minutes to be safe. The way soda glasses and spoons are often washed by dashing them into container of cold or luke- warm wate, is worse than serving them to another person without any washing. Such is one of the several ways in which exchange of saliva ac- counts for the spread of disease. In addition to the usual idea of general cleanliness, provision should be made for frequent and easy hand washing by food handlers; waiters should be instructed in the strict observance of the rules of cleanliness; they should be dismissed for having their fingers in their mouths, for handling the in- side of glasses, or for fingering the parts of silverware which are put into the mouth.- Exchange Notes Wisconsin-Twenty-six young wo- men from the University of Wisconsin are expected to attend the central student conference of the Y. W. C. A. at Lake Geneva, Aug. 17 to 27. ' The conference is held annually un- de the leadership of the national board of the Y. W. G. A. It is de- voted to lectures and Bible, social, and international study as well as giving such attention to hiking, swimming, canoeing and camp activities. t Many colleges, together with the national students' department of the Y. M. C. A., will send speakers to the conferences, which is one of the sev- eral to be held in various parts of the country during the summer. Priest Sentenced Denver, July 28.-Rev. Fr . Grace Arvada priest, was sentenced to two years in prison on each of two counts charging forgery of application-of liquor permits yesterday. The sent- ence will run concurrently. Remember "Jmmie the adtaker's" .1...>.n ftn - A w .~ "i l pp //'ftg III Real Service Must "Be. Engineered Many of the men whose names are writ large in engineering history are design engineers; men like Westinghouse, Lamme, Stanley, Hodgkin- son, Tesla, Shallenberger. Their inventions have the quality of^ usefulness, of reliability, of productability; which is an involved way, per- haps, of saying that they have the primary requisite of all really great inventions:, Serviceability.} Engineering history abounds in instances ofr near-genius that produced no product, and of great developments that never reached comple- tion; and most of these instances are explained by the lack, somewhere in the system, of that. ability to give real Service. Service, in a machine or a system, or wherever you find it, is not there by accident but because it was incorporated by men who understood what was required and knew how to provide it. Much more is required of the designer than facility in calculation and mastery of theory. He must have first hand and thorough familiarity with manufacturing operations and with com- mercial and operating conditions. It takes more than mere ingenuity and inventiveness to design apparatus that will be really serviceable and will "stay put."X The design engineer, in the Westinghouse plan, is responsible for the performance of the finished product. He cannot possibly have the proper understanding of operation unless he oper- ates and tests, unless he spends time and thought in investigation and study, not in the'laboratory or drawing room, but, right on the operating job. Here, most of his ideas will develop; and here he will see and prepare for all the different things which the product will later have io encounter. Then when he comes to put his creations on paper, his calculations will be necessary and helpful to check the conclusions which he has reached, and this right use of them requires training and a high degree of under- standing. This proper balance of the physical and mathematical conception of thingspis what constitutes engineering judgement. It should be thoroughly 'understood that the primary function of the design engineer is the conception and the production of new or im- proved apparatus, and familiarity with the practical is essential to the proper discharge of this duty. It is this view of designing that makes this branch of Westinghouse engineering so impor- tant, so effective, and so productive of real developments. AIestinghouse ACHIEVEMENT Fs OPPORTUNITY " . -JUv.-aalv. I