Battle To Overcome Illness v :c.: * b ....v,...... State Prison And Pov Objects Of (By Carlton F. Wells) The State Prison' and the properties of the Consumers' Power company in Jackson will .be the double-objective df the final excursion of the Summer session next Saturday morning, Aug. 4. The afternoon will be entirely de- voted to inspecting the State prison proper, and also the 4,000 acre farms three miles from the city, at which there is located a newly established textile plant. Officers of the prison will conduct the men in the group inside the high prison walls, while the women for this part of the journey will remain in the guard room, as, prison rules .forbid women inside the main enclosure. While the men are being .taken through, the women will have explain- ed to them the various features of the ..,.,.. ver Company accommodate only 900 innmats. "+ , 2T -slit Powe r Plant Week-End Excursion The morning will be devotd (to vis-, ----- its to the electrical station of the con- prison, and the methods employed by sumer PoW-t coyny, Vhich sup- the administration. plies Jackson and many. neighblrnig lten to be Shown Inside power-consuming communitk , a d to Inside the walls the men will first the gas plant. Luncheon will be be shown the large cell block where furnished the party either at theJack- the prisoners sleep at night, the dorm- son club or St. Paul's parish house', itory of larger rooms, the main dining depending on the size of the party. room, the playground, and then The students will be the guests of the through the granite (monument) Consumers' company at Ja.,2son.w works. Careful prepartitions have been made From then on the whole party will by the company to assure a profi able enjoy equal rights; the women as well and an enjoyable morning for the as the men seeing the farms; the wag- visitors. At 1:15 -o'clock the party on factory and repair shop, and the will meet at the prison offices for the textile plant, all located at the An- afternoon's program at the prison. nex. Nineteen hundred prisoners are now cared for at the Jackson prison, eith- er inside the walls all the time, or atof va one of the several prison farms. Or- i'glnally the~ prison wvas intended to Because of transportation ar iments on the D. U. R. anl fro prison to the Annex, and of lu artangements, it is parictlular) portant that the students plann take the trip should leave their in the Summer session box, Uni hall, not later than Friday afte Aug. 3. A very direct and cheap fo advertising-classifieds. GARRICK MATS. Tues. 14th Annual Season Nights 25-5 H E BONSTS L L E ° In Richard Walton Tully's "The Bird of Paradise N EX F WEEK'K SIX-CYLINDER 4-MPING --_--III I NO i ,.s.I I E { Ihubert Work Foremost among the attending phy present illness are Brig--Gen. Cha h have attained much fame in the ted Rtoosevelt, Taft and Wilson. Gr and is a former president of the EASES PREVALENT atistics compiled by the Michigan >artment oaf Health show that mea- was the most prevalent of com- nicable diseases during the year 2. According to the table, 12,107 es were reported to the public lth officers during the year. Co- wing the number of cases report- during the month of May last year, .3, s compared with the 8,237 es brought to the attention of pub- healt1i authorities. during the cor- ponding month, 1923, the spread the disease seems to be steadily the increase' .ccordiig to the table of preval- diseases there were reportedi in 26,948 pnuemonia cases, 5,573 t~ cUosis ases, 1,108 cases of ty- dii fever, 8,513 diphtheria cases, }L eases of whooping cough, 9,687 rlet fever gases, and 1,231 cases , College Inn has' reopened and s eve you as usual.-Adv. S as'1i8e1 Ad eflISiog Rates: Two cents per word per day, , paid In advance; fif- tera cents per reading line per d ay, charged.° TWPEW1ELTERS ;ewriters of standard makes ought, sold, rented, exchanged 1ened and repaired- o. D. MOl.RRILL Nicklels Arcade Phone x718 1-tfr' W ITMTE) tNTED-A good second hand bi- ycye. -Call 283-M after 5. 35-p LNTED-To cook fior fraternity for ozing shool year- experienced. a1_ 1479-J evenings. 35-p FOR REST USE FOR RENT--On East Kings- sy St., one section of double house a five rooms and garage, $50.00 er month by the year. Phone 1564- 34-c-2 kNTED---Unfurnished suite for fall Sithin access of University Hospit- 1. Write in care Box G. T., Daily >Ace. 34-p-2 ZNTED-An insurance solicitor. eply stating qualifications and hone nu:4er for appointment. Box j.q. care of Michigan Daily. 34-c-3 TYPEWITING P TWITING AND MIMEOGRAPH- NG promptly and neatly done. [ypewriters cleaned and repaired. ). D. Morrill, 17 Nickels Arcade. tfr Brig.-4en. Charles E. Sawyer rsicians treating President llarding in les E. Sawyer and Dr. Hubert Work. medical profession. Dr. Sawyer has Dyr. Work is now secretary of the in- American Mbedical Association. . 1 of small pox, The statstc~l average from 1913-1922 shows that the pre-' Sharon innkeeper, has been hed to alence of typhoid fever and small pox has decreased considerably.' The vital 'statistics' table for the fist four months, 1923, shows that 19,335 deaths occurred within the State, 30,620 births. According .to the - table, the- birth rate has been 8.9 higher than the death rate, PLAN TO SUBSTIT 'E LAW AND ARBITRATION FOR WAR To organize the world for peace; to make a world wide reduction of arm- aments to police status, and to edu- cate the world for peace, is the aim of the National Council for Preven- tion of War as stated in a bulletin recently published, Their idea is to substitute law and arbitration for- war, In an address 'before the the students in the Teachers' College, Iowa, Monday, Mr. Frederick J. Libby, Executive Secretary of 'the Council stated: "The organization of the world for peace must provide the machinery for the peaceful settlement of adl disputes that can arise between nations. There must then be a court for the settle- *ent of legal' disputes and an associ- ation or league of nations for the dis- cussion and mediation of ecopAnmic and political disputes," Nineteen at 0. A. R. Reunion Lansing, Mich, Aug. 1.- Nineteen members of the eighth Michigan in- fantry are in Lansing today for their 53rd annual reunion.. There are only d0 men living of the 1,200 who enlist- ed for the Civil war in 1861. The av- ergge age of thse attending the re- Union is 80 1-2 years. The oldest is William R. Collier, of Hart, who is 86. Baseballers to Pray For IJiyrding Memphis, Aug. 1.-By order of Pres- ident John D. Martin of the Southern League, all baseball games in the league will be stopped for five min- utes, at the end of the third inning today, for silent prayer for the recov- ery of President Warren G. Warding. The College Inn has reopened and will serve you as usual -Adv. Find that lost pin through the clas- sified Ad" will find it for you.-Adv. 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 throu g. u , Nc classes or lectures bi t a Isiess scheule of work from :0 t 5eo'clock, including daily coe terences directed by men with years of business experience, and discus- sons with active factory and office executives at their plants. This re move the instructionfrom the hyp- thetical stage and helps the student to 1ook at things in the same light as a man actually engaged in business. Ijabson Institute, an educational in - stituton endowed for the purpose of fitting men for executive responsi- bilities, invites you to send for the booklet, "Training for Business Leadership." Write today. Babson Institute Wellesley Hills, (S"°® "nf)'mass. VISIT histori Wake 'Cven I ' r s An Auto-Camp Trailer will add greatly to your comforts. It attaches to your auto-very little trou- ble-and carries all your equipment neatly and compactly. Before you buy any of yrur equipment let us show you this trailer and all the equipment that comes with it. Today- "JANE EYRE" with Mabel Ballin Joe Rock Comedy Fri. -Sat..- Tom Mix in I"ROMANCE LAND" Stan Laurel in 160fFS and COLLARS" Sun.-Wed.- Johnnie Walker in "THE FOURTH MUSKETEER" By H. C. witwer Snnb Pollard in "JACK FRoST" Today- William Faversham in "THE MAN WHO LOST HIMSELF" Bert Roach in "WON'T YOU WORRY?" Fri. -Sat. Constance Talmadge in "A LADY'S NAME" Jack Cooper in "SWEET AND PRETTY" Sun.-Tues.-. Edward (Hcot) Gibson in "OUT OF LUCK" Bull Montana in "GLAD RAGS" i. VERNON J. McCRUM 113-115 South Ashley Street Dealer in Pennsylvania Vacuum Cup Tires and Tubes. {;. I ;! 0 . h < . v I I . Real Service SMt 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 abqunds in instances of 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." The design engineer, in the Westinghouse plan, is responsible for the performan'ce of the finished product. He cannot possibly have' the properunderstanding df operation unless he oper- ates and tests, unless he spends time and thought in investigation and study, not in the laborator or drawingroom, 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 to 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 thingsis 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' of 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. i STATIONERY CE SALE-Correspondence y. All clean stock at less t. O. D. Morrill, 17 Nickels' Open evenings. tfr O)ST AND FOUND i WEestinghouse ACHIEVEMENT F8 OPPORTUNITY ;;;1 COR CHICAGO AND MONROE PIKES Gatdlvay to Irish Hills C ZICKEN DINNER :.::.ETC