A ES "MOWMMAN DA, SUNDAY- AUGUST I& Hal _ _._. IE- wAN DaN.W LT ZTp. V aT~lTuvw I io i--. 1p,* * Y-N * *P, .. r j~a attl# less true observation we will put the cover on our long-suffering typewriter and wish you all a pleas- ant and successful fiscal year. 1 _ 1 1#I !MoANmegiaed urn eI andluhivly oatIU "Aw te t e notatearwse.moditd ad thi e ad a ed toet "ra uas. sec 2Oni4 at lb. An tArber, Mishia.s po. oldes as iseed elsas matter. saepttrea 1w carr, $1.50; by mafl. 921"1seBuilding, Maynard Street, SdItMa, 4f ; B401 usiness EDITORIAL STAFF MANAQINO EDITOR HAROLD 0. WARREIN JR. .uewdae reete .......... Gurney wili.am A SOCIATE EDITORS Eleanor Rardo amekw Marion Thornton P. Cuter Showers BUSINESSSTAFF WILLIAM R. WORBOYS A "a" uetl. ManAer .. Vernon Bishp Manager ............ Car Marty 4dvertisins Manaer......... Jack Butain oan..Circulation. . ..Thomas Muir Night Editor-Sher M. Quraishi Night Editor-GURNEY WILLMS Night Editor-C. W. CARPENTER Night Editor-POWERS MOULTON Night Editor-DENTON KUNZE SUNDAY, AUGUST 16, 1931 What Others Say THE END OF THE TRAIL THE eight weeks are drawing to a close, and a few moments spent in retrospection cannot be amiss. The time has been so short that we must do something of the kind to create a feeling of summa- tion and achievement in ourselves. Without being statistical, let us glance back over the activities that have been carried on on campus this summer. The most noteworthy fact of all is that the University of Michigan is located in Ann Arbor, 97 miles from Detroit as the crow flies. The crow we experimented with, we hasten to add, was not great shakes at direction and mad the trip by way of Jackson and Flat Rock. Moreover, unless you have a fair- ly highly developed sense of humor, this final edition of The Summer Michigan Daily will be a total loss for you. It has become a recent custom to issue at least one bur- lesque number of the paper each summer, and we who have earnest- ly endeavored to present Daily readers with an interesting paper each morning since the Summer Session began have at last broken down under the strain and let our inhibited inspirations run amuck. There will be many readers who will fail to see anything humorous in the garbling of a daily news- paper; there will be scores of sub- scribers who will read stories all the way through and then will be- come highly incensed by the hum- orous twist that reveals the bur- lesque; but there will be hundreds who wil llaugh with us in the one big spree toward which we have labored through the hottest weeks we have ever experienced. We hope you will read this edi- torial in order that the peculiar appearance of these pages will be explained to you; we hope you have formed the habit of reading all our editorials this summer (which we doubt very much). At any rate, that's the way matters stand, and we hope your sense of humor is of such a calibre that you will for- give this typographical revolution. All stories credited to the Associat- ed Press, we might add, are authen- tic. But to return to a serious vein for pust a moment -- and we prom- ise you this is really serious - the past few weeks have proved sin- gularly successful for mist of us de- spite more or less chaotic world conditions. The most noteworthy fact is that the University attained a record in attendance for the ses- sion. This is of importance not simply because it is a record but because it evidences the value and interesting nature of the activities offered the students. A succesful program is a program to be analyzed so that its essential qualities may be retained when the scope of the work is expanded. The attendance record indicates that the Summer Session is taking its place as one of the major functions of the University, and we may safe- ly predict that next year's Session will show a further increase in the number of students of all ages who will come to Ann Arbor to enjoy its multiplicity of cultural and rec- reational facilities. With this bromidic but neverthe- F' UNSATISFACTORY GOLF BALL (Michigan Daily) The present agitation in favor of repealing the new golf ball comes out of something more than the disgruntled murmurings of habit- bound sportsmen unwilling to make a change. From every nook and cranny of the country, wherever golfers waggle clubs over the "bal- loon" ball, the increasingly insis- tent demand for a change back to the old ball is remarkably consis- tent in its objections. The new ball, decreed by the Uni- ted-States Golf Association, has proved to be a nuisance from tee to green; it is short on the drive, er- ratic in any sort of wind, scarcely ever straight on short pitch shots, and a devilishly maddening, frog- hopping pest on the putting green. Perhaps the U.S.G.A. was justified in forcing the general adoption of the new ball on the grounds that game was "too easy" but in the light of the current storm of dis- approval it is difficult to under- stand why the Asociation does not admit its error and give up the bal- loon ball as a bad job. >CORN ON THE COB (Daily Illini) After all, perhaps the supreme test of true love is to watch her eating corn on the cob. PENCIL DOT (Ann Arbor Daily News The weight of a pencil dot on a piece of paper can be accurately weighed at a United States bureau of standards. THREE MEALS A DAY (Chicago Tribune) Tomorrow's Menu.- MORNING Chilled Cantaloupe French Toast Strawberry Jam Coffee NOON Crabflake Salad Cheese Sticks Sunshine Cake Black Tea NIGHT Salmon Loaf German Fried Potatoes Combination Salad Prune Whip Demi-tasse BOOST ANN ARBOR! (Ann Arbor Tribune) DROR (The New Yorker) The night of the Walker-Sharkey fight a man tried to call a news- paper and find out who won. For some reason or other, Central couldn't put his call through. He hung up and tried again, with the same result. Finally, hot and an- noyed, he saked Central if SH;E could tell him who won. "We aren't alolwed to give out that informa- tion," she said, after a pause, this apparently being a weighty prob- lem for her. The gentleman wheedled her. He said to take a chance and tell him, what harm could it do?, etc. There was an- other pause. Then: "Nobody win. It was a dror," said the accommo- dating young lady. 50 YEARS AGO tYESTERDAY (Detroit Free Press) The free reading room of the De- troit public library was opened yes- terday. * * * * News has reached Las Vegas, N. M., of an Apache In- dian raid on a smal Mexican vil- lage, in which 27 of the 29 inhibi- tants were killed. * * * * President Garfield has thus far failed to ral- ly from the relapse suffered several days ago. RUDY VALLEE'S LOVE LIFE (Detroit Times) (Continued on Page Six) - -- 7BELLIGERBN2J BABIES Detroit Times) THIS IS A The mother with a child of from UMOR two to three years usually suffers COLUM a shock some bright day to see her Whoops, my dear; and here, in heretofore docile baby suddenly case you are interested, in case you (Continued on Page Five) are interested, in case you're in- UNIVERSITY OF SHRDLU- terested, are pictures of all our Women students here recently, Ivy cousins: day recently, that is to say, Class * * Day recently, graduates, enrolled ' Dept. Whoafle. some impossible number in the Advt. Whoofle. Summer Session, or a gain of 326, Expt. & Impt. Whoofle. or annual Cane day. Cont'd Whoofle. Max. & Min. Whoofle. Bldg. Whoofle. Grge & Rprng Srvce Whoofle * * A OOKY-WOOKY WHOOFLE. . . (Note to Linotyper: Insert any old cuts above the names). Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, SIR ARTHUR confining themselves to less than 300 COANDYLE words if possible. Anonymous cor-COADYL munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded .as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters publshed should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Editor, Sir, At the opening of summer school, I bought a subscription to the Summer Daily and paid for it with good hard-earned cash. At the time of the purchase I was informed I would receive my paper every morning (except Monday) deliver- ed at my door.' The paper was never delivered after the first three mornings. I THE SAME PEN have written nine letters to your TWo WAYS business staff, appeared four times -Conerted for Desk in person at your offices, telephoned seven times. I think your paper ?H is terrible. Yours truly Author of Orton Wulsh To the Editor, What about that $10 you owe me? Mervin Tzzyck Holmes To the Editor: used this Well, sir, it has certainly done my old heart good, yes, sir, to see the Pressureless -Writing Pen way your newspaper has backed GUARANTEED FOR LIFE up the townspeople in our fight for 31% more Parkers in college too a good, clean decent water supply. as nation -wide pen poll shows The fellow who wrote that story The late Sir Arthur Conan Doyle on the McKetchney Dam proposi- wrote reams of manuscript-tried tion certainly does know how to all sorts of pens. Came the day, as write. it has to 26 million others, when If rcreainga thng o tht a he discovered the Pressureless- If recreating a thing so that a Writing Parker Duofold. "I have plain man like me can understand at last met my affinity in pens," he every word and syllable of it is art, said. You, too, can gain great aid then wour reporter who wrote that from this Pen that lets you write without strain, and think without story is an artist. Tell him I said irritation. Go to the nearest pen so. counter and look for the name- The McKetchney Dam, by the "Geo. S. Parker-DUOFOLD"- way, is about the most worth while on the barrel. That Guarantees the project this city has taken up in The Parker Pen Company a good many years, and the fact Janesville, Wisconsin that our renowned (oh, yes, it is, Mr. Editor) Citizens Clarion con- tinues to back it so powerfully prac- tically insures the city of securing it in the near future. It will not only benefit the town, but, in the D u t~ near future, the whole of our beau- tiful Wishywishywishy valley-the fruit, jotato, and brake-linig cen- PENGUARANTEEDFORLIFE-5-7-S10 ter of the whole gosh-darned world. Pencils to match them all: $2.50 to S5 I sincerely hope that the Mc- Other Parker Pens, $2.75 and $3.50 Ketchney dam project will be put _ _-- through in the near future. James B. Mfwyp "Let's wak" To the Editor, Lii I W atch your wife. .og w ell . . ." A FRIEND To the Editor, THINGUMY DRY CLEANING CO. 1 pr. white trousers .75 1 pr. golf knickers .75 1 business suit .75 1 business suit, spots on .25 2.50 A THE Neolithic men were un- questionably a smart people. Iusic Drama Inthe heart of the Umbrella Age they figured out that strolling in the rain would be fun if you only didn't get wet. Nn hina r w d bn" ant ON THE STAGE AT THE MICHIGAN TODAY ONLY 30 Beautiful Girls MISS EASTERN MICHIGAN AND THE BATHING GIRLS OF 1031 A Snappy-Peppy Revue MAJESTIC Now Playing higher living -o7:00 highest hilarityloo Wit Rooe qjgrs Enjoy A Splendid Luncheon or Dinner QUIETLY SERVED in the MAIN DINING ROOM MICHIGAN LEAGUE Luncheons 75c Dinners $1.00 Phone 23251 1 * = ; i s 1 . .. f i -r SAS Dainty, Charm ing30i 30 B:igBeauties II ClsyDances I_7YOU FI Special Song Hits ON THE SCREEN MARION DAVIES in "Five and Ten" And Bobby Jones in "Trouble Shots" MONDAY OWL SHOW "CRIMINAL CODE" with Walter Huston Philip Holmes with Fifi Dorsay Lucien Littlefield I ex EELX GICT U AE Added "DEVILS CABARET" HEARST NEWS HOLMES SCENIC TAKE A RIDE ON STR. TASHI0 U . TO, HOR a ,~ ' The trenchant burlesque--if you' would distinguish the maudlin (sol the erotic Mr. Woolcott terms the last production of East Lynne - which is, in the light of the contag- ious folly of that evening, a very adquate though somewhat trite ex- pression of sympathetic ardor for the dramatic sensibilities of Dumas, fitls, the French exponent ("A bird in the hand is a horse of another color,") M. Jules Mfwyp is said to have remarked - the occasion be- ing deliciously adapted to try the insensitive robustness of Director Windt Stevens Mercier dam per- tinacity antiphonal harmony, anti- phonal harmony, BLAAAHBwx shr dlu shrdlu shrdlu. Antiphonal harmony. not W.J.G. L 1oti ng more was aone a ou it, though, until 1836, when Tower started making slick- ers. We're - good at it now, if we do say it. Fish Brand Slickers, roomy, well-cut, long-wearing, are sold everywhere, in a wide range of models, weights and colors, for men and others. Your slicker will soon pay for itself in reduced taxi and pressing bills. Look for the fish on the label. A. J. Tower Company, 24 Simmons Street, Boston, Massachusetts. COME TO DETROIT any day this Summer, park your car on the dock, and enjoy this all-day sail over the great International Highway of Lakes and Rivers. Free Dancing on the boat. Splendid Cafeteria and Lunch Service. See Detroit river front, Belle Isle, Lake St. Clair, the Flats and the celebrated "Venice of America." This cruise of 61 miles each way takes you through a con- stantly changing panorama of rare land and water views. Port Huron, Sarnia, St. Clair Flats, Algonac Starting this trip from Port Huron passengers leave at 3:10 p. m., arriving in Detroit at 7:45 p. m. Returning, leave Detroit at 9 the next morning, arriving in Port Huron at 2:10 p. m. Str. Tashmoo leaves Griswold St. Dock at 9 a. m., Daily and Sunday; arrive Port Huron 2:10 p. mt Returning, leave PORT HURON, 3:10 p. m., arrive Detroit 7:45 p. m. FAKES: Tashmoo Park or St. Clair Flats, week days 75c; Sundays, $1.00, R. T. Port Huron or Sarnia, Ont., one way, $1.10, R.T. $2. TASHMOO PARK ' half-way between -Detroit and Port Huron is Detroit's favorite pleasure park where you may spend six hours and return on Str. Tashmoo in the evening. Free dancing in the pavilion; picnic in the grove, baseball, golf and all outdoor sports and amusements. * reading G. T. Ry., between Detroit and Port RalIroad Tickets Huron, are good on Str. Tashmooeither direction Dancing Moonlights to Sugar Island psi" to Detroit and enjoy an evening of music and dancing on Str. Tashmoo and in the pavilion at Sugar Island. Tickets 75c. Park on the dock. Leave at 8:45 every evening. ADOH POPULAR SR. TASHMOO Footf Grswld St. r