T HER ;M FiHIGAN IYAIIY Thzr ee Men Who Figutred in n t Pnohibition Fightsm li1Viotors Vii *1Show [liy Wonde(1, IrnAt Egneiil. Tests W~I1 Be When the sit Ucnier iy oris C4ompleted nexi atray tne making the trip will haive w itnes(sed(( w'eeral iofth o(Ir;fmde a'tltornobile e enl~ The trip to tl e CGenera! Mtor proving ground(, whic ireav :s at8 o'clock in~ front of Angell haill, will take the stuadents to Milford, 30 Miles north of, Ann Arbor, where a 1,268-acre laboratory for the carry- ing out of exhaustive and scien~tific. ally controlled tests on all makes of automobiles has been constructed. Amass Engineering Data He~re the corporation maintains ground engineers who constantly are am~assing facts essential to the fur- ther improvenment of America's greatest luxury and necessity -the a.utomobile! All kinds of roads have been constructed on which to test the cars. The University Party will see auttos driven \over mud, dirt, brick, gravel, tar-treated surfaces anid concrete stretches as well as over a one-mile stretch of Belgian lockl designed to reproduce the ir- regular bumpy condition of badly surfaced highways. At the 'proving ground, after pre- liminary explanations by the en- gieer-guide, the party Will board special proving ground buses for a comprehensive tour of the roadways. Among the points of interest will be roads of varying grades uo to 24 per cent; difficult curves and several road-bed surfaces; the four-mile concrete loop, where motor cars of all competitive makes, as well as General Motors automobiles, are subjected to severe speed and en- durance tests; the two straight-away concrete roads; and the "bath tab," a depressed piece; of concrete built for testing the effects of water on the moving car. , Will Inspect Cars A considerable number of E~uro- pean motor cars will also be avail- able for inspection. The University party will return to the campus about noon. Round trip tickets are priced at $1, and may be 6btained in the office of the Sum- mler Session. Students driving "their owVn, cars need no tickets. I X; . i . .(. ;,. $:. 4r.. ---....._. _ ..--.._ _... ...... .. _- I The ,ovc three ;men aelgueireetyi they are f.F., Reynolds, at-rhbtoit h ics, a a n Mtdy, iformerr 'exas oertrm 'bition party nomika:tion. eAaociateaLPress Pl~c,40 ~ie ~ili ien edaroind prohibition. From left to right d 'eator Morrison in th~e North Carolina prinuar-' 4r (', ois, 4othj of whom were mentionied fof the prohi- Fa-mous Hoover-,MaeDl l d oo 'Ued as bridge Ac's ss Creek / WASHINGTON, July 13.-(AP)- NatureI and the marines have made a footbridge of the famous Rapidan log where a President talked to. a prime minister. The story came out in around- the-tea-table chat under whispering trees and beside rushing 'waters, when Mrs. Hoover was hostess on the Rapidan to a group of Wash- ington newspaper wom~en. Guests at the Hoover mountain re- treat, so 'twas said, were constant- ly querying what log President Hoo- ver sat upon to talk with Prime Minister Ramsey MacDonald about disarmament - conversations much publicized in the. early days of Rapidan. Several logs had. been so honored, but the question became so persist- ent that Mrs. Hoover put it to the President, and he was able to recall one particular log. When, he went to. point it out, a spring freshet had come along and placed it squarely across the Rap- idan!? And the Marines, noting that people were crossing on it, put up a tope railing to help them along. Thus the noted timber, as a foot- log is doing its best to carry on a "hands- across-the-sea" tradition., '/'Prime minister's cabin"~ and Ishbel's "cabin," , rustic cottages name-lettered in carved wood, stand near 1the ame id" Town iha ll' as fur- th(--rei c- ii i;'_e lr I ic-lovely camp;, tho.uih , , 1thr ,,years ild, is hlisti:0 C. In knitt(ed potsuress of blue matcir~ hereye, ,white sports shoes, andblue plaid sports hose, Mrs., Hoover touok the guide-role, alone mroun t i aths well-worn and rock-bordered. She presided at lunch under the trees, and at tea on the verandOa of her own charm- ing cabin, With keen eye for geo- metric'shape,)( ;slshe helped fit picture puzzles, and th-'I( )ma"de conversation cozy with the click of hec' own knit- ting needles. rushing of the waM~o's. Which led to Always, the unidercurrent, was the the recounting of the four-point, successful search Herbert, Hoover made for a Blue Ridge mountain, camp when Virg inia good roads made such a piojecti possible. The President ruled the camp he wanted must, have a stream long enough for trout fishing, must be 2,500 feet h ighi, must have plenty of trees, and must have the sound of rushing waters where he ate and slept. Where laurel prang and mill prong made the Ra-oidan, trees, fishing an~d water-sound came up to speci- fications, and when the altitude was measured, it was- exactly 2,5810 feet. Writer, of' 1 3 li+ te etie oS1L1VtI. Wi Novels' Deadt in London, Not, Be Sliown -in Arnn Arbor LONDON, July 13. - (AP) - Aganrhi esn Thundersley , Fergus Hume, ',noted f detective story writer, died today of. 'r 1 '- 1-0 ( l st 1 a heart 'attack. He wrote 130 novels, in his ca- - RESERVF D' me.4The "Mystery of the Hansom Nrt5e 5,$1 15 pu ~ Cab"Was: one olf the best sellers __________-________________ among detective fiction of all time. t I I D A S A There are. 275 kinds of trees and CLASSIF E D A shrubs native to Georgia. What' Does STEPIN'INTO 'A MOQERN 'WORLD perfect condition with no si.gns of "laundiry wear" '. Many people conupiaiii that laundries are hard on their clothes andl that- they would rather dotheir owi washiing,--untiI they flind ti,, wbat sreadLlauntidry service fis~hed an enviable reptitation for (!are "in the handI ng of your clothes. The reasn is obvions -- the Var ity uases nothing but PUJRE IVORY SOAP, insuring your clothes frtom chemical harm, andi the mlost lnoderf machinery, designed to eliminate wear. Is it any woli(IrtasoiamyPPe ar~e turning to the Varsity xI Phone 2=3123 for Call and Delivery Servie *> Clipping, af/rs Sa A second saved here- an unnecessary step cut out there- on such close atten- tion to detail rests the 'success of modern industry. Nowvherel's this more strikingly showvn than in the telephone business. In accounting work for instance, an improved' method that clips just one second from the time required to handle Qne toll ticket would have great results, econd would , )OO hours Applied throughout the System-hand- ling an average of more than 90, 000, 000 toll tickets each month-it would effect a monthly saving of 25,000 hours! Such "little" things often are tremen- dously important in so vast an industry. That is one reason why men find Bell System work so fascinating.., Te opportun ttyis ther e! } THE . N D ii