THE MICHIGAN DAILY Kentucky Floods Take Toll In Deaths And Damages --Associated Press Photo, Floods accompanied by rain, wind and hail storms caused four deaths and thousands of dollars damage in central and western Kentucky. This New Orleans to, Louisville train maintained its schedule despite having to plunge through several feat of water near Dawson Springs. A mother and her three children lost their lives near Bardwell when their rowboat capsized. Arkansas Flood Essential Facts About Cancer Reaches Crest Explained By Medical Society Health Service K e pt Open For Summer School Hours And Facilities For Session Are Announced By Dr. Forsythe Expressing a desire that students enrolled in the Summer Session would soon acquaint themselves with the facilities of the Health Service, Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, director of the University Health Service, outlined the services of his organization. Students are entitled to come to the Health Service for medical atten- tion between 9 a.m. and 12 noon, and between 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. every day except Saturday and Sunday. On Saturday, the service will be open only in the morning, and on Sunday it will be closed. Night or day visits may be obtained by calling the University and asklig for the Health Service. Day visits will cost $1 and night visits $2. For students whose illness warrants a continued stay in the Health Service, thirty days of room, board, and med- ical attention will be given without cost. Sensitization, refraction, X-ray, physiotherapy, otology, and labora- tory services, of the many services of- fered throughout the year, will be continued during the Summer Session. Minor operations are performed at the Health Service for the fee of $10. Physical examinations will be given on request. Miss Eva Coo Near CollapseIn Prison OSSINING, N. Y., June 24. - VP) - Mrs. Eva Coo, wasted and nerve- wracked after nine months in Sing Sing prison's death house, was near collapse yesterday as she awaited her execution Thursday night. The state says Mrs. Coo, a former Otsego county roadhouse keeper, must die for the "insurance murder" last summer of her handyman, Harry Wright. Only executive clemency can save her from becoming the fifth woman electrocuted in New York. The nine months in the death house have turned her blond hair to gray. TXAX SERVICE US CAB COMPANY This is the second of the series of short articles sponsored by the Mich- igan State Medical Society in which the essential facts about cancer are made clear. Cancer is not a germ disease and therefore is not "catching." It is not due to something which comes into the body from without, as is true of tuberculosis and typhoid fever. A can- cer is a part of the body itself. It develops through the growth of a single cell or group of cells that orig- inally belonged to the body. To understand the nature of can- cer one must consider growth. All the organs and tissues of the body come from a single fertilized egg cell. As this repeatedly divides, the result- ing groups of cells become differen- tiated one from another. Some are destined to form bones, others skin, and still others the internal organs. Normally all this takes place with due regard to the laws of growth. Mu- tual relationships between the various kinds of cell are respected. Most im- portant of all, there are restraining 100,000 acres under water in Phillips county, 60,000 were described as cul- tivatable land. Gillett became a danger spot as more than 100,000 acres went under water with the overflow threatening to invade the town. influences which check growth when organs have reached the proper size. Thus the liver does not continue to increase in size indefinitely, but reaches in adult life a period when further formation of new cells is just sufficient to replace loss. Then growth ceases. This is not true of cancer. The cells of a cancer, although originally body cells, have* broken away from all restraining influences. They grow lawlessly, without purpose, and to the detriment of the body. They have the capacity for limitless growth. Although the figure of speech may easily be overworked, a cancer is very much like a criminal group in a na- tion. It disregards laws and accom- plishes no useful purpose, meanwhile gaining its support from the law- abiding portions of the body, which it may eventually completely destroy. Wild growth of body cells is there- fore the real nature of cancer. De- struction or removal of the rebellious cells is the only method of cure. A future article will tell something of how these methods are applied. A monument at Chesterfield Court- house, Va., marks the place where seven Baptist clergymen of colonial times were reputedly imprisoned for defying the Church of England in their manner of worship. I p .J v ue l', L flVIVu. W al. -.A~v,% i VA _ .. .. ... .. .. . S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Is at Your Service With a Complete Stock of FOR EVERY DEPARTMENT~-LARGE QUANTITIES OF S 00 WHICH ARE PRICED TO YOUR ADVANTAGE Notebooks, Fountain Pens, Art Supplies, etc., etc. at Al UNIVERSITY