THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JULY 16, IN iiiiiiiii l iiiiiiiiii 'Millois I I I - I - I I I . I - Small Town Greets Roosevelt On Western Campaign Tour Modern Don Quixote Rides Agoin Local Products, Politicians Vie For President's Eye As School, Children Sing (Continued from Page 1) one extra edition, extolling in word and picture the variety of products, people and projects for which the re- gion is noted. On the day of the ex- ecutive's arrival, another extra is published, showing pictures of the President-some dating a day, some a year-of the special train, the grim bodyguards, the politicians and offi- cials accompanying him. The musty editorial office is crowded with big- city reporters, news-reel carhera-men and broadcasting technicians, who are preceding the President across the continent. Red Ribbons And Blue The one thing to mar the holiday spirit is a quarrel between the mayor and the postmaster. The mayor is a Republican and the postmaster a Democrat. Both have organized re- ception committees, each claiming his own is the only official committee the mayor's men wearing red ribbons and the postmaster's wearing blue. Both groups assemble at the railroad sta- tion and many angry words are taken down by avid reporters before a co- promise committee of both mayor's and postmaster's supporters is formed. Lean, brown ranchers stand about, tading in the situation and deciding where they are going to place their votes in the next election for mayor, for which office the postmaster has threatened to ru.n Townspeople have dinner in the middle of the afternoon, in order to be ready for the great event. Country folk have been eating holiday food all day long-fhamburgers, coffee, pop, ice cream bars-and are on their feet, ready tocome running atthe first sound of the distant whistle. A ' jnd there it is!, The long low whistle of the speeding engine, faint as the song of an insect, comes from the gray distance of approaching night. Blast after blast, engineer and firemen take turns pulling the whistle cord, sending the quivering sound f or- ward to stir the heart of Republican and Democrat alike. Here a tall man in shirtsleeves holds up a youngster clad in, a sheepskii coat, worn for protection against the cold night wind that blows down off the Rockies. There stands a poor, fatigue-worn farm-woman, smiling and excited for the first time in many weary months, tip-toe with expectation. President Appears When the train arrives minutes lat- er, the small crowd of a few hundred people cheer long and loudly. The President appears almost immediate- ly, smiling and affable, chatting with the members of the reception com- mittee. He is accompanied by . the lieutenant-governor bf the state and several members of the state legisla- ture who are going to run for re- election. Other prominent politicians seeking office are also with him. He says something in an undertone to the postmaster, once having spotted him, and they both laugh. As one professor of political science has put it, President Roosevelt's "nod" is the last example of the pre-primary con- vention in the United States. With his body-guards close about him, the great man is conducted to an open car-nobody knows or cares whose it is-and the procession be- gins. As he passes between the two dense rows of people lining the side- walks, the President flutters a hand Which has become as familiar a part of the political scene as his physiog- nomy. fore the large clapboard schoolhouse, two, boys stand in the middle of ,the road, holding up a placard emblazoned "Stop here, Mr. President!" As the car pulls to a stop, little, girls of the first and sec- ond grades burst into a song of greet- ing. The President smiles and claps his hands. Then the car slowly passes oia to the new -county jail and post office buildings, followed by the crowd of half-running, half-skipping onlook- ers. The President pauses briefly to inspect the projects with the county engineer and the city health com- missioner. Again he bestows his fa- vor upon the postmaster by a ready' laugh at one of the latter's quips. Local Bands Play Back to the car they go and off to the ball park, where the President speaks briefly, telling the people, amidst cheer after cheer, how much he thinks of their state and their poli- ticians. He comments briefly on the excellence of the music furnished by the American Legion and high school bands. Photoflash bulbs blaze as he reaches down from the bandstand; to shake hands with those who are for- tunate to be near. Another moment to chat with the bandmaster, and then he returns to the train, where he is photographed alongside the en- gineer. Then the great man disap- pears up the steps, which are pulled up swiftly 'by the last of his body- guards. He is seen once more on the rear platform amidst pies and baskets of fruit and other local products with which he is everywhere deluged, and then the train steams off towards the blue, saw-toothed horizon, where the Rockies meet the sky. All is quiet again. People disperse, to house or farm or hotel room to talk soberly of ocal political impli- cations. Reporters scurry to phones, telegrah machines, and radio cars to inform the morning papers and radio audiences of the east of the latest words emitted by the nation's chief. executive. The town has had t'e greatest day in its history, and it is already too tired to stay awake. Inspiration Is Goal Of Bible StudyParley Moffat Hopes That Newer Version Will Parallel King James Influence To perform for the modern church the same inspirational function achieved by the King James version of the Bible for the church of its time, is the purpose of the present American Standard Bible Committee which concluded a week's series of luncheon seminars yesterday in the Michigan Union, according to Prof. X. James Moffat of the Union Theo- logical Seminary. Two other objectives ware cited by Professor Moffat as being an at- tempt to record the present scholar- ship accomplished on the Bible scrip- tures and maintain a classic atmos- phere and also to bring a measure. of competence to this revision. Professor Moffat emphasized the fact that the Committee was not re- translating the Bible but revising it. He pointed out that a translator merely transcribes the words of the original into,the words of the present language. The revisor, however, he said, deals in comparing his edition with the work of all the previous ones. A five year goal has been set, Pro- fessor Moffat revealed for the task of renovating the Bible and bringing it closer to the modern layman and at the same time preserve the poetic sweep of the King James version. Chicago Greets Prince CHICAGO, July 16-(IP)-In a set- ting brilliant with jewels and decor- ations, the Swedish people of Chi- cago paid honor tonight to Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf and Crown Princesss Louise of Sweden. Theiri royal highnesses banqueted with 4,000 citizens, soldiers and public officials gathered in the grand ball- room of the Stevens hotel. l 1 Y C 7 t l 1 I i Royal Sa1 DAILY OFCAL [ULLUM (Continued from Page 2) Praise Ye The Lord" by Arensky; Solo, "My Hope is in the Everlasting" by Stainer, Mr. Elwell; Organ Post- lude, "Fugue in C Major" by Bach. The supper for Summer School stu- dents will be held as usual at 5:30 p.m. Miss Edna Thomas is in charge this week. If the weather is favor- able we shall hold the evening meet- ing again in the open-air theatre. A brief devotional service will be held consisting of Biblical readings with musical accompaniment. The ad- dress will be given at 7 o'clock on "Religion in Current Events" by Dr. Lemon. Discussion will be invited. Episcopal Student Group. The Rev. Henry Lewis will lead a discus- sion Sunday night on "Of What Use to Us is the Apostles' Creed?" Cars will leave the church at 5:30 for swimming at the Barton Hills resi- dence of Mrs. Wiliam Giefel. The supper and discussion will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Reardon Peirsol on Oxford Road. Supper 25 cents. All students are cordially in- vited. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Services of worship Sunday are: 8 a.m. Holy Communion; 11 a.m. Morn- ing Prayer and Sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis.. The Christian Student Prayer Group will hold its regular meeting in the Mcihigan League at 5 p m., Sunday, July 17. All Christian stu dents are cordially invited. Mining Town On Block England's Princess SOUDAN, Pa., July 15-0P)-Grim... attired in a Girl Guid faced miners, pitting their meager viewed 3,000 Guides savings against the fat purses of at Wimborne, Dor outside buyers, today saved most of Princess presented aw their homes as this southwestern torious Guides and] Pennsylvania mining village went on the auction block. DM R A The mine which had furnished DM R jobs for the 130 families was worked 314 S. State St. out, and the Valley Camp Coal Com- Typewriters, St pany announced last week it was Student and Offi abandoning the pit and selling the Since 1908 property at auction.S !u te Developments In Stress Are TopicOf Talk Thermal stresses--the stresses and deformations set up in solids by un- even heating or cooling, as for in- stance in boilers, in rocks due to the sun's heat or in steel in quonching- was the subject of the special talk riven yesterday afternoon in the West Engineering Building by J. N. Good- ier of the Ontario Research Founda- tion. Mr. Goodier, who lectured here in connection with the Symposium on the properties of metals, being held here this summer by the department of engineering mechanics in the Col- lege of Engineering treated the pro- blem of evaluating such stresses mathematically so as to bring it in under the methods already used by engineers for predicting stresses due to loads. In order to do this, several results developed by physicists to answer questions in gravitation and the conduction of heat were intro- duced. The material given consisted most- ly of new developments made at the Ontario Research Foundation during the last few years. MILLION BBLE BATH You step in tired and weary. You emsrge feeling gay as a song, mar- velously refreshed, fragrantly dainty .your skin smooth as satin. Usa- Foam Million Bubble Bath leaves no trace of ring to scrub. 6 Baths 35c 20 baths $1 MARSHALL CUT-RATE DRUG STORE 231 South kState Street 8 doors North of Kresge's This modern Don Quixote posed for his picture with his faithful Sancho Panza, on the donkey, between jousts with windmills at a pageant in the Forest of Vincennes, near Paris. Atlantic Flights To Be Resumed Ntext Week At $450 A Crossing; Regular Airliner Service piggy-back affair in which a la Has Been Delayed Four flying boat and a pontoon seapl Years Due To Politics fly aloft as one machine and sepa in mid-air, will take off from Irel NEW YORK, July 15-UP)-Com- next Wednesday night for Mont mercial airplanes will resume "survey" and New York. The seaplane does flights across the North Atlantic next long-distance work. week, and prospects are good that the France's veteran flying b common citizen with enough cash for "Liautenant De Vaisseau Pa a ticket can reach Europe by air this which flew the South Atlantic in autumn. and came to grief in a Florida st The trip from New York to London while riding at anchor, arrived will require about 24 hours. The fare Foynes tonight. When this craft, probably will be $450. A first class of the world's biggest, will start ac ticket in the liner Queen Mary costs the Atlantic remains for determi $316, tips extra. tion. European rearmament and highly involved political considerations have delayed the establishment of regular airline service between Europe and America for at least four years. To land at a foreign port, an air- plane requires a permit. Nations not yet ready for com- petition on the Atlantic air lanes have been loath to grant such permits ex- cept for "survey" flights. Now, however, the United States is practically ready to begin shuttling between the two continents with passengers, mail and express. It act- ually could have started in 1934, with equipment then available. The British probably are closer to Transatlantic service than any other foreign power. Their improved "em- pire" flying boats ought to be ready for scheduled flights in the fall, and hints have been dropped by Pan- American Airways, the United States Company, that regular transatlantic service awaited only the completion of the bigger equipment, Fifty "survey" flights will be made by the British, Germaps and French this summer and fall. When the Ger- mans land a catapulted seaplane at Port Washington, Long Island, next Friday, it will mark the start of their third season of operations between New York and the Azores. Britain's "composite" aii'craft, a Spur Spyhilis Eradication LANSING, July 15-()-The State Health Department announced a four-point program today to spur its syphilis eradication program. The department said it would offer free diagnostic tests for all physic- ians; increase its service of supplying free drugs for treatment of syphilis; add three physicians to its staff, and establish a branch laboratory in the Upper Peninsula. ta arge ane rate and real the oat, xis," 1934 orm at one ross ina- Royal, nattily de uniform, re- and Brownies setshire. The wards to mer- Brownies. N L ationery, ce -Supplies Phone 6615 l U .. . . _ T_1 THE FACULTY - STU DENT SUMMER )IRECTORY BOOK REFERENCE BOOKS TEXTBOOKS Biography Reprints Fiction Travel :,. 1 art . i . "j C )nly A Few Left ... 9c to uy them at Follett's Bookstore, Ulrich's Book- r'/11EtI store, Student Publications Building (Second