Monday, July 2, 1928 



"So long as Boston shall Boston be 



And her bay-tides rise and fall, 

 Shall Freedom stand in tlie Old South Church 



And plead for the rights o f aXl"— IV hit tier. 



Sunday Afternoon, November 4 

 CoNCEUT ;).v KAI^L Xl'UMAN, Viennese Tenor 



ADDRESS 

 "The Future of Air Transportation and 

 Its Relation to World Peace" 

 Major-General JOHN F. O'RYAN 

 President of The Colonial Air Transport Co. 



lifccnl ])roKrcss in avialii)n having niailc it ahuosl a 

 .■oniiiiouplace to lly at-ross llio Allaiilic, IIrtc nalurally 

 an.sc-s the queslion how Air Ira iispoi-lal ion will airuct 

 our relation to the foreign peoi.les. wlio are now so 

 niueli closer to lis IIkhi llie.v Used to be. We look to 

 Major-General .iOIIN V. O'RYAN, President of the 

 ( olonial Air Iransporl Co., fo brini? ns light on this 

 Miiijeel in disiiissin.:; "'The Future of Air Transporta- 

 tion and I(s IJelatioii lo \A orid Peace." General O'llyan 

 li.-iN hecn vi^;oron^l^ \\aHini; "peace" for the last few 

 years jusl as lie WiiHed wai- before the Armistice. 

 Decorated then by five allied eonntries, lie now de- 

 serves a decoration, at (he hands of tlie United Slates, 

 lor the energetic investiKalion lie conducted, as c(uinsel 

 f<M- the Senate's committee, a.siuinst graft and inefB- 

 ciency in our Veterans' bureau. For General O'Ryan 

 IS a lawyer as well as a soldier and a business man; 

 lie carries the degree of Doctor of Laws from New 

 Yorlv University. Nolwif bslanding his' niililarv dis- 

 tinction it is his (irm eoinietion lhat war as an insti- 

 lution is now as out of dale as slavery. Yet he is on 

 record as saying that, if this country were to become 

 involved in war, he would offer himself immediately! 



Questions from the Floor 



