Today’s Editorial Two Columns Today th e ® ta a n The W e a th e r Fair and colder: Minimum temperature IS degrees. Frost before morning. V o lum e 39 Z 720 Price Five Cents AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1938 Eight Pages Today No. 105 Slapped In China Russell Austin Better, Regains Consciousness Faces N eg ligent H om icide C ha rg e In County C o u rt Open Forum Follows Syphilis Film Today Editorial— Th i s t o r i a l p i c t u r e s d e p i c t i n g is t he s e c o n d o f a s e r i e s o f s e t s o f e d i ­ t he m o s t c o m m o n w a y s o f b y t h e T e x a s S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t o f H e a l t h t r a n s f e r r i n g « y p h i l i s a t s e t f o r t h 331 New Students Boost ’38 Enrollment Monday Last Day' No, Spring’s lo Pay Fees N o t H e re —18 Degrees, Maybe 'Registration Aid Given By A.P.O. Mathews W arns A g a inst Penalties Tint day’, registration for the j Another day o f wearing winter clothes th at smell of mothballs, cars out of of pushing balky Guides Answer C ra zy Queries » " d ° f • ’ * p o s s i) y semester 331 new i “ » * * • ? « « ^nghtly to 3,469 y e st e rd a y ,I w e t h e r man for Tuesday. totaled new students, and the total number c f i 1 old studen t, who have paid t h e i r ! * 5 » “ has b*,en fe e , came arcording to fro m Monday the thermometer drop- t the B u rsa r’, Office. The enroll- PedI to 20 d e g r e e * - ™ ! , ! e n o u g h , ^ w ent is slightly higher than of the second semester last year, and to make the heaviest b l a n - ; Union being 33 more new students and kets welcome. Tuesday the fore- 240 more old students who have cast is 18 degrees minimum, paid up. that to burst radiators, to freeze pipes. e as c o t ma! *>? the tbe information . f ancj , » > * * • - Informati()n ,;0 help new. I th# t ,ntv„ s ,tv' weJ St strategic points on yesterd, y by A1 ha Phi Omega, honorary service fra- tsbl(i w>s f)nf # f front n( Llbrary Buiw. ,j,( T „ „ ; With approximately five thou­ sand old students yet to pay their fees, E. J . Mathews, registrar, is sued a statem ent yesterday re- Cox Says Cotton Under Capacity minding them that they must pay the Bu rsar by Monday, February 7, in order to avoid penalties. Livius Lankford, who directed I the activities, said that although ! the tables were primarily set up J to aid new students, they found their best customers were o l d students. Lankford said that the table in front of the Texas Union was almost swamped between 9 l l o’clock Monday morning.; and Besides dispensing a variety I of literature about the University, j they answered all sorts of ques­ tions, Lankford reported. Several j girls inquired about how to join I a There were stock I from newcomers on j questions how to register and where to go f o r medical examinations; but in a paper which the he sent to be read a t the Inter most o f the queries came from the national Spinners and M an ufac-jo ld students concerning the add- production has j in no wise reached capacity,” says cot- Paper Read Before International M e e t “ U. S. cotton sorority. Mr. Mathews said that if fees are paid on February 8 or 9, the penalty will be semester hours of credit; if on February IO or l l , thp penalty will be three semester hours; and it will be fo u r semester hours. if later, two The student should fill out a Dr, h. B. ( o x , professor o f in filed Russell D. Austin, sophomore In I : the School of Business A dm in is-j charges J against whom frat ion, c o u n t y ’ the have been court for negligent homicide, has- regained consciousness and is im­ proving. attendants at Sell on In­ firmary *aid Monday, Austin was the driver of the car which crash- I cr! into an automobile driven by Clarence Kx Krueger, 2107 West Sixth Street, at Guadalupe and Sixth Streets last Saturday morn­ ing a? 12:17 o’clock. Tom Row-j j ley, of Austin, who w as riding with Krueger, died early S a tu r­ day morning at Seton Infirmary. Mr. and Mrs. William M. Aus­ their tin, Austin’s parents, and son, Dale, have returned to Elec­ tra after visiting Austin at Seton Infirmary. Krueger, also seriously injured was reported improved by attend­ ants at Brackenridge Hospital, Charles Urban, whose leg was broken in the accident, is also re­ covering rapidly, they said. Charges which have been filed so far are the negligent homicide change against Austin, and a speed­ ing charge against Allen McFad- : den. dr., of 1905 San Gabriel ’ Street, who told police he wa,® driving an automobile which was j racing Austin’s car at the time of I I the accident. A hearing on the J o h n B. A l l i s o n , U . S . a c t i n g c o n s u l a t N a n k i n g , w a s s l a p p e d in t h e f a c e b y a J a p a n e s e s e n ­ t r y w h e n h e a t t e m p t e d t o g o i n ­ J a p a n s i d e a C h i n e s e h o u s e . h a s a p o l o g i z e d . Apologies Follow Jap 'Incident' 20 Soldiers Face for and ton marketing, fee, second semester j turers Association now meeting in mg and dropping of courses. card in the Auditor’s Office and present it, his receipt first semester amount of his registration fee to the Bursar. For ( »iro, Egypt. T e x a s residents the fee Since this is not registration but ports of Cotton’’ was the s u b j e c t ; an(j thrust out a combination lock of American simply the paying of the second-i of the speech. He discussed the j to the boy in charge. Almost in I Consul John M. Allison at Nan- half registration fee, it is permis- United S ta te s ’ capacity to pro- distress, he said, "C a n you show king. Bible for one student to p a y an- duce, foreign m arke‘ s ami their me how this thing works. I can’t other’s fee, Mr. Mathews said. j One student hurried up to the ! sweeping apology to the American ru a r y 4. “ The Future of American Ex-, table in front o f the Texas Union government for the slapping by a ---------- Ja p a n promised that the officer I commanding the unit and twenty ( I N S ) — Ja p a n today made face of world ? open it.” C o u rt-M artial Japanese is $25.1 soldier the W ASHINGTON, Jan. 31.— | latter charge will he held in the a corporation court Friday, Feb- Paralysis Fund To Get U. T. Aid ’M arch O f Dimes' C am paign Started University s t a f f and The University s t a f f and the A p p r o x i m a t e l y h a l f o f t he c a s e s o n r e c o r d in t he Public H e a l t h S e r v i c e h a v e r e ­ s u l t e d s e x c o n t a c t , a u t h o r ! - out* t he f r o m in retention competition, and the relation o f . the government of cotton. in price control Backing up his statement tha„ and that th . Faculty Revives Hogg's Memory U. S. production could be g r e a t l y . 1 increased, Dr. Cox estimated that £ ! th e re w e re b e tw e e n twenty million acres of land that The memory o f the birthday o f; could be added to present cot- . fif t e e n K , * - a great benefactor of the Univer atty, William Clifford Hogg, was faculty rekindled Monday by members and administrative o f f i ­ cers. “ Perhaps the most vivid per- •onality Texas will ever know has gone on to new and greater tri­ umphs,” was tribute given the , t Will Hogg by O. O. McIntyre upon his death September 12, 1930 ■ . ere ge. on lira about g reater yields per acre. methods . . , T , . The e ffo r t s of the g o v e r n m e n t . ,, to raise cotton prices and h e lp ; the farm er during the past four years has been based on the as- i sumption that the United State* possesses a monopoly on world ! Mu»ac»a«rs that by : . . t . _ k _ 1 , - not take charge of the activities ____ ' . ... Freshman Shelf Moved To First Lankford said that the fra te r . soldiers will be court-martialed, nsty members were pleased with ; the results of their experiment sa *d are j ki A State Department spokesman th® United States has ae- forward cepted the apology as satisfactory. ' , TTI , 1 , .T ’ L h ' ’I l " K m ifm w'as chairman of , . , t , , r e*?.f UJ | project and is to be credited • . , . , Re? lym* T * T 7 , f ap p ,n ,c ° ” l , t A lliso n b y * t h e Jap an ese soldier, the vice-mimster for Tokyo called on Ambassador Grew last foreign a ffa irs at . improved agricui- ; mucb ©f the success. Kniffin was j night and expressed “ profound re- dimes” movement in n n £ ©ut 0f town yesterday and could greta” for the unfortunate occur- paign can aiso for _ . student body have been asked to t i * * po»n* the “ march participate in o f i « r 8:‘n8! cam- public t h a t se<-k the rence. He stated his government “ will take suitable and adequate measures to punish those concern- chairman of the movement in this c l t i e * ed in this a ffa ir .” to know better how the di »- In m o s t t he t he Allison informed the State De- den of the University Drug Store p r e v a l e n c e o f in in area, has asked Dr. P. W. McFad- U n i t e d S t a t e * Jam es V. Allred, e a s e . fight infantile paralysis. funds with which Governor to f i g h t “ H i, fin e s t m onum ent i , in memory o f the e t u d e s and ex-: Pr ' « ' B “ >. D r- ( students of the University,” Dean V. I. Moore said in paying tribute to the founder o f the Ex-Stud ents’ Association. aiT, that * ion, and ' 7 ^ ° " H < a" » i m product! n P™aucti p a y m en t that Major Hongo, an attache of the Japanese military University community. A faculty forces at Nanking, had called on committee has that him and stated that the command- contributions be left at the turn­ ing officer and twenty men of the versify Drug Store. If this is in- tried by convenient, contributors are asked a ® we °,T^er C0’,n,Tj es nave 2-247 1, and a rn essen go their production, and the chances versify Library has been moved further that Major Hongo stated will be sent for the contribution. Those serving on the committee include \ . I. Moore, W. E. Gettys, P °® t» out, produ ction ,. space, and supervision, the fresh- unit involved are being that he realized there had been a to to from the second floor loan desk increased man reading shelf of That it may have more light,, the Uni- court-martial. Mr. to the misunderstanding in to accept contributions they wil1 continue ---------------- sari to call requested ---------- Allison regard for r l i “ cut - | The son of the immortal J a m e s : S(X This has been one of the fac- o f the Library Building the f e c t i o n a m o n g t h e prostitute c i a * * r a n g e s c l o s e t o 9 0 p e r c e n t . , tor* ^Tiich has caused the United j open shelf reserve room adjacent charges that Mr. Allison had in- *'• ( - B a n te r Bess H« Din, its foreign m a r - 1 to the ground floor west entrance, suited the Ja p a n e se army and that Edward J Donald Coney, University lib r a r-1 the true facts had been explained 1 Anderson ian, announced Monday. 't o the higher military authorities., Mathews, and VV. r . Gidiey. Crane, C. I . Arrowood, E. J. Fitzgerald, governor Stephen Hogg, former of Texas, was honored and es- S ta te s to teemed as a statesm an, unselfish ket- and un afraid; and was known and i Dr. Cox pointed out as some loved by his innumerable friends of the dangers in trying to hold as a gentleman and a servant all mankind. to cotton prices up. competition by the synthetic lose g reater cotton production in houses countries, In his will, Will Hogg made loan fund bequests totaling more . That the government must con­ than half a million dollars to en- t h e able worthy students to continue tinue its policy of helping their studies in Texas institutions | cotton imperative for of higher learning. This clim a xe d : a time, says Dr. Cox, but he ex- the many good deeds of a man presses the opinion that g o v e rn -; now who was the friend of young man-j ment subsidies xvould be better loved his wealth t spent to encourage quality cot- hood and who only for the good he could do! ton production improved with it. methods. farm er and is R E B E L S REO RG A N IZE M OSES S E R V I C E S HELD 31— ( I N S ) — The S T . J E A N DE LUZ, FR A N C E , Ja n . Spanish Nationalist regime was reorgan­ ized today, according to dispatch­ es received here. Generalissimo Francisco Franco was named Min­ i s t e r o f War, Vice-Admiral Cer- vera Minister o f Marine, and Gen­ eral Kindelan A ir Minister. Funeral services were held in Burnet Sunday for Carter Moses, uncle o f Mrs. Burt Dyke o f Aus­ tin. He was killed instantly when his automobile went o f f a bridge on the outskirts of Burnet as he was returning to Bertram from the Burnet County President’s Ball at Marble Falls. increased now be checked from and fibers e(j to that room, which lu a h English I reading books will protesting, return- Grew informed the Japanese gov- already eminent that the Allison incident uot an isolated case, but repre- and The sents but one of, and cannot be room is open from 8 to I o’clock dissociated from, a series of cases irregular entry of American in the morning, 2 to 5 in the af- of See A PO LO G IES, Page 7. ternoon, and 7 to IO at night. anthropology government, Ambassador economics, books. Faculty Books In By Feb. 12 The popular reading shelf will expanded to include the space previously occupied by th« freshman reading shelf at the sec­ ond floor loan desk. U. T. Increases 9,077 Since 1883 There are more than two times as many students registered in one history lecture section today as were enrolled in the entire Uni­ versity during the first long ses­ sion in 1883-84. letter today Faculty members wil! he that re­ minded by li­ brary book? checked out to thorn are to be returned to the Univer­ sity Library before February 12, Donald Coney, said Monday. librarian. :lLast Waco U. Hall To Be Razed - ter the from Librarian Special to Th* Daily Texan Each teacher will receive a let­ to- . day or tomorrow. The Library will ACO, Ja n . J I Contract na? ; recharg e the bqoks which faculty been let by Baylor I Diversity for niembers wish to retain. Books the razing of Cowden Hall, the s^a m ped f or return afte r Decem- last building of old Waco Umver- h n 1937> need not be brought sity. The hall, built in 1>75, i s ; jn now In a ,.cordanc„ with a new ruj, no longer safe, so Baylor will tear it down and use the brick ane tim- Pn(jorsed early in November ber on its own campus. No plans by the Library committee of the have been made for the plot that. Qguerel Faculty, books will al- ways be returned near the end of will be left vacant. Pulling down the old building the first or the beginning of the I will disturb old ghosts, the calf that second semester of each long ses- , . , During the fifty-four years that ,v , have elapsed since that time, t h . U , d o{ exhaustion a fte r some atu- i .ion. increase has totaled 9,077. enrollment the first year was 221 students. . jDrs. Kratz, Cox, Klotz To Talk Picture To Show Danger O f Disease W h e n t h e s y p h i l i t i c o u g o r his h s i n t o m d * , s n e e z e s h a n d , «. m e d i a t e l y h a n d , w „ h a . m . . jone, p o » s ! t r a n s f e r o f s y p h i l i s g e r m p l a c e . t a k e s is c o n - S y p h i l i s t r a c t e d i n n o ­ c e n t l y b y 5 0 p e r i ts v i c ­ c e n t o f a c t i m s c o r d i n g s t a t e a n d f e d e r a l h e a l t h a u t h o r ­ i t i e s . T h e s e t h r e e i l l u s t r a ­ p o s e d t i o n s t he w a y t o p o s s i b l e s y p h i l i s t o d a y , t o p o i n t i n e c t i o n , !m* I mediately a ftr . h i k e . 9 0 r , d * 5 o'clock t he | „ „ , y p b i l i , H < a , t h D An open forum between audi­ ence and speaker will be held im- the MICA-spon- t m e n t a . 7 ; 3 0 in Hogg Memorial Audi- a t- n - torium, Dr. F. to. k ratz, P. A. United States Surgeon with th * Texas State Health Department, -aid last night. r» l Dr. Kratz will lecture on t h * it is being shown. picture while He endorsed the open forum as a means of answering any questions on syphilis that may still be in the minds o f students after the picture is shown. m a y Dr. George W. Cox, head o f the State Department o f Health, will make a short talk on syphilis L. before the picture. Dr. H. i n n o c e n t Riot*, assistant physician of tho University Health Service, said last night that he will make th * introduction of the speakers in­ stead of Dr. Jo e Gilbert, director of the Health Service. Dr. Gilbert will be unable to attend the meet­ ing because of a surgeons* meet­ ing in San Antonio tonight. Governor Ja m es V. Allred and Dr. Gilbert commended the show­ ing of such a film in statements S aturday night. Governor Allred telephoned long distance to en­ dorse the movement, The lecture will start promptly at 7 :30 o’clock and will end short* j ly a fte r 8 o’clock, thus causing no conflict with the basketball gam e wlich 8:15 scheduled o'clock, Sydney Reagan, president fo r is I of MICA, reported. will be seriously The seating capacity probably if I prior indications are correct, R e a ­ gan said. He advised coming early in order to get seats. Austin men, students, J as well as University overtaxed have been invited to attend. Due to a large number of in- I quines about the film by women students, the possibility of show­ ing the same picture at a later date for women was indicated last night by Reagan. Plans are being made for a meeting of all key men in MICA Wednesday night for th * purpose of deciding on a possible re showing of the picture, Reagan j said. I An explanation of the wide pre­ valence of syphilis begins the mov- ing picture, Dr. Kratz said. Then it is pointed out why no one is ) immune from the disease. | The many methods o f contract­ ing syphilis are explained in sev­ eral scenes. The fact that anyone can contract the disease unknow- in hundreds of different mgly ys is emphasized. Methods of preventing the con­ tacting of syphilis will be illus­ ive FORUM. Pak-p 7. Syphilis Tests Begin At G.W .U. the Voluntary Wassermann testa by university doctors will begin today at George Washington Uni­ versity as part of school’* drive against syphilis. The num­ ber of probable volunteer* was unpredictable, Howard Ennes, edi­ tor o f the Hatchet and one of the sponsors o f the drive, said in a telegram Pitts­ burgh, in a similar drive, had more than one thousand. to the Texan. . . f i l t h y * o rn e- . by a c c i ­ t i m e * i n f e c t i o n d e n t a l . . . f r o m * a y * t o w e l * , ” S u r g e o n C . n . r . l P a r r a n , T h o m a * M . D . , t r a c i n g in I t h e » o u r c e * o f in- 1 f e c t i o n . T h e a u * S h a d o w j t h o r o f o n t he L a n d , w h o c i t e * U n i t e d S t a t e * P u b I i c S e r v i c e H e a l t h s t a t i s t i c s t o e s t i ­ t h a t h a l f m a t e j o f s y p h i l i s i n n o ­ I c a s e s a c q u i r e d , c e n t l y i n f e c t i o n l i s t s f r o m t a i n t ­ t o w e l a * o n e e d .pause i n n o ­ f o r c e n t a c q u i s i t i o n o f t he d i s e a s e . a r e t h e t he EYES O F TE X A S * * * * * * Campus News As Seen By JOE BELDEN ............ ...— 'JL T H E F A L L TERM is over and the spring term is slow in getting started. Meanwhile, now that leisure time is free for a day or so, a good pastime is to go exploring Austin. For example, did you know that English students in a summer session of the University not long ago had bought the old wooden bed in which O. Henry used to sleep when he lived here and put. it back in his former home on E a st Fifth S treet? The good woman who shows you around the home said the students had been told the bed, which had been removed from the place, was for sale. So they pitched in their quarters, purchased it, and put it back where it be­ longed. Since 1888 there has been a increase with the excep­ steady tion o f the long session in 1917- There are other places here that perhaps you have not seen. Have 1918, when the World \N ar occa- The next three years the en­ rollment failed to increase and the fourth year saw the addition of only five students to the total number above the first year. In the fifth year, when there was an increase o f t h e school was acknowledged to be a success. twenty-eight, you climbed up the winding stairs in the Elisabet Ney Studio? Have | stoned a slight ^ roP- you seen the T e x a s relics in the Old Land Office Building? Have you seen the campus from the Capitol dome? Or have you been U}) t0 M A R IN ES WITHDRAWN J * n. the Wrenn Collection in the Library to find out about the priceless first editions? Or to the Latin-American Collection to see the 300- year-old Spanish manuscripts? Try it, JL , T O D A Y’S N A M E— Pharmacy Assemblyman— lives a t B racken ­ ridge Hospital, where he takes care of the drutr room— B I L L WOODS o f Ballinger. ie dents of nearly three score years When the Library checked the ago hitched it to the school bell j faculty it was for a prank; the horse that three found that six volumes had been boys wrangled into Professor Al- kept out from eleven bert B o ge ss’s classroom, for which years. There were 212 volumes they were expelled a week before which had been out fo r a year or graduation. in October, eight to I longer. file Texas Newsman Buried In Dallas s s The building was | J . T. Unicameral Club originally named Maggie Houston Hall after * L a the wife of Sam Houston, but the name was changed when George .Will M e e t l o n ig h t The University Unicameral Club j publishes two Dallas" newspapers* Cowden furnished $20,000 for re- j modeling. Students helped in rais- will meet tonight in Garrison Hall j Lubben, a native of Galveston, ing the $25,000 to build it. A l- 1 a t 7:30 o’clock, offiaers o f the entered journalism with the Gal- yeston News in 1881 and had serv­ though intended fo r a dormitory organization have announced, toward a ^ Gn BeJo newspapers since then. e r young ministers, there were Work of not enough to fill it, so lay stu- one-house for T e x a s --------------------------------- — ____ ’ dents were admitted. Board and and room cost $6 a month. state-wide organization of R A IN E S TO S P E A K “ Parent Education the club will be discussed. A re- the club legislature in the Bi- i t D A LL A S, Jan. 31— ( I N S ) — J Funeral service? were held here and today fo r John Frederick Lubben, have been completed in the of 72, A. H* Belo Corporation, which in correspondence secretary- treasurer forty-three Extension Students Take 7,943 Hours With the object of establishing the tests as a routine part of ail physical examinations at George Washington University, an inten­ sive educational campaign was staged there in November. Poster exhibits, panel discussions by lead- ing medical authorities, and arti- semester hours cjes f r©m Dr. Thomas Parran, Jr ., the United last surgeon general of th* j two years by^ students registered sta te s, and Dr. Raymond A. Von the Je r ic h o assistant surgeon-general, re- were prominent. Ennes courses, recently published biennial port of the Division of Extension reveals. thousand nine hundred Seven Education courses head t h e list in the number of hours in a single course with 2,002 semes­ ter hours of work. Government comes second with 1,243 hours of report The then carried the cam­ paign to the Intercollegiate News­ paper Association of Mid-Atlan­ tic States, a n d literature from the exhibit with him. taking postern Among other large universities offering the tests on a voluntary basis as a regular function of their today ordered W ASHINGTON, 31— ( I N S ) — The American Govern­ ment the Sixth Regiment of Marines, now station­ ed a t Shanghai, withdrawn from Chinese soil and to be transferred to Hawaii February IS. Behind the building stood the port will be given on responses hie” will be Dr. W. Cl Raines’s top- j completed work. old school bell now on Baylor cam- made by some five hundred s t u - 1 ic when he speaks before the Child pus. There was a severe penalty dents recently interviewed by the Study Association a t its meeting were registered for anybody to tamper with although one student a day was it for classes appointed to ring and meals. on the question of unicameralism, sity Baptist Church. Dr. Raines is Those who The student body was found over- an whelmingly in favor of the idea. ‘ Townes Bible Chair. it, Texa Bureau of Student Opinion at IO o’clock today a l t h o Univer- during the two-year period. John C. courses lost credit amounting '312 hours of work. instructor at in the failed the showed that 2o8 ex-service men courses j local health services are Harvard University, the University of Illi- or dropped i nois, the University o f Kansas, to; the University o f Oklahoma, and the University o f New Mexico, P A G E T W O Th a FtVitf CoUrge D aily in the Smith Phone 2-2473 THE B A H T TEXAN* Phone 2-2473 .TUESDAY, EEBRUAPY I, 1938 Eyes O f Southwest Conference On Longhorn B y J O H N D. MCCULLY . a Z S m iFortyMenA n s w e r 1 Spears Injured, Pete: Aids Steer 'New Deal' LlQhT WOFKOUtS out* on the same order will prob-; By C LA R EN C E LA ROCHE T*man Sprats S t if f The eye« of the Southwest Con­ ference will be focused on Greg- i ory Gym tonight when the Uni­ versity’s “new deal” Longhorn basketeers meet Olson’s Terrible Swedes in a tune-up game before | embarking on the final go-round of the 1938 basketball season. Six other clubs, three of them .----- ----------- - q u i t e gravely, l r | W " ’ % A a 'ill be waiting to see just what ^te DYERS 209-11 West Eighth St 1 -, T U E S D A Y , F E B R U A R Y T, 1 9 3 8 Pfi5n« 2-2473——THE D A I L Y T E X A N ’— ^-PKone 2-2473 The First College Daily the South PAGE TURES — Old Doom House Yields Interview, Conceals Mystery faculty, students and Old Doom House, as it is called' still by It is that old house in the stands, the girls’ southwest corner of archery field directly back of the Engineering Building. One o f the oldest struc ture s on those is one of the campus, it '24 and *33; S.M.U. in *35 and ’37. Baylor was the cage cham ­ pion in ’32, and Oklahoma A.&M. (now playing in the Missouri Val­ ley C onference) in ’25. houses that people always say they want to explore at midnight but always seem to avoid after night­ fall. Old Doom House is a very a p p ro p ria te name, as from all in­ dications is cer­ tainly doomed. the old house The house got its n am e be­ cause, fo r m an y years, it was the home o f Ju d g e D. H. Doom and his thro ugh family. Judge Doom th e U niversity pu r­ chased th e old home, and th e name I t was t h a t of Doom has lingered because o f its eerie appearance. The old house was built in the late 1350’s by Matt Raymond and lived there for his family, who many years. L ater the Raymonds rented the house to General W al­ ker, who a t th a t tim e was su p e r­ vising work on the constru ctio n of the new Capitol here. A bout 1892 the house was p urchased by fr o m the Mrs. A m a n d a H o m e heirs of the Raymond estate. It was in this house th a t J u d g e Doom married Mrs. H orn e's d a u g h te r, and it was here t h a t th e y made their home. In 1917 the Legislature a u th o r ­ ized the Board of Regents of the University to purchase th e house and a considerable tract of land adjoining it, thus greatly extend­ ing the University campus. The house was condemned as living quarters. From that tim e on, it has been used for little except as a store room for various school supplies and janitor’s tools. Though neglected, the old house is not averse to publicity and yields a very interesting although not very hospitable interview. The bow-legged posts supporting the porch in fr o n t have become quite worm -eaten, and the entire house seems to have acquired a definite slant toward the east. The vines covering the outside walls make the house a p e rfe c t se tting f o r a j dime ho rror novel, interesting j One room tells an this room time I story. A t one for the center i m ust have been I parties or en tertainm en ts. The * walls have been painted in various colors from time to tim e, most of which now have faded to a d rab g re y or dirty w h ite; b u t close in­ spection reveals the original col­ ors very dimly. There is an old open fireplace a t one end o f the room th a t shows evidence of m any y e a r s of usage. The room seems to be entirely resting in a shroud. The paper has fallen off of the walls in a large sheet, and, except fo r the p a r t held up in the middle tarnished by an e la b o rate b ut chandelier, has draped Itself ova* the room as if to say, “ Do not die- ; t u rh.” the in te rp re t as At a first glance, room across the hall seems to be filled j with queer, wooden, fence-like i constructions that an im aginative I soul might to r tu r e J devices in such a creepy place. It is som ewhat o f a disappointm ent ! to have them turn out to be h u r ­ dles th a t have been stored there while n o t in use by the tra c k team. the room downstairs r e a r o f the house is filled with row upon row of small w ire-cov­ ered cases. These might have con­ tained at one time queer c re a ­ the product o f tu re s th a t were The in I See DOOM HOUSE, P age 6. U. T. Boxers Take Preliminaries In Local Golden Glove Bouts Newell, Barnhart W in By Technical Kayo A s Augasfat, Griesenbeck Draw Byes By V. J. VAN CLEAVE Texan Spor t » St aff ♦---------------------------------------------------- ) , Two U niv ersity boxers in the prelim inaries ; th e ir bouts of th e local golden m e n t last n ig h t in glove to u rn a - C £>1 / o r | l . L C VAI { * the Austin ^ “ V f ? F l T n O # Y T * v » i won A r l / a n c a c S a o L c ’ . j ■ lig h t and m«x- Basketball Title Atj o e B a rn h a rt, . g Kr « , i v , i F 0 RT WORTH, Ja n , 3 1— " C h .m - r a r i a n c d but vary took h i. fig h t by a U c h n ic .l pi0B, don>t r, pM t.. wi„ stand up knock-out in th e third round. T e ftg g w ar.c r v f o r Southwest Con* redbead c aught the fancy of th e ference house, and won plause as well as vociferous aP” I le th a l] the fight. fo „ t bail. but n o t for has- k * T * jp e tte d f o u r Jo hn Newell, popular T he U niversity of A rkansas re- the cage times f o r five it tecnnica| cham pionship, w inning boxer, also won by a kayo, his com ing rn the s e c o n d : consecutive ye«r» in 1926-30, in­ ro u n d . His experience and train- ctogivt_ However, the R azorb ack, for his op- are ^dp o niy te a m ever to re p e a t ing u e r e | for the ehampion^hip in the his- po n e n t, and he won easily. th e present conference to ry of The bouts consisted o f tw o-m inute in (1924 was A u g u sta l and J a c k Griesenbeck, which the p r e s e n t seven members the only o th e r U. T. Oklahoma fig hters, competed, drew byes. T hey will fight in t h e j A.&M. did not w ithdraw until the semi-finals 8 at the a thletic club. to be held F e b r u a r y 1925 season). th re e less. J o e first season rou nd s or t o o much although the , . „ , J A rkansas has carried off the tim es d u rin g , basketball flag six thosp 1 { y e a rs— *26, '27, ’28, ’29, M att Martinez, local newsboy, in the finals of the lightweight di - 1 > 3 0 anc[ gg vision. M artinez won the final fis- tic flu rry of the evening w hen he 7 X X - Tex** and s.M .li. have took • decision over W ilbur R i c h - I “ h " ° .n f ,,” H ' 1>?e ,?.o n T tw ,ce: . r d , by v irtu e of a knock-down l -C.k. in ’a i a n d 34; T e x . ,_ i n blow landed in the first round. J Richards cam e back the U k e the final round, landing n u - - s e n t Joseph one way m erous overhand rights, b u t they m outh-guard another, lacked the steam to put M artinez out. jaw which his to straight rig ht stron g „ fT and to . The highlight of the came when Ramon Garcia knock- he ed out William Joseph in ends. Garcia landed a George Slining, fo rm e r boxer at N o rthw estern University, showed evening the best form of the night when over third took a technical kayo 32 sec- Raymond O tting terrific round. in the A ug ustal will probably Scarbrough's M en's Store • D I R E C T E N T R A N C E S • C o ld ll vat h o r So r i n g s ! Limited Group! Men's $17.95, $19.75 and S25.00 O’COATS Full Belt* Tweeds Brown* H alf Belt* Cheviots Raglans Fleeces G ray s Plaids Reversible* Mixtures Checks S c a r h r n y g h ’s — S e c o n d F l a n r Z ipper front sports back models were originally $7.95. Leather Jackets *6.95 Scarbrough & Sons S e a r h r o v g b ' s — S e r o n d F l o o r th at fo r a Li m i t e d TIME ONLY ANTHONY ADVERSE HERVEY ALLEN Scarbrough & Sons How c a n you CUT S c h o o l C o s t s T h i s Y e a r n W cM A im i one. axmL sou! Hun I our Books <""> Supplies a t the C O - O P SAVE 40 I sea Te xts Solti ut 110% of the New Book P rice The C o - O p ' s policy is to sell all used books at 6 0 % o f th® new price and pay 5 0 7 o back at the end o f school. This policy means that the student purchasing a new book originally selling for $2.00 m ay buy that book fo r $1.20, and m ay sell it at the end of the sem ester or year (if it is to be used here again) for $1.00. In other words the cost of using a $2.00 book fo r a semester or year will be O N L Y twenty centi. UNIVERSITY CO-OP THE STUDENTS’ O W N STORE I 1 A ITE T O T O •rn , r t'm f c w t # ? * p a ir? h r n iftmiK P H o n # 2 - 2 4 T 8 - ^ - T H E T V *T L T T E X X W — - Y l f i m # 2 - 2 4 7 * t u e s d a y , t t t o t a k t i , l a s s Sixes and Sevens B y JO H N R, FR A N C H E Y Today’s Cross W ord Puzzle L G N G L A N G E ' L E T T E E X Suggestions S ir: For som e tim e th ere h ave been several th in gs on which I should lik e to sa y a word, so I shall just p u t them ail in one le tte r . lik e in sta n ce, I should ( I ) Could not eith er th e T exan or, p refera b ly , th e A ustin A m er­ som e sort of q uestions and an sw ers colum n on tr a ffic police? ican , ru n q u e stio n s, perhaps in collaboration w ith the A ustin tr a ffic F o r know w ho has the right o f way 0f whert th e E le v e n th S treet it w ill be n orth -sou th t r a f fic : those com ing s|mp]y unbearable. Could n ot this n o n i and m aking a le ft turn, or g iv e n a coat o f dark green th ose com in g out o f the capito* pBjn t, or som e other color which so g rou n d s. - ..■ Library B uilding, and th e ligh t on C ongress at gU re WM very hgrd on th# eyes w ould not r e fle c t j u ]y nnd A u gu st is green for the to ===r====r== ligh t the j n a ( 2 ) A s has already been m en- painfully? le x a n ed itorial, tr e f- tin n ed in ( 4 ) S om eone m ight be com m is­ c e ligh ts are badly needed on the ajoned ^ se]j or g,jve aw ay cough th e tw o dead ends p rogram s. S tr e e t, at Lavaca and Guadalupe, C om m unity C oncert (3 ) On one o f our recent sunny For som e regson raogt Coughtrg i nvarja biy COme unprepared, thu s and em barrass- w in te r days I w alked across that g r e a t exp an se o f cem en t in fron t an n oyin g others o f N in eteen th dropS or ch ew in g gum at 77)#? Poet s Release POEM TO PI PH I P R IN C E SS S ara, Sara, H o ly T error To th e heart o f m an, C om e back to m y arm s again I f your h eart says y o u can , S ad ie, S adie, p retty lad y I’ll try hard to p lease, F or you I’d g iv e up cigarette* Or sail the seven sen*. S a lly , S a lly , do n ot d ally, And, thou gh it be trite, IMI tell you fo r the h u n d red th tim e T h at I love you , tpnight. LO C H IN V A R , C lass of *41 ing th em selv es. fin e Idea. B u t w hy should a a m ovie such as w ill be show n under th e au sp ices o f th e M ICA be re­ stricted to the m en? D o n ’t w om en n eed to p rotect th em selv es ju st as m uch as m en , i f n ot more so? T h ere seem s to be som e sen tim en t th a t w om en should be kep t from th in gs, th e k now ledge o f lurking, if th e d anger syp hilis is an ex cellen t th in g, and should w e not be w arned a« w ell? to show m ovies on the su b jec t is W h y Not W om en? Sir: I thin k th a t the drive again st b u t such is A. W. E. B. Mr*. G e o r g e E . H u r t a t t h e b a r n d a n c e ? A n d the o t h e r * — well, t h e y w e r e a l l swell . T h e b a r n i d e a is a g o o d o n e . S e l ­ d a n c e l i t e r ­ t h a t e v e r y o n e d o m a l l y “ l e t s d o w n t h e i r h a i r ” a n d ha* a b i g t i m e like t h a t . O f t e n ­ e r w o u l d b e b e t t e r . is it som ething, Sue Joe R oberts was one o f th e prize-w inn ers, too. Som ebody m ade th is rem ark w hen her award w as an n o u n ced : “ Gosh, sh e ’s a l­ isn ’t w ays w in n in g she?" Y es, she won a prize or so o n h er Big A pp lin g ab ility. She “ le t ’s down h er h air” q u ite fre­ q u e n tly — -?uch a# in “ Tim e S tag­ g ers O n ”— and ha# a darn good tim e, I b eteha. If more people w ould "let it dow n” more people w ould have a good tim e. the on ly A nd, by the w ay. that was one o f thin gs adm irable I e v e r fou n d ab out the Big A pple— stu d e n ts in th eir m adn ess to “sh in e,” etc. N o, J an e, I still p ersonally d o n ’t like to do it. forgot every th in g • * • I T h e p e r s o n r a t h e r h a d w a t c h do t h e Bi g A p p l e waa T h e r e a t D e a n . S h e h a d a s u b t l e w a y o f s h i n i n g t h a t m a d e it look n o t so m u c h “ s h i n i n g ” a s it w a s t h a t ’* b e i n g — we l l , j u s t “ c u t e . ” all. A n d I h a v e s ee n “ t r u c k i n ’ on d o w n ” is H e l e n R a m s e y a n d W a l t e r L a R u e H u d l o w . • t h e c u t e s t c o u p l e U s poor people who are som e­ tim es called colum nist? h ave com* in for a little rough ribbing lately. U nder “ P u b licity H ou n d s” of M ister R obert E n gel- k in g ’s current issue o f rho Texas R an ger, one o f the verses reads: “ A lso, w hen I read som e col­ t itle the M um ble, m um ble I d o n ’t blam e h im — I’d mumble .” . . m um ble o ff, too. QI is terrific. Parts in th* Spring The French Line is on our trail and the tr a ffic T h ey w ant us to v isit P aris— P aris in the spring. T h ey fe e l we should get. to know “ ia douce F ra n ce” 7 0 b etter. In fa c t they are d elu gin g us w ith p ictu res U I D N U N C By Harry Q uia U* T S L A D IE S and g en tlem en w ill stro ll into tb s U n iv ersity ’* ballroom in tb s Texa* I nien Fnturdav aftern oon , Fa bro ary 12, to hear, w atch, do, and eat w hile Jan Garber playa a font-hour t«* dance. D ropping the charge from the naua $ 4.50 to $ 3.50 a cop p le, th e crowd w ill be lim ited to 500 pairs o f dancer*. Sw ank, o f cou rse, will accom pany th e revelry. A t the tea tim e in term ission drinks w ill be served to attender*. U nlike previous d am an te, how ever, th ere w ill be no table? to clu tte r the floor and more room w ill be le ft for dancing* The m usic ta, o f cou rse, obviously too good to draw our com m on ta. A nd so, con gratu lations to our e ffic ie n t, hard-w orking U nion m anager, C harles Zivley, not on ly fo r providing this good d ance, but fo r the other pleasu res he adds, through his w ell-en joyed position in our co lleg e life. He is a good erg. # it w on ’t Se ftg the years go cr. W / I T H R EG U L A R G erm an-goere g e ttin g few er W long until U . T. stu d en ts, like those at other educational in- g tttution s, w ill have to sta r t p ayin g a com pulsory U nion fee . W ith little oth er incom e it would be o n ly fa ir fo r each stu d en t to have to pay his own ama l share o r the upkeep o f th e Cam pus C ountry J0 0l * Club. And w ithou t doub t the fe e w ill be returned ten fold lf Mr. Z ivley8* p resen t plans go through fo r additional they u su ally do. fo r student*— and fa c ilitie s . W hen you drink tw o cups o f c o f f e e the Chuck W agon the re fill calls fo r * tax of on ly S cent# instead o f th e usua 5. in Sort o f hate bo see M ack R obertson leave school. He has been w ritin g an 8 A. M. colum n for th e T exan about as lon g as w e can re rn err; ber the palier. Colum nar id eas o fte n run low and keep in g g oin g alm ost M clntirishly wa? one o f Mack's good points. The little red-headed colum n fa th e r ss o ff fo r a school in A rkansas that sen t it# call out to him via a featu re story in E squ ire. And he ju st cou ld n ’t resist the b eau tifu l words. M a r y k a t h e r i n e ■ bac k to school et th to A u stin though and sh* to the school sinew sh e ' Crown City. U N D E R W O O D w on ’t be sr. H er fam ily is m oving w on't be com p letely lost rill st ll grace the V iolet T here ie still m uch fa scin a tio n about w atching a sign p ainter. C ollege kids, who we m ight euppose w ould be d evelop ed past that sta g e, co n gregate around th* fe llo w who d ecorates the Chuck W agon blackboard w ith m enus and p retty colored figures. T h ey ar* as open-m outhed and b ig-eyed as th eh: grade school brothers o f a you n ger gen eration . B u t d on ’t T exan s say gram m ar school in stead o f grad# school* F or th* fir st tim # in year* w» have a lon gin g fo r a piece o f that con fection the grocer used to call cream can d y and hand ou t gratis to us when w e w ent with our '"ather-—as alw ays— w hen be le ft to pay the gen ial d isp e n se r st the fo o d em porium . • We fee l p retty com p lim en tary today. There is not much bo do w hen w e are in th is nice m ood S o, D orothy Buck, eg is a e x c ep t say nice th in g - good kid. One o f th e m ost unp utonish peop le we have se e n around th is ce n te r o f ca m o u fla g e s, she d oes w hat sh e p le a d s , sa y s w hat she p lea ses, act# as she please*, and p lease*. • • SOM ETIM E w hen we ar# short o f th :g- to do and ‘h a t’s seldom en o u g h , w e in ten d to check up on the list o f girls from B eaum on t Seem s each so r o rity g e ts it# sh a re and few o f them ever pledge th e sam e club. M ust be lot# o f fu n to be a rushee dow n th ere. Th#> little o n e-eyed m an h as been p erfectly c o n te n t w ith ou t an y m ore o f a nam e than that. U n til Jim m y N ew m an , W ayne Sm ith, Mary Lou S te w a r t, and Exeer. T hiele raid he should have to m e a p p ella tio n , he u ttered n o t one word o f d is­ sa tis fa c tio n . N ow , w hat -ar we do but ram* r rn? A nd w e h a v en ’t an idea. E d ito r ia l o f' cos, Journaliem Building 186, ICI, a n d D e p a rtm e n t/—J e u m ali* m reb # I ST I*. C irc u la tio n and i t s B u ild in g IO#. Phone Z-24'3. P rinted by th# r n o o r s i r « SUBSCRIPT IGK K *• TES f u ,»« A C Wright, manager. I Month „ I Ser-er'er • 4 % nan. IL I Bean cetera <9 mo ; »„. ■...i . I .IO J .TS S.OO > .18 2,SI 4.88 By Carr #r By Mal! , U C F R E S K N T E i N A TIOS A L a Ii V EET IS IS G N a t i o n a l n a v * m s m g 5 e rv i c e , m c . College P ublishers R ep resen ta tiv e 420 YORK, N.V • SAN FRANCISCO bit W ANGELES MA DISC! - BGSTO C, BY C H IC AGC ST AF F ( 'HIS ll ’SU E N IG H T ED ITO R H ead C op yread *r A s s i s t a n t # Jean Ph pp* Jam#? John Wagne**, H a w N ight S o cie ty K ii tor .................. A ssista n t N igh t S ports E d ito r ...... A ssistan t# . ..... \ p. Bi l o N ight A a lista I lean© Nettie I ' e m Ie F re!;k VV ;U-> Jack I f rant v A lf > R R IS J argan ...Erne! n, Jarl , J. R 'd ar ga ret P ie r. I,, D A V IS Bo wilds Sharpe, Do ,g a*, Palm . B ryson I *e - k i n s Roche. H icker lian -on H< Dorothy j ____ Dona J am es VV VV ii I uun W einer B attel! Bt rat* ha ti R. Palm d A ilk# n illiao ¥■ n o f thi? bell* patrie. au p rintem ps.” spring. •‘T e n e t a P aris.” we are b ein g urged, “ Paris W e want no part o f Paris, p articu larly in th* W hen the flush o f youth wa# y e t on our cheek*, we g o t our fill of Paris, E ven th e backward glan ce is enough to m ake u s w ince. • It w as a sw ee t n igh t in May w hen la st we visited Paris. Our pocket# w ere laden w ith g o ld , the b en i­ son o f P u litzer jou rn alist H. R. K nickerbocker who lik es Texan* and is the friend o f all yo u n g ad ven ­ turers. “ Take th is,” he said, “ and v isit P aris and blow y o u rse lf to a large holiday. And think o f K nick,” Our bag? w ere no *ooner u np ack ed than we sailed out o f our h otel, out p a st the L ouvre and down th e boulevard. To show th e good Parisian* that we had been there b efo re and appreciated them , we struck up “ La M a rseillaise” in our fa n ­ ciest w histle. L ovingly w e stroked our w allet, brim m ing fu ll w ith F rench fran cs. For once we w ere in Paris w ith m oney, a fo rtu n e in fran cs, a hundred dollars, alm ost. Of a sudden a car pulled over, a little sport i roen "Good even in g," said * sin u ou s v oice reeking w ith accent, “ Do you have t lig h t? ” W• did and w « gave it to her from a n ifty Cigarette ligh ter good ole Knick had given us. We showered her w ith som e F ren ch we had learned, “ Oh what a fin e a c c e n t !" she purred. “ W ell, I w ou ld n ’t say th a t? ” 4 Oh but I do. P erhaps you are, a h ow -vou-say, lin g u ist!” ^ e looked into her deep , in digo ey e s and pro­ tested — very fe e b ly . “ No m ad em oiselle,” ‘ M a g r . f i ie !” "Thank you v ery m uch.” H e took an oth er look. She was p erfectly in ­ candescent. “ Your fir st trip, m on sieu r?” “ Oui, m ad em oiselle.” ‘ Quel be; a c c e - * !” “ I f it r e a lly ? ” “ Y ou m ust le t m e show you Pan*. I have, how- y ou -say, un* grande passion fo r A m ericans." It happened j u s t like th a t and b efore you could ch a n t “ H eaven help m*” we w ere on our w ay to see Paris, P aris in the spring. “ P erhaps w e have b etter if we have a luck drink first," she said, a# we ch u gged along, " P lease do," w e said, fe e lin g in our pocket. The w a llet w as still with us. She pulled up in fron t c f a c a fe or. a side street. Like m agic an a tten d a n t w hisked her car o f f. I fo llo w ed her into “Le Chat Gris” very tim idly. The head w aiter was too hum ble. “A llo," he said to me in very G allic E nglish. H e clapped h is hands and a w aiter appeared. " \ o u r regu lar p lace, m a’m aelle?” “ Oui." D ow n sta irs we w ent. Sh* laughed m errily as we d escen ded. Som ehow I wa# reminded o f a line in V irgil, which my pony inform ed me m eant, “ Easy is the d escen t to H e ll.” A nd th ere we w ere, sittin g in a little room w ith a chic tab le and s o f t ligh ts and a syb aritic divan, .va cr pulled out h.-« order but no chairs, bo >k. I he I nodded. She ordered a QUART. “ Do you have cig a rettes? ” she pursued. I didn't It developed th a i she had fo rg o tte n to e a t. In Em ily Post fashion we urged her to do som eth in g about it.. She w as w illing. The wa ter put her down for a seven -cou rse special. So she ordered a p ackage of fifty . # A rter he Budder :y she rem em l er*d it wa# her m other - birthday, The w aiter recom m ended a sp ecia l cake to b*> baked, w hile we w aited. He put her dow n for one that raid "mama, ma ch er e” in pink fro stin g left with our d ea th w arrant, Mims turned to us. She said she alw ays liked blonds. In fact, she knew on e nam ed A lb ert who looked som e­ lon ger do. Her thing tem perature was clim b in g she vow ed. She m ussed up our hair to prove it. like m e. VV p did but no T he wait/er can e in w ith his cargo, all but the cake, He p resen ted us w ith a b ill, w ith fig u r e s that looked as though Mr, R oosevelt w ere p u tterin g around w ith a W .P.A . p roject. On th e bill there v.a* an item of 250 francs for ?ne u*e o f the p rivate salon. I o u can ’t do that to m e,” we p ro tested , a fte r doinc Fora*- m er ta I fig u r in g o u t the bib sr A m erican addition. He looked over at looked us silen tly , sud we su dd en ly ob served he ik< a boxer • a very good one logarithm s and VV e paid out all th e m oney w e had— a1! but f f-rty franc? Mimi su g g e ste d we giv e th at to the We did. w aiter for a “ Now purred Mi.m i,” a fte r he had le ft, “ w* ar* aion' VV p walked the forty blocks to th# hotel. WG cursed <*ur flare for French and th# professor who taught u* what twelve word* we know. The next moi rung a f 'cr a pawning our repor­ torial portable, we checked out, bound for the boa’ a* < herbourg, A t the Clare St. Lazars we spotted Ro ta ria ti She had a good old Pennsylvania Babbit Mims n tow ready to show him the town. W * r o n e d with Homeric la u g h te r. No, thank you, we are not interested in seeing I a> • Not even in the spring, if you don’t mind, you tycoons o f the French Line. 11 o slamming the door. “ You mean YOU a re, said ungallantly, I 2 £> 6 IO ll 3 i th 13 I I a I w , ta n Ti 19 2 2 2 3 %2H 2 6 %2 7 %2 3 SO 79 3 i 2 5 7 7 7 / / / / / a< 3 2 3 3 3 H 3 5 /V V 3 6 3 S 3 9 Y s s H2 I Ht> y y . S s / R 9 HS 5 0 5 1 v / y HO / / a H 3 / / ' / 5 2 5 5 W A/ / / / A A // 12 $3 . 3 7 HI HH H S 5 $ //VS SH r n 37— leave out 89— placed 40— domestic anim al 41— 100,000 rupee* 42— flatter 48— dance step 44—pronoun 45—aport 46— danger 48— subdivi­ sion of the con­ ste lla ­ tion A rgo 50— preposi­ tion. 62— egg* 53— Dutch cheese 54— on the summit 56— make the sound of the cat VERTICAL 1— jagged cliff 2— contain­ ing no liquid I — pertain­ ing to punish­ ment 4— seat in church 5— above 6— keep 7— absorb knowledge 8— salt 5—-chopping tool 10— bishop's head­ dress 11—fold of cloth 16— printer's measure 18— at home 21—Greek god of love 22—again 23— mineral spring 24— narrative poem 25—nautical term 27—sin gle object 28—stepped upon 30— pertain­ ing to the ear day’s puzzle I— Herewith ie the solution to yester- SI—.journey . . . i- c A L L W s e A rn S T I R o L I O A c T L A c E D E B T rn A T H £ R E D A C E 32—elusive 33— permit 35—special ability 37—kind of tree 38— married 39— sorceress 40— shot in r/A AL Si E R rVri £ P O S E s T % Ay Mti R A T n billiards £ R I rn A G A M A £ R a N O T I C E % S T A T U E W A o E rn c O N rn A & E N T TO-* I ft A N A T o R p E A T T H E Or* N A P R A S E O R A T O R I OAffO I V A A T £ N E V E D A W E D rn L Y R E ©aonian*. l i l t . ar Eta* tatar* # 8 rn 41 et ta, lac. 5 1 — t o w a r d s custom 49— note of the scale A £ 42—father 43— H e b r e w l e t t e r 4 5 — h e r d of whale? 46— explosive sound 47—binding HORIZONTAL I—spigot 4— ripple 8—-coarse hominy 12— number 13— sword 14— angle be­ tween a branch and its axis 15— rejuve­ nate 17— rear ap­ pendage 15— symbol for tel­ lurium 2d— engine of war 21—obtain 22—con stel­ lation 28— san 24— Ireland 25—d ill 26— Greek letter 27— preposi­ tion 28— definite article 29— beautiful youth of m ythology SI— implement for spread­ ing mortar 84— involun­ tary tw itch­ ing 86— system of weight* 88— brother o f O d in Patterings on the Peripatus By P A T D A N IE L S N e, O scar, Robert B u m s didn’t o f his C hristm as m arriage. Any- get an an iw er w hen be w rote “ T o th e question fo llo w s: u m n ists’ A Field M ouse." I I f r n * • » en * of t h o * **n - Urmi tie rn en who asked the n ew est ad dition into th e ranks o f D rag w a it­ resses— this one is a blonde, cu te — for a date Satu rd ay night and didn’t ge* it, don’t fe e l all alone. By 7 :3 went to Dabs* to visit This type of application ha* been I his family when he completed his Retiring officer! of the council are Jake Pickle, president; Bry­ son Martin, vice-president; Leach, s e c r e t a r y ; George McClesky, treasurer; Herbert Petry, ser­ geant-at-arms; and P at Daniels, publicity director. “-------------------- sp mmm r n I l lNap ■ M W W termed the “ internship of m inis-1 exams Saturday. tr y ” by Edward Baylesi, prest- dent of the Seminary's Student Association. “ The system brings results,” he said “because the boy who is to conduct the service is al­ lowed to select his own subject, prepare restrictions, and deliver it before visitors, fac­ ulty members, and fellow stud­ ents.” it without wmmum N in a M u r p h e y will be D u c h e ss o f Fort Sam H o u s to n f o r th e c o u r t o f K in g F r iv o l o u s X X I at the co ro n a tio n ball, M arch I , tho c lim a x in g e v e n t o f G a l v e s t o n ’s a n n u a l Mardi Gras c e le b r a tio n . Miss M u rp h ey , d a u g h t e r o f C o lo n e l and Mrs. G. D. M u r p h e y o f S e n in E n g lis h . Sh e A n to n io , is a j u n i o r in th e U n iv e r s i t y , m a jo rin g is a m e m b e r o f Z eta T a u A lp h a sorority, has serv ed in o f f i c e s o f e r f r e s h m a n a n d so p h o m o r e c la s se s, is a m em b er o f S id n e y L a n ie r L ite r a r y S o c ie t y , a n d b e lo n g s to B o w and A rrow . .^University Student Is Married lo A .& M . Graduate Friday A fter the guests leave, the fac­ ulty members and students give a criticism of the sermon deliv­ ered. Rotation in alphabetical or der i.« followed until each ha^ con­ ducted one period of worship. Many of the members cf the the University. Seminary attend Faculty members include the Rev. T. W. Currie, the Rev. S. S. Joe- * kel, the Rev. R. F. Gribble, the ; Rqv. George Summer, and the Rev. R. D. Cambell. There is a special department the school for Mexican s t u - 1 to do religious I in the Rio Grande Valley Y ou’ll W ait Another Year for Value® Like These! All China including Spade-Rosenthal— Dresden— Minton— and many other makes at unheard of prices. Pictures — Furniture — Crystai W are— Lamps— Tables— Art Objects and Hun­ dreds of Gifts. Many below purchase price. today— Gone Tomorrow— T h a t’s the way things ars snapped up at our sales by quality-hungry women. At Here J o s e p l i i n e S F o p s 108-110 W. loth Josephine Pendleton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Willis and I in University student, became the bride of Mack C. Stallings, formerly dents who expect of Bowie and a graduate of Texas A.&M, C ollege, Friday night a t work 7 :30 o’clock at St. David’* Episcopal Church. The Rev. James S. Ior Mexico. Allen officiated. ♦ -------------- -—•— , Following the ceremony th*. south Texas, afte r which couple left for a short trip to | be at 307 West Twelfth Street. I semesters. ---------------- I — --------~-:— they will New Orleans T o n y T o u c h s t o n e ha s gone to for a visit between: :— Wedding Plans For Helen Sharp j^Q CtlQDGfOn ^ ^ _ jn ^ And Thomas Anderson Made Completed plans were recently announced for the wedding of ; Miss Helen Sharp to Thomas D. Anderson. The wedding will be solemnized Monday, February 21, at 8 o’clock at the First Methodist '’hurch, with the Rev. Virgil H. Fisher officiating. A reception is planned following the ceremony at the home of bel bride’s parents, Judge a n d t irs. John H. Sharp, 1108 Colo- Bride-To-Be ado. Boy Meets Date, But Under Guard “ Imagine having a date with­ out a chaperone tagging along!” That was the puzzled statement of le o n a r d Del Monte, student in the University from Havana, Cuba. Del Monte ii studying busi­ ness administration and is pre­ paring to enter business with his father who t h e Havana branch of In tern a-1 tional Telephone and Telegraph' Company. is manager of the In Havana, Del Monte said, a young Cuban must have a chap­ eron along when he takes a girl j to a dance, a motion picture, or I a night club. Boys and girls sit together when they go to a m o-; tion picture, but usually there is a chaperon near. “ However,” Del Monte added, j “ the chaperon is often lost when entering the show.” Motion pictures are received in Havana about two months after being shown in the United States. : They have English sound tracks, j but under the pictures are sub­ titles in Spanish. Although Cubans like the Marx brothers, the Ritz brothers, and other comedians, wild west pictures are not pop love scenes ular, and American are n o t torrid enough the for Cuban temperament, the student said. to “ Everyone goes the Yacht I Club from 5 till 7:30 o’clock to talk and swim. This is called the 'pepillar.’ I t is usually on these that dates are made occasions The dates start a t 10:30 or l l o'clock at night and about 4 o’clock in the morning,” Del Monte declared. last unt in the The dates are met at the club. Sometimes a boy will escort his girl to a dance in the family car with a chaperon back the girls usually are seat, but driven to the dance by the chauf­ feur in a family car, he explained. Because of the watch? ll chap­ erons, Cuban girls seldom smoke or drink, Del Monte ^aid, adding: “ It can be arranged, but it de­ pends on the agility of the boy. thing—girls never And another There are no more th n ten women driv­ ers in the city.” there Del Monte said American games are popular among the men, but girls do not take part in sports as much a* they do in the United States. Miss Sharp received a bache­ lor of arts degree in English from the University last June. While iller© she was a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority, Ownooch, N.U.T.T., Ashbel Literary Society, Alpha Kappa Delta, and Alpha Lambda a Bluebonnet Delta. She was Belle the 1933 Cactus and in Duchess of Austin to the Battle in of Flowers in San Antonio 193d. Many parties have been given lid many more are planned to _ete Miss Sharp before the wed­ ding. Miss Virginia Nalle compli­ mented Miss Sharp with a lunch­ eon at the home of her parents last Saturday. Also, from 4 to 6 o ’clock last Saturday, Misses Eliz­ Schneider abeth and Virginia were hostesses at a tea tor sixty guests in honor <n or give her name in charge. You to the person Ak uld sign with the attendant the Birne of your date, where you Are going, and at what time you .expect to return. [Si'Tour date must be back to her jdovmitory h\ 11 o'clock every night except Saturday, ■ I - - .......... ------------------------------------------------------ - - - IMISS BASS GETS PH. D. ssor of physical education, will turn early this week from State |iv ersitv of Iowa at Iowa City, whole she went to have her doc­ (’Miss Ruth Bass, assistant pre­ tor of philosophy degree conferr­ a l , M argaret Collier and Jean H o o k e r, University students, ac- f b i r ponied her. f p T A F F M EETS TODAY --------------------------- I h e r e will be a meeting of Wylie society staff this afternoon in Journalism it 2 : 3 0 o ’clock B u ild in g 2 1 2 Complete line of SCHOOL SUPPLIES Trade in those old books for a t. . those you need NOW.’ . . . H E M P H I L L B O O K STO R E OPPOSITE THE LAW BUILDING P A H E S I T The First College Daily in The South Phono 2-2473 THE PATLY TEXAN——Phone 2-2473 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1938 Salad Duty Main Worry Of One Co-Op House Girl By VIRGI NI A P ART ON H O U S E M OT H E RS TO MEET D e w itt Reddick, associate pro­ fessor of journalism, will speak at a meeting of the Housemoth­ er's Association for Men, Wednes­ day night at 7 :30 o’clock in Texas j Union 315. The Men’a Glee Club A blond* girl came bursting in the front door of the white, two- w ill sing. •tory house a little after R o’clock the other afternoon and slammed — — her books down on the table, jerking off her cont a? 'he rushed into S T Y L E S H O W P L A N N E D the kitchen. -The jell© will never get hard in time for dinner,” she moaned. «*| forgot I have salad duty to -*------------------------------- night! W ily do we always have -r- jell ft duty?” I O W D W e a r I have salad the nights \ y / The members of the Junior Helping Hand are completing ar­ rangements and appointing com­ mittees fo r their annual spring style show and tea to be given February 28. M ail For S. R.D. Girls Gives Lone Postmistress Trouble Miss O ffatt is patient. For the most part she ignores her audi­ ence, which consists of all t h e “ Have I got a le tte r?” girls that happen to be in t h e dormitory when the mail comes Fifty-odd times in five minutes this question is asked Miss M ary in at 9:30 o’clock. As quickly as Offatt, secretary of Scottish Rite Dormitory, at mail-time in the possible she gets the letters sorted morning. W ith two baskets of mail waiting to be sored, she finds her­ self surrounded by eager faces, assailed by questions and exclama-j a„m* placed in the proper boxes ’ ions: ter he’s sent her this week. must be pretty bad.” It “ What, for heaven’s sake, what h a' happened to my fam ily? I haven’t had a letter for a week I “ If that guy thinks he can treat me like this and get away with it . . . when I remember all the let­ ters T wrote him last summer.” t h e Then anxious fingers spin knobs of the combination locks and cadences of joy or despair indicate the presence or absence of mail. and a half.” “ That’s the fifth air-mail let- There is one mail-box for each room in the two big groups of boxes by the desk. Boxes are num­ bered with the room numbers. In S.R.D. there are 150 boxes, not ail in use. Jessie Andrews Dormi­ tory has 128, U n it I I has 77, and Littlefield has 84. M ail for the three hundred and fifty girls, more or less, who is brought out live at S.R.D. from the main postoffice by a truck and placed in the storage box in front of the dormitory. There the postman whose regular lies along Twenty-seventh route Street picks it up and takes it inside to be distributed. There are two deliveries a day, but it is the morning mail that is of most interest. The afternoon de­ livery contains relatively few let­ ters. Most of the dormitories have approximately the same system as S.R.D. Their mail does not go through the University Postoffice! and the down-town postoffice ie kept busy marking out “ Univer­ sity of Texas” on envelopes ad­ dressed to the dormitories. Packages and magazines a r e See CO-ED M A IL . Page 7. in their Another time the girls living in this house met living room just after dinner for their regular Monday night house meet­ ing. It was supposed to last a few minutes, but it broke up at 1:30 o’clock the morning. Deter­ mined to find out the cause of a recent discord among themselves, the girls went about it in a busi­ nesslike manner and threshed out their problems a l­ though it was early morning when they finished. themselves, in Not only are the twenty-four girls who live in the two co-operat­ ive houses owned by The Univer­ sity of Texa* learning co-operat­ ive housekeeping; they are a so learning co-operative luring. A t the end of the month when the books are balanced, each girl pays an equal part of the bills. run Living expenses from $17 pet person per month during the summer month to $21 in the winter months. them for There is no adult management supervisors of the houses. The are chosen from the membership of each group. It is the respon­ sibility of these two girls to ar­ range the work schedules, plan the menus, buy the groceries, and see to the general welfare of the group in her house. Jane Halstead, who is a senior majoring in so ­ ciology. is co-ordinator of Unit I at 2412 Wichita, and Minnealetha Prater, who -Is a home economic' major, is co-ordinator for Unit I I r* 2508 Speedway. B e t t e D a v i s , n o w f il m i n g “ J e z e b e l " for W a r n e r # , s e le c t s a t h r e e - p ie c e s u it for g e n e r a l t o w n w e a r . T h e s k ir t o f k n u b - b y b la c k w o o l is to p p e d o f f w i t h a j a c k e t o f b l a c k a n d g r e y lin e - c h e c k a n d f u ll- le n g t h c o a t o f t h e s a m e f a b r i c . H e r h a t o f d a r k g r e y f e l t h a s a n a c c e n t o f day s I*"! A I IC f t b l a c k a n t e lo p e a t o n e s id e . Every week a new schedule for the girls in her house is posted by the co-ordinator. Each girl does an hours work each day, and in H a A m that simple manner the is done without much work trouble for any of the girls. The house duties, such as sweeping or j , scrubbing, and the c o k in g dn- *•>« «•»•“ » of » » “ <* *>«“ ’ “ *• b“ ‘ ties. such as doing actual they did not. Each one of the cooking, mixing salads, or wash­ ing dishes, rotate as much Bi p s- gjble in order that the same girl will not have the same duty every day. Continued from Page 3 .. . I l U l l J v tha , , . . rat: cages held a small white which gave its life rn the biology laboratt rv for the cause of sci­ ence. This room had been used ' a' a storeroom for the little ani­ ma!® preceding their dissection. However, one of their darts across the floor now and cousins j in them important Before a girl is allowed to live in on# of *he cooperative houses, her record is thoroughly investi­ gated, and only the best of the app cants are chosen. Health, scholarship, and the ability to co- then startling a visitor as much factors a« » prehistoric dinosaur would. operate are The back porch is used by the which are considered. , , janitor to store hose, rakes, and V e ry enthusiastic about the co-1 endorse [ other implements operative houses, the girls who live them. One of the girls said, “ I as- murder weapons, hut aren't, surued it would be ‘cheap’ living just ilks other places which of- fen room and hoard at very low i t ex­ prices. actly the opposite. I am thankful I have the privilege of living here. The girls All have high scholastic \ r.U n * s ; they are tfle n U d , « « « * L . J , colorful people; and I am proud to get to associate with them ” in a sixty-mile-per- going down hour elevator does. A kind of cen­ tra- emptiness can he felt when stairs creak under foot, espe- Climbing the stairs gives the that ♦•n« same sensation , m„ the b, n ni!ter. rotted ’ha* could be Instead, heartily found , , . , „ I . . , 2I6W. 19th—End of Lavaca Announcements ' # NOTICE Classified Advertisers You can run your classi­ in fied very economics y The Da y Texan: READER 4 TS 20 Words— Maximum 1 * me ............ „ ........ $ .40 .55 2 times JO 5 tim es.............. ! .00 6 times ...... 2-Sire ads 52 month DISPLAY I co . wide x I in. deep, 60c insert on. No refunds for cancella­ tions, Responses e for one ntorreci inserfon only. ALL ADS CASH IN ADVANCE in ^ question Messenger service until 4:30 p.m., week-days. Coun­ ter service until 6 p.m. One room on the second floor is f ar the most fascinating. The aw ay some years ago. There is On September 14. 1936, U n it I usually some noise upstairs that the cooperative house? was could p o s s ib ly be a shutter bang- time. It w a ' ;ng against the side of the house, not n e c e s s a r i l y , of opened for the first filled immediately. There was ar. unanswered the minds of all concerned with the experiment, however, whether it door j? locked, a n d something would succeed or nr t. A L that j ,if year those twelve girls worked to- get her, trying to make their plan b e k in g out an;-*- chance of a peek, j p*ngpced co*eb- successful. W hether or not they ’ No amount < f leaning out Of t h e C O A C H IN G : T rig Alg.. Geom., E s p window in or- room to attempt c. * -h R a ndle k h Far, a mom©. 2 - 0 1 5 7 did succeed in their purpose may be answered by the fact that a look into the fork dden cham­ u second co-operative house for ber will help. That has been tried. girls was opened the first of this This loc Wed room w ill have to present school year. remain me unsolved mystery of the old Doom House, which, by the way. would make a swell title for a mystery novel. Dial t-24TS for further information on messen­ ger service. T R IG ., A r,sly’ . D iffere n tia l Calculus, P h Ph ysic* I , Geol. I , Pow ers, 8038, 2-2478. entirely c o a c h in g in Spanish e x p e r t English coaching. M r*. Cass. thrust from. the has the kev- P A M A., Cai! 2-1883. nae bing U n iversit y E N G L IS H teacher. C oaching Rr asor af Ie. 3018. M A. grad. 4465. od En g lish . Ex- experienced t h r o u g h i n s id e , by Miss Dorothy Gebauer, dean of women and foster-mother to the co-operatives, says the future of the co-opera ti ves will he in ar in­ creasing unity. The rest of the house is a in ­ with squeaky HTR “ T fie vaiue of the co-operative floors and h u n k s < f p l a s t e r which C O A C H IN G : French, Germ an. La tin , Greek Tran slating 2-0862. 5-7 p.m not plan of living,” 'he 'aid, only to offer tes* expensive room and board to the girls, but also the opportun tv to live t< gether, to get the 'ense of unity in hu­ man relation* which comes only after working, living and play­ ing together. It is a mutual de­ pendence o f the g irl' upon one another. It- value i' rn co-operat­ ive living rather ’ nan n co-operat­ ive housekeeping ” Shows Interest In A pp le Pies, H om e, W riting to One of he- chief cl*:’n* faint- is her app.t pits Her h- bby Ie her borne but she finds time off to teach nutritb n and physio- man logic*: chemistry write sever ai art beep published in tritit n journal* ai the American I' ; lions. si well s to ties thai have health and nu- i; to belt r g to it Ute of Nutri- W i irs H er name se Dr. .let f ' is a professor iters The and sh* r t r n ‘ r v U niversity of Texa- \\ jntp. * re­ of Fort Worth, Mies a r’s Cl if: ce ived her bachelor of • m a stt ■ * s at the I Diversity, hit affy a’ Cf hun his, and hoi d o n e r 's degree at Yale. Dr. W inters Forty M e n - - (Continued from Pf-.ire 2.) Andrew Chilton, center; Nelson Puett, quarterback; P a ’ Toombs, center; Dudley Underwood, tack­ le; Don W ill ains, guard; and Ellis Mclnnis, end. Bible, B la ir Cherry, and H. C. “ B u lly ” Gilstrap, assisted by Ney “ Red” Sheridan probably Clint Small, w ill coach the squad. Ja c k Gray and Ed Price art. busy with basketball, and Clyde Little­ field is coac hit g the track ’ ‘'am. and B hie once more issued his in­ vitation to ad men who want lo try for the team, saying that there is a place on the squad fr r every; who really wants to play ire ability to arb has foot bal! keep up. D r . D a w s o n T a lk s T o P . T . S t a f f f1 erey M Daws'.-r . M . D , author of “ The Physiology of Physical Education” and authority on ex- ‘aik to the staff of ercise, will the Depart flier t -T Physical Train- * a for Women Tuesday n ^ht at e o’clock in 'he Women’s Gymna- SI J ITG f o r Vt ie » member of Sigma X , faculty a d v i s e r of Iota Dr, Dawson w a s L - ’ t ee r h a - ' n- Sigma Pi, h o n o r a r y c h e m ic a l fra- ria** p r o fe s s o r at Johns H o p k in s tF r u i t y wh> ®e p u r p o s e it 1- to give t h e U n iv ersity t o w o m e n c h e m is tr y of Wisconsin. H e has tr a v e le d and r e c o g n i t i o n stu d e n t* kh< h a v< a high ? a tin g pent m uc h ti m e in Russia «tudy- c h e m i s t r y a n d o t h e r college m g in hit field th e re . H e is spend- ii * 01 k. in g the winter rn Austin. t ' n i v e r ' i t y an d at P h o n e 2 - 2 4 7 3 T exan assiifie d A d S e ctio n P h o n e 2 - 2 4 7 3 Q ■ I i i - P 111 " - "l* 1 Hi! IMM 1111 Sflm BiillllH IM llim C led n o n Cleaners R e n t a l s R e n t a l s Cleaners in'iiwiffl!HnniiiMIIWMnmiiiHllllWHrttlrHhWIHMWttt|iHljllHIWHHIjiljjBIIIIH^IHWIH>IIIHHIgllirflMIIIMHIIIlllllllllBWliniiiiMi|iHi|i(H||iipi||i|| ppii ^ 555555555555555555555Q55555555555555555555555555555555555 Cleaners P A L A C E C L E A N E R S S P E C I A L S A V I N G S M E N ’S W O O L s u n s CALLED FOR & DELIVERED S O CASH & CARRY 25c—DELIVERED 30c CASH & CARRY 2 FOR 45c DRESSES O n e P i e c e P la in S 1 2 S V ' I — ^ I ~ D E L IV E R E D CASH & CARRY 35c EACH—DELIVERED 45c CASH & CARRY 3 tor SUDO Hangers Taken in Trace PALACE CELANI PHONE 2-8666 AND SAVE 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS WITH PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE Furnished A partm ents Room and Board B L O C K C A M P U S : B ea u tifu lly furnished efficiency apartm ent— fam ily c r couple. Furnace heat, tub and ahower hath, re­ frigeration. 1920 Speedway. 6818, F O R T W O M E N : South bedroom, sitting room, p rivate hath, garage, $80 month, Phone 1219 M arshall Lane, Enfield. 6878. M E N ; New 8 room merits. Electrolux, efficiency Venetian showers. U tilitie s Room for men, 2500 San Antonio. furnished. Approved F O R 3 M K N : One block front campus. S rooms, kitchen, shower bath, tele­ phone. Has private entrance. 106 E a s t 20. 2-9788. A V A I L A B L E February 6: 6-rrmm down­ U n iv e rs ity , re frig e rato r. stairs apartment. N ear fu rn i'h e d . E le c tric W a il HJO3 N uecea. Phone 2-9626. ___ G a ra g e A p a rtm e n t B O Y S : 3 vacancies, nice room* p riva te entrance Meal* optional Reasonable rates. B ills paid. Betw een U n iversity and Capitol. 304 E a s t 18, 2-8676. B O Y S : Room and board in H utchinson H ouse, Ex cellent meals, T w in beds. 1916 south showers. Block campus, _______ j Speedway. 2-87*1. S S S ’ I V A C A N C IE S for two girls a t Mrs. A i ­ k e n * . 220'' Rio Grande Phone 3251. — --- ——- — M E N : Large room?, new house, new fur- : p.iture, large closets, tile hath*. Sealy I m attresses. Meals optional. 2104 Sabine. B O Y S : Room and board $30 m onth. . 3 meals 2 blocks west. of campus. Show ers, sleeping porch. 2815 Nueces, j B O Y S : Room and board. Exec lent meals, j Com fortable south tw in beds, ample closets, connecting bath, sleeping porch. Near U n iv e rs ity . 2511 N uecea. room, G A R A G E A partm ent: Price $16 for tw o in p riva te home or three. A lso room two blocks of campus. Phone 2-5200. D IS T IN C T IV E garage apartment for two or three boys P riv a te drese­ ll ii room and bath 2 blocks campus. B O Y S i Room and b oard o n ly $25 p er room *. 3 2400 rn- nth. N ice ly f irnisbed meal# per day. M rs. W ellto n . Sabine. 2-705:'. — j room I R O O M -Board . Single room Young lady. g irl* . — ' * * ~ ‘ ■ ’ 3 P riv a te home with furnished. Trans port at von o th e r 2-5614. , Phone 4 . 8 A T T R A C T IV E modern sportment. Ceil- j tile bath, garage apace for j far, mg fpr two girl#: Lo ve ly room. tw in bed?. W ell balanced meals at 301 Garage, 2 l > opposite campus. two car*. A vailab le Rather. 761T. Call “ Ro y 2-8678. “ “ ” boy* with water, F U R N IS H E D garage apartm ent for two lights, and maid furnished. W a lk in g distance of service U n iversity. 1606 P ea rl. 2*5398. p h in t’s. D e*irat-l** southeast room G I R L S : Room and board a 1 Mr*. OII- for two girls. 2 block* west campus. 608 W e st 2 4. 2-7068. tm N E W garage apartment, for two boys. Tile bath and shower. mattresses. 3007 T ru th Street. Phone I 775“ 2-8646. D E S IR A B L E : southeast p riva te student Inner spring ' preferred. R ife Court. 710 W e st 24 j . _ room, bath, quiet. For one person. _______________ _ _ _ _ _ __ THIS*'WEEK ONLY . . . CASH & CARRY Dresses | leaning (I pc.) 3 f o r Tailored S u its ................ . A O Sw agger Suits .............. Light W eight Swaggers. . 2 0 Skirts ................... Dresses (2 pc.)_______ Blouses (plain) ................... . 2 2 . 5 5 . 2 2 D A Y & N I G H T C l ce c a n e r s W E S T 19th PHONE 2 5722 ‘li!'lilliltliliiiiti.iiiwiii!iiii!ii»iiiitpiHniHiHltlllllHiBilllll1ilil[il)))ilti{{||jHlHlllW}|[|f R e n t a l s Rooms fo r Boys R e n t a l s J^ooms for Boys Stud y Rooms for Girls I 3 I 3 S. Congress G A R A G E Apartm ent for m en: ---------- For Sale F O R S A L E : S e t Spaulding K ro - F lita golf clubs. N os. 2, 3. 4. 6. 29, putter, d river and spoon, leather bag. $25 cash. Call 2-19.87. G A R A G E roo"., and one boy room T w in bed*, shower, G a ra g e Rooms room, Maid service —- p rivate shower, newly furnished. Inside stairs. Phone 617 9. to share telephone, N orth maid service Guadalupe. 7121. Bills paid. 2-11 Laundries One Day Service V A C A N C Y fo r on* boy in new garage room. U n usually w ell furnished. Maid in house. service Also beautiful room 1*12 N .ere*. 97 t i1 DRISKILL HOTEL LAUNDRY 8-H O U R S E R V I C E R H Y S : Ga-ag* apartm ent upstair*. Heil- j room. st idy room, p rivate bath, twin can pus beds. Rill# paid. 1 oven ie: - 30< - North Guadalupe. 2-0177. 6444 I 19 East 7th M E N : Single, downstairs rocm in g a r­ den apartm ent. P r iv a te entrance, 607 W est 32. Phone 7254. T W O R O O M S for girls in p riva te home. B rea k fa st in room and dinner optional. B ea u tif ii into house. G arage opening v ie w . 2-2 ! 60. I W O V A C A N C IE S for girl* in ’ he home of Mr* J. J . T e rrell. V ery rear the campi.*. LOT W est 21st Street. R O O M S, Board options, fo r girls st 2207 Rio Grande. Phone 7 7 76. U N I V E R S I T Y g irls : I.arg- well C ir r i ti­ room, nicety porch. room. Also sleeping sing - ed furnished. Glassed-in 2i08 Nueces. 2-10 30. F O E L A D I E S : T w o a ttra c tive south and east expos ira. rooms, heal. term s. 106 W est 2 7. Convenient b a t h . Reasonable J G A R A G E RO O M S- F o r boy*. Tw in bed* two show-#-. U n iv e rs ity and Capitol. HOO Guadalupe. ba'I 2-8259. 7 three i I A T T R A C T I V E L Y furnished room, suites ojf f urnjtu re fresh curtain*, g«< I rugs, ir Betw een tw iB beds. G irls only. KOO Colorado. G I R L S : Room*, hoard optional. V e ry just od campo* convenient location j R O O M S F O R B O Y S Q uirt, p riva te en­ trance, maid see*, ce $7.50 each 708 W est 25 J 5 . Call 2-6 105 B O Y S F ro n t room w ith southeast e t. unsure in p rivate home. One block of campus. Phone 2-8868 room TW i) B O Y S : W e ll furnished southeast con furlable beds, 8 window*, In tile bath-*hower. typ e w rite r desk, new brick apartm ent. 2-6590. V ACA N C V home. Tw in for y r mg ms- beds. in p riva te adjoining bath. Q - !gu 7 U W e st 25. Phone 2-073 5 sm all house. Excellent T W O L A R G E , q u irt, clean room* in for study. 4 blocks from campus. $8 per month. -05 West. 22 B O Y S : .S W A N K H O U S E . Comfortable room?, block north P h ys ic s Building. Board optional F xcellent meals. Prices reasonable. 2592 W ic h ita . Phone 4387, home M K N : Two upstairs rooms rn new brick three boys. Pries:** hath, shower. Larg e closets. 319 4 H arr s Park Avenue. 2-6876. fo r Unfurnished Houses A V A I L A B L E F e b ru a ry I : in rooms, liv­ ing room. dining room. kitchen, a h-d- 711 ronms. 3 bs th*, sleeping porch# *. West 2 ! „ 60 « o Ta xis Furnace j W E L L F U R N I S H E D room, _ _ __ adjoining Rids w ith Home-Owned A Operated Caba • W A T C H T H E T A X IS _ sleeping porch fo r two. $10. N o bills, I j file hath. Garage. P riv a te entrance. Tele- J rh:,T;’ ._2Ui5 Nu*c**:_2:T-H9: O N E ROY entrance, in share nice room. P riv a te ihower, Bpxrtmer;* for tile it# home. C. M Cleve- two, both in priv land. 7727. AU C ars Bonded I or 2 Sam e Pr-^e L O N G H O R N TAXI Phone 2-247* Travel Bureaus Locksmiths BOY S : Furnished, modern garage j Available F eb ru a ry Phone 2-66.52. I . 510 W est 23rd. W A N T E D Boy to share room in private home. N»w furniture Tw in bed-, sd- P E T M E C K Y*S F IF T H S T R E E T S H O P . IG I W E S T 6th. P H O N E 2-7’j S l . K E Y S F IT T E D . C A L L U S 2-8815. apartm ent. Bedroom, dressing room, in I house, sleeping gallery. 27 17 Guadalupe. tile ahower. Reasonable A lso ro im Lost and Found L O S T F rid a y, in or near Ja n u a r y 21, Hogg A id itcri im, pair of horn-rim ­ leather case. in brown med glasses Pho-w 2-2641. Reward. Plumbing E. R A V E N — Since water neater 1890 — Plum bing, repairing, gas piping, ranges, heaters connected, sinks, sewer* unstopped, 140-3 L a va c a , Phone 6763. Radio Repairing EXPERT RADIO REPAIRING B y ' k Sled Technician* FREE ESTIVATES W o rk Guaranteed, Called F o r and Delivered JO H N L. M ARTIN PIO < ingres# Rhone 356 3 Records 5,000 S L I G H T L Y USE. ) Phonograph re- cords: V icto r, Bru nsw ick Dec ca. V o ca ­ l i c Melotone. B argain, Se each. P ete's Package Store. 116 E a s t 5th. room with 5 window*. B O Y S : N ice ly furnished upstairs garage T * : » bede, shower. V e ry quiet. Garage available. 906 W e st 26. 585*. BOY’S : G arage with t is bath. One two cr three bo>*. Reasonable rate*. N ear U n iv e rs ity . 203 E a s t 30. 8204. G A R A G E R O O M S for boys: Tw in bed*. hot and ©old shower. Telephone, maid service. Rea«on«bie. All bill* pa d. 2810 Nueces. 9367. T W O bedrooms, bath, twin beds, shower. Also v a ­ cancy for one boy 804 W est 22. 2-6806 Accomodate 3 or 4 boy*. Rooms W E L L per month. 2100 .'an Gabriel. f u rn'shed single bedroom. $15 I I N D I V I D U A L L Y furnished room, p riva te bath. E v e r y convenience. Maid service. M 'fti* or garage optional One block of : campus. 261 8 Speed*** E I T H E R quiet bn* Sou th w est, $8.50 single. Ea s t redecorated, 110.00. Garage. exposure) Q uiet p rivate home. 2310 Sabine. G R A D U A T E or F ac u lty member: Feb­ ru a ry I . Large bed room in new brick bn mc, qui** neighborhood. Priv Ste bath, entrance, garage Double closet* Break- ; fast if desired. 5097. D E S I R A B L E room, p rivate bath, quip: One person preferred. Rice southeast Court, 710 W e s t 2 4 K . ” 757. Rooms fo r Boys L A R G E . N E W L Y decorated, nicely f ir ­ nisbed room H r boy*. Adjoining be * h. I.lea! location. 3 blocks campus. Reason­ able. 604 W e s t 19th. BO Y’S : Room* three block* from campus. Reasonable ra ’ es. 2501 rent fo r Nueces Stree t. Ph on e 2-1552. p riva te home O N E OR T W O b o v* : U p sta ir* room in P r iv a te entrance and hath New ly redecorated. AU bills paid. 2514 Pearl. Phone 2-3372. B A R G A IN F O R B O Y 'S A - tra cth e small modern house in vard. Bedroom, single lavato ry. LYG- he,!*, storeroom, closet, Rio Grande. Phone 2-s22*. I S T I D E N T wants share room. Single bed4. *6.00 per month. Primate home. IOT E a s t 2 7. Phone 3390. roomm ate to I 2*91! 8 S. Phone j R I D E ! M R S. T A Y L O R S T R A V E L RU- years. Tara I R E A ! d pas and passengers anyw here. Reference* buy gold Established six ” ’ ’ lo th . 2 -3 3 3 3 . 102 W --- ' A_Rf. • »<1 P * s»engrrs d aily to al! pointe. 4 B v . Tray el B u r eau. 710 B razos. I H I . Joining bath. 301 W e st 29- i 2-7529. B O Y 'S : On# or tw o large d eligh tful ess* room-. Convenient to bath. Esp ecially situated fo r quiet study. Garage. 3904 Avenue F. 2-8088. M E N : Large upstair* room, 3 blocks ram ; 1* bet ween U n iv e rs ity and Cap- in large j 1 it id. A lso vacancy w ith boy S'hone 2-66!:' room. S T U D E N T v ant.* suite of rooms to share roo to ma* e lo v e ly new home in near U n iv e rs ity . P riv a te entrance. Rea- [ sortable. Phone 2-6103. B O Y S : Room in quiet home. P riv a te en- porch. Also room over garage. 1006 W e s t 22. •-anre and a bower. Sleeping ------------ ROOM F O R R O Y S : $10 apiece, no bills, In private Phone home of U n iv e rs ity tw o closet*. twin hoi*, student. R O O M S for b o ys: C onveniently between Engineering Gregory Gym . Dial 7894. Building located and F O R O N E M A N : L a rg t room, I)*, th at 2214 San Antonio. p rivate $17 , m onthly for one man. Phone 2-2957. RO O M w ith six windows for tw o boys. Tw in hod*, p riva te entracn# and pri­ Phone vate ba: h. 1510 W est Avenue 6638 F O R B O Y S : Com fortable rooms ai rea­ if desired Mr*. sonable rate# Meals Le Roy Carpenter. 2610 Guadalupe Phone | 6862 Typew riters F R E E ! F R E E ! free with each Have your ty p e w rite r oiled and brushed nut ribbon purchased. Buy a ciew poriab’e tor *i lift, as iOc a day. t y p e w r it e r s r n New - Lived Portables S O L D R E N F E D R E P A I R E D Rentals by Week, M onth, or Sem ester H E M P H I L L ’ S B O O K S T O R E P’rc'-'e 2-2211 R E N T A T Y P E W R I T E R W e h ave th e best irs A j«tin . Special Stud ent Rates STEC K S 9th a t L a v a c a 6334 B O Y S : La rg e com fortable room*. Block Pwin beds, telephone Reasonable north W o m e n ’# G ym . convenient bath. ---------------- I ra te*. £616 Speedway. 2-0523. mat re woman : , ------------------------------- -------- (south I T W O B O Y S : L o v e ly south room. A ll new inner-spring Block west fu rn itu re. Tw in beds, m attresses, adjoining bath campi;*. 1928 San Antonio. T W O GR T H R E E . B O Y S : T v n private en: ranee. Two blocks rooms. from campus. Reasonable. 103 Bast 1 ‘th. L A R G E south tw in beds. room. connecting bath, In quiet home of *m*T fa m ily . Convenient to town and U n iv e r­ sity . KO T Congree*. H O P*’— all a t the TTH'* inopportune times. ; years successful teaching and coaching, j Benny Goodman and H :» O rchestra. Re- J. R Reed M usic Co., be satisfied. Cai! M arsh all. M organ Manner. “ C A M E L tics M.A in Mathem atics E F F E C T I V E C O A C H IN G i D O U B L E D A R E Y O U ” in the Ru ss in M ath em a­ Several Y'o ; w ill 2-6868 cords on sate at *05 Coiigre** Dancing R e n t a l s L E A R N TO D A N C E— 8 Lessons $8.69 Student Ballroom Classes Monday and T h u rs d a y — 7:30 pm A NNF. T I E D U V A L D A N C IN G S C H O O L Phones 2-3854. 6908 10 * W I t V isito rs W elcom e Dressmaking Educational D R E S S M A K IN G Alterations. Reavonsb.e f - Work k is ran teed PH. 8 299. . an n .— r~ .. N c 1 , > located in h o r new home, one of .. u the S o u t h w e s t s Most < ■ mplete B U S IN E S S C O L L E G E S DA Y A N D N IG H T C L A S S E S E v e r y G raduate Su ccessfu lly Placed .. , ___ ,■ 6 * h a t L a v a c a P h o n e 2-6771 Flower Seeds I F O R F I N E B U L K fie vier bushes c r G a rd e n feed and a su p p lie s see M a r t i n s Seed Es” 6th. *eed. R-*#* g ard e n .'to ra . 214 R O O M in p riva te home. P riv a te entrance, J T W O R O O M S d o w n stair*. Also I ; east exposure. Large, nicely . V ery reasonable. Phone 2-2502. adjoins tile bath with shower. South- furnished. __ u p stairs. Large, pleasant, twit tub and shower. 6 1 ° W e s t 74. 2-9671. room* beds, Phone O N B B O Y . La rg e quiet upstair* room to bath. Sleeping porch. Convenient Reasonable. 702 W e * ’ 21. T Y P E W R I T E R S Sold-Rented-Repairc I S u p p lies ROOM KO R O N E neighborhood. Garage. U tilitie s B O Y . U n iv e rs ity f u r­ T Y P E W R I T E R S : AU make* Portables $9.50 up. Craddock's. 821 Congress. nished. 205 I.ast 30. Real Estate Rentals //HY EXPERIMENT If you wan' to B u y • R ton ing nr Boarding H for Dependable Se rvic e S e ll Your se See U s I N C O M E S E R V I C E & I N V E S T M E N T C C . La rg e st Busine** Brokerage ii the South 2■■--209 N a'Ie Bldg. P H O N E S 2-9841 — 906 1 A p artm en ts for Rent Board B O A R D E R S wanted by *eek or month. Bloop Phone Excellent meals 192 3 W h iti* Reasonable I not;th campus. 2- 4836 I .. 1,1 - Phone 3119. Room and Board G I R L S : R o om end hoard, $27,50 up. 2 b lo ck s w e*; U n ­ Ca!! 2206-2208 N .cee*. R o o m s , $7.66 up. ion B u ild in g 2-1014 F O R A D U L T S : T h re e new , s m a ll, s o u t h ­ e r ; '’ a p a r t m e n t < 4 fu rn is h e d or u n fu r- , > rn-bed. Com.r e !e modern, a ttra ctive , I well located. . G i l i_.ro*-mr .street. Phone „ 2* 11 4 .. • f F O R R E N T : N ic* u p s ta irs a p a rtm e n t clo se to I a iv e r s ! ’.y and C a p ito l. P h o n e 4! 03 fro m - *o 9 :30 and I to 2 :30. NOTICE BOYS LOVELY ROOMS E x c e lle n t m eal* M a id S e r v ic e . Billa Paid LO W RATES B O Y S N ice room with southeast sleep­ ing porch in p riva te home. I860 Guad­ alupe. 3085. S T U D E N T S : Ro om , tw in bed*, qui*” md cool, sh ow er. R e a so n a b le . 3100 W h it is A T T R A C T I V E room, adjoining hs’ h with shower. V ery quiet, T w o closet*. In ­ dividual fu rn itu re. 703 P a rk Place. Phone 2-8887. B O Y S : V a r g e room w ith sle e p in g porch. B O Y S Front room. 3 exposurea. in pri- E v e ry th in g Block north women's gym . vate home, p rivate bath. furnished. R -I'o n sb lf. .'HOS VY ichita. 4238. room B O Y S : S in g le A ls o southwest double room . Block campus. Showers, law m aid s< rvicc. A ls o s tu d e n t. 2101 San Antonio. 2-3761. roommate for W A N T E D : Man to share room in quiet home. Shower, private entrance, maid service. 2614 W ic h ita , Phone 9811. iprivate home. Aldridge Place. P riv a te J g o Y S : Fro n t dow nstairs southeast room, shower, rooms, connecting bath. tiled bs’ h, entrance, garages. furnished. 3115 H em phill Park. 2-1287. j Algo U N I V E R S I T Y men desiring a pleasant, j - I 2604 Speedway. 2-9691. _______________________ into bath-tub I t ili’ u_- > --------- opening and - - com fortable place to this room, f a l l after 4 see 2 5 %. ( i i w e s t J live and * ” JfG j R O Y S ; Nice. clean rooms with tub and shower. H alf block w est Union Build- m g. AU b ills p a id . 407 W e s t 2 3 rd . P h o n e •2-0616. F O R B O Y S : N ic e sleep in g porches. M e als i f d esire d . 3 b lo ck * east ro o m *. o f campus. Garage. 716 P a rk Place, Furnished A p artm en ts _________ — ----------------- ------ W A N T E D T w o boc» to "h are 3 room -- I M E N : Room and board .....— --------------- — in new brick j home. T w in had* large closets apartm ent There*# room here! Phone J eel lent meals Reasonable. 2515 Pearl, B E D R O O M En -' vat# entrance. U tilitie s paid. in p riva te borne. U n iv e rs ity neighborhood. C onnecting bath, ^ pri- Furnished teacher or graduate student. to plea e 2-6330 a n - ' me before Sa tu rd a y , I Phone 2-5907, ; 2309 Rio Grande. 1914 N U E C E S P H O N E 2-0602 B O Y S : Southeast fro n t bedroom, adjoin­ ing bath, p riva te entrance. 904 W e st 22 Phone 2-6633. B O Y S : Room entrance. A d jo in ing bath, in p riva te home, p rivate A vailab le February 2. Reasonable. 709 W e s t 26. Phone 2-4715. TURPEN’S JIO W . 19 Phone 6115 17 Year# Repair E vperienca Typing T Y P I N G . C a ll 2-6081 o r 9951. . . . T Y P I N G : Law outline#, theses, themes, M a t M u rray. 2206 Nueces. 2-8817. E X P E R T T y p in g — AU kinds. Fred W e b ­ ster. J r . Phone 2-3872. W a n te d to Buy H IG H E S T CASH P R I C E S PA ID F O R second-hand clothing, shoes, and suit cases W e also buy musical instru m ent*. A. S c h w a rtr Phone S762, M A L K IN P A Y S M O R E for Ussd Su its. C lothing and Shoe 1. 407 East 6th 2-0635. C A S H for Scrap Gold, Rings, Teeth, Pins, watches, etc $21 Congress 2-7712. HURRY! Before It’s Too Late to Rent Those Rooms C a ll 2-2475 B e fo re 4 :3 0 P h o n e 2 - 2 4 7 3 — T H E D A I L Y T E X A N P h o n e 2 - 2 4 7 3 The F i r st College D ai l y in the Sout h ( A G E S E V E N Is Y o u r N avy B igge r Than M in e? Handle Your Finances C O N V EN IEN TLY Through the AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK T U E S D A Y , F E B R U A R Y I , 1 9 3 8 Blue-Eyed Girl Born To Princess Juliana Holland Takes N o isy Holiday A s G u n s Boom Awaiting N ew s B A A R N , Holland, Jan. 31— ( I N S ) — While all Holland listened, a salute o f f ifty -o n e cannon brought news that P rincess Juliana, running true to the form o f the H ouse of Orange-Nassau, had given birth to a girl. today There w as disappointm ent that the signal which the N etherlands * f o r w e e k st had eagerly awaited fusillade w as n ot o f that would have meant, the first male heir in h alf a century. the crashing IQI guns the nation plunged B u t this was quickly fo rgotten in to re­ as joicing that m o th e r and child w ere well and th e t h r o n e o f H o l­ land assured »»f succession. T h e b ab y , f a i r - h a i r e d a n d b lu e ­ e y e d , w eighed eight pounds at birth. She will be baptized within fiv e w e e k s’ time. “ H e r Royal H ighness P rin c e s s J u l i a n a gav e b i r t h to a sp le n d id (4 :2 7 d a u g h t e r a t 9 :2 7 o’clock o ’clock Eastern Standard tim e.) T h e c o ndition rd* m o t h e r a n d bab y is very sa tisfa cto ry .” The bulletin was signed by the atte n d in g physicians, D octors De Groot and De Jongh. No s o o n e r bad w o rd o f t h e e v e n t spread t h r o u g h o u t th e n a ­ tion than workers declared them ­ se lves an im p r o m p t u holiday. A p ­ p e a ls by e m p lo y e r s to w a it until th a t a d e q u a t e a d ­ to m o r r o w so v a n c e preparations could he made fo r a 2 4 -h o u r c e ss a tio n o f w o rk w e n t u n h e e d e d . j In A m s te r d a m , R o t t e r d a m , The H agu e, a n d o th e r la r g e citie s in ad d itio n to this t i n y tow n adjoin­ in g crowds th e g a t h e r e d the streets, singing, s h o u ti n g an I parading. Business cam e to a c o m p le te sta n d still. royal in palace, I Cold Turning To South, East Labor Board Is Sanctioned Broad Powers Given By Court W A S H IN G T O N , Jan. 3 1 — (I N S ) -Shortly a fte r S tan ley Reed took the oath o f o ffic e o f an associate justice, the Suprem e Court hand­ ed down tw o im portant decisions con firm in g broad powers of the National Labor R elations Board. The accession" o f Reed, which marked a d efin ite swin g o f court I pow er to “ liberal” justices, was I witnessed by an audience which I crowded the courtroom. In ruling in two unanimous op­ inions read by veteran Justice I Louis Brandeis that federal courts cannot enjoin hearings of the labor hoard, the high court vir­ tually cemented other decisions upholding con stitution ality o f the W agner Act. In ruling that federal district courts can not issue prelim inary in junctions on complaints of cor­ that hearings ordered porations by the board would cause ir re­ the high court parable damage, sustained the procedure laid down the National Labor Relations | in J Act. The case was regarded by the im port­ labor board as o f great ance. An adverse decision, it said ! in a brief, would have nullified the I legal procedure set up by Con- j gress. a The controversy arose when the \ a / , board ordered a hearing on charges W e s t , nrtlGGIO W O S i J that the com pany denied collec- H a v e Ze ro W e a th e r ' !tve h®r>falI”ntr ri*£ts of p ork ers k c l ii \ A/ at. its Fore River, Mass., plant. The W est and M iddle W e s ts Monday shivered in zero a n d s u b - 1 5'anie aero tem peratures as the w in ter’s I sharpest sw eeping South, vice reported. cold wave moved toward International N ew s Thfl company, a s s e r tin g t h a t th e ' ssue? had been b e f o r e th e labor h o a rd , c r e a te d u n d e r N a tio n a l Recovery A ct only east and ; ^cur anu * bilf months before, the ancj ; four and tem porary I It contended that the n ew hearing Ser- j so u g h t a in, •***♦ } rn the U. S., Britain, And France Agree To Swap News Of Japan LO NDON, Jan. 3 1 .— ( I N S ) — , ment, it was learned, was rea ch ed * -— ------------------------------- The U nited States, British, a n d at a m ee tin g at the foreign o ffic e French naval high command have attended by Captain Russell W U - 1 secret “ g e n tle m e n ’s son, United States naval attache, reached a a g r e e m e n t” to pool all fre- tion garnered by their respective quent visits to the admiralty, dis- naval in telligen ce de; ar?m e n u re- cussing the entire Pacific naval in forma- Wilson has been paying in ju nction. I g i r d in g Ja p a n ’s ship-building pro- situation w ith British experts. ** gram It was stated on high authority today that effo r ts are now being three made by ag en ts of cou n tries to obtain definite knowl­ ed g e of Japan’s naval activities. these Particularly it is hoped to learn w hether reports that is building battleships greater than fo r ty thousand tons a>*e true. Japan The secret three power agree- 1 One aspect of these discussions is the action that the respective fleets would event l a k e t h e in A merica or Britain or both be- come involved in trouble with Ja- pan> S h o c k e d By Electrified Ca se Shocking in the Situation life of One Building wa« uncovered by Texan reporter recently. Num ber the Library a While in the the Rare reading I Books Collection, reporter leaned against, a case containing , original copies o f newspapers of The Seventeenth Century. leaning was cut short by a short, electrically for ca?e w a s the , , Leading m inisters of the British t • R eturning the next day for a ' ^ ' nPt W" ' due ,n H feature story, tho reporter shocked talk o r e - reports about Ja p an ’s j the librarian by asking about the i shocking case. “ W e have no elec- construction program. { “ ' Texas School of Fine Arts (Inc.) A c c re di t e d by The State Department of Education F o u r y e a r c o ll e g e c o u r s e in m u s ic , s p eech , and p u b l i c sch oo l m u s ic . S p e c ia l w o r k fo r ch ild r en in m u sic, sp e «eh an d d r a m a tic s. Practice Pianos Available J U S T S O U T H O F T H E C A M P U S 2010 W ichita Phone 9935 fa sh io n s favorite the kiltie ct tc H E R B E R T W A L L B a r i t o n e T e a c h e r o f S in g in g D ir e c to r o f U niv. o f T e x a s L i g h t O p e r a Co., D i r e c t o r of Mu • ie, U n i v e r s i t y M e t h o d i s t C h u r c h , D e a n of Fine A r t s , T r in i t y U n i v e r s i t y . D o r o t h y B O R C H E R S S o p r a n o A s s o c ia te T e a c h e r a n d R e p e r to ir e u r D ir e c t o r o f M u sic, U n iv e r ­ sity P r e s b y t e r i a n C h u r c h Helen Eiker C o n tr a lto A s s o c i a t e a n d C o a c h cause it g r e a t expense. J ” ® company was joined in its suit by em ployes repre­ sentation o f em ployes plan” al­ leged by union representatives to be a com pany union. in the Justice Brandeis delivered the high c o u rt’s opinion in the B e th ­ lehem and N ew p ort N ew s cases. He said in the Bethlehem case that federal district courts ca n n o t grant c o n ­ gress has vested exclusive power the board and courts o f ap­ in peals to enforce the labor act. injunctions because “ The grant, o f that exclusive power is constitutional, because the act provided for appropriate the board and procedure before in the review by the Circuit Court of Appeals an adequate oppor­ tunity to secure judicial p rotec­ tor* against possible illegal a c ­ tion on the part o f th e board,” said the court. en fo rc em en t, ‘No p ow er to en force an order is conferred upon the hoard. To tho board secure oust apply to a circuit court of fo r Its affirm a nce. And appeals until the board’s order has been affirm ed by the appropriate cir­ cuit court, no p en a lty accrues for disobeying it. “ The independ en t right to ap­ ply to a circuit court of appeals to have an order set aside is con­ ferred upon any part part aggriev­ ed b y the proceeding before the board. The board is even w ithout power to en force obedience to its mbpoena to te s t if y or to produce evidence. [ b e u l a h B E A V E R i I Pipe Organ and Piano I O r g a n L easona a t U n iv e r s ity M e th o d is t C h u rch o r a t T e m p le B e th I s r a e l. P ia n o L e sso n s a t S tu d io — 1 7 0 0 C o n g r e ss A v e . I PH O NE 7627 J. Campbell Wray H e a d o f VOICE D e p a r tm e n t TEXAS SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS D i r e c t o r of F irst B a p tis t C h u rch C h o ir , A u stin S e n io r H ig h S c h o o l C h o ru s, B e n H u r S h r in e C h a n te r s. A U D I T I O N S a r e n o w b e in g h e ld fo r C H U R C H C H O IR S O L O IS T S Texas School of Fine Arts 2 0 1 0 W ic h ita A c r o s s fr o m L a w B ld g . $ 3 6 5 A N D U P The MUSETTE holds the spotlight of favor among style­ conscious w om en.Its sim ple,beautifully-proportioned lines give it a smartness and sophistication all its own. And no wonder, for each of the nine different Models is a skillful adaptation of Hie “Period" styles which are the basis of all successful interior decoration. Furthermore, T he MUSETTE brings you RESOTONIC CONSTRUCTION, an exclusive feature which improves the tone amazingly — giving it greater clarity, depth and richness. Mode rnize y our hom e and d eli ght y our fa m i l y w i t h the l a t e st t h i ng in pianos. T E L . 3 5 3 1 8 0 5 C O N G R E S S ] S IN C E 1 9 0 1 At Chicago, the m ercury touch- j readings. : «d zero in unofficia! N o r t h e r n Iowa t e m p e r a t u r e s t u m ­ to 16 b elow , with 6 below bled ze ro , a record for the winter, at D es Moines. Below zero tem peratures pre­ vailed in Colorado, M ontana and W yom ing, with more snow and gale-like winds predicted. Havre. Mont., therm om eters showed 28 b elow ; Cheyenne, IO b elow , and D enver, 3 below. Severe cold gripped Indiana, w here tem peratures fell from BO above Sunday to 8 d egrees at 7 o ’clock Monday morning. Relief was expected Tuesday. K a n sa s C ity to u c h e d a w in te r low a t 2 abov e. I t w a s 0 a b o \ e a. S t. Louis. S p r in g f ie ld , 111., r e g i s ­ t e r e d zero. In Michigan the second blizzard within a w eek w re c k e d a factory, c a u s e d se rio u s ice jams, isolated scores o f villages a n d d ro v e t e m ­ p e r a t u r e s below zero . A bowling pin f a c t o r y a t B ig B a y w a s w r e c k ­ tw o h u g e s m o k e s t a c k s ed w h en to p p le d on it. I t w as s e v en below 7,ero a t M a r q u e tte , n e a r which c ity s e v e n ty -fiv e l u m b e r ja c k s w ert m a r o o n e d w h en snow piled high around their camp. Many roads xrere im passable. Warm weather prevailed over m ost o f th e E a s t , w h e r e t h e cold w av e w as e x p e c t e d t o a r r iv e M on­ d a y n ig h t. W a s h in g t o n b a s k e d in a 6 0 -d e g re e c lim a te , w ith BB a t N e w Y o rk , r e c o r d i n g th e w a r m e s t d a y o f th e y e a r . Rain was predicted in th e Los A n g e le s a r e a , e n d i n g a t h r e a t of frost which had im periled crops. A gale w as b lo w in g u p o f f th e S o u t h e r n C a lif o r n ia coast. S to rm fro m L os A ngeles s ig n a ls H a r b o r to ( ape F l a t t e r y . flew at Ice a n d sle e t m a d e m o to r in g h a z a r d o u s a n d through out m uch o f Ohio. Street? and coated at Columbus -were Cleveland. L ou isville Co-Ed Mail - - (C ontinued from Page Six) d and led by putting in the proper tnail-box a printed slip a n nou nc­ ing its the arrival and asking o w n er to call at th e desk for it. T h e favorite question, sa y s Miss O ffa tt, repeated through out the yea r in spite of con sta n t refusal?. I g e t m y room m ate’s is “ May package?” This type of mail is d e l i v e r e d to no one but the ad ­ d r e s s e e . At the W om an’s Building, which w a s designed b efore anyone had th o u g h t of putting tiers o f g lis t ­ ening glass and chromium, com ­ a in bination-locked m ail-boxes is distribut­ dorm itory, the mail ed in a simpler fashion. Letters, papers, m agazines, qnd all a r e spread ou t on a table in the se c­ ond-floor hall and each girl picks hers up as she goes by. Apologies ( C o n tin u e d F r o m P a g e I ) that Japanese p r o p e r ty and disregard o f A m eri­ can rights by Jap anese soldiers.” Grew points o u t that Mr. A lli­ son “ was in v e s tig a tin g an unau­ thorized an d unwarranted en try o f A m e r ic a n p r o p e r t y ; in com pany with a Japanese consular policem an and g e n d ­ arm es, Allison proceeded to the in question; American p r o p e r ty th a t the investigation led from the A m erican p r o p e r ty t o p r o p e r t y which was a f o r m e r re s id e n c e of Catholic priests b u t n o w occupied b y J a p a n e s e soldiers; t h a t the pur­ last m en ­ p o se tio n e d property was to id en tify the p erso n s who had if possible w ith ou t w a r r a n t the A m erican p r o p e r t y in question. in going to the e n t e r e d T h a t M r, Allison and Mr. Riggs (an A m e ric a n official o f th e N an -! k in g Mission), w ith o u t e n c o u n te r - 1 m g a n y s e n tr y o r g u a r d , follow ed ! t h e Japanese gendarme inside th e ! o p e n ga te of t h e compound o c c u ­ p ie d b y the J a p a n e s e soldiers, t h a t ! as soon as a Japanese soldier in-; d ic a te d that th e y should withdraw, t h e y b egan doing so; a n d that *he so ld i e r slapped Mr. Allison b e f o r e M r. Allison had tim e to g et ou t of t h e g a t e and while Mr. Allison w a s in th e p ro ce ss o f backing nu’ o f t h e c o m p o u n d .” Mr. Grew emphasized the im­ p o r t a n c e of “ prompt com pliance” w ith t h e s e demands and informed t h e f o re ig n o f f ic e th a t he would r e m a in a t home all day Sunday ( y e s t e r d a y ) awaiting “ an immedi­ a t e a n s w e r . ” T h e p r o t e s t w as made orally on the S a t u r d a y . Sunday evening foreign affairs! v ic e - m in is te r in vited G re w to his official r e s i - 1 deuce a t IO p.m., and there made th e ap o lo g y and announced th- -»•> re sp o n sib le would he punished. for Forum - - ( C o n tin u e d F r o m Page I ) trated by the picture and explain­ ed by the lecturer. Laboratory m ethods in tracing the disease and d etectin g it? presence will be ex­ plained fully. Several sc en es o f the terrible ravages o f syphilis will be shown in order to im press the audience said. o f spire-; Microphotographs of I ch ete, the corkscrew syphilis or­ in action will be shown its dangers, Dr. Kraut the ganism. on th.e screen, j The problem o f national control I o f the disease will he discussed by : the film. B e n e fits o f public health are programs against dem onstrated by several scenes. syphilis Methods o f and facilities fo r the cure o f the disease in all stage?! w ill be shown. These are includ­ ed to show the public that syphilis can be cured and in order to warn people again st treat­ m ent, Dr. Kratz said. Incorrect trical cases,” the librarian insisted. T he student w as shocked again. An explanation fin a lly came from a janitor who said the elec­ trification had been only tem po­ rary, dup to a short in the light­ ing system . m m . ' : ’•y'ff AS STUDENTS HAVE FOR OVER 47 YEARS! Your check book provides you with a continued record of your cash balance together with a record of what hap­ pened to the money. If you need to watch your balance, a convenient method is afforded you; and if you have a surplus, there is no better place to keep it, than the bank, where it is immediately available for your needs, AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK Littlefield Building ■ - * 3 - ; ' ■ i v-v—j. .. > . - L ■ I - ’ . V H ; . ! ■ 1 •' .SWY J ' - S ■ ... ■ ' gj t m - m m m m : r n ** ■nZi I.’. - .. . '*•“ '<■ " ‘ e'j , rn m i ■vjg: . : v . f S A V E on Your LAB SETS at the Co-Op Everything that you need is included in these sets and nothing is included that you do not need. A n d notice the lowered prices . • . Bacteriology 3 1 6 s ..... ....... ......... . $2.10 cs I and 9 ... $2.00 Z o o lo g y I ................ _......... $4.05 G e o lo g y l b ... ............... .... $1.89 G e o lo g y ( a s .......... .$1.96 Botany I ........ $4.32 B. A . 4 2 0 ....... ... _ „.$ .75 B. A . 432 ..................... $1.70 B. A . 81 I A ........... *__ $ .70 B. A . 811B, Practice S e t ........... $2.00 Physiology 6 ............ ............ ,........$2.93 U N I V E R S I T Y C O * O P THE STUDENTS1 O W N STORE Where to Go 1 Handy Dancers Old And New Williams Play Is In Rehearsal 'Night Must Fall' is Austin High Play P A R A M O U N T . — "Y ou’re a S w e eth e a rt,” W ith A lice F aye, G eorge M urphy and Ken M urray. I F ea tu r e b egin s at 1 1 :0 5 , 1:13, j 3:21, 5 :2 9 , 7 :3 7 , and 9:45 o ’clock. I (L ast d ay.) ! S T A T E .— "52nd S tr ee t.” W ith Leo C arillo, E lla L ogan, K enny "N igh t M ust F a ll ” a play w hich j Baker> and Zasu P itt, . F eature h as been revealed to be ta u t in b egin s at 11 :1 3 , 1:20, 3 :27, 5:34, hom icidal psychosis, popularized 7:41, and 9 :4 8 o ’clock. (F irst day) on the screen b y R ob ert-M on tgom -J Q U E E N .— "Som e B lon d es Are ery, will be the third dram atic of- Dangerous.** W ith W illiam Gar- fa rin g o f the cu rren t season by gan X an G rey, and N oah B eery, 2:47, th e Red D ragon P layers, A u stin Tr F eatu re begin s a t H igh School dram a group. 9:55 g :og, p lay, w hich w a s w ritten by Em lyn c -cjock< (F irst day.) W illiam s, w ill be p resen ted b y the group at A ustin High School on F eb ru ary IO and l l . in Bis* tresg/» W ith Fred A staire, Gracie A llen, and C ooree Burns. C A PITO L.— "D am sel The j 4;34 I. and 6;21f The p lay fir st enjoyed a pros­ V A R S IT Y .— "The P er fe ct Spe­ cim en .” With Errol F lynn, J o a n 1 Blonde!!, and Edward E verett : H orton. T E X A S .— "On th e A v en u e.” ; W ith A lice F ave, D ick P ow ell, and M adeleine Carroll. N IC E H A N D - W O R K .— S im k ie, c e n t e r , i t t r in her o w n r ig h t in S h t n - K i r ’i B a ll e t, and tw o H in d u titte r* , Z ohra a n d U a ra , in a t e q u e n c e o f th e b a ll e t p r o g r a m to he g iv e n in H o g g M e m o r ia l A u d i ­ to r iu m F r id a y n ig h t . season perous in London and ©ne in la ter New* York w ith A nglo - 'Welsh Mr. W illiam s in t h e p ersonally role com posed o f D anny, th e eg o c en tric k ill­ er. R o b e r t M o n t g o m e r y p layed th e role on th e screen last season in ch aracterization for him . W eim er S tratton , b rother o f B e tty Lois Strattor., U n iversity stu d en t, ha? hibitors today won an appeal to I 8:15 o ’clock F rid ay n igh t. The W est a ssociates d an cin g w ith th e 80n s sixth Town Hall attra ctio n . th e role o f D ann y in the Suprem e Court fo r re v ie w o f fe e t; the H indu con sid ers them on ly su p p lem en tary to th e hands Dragon play. Shan-Kar And Dancers To Hand Out Hindu Ballet O' C C ID E N T A L con cep tion s o f the d ance w ill be blasted w h en S h a n - 1 San A nt,onl° W edriesd*y c o r n i n g San P edro K ar and his trou p e o f fifte e n H indu dancers p resen t a fu ll pro- at 11 0 Ci0C^ at th is sea- High Court Gets Interstate Appeal V icki Baum , n ovelist, w ho a t­ tracted nation-w ide a tten tio n w ith ; her "Grand H otel,” w ill lectu re in ( I N S ) — M ovie producers and ex - 8™*** o f e x o tic dances o f the E a st in H ogg M em orial A ud itoriu m ^ P l a y h o u s e . M iss Raum Vicki Baum To Lecture In San Antonio Feb. 2 in terp retation o f the d a n c e .* --------------------------------------— ------------- a T exas Federal C oart ord er en- the in a new d ep arture W A SH IN G T O N , ST R A T T O N th e Red ......... Jan. 31.- _ S H O W T R O O P E R S . — L e o C a rrillo and Z a tu Pitt* o f th a t c a lle d th e a tr ic a l " 5 2 n d S tr e e t , ” c u r r e n t a t th e S ta t e . t h o r o u g h f o r e HAND LA NG U AG E Texas alone has more th a n sev- I T he trad itional dance o f the en thousand stu d en ts en rolled I m p h t’ The ; H indu show s the activ ity o f d ivin e w hile the total en rollm en t o f th e [ f e ?° th at m em bers m ay atten d | fig u r er and epic heroes, or e x - other stateg ig m orc than eig h tee n Ithr *how ’ I p ounds em otional | K ar has developed h igh ly cu ltivated , g u a g e them es. Shan- bundred, B esid es T ex a s, O klahom a g estu re into a gends t be m ost stu d en ts, h avin g l a a - j over tw o hundred en rolled . The I exp licit sta tes h avin g m ore than o n e! jv e y e d by ev ery m ovem en t o f the hundred are: A rk ansas, 1 1 2 ; 11- n 0 ; L ou isian a, 168; and i bead or hands. E ach ‘ hand” h as L . . in w hich m ean in g is con- In tw o separate cases th e In - ; the I jo in in g con tracts on the ground • Shan-K ar and his troop w ill p art o f violation o f the a n ti-tru st la w s .! erally d ance w ith their hands, Gloria Jane W arner h a s omrt o f Mrs. B ram son, th e w h k h w a s'p la y e d by D am e May W hirtv on both London and G oth- t e r n a t e T h eater Circuit am stages and in the m otion pie- others, ow ners of m ovie h ou ses, pieta w ith th e leap in g m e c h a n ic - C f . i c o n i c I n I I T th e m ajor H ollyw ood p r o - 1 tion s o f th e trad itional b allet, but J l U U U l l l i III U . I i tune Frances Gale Jones p lays and O livia Grave, the part essa y ed by ducers had appealed. these w ill be accen ted w ith bodily R osalind R ussell in th e screen ver- s . on. The part of D ora, th e ser­ van t girl, ac*ed by Mer;e T o tten ­ ham on the screen , is p layed by the L illian S ch w artaer.b erg h igh school p resen tation in charged In te rsta te T h eater Circuit oth er p roducers, in clu d ing T exas C onsolidated T h eaters, Karl Hob- litz e lle , and R. J. O ’D onnell, con ­ spired to m onopolize the first-ru n the cast are H elen m ovie b usin ess in T exas and N ew the con tortion s bordering on the bar- and baric. In his repertoire. Shan-K ar has in corporated the n ative Hindu g estu re art. considered by H indus over *be w orld, h a v in g over n ine to be an id ealized form closely re- th e S ta te s and : over 0Tie hundred from F oreign lated to th e dram a. S han -K ar’s "dance dram as” w ill and be red-b looded com p osition s com -j U n iversity o f T exas is w ell 8 tu d en tl fro m ail Foreign The governm ent „ ented b thousand C o u n t r i e s . from lit- in * Others R ansom , D oris G ene P eterson , and V m a c e G eorge Thom as, Shropshire. M exico. T.C .U . Freshman Works A f Four Jobs is d ecap itated , a co lleg e ed u cation. The scene o f the p lay is six teen m iles from London in the sin ister Forest atm osphere o f E p ping C harlton M cK inney, a freshm an w here D anny, a page-boy at Ta i- at T .C .U ., b eliev es th at all work b oys T avern, buries the b od y of Mrs. C halfon t, whom he has m ar- and no play is a good w ay to g e t d ered . The body its nam e and origin, accord in g to J M issouri, the su g g estiv e m ovem en t o f t h e He w orks a* four d iffe r e n t jobs, D ann y carryin g the head about n h is hatbox, D anny secu res a job I m ean w h ile a tte n d in g classes. H is fin g ers. Each m ovem en t has in fi-j as h ouseboy on the esta te o f Mrs. ; fir st ta sk b egin s at 6 :3 0 o ’clock in ; n ite variation s or a ttitu d e s called B r a n so n through the charm of his the m orning, w hen ha a c t, aa I n * blarn ey, a fte r having bar-.ed , w a u e r m a b o a r d y h o r n . C l u m th e n u d e torso o f th e m urdered occu p y hrs fame th e n from 8 un- d a n c t, w ,„ be 1 0 f coordin, t i o n i " ' „ hundred w om an across the road from her ; til I o clock. e s ta te which is surrounded by the g lo o m y w*ood. D anny s egocen tric and m urderous ca reer co m es t o an en d on ly a fte r he has m ur­ d ered h is b en efa ctre ss. in clu d ed in the ^ n p o f tw e lv e d cn U en rolled . “m„ rd a , ” Mf d-cine » d i 2 g. The send th e le a st num ber o f stu d en ts n p U w ar* Rhode Island and V erm on t each having sta te s th a t: tw o' stu- In th e School o f I th ere are m ore than I stu d en ts. T e a , As soon as he g e ts out o f class, be sta rts or. his N .Y .A . job , k eep­ ing a: it u n til 5 o ’clock. Taking little tim e to eat dinner, Charl­ ton sta rts "hopping cars” at 5 :3 0 o’clock at a cam pus d ru g store. Q u ittin g tim e is u su ally l l o ’clock. is an odd o re. He d ev o tes all his "spare” tim e to it, ta k in g order- fo r a F o rt W orth m a n u factu rer o f coveralls. T he (liber job ing 1 4 1 . A ll stu d en ts ex p ec tin g th e cou rse should to take im m ed iately at the E xten sion O f­ fice. F ee, $6. W . R. W OOLRICH, dean o f en gin eerin g. o cc a sio n , : Q f t]w forej com p osin g lead in g th e num ber en rolled and of hand m ovem ent*, two m odes o f rhythm or typ es o f A rkansas secon d, h avin g six. dance for cerem onial E very g estu re h a , m ean in g; th e h a n d , d en ote th e clinched w ith th e thum b in th e . g palm . sig n ifies te e god of lo v e ; and -he join ed palm s exp ress w eb i com e. twentv.Mven fo r e fin g e r T h t „ u dent» hail from fo rty -e ig h t i sn d the D istrict 0f C olum bia territo ries and p ossession s , nd tw e n tv-tw o fo re ig n cou n tries. ^ etudent5 com e fro m M exico from Canada, an age-old in a circle ___ * _____ _________________ cou n tries, f i f - 1 lo v e ; ive B A S IS IN TRILOGY G u i d e B o o k s S h o w n . a * j* . dance epic incident im person ates "Kama xaa J Aiea _ t u i i f v i o v i i o (vo god o f love, and ere- F o r S ix M a t e s Shan-K ar w i i o n **0 4. D e v a ,” the dram a enroll a te* a com p lete Pix volu m es o f th e A m erican around an t h e Guide S eries, com piled by the Fed- reign of " S h iva,” the d estroyer. A ll dances are based on three e l e - . er8; W rite rs P ro jec t of th e P ub- i3C d o r ie s A dm in istration , w ere m en ts, religion , m yth ology, a n d placed on ex h ib it in the loan de- folk lore. . in n artm ent o f th e U n iversity Lib A corps o f H indu m agicians w ill »,a - ' inz . , . . . . in , , p resid en t. p>>rt to m e d i a t e l y . T H E F O L L O W I N G s t u d e n t s •n o c i d t h e R e g i s t r a r ’* O ffice re im.' in The su b ject o f her talk w ill be "W hy Be A fraid ?” a ch allen ge to the fea r com plex w ithin ev e ry p er­ son. O ther su ccessfu l n ovels w hich M iss Baum has w ritten are “ A nd L ife Goes On,” " F allin g S ta r,” "M en N ever Know*,” and m ore r e ­ ce n tly , "Sing, S ister, S in g .” A LECS M EET TO NIGHT The Sons o f A lex w ill m e e t in the E n gin eerin g Building im m ed- ; la tely fo llo w in g the picture show in H ogg M em orial A uditorium to - beld C A P IT O L ENDS T O D A Y ! 15c FRIO ASTAIRE ’Til 1 jfORDE BURRS i GRAUE ALLEM Dim* M at. for Sch ool Children TODAY 3-S for H e r One M istak e t rn: W E D N E S D A Y St T H U R S D A Y She P a i d W i t h H e r S oul Po y ce, S h elton W, B r o w s, J. S tok es (' - • «. W illiam L. Fee* r.eritone, J e n n a Loa Fos he* M a r y V. Hill, Stan ley H older, J a m es W. M Collun’., M y r t l e A. McDonald, Louis H. M a '’D e r m o t t , Wallace T. M a r t y n . Mary J . M rpfcy, R obert R ichardton. George Harriet. A r n R c h a r d L., J r . Lee A Ke r t H a r r y C. avid M a r i e s Oliver W. J e r o m e F r a n k sr ei Eve W it Spencer E. J . MA ’ HT >* 3, r e g i s t r a r . are FIRST SEM E if paid th erea fter, PER S T U D E N T S alread y done to th e secon d h alf ion fee. It may be ow and M onday, thout p en alty. I f y 8 or 9, the pen - em ester hours o f p a y itra1 paid b etw een n February 7. wi paid on F ebruar a lly w ill be 2 ? cred it; if paid on F ebruary IO or • l l . the p en alty will be 3 sem ester! it hours; and will be 4 sem ester hours. S tu dents in th e A u d i­ will fill o u t a card tor’s O ffic e and w ill p resen t it and th eir receip t fo r the first s e ­ l o r m ester fe e s to th e cashier. T exas resid en ts is $25. This is not registration but sim ply the p avin g of the second half o f the registration fe e , and it is th e r e fo r e perm issible for one stu d en t to pay fo r another stu ­ dent. th e am ount E. J. M A T H EW S, registrar. ; rary F riday. , _ ......... provide the essen tia lly su btle a c­ The volu m es are on Idaho, Mas- com p anim en t— ob tain in g percus- si on e f f e c ts with a b attery o f fif- sachu setts, M aine, \ erm ont, Rhode teen drum s, -erpent horns, a n d Island, and "Washington, D. C. reed and strin ged R eserved seats Som e w ere published by the Gov- j in stru m en ts. for th e A u stin e m in e n t P rin tin g O ffice, o th e r s; are $1; g en er a l ad- by the H ou ghton-M ifflin C om pany, j tr a v e le r s’ ; More perfornrsanc m ission is 50 c e n ts; 25 ce n ts for b lank et *ax holders. T ick ets are gu id es the books a ttem p t to giv e in sig h t into the h istory, g e o - 1 on sale at the T exas U nion and a n the . graphy, art, literatu re, m usic, pub- j J. R. Reed M usic C om pany. ------------------------------------------------------ : lie life , and gen eral ch aracter o f j B A SK IN ’S C O U SIN K ILLED the p eop le and th e cou n try, T h ey than m ere , ,, . . EN y B askin, stu d en t in the U ni- versity, returned M onday m orn -i v rrMO • • m g I rom his nom e rn C am eron, 1 ., , w here he w as called a fte r the ! . death o f hi? cou sin , R obert Y oung (R ed ! Baskin. Mr. Baskin died Sunday b ein g in ju red in an autom obile era -h near H u ntsville Satu rd ay n igh t. ,, , are illustrated w ith n um erous pie- j tu res and m aps. T h ey describe . p laces o f in terest, show , cou rses o f sigh tseein g tours, and , . , d escribe highw ays. , to u rist . , , m , Dick ar ! Fay S tarley spent th e w eek-en d in San A ntonio w ith a friend. SHAN-KAR an d his H i n d u Ballet “All thf e le ments of t he spe ct ac ul ar, the colorful, and the e x o t i c ” N . Y . H erald T ribune FEB. 4 H O G S M EM O R IA L AUDITO RIUM Re*. 5**» f» Gen. Adm S tu dent* with b!ank.‘t ta* Si OO We 25e Auspi c e s Cu l t u r­ al E ntertainm ent Committee T i c h a t t on atle *t T e x * * and U n i o n J. R. R e e d M u s ic Co. # **!? I H I S T A R T S W E D . I A K I O VV L U . g n > URRSmJBH M e et P u b lic E li g ib l e N o. I E rr o l Flynn Joan Blondell 'T h e Perfect Specimen” w i t h H u g h H e r b e r t E X T R A ! "A M U SICA L JO U R N E Y TO S O U T H A M E R IC A ’* TSXAJ SEGHI P o w e l l ^ Madeleine C a r r o ll “On the Avenue” W i t h * A2 r Faye R it z B r o th e r * QUEEN NOW ! 2 5 c T I L L 5 * N|vr ONlVf»S*l >iCTU*t WITH NOAH BEERYJf-WILLIAM GARGAN DOROTHEA HINT • NAH BRET “ GO IN G P L A C E S ” w it h LO W ELL THOM AS E X T R A ___________ J am es R. B u rton , d irector o f th e p la y , b eliev es " N ig h t Must F a ll” to be the m ost am bitiou s d ram atic p roject h is high school ch arges have assu m ed . O ffic ia l N o tic e T H E LO NG H O R N B A N D w ill re­ h earse to d a y at 3 o’clock and a t 7:30 o ’clock on th e secon d flo o r a f the Old L ibrary Building*. M A U R IC E H O F F M A N , T H E M E N ’S G LEE C LU B w ill m eet T u esd a y n igh t at 7 o ’clock in the G lee Club Room . There w ill be an elec tio n o f a B lu eb o n ­ n e t B e lle . B R Y A N B E C K , p resident. F R E S H M E N w h o m ake a grad e o f C or ab ove in E n glish l a . may add E n g lish 2 0 2 s. a t the o f fic e o f th e ir d ean. P H IL IP G R A H A M , ch airm an , D epart me nt o f E n glish . H O U S E M O T H E R S f o r m en w ill m e e t W ed n esd ay r ig h t a* 7:30 o ’clock in T e x a s U nion 3 1 5 . D e­ w i t t R eddick, associate p ro fesso r o f jou rn a lism , w ill speak, and the M en ’s G lee C lub w H sing. DICK R U BO TTO M , a ssista n t dean o f me „ M E N W HO v . re en rolled in the C ollege o f E n g in eerin g d uring th e lo n g session o f 1937 -3 8 w ill be in elig ib le to enroll in S ep te m ­ b er, 1 9 3 8 , i f th ey have fa ile d to rem ove their en tra n ce con d ition in solid g eo m etry b y that date. VZ. R. W OOLRICH, d ean r f th e C ollege o f E n gin eerin g. T H E C O U R SE in so to rem ove an en ti a a g eo m etry :e con d ition be giv en by n sion fo r the S ection orm w ill and W ednesday rn. in E n gin eerin g s e c tio n tw o w S ection in e n g in ee rin g w ill th e D ivision o f E x te second sem ester m eet M onday from 5 to 6 p. B u ild in g 301. m eet T u esd ay and Thursday from 8 to 9 a, rn. in E n g in eerin g Build- tw I T 'S B U S Y A N D DIZZY . T H E E N T E R T A I N M E N T C E N T E R OF T H E W O R L D ’ . S H I F T Y A N D N I F T Y . W A I T I R W A N G E R na W H E E T wr™ I A N HU N T I R L I O C A R R I L L O F A T P A T E R S O N I 0 O A N I L L A S I D S I L V E R S Z A S U P I T T S «nrf KI NNY BAKER ( T O T I Paramour’ im mri*j New* J i m m y F i d d l e r ’* P*r» «m *li»y P a r a d e *** I V U * » ! « » i ■ PLUS Ca** D a U y . . . f o r . . . THIS WEEK For the week February I to February 6, inclusive, we make . . . 3 ^ I 8 x 1 0 KASHM IR PHOTOS and IVORY- TONED MINIATURE R e g u l a r $ 6 .5Val ue for %• 7 5 ALSO FEATURING THIS WEEK a T o u m t y h a v e t i t t i n i or u t # n e w a n y n e g a t i v e m ad # t o r th * Cac tu* th * le at f i r * ye a r* . m Diplomas, C ertificates of Organization M em ­ bership and Pictures FRAMED $ COMPLETE UP TO 11Mxl4' IN C L U D IN G G LASS N O APPOINTMENTS NECESSARY a r a 2 5 1 0 G U A D A L U P E 2-0258 HURRY! BEFORE IT’S TOO LATE T O RENT THOSE VACANT ROOMS SPACE ADS lx l 60c Per Day BOYS: N E W LY FURNISHED Southeast bedroom next to in private home. Ex­ bath cellent meals. Very reason­ able. For 2 students with car. P H O N E 0-000 C o u r t e o u s m e s s e n g e r s will c e ll fo r y o u r ad. This s e r v ­ ic e is e s n e a r a t you r t e l e ­ p h o n e . PHONE 2 - 2 4 7 3 BEFORE 4 : 3 0 READER A DS 1 (,2 0-W ord M a x i m u m ) 40c Day. $1.00 a Week U P S T A I R S n ic e s o u t h f r o n t r o o m , n e w l y tw in bed*, show er. C o n v e n i­ to w n . R e aso n ab le. p ap ered , e n t A dd ress . P h o n e t o cn m p u* an d , Hundreds of students are look­ ing for rooms now. 750 new; students will enroll in the Uni­ versity the second semester. Don’t risk having your rooms vacant. A Daily Texan reader ad (20 word maximum) costs only $1.00 for a week. Write Your Want Ad Now N am e Address THE DAILY TEXAN Classified A d D epartm ent JOURNALISM BUILDING 108