y IXP6 For Rhodes Preliminaries Howard, Stuckey, Mitchell, Goode, Dinkins, A vriett In Six students in the University have been chosen as candidates fo r th e Rhodes Scholarship, Dr. D. A. Penick, chairm an of the selection committee, announced. They are Giles A vriett, L. L. Dinkins, William Jo siah Goode, Jam es K enneth How ard, Charles Clyde Mitchell, and Jackso n H e n ry Stuckey. T hese University w inn ers will a p p e a r before the state Rhodes Scholarship committee which will choose Texas th e n a tio n a l will make the final selections. representativ es to \ com mittee, which j All six are students in the Col­ Eleven Elected To Honor Society lege of A rts and Sciences. Phi Lambda Upsilon Initiates Group Soon In m aking the final selections, the com m ittee considered literary and scholastic ability and a tta in ­ Five gra d u a te , five senior, and m ents. qualities of manhood, cour­ one ju n io r stu d e n ts in chem istry age. tr u th , devotion to duty, sym- and chemical e n g in e e rin g were Ip a th y , kindliness, unselfishness* fellowship, exhibition of moral j elected to membership in Phi to j Ijamhda I psilon, national honor- f o r c e of cha ra c ter, lead and in ai7 chem istry and chemical engi- schoolmates, and physical vigor peering fr a te r n ity . Those chosen as shown by sport-* or in o th e r ways, in the fall election a r e : instincts interest to take an in outdoor interest For the R a p id Reader C A M P U S A nnounced Bruce Benedict Fred M. G arland Styles Roberts Bur] 0. Rogers R. Curtis Wilson Simon R. A lex an der Jack L. Fleming Luis H e rr e r a Hal F. H erron Lloyd W. Piester Samuel Lee Inform al initiation will be held T o d a y ’s Editorial The Sorority Merit Badge S h e I (LCXCllt The W e ath e r Partly cloudy Volume 39. Z 720 P r ic e F i v e C e n ts AUSTIN, TEXAS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1937 E i g h t P a g e s T o d a y No. 38 U nion Peace Parley International Tie-1 Jp Grave In Shanghai ‘—1 — — % Lattimore Rites Held Thursday Judge Eulogized A t Church Se rvices I F uneral services fo r Judge 0 . S. the Texas jud ge of L attim ore, Court of Criminal Appeals and Sunday school te a c h e r of the stu­ d e n t class in tho University Bap­ tis t Church, w ere held at the Uni­ versity Baptist Church Thursday a fte rn o o n at 2 o'clock. Dr. W alter lf McKenzie, pas* to r of th e church, was rn charge of the services. Americans, British, French, A n d Italians Join Hands SH A N G H A I, Oct. 28— ( I N S ) — Deadly sprays of bullet* from two Jap an e se tanks en dangered the lives of the commander-in-hief o f B ritain ’s land forces in Shanghai and m em bers of his staff today, heightening Anglo .Japanese tension near the explosion point F re ig h toned with grave international possibilities, the incident__ Harper Case Reviewed Today ♦ one of a st whic h have seri- jo usly strained! relations between J London aud Tokyo— occurred as ‘ he British commander, Brigadier- General A. P. D. Telfer-Sm ollett, and his s ta ff officers were inspect- , ing the boundary o f the British defense zone in the In te rn a tio n a l O n e o f the m o s t im p o r ta n t labor c o n f e r e n c e s in h is to r y b r o u g h t t o g e t h e r in W a s h in g to n l e a d ­ ers o f th e rival A m e r ic a n F e d e r a tio n o f L ab o r and C o m m itte e f o r In dustrial O r g a n iz a tio n in an a t t e m p t to h ea l the breach b e t w e e n th e tw o u n io n s. G e o r g e H a r riso n , le f t, A . F. o f L. s p o k e s ­ m a n , sh a k es h an d s w ith D avid D u b in sk y , right, General Says, ‘No War j p r e sid e n t o f the A m a lg a m a te d C lo t h i n g W o r k e r s and a st r o n g CX O . supporter, as P h ilip M u rray, c e n t e r , ch airm an o f th e CXO, S t e e l Workers* O r g a n iz in g C o m m itte e, looks on . H o m e r M artin, I ***» ** • at I ll A at** a*. La t p r e sid e n t o f __ _ I U n io n , is sh ow n b e t w e e n Harrison a n d M urray. F irst session was restricted to d is c u ssin g rules o f p r o c e d u r e . re- _ J Ll a. ai* aa * Dr. W . C. Raines, professor of the Townes Bible Chair, spoke at I the funeral. He read from the N e w A p p e l l a t e B o a r d | Created For T r ia l Bn t „ h , F r e n c h , . ™ . Italian troop* crouched over ma­ china guns side by side as thew Cordie H a r p e r ’s appeal on ’he manned the defenses of the Inter- the national Settlement., un d e r orders c h a p te r o f R om an s, a Jiewly-created Appellate Board of to fire in defense o f their position Til/"? Cif J u d g e al V « the J u d ic ia ry Council at 2 o’clock if they are atta c k ed , recent election goes before .lent* A nociation, said last night. f iCKLly read at hi* funeral. Jak e Pickle, president of the S t u - » I . Ck 4 I* 1. W f \ %* i V‘ £. ... t U i’i TllJlAi AM* f ’ AiaM a1 I A. L attim ore the United A u to m o b i le W o rk e r* ’ J tw elfth nil n ntni* c hapter quested be to Am erican S r a ^ a n j Dr. W. C. Gayer of Uvalde brought this marines a* thousands of Chinese the sympathy of the I valde church j Harper made bb. appeal to the Lattimore fam \ ana m . week follow ing a decision of the some gravely wounded, dragged o f Judge Lattimore s work as Judiciary Council which gave the them selves from the smoking ruin* president of the Aho tr io Baptist election from of Chapel, a huge native quarter for assemblyman Encampment, which meets near th , School o f Business Admin*- which once housed half a million Leakey every summer. Dr. C. V. tration to Clyde Taylor, who had residents Edwards of Vernon, former pas- appealed the case to the council election. tor of the church Judge Lattimore British officials «aid the nfft. attended while Urine rn Fort Taylor had baaed b i, appeal on aer, eS n e a n d " the tin o f tit. it wa* Worth, aho spoke. been claimed, w ere machine-irunnimr fleeing across the Appellate the nearby Shanghai-Hangchow o f A ges,” “ Does Jesus with Mrs. J W. Ezelle singing the , Members o f sclo part. “ Abide With M e’ and Board were Wilson Elkins, “ L arg o” The British officers who w e r t Symphony were played on the o r - j editor of the Texas Law Review, standing n ear the s m i t h 'rr. end o f gan beiore and a f te r the service. Methodists Likely To Unite Churches the New World : stru c to r in history, Roy B ennett,! The church choir sang “ Rock | wrong ballot boxes the bridgr, hurried ly took refn ’he fa ct that eighteen votes in two Japanese tanks which in- railway bridge. immediately after f are? *, I counted. «„d Pickle. I ... t - '.6 I. civilians Chinese from . . had the ' “ • # I-- n nett was nam ed rn a con- J in a sandbag redoubt. refu g e y e ste rd a y for were t h e 1 U niversity winners R >des Scholarship. Six selected on Frid ay , N ovem ber 5, a t 6:30 s ar- Giles A vriett, L. L. Dinkins, o’clock a t the Chemistry Building, w i l l i a m Josiah Good®, K en neth Howard, Charles Clyde initiation b an quet will be held at Mitchell, Jackson H en ry the Driskill Hotel on Monday, No-1 and Stuckey. N ext step fo r a p p e a ra n c e before state Rhodes w jH be announced later. com m ittee, limn I.) them page (See col­ I, ' Jam es ; Form al initiation services and the M o n Harvard lo Award \ f h f i a r c h i n e J U I v l u l J i i l p j Student Strikes A re R o t— Bullard B y JOE B E L D E N Texan Associate Editor is no d an g e r of the T here , g . is M em ber 8. The guest speaker th en! As a Pftrt of * * new H arvard „ 1 XT- i ! — 1 . National Scholarship plan, prize Officers for the y ear are Mon- j scholarships will be awarded to j two or m ore m em bers of each. - ♦ Dr. C, M. Montgomery, back from the Southwest T< xas Confer­ the Methodist Episcopal ence of in San Antonio, j Church, South, Those are the words of Lieu- j believes that the th re e Methodist the Harvard MpHi I 1 nosp arR ine woras or uueu- j oeneves m at m e tnree Memo MST cjasg wbo stood guard at the cas- ! U nued fetates g etting , any war in the n e a r f u tu re , either S tu d e n t m em bers o f the L a tti- | E uropean or Aclastic. invo]ved . . SP O R T S I£ e Kriegel, president; C. T. Weds, vice-president; Robert Bur- vin. tr e a s u r e r : H. K. Livingston, p o rte r; Vesta Michael, secretary; George Wart,, | “ I ,. , ” Intended pnterintf , ! , I cal School. I t these scholarships will two and encourage scholastic attain-1 who visited v,slted », is « ten an t General R obert L. Bullard, i * » « > > « will combine I t h a t ) U n l u d s u t M Army> incident occurred un der ‘“Yu!'u ' ,''ccur^*® unae* and b i n a t i o n a l convention is held n e x t . ^ V r e 'ifln rij'F Iu g h e d B m t ^ C a r v e r . scribe Voicrtion k f such a board ^ e r fweiipn tro ops m anning ma- more Memorial Sunday School ference yesterday of the two par- ties. Teams of the constitution of pre- the Vet fnr intervals of a half-hovir tim S tudents’ Association A™ r i r »n- .. 1 t i ..ben The Bill Allbright. Felix G resham, Bob | to be composed o f a f a tu i ty mem- V T J ™ ’ ; s t a c k i n g ! h e ° I n t £ u n a r h Bible will take only game at Dallas instead of Glenn Jackson this representative. Dr the usual I is faculty adviser. social tw e n t y - n in . m en to the Southern | chairm an,- and Ley Cross, alumni M ethodist H. R. Henze week-end, thirty-six. c e n te r who h a . been nu rsin g rn- K a T 0 SI H XT T A T * I I i i r i o c ju rie s, is expected to be ready for exem plary character,' and appar-1 affo rd h > to come to rhe H arv ard l r a t t ,d edition of Milton's “ P a r a - 1 ^ o r th t and the P r o te s ta n t Metho- w illiam Yates. a paralytic i th e game. (See page 3, co umn v , n , a l r e a l - ! la ,. S a tu rd a y aftern oo n FOREIGN the camt)U8 vegter. ? . om , the U niversity Methodist c h e r r y , Robert Newman t n ® campus ment. and, second, enable s u p e n o r dtty. young men, otherwise unable to I perfo rm J was General Pershing’s right-hand A pn l m Birmingham, Ala. first, re c o g n iz e ; m a„ durin|r t h . " w o r l d W a r ' and | , rnD„'/ “ .) | gn t ability to succeed in the chem-1 Medical School. The o f f e r of these scholarships u b r a r v j e s t e r Church, pointed out that, favor- B urns Howard Davis, Naomi Ann dent, : able voting b y c o n fe re n ce , of the I g t a p R„,.h Bell. Frank Heard, - - ilius- M e t h o d i s t . Episcopal C h u rc h ,' Clyde Kennely, Frances H art, and j stroke ; tre a s u r e s Judge trea su re s, m e general ity. The Southw est Texas C o n - ! L a ttim o re died a t t h e Seton In- fir m s ry W ednesday m orning a t 6:50 o’clock. in- to 5 in favo r of coml ming. Edw ard I. H a r t e . * and Dr. Dae- lei F. Jones. The d o n o r, expressed at »>« favorite passages, the com pile.. I H a c k e t t A i d s C o l u m b i a th e VVrenn th e general is made possible bv gifts San A n to n i, voted 247 to Phi L am bda Upsi- djse Lost,” one of lon b based on M 1 9 ? " " ' “ *r£ 2 * he ,a u l W»5 ° r' e ira! profession. g ia n t j Election Looking over h !cho!srshf . functions: Following iurn!on °; ♦ v.J"'”lI?*’1 v.. Up“ n from fir s t he, the I ca o « x * . - — ^ ' I h e Methodist E p i s c o p a l Active pallbearers were ( ■ R. « I * " ’ Ed ; tion, and one disinterested stu- 8 Students lo Attend Lubbock Baptist Meet n « io n a T S e T t i e m e ^ rn. the tide o f I battle neared the foreign area. Jap an ese Meanwhile, troops drove a spearhead across .Shanghai against Chinese forces massed along Soochow Greek. Bentley, Arnold pjrst Baptist Church in Lubbock, Clinton Owsley, W ard October 29-31. L a ttim ore Ewing, I The Texas Baptist S tu d e n t Un- other a t opposite* ands of O ther detachm ents of Chines* and Ja p a n e se troops faced each the jon convention will meet at Die S u n g h a i - lL m g c 5 ow R a i l w a y ' 1 I'tje Chinese were ex- pacted to blow the bridge to bit* I the at- ’.ne o r c a n i z a - invaders moment pate president of the o r g a n i z a - ! sta te p r e s c i e n t ox . . ;oru w.;jj preside a ’ the meeting. • : crcss* Prepare Program “ Brave New W orld,” a radio e d u c a t i o n xviii n e e n a o i e u id a i - tend the Harvard Medical School. . . ‘ x u iU „ , u l p “ f " . . Scarbrough, efu group and the James Ewing, and George ( .iris- u i s i w u i n , R, **• *-• . , “ ^ t ' n l A m e r i l a t h e " H a r l S J d 'M e d i M l 's r i * 7 '^viU j ^ After Evading about that fight I Doubt a, to the possibility^'©? I ^ H o n o r a r y nallb«»re™ w ere F. I ^.b“ | U nited States go to war, tor i w incumbered by debt; while the Marshall. time bein*» at lea st« he de' ^ thodlst Episcopal C h u r c h . talk union ot, three churches cen- I. Havvkin that the Methodist r u reton Ben C ntz John Sharp, the th* h° St against S o o r h A Creek. T h ” h International Settle- attending t he Shang, convention will be F r a n k let Episcopal Church, South, with Us C. V. I errell, William. M cC ray. Heard, Clyde Kennedy, W a r d J ** churches and congregations, J. W. Ezelle, and the Rev. J. N. B addock, Felix Gresham. Doris; Chinese forces, previously «va- from Chapel, which was smouldering ashes, its sm aller churches ; named judge o f the Court o f Crim-' tional director of the U niversity j b”ed up ,in balt,le Positions along the creek* , W. C. Morrow, C. M. University students Lattimore wa? Etheridge. Lake R. Pylant, educa- Hughes, Mildred Riddle, and W. B. cuated a c f .............. In 1919 Judge Noyth. with T' Ch wU1 r.educed r S tn ' the ^ to . , " The M ethodist Episcopal Church f 1 f ° r‘ d »v»ded over th e slavery issue be- awarded for one year the first y e a r as* a medical s t u - i g0 tte n 0Ur exPe n e nce yet, he be- fore th e Civil W ar, and such a in “ Two generations are needed I an(T j.^‘^ r f 5 a l 10f SJ ,ls clear °t' debt. j Ina! Appeals and held th a t posi- i p;aptist Church, will c o m p a n y ^ e ® ^ ta ban^ of t ° tion until his death. He was ac- Or, J. W. Stoner, pasto r of the tive in religious work, serving as the chairman of the Board of D e a - 1 F i m Baptist Church of Tu1sa, ’ Crthn-’ir.hin win be A. ° awaiting the attack, the students. If during I lieves. “ Men . *. Japanese w ar planes covered the advance cf the ground troops, * * ' union would m ark th e first sue- a tte m p t made to unite the Sunday school class in the L n i v e r - . speak e r among a g roup of nine cessful attempt made to unite the Sunday si hcol class in the U n iv er-! sneaker amomz a irroun of nine Arti51erh shelled the Chinese from three Methodist Churches again sity Baptist Church. sity Baptist. Church. cons and teacher o f the stu d e n t \ Okla., will be th e out-of-«tate I speakers. tbe rear* bomhin» thc Chinese positions. each Monday I be regarded as a candidate for a the will be presented night, from November I thnulgh HarVnni M edia? School Nato,nal w a r - o r rather peace. The Amor- April 25, 1938, from 9:30 to IO ‘ Scholarship. These o’clock, over the Columbia Broad- will be awarded as casting System, the D e p a rtm e n t of the In te rio r announced T h urs­ day in a le tte r to Dr. C. W. H ack­ ett., professor of Latin-A m erican history. those members of the class who anr.ronriation committee are de-1 dared. serving of them. scholarships' ican public ia not “ prizes” to !? TT “f in the estimation of the the general was incoming ready Ti,,, to to V f , “ The D e p a rtm e n t of the I n t e ­ rior has w ritten the P resid ent of ^ the U niversity for Dr. H a c k e tt said, “ and his s e c r e - 1 ta m e d , th e scholarship will be r e - ! now know what the World War tary, Mrs. Hugh McMath, and I newed for th re e j was like, and it’s going to be some .. rtnllakni-orxir! g a th e rin g years. Since all applicants for afI~! time b e fo re th e y are read y to get have collaborated the material. in fo rm a tio n ,” d en t a high honor record is main- the OI__II ^ legislature ■ - - - - - remaining ovl. I, • the Iv, in n f A m i n I t h a . M J ! VV .. J I . . ‘ The U nited S tates go vern m ent is carry in g out by radio b ro a d ­ casts the third step of Pre sid e n t See HA CK ET T , page 2. i i t h e H a r v a r d M e d i c a l ipso facto candidates * ___ * i. m i s s i o n t o School are for the H arvard Medical School m e n t- Tw o-thirds of the people National Scholarships, no special must have no actual recollection application is to be made. of a w a r before a nation will I D o n ’t Read Between Lines A n d Finish N ew Ranger Fast By ALONZO S H A R P E EADING time f o r the October issue of th e Texas Ranger, which - t v in out today, is tw e n ty m inutes, provided you d o n ’t read between the lines. In th a t case, however, it m ay take you a day or so. And if you t r y to im agine w h a t the censo r c u t out, boyoboy, you’ll never g e t through. The editor, Bob E ngelking, apologized to the censors the other day f o r making th e ir duties so onero us this time, b u t he explained th a t this issue w’as a tak e -o ff on tr u e confession and dime d etec­ tive magazines. He said t h a t he w anted to do a thorough job of it. And he did, even with w h a t’s left. Highly commendable, if a th in g like this can be commendable, is the cartoon th a t reads, “ Dean, I to meet my m o th e r!” want you the f irst page. You’ll find it on I f s w h a t’s called the di­ taking lemma by the horns. m ostly original; th a t is, local ta l ­ en t s tu ff. a t A S soon as you finish looking the cartoons, you m ight read story, Joel W estbrook’s “ W h a t College Did for Me!” I f s no worse than M aupassant’s best, and besides th e r e ’s a shotgun w ed­ ding a t th e end ; so all’s well th a t ends well. that rem em ber Now you’ve only been told a b o u t the better fe a tu re s so far. J u s t the Texas R anger is still the T exas Ranger, and some of it isn’t w’orth . . . well, you know. But i t ’s w orth y o u r time and trouble to go get it a t Journalism Building 108. In the second page y o u ’ll find one of the more subtle jokes of the magazine. I f s original to o; th a t is, it doesn’t c a rry a credit line. As a m a tte r of fact, one of the best compliments t h a t can be paid to this issue is th a t it ’s tw en ty others he made J u s t one p a rtin g comment. The edito r calls “ Crude this Story (Alias The Texas R a n g e r ) .” He made a bust th e re ; but, even if this b u st is on the cover, i f s n o t n e arly so p rom ine n t as ab ou t issue w ' 1 15 . HUO One gfOUp. T h o m d S S p e a k s T o n i a h t r n a S O p e d K S O n i g n t I O G e o l o g i c a l S o c i e t y lf Boat Runs Blockade r 5 p a n i s h J e x t s W i l l C o m e l 't ^ tak e a n o th e r plunge. “bt t nless a Spanish boat run-; ‘he Dr. J . E lm er Thomas, promi- j blockade, Dr. C. C. Glascock’s nent independent geologist, will advanced Spanish students will be * ^ , I t s true that the Japanese ..speak at a called m eeting o f the I textless. the program E nte rta in - whieh rematned behind to cover the retreat of the main Chinese ’ * C h a p e l what was left doomed nota,non. Approximately fifty s t u d e n t s 1 from schools in th e sta te will ap-1 *! pear on r - . . r ................. ment will be on the H arvard plan; leach d elegate will pay $1 regis- tra tio n fee. . /ms. C o a c h C h e r r y t h l a i k s -----— J g p Q f f j ^ E l S C t C C l t l o % t>u" had a war with Russia less than j Southw estern Geological Society j Dr Glascock, professor of Ro- p * n L A nrj U f M i X M o m k t a r c two generations ago, b u t th a t was Friday a t 7:30 o’clock, in Geology j mance languages, a walk-over. They didn’t g i t a Building 14. I afternoon th a t he belly-full of w a r th e n ,’ was th e ; Dr. I homas, who a tten d e d Five ju nior and five sophomore G en eral’s explanation o f the Jap- In ternational Geological Congress concern in New Y ork, but he be- U he U niversity in a talk to mem- rirls have been elected to Orange Jackets, honorary service organ- anese hostilities aration, M argaret Fisher, presi- going on. discussed! t h e ; communicated with the im porting p re s e n t athletic d evelopm ent' at said T h ursday! had not as yet Coach Blair C herry berjj of the Panhandle Club last th a t organ- in China now. in Russia last summ er, will d is - ; lieved T a H f 3 r A A I U v / l d l i y C J u l n v l j imported m a t e r i a l : n^ u r He explained that perh ap s occasionally * “ R otl” T h a t was j cuss th e Congress and tell c f the I they received the only ad- geology of Russia. He will illus- 1 from Spain. j j7at(0*n 0f a good football team dent, has announced, stu d e n t strikes against I pictures he jective General Bullard found to ; tr a te his lecture with some o f the describe, war. T h e same word was used in connection w ith “ we-won’t-go-to I ----------------------------------------———— ----- —..... — ............................. war - u n d e r - any - circum stances” groups in colleges through Europe last year. took his on the circum stances Q u ie tin g Babies To C u ttin g G rass M ake School M o n e y “It is impossible to picture at present sur­ rounding a people when they de­ cide to fight. What we do and say now will be changed tomor­ row. You young men in college now go out fo r rough sports, f o o t - j to caring f or babies in try in g to I ceives an im petus when there is I P r n i f f D a n i e l . M o r q a n ball, boxing. Well, when a war < earn a n or p a r t 0f comes, you will be o u t there be-; thKmgfc school. Boys have such players are cashing cause you still like ro u g h sp ort.” j j obs as mowing grass, everything fro m coaching f o o t b a l l ! n u rsery occupation invariably re- — ~~ ~— th e ir way j a football gam e in Austin. Piano University s tu d e n ts are doing doing ta le n t a t places w here children stenographic work. The Club. .................................. trim m in g in on ■ - ' A few of th e students, however, I takes l ime .ind jt is impossible to! Newly elected ju nior members i copies. trip wert able to o btain second-hand £o m an exceptionally powerful I a*« Evelyn Cberkas of Sealy, Lois ~ a new Crow of Dallas, Garol Hollister of Galveston, Sally L ipscom b of Bon- F i r s t organization of the club ham, and Lois S a g e r of Childress* this year dissolved Sophomore girls are B arb ara handle Club and formed the Am- Kone of Austin. Ann Finch of arillo Club. Club action last night Austin, Laura H eils of San An- changed th e name of the organ- to m e, Mary Herod of A tlanta, R a t i o n back ' ‘ team the first y e a r under system the Panhandle Ga., and Adele Neely of Dallas. the old Pan- * — '»** to ~ ‘ ‘ First meeting fo r the new mem- ------------------------------ b,'r* w u ' be tu e sd a y a ite rn o o n a t j 5 0*cjock in Texas Union 315. The 77-year-old A rm y veteran hedges, washing windows, w aiting are is m aking a visit through Texas, tables, and w ashing dishes, while w here he spent m an y of his sol-! most of the girls do stenographic d ier days. W ith him are Mrs. work. The Y.M.C.A. and the Y.W.C.A. Bullard and friends. He cam e to Austin especially to see the rare- to geth er have a ttain e d jobs fo r book collections of th e University approxim ately one hu n d re d and these a n d was shown over the city by fo rty students. Colonel Paul L, W akefield. Reed would no t have been able to at- G ra n b erry , chairm an o f the wel-1 tend this help, coming committee, and Donald W. A. Smith, director of the or- Coney, librarian, took the p arty j ganizations, has estimated, thro u g h L ibrary. school w ithout inspection o f the | Girls F o r t y of an learn in g their O n L a w H o n o r LsO UnCi! The annual fall initiation ban­ quet will be given Thursday night at 6 o’clock in the Union Build- Honor Council m em bers from ing. Ruth Hall is chairman of th# first-y ear program committee, Dawn Blair Some girls are companions elderly people, and others are em- classes of the School of Law w ere j is the decorations, ployed in sales work, mimeograph- elected Wednesday morning. W ar- and Josephine Pile heads the Irv­ table waiting, ren P r u itt and W. B. Morgan were citations committee for the ben- ing^ house work, and advertisin g work. elected by the mid-laws and John quet. the piano to the mid-law and in charge of to play the .* Boys have found jobs as pho- Daniels by the first-y e a r class. tographers, house m anagers, meat cutters, and salesmen. Some are School of Law will elect a c h a i r - ; ju n io r women. m aking m oney by w rapping bread, pentering, Orange Jack ets is a service or- and is twenty high-ranking the campus, who are answering 8 o’clock. The nominees are Ray- chosen on the baris of scholarship, leadership, and general all-round slicing and ; man fo r th e Honor Council Sat- limited c a r - 1 u rd a y morning, October 30, a t girls on The entire s tu d e n t body of th e ganisation Membership sophomore pa inting, tutoring , for to find employment caring telephones a t night, and reading mond Cook, Thomas Shelton,, a n d ^for invalids a n d babies as well a s , t o blind students. William Goodrich. lability. I n t e r n a t i o n a l th re a te ne d in Shanghai as lions th e Ja p a n e se the city and took moved to the In te rn a tio n a l S ettle­ m e n t * Americans, French, British, and Italians lined u p behind a sand bag wall to pro- toot those foreigner? still in the I sity. (Sea t>age I, column 8.) boundary- S O C IE T Y Halloween spirit take? the cam ­ pus. G am m a Phi Beta, Zeta Tau Alpha, Tipton House, M atejek Jessie Andrew’s Dormi­ House, tory, W esley Foundation, and S.R.D. are scenes of parties this week. (See page 5, column I.) BUZZARD W alkathoning the P e rip : A D ­ E L E N E E L E Y and W A R R E N OS­ BO RN E w ondering “ why school a n y w a y ? ” MAE MOORE listening to HOMER MUELLER. in te n tly BROOKS, E L L E N DOUGLAS who really got scratched with the ! newly acquired K .S. pin. B U S T E R sc a tte rin g much lenza on the campus. JACK influ* S H E P P A R D Maybe you didn’t know, but B E T H late-dated w ith the g r e a t NINO MARTINI (living up to his last name in a big w a y ) , and failed to sign o u t; f o r th e night at S.R.D. H er room ­ sober an d drove m a te “ hom e.” Biggest slip-up of the y e a r ; K E N N E TH MODRALL. J A N E AYERS brings good look­ ing aviators to the A. D. Pi house stayed ! by battalions. the Delta Tau One clumsy little T ri B elt slip­ steps ped down S unday, only to slip up and back in to the h e a rt of one of the bro­ th e rs fro m Houston a half ho ur two-month void. la te r, a f t e r a EL O ISE DU BOIS, a gracious a n d lovely girl, can po^e on down best. ANNE CA R T­ w ith the are W R IG H T and her certain rig h tly worried abo ut a m a rria g e problem. V. A. DAN­ I E L S is one of the few girls who cb serve complim entary mention as to clokies, JO H N smiles, W A RD , JR. family and RODDY 'Hell-in-hLs-hometown’ PO LL A R D , U niversity stu d e n t fr o m Cameron, is going to Big D th is week-end to display his tech- n que to the big city. F R I D A Y , O C T O B E R 2&s I Barr C O R P U S C H R IS T I C L U B M E E T S M RS. G ID L E Y B E T T E R B illy Evans, new president of the Corpus Christi Club, was elected with other officers of the club at a meeting Thursday night. Others elected are Marian Gunst, vice-president; Frances U t l e y , treasure.*; Nettie Ruth Hereford, secretary; and Roy Hodges, re­ porter. The date of the club’s dance will be decided at its next meeting on Thursday night at 7:15 o’clock in Garrison Hall 113. Mrs. W . F. Gidley, injured in an automobile accident October improving at is 9 near Alvin, John Sealy Hospital in Galveston, Dr. Gidley, dear, of the School of Pharmacy, said today. Mrs. Gid­ ley will probably return to Aus­ tin in a month. Dean Gidley, who was also injured .in the accident, returned to the campus recently. THE STORE FOR MEN N O Production Line Look HERE Freeman Shoes never can have that "C arbon Copy*' look because each pair ii made as an individual unit, A right and left is mated from the same skin at the cutter's board and throughout over 225 careful shoemaking operation* they are never separated. Let us show you how much difference that makes in appearance, comfort, and longer wear. $5 to $650 W O R N WITH PRIDE BY MILLIONS 616 CONGRESS AUSTIN'S LEADING STORE FOR MEN Deices, Jones House, Newman, District 7 W in In Softball By RIP DODGE Texan Sparta Staff Champion* were crowned yesterday in the final play-off* in the intramural softball leagues. In the championship series, Delta Kappa Epsilon won over Pi Kappa Alpha, 2 to 0, for the fraternity champion­ ship; Jones House defeated Mergele House, 14 to 12, to take the in­ dependent series; District 7 downed District IO, IO to 6, to win in the M IC A Club defeated Little Campus, 8 to I, for the club championship. finals; and Newm an♦ In the fastest game of the after­ noon, between Delta Kappa Epsi­ lon and P i Kappa Alpha, Gordon Roundtree, Deke hurler, burned the ball across the plate in the best pitching exhibition of the season. Roundtree struck out eleven men during the seven in­ nings and allowed only four hits, H O L M E S S C O R E S Funeral Services Held Thursday For Martin Funeral services were held f o r Ray L . Martin, state director of vocational education, at the Thur- low Weed Funeral Home Thura- j day afternoon. lead. The Rev. Chester L, Hults, rec-! Episcopal I Saints’ tor of AH Church, officiated. Services were held in the funeral parlor. The choir, accompanied by the pipe organ, sang “ Nearer My God to Thee.” H a rry Holmes, Deke catcher and lead-off man, scored in the first stanza to give the Deke* a A fast outfield, one-run led by Ed Tigner, left fielder, and Roundtree’s pitching kept the one- point lead intact. In the seventh Red McCullough, shortstop, added Johnny Holmes another when drove out a two-bagger over sec­ Mr, M artin is survived by bis ond ba^e Th?* two points were good for the ball game and the > kl0^ * nd two sona, Lieutenant championship. Fighting The body lay in state Thursday afternoon before being shipped to San Antonio for cremation. Hamilton Martin and Duke Mar -J tin. desperately behind lanky Basil B e ll’s pitching, the P i K. A .’s found the hole-proof defense of the Deke’s too powerful for scoring. Only once did a Pi K . A. advance as far as third. O V E R T IM E S C R A P Honorary pallbearers were A l ­ bert Krueger, T. J . O’Connor, Jim Eddy, Dick Derby, W. R. Cate,! Charles Cyrus, J. J . Brown, R, A. Manier, Hartman Dignowity, C. L. | Kuykendall, L. A. Woods, Dr. Jerem iah Rhodes, T. H. Green B. Trimble, Charles Jo h n ­ son, Dr. J , M. Kuehne, Claude Shelby,) Nine innings were required to untangle* a 12-all score knotted in uie n u n nilling in uw mucjjunu- in the fifth inning in the independ- ent .erie. between M e r,e l. House H ,»- Orsdy Chandler,-N. S H«»- and two runs in the first half of the V * " ” ninth that won the game. ! on- J ° hn O'"*"- J \ B ' Jo n .. H on... Jo n . , added J 0*' ' " P * b" ey\ ! " . W f J . T. Reynolds, Fred Erhard, C. IL Rakestrow, Clarence W inkler, Colgate Elm er, E . L. Williams. The Mergele sprinted team ^ *. quickly into the lead in the first and H arvey Williams. ; inning, scoring five runner*. Jones i —_ — ; tallied flam m ed W arren Wiggin, Mergele Poppy Sale To Benefit j pitcher, t’or eight runs rn tho third p i j| j to tak e the lead. In the fifth , the | '- '" I I a TBH v J t V e t e r a n s the second and two /"Mf in - , . . . . . runs totaled bv Jo nos. score knotted when Mergele slug I vers found the holes to tie the 11 v. T again on November 11 as member- of the „ , I University I. nit ot the American F " r *• ree ic in g s neither team Legion Auxiliary begin the anmia! In the first of the j saie of poppies to raise funds for I ninth Charley Ruegles, Jcr.es left the needy children cf World W a r Poppies will bloom _ , . .. threatened. . . . .. , I * , fielder, singled, ’ leu advanced to veteran-?. third ! third on an error at second bast. Elwood Marlin, sacker, doubled with a hard drive through ,f thp dr.uoleo w,ti, a nard drive r a n . , v ’comi, .corm * R u g ,!*.. Marvin tho. „ who M c C O w e n , , *« . i j doubled to score Marlin, bringing w > , w the score to 14 to 12. Mergele ‘ worm The second baseman, I House put three up, three down to . „ - Am ericas Mrs. J. W . Byrne, president of the Auxiliary, said that the wear- L, a trjbl)t, their , during . „ in the • service funds received from the poppy sale are used not only for needy children of veterans but for all child welfare work. hand the cr un to Jones. Ta S T A R T S L O W District 7, after being held : scoreless for tv i innings, opened up for four innings to circle the base ten limes. District IO led . , . fo r three periods b u t saw the . I n * . j e e r , from D istrict T forgo ahead Hunt at i double their five runs sr ired s x EMahl> Mrs. g 0 . '.Miller w: rn tho gam . ende Mrs. J. C. Tittle is chairman of sale. Those working the poppy under her are Mrs. Lueiie, Pow* era, Mrs. C larence S ’ umpf, Miss B l a k e i t e . Mi-, A leen e M ,,. j w Ram J - and Mrs. J . IV. Byrne. M , , The highly-touted Little Cam- . ---------- -------------------- .. r . . . pus team met its Waterloo at the hands of the Newman Club. The h o r V o lu r iT 6 8 r S B a ., Avenue boy, were beld to S f ar+s C a c t u s W o r k rive hits and one run by one of ; the fattest outfields seen in the Students who are interested in series. New!na.; ! lubsters scored working on the Cactus should sign Journalism to toke the club championship sc- Building 3, a* work on ‘he Uni- ries by a M n I score. versify yearbook will begin soon, M Rh the league play-offs fad- George Chamberlain, editor, fin­ four inninffs an n:ns ™ thf application in ing into tilt background, the I nounced Thursday. I league champ* c a rt looking for-! Assignments were made to va- ward to the I nu amu: a1 champion-j rious sections at a meeting of I ship to be played next week. No j volunteers Thursday afternoon, B>'b Townsend, associate edi- date has been set for the play- offs. Representatives from each I tor, and A! King w ill edit the ad- league win! er will meet in the In ­ ministration Everett tramural Office in Gregory Gym- Shirley will edit the fraternity sec­ nasium today at 5 o’clock to de- tion, and Naomi Smith the soror­ ity section. • cid?? the championship series. section. P A G E T W O Th? TI mf C nllrfffi Daily la th? Touiti P h o n e 2-3164 T H E B A I L Y T E X A N P h o n e 2-S1.65 Undefeated Texas Cross-Country Team To Meet University Of San Antonio This Afternoon U. I. Has Beaten Gophers And Fightin’ Irish Seek Top Honors B o t h N o t r e D a m e a n d M in n e s o t a h a v e ta s te d th e b it t e r d reg s of d e fe a t b u t su ch it th e g r e a t ­ ness o f t h e ir n am es th a t e it h e r c a n r e g a in lost c e n te r a n d C r a m a u d M o o re to r u n th e Ir is h fla n k s . M in n e s o t a h a t th e p o w e r to w in . N o t r e D a m * h a t S im o n ic h a n d M c C o r m ic k f o r ft r e n g t h p re s tig e b y d e f e a tin g the o th e r. W i t h E l m e r at a n d fin e s t e in th e ir s h if t y b a c k f ie ld . Fincher, Weller Win In Fermis City Tourney M a y End By Saturday in the Austin city tourna-1 Fincher and W eller defeated IN: rn en and Granville, 6-1, 6-3,1 in the only match played Thurs­ day ment. The tour? ev this year has not enjoyed :ts usual success be-1 cause of failure to play matches on schedule and because of for­ feits by such outstanding players as W ilm er All son. John Van Ryn. and Sterling William s Dr Perce!:, Texas tennis coach, has devised a complicated *che- 1 dale the hop# of being able to play the I final event Saturday. f ~>t this afternoon in C L U B P IC N IC S T O D A Y Form er stu lent* of the Un! v e r it y of San Antonio H u b and their guests will meet this after­ noon at 5 o’clock if? Ii int of the Texas Union to attend the eam- pus club's pi%rt.$e» _ The picni will be held at Bull j Creek and a moonlight hay ride • w’ill he an added feature of the annual g ^-together of the mem- . hers, ; Some members of the faculty I of the University of San Antonio and r idents will arrive Friday at noon to v - n d the p caic. 3-Day Racket Club Schedule Announced Marjorie Murray, publicity manager of the Racket Club. an- noun es following matches of the club's ladder tour­ nament must be played as sched­ uled : that the F r i d a y , O c t o b e r 29 V irgi n a Mar re y vs. Ha z e I Gray, Court 3 at 5 o’clock Dorothy Baldridge vs. Edith po rd lr an, Court 3 at 2 o’clock. Bobbie Lee vs. Glen Appling, Court 2 at 2 o’clock. Elizabeth Olsen vs. M ary Mc- Quiston, Court 4 at 2 o’clock. Mary Helen Perkins vs. Hallie Dunlap. Court 3 at 3 o’clock. Betsy Clevenger vs. Viola Woodall, Court 2 at 3 o’clock. Kell Watkins vs G itty King Corbett, Court I at 3 o’clock. Mary Fletcher vs. Miss Sheila O’Gara. Court 4 at 3 o’clock. Monday, November I M yra Thibmult vs. Tee Schmidt Court I at. 2 o’clock. W ednesday, November S •To Polk vs. Marjorie Murray, Court I at 2 o’clock. G R A D E S O U T T H A N K S G IV IN G Thanksgiving this year might not be a'! turkey and football for some reports will be home by then. students— failure All instructors’ reports will be sent home before November 20, which will give plenty of time for “ Joh nn y’s” grade* fo reach home before be arrives. Foes Before The crosscountry Longhorn team, undefeated in two starts this s«a*on, meets the San An­ tonio University harriers at 4 o’clock this afternoon in San A n ­ tonio. The San Antonio harriers met with too much opposition when they ran against the Long­ horns in the previous m att held in Austin and ware unable to push the highly touted Longhorn run­ ners. The San Antonio University team is coached by a former Long­ horn track star, George Harris. The Texas marathoners de­ feated Rice I tat Saturday in a dual meet which was run off in the Texa< Memorial Stadium with no one hut the officials to see it. The distance was two miles and although the Longhorns won the meet in totaling the points, Calvin Bell of Rice copped the first place honors. Allan O’Neal Reed, Texas, dogged Bell all the way, However, the Texas harriers are still in their preliminary stages of preparation for the conference at championships to be A AM. November IS . held Calvin Bell, th* winner against Texas, was the only point-getter for Rice, being followed into the finish by -even Texas runners closely bunched. for cross-country “ A.AM . will be our strongest competition the conference championship which Texas will be defending,” says Remus Thomas, Longhorn coach. Coach Thomas led The University of Texas harriers to the confer­ last year as ence championship captain of the Lor shorn team and won the place honor* pionships in the conference cham­ individual first The Aggies ber A Longhorns will meet the in a dual meet Novem­ T e n n i s S c h e d u l e U P P E R B R A C K E T 4 o’clock— Dulling-Murphy va. Christie cr-Lapman. 5 o’clock— W inner of above vs. Lorfmg-Hickman. L O W E R B R A C K E T 4 o ’ c I o ck— M cGinnis-Brauback vs. Kamrath-Glenn. 5 o’clock— Welier-Fincher vs. winner r f above. S ci warz-Fox Brauback if the Kamrath-Glenn. vs. McGinnis- lose to latter Advanced Handballers lo Form Club Today Plan* to form a handball club for all advanced handball players will be discussed in a meeting to be held F rid a y afternoon at 5 o’clock in the ping pong room of Gregory Gym. The idea of establishing a hand­ ball club v. as conceived by Vance Foster and K elley G affney, rank­ ing University player*, and has the approval of B e rry Whitaker, director of intram ural athletic* for men, for In the meeting the possibilities of such a club will be discussed. The handball club, if formed, w ill attempt to select a standard ball, arrange tournaments, other than the one and only intramural tournament, for and matches against the various hand­ ball from other colleges and the Y.M .C A. team* of the sta te . arrange teams the players have com­ having only one tour­ Some of plained of ex­ nament a year, and pressed the desire to form such a club prim arily to sponsor more tournament*. have ( Continued From Page One,) Roosevelt’s “ Good Neighbor Pol­ icy ” stated in his inaugural ad­ dress o* 1932. I he policy ii to out­ friendship law war by building with our neighbor*. First and second steps of the government were to encourage friendly relations with our neigh­ ‘ he bor?. and to participate Buenos A res Conference for the maintenance of pea * lr The twenty-six come- ative pro­ grams present the vast sweep of Latin-A r ertran history by pictur­ ing the live*** cf the leader*, states­ men, educators, poets, and artiste. The program* w ill be divided into cultural periods. 'The Eyes Of Texas' Included In Song Folio “ The Eye* cf Te will be published this year in a folio of selected major college marches. Permission has been granted to use the University’s school song. The publishing company ii? com­ piling these co! -cr marches into a set of complete orchestrations for twenty-seven instruments. No such folio has yet been made for college and m ilitary bands. The sale will bt- made through the Na­ tional Music Distributors. “ The Eye* cf T.-xas" hat only recently been legally the Univer­ sity s school song. The copyright was secured Ja n u ary 30, 1936. The words were written in I §03 by John Lang Sinclair, ex-student, now a tax expert in New York. It wax ’ he ou gwnv*• of the ad­ monition of VV. L, p arber, then president, who said, “ Young ladies and gentlemen, the eye? of Texas are upon you.” Legend ha* it ‘ hat the song was sung a* a football game and mi­ raculously changed the game in Texas’s favor. Since then it has be-en the school song, but it was not until the c< pyright was «e- : cured that th- song Ie ga ly be­ came the property of the Stu ­ dents* Association of The U niver­ sity of Texas. — - ------------ Funeral Services Held For Mrs. Howard Funeral I -cestiav afternoon at 4 for Mrs. Martha Howard at services were held o’clock the ighter, Mrs. M ary Bonner, at 2305 Lafayette Street. M nday of morning at 10:30 o’clock double pneumonia. She wa* the mother of Miss Margaret Howard, who is employed in the binding im­ part mer.* of the Library. Mrs. Howard died Five daughters, Mr*. Kathryn Harding. Mrs. Bonner, Miss M ar­ garet H- ward, Miss Evelyn Ii- Ic­ ard, and Mrs. Donald Eastman, and three grandchildren survive. R O Y A L P O R T A B L E wuh T O U C H C O N T R O L * Ti «dr -ark Intr ferry tmncx: V n ct TIm* mn amman* nvmnm ad* pts hit- •■•on to ew m w ’ • Suae* areeeuntf C L A Y L. PRICE Phone 2-3233 aanm m m aam m m m am m Ci*wrj*sai**» Plea** bail urn mbaut Roysgfe tree* moderately p* a e* nrKxfedtu ct*, .max Witt. o*fryro* .'..we. Alw. .'fest*us al |, Jjti • man imrtuaM pion ti*™** ..... ........ __________________ _ ____ G O O D M A T C H Arrow Shirts and Arrow T ie* are made for each other. They’re expertly tailored in original de­ sign*. smart, sturdy and top* un style. Shirt* arm 4# He*#* fur rn-fit ami Sanforized --- $2 up Pfacktie* rmttiteml amatrut turn t t » SISO T O G G E R Y 2310 Guadalupe J . I . Pose O ur A R R O W G o rd o n S h ir t Is a winner on seven separate counts: 1— A R R O W c o llar— the sleekest collar on any shirt. 2— O x fo r d — the favorite young m an’s fabric. 3— T ailo rin g— the Mitoga form fit is the neatest shirt design ever developed. 4— F it—-it Is Sanforized-Shrunk, 5— G uaran tee— a new shirt if one ever shrink*, 6— C o rre ct style— either in plain or button-down collar. 7.— V alu e— a day-in day-out bargain at 616 Congress AUSTIN’S LEADING STORE FOR MEN I a r a A X X I TXT*:-- ^ x x t t t t t x t t i t t v ix u x y ■) e d u c a t i o n ! The sooner you get acquaint­ ed with Arrow Shirts the better. They're authentically styled by experts and topped with the finest fitting collars that ever graced a neck. The body is M itoga curve-cut and Sanforized— never to shrink. $2 to $5 a" - FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2 9 ,1 9 3 7 The F irst College D aily In the South Phone 2-3164 THE DAILY TEXAN - Phone 2-3165 PAGE THREE Twenty-Nine Longhorn Gridders To Leave Tonight For Dallas And Game With Mustangs l l . I, Squad Drills M u stan g Linesmen Hugh Wolfe Leads Southwest Conference Backs In Yards Gained B n All Points Texas Invited To Participate In Hom ecom ing The University has . U. T. Exes, Instructor In Mexican Net Play Central Texas Scouts To Attend Circus Here Scout* from fifteen Central been I Two in- and a e x -University tennis stars j Texas counties will be in Austin U niversity in stru c to r will I this week-end to attend th e B oy Sterling Williams vited to participate in a1 of the j compete fo r the Abelardo L. Rod- , homecoming ‘ unctions given by riguess Cup in Mexico in a tourna- Southern Methodist University in ment beginning Saturday. Dallas on its annual homecoming | day Satu rday. | and Paschal Walthall of San Am­ in addition to the contest be- tom©, ex-stu den ts of the Un ive r- and L on g-1 rity, and L o d e n LaCoste, i n s t r u c t tw een the Mustangs horns, student bodies are invited to r in the D epartm ent of Applied to a tte n d a land Auditorium between 6:30 and 7 o’clock. Tho Longhorn Band and tho Sou th ern Methodist band will be presented. of A u s t i n 1 broadcast in M c F a r-1 Mathematics, with Jake Hess, Jr., rade Scout Circus, A tent city, modeled a f te r the one a t last year's Na- tional Jam boree, will be erected in Pease Park. Plans are being made for a pa- the through streets F rid ay dow ntown ‘ nd Max ( ampbell, Ho iston, and j streets F riday morning. A com- Fred Rover, Dallas, will face th e: Mexican team . The I n f e r is com- Plete to u r of the University, posed of Manuel Bed Pa, Federal Capitol, and o ther Distriot champion, and the Davis | te re ? t will ,- j r r ^ h Cup members, E steb an Reyes. Daniel H ernandez, Un da. Twelve singles and doubles m atches will be played. a ^ ° be five ; tre a te d to a free picture show at tho id a ce* of in- entertainm ent and Alfonzo j ^or ' ne scou?'- *nev " one of the theaters. S a tu rd a y night there will ho a dance at the Adolphus Hotel spon­ sored by the Ex-Students’ Asso­ ciation of Southern Methodist U niversity. S r u r h r t m t j h 's . W e n * S h i r r A I R - C O N D I T I O N E D D I R E C T Vickers Of Rice Is Second O'Brien Of T.C.U. Last Hugh W olf, pow erful Longhorn right halfback, is leading the Southwest C onference in yardage gained, according to figures released by the A.&M. publicity departm ent. Runner-up is “ Red” Vickers, Rice back. Wolfe has piled up a total of 243 yards in thirty-five a tte m p ts, an average of 5.91 yards. Vickers has carried the ball sixteen times for 88 yards, an average o f 5.38 yards. P la y e r— S c h o o l— CA) .......... ..................Texas W olfe .............. ............16 (I I V ickers...........Rice (2) H a r lo w _____ S.M .U---------- ............ 23 (3) Hall ................T.C.U.............. ............ 34 ........ 34 ( 4 ) Patterson ......B a y lo r .......... Rogers .................. A.&M.............. .......... 41 ......... I 6 (2) G u y n es...... ....S.M.U. F le tc h e r ..... .........Arkansas ... . . 20 ............ ........A.&M. Todd ............55 ..........79 (3) O’Brien ...... ..T.C.U......... . ....... (B ) 213 SR 127 198 ITT 191 71 sn 237 223 (C ) 35 2 5 21 18 13 0 0 33 2 7 CD) I 2 3 3 a 3 4 2 6 12 CE) 5.91 5.38 5.30 5.21 4.68 4.45 4.44 4.00 3.71 2.48 ( A ) — Times carried; (B I­-Y a rd s gained; ( € ) - —Yards lost; ( D) — Times no gain; ( E ) — Average gain. ( 1 ) — Figures for Oklahoma University game missing. ( 2 ) — Figures for C entenary, Washington U. and Vanderbilt game* missing. ( 3 ) — Figures for Fordham game missing. ( 4 ) — Figu res fo r Oklahoma ( Ay U. and C entenary gam es missing 13. T hat a b o u t ta k e s care of the Conference. R A M B U R The pro football game is com­ ing right along . th e Giants . j have averaged 25,000 attend an ce so f a r this year and hope to b ea t . tough that, , . , W onder if Don Budge wished he had tu rn e d pro as his car turned over the o th e r day . . . would be to be seriously injured before he got a chance to make th a t cash, . . . Larry the Great Kelly has decided definitely on sports-writing in p re fe re n ce to playing pro ball . . . ■ Jackson To Be Ready For S.M.U. Contest By SAM BROWN Texan S p o rtt S t a f f Dana X. Bible is in a fine frame I I o f mind. Since Coach Bible’s dia- I position is generally a good gauge I o f the w ork of th e te am , the team th e Mustang I m u s t be r e a d y for f r a y in Dallas S aturday. The te a m w e n t throu gh an all- around w o rk o u t yesterd ay a f t e r ­ noon, smoothing out all points. T he fir s t p a rt o f the session, a f r i l l in knocking down passes, found th e Longhorns much more a le r t an d effective th a n they have been. T h e ir w ork in th e fia t zone praisew orthy, was with the examples of M itterm ayer, G ray, Baines, and Boyer giving incentive the others. Pass offense was executed with a snap th a t belied S a tu rd a y ’s h e a rtb re a k in g loss; th e ends had a high average of completions, as usual, and Carl Bage gave a n ex­ hibition of good pass-snaring. the work of especially to B E W I L D E R I N G P L A Y S J u s t to make certain that ru n ­ ning plays are still in good shape, Coach Bible th e n sent team through a set. of elusive plays cal­ culated to bewilder S.M.U. De­ fense w ork against the freshmen ended th e a fte r n o o n ’s work. the Glenn Jackson, c e n te r who has be en ba ttling with Roy Baines fur t h a t position, appeared in a w a rm ­ up su it fo r th e a fte r n o o n ’s drill, a i d a f t e r a brief workout, r e ­ t i e d ; b u t his lay-off will be only temporary’, and he will be ready to play S atu rd a y , Jim Maedgen, guard, is s u ff e r :ng from a knocked down shoulder, and will be o u t in­ definitely. L E A V E A T IO O’CLOCK The team will leave Oak Grove Dorm itory for the station a t IO o’clock tonight, after a final drill I this afternoon. They will arrive in Dallas Saturday morning at 7:40 o’clock. Those who will make the trip will be Burchell Allinson, Jud Atchison, Carl Bage, Roy Baines, Wes Boyer, B. F. Bryan, Shelby Buck. Bernie Esunas, Lew­ is Ford, BUI Forney, Lewis Gray, Ray Howard, Glenn Jackson, Ray K eeling, J. T. King, W allace Law­ son, Ned McDonald, Henry Mit- tefm ayer, Park Myers, Charles Kaiser, Stanley N eeley, John Pet­ erson, Clyde Prestwood, Jack Rhodes, Larry Rn pel, Howard Terry, Will Tullos, James Wat­ son, and Hugh W olfe, Coaches Bible, Blair Cherry, Bully Gll- ‘ strap, and Jack Gray and M. W. K elley, Dr. Joe Gilbert, and Kelso Dabney and Bill Ward, managers, will accompany the team. The probable startin g l i n e u p f i r S a tu r d a y ’s game will be P e t­ right al--on, rig h t end; Esunas, ta c k le ; Kaiser, right g u a rd ; Ja c k ­ son, c e n te r; T erry , g u a rd ; Keeling, left tackle; Neeley, left e nd; M itterm a y e r ( c ) , q u a r te r ­ back; Wolfe, le ft halfback; Bryan, t i g h t h a lf ; and Gray, fullback. le ft 1,500 Tickets Sold Here For S.M.U. Tilt f o r sold A pproxim ately fifteen hundred the tickets bad been Texas-S.M.U. game early T hurs­ day a ftern o o n . Last m inute sales were expected to raise the total t o approxim ately thousand, Miss Alice Archer, secretary of the A thletic Council, announced. Sides closed T h u rsd a y afternoon at 6 o’clock. two A dvance sale of tickets for the A .& M . game has reached 5,000, with additional requests increas­ ing the number daily, Miss Archer •aid. S tu d e n t tickets will go on sale Novem ber 15, A b o v e a r e th e m a i n s t a y s of th e S o u th e r n M e th o d is t lin e. The guard p o sitio n s a r e filled by C liffo r d M a tt h e w s , A m a r illo husky, fro m K arnes C ity. and W e s l e y A a r o n , d im in u tiv e h a r d -f ig h te r T a ck les are C h ar lie S p r a g u e , c e n t e r o f last s e a s o n , and L e a m o n Phil! ips, 2 2 0 -p o u n d e r . T h e c e n te r post v a c a te d b y S p r a g u e is filled by J o e G ray, fo r m e r W e a t h e r f o r d J u n io r C o lle g e p la y e r . O \ /x L f Q CJO O O O O O O C J S B y J O H N a C O N G R A T S , H U G H ! ■■■— ism T E ,K A N ? P O R T S C D I T O R My best to H ugh Wolfe who ha* been b u rn in g up gridirons fo r the U niversity for ‘bree y e a rs and who has tu r n e d in the best ground- gaining perfo rm a n c e in the Conference to date. (See list of leading conference ball carriers.) A n d the sa m e to B u r c h e ll A llin so n , E l D o ra d o , A rk ., bo y, for his g r e a t i m p r o v e m e n t sin ce the sta r t o f the se a s o n . W h e n p r a c tic e b e g a n , Al l i ns o n w a s s c a r c e l y i n c l u d e d in an y Hat o f v a r s ity p r o sp e c t s. He j u s t m a n a g e d to s q u e e z e on to the list as the se v e n t h ta c k le . B u t today he is one of the best tackles on the team , sta rred in last S a tu r d a y ’? game. A leg injury may keep him on th e bench d u rin g most of he'll see some service. the S.M.U. gam e, but • a y s he w a s 89 p e r c e n t e f f i c i ­ e n t last w e e k . in th e nation, which B aylor’s Golden Bears are really p u ttin g on a show, ranking is n in th a p r e tty high ranking, don’t you know? T.C.U. comes w ay down the lis t u n d e r the Bruins, finally settling down at No. 29, while the A.&M. m anages to stick sixteenth slot, Rice climbed a little, stopped a t No. 48, and A r­ in No. isn’t doing badly kansas in 'B R Y A N 1 T H E O W L The infallible Associated Press reason why ano th er disclosed Texas lost to Rice. A n A. P. p h o to in tho D allas N e w s show s " B r y a n ,” in a b lu e Rice je r s e y , g e t t i n g o f f a punt. Long " B e e f us B r y a n P u n t fo r T e x a s , ” r ead s t h e c a p ­ tion . B o o ts Well, if th a t was Beef us in an Owl un iform with the num ber "TO” on his jersey, then a ’s no w onder Texas lost. T H A T O L D SPIRIT In the list of squad m em bers m aking the trip to Dallas today, there are only tw enty-nine names. usually H eretofore, Bible taken of squad the thirty-six or thirty-seven men. complete has Why the change? B e c a u s e th e r e a r e men o n the • q u a d w h o a r e ju s t kittin g back on the th e ir heel*, w a t c h in g p a r a d e go b y , a n d n o t m a k in g t h e m ­ a n y e f f o r t to se lv e s . p lay to w o rk fo r it. T h e y d o n ’t w a n t fo o t b a ll b a d ly e n o u g h im p r o v e to U r l f our clothing d im miss could ta lk Ilks Charlie M cC arthy , . . they’d tell you of the compliments t h e y ' v e received t h r u ' t h e p late glass in our win­ dows . . . Of the men and wo­ men who have stood in front of these windows end have pronounced the clothing to be the finest in town. laugh at right to the They'd time they’d had to un­ in dress a public y o u n g m a n w h o "try on the wanted to suit In the window. there please are These ' dummies wearing the smartest Fall clothing ever de­ signed. Sea Our Windows and Our Values the T.C.U. T icket sales for T h a t old spirit in the boys who make good is w hat keeps them in game Novem ber 13 have reached ; the ball games W hen a football 4,000. Requests are also coming player decides trying, to quit in for reservations for th e Bay­ then h e’s no longer of a n y value lor game, N ovem ber 6. Student to the team. tickets fo r th# Baylor game will go on sale Monday, Miss Archer said. N O . 60 Yes, that’s right where Texas rates according to th e Williamson rating system , and that’s probably fair enough when you balance the won-lost columns. S .M .U . Is the o n ly S o u t h w e s t tea m ra n k in g b e lo w T e x a s as Mr. W illia m so n it. A t s e e s is so m e co n so la tio n , lea st, that s y s t e m ’s p r o p r ie t o r th e sin c e $ SOL% % I $ Kit Carson Cleaners R. L. DOV'NS, Owner CLEANING | DYEING I ALTERATIONS ftr W ork G u a r a n t e e d S a t i s f a c t o r y ^ Power To A d d re ss C h ic a g o O il Convention H. H. Power, professor o f pe­ engineering troleum production p i the U niversity, will be one of the speakers a t the American Pe­ troleum In stitu te in the Stevens Hotel in Chicago, November 8-12. Mr. Power will conduct the Fri­ day afternoon group session o f the ^ v is io n o f Production in consid­ ering production practice and re- & tea rch. for from Two thousand oil men from the j § I U nited States and several 3 foreign countries have made res- i $ convention. •rvations the speakers will be Some o f the (Charles F. K ettering, Detroit, Mich., vice-president and director o f research f o r General Motors Corporation; Dr. H. E. Howe. W ashington. D.C., editor o f In­ dustrial and Engineering Chemis­ try; Congressman W esley E. Des- ney. representative from Okla­ h om a; and J. D. Collett of O’K eefe and Collett, Fort Worth, a mem­ ber of institute’* board of directors. the PH. 2-8969 tm at- <«* as- 407 W. 24 ^ am mm a a l Seventh and Congress STEI' OUT SMARTLY Kith a S ir lo in No worries about smartness with this new Stetson on your head. Note its lower, tele­ scoped crown, its wide deep-snapped brim. WHERE ELSE BUT AT SCARBROUGH’S WILL YOU FIND THE COMPLETE SHIRT STORY urn Soft collars . . . button-downs Tab co lla rs. , . tabless tabs Kent collars . . , Neckband collars No-starch non-wilt collars Twills, O xford cloths, M adrases Silks, crashes, chambrays / rn i -■A h s Broadcloths— domestic and imported Com bination madras and broadcloth Pin stripes, spaced stripes, tape stripes I 0 .rn mew*9 . 1 Shadow stripes, vertical stripes British stripes, horizontal stripes Solid colors, solid white, white-on-white Checks, tick patterns, clip figures Styles for campus, business, dress Collar sizes 14 to 18; sleeves 32 to 35 2 . r n and others to Y■ O U 'V E seen what happens when a woman pulls a sm art fur piece up around her neck. Even if she is a plain woman she takes on glamour. W h a t goes next to the face is im portant— and the right collar and the right shirt can do a lot for your face. A b o v e you see our Kne-up, ready for your selection, at prices to fit in with your budget, whatever its size. Scarbrough & Sons PAGE FOUR th e F irst College Daily in the South P hone 2-3164 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Phone 2-3165 PRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1937 I T o day s C ro ss W o rd Puzzle ^_/e's your Prof Q 5 IO lf ///< 13 e> i i l l 9 2 6 1 3 % 1 16 /3y Margaret Bellmonfi,,,umw»,w Leonidas W arren Payne A. W. m ust be on the wrong side of the fence. I for one think th a t as Texas is th e state school it should excel in everything. The band is an im portant factor and y e t such bands as S.M.U. and T.C.U. are b etter known. In case you think they don’t play together, please ALLED Dos by his wife, Dr, B A L L E D Dos by b t, wife. Dr. “ T J" !t, ° n« K y ™ " X k " ° w M f 0' Leonidas Warren Payne, pro­ C L eo n id ,. W arren Payne, pro- , ° J ’ ° no known college band has a director on the field fo r it would be fessor of English, is most conser- vative in looks and disposition, yet a disgrace. Any band th at cannot play together and w ithout a direc- is the fa th e r o f two aviators, a to r a fte r rehearsing many hours should be disbanded. Our band should doctor, and a Phi Beta Kappa swing out and give us and the team a little rhythm . I am not saying th a t the band is no good as it now stands, for I think it is really fin#, daughter. Dr. Payne u the typical prof**- onjy nee(js some swing so th a t it may become well known ju st as other u - , I! . “ f £ t0 a u t I ’ ^ \ The public and school is swing minded so I say, “swing it you —J . M. mmmm 1 When lecturing in class, he as­ sum es his favorite pose of stand- log before his desk and gazing steadfastly over his pince-nez out th e window. The more absorbed G 'rlm A he becomes the in his subject, m ore precarious becomes th e po- n non of the jja - ea, until firm ly hapR y0Q did th ey topple off and catch with a je rk on the black ribbon around brothcr his neck. They Talk A b o u t --------------- Crime Exhibit— Perfect Record ----------------- In Other Papers Compiled by Ana Jarratt \v e read the other day, as per- that the f atber and t , , as was necessary fo r the record to be made. The K ansas City that . record sug- invariable excuse o f t th a t , the child ran into the street may not al- A native of Alabama. Dr. Payne some sort of wax museum about ways be a sound one and that he scholar at Alabama the country to “ prove” th a t crime is charged with the responsibility ed John Dillinger were dragging out lat« and unlam ent- the m otorist was a record 3 8 z z / ( H O V/Zs V A ^3 m d ZZ/ Z /Z iTSS* H6 H I 3 3 serial type, with hts black-ribboned pince-nea and brief case. Hit classes are always crowded and interesting. Perhaps this is be­ cause he has been often heard to say, “If I can teach ray students how to read- that }*^hoyf to read creatively by the time they grad­ uate, I shall feel that I have suc­ ceeded in the teaching of literature.” in my main endeavor school bands. Longhorns.” The Sorority Merit Badge S O M E H O W you ca n ’t k eep from fe e lin g By Pet Daniels a w fu lly sorry for any one of th e fresh - sh e’s m an crop of w om en. G enerally P A T T E P I N G S P E C I P 4 T U S on the U Z Z I.... • kicked around, bren'-beaten and coerced in lectures, low -rated by sister students „hich he, beira on it. No, Oscar, th* Community Cheat !• not th* kind farth er alon g k n ow led ge h ill. Sm all pit- m tance is it that w hile youngest in the col­ le g e fam ily she enjoys th e fick le attention th at sh ifts to her as new b lo o d ; the haunted look in her eye is a dead give aw ay. She ca n ’t en joy it because she know s n ext year sh e ’ll be on the discarded heap w hile new talen t arrives to be exp loited . G reatest little k ibitzer in her co lleg e career— if sh e ’s m em ber to a sorority— is her sister Greek. For from far up in the h igh er hierarch ies of sisterhood on Forty . A cres has com e the o fficial decree as to i j t how she m ay best fu lfill her freshm an life. , . * * vt v e u I trucked over to St. David’s the other day, ju st like a good little boy, to aes some lick friends. In Room 206 was Charley Haas, the boy who “limped o ff the field with an injured shoulder” and who 3 6 doesn’t look at all like a football player. In 208 was Woodrow Tunnel!, who fell and sprained his leg. In 210 was Evelyn Jediicka, who has some­ thing and is taped from her neck to her w aist It so happens that the three— in on» line in the hospital— became acquainted. Their bull sessions, unfortunately, were killed by nurse’s orders, th* meanie. The moral is that I still want to go to the 1 2Q 3 0 %3 1 / / / 3H 3 3 m 37 39 m LI2 w a 5! I W I? 3 2 It com es to her. this decree, enacted, ho.rit.!. E-eiyn will be there until the letter part of the week, and I would like to ?ee the nurse stop cod ified and r e a d y for enforcem ent. That she m ay know her shortcom ings best sh e ’s me from talking to her. graded on a ta lly sh eet. For the high com- m and, b eliev in g that w om en are scarce as A IitU« blond friend’ who« nam' can,t be r9‘ lad ies, ha? com piled a sort of graded Koran, or service station lubrication check sealed because her “future” objects, submits this, chart. C olloq u ially, it tells her how' sh e’s You define its doing. V alues are p laced on signal service to the sisterhood, g ra d es g iven fo r valiance under fire. Aahas to uh**, Dust to dust. Blood will tell But daUie* won't. ■pOR EACH Sunday lunch date at a fra- A term tv house, sh e m ay receive ten points. If she stays and d an ces afterw ards, it’s con ceivab le to im agine she gest another fiv e for bonus. For picnics, or any sim ilar form o f self- expression, her m erit b a d g e gain s w eig h t. P ossib ly she sw ings fifte e n points into the black sid e o f the ledger. Bill Durnal swears that one of his profs made this observation: “Candy’s dandy. Liquor’* quicker.” • Best atory of the week it told on Jack Egoxcua, VERTICAL aatutant yell leader, who sprained an ankla at the gama Saturday while doing hi* pert. The schedule of grading goes on, item ized and calcu lated by form ula. F or Said the merry go-round to the elevator: “You atten d an ce at large social ga*bering?, sh e may have your ur-s and downs, but I really get m ay receiv e honorable m ention; or a around.” couple o f w ound stripes. For each G erm an or d ance In her w a k e th e score m oves to t o t t e r i n g h e i g h t s . Said tha Texan headline? “ ‘Beat Dreaded’ Run In cid en ta lly sh e ’s given th e nod o f ap- O ff Today.” Said Jack Guinat “ I think it'a a good probation If she does w ell in school w ork. id ee.” HORIZO NTAL I — M e m b e r o f a n A l g o n q u i a n t r i b e 4 V, ho w a s n o m in a te d to s u c c e e d J u s tic e Van D e c a n te r on th * S u p r e m e C o u r t ? . F.np e i r e soun d I i — The kern I j—Famous French O rien taU ad 1 4 —43 ce ? <** g a rm e n t 15— E ach I*— W h a t m ythical a la n d is said by ancient w rite rs to b a rs been su n k b e n e a th th e o c e a n ? IS — W h at J a p a n e se a d m ira l ' B u ,* an fleet in th e S '? 1905? 50— ? (stern ti—Aeq airn* IS— F oes 27 — P anc s u r f a c e I S — W o rsh ip 2 8 N o te of th e scale JO— R u ssia n t i — D irty * t — Pi:'.J a lo n g a fter TA— Fri noun 1 4 — W ho is considered th* f a th e r of ita lia n t r i a g e co m m u n ity t r e a t e d t b s ’ ''-"in. M ay, poetry 7 55— F o u n d a tio n 56— S h ip w c '"ens SS— H eaped 1 5 — B ein g 40—Bristle Iii* organ 41— P r esen t 4A~ S tr ik e s m a rtly 4 8 - I in g u is tle sto ck o f Indo-C . , a 41— W -tat is t h e m is s in g p a rt c f th e o s , u s of th , sen a to r fro m id a h o ; W i l l i a m ------- Horah 7 BO— F r o : cr. w a ter 51— S k ill in p s r i g t n t a n 62— A p p ro a c h e s TS— S taffies* co in 1— U n d e r m in e 2— H a il: 5— W ho d ta co rered t h e St L a a enc* R ise r 7 4— B o arts A— M th o r o f A p o llo 6— ; T— W o lfr a m ite 5— B a s r a ity I— A d e lin a w a s th* fir st r i m e o f w h a t - w a r y co le ctio n turnons o p era tic s o p r a n o ? sa sh IS — J apar l l — D a n c e s te p 17— T itle IS — In d ia n of T ierra dc! FN eg o 21—Entire range 22— A scen d 28— P r e p a r e s for publication 24— What is th e co m m er cia l cantar af Seward Peninsula? 28— U n e v e n a s if ea te n aw ay 2 6 - Baaed w ith s titc h e s 28—Italian riv er J I — V. ho a r r a n g e d w ith M exico fo r th* e e l, o f land th a t now in clu d es t b s s o u th e r s p a r t of A rizona ? S S - W in g ed sh o e s o f I le W ir y S 4— S a n d y tr a c t by th e se* 88—Small portion 87— S e n d , as m oney d c# SS— P e e p s 4©—Celestial body 41—Eskimo 48— 1 >eface 4” — C y p rtn o td fish 44— Turkish commander 46— P e r fo r m 47—Fondle Herewith is the solution to yes- terday s puzzle. ZX I< iIf A VV A Oi H air ill T C K A T A R i TA R El. ILE P F AH*'0 NE; ;iE E S I E : N S R d k E p X p A w SjEjE NI iGElEiSiE ~ I M C D E R N B C N N E T E R A SIE!. P O R T . : ...... W AN C RE a E r r \ A I C A T A N D A R R O W IDT A A NI I C U GIW L EiNlE P l N E: iPiEjR L P i e E F ' 5 A EOI E D El Cofyrtght, I S3? bf Kiss* Pastoras Siw liatta In* 5 i ? A , E ' ; A r ; : « S * — ■» r . w a i . . r - . , . the ki,,d word> concerning- the de- “ he received a fellowship to University of Pennsylvania, and it parted. was there, two years later, th at he received his doctor of philoso- blame phy dej^-ee. Dr. Payne ha* had more con- * Here is another case where the is wrongly placed. Dillin- Senior, and the brother of * , ^ in ^ the home of Dr. in the the notorious criminal are out to ta c t, with the celebrities literary world than probably any make some money. They ran other person on the campus. Carl make more and accomplish their Sandburg and Robert Frost have ^ and visited Mr.. P . T».. And it w .. lo Dr. home >» Indian*. Payne that Starke Young gave the original manuscript of “So Red rd exhibition— the maudlin, the Rose.” The people who patronize such the ignorant, the unthinking —are the Listed in “ Who’s Who Among people who are responsible. They North American Auth rs,” Dr. create a demand for a demons:ra- Payne has written books th it are lion than, need not and should not hr-ins: used by universities and be. As I mg as there are people colleges all over the country, “ bin- like th at— and there always will is a bo—we’ll have tha? sort of thing joying Literature,” which group of four volumes, is his lat­ est book. The book, “ Selections from American L iteratu re,” which Temple Courier-Times. and Didingers too. Official Notice —— ------— tribution of .a la ry w a rra n t, and win evot“ » w n “ ° f checks each month. Members who from ™»W ar: « - h w W b f w do not wish to participate should amr'0£ t i f'"e, V 1 71e"‘ His first Id" Th S I .. call IN ADVANCE and execute Perfect Record The remarkable traffic record THE FOLLOWING students will notice of waiver. the Registrar’s please call by Office immediately: Jackson, James Woodrow Romberg, Edgar Sweeney, Mike James E. J. MATHEWS. The former procedure of mail­ ing -warrants and checks will he discontinued TO ALL until fu r­ ther notice. This month’s salary w arrants and checks will be avail­ able on Saturday, October 30, be- Re- THE BURSAR is receiving Octo- «*P t8 2 * ° ^ ber contributions to Teacher ^ Ti h* Teacher Retirement Fund ^ registrar, tween the hours of 9 and. I .■ I i t f t V>« Vt V 9 tality * * W et. A I* *“«•*• *H% book, ‘ Southern Literary Read- of Kansas City, Mo., of passing a K a m !* traffic fa- ings,” is regarded by Dr. Payne year without a child those who to as his best work. that deaths “Who’s Who in America” lur- have always believed the streets were veyi Dr. P a y n e ' s activities; Mem- of children on ber of the M od e r n L a n g u a g e Asse- largely avoidable. This record, believed to have n a el ati on, A m e r i c a n Dialect S oc i e ty , American and Texas Folklore So- para. el for Cities of 500,000 pop- cieties, A m e r i c a n Associati on of ulation, was supported by that for u a iver,j ty Professors, Pi Kappa the two previous years, with only Alpha fraternity, and the Baptist five child fatalities in 1935 and lends hope seven in 1936. Retirement Fund. If the ann .ai membership fee of J? I has not "or salary ehec^ been paid, it should be included in your first contribution. Ad- vancc payments of monthly con- THE CAP AND GOWN Council will meet at 5 o’clock Friday in tributions will facilitate the dis- . J A K L ; BELG, auditor , Pl'esen ed when calling ---------- Much of the credit was given Texas Union. All members are for the 15 man school traffic pa- urged to attend to formulate plans trol T a t is on duty in school hours. Perhaps, the greatest com- for the year. tile mendation should b* given president, motorist for such careful driving DOROTHY MATSON, . t u t , , . t i . , m th m rence. It proved that traffic safe­ ty la possible. « . . . — Fort W orth Star-Telegram . The Poet's Release TO MY BELOVED I m ight speak some words p oetic; Describe my state of h eart; Might say with phrase aesthetic T hat we should never part. I m ight confess my love fo r Might say you are my life; I might adm it these things as you; true, And soon you’d be my wife. So ITI content myself with pen To speak of such as love; ITI w rite and w rite and w rite and then E rase the things above. DON IRW IN. MY CART AND ME U nderstanding lags in my pokey Reasoning rides ahead; Stern decision sits firm ly at my W eary journey I W ith fa ste r pace and smoothes c a rt , side. road How m erry I could be If understanding rode On the seat with me! — MARY ETH EL DUNN ‘MS IT GOOD BUSINESS TO BUY COSTLIER TOBACCOS FOH CAMELS? lf A QUESTION ASKED BY MANY PEOPLE ANSWER; C O M M E N D A B L E as th e m ovem ent for J fin er w om anhood b ecom es, our co-eds can ta k e credit for sign ifican t research and ach ievem en t on ly if th ey push the id ea to m ore fru itfu l field s. U n fortu n ately, ratin gs o f th is nature h ave b een know n to exist on the o th er sid e o f th e high school b rid ge. But virgin territory is ju st w ithin the pale o f curiosity. More ex a ctin g , more \ .‘a1 code? and ch eck -sh eet? can be draw n. She can tak e sp ecia l prizes at arriving late and lea v in g ea rly at m ass m eetings. Som e account m u st b e m ade of th e fra ­ tern ity pins she Is o ffe r e d , som e for th e p rop osals. In divid u al in itiative should have its h ow l, too. th e B rass b an d s and soap b oxes h ave long p o in ted fin g e r of notability. And th e r e ’s a w ire, by tim es, stretch ed b etw een Jou rn alism B u ilding and the P hysics B uild­ ing. N o o n e’s tried w a lk in g th a t b are-foot and in a n eg lig ee. (the D o ® te x a n lie Daily ie..;-- . et-icier • Lew* apay of Th* I r vert ty . f Texfcf. ie published on the campi.* of the L'niv*rest> et Austin by th* Tex** Student Publications. Inc., every room* Intr exempt Fe.t.->r.a1 offices, Journalism Building IOU, 181. and lot Telephone# *3 71—842 and 03 771—Zh2. (After IO p.m.. 6171) sac Circulation Department—J ours*; ma Advertising Building 108. Phone 2-8164 ar J 2-8166 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY N atio n al A d v e r t is in g Service, Inc. C o l I e g e P u b I is h e r s Ii f p r e se n ta ti v a NEW YORE. SY. 420 MADISON AVE CHICAGO - BOSTON - LOS ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO Printed by the University Press. A, C. Wright, ms na gee. ---- y ....... Editor-in-chief Associate Editor — —— Associate Sports Editor Society Editor ...... ............— Associate Society Editor Photography Editor ED S Joe Beiden Lynn Jacks r Elizabeth Keeney Lois I ager Emory E. Powers— Dick W atts Jim Anderson..................................Telegraph Editor Margaret!® Garrison __ ___ __ Feature Editor ..Amusements Editor P< rime* A cranker ... Associate Arr.usemi-r.-6 Editor Olcott Sanders - —.-Copy Editor Harry Quin ................. John StcCttliy.- Sports Editor ---------- —... Rad:-, Editor „ ______ ........ — , EDITORIAL ADVISORY COUNCIL Harr> Quin, chairman Bill Woods Ear! Arnett Ramsey Moore Dick Watts Billy Ruth Young Joe Balden Joel Westbrook Bill Francis Jethro Meek Eckhardt B P, J. Thompson ..Bob Goodrich* STAFF FOR THIS ISS” ” NIGHT EDITOR......................... . HARRY QUIK Head Copyreader. ........-----... ......... Everett Shir ny A .-ms: anta ......................... Kathryn Owens, John McCuUy, Mary K. Duggan, Lloyd Rigby. ......... ............... — Barclay Hodges Day \ «lunu*er Night Society Editor .......... ...... Juanita W’hittiesey Night Sport# Editor ............ Joe Frants Asatrian? Sam; Whitley Brown Night I ‘di graph Editor...................... Ed Kampmann Assistant* ...Barclay Hodges, --------- . Oma Ray \S aiger, J. E. Palm. This Great Troth a stolen from the Ohio State Lantern: if I hold her hand She thinks I'm boid; If I don’t She thinks I'm mighty cold; If I muss her hair See calls the housemother; If I don't She calls me brother; If I try to kiss her It’s “ No you don’t ” ; If I tease her She start* to cry; If not I f s “ here's your h a t Goodbye.” Patter: Note in Library Buildings “Lillian, wait here at this door for ma— i ’ll be down at 5:20. Babe" . . . Ne! •on Hall i* the champion hard back* •lapper of the campus— I know . . . Note to Dick w atts; Gary, Ind., has a radio atation with call letters W IND . . . Add notes-on-beer-joint walls: T h is is where Mary and Jim gave their hearts to •ach other.” Looking Back W ith W a ld o N ieb u h r IO Y s t n Students who attend the mass m eeting called by the food conservation committee hear President Vinson of th* University w arn them to conserve food supplies to avoid conditions like those which exist in Germany where the people are forced to eat wood. The army announces that seniors and juniors in the R.O.T.C. unit at L.S.U. will receive “com­ mutation rations” which amount to SO cent* a day. Pay day will come every three months. IO Years Scoring both their touchdowns In the first quar­ ter, the S.MXT Mustangs defeated the Longhorns, 14 to 0, at Dallas. Southwestern University at Georgetown win* from the Rice Owls, 14 to 3 2, T.C.U. defeats Bay­ lor 14 to 0. Among the players entered in the U niversity’s a!!-vare:ty tennis tournam ent are W ilmer Allison, Ber is. Vi«y Bell, Bruce Barnes, and Lucien LaCoste. “Came! is the cigarette on this campus. M e? I ’m a steady Camel smoker. I've found that Camels rate tops for mildness — they don’t irritate my throat.That mellow Camel flavor just hits my taste right!” (Signed) WILLIAM S. COREY, college student “Camel’* rich, delicate fla­ vor appeals to a woman*! taste. I amoke nothing else. So many of Hie girls in our crowd feel the way I do about Camel’s being 4wrtra-gentle to the throat.” JOSELYN LEBBY, private secretary ( Signed) Think of what this means! The greatest pleasure for the greatest number of smokers ever given by an y cigarette try them. Millions have smoked them steadily—and have found more plea­ sure in Camel’s costlier tobaccos. A N D th is d id n ’t happen by chance. \ Camels are the largest-selling ciga­ rette in America —and in the world. People can and do appreciate costlier tobaccos. Smokers trust those finer tobaccos in Camels to give them more of what they want in smoking. And that makes Camel’s policy of spending millions o f dollars more for costlier tobaccos “ good business.” I f you are not a Camel smoker, “I can tell Camels are made from mighty fine tobaccos. There’s a tight more goodness in ’em — natural flavor! I like my Cam* Is at mealt:rm-'i too. They help my d ig estio n keep o n an even keel.” ( Signed) GEO. BUCKINGHAM, ship’s engineer NEW C A M E L C A R A V A N 2 great show s in a single hour’s entertainment! Include* Jack Oakie C ollege” and Benny f.oodtnan'* “ Swing School” ! Sixty fart minute* of grand fun and music. Every I ueaday night at 9:30 pm E. S.T., 8:30 pm C .S .T ., 7:30 pm M .S.T ., 6:30 pm P .S .T .. over W A B C -C B S N etw ork. Ousrrieat, la n jS . J. fcwoma* tobwee b o a » u i. v e n w - w w , M, a ■ i r f S f t “I love the taste of a Camel.They*re so mild. E v en a fte r s te a d y smoking I notice no ‘cigaretty* after-taste.” (Signed) MRS. ANTHONY J. DREXEL 3D “ I’m a steady Camel smoker. Camels are differ­ ent from other cigarette*. I find that they have the mildness I demand in a cigarette. When I say that Camels don’t frazzle my nerves it means a lot.” ( Signed) LEE GEHLBACH, famous test pilot COSTLIER TOBACCOS IN A MATCHLESS BLEND! Cameist are a matchless blend of finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS-Turkish and Do- mestic. TK; skillful blending of leaf with le af brings out the full, delicate flavor and mild* ness o f these choke tobaccos. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1937 Phone 2-3164 THE DAILY TEXAN Phone 2-3165 The First College Daily in the South PAGE FIVE T h r e e ^ e y E n s e m ^ e s Today in Brief 2:00— Member* of the work­ shop will m eet Friday a fte r­ noon in the basem ent of the W oman’s Building. 3:30— League of Women Vot­ ers a t University Y.M.C.A. Dr. Bernice Milburn Moore will talk. 5:00— University of San An­ tonio Club will meet in front of the Texas Union for a picnic at Bull Creek. 7:00— Curtain Club, Hogg Me­ morial Auditorium. 7:30 to l l — Freshman Fellow­ ship social a t Y.M.C.A, 7:30-—Natural History Society, Biological Laboratory 301. 7 :30— Southwestern Geological Society in Geology Building 14. Dr. J. Elm er Thomas to speak, 7:30— Kid party, Wesley Bible Chair. 8:00— Rabbi Goodman speaks a t Temple Beth Israel. 8:00— Carnival, Faculty Wom­ en’s Club. Social C alendar FRIDAY 5 - 1 1 — University of San An­ tonio Club will give a hay­ ride and picnic a* Bull Creek. 7 :30-15.— Freshm an Fellowship Club will entertain with an informal dance af the Y.M. C.A. Building. 8-12— Residents of T i p t o n ’ * boarding house will give a Halloween party at 702 West Tw enty-fifth Street, SATURDAY 8-11— Open house reception will be. given by residents of Mrs, J. M. M atejek’s boarding house. Club Notices U n i v e r s i t y o f C l u b — 5 o’clock Texas Union. S a n A n t o n i o fro -it of in i W e s l e y F o u n d a t i o n — 7:30 I j the Wesley Bible o’clock at Chair. Halloween Is M otif O n University Campus ■kf ThD week brought the Octoberiah Haloween spirit to the campus end students ju st couldn’t resist giving parties and dinners. Jack- o-la^nterns, witches riding broomsticks, and spooks and sprites of all ■ha)'*?* and sizes graced the tables and made the houses look “party- ish.” Black cats and owls will con­ tinue reigning supreme this week­ end as the final Halloween parties are given. GAMMA PHI BETA Members of Gamma Phi Beta sorority were entertained a t a Holloween dinner Wednesday Hight a t the sorority house. The Halloween theme was evi­ dent in the menu and table deco­ jack-o’-lan- ratio n s of te m s , black a n d witches. lighted cats, owls, Mona Parkinson was in charge o f arrangem ents fo r the dinner. Z E T A P L E D G E S - Pledges of Zeta Tau Alpha en ­ “ big their sisters” tertained Thursday night at 7 o’clock at the chapter house, with a Hallow­ een party. Grace Adele Hargis, chairman of the social committee, wa* in charge of arrangem ents. There were Halloween decora­ tions and the refreshm ents were served from the dining room table which was decorated with orange marigolds, autum n leaves, and or­ ange candles. E l e a n o r F e r g u s o n told f o r t u n e s , were games and Halloween played. S C O T T I S H R I T E A b o u t----- University People Richard W alker and Lawson Me- Gruder will be the guests of Ar ehie Owens fo r the T.C.U.-Baylor game in Waco Saturday. K atherine Anderson and Robert Goodrich will spend the week-end at their homes in F o rt W orth. They will stop in Waco Saturday for football game. the T.C.U.-Baylor Betty Trammel will have as her guests this w*eek-end the Misses Ann Elizabeth Evans and Mary Martha Nord of F ort W orth. Jack Josey and Robert Baker will spend the week-end at home in Houston. They will attend the Rice-Auburn football game S atu r­ day. C la ire L o u is e Meyer will spend the week-end in Dallas. Mary Frances Fletcher and Mary Lynn will spend the week­ end in Fort Worth. Scottish Rite Dormitory will Kathryn B urger and M argaret have it-* second form al dinner to- Ames will spend the week-end vis- night. It will be a Halloween din- Ring in Dallas, n er and black cat, witches?, and Frank Chappell of Dallas will other paper cutouts will be used Upend the week-end at home, and fo r decorations. In the centers of attend the Texas-S.M.U. football the table* a lighted pumpkin will game. be placed. T1PT O N H O U S E Jo® N izer will spend th e week- the in Dallas and attend ' nd The residents of Mrs. La R io Texas-S.M.U. football game. T ipton’s house for girls, 702 West W illia m B o y d , D e lm a n Sm ith, Twenty—fifth Street, will enter- and E d w in Woods will motor to tonight with a Halloween Dallas for the Texas-S.M.U. game. tain C r t y from 8 to 12 o’clock. T h e L ouis H odd e will visit his par- l o u s e will be decorated in black eats in Brenham Friday. and orange with jack-o’-lanterns E nd other Halloween decoration-, -las this week-end. L ou ise S h ir le y will visit in Dal- The entertainm ent will consist Marianne Reed will attend the of a program dance, during which Bayior-T.C.U. game in Waco this punch will be served. A fterw ard week-end. the guests will enjoy a sandwich, ■Iflp'tp' Joe Loper will be the guest of Hayes Rogers in Dallas this week­ en d s in charge of the party are end. They will attend the S.M.U. Beulah Halpern, chairm an; Helen I game. Thompson, refreshm ents; Fern I I-j brich, program ; Elinor K ra u p p .; home in Beaum ont this week-end. en tertainm ent; and Janice Nixon, j Alfred Scott wiU &tten(J decorations. ; game in Dallas this week-end. WESLEY FOUNDATION Theresa Dean will visit in her the Rose Hall left Thursday after- in the week-end to spend The Wesley Foundation will en- noon A Football Spectator —In One Easy Lesson By J A C O L Y N A L E X A N D E R All of us have seen the advertisement about the coach and the football hero’s little sister who, until after watching a practice with the coach, had not realized that there was a line in the game as well as the two or three men who carry the ball. There are probably very few girls who notice the line unless, of course, their “ big moment” —------ ------ is tackle or guar';. And as far** as that goes, maybe some boys do the boy.friend who „ ally und„ . , he game, read “ How to no- know what a (treat part the clame” ar..! seven linesmen tak e in the game. W atch R Football of k for and how to enjoy the essen­ tials of the game. -------------------- one past few days. b it tain tonight a t 7:30 o’clock a t, Longview and Texarkana, The ne- the Wesley Bibb1 Chair. Mr. A. C. S t u a r t has been visit- casion will be in the form of a Kid j jng bt|s granddaughter, M ary Lou, party. Halloween games will be played. Tn charge of fhe part*, are Martha Woodson will attend the Sue Jo Roberts, Pauline McAnelly, Baylor-T.C.U. game in Waco this and Anna Bess Ratliff. M A T E J E K O P E N H O U S E scavenger I A Halloween will put the residents of Mrs, J. M. their homes in Beaumont. M atejek’s boarding their guests in a festive mood for M artha Lute, and Jean ette David usuai p| ay, besides the open house to be given Sat- will be the guests this week-end j cussed, has diagrams showing the night a t 7:30 o’clock urday night at 8 o’clock. There of M argaret Mae Buchard at her ' position and line of run of t h e ! Union 315. Dick Rubottom, wail be dancing and refreshment*, I home in Gonzales. J E S S I E A N D R E W S How to W atch a Football Game, one certainly becomes ’line’ con­ scious. Each play is explained and each player’s actions dis­ in and M a x i n e D e i t z e l , C o n n i e D e l a v a n , j forra 0f a who!e game. Each Houston Club Dance Set For January little pamphlet scventy.five r,aR„ wfcat to t i l l will spend the week-end at cuussed. After readmit Mal Stevens anc , ,earn Ju d ith B a ld w in and D o lly Mar- the un- being dis- The booklet is written S te r lin g B ush will spend the Harry S h o rten s week-end. (players. house tands hunt The Houston Club met Tuesday ____________________ , in Texas as­ d is ta n t dean of men, spoke on “ A Remember the crosses and cir- Typical Day in the Dean’s O ffice.” clee you used to see on your high} The date for the spring dance school blackboards? They® were was set for the second Friday in Jimmy Watson and* his (diagrams of th e plays which the January. Jessie Andrews Dormitory will week-end at his home in Dallas. have an inform al Halloween din- ner Saturday night for the girls (week-end in San Antonio, who are not attending the Texas S.M.U. gam®. w ee k-en d . M a rg u er ite W in n will spend the Jo Jones will visit in Dallas this ! coach p u t up and explained to . orchestra will play. W om en Voters To Hear Bernice M oore Today P e a r l# D ick so n , K a th erin e H a m ­ ilto n , and J e a n M o n tg o m e r y w ill be in Dallas this week-end for the f o o t b a l l g a m e . I B , talk M ildred H a k e and V e r t a Brou»- »«rd will attend the S.M.U.-Texas lo n e John* will spend the week­ Dr. Bernice Milburn Moore will . talk to the League of Women \ ot- game in Dallas thjg week^ nd era this afternoon a t 3:30 o’clock in the Y.M.C.A, The subject of her is “ Taxes for W hat?” J o e L o p e r and H a y e s R o g e r s, Dr. Moore is a graduate of the students in the University, will at- University, having taken both h er; tend the g M U football game in bachelor s and ber m aster s de- j)ajjaa greo« here, She received her doc­ to r’s degree in sociology from the University of N orth Carolina last June. M argaret Sm art, University stu ­ dent. will visit her home in A rling­ ton this week-end. end in Dallas. Mary f ranklin Chapman will She gave a series of ten lec­ tu res for th e National Y.W.C.A. a t the regional conference held rn the Highlands of North Carolina last summer and is now making a i m p iumi, Jan(. study cl the Southern family for f W„„V, r .i- n li n n ! the University of North Carolina Her study is a social economic in­ terp retatio n , in which she uses library m aterial and many cases th a t she has worked up. lecture Dr. Moore’s Friday T I „ . afternoon is open to the public. visit in Leander this week-end. Among the students going to Dallas this week-end for the Texas- S.M.U. game are Mary Hearne, A piT .A ,2 p ■ .* T'« .? E J , . . b e t h P . m U r , B e t t y J o h n so n , R uth S tu a r t , M a rjo rie R e e v e s , F lo r e n c e D u la n e y , an d W in n ie Jo R a m sa y . L. J. S a g s t e t t e r o f Silsbee, fa th e r of Bill S a g s t e t t e r , jo u rn al­ ism senior, is in the Santa Fe Hos­ p ita l a t Temple with a leg injury. Bill plans to visit him this week­ end. Dr. G e o r g e J. M u n d t, tu to r in Germanic languages last year a t the U niversity, is now teaching in Colgate University. Last Gamma Phi Beta Founder Dies In N. Y. Three successive Some of us, no doubt, wonder ju s t why that. particular play was called. There is a great deal of strategy in this thing called foot­ ball. plays might be called in which the line is hit for little or no gain just to draw the opposing team into a close form ation and then have ’ a pass or a wide end run sprung on them (and on the crowd who -»>'> * - *<•- does not know much of the whys and w herefores also.) You’ve all heard how to learn ■ three easy to dance lessons. Well, if you want to keep up with in For Sm artly Styled A r­ rangem ent of Flower* CALL The last of the fo u r national founders of the Gamma Phi B eta sorority died Friday, October 22, in Utica, N. Y. She was Mrs. J. V. Ferguson, 82, who, before her m arriage, was Miss Helen M. Dodge. Mrs. C. M. Moss, another of the fo u r national founders, died this last summer at the ag© of 83. She was Miss Frances E. Haven when she helped found the chap­ ter. H onorary services fo r Mrs. Moss and Mrs. Ferguson will be held by the Gamma Phi Beta chapter her© on the campus on National Founders’ Day on November l l . A.T.O.~DALLAS PARTY The Alpha Tau Omega fra te r­ n ity chapter in Dallas will have an open house at which Anson the music. furnish Weeks will A bout h alf of the members of the Austin chapter will the gam e and the open house. In ad­ dition, Dallas alumni will give a p arty Friday night a t the country club. attend C H A P E R O N S A N N O U N C E D Chaperons fo r the Texas Union, the Saturday night German, which will be held in are Mrs. Kathleen Bland, Mrs, D eW itt W altman, Dean and Mrs. J. An­ derson Fitzgerald, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Degler, Mr. and Mrs. IL H. Power, Mrs. Doolittle, Mrs. J. M. Brown, and Mrs. Scaroff. 1406 Lavaca Y o u r F lo rist f o r More Than SO Y ears ORCHIDS A N D G ARDENIAS DAILY Day Phone* 2-1147 and 2-1145 Night Phone* 2-382S and 2-2S43 Flowers Teh'graphed to All Parts of the World Mem ber of F .T.D . * » :♦> <♦> *:♦: <♦> ;♦> <♦> m W H E N THE O R C H E S T R A P L A Y S A TANGO! Do you have to fox trot? TH E O R C H E S T R A P L A Y S A R H U M B A ! Do you sit it out? i Ja n e t C o lle tt School o f Dancing £ B allroom classes M onday, T uesday, and T hursday at 8 p. rn. rn &♦> 2330 G uadalupe T elep hon e 9956 :«• <♦> a* smqm&w a* -se ae* ma -ae* jobs CHI I b CARE f H I t a II& IL , ' THIS YOUNG MAN IN THREE- CORNERED PANTS IS HAPPY. He ge+s all the attention he wants. Maybe he is an ophan. Maybe his mother works long hours away from home. Maybe h:s fam ily has broken up be­ cause o f poverty. BUT HE IS HAPPY because he is one o f the hundreds of children cared fo r by Chest agencies like the Home of the Holy Infancy, Child Pro­ tective and Humane Society, G irls' Settlement Club, Ne­ gro Com m unity W elfare As­ sociation. You can d o y o u r share th ro u g h th e COMMUNITY CHEST H e r e ar e th ree str ik in g and n e c e s s a r y o u t f it * fo r th e co -ed w h o s e social s e a s on is n ow o n in fu ll sw in g . S a n d r a S to r m e w e a r s a go w n o f w h ite w h ich has rn. d is tin c t iv e y o u th f u l so p h istic a tio n . T h e k n if e - p le a t e d c h i f f o n is draped on a f l a t t e r i n g s i lh o u e tt e a n d th e s i ngl e s t r a p of s ilv e r cloth h olds the g o w n o v er one shoulder. A n o th e r c o s ­ is sm a r t as w e ll a s e x t r e m e ly u s e f u l tu m e that is a s p e c t a t o r s p o r t s c o s t u m e , s u c h a s K a y F r a n ­ t a i l o r e d cis is sp o r tin g . T h e dress is m ad e o f h e n n a f l a n ­ n e l, w ith li nes, a high n e c k li n e and a b e lt of b e i g e l e a t h e r . It is t o p p e d w ith a t h r e e ­ l e n g t h coat. of b e i ge b r o a d c lo th . F or q u a r te r s less in f o r m a l occasions, s u c h as te a d a n c e s and sim ilar a f f a i r s , A n i t a L o u i s e is w e a r in g an a d ­ m irab le o u t f i t . T h e d r e s s is a b l a c k c r e p e surplice w h ich b oasts c o r n e t jeweled clips. T h e lin es are lux sim p le b u t e l e g a n t a n d t h e silver f o x fu rs MISS SEYMOUR S I N G S Miss Katherine Seymour, lyric morning at 11:30 o’clock. Miss soprano of Houston, was pre- Seymour was presented in Austin sented at the Woman’s Club in a several years ago under the aus- pre-luncheon program Thursday \ pices of the A m ateur Choral Club. SPORTS SHOP— SECOND PLOOR each player— the man he should hit and where he should be a t all PROFESSOR VISITS SEGUIN times during the play. T h at’s W. E. M etzenthin, professor of right, it is called skull practice, j Germanic languages, recently ad­ itu s is one of |b e grand features dressed the students of the Texas little book—its glossary lu th e ra n College a t Seguin on the of this of terms. the explanation of value of a college of arts and sci- the plays, the term s are also ex- onces in the scheme of education the plained. By this, we get a very in Texas. He also addressed clear meaning of each term . Some Rotary Club in Seguin on the dif- of the rulings of the game are * faculties of m aintaining a “ uni- also clarified; however, they are versify of the first class” in Texas, j not stressed. *— ---------- —.... ( ....... In SUNSHINE VITAM INS A B D G CAPSULES 25* 7 9 c Dr. W est, T ooth P aste 25c Si z e 1 4 c Kurlash, Curlers 1.00 Value 79c Iodent, T ooth P aste 26c Bromo Quinine T ablets T a b le ts C o d Liver O il 79c IOO* 50 c Size Halibut Liver Oil Capsules 50s 6 9 c Abo^e— Vary sheer lace aUer g :r- die with a panel over the tummy and supporter*. 3.50 R ig h t — Dainty satin lastex - • and a most nothing - - for un­ der evening things. 3.75 Corbet D ept,—Second F le e t Fine S o ft Yarn 2-Pc. K N I T S are campus hits! Everybody is raving about them! They're so s^a-4, but inexpensive, and are perfect -or rugged cam ­ pus wear. They’re of such soft zephyr wool and pebble knits! You'! just love the c o l o r s — fc - o wn , r u s t , g r e e n wine, b acle a-d blue. Sizes fro m 12 to 22. Young Things Know and appreciate the need fo r sheer but re- s t r a i n i n g foundations. Scarbrough's features but two o f many sty es; Are you hard to fit? WEAR SCARBROUGH'S H A L F - S I Z E P u r e D a t i n y e S i l k i p s s i Short Figures 1.98 •nd 2.98 Scarbrough's comes to the rescue of the short figure by presenting a slip It's th a* was designed just for you. moulded bust and hips g ve the de­ iced shorter length. White and tea- rose colors in sizes 2°1 S♦ 3 H u 33VV 351/j. 37f/2. Ta ared or trimmed with fine Imported Aioncon lace. li n g e r i e Dept. Second Floor Box of IOO Poker Chips 33c Playing Cards 39c Card Tables Strong, Smooth B IC Y C L E 9 8 c W ake up on tim e, get an A L A R M C L O C K Salute or Old Colony ........ Big STATIONERY Values ! C ascade Vellum Boxed Paper C ascade Writing Port Folio 48 W h ite Sheets 36 Envelopes 60 Sheets 24 E nvelopes 3 9 c In Convenient Folder P A G E STX The First College Daily in the South P h o n e 2 - 3 1 6 4 T H E D A I L Y T E X A N F R I D A Y , O C T O B E R 2 9 . 1 9 3 7 I Building Collapse Kills Two Thursday— In The News By International N«wi Senriee B U D G E T P L A N S P U S H E D HYDE PARK, N. Y.— While th# Adm inistration moved to bol­ ster th e gyrating: stock m arket by decreasing m argin requirem ents for security purchases, President Roosevelt pushed his plans to bal­ ance the Federal buget in the fis­ cal year beginning next July I. revenue. There was no official comment ©n th e Federal Reserve Board action announced from W ashing­ ton, but there was interest in the move’s possible effect on govern­ ment income and spending will be discussed by P resident Roosevelt with Secre­ tary of T reasury Henry Morgen- thau, Jr., and Acting Budget Di­ rector Daniel W. Bell at the Roosevelt fam ily estate tomorrow night. Federal R E P U B L I C A N S T O C O N V E N E CHICAGO. — A mid-term con­ v e n t i o n of the Republican Party will result from the party’* n a­ tional committee meeting here in November, leaders felt certain today. local political such indicating Them opinion wa* based on the Kinta, action, which were reported dropped by Chairman John I t M. Hamilton during a brief visit the city yesterday. He declined to make any formal statement, but it was believed he was favorably inclined toward t along with Alf M. l o n ­ don, the party’s Presidential nom­ inee in 1936 in M A R K E T R I S E C O N T I N U E S NEW YURK.— The Stock Mar­ ket goatee I to e points at the start * n g I on the overnight newts of reduced margin require­ ment.?. but lost a part of these gams under later profit-taking. Leaders gave ground late andJ acme blue chips went under the I NOW IS THE TIME TO ARRANGE FOR YOUR m s CACTUS CLASS PHOTO N O W H a v e your class picture In the C a c tu s this important year of your college life. A rra n g e now, and have your picture made at your own conven­ ience. The cost to you is only $1.50. f N O w The MS Cactus J O U R N A L I S M B L D G . 108 T w o p e r s o n a , a ma t t a n d w o m a n , w e r e k illed a n d f i f t e e n o t h e r * i n j u r e d w h e n t h e s e c ­ t h r e e - s t o r y M o r r i a F r u i t a n d o n d f l o o r of P r o d u c e C o m p a n y b u i l d i n g c o l l a p s e d s u d d e n l y t h e a t M i n n e a p o l i s , M i n n . Ann M u r p h y , o n e o f t h e i n j u r e d v i c t i m s , is s h o w n b e i n g c a r r i e d f r o m t h e r u i n s b y f i r e m e n . ( I n t e r n a t i o n a l I l l u s t r a t e d N e w s S o u n d p h o t o ) K t s S r U S S S S S A. F. OI L And CLO. 5 * fc SJW , o w * * Reject Peace Offers brought another ing th# list back re ar the day*? highs. Steels and motors set the ■ pace. s r.=e. .end- _ _ D e c l a r e D r iv e A S u c c e s s T o B e g in M o n d a y n«» A im * f e w * Department of Public Safety officials have declared the state- wide safety drive, of which the Vice *'ror!? . . . . ^ . . , Austin will have a now ached- : e f'r air mail and passenger set*- I starting Monday m orning. tr T ^ ast ar'n ^*orth, MUSSOLINI FLAYED WASHINGTON. Oct. 28. , _.TO (IN S )— Early J (IN S )— Early _ . reunion of reunion of the the LUNDON.— In a bolstering at- American F ederation of Labor Rivera y sa ety m e of O c,o,er Plan? for an official welcome ll tacK upon David Lloyd George accused Pre- Organization hung mser Muss dim of -Caesarean am- ar.ee today. bitic ns” in mons today. the J u lia n dictator. 2nd the Committee for Industrial I - was a ta rt. a big success ar-: for , he f i r n p]ane were ?taned the bai- expressed the belief -hat student# Tuesday. The reception will take will spread the benefits of the cam- dace a* the R obert Mueller Muni- tipal A irport Monday m orning at dead- Statistics from the departm ent’s ' 5:30 ‘‘peace proposals and so raien over the state. of Ccm- Each rejected the the House other's in His aims, Britain’s prem ier said, are not confined delegates th a t they tailed off fur- safety drive campaign has been that m erely to achieving a victory fo r tha r m eetings until November 8. anOT' , a ‘:' n f r ' 7'' a, or, * roster, * , ■ , -Genmar v “ a t t have colonies!" . n T TI Duce roared in term s addressed & to Europe and all the „ .r l d at well as hi. immediate liateners. , j • , eratio! n proposal that the < I 0 H a.’’ M U. ’ , , .. A “ °. , , «> according to figures romp led by the Tex** It is in greatest demand Union, by student . Life, the picture magazine, threatens the former'* number one place. Collier’s, Time. New Yorker,I Cosmopolitan, Liberty, American, I INftderN Digest, a id th* Saturday the! Evening P'.'-’, above mentioned, are the ten high­ est ranking magazines from the viewpoint of student demand. together with charg€ I ne I mon issues magazines fr r one-hour ti!- nods. Newspapers and maya f meg are secured on a two-year subscription plan, and if any -.ay ­ is added to the list when subscrip­ tion* an renewed, in great demand it C o m p lim e n ta ry package o I: Life S av c r AI cl as- O -M in ts ” w itll eacli R a n g e r Bm f e R A N G E R OUT t o d a y : Get your "Crude Story” issue of the Texas Ranger at Journalism Building 108. Bring your Ranger Card if you have a blanket tax; the price is 10c to all others. !ErzS =5= 3 C o m p l i m e n t a r y p a c k a g e of l i f e S a v e r M o la s - O - M i nts w ith c a c k R a n g e r / TniiiiiiffifiimTimrmfmmhnmimimimnTnniHiifPiifnniiiimi'iTTTrrTifnr lllllliyiillilHI'iiliilii'lLiilliiillilillllilllllHiiilinMilJlijljlliililliLililil1!/ lillill llllWlBHKai llm!l!''i"l III F R ID A Y , O C T O B E R 29, 1987 T he First. College D oily in the South Phone 2-8164 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Phone 2-8165 P A C E S E V E N Torchbearer T im in g on th e C h a in s ’ G a n g s Reviewed Today the Conin Doyle and the Sherlock Powell and Miss Log did when in “ She Asked for It .” Orien Hey- they attempted to catch an elong- ward, former Kentucky girl whose ated crook, and the high-speed Eugenie Leontovich Amazed At Youthfulness Of Governor B y P E R IC L E S A L E X A N D E R ,.. “ Such personality, and so young,” Eugenic Leontovich, here yes­ terday for a performance in the stage company, “ Tovarich.” exclaimed after meeting Governor Jarrms V. Allred and chatting informally with him in his office yesterday afternoon while newspaper reporters, George Clarke, the Governor’s secretary; and L. Novy, city manager of Interstate Theaters, listened in .t -------- ------------- — ..... .... Miss Leontovich cast complin -............ ............... ments in every direction at G ov­ ernor Allred, Texans in general,; and M cK ay Morris, leading man in her company and a native Texan from San Antonio, She talked before the Governor with expression in her voice and in picking Steadiness of speech her words to describe the gran­ deur of the State Capitol build­ ing. She said the Govornor’s re­ caption room looked much like the M ayor’s H all In London, which she saw when sjie appeared in “ Tov­ arich” there. Oarboesque in appearance, in­ teresting to listen to, Miss Leon­ say tovich seemed (enough kind things about Austin ^ 5 ' V P m8' e *1 i ‘ San Antonio at his former home, , i •1 j unable . . . to , . W h e r e t o G o S T A G E A U S T IN H IG H SC H O O L A U ­ D IT O R IU M .— “ Kind Lady.” W ith Frances Gale Jones, and Weim ar Statton. Performance at 8:15 o’clock. (Last night.) M O T IO N P I C T U R E S P A R A M O U N T .— “ L o s t Hori­ zon.” W ith Ronald Colman, Jane W yatt, and Edward Everett H or­ ton. Feature begins at 11:80, 2, 4:80, 7, and 9:30 o’clock. (First d a y ,) . S T A T E — “ Dead End.” W ith , SyWia Sidney, Joel McCrea. and I Governor Allred presented her com m ission, a Ranger’s with a ■ hat, and a badge. She thought nothing of walking from the Capitol building to her W ith William Gargan and Orien Heyward. I. 2:46, 4:32, 6:18, 8:04, and 9:50 o’clock. Feature begins at (Reviewed today.) f hotel chatted amiably ant the j C A P IT O L .— “ Exclusive.” With I way, looked in the shop windowi Franp„ Farmpr Pred MnrMur along Congress Avenue and a v ^ charlie Ruggles. swered questions about her bus- band, Gregory Ratoff. No passers- j by recognized her and it teemed Night’." Dream.” extremely amusive* to be walking Cagney, Olivia de Haviland, a1, ng Congress Avenue with the j ot g Brown, stare actress who has captivated , the playgoers of London 'o r many D IN IN G AND D A N C IN G a “ Tovarich” performance, I A V A L O N D IN N E R CLUM ,— W ith Jam es' amil V A R S I T Y . — “ Midsummer : H arry Bernstein, her business Horace Anderson and his orches- mnnager, chided her balked, saying. “ I'm going to be : mighty angry if you send this hat A. D. P I D A N C E IN D A L L A S S e Governor has given you to ------ — — -- they t *a. The as I gregory n 0 l> ‘ While the "T ovarich " Runoff ’ L L w e°e l L H e* f U w in " f rom £ " d * 7 7 7 * ' * H company was appearing in Dal­ is* last week and accompanied his w ife to Houston. He did not come to Austin, but returned to film work in California. Beaumont Club To H ave Fall Dance November 5 The Beaumont Club will have it? fall dance on November 5 in the Crystal Ball Room of the Dr!skill Hotel. Hours will be from 9 to 12 o'clock. Jim m y Weiler's or­ chestra will play, Members of the club met Thurs­ day night in the Texas Union to Alpha I receive their bids. Those who dei Delta Pi ha* been invited to at- j not get bids Thursday should see ....................... _ ]oci] #f J * * i « n in j NYwton Hopkins, cti.lrm .n of the nl* ht W *■>«, dane. committee. Th, e supp y Pi imited. aud of the kindness of S .u An- JL M 4 o clock, ^Firat day.) J ionio people. r hr me j Humphrey Bogart. Feature begins H s l s n Jo D S O H SlriQ S J i n y i Tonight A T T . S . C . W . Q U E E N .— “ She Asked for It.” Sp«W to Tho t>*z v Texsn G A L A H A L L O W E E N M IDNITE SHO W S A T U R D A Y GINGER ROGERS in “ ST A G E DOOR” S E A T S ON SALE AT BOX O F F IC E WITH K A T H E R IN E HE PBURN A D O LP H E MLNJOU H O U R W O A I N BC K N O W C B S Metropolitan P a ra d e ................ Concert H all ...... -.........-•....... . B etw een the B o o k e n d s * Swing and Swing ....... .............. Soak C a rte r .............................. Vie Arden’s Orch. .................... 7:00 (Cal Kemp-Alice F a y e ..................7:30 Hollywood Hotel .......... “ Song Shop” Glen Gray’s O rc h . Richard Himber’* O rc h ............ 10;3s Ted F lo Rito’s Orch................ ...11:30.................................. . .....10:15 ......... 8 :00.................... ....... ....... " S H E A S K E D f o r im m e d i- is “ Topper” all Queen. Screen play sod *nd Theodore R*e *«.-». Produced by the cinema audience with plenty of; over again, even to Mr. Gargan the f a c e hftS b « e n * e e n h e r e t o f o r e in ride i n Jack- c^S'ar®tte advertisements, i t ." — A t by Frederick t h e a u t o m o b i le faces ately following j ^ ! f , “ tod* •nd * ctin* | Grant did. Mr, Gargan in the car aa Mr. stands up william. Gsrgsn1 Mr, G a r g a n and Miss H eyw ard better t h i n Mr, G ran t, Breakfast d a b M a.''w T»:;rhv p.Y.m7aafc Pepper Young's Fam ily Newscasts 8:00................. 2:00.... 8 :00...... 3:30 ...................... Rt.h.M r.H . ........ ......... _ Richard Cads r> £ ,,«- Hoyt Bug House Rhythm Rudolph Stettin _____ __ Roland Drv- 6 Harry Beresford J E S S E S CM,, Service Concert R " kr*?,Nor'" ..Cities Service Concert Mr* Club Matinee u t . v Dwight Stanford — fhe cast ti “ There a,r ' m» " * " d w if « ■omeawhi- on: or<*er e t "Top per" and “ The tiow ou i wit 'H o * . in the dialogue. Thin M a n ,” a n d this passing rri- When ii is su g gested that Grand- tique elevates them a niche above pa Stettin have a b irth d a y cake Messrs. Powell and Grant and ’ with candles, he say* that i t woald Misses L e y and B en n ett. A t the look aa if it w ere a fo rest fire . is s u r e -fir* for I t ” Intimate d om es-j “ She A sk ed is humor the in Old Man stall.n ___ Tully Marshall U ltn ....... -.... — ...— ..... Mild Morns v e r y b e gin n in g ..Varsity Show First Nighter Newscasts Russ Morgan’s Orch. Sign off screen assignm ent w a s the b utler who swigged as he served in “ The . Animal Kingdom,” becomes both W illiam G a rg an , whose first U clty >ttem Pu to gtir «* Mr. j en terta in m e n t.— B. Sinclair, S O L O N .— B ro o k * W a s t, who w ill h ave tho role of S e n a to r G o rdon K e e n e in “ F ir * t L a d y ,” is a m em ber o f the A u stin L i t ­ tle T h e a te r and was fe a tu re d in “ A w a k e and S in g ” and “ A lic e Sit-by-the-Fire,” last ye a r, H e did ra d io play* fo r K N O W last sum m er and d ra m atic w o rk in H ills b o ro Ju n io r C ollege. ___________________ _____ In the N B C concert tonight at i°? * “ They J ’ m,ls0” ' K (n Ni,e*’ * 7 « n L ” ’ r l T ” ' * " V ° ’ 7 7 o’clock over W O A I, Miss Lucille E*r ’ Ann* Manner, will sins "Something ... Remember You B y .” “ Serenade. ’ 7 ” aud “ F le u r.* Pie urea M e . Yeux” k n’S w T V m w a, Bolos, and in a duet with Robert K N 0 " * ! 8 c; c!ock Simmons she w ill sing Star gazing: Le* Tremayna and Didn't Believe Me.” M r. Simmons Barbara Luddy are starred again will also be heard in a rendition tonight in another of those clever of ’Meanie W ith the Light Brown “ First Nighter” plays (W O A I- 9 ). H air,” The ensemble w ill present Tonight’s play w ill be “ Romance selections from Rudolf Fritrh's Should Begin at Home.” Trey- “ Three Musketeers.” mane stepped Into Don Ameche’s shoes when Ameche left the show for bigger thing* , . , Tonight’s H o tel” has Mary Astor, Jon Hall. Andrea j Varsity Show comes from the cam- Leeds, and C- Aubrey Smith. This pus of Temple University in Phila- , Shirley Temple's all-»tar guest list will be h eard: delphia in scenes from “ The Hurricane,” mother la being tempted by big a picture based on the story of contracts and like La the same name by Charles Nord- Temple will soon be on the air . . . As her guests on “ Hollywood ton igh t, L o u ella P arsons looks it . . -Helen 2s . soprano, boff and James Norman Ha.:, who] signing off. D E N T O N , Oct. - C. M., JR . .fop son, Metropolitan — ----------- will appear at the Texas State j wrote “ M utiny on the Bounty.” College fo r Women 8:15 i 1J,e musical portion o f the show! M ary Helen Mobley, M ary Bland o'clock Frid ay night, in the col- will be headed by F ranees Lang- Smith, Elizabeth Stuart, and Elea- loge auditorium. ! ford from the “ Hotel’*” gay “ Or- nor Anne W ard will attend the -................................ VITA GOLD Grin* Show IO a rn, bat IOC Sch. Chi. chid Room,” assisted by Je rry Coo- Texas-S.M.U. game at Dallas. ................. at C u ltu ra l En te rtain m e n t Com m ittee presents T h e R o m a n c e of M e x ic o in M e lo d y MERCADO’S Tipica Mexican Orchestra FRED MACMURRAY FRANCES FARMER CHARLIE RUGGLES « txciusm —SHORTS I— Popeye Cartoon Our Gans Com. A “ F r im I Favorite’ G R E G O R Y M o n d a y, N o v. I , 1937 G Y M 8:15 o’Clock G e n e r a l A d m . 5 0 c R e s e rve d Sea ts 75c - $1 T I C K E T S Ors Sales s t J, R Reed Music Co Tex ss Un ion Blanket T ax Holders F R E E I n o n e 2-3164 T exan Classified A d Section MMM* HW Wit FI P h o n e 2-3165 Cleaners J. B. SMITH C LE A N E R S Locksmiths Taxis Typewriters P E T M E C K Y ^ F I F T H S T R E E T lft I W I S T 8th. P H O N E 2-7 IS I SH O P. K E Y 3 F IT T E D . C A L L U S L O N G H O R N TAXI P H O N E 2 247$ YPF. W R I T E R S : Ail make#, Poptabls# *9,50 up. ( raddock's. *.’.2 Conure?*. 02ft We#* I i Phons 2-1083 Lost and Found Travel Bureaus R E A U . Established fiv e year*. R I D E ! M R S . T A Y L O R 'S T R A V E L B U ­ Cars J and passengers anyw here. Reference*. buy gold. 201 E a s t "th, 2-3338. TURPEN S 219 W Id Phone 5115 New Portable* Term s Like Kent T Y P E W R I T E R S S old - R e n ted -Rep a i r id Supplies Used Cars Announcements N O TIC E C assized Advertisers You can run your classi­ fied very economically * in The Daily Texan; RE A D ER A D S 20 W ords— Maximum 1 time 2 I met ...... 3 times ......... 6 times .... ........................ $ .40 .BS 70 LOO D SPLA Y I co!, w; ie x I in, deep, 60c insertion. No refunds for cancella­ tions. Respons hie for on© n ccr re ct insertion only. A L L A D S C A S H IN A D V A N C E Messenger service until 4.30 p.m., week-days. Coun­ ter serv ce until 6 p.m. Dial 2-3! BJ* for further information on messen­ ger service. Coaching ,7 T I “ r~7.’77~~ •.'••ACHING ton ■ •!•■ ' “ • l o s t . R im lei* *r'.a*««» in grsy esse. probable in Geology B uildin g tuesday. ! tn Spanish gram m ar and R f warn. Phons 2-5887. Ca.', Reasonable rates. —- _____________ ___________________ anytime. 2-0874. ~ ............ — ..... ...... .— — T U T O R IN G in Freshm an Astronom y, M axine A . Mat hematics, #nu P h ysics. Call IO Si and leave name a n i phons number far H E W A R D : rn appointment. E m e ry E . Powers black L O S T : Tw S.R .D C O A C H IN G ; French, German. Russian. Fin d er retu Clauses or individuals. Phone 2-7496. fur reward, trand po? camp •*. R.D I necklace around Ret urn to M ary i r I. or return of medium-sised ta owner shot a. Va! able inside-—Gordon George t«i Jo u rn a lism B uilding 10* M A T H C O A C H IN G , Experienced teacher. Trig, Algebra, Geometry. R . M Randle, I I 2311 Sen Antonio. 3-0187. Orchestras tics, M .A . E F F E C T I V E C O A C H IN G in Mathem a­ in Mathematic#. Several years successful teaching and coach:.;*. Y< i w ill be satisfied, Cali M arshall. 2 - 6 6 6 3, N.B.C. ORCHESTRAS Canso dated Radio A rtists, Inc. Local Representative Jo e Stanton Cfi ce Ph. 2-S227 . . Residence 2*5651 C O A C H IN G ! French, Germ an, Greek- T ra n s la tin g : 3-0802, evenings- La tin , I Pawn Brokers M O N E Y TO I ( AN en Diamonds. W atch es Je w e lry or A nything of Value No Loan too Large Dancing L E A R N TO D A N C E — 8 Lessons 13.1ft Stud ent Ballroom Classes Monday and Tn r ty — 7 :80 p.m. A N N E T T E H U V A L D A N C IN G SC H O O L Phones 2-3854, 8008 108 W . 14 Visitors W elcom e HA V E Y O U R PARTIES AN D L A N C ES In the B e a u tifu l Club House BASTROP ST ATE PARK Plumbing # e * JrTcoe— OW 70* i m TYP EVV RITER H E A D Q U A R T E R S L. C . Smith, Royal QrA Underwood U P R IG H T T Y P E W R IT ER S 9 5 $U b 9- $5. Down F a s t M o v i n g U sed C a rs Cir present st irk tractive. today and look them over, I:, w ill pay you to come down is exceptionally hi - j 1936 Chevret Standard Sport Sedan Finished in gun meta! grey, nice upholstery, good tires and am >oth running motor ( T i c 3 : 1936 Chevre et 2-Door Touring Sedan Finished in olive green, good tire-, a smooth performing car ------ 1936 Fcrd Tudor Or gins! fin ish and upholstery looks like nev, new tjr^s A - I Mechanics! condition <4-0^ ▼ * 1 ^ 1935 Ford Fordor O riginal blaek finish, new tire*, a clean car f o r ___ S 3 fc 5 1933 Ford Fordcr Six wire wha# !*. trunk rack, new paint, finished in dark oma, connecting sitting room, hath, tie beds. F o r business women or men. ■* Rio Grande. Phone 3-8328. CC i M F O R T A B L E a*, odern room, p rivate entrance, eon nee ti r * bath, shower, low firs t month. Phone rent Reduced rate 5968 afternoons. W illia m Lethco. 217 E a s t 6th Ph. 0220 $525 So d on Easy Terms H A N D B A G S C O V E R E D , Complete line of Saddlery, Auto Tops and T r namings, Rhody & W eber. 304 E a s t 6th Street. Phone 8113. Automobiles P IE R C E - A R R O W ro ad ster; Rumble scat, new curtains, good repair. Cheap for cash, 70S P a rk Place. Phone jf#$3S7. Barber Shops Haircuts 25c— Shaves 15c 409 W e s t 24th-—S t a r V a rs ity Theater Beauty Shops H A R PER M ETH O D S H O P Complete B - autg Se •'afer Phone 3-0737 121 E a s t Ninth Body, Fender Repair Help W anted W A N T E D * . Student who is a linotype op­ (Jail at Y M.C A . G uide! tpe erator. and T w e n ty -Second at once. S U P E R IN T E N D E N T S calling for teachers Registratio n urgently free. H ave new Corona typ e w rite r ut b a rg a in — in »- taken shipment. School S ervice Bureau. 210 East 2 6 4 , Phone 2-361'* Laundries VOQm'- - ■ Ex p ert Fen d er and Body Repairing A ’-.to Pain tin g, 34-Hour W re c k e r Service P O W E L L B O D Y W O R K S J I I aaaA Phone 6705 OT't t 409 Colorado One Day Service DRISKILL HOTEL LAUNDRY 8-H O U R S E R V I C E 119 East 7th | Service Stations WASH AND GREASE $1.00 SHAWS T-P SERVICE 2714 Guadalupe Phone 3-3191 Shoe Shops ROWELL’S SHOE SHO* C O M P L E T E S H O E S E R V I C E Hand-Made Boots a Specialty SHOES DYED TO MATCH YOUR DRESS Curb Service— K U 6 La va ca Street Notice Classified Advertisers! Effective Immediate^ M ESSEN G ER SERVICE Until 4 :3 0 p. rn. Counter Service, es usual, to 6 p.ut. Dial 2-3164 ( an ^ ou ( oacli Students in A n v C o n u se s. If you can, a sm all ad placed in T h e D a ily T e x a n Classifieds w ill bring yo u r nam e before 10,000 students, m any of w h om are anxious to contact a first-class coach. T h e rates are reasonable. Call 2-3164 before 4:30 Today I* Miss Leontovich considering flits work? “ A fter our tour is completed, I ’m returning to New York on business,” she said. A s she walked along Congress Avenue she commented on the young girls that passed by. “ Such cute numbers they have here in Austin,” she said. When inform ed th at The U ni­ versity of T ega* was located here, abe replied, “ Oh, th a t’s th a rea- at>n.” M rs. Power Addresses Alpha Chi Omegas Mrs. H H. Power of the na­ tional treasury organization of Alpha Chi Omega sorority ad­ dressed the Austin alumnae at their luncheon meeting Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Alexander |A- flit. Mrs. Power discussed the na­ tional council meeting, which wa* held in the Beekman Tower Hotel, national Panh.ellenic headquarters ' in New York City. Mrs. Power also attended the National Pan- helelnic Congress in New York and has visited its headquarters in Indianapolis. In The Texan’s Business News Saturday Evening Post Goes To Texas The Saturday Evening Poet has hung out a sign lately which says “ Gone to Texas.” The past few tissues have been full of stories .and articles on Texas and Texans. The October 8 issue carried the story of Lutcher Stark ann Dana Bible in an article entitled “ The Arch-Angel and His Bible,” and a number of football articles have Included mention of the teams of t the Southwest Conference. Texas oil fields have received several write-ups in the past few months. There was also an editorial called “ The Ayes and Nayes of Texas Are Upon Us.” Explanation of the break Texas has been getting lately in the Post I comes with the announcement that Wesley W , Stout, the new editor of the magazine, was form erly a newspaperman covering the terri­ tory between Louisville, Ky., and San Antonio. is a “ Football The Post for this week, out to­ day, Issue” and gives its readers all kinds of stories on the famous American game. m n j T u u 'i N O W ! 1 5 c - 2 5 c ii miDsumme DIGHT S DREAM I) Wa. Shakespeare * Motte bv Mendel**** IS start I* cast af 1600 S T A R T S S A T U R D A Y ! So G r e a t . . . It h a d to re tu rn . G a b le an d C o l­ b e rt w e re n e v e r b e tte r. G A B L E Claudette C O L B E R T “ IT H A P P E N E D O N E N IG H T ” W a lte r C o n n o lly — Roscoe K arn s IN W IT H Faculty Helping In Chest Drive C am p u s Chairm en Receiving Funds chairmen began The campus division of t h e Commonty Chest campaign for funds began Thursday as twenty- one soliciting their colleagues for contributions to fourteen chest agencies. Prseident J. W. Calhoun and Dr. A. P. Brogan are lead­ ing the University campaign. support the totaled Last year the University con­ tribution $2,904. The largest amount ever given in the University division was $3,411.50 in 1932. Students will probably be given a specific opportunity next week to share in the support of the chest this year, Dr. Brogan has announced. Until then solicitation will be confined to the faculty and other employees of the University. Chairmen in the various build­ ing" are as follows: Walter T. Rolfe, Architecture Building; Dr. C. M. Montgomery, B. Hall; V. T. Sehuhardt. Biologi­ cal Laboratory; Dr. H. R, Henze, Chemistry Building; Miss Rosalie Godfrey, dormitories; E. C. H. Bar:el. Engineering Building; Dr, Ruth Allen, Garrison Hall; Dr. H. P. Bybee, Geology Building; and L. Thee Bellmont, Gregory Gymnasium. Also, Miss L u cy R a th b o n e , H o m e E co n o m ie s B u ild in g a n d U n iv e r s ity C o m m o n s; G ranv ille P n c e , J o u r n a lis m B u i ld in g ; D ean I. P. Hildebrand, Law Building; Dr. E M. Clark, Library tower; Donald Coney, Library staff; M ss Sunshine Neely, administrative of­ fices; Carl V. Bred'. I itt e ( a ro­ pes; Dr. Arnold Romberg. Phy­ sics Building; A. C. Wright, Uni­ versity Press; Dean B. F. Pittf ti­ ger, Sutton Hall; Dr. E. K. Mc­ Ginnis, Waggoner Hall; and Miss Anna His", W men’* Gymnasium. 2 Exes, I Student W in Farmer Scholarships O n e s t u d e n t a n d tw o e x - s tu ­ d e n t? w e r e chosen y e s t e r d a y fo r s t u d y in t h e N a tio n a l U n iv e r s ity of M exico u n d e r th e E. D. F a r m e r I n t e r n a t i o n a l S c h o la rs h ip F u n d . T h e y a r e Malcolm M c L e a n , w ho in 19 35 w ith a w as g r a d u a t e d b a c h e l o r o f a r t s d e g r e e ; T h o m a s E d w a r d Perry, la w s t u d e n t f r o m R o b s to w n ; a n d E r n e s t G eorge M a rs h , J r . , who re c e iv e d his b a c h e ­ lo r of a r t s d e g re e in 1937, E. J, M a th e w s , c h a ir m a n of th e c o m m it­ te e . said. T h e c o m m itt e e , c o n s is tin g of Mr. M a th e w s, r e g i s t r a r : Dr. H. T. P a r lin , d e a n of th e College o f A r t s a n d S c ie n c e s ; a n d J o s e G u a d a lu p e P in e d a . M e x ica n c o n s u l-g e n e r a l s ta tio n e d a t San A n to n io , se lec ted th e 'r o m seven w h ich w e r e s u b m i tte d f o r e x a m ­ in a tion , t h r e e a p p l ic a n ts Mr. M c L e a n , a w a r d e d th e s c h o l­ l a s t y e a r , w a s g r a n t e d a e n a b le th e sis a r s h i p h a l f - y e a r him. f o r th e m a s t e r o ' a r s d e g re e . s c h o la rsh ip to finish, w o rk en his to P e rry ' w ill s tu d y law , s t a t i n g in his a p p l ic a tio n th a t ho wa? i n t e r ­ e s te d in t h e field o f d ip lo m a c y . M a r s h , m a j o r i n g in b o t a n y , ha? in F ie ld M u s e u m of N a ­ w o r k e d in t u r a l H i s t o r y , C h ic a g o , a n d th e a u s p ic e ’ 123 6 w o r k e d u n d e r of t h e N a ti o n a l P a r k S e rv ic e of th e U n i t e d S t a t e s D e p a r t m e n t of A g r i c u l t u r e . H e s t a t e d in h i s a p ­ p lic a t io n t h a t h e w as v ita lly i n t e r ­ e s t e d in t h e s t u d y o f t h e b iology of N o r t h e r n Mexico. The funds for the scholarship were remitted from the state in ­ heritance tax on the e s t a t e o f E. D. Farmer, Fort Worth citizen, on the condition that a sum excessive of that involved would be endowed to The Univ*rn tv cf Texas to cul­ tivate friendship I tween ? .*• two countries Mr. Mathews said. ll. T. G radu ate Sails To Europe For AP BG an C o y n e , E d w a r d C ornish , a n d J i m O grin c f A rk a n s a s City, K a n s a s , visited In A u s tin last w eek e n d . T h e * bree sailed f o r E u ro p e M o n d a y from Calve?; n as foreign c o r r e s p o n d e n ts . Mr. Coyne is with t h e A sso ciated Pre®?.; Mr. Or gin is w ith vice, and Mr. Cornish represent! L ife Magazine. I n te r ! atle * ai N ew s S jo u r n a l i s m — — ...........— r f J I h i r d • i I n B u n d i n g P e r m i t s K a n k S n that Corpus I in which he -| J* ‘ ’ I ap- a|i- id A- r» n sa I from O xford U n i v e r s i t y , m arched in the academ ic pro­ cession al. TR A I N C HA PE R ON S NAMED B, Hall h as b een c o n d e m n e d a n d w a s sup p o se d to h a v e b e e n t o r n dow n la st y e a r . P r e s i d e n t J . W. C a lh o u n , h o w e v e r, p ro m ise d th e B. H all A sso c iation t h a t t h e Shoe R epair D ept. O EPr—'* M c L E L L A N ' S 710-712 C ongress A ve. I believe that my marriage and f uj an(j entertaining. practical I course meets ira V iii VS KVfClll«iX?IIfc VA iUVAiw. The "(Treater p a r t of M exican ! p r o b le m s of s t u d e n t s , " said (rental in som e of 7 " m s h a v e b ee n c o n c - ed w ith Dr. C. W . Ha!!, i n s t r u c t o r in B i b l e , ! a n d r e s id e n tia l b d i d i e s th a t h a v e I J v e l J s t o t a l o f tV OI M g f o r I n d ia n lore, a n d M r P low es w ishes “ b u t I ‘b i r k t h a t t h e rea< th e old c o m m e rc ia ! g i V i « » « ' * , . . ‘t ■.a year a to ta l of *3,'.>12,982. th e i “ ! ‘‘' “ I J w e a th e r e d still sta n d f o r u s e an d f o r th e a d m ir - s to r m s and A u stin r a n k e d third a m o n g T e x is oil a n d s h ip p in g c o n ­ s p o r t s m a n ’?' p a r a ­ ^ la * c itie s Inst w e t * in volum e o f | to th e S .M .U .-T e xas f o o tb a ll s a m e C hristi should a d v e r tis e no t o n ly ! t h a t it scious and a OIL W EL L LOGS O B T A I N A B L E dise, bu* th a t it is a ’so an a r t i s t ' s ! will be Mr. and Mrs. D e W itt R e d ­ . . , Mimeographed copies of th e p a r a d is e . I he a r ti c le w as w r i t t e n 1 ; dick a n d D ick R u b o tto m , vij recent visit to that Iin,?r $180*560 worth of construe- dlck and I),ck Rubottom. Miss logs pf manv of the oil following a city, which he described as color-!11-0? f ° r a ,year’S t0t « 1 I ' r o m t n e ^ u n i v e r s i t y et b u ild in g p e rm its. H o u s to n com e first, a u th o riz - earlv 4 tr ip f o r th e ... . , , _ , C h a p e r o n s on th e special tr a in ? f o r m e r d o r m ito r y w ould n o t be Or.hcr cities ranked a? follow?: Longhorn Special which I L u b b o c k , F o r t ^ ^ o r t h , S an An- A u stin at o o ciock I to n io . C o r p ™ C hriati, C i v . * ^ {Mrs. R e ddic k will be on th e o t h e r , log? a r e on ' . ' P J th e b u r e a u leaves bas been mimeographing those up lo a n a m c i u a i n g s u s o . a geologic G alve sto n, m o r n in g a n d come? hack S a tu r - j m a p of L eo n C o u n t y has r e c e n tly o a t u r a a y S a t ? r d *y l t 0 « * . * * * * « « » « : A 'nT n , n * ; . M r - »nd « • “ " f E c o n J . ? ,e tile a n d L l 1 • ^ <,n'1 Cpr’ icln»- ld *>‘ I been issued by the bureau. Ace High! f - V ^ I N QUALITY a n d S a n it a t io n W e In vite y o u r I nspectio n o f o u r s c r u p u lo u s ly d e a n p la n t w h o re w o p repare P O T A T O C H IP S , P E A ­ N U T S and C O R N C H IP S . SANi-PRODUCTS O F T E X A S /Af THE SATURDAY . - ■ /- My- T-;S: POST , . . v.y th*.mck '^ F u - 'w ir v ^ M exico's eocial i e x p e rim e n ts! * * * * p o p u l a r i t y o f th e c o u r s e c a n ‘ i n e ' t v e ° ' n f 7 n*"*-? ? Hp - ™ ! b e s t b e a n s w e r e d by e t u d e n t . w h o I " * ^ b e s t b e a n s w e r e d b y s t u d e n t s w h o | eon c o m m e n te d have ..k e n it." 7 “J- ' “ O utstandino* H E plan? to make Mexican and ™ G r e e k R c J vat mansion U n iv e r s it y s t u d e n ts also m u s t on th e b lu f f . I? is se re n e , sedate, English versions of his gov­ th in k tha* Bible 317 h as value, f o r an d c h a r m i n g in its a r c h i t e c t u r a l ernment-financed film, using Hol- ' 'te n e m e n t. T he ho u se m u s t h a v e th e cia?." has had la rg e e n r o llm e n t d actors for the American IVW | b e e n b u ilt in th e f i f t i e s w h e n so .. f m a n y G re e k Revival h o u se s w e r e Dr. Hall said there were always built in Austin, San Antonio, nique of the Mexican film indus- try was not equa. to that of the fewer students rn the cia?? in the Victoria, and elsewhere in Texas.” American, but maintained that the ma'ie a few criticisms lighting and sound was on a par. Im. He admitted tha: the tech- since it wa? in in ,-,;J gprjn There of the city. i? ’ He also than _ j Dr. Hail ha? had a number of also dangerous. Those Mr. Plowes, a newspaper man an a ‘* 'antage in this deficiency in that it makes class discussion p*?- • t ■ _■ '->e from Mer,rn f - a year aibl.. ' f thirty-five years standing, was •xiV-d t -at - , n '• • I. He and a brother, Leon. .dc. pub- Bsh Continents:, a mvrThlv maga- comra*»»« “ v a n o t s - of*25.000. zine with a circular i , • • - ....... 0 Li. *.• T- • j , . , ' T, r ‘“ u ‘ ' " ‘I ,s an‘‘r‘‘" some sections are * T, rn ludicrous anc. burning . , e j e t s - f l . r o , you ca I t h o m - ,, or. work here. The campus paper f nd Col.or “ J ™ . TT T °,l to dav and particularly bv night. I r :b.icat:or la de- of the I r. ersity of ! nom put,- Bl,, h, the , , , , , , nd the nPt . of American film p00r in . . . winter. It is disc a m i n e to me winter, i i is aiscouragmg to of your v o « d dustry. His ntinue their work in the Un:- Clted Dr. t o l l a course a? an ex- 5and dunes by disreputable shack? em ph«ized to ‘f * r*!,"d for practical education. note the disfigurement T e a an e d ito m on the subject ;ha. fue, tb ew h c re by th.t summer which i ., daughters will remain the American film ; ~"*,r— . . . . to. . ' t , • ""gila, a sophomore study- amRie ariG 5*>' P h ‘ rcial a r t, h a- c o m p le te . as an illu s tr a tio n l e n o m e n a l g r o w th a n d l it te r e d tr a s h .' ------------------------ o f p r a c tic a l e d u - . co v e r s if y . S te m g c o m m e ill u s tr a ti o n s fo r a book on T e x a s C a th o licism w r i t t e n by D r. C. E. C a s t e n a d a , U n iv e r s it y L a : i n - A m e r ­ Z a n y -a. also a ic a n s o p h o m o r e , p la n s to s t u d y j o u r ­ n alism a n d r e t u r n to Mexico C ity to w o r k on h e r f a t h e r ’s p u b lic a ­ tion. B th g rig a r e m e m b e r s o t h e G r e g g H o u se FE av e rs. lib r a ria n . Texas Farm Income Jumps 15 Per Cent Dr F. A Buechel, assistant di­ rector and statistician in the Bu­ reau cf Business Research in the University, has announced Ghat the computed farm. cash income in I va- for September was $101,- it was $87,000 - 000,000, while la s t y ear. in c r e a s e of m ore S e p t e rn b cr T h e r e w a s an th a n 15 p e r c e n t. ';a in n. S im ila r c o u r s e s a r e b eing lute d on h u n d r e d s of u n iv e r- in a n s w e r t o d e f i ­ ty c a m p u se s le d e m a n d s f r o m th e s tu d e n ts . ; N. Y. Symphony Gets Library Build-Up On ex floor of w ee k art I t r a Pense issued F> p h o n y St T he ibition on t h e gr? u n d ie L i b r a r y B u i ld in g this copse? o f th e “ O r *hes- a iity B o o k ." a p a m p h le t t h e PF i lh a rm o n ic -S y m - le ty o f N e w Y o rk . * SIC K LIST David'* Hospital S t. Woodrow T unnell Willi* rn Weiner Em rn*»tt Trader Erma Wolf* Chark s Drew G i bort Cox Chesil*y Pickle Robert Evan* Evely n l e d lick a Ale? ha Reed I.. Davis Ralph Cooley, Jr. J Ken ti eth Hollow* y Earl Anderson N. L. L edbetter Glenn Jackson i Hug hett* H arr * ; J a rn ea Crane E sther Homi W'ynema Lusk Daphrene Gray Seton Infirmary Ar chis Ht-ap Scottish Rite Dormitory Margaret Q .aid Frances La Rf » Felice Cline rothy Adam* Betie Your;g Hr ode Soh war* ISI at H ame Holt Pa 'n p h Ie t Mary Katherine rrine Davie *nehe F ic h * R