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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1924)
LIBRARY PERIODICALS IN CONSTANT DEMAND Magazines, 1253 in Number Aid in Class Work The University library subscribes for 1253 periodicals, so a student may find practically any subject in the various ones. Among the more popular are the Saturday Evening Post, Good Housekeeping and the American magazines. Those dealing with current events are used a great deal as are the ones relative to art and the theatre. A great amount of reference work is done through magazines and it is by means of Poole’s Index and the Reader’s Guide, as well as the dramatic engineering, agricultural, industrial arts and foreign indexes, that the student can find the prop er magazine for the subject mater ial. Only the current numbers are available1 on the tables in the li brary, as the bound numbers are kept on the stacks and on the open shelves on the third floor. I At the Theatres 1 HEILIG—Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Marshall Neilan’s production of Thomas Hardy’s famous novel, “Tess of the D’Ubervilles,” with Blanche Sweet, Conrad Nagel, Stuart Holmes, George Fawcett and • Courtney Foote. Coming: Reginald Barkers’ “Broken Barriers,” with ten stars, including Adolphe Men- j jou, Mae Busch, Robert Frazer, James Kirkwood. “Circle the Enchantress,” starring Mae Murry. THE REX—-Last day: Cecil B. DeMille’s production, “Feet of Clay,” a drama that digs deeply into human emotions * and the married flapper of - today, staged in DeMille’s most opulent settings and fea turing Rod La Roque, Ye^a Reynolds, Victor Varconi, Jul ia Faye, Theodore Kosloff, Ricardo Cortez, Coming* (tomorrow) “Emp ty Hands,” with Jack Holt and Norma Shearer, THE CASTLE—East day, Henry Leon Wilson’s cleverest novel, “Ruggles of Red Gap,” with Ernest Torrence, Lois Wilson, Edward Horton, and fine sup porting cast; comedy, “Hot Dog Special.” ---o Get the Classified Ad habit. DON’T FORGET— TODAY IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SEE “FEET of CLAY” the picture they’re all rav ing about. j Johanna James, Soloist LAST DAY “Ruggles of Red Gap” with Ernest Torrence LOIS WILSON EDWARD HORTON COMEDY “Hot Dog Special” THE_ CASTLE “HOME of the BEST” tcOMING EVENTS1 j O-:-:-<$ Today, October 30 1 ' 11:00 a. m.—Assembly, Wo : | man’s building. Friday, October 31 7:15 p. m.—Noise parade, Eu gene Armory. 8:30 p. m.—Homecoming rally, j Kincaid field. } 8:30 p. m.—Burning of bonfire, ! Kincaid field. Saturday, November 1 i 11:30-1:30 — Homecoming 1 luncheon, Men’s gym. 2:15 p. m.—Washington vs. Oregon, Hayward field. 1 8:30 p. m. — Homecoming dances, Woman’s building, Cam pa Shoppe, Eugene Armory. Sunday, November 2 4:30 p. m.—Vesper services, Eugene Methodist church. Friday’s Noise Parade To Start Homecoming Festivities With Boom (Continued from page one) ored canopy of fire, will be hun dreds of Homan candles, firecrack ers, sparklers and every sort of pyrotechnic display, dear to a ori ental ’s heart. The judges, Dean Walker, James H. Gilbert, and Ralph Casey, will take their fingers from their ears as each float meanders past, to determine which organization is to win the beautiful silver cup, gi-\%n each year to the best noisemaker. There will be a rest period mid way down Willamette street to give the rollers a chance to take another breath, get their second wind and burst out in renewed vigor for the remainder of the distance to the bonfire, on Kincaid field. The R. O. T. C. band will leave the barracks at 6:15, and every one inn GRAHAM’S Cadet Boots For military drill, for hiking, for the stormy wet days, for the foot ball rallies—for wear in the class room; our boots you will find most reliable—and reasonably priced. GOODYEAR PACS CA FOR DRILL.?0-3U BASS’ GENUINE MOCCASINS. . . $12.50 ■ 828-WILLAMETTE STREET-828 ‘1 Where College Folk Buy Footwear ’ ’ \ iiiaiininiiiHiiiiBiiiiniinniiiiiwiiiiiaiiiiliBimiiiniiiiniiiiininimiinB awiiiHiiniHiiHminmiuiHiiiDwiiiiBinimHiniiiiiHiiiiHiiiiiHyiinuiiiHiiiiiwiiimiiiiHtiiiHiiiHumiiiiniiiimmntra S STARTING TONIGHT # Aryan Kelton’s Course of Twelve Lessons in Practical and Applied ■ 0 PSYCHOLOGY . Two Lessons each night with a brief intermission between ARRANGEMENT OF THE COURSE FIRST NIGHT, FIRST HOUR—THE GREAT SUBCON SCIOUS MIND, how to use it for success in business. Memory development. • FIRST NIGHT, SECOND HOUR—CONCENTRATION. How to use the subconscious mind in concentration. The different kinds of concentration. The proper time for concentrating to reach success, health, happi ness and prosperity. SECOND NIGHT, FIRST HOUR—Reasoning, imagina tion, intuition, inspiration. SECOND NIGHT, SECOND HOUR—The attributes of Consciousness. THIRD NIGHT, FIRST HOUR—Astrology, Law of Karma and Astro-Psychology. THIRD NIGHT, SECOND HOUR—Character Analysis —Psvcho-Analvsis. , FOURTH NIGHT, FIRST HOUR—Personality-develop ment ; 15 kinds of suggestion. FOURTH NIGHT, SECOND HOUR—Temperaments positive and negative. How to develop a positive temperament. (This fourth lesson alone will all through life give a greater initiative, the courage of conviction, the con census of opinion-ability toward your purpose. There is an infallible law by whch a man can be positive.) FIFTH NIGHT, FIRST HOUR—Number vibration. (Balliett system.) FIFTH NIGHT, SECOND HOUR—Rhythmetic breath, Yoga Science of Breath. (“Thought is but a breath”) said Victor Hugo. The great Law of Attraction. SIXTH NIGHT, FIRST HOUR—The Psychology of Music. Color vibration of music explained. The healing influence of music. Voice vibration. The first vowel sound out of the heart, AH! Suggestion in the speaking voice. SIXTH NIGHT, SECOND HOUR—The Harmonious use of color in home and dress. The Psychological effect of flowers. The hundred and fifty-one varieties of orchids in India explained. Also the Lotus, the sacred flower of India. The Realms of higher force. Seeing the Law of Attraction through visualization and the physical eye. This wonderful course has helped thousands of people on to a greater inspirational-spiritual ife. Only Six Dollars for the Entire Course will be in line at exactly 7 o 'clock. Plenty of means of transportation will be on hand at the start to car ry all women, and oven those tinny open-work Fords which, (to borrow a term from Ring Lardner) are sometimes laughingly termed “our cars,” will be asked to report to the chairman of the noise parade committee, Cyllbert McClellan, and be assigned a place in line. And one other thing—the beauti ful silver loving cup will be pre sented to the winning organization at the dance in the Woman’s build ing, Saturday night. All Hail! The noise parade. Football Situation in East and West Given By World of Sport (Continued from page one) Califomia-Washington game at Se attle, November 8. At this writing nine conference teams loom ns the best in America, and four of them are on the coast. The nine are, Pennsylvania and Syracuse in the east; Drake, Illin ois and Notre Dame in the middle west; and Washington, California, Stanford and Southern California on the Pacific coast. All have clean slates. The list should diminish at least by ono when California and Southern California piny at Berke ley Saturday.—S. W. —1_ Xclassified adsT O-—-o LOST—Small green purse between school of education and Collego Side Inn. Reward. Return to Emer ald office. 0-29-30-31 TWO FURNISHED ROOMS for rent by student of University. Price, $12.00 each or a study room and bedrooms for $20.00, at 157 1-2 West .Eleventh. tf THK MAN who took the over ■opt from the library Tuesday eve ning will save further trouble by •eturning it there. COAL IS YOUR BEST FUEL Rainier Coal Co. Phone 412 15 E. 7th CHIROPRACTIC is the Science of Restoring Health through the nerves. If you can’t brace up, make good pi your class or on the field, your nerves must be curtailed. You owe it to yourself to investigate Chiropractic and what it will do for you. The growth and success of Chiropractic merits your investigation. DR. GEO. A. SIMON 916 Willamette St. Phone 355-J RAIN COATS for Men and Women Umbrella Repairing HENDERSHOTT’S GUN STORE Next to Ye Towne Shoppe DANCE Every Thursday -At-• Springfield Hear that Popular Music by WOOD’S ORCHESTRA of Spokane Listen Ye Collegians! If you want a real honest ‘ to goodness shave or haircut— Drop into the CLUB BARBER SHOP Geo.W.Blair 814 Willamette Tempting food like you get at home Those good old lemon pies, choco late cakes, hot rolls, apple dump lings and a host of other good things, like Mother makes, are found only in one shop—the one with the softly subdued lights and that cozy atmosphere. Peter Pan ESSBS5 'piE HEART OF ALL HUMANITY has thrilled to the ^ story of “ I ess.’* The greatest of modern heroines, she has come to symbolize all pure women, caught in the toils of relentless fate. From the moment when, in youthful in nocence, she is betrayed by Alec D’Urberville, through her marriage and the death of her child, to the terrific climax, where she wreaks vengeance, “Tess” will hold you ab sorbed with the intensity of truly great drama. , See— ^MARSHALL NHLAN PRODUCTION" i OF THE DURBERVILLES BLANCHE SWEET i m TODAY Friday and \ Saturday From the Famous Novel by "HOMAS HARDY Directed by MARSHALL NEILAN Scenario by DOROTHY FARNUM HEILIG In the Cast: CONRAD NAGEL STUART HOLMES i GEORGE FAWCETT COURTENAY FOOTE r