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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1927)
Soviet Eyes U. S. As Prey, China War Lord Avers He Raps Any Americaii Recognition Toward Orient Factions Japanese Meddling Willi Railway Improbable Bv WILLIAM TL KUHNS * (United Press Stuff Correspondent" PEKING, Oft. 28.—Any suggos tion working toward regional fl'eog nition of Chinese parties by t tie United States, as was suggested by Senator Bingham of Connecticut was rejected emphatically and tin Conditionally by Chang Tso-Lin in an exclusive interview with Karl A.-Uickel, president of the United .Press, and the writer, United Press Peking manager. Firm Nationalist “I believe in nationalism as deep ly as any man enn believe in il but. nationalism for the people, not for the benefit of war profiteers. “Our first duty is to restore order and eliminate communistic agita tion and dashing factions. “No man in the world more thoroughly understands the plana of flic Bolshevik than i, as "the Communists, Borodin, Karakhnn and .Ioffe, all came to me first with their proposals before going to the south ern leaders. U. S. Next-Prey “They told me that after China they desired to penetrate the Unit ed States, which they felt to be their greatest enemy. “I feel that America should im fderstand that and know that I am fighting to suppress bolsheviks.” ("hang Tso-Lin emphatically do llied the reported possibility of the extension of Japanese railroad in ti-rests over the Chinese Eastern railroad from Chnngchung to liar bin or other extensions of Japanese railroads in Manchuria and outer Mongolia. “You may hear that the Japanese control Manchuria, but VI control Manchuria.” Football (Continued from page throe) has elevated him to the opportunity of starting at the other guard in place of Hob tick man and Don Dev orenux, who will be in reserve. Ken neth llodgen, another likely guard, is making a heated bid for the line and will probably see action before the game is over, ilill lining, cen ter; Mnyhotv Carson and Alton Hen rose, ends, and Marion Hall, tackle, will be other line reserves ready for Reinhart’s call. Reserves on Deck Reserve bucks whom the coach will have ia readiness to send in at any time will be licit Tutticli, the speed boy of the squad; lid Dvorak, a tall hall hater w ho has a knack at picking holes in the defense, nnd Leon Steen, a recent addition to the first string roster. indications were yesterday that iJ eJcljaMH’jM ihjkjSJbIIS JpMIlDJSJcMI Don’t be too careful! You can do any thing when you send your laun dry to us. It is re refreshin gly clean and white when we return it no matter how soiled it m a y have been. And our prompt serv ice will please you. We relieve you of all bother. Just call 825 and your job is done. Phone 825 New Service Laundry ■ I ■ i i‘ ■ |iujgJgJgiiSJSJEJ5JSM3/SJS,3i2iEiE!JS/2JS/EEJt/fi tiic brittle would be staged on a |soggy field. Rain could give little . weights nre not greatly different, 1 r. , l 1 although it would inconvenience Reinhart’s overhead attack and in crease the chances of breaks decid ; mg . the game. following 1he game the gridgrajdi tin .McArthur Iglon will start, giving the play-by-play aei mint of the 'progress of the Oregon varsity in ;their classic battle with the Stan ford Cardinals at I'rrlo Alto. The gridgraph ('oinmenees at o’clocly Bantam Squad Goes South To Meet Teachers Codru Kerns Takes Light Team for Bailie At Ashland is showing “Papa” Warner’s Stan ford crew, the . “why” and the “ whereby*” of football at Palo Alto, and while a freshman squad (in Hayward field is attempting the same procedure in kind to the Husky babes from the north, an other finish squad will be making j earnest endeavors to increase the mortality rate among the ranks of embryo teachers in the vicinity of Ashland Normal school. This team under the mentorship i of Bert Kerns goes to Ashland *o dny and will be on hand tomorrow to meet the Normalites. Ashland Normal is a new institution, being a yearling itself as it was estab lished only last year, and the class of football it will put out is very much an unknown quantity. How ever its team should measure up on the average, better than prep seliool . calibre, and if it does the, Webfoot ducklings that make the I tour will'have their hands full be cause last week they were upset by in prep team in Medford. The finish, team should be improved now with | one game’s experience and better co-ordinated play, and is expected to give the Ashland team an after-, noon full of anything but peace and quietude. Coach Kerns would hot go under joath as to what his exact lineup I would be for the opening whistle, hut intimated that Hoskinson and Penrose would take the ends, with Schroeder in reserve; Liebe and | Kckmnn, tackles; Thurston and ] Lowe, guards, and Hatfield at the [pivot. position. Alternates will probably be Belts, tackle; Douglas, ■guard, and Hast, center. In the jbaekfield the starting four will be Brown, Blnekburne, and the Itoggs I Heiberg “touchdown” combination. Brown will be at full, Boggs and 1 Blaeklmruo halves and Heiberg will bark the numbers. laUqutette and Hall will jostle along with the team | as alternate backs- ' ■ advantage to eitlier eleven as the IS COMING! See It Monday at The McDonald MATINEE TODAY 2 P. M. FOOTBALL RETURNS F - , *■ ' FRANK LLOYD V PRODUCTION . ; \ . * WITH N > '■* . .FLORENCE VIDOR *. ... AND, , ’ RICARDO CORTEZ &. Cfaramounl Q>idure * COLLEGIAN SERIES FATHE NEWS Communications (Continued from page four) tray of toast nt)d coffee. At 7:1 fr, tiie bath steward notifies Avery tliat liis “bawth” is ready, at 7:80 .Taek | performs hjs abobitions, and at 7:4.o ; (Hint, 's as late as I could arrange to take it/ 1 take mine. TWp.bath is salt water with fresh watec to fob low rip. At 8:80 breakfast is served ,i —f v e r y thing from ;gr4pefruit through fish and curries to vanilla pancakes. At 11 o’clock,-.beef tea and crackers are served, at 12:30, : lunch j at i!:.'50, tea; and at 0:80, dinner—the big meal. So much for ! eating. Then the bar is open from 8:80 until 12:80* and from 4:80 until 11. We have seen numerous flying-fisli gliding above the water, and at night the sea has beautiful phos phorous spots in it where,the prow stirs waves. lit the time between meals, when we are not playing Mali .Jong, swim ming ill tbe deek tank, watching the crew wrestle, looking for flying fish, exploring the steerage j trying to learn the .Japanese language, dancing, or watching mdvieS, we a CO working on debate. We heard by the daily wireless I bulletin today the ;outcome of the I Califomia-Orcgoit game, and had to I etiilnle life eatistJc cqiriitlmit sof scv eral Oflrifornifi graduates and; stu dents on board. Day. before yester day we received two wireless mes sages niirsflveS,;imp from Alexander llnine Ford, editor of the “Fan-Pa cific,” inviting us to a dinner when we arrive in Honolulu. (JIurrah,— another meal accounted for!) The other was from Rtotemas University; in Manila, challenging us to a tie- . bate when we, stop there to meet the I University of the Philippines. They must have wanted to debate us pretty badly, because the message was -thirty-t wo words tong at a rate of eighty cents a word. Figure it out for yourself. We have moving pictures every other night, and datiees in between. I Nothing is overlooked in the way of , ejitcrtaipment. Yes, college may be all right, but to be on the deck of Fiye brilliant in, ,a, comedy-draaia that you’ll remember forever! Headed by ■:« BEN LYON ' GEORGE SIDNEY * FORD STERLING GEO. MeMURPHEY and his KOLLEGE KNIGHTS ADAMS KOKO COMEDY CARTOON FRANK’S SOLO LAST DAY! I DROP KICK n liner in mid-Paeific about eleven p. ni. with a warm breeze blowing, n full moon shimmering on the ilnrk blue water, anil a marine’s bride to-be beside von—ah! BENOIT McCTlOSTvEY. Dislikes Flapper Mater To the Editor: As another alumnus, although feminine, I must voice my protest at your recent editorial in answer to the open letter of three loyal alumni which has seemed to cause you so much consternation. Of course, being a woman, 1 am sup posed to know nothing about foot ball, or rooting, or college spirit, or anything useful. But it so happens I do know all these things; I have shouted myself hoarse in years passed, I have sung with the rest of the co-eds until 1 couldn’t speak, sometime it was in defeat, some time in victory, but always it was in a spirit of high loyalty to Ore gon and Oregon teams. I first saw Oregon during the throes of the war, but during that hectic period of readjustment, I learned to love the institution, more particularly the gallant front it presented on the athletic field against bigger and better equipped adversaries. Oregon meant something then, it stood for the highest ideals in sportsmanship and in scholastic standing. And we rooted for' her because she was our alma mater, struggling along in the face of adversary. And now you inform us that our mother has had her face lifted and Is coyly trying to win back the old grads who have dared express to the present student body their opinion of the ipre.selit lack of “Ore gon spirit.”- We don’t want such a motlicf, and how many of you, j yourselves, could really love a mother-who has had • to resort to j such trichs to preserve the affee I tion of her children? We want a j good old-fashioned mother, to. whom w<* can go in times of trouble and be comforted, into whose home we can bring our friends anil have tlienj welcomed with a real' hospitality, a mother who will stand, lly in ad i versify/ who will be gracious in i victory. We will have nothing to do with this face-lifted Another1. We want our old mother for whom we can fight until the last ounce, and defend to the last ditch because she is our mother. Toil on the campus are perhaps not aware of the glaring compari son that was made by Portland peo | pie of the student bodies of the two Oregon institutions whose fnot j ball teams played in Portland with in a week of each other. We here in the city must listeii to the re marks of the public anil answer as ! best we can the question that is ! put to us everywhere we go, “What is the matter with Oregon?” We .know ila'rn well there is nothing the matter with Ordgun. We’ve got a good football t ha m, we-’ve got a j good institution. If the old lady , lias new, fangled Ilians and- has had her face lifted, let her l'drgetrabout I it and ail the ‘new frills sli’e’s put j on. Let her -go back to her real I job of being a mother, let the band peal forth the old songs we know, the old veils we know. And you down there help her out, and put on the snappiest Stunts imaginable for the Homecoming game to offset the poor impression left in Portland in the minds of more or less disin terested foil? who judge an institu tion by the abearance of ite stu dents in public. Pranklv, the stU BELL THEATRE Springfield Sunday v' V,. 1 > • - MOT of HHARITY-With all the / " 1 thrills of an African Hunt • WAMt f P.• BROS:«ent $YD cmniN The Mission 1M k nvMwtPi 6fsos, rnooucTioN Junction City:: Sunday MSMM j clout body'Trill have to live dnwi I the impression it made in Portlani i two weeks ago during the Oregon California game for a long time t< come. The onns of that criticisnr is falling upon members of tin alumni. We appeal to that studen body.and are told we’ll have t< learn to love our mother with hci .face lifted. 1 repeat, she is no ren mother, if she has had her fac< .lifted’. Butj if she has gone throng! that disfiguring process, let her for get it, and again be the good old fashioned mother whom wo can love You’ll find us loyal in any even because, after all, Oregon’s tin only mother we have. But we di want her as- nearly perfect as pos sible. You on the campus are then to make her perfect, and much a we regret the necessity of criticism vve on the outside must point out t I you wherein you are lacking. 1 no criticism is not mou'nt inillimlly, ' iJUt it is emphatic. What are you I ooiag to do about it GWLADYS BOWEN, Oregon, ex 322. FRAMES — ^b&irviy and 5^ : Dr. Roqal Qick , . OPTOMETRIST — O PTlCIAN 878 Willamette EUGENE’S BEST HOTEL Is the best guarantee of success for your club luncheon or formal dinner. The EUGENE HOTEL Broadway at Pearl [ 25th Anniversary u Kay” for YoungMen An Early Fall Marathon ’ Brim can*be worn sflappecf'or curled, with the new self-figured band and raw edge, i Here’s Personality for you—our feature hat at— $Q QS Full, rich lining in the Fall shades of pearl, chamois, tint - of - blue, coral and mocha. '[Let Us Be Your Hatter” jk They Stop at the Rainbow Watch the groups of college theater goers when the fea ture is over. . . . Ever notice how they just naturally stroll up toward the Rain bow? . . . Why? Ask another—Where could they find a more fitting place to quiet the little midnight hunger and climax a perfect evening? THE RAINBOW 820 Willamette