Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 22, 1930, Page 4, Image 4

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    WHAT SHOW TONIGHT?
Heilig— Richard Barthelmess
in "The Dawn Patrol.”
Colonial — "Hunting Tigers
in Africa.”
McDonald — "Billy the Kid,”
with John Mack Brown.
Rex — "Gow,” and Captain
Salisbury in person.
State — “Chasing Rainbows,”
with Bessie Love and Marie
Dressier.
Dramatic Escape in Talkie
What is said to be the most dra
matic escape in all American his
tory is recreated in King Vidor’s
‘‘Billy the Kid,” an M-G-M picture
which is now at the McDonald
theatre.
John Mack Brown, as Billy, re
lives in this talkie the famous and
desperate dash for rescue made
from the Lincoln, New Mexico,
jail by the notorious William Bon
ney, who at 21 became the reput
ed “most dangerous man in the
west.”
Cnnnibsil Life Shown
Today is your last chance to see
“Gow,” the famous picture of wild
life in South America, only the
wild life referred to does not con
cern animal but human or so-call
ed human life. The famous head
hunters of Ecuador and the canni
bals of this region are shown
so interestingly that one imagines
he has been on a voyage to that
country. Capt. Salisbury makes a
personal appearance at these
showings.
Barthelmess in War Picture
From any angle you may care
to view it, "The Dawn Patrol,”
now playing at the Heilig and star
ring Richard Barthelmess, is a
splendid production. Widely her
alded as an epic of the air, show
ing the heroism of youthful avia
tors in the World war, in following
the picture one is made to feel the
devastating effects of war, the
breaking down of nervous resist
ance, and above all, the incompara
ble spirit manifested through un
selfish heroism.
(Elephants Slain in Colonial Film
Some very interesting sidelights
on the family life of the elephants
are to be obtained from the talkie,
"Hunting Tigers in India,” playing
today at the Colonial,
While the entertainment con
cerns itself chiefly with describing
in sight and sound, man’s conflict
with the tiger, jungle terror, it also
contains many interesting scenes
of other jungle inhabitants, not
the least entertaining of which are
the wild and tame elephants of the
country.
Comedienne Fives Hole
Bessie Love, who plays the lit
tle comedienne in the show, “Chas
ing Rainbows,” started in motion
pictures when she was fresh from
high school, but trouped in vaude
ville during a dull time in her mov
ie activities. In a Fanchon and
Marco act she played theatres,
both large and small, and learned
to know the ropes of the real back
stage, the theme of this picture.
"Chasing Rainbows” is closing its
run at the State today.
Briefs
"Jealousy,” the last picture of
the late Jeanne Eagels, has been
postponed for showing by the Co
lonial until next Tuesday and Wed
nesday. It will be the first show
ing of the picture in Eygene, and
bids fair to be a dramatic sensa
tion. . . . The State has instituted
a policy of making four new chang
es a week. . . . Considered one of
the probable big ten of the year’s
best pictures. "Liliom,” starring
Charles Farrell, is slated for an
early showing at the McDonald.
Charles Chaplin’s new picture,
"City Lights,” a silent, is soon to
be released. A good deal of inter
est is being shown in its reception,
silents having been relegated to
the attic.
• EMERALD CHIPS *
Tuttle To Ileturn—
Prof. H. S. Tuttle, of the school
of education, will return Wednes
day from Gold Beach where he de
livered a series of addresses at the
Curry county teachers’ institute on
Tuesday, October 21.
Hawkins Goes to Portland—
Professor H. C. Hawkins of the
school of business administration
is leaving today for Portland
where he will be engaged in re
search work centering around a
foreign trade survey of exports of
manufactured products of the state
of Oregon. He will return to the
campus Monday.
Oregon Dad Honored—
Marshall '‘Bull” Wright, U. of O.
student and Kappa Sigma pledge,
recently received news of his fath
er's election to the mayorship of
Honolulu, and to the position of
chief executive of the island of
Oahu.
Alumni Book Club
Big Aid to Grads
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.—(IP) —
Something entirely new in the way
of adult education, and another
method of keeping in touch with
alumni, has been instituted at the
University of North Carolina here
in the form of the Alumni Book
club.
The new library, believed to be
unique, circulating as it does at a
nominal cost a list of selected
books recommended by the faculty
of the university. To make the
affair a success, three university
agencies are co-operating with the
faculty—the alumni office, the li
brary extension service, and the
university library.
Under the plan of the Alumni
Book club, a list of five new books
which may be borrowed by the
alumnus is furnished each gradu
ate. Each book will be mailed to
the borrower, accompanied by a
critical review, written by a mem
ber of the faculty best informed
on the subject dealt with in the
book.
This commentary is designed to
show the book's relation to other
books on the subject or to furnish
information about the author and
his work.
Indians Participate in
Dance ol" Forefathers
LAWRENCE, Hans.—1The beat
of tom-toms and chanting of (
braves echoed over the campus of
Haskell Institute here as more j
than 1,000 Indians, attending a j
nation-wide pow-wow incident to
the game between Haskell and the
University of Kansas, participated
in the war dances of their fore
fathers.
The spectacle was held in the
athletic stadium of the govern
ment’s Indian school. The braves
tramped across the chalk lines of
the institution's football field, the
modern battle ground of Indian
youths.
Following the dances the In
dians participated in a colorful
pageant depicting the history of a
number ot Indian tribes.
The next night a band of pres
ent-day Indian warriors, Haskell's
football team, went on the war
path against the University of
Kansas eleven, and lost by a score
of 33 to 7.
It was the first meeting of the
two teams in 10 years. The pow
wow, called in celebration of the
resumption of athletic relations
between the two schools, was in
tended at first only for graduates
and students of Haskell. It was
made nation-wide, however, when
Indians from all parts of the coun
try announced they would attend.
V
uitjmime/mi/m
me
Lriufj Ijcautv into
tfie, HOME
t'/ifo i/ie HE/1RT
1 >ig bundles of sunshine"
—that’s what one little
tot called our chrysan
themums.
They are packed with
brightness and cheer ...
ideal for home decora
tion, to carry a message
of love, of sympathy,
of congratulations.
UNIVERSITY
FLORISTS
598 13th Ave. E. Phone 654
Explorer Speaks
At Villard Today
Captain Salisbury in Town
With Travelogue
Captain Edward A. Salisbury,
world adventurer, explorer, lec
turer and soldier of fortune, who
is in Eugene in connection with
the showing of his pictures, “The
Lost Empire’’ and “Gow," will
speak to the classes in foreign
trade, business administration,
marketing and commercial geog
raphy, in the Villard assembly hall
at 10 o'clock today. His subject
will deal with South American
trade and his experiences in the
islands of the Pacific.
For 35 years Captain Salisbury
has traveled the little-known high
ways of the world in quest of ad
venture and the unusual. Six and
a half years have been spent ir
the islands of the Pacific amonp
the cannibal tribes inhabiting th<
Atoles. i
Experiences of Captain Salis
bury have been preserved by him
in moving picture travelogues, the
exhibiting of which has brought
him to Eugene. Captain Salisbury
comes to the University sponsored
by the National Geographic So
ciety and the Los Angeles Museum
of Natural History, and at the in
vitation of Dean Faville of the
school of business administration,
who invites all those interested in
the exploits of Captain Salisbury
to attend the lecture today.
Professor Bock's Work
Shown al Oregon Exhibit
The Society of Oregon Artists
has asked Professor R. S. Bock of
the sculpturing department, to
contribute several pieces of his
work to their exhibit, which is to
be held in Portland at Meier and
Frank’s from October 22 to the
end of the month.
His “Golf Bug,” a happy, con
ceited, exultant sprite, is to be
cast in bronze green patina. Pro
fessor Bock’s other contribution is
the figure of a young girl, called
“Abandoned.” It is a part of an
elaborate theme, “Voices of the
Wind," originally inspired by the
moaning and sighing of the wind,
suggesting lost souls in distress.
When completed this intricate
composition will consist of 12 fig
ures.
EVANS CHOSEN AS
HOMECOMING LEADER
(Continued from 1'ape One)
middle foreground. The stickers,
as previously, will be printed in
green and yellow, the Oregon
colors.
The design was made by Flor
ence White, of Portland, a sopho
more in art, under the direction
of AJice Carter, who is in charge
of welcoming and accommodations
on the directorate.
A tentative budget of $2000 has
been drawn up for Homecoming
by Jim $ezendorf, finance chair
man. The details will be an
nounced later in the week.
Theta Si»ma Phi
To Have Meeting
Editor of Eugene Register
Will Be Speaker
Women in the school of journal
ism will be guests of Theta Sigma
Phi, women’s national journalistic
honorary, at that organization’s
>pen meeting to be held Thurs
Jay evening at 8 o’clock, in Al
umni hall.
Frank Jenkins, editor of the Eu
gene Register, will be the speak
er, and will talk upon the subject
>f women in the newspaper busi
less. Refreshments will be served
’ollowing the informal talk by Mr.
Jenkins.
Lavina Hicks and Dorothy
Thomas have charge of arrange
ments. This open meeting is an
annual event sponsored by Theta
Sigma Phi, and is given to honor
the women journalists.
_
Education Club To Meet
At Gerlinger Hall Tonight
Election of officers and selection
cf a name for the organization of
education and all other students
who are prospective teachers will
take place at a meeting of educa
tion, music, and physical educa
tion undergraduates at Gerlinger
hall Wednesday evening at 7:30.
The meeting is sponsored by Pi
Lambda Theta and Phi Delta Kap
pa.
The purpose of the club will be
to foster a professional spirit
among prospective teachers, fos
ter interest in the teaching profes
sion, and promote a friendship
among students, according to an
announcement made yesterday by
Mildred Swafford, who will act as
president pro tempore for the
meeting.
The business meeting and organ
ization of the club will follow a
lecture and musical program. Dr.
E. O. Sisson, of Reed college, will
be the principal speaker of the
evening. The meeting will close
with the serving of refreshments.
Theology Like Topsy
MILWAUKEE. — Speaking be
fore the conference of the United
Lutheran Church in America, of
which he is president, Rev. H. F.
Knubel, of New Rochelle, N. Y.,
declared that the development of
theological education in this coun
try has been haphazard.
"Like Topsy, it just grew,” he
told the convention.
Club To Discuss
Current Relations
Students Interested Asked
To Attend Tonight
All students interested in cur
rent problems are asked to attend
the first meeting of International
Relations club to be held this
Thursday evening at 8 o’clock in
room 207 Commerce.
This club is one of a large num
ber of International Relation clubs
sponsored by the Carnegie Tech
endowment of New York. Every
meeting is an open forum, and ac
cording to Victor P. Morris, pro
fessor of economics, anyone inter
ested in international good will is
invited to come to its meetings
where all current problems are dis
cussed.
Miss Louise Ansley, sophomore,
will take charge of rearranging
the bibliography of the Interna
tional Relations club in the library.
This club is reorganizing this
term, and at its first meeting it
will adopt a constitution from the
head organization.
Gulf Stream Water
Operates Power Plant
MATANZAS, Cuba.—(IP) —
After two failures which cost his
backers hundreds of thousands of
dollars, Prof. Georges Claude has
at last demonstrated the practi
cability of his electrical power
plant operated by utilizing varia
tions in temperature of Gulf
Stream water.
As cold water flows from the
huge tube more than 4,000 feet
long to the bottom of the ocean,
warm water from the surface
flows into great vacuum tanks,
where it i3 converted into steam
because of the lack of pressure.
In a short time the steam
reaches such a pressure that the
adjacent tubes begin to revolve,
and the cold water flowing about
the vacuum tanks condenses the
steam in one while the other is
filling.
The condensation produces a
fresh vacuum, so that by the time
the full tank is exhausted the
other is ready to begin function
ing.
Professor Claude was able to
light 40 light bulbs with his
strange turbine.
Observers believe it will mean
a revolution in industrial power
methods.
Tempera lure of Earth
Gradually Warming Up
TEMPERATURE OF EARTH ... 2
LAUSANNE.—(IP)—The earth
is growing slowly warmer and
drier, as it was thousands of years
ago during the inter-glacial period
Taking
Electrical Convenience
From OF Man River
Join us in the Central Electric
Program, broadcast eien Saturday
tuning l h u H.iSi *. u tdt i\.B.C.
GENERAL:
ELECTRIC
HE total capacity of waterwheel generators
-*• built by General Electric in the last ten years is
more than enough to supply light and power for
twenty cities of one million population.
Installed in power houses along the waterways,
these machines transform the strength of mighty
rivers into useful electric energy for homes, for
industry, and for transportation.
The vision and skill of college-trained men are
largely responsible for the continuing leadership
of General Electric in its service of furnishing
machines and devices that provide the swift, sure
convenience and the economy of electricity—on
land and sea and in the air.
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY. SCHENECTADY, NEW
9?7V>CC
YORK
of relatively recent geological his
Worklng Studes Win Keys
PRINCETON, N. J.—Under
graduates who are working their
way through Princeton university
win more than their proportionate
share of Phi Beta Kappa member
ships, according to university of
ficials.
tory, according to Prof. P. L. Mer
canton, of the University of Lau
sanne.
The professor, who is chairman
of the scientific committee which
has recorded the advance and re
treat of glaciers since 1881, bases
his opinion on the fact that gla
ciers of the Swiss Alps have been
retreating for a number of years.
Whether or not this condition of
earth temperature may be con
fined to the Alps, or may have
some connection with the recent
drouth on the other side of the
Atlantic cannot be determined so
quickly, weather authorities say.
Whether or not the glacier re
treat of the past few years marks
a temporary recession, to be re
placed in a few years by an in
creased advance, scientists say
they are unable to predict.
New Names Must Be Learned
NEW YORK.—According to a
story in the New York Times, po
litical changes effected by the
World war in the spellings of old
established cities, rivers and other
geographical units of Europe and
the Far East will be noted in
school geographies and receive
mention in classrooms in New
York public schools, but in most
cases will not take precedence over
the more familiar designations
used in the schools heretofore.
Camps Advised for Schools
NEW YORK. The introduction
ot camps into the public school
system as a means of getting
school children out of doors, has
been advised by Dr. Goodwin Wat
son, professor of educational psy
chology at Columbia.
Ex-Emerald Head
Now at Medford
Schoeni Teaches Preppers
Newspaper Game
Letters from Arthur Schoeni,
editor of the Emerald last year,
reveal that his present journalistic
job is an inspirational one.
He is engaged in putting the
spirit of the profession into the
hearts or at least the heads of
students at Medford high school.
In addition to his newspaper
classes, Art is teaching history
and doing publicity work for the
school.
Under his direction the students
are publishing a bi-weekly paper
that Art predicts will be one of
the best when the high school
sheets are considered at the com
ing press convention.
Schoeni has purchased a new
car in which he will venture up
to the campus one of these week
ends, he says, to take in a foot
ball game.
Children, 2 to 4, in School
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J.—
A new school for child study, open
ed at. the New Jersey State Col
lege for Women here this year, is
designed to offer children advan
tages which they would not re
ceive at home. Physically and
mentally normal children from two
to four years old are being ad
mitted.
People with salaries of below
$675 a year in England pay in tax
es each year a total of $950,000,
000.
Green
Lantern
Laundry Service
Supreme
Special One-Dav Service for University students if
desired. Otherwise bundles collected Monday will
be returned on Tuesdav afternoon.
Cords Cleaned and Tinted—50c
Eugene Steam Laundry
178 W. 8th Street
Phone 123
?iEriiniinMniifdmr^ir^irsinnr^r^ir^imrc;'ir^ir^re)r^ir^inorpnnnnraran7trcnmmrammmmmrji£ir=immmmr-ii tmmr:
Plants To Be Grown Upside Down
7
ST. LOUTS.—Plant life was
speeded up and literally turned up
side down in a small experimental
garden when student botanists
here made plants grow upside
down and mature in half the usual
time.
By the aid of chemicals, ultra
violet rays and other means the
plants were made to lose their
sense of gravity and sprout their
roots abcve the ground while oth
ers grew during the night under
the treatment of students.
A pipeful of
good tobacco is
the real smoke
TODAY, tomorrow, all the
rest of your life, you can en- ^
joy and keep on enjoying good
tobacco in a good pipe.
“How can I pick a good pipe,
and how can I tell good tobacco? ”
you may ask. Who but you could
answer? You’ll know your own
good pipe when you bite down
on it.
Edgeworth maybe the tobacco
you’re looking for. It has the dis
tinctive flavor that men like, the
slow-burning coolness; and it is
rich with the aroma of fine old
burley blended just right. A pipe
ful of Edgeworth is the real smoke.
Why not try Edgeworth? You
can buy it anywhere in the 15jf
tin—or, if you wish, write for a
generous sample packet — free.
Address: Larus 8b Bro. Co., 105
S. 22d St., Richmond, Va.
EDGEWORTH
SMOKING TOBACCO
Edgeworth is a combina
tion of good tobaccos—
selected carefully and
blended especially for
pipe-smoking. Its quality
and flavor never change.
Buy Edgeworth any
where in two forms —
" Ready • Rubbed ” and
"Plug Slice. ” All sizes—
15c pocket package to
pound humidor tin. —
Larua & Bro. Co., Rich
mond, Va.
:*/GH GRADE
jWADVfiJJBBiPj
I
I Expert Now at Bristow’s
J.
M. “Toby” Toman, for 17
Years at Seth Lara way’s,
Now at Bristow’s
Mr. Toman will have entire charge of the watch repairing, jewelry work,
diamond setting and engraving. Every piece of work that leaves the store
will either he executed or personally inspected by him before it is given to
the customer.
If any repair work is unsatisfactory, bring it back for all our work is
guaranteed. •° * ' > • •
Mr. Toman has been with the Seth Larawav Jewelry‘‘Store for 17 years
and his friends all know he is a specialist in all jewelry store repair work.
As a matter of fact lie has no peer in any such work.
The addition of Mr. Toman to the force was necessary to enable Dr. Barr
to devote his full time to his growing optical practice.
/
f^ristoirX
FORMERLY ^
LUCKEYS JEWELRY STORE1
AT THE BIO. STREET CLOCK