i TALKIE TOPICS ► Heilig —"Shanghaied Love,” star ring Noah Beery and Sally Blane. Showing for the last time today. State — “Abraham Lincoln,” fea turing Walter Huston. Showing for the last time today. McDonald — “Cuban Love Song,” and Lawrence Tibbett. Opening for a two-day run today. Colonial—“Politics,” starring Ma rie Dressier and Polly Moran. Showing till Saturday. Beery at Heilig One of those exciting, red-blood ed action stories, which were so much a part of the silent era, but which unfortunately were relegat ed to the background while draw ing room talkie dramas held sway, is showing at the Heilig for the last time today. “Shanghaied Love” has an all Etar cast including Norman Spring er, Richard Cromwell, Noah Beery, and Sally Blane. For honest-to goodness adventure, it has them all stopped. Battles with the angry sea, mutiny, a fist fight, and a battle of emotions, all contribute to making “Shanghaied Love,” as tempestuous as the sea itself. This saga of life on a vessel that was known as the “Hell Ship” will set your blood tingling, while the love Showing till Saturday at the Co lonial. story of a young and able seaman and the beautiful daughter of the cruel old Yankee skipper will move you. * * # Walter Huston at State D. W. Griffith’s spectacular pro duction, "Abraham Lincoln,” which is showing for the last time today at the State, is more than the mere marshalling of interesting facts into a pattern work of sympathetic romance and vivid drama; it is the life of Lincoln, not merely the saint of the copy books, nor yet the Lin coln of lusty jokes and tragic moods, but the man of destiny, the mystic and the prophet. It is impossible to point the fin Sez Sue SHOPPING COLUMN What a Game! We won from N. Y. II., and now “Sue” is looking for ward to the Homecoming game! Remember the spirit the Eugene merchants showed at 1 lie rally Wednesday? That’s the spirit they are offering us now in bargains too. Shop with “Sue” today before; the rush of Home coming. Milady’s Taste Will be pleased with a dainty new dressing table box from Laraway’s Jewelry Store, 88r) Willamette. In exquisite shades of green, yellow, pink, lavender, or black, decorated with deli cate miniatures, these boxes are designed for use and beauty. New musical jars at $6.00, and small powder boxes for $1.00! Combination cigarette-and-pow der boxes are clever at only $1.25. Food from Ho\ne} How everyone loves it! It's so good especially with a cup of the Jasmine tea that they have at McMorran’s. It’s im ported from China in tins and baskets, and has a delicious, spicy flavor. And would you like a dainty to go with it? Try their sliced ginger. "Sue" declares it completes the per fect tea-party! You'll find these imported delicacies at McMor ran’s candy counter where you get your cigarettes. Strike the Note By giving individual gifts. Just the tiling for hostess gifts is smart note paper in imported boxes, useful afterwards for cigarettes and jewelry. Memo randum pads may be practical and attractive too. There's new note paper now for those who prefer personal Christmas notes for their friends. Where? At the Oriental Art Shop, in the Eugene hotel building, of course! Another Scotch Story It’s ; fact. All Scotchmen grow homesick when they see the new robes in reversible Scotch plaids at the Broadway, Inc., 30 East Broadway. You’ll know the reason, girls, when you see these values at $4.95 and $7.95! Your hoy friend or Dad will want you to have one for the Homecoming game. Just the thing to use afterwards on your day-bed or in the rumble seat, and in soft warm colors to blend with your outfit, room,1 and car! i Girls! Would you like a lovely per manent ? A flattering one ? For one week you can get ring let J}U.sh waves for only $4.00. Where? At the Beau Monde Salon, in the Angeline Dress Shop, at 63 East Broadway. Another wonderful offer, a shampoo, vinegar rinse and finger wave for $1.00! Always good service at the Beau Monile too, with experienced graduate operators. So call 466 today and make your appointment for a “wave.” From Tip to Toe Your evening ensemble must be smartly formal, so Paris de crees. Let Buster Brown's Shoe Store, 933 Willamette, solve your footwear problem with a pair of sophisticated formal sandals. Black sandals in new velvet and satin combinations, all-suede models, and white satin styles. A real bargain, silk mesh hose, for $1,00, in black, brown, and gunmetal, too! Letters Home Can be good-looking as well as practical. The Oregon Phar macy can supply you. They have heavy Bond paper and at such reasonable prices! There's 72 sheets and 50 envelopes for 89 cents. Do you like to write on the small-sized note paper? You’ll find it, in the same good grade of paper 96 sheets with 25 envelopes for 69 cents. Stop in at the Pharmacy on your way down Thirteenth and see these for yourself. You'll like them! It’s Cowing Homecoming, with all its hurry and bustle meeting old friends cheering the team . . . Have your house attractively decorated for all the old grads. They'd like one of the table centerpieces sent up by the University Florist's. They're composed of the finest flowers arranged carefully. The effect will be lovely! Remember they're on the corner of Thir teenth and Patterson. Betty Anne Macduff, call at the Fox McDonald theater bax office before Sumbiy night and receive two pusses! ger of admiration at any one par ticular scene of this picture with out slighting the whole. Griffitl has managed perhaps the most dif ficult job ever undertaken with s touch of genius that harks back i to the time of his “Birth of a Na I tion.” The end is lyrical poetry trans ferred to the screen and thanks for this must undoubtedly go to the eminent poet, Stephen Vincent Benet, who wrote the dialogue and many of the romantic scenes. “The Nevada Buckeroo,” star ring Bob Steele is showing Satur day only. * * * Dressier at State Although “Politics,” as played by Marie Dressier and Polly Mo ran, is one big comedy from start to finish it nevertheless conceals a moral behind its hilarious straight from-the-shoulder action. Marie and the redoubtable Polly Moran go into politics to clean up the town, organize the women and get them to go on strike until their husbands capitulate to their po litical ideas. * * * Tibbett at McDonald "The Cuban Love Song,” star ring Lawrence Tibbett and Lupe Velez, opens its two day run at the McDonald today. This picture which attempts to correctly use music in a serious photoplay, has plenty of drama, glorious singing by Tibbett and comedy relief by James (Schnozzle) Durante. Two Leave for Pullman For Mortar Board Meet Janet Osborne, president of Mor tar Board, senior women’s honor ary, and Ann Baum, president of the Associated Women Students, left Wednesday to attend the sec tional convention for Mortar Board chapters in the Pacific Northwest, which is being held at Pullman, November 6 to 8. The two delegates were elected by the local chapter of the Mortar Board. They expect to return to the campus next Wednesday. Representatives from the Uni versity of Idaho, the University of Montana, Montana State college, Whitman college and the Univer sity of Washington are to attend. These Fall Days WON’T LAST FOREVER Take advantage of them while they’re here. SPECIAL STUDENT RATES LaurelwooD Golf Course Oriental Women Likened to Cows By Lucille E. Day Student Mission Secretary Speaks Last Night In Gerlinger Lucille E. Day, traveling secre tary of the Student Volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions, emphasized the low status of women in the Orient and how the missionaries in China, India, and Turkey are doing things to over come the situation, in her address, “What Christianity Can Do for the Orient,” last night in Alumni hall. Women are the property of their husbands just as cows are, Miss Day pointed out. Their place in the household is no better than that of a servant, and in most cases the men do not trust their wives as much as they do the servants. Men Do Marketing The men do the marketing and send the purchases home by serv ants, Miss Day told in way of il lustration. In many instances the women in the Oriental countries try to kill their daughters because they know that death is better than the life of drudgery that they have to live. The missionaries in that country are improving these situations through education, which formerly the women were not allowed to enjoy. Higher standards of living are being taught to the people of these countries, Miss Day con tinued. Monogamy is being in troduced in place of the former custom of polygamy. The missionaries are trying to dispel the fear these people hold in the natural forces such as rain, rivers, and the sun god. They meet this with teaching scientific farming. Nationalism Strong A strong feeling of nationalism is noted in all of these countries, i Miss Day said. The Christian mis sionaries are teaching that one nation should consider itself a member of a family of nations. In this respect they are being helped by the leaders in the countries that' are Christians. Gandhi was men tioned as one belonging to this class. Students who heard the address and any others who are interested I may learn more about the mission-1 ary field by attending the round table discussion which is being held in the women’s lounge in Ger linger hall this afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock. Personal interviews may be scheduled with Miss Day * through Margaret Edmunson, sec retary of the Y. W. C. A. Miss Day is traveling on the, Pacific coast visiting the different colleges and universities. Her visit on the Oregon campus is being sponsored by the Student Christian council. KOREAN INDEPENDENCE IS HELD IMPOSSIBLE (Continued from Page One) 90 per cent of these lease three acre farms. Herr M. Fischer, of the Hun p Get Yours Now... The New Campus Tradition Those new “Soph omore Blues”trou sers have been of ficially adopted as regulation campus dress at leading colleges and schools in all parts of the country. j C c I 0 J c “SOPHOMOAB 15 LUES” 1HOUSERS These “Sophomore Blues" are smart and snappy... good looking ... tough enough to outlive the most per sistent underclassman. They’re in now. Get in step with tnis new tradition ... get your “Sophomore Blues” today. J L“J la LOJ EiJ CU Cfl KJ OfJtHJ Oil I On Sule RIow At Loading Llothing Stores Made by 15ROWNSTEIN-LOUIS COMPANY Los Angeles, Calif. Hirsute Marvels Display Beards And Mustachios ■j^O, the geology department hasn't gone “House of Da vid,’’ nor have “Calcite” Clift and “Pyrite” Peek lost their ra zors. It’s just the initiation re quirements of the Condon club, geology honorary. The fall term pledges, Fred Clift, Norman Gonzales, Quinton Harris, Fran cis Peck, and Howard Stafford, are required to present the ap pearance of a “Forty-Niner,” hence the hirsute adornments. All the initiates will also have to dress their best (or worst) as an old-time trapper or prospec tor on Friday the 13th of next month as one of the requisites for membership in the club. Burros and mules may be the method of transportation around the campus of these pseudo Wild Bills in their annual inva sion of the University. garian State Railways, will be sent here by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, with which the local club is affiliated, to speak on the Balkan situation at the next meeting of the club, Thursday, November 19. This will be an open meeting held in Alumni hall. Victor P. Morris, professor of economics, announced that trans portation will be provided for those who wish to go to the Inter national Relations clubs confer ence at Reed college the two day3 following Thanksgiving day. There will be speakers from Pacific coast colleges and the Carnegie Endowment. Gamma Alpha Chi Names Six Women on Pledge List Six students active in journal ism and advertising were pledged to Gamma Alpha Chi, women’s na tional advertising honorary, it was announced yesterday. Those pledged are Caroline Card, sophomore, an Emerald reporter; Dorothy Cunningham, sophomore in commercial art; Helen Evans, senior, president of Phi Theta Up silon, upperclass service Honorary for women, and now doing direct mail advertising for the Valley Printing company; Caroline Hahn, sophomore on Emerald advertising staff; Velma Hamilton, sophomore in journalism; and Mary Lou Pat rick, sophomore in journalism. EMERALD Eugene Pearson, baritone, will be featured on this week’s Music day program when he presents 15 ninutes of singing over KORE dur ing this afternoon's Emerald of the Air, regularly scheduled for 4:15. Pearson was presented in recital Tuesday evening, and his presenta tion was acclaimed as one of the best given on the campus recent ly. Moussorgsky’s “Song of the Plea,” made popular by Lawrence ribbett, and one of Pearson's most successful numbers, will be repeat 'd during his broadcast today. ‘Trade Winds," a number associat 'd with the singing of Mark Dan ies, has also found a place on his ist of selections. Pearson is a member of the first solyphonic choir, and the men’s lolyphonic chorus, as well as lesser nusical groups. Barnett Explains Results of Recent National Election Whether the Democrats had a majority in the House of Repre sentatives of Congress or not, it wouldn't be hard for them to domi nate the house because there are a number of Republican insurgents who would line themselves up with the Bourbons, according to Dr. James D. Barnett, chairman of the department of political science of the University. The Republican insurgents have been clamoring for a liberalization of the house rules in various ways, and Dr. Barnett predicts that such a change will be effected now that the Democrats have a majority in the House of Representatives. Dr. Barnett pointed out that the three ranking positions in the house, namely the speakership, that of the floor leader, and chair manship in the committee on rules will be filled by Democrats. It is also likely that Representative Hawley of Oregon, co-author of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff law, who is at present chairman of the com mittee of ways and means, will also be replaced. As Representative Garner has been for so long a time floor leader of the Democrats in the house, Dr. Barnett thinks that he is the most logical one to be elected speaker of the house should the Bourbons succeed in electing their own man this time. Joint Picnic Announced For Two Wesley Groups A hike to the top of Spencer’s butte on Wednesday, November 11 1 i3 planned for the Corvallis Wesley foundation and the local group, Thelma Suey, chairman of the so cial committee, announced yester day. A sunset vespers service at the top of the butte and a picnic lunch 'are the plans being made by the committee. Word has been received that 25 of the Corvallis group have al ready signified their intentions of coming to Eugene for the Armis tice day hike, Dorothy Nyland, Wesley foundation director said. However, a larger delegation is ex pected when the hikers arrive. The two parties are to meet at 2 at the First Methodist church. Transportation to the foot of the butte will be provided for all those going. If the weather is not fa vorable for hiking, a party will be held at the church. SINO-JAP SQUABBLE MAY OPEN WORLD WAR (Continued from Page One) involving Soviet Russia, Germany will enter to support her; Russia will attack Poland, and the French will help the Poles. Existing al- ; liances will force other European countries to go to war, thereby re- [ staging the world conflagration of 1914-18,” Professor Noble con cluded. Journalism Alum Wins in Aviation Ad Competition Marion Sten, graduate in jour nalism, ’29, has been announced the winner of the second prize in the “Air View Want Ad” contest sponsored by the Los Angeles Ex- ' aminer for the furthering of ad vertising in the aviation field. The second prize award is a trip to Chicago by airplane for the Notre Dame-University of South ern California football game with all expenses paid. Miss Sten is a member of Theta Sigma Phi, women’s national jour nalism honorary. After gradua UJ lii lii LLI L=J 1=UZJ 1=4L=i cu LTJ CJ CJITJ til uy li! Lj Lii in LTJ L^J LiU LiJ LJ UJ liiJ liil liJ cu liU Cil UiJ Oil [iJ IHJ Cii LHJ DiJ IHJ lliJ DiJ CiJ i Carburetor Trouble? Net if you see us. Don't place too much blame on the motor when it doesn’t start some cold morning. THAT CARBURETOR HAS BEEN NEGLECTED George A. Halton Battery and Electrical Service Broadway and Olive Phone 1619 tion from Oregon, she too:; gradu ate work in journalism at Stan ford. She has been with the Oak land Chamber of Commerce in the publicity branch, and is at present a reporter on the News Pilot, San Pedro, California. FIVE IN INFIRMARY The infirmary has two new pa tients, Fred McKinney and Bill Hanson. Isabelle Crowell, Louise Thomas and Alfred Wolfe are also 111. It’s the Thing to Do -dine at The Cottage “There’s a difference’’ Corsages! GARDENIAS ROSES VIOLETS PANSIES SMALL MUMS Nothin" adds more distinction to the evening gown than flowers properly clustered, properly delivered. Send your orders where they will receive individual attention and where the price is right. Oregon Flower Shop Phone 1281 ‘ACROSS FROM SIGMA CIII” $000 . . . A beautiful gunmetal kid shoe of remarkable beauty and grace. The shoe’s patent trim and new side tie give a smart appearance that adds to the grace of its wearer. McDONALD THEATRE BLDG+1032 Willamette When time hangs heavy on Friday night (now that the libes are closed), bring the date ' TO Cocoanut Grove Forget the rigors of mid-terms in the round of gaiety take out your spite toward the books by ruining some one s foot. Or, failing that, drown your sorrows in punch. MUSIC BY Carl Collins Kampus Knights