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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1931)
SOCIETY! Eleanor Jane Ballantyne-Lenore Ely B liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii)iiii:Ni:iniiiiiiiiiiriiii:iiiii;iiiiiiiiiiii[iainiiiiii3!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiii'"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiii[!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiaii[iiii^i! Kappa Kappa Gamma To Honor Mrs. Talbert One of the outstanding social events of the week-end will be a reception to be given Thursday afternoon by Kappa Kappa Gam ma for Mrs. Elizabeth Talbert, house chaperone, who made her home on the campus this fall. Miss Janice Hedges, Mrs. Tal bert, Miss Constance Baker, and Miss Barbara Dielschneider will form the receiving line. Those pouring are Mrs. Edmund Conklin, Mrs. Alice Macduff, Mrs. H. D. Sheldon, and Mrs. Jane Thacher. • * * Miss Morrow Weds .William Harvey Scott Miss Alice Morrow became the bride of William Harvey Scott on Friday evening at the Westminster church in Portland. The bride was given in marriage by her father and wore a gown of ivory satin designed along the empire lines with square neck, long sleeves puffed below the shoulder and straight full skirt with circular train. Miss Anne Morrow, sister of the bride, was maid of honor, and Miss Gwen Panton, Miss Jean Hart, Miss Elizabeth Potter, Miss Marie Mecklem and Miss Eleanor Look were bridesmaids. John Brix act ed as best man and the ushers were Joe Bates, William Barendrick, William Carter, Robert Cummins, Jack Stipe, Kirby Kittoe and Omar Palmer. Mr. and Mrs. Scott left shortly after the reception at the home of the parents of the bridegroom, for a short wedding trip to Vic toria, after which they will return to make their home in Portland. * * * Foreign Students Entertained at Banquet The Wesley club entertained for members of International house and other foreign students on the campus at a banquet Friday eve ning at the First Methodist church. Prof, and Mrs. Harold S. Tuttle and Prof, and Mrs. John Casteel were invited guests. About fifty students were present. v * * » Pierce-Reiter Wedding Date Set Announcement has been re ceived of the wedding of Fannie Vick Pierce and Mr. Francis Reiter, which is to take place on December 19 in San Francisco. Miss Pierce is a member of Delta Delta Delta and was gradu ated from the University last year. Mr. Reiter was affiliated with Phi Sigma Kappa and also took his de gree from the school of law last year. * * * International House Has Guests Messrs. Carl Weaver of Los An geles, Aramis Fouche, James Col lins, and Napoleon Simpson, all of Pasadena, California, were guests at the International house last Sunday. The guests, who are 1 known as the Dixie Quartet, sang several selections for the house members and their guests Sunday evening. * * * Bercovich-Sedloek Wedding Is Solemni/.ed The marriage of Miss Bernice Bercovich of Portland to Stephen A. Sedlock of Eugene was solem nized Saturday morning at a serv ice held at 10 o’clock at St. Michael’s church, Portland. The bride was given in marriage by her brother, Nicholas Berco vich. She wore a dress of white Chantilly lace over satin, designed with a tight-fitting bodice, long tight sleeves and tiptoe length skirt. Miss Florence Bercovich, sister of the bride, was maid df honor and wore peach taffeta. Brides maids were Misses Thelma Leh man, Laura Jane Hall, Lillian Liubetich, and Mary Caniparoli, and all wore maize taffeta. Nich olas Costani was best man and ushers were Howard Strawn, Ed ward Wells of Eugene, George Shaw, arid Francis Costani. A wedding breakfast was given at the Multnomah hotel following the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Sedlock are to make their home in Eugene at the Wilder apartments. She is a grad uate of the University of Oregon and a member of Phi Mu. * * * La Casa Filiplna Given Dinner Party Members of La Casa Filipina were entertained on Thanksgiving day at a dinner party given by Mrs. Mary W. Fairfowl. Twenty guests enjoyed the affair. Filipino dishes were served. The patrons and patronesses were Dr. and Mrs. Harold Tuttle, Mi$s Edna Weiser, and Professor Juan Kael. * • • Miss Eloise Schade Marries Harold Balshe The marriage of Miss Eloise Schade and Darold Balshe, both former students of the University, was solemnized on Thanksgiving morning in Portland. They are to make their home in Moro, Oregon. No Need to Shout I Everybody knows that golf weather is waning - - - Take advantage of it while it lasts! Laurelwood Golf Course Seeing 3 lines or 2 depends on what kind of bifocals are used Dr. Ella C. Meade 14 8th West OPTOMETRIST Phone 330 Mrs. Ealshe is a member of Alpha Chi Omega on the campus, and Mr. Balshe a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. » * * Women of P. E. Staff Entertain at Tea Dance Men of the physical education department were entertained yes terday afternoon by the women of the staff at a tea dance in the sun room of Gerlinger hall. The af fair lasted from 4 until 6, refresh ments being served. Exchange Dinners Fewer as Finals Near This week’s dinner engagements are fewer than usual due to the proximity of finals. On Wednes day Delta Gamma will be enter tained by Sigma Pi Tau, Kappa Kappa Gamma by Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon by Pi Beta Phi, Gamma Phi Beta by Phi Kappa Psi. • On Thursday Kappa Kappa Gamma will be guests at a dinner given by Beta Theta Pi, and Phi Sigma Kappa will go to Susan Campbell hall. Members of the faculty were also entertained by Kappa Kappa Gamma last night. * * * Genevieve Clark Weds Howard Neel in Oakland The marriage of Miss Genevieve Clark, senior, to Howard Neel of Oakland, California, came as a surprise to their friends on the campus. The wedding took place in Oakland on Friday, November 27, during the Thanksgiving holi days. The service was performed at Mr. Neel's home. Mr. and Mrs. Neel are making their home in Eugene, where Mrs. Neel is continuing with her school work. Blind U. of O. Graduate Purchases Weekly Paper The Oregon City Enterprise re ports that Edward C. Robbins, graduate of Oregon with a B. A. in journalism, '26, is to purchase the Canby Herald, weekly news paper, managed for the last eight years by H. E. Browne. The paper was sold for $7000 and Robbins was to take possession on Decem ber 1. Mr. Robbins, a blind newspaper man, has been connected with the Hillsboro Argus and the Forest Grove News-Times since his grad uation from the University. For the past two years, however, he has been doing advertising work in Portland for trade journals and was also working for his M. A. de gree in journalism. EMERALD The... AIR A Book Chat will be featured during this afternoon's Emerald of the Air broadcast over station KORE at 4:15. The discussion of the latest in books and of their authors will be conducted by Mar garet Ormandy. The Book Chat has been instituted as a regular bi-weekly program. * * * * A sports dialogue and interview will be carried out during Thurs day’s broadcast by Bruce Hamby, Journal correspondent, and Dick Neuberger, Oregonian writer. Hamby is a member of the Emer ald sports staff, and has conduct ed a number of the weekly sports talks sponsored by the Emerald of the Air. Neuberger has had expe rience in sports broadcasts over KGW, Portland. Oregon Song Book Offer Gets Answer From Alums Responding to a story in Old Oregon offering Oregon song books at half price to alumni who could not get back for Homecom ing, letters have been arriving at the alumni office from all parts of the United States. The story suggested that, through the coop eration of Marion McClain of the University Co-op, alumni could se cure the Oregon Song Book for 35 cents apiece. "I have been amazed at the number of alumni who have re sponded to Mr. McClain’s offer,” said Jeannette Calkins, alumni secretary. ‘‘Orders have come from Texas, Minnesota, Idaho, Cal ifornia, New York state; in fact, seven different states are repre sented in the orders so far.” The Oregon Song Book contains a number of Oregon songs, includ ing the older ones so well known to alumni. In this group are: “In a Harbor of the Mountains,” “Mighty Oregon,” “On Oregon,” and many others. It also includes John Stark Evans’ “Oregon Pledge FIVE AT INFIRMARY Five patients are confined to the infirmary. They are George Linn, Margaret Frey, Marshall Willis, Jack Cate, and Ellis Thomson. BOOKS OF THE DAY EDITED BY ROY SHEEDY CORRESPONDENT SHAW Ellon Terry un»l Bernard Shaw, A Correspondence; <i. P. Put nam’s Sons. REVIEWED BY ROBERT HILLIS People who pick up the Corre spondence hoping to catch the best-known wit and scoffer of the age with his guard down, and there will be many of these, are going to go down before a flurry of Shavian eloquence to a most abject defeat, for love never se riously threatens Shaw's intellec tual balance. Not that the letters always reveal Shaw as an ideal intellect in a pigmy world, but that they reveal him as George Bernard Shaw, successful world ling, and rarely as Dame Terry’s “Dear Bernie.” There, too, is a question that the book never quite settles as to the real depth of the affection of either party. There is more than a hint that it is all a bit of off stage acting that each found de lightful. The fact that it is George Ber nard Shaw that corresponds and not a moonstruck idiot, makes the Correspondence an important con tribution to modern* literature, al though to those who would like to do a little retaliatory jeering, the book will be a great disappoint ment. There are many interesting, stimulating, and irritating things in Shaw’s correspondence with the actress whom he saw continually on the stage yet did not meet for many years. Two letters that find him utterly convincing in the dual role of critic and playwright are Numbers 21 and 23, in which the cutting of the play, Cymbeline. Here one sees the hard-headed, in cisive craftsman. Letters 115 to 130 show him in a most disagree able light, usipg all his power of excoriation on Henry Irving, in a disagreement over a comparative ly minor business arrangement. Letters 225 and 250 bring out a Shaw whose hardness and insist ence in money matters would have made him a successful bill-collect or, an attitude which in his case, does not soften even when the lady whom he has so sedulously wooed is the party of the second part. There is much purely personal communion in the book but there are, too, many pages in which one almost suspects a great Shavian hoax, designed to entice a back ward public into reading dramatic criticism disguised as love letters. Dame Terry’s letters, far from forming merely a frame on which to hang the Shavian effusions, have a charm, a balance, and dis play a penetrating mind, that will surprise those of us who have formed our judgment on actorial intelligence from press-agented statements out of Hollywood. There are sentences, however, that hint that Shaw has performed a last service for the lady he has so long pursued. Shaw has contributed a preface to the letters. The Correspondence is charming, informal, unorthodox, informative; a book to delight the army of Shavians. A N NOUN CEMENT All those wanting girls to work in their homes next term for room | and board, and those making | changes please notify Margaret I Edmunson at the Y. W. C. A. be fore the holidays so that she can get in touch with girls coming to | school. Announcement Ileginniii£ W e il n e s day, December 2nd. “Ked” Ito tenbers’s Orchestra will play at Seymour’s Cafe— 0 n Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thurs days of each week from !1 :S0 1*. M. to 10:30 P. M„ and on Fridays and Satur days from 12 P. M. to 1 A. M. NO EXTRA CHARGES Come to SEYMOUR'S CAPE after the show or dance. S3; TALKIE TOPICS j McDonald—"Once a Lady,” star ring Ruth Chatterton. Showing for the last time today. Heilig—“Compromised,” with Rcfce Hobart and Ben Lyon. Showing till Friday. Colonial — "Daybreak,” featuring Ramon Novarro. Showing today and Thursday. State—"Dancing Dynamite,” with Richard Talmadge, and "Lover Come Back,” featuring Jack1 Mulhall. Showing for the last time today. By RALPH MASON Once a Lady” at McDonald A tragedy of the less spectacu uar type is shown in this carefully executed film in which Miss Chat terton plays a leading role. So well does Chatterton perform that she might even be accused of overact ing. Her every word is mouthed carefully and with an unmistakable Russian accent. The picture does not depend on sensational material of any sort to put it over; on the contrary, a very quiet atmosphere is present at all j times. This gives Chatterton ev ery opportunity to do her best in i a picture whose strength lies in | acting rather than in action. Geoffrey Kerr, husband of the unfortunate Chatterton, is a poor person to put in a part which makes him superior in rank to Chatterton when the contrary is so obvious. So much attention is paid to | dialogue and acting by the direc ! tor, Guthrie McClintic, that the film could easily prove boring un less followed with more than usual attention. “Are These Our Children?” star i ring Eric Linden, Ben Alexander, and Beryl Mercer, is coming to the McDonald Thursday and Friday. Ruth Chatterton who is starring in “Once a Lady,” which is show ing at the McDonald for the last time today. “Compromised” at Heiiig Ben Lyon plays one of the first “father” roles of his career in “Compromised,” new First Na tional picture, now showing at the Heiiig theatre. The story is a ro mantic drama from a play by Ed ith Fitzgerald. Others featured in this picture are Rose Hobart, Ju liette Compton, and Claude Gilling water. * * * Noah Beery Coming to State A first run picture, "In Line of Duty,” starring Noah Beery, Sue Carol, and James Murray, is com ing to the State on Thursday and Friday. The double bill feature of "Dancing Dynamite,” starring Richard Talmadge, and “Lover Come Back,” with Jack Mulhall is showing for the last time today. r 'r4*r]r *i’ rir ri'rx''**tt*ri’rv '4’'k''x*rx*'r ,v’,4’rt'r2? *r’t''S' '■J1 '»*'t’'r'v'i*ri’t'S’'Jr*1? ri'rv •‘t*'J’ *■v* ? A. 1 rouR Photograph The Gift Supreme See us NOW for that Christmas photo. HIGH QUALITY — REASONABLE PRICES ROMANE STUDIO * I * 4* f #> 4* *> # * <r •s* * * * * t * * CANDY.... The Ideal Gift See our gift boxes— Imported Jars Salted Nut Candies Walora Candies 851 13TI1 AVENUE EAST A Complete Assortment of Maiden Form Accessories at McMORRAN & WASHBURNE MAIDEN FORM c?r cTas/t/on steceen'fy "Gr09-shon", The Maiden Form up lift shown above, sculptures your bust in the youthfully rounded curves the picturesque new frocks demand The Madden Form girdle illustrated, of brocaded me ire (fuliy boned) effortlessly prepares your ftgure for sliply fitted kipiines* \ Frocks relentlessly reveal each fig ure curve, making Maiden Form's gentle but firm moulding a neces sity for even the slenderest of figures. Wear the exacting new styles with poise and comfort by wearing the Maiden Form uplift and girdle (or garter belt) best suited to your type. Get the New Maiden Form Booklet from your dealer, or write MAIDEN FORM BRASSIERE CO, Inc Dept.C - 245 Fifth Ave, N. Y. AT DEALERS EVERYWHERE There is a Maiden Farm foundation for every type of figure* "Maideneffe Double Support with fitted bond reinforcina up lift support, nigh waist slenderizing girdle of faille. "New Moon' whose clever practically seamless pockets make if invisible be neath the sheerest powns; boned peach batiste girdle. GIRDLES • CA<TIH^ K ITS Maiden Fon* hen a host of imitate**. Accept no substitute. Ins'st on ihe Mciden For* Trod* Mark label “Eugene's Own Store" McMorran & Washbume - PHONE 2700 - MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT THE BIG CHRISTMAS TREE Margaret Burnham’s Cottage Candies Try Margaret Burnham’s famous Cottage candies—they’re so delightfully fresh and so tempting. . . . You’ll like these delicious can dies and you'll enjoy every piece from the first tasteful chocolate to the last dainty bonbon. Assorted Chocolates ... 1 lb. box— 85c French Mix . 1 lb. box— 85c Eonbons . 1 lb. box— 85c Chocolate Mints . 1 lb. box— 85c “Good Night Sweetheart” Bing Crosley s Latest Hear liinpr Crosby’s newest release No. 6023, a Brunswick record—“Goodnite, Sweetheart” and “Too Late.” Other new releases are—“Honolulu Blues” by Red Nichols and his original Five Pennies— a Brunswick. Victor releases by Lofner and Harris—“River Stay Away From My Door”; “Bow Down to Washington” by Cole Mc Elroy’s Dance Band. 5 Packages “Kleenex” 25c Size tor 59c A very special value in “Kleenex” cleansing tissue—in five dainty pastel tints—pink, green, yellow, orchid and white. Regularly 25c a package—or extra special now at 5 packages for 59c. Supply your needs for the future. Van Raalte V-R Tex Panties at $1.95 Exquisite lovely and dainty Van Raalte under Ihings. Panties of soft, fine V-R-Tex (half glove silk and half rayon), finished with fitted waist and loose knee. In pink only. V-R-Tex fabric will not run. Sizes 5, 6 and 7. Select these for Christmas gifts. All at the Friendly Christmas Store “Brother, You’re Dumb!” “You know a lot of people seem to tliink that there isn’t any difference in the quality of the things you buy. They don’t realize that there are good mer chants that sell good merchandise and poor merchants that sell poor merchan dise. “It's pretty hard to tell at first sight just who is a good merchant and who is a poor one. One way we have found of deciding between good and poor is notic ing whether a firm advertises in the Ore gon Daily Emerald. “You’ll find that the better class of merchants who eater to University trade use the Emerald in their advertising. In the long run ... it pays to read the Em erald advertisements. Quality merchants , advertise in a quality paper.” READ AND BELIEVED BY 3000 COLLEGIANS PATRONIZE A GOOD MERCHANT