The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 48, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 3, 1935 Page: 1 of 4
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The OMahoma Daily
Intend nt (fee Norman rotlojftca at second cIsji matter under (fee act o Con gnu March X 179 “
Weather
I Occasional Showers
Today
Sooner Weep
VOL XXL NO 48
“MORE TRAN A STUDENT NEWSPAPER"
NORMAN OKLAHOMA SUNDAY NOVEMBER 3 1933
CP) MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Things Look
Better For
Back Seats
And Stoves
TEW YORK Not I— 7— Better
times are ahead tor the back-seat
driver and the American housewife
Two women inventors one in New
York and the other In Milwaukee left
their kitchen stoves lone enough Sat-
urday to announce revolutionary de-
signs for automobiles and oil burner
stoves
"Before long" predicted pretty Miss
Helen Drydeu New York "automo-
bile wia have engines In the rear”
"They 11 look more like airplanes"
acid America's first woman to invade
tiie so-called man's field of motor-
car design
"Rear enghtea will be here in a
few yean and rocket-type cars will
clip along the highways" she be-
lieves '
Miss Drydea looks as modem as
tomorrow Is car Blw wore gilt sandals
and a scarlet velvet hostess gown She
formerly designed boudoir caps
YEARS of experimentation with oil
and air and with various tiny
gadgets have turned to fruition for
Mrs Viola Bchulta S5-year-old
housewife the Inventor of a new type
burner
(hie Ohio corporation has offered
her f209£00 to back the manufacture
of the burners
Each day Mrs Viola Sclults hum-
med as she want about her housework
and tended to the needs of her hus-
bank and three children while she
mulled aver principles of eomhusticn
The day's housework was followed at
night by hour of concentrated study
Out' of her studies evolved a burner
which Uie housewife claims Is differ-
ent and more efficient and economical
" to operate
She explains her Interest In things
' mechanical fm-tha-laot that the
found toys of her six brothers when
she wee a Child In Appleton Wto more
intriguing thau dolls
By the Associated
Italy facing economic snubb-
ing by more than half the civi-
lized world beginning November
18 made new concessions Satur-
day to speed the return of peace
with Ethiopia
The nature of the eoncessiane was
not made known They were under-
stood to have been outlined In a pa-
per handed to Premier Laval of
Prance at Geneva Saturday by Mus-
solini’S envoy to the League of Nl
tlons
Diplomat at the league doubted If
Italy’s concession would bo satisfac-
tory Their pessimism wee baaed upon
Mussolini's previous refusals to secret
conditions which Great Britain has In-
sisted are essential
War Plana Centime
But whatever Balyk premier may
have In mind at Geneva It la not
reflected either In Italy where meth-
ods to meet the economic boycott are
being rapidly formulated or In Ethi-
opia where plans are completed to
launch a new advance of the northern
Italian army Sunday
Restrictions already are being ap-
plied by Mussolini to conserve the
products which he knows the appli-
cation of sanctions will sharply re-
duce— coal meat oil and other neces-
sities of the nation's life ’'Meatless
Tuesdays" are forecast Stores win
close earlier to conserve light and
fuel Fewer trains will operate to
save coal
Sanctions Start November II
The sanctions committee of the
league representing 52 member na-
tions fixed November II as the date
for applying the “sell nothing to
Italy” sanctions The action was ta-
ken "with great regret” said Sir Sam-
uel Hoare who to foreign minister
speaks for Great Britain
"The object of the action” he said
"is to shorten the duration of the
war"
But it had a red-flag-ln-s-bullT
How he unearthed 50000 pounds of fac8 effect on Italians who are flnd-
dlnosaur bona In Wyoming and lo- jgg u more and more difficult to res-
eated another prehistoric reptile J train their expressions of rage against
kingdom will be told by Barnum Orest Britain
Brown scientist end explorer when
Brown to Talk On
Fossils Thursday
Brown Stovall toMake Aerial
Survey of Excavations
he speaks at 8 o'clock Thursday night
In the university auditorium
- Brown who is curator of fossil rep-
tiles for the American Museum of
Natural History has searched for
skeletons on five continents In 1935
be made an aerial survey over sev-
eral western states mapping tha
1 ground over which dinosaurs roamed
With J Will is Stovall assistant pro-
fessor of geology the visiting scientist
win fly Thursday morning over excav
ationa In Cimarron county from which
Stovall nu taken thousands of bona
of brontosaurus the heaviest of the
dinosaurs An aerial phutograhper
wiU sccom pan) them to take pic-
tures Alpha Lambda Delta in Hold '
Formal Pledging Ceremonies
Six university women will be formal-
ly pledged to Alpha Lambda Delta
national honor society fei freshmen
women at 1:30 Wednesday night In
the Women’s building Joyce Watford
Norman secretary said Saturday
They are Bleu Ash Carocll Helen
Fine Mabel Prances Ritchie Okla-
homa City: Hannah Steinberg Hous-
ton Tex Elizabeth Stewart Norman
and Winifred Thayer Holwrt
Army Maneuvers Will Begin
Monday at California Post
RIVERSIDE 'March Field) CaL
Nov X— (A-One hundred and forty-
two tons of bombs and 355000 round
of machine gun ammunition will bo
used In army air maneuvers beginning
Monday In tne San Joaquin valley
Eighty planes will go Imm March and
Hamilton field to the Muroc dry lake
range on the Mojave desert for the
sham battle ‘
ItandbaU Deadline Monday
Entries for the handball doubles
tournament must bo listed In 20 Field-
house before o'clock Monday after-
noon A1 GUIs Intramural secretary
said Saturday Matches wiU start
yrcdiMiday
Italians Offer
Concession In
' Peace Effort
Sanctions Date Is Set
For November 18
Mussolini Is Ready
Anti-British Feeling Is
Greater at Rome
Round-Robin Series
For Softball Crown
To Open on Monday
Muddy fields last week held the
race for the Intramural softball cham-
pionship to a standstill but Monday
If the weather permits four of the
five league winners will open the
round-robin series
The comparative strength of the'
fraternity and the independent tarns
in the playoffs will be tested on Dia-
mond 9 where Sigma Alpha Mu of
tha International league will battle
Chain c of the National association
Phi Delta Theta champion of the
National league will play PI Kappa
Alpha on Diamond I The Phi Delta
are favorites to defeat the American
league pennant-holders Flying U of
the American association la not
scheduled to play Monday
Fine Arts String Quartet To
Present Program at Yukon
Tha fine arts string quartet will pre-
sent a program Monday afternoon for
the Yukon unit of the Oklahoma Fed-
eration of Music Herbert H Scott
assistant in the division of public re-
lations announced Saturday Mem'
ben of the quartet are Billy Wright
Oklahoma City Harold Knox Nor-
man John Anne Bishop Guthrie
and Ruth Hughes Shldlci
Boy BcouU to Elect Offlrers
Officers for tha coming year win
bo elected by Cleveland county boy
tout officials at a meeting Monday
night In tlit basement of lb First
Methodist Episcopal church accord-
ing to Ira Rici field executive
Miser to Bo Held Twaday
A Y M O A freshman-taruity
mixer to which freshmen and faculty
members are Invited will ba held at j
1:10 Tuesday night In the lounge!
room of the Union Jack LuUrril Nor-1
man chairman Hid Sa'uidsy j
Military Group Is
Awarded First In
Float Competition
IITTTH AN elaborately decorated
1 diini
display symbolizing ' notional de-
fense Scabbard and Blade honorary
military orgaiKiation carried off first
place benors for the best float In the
Saturday morning Homecoming pa-
rade In the fraternity house decoration
eon test Alpha Tau Omega was named
winner of the lnterfratemlty coun-
cil loving eup A largo outline repre-
senting Coach Biff Jones as a Jay-
hawk hunter was erected in the fra-
ternity's yard
Escaping a drizzling rain which put
a damper on much of the dip's cele-
bration the traditional Homecoming
parade moved thru Norman streets
to the music of four bands the clank-
ing of a Arid artillery and the clatter
of horses’ hoots
Frequent cheers and applause broke
from spectators who lined the streets
The procession was headed by repre-
sentatives of 8cabbard and Blade
which was in charge Next followed
the colors the Sooner bond and the
floats
A mock graveyard for eleven Kan-
sae university grldmen brought the
Sigma Nu chapter second place In the
house decoration contest Sigma Alpha
Csnttmad an Fags I
Sooners Down
Texas Pacers
Lochner Paces Squad
In 32-23 Victory-
Leading hie closest opponent by T5
yards Floyd Lochner national inter-
collegiate two-mile champion led the
Sooner harriers to a 22 to 23 victory
over the North Texas Teachers of
Denton Saturday between halves of
the Oklahoma-Kansas football game
Wen behind until-the fifth lap
the cotton-haired champion finished
strong on a wet track to click off the
two miles In 10:02 Henry Morgan
and R C Conlee crossed the finish
line In 10:10 and 10:11 to cop second
and third placet for the Teachers
El wood Cleveland's last minute
sprint gave him fourth place Derail
Boyd Loris Moody and Presley Bego
won fifth sixth and seventh places
far the Sooners Henry Beg rest Frank
Morgan and Richard Field completed
the Teachers quintet
Duane Abbey former university stu-
dent dropped out of the race In the
sixth lap A pain In bis side also
forced Dick Chaney Sooner Blg-Slx
half-mile -hempum out of the race
500 Drivers Stopped
For Light Violations
More than 600 motorists have beeif
stopped for defective car lights by
county and city officers since October
14 In tha drive to reduce traffic
death and accident toll Key Durkee
undersheriff said Saturday
The campaign for highway safety
which wiU continue indefinitely
being carried out by county officers
petroling the highways City officials
are checking the business districts
Additional moves to reduce reckless
driving wiU be Initiated by the county
Durkee said
Armstrong to Speak
Henry M Armstrong director of the
division of public relations wUl speak
before students of Southeastern State
Teachers college Durant at 10 o'clock
Wednesday morning “Social Progress'
wUI be Uie tonic of Annul! out's ad'
dress at 12 o'clock Thursday when he
speaks to the Lions club at Shawnee
Opera Needs Male Voices
Any university men Interested
trying out for the chorus o t "Rlgo-
letto" university opera to fas present-
ed March 20 and II are urged to are
Spencer K Norton director Mai
voices are needed far the chorus Nor-
ton said and any man enrolled In the
university to eligible lo tryout
Cabs Impaars RanrttoM
HAVANA Nov 3-MV-PreaMral
Carlos Mendleta Saturday made pub-
lic a decree establlsldiig financial 1 sublet's have appeared In numerous' Virginia Klein 20 both of Norman
sanctions against Italy and prohibit-' professional pubilraLlen William P Prinrr 31 Oklahoma
tag remittance to Italy except between
ecclesiastical authorities and the Cn
ben government
Tax rsllerltona loereaae
NEW YORK Nov l-idV-Real!
enisle tax collections for the second
half of 1039 In New York city are
more than 1 1 3400400 above receipts
of a y tu sga
Accusation Of
Scandal Irks
School Heads
Immorality Is Charged
At Minnesota
But Deans Deny It
St Paul Man Tells Of
‘Love Nests’
ST PAUL Minn Nov 2 —
i Special) — A charge that a doz-
en University of Minnesota coeds
are living with men students
without benefit of clergy was
made here Saturday by N T
Mears prominent business man
in an address before the Minne-
sota Temperance Movement state
council
The charge brought a demand from
two University of Minnesota deans
that he back up his declaration with
facta
Mean made the statement In a talk
In which he asserted morel conditions
In St Paul are becoming worse and
that high school comet are
ws of drinking orgies by young
boys and girls
He sold he based his charge of Im-
moral conduct on statements mode by
a son who to a student at the unlver-
Dooen' Coeds Cited
This son declared he said that Jn
discussions of morel conditions with
other students the homes of a damn
senior girls living with senior men
tha unmarried were listed by the stu
dents -
Mears charged that the stands at
St Paul's high school football games
"smell like a brewery or a distillery"
His general statements concerning
moral conditions In SL Paul were sup-
ported fay Rev W A Horfhsge Meth-
odist Episcopal 'partorr who told the
council that anyone who wants proof
of drinking by young people and gen-
eral drunkenness need only to walk
about the main streets from 11 o'clock
at night until 4 o'clock In the mom
tag
Deans Demand Facts
Anne Dudley Blits university dean
of women and E E Nicholson dean
of student affairs demanded thst
Metre produce tha facto on which he
based his assertions
"I am under the Impression that
conditions among students at the uni-
versity are better this fall than they
have been for a long time" cold Nlch-
if be planned an Investi-
gation ha replied: "You cant Just
run thru the student directory from
A to
"I really have no comment to make
os no such ease ever has been brought
to our attention" sold Miss Blits
-It seems to ms that tf any one lud
any knowledge of such a case anil
really wished to correct it he would
bring It to the attention of university
athnriHes rather than make such
sensational statements in the publU
99
prew
Monnett to Speak
On State Geology
Wednesday Night
Dr V E Monnett director of the
schools rf geology and geological en-
gineering wilt be the second siieaker
In the public lecture series when he
nt on the "Geologic Architecture
of Oklal-oma" Wednesday night
The talk which will begin at 8
o'clock m the engineering auditor-
lum wUl be UluziU-d director will be selected
with pictures of scenes from 11 PMtiMj VMk
of the Hat
Monnett gehme particular fU-ld of nk wor1(prt must be hired beta
sprotollaitlon in geology to roll tach- j work m lH!Etn
notugy is a graduate of the university i
He also attended Uie University of Mairtoge Urcmrs
Michigan Ann Arbor and completed Boy jx and Edna Mae
wotk for n Ph D degree st Cornell : ari0tai 33 both of Oklahoma City-
university Ilh-iea N Y j Hxrnld Raymond Brllua 21 and
Field work luu carried Moniult to Marjorie Fern Brown 23 both of Ok
Mexico and many ports of llie United lalioma City
States and hto arlkte on geological Thomas Tajlor Beeler Ji 34 and
lit to n member of the executive
commutes and was formerly preldent
of the atlilellc council Hi also to
member of Sigma XI the Genbiglral
Society of America and othrt scientific
orguntztioti
j Altlio Uie leclurs wUl be on a treh-
nkal subject It will be present'd in
non-irrhniesl manner The talk
wiU be open Id the public
Ludw'g asBizzell’s Guest j
Sees His First Grid Game
Noted Biographer Also Has Some Terse Crisp'
Comment on Hitler and Mussolini
puiL LUDWIG regarded as the
dean of living biographers dropped
in on Soonerland Saturday and with
all the curiosity of a 12-year-old boy
witnessed his first American football
game
The great German writer wo the
honored guest In President Bizxell's
box when the Kansas Joy hawkers
gained an eleventh-hour victory over
the Sooners At the request of Biz-
sell he came lo Norman from Okla-
homa City where he will give two lec-
tures Monday and Tuesday
Bizzell who admits his elementary
knowledge of some of the finer potato
of the game was hard pressed to
answer- the questions of the agile
German A distinguished appearance
a brown shacked suit and y high fore-
head act the noted author off from
the crowd -
Ludwig who radiates a mixture of
good nature and Intellectual ability
sold there woe nothing on the con-
tinent that compared to American
football ’
"The camaraderie and sportsman-
Soviet Border
Raid Is Foiled
Russia Lays Blame On
Japanese Army
MOSCOW Nov 3 —(ff)— A raid
across the border from Manchoukuo
to cut the railroad line to Vladivostok
failed when a Soviet bolder patrol
fought the raiders killing two and
wounding three official Russian ad-
vioes from Kharbarovsk said Sunday
The official TSss news - agency
chavgMi the (aid was organized by
army officials in Manchoukuo It to
another in a series of bonier Incidents
which have kept Soviet-Japan rela-
tions tense
Soviet accounts said six men des-
cribed as "Keren bandits” made up
the raiding party which crossed the
bolder at Poltavko a point on the
railroad line Only one member of
the bend escaped
The raiders abandoned a quantity
of anti-Soviet literature Tea re-
ported and tools with which they
planned to pry up nils Several pis-
tols were found In their possession
Committee Approves
Eight Student Loans
Announcement of the approval of
student loans totaling 9900 from the
Lew Went and the university stu-
dent loan furds was made Saturday
by Emil R KraetUI university sec-
retary The loans including also a grant
from the Phi Beta Kappa fund to one
student were approved at s meeting
Jdent loan fund committee
Pour students were granted loans to-
taling 8300 from Uie Lew Went fund
and four others shared in 9300 from
Uie student loan fund
Supervisors lo Plan
WPA Survey Work
Plana for storting work on the WPA
geological survey will be discussed
when seven district supervisees meet
with directors here Monday Dr
Charles N Gould general supervisor
said Saturday Tlie meeting original-
ly scheduled for Friday was post
polled because of the wes liter
Pour more district supervise!- and
! Gould said In addition to this 950
city And Fraueea Mario Russel 18
Oklahoma City
!
Veterans to Give Ball Friday
A masquerade bad will be given by
- Uie Norman post of the Vtterana of
Pordgn Wars Friday at the Trepee
to raise funds to provide dinner for
veterans cunftned in Lite Central
( State hospital
ship to remarkable" he added “Such1 50-Yard TOSS BrinSfS
“ “j 7-0 Triumph
Whim asked how he enjoyed the
gome Ludwig replied It was oh right A IgOOd Czltch TOO
until the lost 30 sesmds “When I 1
am In Oklahoma I want tu become a r
part cf Okbhoma and that Includes SOOnerS Fail TO Score
being an Oklahoma enthusiast" From 1-Yard Lino
His inquiring mhid cauo him to I r 170111 1 larQ Ajlne
question endlessly When he appeared!
on the porch at Bizsell'S home he1 A dazzling 50-yard pass by
tapped the poich pillars carefully Ceor8e Hapgood and an equally
sensational catch by Rutherford
B Hayes in the last 35 seconds
of a rough and tumble battle Sat-
urday gave the badly battered
University of Kansas football
team a 7-to-0 victory over Okla-
homa snd knocked the Sooners
out of the scramble for the 1935
Big Six conference crown
Outplayed In every department of
the game the fighting Jayhawkg
tightened up hi the shadows of their
goal post took advantage of the
beaks afforded them by a slippery
muddy ball and made use of Fred
Harris' peerless kicking toe to win
their second consecutive conference
game They still lead the the loop
Fakta" an end run after Oklahoma
had gambled on a pass on the fourth
down near the mid-Held stripe Hap-
good heaved a looping spiral to Hayes’
waiting arms on the Oklahoma 5-yard
School Children to Aid
Penny Fund
Sooner Defense Fajtore
Both Jack Baer and Bill Breeden
batted ar the ball in vain attempts to
knock It down but Hayes charged
over the pay line and Tom McCall
versatile guard converted the point
after the towhdown
The Joy hawks mode the first bid
Tor a s ore In the opening quarter
atter Wade Green blocked an attempt-
ed punt by Woody Huddleston re-
covered on the Oklahoma 30 and drove
to the 17-yard line
After falling to puncture the stub-
born Souner forward wiU the Kan-
sans called upon their drop-kicking
specialist Tom McCall a mainstay
of the Jayhawkcr line
Ralph Browu tore thru and blocked
McCall's kick JOhn Mlskovsky re-
covered hesitated momentarilly end
was downed on the Oklahoma 29
Sooners Threaten Twice
From that point on the Sooners
dominated the game except for the
High School Assembly one set of Hayes' and Providence
rn tt will -Drtrroi-o ' Twce 11 APPred that Oklahoma was
To Honor u ill Kogers cartata once 2yard
line and a few minutes lata from the
1-foot marker
Late in the second quarter a dy-
namic 198-pound sophomore Bill
afternoon In the education auditor- pgbtocked
lum Xrurt M Edraondsro assistant wlUl precision After Bo
professor of school supervision tad Hewes circled left end for seven yards
I to the ifawy 29 bhr Bill took dime
JTL siren ' J0!m murfed
wffl be BlrenThey are Hto pas Breeden plunged to the 25-yard
?“0d j line for a first down He followed it
man An Actor Entertainer and Hu-1 up wlth a i4yr(j Hurrti
nuvist" by anothrr Harris this
and Home Life" by Muriel Minntok tinu for echt
Norman and “WIU Roger os a Pub- rheliw Kirk
he Character” by Genevieve Speyeral piungedJ°2 Kansas 2-
Westem songs will form a part of lt“J
Norman school children will join In
the national drive for a Will Rogers
memorial Monday when they bring
pennies end hold special assemblies
to honor the late humorist
An assembly program win be held
the high school auditorium some-
time Monday J B Stout superin-
tendent of the Norman schools said
Saturday
Monday birth anniversary of the
Oklahoma cowboy stage and screen
star wUl see the drive for a memorial
reaching Its highest tempo
In every state school from the rural
one-roomed type to those In the cen-
ter of the metropolitan business dis-
trict memorial programs wiU be pre-
sented Pennies will be collected in school
homerooms end sent to the board of
education by the teachers
the program
Grid Results
Big Six
Nebraska 19 Mtosouri 8
This 13 Kansas State 13
Marquette 28 lows Slate 12
MisMOri Valley
Drake 33 Grlnnell 21
Washington 33 Crebthlon 1
Waihburn It ILv&ell X
State Collegiate
Central 1 Southwestern 0
Pittsburgh e Northeastern X
Junior Collrgiata
O M A X Okla Aggies Frosh X
Corner m Ag 25 Connors Ag X
University Junior college 33 Ark-
ansas City Junior college X
Big Ten
North western 10 Illinois X
Iowa a Indiana 6
Michigan IX Pvnnslyvniua X
Minnesota 2X Purdue 1
Notre Dame IX Ohio State IX
Beuthaeal
S M V 20 Texas 0
Arkansas IX Texas A i -'d M 1
T C U 2X Baylor X
Rice el Oruigo Washington 0
Larky Muantalu
Wyoming 8 Montana State X
Utah State 13 Colorado State 0
Heulh
Gmtrnary 9 Loyola tHouih) 0
Vanderbilt 14 Georgia Tech 13
Alabama IX Kentucky X
L 8 U X Auburn X
Kansans Pass
To Victory In
Fin Si 1
1 llldl
'line
Raphael Boudreau the sophomore
with the magic place-kicking toe But
with only seconds left to go before
the end of the half Ed Phelps Kan-
sas center broke the spell blocked Iho
kick end brought the baU into play on
his own 20-yard line
Bo Hewes opened the way for a
touchdown with a hair-raising 35-
yard end run to the Kansas 30 Hi
skirted left end behind good blocking
by Ralph Brown Del mar Strinbock
and A1 Cor Kto douged hto way down
the middle of the field straight-armed
tackier os he dtoganaUed back to tlu
left side of the field and finally was
downed by George Hapgood
Breeden continued ilia attack from
Continued on Page 4
Give ’til It Hurts
In order to continue their bene-
ficial and constructive programs at
thcunivcreity members of the Y M
C A will open a drive Mnndny
among stunenta fumto rsaetiilal
to llie maintenance and progress
of tlie two orgnnlzatloi'
Tlie drive Itulorred and approved
ty President - DLMI will reach
every student In the university If
you are not lumlllnr with Uie work
and activities of Uirvo orgnnhu-
lions you win find a short sum-
'inarj of 'heir activities on page
X
Ol e Til It liurta— Tlw editor
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Turner, John Herald. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 48, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 3, 1935, newspaper, November 3, 1935; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1796122/m1/1/: accessed June 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.