sou'wester
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7/25/2019 Sou'Wester
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7/25/2019 Sou'Wester
2/4
TH3 SOU'WESTER
Friday, October I, 9
SOU'WESTER
ESTABLISHED
1919
\\
PUBLISHED
WEEKLY
By The
OF
SOUTHWESTERN,
MEMPHIS,
TENN.
Member
Collegiate Press
Association
as second-class
matter
at
at Memphis, Tenn,
the
act of March
3,
1878.
MEADOW...Editor-in-Chief
304
Calvin
Hall-Phone
7-9279
or
7-3110
SHAFFER. ......Feature
Editor
QUANT'HY ...
FULLER ..........-..
SportsEdito
WATKINS. ...........
News
Editor
WARDEN....................Society
Editor
News
Staff
Alexander,
Asst. News Editor
Cobb
Margaret
Leuck
Olga Hartmann
Walls
Richard
Thomas
Taylor
Elizabeth
Robinson
Flowers
Savllla Martin
McCord Martha
Bailey
Buchanan
Joe
Bell
Maya Jack Crosby
Sports
Staff
unlap
Murrah Gattis
Webb
Dan Wingo
Feature Staff
Ingram
Gertrude
Smith
Wood Maran Kleisker
Lynn Barnard
Irene
Battle
Frances
Cunningham
Tully
Margaret
Winchester
Special
Features
Heidelberg
Louis Weeks
Tom Jones
TATE....
Business Manager
S. McLean-Phone
7-3958
Circulation
Managers
GEORGE
WILLIS
WALLACE
...... Asst. Circulation
Mgr.
ARMISTEAD..............Exchanges
DUFFEE..........Advertising
Manager
Asst.
Advertising
Managers
McCormick
Jim
Watson
McCormick Wayne
Paulus
SANDS
DREISBACIK.........Secretary
Glittering
Gold
a copy
of
the
Lenoir
Rhyean,
publication
of
Lenoir
College,
Hickory,
N. C.,
this
editorial:
through
the papers
the editor
noticed that
Sou'wester,
from
Southwestern
in Memphis,
Tenn.,
carried
about the
fact that there
45
students
who
reported for
on
that
paper. If
there
a tenth of
that number to
re-
to
the office
of the
Lenoir
the members
of the staff
no
doubt
promptly
go
into
a
faint. What
is
the matter
with
school?
The paper
that was
mentioned
is
no better paper
ours can be.
There
is
one main
The students
at South-
are taking
an
interest in
college
publication
as we
should
Editor Shue of the Lenoir
not
gold that
things
are not
always
they seem,
or
more
spe-
like
the
old lady
in
the
that had so many
chil-
she didn't know what
to
you
get
the point.
By DAVID
FLOWERS
Millsaps
paper, PURPLE
AND
should be complimented
on
recent
editorial,
"The Question
Much publicity
has been
to the South
mistaking
its
towards
the color
question.
Southerner
has
always
regard-
the colored people
as children,
in
thought
and
action, and
treated
them
as such. Racial
are
distinctly
drawn
in the
negro
realizes it and
is thankful
for it. Kindness
colored
race is,
however,
a
whites,
and as the PUR-
AND
WHITE
says,
"The
true
only raises himself when
is
decently
civil to his servant.
is stated in the
University
of
CRIMSON
AND
that
over
3,500,000
students
unable to
find
jobs after
college. The
executives of
raise the cry that
the
man should equip
himself
a
specific
job. This,
however,
the college man in
the position
wage
slave,
specializing
in only
and consequently
adrift
when
the
occupation
or is overcrowd-
In England
a man is selected
a position
in the Diplomatic
through
his knowledge
of
rather than
his ability to
international
problems.
the University
of South Caro-
paper,
THE
GAMECOCK, one
that
Who's Who has
se-
their faculty.
is also
well represent-
those
in
Who's
Who
1r.Weh~,
Prof. Tate, Dr.
Town-
and
Dr. Athlnson.
Campus
People
By
Richard
Alexander
It has been
the custom of the
Women's
Pan-Hellenic Council for
the past several years
to
entertain
with
a backwards
tea
dance
during
the
first semester. It has always
been
a
mystery
as to how certain
people
are given dates with
certain
other
people. This week
we are
go-
ing
to show you how the
Council
decides
whom
they
are going
to date.
The
scene
is
the Zeta house.
The
council is in
session there discus-
sing
dates. President
Black is seat-
ed at
a
table
looking
over
the
lists
of
boys. She
decides to
say some-
thing. Girls,
I
can't
see
how
we
can
make
all
the
dates
today. What
we will
do, though, is
make the dates
for
us girls
on the Council.
As I
call
your
name, please
answer
with
the
name
of
the
boy
you want
to
take
to the
dance. Do
you under-
stand?
Very
well,
I'll start
with
Lucile
Woods. What
is your choice,
Lucile?"
Baine
Chosen
"Well,
Babe, I'd like
awfully to
take
Rodney Baine.
You know, he
has
a
way with him."
I
object,"
says Sally
Griffin,
"everyone knows
I want to
go with
Rodney.
Why, we've been friends
for years.
This isn't
a fair way to
make dates."
"Girls, girls,
we can't
have this.
Let's not
be ugly about this.
Rod-
ney isn't the
only
boy in school.
There's
"Big Mac.
"He's for me, adds
Thelma
Worthington.
"Annie
Laurie
Pente-
cost said ould
have him for this
dance.
And
what she says
about
'Big Mac'
goes."
Sally saw
that
the two
best boys
in
school had
already,
been
chosen
so she decided
to take next
best
"Put me down for Cy
Williams."
"All right, Sally," says
Babe.
You
and
Cy will make
a nice pair. Next
girl
on the
list
is Lib
Pearce. Who
do you
want,
Lib?"
What
About
Wallace
"I've noticed Young Wallace look-
ing my way
lately.
Could
it be
fixed
up for me
to go with
him?"
"Absolutely not.
Martha
Shaffer
spoke
for Mr.
Wallace fully
three
months
ago.
We
can't
disappoint
a
girl who has
been
waiting
three
months."
"Poor
me I
guess I'll have to take
Dicke Thomas. But
I'll get
even
with
you, Martha
Shaffer."
"What
about
you, Sarah
Eliza-
beth?"
I haven't
much heart in this.
Last
year,
I
wanted
Scudder
Smith
but
couldn't
get
him,
and
this year
he
isn't in school.
I
suppose I'll
have
to be content
with Red Davis."
"Content?
My
dear,
you should
be
flattered.
Now who do
you want,
Teresa?"
Sowell
Comes Through
I'll
take
Jesse Sowell any
time.
"That's fine. You
see, girls, Miss
Lilly lost no
time
in making
her de-
cision.
Helen Gordon
is next.
I
just
can't
be
so quick
about my
decision.
There are
so few
boys left.
Let me
see,
I
expect
you
should put
me with Herbert
Cain."
Just as
you say.
Olga, have
you
made your
choice ?
I
won't
let Helen Gordon
out do
me.
I'll
take Walter
Cain."
Everybody
here
then
has
a
date
except
me," laments
Babe.
I
guess
I'll
have to stag. I
always
get left
out
on these things.
The Council
will
meet
again tomorrow
afternoon
to
discuss
other
dates.
Be sure
that
all
of you girls are
there.
Now,
and Then
1934:
Dorsey Barefield got
a letter the
other
day. His
best girl
wrote
to
tell
him of her wedding
in
which
Dorsey
took no part. He
tried to
laugh
it
off
by saying,
Oh, she
was
just the
girl next
door;
I knew all
about
her.
Harry
Webb
can entertain
two
girls
at the
same time
very
well.
But
can he
do
as
well with
the
girls
one
at a
time?
1933:
Alvan
Tate
said:
The United
States
will be forced
into
war by
her
commercial
ties.
Yet the
bal-
ance
of power
rests with
Italy
and
not
this country.
But
Lapsley and
Ned Wright
promise
ready support
to
their
country.
Didjever
see
Hiram
Todd'not
mer-
rily doing
a
Bing
Crosby
down
the
halls
of
Palmer?
The finals
of
The
Sou'wester
chess
tournament
have
been
reached
and
we
find the
student
body
reprenet-
An
old
American
institution
is
the
privilege of free speech, and
with
Scientist
William
O. Puckett there
are
few
fetters
to the art
of
con-
versation as
well.
Unlike small-fry
academicians
who
summarily refuse
to talk with
reporters in jealous
fear that their
learned opinions
may not appear
so
learned
in
print,
Professor
Puckett
knows life
better than to consider
newsmen
amoebas.
Reared
in
the vicinity of Davidson,
North
Carolina,
he has been in or
near
colleges most
of his life.
His
bachelor's degree
was conferred
at
Davidson
College.
Continuing
his
graduate
work in the University
at
Chapel Hill
for
two
years,
he
re-
turned to his
alma mater to
teach
for
three summer
schools and
two
regular sessions.
In
explaining
the
excellent
financial condition of the
Presbyterian
Davidson
College,
he
said. "The Duke fund brings
an in-
come of
over eighty
thousand
dol-
lars
a
year,
while a
large alumni
endowment
is possible
with
such
graduates
as the Richardson
broth-
ers of the
Vicks
Company
and the
Cannons
of
the
textile industry."
Had Princeton
Fellowship
Probably
some
of his most illum-
inating
experiences were
at Prince-
ton, where
he held the
"Class of
1887
Fellowship."
There
he
did
work
in experimental
embryology,
and
the
effects of
radiation,
as X-rays
and ultra-violet
rays,
on
the
devel-
opment
and growth
of organism.
In speaking
of that
university
he
emphasized,
"There
is no factory-
like
system of education.
With three
thousand
men there
are about five
hundred
on
the faculty,
which makes
for small
classes and
more
individ-
ual
attention. An
interesting
plan
in use
there,
comparable to our
read-
ing
system,
is the student's
election
of a department
in
which
he does
in-
tensive
outside
reading his junior
year
and prepares
a thesis the next;
then
he
is given
a
comprehensive
ed
by Rodney
Baine
challenging
Prof. Haden.
1932:
Vernon
"Torchy"
Pettit is this
column's
nomination
for
the model
student.
He got so interested in his
lab work
that
he forgot to
go
to
the dance Saturday night.
Dickie
Dunlap
defeated
Dan Ross
in the
finals
of the annual fall
ten-
nis tournament
at Southwestern
Wednesday.
Charlie Ledsinger
threatens to
go
into seclusion.
What
will all the
fair maids of this school do if
he
carries
out
this drastic
threat?
examination
over
the
two years'
work.
He added,
I
was especially
impressed
by
the intimacy of the
faculty
and
students, although the
House plan is
in
use only
at
the
Graduate School.
Dr.
Puckett agreed
that
Prince-
ton's famed academic
freedom
is dis-
tinctly that.
Church Has
No
Control
When
questioned as to
the
influ-
ence
of
the
Presbyterian Church
on
the administration he replied, "The
church has no control
whatsoever
over the University, and
the The-
ological
Seminary
in the
city has no
official
connection with 'The College
of the State of New Jersey,'
which
is
Princeton's official title.
"The Flexner-directed institute
endowed by
the Bamberger Depart-
ment Store millions
is
established
there for the
purpose of encouraging
advanced
study,"
he
declared
in ex-
plaining
Einstein's residence at
Princeton.
"Others, including the
English scientist, Weyl,
are
doing
work
in mathematics, although
the
field of economics
has been added
now.
About sixty scholars
are
re-
ceiving very
comfortable salaries,
going about their
works
with few
diverting worries."
Well-Dressed Men
Speaking of the "well-dressed
col-
lege man, Professor Puckett
said,
"It
is
the fashionable thing to dress
poorly. The men leave
their
cordu-
roys and sweaters for an occasional
week-end in New York or
a
house-
party. However, there
are surpris-
ingly
few
entertainments
at
the Uni-
versity. Also,
it is required
that
the
men
attend church
every
Sunday."
"The local
clubs
at Princeton," he
suggested, "are thought
more suc-
cessful
than
national
fraternities.
For instance,
the men
aren't trou-
bled with unknown
Brother So-and-
so from Brooklyn Eta
blowing in
to guest for the
evening."
Remembering a lab-ful
of charges,
the
genial
young prof
without
fur-
ther ado
was off
to more
familiar
work.
-from the
House of Brod-
nax
are of
unquestionable
value.
They are
pieces
that young men
and
young
women
will admire
for
beauty
and
cherish
for
Interviewing The Faculty
By HARVEY HEIDELBERG
quality. Come and see
what
Brodnax has
to offer
before
you make
your
selection.
The price range
is exceed-
ingly
wide and the variety
of items
unequaled
in
Mem-
phis.
GEO.
T
BRODNAX,
Inc.
Main
at Monroe
Memphis,
Tenn.
Ili J__
ll
Sger Rough
Cut
glad live
in a
country
w here a d me
is
ina
common -
sense
package
10c
money
-and
where
I
can
get
good
pipe
tobacco
THE
tobacco
which we
believe
is
best
suited
for pipes
is
used
in
making
Granger
Rough
Cut.
It
is made
by the
Wellman
Process,
and
we
believe
that
it will
compare favorably
with
higher
priced
tobaccos.
We wish
in some way
we
couldget
every man
who smokes
a
pipe
to just
try
Granger.
LIGGTrT
& MYERS
TOBACCO
CO
the pipe
tobacco
that's
MILD
the pipe
tobacco
that s COOL
,~A WI nnb~ei
2931 Ia rr
mi
Tosee Co.
Potter's Clay
(Dirt)
I asked a young
lady
if me
she
would wed,
In
answer
to my
query, 'tis this that
she said
Go
ask
father.
Now
she
knew
that I knew that
her
father was dead
nd
she
knew
that I
knew what
a
life he had led;
So,
she
knew
that I knew
what she
meant when she said,
Go
ask father."
How's
that for an answer to an
unwanted proposition?
Here's
hop-
ing our loveless ladies
won't use it
on the ardent campus swains. From
the
looks
of
things,
several of
them
will be needing an answer
of
this
sort,
or a more
favorable
(for them)
one
soon.
Truly Southwestern is place for
romance, as is attested
to by
the
numerous
couples cantering
hand
and hand through the stately clois-
tered halls and
around
the historic
"lover's lanes" of the institution.
The
KD's
never
fail to use
this
point
in
rushing,
but from
the looks
of things,
they'll experience more
trouble in fulfilling that promise
of
quick matrimony this year than
ever
before. Only
Margaret Lueck
of
the
present crop has
anything
to
show
for pre-pledging
promises, and after
all, an ATO pin is not stamped
on
marriage licenses.
Now
for the romances; Helen
Gor-
don is being seen
with
that up and
coming
Dr.
Paullus so often that
even reporters who never
got a name
wrong
before
are
calling
him
"Gor-
don now (Reference:
The
Sou'-
wester,"
Oct.
12);
Eugene Stewart
keeps
on
trying to
be a gentleman
by preferring
blondes and Spencer;
Frances Smith
is
still trying to hold
McKay
for
campus duty and
"Snake-
bit" Pierce for that
"one
night
out";
Sally "Pertelote"
Griffin (ask
Dr.
Monk
what
that
means) continues
with John Perry Gaither,
while
his
brother,
Duff, emits sighs and con-
sumes juleps
over Grace Waring
(isnt it appropriate
that
she
should
No
Doubt You
Know
By
Loui
Weeks
II
I
Poet
Scorner
Mr.
President: Since
the country's
going to
blazes,
Put
this in your N.
R.
A.
Give
a job to
all the
Mayses,
And let the rest of us
loaf all
day.
be
a Colonel's daughter?
Now Duff
won't
have
to feel that
he's not do-
ing
right
by dear
ole
KA);
"Horsey"
Knowlton
now
spends her
time
imi-
tating
Minnie
Mouse for
the
benefit
of
Lee "Little
powerhouse"
McCor-
mick;
Breytspraak
expects to
kill
two birds
with one
stone through
his attentions
to
the Coach's
daugh-
ter and the
basketball
he'll
receive
for them; Jane
Belcher
is
still
the
"panel-pusher's"
delight despite those
off-hours
spent
with
Ann Sledge;
the Matthews
stick
to their
"med"
students;
Lib Pearce still
thinks that
the
advertising
business has
a great
future
(we
never
heard
him
called
that
before), and Maxey
says that
he's
like Ed Wynne-the
only
differ-
ence
being
that he'll
take Savilla.
So
"Fare Thee
Well."
THE COLLEGE
RENDEZVOUS
COUVERT
REFRESHMENTS
1
AND ENTERTAINMENT
R JON
HOTEL
CL RIDGE
Watches, Rings
and Jewelry
mom
- -
-that Southwestern's
eleven weighs
one ton and that ton is going
out
to
get Mississippi
State
100%.
that
it
took
54
miles of
adhesive
tape
to bind
and bandage the 1930
University of
California
football
team.
-that
Howard
University
has
an
en-
dowment of $108,087,433.
that
the
following
are
excerpts
from
Southwestern
catalogues
ranging
from 1871 to 1895:
Students
are not
permitted
to
visit saloons.
pool-rooms, or to
board at
hotels.
Card
playing is
strictly forbidden and
any
stu-
dent known
to engage
in it will
be subject to discipline.
Eighty-eight
of
the
192 Rhodes
Scholars
that wer
selected
last
year
were from the
United States.
Iail
11
i
1
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s
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f
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f
e
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7/25/2019 Sou'Wester
3/4
Fa Ocoe iS
153 aIO ESE Page
Dr.
Norman G.
Patterson,
medical missionary
to
China, related
some
of
his
experiences
in that
to the
members of the
Ministerial
Club
last
Monday night
in
the
Bell room.
He
also had
with him
a few photographs
of
some of
the
eases
that he had treated.
Most
of
my
experiences
In China are with the
soldiers.
Soon after
I arrived in
China
in
1927,
the
Chinese
soldiers
occupied our hospital.
They
remained
there
as long as
they saw fit.
During
the past three years
our hospital
has not
been
molested by them.
However, I have had to treat
obb
Hall
the Robb rails:
Baine
rushing
in
and out
the door in
a
feverish
search for
other. . . . Reed
Brock
waiting
for the
mailman, there
be
money
...
Professor Coop-
doing
handstands
... Bobo
rak-
leaves
stops to
gape and utter
inevitable Arigst ...
Leon
moaning over
his
tire
trou-
they become
flat every evening
dusk . . .
Lapsicy walking
up
with
perspiration
on
brow ... Maybe
it is the
bas-
he
and Strickland
become so
fond
of recently.
you
know (apologies to Louis
that
Professor Cooper
was
of
being
a little boy wile
Dean
of Southwestern?
Back
an
earlier
year
he
was
perform-
the difficult
task
of walking
on
from Robb
to the stone
As
he
approached
the
wall a
in
a
big
car drove up and
said,
boy,
can
you tell me where
Dean is? To
this Professor
replied,
Yes
Ma'am, I'll
find
and tell
him to meet
you
at his
With
that
he immediately
to
his
suite and
changed
his
Clothes
make the man,
you
Baine's ten
thirty
coffee
is gaining
in memhership.
the host's
embarrassment
his cookery
blew
the fuse.
Feiderling
gathered
himself
a table for
fear
of a police
will
be no
travelling
done
week-end
because
Robb Hall is
everything
they
have
on
the
Lynx for
Saturday.
One evening
a prominent
socie-
woman
stepped
up to a Chinese
had been lecturing
on his
na-
country
under
the
auspices
of
Y. M.
C.
A.
Chao,
I hear
that you
Chinese
rats.
Chao looked at
her for
a mo-
then
he replied, "Madam,
I
that
you
Americans
eat
hot
bald,
a
very optimistic
went
to
a drugstore
and
asked
a bottle
of
hair restorer.
The
said,
Here
is
a preparation
is
sure to
make your
hair
grow.
All
right,
replied
the
optimist,
take
a
bottle.
And
please
wrap
a
comb and brush
with
it."
NE W
STRAND
SAT.,
OCT. 20TH
The
Glorious
Successor
to
Lady
For A
Day
LADY
BY
CHOICE
with
CAROLE
LOMBARD
MAY ROBSON
WALTER
CONNOLLY
ROGER PRYOR
COMING
Gene
Stratton
Porter's
"A Girl
of the
Limberlost"
a great many
wounded
men who are in the
army,
Dr. Patterson
began.
The former Davidson
College
student
went on
to say that the majority
of
the
soldiers in the
Chinese army
was
made up of boys between the
ages of 17 and 20. Also he said
that
every time
a band of
outlaws
became
too
large
for
the
army
to fight,
the bandits
were
automatically made
soldiers
in
the
army.
The
Chinese army,
he
said, contains about
ten million
soldiers.
The Ministerial
Club
members asked Dr. Pat-
terson questions
about his
work.
He
gave them
some
of
his
own experiences for answers.
His
station
is
situated
about 60 miles from Shanghai.
(Continued
from
Page Four)
hack Dr. Swan.
Heck,
says
Pitts,
I thought them
things was
worth
more'n two-bits.
Hi Lumpkin, who twisted
his knee
in
the early
part
of the season,
will
be
back in
uniform
Monday.
Hi
is
the hardest shoulder
blocker on
the
team; and he can hold down
the
center with the
best
of
them.
After being idle for two weeks,
the Bobcats will take
on
Freed-
Hardemann here Friday.
Miss.
State will
use a complicated
formation with either single
or dou-
ble wingback.
The single wing
is
used mostly with the
back
man do-
ing
the
passing. This man
will be
Armstrong,
a
sophomore, who
is
probably
the
best
passer the
Ma-
roons
ever
had.
JOHN QUANTHY.
What's
this talk
about
Intramural
football?
Sounds
like
good
stuff-
let's have some nore
of it. This
would indeed promote
more interest
in intra-frat athletic
programs and
also give more boy
s who
haven't the
time to go out for
football
a
chance
to
enjoy the game;
the tough part
of
it
would
not detract from the
interest
to any large extent.
It is noted
from Bob Pigue's
col-
umn in the
Press-Scimitar that
our
next foot-hall
opponents
are
sport-
The Pause
That Refreshes
PHONE
6-5600
Factory at
Fourth
at Washington
New
Fall Fashions Demand
BAKER'S
SMART
SHOES
FOR
SCHOOL
AND
DRESS
WEAR
VISIT
BAKER'S
SHOE
STORE
63
North Main
Ing a
pretty
good
pair
of ends, both
hailing
from
the same
place.
This
column happens to know that these
boys, Fred
Waters
and Bert Red-
doch
to be
exact, have
played seven
years
of
football
together and
know
what
they're
doing.
Also,
the Arm-
strong
to
Walters
passing combina-
tion
is nothing
to be
thrifled
with.
They're at it again-and much to
delight of the various charity asso-
ciations and
grid
fans. Plans are
in the making for
another fast
game
between
the Bobcats and
All-Mem-
phis seniors.
The
Bobolysx
game,
as
it
was called last year,
was
a
suc-
cess in every
way, including the fi-
nancial end
of
it,
and should
by all
means be continued if possible. The
aid it
rendered
last
year to the
poor
children
was
invaluable.
May
the
Lions Club be successful
again
this
year in arranging
a contest.
As a freshman,
Red Davis
played
tackle; with
the varsity, Red has
been
used
as
an end. The
thing
is
that Red looks so
good in any
posi-
tion you put him
that
he may be
in for
another change
very
soon.
Both Tennessee and
Mississippi
State
are slated
to
lose their
coaches
next year.
The
former
loss coming
as the result
of an
Army order
while
the latter
is contributed
to unknown
reasons. Capt.
Mackecknie and
Major
Neyland
have done
well with
their
charges.
Goat
Hale, now Freshman
coach
at Mississippi
State, is
slated for
Coach Mackechnie's position.
Hale
is
one
of the smartest men in
the
game
and is
bound to go places with
his
teams.
This can he illustrated
by the '33 edition
of
State's
Fresh-
men.
Professor
Tate says the finest
lit-
erary
criticism
being written
today
is in
The Criterion,
edited
by
T.
S.
Eliot, The
Symposium,
New Re-
public,
The Nation,
and
Hound
and Horn, an
English
journal whose
publication
was
suspended
this sum-
mer. The
library
is
planning
to sub-
scribe
to these magazines.
The following is
a
list
of books
recently received
in
the library:
Bauer:
Permanent Prosperity
and
How
to
Get It.
Bernays:
Special
Correspondent.
Bennet:
German
Short Stories.
Bloomfield: William Morris.
Booneville:
Organizing
and
Finan-
cing
Business.
Boucke: Laissez
Faire
and After.
Campbell:
Strindberg.
Chapman:
Fiscal
Functions
of
Federal Reserve
Banks.
Clare: Sketches
in the
Life
of
John
Clare.
Clark:
Readings
in Marketing.
Cohen:
Find Yourself.
Cole:
Manuel
of Thesis Writing.
Daggett:
Principles of
Inland
Transportation.
Darlington:
Sheridan.
Dowell:
American Farmer
and the
Exports Market.
Easton: Youth Immortal.
Education of American
Ministers.
Eschet: Flying.
WARNER
THEATRE
Preview Friday
Week Starts
Saturday
JOE E.
BROWN
In
is atest
laugh
riot
Six
Day
Bike
Rider
ADDED:
Hail
Columbia"
Second of:
'SEE
AMERICA
FIRST SERIES
and VITAPHONE
VARIETIES
Einzig: Germany's
Default.
Fillpowcz: Poland,
Past
and
Pres-
ent.
Graham: Security Analysis.
Graves: I, Claudius.
Holcombe: New Party
Politics.
Home Missions
Today and Tomor-
row.
Lansdowne: Queeney Letters.
La Roche: Sophie
in London.
Lutz: Pra ctical Engraving and
Etching.
Mirsky:
History
of Russian Litera-
ture.
Odum: Introduction
to Social
Re-
search.
Owens:
Business Organization and
Combination.
Pack: Forestry;
an Economic
Challenge.
Platt: Book
of
Opportunities.
Read:
Profession
of Forestry.
Saliers:
Handbook of Corporate
Management and Procedure.
Scherer: Japan-Whither?
Schwartz: French Romantic
Poe-
try.
Silius
Italicus: Punica.
LOEW'S STATE
Starting
Saturday
JACKIE
COOPER
IN
PECK'S
BAD
BOY
WITH
THOMAS
MEIGHAN
Stall: Art and
Artifice in
Shakes-
peare.
Strachey:
Coming Struggle
for
Power.
Symons:
Art of Aubrey Beardsley.
Tatum:
Disloyalty in the Confed-
eracy.
The New
Dealers.
Tilley:
Foreign Office.
Tristan: Le Roman de Tristan et
Iset.
Vaile: Economics
of Advertising.
Whitlock: French Eloquence.
Willey:
Seventeenth
Century
Background.
II
Yale Alumni
Weekly:
Yale Resi-
dental
Colleges.
Among
the
best
iving rvicwcrs
Professor Tate would
include Mal-
colm Crowley,
Lawrence Leighton,
Philip Wheelwright,
Theodore
Spen-
cer,
Robert Penn Warren,
Stark
Young,
and
Lincoln
Kirstein.
VISIT
Gilmore Barber
1857 Shop HAIRCUTS
MADISON r
NAT and
ELEC
Nat and Elec are our
symbols of team-work
in
service, representing
the combined
services
of Gas and Electricity
rendered by
this
Com-
pany.
This Company considers itself as
partners
with the people and
continually strives
to
labor
as
a
team-mate
with the
public in
com-
munity progress.
MEMPHIS POWER LIGHT
CO
Electricity u:cd for lighting and appliance
operation;
end natural gas
used
for
cooking water heating
and
house
heating
in the homes in
Memphis cost
our customers less
than electricity
used
alone for
the
same purposes under
any known electric rate.
TOMMY
FULLER.
I
I1IL
Ii
Good
Taste
firm, Luckies
are
fully packed
with only the clean center
leaves
these
are
the
It'stoasted
mildest
leaves-
they cost more- they
taste better.
gre. .rw
- .u n~r .
u h i
I ~ n: ::
:i
: _Il~_::::. :--
ll--
_ -.. .-
:.-;i.
:..-:~:;: :
;_-:.:;: .,:
-;~.:..~i. .
:
: ::1
Luckies are round,
Luckies are
Pop sa
EE SOU'WESBTER
ctober
It.
1934
r
t
-
7/25/2019 Sou'Wester
4/4
TH3
OU'WSTERFW~RT,
ctobr
iS
1U
COLLEGE
LYNX
suffered her
second
defeat
Saturday
in Jack-
the hands
of
the
Mississippi
20-7, before
a crowd
of
Lynx,
unable to threaten
the
more
than once,
were
out-played
for three
quar-
of
the
game. Southwestern's
csme as the result
of
a 57-
run
by Rudy
Gartside
in
the
quarter.
Choctaw half-back, scored
of
the
Mississippians
touch-
and was
ntrumental
in the
by
tossing
a short
pass to
who stepped
over the mark-
Mississippi
College's
best
in years, tallied
once in
and later
in the third
Pe-
on
straight
running
plays.
by the
Lynx
in
quarter
were futile and
net-
the Memphians
nothing,
the
ending with the
ball
deep in
territory.
Elder, and MCollum
the best that
Southwestern
offer,
while Baker,
Davis,
and Toler
were
outstanding
Choctaws.
Williams,
Lynx
suffered
injuries
and
will not
this
week.
Position
Miss. C
............
L.E...................Bal
........
L.. ..........To
............ L.G....................
Ya
............
C. .. Fortenbe
................
R.G ..........
H
.......... R.TT...............
Gord
............
R.E...................
Da
..................
Q.B...........
Pries
............ L.H.......... Cr
.......
R.H............. AnPeep
............ F.B........Andera
by quarters:
........
7
Col.....
7
0 0 0-
o 13
0-
'ol.
ker
ler
tes
rry
u
ion
vis
ter
aft
les
ion
-7
-20
Southwestern-
L.E.;
Jones, R.H.; McDonald,
L.G.;
May,
Q.B.; Weeks,
Dunlap,
F.B.;
Benton, L.G.;
R.E.;
Medaris,
L.T.;
Huckabee,
College-Kelly,
L.E.;
L.T.;
Edmenson,
Q.13.;
L.H.;
Dickson,
L.G.;
Kyzar
Parks,
R.H.; Thigpen, Q.B.
Scoring-Touchdown,
Point
After Touchdown-
(placement
kick).
College Scoring-Touch-
Craft 2,
Baker.
Points
After
2
(placement
Bob Shelton
umpire, Kenneth
Haxton
Miss);
head
linesman.
James
(Milisapa);
field judge,
Bobo
(Mississippi
State).
THE
TALK
THE TOWN
Those
PIg'N
Whistle
Barbecue
Sandwiches
BY
FOR
LUNCH
-
BY AFTER THE
SHOW
PIQ'NWHISTLE
FOOD-SODA
1579
Union
Ave.
Herbert
Hood,
Jr.,
Mgr.
Right Tackle
C
I
i
I.
1
I:
II
b
ORPHEUM
NOW
Gala
Stage
Show
Memphis'
Own
Ernie
Young
1935
REVUE
Cast
of 60
and on the
screen
"DANGEROUS
CORNER"
with
CONRAD NAGEL
and
VIRGINIA BRUCE
GRID
PICK CONTEST
Place an
(X)
beside the
team
you
pick to
win, cut
out the
list
and
the grid pick box In the Supply Store. Each person is allowed
of
guesses. Everyone is
eligible except The Sou'wester staff.
All
guesses must
be in not later than 12
o'clock, Saturday
after-
1 (
.... _.....
_.............__.. ............
Tech......
(
.~......
C
-..... __........_~^
-
Tech
....... _ _ _
Arkansas
C
.--..~.~~- ..
State . C
C
-
C
A&M
....
II ___
. .
A&M
abama
I
C
_
(
) vs. Miss. State ._...--..---..
) vs. Sewanee
..........
...._...._.....
) vs.
Vanderbilt..........C
) vs. Notre Dame .
)vs.
Texas
..... __............. .....
-
) vs. Davidson .................
) vs.
Michigan
.................-..-
Svs. L S U
-..--
I-......l
)
vs.
Columbia
. ...... .... C
)
vs.
Colgate .....-...--..-..
Svs.
W t L _..._
_...._...___
)
vs. Purdue... . . . . . . . . . .C
) vs. S.
M .
U
_..._..._..._.---.........
) vs. U. San
Francisco .- (
Svs. T.
C.
U...~......-.........__
)
vs. Tulane
_..... . ... C
)
vs.
Tennessee
.
.- .
C
)
vs.
N.
C.
State
.. 1
)
vs.
No. Carolina........
) vs. Mississippi
) vs. U. Minn.
)vs.
Brown
BOBCATS
PLAY
F. H.
TIGERS
Southwestern
Bobcats
will
play
the
Freed-Hardemann
Tigers next
Friday
on
Fargason
Field
at 2:30
P.M.
The
date
has
been
moved
up
a
week
so
the
game
can
be
played
while
the
Lynx are
in Chattanooga.
The
Franklin,
Ten.
boys have a
strong
team and
are pointing
for
the
Bobcats
as the result
of the
un-
e
v
e n
Jonesboro
-- Bobcat
score.
Freed-Hardeman
is considered
a
much better
team than
the local's
first
opponents
and will
give the
freshmen
a
hattie.
Driesback: Men
are
all
alike.
Weddington:
In
your eyes?
Driesback:
No,
in my arms.
Wn
0 tl. t
asrr
Su
Tama*
Co
/IYNX
GOLF
TEAMI [
MEETS OLE
MISS
K
E:Q4 i
Statistics:
Yards gained from scrimmage:
Southwestern,
137 in 28;
Missis-
sippi
College, 205 in 43.
Yards gained
on passes: South-
western, 65 in six passes; Missis-
sippi College,
78
on
seven passes.
Punts: Southwestern,
11
for
370,
average 34; Mississippi
Col-
lege, 10 for 362,
average
36.5.
Returned punts: Southwestern,
six for 52; Mississippi College,
four for
56.
Passes
completed: Southwest-
ern, five for
64;
Mississippi
Col-
lege,
three for 47.
Incomplete passes:
Southwest-
ern,
15; Mississippi
College, seven.
Passes intercepted:
Southwest-
ern, one;
Mississippi College,
four.
Penalties: Southwestern,
10;
Mississippi
College, 15.
First
downs: Southwestern,
six;
Mississippi
College,
eight.
Fumbles:
Southwestern, four
(recovered
three); Mississippi
College,
two (recovered
three).
Yards
lost
from scrimmage:
Southwestern,
3 2 ;
Mississippi
College, 17.
Left Tackle
Southwestern
golfers will
have
a
fall
match
with Ole
Miss
within
the next two weeks, in
Memphis.
Jack
Crosby,
president
of
the South-
western
golfers, announced
yester-
day
that Ole
Miss had
written
ask-
ing for the match. The Lynx
golf-
ers defeated the
Ole Miss golf team
twice last spring in matches here
and at Oxford.
Southwestern also has a
match
pending
with
the University of
Chattanooga
mashie - wielders for
Oct.
27 in Chattanooga. The
Mocca-
sin
golfers will give
a
definite
an-
swer concerning
the match by the
end
of
the
week.
'his is
the
first year
that
South-
western has planned any fall
matches for
the golfers.
A
strong
quartet can
be
picked
by
South-
western. Ben Weddingion
and Jack
Crosby, both
members
of
last
year's
team,
are hack in college. In addi-
tion
to these, the
Lynx
have Billy
Bethea,
Woody
Butler,
Kendall Rein-
hardt,
Charles Ledsinger,
and
Louis
Weeks
as possible varsity golfers.
Mr. Crawford
reports another
Scotchman
in
his bailiwick
who
opened
his pocektbook last Christ-
mas and a June bug flew out.
Itackle.
Sport
Scribble
Is there anything wrong
with
theIers
will
take
on
Chattanooga
next
Lynx? Some think that with the
material
out, the team should make
a little better showing.
Two things
have
been
worrying
the coaches:
The blocking has
not been what
it
should be; and, what's more
impor-
tant,
there has been
too much talk-
ing
in
the
huddle. Too much you
missed
your
man ;
Let me carry
the
ball on
55.
In
a smooth work-
ing team
no
one opens
his mouth
except the quarterback.
His judg-
ent
should
not
be
questioned.
If
he falls
down
on
his
job, then
the
coach
will substitute.
Coach Haygood
has worked
all
week to clear this
up. The Lynx
will
have
a new
punt
formation
to
work from.
Each man will have
a
certain
man to
block. If he is not
blocked
and
makes
the tackle, it
will
be easy
to know
who fell
down
on
the
job. The
old
double
wingback
formation
has not
been
changed.
Bengie Weddington and Co., Golf-
Saturday
in Chattanooga. "I'll win,"
says Bengie;
so that part
is
already
settled.
The alumni
of
Ole
Miss and
Ten-
nessee in Memphis want
a game
between the two
schools
played
here..
Naturally the
Lynx
object.
Why
should Memphis football fans want
to see
a game
between two schools
that
does not
concern
Memphis?South-
western has
succeeded
in bringing
such clubs as
Kentucky and others
equally
as
good. Besides that, the
Lynx are planning to bring Tennes-
see here
in
1936.
After the Freshman
football
team
had seen moving pictures
of the var-
sity
playing Sewanee, Porter Chap-
pel asked,
How much does that
gagget
cost Dr.
Swan. (he was
speaking
of the
projector).
More
than
you'll
ever be
worth,
comes
Continued
on Page Three)
SIREN
'he
role of
history's most
fa-
mous qu n
and
charmer is CLAU-
I)ETTE
COLIIEIIT,
in Cecil
B. De-
Jlille's
CLEOPATRA ,
which
comes
to Locw's
Palace
Saturday
for
a
week's engagement.
Also in the
cast
are Warren
William and
Henry
Wil-
coxon.
LOEW'S
PALACE
Week Starting
SATURDAY
The
Flaming
Chapters
of
the Greatest
Love Affair
the
World
Has Ever Known.
CLEOPATRA
*-With-.
CLAUDETTE COLBERT
WARREN
WILLIAM
HENRY WILCOXON
A PARAMOUNT
PICTURE
Fafr
enoug Lh
OM
time
to time
we
tell
you
facts
about
or
that
money
can
buy
is used
in
J.
about
Chesterfield
Cigarettes.
making
Chesterfield
a milder,
better-tast-
We say
that Chesterfields are
different ing
cigarette-a cigarette
that Satisfies.
from other
cigarettes-that
the
tobaccos
You can prove what we
are different, the paper is different,
and
tell you
about
Chesterfield
the way they are made is different. ay
we
ask
you
to
try them
Everything that modern Science knows that would
seem
to
be fair enough.
MONDAY
WIDNSDAY
ISATURDAY
ROSA
NINO
C3T
VONURLLU
MARTINI
UTUCK;CO.
LOST= ANUTZ
OCRU' A
AN3CHO7I*
8 P.
c.
Ta-C6LUMIA
m2wI
4
....
... .... ............. ...................
........
........ ... w... ......
CECIL
McCOLLUM,
Hurricane
Mills, Tenn.,
Is rounding
out his fourth
ear as varsity tackle.
I
ridPick
Winners
This week's grid
pick
was won
by
Hinky
Jones with a
perfect
score.
Second place
resulted
in a
four-way
tie between
Frank
Mc-
Lendon,
Jim Merrin,
Louis
Grae-
ber,
and Jim Fisher.
Henry
Wat-
kins was
the unrivaled
last
place
winner,
missing
ten guesses.
Two
passes
will be
given
for first
place
and
one
to
each
of the
second
placers.
I
THE
SOU'WIIESTER
Frida, Oober
1 1134
i
MOON
WHITE,
Lamont, Miss., senior, is Haygood's mainstay
at
right