y Available
field and Mies Mary Louise Norson haft Oct, 14. The otteera In man.
The president, Mrs, W. S. Taycharge were Mrs. W. 8. Taylor, pre- lor, appotntd
the following commitsident; Mrs. P. K. Holmes, first vice tees for the winter:
y,
president; Mrs. Karl Wllking, secEducational Mrs. Harry
chairman;
Miss
Local Branch of the Ameri- ond vice president; Miss Louise Parker, Mrs. Jesse E. Adams, Ethel
Mrs.
can Association of Univer- Norman, secretary; and Miss Eliza- E. L. Harrison, Mrs. May K. Dunsity Women Plan Extensive beth Le Stourgeon, treasurer. The can and Miss Sienna Fried.
Miss
Fellowship
Whitney
Program for the Winter hostesses entertaining for the day Smith, chairman; Mrs.Ann E. Llgon,
M.
were:
Miss Bessie Boughton, Miss Mary Miss Marguerite McLaughlin, Mrs.
The Lexington branch of the
L. J. Horlcher, Mrs. J. M. Server,
American Association of university Jo Jones, Mrs. Edna Giles, Mrs. M. Miss Elizabeth Le Stourgeon, Miss
E.
Llgon, Miss Mary Frances
women planned an extensive pro- Krleglc,
Margaret Horsfleld, Miss Margaret
Mrs. O. M. Knapp, Miss
gram for the winter, and launched Anna Sprauge, Mies Elizabeth Le Tuttle, Miss Anna Peck, Miss Mary
Mrs. C.
a membership campaign, at its first Stourgeon, Miss Margaret Hors- - West,Splckard, M. Knapp, Miss Ron-ell- fl
Miss Mary Frances
Kricgle, Miss Idle Lee Turner, Miss
Mary Jo Jones and Mrs. Nell Hooks.
Program Mrs. J. W Jones, chairman; Mrs. Harry McEldowney and
Miss Elizabeth Le Stourgeon.
Attendance Mrs. George Smith,
chairman;
Miss Gertrude Wade,
Miss Margaret Tuttle, Miss Sally
Pence, Mrs. Fred Fischer, Miss Es
ther Cole, Mrs. Alvln E. Evans, Miss
Gladys McWhorter, Miss Mary
Louise Norman, Miss Martha Payne.
Miss Anna Dell Schoonmaker, Miss
Ann Whitney Smith, Miss Fan Lee
Dalzell, Miss Anna Sprague, Mrs.
paui Farrier and Miss Pauline
Peeples
Publicity Miss Anna Louise Conner, chairman; Miss Lucile Cook.
Membership Mrs. P. K. Holmes.
Mrs.
m
That was his code
JM chairman; Boyd, Dorothy Long, Miss
Virginia
mmmmmmmmni
vmmmmKmm Clay, Miss EstherMrs. Lucille Nafl
Cole, Mrs. T. C.
Ecton, Miss Gladys McWhorter,
Mary Louise Norman, Miss
against tne wiies iiBK wnifwom Miss
mnmrnnmv
Martha Payne, Miss Anna Dell
Schoonmaker, Miss Whitney Smith,
of woman, he was
Miss Grace Anderson, Mrs. Paul
Farrier and Miss Pauline Peeples.
defenseless. Too
annnnnVanKS
international Relations Mrs. F.
1
L. McVey, chairman;
K.
late he realized
MBMfimm Holmes, Miss Esther Mrs. P.Miss
Cole,
Marguerite McLaughlin, Mrs. Mauthe cost, but
rice Well. Mrs. J. C. Jones. Mrs. E.
A. Bureau, Miss Margaret Tuttle,
' too late to even
Mrs. W. A. Price and Mrs. Frank
I
Murray.
the score of love
mmmmW
i
mmmmmw
Legislative Miss Chloe Gifford.
i i'fJMM
H m HPfifSim chairman; Mrs. Forrest Black, Mrs.
betrayed.
Alvln E. Evans and Mrs. Frank
Murray.
Hostess Miss Margaret Horsfleld.
Hospitality Mrs. D. H. Peak.
Year Book Mrs.. Maurice Well.
chairman; Miss Mary Louise Norman, Mrs. E. L. Harrison, Mrs. Jesse E. Adams, Mrs. C. C. Ross and
Mrs. L. M. Chamberlain.

MEETING HELD BY
WOMEN'S GROUP

lH

pH

I

HP

JK&iKM

H

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iGSmESfli

H

)Or'Ml&m
sJiflSlH
rs

v

LB!T JCKY KERNEL
i" k an Idyll which
with Thnnu
Mngs and flows
threvffh . the forrcl.

MM wine

Eight articles dealing with the
"College Frontier" arc appearing in
THE NATION. The first was published in the issue of October the
first, particularly the second article is worthy of notice. In a stimulating and Interesting way Hamil-fn- n
Holt, nresldnnt of Pniiins n.n.
lege, attacks the lecture plan of the
universities nuu mu rccunuon system as well. One point of view- -to
say the least whether or not we
agree with it. Incidentally, Mr.
Holt recently lectured here at the
university at which time ho maintained that "The rtnlllns Mnn no
his article in THE NATION is called, is not radical, but on the contrary very reactionary and socratlc.

.

To those who enjoy hearing Floyd
Gibbons on the radio it may be said
that Floyd Gibbons carries his
Jerky, staccata, swift style Into his
writing. Searching for news. Mr.
Gibbons with a keen Journalistic
sense for stories tells In LIBERTY
magazine of some hcadlincrs in days
gone by. The last Issues hav told
of his adventures with one gory
Rancho Villa.
Perhaps 'reading
these encountes aloud may help one
to find the necessary realistic touch.
In the privacy of one's own room
a voice may boom out over the stillness of Mexico in the days of Poncho.
.

JUDGE, somctlmn linmnrmts
weekly, has been carrying a series
oi cartoons Dy .Bruce Bairnsfather,
creator of "The Better 01e." They
aDDear each week and nre nuito
good. Some may remember Balms-fath- er
as a captain in the British
army during the World War. He'
entertained the soldiers by picturing
the brighter side of war In the form
of cartoons drawn on the walls in
the dugouts. The cartoons now appearing in JUDGE are of full page-siz- e
and have to do with the same
characters which made Bairnsfather
famous during the war. Of course
Bert and Bill of the cartoons are
now civilians and are dodlng other
things than shrapnels.

KELLY LIKENED
KWWWWWWWWWWWi TO "RED" GRANGE
Style of
Looking Over The Only Difference Is Important
Running; Each
Magazines
as Factor in Team's Of-

JjggJj!

BfeB

flfe Wfitf 4V II

ne Sahara

"LILLIOM"
Charles Farrell

SUNDAY

STARTS

jjj

N0W FLAYmG

8

iABl

BIAUM

vwvwwvwwvvwvvwwv

Uuignol

Players
USE

DUNN'S

I

By
NICHOLAS WINN WILLIAMS
Sweeping across the centuries H.
G. Wells continues his search after
superlatives. This time he is looking for "The Twelve.Greatest Dates
In History." In the November FORUM he gives them to us. The editor has asked for twelve, but Wells
Kays he cannot dwindle the number
to less than fifteen. The gives the
first date as the Death of Alexander
In 323 B. C, and closes with the two
Russian Revolutions in 1917. Last
month Will Durant, of "Story yof
Philosophy" fame, gave his ''Twelve
Greatest Dates in History."
"A River Goes With Heaven,"
by Howell Vines has beaiity to it.
These papers appeared in the
st
ATLANTIC MONTHLY from
throHgfi October. "A River
Goes With Heaven" smacks of the
strangeness of the Warrior river
ss
down In Alabama. It has a
to 'it that toaches the
mosai-talneeblack soil trampled by the
mountaineers who have
strength and keeness.. A yeaac
southerner spends a summer at
his ancestral estate In the wilderness together with the girl whom
he loves and with his grandfather.
His grandfather's comments on
life have a freshness and rastlcl-t- y
which give them something of
originality.. "A River Goes With
BSiSBSBSBsflLsisV

!

fense

In

1922

a red headed youngster

from Wheaton, Illinois enrolled in
the University of Illinois. This
young man had been christened at
birth with the name of Harold E.
Grange. He was destined to become
one of the best known men In the
athletic world and to take his place
alongside such Immortals as Walter
Camp, Walter Eckersall, Ted Coy,
Johnny Poe, Jim Thorpe, "Big Bill"
Edwards, Charley Buell, Mohan,
Brick Mueller, Ernie Nevers, Bo McMillan, Red Robers and others who
have made history and carved
themselves a niche in Football's hall
of fame.
It was not, however, by the parentally christened name that he was
to ro hurtling down the pages of
football history, but by a cognomen
fastened upon him in his days as a
member of the Ullnl freshmen team
where he started as halfback alongside another youngster who was also
destined to receive much attention
but less fame than Grange. His running mate in their freshman days
non other than the well known
Ralph "Moon" Baker, who was one
of the greatest players ever to wear
the purple of the Northwestern University Wildcats and who was selected on the All American team of
1926.

"Red" Grange is one of the few
players ever to receive the coveted
All American
honors for three

10 O'CLOCK SHOW
Saturday Morning for Entertainment of
Alabama-Kentacky
football guests.
The
PROGRAM

"THE OFFICE WIFE''
merBros.- Vitaphone

COSMETICS
EXCLUSIVELY IN ALL
THEIR PRODUCTIONS.
YOU, TOO, WELL BE
PLEASED WITH 0UR
COMPLETE LINE OF
TQILET AND BEAUTY
ARTICLES.
Razor and Creap
riven to man with best beard

Up-to-da-

te

WiU Dunn's

Drug Store

IT'S

i'

.

1

Air
MM

JOE I. BROWN
JOAH BENNETT
JAMES

PAGE NINE
an elusive, change
of pace line of scrimmage (necesback).
to
Once
Commence sary the any running zone of defense
Into
secondary
his forte was sidestepping and
The annual effort of the Univer- chango of pace. Kelly Is faster than
sity Y. M. C. A., and Y. W. C. A., to Grange. He reverses field occasionmaintain their positions on the ally His forto Is
d.
campus will begin Wednesday, No- It is In this department only that
vember 4, when the faculty finance
campaign will begin. Students will
bo given an opportunity to cnotrlb-ut- e
to these organizations at a later
date. The Y. M. and Y. W. are dependent upon the faculty and students for their support. A meeting of
the workers in the campaign will be
held at 4 p. m,. Tuesday, November
4.
Professor Roy Moreland and
Mrs. E. A. Bureau will be In charge,
They will be assisted by other numbers of the faculty.

Y. W.,

Y- -

M., Finance

cricc. Grange was

Drive to

Neither of
the two players differ.
jthem were regular in the matter of
kicking and passing.
In an analyzatlon by a football
expert we believe thero would be
very llttlo dlffercnco to bo found in
th ability of lther. Ono of them was
plenty good. The other IS plenty
'good.
I

straight years. As a sophomore ho
was chosen In a year of mediocrity

among outstanding football players.
His greatest fame came In his Junior year. It was at the Illinois homecoming game between the Ullnl and
the Michigan Wolverines that
Grange established a world's record
in major football competition.
In
this game Grange received the Wolverine kick-o- ff
and raced 95 yards
for a touchdown. Not a single Michigan player got his hands on the red
head
When the game was twelve
minutes old "Red" had received the
ball in scrimmage five times and
crossed the goal line In four of his
efforts. These runs were for
and 55 yards In order. In none of
the touchdown Jaunts did an opposing player lay hand on the red head
after ho had crossed the line of
scrimmage. For that exhibition he
was christened by the late Walter
Eckersall, referee of the game, as
the Galloping ghost of the Gridiron.
To be more exact: "when Grange
gallops over the gridiron he is as
elusive as ghost." From that expression Grantland Rice, one of the
foremost sports writers in the nation penned In the true Rice style
that has made him famous, a poem
m which he referred to the nihil
halfback as "The galloping ghost of
the gridiron."
JOHN S. "SHIPWRECK" KELLY
John Sims "Shipwreck" Kelly en
rolled In the University of Kentucky
in 1928. his home town is Springfield, Ky where he played four
years on the Springfield High
school team. In his freshman year
at Kentucky he was one of the outstanding members of the team. It
was in this year that Kelly received
his nickname of "Shipwreck." For
this appellation Mr. Frank K. Hoover, Sports editor of the Lexington
Herald is responsible. We know less
of the reason for the nicknaming of
Kelly than we do of Grange. Hoover
refuses to let us in on the secret of
why he dubbed the Springfield flash
with that name. Whether it was due
to the publicity that the flagpole
sitter of that name was getting at
that, time or some some suppressed
desire to roam the seven seas that
only Hoover knew about, we don't
know. We do know that of all the
many names and expressions that
Kelly has been characterized with,
It is the only one that has stuck.
'
Although Maryville and Carson
Newman had both been met and defeated in games in which Kelly
played no little part In his first varsity season with the Wildcats, it was
Kelly's playing in the first major
test of that season Clemson that
established his star in the firmament of all-st- ar
ball carriers in the
Southern Conference and nation.
Kelly's worth to the Wildcat team
from that day to the present is well
known by every supporter of Kentucky as well as their many rivals.
He has never played in a losing college game to date. In the only game
the 'cats lost last year which was to
Alabama, Kelly was not in the
game.
What the game tomorrow
holds In store for the Wildcat star
no one knows. It Is our own firm belief that he will give a good account
of himself. He may not dazzle his
opponents by an exhibition such as
has been his lot in previous games,
for it must be remembered that the
'cats will be pitted against a team
that, in games already played, has
proved it to be one of the strongest
teams In the South. The quality of
football played in the Southern
Conferenc has already been demonstrated to some of the best teams
in the nation.
On cold dope, the
Alabama team sits at the top of the
heap with the best. Either the Wildcats of Kentucky or the Crimson
Tide of Alabama Is not only the
most powerful team In the South
but after tomorrow's game will have
demonstrated its right to take its
place alongside the other great
teams that the South has produced.
There are many who have likened Kelly to the Great Grange. In
this they have not been far wrong.
They are very much alike In many
respects. Each one proved the vital
cog in their respective machines.
Each has had to carry the burden
of the offense In practically all of
their games. In manner of running,
there is only the slightest differ- -

Black With White
and New Metallics
Have Completely Monopolized the Fashion
Scene! We Have Them All . . . Priced

$5 and $7.50
'T'HERFS

so many daring new styles in hats... but they
must be black and white, or made of the glistening
new Metallic!. Turbans, Bicornes, Tricornes with a droop
ing feather
or a velvet bow have a very romantic
aspect . . . and are so flattering! All head sizes.

...

SECOND

FLOOR

71

THIS MAY NOT BE COLLEGIATE
Last Time
IT'S GOOD!
"Amos 'n
Andy"

BECAUSE
WHY?
IT'S SPICY AND
PLENTY HOT!

In

"Check and
Double

Check"

fiy'mnB

"

mn

YEA
Wildcats!
TURN THE
CRIMSON

nun

H
H

CLARA

BOW
HerWWdintf

1 1I

Night
CI

Qcaamawat Qictwe

mi

with

Ralph Forbes
Charlie Ruggles

""IlllnVBml
IT'S A
WOW!

Skeets Gallagher

etitucku
i
in

Lo Horn.

fin

Stalls

Tnrmtrrmv

(if
!l

m

1

HALL

MEYERS BROS.
CORNER MAIN AND MILL STREETS

A college education iaua the class- room! with Joan Bennett, Joe E.
Brown, James Hall and America's

greatest gridiron eleven:
Schoonpver of Arkansas
Banker of Tulane
Harpster of Carnegie Tech
Montgomery of Pittsburgh
Haycrafh of Minnesota
Gibson of Minnesota
Scull of Pennsylvania
Pommerening of Michigan
Moynihan of Notre Dame
Sleight of Purdue
Ruas Saunders of Caifornia

MILITARY EQUIPMENT
Tf

H

'mWmW
'mwmWr

SPORTS WEAR
RIDING APPAREL
FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN

The Most Complete Line of

Leather Clothing,

Hi-To-

p

Corduroy Trousers

S. Lime and Maxwell

In the City

v wng.',.

v

Starts Sunday

'fit.

Boots

m

I

*