Monday, Oct. 21, 1929

National Affairs

COMING

Oct. 18-19--Close of National Dairy Show at St. Louis.

Oct. 21--President Hoover goes to Detroit for Henry Ford's dedication of the Edison Laboratories; Oct. 22--goes to Cincinnati for celebration of the opening of the $100,000,000 improved Ohio River waterways; Oct. 23--inspects Louisville Dam; Oct. 24--in Washington pushes button to open new Mount Hope Bridge connecting Bristol and Newport, R. I.

Oct. 27-Nov. 2--Trenton, N. J., celebrates 250th anniversary of its settlement.

Foreign News

Oct. 11-25--Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald continues his three-week visit to U. S. & Canada; Oct. 25--sails from Quebec for England.

Oct. 18--Close of Institute of International Law meeting at Briarcliff Manor, N. Y., as guest of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Oct. 24-27--French Radical-Socialist party meets at Rheims. Party presidential candidate: Edouard Herriot.

Oct. 28-Nov. 9--Institute of Pacific Relations meets at Kyoto.

Oct. 29--British Parliament reconvenes at London.

Oct. 30--General election in Ontario, Canada.

Aeronautics

Oct. 18-21--End of national air tour for Edsel B. Ford Reliability Trophy.

Oct. 18-27--Continuation of Southwestern aircraft exposition at Dallas, Tex.

Oct. 31--Close of Guggenheim safe aircraft competition.

Science

Oct. 18--Close of meeting of Society of Industrial Engineers at Detroit.

Oct. 29-Nov. 7--World engineering congress at Tokyo.

Medicine

Oct. 18--Close of meeting of American College of Surgeons at Chicago.

Oct. 21-25--American Academy of Opthalmology & Otolaryngology meets at Atlantic City.

Music

Oct. 18--Season opening of Chicago's Symphony Orchestra.

Oct. 18--Season opening of Cincinnati's Symphony Orchestra.

Oct. 28--Opening of 24-week Manhattan season of the Metropolitan Opera Co.

Education

Oct. 18--Inauguration of Dr. Clarence Augustus Barbour as tenth president of Brown University.

Oct. 20--Seventieth birthday anniversary of Prof. John Dewey.

Oct. 25--Columbia University begins six-day celebration of its 175th anniversary.

Business

Oct. 18--Close of Investment Bankers' Association meeting at Quebec.

Oct. 21--National Thrift Exposition opens in Manhattan.

Sport

BOXING

Oct. 29--Ten-round title bout between Mickey Walker, world's middleweight champion, and Ace Hudkins of Nebraska, at Wrigley Field, Los Angeles.

FOOTBALL (Oct. 26)

East: Carnegie Tech v. Notre Dame at Pittsburgh; Harvard v. Dartmouth at Cambridge; Princeton v. Navy at Princeton; Yale v. Army at New Haven.

South: Florida v. Georgia at Jacksonville; North Carolina v. V. P. I. at Chapel Hill; Tulane v. Georgia Tech at New Orleans; Washington & Lee v. Tennessee at Roanoke.

Midwest: Illinois v. Michigan at Urbana; Missouri v. Nebraska at Columbia; Ohio State v. Indiana at Columbus; Wisconsin v. Iowa at Madison.

West: Stanford v. Southern California at Palo Alto; California (Southern Branch) v. Pomona at Los Angeles.

FOOTBALL (Nov. 2)

East: Cornell v. Columbia at Ithaca; Harvard v. Florida at Cambridge; Pennsylvania v. Navy at Philadelphia; Pittsburgh v. Ohio State at Pittsburgh; Princeton v. Chicago at Princeton; Army v. South Dakota at West Point; Yale v. Dartmouth at New Haven.

South: Georgia v. Tulane at Columbus; Georgia Tech v. Notre Dame at Atlanta; Vanderbiltu.Alabama at Nashville; V.P.I. v. Washington & Lee at Blacksburg.

Midwest: Minnesota v. Indiana at Indianapolis; Nebraska v. Kansas at Lincoln; Northwestern v. Illinois at Evanston; Wisconsin v. Purdue at Madison.

West: Southern California v. California at Los Angeles; Oregon v. California (Southern Branch) at Eugene; Redlands v. Pomona at Redlands; Stanford v. California Tech at Palo Alto.

LAWN TENNIS

Oct. 28-Nov. 1--Mid-South championships at Pinehurst, N. C.

GOING

Best Plays in Manhattan

STREET SCENE--poetry and passion in Manhattan's purlieus.

JOURNEY'S END--English gentlemen waiting in a dugout for the zero hour.

STRICTLY DISHONORABLE--funny fairy tale about a speakeasy, a Mississippi maid, a Latin lover.

ROPE'S END--choice British horrors served to the Queen's taste.

THE CRIMINAL CODE--dynamic exposition of what is wrong with laws and jails.

Best Pictures

DISRAELI (George Arliss)--Epigramo-phone record of the purchase of the Suez Canal.

HALLELUJAH (Directed by King Vidor) --Authentic drama of a black girl's troubled road to glory.

BULLDOG DRUMMUND--Ronald Colman gets there in time.

HOLLYWOOD REVUE--Extensive Music and 25 famed cinema faces.

WHY BRING THAT UP? (Moran & Mack)--Genial routine of a black-face team in white face.