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mb~ tfliatnriatt Volume XLVII TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1929. !\umber 3.
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COLLEGE CLUB SPONSORS BIG DRIVE Survey Reveals
Greater Need of Spiritual Activity
\Assumes Duties Kangaroo Court
of Club Treasurer Revived on Cam us .:\lr Ell.t:"Pm• HotTman, t)( B#O'n-"' •n, 111., p
Honor Roll Again Insurance Campaign To Be Published D t Cl raws o ose
prnmln(·nt m~mJ,pr cf thf· :-;('ninr da'"s. ann.,unct.·s that tht:> t'UStl'lll estahli,..hctl ThP ~UJH'emc c.. ·uurt ' f Kang--at.,JO
ha,;; takE-n on·r the duti•s of the Col· two Yt><l.l':-1 ago of printin~ th(' nanws of J,.g,~ f 'luJ, Trefl.-"'tlrPr·. th1• offict-- ha,·ing ('uunty, ina('tive fm· the past fl:.'w years honnr studt:>nts in Tho Yiatorian \\"ill l:e
l.arl WHk n l"f'll'•n'·r Cor Th1· \·;a,. ,"··•·n l"ft nH·;•nt ))y tiP UOI'XJII'C'l•·d du~ t() a pt·ofound and tlwrnughly un- continuu.l thb year. .A sur\'ey of stu-
1 11~>1'Vlf•\\"t·tl " \'f•ral m1·rnhf·rs rJf r·-~·g-natiun of thf· fornwr tn•asur .. r, )fi·. interesting- nformali n of the t~dminal:;; dent grn.des ht.·fort' and after tlw in-
Class Competion Is Keen Ill past Yt'nn:, tht' coll('Ctil}l\ t.'\f tho
(arulf)' 13 \YCII ne n·pn9entutlvf• Haym·,ncl E. Xnlan. 1't Hoekf•.nl. Ill. suhj~ct to its jul'i:sdinion. has found it auguration of llll' lionOl' Roll l't'\"t:'Hit.•rl C'llllC~t.' t'lub In~ul·anct.' hn~ n.lwnys
Y(•:n· 19::!!1-1930 wa .. -. held 111 tht.' Kang· til aftet· the st.•mester cxaminatllln~. it
aroo County Court Room on the Eve of is hoped that this anonuncemt>-nt at this:
..\.II Saints Day, thnt is, 1-la.llnwt.·"en. time will be an incentivt\ to \.letter
lt was with Pxtr1·nw and ~l.·ntral n·grtt nt•t·~.-.::-;ary to n•suml~ session::; once that gnltles \\"€'rt.' notably rah:-:t'd hy th·s that word \\fl.<; l'd't·ln·d <~h, ut th•· cam- publ'cltv g-h·"n to ·tudent • who •x ·-J
J \J n of ft·l!glouM :Jt·th·Jtff~ anti c·on· pu~ announdnJ.:; .\lr X ,Jan's with- more. SC$!-;on On~ of the Schola.:-;tlc .\..lth~ug.h nol~ling ,,~ill bt.~ 1:uhli~hC":I· ~1t11 .
bt.·l·n a ~Lltlt'l't.• of mul'l'l Wt.ln·y on tho
pa1·t ot' lht.• Preshknt ant.l an unsa\'OI'Y
~uhket b' thl' mt•mlwt·~ thl'nlSt."""~lve~.
Hut Hna\1~' n plan hu~ bt.'t.'n 1..'\lmplt.'tC<l
hy which this mnnt.'Y l':\ll tw l'Oilt.•ctNl
uct t•( th., ~tud•·nts t·f St \'lator C'ol· drawal from collq.:-t· and hi~ con:-;Pqtu·nt
re It \\-a~ I"+·VI·:d+·ll tha_t In th•· IJJiin /rt·si.L:"natlon from :t n•ry re~pnnsi!,](· JJO·
,n •Jf th•· Ill+ n Jnf~<rvlr>\\t!+l 1 n·n.lly sitlnn a..~ an otfkt·t· of thr Coli ~·· <"luh.
I :-min..: s'tuatl••n r·x•~ht Thf'}' Ia· I Th1· .Junior ('la~s 1~ unanimouo.: in {·X-The jucLC"ial \Yig ancl gown gmced the scholarship. without tlw usual "dunnln,~o.:··nnd·nn~·
""' •I tlu• f:~r trA, )Jrllnt.tunct ·d Hpirltuallpl·f>~~lnJ,:" ils slnr• rt> ~·on·ow f;H'r the de- hC'Hd and shoulden; o! that ::;tal wart Plact·~ on tho l !onor Holt n.n• dl'lt.'l'· glng-" :-•ystt•,n. At a JH't.'\'lt."l lls ll\t'"(.•tlng 1 •thy nrul tll"lnt,.,., Jitl<oelw·Ks among- thf• ]larturt· n! o1w uf It~ most rP~Jh•<·t E.' d mined hy the number of 'Ilnnor J '. ·i nt~· u·f nt.s nnd t:xprl·tt·t·d th•·mst·lvr·"~ In 1an() ,.~lC' mbl mt·mh'-·r~ The reth'"ng minion of JUStice from Odell. thl~ llon. n student receiv('S in tWoportion to thl· or tht' C(•llt.•gl' Club. out· Pn'"'lth.• nt, Mr.
1\' .. of 1111)' m••:HUI that would r;lvt• tht· lrl.::uo~urc·r ma.<h· no oflklal commr·nt on Jay "'atRon. The Prostcutlng- . \tto1·n number of hours he Is taking. The \\';.\1'11l', intnxluced thl'-1 non•! mt., t hod
hi~ n.brupt dec1slon to quit Viator's ey, a vet·l)w;,;e ar.d ganulous master of normal rule is that l\\·icc n!-1 many in lh<' form of dwn('l'·hCn1ks, wh ic h
hall:-c hut It lf! hlntcd that sudden pro;.:. high-falutin' rhelot•:<· was the e~tet"med ''Honor Points" HS semt>::>t(•r hou rs \\'l'I'O di~tdbutt•ll among- lht.' nwmOOrs ·•lll In In} I IlK that th'1 OHJ!'!l dangPI'· pN·ts of ftnandnl gain amon.L:" the Pat Clt'ar·y. Hack Tucker <:Ut an im- plaC('!-1 a. man on the ''B'' llontH' Roll. of tht.• ('luh. Each Uool< conttdnPd 100
"' Ih.1n:.: un Uu· r·nntpUH 1ddlly \1- th•· wor·ld'M Jndu~trlnl wlzardH had t(•mpo- JH't:..._ .... ~·dve ft~ur·€' wo~ Daillff, and Bul'!y and thre~ times a~ many ' llonO!' Point~· <'hH!ll'('),l, HOll ing nt tlw Rmall Hllm o.f
t twit• 1,( n l"f·rtaln f"ia H nf ~tud•·tll" rarlly tllmmed all amhltlon to a(·qulre Logan rtnd AI Ful'lon~ \"\'("!'(.• consplc- as semE'~tct· hoUJ·s plnc(>s. him on thE' ll\'P (.•(•nt~ a chnnct.•, on n pr·l?.t.' or $25.
h•l l>t•llf'\'t• that lht• lllnl"f•rt· :lnrl J.:"•·n· the onr•· attractlvo ~h(.•t·p~kin That uou!-1 a~ l)(>putie~. The Clerk was Ju:-t "A'' Hono1. Roll. As nn lncf.'ntivc for st.•lllng tht' l'htLnCC6
WI JHIL!'Iln~ uf Jf'llg"l••n ttl:llllfli nne )fr. :--Jolnn will bt.• SUCCf'};Sful In who.t· .:'.I<'Carthy. "Honor· Points" 11 1•6 comptrted ns fnl- IR l'loo n as poRslblt', l\ l 1·. \\'at·no lnsli· t·tl••nlnat•· . OnP Cac·ulty nH'mlwr e,.,.,. lin(' he chom-u·~ to JHlnWt" Is th€' 1t !Wem~ that tht- noise and l'ubhish lows: 1< ..... 01. the ~;rude "A", th J't'e .. ~,·mit.' tut(.'(] fL c·umptd t-rn-ll l t'l'fdl y, it rELl'l\ b t>-
rt .. .t thnt lw IH unohl1· to undcrl'ltltnll re:L~nnn!Jlc hope of the entire college that \'!siting debat(•rR howled inccss· points'' art• given: for th~ gTade "B", l\\('t•n th0 rou1· c l nsst\."-~ of thl\ Cnllcgo.
P mt·nlallt)• that n·gurdto a~ vlril• and J..tUdt•nt hody. HI~ many trh·miK among antly last year had little influf'nc<: n two "~r.\.de points"; tor the STadt• ''l''',
twli·nt who HJWI11l!1 thP .stud4·nts untl th(• tac·u lty aH \\'t·ll. judiC'Inl clr<'les on thf' campuF, tor the one "gTadc point" Is given. " Honor
juln lu wl~hlng- him a pJ·oHpet'OU!'I <"u· l..:ang~u·oo Coun retalnt•d th(• nnc-:e nt Puints" nrc found by multiplying tht>
rN·r. pnt<"tiCP ot reJ..tlng- the case with "gTadP points" obtained in each coul·~c 1'h1• IH·w tn•rtRun•I', hrt.\·ing a~Humt·cl "l\n~lcve nwn good nnd tl·ue'', although by tht.• numLer of s<•mr·ster hourH nf
tht> flutli•H of his pn:-ltlnn lmnwrlhttt·ly til h(• <•xact It must lw :-<tated that the· that cnurse. An t·xam 11 tp: A ~tudt-nt fullowln~; th<" Rpl'('\nl plt.•(·tion of 'I'U+~- Jn(·al Ulogtnes could only ftnd eight makt'!<!H a ~radp nt "ll" in nve thrt·l'·
day thf, :!~tth of Oetoht.·r, has thrown nw-n "good and trui•'' to sit on the jury, hour <'+ urHf'S; thuH hl· hus thirty" l lonnr I )' ntt·•·tln,a.:H, ~t\uhl.uu·~- t,f JII"Oflll1· hlm!h"lt ht·nrtlly lnto th+. bn·aC"h lt·ft and two ot the:-;t>, qultt· hy ac<'i(lt·nt, n11 l 'o!nt:-;.'' Sinct~ this IH t•xuc·tly twh- •• tl1l'
tlld ••lt.M• ··nlty, lttul In gnwnd t11n nJJPfl by his prl•tlf•(·• H!-lor ,\lr JTurfrnnn dPubt, WC"I'O al:-o ,zt•n l ou~ witnC's~·H's !ur numlwr of his S(·nwstt> t· houl·s. ht• wln'l
will lllllkt• an able ant! t·tfkh·nt J..:"U:trdlan lht• J•ro!-!(•('trtiflll. Tht> jurorH, ''go11<i a jJlact.l vn the ''I~·· J lonor Holl.
College Club
Tht· (.'li\ss that llnl~ht.'B l a~t in tho dis·
po!:litlon o f th(.•h' bool(.H will hn vu to pny
the JH•nnl ty v f g iving n l'llllOIH•I' In hon·
o1· of tlw vthc- 1· thn..,, l'i!t,-1.,'-~t.'l-1, 'l'h lH
campnl~n c l o~:~t•H on tho night or No-
\'t.·mbt•l' 1~.
nf tht• tn·a ury an•l hL.... Jl''lllllarlt)·, at ant\ trut·.' 1f you will, or Hn.rthlng
l••Htt-d hy tht.· n\·t·rwht·lmlng- majority "'~·. If you pn·ft·r. Wl'rt·: H o nahu1·, Car
of V••l•·" !hal \n·nt hl!t \\UY In tlw t·l+·(··ll·•· ll, :'\!ill~. llam iltnn, liOfi"ll''IO, ~•' 111'· tlnn, \\Ill t"taud him In guod Ill • atl lnng" , \nlll·I"sl•n and C;ortllfn. l•'urlon,~.:
wlh·flt'\"l'l' ho hr·nadt•.t.HB his e:11l (, rland .\mh·Nnn \\"(•f"f iladly !lf•t•f!f•li i.lt! Holds Meeting Hta~t!Hilt•H how that ()\"("1" Hfty P•·•· ("Nit
wltt:+•!-S·~ f••r •t, p Jlrnt'l'f"Uti· n, a111l ul- 11 t t)l(' lJnokH ha\'t• ht•l'll 14o]d, ftllfl lhn.t
It IH plainly t.'\'ldpnt thltt thll'l plnn
hn~ nH•t with lnHt.ant fll\'fll'. u nd tho
l'fl('t' lw't Wf (•n t ho "' liLt- ~<~~ (huH J.x•o n
tran·llng- nt n. furltJ\IH pnct•. l•:n•t·y
tir•t, nuntht<~· of ehniwt·H hlntst·lr, h:1 ltt•t·n
COJH!ur·ting H H('l'tlpl/11111~ ('Hll\"H~<.'Iillg" (I(
tht· HliHli·nt bndy and lh, uf•lghhodn$;
to\\ 11~ In au t•ff01·t tn dlHJIIlH(' ot Hll ot hi!-! f'hllllt't'S, At tlu 1 pl.f'Ht ' llt wdtlng
Viator Alumnus Given High Charge
\\ t'l lht" )lj ' '
tt·rn,~;t~·tl lwLwet-n thf• f'.ttadths ot jUn•r l'n•t~id•·nt \\'.trfll (.dlt·d n -;ptdn l tlu • nu·P r 111. flrlt pbt·t· IB n•ry dntw.
ant\ wltneR~. ).r ti"ty 'l'oohill IH·Ipt•d I'll! ling' nt the t 'n]\I•J!f' f'lu!J (Jq :!!J tnr• To dat i! tlw .Ht(liHlirll{ or tlth \'lfi"IIIIIH
tht·HI Dill II~ fl Wlll1! 1M~ Wht•f) tlll'i!" ifn lh" PlllJIIIJ<If' or f'lf•f"lillf.;" ll IH•W ln•H !11'1'1' I'IH~~t'H J:ftl I IH fOIII)WH;
ngln:ttiou Lu.n,;P•l. Tht' \\itnt • M a.c;l\'1' In tak•· tht pLw•· ;ddy tllll'd \Jy .. \lr. H tY .Junl+ 1 1;~. Jwr
1., 111 11
f tlu J,ool{H IHJif l.
th nu~tlc lt"t'l unts nf th,.., l"l'ltn" ••t Xcolau '\ ho rt•<·t·ntl~· I' IJ.:nl•tl ~~·nJ 1 ,,." till fll'l" 1
.1.111 tJf tlut hook" t~ol d,
\\ !I I ft \ nant tty the- r ('t:'O
t t ,,. • •H«t bhd o 1,, 1a ltt'v
~I
'tb, J;:"liilt) • awl tlw til (·o·tat II'H, \\hoi :\lr llolrlllilll, .. \h. :-oh+a. nrul \lr \1 I s. I -- r <I I I
I' IJI I !'I 1 J Jll f (I llt (I H' Jill< (l't tt tJJ/1 .
f'll··d tht• tulll"ll 11111 J.t·t·.amu l•lo 1]. th1·\\H \\tit• n+HHintt•·d for ttu •tlkP "''":ilL ·,u 1111 , 1.111 (Jr til '""'k ttfll d
tl"'thnt t!Jr·Ht\ an• tllt·n.tclng h th•• ht~ITJ\ \s('tTHIIdllot\\<tMt:Jktll,uui\IJ il~>tt ~" \llll,tn IIJ 111
,1
t•trh tlaMH IH
,.t(lr) ()( ect·mc \\11! tt!t~wly untnld d. n~ua \\Uitl•lt•d \\llh o1 ltt~l"' 111 J"tlt} tr\lll,q' lltttl 11
,11 1
., 1,, , ,
11111,
111,1 1
,111111
Tht.' tl,o.f,·nsc atrunH) W•· e .\lltltll+·t"n of Jh(• \lit·. t•lh•·r• da!1H('H, arul lh:d thn olht•r IJ1t.l"· \\ ••1th(• hut J,t-ing
f1n' the
u tHy, l';()«l"tH
tW'lJ fly the
td\'1
THE VIA TORIAN Tuesday. November 12. Page Two
~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;f~;;~u~;;;;~a~;;;;~~~;;;;;;~=====~~====~=P~==~=w=a=-~====~=P~==::a::~==~::::::::::::::::::::::::::
THE VIA TORIAN .. .. Published Bi-Weekly Throughout the Scholastic Year by the
Students of St. Via tor College
JOH N W. STAFFORD .......... ___ ...... _ .. _,_, ..... -..... _._, ___ Editor-in-Chief LLOYD 0 . WARNE .... _, ___ ...... ----·-- .......... __ ,_._ ..... -Manag ing Editor J AR LATH M. W A TSON .. ..... _,_,_, .... _ .. _ .......... -.... ·--·Athletic Editor BERNARD C. MULVANEY ...... ___ ..... -_ .... ___ ........ -.... A lumni E:ditor H. PAUL MILLS a nd JOSEPH LOCA N ....... ___ , .. __ Campus Editors C . RAYMOND SPRACUL ...... --- .... ·---·-... -- .... --- Inquiring Reporter RAYMOND M. BOYSEN .. _, ___ .... -_ ...... _._, ... ____ ...... -. -....... Viatoriana
Department
Alumni Notes . The Inquiring Reporter a
"Strange as It may seem", two alum- Qu~tlon: ""hat is your opln:on (,f
ni now in bw-liness together and haYing Co-education in Colle~~::;?
the same name are not relatiYes. Dr. .John Powers '17, fonnerly a successful dentist In Peoria, and Dr. J. G. PO\Y·
I.
E l'GE~E HOFF~L.\~. '30. ~ly opln·
era '21. who lately completed his med- ion o! cout·sc would he vct·y fa,·ot·able ical studies , asl< you to stop in and see hecause I thin!' thn.t co-educatit,n is ad· them at -t36 ::-.rain St., Glen Elyn, Ill. vantag-eous ln many way!:!. Fur one
thing it is an incentive for many more Dr. John 1\ladden, Acad. '18, has his social aiTn.irs, mainly because girls are
offices at 5412 X. Clark St., Chicago, more active in thinking up and ·workand may ))e called at Long Beach HOO. ing out plans for such affairs.
It this que.!<tiOn were asked at I. S.
Circulation
ROBERT C. DOYLE VINCENT CRAWLEY
JAMES R. HULL J OSEPH E. GRANT
Subscription Rate: $2.00 per Annum Adlclress A ll Correspond en ce Referring Either to Advertising
Subscription to The Viatorian, Bourbonnais, Illinois
Father Joseph M. Lonergan, who ~- U. whe1·e I attended this past sum. was recently elevated to Lieutenant mer. there would be a riot. and the Cclonel in the National Guard, has suc· word "men" would be substituted !, r
or ceeded the late Father D. J . Conway as "co-~d·'. The girls are complete mas· pastor of St. l\lary's church, in "1iYood - ters of the situation there.
Emltered as Second C lass Matter a t th e Postoffice of B o urb o nn.a is, Ill. Under the Act of March 3rd, I 8 79.
WHAT DEBATING MEANS TO A VIA TOR STUDENT_
This year, as in former years, St. Viator College is expected t o
h ave winning debate teams. In the past few seasons, some of th e
most promineinlt and skillful teams in th e United States h ave acknowledged the sup e riority of Via tor debators, so th a t our teams have a
sp lendid reputation to uphold. We ought to h ave a success ful sea
son thi s year, and we will h ave this, provid ed the s tudre nts do their
bit.
All in all. I think co-education is very stock. Illinois. ' beneficial to any institution as a whole,
Leon L. D1·olet. who attended college because it gives both boys and g"rls a
here until 1!.122, and who is now prac- certain social benefit that they miss in tieing law in Chicago, recently under- a boarding school. There is just one went a successful operation for appen- disadvant...:'lge and that is that one has dicltis. Leon rooms with Soran Leahy, to be able to co ncentrate t1 the nth dea broker, who, despite his many 3..f· gree, or it's just to bad for the studi Es, fairs. often finds time to visit at the especially ·in the summe1· time when College.
The 1·adio lectures that the Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, Ph. D., S. T. D., '17 gave
the evenings are so alluring and attrac· tive.
II.
over Station \\"CAO were very engag- BER-:\' .\HD .:\Il"L\'.\NEY, '30. Coing ancl instructive to all who heard education in ~econdary schools :s:, foundthem. On October 13 he spok-e on e.d on the fallacy that since men and "Religion", and a weel< later treated, women are being equipped f-o r the snmc as only his faci1e mind can, the subject work, their training fihould he the of "'!'rue Rel igion". \•Ve anxiously same. It tal<es no consideration of the await this speaker's next radio appear- different functions in life that are peance, feeling confident that his lee· culiar to either sex. 'J'he apparent tures will again be interesting anrl pro- broadness of view supposed to be atfitable. tained in co-education, as well as the
cultural uplift due to its inauguration, Edward A. Cox, '18, visited us during are too dearly paid for when it means
1·ecent months. He lives at 245 North lo~s of sex characteristics, as often is
_\Jason Avenue, Chicago, and is em- the case. Co-eductaion is an undesir· played with the telephone company. able relic of the past, and the sooner
we realize it, the be-tter of'f we will be.
lt is true that t h ere are1 some experienced d e b a ters at hand t o John T. Ellis, -r.1. A., '27, who is III. LAWRENCE CHR I STM.A..t'i, '31.
position o n thi s y ea.r' s team. B esides, owing to the large number o f the Catholic university in V\~ashington, Co-education has its advantages and
th e d eba tes schedule d, more n ew men w ill be called u'pon than have was recently complimented by Bishop disadvantages. It increases the s ocial
b een needed in any prev ious year. Now thi s does not mean that th e M. J. Hoban, D. D., of Scranton, Pa., standin~ of a ny college and e!'lables the fo1· a llecture he gave at a d'ocesan student to become better acquainted
coach is scouring th e campus in quest o f the smartest looking or most convention. His subject was The Teach- with soc:ety, as it exists· today, In Codig nifi e d students. Nor does it mean that only the more talen'ted1 ing of History in t he Grammar Grades. ed institutions, the student limits his will h ave a c h ance to make the teab a nd get the experie}nce that it Mr. Ellis recently sent his check into social activ ity to the campus, on the affords. D ebating calls for two things, a normal int e lli gen ce and the The Viatorian for o. year's subscrip- other hand, the scholas{ic standing of
willingness to work. Certainly h ere is a n opportunity worth seizing, tion. the school is lowered by allowing young
carry o n the work. Yet not even these h ave the least assurance of a muctying for a doctorate in histo1-y at
women and men to attend classes toan oppo rtunity to become a member o f one of the best debating \Vhlilst on his honeymoon, AI Dona- gether. Social lit'e tends to dieytract teams of the coun try, a c h ance such C\S few oth er sch oo ls could af- hue, '2-1, of Abe.rdeen, S. D., visited at the student from his studies and ford . Those w ho h ave been on former teams w ill t e ll you there is n o the college. He ,...-as married October forces the average young man to beco llege acti v ity that calls for so muc h deve l o pment of worth-while 21 • to Miss Cecile Bernard, of Millbank, come a spendthrift.
a biliti es as debating. A ft e r a season on th e Viator team, eve-ry d e- :~n~- c~~/sc::ith his fath er in the Don- IV.
Compliments of
JOHN HICKEY
Mortician
United Cigar Stor• Cor. Court and Schuyler
Comple te Line of Smokers' Articl !I
Fountain & Luncheon
Trade at
Philip T. Lambert' Good Service Hardware
Reach, Wright and Ditso
SPORTING GOODS
129 E. Court St.
ARSENEAU'S
CONFECTIONAR'
The College Boys' Favoritl Place to Eat.
Bourbonnais, Ill.
TETRAULT & SO Garage
AUTOMOTIVE SUPPLIES AND REP AIF
Telephone Main 1987
Bourbonnais, Ill.
W.G.CHILD
Sanitary Market 346 E. Court Street
Telephone 137
bater h as had a' very practical mental training, and is able to give a LEONARD DEDARIO, '32. I believe good accou n t of himself on a n y public platform. Other alumni who were married with- that co-educat!on should have its place '--------------:--'
Whil e the candidates for the tean1s are preparing the question in· the last few months are: Ray Beu- in every American college tcday. for this year, Nati onal Disarmamen t, their fe llow studen ts can aid ter, '25; Thomas Gallagher, '21, and There are many girls who seek eel-
- Joh~ Lee, '22. ucation higher than they can obtain in the m in ma.ny ways. The r esearch work would be much less tedious high school and should be allowed to
if th e students wou ld r eport to th e coach any material or probable The Rt. Rev. Edward F. Hoban, D. at.Lend any college which they may
sources o f material o n this question th at they may discover. Of D., Bishop of Rocltford, presided over ch oose. True, they can attend some course, they sh ould also S1Ci2._POTt their teams, bearing in! mind that in the dedication ceremonies at St. Pat- institution for girls on ly, but why they sch ools v is ite d by Viator debaters, there was a lmost as much inter- rick's School at R·ochelle, Illinois, on should be held aloof from the members est over meeting u s over a footb a ll g.ame. If th e stud en ts would October 27. The pastor, Rev. Thomas of the male sex is beyond me. read occasio n a l art icl es on the question now, they would find• the O'Brien, '11, is to be commended on v. season's debates very in1beresting and profita ble. the splendid new building he has erec- RAYMOND WENT:HE, '33. In my
The coming season promises to be one of the \b est and one o f the ted. opini·on, Co-education is a most essen-hard est Via tor ever took part In. A lumni friends expect the stu- tial factor in the attaining of a com-dents to make it a success. From the Mexican Legation at Lon- plete educat:on. Education defined is:
LIBRARY LARCENY.
Will the zealo u s s tud ent that found it indispe nsable to his
sch o ]a.rly pursu its to t ake from the library the Cambridge Mediaeval
History p lease develop a bad case of scrupl es immediately an d r e
turn, not w h at h e h as borrowed, fo r h e couldn't borrow that which
is not to be loan e!-l. but what he h as, a t least temporarily, pilfered
don comes a letter from Guillermo D. the preparation and training for fu-1::lclgar, '09, asking for the renewal o.f ture life, and the man who has been o~d acquaintances -through the columns raised from childhood ·in boy's boarding of The Vlatotian. schools cannot be trained to act prop-
erly in the presence of Jadies. Rev. L. J. McDonald, '17, has been Throughout his life his associations
reHeYed of his pastorial duties at 1-.-It. have been limited to boys and \Vhen he Oli\'e, Illihois, to assume the f unctions meets young ladies, as he undoubtedly or a chaplain in the United States will, he will most probably act in a very
self-conscious manner, a fault difficult to remedy when a person is full-grown .
from the library. H e may be a model s tudent that a lways does all army.
his outside reading, b ut he should give others an occasional chance to become model students as well . Th I f h' b Yince :McCarthy, '23, whose football On the other hand, it is claimed that
ere are a ot o t tngs to e teats will long be related at St. Viator 11roper attention cannot be given to the said about the library, and some criticism could be made of l ibrar- College, is District Manager of the Bell studies in co-educational schools. Ho,...--
ians, faculty, and students, but it seems that the most wide-spread
abuse is this uncontrollable t endency on th e part of a number of
students to commit l ibrary larceny, which offense by definition con
sists ~ n' removing, even temporarily, books that are on refence or
on reserve.
Telephone Company at Danville.
Legal "Business Hours" The term "business hours" is sai d
to Include legally the entire day from $-llnrise tn sunset.
ever, this does not interfere with the person who goes to school with the proper attitude. He realizes that he must learn to \YOrk under any conditions and welcomes the opportunity to do ro while he is young.
CALL 76 FIVE CAN RIDE FOR
PRICE OF ONE IN A YELLOW
No Charge for Extras.
Yellow Cab Co.
Everybody Likes
CANDY We Supply St. Viator
F. 0 _ S;\.VOIE CO.
Distributor
DeJiland
Arseneau's UniforJ BREAD
" ITS QUALITY SATISFI •
G. ARSENEAU BAKER Bourbonnais, DL
]~
·y
'te
Tuesday, Novemb e r 12, 1929
P sy ch o logis t s say tha t a goo d laugh relaxes th e face muscl e s, relieves m ent a l strain, a nd in general , is good for •digestion . A braf. ham Linoofn was g r eat for p ull ing jok es. O n e d a.y h e p ull e d a j o k e tha t w asn 't so h o t , becau se n o n e of h is cab in.et la u g h e d . "Gentl emen" , h e said, " Why d o n ' t you l a u g h / Wit h th e f earful s t ra in tha t is upon m e nig ht a nd day I would go c r azy i f I d idn 't la u g h. " Now that is jus t w h y we h ave th <j Viatoria n . Whenev er you feel b lu e jus t pick up the o ld Coll ege pap e r . Some o f th e a rticles a r e a scre&m. Of course, t h e r e is t h e opposite extre m e o f l a u g hing too muc h . Som e men h ave d ie d la u g h ing. B ut t h at is w h y we h ave this colum n. I t will act as a sort of safety valve w h e n you g"e t s t a r ted la u g h in g t oo much a t the featu re number s.
THE VIATORIA N P age Thr ee
tried to Jdll-o-walt. lfl It true or not?" So absolute was the hold that the dope
Evanow lvanitch "lt. Is not yo ur honor. " h1nl on me that 1 received the nickname
"I surmiHC, f r·om that, that your or "The Worchestershlre Souse'' and
name Ia "\Valter Power·". "'J'he De Qulncey ot the Dinner Tabl e". A roma.nee of the C'lay cour·t by Ros· "It Is Knott, your honor." One night Dad surprised me w!th a
coe Evsl<y, author of "Hhymc> and its "Not what?'' You cou ld just !eel the viRit. H e dlf.:lcovered me In my room
Punishrncnt", "The B,·others Chrr.mo- judg-e'~ com po~ure leav ing him again. lying asleep, completely under the "ln-zomc," etc .. etc. Ivn.n tded to explain. "I'm not Watt nuence". In my Hallucination I mi~-
CHAP. !I. l'm si mpl y Knott YOU!' honor." took him tor my lau ndry bag, pulled '"rHE \VOR CHESTE RS HJRE SOUSE" Foam appeared at the the judge's off his clothes, and threw hfm on top of
As we have seen In the last Issue, mouth. "LI~:~tcn Here", he screamed, tho wardrobe. The following day he America's 'l'ennls supremacy had been "You not Watt and you 'r e not your came back in a fury, tormaJly dlsln· Irremediably shattered by the youthful honor. \¥ho In the!$?&( .. ..,--are you hePiled me, and plctured In fiery terms
invaders f1·om France. Out.Iooks for the future were seem-
then." the opprea.-;1vely dismal future that Ivan and the runt both saw that It awai ted me. "Fathe r,'' I replted, hurt
lngly hopeless when literally out of a wa.<J t!me to cut out the goofing. "I'm to the quick, "I'm going to become faclea,· sky, came the singula1· Ru~an Knott yoU!· honor," said one. "And mous. and some day, whether you ail·
youth, Evanow Ivan!tch. VVe may well I'm Watt your hon oJ·," said the other.'' mit It or not, you are going to be proud together we' re simply 'Vatt- to shake my hand.'' "Famous," he "And ask, \vhn.t possible Influence could this
obscu l·e figure exert upon the destiny Knott," they sang out in unison. echoed contemptuously, and then gave of America's tennis aspirations. The The judge, with a distracted look on way to a sneering laugh. "Why man answer to that question will constitute his face, turned to the trusty g uardians a live with the face you've got you'll the denouement of this li ttle story. of the law. "Gentlemen,'' he .said, "the s tarve to death.' ' I never forgot those Afte r al l, anything is liabl e to happen veJdlct lies with you." last words. They made a vivid im·
"\Vhich shall it be, fifty dollars or pression on me. And, as you will see when a temperamental "Russian Step· fifty days?" pess out ~'est". anythi ng from a social later they proved prophetic. I never
Y eh! But what abou t t h e j okes? O h , well l the wors t.
" At w h a t price d o your e n v elopes run? "
revolution to a novel method of wrink
Here goes fo r J=n g- peas. In the opening chapter we t ollo\ved Ivan in his run from the Palon of the Ge1·man zeppelin Tru -2-U at the
The Intelligent police-corp knit the~r saw Dad again. LeaV'i ng my hopes of brows and groaned under the unusual a glorious University career, behind m e, exertion of thinking. I hit out tor the West a nd its uncertain
"Shall I give them fifty days or fifty opportunitiC.$. My firs t job was on a dollars," r epeated the judge. newspaper. I enjoyed the work but it
Inquire d th e m a ide n Mary. " They d on' t run M adam,'' t h e clerk r ep lie d ,
"You see th ey· re stationery."
Of course, t h ere is nothing in a n ame-but we r ead o f a g ir l named Hel -en S p ark s, who call ed h e r h usb and A- d a m Spa.rk s, a live wire, th en set fi r e to h is e lectrical sh op, and fi n a lly was ch arged with battery. She w as put in a dry cell.
S cen e--a d a rk nig ht in B l oom in g t o.n:. T wo s tud e nts drive a ll ove r the town , tryin g t o fi nd a way out-The n sa.ys o n e t o th e o ther :
"Sa y K e n\ Wh o the duce l a id t hi s t own o u t, · a n yway ? .. "The Sta t e did I sup pose, w h y? .. " W e ll , tell t h e m t o come b ack a nd bury it."
----::----
Ah·port. to the P enny Arcade district "You s ha ll, s ir,'' came the verdict at was unable to satisfy my needs. The ol Chicago'E= Loop. There he F.:ncnunt- last. ered a cul'ious little man with a ra.the1· hideous false face. the story.
\Ve now continue "I shall what?" screamed the judge. "You shal~ not.' '
craving tor dope r emained with me still. The genuine imported P errin's s.:'l.uce alone could sa.i!isfy it a nd the
The judge turned mechanically to the pl'ice of this was enormous. Necessity, ''IJisten to reason, you little runt",
exclaimed Ivan as he collared the defendents. "You have heard the law however, m other of invention that she Scotch wop. "You'll have to explain speak,'' he said. "Which will you havC, is, knows no law, and it was through the idea of that distorted and freakish fifty days or fifty do llars. The choice her that I found a solution of my diffimask, ~r I'll have you a rrested for im- lies with you." culty. One day while watch ing a proper sonat! ng a cop". Now up to this For an •instant the culprits gathered fessi{)na.l beggar at work, I conceived time the littl e fellow had been in a n In consultation, then , with a knowing the idea ot wearing a false face and am icable disposition ready for any con- s hak e of the head they turned to the trying the ga,me myself. The susccess-
judge. tul results were beyond my fondest ex· ciliatory measure. But at this rough-neck treatment he bega n to get hot
"\Ve've decided to take the money, pectaMons. For not only was I pro-vicled with an adequate 4ncome, but this your hon{)r."
under the collm·. "Let go now you over-On the third d ay the L ord mad e ~a ll k inds o f crabs and tu rtles grown Trotsky,'' he panted, trying hard The judge turned a tittle bit paler, singular trade opened up an entirely
- and boy he m a d e th em snappy. to extricate himself. "I'll be hanged if blinked his eyes rapidl y, reached in his new horizon to my view. I discovered ----: :---- I'll let a lumber headed Russian hold me pocket for the money and placed it that hitherto I had been only half alive
a nd that a great and wonderful world Lost, But Not Found.
Fr. Munsch warns t h e lal:ll w h o ran o fl w ith his bull -pup o n Homecoming nigh t to retu rn it in a hurry, b ecause in three weeks it is bound to d evelop H ydrop h o bia. - An a lum nu s is b e li eved t o h ave taken it. A in't tha t dog-go n e funn y.
P a ul Fri e dma n , n otorious composer of th e son g -h its, "Ma mmy "·, "My M a mmy", "Ala b a m a M a mmy" a n d M a mmy, M a m my .. , announces a n o th e r deliri o u s r e l ease, e n t itl e d : " She Was Only a C hiroprac tor's D a u g h ter , Y et S h e S a n g i'n A ll the Best J oin ts."
D o u g las B aresh a n ks w ill p rob ably fea ture it in his ri o t o u s t a lking w o nder- " The Average Woman. "
----: :----B y the w ay, The V iatoria n a offers a hundred gran d fo r the b est
satir e on A m erican a d vertis ing. For instance, th e 'They a ll l a u g hed wh en I sat d own to pla y " variety. G ood poem s tha t fa il t o make The Via t o rian will a lso b e accepte d . Put a ll contribu t io n s unde r the d oor of R o o m 2 I 1 .
up by the neck. ~'hy man alive,'' h e car efully on the rostrum . Then reachcontinu ed. "you can 't spea k decent Eng- irig for his gavel, he felt out a bald had lain wholly outside of my experli s~ yet.'' T!·ue enough I van had a de- spot on his head, rapped himself on the ience. This nefarious occupation gave cided Russian twang to h is speech . spot severely, tottered for a m oment, me a passport into the underworld. And he had always felt rather con- knocked his chjn on the rostrum and There I became intimate with the ou t
casts and the dereLicts o! soc:ety. ceited about it. Consequently, this dis- sanl< unconscious to the floor. paraging reference to so pe1·sonal a Meanwhile the adventurers gathered From a first hand viewpoint 1 studied subject touched ·hlm to the quick. up their fifty-spot and walked silently in their stark naked reality the ceoMomentarily forgetting himself, he from the room. nomic, social and r eligious evil s of the
day. For hours at a time I would s it threw off his great coat and prepared Out in the open air they looked at absorbed while wayward geniuses pro-to avenge the insult. The Scotch wop each other for a moment. Then they pounded radical theories, recited however was in no mood for concilia· broke out into a laugh. "Now we can lion eithe1·. No sooner was he released consider the coffee proposition without strange tales, or told of blighted hopes than he began spaning a round Ivan at fear of being interupted," snickered the and vanished dreams. So great was
their eloquence that a t times I hung In a furiou s pace, now weaving in and little fello\V. Yes, agreed I van, "and ecst acy upon their words. Strangely out, and occasionally landing a vicious I am al>out as hungry as a Russian co- enough, amid these morbid surround· blow -on !va ns unprotected bicoque. ed afte1· a dance,'' (or a co-eel after a The latter had learnt his pugilistic Russian dan ce, either form is permiss- ings, they seemed a ble to give full science in an entirely different school. able). vent to the adm irable talent which had
- --- . . ---- ~'hile the runt was wav·ing his a rm They continUed walking a l·i ttle while been allowed to lie wasted within them. Mr . ]. Cla n cy ' 14, h as o p e n ed' a quiet lit t le undertakin g p a rl o r Two years or this li fe gave the knowl-
like a cheer-leader, he very indifferently and then tw·ned in at the "Just Steal I n s uch nov"! surround-in Kanka k e e o n a b asis o f " rigid econ o m y" <sounds like th e d e ad reached out for the litt le fellow's neck Inn." The pi·oprietor. Mr. Just'n edge of ten. ~ Scotchma n . H e says, just d r o p in w h enever you d o n 't look rig h t. and. l ' ftin g him ol'f his feet, proceeded Steel, met t hem at the door with a ings my mind became greatly stimulated With him on the b l ock , o ld J ack Hick ey sh ould ha1ve som e "st iff" to pummel his face with an open palm. great big smile. The Scotch wop , rec· and matured rapidly. The previous
competitipn . ---- ---- The entire fracas las ted on ly a few ognizing the countersign, returned the ~~~~n;r~f~si::d ::~e~::d~u~~ognet:;r 1;::~ ..I N .1. d h < d minutes a nd everything mig ht ha ve smile goodnaturedly andJ walked inside. so hastily acquired, proved the !ounda-1'\ ow we' ll have ,a. li ttl e W i de poetry sai t e pro11essor, an 1 d i 1 B t f t 1 The lights were so subdued that Ivan
he pull e d out the D e P rofu:nldis. c eru·e up n ce y. u ' un or unate y, Just,·n St"el, how- lion of an lntellectuaJ edifice which is '"L the ever-unconscious police force got could hardly see. "'
wind of the rumpus and surprised our ever, conducted them down the passage- nothing less thanr startling. You have ----::----The Par-a-abies , or a Struggle for Nest E g gs.
On ce there was a fine l ook ing egg, called Dempsey. H e certa inly was arhd -b o ile d , Uhmmm ! I h ope so. T h ey said h e s imp ly said h e could'n · t b e beat. Bu t o n e d ay a bi rd n a m e d Tunney th reat ened to w hip him. Now being a w iS'e-egg. h e didn't fancy the id e'a o f b e ing w hip ped. S o h e we n t ;nto incub a t fng quarte r s in o rd e r to d evelop . H aving r each ed t h e pink of condi t io n h e cam e o ut feeling h ot. But, stra n gely enough , thi s b ir d namt>d Tun n ey c racked him-so tha t p oor o ld Dempsey, like a ny ord .in a ry egg, bro k e down arid ran. It's n ot becau se I' m yell ow, h e w himpered. I'm s imply n ot w h a t I' m crack ed up to be. I' m only th e s h e ll of m y fo rmer self. So I'll h <i
1ve to a d m it it boys-th e yok e's o n m e.
S incerely, Gelatin o u s j oe a nd F. E. M . ----::- - -
Musings of the Comic Spirit. Once W a lter j o h nson and mysel f were on our way t o E u rop e.
We had got o u t a l itt l e way w h en I noticed that W a lly was t ravelin g by "rail. " Coming up to him n'on-chalantly, a bag of peanu ts in rny han d , I asked h im, "Wally, o ld boy, h ow's th e w h ip, a n yway?" "Not so bad .. . h e answered gamely. "From w h at I' ve n o ticed I seem t o b e ab le to peg as far as th e next man ...
---- ::----Diary of the C a mpus Idol.
D ear Doc-My ribs are h ealing n icely, b u t sti ll get sh arp
two adventurers before they w;~~ ;~::.e~:~te:·n~~e ~is~~=Yha~dt~~een b~::: :~.~:·~ot~:. ~l:t!:·e;~o::sd~·~q:~nt.l~:,t:~ ~~·~:~es,o~o ;:~~~~~·· a:;s;~~e ~~fjustice ed. and over their coffee and cigars, Scotus and others. Here you behold a in this great city of our::;, the two offen- the l'unt opened up and began his story. ma n that bids fair to s urpass them all. clers found themselves hailed before the "I might as well &lyle It, "The Con· The potentialities of my mind a re ve,·i
tably boundless. You know what terrijudge. "Disturbing the peace, your fessions of an opium eater, he began, ble th ings can ha ppen when genius honor··, came the complaint against " for that's what it amounts t{). I \vas them. born into this wol'id under the Impress- goes wrong. Through tear ot that ca-
The judge adclre~sed himself to the tve nam e of De Quincey Pen-in, only !amity I sometimes a lmost go mad.' ' little fellow first. son a nd he.i r ot the honorable L ea Per- Then, tapping his head knowingly with
;'What's your name," he asked. rin of 'Vorchestershire and Tobasco his finger tip, he whispered softly, "VVatt, your honor.'' sauce fame. "VVhether you believe It or not, sonny
boy, the world is at the threshhold of a " I asked you, what is your name," My father was a very eccentric char- philosophic and social revoLution.''
continued the judge patientl y. "Watt's my name." The
sounded Innocent enough.
acter. So inordinately proud was he ot reply his various sauces that he insisted on
lining them up on the table at every Yes! Yes! What's your name." The meal. His motto was, (Try Perrin's
judge was beginning to get hot now. sauce. Once on your table always \Viii
" My name is John Watt, jus.t little be.) Naturally, at a very tender age, John Watt, and nothing but Watt, I became a confirmed sauce addict. though others may call me I don't know The effect on my ne1·ves was so Intense w.hat." The little runt hummed the that Dad ftna1ly shipped me off to Ox-words maliciously, ford in the hopes that a cure might be
The judge made a s upreme effort at effected. The1·e I delved deeply Into
(To Be Continued.)
N. L. MARCOTTE
Barber Shop Agen t for D own-Town C lean
ing, Pressing a n d R e p airing Es ta blishm ent.
Hitch es in t h e s ides. D ear b oy-Never mind t h e stitches.
i!Ie knit t ing we ll .
$elf·control. Waving the little fellow philosophy and literature and endeavorIt shows that the bones aside, he turned his attention to Ivan.' ' ed by every means to distract my mind BOURBONNAIS, ILL.
"From Watt I have learned that you and soothe my nerves. But to no avail.
p,."~ F<,ur THE VIATORJA; _
~-~~~~~ .... ~-;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;-;:;:;:-;;;-:;-;:::~;~-~;;;;;;~~~::::~~::~=~;;;;;;; I ollll rl lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllh ~ ;,;.;.-: a kP: .. OndJ Pre! ~T r Roc o gy at C l hoi. l'nlver - y a Am..-rlc:L J.o Exchange 0 umn Campua Briefs.
lrh t thP ot,..~r bodt.11 10 th, ~r Book Reviews.
~C:::=:::>4"1:1:Jo.cc:::=:::>4ICI~•c:== :: ,.:~:":. 1 ~ow:n:~p:r~ :~la~on~"' YERSE o; THE EXCH\.'iGE<;, 11~:::111::1~:~~1>1~.~~:~:11 1111111:1111111~: ~,-0 , ~~~T 'T\~:~:,\J~'Tif Ro ,.;: 11ni\;ll :rn,J '\•·"' \rri\o , d ~. hy JJjJ ~•in
Th~ nf'ld In thba t...-..M",k 13 nc.tL as narrow I The f:A:t:t >r-ln-r h r PX .. f<rfn$t hu- turn rN In the- ! .111!.. ~t' ~k~Pif)~ ln • he J tn c L!! . Jklltot'
(Ttv f n IJ n l'nmp::- ny "n ,ght t~ lh ught. f· r Let HllaiTP BE-l· rlur> rlg-hU, turn~)(} down an '"'XC'PIIf·Ot Al Furlontr-''Th }''M:" hlU!!!hlna: to rchf'~t~~r ){orrt .. ln .. \hhl '', and Evett
If lr J, •1,c h. tlt·n~ l t>~'ld I! ty~ 1- I he J,nf.:t.~"e. not nnly l<J n artie I~ I h:ut written ttr .... WH"k for rr'l~ think how ~rr~n thf'~· h.'\'-'e be-f'n all Bn-nt \n • tntt\rftonan •• , Itt~~ "a a l' ,,, kntH k 1
, 01 th,. W( r!.l d("111tltUtl ' "hr, rlt~ nnt know Ex<-han,~.rP f'olumn C·n thP ~uhj~ct~ Rus <>umm('r tUl"'t' Y<•U'H nevt'r· rl~rln"t ! Broth
wr ,! • ftt) th.., "''•rY J(' (" tr oxt•,rrl wtv·rn to turn f(•r hl.s ntxt me:al and tlr Slmplkit}· nnd StA.rtltn~ h:morance .lilf:\iOl"t bnlth--r--on~ upholttlnio! lht" 1 \\. 'Th 1 ,\tr. .un• r,r l~t·r· r ommrn 1 In fJnt> Jr,.J£"fn", 1,111 td~• th1• mnn who d•)~>-~n't In IIIJnl)l1' Colle~iate PuhlicaUon<,l. Ro~rt Hull-(Tr:ln!'ll :\tlnll!:' Frtnch).- th otht'r h~\klnl(' Jt. \'l.t >tl thfi
kn<•W where ro I urn ((.r m~>a~ or l•xlging Th" artlcif' WM tlmPiy, and weiJ-wrltU n ''Th~ mnn·~ e)"f• hit tht> hnc-k or tht' :tel"' o ( H\U•J ,.Ill"'. l'•nc In lh• r·.,o~w .. l<l'
1"r n f•·ll«wshlo• foer oorn" tutum un•I<·On•• l tom", too, hut th~ boRA ""ld It was too cnckey chnlr." :--;
0,. 'I u ll 1 ~ •. ,. l' It \\"It
"1
,\II llo••l•. fl• rll•ln'l "" It hut th• Tlou It 1~ shown th"l <·v• ry.,ne working and ahu•lvo. Ohedlent child to the 8
.. ,.,,, . '.:Tho,' b.-.; pleturo 1 lu\', .,, "tti/'Y
1 1 J~~:o r·urrcnt, tt•;tf ,,xft,nl ha~ ,,,,,,l~r llo' l•r••r·nt comnt·tt·tfvi' wa,...r po\•·er~ that bE>. I cn!llt m'-· darling man· h 1 P hll ~ kl l r 1 t h .... '" '' .., J Fat er L<lwnf')" C n u <' >C~J)fn · ntt math·.'· ~-\Y,.. .\1 Jol!••)n. Htttt.>r tbun th r•·~rot<td "" r • .,.., ,\not "' ""loy t•·m Is onn t c·•·ct<olnly "•lr·stltute · Ul«'rlpt Into tho wnste basket and be- -Cnn you deflne an oratnr ?" ~lnglng P ool" • .\I In tlw Nlo• of
d"n" hln trn•·•·lln.: WI" lh< r "" f·<ot '" Y<·t It I• •nd that "'"re nttentl•.n "''~' took my" It to poetry to "<>>the my Gezzo Sennln~er-"Suro•! H e's a f•l· •on" wrlt••r ,·111
,1 no•ll,1
·nto•rtaln•·r J!~ornr•, ,,r l•rt,llnt1 l:ngl.•nrl in tlw ;:..;.lrlt .._ ~ ~-
In nul c,ut ,f f.tpaln, North Afrlrn r•tr· • nut J;IVUl Jn ltu· IJQr,k to this largr·r thwarted eplrll. I N'ad D• n Juan and low who 1" nlway~ rt>ady to lo.y down tl~ Davt•y L••t• Slllr!'t wHh .\1 and MnriUI "-·'h 11 ~ c l'•·fll wid•• ''fu·n .. But it
1.r1 rnudl m0n• funrlanwntally Import· th f' Dnam o r Oerontiu~ t or an ho ur o r your lite to r hi.!\ country·· ~IXMl l•ln}·M lh(' i:wlrt oC AI'~ \\I(•
1nt ll' fU·d r.t ch·Rtllutlon. I ndeed. a so, and tht>n the thought came to me wr,uht hP n "''rry r•liMtakc l•' think that who!f• ('h:q•IH I~ df•vot<•d to this pha~ that I might perhaps find mental aile- Purr Romnry (seat('(). In hotel dining V~ry g0\x1. Don't miM thl~ Ct"4HUN'. 11
" Mum ''•ISII "r 111
" traVt·ll't W:ll~ <·IJil· nf th1• pr1hh·m, hut thP. conc-lusions a r · viutlon a"' well as material for some room.) " ' hen n$kf>d what trult he would ~ov. l ;), Hi. ''Strt•t•l Girl", with H t tnhu·fl In hl!-4 r· •wl , !Ut.flYII. Ft•r '\\'hilt• rlvf·ll 'll ;,,.,, \'ll~UI·, and thf-' Cathnllc n~' ,.,. Exchanl{e copy I( I would read the order, says-"I'll take grnpc nuts.'' t)• Comp~m. Jnl·k Onkit• nlld J ohn ltnr hro ...,., ut '" P•·•· ha•·ho•·H, l'lvr·r.~. moun ron. Tht• ~tory ndo.ptt•tl trom \\' Clrt'' ('hureh fl,;un· hut ~upf'rfldalty, and V<·rse In th(' Exchan~es. llllnll, dlll·f'l, halth•-fll·hiK, lnm,, "rldg•· ;,JrnoMt hy a 'tour rlf' t on·e,' to give the \\"ondt• r·ly'~ "TIW Vlt•nm•~t\ Chormt'r' t
nthH!nd!i, Hhrlnl'!'l, In f;u·t. Anything, dlac_·uM ion a ~umc:(·ntly Catholic turn r first t ook up the Marywoc. d College Jralher Lynch-"No w 'Yatson, how dramatic nnd C'(\l\lll'ttc tal(' u r thnt IHU· Hllru•·th:nJ:. Thl :tud Thnt. Hnd Evf·ry h I or the book. Bay Lear, a handsom ely bound and did Ge nemt Gordon m e-e t hi~ denth? kno\vn , hut lnt£'nMely humn.n dlstrkt· lhllw. Y"l lw tall<,.fl with rn•·n. ~athl·n·d to pn·wr'V(· t t' un ty well pr·Jnted magazine rrom Scranton, Jay "'at~n-''He died while monkeY · New \'ork',e; "Littl{' llt.lngnr·y··. Ou·
up/nllltl, \\fl!!l ,,,l,n• int•·r·,.HINI in mov•· Onf' n·,L!'rtlH that thl!-4 J~TN\t human eco- Pa. Chagrined to fin~ the f\rst Ex lng with some electric w !r ps." Arnhelm'M Cocoanut Orovt• Danc-e l~ln· tn•·ntH h.Mtnrkal, ur,Jitif'al, lltr~rary nrunle an ti lndu!1trlal problem ot wages change I picked up to b(' from a ~rd'~ Fathe r Lynch- "Could you prove is hl'nrd In this picture.
Jtnd l'~"llglouH. 'f'h,, I'~"Mllll ot hiH kt<·n was llCJt rl•alt with (rom the point oC !iChool, since I nev~ r hod any lurk In thnt by thE'o book?'' ~ov. 17. "Hu· Prlvo.tl' Atfalr" will nnd Jon~ nh~''I'Vatlnra r·ouph-tl with his vlc•w or IJI~lr-lhutlon or ~me ~imllar· managing women, I nevertheless r e- Jay " 'ntson-(rendlng) - "Genfrnl Ann Hnrdlng th(' popular stngt~ l'ltar
Mhll l'JI nnHI}'HI1'4, P''lll'tratln"' nHnt l and :iYKlem. solved not to be abashed al togethe r Gordon was killed w hile chargln F:" his A Pathe nil-dialogue plcturt'. Jt 1
f··r·r·,·ful I• ~.C' IM r·nntainl'd in hl!-t la.tf'Ht (:o~~~~:~ ... ~;.'c7knxl~n ~:.:~~t!:c:, 0~0~~:ve;;ol~~ ~~~e~~~\8Po:::ontheen::~az~:~ :~ batteries." said to he an lntl'n~ly dmmnttr photo
hn"l' If lnd•·' rl It lw htM lal+'f4t fnr hP lc·m or th<:! d<'Htitute aR mort com mon ly h h I I th able verse play. Addt.'tl tht' usuol Sundny thl'{>t '" Hllr·h :t prnlllk wrlttr· that h+· mny d<•finNI tu Inc-lude the poor, the sick, ~t ~su~ar ~ro~ mp:e~ry.nni 1:::~ on. Nex~ T om Doyle-(tn Public Speaking)-- nct...q or vuudf.'ovlll t•. 1111\'1' ll ltrat'l' or huolu~ nfl' tlw IJI'P~R hy "People sometimes pay fHtee n or twen- Nov. l!i!, J!L "His Glorious Night' th(· tlnw th!M. !lJlJH'an-.) Hl.lrvlva.IR and the.• inflrm, the hlind, the d(·af and the ca me The Fable or the Rose a nd the ty dollars to h E-a r Ringers who sing. with Jnc-k Ollbert. Gay, dllfl.hlng Jnek :-.;,.w .hl'!vuls. Hl'llnC' 1~ tnt{•re!-4tNI In dt•!-!('rt,·d. Dr. o·nrady reveals the Am>le T1·eo, There Is a. secret, and In-
('htu·c-h ~~N the gr~nd philanthropist o r t 1 d 11 t them t om the p eon of a ---------nlltllY lhhH;M hut hlH hl,..dH•Hl lnt<•rfi'f;t i" tlw C'Cntul'it•K; he doesn't preach at his e r u e, a o r . mantle vehicle limn this one! H e plnr In l111 H, •JI.L;"ion to whic-h lw hC'Iongs, itE M!ss Fl·ances Andre\Y8'. I was ~ur- as o nl y O llbc1·t can th~ dcvll ·may-cart
Gilbert neve1· had n mo1·f' p£'rtect ro
l it!": Jll' 'HIll! und \IH ruturf' And rtad('r~. new lrmd the Catholic Church prl sed, tor he,·e wn.s ve rse tha t hnd Obituary. young cavalry o ff'lcer who not only If"~ · ·
1 1
· • w ith unmC;"ritC'd praiHC. H e g ives facts such beauty, wls ttulness, (Julet grace lw hn~ hc·,•n, nncl 1~. It~ militant c- hamp- da1·es to look at n beautiful prlnct'll!'!, Inn, ThiH IH !'VIdt•nt In h\ )-1 l •~ut'O JW a nd tha t no sN· ub_t' h bi.or l:l.n wou ld deny a nd s u bdued mystic splrlt that it could b I I h fT' I
and mnrllnlH these fac tH t o tt conclu- II d t To avo:d The !acuity and trl ends of St. Viator ut actuo ly cn..n cs cr o ' and At<'n 8
:1
1~:·1':~:~:::.:;· ,: ·,: , /•::, 0~1
1"~r 1
,
1::; :.~·~:~~:~:~/; s lon that no o·n.lional mn.n could l'efuse :::·~~~ubi:• 0 ;a q:oll~;~ "~· a nnounce College mourn the loss o r a loyal and her· ~earl. A nig ht of lov• you'll not
nllll N.,.,, .. 1,.1 •• ·,.,., 1.". to O.C'<'E'Pt. The quasi-communism or that those two students who have rorm- long-s ta nding tr·l end, Father David J. won orget. • ,., the 1-:n.rly Chui'C·h. the bishops through hi 1 C C W O<J!;tock Ill wh dled Nov. 20 , 21. 22, 23. "The Cock~yed
In t h b loonl< ht· 4•xnmlncH, dbtcus~es ed the bad habit oC r eading t s co onway o o ~ ' . , o \Vorld'', "\VIth VIctor McLnglen, Ed· nnrl 1\llitiY!-{t•~ with ,;n·nt p nwt• r the n.n- tht· agt.s, the guild~. the monasteries , umn may Inspec t this poetry, i! they de~ recently as a r esult o r injur!es received L 0 I h i c-h·nt f•u·~ u r tlw Fnlth, arHI nne hy one chiva lry , Poor L..'lws. Almsgiv!ng. Tithes sire, in the College Club Room: Mary- In an accid ent. As pastor ot St. Mary's mund flowo nn~h Lily am tn (t e:
KnIght H llos plta le rs, Ins titutionf! w ood College Bay Lear. Oct ober Issue, Church oC Woodstock, to r the past 21 newest nme). e sam~:~ R'tnrs, nut . th+·y 1\ 1'1' c·ounll'd out ~~~ having had few Foun(!lin~s-all out-gr owth or ftC- 1929. Father Conway has labored ors and directo r who gave you " What
tlwl r duy unci n•maln llH flO mnny tooth· l'~C'n C'('n turles ot Catholic Culture. are The H oly C ross Purple was a lso near- :::~=~sl y, so that the Paris h , which Is Price Glory", Four dnys tor thl fll big I t·~~ ~urvlval:-:c Thi·Y {U'r' Tlw Dlhlf' At· a ttraction. Don't Colt to see thlf'! lud<, 1\l!llt•l'luliKm, Tlw \\'l'a.lth and ndcluc('(l HH pre·Retormation examples by whe n I r e legated my beloved Rustle eq uipped with a grammar and high
P nwPI' .\r·gullll'lll anrl Sdt.•ntiftc :'\ega- ot thP Chu •·ch's concei·n tor the desti- Simplic ity and Startling Ignorance In school, a new parish h all , gymnasium, AT TilE LYNA
tlnn. tute. The f.,:'reat work done during the llllnoiR Collegiate Publications to the r ectory, convent and church, Is one or Nov. 10
. "H[tlt Marriage'' wllh OIIV€" Tht• ,\ lain OppoHltlon tn the Faith h e Cat holic n evi val by St. Vincent de Paul, realm oC Ohe St!ll-born. This maga the best In the Rockford Diocese. The Borde n nncl Morgan Farley,
llndH cmHprl~t't-~ NatiOJwllsm, Anti- Hlt~gshc·d ,Jonh Eu<le~. Juan l ... uis Vives zine is a high c lass arratr, containing innumerable trlends gathered af his Nov. 1
1. 12
, 13
. "In the lieadllnM".
Ch'l'l('all"-lll nnd th0 l\lodf'rn Mind, and t~"n~do·!c l< Oz...'tnam is briefl y out- o; much to be commended," as our· rune ral, attest to the keen regrflt his A \Varne.r Bros. production. Starring
"tlwy \)('V UPY lhP ~tag\' today with the tined. La...~ l y th ere are Rome tiresome, Alumni Editor likes to ~ay; yet the on ly loss entails In the h earts o r a ll who Grant Withers, Marlon Nixon and Pnu
N''" At·t·i.,.uiH In tlw wlng-R." These :.~tntiHtical, yet no doubt valuable chap- thing that Inte rested me the n was the knew him. May he rest In peace. lin e Garon. A ll -talking Vltaphon~ tht'\'1' :1n• rl1 all with nt h:>n~lh and in a tC'I'f'l on the work now be ing done by verse. J. P. B. Ga llagher, Sophomore comedy-drama ot newspaper liCe. Both
~~·:uThlng mnmwr, IH' ns:-;crt8 the "Con- C'ntholics tor· the destitute, a nd som~ at the ' Vorcester· ~choo l, has three To Rev. John A. Hynes, pastor ot Marlon and Grant t nact CLB reportf.'r!i,
llch'11<',,·· nr tlw l\lnln Opposition, but \'l'IT l'Xcellent pmclical advice to a ll quiet pieces or verse on Gulls, L e.aves Our Lady ot Angels Church In Chlca- one a star, the other n. cub. Tres Bien~ It lnn will havl• ltH day and pas..-.; on. who a l'e lnu.•rested In social \Yel fare and I cebergg that are peaceful little go, and a form er student ot St. VIator Nov. 14, 15, 16. "The Mysterious ls·
Tlw ~~·w .\nlntl:-; ar,, cla~sed under work. dreams on the majesty and beauty or College, sympathy ts extended on the land", with Montagu Love and Lionel
tlw lwad <lf Nc.•w PnJ,;ani:-:rn. :-;howing Sl. ' HY .. } Y REYE.\ Ls ~EED OF nature. J. A. D evlin tackled the Moon, loss o r a s iste r. Barrymore, and Lloyd HughoA. Thl" wht.•n•:n It llifft•rs tnm1 tht• old. nnd SP IRITL'.-\L .-\CTTYJTl' and achieved the marvelous, two orlg l- million dollar picture actually filmed at
(CL·ntlnul·d from Page 1.) nal stanzas on that e ternal subject. The members ot the faculty a nd stu- the bottom ot the ocea n orr the Baha· \\hot 1~ ll~ mt•not~t'.
In ttw "(.)pportunHy" Bclloc s h ows --------------- Time. by D. F. O'Brien, must be too dent body extend their sympathy to mas, tmperllled by hurricane and storm,
h lm:-;l•lr rwt :\H o •w hoJ•t.•lt.~s.....:ly pointing mt>n, whom he- S..'lid could eag1Jy be pick· pro tound tor m e to g rasp, for I thought R e\'. Timothy Rowan, Ph. D . '17 . upon Jules Verne's ·I mmortal no vel comf'l: lHrt lianRt• r·~ nn~1 pltrall:-4, tw Is optim ls· cd out draped over the seats In C ha pel it nonse nse . The Shadow Dance by the death ot his maternal aunt and n ow on the .screen. In te<:hnlcolor dlar
tk c'r t lw sut'l'{':il" ,,r tlw Chut·ch to lik(' exhausted sausages, never s poke J. F. Su~llvan and The Old Tar's Dream roster mother, Miss Elizabeth Cough· logu€' and sound. \\' hat a treat In llll't'l nnd dl'Cl·;lt nll ~Hl:H·-k~: In thl~ nn inte lligent word In c lass or at a stu- by S. E. " 'e l.'is are Interesting, iC not lin. The tun e ral took place at St. Pat- store!
('1\ap tt•r Ill' ~ays tlrwly, " l tor my part. dt•nt meeting, yet were s l!·angely elo· ver·y g1·ea.t, pieces ot verse. The only rick's Church, Chicago, a nd was at· Nov~ 17. "Big Time", all talking
lwlll'\'l' ltpnn the ''holt.'. a Catholic in- quent In C ha pe l and thought nothing piece that a pproach es poetry is a sJngle tended by the Very Rev. Provincial, drama with Lee Tracy and Mae l'l'Nl~t· h'~ ht.• more.• lilct•ly: tor. in spitC' or carrying on a lvud whispering cam - stanza by P. F. O'Connor, e ntitled Old Fn,.ther O'Mahoney, and by the Rev. Clarke. A peep Into a Hollywod studi<J
('I( tlw tlnw In whkh 1 llvt..•. I cannot pnign with the neighbor, e\·en immed- Age. Xlnety-three out or every hun- Edward Dunne, who wa.~ Deacon ot the Is a l'(orded acr een lovers In this picture. ht'h'\t..~ that tlw Human Hea~on ,-.,-m iatt-l:r befor·e or immedlntely a tte r re- d1·ed College men wou ldn't know what Mass. Daphne Pollard plays the comic part. Pt'rmam•ntl)· lo~'-' It~ tWWt.l'. :\'ow the ce!,·ing Holy Communion. It Is all about , tor they n ever h eard o! Xov.
1s. 19 , 20. "Sophomore'' with
Fnlth I$ ha~l't..l U!ll'~ll Ht·a~on and ~very· Several students interviewed said the the two men whose names are mention- T o Brother Eugene Surprenant, C. Eddie Quillan and Sally O'Neil. At
wtwn• ,,ut~ldt• tlw Faith tht• dec-line or u...:~ or p1-oCanity and obscenity. both by ed in It, but to show the select few S. V., the Viatorian extends Its sincere last the great Amer1can college talking
H'-':t~llll i~ appannt." 1'hi::-: he ::;uys In ('Ultur·l•d s~.-•nior::l' and Innocent freshm en who r ead this column that good verse a nd prayerCul condolences on the loss picture-a touchdown 4n screen enter· nn~w~.•r h1 :\n 1•pinh'n tlC ~t'lllt' o~~n-eN, was startling. One lad said he had nt- can be written by a College Sophomor e, of an aunt, Mrs. L. E. Surprenant, who talnment-a dlalogu.,. tum ot ~ruprtmt l'IW a ~hlth'rn F't·t•rwh·Jt.~wish convert tC'nded a non-Catholic school before I append the stanza below: died at Harvey, Illinois, Nov.
2_ m e rit. Don't mlas It ; It's wonderful-
wlw prt.""tll'~t'd ":\~ a pr~.-lb...'lhh.• tendtmcy coming hert?-. and that the dH'f'erence in T'wo old cronies, near the fire, it '8
great!
sheltered from the cold, llt· ~ll:tl t•' which we. art• movin_g, a the amtlUnt or improper language in the W\lrld in whkh :t :-omall but intense two ~'hools was surprisingly slight. bl''~tl y 1.'! tl\1..' Fnith $ht..lUid ~t:\nd npart This ~tud\·nt said he had always at·
In :tn lnct'('a$ing thlt'l.i ,,f T':t~nism.'' tC'mptC'd to th:nk charitably of his tel·
Talk of the- wondrous tar-orr days \·erse ot a quality tar above the aver- AT THE RIALTO.
when they were young and bold; age seen in college journals. The third ~ov. 1o. "Points 'Veet'' with Hoot
. \ nd fkllo(' l."\.llldudt.·::-: that thC' sign low students in the non-Catholic school
which :sh:lll $htlW that the ad..-:Ulet" of whe-n they used t oul language, but that
Great ).1unc hausen In hLs grave- is Mont Salnt :\fic h e!, by A. J. Crelgh- Gibson and Alberta vaughn. uneasily turns again , ton, in The College Spokesman from
Dubuque. I owa. Last summer I read AnanJa.s Idly wonders who dares F~\:th i::l' :H h:md i~ Pt\I.&.'('Util•n. ht' w:ts unablt.\ at all to condone im· dispute his reign. Henry Adams' gorgeous study of the
Tht• btltlk L-:. a tim.~ phc,• (If l"'atht.'lic pn.>per spt:-t>ch in students who have Xext, I read all the verse in all the ).riddle Ages, :\Iont Sal nt )IIchel, and
.\ p~_,l},"t.:"t.'ti..' :\nd likt.' Eurt..lp(' and the \)(>(n subjt>cted to years of Catholic Exchanges in my room that ha\~e pre· consequently read eagerly ~r. Crelgh·
F:\ith in Hb~h.,ry d:\!:'St.•::. slwuhl be u~d tni:ining. tension~ to verse: The :Mountain Echo, ton's \'e rse on the same subject. The in Catht.,lk c~'llt'~c:< in t._,eir h:gher ::\Io~t o! tho.::e:.e- intt.-rviewed expressed The Aug~"""t.n.na Observer (my old subject is an exceUF-nt vehicle for tit·
Xov. 16. "Bad Men 's Money'' W'lth
Yakima canutt. A wow o! a s tory. ::s'ov. 17. "The ExaJL.-E-d Flapper''
with Sue Carol and Stuart ErwJn,
Barry :O:orton co·!eatured In this Fo:t production plays t~ part ot •· Princt
Boris" ot a mythical Eul"6-pean k:ng' Itt• opini{ln that among the etrect :ve friend). 'I\he "\Yatch Tower, The St. erary art, and it was my surprise t o dom. me.::m::; tor combating the religious \._ince-nt College Journal, The Pro";. find that the verse In The Spokesman
l'ht> C;ltiH,lk f'hut"\'r :uu1 Tht• Dt~tit ut i', :l}l..'lthy cf the ::;tudent.s. the two most dence College Alembic, St. Yary's was as exquisite, prr,found and beautl·
by tlohn O' Gr:.ldJ. 11 )Wer(ul wen?- a whole-hearted and Chimes. and The College S pokesman. !ul a treatmE-nt as :\lr. Adams' volume. lTht' )1.\,·:\tll'an t"·'lllf\:.lny. ~1 Ol ~in~.-~n?- dls..:-u~sion of the sauation :n Some of the verse was wretched, some Two lines l mu5t qul}te- from the ve~e:
Tht' latt•:q \'lllunw \'' th(' Ca!v~rt Se- The Yl::ltorian, and a concentrated and quite clever, as !n The .Augustana Ob- "~en sage and Saint In cloister rlf:-:., \lfl(ttr tht.~ ~·nt>r.ll editorship of 1s.·rit.lU:<: errort to m:lke the Holy Xame se-n·er, and three selections really worth pa.Jd the chanted wage.
Hil'\ln~ n~'!h''-'· l$. tht.• t_"~lth.:-Hc Church
1$ ·dt>ty an agt"nt o( Spiritual Re~ner- wh!le. ~·o ot these are by Carroll Prayer ·~·•·rapped "-;th mwYc !rom
an~i tht.• rlot.',.;tltutt.~. hy Rt>'\·. John ati0n. Hickey or Provid~nC€ College: nature the sEa bt=low.''
Tiny Congregation At Exmoor, England, tbere Is a tiDY
moorland chort'h which ba.! oe~er half during the past generation a la~r congregation than seven or eight, tb.e average ~Lng abont tbrr:e. JnclodlDI che oYga_nlst.
., Jlo
Tuesday, November 12, 1929
Viator Falls Before Big Blue Rush
Blanck added G. a.nd then Corbett got free, and .);lhnklng off tacl<lcr.s, raced 35
:n.trd::. over the goal li n e . 'COl'bett pas
'lPd to McGuli'G for t he extra point.
Score, 1\lill lkln. 14; St. Vin.t.OJ", 0.
1\fllHkln let up during the remainder The Green \Vave of Viator journeyed of the pe riod and St. Vlat.o l', with Fm·
to Decatur Saturday to take part in the lon g- and Evard crurrylng the ball m ade
THE VIAT O RIAN
K. H. S. Works Out on Bergin
Field, Oct. 30 In order to fam ilia rize themsel ves
Amedee T. Betourne
Pharmacy
Cut Rate Drugs
P age Five
Baird-Swannell I Everything in Sport
mg Goods Homecoming festiviti es of James Mil- two ftn;.t downs. The pedod end- with playing at nig ht and t o be pre-
\\-1 tl ft 1 1 1 ht t St to
1
. 119 Court St., Kankakee, Ill. !ken Unin~rsity. 1en 1e na eel with Millil<in in possession of the pared for the- r n g game n. rea. r. heers had boomed across the fte ld, t h e hn.ll on its own JO-ya1·c1 line , a flne punt Kankalme High School's f.;'tidders QUALITY RADIO
Kankakee's Largest Stock
Big RJue was on the long end of a. 35 to placing the oval there. wo1·k ed out under the giant Cahill re-ocore. The heavy 1\lil\il.:en line was
00 much to penetrate th e hard-charg
ng Blue wall. Corbett. B lanck and
Second P m·jod. fl ector s on Bergin Field, Oc tober SO.
A bad pn.ss m o ved the Blue bacl( two Kicldn g and passing occupied most ot
Heidinger were the big g uns in the ya1·ds nnd COI'bett kicked to his own
filliken offense. Corbett, "th t; gall - p- 4 li-yard line. After an exchan ge of punts 1-:Ieid-
ing·e1· intercepted a PaJSS and ran 65
the g1·idders' time. There was a light
scrimmage to wind up the evening's practice. Both llhe coach and the play
Cl'S were enthusiastic about the vlsibtl· ing goat of the Little 19,'' :-;c:)red tw"
ouch-downs, one climaxing a 35-yard yai'(1S for a touchdo-wn. Corbett kiclcect lty on t.he field. A large cl'Owd of
run. Heidinger contributed t\VO more, Ka.nl<alcoo High School g rid fans was and Arnett snagged a pass for the final goal for the point. Score: Milliltin, 21 ; o ut to see their te::t.m In oction under score in the last quarter. St. Viator, 0. Evard, Vin..tor star was the floodlights .
Hamilton. midget quarter-back for injUI'ed trying to pull Heidinger down nnd was fol'ced to leave the game.
he Green \Y::n·e, ran his team well, but Later in the period Mlllildn took the with a field goal.
rn.ins did not over powel· brawn. Too- ball again to rthe ten-yal·d line, but a St. Viator. 0. Score: Millikin, 35;
ill intercepted a pass la te in the fray, bad fumble gave St. Viator the ball on .MILIJ1KIN almost getting away fo1· a touch-down, G . LE
ST. VIATOR Toohill
Mooney Hoog
Veroskie
ut was brought down by one of u1e its own 20-yat·d line. Bla nclc added n.n- ~i~c~~~: -(~;--~~-::: .. L~ .... _ .. wift Milliken bacl<s. other 20-yard run before the halfended. Adamson _ .......... LG ... _ The Viatorian offense was c rippled Via tor Thn~ufens .
Tarro .............. RG .. . when C'1ptain Evard was forced to St. Yiator played its best football just F'a,vley .................... C .. .. etire with a damaged nose early in the after the stm·t of the third pericd. F or- Musso .............. . .. RT .. _ ......... .
O'Malley Matthews
Gibbons .Hamilton
Evard Karr
Furlong
econd quarter. Al Ful'long was the ward passes took the ball to Mi11ilcin's Arnett ....... RE .. est bet at carrying the ball. and tore -10 and Furl ong got free a nd ran to1 the Hankins QB .. .
through the Blue line fOL' seyeral good 25 yard line. Musso, Mil\il(in lineman, Corbett _ .......... ... LI-I .. .
gains. The Irish came back at the half intercepted a pass but fumbled it and Blanclc ............... Rll .. . and took the ball down the field to Mil- St. Viator r ecovered the ball on Mil· Heidinger ............ FE .. ikens' twenty-yard line, only to lose it likin's 23. The Green was unable to .:\Iillikin ..... H 7
n downs. ).fusso. 230-pound tackle. gai n, however, and Millikin got the ball St. Vlato1- __ ......... o o was a constant menace to the Irish when a pass on the f olll·th down was and smeared most of the J)lays that wild.
0 14- 35
0 0- 0
came his wa~'. 1\'Jillildn t UI·ned the tide, however, Solace for this defeat may b e found back in, got under way and the Blue
among the memoriess of other battles buei< in got under way and the ~i lue \'ith 1\Iilliken. Two years ago St.Via- I adYance was only checked on ~h~ Via·
or invaded the Blu~ stronghol~ to fur- l to r 35 yard line . After an exchange of ish the Homecommg attractiOn and punts Millikin got the ball on its own
decisively outplayed and outfought a 145 yard line.
heavy Millil.:en eleven. The Irish had Millik in th en worl.;: ed the h:de-out
entered the game as t!nde1·dogs, but I pla.y on the visitors. Blanck taking a
~merged victorious to the tune of 13 to long pass to St. Viator's 30 yard line. ~. It must be remembered that MiUi- Two plays made it first down on the ken is having their best year, wh.le at 20-yard line. The third quarter ended St. Viator's this year is genErally r ecog- hel·e.
nized as the poorest. Injuries have Corbett then ran aro und his own
played havoc with the large squad that right enct for a touchdown and also
reported to Coach McAllister in Sep- kicked the point. Score: Milikin, 28;
tember. St. Viator, 0. Ho w It \Vent. After nearly all of the period had
Millikin l<icked off to open 'the game. been used up. M illikin again went into Viator made .only two yards and ldcked Viator territory, and Arnett took a
on the third down. Millikin took the pass over the goal line fl'Om Corbett ball on its own 38-yard line and Heid- for the last touchdown. Barr, ::rubbing
inger on the first play went 11 yards. in the bacldleld, added lth e extra point Blanck got free for 18 and Corbett ad-
ded 5. Blo..nck then got free again for G r oceries 25 , going to the four-yard line. Heid-
Confectionary
inger made 3 and then toolc the ball over for a touchdown. Corbett kicked the point. Score, 'Millikin, 7· St. Via- Amedee J. Lamarre tor, 0.
St. Viator took Millildn's kickoff on the 32-yard line. Unable to gain , they
pun ted. \Yith the ball on his own 35-
Bourbonnais. OL
yard line, Blanck made 15 yards. T wo C igars Notions plays made another first down. L--------------!
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Touchdowns- Heidinger, 2; Corbett,
2; Arnett. Points after touc hdown-Corbett (3),
(field goals); P ass, Corbett to McGuire, Ban (field goal).
Substitutions : St. Viator- Hunt, Carroll, Cassidy, Warden. Millikin-Gol
den, 1\Iiller, Davis, France, Shelby, Ban, Sollars, J enuine, De1Velse, Har
re\1, and Rollins . R eferee--Sanford. Umpire--V\Tinters.
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Page Six
Prize Short Story Contest Announced
3000 Spectators Attend BradleySt. Viator Game
THE VIA TORIAN
Standings of the Little Nineteen
Shifting of percentagu1 in the Little
writing :urH,ng thr· studr>nts rJf St. Vi~t- Nineteen as a re::;ult o f the week-end tor C'nllr•g(·, Thn Vlatorlan l!i condur:llng An old :-~tory wa.CJ re-enacted in the football batt1es le(t six teams undefea.t-
~t. Hh(Jrl ::-;tory C~ontest open to all the joust between Brt.tdley Polytechnic ed with James :Millikin and Knox
~tU()I·ntH or thf' (!ollf J.w Df'paz·tment. Institute and St. Viator College o n the Lied for the lead with four victorie~
On(~ or thP moHt dHikult t ormB or comp- PPorla tenm'!i home grounds. Friclay apiece.
otr!Lirm, if th(· criteria. a.r~:- art:sllr Of't. 2;). The annual till L"> ~eldom a Lombard tumbled Bradley out of the writing and lntf·rt•st, i!i the Short Story. gala. occurrence for the Viator clan; select circle 6-0, Saturday. The GalesIt cuiiH rorth trom the writor the exer- th~ superior weight and numbers of thE.' buq; ele:ven had Bradley on the defense cl~o of. v:trl!:d POWI·rs: hf• must have a oppo~ing H!Uad Is usually reckoneed as the g-reaaler portion of the g-ame, scm·g-ood Rtory worth wh1le: te ll ing; he must Hornething- Of a "bugbear," to the small- lng Its touchdown in the third quarter he a maRt<.-r of E'Xpo:illion, description e1· IJut doughty outfit of the Irish. on str3.ight football. It Wa::i Bradley'~ and r·lcver nanation; hr· must know ex- 'l'ho game, played at night under first homecoming reversaL :tf'tly wh<~t to Hay and what to leave un- BradlE-y's recently installed lighting l\Iillil<in triumphed ove1· St. Viator in said, since h1s space i!-4 nr·cessalily lim- system, was witnes::;ed hy a crowd of the Blue's homecoming attraction, 35-0.
Tuesday, November 12, 9 29
IDEAL SWEETS CO. Manufacturers of
IDEAL ' 'That Good lee Cream"
W holesale Confectionery and F ountain Supplies
itcd, Thus a (~()ntl'st In the Short Story three thou!-"and spectators. The Viatorians were unable to match ;-----------------------------· ;...-, :-~ hould do much to em·ouragc this diffi- Gam e J n tCJ·es t ing. speed with the l\Iillikin backs. cul t nnd highly disciplinary form of It wa.'> a. hard-fought battle from st.:t r t North Central trounced 1\It. Morris, wi'!Ung. to fini~h and the rather lopsided score 30-6 to chalk up its third win.
Jtulcs S illi Jll e . 31 to 6 gives l-ilLie indication of the UnJeasing a furious offense which Th e rules of the contest are n ot at a ll tight struggle that marked the g reater netted them uneven tou chdowns Mon·
complicated. T!1e limit of the stories is portion of the game. It was only dur· mouth a nnihilated A ugustana, 43-0 to IHU·('n hundn:d wo1·d~·. that is, they ing occasional let-downs in t he Viato1- t hrill a homecoming crowd a nd re ta in mu st 11 ot excec<l that numbe1·. rrhe defense that Bradley scored her five· a clean conference record. s ubj1)ct chose n is e ntirely unl !mited: touchdowns. A diminutive, but scra p- Illinois colleg-e scored its fir st cona nything m ay form t h e~ s ubject of a PY forwanl wall labol·ed tire lessly in at· ference win in trouncing Carthage 6-0 Sho1·t Story that can be handled effi ec· tempti ng to Mop the pl ung ing bach:s a nd thereby crimping the gayety of the ttvely a nd a deq uately within the space r1·om the Hill top school. Iris h pluck and latter's homecoming. R obe rt S chuster, a llot.tccl, so The Viatorian in its con- fight kep t the scon:) from mounting to captain and one of the outstanding test leaves full liberty to the w 1·!ters in heights that wo>..:lct r~ot have been at a ll ha lf-backs in t he conference, raced 70
the c hoice of the subject. All s to1·ies unreasonable when one cons iders the yard s fo r a t ouchdown. mu st be in the hands of the Managing weight a nd experience of the Bradley Eureka held the s urp1·ise pack· Edito1· of The Viator ian by 11 P. M., line, a nd the fl ee tness and all-round age of the week end; the Titans were 1\Londay, Decembe1· 9, 1929. Th!s is a ability of t heir backfield m en-tour of forced to extend themselves to the limit pos tive dead-li ne, a nd a ll manuscripts the best in t he con fe rence. to gain the victory. ha nded in atte1· that time will be re- E lmhurs t registe1·ed its triumph in jected. It is not necessary that the Runs 90 Yards. drubbing W heaton 34-0. Shurtleff eli· s tories be typewritten; they must, how· The one brig ht spot in Viator's offe n- maxed its homecoming with a 7·6 vic-ever, be perfectly legible, and if legibil - sive play cam e towards the close of thr! tory over 1\1cKendree by makin g good Hy a.nd hand-writing a1·e mutually ex- seco nd quarter, wh en Byt·on Eva rd, in- its ti·y for the extra point. c lus ives to a ny con testant, he had com pa rab le Iris h halfback a nd captain, Western T eachers annexed its t h ird bette1· have his m a nuscript typewritte n. r e turned a Bradley kick-off 90 yards consecutive conference win in spilling
\Vim1 ing St oz-ies Publis hed . f or a touchdow. The fighting little the Sta te T eachers, 14-6. The o utcome of the con test will be ha lfback provided the big thrill of th e In the n on -confer ence struggles,
a nno u nced in The Viatoria n of D ecem- gam e whe n he out-ran the enti re OJ)· Knox buried B eloit, 20-0 in its debu t ber 19, and if poss ible, t he prize story posing e leven in his unchallenged dash into the mjd-west confer en ce this sea-
fot· the only six points garnered for t he will be publis hed the n a lso. The sQc· team that he capta!ns. The first half son; Capt. D eforrest Hitchcock again ond best s tory will aJso be published in e nded wi t h the score, 13 to
6 in favor led Knox to victory, scoring two t{luch·
~:,:il~::~e~oJ·ian as soon as space will be of Bradley. The Bourbonnais boys fail- :~::1:· g::~:~h:::11 :e~~~~e:,~;n ~::~~:~ ed to s·cot·e in the second half while the paraiso and Southern T eachers celeHilltoppe rs added t hree more touc h-
The Prizes.
THE FRANKLIN PRESS CO. PRINTERS and STATIONERS
Prin ting, Engraving, Office Supplies, Loose l:eaf
Forms, Bind ers, Etc.
264 East Merchant Street Telephone 406 Kankakee, lll.
RIEL Y & RIEL Y CHAS. C. RIEL Y DONALD M. RIEL '
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS AND DEALERS
Electricians for St. Via tor College
Telephone 995 362 East Court Stret
D. J. O'LOUGHLIN, M. D. Practice Limited to
EYE, EAR,NOSE AND THROAT
Bell Telephone 253
602 City National Bank Bldg. KANKAKEE, ILl
The Viatorian is not a nnounci ng the downs before the final whistle blew. brated its h omecom•ing by trouncing prizes yet: that will come in the n ext Wolfe was t he big g un for the win · Cape Girardeau, 7-0. ,-----------------------------~-, issue, t hat of Novembe r 21. H owe ver, nCJ·, but Bali tz , Harms, and Swisher Little Nineteen s tandings: it may be said now that the p r izes are share~l honors with him. Schools- \V L Tied n ot to be scoffed at, and " 1ill come in Knox ................. .4 0 0 very handy at the t ime of the Christ- Summary :
mas Season. There will be a first and B 1·ad!ey Position M illil( in ....
-St. Via7.oJ· 1\!onmouth
....... ...... .4
............ 3
second prize, and honorable mention Balitz .. .............. .... L.E .. . Tooh ill North Central ........ ......... 3 will be given to the th:rd a nd f ou r t h Thornton ............ L.T. Mathews No . T eachers ........... 2 best stories. ITarte1· .................. L.G . . . ........ Logan L omba rd .. 2
'f he J udges. Searhealy ......... ....... C ...... . O'Malley Illinois ' Vesleya n .. 3 Three men quite \ve il qualified to dis· Harms ........... ... R.G. _ Verosk ie E. T eachers .................. 3
tingu ish the best s tories have consent- Gottlieb ............. .. R.T .. . 1\!Looney B radley .... 2
ed to act as· judges. 'l'heir names are "\Vaugh ............. ... R.E.. Gibbons So. Teachers not made public as yet, but ru fair and Mason ............... ... Q.B.. Hamilton \V. Teachers impartial decision will certainl y be Holl .................... R.H Clothier Eureka g-iven b y them. They will judge the Noole .................... L.I-I... Evarcl Elmhurst storiE-S from the usuaJ points of view : -n~olf ...................... F .B.. Furlong Illinois College Inte rest, effectiveness. ingenu ity, dia- Substitutions: B1·adley- Swisher for Shurtl~ff
Iogue (if there be any,} and q ua lity as Holl, McQueen for Balitz, Steiner for '~'heaton
a piece of English. Obviously, they Mason. Lake Forest can give little conside-ration to manu - Substitutions: Viator - Romary for 1\IcKendree scripts conk"Lin ing mistakes in spelliug Evanl, Hoog for Mooney, Karr f or State T eachers ot· grarnmatical blunclel'S, but it is a !- Clothier, Gorman for Evard, \Va r den Carthage most superfluous to state this, since for Hamilton. St. Yiator college men a1-e supposed to be a bove Score bYi Quarters- 1 2 3 4-T'l. Moun t M orris these pue1·ile literary peccadillos. Bradley ........................ ..... . 6 13 6-31
..... 2
......... 3 ...... 2
....... 1
...... .. 1
......... 1
.... 0 ... 0
.... 0 ....... 0 ....... 0
··-- ... 0 ........ 0
Ma nusC I' ii>ts N umbered. St. Viator ...... ............... 0 6 0 0- 6 Reliable Cleaners In order to make everyone confident Scoring-
that there can be no possibility of dis- Touchdowns VVolfe, 3; Mason, crim..lnation, no names will be put on Swisher, Evard. the manuscr!pts. Instead, each manu- Try'-for-goal-Xoble and Evard. script. when handed in to :r-.rr. \'\'arne, Officials-
will receive a number, and he will keep Referee-Horton (Springfield). a rccot·d of tbe author. Umpire---Eilson (W. & J).
All m~nuscrlpt:s, when submitted, become the prOIJerty of 'l' he Viatorian. Ko manuscripts will be returned.
Head Linesman-Pierce (Wesleyan). Field Judge-Carlin (Northwestern).
Kankakee, Ill.
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Prompt and Efficient Service through our agent-
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Room 219 Roy HaU
T he name ··runaway star'' il::tS been giYe ll to ·'Groombridge, 1830." a 6-7 magnitude son In Ursa i\Injor. rt bas the excepti onH il y large proper motion of 7 inches nnnunlly. rts real motion in spare is about 200 miles per second
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I
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