Football SPORT Little Red Riding Harvard was paid a visit by a new kind of grandmother, a Princeton tiger thinly disguised beneath popular betting odds. "The better to eat you with, my dear," quoth the tiger, leaping out of the locker room and baring its chief fangs, Backs Slagle and Williams. No doughty woodsman bobbed up at the psychological moment to save the heroine and for a gruesome hour or so the sound of munching was heard on Soldiers' Field. At twilight, an autopsy was performed which revealed Harvard's condition as the most serious she has ever been in after a meeting with her New Jersey relative. Score: Princeton 34, Harvard 0. While the Princeton cat was away, mice from Rutgers and Lafayette went over and played in Palmer Stadium. Lafayette fumbled and fumbled and fumbled, but would in no case have been a match for rugged Rutgers. Hulking Homer Hazel,* 226-pound AllAmerican back, and his fleet fellow, Henry Benkert, smashed and scampered through every obstruction Lafayette could rear, at one point forming 72 yards' worth of interference for ¡ Quarterback Terrill. Score: Rutgers 43, Lafayette 7. Yale, who was planning to go calling in Princeton the next week, spent a restful afternoon at home, letting her second string entertain Maryland with a collection of touchdowns and faultless field goals. Score: Yale 47, Maryland 0. Pennsylvania's guns, unspiked this season, missed fire consistently when trained on Georgetown. Fullback Al Kruez was chief gunner. Four times he set his sights for a field goal, three shots sailing wide, the other ricocheting backwards off a Georgetown mast. Finally his crew moved him up to the 21-yard line where he touched off a direct hit. Score: Pennsylvania 3, Georgetown 0. Up in New Hampshire, Dartmouth gave Boston University a hardy New England reception. Guard Abodeely of Boston stood forward staunchly, but was shaken so thoroughly that a bone in his leg came apart. Dartmouth sub*Hazel, aged 29, is the father of three. As TIME, The Weekly News-Magazine. Editors-Briton Hadden and Henry R. Luce. sociates Manfred Gottfried (National Affairs), John S. Martin, Thomas J. C. Martyn (Foreign News), Jack A. Thomas (Books). Weekly Contributors-Ernest Brennecke, John Farrar, Willard T. Ingalls, Alexander Klemin, Peter Mathews, Wells Root, Preston Lockwood, Niven Busch. Published by TIME, Inc., H. R. Luce, Pres.; J. S. Martin, VicePres.; B. Hadden, Secy-Treas.; 236 E. 39th St., New York City. Subscription rate, one year, postpaid: In the United States and Mexico, $5.00; in Canada, $5.50; elsewhere, $6.00. For advertising rates address: Robert L. Johnson, Advertising Manager, TIME, 236 E. 39th St., New York City; New England representatives, Sweeney & Price, 127 Federal St., Boston, Mass.; Western representatives, Powers & Stone, 38 S. Dearborn St., Chicago, Circulation M. stitutes conducted the latter half of the affair, felled a flight of passes. Score: Dartmouth 38, Boston University 0. Wesleyan waded beyond her depth at Williamstown, drowned without a struggle. Score: Williams 43, Wes leyan 0. Childe Harold Grange* to a dark tower came, at Stagg Field, Chicago. Instead of waiting, as most people do, to stop him after he got started, Chicago anticipated the Grange assault with counter-irritants. Before Coach Zuppke could unleash his red lightning, Coach Stagg had loosed big Austin McCarty, big Harry Thomas. The Illinois line wavered, broke twice, three times. When Grange finally got under way, he scoured up and down the field frantically, covering 300 yards, of which 80 measured his zig-zag trail to the touchdown that saved a tie to Illinois. Score: Chicago 21, Illinois 21. Michigan flung herself on Northwestern, 27 to 0; Notre Dame herself on Wisconsin, 38 to 3. Indiana, an outsider in the Big Ten race, left Ohio State at the post, 12 to 7, thus bringing to an end Ohio's sleepless nights over the title. The title rested between Illinois and Chicago, both unbeaten, but the latter tied twice to Illinois' once. In the Missouri Valley, Drake outplayed Kansas in a duel of punts but suffered her spotless record to be smirched with a 6-to-6 tie. Missouri meantime tucked away Oklahoma, 10 to 0. Iowa squeaked out of her Butler game, 7 to 0. Ames jaunted up to Minneapolis, tied the Minnesota Gophers on their own prairie, 7 to 7. Farther west, it was California vs. Washington, and the champion Golden Whales were all but harpooned, 7 to 7. Idaho rose up and smote Oregon, 13 to 0. Leland Stanford found Utah only mildly entertaining, won 30 to 0. Southern California took more punishment, this time from St. Mary's, 14 to 10. The big game of the cotton belt went to Baylor, 28 points to Texas' 10. Georgia Tech handled Louisiana State nicely, 14 to 7; Georgia sought out Virginia, punished her 7 to 0 in a furious game. Doodle At Mexico City, Yankee Doodle came to town, riding on the railroad; stuck all the feathers in his cap and called it a day. The feathers were Mexico's national tennis titles. Those who took turns being Yankee Doodle: Vincent Richards, singles; Vincent Richards and Ray Casey, doubles; Mary K. Browne, *Witness to the fame of this man was born last week when: (1) The Wheaton (Ill.) Town Council christened Wheaton's new high school football grounds, "Grange Field"; (2) When the Wills St. Claire automobile com singles; Charlotte Hosmer aus Miss Tennant, doubles. Richard also Yankee Doodle in the 1923 can singles. A World and William T. ("Big Bill") T perched securely atop the tennis w these several years, looked dow neath him and selected ten players seemed to him to reach upwards 1) VI. est to the judgment seat: Richards, 2) William M. Jolmsta Réné La Coste, France, 4) Geral Patterson, Australia, 5) Manuel AlSpain, 6) Pat O'hara Wood, Ater 7) Jean Borotra, France, 8) H Kinsey, 9) Henri Cochet, France, Baron de Morpurgo, Italy. exte The rest of the tennis world c. tated. Surely Tilden had some courtesies in this ranking. Morpurgo before Wallace Jolis Before Colonel Kingscote of Engi Patterson before Alonso, before Etra?" Well, perhaps. Tilden had pl all these men. He knew the talk. Mover, Tilden gave reasons, and ther gested that the list was 'far from. curate." What none would' dispute th many smiled was the g humored, necessary, yet quaint on sion of the writer's name from t whole consideration. There was a te nis world-and Tilden. over MILESTONES Engaged. Miss Harriet Winthr McKim, daughter of Mr. and M Winthrop McKim of Tuxedo Park, Augustus B. Field Jr., son of Mr. a Mrs. A. B. Field, of Manhattan. B are direct descendants of Thomas Bud anan, 18th Century merchant, whe great landholdings in New Yor founded many a proud fortune. Married. Miss Anita Damros daughter of Walter Damrosch, fam conductor of the New York Symph Orchestra, to Robert Littell, one of t editors of The New Republic; in Ma hattan, on her 21st birthday. Gran daughter of James G. Blaine Maine), she is niece of Anita McCor mick Blaine of Chicago. Married. Miss Sylvia G. Van Rens selaer, granddaughter of Mrs. Joi King Van Rensselaer, of Manhattan, t Harold Ingalls Sewall, of Boston 2 Porto Rico; in Manhattan. It claimed that Miss Van Rensselaer, member of one of the oldest famili in the U. S., can trace her descer through nine Colonial Governors from the famed Jack Spratt of nursery rhyme. Married. Mrs. Lowell Lloyd, c Boston, to Randal Thomas Mowbra Rawdon Berkeley, eighth Earl Berkeley, in London. Married. Mrs. Gertrude T. Doug | las Peabody to Peter A. B. Widener II. son of Joseph E. Widener of Philade'phia. financier and art collector. Mr Peabody last month obtained her Μ' ILLIONS upons millions of books fill the shelves of our libraries. Books of every conceivable kind, on every conceivable subject. So many books that their very number staggers us. Within these illimitable rows of books are treasures richer than Ali Baba's cave ever held. Here is knowledge, education, culture, entertainment. The jewels of civilization are within these books. What priceless benefits we could obtain from them-if only we had time to read them! There is the problem. How can we hope to read even a small fraction of all the good books in the world? Which are the ones we should read, and where shall we begin? It is an embarrassment of riches. In our perplexity we put off the worth-while reading we have promised ourselves to do. We seldom get beyond the daily program. The vital need Now, what is really needed is a book that will tell us how to get the most out of the books that are already in the world-a book that will tell us what to read-and when. The book you see pictured above is that book. Here at last is the key to the literature of the world; the solution to the reading problem of the busy man or woman. For this book contains the famous new reading plan created by nine eminent men of letters-Dr. Lyman Abbott, John Macy, Richard Le Gal'ienne, Asa Don Dickinson, Dr. Bliss Perry, Thomas L. Masson, Dr. Henry van Dyke, George Iles, and Dr. Hamilton Wright Mabie. A unique new plan The plan that these great authorities devised is absolutely unique. From the immortal literature of the world these men have selected just the element essential to a cultured person's reading. And these selections they have arranged in a day-by-day program covering a full year. Your reading is scheduled for each day. And the selections are so arranged as to be of timely interest. Thus, on July 14th, the anniversary of the fall of the Bastille, our reading takes us into the stirring days of the French Revolution. Or, on November 13th, the anniversary of the birth of Robert Louis Stevenson, you read a biographical sketch and several selections from his works. Your reading is filled with fascinating variety, it takes you among the masterpieces of fiction, historical description, poetry, drama, essays, biography. Only twenty minutes a day are required. Yet almost before you realize it, you have acquired a broad grasp of the world's important literature. You feel at home in a discussion of the works of such immortal mas ters as Addison, Balzac, Barrie, Boccaccio, Burns, Byron, Carlyle, Conrad, De Quincey, Dickens, Emerson, Galsworthy, Washington Irving, Whitman, and others. A remarkable offer It would be difficult to set a price upon The Daily Reading Guide. Its value to intelligent men and women is almost inestimable. But you are not asked to purchase The Daily Reading Guide. A remarkable offer brings it to you FREE. A Hmited number of copies are to be distributed without cost, for the publishers believe that by this simple new plan that makes it so easy to read good literature many people will be encouraged to do more worth-while reading. So by taking advantage of this introductory offer NOW, you will receive one of the free copies. Simply mail the coupon, enclosing only 25 cents to help cover the osts of handling and postage and The Daily Reading Guide will come to you at once. To avoid disappointment it is important to send at once. NELSON DOUBLEDAY, Inc. DEPT. Y 7211 Garden City, New York Nelson Doubleday. Inc., Dept. Y 7211 Gentlemen: Please send me, entirely without ob ligation, a copy of The Daily Reading Guide, containing nearly 200 pages. bound in rich blue cloth, which contains the complete new plan created by nine eminent men of letters for reading the essential literature of the world in only 20 minutes a day. 1 enclose 25 cents (in currency or stamps) to pay handling and shipping charges. There is to be no further cost. Already this fascinating new plan of read- Name ing has been hailed with delight by thousands. This is just what I have always wanted!" people say when they see this book-the only book of its kind in the world. Address City .State....... In the Land of the Laughing Buddha by Upton Close. China in the throes of its present political upheaval. China the vast, the ancient, in a chaos of modern ideas, with a faithful picture of Chinese life of today, intimately and often thrillingly told .$3.50 The Sea Gypsy By Edward Salisbury Merian C. Cooper Here is the romantic account of the famous little yacht "Wisdom" and her attempted cruise around the world. She went thru the whole gamut of sea adventures until her final burning in a Sicilian shipyard. A tale to delight lovers of travel. Beautifully illustrated with photographs of the voyage The Windows of Westminster $3.50 By the Gentleman with the Duster An intelligent, unbiased and fearless estimate of the most powerful members of the Tory party who comprise the present British government ..$2.50 For Cross Word The Carolyn Wells Cross Word Puzzle Book 52 intriguing puzzles by the master of The Putnam Cross Word 52 original puzzles by the experts J. C. Putnam's Junior Cross Word Puzzle Book 30 puzzles in the form of birds and animals for children. With pencil attached ..$1.00 Putnam's Word Book 100,000 unusual words designed for quick and convenient reference..$1.90 G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS 2 West 45th Street, New York N. Y. Divorce Rumored. Mrs. Mathilda Townsend Gerry, from her husband, Peter Goelet Gerry, U. S. Senator from Rhode Island; in Paris. Mrs. Gerry, prominent hostess in Washington, D. C., last January bought a string of dark pearls from Felix Yusupov, Russian princeling, allegedly valued at $400,000. Cucd for Alienation. Mrs. Beatrice W. Flagler, widow of John H. Flagler, Standard Oil Magnate, by Mrs. Max Goldreich, New Zitta, Germany, whose husband ("Professor Armand Sullivan") conducted a physical culture parlor in Manhattan. As possible assuagement for charges not made public, $100,000 was named. In the pages of metropolitan dailies was revealed the face of a marcelled Brobdingnagian, beetle-browed, curly-lipped. Died. Princess Giambattista Rospigliosi, née Ethel Bronson, daughter of the late Isaac Bronson of Manhattan; in Rome. The house of Rospigliosi, one of the oldest in Italy, dates back to 1330, was once headed by Pope Clement IX. Died. Lady Mary Booth, 42, wife of Sir Alfred Booth, former Chairman of the Cunard Steamship Line; at Stamford, Conn., after a short illness. Died. Dr. Bergonie, röntgenologist of Bordeaux, France; in Paris. (See MEDICINE.) Died. Dr. William Tillinghast Bull, 56, once famed football player, long member of the Yale University coaching staff; in Asheville, N. C., of tuberculosis. His titanic drop-kicks, as a member of the Yale teams of 1887-88, are now legendary. Died. Reginald Ronalds, onetime Rooseveltian Rough Rider; in Mexico, when he was climbing a mountain to inspect gold and silver mines of which he was part owner. His daughter by his first marriage was known as 'the frappéed baby" from cold storage methods used to cure a childish illness. His mother, Mrs. Pierre Lorillard Ronalds, was a favorite of Queen Victoria. Died. Henry Cabot Lodge, 74, of Massachusetts; in Cambridge, Mass. (See CONGRESS.) Died. Colonel P. H. Brewster, 78, Georgia's oldest practicing attorney; in Atlanta. When elected to the presidency of the Atlanta Bar Association, he was asked how long he intended to practice. "Just as long as I live," said he. Died. Cornelius Cole, 102, oldest ex-U. S. Senator; in Los Angeles. He was a placer-miner in California in '49, knew well the bravest days of the Golden State-the stagecoach, the ponyexpress, the vigilantes. Lincoln's friend, he heard the Gettysburg address, was with the President on the day of his assassination. He was one of the twelve who organized the Central Pacific Railroad; the last of that stern company of senators who im POINT with PRID Ifter a cursory view of TIME'S mary of events, the Generous C. points with pride to: The Spirit of Pittsburgh, crying with a strong voice. (Page 20, c 1.) An almost forgotten historical work is now brought to ght. Rarely found except in private collections, this istory gives a most vivid description of decadent Rome. ts revelations, taken from the writers of the time, are stounding. Not the Caesars, but their women were the eal rulers of Rome. Never were women mightier in power or more abandoned in morals. Their ascendency over the Romans gives the only reasonable explanation of the Empire's tragic dissolution. Never in history have women's fascinations worked greater evil, as these two volumes disclose. Conditions coday present startling parallels-the growing power of woman, the wide-spread love of luxury, the admixture of races and alien customs and political creeds. In Rome we see the greatest depths of iniquity, the orgies and poison plottings of the wives of Caligula, of Nero, of Commodus, of Gallienus. The crimes of the Borgias seem tame in comparison with Messalina. The wickedness of the French court pales before the utter depravity that flaunted itself in Roman palaces. morality, but only to add zest to the ensuing Saturnalia. Occasionally a noble Queen stayed the tide of imThus Livia, the wife of Augustus, and one of the most brilliant and virtuous women of history, was succeeded by Caesonia, who drove Caligula insane with a lovepotion, and by Messalina, Aggripina and Domita, whose passionate excesses debauched the whole race. The Lives and Secret Intrigues of the Roman Empresses This fascinating and illuminating history of the virtues and vices of the Roman Empresses is a true translation from the original French of Jacques de Serviez, a nobleman and gifted historian of the early 18th Century. Written presumably as a rebuke to the extravagancies of his Bourbon court, it stands today as one of the most authoritative and penetrating descriptions of life under the Caesars. The pages abound in graphic portrayals of feminine character and dramatic episodes. We are shown the gentle, stoic philosopher, Marcus Aurelius, in his study, FREE while in an adjoining apartment his Empress, A pre-publication brochure containing specimen pages and the price and terms is now being prepared. This brochure will be sent FREE to all who mail the coupon attached here. If you wish to consider the eventual ownership of this rare history in two volumes of magnificent printing and binding, it is highly advisable to mail coupon today. Name Address The American Anthropological Society, 45 West 45th St., Dept. TN, New York City. Gentlemen: Please send me at once the pre-publication Brochure with specimen pages on The Lives and Secret Intrigues of the Roman Empresses. This is neither to cost me nor obligate me in the slightest. State. Which space by the thickness HE picture shows the ends of two telephone receiver magnets. The spaces indicated by the black arrows are equal in size to the unaided eye. But the extremely fine measuring instruments which Western Electric uses, show one space to be wider than the other by the thickness of a bee's wings. Even so small a difference is too great to pass the rigid inspection which watches over the making of your telephone. This care for detail is one reason why your telephone is so dependable. It is typical of the whole work of producing Western Electric equipment, and is a manufacturing habit which dates back to the very beginning of telephone history Under the receiver cap is a thin disc of iron. For proper voice reception. the distance between disc and magnet must be fixed with minute accuracy. The operative shown here, by grinding the magnet unit, makes this distance just right. Western Electric SINCE 1869 MAKERS OF ELECTRICAL 79-APR-19-26 EQUIPMENT |