Monday, Nov. 04, 1929

COMING

National Affairs

Nov. 4-9--National Council of Women of the U. S. meets in Manhattan.

Nov. 5-7--Nebraska celebrates its Diamond Jubilee.

Nov. 11--Armistice Day.

Nov. 12-14--National Conference on Improving Government meets in Chicago.

Foreign News

Nov. 2-9--Final week of Institute of Pacific Relations at Kyoto.

Nov. 5--In England, Guy Fawkes' Day; national celebration with fireworks and bonfires commemorating Fawkes' "gunpowder plot" (1604).

Nov. 9--Prince of Wales presides at dinner in London's Parliament Building for all wearers of the Victoria Cross (highest British military decoration).

Nov. 9--Installation of Sir William Waterlow, new Lord Mayor of London.

Nov. 12--Chinese national celebration of the birthday of the late Dr. Sun Yat-Sen.

Nov. 17--Presidential election in Mexico. Candidates: Pascual Ortiz Rubio (National Revolutionary); Jose Vasconcelos (Anti-Reelectionist).

Aeronautics

Nov. 8-10--Intercollegiate aeronautic conference at Columbus, Ohio.

Nov. 9-17--Western aircraft show at Los Angeles.

Nov. 10--Opening of Hawaiian Airways, Ltd., new inter-island air service.

Nov. 11--Dedication of Municipal Airport at Duluth, Minn.

Nov. 15--Dedication of Curtiss-Steinberg Airport at St. Louis; of Kinsolving Airport at Abilene, Tex.

Religion

Nov. 12, 13--Seminar concerning relations of Catholics, Jews and Protestants at Harvard University. Speaker: President Abbott Lawrence Lowell.

Nov. 13--Protestant Episcopal House of Bishops meets at Washington. Purpose: election of presiding bishop to succeed the late Right Rev. John Gardner Murray of Maryland.

Science

Nov. 7--Close of world engineering congress at Tokyo.

Nov. 8--Mme. Marie Curie sails for France.

Press

Nov. 12. 13--American Newspaper Publishers' Association meets at Asheville, N. C.

Business

Nov. 7, 8--Mid-Continent Trust Conference meets at Detroit.

Nov. 13-16--American Institute of Steel Construction meets at Biloxi, Miss.

Sport

FOOTBALL (Nov. 9)

East: Brown v. Dartmouth at Providence; Columbia v. Colgate at New York;

N. Y. U. v. Georgia at New York; Pennsylvania v. Penn State at Philadelphia; Princeton v. Lehigh at Princeton; Navy v. Georgetown at Annapolis; Wesleyan v. Williams at Middletown; Yale v. Maryland at New Haven.

South: Alabama v. Kentucky at Montgomery; South Carolina v. North Carolina at Columbia; Tulane v. Alabama Poly at New Orleans; Vanderbilt v. Georgia Tech at Nashville; Virginia v. V. P. I. at Charlottesville.

Midwest: Chicago v. Wisconsin at Chicago; Illinois v. Army at Urbana; Iowa v. Minnesota at Iowa City; Notre Dame v. Drake at Chicago; Ohio State v. Northwestern at Columbus.

West: California Tech v. Redlands at Pasadena; Southern California v. Nevada at Los Angeles; Washington v. Stanford at Seattle; Washington State v. Idaho at Pullman.

GOLF

Nov. 12, 13--Mid-South open at Pinehurst, N. C.

Nov. 15-17--Hawaiian open at Honolulu.

HORSES

Nov. 2--Close of Boston Horse Show.

Nov. 7-13--National Horse Show in Manhattan.

ICE HOCKEY

Nov. 10--Season opening of Canadian-American Hockey League (professional).

GOING

Best Plays in Manhattan

STREET SCENE--Life cycles in the delicatessen district.

JOURNEY'S END--Britain's best blood congeals in the trenches.

IT'S A WISE CHILD--This is the play with the funny iceman (Sidney Toler).

STRICTLY DISHONORABLE--This one has the funny policeman (Edward J. McNamara).

JUNE MOON--This one has the uproarious Broadway pianist (Harry Rosenthal).

Civic REPERTORY THEATRE--The worthiest dramas in town (Tchekov, the Quinteros, Anet), splendidly acted by Eva Le Gallienne and company.

ROPE'S END--The caviar of criminality.

SUBWAY EXPRESS--Ingenious murder underground.

THE CRIMINAL CODE--Arthur Byron powerfully interprets human injustice.

Musical: WHOOPEE; FOLLOW THRU; THE LITTLE SHOW; HOT CHOCOLATES; SWEET ADELINE; GEORGE WHITE'S SCANDALS.

Best Pictures

WELCOME DANGER (Harold Lloyd)--Immensely funny talkie of botany and crime.

DISRAELI (George Arliss)--Fine characterization of the mahogany epoch in English politics.

MADAME X (Ruth Chatterton)--Old play of a lady's decline made into an effective talkie.

HALLELUJAH (directed by King Vidor) --Compact, realistic story dealing with Negroes.

WHY BRING THAT UP?--Moran and Mack's dialog.