I TWO 1"N TT -IFr:NUH ,MC-.N 'fDAILY " v 4X-7['46 Vl ,11 1s.1 -.A-IL - ait . * . A I . ./ N i'A.JAJ> 4 IU.., TO LECTURE HERE, Dr. F. C. WHoods Will Speak Under The~ Auspices Of Galens, Honorary Junior .Medical Fraternity DIREC'TOR AT COLUMBIA COLUMBIA'S FAMOUS SCIENTIST WAS ONCE POOR IMMIGRANT LAD IMONROE.--Fire believed .to have been caused by defective wiring, dam- aged the Reaper theater to the amount of $2,000 recently. F, List Of h~In ilricalvetso MEDITERRANEAN CRIJS! C-ROUND THIE WORLD, WEST INDIES, ETC.' S An~y LnsAry Steamier, Any ~~~ Maki: Reservations NOWV~ A Svkail depos tguaraptee.s spc* in aay c~aae p~iae 6412'Xc. E .KJ fL- Izci1 Local Agerat .G U BE ALl.L 'NES CCI E. IHuron St. Anak lm, VMk ' =1 ITUNIS, North has visited South sandstorm which twon das. Africa.-A cyclone Tunista, raising a lasted more than Dr. Francis Carte Wood, director of the institution for caner research at Coumba university, wll speak on '"Rublc health Ap~cts of.Cpcer i lation to Diaiosis Prevetion, and 1rTtenen" vat 8 o'clock tomorr w night .ig Natural Science auditrium unider .te auspices of Gi n, liotir- ary junior-medical soiet, it was an- nounced yesterday.I Dr. Wood, who is regarded as one of6ottnigfgrsi h ol of cancer research, therapeutics, and popular cancer education today, has jufst ireturned from Huurope where h inade an extensive study of a number of new cancer"discoveries. After his graduation from the Co- lumba College of Physicians and Sur- geons, a two and a half year surgical internship in St Luke's hospital in New ;York city, and a study trip abroad, Dr. Wood returned to St. Luke's hospital as pathologist, a po- sition which he has held continuous- ly for28"years. In 1912, after Colum- bia university received a gift' of $1b0,000 for cancer research from George Crocker, Dr. Wood was select - ed to direct the work of the institute. Since Sut. 4%WVhospital and the can- cer nso tte are in close proximity, he was ablef to continue his intere st in clinical mdicne, having been for yea's atikding "physician to the hos- pital. Dr. Wood has installed and at pres- ent directs an elaborate radio-thera- peutlti department in St. Luke's hos- pital., More than 1,000 new cases of cancer are treated each year by the department AA great share of Dr. Wood' time is spent in examining, on an extensive Sale, conclusions which have been advanced by other research workers kie i tt of the Journal of Can- cer R; ac, and was one of the or- ganlz,_ a p4is at present the vice- presislit, e American Society for Control o5 icer. He is the author of.11'! -ilanoi"and "Chemical and .Mcrosopical Diagnosis" and for years has been the editor of the fam- ous text bok on. pthology written by the late Drs. Delafield and Prudden. Oniderdonk To Give1 Picture Dialogue To Tolstoy Club (Continued from Page One) Tomorrow's dialogue will ;put on'e of the lecturer's theories into actualf practice. Hie has long believed that little is actually learned from a le- ture or sermon, but that the speakers' views may be clearly understood by the audience if pictures illustrating the thouht advanced are shown and ezwlaned. liHe believes that word peace could be -greatly facilitated by the judicious use of motion pictures, alit according to a recent interview in The Daily, he has written several scenarios with that view in mind, but has been inable to secure coopera- tion i$_ having thenm produced. IntJ. orrow's talk he will show picturesllustrating the thoughts hie wishes td'give his audience and will interpret these illustrations. When interviewed yesterday, Dr. Onderdonk said that he was particu- larly anxious to correct the common fallacy regarding Tolstoy as a Bol- shevik.rain America, he says, where TtIolstoy is not widely read, people kiiow n-y that h was a Russian and a radical and assume that he mrust be a Communist. The truth of the mat- ter is that it is against the law in Soviet ,.ssia; to have his works in ones' ipo'ession, le also believes that maney persons regard the Russian as merely a writer of interesting nov- els, whxereas_ he considers him the founder of; -Fgeat philosophy on re- ligion, ethics, and war. Dr. Onderdonk continued, "Tolstoy's significance has not been appreciated in the protetant west, where a grad- ual enightment of religious thought has been developing for centuries, and many of his conclusions, which sound revolutionary to southern and western Europeans, mean nothing in partie- lar. But what George Fox was for j England and America, Tolstoy is be- coming to Russia and Bulgaria. Dur- ing the first year of the war more than 300 Tolstoyans refused military service in Russia. Also in Austria. there were. Tolstoyan "conscientious objectors." In these countries the followers of the writer are united into national societies numbering thous- ands of members. "Who ever has experienced the Mower of Tolstoy's writings 'realizes that their influence has but begun and that this great messenger of Godl will yct harvest many souls for the kingdomi. Hi-s works include discus- sions on the problems of Christianity, war, sex, and ethics, and provide somne{ cf the most interesting and worth while reading ever published. In pro- testant countries we could have no better weapons to combat militarism and materialism than Tolstoy's books, c r he is the prophet whom God sent for this age." (By Central Press) In 1374 a 16-year-old lad from B! grade, Michael Pupin, came to Amer-- lca as an inimigrant steerage pa:-, -= senger. Today(i(he is a professor of° el~Ctro-,mchlanics at Colunmbia ._ihi'T s i e l' s v and thl ~ie incoming pi sident of Tat1els=s ,ythe Amen ,:an A.ssociation for the Adl- Ivancement of Science. r , Dri. PupiJn arrived in this country 1= a n y 1011ete With but five cents in his pocket afl(1 one' suit of' clothes. h1is 'first job I- j' was (lI v~iig a team of mules on a! a r i v Delaware farmi. IHe was graduted an wr1na'l f, om Colunnbia university and afte~r 1o furthr mul)Cll~lltstudy he decidled i n i at sae iu to go to (;ermwny to perfect himself t s d d for a se eifltifi(' career. ! W hen a lepirtm ent of engineering 1 1p r e T r e fl ' " ws op n d a , C lu b a r upnIw s p t n c a g . W h l- i m of the Columbia faculty hie has has, 'several important inventions in the - electrical field to his cred it. The first X-ray photos to lbe nmade in Americ aI to drive a nmule team. - W r a .- Many mesdals aind honors have been bestowed upon hime in recognition of . hisc-fetiicresearch. -D a I - Harvardb'o' rIs Honord AboadtAnn rborDairy Coo ICAMBRIDGE, Mass., Jan. 19.--Fo< E O EOF PR°M L the second time since its fondation E IIO F U E- an American has received the mathie- matical lprize awarded by the Royal IIIIIsilllliIli IIlIiIwliIII1iIIiiiIUIIlIIIllhiIIIi#'Il IIliIIIII~ilt~~~illt 1I IjII ji Dr. Micintel I. Tulin etroit Will Hear ConcertI By Glee Club Under the sponsorship of the Vor- tex club, a noonday luncheon organi- z ation, the Varsity; Glee, club will pre- sent a concert on Thursday, Feb. 4,1 In, Detroit..,rThe concert will be held in the auditorium of the. Cass Techni- cal high ,ichool, which, it is said, is the largest in the city. FAll the preparations for the concert are being made by the members of the Vortex club and the proceeds will go toward the building fund of Camp Brady, the official camp of the Detroit Council of the Boy Scouts of America, which was recently destroyed by fire. A scout bugle corps will open the pro: gram and a group of scouts will stage a demonstration of scoutcraft during the intermission and after the concert. }In 'addition to the regular numbers given by the entire club, Barre Hill, '26, and Otto C. Koch, '27, will render solos, according to Kurt J. Kremlick, '26, student manager of the club. 'he Intercollegiate Glee Clubs, Inc., will hold their annual convention in Chicago on Feb. 22, to determine the best glee club in the mid-western col- leges and universities. The winning club will go to New York later in the' year to compete with the best organi- zations in the east, to decide the na- tional championship. Theodore Iar- rison, director of the Michigan club, will take 24 men to Chicago with hime on. this trip. While in Chcago, the men wil be the guests of the Michigan alumni at their weekly luncheon. ' Academy of Belgium. This time Prof. W. C. (rauiistein of. the department of Mathciatica of Harvard university has been successful in competition fcr this trophy. FIRST S1111I)ENT-PRI~NTED M ANNUAI, APPEARS AT IOWA IOWA CITY, Iowa, Jan. 19.-*For the first tine in any American univer- sity, a junior annual or year-book will be printed. in a student ownedl printing plant, when the 1926 Hawk- eye, annual of the University of Iowa, rolls from the presses of the student publication body here. Dangerous acids r 2O° Discount On Our4 Entire Stock Cross-section of a tooth, showing Acid Dec"y at The Danger Line. Acid Decay, re- suit from foods which collect and ferment --which cause APPLIED ARTS 2 Nickels Arcade The Slop for Unique Gifts in those tiny PAY YOUR SUBSCRIPTION- NOW.' V-shaped crev-. 1' ices where gums meet teeth- Whitne THEATRE j n2 hit OYONE NIGHTJa 2 Orchiestra $1.40, Balcony $2.00, $1.50, $1.0) Plus Tax SEATS NOW SELLINGn Tl'l oe11 fiing D~esirable Locations Wlill Find It, Advisable to Secure :P'icket's Now. FRESH FROM FOUR WEEKS TRIUMPH IN DETROT r E fL .uHSE !S ATEf16N 4ru 0R I l The Danger Line. Squibb's Dental Cream, made with Squibb's Milk of Magnesia, ;safely. and promptly neutral- izes these 'dangerous acids- safeguards your teeth from Acid Decay and relieves sen- sitiveness. Use it regularly. At druggists. SqU IBB'S DENIAL CREAM 'A/oe wirthtquibb&Milk ofM~nesi R." R. SQUIBB & 'SON~S, Chemists to t'he Dental and Medical Professions since 1858. with -111. MULLIGAXN and Mll.G RRTX Tha "Tbi9 =,'Chilling, uEiihug'" i in oci B X. - * Tha "ThillinAli The~ater Records in, INEW YORKOSTON L061D FUNNIEST SHOW ON EARTH 0 1925 , i4 Ben Bernie and Elis Orchestra Have, Made .a' New Electrically Recorded Brunswick Record that you should hear i I THE BRUNSWICK PANATROPE Have you seen and heard this re- markable instrument yet? If not, a real treat is in store for you. We are unable to adequately describe it here except to say that it is neither a phonograph nor a radio but an entirely new musical instru- Ask to I-lear No. 2992 Also No. 2990 and No. 3013 A LITTLE BIT BAD--Fox Trot SLEEPY TIME GAL Ben Bernie's OrchestIra I FOUND SOMEBODY TO LOVE SLEEPY TIME GAL N~ick, Lucas MIAMI YOU FORGOT TO REMEMBER Al Jolson w'ith Carl Fenton's Orchestra ii i 1 C 5 II