Award American Ambassador Degree at Oxford In a colorful ceremony at Oxford university in England. Robert W. Bingham, United States ambassa dor, received the honorary degree of doctor of civil law as a gesture of friendship with the United States and recognition of personal merit. Shown just before the ceremony, are (left to right) Ambassador Bingham: Dr. Cyril Bailey, the public orator; and Joseph A. C. Avenol, secretary general of the League of Nations, who also received honorary degrees. SETTLES WITH INSULL j Mme. Helen Coyimzoglu, of Ath ens, Greece, who recently accepted A settlement for her claims against Samuel Insull, former utilities mag nate, for her services while she sheltered him during his fugitive days in Athens in 1933 and 1934. The Grecian beauty journeyed all the way to Chicago from Greece. Her attorney agreed to a settlement reported at $4,500. Champion Steer Brings S3 a Pound G-Page. the 1936 grand championship steer at the recent International Live Stock exposition in Chicago was sold at auction for $3 a pound or a total of $3,060, since its weight was 1,020 pounds. The champion, an Aberdeen Angus, owned by the Oklahoma A. & M. college, is shown above in care of Arthur MacArthur, chief herdsman of the college. New Plane Folds Wings for Speed The new “Varivol” plane, invented by Jacques Gerin of Paris, France, which folds its wings while in flight to increase its speed. The maximum speed is 300 kilometers an hour. The full wing surface is 23 square meters and the reduced surface is 71 square meters. The plane weighs 1,300 kilograms. TUGWELL’S SUCCESSOR W. W. Alexander, assistant re settlement administrator. He will replace Dr. Rexford Guy Tugwell, who resigned as rural resettlement administrator to accept an execu tive position with a large New York business firm. Sunset Silhouette on California Strand Coronado’s Silver Strand, near San Diego, Calif., is an autumn and winter playground for America’s social register set. In the above photo, three of the younger set are shown on the famous strand at even tide. V Scenes and Persons in the Current News 1—Wearing new uniforms and specially designed steel helmets, a battalion of the Red army parados in Moscow. 2—Edward F. McGrady (standing) confers with labor and transportation officials in San Francisco to provide food for Alaska, shut off by maritime strike. 3 -M. Max Dormoy, appointed to the French cabinet post vacated by the suicide of M. Roger Salengrol. Expedition Sails for South Seas Members of the Denison-Orockett expedition of the Academy of Nat ural Sciences of Philadelphia aboard their schooner “Chiva” before sail ing from Gloucester, Mass., for a study of anthropology and zoological specimens on seldom visited islands of the South Seas. TO WED ‘TEDDY’S KIN’; . .. Jr-X..vl*x...s ......v.. .. .-.t Miss Mary Lowe Gaddis of Mil ton, Mass., whose engagement to Kcrmit Roosevelt, Jr., grandson of the late President Theodore Roose velt, was announced by her moth er, Mrs. Avery Gaddis. Miss Gad dis, who made her debut last win ter, is a sophomore at Radcliffe college. University of Iowa Tries Out Dry Night Club j First nighters at the latest educational experiment, ‘he University of Iowa sponsored liquorless night club established so “that students would have home-town entertainment and would remain olT dangerous high ways over the week ends.” Called the Silver Shadow, the club had its premier recently with a complete floor show and even a wandering troubadour, Donato Petruceelli, law student, shown above. ^_$_ . GRAIN GROWING KING | Herman Trelle of Wembley, Al berta, Canada, who won the grand championship for both wheat and oats at the International Live Stock exposition and Grain and Hay show at Chicago. This is the second time in history Trelle has performed this feat, winning both titles in 1926. Since then he has won each title several times. Beard Growing Champions of Japan Proud contestants posing after the judging in the national beard “championships” at the Koraku restaurant in Tokyo. Some of the con testants are wealthy. Some Japanese believe that long beards bring monetary good luck because the men shown on Japanese currency ah have full beards. VIDA knew all the tricks. You see, she read a lot. Books on every conceivable subject Even magazine articles and fiction. ( Unfortunately Vida’s facial beau ty was next to nil. When, at the age of eighteen, she came to a full re alization of this, and an under standing of its possible consequence she was at first unhappy. But being a sensible person, sensible enough to look at the thing squarely, she sought for other means to achieve her end. The end was a man; love, romance and happiness. The other means were presented in the form of books, learning how to put yourself across when you weren't particularly attractive; re sorting to devices and technique that good looking girls didn't have to employ. She read sedulously; re ferred to the printed word for set tlement of her every problem; com pared her own experiences with those of heroines, abiding by their decisions, and always adopting their( tactics. The results were exceedingly gratifying. Even now, at the age of twenty - two, the man of her dreams was practically within her grasp. Give her another month, two at the most, and he would speak the words that would make her hap piness and triumph complete. The man's name was Glen Lam phier. He was one of those fine, good looking, upstanding specimens of young manhood. Intelligent, gra cious, and with a promising career ahead of him. The type who ap pealed by exerting only a minimum of effort. Vida had aimed high in selecting him as the object of her acquired charms, but the thought of failure had never once entered her head. She had aroused his interest Dy heeding the dictates of her fiction heroines. And Glen had seen the light. He had come to realize that behind the plain features of this girl were quality, intelligence, breeding. His initial feeling of casu al interest was supplanted by some thing deeper, more lasting, some thing bordering on love and re spect. In a word, Vida had been success ful in her enterprise—up to a point. Unhappily, it appeared now as if that point might prove a stumbling block, an insurmountable obstacle. For the month passed, and another, and Glen did not utter the words she longed to hear. ' Coming into the living room one evening she found him waiting for her, comfortably ensconced before the fireplace, a volume of Oscar Wilde open in his lap. The fact that her entrance did not distract his attention piqued her no end. She hesitated a moment before making known her presence, and in that moment the feeling of being piqued gave way to torment. Suddenly she realized that something had hap pened, that she was losing her hold, that Glen’s interest was on the wane. The thought made Vida unhappy. In the days that followed she brood ed over it, puzzled over it, referred to her books in desperation, but without satisfaction. The books had no suggestion to offer for such a situation. A week later, sitting before the living room lire, Vida abandoned seeking an answer to her problem and, for lack of something better to do, picked up the copy of Oscar Wilde and opened it. Her eye chanced to fall on a paragraph, which had been lightly checked with a pencil. She read through it with a rapidly increasing pulse. “—I really don’t see anything romantic in proposing. It is very romantic to be in love. But there is nothing ro mantic about a definite proposal . . . The excitement is all over. The very essence of romance is un certainty.” Vida stood up, and there was a wild look in her eyes. Glen had read thatparagraph. He had checked it with his pencil. H e had re membered that her faith in books, in the printed word was profound. She made her way to the book case behind the fireplace. Her eyes scanned the volumes contained therein. She removed a copy of O’Brien’s short stories, leafed it through, found the passage she sought, and then underscored it heavily. Glen called an hour later. H he was annoyed at the long interval in the living room before Vida’s ap pearance, he did not betray that fact. Instead, he seemed deeply in terested in reading a paragraph from a volume of O’Brien’s short stories, which he found lying upon the table. He read it through twice before Vida’s voice disturbed him. He was glad she had come. He welcomed her eagerly. He had some thing to say, something that could not wait. He said it incoherently, babblingly, but plain enough for Vida to understand and nod her head in acquiescence. Later that night Vida returned the volume of O’Brien to its shelf, first reading through the underscored paragraph. ”... and so at last, wearied of waiting for his proposal Agnes found her love growing cold, found herself entertaining a lively interest in other men—men who seemed to possess the courage to assert themselves ...” She smiled thinking how dearly she would al ways treasure her books.