Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1910)
Brcutu Society Brand Clothes are Different—because their general lines are new and have a style never before brought out in ready= to=wear clothes. Dianified--because of their refinement; their gentlemanly modesty but youthful style and young mannish characteristics. FOR SSLE ONLY BY S. He Friendly Eugene’s Leading Store The Talk of theTown The Parisian Tailors THE FASHIONABLE HIGH-CLASS MERCHANT TAILORS We are experts in our line. We handle nothing: blit the finest kind of merchan= dise. All patterns exclusive. Come in tonight and pick out that new Spring Suit. Made the way you want it made. -The Parisian Tailors 20 East Seventh Street The Sign on Shoes Mentis l That Sterling does on Silver Newest Stock. Latest Kastern Styles. Silk Hose a Specialty SCLZ ROYAL BLUE SHOE STORE Wilcox Bros. 457 Willamette Street NINETEEN MEN ENTER Local Handicap Contest Will Also Be Held With Silver Cup for Trophy With the completion of the Varsity concrete courts the tennis season has begun in earnest. The tryouts for the \ arsity team are tinder way now and candidates for the handicap meet are rapidly signing up. The drawings for the Varsity tryouts ■ ast I lmrsday night resulted in the fol lowing men being paired: Williams and Stewart, Bond and Collins, C. Moore and Shattnck, Baer and Robison, Con nell and Bates, Jamison and Gray, Wills and Rithsehild, Rigler and Powell, Cash and Parris, and Ralph Moores as "by." I he three men chosen in these tryout tournaments will hold a "round robin” with Stine and Pastham. hist year's \ arsity team, to choose the two best men to represent the Cniversity this year. In spite of the announcement last week to the contrary, there will be a handicap tournament this spring. Lara way, the jeweler, has offered a silver cup to the tennis club, to be awarded to the winner of the tournament each year, and which will become the per sonal property of anyone who wins it three tunes. 1 he tournament will be gin immediately and will be open to noth stuuents and faculty. A twenty live cent entry fee for the tournament is charged to defray th eexpenses of the mejt. halls will be furnished for the linals and semi-finals and rackets will probably lie put up for those who make a place in the final round. All entries must be made before Tuesday night, May 2, when the drawings will iie made, and after which no names will lie considered. Entries can be made either on the bulletin board at the court or to Ralph Newland, Bert Prescott or Gerald Eastham. Miners Visit Mines Six upper classmen in the department of mining engineering spent part of the spring vacation doing some practic 1 work in the held. tulles, 1 illotson, llomer, Bfistow aud several others, accompanied by Profes sor Barker and later by Professor GE der, went to Gates, a small town in the Coast Mountains, near which are lo cated the Silver King and the Black Eagle mines. At the Silver King, the miners surveyed a prospective tunnel, making a thorough study and devising plans for developing it. I lie boys report a pleasant trip as well as a valuable one.