GERMAN CLUB 10 MEET Last Meeting of Year to be Held At Beth Rhea House Tuesday Evening I lie last meeting of the German Club this semester will be held next Tues day at the Beth Rhea house. 'I he semi-annual election of officers will be held then, and the reports of all standing and special commitees will be read. After the business meeting the fol lowing program will be given: Piano solo.Eraulein Ethel Evans I >ie Ereiheitskriege von 1813 zu 1815.Krauleiti Alice Stoddard Effect of 1813-1815 on Literature and Country.Herr A. C. Henry Solo. Herr Curtis Solo.Eraulein Anna Bergmann Her Aufstand von 1848. .Eraulein Elizabeth Baer 1870 I )eutsch-Eranzosische Krieg. . Eraulein Ermel Miller Solo. I lerr Quigley \ ft or the program there is to be a social hour in order to dispose of till funds left in the treasury. As this is to re the best meeting of the year as ail members be present. Mrs While is enjoying Junior week end with her daughters, the Missies Rox,-11111,1 and Helen White and her son, George White. Mrs. Jamison is visiting her daugh ter. A. is /.eta Johnson, of < ). A. C., is here for the week end 1 arg - ret I lei rou, of ( orvallis, is visiting i:i Eugene this week. i he freshmen of the Washington < Mie w on the meet from the i ' o 11< in ■- i the narnj w msrgin < > f ■ se pi)int. COCKERLINE & WETHERBEE FANCY AND STAPLE DRY GOODS i.ADU-.S' .1 XU MIi.\ rt'KXISWXCS N • 1 11 v hihI C 11 M i • ; i I*' !( ).\ !•'. M \l.\ 4 * ( )i I ii i Gillette Razors POCKET EDITION EXTRA BLADES Chambers Hardware Marx Barber Shop AN UP-TO-DATE MAR HER SHOP First Class workmen 5<>5 Willamette St. TOLLMAN STUDIO While attending photo conventions at Seattle we purchased new hack grounds, new photo mounts and some tiling you will all like, the latest photograph ma terial Watch our sample case. 1'AINLKSS DENTISTRC See DR. M. M. BALL BOSTON DENTAL PARLORS 5(>7 Willamette Street, Eugene, Or. Lady Attendant Always Present Grateful for Student Patronage F. BERRY, Proprietor Razors, Cutlery, Stoves! The only Exclusive Sporting Goods House in Eugene Spalding Reach Stall & Dean AGENCV We carry everything needed for Track, Field and Gym. Eugene Gun Co. Phone Plk 1511 534 Willamette The Sign on Shoes Means What Sterling does on Silver Ncrvest Stock. Latest Eastern Styles. Silk /hose a Specialty SELZ ROYAL BLUE SHOE STORE Wilcox tiros. 457 Willamette Street INTERSTATE ORATORS MEET NEXT SATURDAY REPRESENTATIVES FROM THREE STATES VIE FOR FIRST PLACE wiaiois liuiii wicgun, vv daiuiigiuu and Montana will meet in the Annual Interstate Oratorical Contest in Vil la rd Hall Friday evenin, May 27. Glen H. Hoover will represent Wash ington; Mr. liullerdicks will speak for Montana, and Harold Rounds for Ore gon. Professor Glen has also promised a good musical program. There will be numbers by the Glee Club as well as by prominent soloists. T he judges for the contest already chosen are Professor Lyman, of Wis- j cousin; Professor Alden, of Stanford, and Professor Shurter, of T exas Uni- ! va rsity, judges of composition. Profes- j sor Fisher, of Portland, and Professor ; Matthews, of O. A. C., are two judges j of delivery. The third is yet to be de cided upon. T he prizes to be awarded to the two best orators are $75 and $25, offered by the King County, Washington, Bar Association. This is the last contest of the year and students and faculty are urged to support it. THE OAK SHOE STORE Leader in Footwear SR7 Willanipttp S* Successor >o DaniH W. A. KUYKENDALL Pharmacist Chemicals, Perfumes, Toilet Articles, Stationery Free Delivery (ileii II. Hoover, Washington. II. J. Rounds, Oregon. Mr. Bullerdick, Montana. Tail of Comet was not Fatal to Is, But Did tarth Disfigure its Tail? When this part of the earth passed through the tail of the comet, Wednes day, between 0:00 and 7:00 o'clock, it did not shatter any kugene skyscrapers, or extinguish life on this terrestrial sphere. Hut many a line hand made prophecy is now wandering about without anyone to stand responsible for it. ‘Before the comet goes thou shalt deny me thrice," said the little prophecy. Many fears that raged in the hreasst of timid old ladies were likewise ex liuguished. Hut what did it do to the college community ? Hill you hear any boys going past your house this past week at 2:00 a. in., singing merrily : I )id y ou see any con pies sitting softly in laafy corners talking softly ? I'id y ou see any girls sneaking in va G. W. Hunter Elecric Company New Location W t igi.ih St. Phone Main 7 I H t e jene, Oregon %ll kinds of t leefrie Supplies and Wiring tstimales furnished rious houses after house rule hours? Well, those were students of a scien tific turn of mind, l hey were all comet parties. It is very easy to prove that— why, jut ask them. Horace Kerr, son of President W. J. ivrr, and a' graduate of Stanford, is here taking in the track meet and base hall games. \mong the l >. A. C. people who are here attending the track and baseball games, are Kenton K. Macbeth and bloyd Rogers. I he girls’ debating team of the Or egon Agricultural College won over Al- ( bany College in the annual debate last Tin.. -- "light. Mr. n Kitchen, assistant in the department t ihiblic Speaking, has re turned from \io.uiy, where he went as t judge of tlte annual debate between lie women of the Oregon Agricultural ollcgc and \lham College. Mr. and Mrs. Huston, of Portland, Miss Klanohe Huston anil Carl Huston, made the trip from Portland Thursday in their new Stearns machine. They will spend the week end with friends in Eugene. MILL RAGE IS HAUNT OF THE COLLEGE YOUTH When the high school student comes to Eugene to survey the college, his eye rests with interest on the college cam pus, the college buildings, the college professors, and the college students; but it lights with enthusiasm when it surveys the college millrace. The Oregon youth kis an eye for possibilities. He returns iome greatly impressed with college life and the next year finds him safely ii stalled in the city. As a freshman, his first duty i: learn to paddle. This he doe: wuh 1 narvs llous speed and success. The love ly afternoons of late fall are not con aimed poring over newly acquired books, out in maneuvering around with a fel- j low paddler on the placid waters of the millrace. In the spring he develops a passion for the river, enjoys paddling is near the rapids as possible without Picture Framing Pictures aed a Specialty Art Goods The Eugene Art Store GUO. H. TURNER Phone Red f>+-H Commercial Club Bldg. Eugene, Or. going over, and deserts the millrace for a brief period. But as the days grow warmer and examinations draw nearer, he returns to the old place, anchors his canoe under a shady tree and while the hours away, reading, studying, and dreaming. When as a sophomore he returns to college, he retains his love for the mill race, and a new delight is added to his former pleasure by the presence of a fair companion. To him the millrace becomes a most beautiful and romantic spot at all times, but especially in the evening when the moon smiles down with his usual broad grin. In this wise does love for the mill race grow upon the college youth. As a junior he realizes what the race means in his existence, and asks: “What would the University of Oregon be without the millrace?” As a senior, he regards it with still deeper affection, because he knows he soon must leave it, since it follows inev itably that “the best of friends must part.” Since the millrace is so well beloved by and so popular with everyone, it does not lack attention, and numerous at tempts at its improvement have been in stigated. Some of these attempts have improved it, others have not. Numerous property owners along its banks, wishing to get a glimpse of its waters, have cut down the shrubbery, thereby improving the view and giving the race more air, but detracting from the solitude and seclusion. This is bad enough, but it has come to the ears of a few interested persons that there is a movement on foot to establish a chain of arc lights all along its banks, to be lighted at eight o’clock p. m., by way of illumination in the absence of sun light, but incidentally it saddens the heart and detracts from the solitude and seclusion of the race. I here is one movement, however, be ing pushed by the senior women, that bids fair to become a real tradition. Its object is to have the race clear of all human intruders by nine o’clock p. m„ not to restrict the pleasure of the numerous paddlers, but to secure their safety in, the return down the stream. Go to HILLS 5-10-15 Cent Store For Little Things Mrs. John Spores 24 West Seventh Street Eugene, Oregon University Home Bakery 206 Fourteenth Street f • T. Condon, Prop. butternut"bread Phonesi Main 71, Black 1561 HARDWARE