Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920, January 31, 1912, Image 3

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    €otrncys <£anfctes
Sharing necessities
Prescriptions Compound
by iSrabnate pharmacists
Sbern?in*2TToore Prim £e.
9tb atti> Willamette
Cor. 9th and Willamette.
Smeede Restaurant Co*
Wing Kee, Proprietor.
American Bill of Fare, 6 A. M. to
12 P. M. ..Chinese Bill of Fare, 8 A.
M. to 12 P. M.
C. W. Crump
Dealer in
STAPLE AND FANCY
Groceries
Fresh Vegetables
20 East Ninth St. Phone 12.
Alfred Benjamin
AND
Sophomore
Clothes
Regal and Stetson Shoes.
Mallory and Stetson Hats.
Star and Cluett Shirts.
Roberts Bros.
“Toggery”
554 Willamette Street.
WHEN YOU THINK OF
WATCH REPAIRING
then of course you naturally think of
Smart, The Jeweler
New Location
591 Willamette
W. M. Renshaw
Wholesale and Retail,
Cigars and Tobacco
513 Willamette St.
Roach Music House
Everything in the
M U « I C I- I N E
10th and Willamette Sts. Phone 862.
W. M. GREEN
The Grocer
The BEST of Everything u
623 Willamette
Phone 25
INTER-FRAT LEAGUE PUT
UPON PERMANENT BASIS
Eleven Organizations Look With
Favor Fpon Continuing Athletic
Relations.
With the exception of Beta Theta
Pi, which was invited but failed to re
spond, all the fraternities and clubs
were represented at the organization
of the inter-fraternity league confer
ence, which met Tuesday afternoon.
The aim of the council will be to
place the interfraternity league con
tests upon a more general and sub
stantial basis and to substitute for the
special boards of management for
each of the leagues, one general con
ference which shall posses larger
powers and be better qualified to deal
with the questions arising. It is also
hoped that through such co-operation
the fraternities and clubs may be
brought into better understanding
with each other.
The sense of the meeting was that
each organization should be repre
sented throughout the year by one
permanent delegate in the council
and that all business of the leagues
should be administered by that body.
Sentiment also favored choosing the
officers by rotation to avoid political
dickerings.
Ralph Moores was chosen tempor
ary chairman and a constitutional
committee consisting of Ben Chand
ler, Ed Bailey, Tom Word, Will St.
Johns and Vernor Motschenbaeher,
was appointed to report Friday.
Your Y. M. C. A. dues should be
paid at once. The Association needs
the money. Come to the Exchange
and pay up.
Are there any hustlers in college?
I have a good proposition to make to
several men for spare time work. If
you are interested, call and see me be-1
tween 6:30 and 7:30 any evening this
week at the Delta Sigma House.
C. W. WALLS.
Weber’s Milwaukee Chocolates at
the Obak Cigar Store.
Do Not Forget
when going home on your vacation,
to take home a box of “OTTO’S”
VICTORIA CHOCALATES, tne best
chocolates made.
BUJE AND GOLD TRACK
1 PROSPECTS DOUBTFUL
Captain Expects to Build Strong
Team With An Abbreviated
Nucleus.
Although handicapped by the loss
of six of his host- track men. Captain
Don Evans of the University of
Washington track team feels confi
dent that the northern institution can
muster up a winning aggregation on
the cinders this spring. Notwith
standing the fact that there are but
two or three sure point winners in
c. liege at present. Captain Evans is
looking to the new material to de
velop, and feels assured that the team
this year will not fall far behind
those of the last two seasons. In
speaking of the prospects the Wash
ington Captain said:
“While prospects are not rosy,
neither are they gloomy, for with Ira
Courtney, Herman Anderson, and
myself and some good men who I hope
will enter in February as a nucleus,
we hope to have a fairly representa
tive aggregation.
I hose missing ot last year s track
men at Washington are: Gish, Bow
man, Eakins, Brokaw, Pape, and
Lange. To take their places there
are: Don Evans, jump and javelin;
Courtney, Ridgeway, Wright, sprints;
Redman, distances; Anderson, Patten
and Sherrick in the weights. Of the
new material that’s promising, Ed
monds. in the weights, Abbott, quar
termiler, and Earl Godbe, hurdler,
are expected to develop form, while
Ned Humes and J. McGillicuddy, of
Broadway High, and Paul Clyde, the
fast miler from Lincoln, are expected
to enter next semester.
Coach D. C. Hall, nowever, is pes
simistic and feels that the outlook is
anything but promising. He says that
nothing but hard work and good for
tune will win for the Purple and Gold
this spring.
The Washington track schedule in
cludes two indoor meets with the Seat
tle Club and all comers; sometime
duiing February. Following these
the program embraces the coast con
ference meet at Berkeley, the dual
meet with Oregon, May 16, and the
Northwest conference meet at Port
land on June 1.
Have you paid that dollar to the
Emerald ? Do it now.
Lyster Chambers and Madeline Loui s. in a scene from “The Deep Purple,”
Eugene Theatre, February 5th.
GOOD ROAD ECONOMICS
TITLE OREGON BULLETIN
l’rof. Young Writes Treatise On
Subject Advocating State
Cooperation.
“The Economics of Oregon's Good
Roads Problem” is the title of the
University of Oregon Bulletin for
January, written by Prof. F. G.
Young, head of the department of Ec
onomics and Sociology.
This bulletin was written with a
view of presenting to the communities
and districts that are struggling with
this question of good roads, a compact
and concise treatise, setting forth the
why and wherefore of suitable high
ways especially from the farmer’s, or
the economic view point. A special
study is made of the failure of past
and present policies in regard to road
construction and maintenance, and in
their stead a tentative plan for state
cooperation in regard to construction,
determination of cost and apportion
ment of funds is suggested.
After pointing out the necessary
factors for any system of road im
provement, as adequate plans and a
just apportionment of the cost of con
struction, Prof. Young shows that
good roads are Oregon’s most pressing
need, and this is so since the solution
of the back-to-the-farm movement and
improvement of rural conditions, lies
with the construction of better means
of transportation.
Touching the more fundamental
economics of the problem, it is shown
that the type of road, necessarily
good, will be determined by the char
acter and volume of traffic, which has
to justify any initial high cost.
In conclusion it is noted that every
locality has its special problems that
it must work out for itself with ex
pert technical service, especially
since the automobile adds a new phase
to actual road engineering, and that
since the present county system has
been found wanting, a state system
of aid and administration is advisable,
as the highways of a state should he
considered an organic whole.
BASKETBALL TEAMS IN
NORTHWEST ARE ALIVE
The first basketball game between
colleges in the Northwest conference
was played between Idaho and W. S.
C. on Saturday, January 13; the two
inland-colleges mixed at Moscow, and
the game was won by Washington
State by a score of 31-5. Idaho, how
ever, did not play her best game, and
was extremely unlucky in shooting
baskets. Both sides ran in a number
of second team men and subs in the
second half.
The second game of the series be
tween the two institutions was played
at Pullman, Saturday, January 20, and
was also won by W. S. C.
The Girl of the Pingree Shoe
We (Jive Ease Where Others Squeeze
WILCOX BROS.
Royal Blue Store
Across From Hampton’s
NEW
Seal Slalionery
at
SCHWARZSCHILD’S
Preston & Hales
Mfgrs. of AH Leather Goods
Dealers in
Paints and Paper. Agents Johnson’s
Dyes and Wax
U* O* Barber Shop
SANITARY AND
UP TO DATE
Thirteenth and Patterson Streets
Footwear
For College Folks
LASiS THAT PLEASE
LEATHER THAT ASTS
Burden & Graham
A Good Place After the Game
Castillicm (Grille
103 Sixth Street - - - 427 Washington Street
American anb Spanish (looking
and Good Drinks of All Kinds
Camales, (Enefyilabas, Spanish pot ties
and Many Others
Ouf Tamales for Sale at Otto's, 501 Will. St., Eugene