^oirneyf £art6tcs Scaring 2Tcccssitics Prescriptions Compound by (Srabuatc pharmacists 5hern?tn=Xnoore Drug Co. 9tli atib lOillamette 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. 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. W. M. GREEN The Grocer The BEST of Everything to Eat 623 Willamette Phone 25 NEW Seal Stationery at SC HWARZSCHILD’S Preston & Hales Mfgrs. of All Leather GoodB Dealers in Paints and Paper. Agents Johnson’s Dyes and Wax U* CX Barber Shop SANITARY AND UP TO DATE Thirteenth and Patterson Streets ALL WISCONSIN V. M. Debate Coach Leroy Johnson Writes of Progress at His Alma Mater. In the fall of 1908 a young man by the name of Arthur Jorgensen be came General Secretary of the Uni versity of Wisconsin Y. M. C. A. His coming really began « new era in As sociation work at that institution. Before this the Association had ex erted no great influence over the student body as a whole. The men who conducted its affairs had not been recognized student leaders. Y. M. C. A. work was at that time looked upon as work for the “hollier-than-thou” type and not work for “red-blooded” men. However, Mr. Jorgensen, by personal work among the men soon convinced them that the Association was an institution worthy of their support. He showed them that it was not any closed corporation or a Bible study “frat,” as some termed it, but that it was an institution that stood for service and good living. As soon as the men were really convinced that this was true they pitched in and pushed the work hard. The following fall, that of 1909, the Association secured as its president Jack Wilce. He was then captain of' the football team and a member of Iron Cross, the honorary senior so ciety. Since that time every presi dent has been a member of the senior honor society and all of them have been student leaders and prominent in some undergraduate activity other than Y. M. C. A. work. In 1910 the president was managing editor of the Daily Cardinal and a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Last year’s president was editor-in-chief of the Cardinal and an intercollegiate debater and the president this year is captain of the track team and a prominent literary society man. Not only have the officers of the Association at Wisconsin been prom inent students during the past few years. The membership has greatly increased, until now the Association exerts a wonderful influence on the life of the students. In the fall of 1910 a membership campaign was lauched, in which the motto was “break the record,” meaning the American University record for total Y. M. C. A. membership. This was not accomplished, but now Wisconsin with a membership of over 1,000 men is second only to Yale. During the winter of 1910 a number of student religious leaders, including John R. Mott and E. C. Mercer, visited the University and greatly boomed the cause of the Y. M. C. A. Mr. Mercer, by meeting with fraternity men and other groups, greatly influenced, and Mr. Mott, by large public meetings, deeply interested many men in good living. Many men publicly announced their intention of actively supporting the Y. M .C. A., among them being “Keckie” Moll, the famous Wisconsin quarterback, who was this year chosen by most critics for the all-Western eleven. The faculty have also been touched. Their attitude up till several years ago was one of indifference, but now some of the most prominent men of the faculty, such as President Van Hise, John H. Commons, Edward A. Ross, Wm. A. Scott. Paul Reinsch and others have taken a personal interest in the work done by the Association. Chief Justice Winslow, of the Wiscon sin Supreme Court, takes a vital per sonal interest in the work of the Asso ciation and has been for some years president of the Advisory Board. In the fall of 1911, when the Association was trying to increase its membership, President Van Hise came out with a public signed statement in the Daily Cardinal, urging all men to support the Association. The Association at Wisconsin owns a fine five story building. The first two floors are turned over to the stud ents. The main floor is a general re ception, reading and game room and is the headquarters of the “Wisconsin Union,” which comprises all male students. The next floor has some beautiful committee rooms and a small assembly room, all of which may be Y.H.C.A. S VALUABLE ASSET III UNIVERSITY Pres. Campbell Writes of Importance of Association to University Life. (By President Campbell.) The Christian Associations have been a powerful factor in making for the best life of the University. Their quiet, persistant influence has broad ened and strengthened the foundations of spiritual thought, and their steady existence, on right standards of living has added vigor to the moral ideals of the students as a whole. Their work lies deep, but the good points of it are seen in every department of Univer sity activity. They help create the at mosphere in which thrive clean sport, clean living, and honest work. Both students and faculty are in debted to the Association for number less acts of individual helpfulness, which it would be hard to repay. Rooms for Freshmen, work for stud ents needing assistance, Book Ex change, lectures, social evenings,-—all these are but a part of the long list of useful things looked after by Associa tion committees. Any man or woman in the University, who is in need of a friend, always has such a friend at hand in some one of the Association committees. The important thing for the Asso ciations now to do is to plan for larger budgets, better quarters, and still greater work. The coming year promises to be a notable one in the University’s growth. The Asoscia tions ought to be prepared to meet it. Their safety will lie in wholehearted aggressive work. They can command the support, not only of the whole University, but also of all good people in the state, if they will go out cour ageously and get it. Large faith, large plans, and united action should show the way to greater results than those yet achieved in any American university. SPECIAL SPEAKER TO MEN r 1 Charles D. Hurrey. International Secretary. Do you like a good pencil? Himes, at the Dorm, has the best five cent pencil on the market, besides having erasers, drawing inks, paper, tack, tri angles, etc. Have you ordered your sliderule yet? If not, see Himes at the Dorm. Best rules at lowest prices. Have you ordered your sliderule yet? If not, see Himes at the Dorm. Best rules at lowest prices. used gratis by the student organiza tions. The Association helps the stud ents in innumerable ways, such as ing work for needy students, allowing the use of their rooms for all sorts of meetings and smokers, conducting Bi ble study classes, helping new stud ents get rooms, helping entertain vis itors at the interscholastic basketball and track tournaments, etc. In fact, it does all in its power to serve the University and therein lies its suc cess. As soon as students see that it is really broad and comprehensive in its purposes and that it makes it a point to in every possible way help the students and encourage them to better living, they are willing to sup port it. J. L. J. NOVEL DANCE PLEASES Co-eds Have Things Their Own Way and Enjoy Filling Programs and Hunting Partners. Who is the most popular man in the University? Those who sought an an swer in the leap year dance last night were disappointed. The girls were ab solutely impartial and positively re fused to allow any man to adorn the wall. It was a jolly crowd and a good sized one at that. Everyone entered into the fun and the novelty of being a “boy” or a “girl” was fully appre ciated. The fellows learned how delightful it is to sit quietly, with folded hands, waiting for requests for dances, or enjoying the sensation of seeing your pardner rushing about trying to get that “last” dance for you. And the girls—well, for once they danced with whom they pleased, as long as their dances lasted and then they knew how it feels to have ones program filled and only about half your friend’s names on it. They also found how de lightful it is to have your pardner lost in the crowd, to walk entirely around the floor and then find the object of your search within two feet of where you started—just as the music stops. And the patrons, “weren’t they sweet.” Men, everyone of them. The list included Pres. Campbell, Dr. Leon ard and Professors DeCou, Straub, Bo vard and Dearborne, and Svarverud’s orchestra furnished the music. They had plenty of spirit and were liberal with their encores. Do you like a good pencil ? Himes, at the Dorm, has the best five cent pencil on the market, besides having erasers, drawing inks, paper, tack, tri angles, etc. T. A. Gilbert. A. B. Chaffee. Che Oak Shoe Store Wear Sorosis and Walkover Shoes. 587 Willamette St. Phone Main 227. $ch wering $ Cindley BARBER SHOP Students, Give Us a Call 6 East 9th St., Opp. Hoffman House Broders Bros. Wholesale and Retail dealers in FRESH, CORNED AND SMOKED MEATS Chambers Hardware Company Gillette Safely Razors The Kuykendall Drug Store DRUGS, CANDIES, TOILET ARTICLES AND SUNDRIES 588 Willamette St. £)ot Cake Sanatorium NATURE’S CURE FOR RHEUMATISM Hot Lake Sanatorium, like the U. of O., is an Oregon Institution, and again similar, in that it ranks first in its class. Hot Lake Sanatorium is equipped to make sick people well. The greatest health renewing In stitution in the west. Write for illustrated booklet describing the great boiling mineral spring. WALTER M. PIERCE, Pres, and Manager. V)ot $ahe, 0regon