Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920, November 02, 1912, Image 5

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    English Gaberdine
and Linen Rubberized
SLIP O N S
$15 and $20
Raincoats that keep you warm and dry
and give you a dressed up appearance
mWL fi QUALITY €■ ECONOMY
Outfitters to College Men
Elmer Spencer College Representative
THE CLUB
BILLIARDS
Bigger and Better than Ever
Eighth and Willamette
J. J. McCORMICK
DUNN’S BAKERY
BREAD, CAKE AND PASTRY
Dunn 8c Price
Phone 72 30 East Ninth
Burgess Optical Co.
SOI Willamatts St.
Registered Optometrists
FACTORY ON PREMISES
George Sovern
PROPRIETOR
Combination
Barber
Shop
519 Willamette St. Phone 641-J
F. W. COMINGS, M. D.
Phone 744
Over Eugene Loan and Savings Bank
TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE
All makes of machines rented, sold,
and repaired.
M. K. TABOR
474 Willamette Street.
A. B. CHAFFEE
RETIRES FROM BUSINESS
Every Shoe in the
house to be closed
out.
Oak Shoe Store
Broders Bros.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
Fresh, Corned and Smoked
meats
The Kuykendall
Drug Store
DRUGS, CANDIES, TOILET
ARTICLES AND SUNDRIES
588 Willamette St.
Preston & Hales
Mfgrs. of all Leather Goods
Dealers in
PAINTS AND PAPER
Agts. Johnson’s Dyes and Wax
Electric Wiring
Fixtures and Supplies
Eugene Electric Co*
W. H. BAKER, Prop.
640 Willamette Phone 836
Starrett's Tools
For the Workshop
Griffin Hardware Co.
Phone 623
527 Willamette
W. M. GREEN
TheGrecer
The Store of Quality and not
Quantity
623 Willamette Phone 26
H. D. SMARTT
For Up-to-date Repairing
Oregon
Pins, Fobs, Buttons
Always in Stock
591 Willamette
BANNERS, SHOW CARDS
ELECTRIC SIGNS
Gilding on Glass a Specialty
Tel. 542 Raar Yoran’s Shoe Store
DR. M. C. HARRIS
Dentist
U. 0. ’98. Rooms 2 and 4, Me
Clunar Bldg., 8th and Willametta Sts.
T ” " "s.d.* read
Dentist.
583 Willamette Street, Eugene, Ore.
Phone 500.
FURNITURE AND CARPETS
Seventh and Willamette Streets.
COCKERLINE. I FRALEY
Fancy and Staple Dry Goode, La
dies’ and Men’s Furnishings, Men’s
Youth’s, Children’s Clothing.
Phone orders Hied promptly
Bull’sSmoke House
AND
Billiard Parlor
A pleasant place to spend the idle
moments.
Hastings Sisters
HAIR DRESSING PARLORS
R*l'iWi •«rSin|l Tilton* (AI R
Minltirlnf Snip ind Fin Tintsnt
A. W. COOK
CLEANING, PRESSING AND
REPAIRING
I-ADIKS WORK A SPEC1 AI.TT
46 E. 7th St. Phone 6(2. Eiiftnt. Or*
RAE & SON, Florists
Cut flowers, all kinds, all the time.
Violets every day. Phone 136.
29 East Ninith Street.
The Koh-I-Noor
FOR FRKSH
Candies and Ice Cream
X.UKOUS AT ILL IOUM
Plion* 67* C. A. MOUSE, Prop.
Berry's Shining
Parlor
640 Willamette
Grateful for Student Patronage
Friday and Saturday,
November 1 and 2.
PHOTOPLAYS
Gaumant’s greatest two reel
feature—“In the hand of the
Lions.”
2—Other Fine Reels—2
VAUDEVILLE
Miss Bess Stokes, lyric soprano,
Mme. Stephani and Miss Nick
lin, in harp and violin selec
tions.
OLD WORLD COMEDY
ARISTHOPHANES' “CLOUDS" IS
LISTED FOR NOVEMBER 15.
College Instructors Enthusiastic—
Details of Production True
Historically.
(By Russell Calkins.)
Think of it! A comedy that has
kept the old world laughing for 2,000
years. Way back in the past when
Athens was at the height of her
glory, a young fellow by the name
of Aristophanes wrote a comedy on
Greek life, entitled, “The Clouds.”
The Greeks laughed over it and
from that time, this play has carried
lighthearted merriment down through
the ages.
This comedy typifies the Greek idea
of a good time, when the country was
at peace and the people flocked to the
Temple of Dronysus to celebrate the
harvest of abundant crops. The Greeks
are taking a holiday and as college
students are wont to entertain them
selves in an idle-hour by laughing at
impersonations of their instructors, so
we find here the teacher Socrates held
up in a very ludicrous manner.
Professor Straub of the department
of Greek Literature, and Professor
Dunn, of the department of Latin Lit
erature, are especially enthusiastic
over the presentation of this play.
Professor Straub said, "It is a fine
opportunity to present to students of
the classics a living picture of Greek
life, and to give everybody a better
idea of the wide scope of Classical
Literature.
Professor Dunn said in regard to
play, “Many students of Plato, Soc
rates, Herodotus, or Sophocles, have
become familiar with the fertile in
tellect of the Greek without catching
a glimpse of his love for jest which
this play brings out.”
A strict adherence to Greek man
ners and customs even down to the
minutest detail, is planned wherever
practicable. The rostrum of Villard
Ilall will present the front of the
Greek Theatre with its heavy marble
columes and massy doors. The door
at the right will swing open at the
beginning of the play and the inside
will present the semblance of a Greek
house. As the plot advances, the big
double doors of the center open and
a movable stage will be pushed
slowly forward until it stands well out
from the facade of the theatre. The
costumes of the actors and chorus, as
well as the peculiarities of acting,
will present much that will be both
odd and instructive.
WASHINGTON WOMEN FORM
SWIMMING CLASS
Co-ed aquatics are the latest thinp
for the physical training of the wo
man at the University of Washing
ton. A hundred have sipned up for
the course, which will be piven at a
Seattle natatorium, under the direc
tion of a competent director.
In connection with the repular pym
nasium work that is required of ev
ery co-ed, a course in rowinp has
been arranped that may be substi
tuted for the “pym” work. Last year
the faculty abolished co-ed rowinp
on account of the lack of facilities,
but this year the women have a new
buildinp set aside for their use, and
hours have been prescribed when
they are to have possession of the
university rowinp equipment.
Elliott Roberts, ’14, is visitinp in
Salem durinp the week-end.
Weber’s Candy at Obaks.
sf National Bank
Capital and Surplus $275,000 00
WANTS \ OUR BANKING BUSINESS
T. G. HENDRICKS, President
P. E. SNODGRASS, Vice-President
LUKE L. GOODRICH, Cashier
DARWIN BRISTOW, Assistant Cashier
^ RAY GOODRICH, Assistant Cashier