Y. W. BUNGALOW IS DEDICATED ADVISORY BOARD THROUGH MRS. SWEETSER PRE SENTS STRUCTURE 2 YEAR’S WORK COMPLETED Women of Association Reward ed for Trouble of Obtaining Funds by Beautiful Home Ad jacent to Campus. “And now girls of the Young Wo men’s Christian Association, I pre sent to you the Y. W. C. A. Bunga low. There it is,” said Mrs. A. R. Sweetser, yesterday, in her speech of dedication to the University Young Women’s Christian Association. Mrs. Sweetser has been active on the ad visory board since Y. W. work was first begun in Dr. Schmidt’s room in Deady Hall. She traced the growth of the conference work through all its stages, telling how the need of more room for classes forced them finally to the “Shack,” where they held their meetings last year. In 1911 the advisory board devised the idea of having a home for the association work and immediately every effort was made for the new building. For this part of the work the University women raised by their fairs, candy sales and tag days $382.65. The rest was raised by the women of Eugene. President P. L. Campbell spoke on the benefit which would be derived from the new home as a place of both spiritual and physical rest for the University women. Edith Clements, president of the association work on the campus, thanked the advisory board for the new home in behalf of the University women. In closing her talk Mrs. Sweetser said: “We pray our Father that within these walls you may find rest and comfort for your bodies, quiet and development for your minds and peace, joy and expansion for your soul’s life, and that these growing Into well rounded Christian woman hood, shall be a benediction, an in spiration and a joy to the whole Uni versity.” Miss Esther Maegly, ’13, has re turned to her home in Portland. Louis Pinkham, class of ’ll, spent the week-end at the Beta Theta Pi house. Mrs. Gering of Medford, is visit ing her daughter at the Chi Omega house. , Mr. and Mrs. Downing of Salem, and Jennie Frye, ’12, were at the Delta Delta Delta house on Sunday. rtAAAAArtnyvnnn a a A o o o SAVOY THEATRE o o Students should see this Fea- o o ture program o o FOR WEDNESDAY o o YOUNG & MANNING—The o o great vaudeville blackface art- o o ists in the great comedy sue- o o cess, “A night in Dixie.” o o Vitagraph—FORTUNES TURN o o Pathe—SNOW EGRET. o o Edison—STORY OF THE o o BELL. o o Biograph—DIPLOMATIC CIR- o o CLES. o o THURSDAY PROGRAM o o BILLY WEST—The great o o comedian. o o THE PIT AND THE PENDU- o o LUM—Poe’s celebrated clas- o o sic. State right 3-reel fea- o o ture. Every scholar and stu- o o dent should see. Features the o o great Damlin Karr-Solax. o o LOVE WILL FIND A WAY— o o A dandy funny riproaring o o farce comedy. o o YOUNG AND MANNING— o o Vaudeville comedy, “A Night o o in Dixie.” o O 0 ooooooooooooooo Robert Brady, of Astoria, and Roy Holbrook, of Portland, are new Av ava pledges. I M. C. A. LECTURES • ON HYGIENE BEGIN ® 0 •“ o . 0 Prominent Men Will Talk on Sex Hygiene at Men’s Meetings A series of six lectures on the sex question, by thoroughly competent men, will be given under the auspi ces of the Y. M. C. Al at their regu lar meetings. The following is the order in which they will come: Oct. 15th, "The Anatomy and Phys iology of Man as a Creator of Man,” Dr. Omar R. Gullion. of Eugene. Oct. 23rd, Dr. Winifield Scott Hall of Northwester University, (two lec tures. ) First "Sex Hygiene.” Villard Hall at 1 p. m. Second, Villard Hall at 7:15 p. m. (Special.) Oct. 30th. “Eugenics,” Professor John Bovard, of the University. Nov. 6th. “What a Young Man Should know for Marriage.” Dr. James B. Taylor of Eugene. Nov. 13th. “Biological phase of the Sex Question.” Dr. C. T. Hodge. Dr. Omar R. Gullion, Prof. John Bovard and Dr. James B. Taylor de livered some lectures for the Y. M. C. A. last year and all that heard them were loud in their praise. Students having questions to ask regarding this subject are requested to bring them to these lectures and they will be given careful considera tion. A cordial invitation is extended to every young man in the University to attend these lectures. U. OF W. GLEE MAN WONDERFUL TENOR Prof. Irving M. Glen Starts Pre parations for Con cert Work Washington’s new Glee club held its first practice last night in Deady hall under the tutelage of Professor Irving M. Glen, dean of the college of fine arts. Regardless of the fact that out of the twenty-five men chos en at the tryouts last week only six were members of last year’s club, Professor Glen says that he expects to develop the best musical organiza tion that Washington has ever had. H. T. Davidson, tenor, and Prank Kelliher, baritone, both freshmen, are the chief contenders for the solos. Mr. Davidson, who has been turning out for football since the first prac tice, has a remarkably high range, reaching A and even B flat last night with apparently no effort. Ruberi Beckwith, also of the fresh man class, is tc act as accompanist for the club, and if the present plans of Professor Glen are carried out he will be featured on the program with one or two instrumental solos. Washington Daily. Lloyd Van Dusen is visiting this week-end at the Sigma Nu house. Victor Chambers of Cottage Grove has been a guest at the Sigma Nu house. NEWSPAPERS PUBLISH STUDENT RESOLUTIONSI O 8 • • • • © Editors of State Show Approval of University by Giving Publicity Newspapers in all parts of the state are printing the resolutions upon the university issue passed by the stu- ( dents “district associations” recently. | An examination of the exchanges in the Guard office and at the Depart- ( ment of Journalism yesterday showed j very few papers that had failed to , take notice of the action of the dele- | gation from the home town. In , many instances the editors wrote ed- , itorials approving of the active and intelligent interest the students were ( taking in public matters. , Where the resolutions appeared in , the colums of a daily paper, care was ] taken to hunt up the issue of the ( same paper for the succeeding day. i In practically every instance was , found in the next day's paper a prominently displayed news article j under some sucn head as this: "Big- i gest Day Yet for Registration,” or "Registration Becomes Heavy." In no instance observed did the activity of the students attract other i than the most favorable comment. i 1 HAZERS CAUSE OF TROUBLE Two Sophomores Are Arrested and ; i Student Council Forbids Practice. 1 The University of Missouri is hav ing its trouble with hazers. Two sophomores were arrested for hazing freshmen and the student council has declared against indiscriminate haz All Sophomores who have recover ed from the affects of the inter-class melee the other day are urged to present themselves at the Dormitory on Wednesday afternoon at four i o’clock for the purpose of holding a football meeting. Sifenal practice will follow the meeting. Seventy thousand people were giv en free treatment at the Lane hospi tal of the Stanford Medical School in San Francisco last year. The pa tients were operated on by special ists for the benefit of the medical students. Jessup Strang was suddenly called to his home in Salem yesterday af ternoon on account of the serious ill ness of his mother. “Obak’s” Hot Dogs. 1 haven’t got a lonesome looking store with large rear room devoted to Mr. Hoyle’s Games with a nice little kitty scratching the table. I have a prominent place with ci garettes from the world over, but 1 find the consumer does not come from the world over to get them. So I am going to sell hot dogs ev ery evening. “Obak.” Do you know him? Register Wednesday. Register Wednesday. Register Wednesday. I Sophomore and Styleplus Suits anh Overcoats Ready to Wear. Kahn Tailored Suits and Overcoats Made to Measure Knox and Mallory Hats Roberts Bros. . T O G G E R Y )R. HODGE WONT TURN OTHER CHEEK TO PESTS Vlan’s Foes in- Insect World Deserve Hate, Not Love, Biologist Teaches. "Love your friends but hate your eue utes.” This does not sound much like a bibli •al injunction, even if its sponsor is Dr. 'lifton Freeuiout Hodge, the widely mown biologist of the University of Ore ;ou. Dr. Hodge, moreover, is to teach his doctrine far and wide over the state, le is to carry it to the people who cau lot attend the university of Oregon to tear it. He will lecture and teach in nany an Oregon town during the next ear. under the university’s auspices. Wait a moment, however, before you onderun Dr. Hodge us unorthodox. He Iocs not mean human friends and human nemies but those of the insect world, le proposes to show Oregon the iuiiue liate benefits from knowledge and prac ice of elementary principles of every lay biology. To make science the servant of Ore ;onians rather than something to regard n awe is the mission of Dr. Hodge, lie ays the "insect tax" cosfs the United States one and one half billion dollars unually. To propogate and encourage he common quail alone, he suys, will ave the American people one-third this raste. lie will carry to every Oregon mullet that desires it the story of the alue of bird life to the farmer and the illager and the business man. Science o Dr. llodge is simply teaching people o make their labor more productive. To teach the farmer boy and the tur ner girl to return to the farm after gat ing an education, is another of Dr. lodge’s plans. Farm life, he argues, ■an be made infinitely more attractive f science is enlisted. The lectures are to he given mostly mtside the university. Some will be at anchors' institutes. His first series of 15 lectures will deal with problems of alucation in various communities. He v ill make every effort to have the talks it local conditions. The other muin divi >ion under which his lectures will fall is he life of the community. In these lec ures he proposes to teach the citizenry low to utilize the forces of nature to its >wn advantage—a sort of course in pop ilur biology. Towns or rural communities desiring ectures from Dr. Hodge should commuu cate with F.xtension Department, Uni versity of Oregon, Eugene. The lectures, if course, are without cost to the cum nunity. They are part of the state uni versity’s well-known plan to put instruc ion within everyone's reach, either at the university or away from it. 3R0F. SWEETSER SPEAKS “Christianity” Is Topic of Address GivAn Before Y. M. C. A. Professor A. R. Sweetser, head of the University Biological depart ment, spoke on Christianity at the Y. M. C. A. meeting Thursday night. Secretary Koyl says that Professor Sweetser’s splendid address made the meeting one of the most success ful of the year. By a series of experiments with the X-ray and a photographic display he proved ingeniously his statement that “there is more in things than can easily he seen.” !FEARS FLY, RAT, SQUIRREL I Or. Clifton F. Hodge Will Urge Cam paign Against Pests. The lectures,by l>r. Clifton Freembnt Hodge at the state fair last week indi cate some of the work this new man on the University of Oregon faculty will do i throughout the state this year. Dr. > 1 Hodge spoke upou Oregon bird and ; game conservation and upon controlling 1 the fly and rat pests. In his extension labors among Oregon | towns. Dr. Hodge will point out the con stunt danger of bubonic plague along the ! Pacific coast unless the rat und ground squirrel problems are effectively dealt with. A class of University of Oregon students will spend some time this year collecting material along this line. It will study also the fly problem, the game conservation problem and soils and pro duction statistics. Dr. Hodge during his first year’s work here hopes to get a fairly accur ate census of game birds and wild ani- . nulls in Oregon. This work will be un- 1 der the auspices of the university und " of the state game commission. EMERALD HAS TELEPHONE Installed By Journalism Department. . 055 Is New Number. It is now possible to reach the Emerald by phone, as an instrument was installed today in the office of | the paper in the Journalism depart ment of McClure Hall. East year I this was strictly an Emerald affair, but this year, the University has | taken over the financial load in- . curred. Due to the fact that there was no phone connection during the sum- , mer it has been found necessary to change the number which is now 655. DR. M. ASHTON CHIROPRACTOR NERVE AND SPINE SPECIALIST EXPERT WORK, LATEST METHODS The cause of disease successfully removed. 227-8 over U. S. Nat Bank. Phone: Off! e 8G0-J. Res. 860-L Eugene, Ore. THE WATER PROBLEM SOLVED AT LAST Install a Pump and DRIVE IT WITH OREGON POWER SERVICE Cleaning and Pressing Phone 250 Holt, Agt., Dorm. No. 57 Home Restaurant The Best Meal in the City for 25c. Come and See Us. W. F. ALEXANDER, Prop. 112 Ninth Avenue East A Good Place to Eat Open Day and Night BALTIMORE GRILL R. C. ELLMAKER, Prop. Phone 588 ALL STUDENTS WELCOME 771 Willamette St. Eugene, Oregon H. CATO TAILOR For Men and Women ° «"0 # e . • At the Old Varsity 691 Willamette Street Bangs Livery GOODYEAR WELT SHOE REPAIRING JIM THE SHOE DOCTOR DELUXE The Quality STUDIO THE CYCLE CLUB 832 OLIVE STREET For Your Bicycle Repairing New and Second-Hand Wheels. All Work Guaranteed CLYDE FISK, PROP. We Want Your Cleaning and Pressing Phone 250 for Club Rates Work Promptly Delivered HAMPTON’S THE DAYLIGHT STORE UMBRELLA SPECIAL 250 Men’s and Women’s Umbrellas Saturday and Monday Only Special at .$1.00 SEE WINDOW DISPLAY Womans Exchange Home Cooking Phone 1056 EUGENE BICYCLE WORKS Prices the Lowest Work Guaranteed 835 Olive St. NEW GOODS AND REPAIRING Second Hand Wheels Eugene, Oregon