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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1914)
M’CORMICK BROS BOWLING A Bowler Never Gets Ap pendicitis, “That’s All" • o 685 Willamette St., Eugene Spread, Without a Loaf of Tip Top Bread It’s Incomplete, That’s What UNIVERSITY BAKERY The New CONFECTIONERY STORE Opens For Business THURSDAY. DEC. 12 Our Candies are Pure and Fresh. Made in Our Kitchen. We Invite Your Patronage O. J. HULL 796 Eleventh Avenue West THE WATER PROBLEM SOLVED AT LAST Install a Pump and DRIVE IT WITH ELECTRICITY 1 'Hr-, Oregon Power Ca. Dorris Photo Shop F or Classy Photos Cherry *Jidg. Phone 741 OSBURN HOTEL Dainty Dinners for • College Students • © 9 °0 o Reserve Tables for Sunday Evening ▼ W. A. Kuykendall DRUGS The Rexall Store DORR & JOHNSON NEW AND SECOND HAND FURNI TURE, STOVES, RANGES, HARD WARE, ETC. 640 WILLAETTE ST. EUGENE, OR. “Do you want a shine?” “Yes.” PETE The Shine Doctor. 747 Willamette. Sophomore and Styleplus Suits anh Overcoats Ready to Wear. Kahn Tailored Suits and Overcoats Made to Measure Knox and Mallory Hats Roberts Bros. TOGGERY o “THE CLUB” RESORT FOR GENTLEMEN BILLIARDS All Latest Dope on Sports ii EISHtH A E. AND WILLAMETTE ST. JAY MeCORMICK SOCCER TEAM IS CHALLENGED M. A. A. C. ASKS FOR GAME WITH OREGON IN FEBRUARY OTHER CONTESTS PLANNED Out *of Squad of Fifty Men, Coach C. V. Dyment Has Picked Enough Good Men to Form Formidable Team. > <» 0 °° • °0 ° ;*• Try . •° * Oregon's soccer team has been recognized. Realizing that the Uni versity was the first institution in the Northwest college conference to take up the game, A. E. Mackenzie, a soccer player of the Multnomah Ama teur Athletic club of Portland, has written to Professor Dyment, who has been coaching the Oregon team, asking for a game. Professor Dy ment will turn the letter over to Cap tain Spellman, who will confer with Graduate Manager Dean Walker and Trainer Hayward about the chal lenge. Mackenzie asked for a game at Eugene either February 12 or 22, but not likely either of these dates will be granted. A game at Portland this Spring with the champion team of the Portland Interscholastic Soccer League is considered more probable. Multnomah club began to play soc cer in 1908 and was the first big ath letic club to take up the game in the Northwest. It defeated all teams in Portland that year, and the next year also. It did not have a team last year, but on hearing that a team at Oregon had been organized, interest in the game was revived in the club. A game between Multnomah club and Oregon would be the first big step in the establishment of soccer as a con ference college sport in the North west. Mr. Dyment says that in five years, soccer will be one of the most popular conference games. Dr. E. J. Stewart, athletic trainer at O. A. C., wants to start soccer this spring. Fifty men have turned out for soc cer at Oregon this year, but the game is difficult to play and few have made good. Mr. Mackeszie’s letter reads: “We are very keen on having a go at your Varsity soccer side and this note is to inquire what the prospects for a game are. “The club field will be turned over to the soccer team just as soon as it is cleared and marked, and we hope to get some games with the schools by way of practice. Let me kn.ow at your earliest convenience if you can bring an eleven to town to meet a side composed chiefly of M. A. A. C. men and filled in with such other lo cal talent as may be required. “We are also willing to try to bring an eleven to Eugene if we could have either the 12th or 22nd of February. Of course this is not definite but several of the fellows have informed me of their willing ness to take the trip. “Please let me hear from you as soon as possible. The Club will be keen to have Oregon dow'n, and 1 personally think it is one of the most attractive games that could be played in Portland. “Sincerely yours, “A. E. MACKENZIE.” GRADS FOND OF TEACHNIG Most University of Chicago Alunuii Co Into That Work. „ °a "Chyfago, Jan. PB.—Teaching i? the favorite profession of the graduates of tl^e University of Chicago, accord ing to the firs'? annual directory of the instittuion, issued0today. Of the 7,004 living graduates, 3,287 are en gaged in educational work. Of these 1,562 are rrften and 1,725 are women. A total of 618 graduates are min isters, 584 are lawyers, 455 are in mercantile occupations, 348 are physicians, 144 are writers, 107 are in science, 7 6 in finance, 5 3 in manu facturing, 49 in agriculture, 49 in art, 4 4 hold government positions, 38 are engineers and 11 are in trans poration work. A total of 1,008 women and 255 men graduates specified no occupation. $56,000 was earned by Harvard men last year. FOUR OLD MEN OUT IN SUITS REAL BASKET-BALL PRAC-; TICE BEGAN LAST NIGHT MUCH PROMISING MATERIAL O Tentative First and Second O Teams Clash Last Night in First Tryout for Varsity. Bezdek Promises “Work. Contenders for the Varsity basket ball team were out last night for the first time since the holidays. It is yet a little early for Coach Bezdek to get much of a line on the men, but it seems to be the consensus of opin ion that there will be a better team this year than there has been for a long while. Four of last year’s team are back and there are also a num ber of very likely new men out. The schedule this year will be hard on the men, all the games coming in Febru ary, and there will of a necessity be a number of first string men make their letters. Of the twenty men who turned out •for practice last night, four were letter men, Captain Fenton, center; Don Rice, Bradshaw and Simms, guards. The other two letter men, Boylen and Brooks, have not as yet reported for practice. On account of a heavy course, Brooks may not play this year. The first team line-up for last night’s practice included Captain Fenton, center; O. Simms, Bradshaw and Rice, guards; and Carson Bigbee and B. Simms, forwards. The second team men were Stevenson, Furney and Benson, center; Fee and Davis, forwards, and Gorman and W. Bur gard, guards. Stevenson and Fee were both substitutes on last year’s team. It is expected that more can didates for varsity honors will be pre^enj, tonight. Hugo Bezdek will coach the team this year and has sent out a call for every basketball player to appear on the floor for strenuous work from now till the season opens. SONG CONTEST WILL CLOSE NEXT FRIDAY About Twenty Contributors Re ceived, but Still Chance for $2 5 Prize. The end of song contest for the best Alma Mater song which was postponed before the holidays will arrive on Friday, at which date the committee in charge announces that all contributions must be in, in or der to be eligible for the $25 prize offered. Before Christmas only 12 songs had been received by the committee and it was on this account that the date of closing the contest was put off, as it was claimed that a better representation should be had before final judgment was pronounced. | At present, Vernon Motschen bacner announces that eight more songs, two of them having both words and music have been sent in and that there is every prospect of a still larger number before Friday. One of these is said to be especially meritorious, and Dudley MoOosh, varsity band leader, who played the production last night, is quoted °as being well satisfied with it as fai°as the music “isoConcerned. o o o o o°o o oooooooooooo °0 o o o o A meeting of the “Order of o o tiie O” is announced to take o o place tomorrow evening at the o o Kappa Sigma house at seven o o o’clock, states Bob Bradshaw, o o president of the organization, o o The business to be discussed o o is unusually important, he o o says, and urges that all mem- o o licrs be present at the time o o specified. o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o The Dormitory Orchestra will give a concert Friday eve between the hours < f nine and eleven o’clock at 1 “The Varsity.” The Christmas issue of the O. A. C. Barometer was four thousand copies. THE GOOD EATS RESTAURANT - 1 THAT’S ALL O. U. BUTTERSCOTCH COLLEGE ICE CREAM1 AND PUNCHES For Particular ^People Storage Co. PHONE 343 For the Best Go to Otto’s CHRISTMAS CANDIES Victoria Chocolate Special Tuttle Studio 306 East 13th Avenue Everything in Photos MARX BARBER SHOP 0 Dniversity Pharmacy ’ 0 o ° * Corner Eleventh & Alder Telephone 229 Now Open For Business! Full line of Drugs, Sun dries, Stationery, Toilet Articles & Perfumery Dont ecu oar b reins! :4s ve cv Wa.te®ieai’s IdeeJ) Fountain Pen The Quality Gift that everybody wants Schwartzschild s BOOK STORE REX FLORAL COMPANY The Artistic Floral Shop Special Attention Given to Party, Wedding and Funeral Work We Carry a Fine Line of Brassware, Pottery, Vases", Japanese and Oriental Baskets Cut Flowers and Potted Plants of All Kinds’ o ° o Phone 962-J • * Delivery °Free 0 O* o © Annual Mid- Winter Shoe Sale For Men $6.00 Tan English Bals for $4.35 $5.00 Dull Calf English Bals for.33.35 $5.00 Dull Calf English Button for.S3.35 For Women $3.50 Dull Calf Button for.§2.45 $5.00 20-Button Tan and Dull Boot .$3,! 5 $3.50 Strap Satin Slip per . .95c BURDEN & GRAHAM Eugene Shoe Headquarters 826 Willamette Street