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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1915)
sms IDE FUST GETOI6 INTO IN COLUMBIA MEET, THREE WEEKS OFF, IS THE OBJECT OF MUCH SWEAT Wilson, Carridge and Gorezsky Have Been on the Sick List, but Will Report Soon O By Rex Kay. With only three weeks left before the Columbia meet, it >& certain that there will be some hard work and real sweating in Bill Hayward’s camp from now on. Some 30 men have been turning out for track every day, but on ac count of the weather, the earliness of the season, mere nas oeen no real honest “Hayward work outs.” But a great deal of time has been put to lining up the men wanted for the va rious events and a great deal has been done for some of the men in the way of form. Wilson has not been out regularly during the past week on account of a light attack of the la grippe. Car ridge, the sprinter from Kansas, has also been on the hospital list for the past week as a result of an accident with some acid in the chemical lab oratory. His face is said to have been badly burned, but he will be out from now on. For the past two days Go rezsky has not been on the field on account of illness. The fact that so many of the sprint ers have been out of the game for the past week has slowed thirtgs up, but with the present break of good weather things will steam up. One of the first things Hayward will do is pick a relay team for the Columbia meet. This is always Ore gon’s event, and this year it will be an altogether new team, with per haps one exception, that will have the job of hauling in the banner. Boylen, Peacock, Ford and Loucks are at present figuring strong in the 220. There are a raft of men doing this race, however, and there may be some real regular dark horses in the field. It looks every bit as though Coach Hayward will have something in the high, jump for the other colleges to ■it up and watch. Muirhead is go ing: in mid-season form right now. Hayward has fixed him up with a new form and certainly does the work: a little better than six feet is the re sult of it so far, and it has been in use only a few days. Sid Clark is right on Muirhead’s heels, too, and there will be tall jumping if these men hold out as they are expected to. In the broad jump Johnson, a Freshman, is fighting hard to make the 22 feet, which would put him up on the conference records. Muirhead is doing better than 21 feet. Bond and Parsons are showing good. Ndne of them have come up to Parsons so far. Payne and Huggirjs are the best bets in the distances so far, and are leading a big field of new men in rear. « In Loucks, Staub and Nelson, Hay ward expects to bring out a set of 440 men who will be hard to beat. They have been used pretty easy up to date, but from now on it will be speed and form together. While Coach Haywara was dream ing out a form for Muirhead, he in vented one for Captain Cook in the weights. It sure works, and Sam is putting the iron pill a little bet ter than 40 feet right along without work. Philbin and Snyder are work ing with the shot every day, most of their efforts being confined to form. Bill says "they’re comers.” Heidenreich and Cook are working with the discus to the tune of over 116 and 120 at every clip. Both have stuck it out for better than 125 this year. DR STUART PUTS QUESTION: “WHAT ARE YOU HERE FOR?” “What are you here for?” was the question asked by Dr. Bertha Stuart in a recent lecture at a meeting of the Y. W. C. A. “The majority of you do not know what you are here for. You cannot be efficient if you have no standard toward which to work. First, decide definitely what you are here ijor; then, get busy. If you are not phys ically normal, you cannot expect to be efficient, so get in good working condition. Finally, do what you are doing in the best possible way to the satisfaction of everyone concerned. This constitutes efficiency.” Dr. Stuart urged that each girl PEGGL O’NEIL, in OLIVER MOROSCO’S PRODUCTION, “PEG O’ MK HEART Oliver Morosco’s delightful produc tion of the J. Hartley Manners’ com edy, “Peg o’ My Heart," with Peggy O’Neil and ihe New York-Chicago cast, will be at the Eugene Theutre March 24. Thu refreshing “wild Irish rose," with her natural exuberance, effer vescence, wit and humor, will return to again captivate her audiences. Pag is a broth of a girl. A capti vating rascal. Crude from the old soil which she rambled over in the cart, at the tail of which her social istic father had orated for ‘‘Ireland and Liberty.” Then came America, and later England and a home with her dead mother’s family. Amid the aristocratic grandeur and artificiality of an English household where she is to be polished and made u lady of. As the story goes, she does most of the polishing, as a sample of the dia logue will show, vis: “My name is Peg; that’s what me father calls me," she tells her austere aunt, (Mrs. Chi chester the aunt) “I shall call you Margaret” Adv. should take an inventory of her men tal powers, determining her respec tive assets and limitations. “When you have hit upon your particular ability, so plan your cours es that every study will have a bear ing upon it. As a general rule, our efficiency is hindered because we have not decided what we intend to do in life." Numerous persons have the habit of borrowing pencils and inadvertent ly sticking them in their pockets and going off without thought of the own er. A bank in Kansas has devised a method to put an end to this. On the pencil is stamped the legend, “Stolen from the First National Bank of Lawrence.” Very few pencils are missed. Spring suits made to order White trousers 874 Willamette Street Lunches Candies Ice Creams Uicterta Chocolates Don’t forget we have a Special Sale every Friday and Saturday They Stand the Wear Loose Leaf Fillers and Note Books SdiuniKs BOOK STORE PIERCE BROS. Staple and Fancy GROCERIES Thone 246--Cor.yth andOak Sts hmm A. M. Robinson, 0. B. Pennington DRUGS. SUNDRIES, PER ' FUMES, KODAK SUPPLIES Telephone 217 Vf i r 11 v t ^ -f ■all Will R'lik N * Wh«r« ft. ftUrtal Ca MAILING LISTS *** guaranteed reftfiu «tl clwcl of toiaaaa. ontcattoiu. irate OI ttefUaala »a*4 lot w CM ate naW| ik«h 4m l«Oaial (Mat aa 7.000 cliMitcadea*. Alaa •prcial |iicn aa fac-aiauk letter*. ROSS-GOULD 411H N. tlk St. ST. LOUIS COPYRIGHT BY ED. V. PRICE ft CO* calls for a new Suit and Furnishings In SUITS we show all new colors and o two-tone effects, thru a range of 500 different patterns In FURNISHINGS we have all the new ideas in men’s shirts, ties, socks, collars, underwear, etc. ■) 9 Remember— THE HABERDASHER 713 Willamette Street Men’s Outfitters f Quality Portraits Dorris Photo Shop Pboae 741 U. OF O. Barber Shop W. H. BLOWERS, Proprietor Hair Cutting 289 E. 13th St. A Specialty, 25c Eugene, Ore. MARX’S Barber Shop 829 Willamette Street First-Class Workmen And the beot of service CHAMBERS Hardware Co. Hardware and Furniture Paints, Oils and Glass 742 Wilamefte Street Phone1 Eugene Bicycle Works All Work Guaranteed Our Prices The Lowest 835 Olive. Telephone 47 Watts’ Opllal Parian No charp* for Eahawiaatioa*. Brokan Lan tm 4ajfa*tad wittea an hour or two( kwin* tkapiaca*. Factory chi tk« Premia**. 790 Wlllooaotlo Btna Sc J. w. Quackenbush & Sons 160 Ninth Auenue East * |>a/n\J\£ck,~ <&j^edx^/a£tuAc April Fourth is Easter Get ready for it now. We are show ing the above models In a variety of clever fabrics. ■ « Weber & Heilbroner hats for Spring are on display