Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920, April 22, 1915, Image 3

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HAS NIHfSlEMS
"Will Get Degrees During Coming Com
mencement Week. Ten Must
Improve Work
Ninety-nine men and women will
i compose the graduating class of 1915.
Ten of these, however, have been no
tified that their work must be im
proved if they wish to receive degrees.
The following is the complete list:
Luton Ackerson, Roy C. Andrews,
A. L. Apperson, Callie Beck, Francis
A. Beebe, Morris S. Bigbee, Earl
Bl^ckaby, William R. Boone, Tom Boy
len, Walter Brenton, Leland Brown,
Lois Birown, Gertrude Buell, John
Clark Burgard, William H. Burton,
Marjorie K. Cogswell, Lucile Cogs
well, Genevieve Cooper, Jacob R. Cor
nog, Peter Campbell Crockett, Geor
giana Cross, Lawrence Dinneen,
Thomas G. Donaca, James T. Donald,
Benjamin F. Dorris Jr., Ruth Dorris,
Boyce Fenton, Floyd Galloway, Car
lyle Dressier Geisler, Eugene N. Good,
Marsh H. Goodwin, Olin C. Hadley,
Helen Jane Hamilton, Fred A. Har
desty, Henry W. Heidenreich, Leland
G. Hendricks, Maurice B. Hill, Louis
B. Hoisington, Thornton W. Howard,
George Chester Huggins, Anthony
Jaureguy, Bertrand Stuart Jerard,
Roy Johnson, Vera Edwards Kellems,
Florence Oswald Kendall, Katherine
. J. Kirkpatrick, Carolyn S. Koyl, Wil
liam E. Lackey, Beatrice Lilly, Her
bert W. Lombard, Elton C. Loucks,
Edith Vaughn McCormick, Millar Mc
Gilchrist, Samuel Michael, Mabel Mil
ler, Vera M. Moffat, Josephine Moor
head, Victor P. Morris, Edith Moxley,
Nellie I. Newland, Andrew T. Park,
Lois Parks, John F. Parsons, Neva
Perkins, Rex Putnam, Hazel V. Ra
der, Rolla E. Ralston, Clarenoj. W.
Reynolds, Mildred Riddle, August P.
Scholl, Charlotte Sears, Ruth Sears,
Velma Sexton, Lucile Shepherd,
Gretchen Sherwood, Rose Seiler, Ani
ta Slater, Franklin W. Staiger, Beu
lah A. Stebno, Lyle Steiwer, Engle
brekt Swenson, Tetsutaro Tetsugan^,
Gertrude Taylor, Cora Truman, Ellen
VanVolkinburgh, James L. Watson,
John Andre Wells, Helen C. Werlein,
W. Wootton, Bertha P. White.
©
HAYWARD’S HOOK FOR THE
TRACK ASPIRANT IS REA >■
A 24-page pamphlet for would-be
track men has been received from the
press by W L. Hayward, Physical
Director for men at the University.
“All of the events have T>een care
fully gone over and every detail in
forms of the different events ex
plained. The instructions have been
so arranged that any boy or young
man who makes a careful study of an
event in which he wishes to become
proficient may do so without the aid
of a coach,” says Mr. Hayward in the
introduction to his book.
•Mr. Hayward’s book also treats
of injuries, their prevention and treat
hJJnt. The need of care in early
training and of good physical condi
tion is emphasized.
The causes of soreness, strains and
“buck-shins” are given and treat
ment prescribed. The use of adhesive
plaster, massages and other ways of
overcoming #ills are told.
A number of these pamphlets have
been sent to high school students.
Anyone desiring a book can obtain
one by writing to Mr. Hayward.
Chicago University won a track
meet last Saturday in which eight
Western universities were entered.
Four of the conference records were
broken in the meet and two world’s
^.records were equaled.
T
SOCIAL BIOLOGISTS
WILL COUNT BIRDS
Dr. C. F.° Hodge Co-Operates With
U. S. Department of Agricul
ture for Winged Population
Dr. C. F. Hodge is co-operating
with the United States Department
of Agriculture to make a bird cen
sus of the nation. It is his plan to
have the students in his Social Biol
ogy class help him in the local cen
sus. Sixteen have already expressed
their desire to do so, and will make it
their thesis work in the course.
“Each of these students will be giv
en a forty-acre tract and will be ex
pected to tramp through it in the
height of nesting season, counting
the singing birds,” said Dr. Hodge.
“I am trying to interest the schools
in this proposition so that similar ob
servations may be kept by them. This
kind of work will be done all over the
nation, and the total results will be
collected at Washington, D. C., for
the eensus report.
“There has never been a complete
census taken. Last year one was
secured for certain parts of the coun
try, and the only one from Oregon
was that of a small district in the
Eastern part of the state. I desire
to see a fine report from the Willam
ette Valley locality this year.”
Dr. Hodge has sent to Washington,
D. C., for the necessary data, and the
work wil begin as soon as it arrives,
the meantime he and the volunteer
students will make a preliminary sur
vey of the land and apportion it off
in the forty-acre districts.
“This national census is the cli
max of a great deal of bird work
which has been going on for the past
20 or 30 years. We intend to put this
work on a practical basis; to find out
the exact value of each bird species
to the crops. I believe that there is
only one-third of the number of birds
in the United States that there should
be. The United States spends over
one billion, forty-nine million five
hundred thousand dollars annually for
the destruction of bugs; and over five
hundred million for getting rid of
weeds. This is the natural work of
the birds. If we had enough birds
this big expenditure would be unnnec
essary.”
Registrar E. M. Stone, of the Uni
versity of Washington, announces that
the total enrollment now exceeds four
thousand.
Tuttle Studio
Portrait work our specialty
606 Thirteenth A ve. East
Quick Delivery Grocery
ORA A. RHODES
This is yoir grocery—enjay if
Ph«ie 141 790 E. 11th
II Will tick Hl» Wkari H« Hiatal Ca
MAILING USTS
•9 cfo GUARANTEED
eiarcriif ill ckmi if biaiiaaa. »r«l«lni, train
•r InliaUiila. »n4 far »r cim»lcu audit akiw
ln iidoi *1 cam n 7.00* cliaaiicaliisa. Ala*
apecial pricta ■■ fae*aimil* lcttera.
ROSS-GOULD
411H N. »tk St. ST. LOUIS
DR. GILBERT THINKS
RUSINESS IS BETTER
Conditions in East Improving; West
° . Following Suit; War Will" °° f
Help
That business conditions are better,
in some respects, than they have been
for some months, is the opinion of
Dr. James H. Gilbert, Professor of
Economics, and unemployment is less
among the working classes.
“The improvement is most marked
in Eastern sections,” says Dr. Gil
bert. “Depression always sets in first
in the East and gradually extends to
the West; improvement always takes
place in the same order.
“My impression is that there never
was a legitimate excuse for the pres
ent depression, anyway. Nothing in
the national legislation of recent years
should disturb business. Tariff chang
es were moderate, and manufacturers
appear to have been more scared than
hurt.”
As to the effect of the war on Amer
ican industrial conditions, Dr. Gil
bert says that it depends on how long
the war lasts. If it lasts for a long
time, American industry will be stim
ulated in an artificial way, and a re
action is bound to follow, when the
®
—®
CfyeQub
Eugene's Finest
Cigar and
Billiard Resort
°ipc Repairing and Inlay
Work a Specialty
They Stand the Wear
l-P
Loose Leaf Fillers
and Note Books
n
I;
$
BOOK STORE
Lunches Candies
Ice Creams
Uictoria Chocolates
Don’t forget we have
a Special Sale every
Friday and Saturday
European competitor again enters the
market.
“In other ways,” Dr. Gilbert con
tinued, “the close of the war will be
beneficial. Eurbpean industry will
be seriously crippled for lack of cap
ital and sufficient labor, and for a
time there will be a considerable open
ingoin the European markets for
American Surplus ;”o0 0 o
MARJORIE McGUIRE ELECTED ®
TO EDIT WOMEN’S EMERALD
At a meeting of the Women’s
League Tuesday afternoon, Marjorie
McGuire was unanimously elected ed
itor of the Women’s Emerald, to be
published during Junior Week-End.
Last year each member of the Wo
men’s League pledged one dollar for
the Women’s Building, and the fol
lowing committee was appointed by
the President, Lyle Steiwer, to for
mulate a plan to collect this money:
Helen Wiegand, chairman; Margaret
Hawkins, Sara Barker, and Mina Fer
guson.
SilYid at List
Install a pump and drive it
with electricity
Oregon Power Co.
Phona 392
47 East 7th
Imperial
Cleaners and
Hatters
Ladies’ and Men’s Clothing;
Cleaned and Pressed
Men’s Hats Blocked
Prompt Service
FRED HARDESTY
Ualvarsity Agant
SPECIAL
French
Nougat
35 cents
pound
Varsity
Sweet Shop
Young Men's Suits
All the latest models
O
a young man wants
PERFECT MODELS
$ 15, $20, $25
WADE BROS.
The
Stein-Bloch
"Ontario"
3®
r47
The Shine Doctor
Willamette
My Business Is
Fixing Shoes Right
Jim “The Shoe Doctor”
Pianos and Expert
Piano Tuning
A. S. DRAPER
Official Piano Tuner
University School of Music
986 Willamette Phone 899
J. w.
Quackenbush
& Sons
KUYKENDALL’S DRUG STORE
THE REXALL STORE
Phone 23 870 Willamette
=@
£3
Tea Garden Syrup is used thousands of ways in cooking.
We want the housewives of the Northwest to tall us how
they use it for desserts, for preserves and crystallising fruit,
etc. For the best receipt received we will pay $75 in gold,
and $25 for the second best. Send as many as you desire.
Contest open until September 1.
- %
Tea Garden
Syrup
%
%
\
is delicious and nutritive
—it is far superior to and
more healthful for
the children than all \
corn or glucose syr-V
ups. nil
HiiilF
Pelican
Molasses
Is an open-kettle, genuine New Or
leans molasses—strictly pure—the
best on the market—costs more, but
worth it.
ASK YOUR GROCER
Pacific Coast Syrup Co*
PORTLAND, OREGON
m
llllllil'lml'ill
Every University man who has not drawn a partner or whose partner cannot attend is urged to make a date at once with any available Co-Ed
FOR THE BIG
ALL-UNIVERSITY lottery hop
TO BE GIVEN IN
The UNIVERSITY GYMNASIUM, Saturday, April 24th, 8:00 P. M. Sharp
Admission 35 cents Hendershott's