HI GETS RECORD o o Number Reaches 415, Which is Now 80 More than Last Year’s Circulation Four hundred and fifteen subscrip tions, the largest number on record, have been taken for the 1916 Oregana, according to Leslie Tooze, circula tion manager. Three hundred and fif ty-seven of these have been taken on the campus, while the remaining 58 represent those taken at the Law and Medical Schools, in Portland. * The circulation staff expects the to tal number of subscriptions to reach 450, which would exceed last year’s circulation of 370 by 80 copies. Several weeks ago letters were sent to alumni all over the state asking for subscriptions, and several have heen received. On February 15 a complete list of Oregana subscribers to that date was published in the Emerald. Those who have subscribed since that date are: Albert Gillette, Harold Hamstreet, E. Irvine, Rita Fraley, H. Phillips, Russell Pugh, Vera Williams, Martha Tinker, Walter Brenton, Loren But ler, Russell Quisenberry, Gertrude Bu ell, Georgia Kinsey, Beulah Stebno, William Ramage, Fred E. Melzer, ^Esther Stafford, Helen Dresser, Frank Wilson, Laird Woods, Mary Hislop, James T. Donald, Evangeline Hus band, Frances Shoemaker, Teressa Cox, Callie Beck, Mabel Miller, Grace Campbell, Ruth McLean, E. Lind, Donald Newbury, Lloyd Teggart, Wil ford Jenkins, Ida Johnson, Edna Hol man, Alexander Pearson, Vaughn Mc Cormick, Rufc Westfall, Ben H. Smith, James F. Howell, Ira Barnett, Golden Barnett, Nellie Cox, Joseph Denn, Prof. H. Crombie Howe, Helen Wetzel, Miss Aupperle, Ethel Gibson, Jeannette Kletzing, Cosby Gilstrap, Hazel Rasor, Lolita Bodman, Chester Huggins, Anne Geiser, Prof. Warren D. Smith, Frances Craighead, Aileen Townsend, Loren Parmley, Cora Hos ford, Vera Webber, Wm. R. Service, Adrienne Epping, A. C. Shelton, Tur ner Neil, Merna Brown, Robert Riggs, Lynn Parr, Dorothy Downard, Miss 4 Marguerita, Peter Crockett, Lucile Huggins, Harold Tregilgas, Walter Kirk, Clar* Lee, Edel Fraasch, Echo June Zahl, Larry Mann, Robert Lang ley, Cora Truman, Harold Sexton, Velma Sexton, Edward Gray, Bertrand Jerard, Lillian Littler, Harrie Booth, Lucille Watson, E. Tregisi, Elizabeth Carson, Joseph Hedges, Marsh Good win, Hazel Downing, Thomas Camp bell Jr., Jane Knox, Millar McGilchrist, Donald C. Roberts, Lois Gray, Fran ces Beebe, Lyle Bigbee, Elizabeth DeVaney, Vera Kellems, Herman Gil filen, Leo Potter, Ralph Allen, Sam Michael, Dorothy Wilkinson, Robert Earl, Josephine Moorhead, Henry Thorsett, Agnes Driscoll, Marie Churchill, Olive Risley, Bertha White, Erie Lane, Ella Hayden, Miss Kent, Fred Hardesty, Dr. Ralph C. Bennett, * Oskar Wiest, Bert Lombard, Williard Hayes, Prof. Broecker, Ralph Taven ner, Harold Berlin, Leo Fumey, Clar. iel Ogle, Russell Ralston, Mona Dougherty, Eulalie Crosby, John Huston, Glenn. Stanton, Luton Ack erson, Thomas D. Cutsforth, Beatrice Lilly, Sara Barker, J. S. Daly, Wil liam J. Montgomery, Bernice Perkins, Hazel Knight, Alice Leiter, Pauline Beadell, Hermes Wrightson, Bothwell Avison, Sigma Chi Fraternity, Beta Theta Pi Fraternity, J. F. T. Gal loway, Robert Baker, Carl C. Baker, Louise Bailey, Augustus P. Scholl, G. N. Anderson, Wilmot Foster, Clinton Thienes. The above list does not include the k Law and Medical School subscrip tions. 5000 CATALOGUES FOR 1915-1916 WILL BE READY SHORTLY Registrar Tiffany states that the 1915-1916 University of Oregon cat alogue will be out during or a little after Junior Week-End. Five thou sand copies are being printed. The bulletin is printed on light paper and it will not be as bulky as that of last year, but will contain more pages, j He Commerce, Architecture and Law Schools are described at some length. President Campbell spent Friday in Washington, D. C., on business, and left for New York Friday evening. He goes to Clark University from New York. U FOLLETTE HIS ARTIGlf ON PEACE President Campbell’s Assembly Ad dress on “Good Will On Earth” Appeals to Magazine A marked copy of LaFollette’s Mag azine for April, 1915, edited by Sen ator Robert M. LaFollette, contains an extract from an assembly address by President P. L. Campbell at the University of Oregon during the ear ly part of last semester. The article is headed “Christ’s Doctrine: An An tidote to War," and is reprinted from the entire address as reported by Prof. E. W. Allen, head of the Jour nalism Department and printed in the Extension Monitor of December, 1914, under the caption “Good Will On Earth.” The article as it appears in LaFollette’s Magazines is as follows: “The time in history seems to have come when civilization must adopt the doctrine of universal good will toward men or civilized peoples must face ex tinction. “I do not believe the present prob lems confronting the world can ever find permanent solution on any other basis. The doctrine of human broth erhood and of equal justice for all, promulgated two thousand years ago in Palestine, has never been tried on a universal scale, but it now is permanently to be forced into the realm of practical politics as the only way of escape from an intolerable and suicidal state of affairs. “The failure of civilization should be laid at the door of the nations that have despaired of the common brother hood of man. War has become too ef ficient and too deadly, and to follow the old cynical doctrines is for the na tions to hurry to their own destruc tion. The march of events, the bitter logic of facts and experience are pain fully but surely sifting false from true. We have said with our own lips for two thousand years that ‘The meek shal inherit the earth,’ yet all this time we have acted as if pride, selfishness and self-assertion were wisdom. ‘Blessed is the peacemaker’ we have asserted, but it has been the war maker that in our blindness we have looked upon only too often as the bringer of progress and the true defender of religion. , “At last the war-maker’s course is nearly run. Power and riches and in justice have at last learned to arm themselves so effectively that they will find themselves proving their own futility. Now we shall watch mili tarism and race hatred and force burn themselves out. They were inef fective and injudicious policies, car rying the seeds of their own destruc tion. “Christ was, as time will prove, the true political scientist. The test of tinth is that men have come to it in time, however unwiliing. It proves itself. If the Christian doctrines are true, do not worry about them; they will live. If they are true, it is only a question of time until all men will be driven by a relentless force to rec ognize their truth.” - The University of California has adopted a resolution providing for a severing of intercollegiate relations with Stanford, until an agreement be tween the universities contain the con dition that Freshmen be abolished from varsity competition. RADNOR f\jlADNO ARROW COLLAR mwam A. M. Robinson, 0. B. Pranlnftoa DRUGS, SUNDRIES, PER FUMES, KODAK SUPPLIES m SIT BATLEY IS ELECTED PRESIDENT OF CLUB Bothwell Avison and Lawrence Mann Chosen Vice President and Sec rery-Treasurer Respectively Merlin Batley was chosen Glee Club President for the next year at a meet ing held Wednesday. He received a unanimous vote. Botts Avison was chosen Vice President and Larry Mann, Secretary-Treasurer. Batley has been a member of the club two years. Both of these years he was a stunt man. “We have chosen the logical man for the job,” said Henry Heidenreich, President this year. “Batley is the kind of man the club needs, with lots of pep and ability. Under his leader. J ship the club will become one of the best in the West. “The club will only lose a few men this year, and with next year’s ma terial, a great organization can be expected. It will be made up of men who can really sing.” Both this year’s and next year’s Glee Club Presidents are LaGrande products. A statistician at University of Cal ifornia who had nothing better to do compiled the following statistics: Since the women’s swimming pool has been opened this spring, nine Red ranks first as the favorite color of bathing caps, with green and blue close behind. Pianos and Expert Piano Tuning A. S. DRAPER Official Piano Tuner University School of Music 986 Willamette Phone 899 KUYKENDALL’S DRUG STORE THE REXALL STORE Phene 23 870 Willamette ! " I' - i t H L i1 I / V l I ( ' 11 K! S r _ _ ON O'O Kl‘ ! tj BURGESS OPTlfALG I At I I '.SI \ I. Ol’l ICIAS.S .'ii mi i i'll i ii m iii.i m .'ii ',,'n We are Sole Agents for Gorham's Silver ware and Hawkes’ Cut Glass BOTH MAKE VERY APPROPRIATE WEDDING PRESENTS Luckey’s Jewelry Store HAMPTON’S FOR Hart Shaf f ner &Marx CLOTHING ~ ate This advertisement, pub lished in the $500 Fatima Advertising Contest, is the work of D. T. Carlisle, University of California. The $500 Prize — $500 will be paid to the college student who sends to us the best original adver'isement for Fatima Cigarettes before June 1, 1915. Inthe mean time for each ad we publish we will pay the writer $5. Illustrate your ad if you can, but if you can’t draw, then use your kodak or describe your idea. Prize will be awarded by a committee of three promi nent advertising men: L. B. Jones, Adv. Mgr. East man Kodak Co., F. R. Davis, Adv. Dept. General Electric Co., and J. George Frederick, Editor of “Advertising and Selling”. I.ioorrr & Mvim Tosiceo Co. 212 Fifth Ave., New York City