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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1915)
MOTOR TRUCK ILL DISTRIBUTE MS Printing on^Book Finished and Bind ing Begun; Name of Person to Whom Dedicated Kept Dark Monday morning, May 10, is now the date set for the distribution of the 1916 Oregana, and if nothing more happens to prevent, 400 books will be given out from a motor truck whi"'i ^ will make the regular rounds of th.1 houses, and which will leave a num ber of volumes at the Y. M. C. A. Book Exchange for non-fraternity men. It was planlned to have the Jun ior year book ready to deliver May 8, hut Manager Holt announces that a series of unavoidable delays ha*m made necessary the postponement »f the date. “Have your receipt and your doll- • ready when the books arrive,” sai 1 Leslie Tooze, Assistant Manager. Each house will be warned befor • hand of the advent of the truck. The printing has been done, ard the publication is now in the process of binding, says Manager Holt. The name of the one to whom the book is dedicated is being held se cret. LESLIE TOOZE WILL EDIT 1915-1916 Y. M. HANDBOOK At the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet meeting j Thursday, Leslie Tooze was elected, editor of the Y. M. C. A. Handbook. | As associates, the entire Cabinet will assist him. The book, which will be gotten out before the close of school, will be re duced from the 100 pages of last year to about 70 pages. However, most of the reduction will be made in the exclusion of advertising mat ter, as under the agreement with the Emerald and the Oregana no school publication other than those may so licit local advertising. The book will be placed in a lea ther case of two compartments, one designed to hold the Handbook and the other to hold a Student Body ticket and Y. M. C. A. membership card. Don Belding, the publicity member of the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, will edit the annual report of the Association. This report, covering all phases of the association work during the past year, will appear in the Emerald in about a week and at the same time 200 copies will be mailed to friends of the association outside of the Uni versity. “How many out?” and “What’s the ■core?” so often heard in the bleach ers, will soon become back numbers «t Princeton. A score, board, very mueh like the one at the polo grounds is being erected. The board will mea sure 30 by 15 feet and will register balls, strikes, outs, the score by in nings, and th§ lineup. JUNIORS WILL START REVELRY. WITH PARADE < Continued from page 1.) week-end events. “Everybody works” is the slogan for Friday morning. Boyce Fenton, chairman of the University Day, will not give out his committees until next Tuesday. It is definitely understood, however, that no one will be allowed to play the role of the “fat rich.” The frog pond will be smoothed over, trees will be torn out in front of the new Administration Building, and the car station will be moved. The Women’s League will provide booths for the hungry laborers and a “jolly ser pentine” will be formed to gather in the eats. At 2:30 P. M. Oregon and Washing ton will again mix in athletics, this time in the form of a track meet. At 8:00 P. M. “Jeanette’s Way,” the Sen ior Play, will be staged in the Eugene Theater. Over 100 “prep” athletes will par ticipate in the annual interscholastic meet Saturday. The preliminaries will be staged at 9:00 A. M., the finals at 2:30 P. M. Hayward Hall will serve as an in formation bureau for the “preppers. The last Junior Week-End festivity will be the Junior Prom, Saturday ev! ening at 8:00 P. M. Those who do not wish to attend the Prom will be entertained at a smoker in Villard, Hall. Visitors will be provided in advance with partners for the Jun ior Prom. XETSER TO MESS 'IS GRADUATING CLASS Night Letter From President Camp bell Says Columbia Mathemati cian Is Secured A night letter from President P. L. Campbell to Professor W. M. Smith, Secretary 'to the President, received today, announces that Professor C. J Keyser, head of the Department of Mathematics at Columbia University had been secured to deliver the com mencement address of the 1915 grad uating class at the University of Or egon. Professor Keyser Is well known throughout the United States for his exploits along the line of philosophy. A brief outline of Professor Key ser’s life is as follows: Professor Keyser was born in Raw son, Ohio, and graduated from the Ohio Normal School in 1883, taking a B. S. degree. He studied law in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and Kenton Ohio. Was given B. S. degree from University of Missouri in 1892; h» took an A. M. degree from Columbia in 1896, and married the same year. He was principal and instructor in various schools in Ohio, and was ap pointed to the Thayer School of Math ematics at Harvard In 1892. Pro - fessor Keyser has been the recipient of numerous degrees from several colleges throughout the United State*. “MY MAN AND LADY" TO BE PLAYED AT JUNCTION CITY “My Man and Lady,” the play that made a successful tour through Southern Oregon, will be repeated in Junction City on this evening, May 8. The performance win t>e given un der the auspices of the high school, of which Herman Oberteuffer, ’14, is principal. The same cast that played here will make the trip. It includes Professor A. F. Reddie, Fred Hardesty, Man dell Weiss, Homer Kellems, Ernest Watkins, Beulah Stebno, Marian Tut tle, Mina Ferguson, Elta Aikens and Josephine Moorhead. TWO SCHOOLS WILL DEBATE . FOR HIGH SCHOOL HONORS The final two of the 43 high schools in the State Debating League will meet tonight, in Villard Hall, to de cide the state championship for the debating cup. The two schools are Salem and Enterprise, with two men on each team. In the last semi-finals Enterprise beat Prineville. The question used in all the h5gh school debates this year is the same as that in the inter-collegiate con tests: “Resolved, That the federal government should own and operate all interstate railways and all intra state lines competing with them.” PROFESSOR BOVARD WILL RETURN BY SEPTEMBER Prof. John F. Bovard, who left last fall to take up biological work at Harvard, has written that hj will be back at the University by Septem ber 1st, in time to take up the fall classes in Zoology, Physiology, His tology and Embryology. New cour - es in Bionomic Problems will also be offered. Professor Bovard has spent a great deal of time in research work along these lines. August Nehring, elevator operator in the University of Texas, is the proud wearer of an iron cross award ed him by the German Kaiser, during the Franco-Prussian war. WOMEN’S GLEE CLUB TO SING AT PORTLAND ROSE FESTIVAL Among other choral organizations of the state, the Women’s Glee Club of the University has been invited to sing at the Portland Rose Festival. The club will give a program of an hour’s length, consisting of chorus and quartet numbers. No solo num bers will be given, as the concert is to be held out of doors, at the Fes tival Center, at Park and Madison streets. All 24 members of the club will leave Thursday, June 10, and prob ably most of them return the same day. The concert will be given in the afternoon. Director Ralph H. Ly man will accompany the club. Have you placed your order for one of those beautiful memory books, any crest or seal, at Cressey’s Book Store. EXTENSION DIVISION MAKES FLY-BAIT EXPERIMENTS Fly-bait experiments were conduct ed yesterday by the Extension Divis ion, the results being sent to the Bu reau of Health, of the City of Port land, to be used in the Portland lly campaign. Five traps, each with a different bait, were set side by side at a place near the edge of town. The baits were syrup, banana, salmon, crab and bran mash, the formula for which was given by Dr. C. F. Hodge. In twenty minutes, the first trap had four vic tims, the second 10, the third 12, the fourth 39, and the fifth 220. PETER CROCKETT. ID COMPETE FOR PEACE ORATORICAL PRIZE Peter Crockett will represent the University in the International Peace Oratorical Contest with U. of W., to be held in about two weeks. No local tryouts have been held, because Crockett was the only student ex pressing his willingness to work on an oration. He has put in several months of labor and he has finally given his declamation the title of “An Illogical State Concept.” There is a prize of $75 offered to the winner and a stake of $15 for the next best oration. At Northwestern University, all stu dents who maintain an average of “B” ro better in a subject are excused from taking the final examination in that study. ®. . — — ) THE RAINBOW . Eugene's Palatial Sweet House BOWLING Ladies’ Day Every Wedaesd’y i- - ■ i _t_ Lunches Candies Ice Creams (Jktoria £lwoUte$ Don’t forget we have a Special Sale every Friday and Saturday Chinese Noeiles’ flense Everything in Chineae Noodle* 10:00 a. m. to IKK) p. m. 63 Sixth At—un East Tuttle Studio Portrait work our apecia/ty 606 Thirteenth Are. Eeet Quality Portraits Dorris Photo Shop flM« 741 6th aad Willamett Street Premiums W. R. WALLACE TkiOhakCi(vS4«re FOB RENT—A first class piano at reasonable rates to the right party. Can be had for an indefinite length of time. Phone 1161-J. SIGMA DELTA CHI PLEDGES TO BE INITIATED MAY 22 At the Sigma Delta Chi initiation for Harold Hamstreet and Leigh Swin son, on Friday, May 22, the national officers, Carl Getz, Dean of Journalism at Montana University, and Lee A. White, of Washington University, will hav charge of the ceremonies. As is customary in connection with the in formal part of the initiation, the neo phytes will appear on the campus in full dress suits. In order to show their journalistic ability, Hamstreet and Swinson will have charge of Thursday’s Emerald. After the initiation, Friday, a ban quet will be served for them at the Osburn Hotel. A recent edition of the University of Washington Daily appears modeled after the New York Evening Journal, as a note at the bottom of the sheet states. This was carried out even to. the last page with its large type ed-l itorials. Scare heads were also used on the front page. The paper, la beled the “8th” edition, also contained a thrilling love story by Virginia Ter hune Van de Bogart. EXCLUSIVE ASEMCT De Luxe Ring Books Conor Nloth ood Vlllaaotte Call 944 when yoo miss your Em erald. A. 1C. IUMmh, 0. B. PisataitoB DRUQS, SUNDRIES, PEE FUMES, KODAK SUPPLIES Mom HV gr... = CHAMBERS Hardware Co. Hardwire and Furniture Paints,Oils and Glass 742 Vilaa:itt Sdreal Phene1 Sample Voile Presses Less \ Newest models in fiine quality white French Voile, trimmed with hand embroidery, colored embroidery, crochet buttons and crushed silk novelty girdles. Un excelled in workmanship and materials. Marked 25 */> less Than Regular Price LINEN DRESSES Newest models in natural and colored linen dresses. Perfectly made and designed in good and pleasing styles. Trimmed with pique collar and leather belts. Price $7.50 to $12.50 Urge's Cloak & Suit House “The Store that Sells Wooltex )> 865 Willamette St. Eugene, Oregon 1 At The Junior “Prom” You’ll be correctly attired and enjoy the occasion to a degree which mere words fail to express if you’ll have THE HABERDASHER MEN’S OUTFITTERS 713 Wlllimetle send us your measure for clothes tailored to your individual order from our incomparable styles and woolens. You can afford the cost. Largest tailors in the world of GOOD made-to-order clothes U. S. A. Chicago