Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920, May 13, 1916, Theta Sigma Phi---Woman's Edition, Page Ten, Image 10

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    10 Votes Free With Every Dollar Purchase
Help Elect Miss Edel Fraasch as Rose Queen
t
F Hampton’s
Where Cash
Beats Credit
Women’s Novelty
Suits Reduced
About 50 women’s and misses nov
elty suits taken from our regular
stocks. All this season’s newest
styles are offered at a decisive re
duction :
$12.00 novelty suits.$ 8.95
$18.00 novelty suits.$14.40
$24.00 novelty suits.$19.20
$27.50 novelty suits.$22.00
$30.00 novelty suits.$24.00
Silk Jersey and Corduroy
Sport Coats Reduced
The Campus Queen
ELECTED
Latest Returns from the Polls
Blue Bell Wins
Unanimous Decision for Blue Bell Ice Cream
The Sorority Special
Eugene Farmers’
Creamery
Home of Blue Bell Ice Cream
Phone 638
856 Olive Street
The Best Meals Served
Most Central Location
Telephones in all Rooms
HOTEL
SMEED
Eugene, Oregon.
Special Attention to Students
Rooms Steam Heated
Hot and Cold Water
Green Lid Frosh
Miss Domepieces
One Frosh Declares He Will Be
Like a Nut Minus Shell
After the Cremation.
"When my green cap is gone I’ll feel
like a nut without a shell,” ruefully re
marked one freshman as he considered
the grand cremation to take place Fri
j day. He is not the only one who will
1 miss the verdant dome piece. George
■ Cook says he finds a cap much handier
I to carry around with him in perference
to a new lid of not as insignificant size.
Earl Murphy is almost afraid to buy a
new one for fear he will leave it under
a seat in the Eugene theatre next Friday,
lie is so used to finding it in his pocket
that he will just naturally have to learn
the habit of putting it elsewhere all
over again.
Somewhat of this feeling is bothering
Nellis Hamblin. “My joy at being freed
from the green thing Is so great that I
can’t express it but, you know,” he said,
“there’s one drawback. I’ll have a hard
time tipping another properly.”
The treasurer of the freshman class
has learned to count his dollars since the
difficult task of keeping track of the
twenty-five cent pieces in the class treas
ury has developed upon him. He was
considering the purchase of a new “lid”
until he happened to think that the sud
den demand for proper head covering
would make the price go up. Now he is
in doubt about just what course to pur
sue.
Harold Say fears he is going to feel
peculiar for a few days. “I’ll miss the
gentle trickle down the back of my neck
during the rainy season,” he says.
Another member of the class of 1919
says he is afraid he and some of his
mates are going to look like accidents
just going to happen. He suggests that
they wear muzzles so they won’t get
lost on the campus without anything to
identify them. Still another says after
Friday he will be in the seventh heaven.
40 MEN WORK ON DIAMOND
Improvements Only Preliminary Says Mr.
Tiffany.
Special work was done on the baseball
diamond during cleanup morning, a squad
of 40 men being detailed to work on
it. The improvements made were only I
preliminary however. Early next week
it is to be ploughed, scrapped and
leveled. “We want to get it into good
shape before next season,” said Mr.
Tiffany. “We have a natural diamond
there but it doesn’t drain well enough
yet. We are going to round the center
and provide a suitable slope. It lacks
one now. Our outfield is too rough,
at present too, and we are going to level
it. We have the makings of one of the
best baseball diamonds in the north
west there. New bleachers along the
track fence will also go up. Our present
seating capacity is only 1200. We will
swell that to 1700 or 1800 by next
season."
Steps were cut up the bank from Alder
street Friday morning by the work squad
and they will be boarded up and made
permanent when the plcachers are erect
ed.
The only objection to the diamond as it
now stands is that the sun is rather hard
on the fielders' eyes. It faces the north
west and should face the southeast. Man
ager Tiffany says this condition will
probably be changed by next season.
GLEE CLUB TRIP NETS $100
The recent glee club trip will net ap
proximately $100 for the woman’s build
ing fund, according to Manager Leslie
Tooxe.
He believes that the success of the
j trip was due largely to the ticket sales
[ held by high school students in the vari
; ous towns.
i “Newspapers everywhere were com
plimentary." Tooxe concluded. “I believe
that the girls going into the homes was
a benefit. Every report said that the
| Eniversity had been helped greatly,
I through its students becoming known
more thoroughly.”
Real Vaudeville,
Say ’17Joyrtiakers
Junior Class Hour on May 20,
Won’t Be “Local Color Stuff”
or “A la Freshman.”
WHO—Junior class.
WHERE—Guild hall
WHEN—May 20, 4 to 6 p. m.
WHAT—A genuine vaudeville perfor
mance.
There you have the list of it, but there
are a few other details that might in
terest you. Echo Zahl, chairman of the
junior class hour committee says,
“The performance will be strictly pro
fessional. There will be no ‘local color
stuff, for once, the faculty will escape.”
All of the plans of the production have
not been made public as yet, but a few
of the features are already known. Rosa
lind Bates, Robert HcMurray and Alex
Bowen will ‘perpetrate’ “A Full House,”
a one act skit by James Mott, who direct
ed "The Fortune Hunter” and “Arizona.”
The skito was produced professionally
with great success.
Margaret Spangler has been secured
to sing semi-classical songs. She will be
supported in the chorus work by a pony
ballet.
There is to be a Hawaiian stunt, too,
with ukuleses, but the management
wishes it to be distinctly understood
that the act will not be pulled off ‘a la
Freshman.’ MaTtha Beer is to appear in
an original Hawaiian interpretive dance
called “Lalee.” She asserts that every
effort will be made to “get over” the
genuine Hooloo atmosphere.
Then, last but not least, Howard Mc
Culloch and Echo Zahl are booked to
give 15 minutes of song, dance and pat
ter.
The admittance to this performance by
the above mentioned artists is free—to
those who are invited. Come early and
avoid the rush, the management sug
gests.
The freshmen are to be hostesses to
the junior women at a picnic lunch the
evening of Women’s Day at Syracuse
University. Each freshman will prepare
a lunch for two, and take with her a
junior woman.
Ruby ITammerstrom, ’13, who is teach
ing at Franklin high school, Portland, is
a guest of the Gamma Phi Beta fratern
ity this week-end.
CENTENNIALS
Are Best
PUCSLETS
From Marshfield
PETER PM
996 Willamette
Ninth-St. Meat Market
The Sanitary Market
o
FOUND—A sum of money on the
campus. The owner may have it by send
ing: to Miss Mozelle Hair, Extension hall
a statemenj of the amount, when and
where lost, etc. ° 0 . -
FOUND—A pair of tortoise-rimmed
spectacles on campus, between Dorm and
McClure. Inquire of Louise Bailey.
Read every advertisement.
Your Kodak
and our
Finishings
Give Best Results
Schwarzschild’s
Book Store
BREAKFAST
7-9
LUNCH
11:30-1:30
DINNER
5:30-7:30
The Monarch
CAFETERIA
and
Delicatessen
Home Cooked Cakes, Pies, Dough- q
nuts and Cookies.
All the good things to Eat
Try our Delicatessen Department
956 Willamette
Phone 952
Have You Filled Your
Memory Book?
See our Mill Race Pictures
Look at all Your Old Friends
Pictures of the Varsity Football and Baseball Teams
Junior Week End Snaps
Y Parade Pictures
Burning the Frosh Caps
Some beauties of the floats, too.
Have you seen the Girls’ Baseball Game?
It’s a Scream! \
This is the place to Fill Your Memory Book.
Hurry Up! Hurry Up! ° Before they are all gone.
Reynolds’ Studio
Campus Pictures
Frosh and Rook Pictures
982 Willamette St.
Phone 535