Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920, October 07, 1916, Page Four, Image 4

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    Service Garment
With Fashion
Attractions
This is what the up-to-date
.Overcoat should be. That is
the standard by which you
can measure all
FRIENDLY OVERCOATS
Serviceability makes no
concessions to fashion, nor
does style make any com
promise with durability and
comfort in these swagger
Friendly Overcoats.
Comfort, service and style
distinction are so associated
in these garments as to ren
der you a complete and well
balanced satisfaction. There
is nothing medium about
these clothes but the price.
Central Church
Tenth and Pearl Streets
Morning Church—School 10.30 A. M.
Men’s class in Present-Day Problems, DR. CASWELL,
Leader
Woman’s Class in Old Testament Stories—MISS FOX
Leader,
A Church Home for Students
Try It
OUR POLICY IS
“Your Satisfaction”
There is no “beating around the bush” about our store pol
icy—we’re set in the idea that what yiu want is quality,
style and value.
And plus believing it, we practice it. Please say “show
me”. We will with—
Stein-Bloch and Kirschbaum Smart Clothes for College Men
$15 TO $30
AT YOUR HOUSE PARTY
You will serve punch. We can serve you with the best
of things at a low cost, for making it.
Grape Juice
Logan Juice
Lemons
Oranges
Grape Fruit
Pineapple
rresn mmscos, Adoras, and Anolas, in bulk
ELLIOTT & HOSMER
GROCERS
9th and Oak
Phone 2-16
SWIMMING POPULAR SPORT
250 Co-eds Sign Up for Classes Under
Miss Cummings.
Two hundred ftnfl fifty University
Kiris have signified their intention of
swimming in the tank when it is open
ed to them October 31. As swimming
is not listed as an out-door sport and
no credit is given for it, .Miss Louise
Cummings, head of the department of
hygiene and physical education, consid
ers the number large. She is of the opin
ion that swimming is the most popular
sport among University girls today.
The tank will be open on Tuesdays
and Thursdays from 2 to 5:30 p. m.,
during which time Miss Harriet Thomp
son and Miss Hazel Rader, of the phy
sical training department will give swim
ming lessons. No fee will be charged,
with the exception of a locker fee, and
the girls are to have unrestricted use
of the tank during those hours.
FRESHMEN SMOTHER
EUGENE HIGH SH
Steers Makes Touchdown in
First Three Minutes
of Play.
Frosh Rip Prepers’ Line at Will;
Steers Is Star of
the Game.
Plowing through their opponents’ line
at will, the Oregon freshmen smothered
Eugene high 51-0 in the first football
game of the season yesterday. The
lighter and less experienced eleven was
no match for the strong team Coach
Walker has developed. The heavy Ore
gon backs ripped the Eugene line to rib
bons, making from five to 30 yards on
every down.
Bill Steers, the ntiSKy Tad from The
Dalles, stood out as the particular
luminary of the day, time and again
tearing off long runs and shaking off
tackier after tackier. He scored three
of the freshmen’s eight touchdowns.
The first touchdown came after three
minutes of play, Steers being shoved over
the line. Toward the end of the quar
ter Mast broke away around left end
for 30 yards and planted the pigskin be
hind the posts for another score. z
In the second quarter Reinhart made
a nice run of 50 yards and then plunged
over for a score. “Brick” Leslie
blocked a kick in this period which
Strowbridge recovered. On the next play
he made c touchdown.
The second half was almost a repeti
tion of the first except that Eugene of
fered a little more stubborn resistance.
Scaiefe and Foster made first down for
the high school once, the only time the
prepers were able to make yardage.
The freshmen attempted nothing but
simple line bucks and end runs with a
few forward passes sandwiched in. Ore
gon did not punt once. The Eugene
offense was powerless against the heavy
Oregon line, many times their plays be
ing spilled before they could get under
way.
Anderson, Benefiel and the entire
backfield shone for the first year then
while Newman and Scaiefe were most in
evidence for the town boys. The line
up was as follows:
Freshman-center—Laughlin; guards,
Benefiel, Berg; tackles—E. Leslie, B.
Leslie; ends—Anderson, Wilson; quarter
—Steers; halves— Mast, Reinhart; full
—Strowbridge.
Eugene-center—Friends; guards—r.
Campbell, Bradway; tackles—Oallison, C.
Campbell; ends—Quinner, Hoffer; quar
ter—Scaiefe; halves—Brandenberg, New
man; full—Burton.
Substitutions—Foster for Branden
berg, Ellis for Laughlin, Maulkey for
Mast, Stalun for Wilson, Brown for
Benefiel, Brattaim for Berg.
TEACHERS WILL SPEAK.
Earl Fleischmann was the only stu
dent from the colleges of Oreogn to take
the Rhodes Scholarship examination this
week.
Dr. Schafer, chairman of the colloqu
ium committee, asks that suggestions for
topics for discussion for the year be sent
to the president's office.
Jim Says:
“Wear Neholin Soles and forget your
Rubbers”
JIM, The Shoe Doctor
Opposite Rex
Hint to the Frosh
The Sophomores Drink our Malted Milk ;
That’s Why They Won
PETER PAN
.
AT HARDY’S .
If you like a feed of Pork and Beans and New England
Brown Bread for your breakfast Sunday morning you can
get it at Hardy’s. Fine chicken dinner at noon and evening
at a very moderate price.
HARDY’S
Cor. of 9th Ave. East and Oak Street. City.
Sophomores Are Victorious
(Continued from page one)
GO yards for his fifth score. He added
the extra point each time
The rooters cried "touchdown, touch
down,” and Tegart accommodated them
by grabbing Shy’s loag pass and running
five yards the last chalk mark. Enter
Shy Huntington again with a rolling,
tumbling, 60 yard tramp over the goal
line.
Summary: touchdowns, Montieth 3,
Jensen 1, H. Huntington 3, S. Hunting
ton G, Tegart 1; goals from touchdowns,
S. Huntington 12, Montieth 1.
Substitutions, Willamette: Wormar for
Carson, Procter for Tobie.—Oregon:
Spellman for Williams, Dudley for
Snider.
Officials—Referee—Sam Dolan; um
pire, Bill Schmitt; head lineman, Dean
Walker.
The lineup was ns follows:
Willamette Oregon
Flegel (capt) ... .L.E.. .Beckett (capt.)
Tobie ..
Guerin .
Peterson
Carson .
Taylor .
Rexford
3ooth .
Dimmick
Grosvenor
Radcliff ..
. .L.T...
.L. G...
...C. ...
...R.G.
. R.T...
.R. E.
...Q.B....S.
...R.H.
...L.H...
..F. B...PI.
.. Mitchell
... Snyder
.... Risley
. 1111110018
.. • Tegart
. . Bartlett
Huntington
. Montieth
... Jensen
Huntington
Bangs Livery Co.
All Stage Lines
Transfer Day or Night
Phone 21
CONCERT IS TO BE GIVEN
University Orchestra Will Present Selec
tions From Friml’s Katinka.
Selections from0 the score of
“Katinka,” a music comedy by Rudolf
Friml, the California composer, are be
ing worked over by the university
orchestra for their concert.
“Katinka” was successfully produced
in New York last winter. The music
is delightfully vivacious and is the kind
that will be well received by everyone,”
says Miss Winifred Forbes, director of
the orchestra.
According to Mis3 Forbes, “Unusual
interest is being taken in the orchestra
work this year, probably because it is
now composed of students only,” she
declared. “Present indications point i
toward a very successful season.”
HOTEL
OSBURN
First Class Hotel of City
Caters to Student Banquets
Our Sunday Night Dinners
Unsurpassed
Music by Hendershott’s
Orchestra
MARY’S
White Lunch
Short orders a specialty
Waffles and Pie
“Like Mother Used to Make”
Where the “Fellows” All Go.
Copyright 1916
The House of Kuppenheimef'
Success and Leadership
Ai g the returns on an investment of courage. Courage to
strike into new paths, to give better merchandise and to
rest content with a medium profit in the interest of greater
volume.
Less Profits
and
Greater Volume
Is our Plan
i ^ ^der this plan you are going to get the difference in
better fabric, better fashions and better fit for less money.
Kuppenheimer Clothes
' • $18.00 to $30.00