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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 14, 1916)
ASK FOR— BLUE BELL BUTTER | and Ice Cream Always Good EUGENE FARMERS’ CREAMERY 856 Olive Phone 638 The Palace Barber Shop For any and all kinds of barber work Palace Shining Parlors 15 shines for.$1.00 7 shines for .50£ Hats cleaned and reblocked 747 w illamette Street i ¥ f Eugene Theatre TWO DAYS December 15-16 SATURDAY MATINEE NIGHTS AT 8:15 MATINEES AT 2:15 The World’s Most Stupendous Attraction D. W. GRIFFITH’S Two Million Dollar Spectacle f 'Intolerance' Love’s Struggle Throughout the Ages Mr. Griffith’s First and Only Production since “The Birth of a Nation” Coming direct from 8 months at the Columbia theatre, San Francisco Symphony Orchestra of Thirty PRICES: Nights, 25$ to $1; Boxes $1.50; Saturday Matinee, 25C to 75<?; Boxes, $1 SEAT SALE THURSDAY Mail orders accompanied by remittance filled in order of receipt JAPANESE ART IS TOPIC Illustrated Lecture to Be Given by Port* j land Woman Today in Guild Hall. j An illustrated lecture on Japanese art will be given by Mrs. R. M. Tuttle, of ! Portland, Thursday afternoon at 3 : o'clock in Guild hall. Mrs. Tuttle is ! head of the art department of the Port | land Woman's club and is prominent in lecture work in Portland. The lecture will be given under the direction of Allen I Eaton’s class in art appreciation and con sists of a full hour's description of mod | ern and ancient art movements in the Orient, illustrated by 27 lantern slides. The-'art class of the University has placed on exhibition in architecture hall a collection of color prints, mostly wood block work, which will be shown for the rest of this week. The group includes the work of Bertha lain, Helen Hyde, Xordenfelt. Basketball Again (Continued from page one.) i build he ought to make an ideal guard. Hollis is said to be as good as his brother. At the conclusion of the inter-class games set for next week a squad of ten or twelve men will be selected as the Varsity squad and the team picked from them Due to the change in the Chris tmas vacation, onlv four days intervene i • between the resumption of school and the California series to be held here Jan uary 12 and 13. To get a team to gether it will be necessary for the Vars ity squad to return a week or so early. The schedule this season is a compli cated affair, most of the games depend ing on who the state champions are. Ore gon and O. APt:. are to settle the Ore gon state championship by January 31. O. A. C. will furnish stronger opposi tion in basketball than she did in foot ball, with six veterans of last year’s champion Coast aggregation on hand. Patronize Home Industry And use Butter Manu factured by The Lane County Creamery Always Fresh and Sanitary Phone 117 48 Park St. ENTERTAIN GYM MAJORS Maud Lombard and Virginia Hales Give Birthday Dinner. The instructors in the department of physical education and the upper-class majors 'in the department were guests of Maude Lombard and Virginia llales at a birthday diimer at Miss Lombard’s home Saturday afternoon. The birthdays of the two young women come within two days of each other and so were celebrated together. Lighted Christmas trees formed the decorations of the two tables and the place cards carried sprays of evergreen. In a game of guessing advertisements. Ethel Murray won first place and Harriet Thomson the booby prize. ♦ SO LONG C V. D. ♦ Dyment we hate to see you go ♦ You’ve been a friend to all of us And we'd like to have you know That we’re with you thru and thru; 4- And if we scrape our feet and cuss ♦ And don't know when to shake your ♦ hand. ♦ You’ll know its cause words can’t ♦ break thru ♦ To say the things we mean to you. ♦ ♦ ♦ Wo wish you all a world of luck And hope they'll love you as we do ♦ ♦ We know that in a pinch you’d stuck ♦ ♦ And pulled your bit with Oregon’s ♦ ♦ crew. ♦ ♦ Tint fortunes turned a card for you, ♦ ♦ (Were mighty glad it was for you) ♦ ♦ And c. v. d. just let us say, ♦ ♦ We want you back this way some ♦ ♦ day, ♦ ♦ We want to walk you in the rain ♦ ♦ And grip your friendly hand again ♦ ♦ And have you watch \lie team at ♦ ♦ play ♦ ♦ And-say- ♦ ♦ PerhapS old man you’d better stay. ♦ ♦ —P. A. B. ♦ *•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ Sigma Nil announces tbe pledg- ♦ ♦ ing of Flint Johns, of Vancouver, ♦ 4* Washington. ♦ •»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Penn Has Many Stars (Continued from page one) Another of Coach Bob Colwell’s pro teges is Ileinie Miller, the 170 pound Pennsy right end. Miller is of near All American caliber, several critics giving him honorable mention on their elevens. Tie is a wonderful defensive player, is fast in getting down on punts, and can handle the forward pass with the best, of them. Bill Snyder will be stacked up against a modern Goliath in the personage of Henning, the 210 pound red and blue left guard. Tt ought to be some tussle when these two big fellows meet. Right tackle Little, the boy with the deceiving name, will pit his 200 pounds of brawn opposite Kenny Bartlett at left tackle. Critics the country over have already sounded “taps” to Bezdek’s men’s chances of coming out of the fray with anything less than real mauling attnehed to their side of the scoring ledger. Es pecially on the coast is the opinion be ing voiced that Oregon will get a wallop ing. Coach Andy Smith of California, a former Pennsylvania man, broke forth the other day to the effect that Oregon would get a fearful trimming by the Quaker?, A similar situation occurred last New Years day at Pasadena when “Lonestar" Dietz’s champion W. S. (' eleven stack ed up against the husky Brown team. You could have bought the staters chances for grabbing the long end of the score for the proverbial “widow’s mite.” Yet it was with little difficulty that they tallied two touchdowns, and held the Rhode Islanders scoreless. Incidentally they stopped Pollard, the dusky colored boy, who created stlrh a noise in eastern gridiron circles this year. The varsity will work out occasionally from now on to the day of their de parture for the city of oranges and roses. Practice the past few nights has been more in the nature of reviving some of the lost wind that escaped during the interim of rest after the Multnomah game. The scrubs reinforced by Steers and Strowbridge, will furnish a light scrimmage session two nights of the week. Bez expects to carry two full teams to the southland so that he can stage three scrimmage practices on the Pasadena oval. Varsity Calendars 25c For sale at Co-Op, Peter Pan and Y. W. Bungalow BRODERS BROS. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Fresh, Corned and Smoked Meats 80 W. 8th St. Eugene, Oregon. Phone 40 Copyright Halt Schatlner Si Mai* Be Sure His Christ mas Gift Is Right GIFTS from this store stand for more than mere ly the thing itself; they speak your good taste, and your quality ideas. You don’t have to hope it will be right; you can be sure.. Every man is glad to see our label on his goods; it stands for “best quality.” HEfRE ARE SOME SUGGESTIONS: Neckwear, 50c to $4 Half hose, 50c to $1 Bath robes, $5 up Smoking jackets, $7.60 Dressing gowns, $5 up Gloves, $1 un Leather and metal novelties $1 up to $10 Handkerchiefs, 25c, 60c, and up Mufflers and sweaters $3 up Hart Schaff ner & Marx Clothes Varsity Fifty Five suits Dress Clothes Varsity Six Hundred overcoats Tuxedos Wade Brothers “The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes” “The Magic of Oz” Clever, Fantastic COMEDY University Orchestra—Fancy Dancing Guild Hall 8:15 P. M. Gen. Admission,.150 Frl. and Sat. Reserved Seats.250 Nights