o For One of Those Parties <£ And are you going to wear “those awful old slippers” again. Come in and see our very exclu sive new satin kid and patent SLIPPERS Lenten Suggestions Preferred Stock Fish Flakes Preferred Stock Salmon Preferred Stock Crab Meat Preferred Stock Oysters Preferred Stock Minced Clams Preferred Stock Tuna Fish Preferred Stock Shrimp Preferred Stock Lobster Eugene Branch Alien & Lewis, Inc. DISTRIBUTORS U. OF O. MARKET T. F. BENNETT, Prop., Dealer In FRESH and SALT MEATS OYSTERS and POULTRY CAME, SMOKED AND FRESH SAUSAGE SALTED AND SMOKED FISH Maryland Beauty Counts and Extra Balto Standards Oysters Try Our K. K. K. Special The original K. K. K. hasn’t anything on us. and ours only cost 15c. Don’t wait until Saturday night, but come now to the PETER PAN Send the Emerald home Send the Emerald home Varsity Will Meet Aggies in First Contest of Year. Affirmative Team at Corvallis; Arbitration of Labor Dis putes Is Subject. o o The University of Oregon debaters will meet the O. A. C. team in the first in tercollegate debate of the season, tonight at 7:30 in Guild hall. The judges for the debate are: Ex-Governor Oswald West, Eugene Brookings of Portland, and Miss Cornelia Maivan. Mr. Brookings is a well-known Portland lawyer, and Miss Maivin is the state librarian. The judges of the contest at Corval lis will be Mr. Merian of Reed, Mr. Betpitehen of Salem and a professor at Reed whose name has not yet been agreed upon. Walter Myers and Vivian Kellems will represent Oregon at O. A. C., while Don I). Davis and Lewis Beebe will be the varsity defenders here. At Corvallis the Eugene team will meet one of the most formidable of the (t. A. C. debaters, Robert Jleichart. Heieliart has had four years experience in debate, and this is his second bout with th- University of Oregon. He is also an orator of ability having won second place in the O. A. C. oratorical contest I-askr, the other man on the Corvallis squad is an old high school debater. The O. A. C. men here are both com paritively new at th • game as are also the Oregon repres itative,. Mr. Davis, who with Mr. Beebe, will defend the neg alive for Oregon, is the first freshman , . t in years to make tin1 Oregon team. Both the Oregon and O. A. C. men have a reputation for fighting. The question to be debated is, “'Re solved, That Capital and Labor should be compelled to settle their industrial disputes in legally established courts ,f arbitration.” Oregon will have the nega tive here and the affirmative at Corval lis. “Admiral Crichton” Is Selected by Dramatic Students. Cast Picked; Ernest Watkins in Title Role; Date Set for March 30 and 31. Tho production of the “Admirable Crichton” which will be given in Guild hull on the evening of March 30 and 31 will hi' almost i ntircly in the hands of the students in the dramatic interpret;! tion department. Committees for the arrangement of 0 cnery, costumes, directing and light ing have been ehosen from the students 1 nthis course. Robert McXary will have charge of the stage directing and scenery while Cleome Cnrroll will be at the head of the committee on decorating and J lighting. i The east has been announced as fol lows; Crichton .Krnest Watkins Lord of Loam.VIex Bowen Krnest Woolley.Warren Howards i l,ad,\ Mary.Margaret Crosby Tweeny .Lillian Bancroft l.ad\ Uroeklehurst.Hester TInrd liev. Treherno.Burt Thompson 1 Lord Uroeklehurst.... Kenneth Shetterly I Lady Catherine.Helen Purington j l.ad,\ Agatha .Roberta Killam I’isher..Grace Sage Cook.Vrlo Bristow Seci ml Maid.Claire Gazley 'i'hird Maid ..Frances l'rater Pageboy .H. II. Hargreaves Thompsett .Walter Kennon SIGNS WITH CHATTANOOGA Couch Johnny Spiegel has signed a two-year contract with the Hnivtrsity if Chattanooga. Vthh tics have been placed on a firm'and permanent mss u that university. SIS TO BE BUSED EBB E1BPEI FBI ‘ | War Relief Subscriptions Al ready $118; All Students to o Be Asked to Contribute. _ President Campbell Compares Men in Prison Camps to University Students. That at least $1600 and possibly $2000 will be raised on the campus for Europ ean war prison camp relief is now the expectation of the faculty and student war relief committees. Every student on the campus will be interviewed by tomorrow morning, by a representative of the war relief commit tee. according to the plan of campaign ; outlined at a joint meeting of faculty and j student workers last night. All fratern- i ity. sorority and other houses where a j number of students are congregated will lie visited by a faculty member. Stu dents who can not be reached in this way will be interviewed by student members of the war relief committees. Pledge cards will be given out to be j filled and turned over to Loren Roberts. ; chairman of the men's committee or to i Louise Allen, chairman of the women’s | committee. The money is to lie paid in at the University comptroller’s office and is due March 5. Up to yesterday noon $11S had been donated toward the University fund with file canvassing work just beginning. The | contributions ranged from $2.1 down to i $1. This averages well with the dona tions among the students of other Amer ican universities. Vale averaged about $(i for each student. Williams about $10, Iowa about (50 cents. President Campbell is enthusiastically backing the relief fund. In an announce ment before the student assembly Wed nesday morning, he told of the suffering in tile prison camps within the war gone and contrasted the lot of the inmates of these prisons to that o the students of tin1 American universities. "It is a worthy j movement,” he said, “and one well de- [ serving of support; that of transferring! some of the comforts of 1'Diversity of j Oregon students to the more unfortunate I young men of European warring nations I now practically starving to death in pris on camps.” It is planned to complete the subscrip tion list on the campus by a Saturday. A meeting of the committees working for the relief fund is announced for Friday night, when the work will be checked up and arrangements made for* completion of the campaign. ; Kellege Karnival (Continued from page one) going to lie the climax of my social ca reer. If Seaiefe keeps away from me 1 know 1 can have a nice time. If he don’t —wow.” Westerfiekl lias a hunch that this is going to be the best ever, lie says, in passing, "Please state that 1 am out to win. Saturday night I will be rampant. Those three K's thrill me like three other K's did the niggers in the Itirth of a Nation time. My soul is on fire with | the thrill of the revet." Fdytlie Hrncht says. "What a debauch of music it will lie! ! ! What a riot of fun. 1 have my middy blouse all dirty just for tire Karnival.” Come one. Come all to the Ivollege Kid's Karnival. Babylon's Wonders (Continued from page one) t'l\ that Noah landed with his Ark afte. the flood. Dr. llanks adds that t>he na no id' Noah was not on the paper with the list of those who ve reached the t > > which ii kept in a i ottle in the summit safeguarded by a mound of stone. 1 >r. Hanks believes after looking over the lis that he is the first American who has ever climbed to the top of Mt. Ararat. The s1 eaker also showed slides of where the garden of Eden is said to ha e j <3 Have the Indians a Music? C To be Convinced HEAR Cadman-Tsianina at the Eugene Armory Wed. March 8:15 P. M. Reserved Seats 50