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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1917)
THE KODAK STORE Fill Those Memory Books With Kodak Pictures THE KODAK STORE KEEP A PICTURE ACCOUNT OF YOUR JUNIOR WEEK END WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF EASTMAN KODAKS AND SUPPLIES. DEVELOP ING, PRINTING AND ENLARGING DONE IN OUR MODERN DARK ROOM BY TWO EXPERTS. WORK GUARANTEED.—GIVE US A TRIAL LINN DRUG COMPANY “The Service Plus Store” O. B. PENNINGTON Phone 271 Written by a Member of the Advertising Class S. R. STEVENSON Willamette St. TheVarsity INVITES YOU AFTER THE SENIOR DANCE AT THE OSBURN. Come! Co-Eds Will Run Business of Meet Saturday; Bill Chief In Command Aii untried and unprecedented thrill waits just around the corner for Hill Hayward's track class of women's gym nasium majors and the tireek letter track men entering the inter-fraternity ■eat Saturday afternoon. Women are going to hold the watches, do the measuring, call the events, judge the fouls they're to run the whole show. Hill himself will run the women; he's chief mogul and clerk of the course, and isn't trusting anyone else with the re sponsibility of keeping a wholly untrain ed crew of «0 green and flighty co-eds with their feet on solid grouud. It's to lie suspected also that Hill knows the ways of ’em. with their iuexplainable partiality and favoritism. Hut he's going to try them out, and sec what they can do as official starters when all the men are somewhere in France. Co-ed track meets will be the rage perhaps. To distinguish them from the common herd. Hilt's own will ap pear in white middies and skirls, atui HELP WANTED. An entelligeut person may earn $100 mouthly corresponding for newspapers; ( $40 to $.10 monthly in spare time; expe rience unnecessary; no canvasaisg; sub jects suggested. Send for particulars, i National l’ress Bureau, Boom -oSl, lluf- i dale. N. 1*. will wear official badges of some de scription. If a sufficiently stout pair of feminine lungs is discovered, the megaphone will be turned over to the owner. It's highly probable that certain ac companiments of such events will be missing; no tobacco in any form is to he allowed the referees and seorekeepers, and free speech among the contestants will be curtailed. 1J. Tl MEET 8. B. 8. Final Game for Hayward Cup Will Be Played Saturday. Kappa's Defeated 18-5; Hitting and Base-Stealing Win for Association. \ . \\ . t'. A. wiii piny l K <,>•■ tilt’ Hayward baseball cup on Field day next Saturday as the result of winning from Kappa Kappa Uamma 1S-3 yesterday. As four of the Y. \Y. lineup yesterday have also played on the Triple B team, it will he necessary for me respective captaius to arrange which team these players shall represent Saturday. It has beeu suggested that they draw straws to determine their decisions in the matter. There will probably be a rule next year to limit each girl to one team. No girl will be allowed to play in he final game for the cup who does not hold membership in the Women's Athletic as sociation. Large factors in the success of the as MARX BARBER SHOP We solicit your trade and guarantee satis faction. The Varsity Barber Shop The place where the stu dents go. Bring your razor in and have it put* in good shape. Ask me about it. John McGuire Proprietor. SALE! Men’s Suits and Furnishings all this week greatly under price sedation nine yesterday were the heavy hitting of the whole team and their abil ity to steal bases. The teams seemed evenly matched until the last inning when the heavy hit ting brought in ten runs for the associ ation. The pitching was good for both teams, Maude Lombard for the Y. W. allowing onljr three batters to face her in the third inning. MILLIONAIRE ON CAMPUS # ^ # * SKELETON VISITS VILLARD * * * « PART OF INITIATION ANTICS Two national honorary fraternities enlivened the campus atmosphere yes terday morning with pre-initiation cere monies. Three commerce men, Alpha Kappa Phi pledges, Jake Risley, Oscar Goreczky, and Ray Kinney, held a pat riotic discussion in front of Deady hall before assembly. Goreczky wore a silk hat and attempted to appear as a wealthy representative of the manufac turing class. Jake Risley came out in blue overalls and red bandana handker chief as a representative farmer. Ray Kinney wore a uniform and carried one of th* popular Oregon-made rifles. They decided that all of them were work ing for the good of the country, and left the laughing students with the words, “We’ll talk it over.” Sigma Alpha, the medical fraternity had seven pledges ramble through Vil lard hall. Two of the men, Leonard Floan and Fremont Hudson carried a skeleton. Ernest Boylen came next with a sign on his coat, “Sigma Alpha”. Bert Woods labeled himself “Doc Yak”, and Dow Wilson “Dr. I. Kurem.” “Pain less Parker” was there in the form of Earl Wilson and Xed Fowler advertised “Bain’s Corn Cure.” 4 ♦ ♦ COMMENCEMENT ♦ ♦ Commencement announcements ♦ may be secured at the Y. if. C. ♦ A. any day from 11:00 to 12:00 ♦ a. in. or from 2:00 to 3:00 p. m. All orders must be called for ♦ before Saturday evening at 5:00 ♦ In case they are not called for, ♦ they may be sold to those wish ♦ ing extra announcements. ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ & ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ CHILDREN'S PAGEANT FRIDAY ON KINCAID Playground Classes Will Have Charge of Patriotic Numbers and Maypole Dances. 1200 School Pupils Practice Daily on Campus; Are Trans ported in Automobiles. Twelve hundred children, grammar school pupils of Eugene, are practicing daily on the University for a pageant which will be presented next Friday af ternoon on Kincaid field. Miss Mabel Cummings, head of the department of physical training, has charge of the pa geant. She is supplemented in this work by the members of the University play-, ground classes. The children in the first, second, third and fourth grades will begin the pageant with a series of games as fol lows; “Teacher and Class.” “Shoemaker Dance,” “Mulberry Bush,” “Muffin Man” “Hickory-dickory-dock”, “Broom Man,” and “Carrousell,”. Mary Johns, Margaret Crim, Helene Delano, Gladys Conklin, Edith Hales, Mabel Rankin, Ruth Trowbridge and Edna Gray have charge, of this division. A Maypole dance will be given by the girls of the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades. There will be nine May poles, with twenty girls dancing at each one. A color scheme of green, and pink will be carried out in this number. The boys of the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades, under the direction of Warren Edwards, Henry Foster, William Column, Edward Bartholomew and Wil liam Mulkey, will take part in a track meet. The events scheduled are run ning jumps, sprints and relay races. The concluding feature of the pageant is a mass drill adapted by the physical training students for the entire number of children. 1’atriotic selections will be sung ia this drill, while all natons of the world will be repreesnted. Original cos tumes have been designed by the depart ment. Miss Cummings says she considers that the pageant vyill be a practical test for the ability of the playground classes. “In training the children,” said Miss Cummings, “the regular work of the classes is put into execution. WTe ex pect the affair to be a decided success, ns the children are very enthusiastic. The University band will provide music. We Are Prepared To serve you with good eats for that picnic 790 East 11th Phone 141 fT'D Y TO f Penc^s’ Tablets and Paper at I 1% ■ § J ^ * examination time. * • “We are here to please” University Pharmacy SIDNEY R. ALLEN, Prop. Corner 11th and Alder Phone 229