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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1917)
Kuykendall Drug Store 870 Willamette St. o Phone 23 Go fo Eggiman’s Candy Kitchen for Pure Candies and Ice Cream Springfield 4th and Main Sts. Don’t Forget the Marx Barber Shop 729 Willamette THE RAINBOW for dainty lunches, French pas tries and home made candies BOARD ACCEPTS RESIGNATION (Concluded from page 1.) and one which has done me untold damage. I now ask you to weigh the evidence and give a decision from which there can be no appeal. I want to be cleared or I want to he con victed. For me and the University there is no middle ground.” Says Charges Were Framed. Practically all of the 19 pages of Mr. Eaton’s written statement were devoted to a defense of the People’s Council, which, he declared, was not disloyal in its purpose, nor pro Ger man in its membership, and to the expose of a political plot to involve not only himself, but President Camp bell, other 'iaembers of the faculty and two members of the Board of Re gents. To the charges brought against him by the Chamber of Commerce Mr. Ea ton made emphatic denials, except that he admitted having attended the Chicago meeting and that he wrote the article appearing in the Oregon Journal. He charged that the reso lutions condemning him and demand ! ing that he be dismissed from the i University faculty, were passed at a meeting of the Chamber of Commerce at which ' only one-thirtieth of the members were present and that the question had been kept alive by con tinued publicity, unfavorable to him, in the Eugene Guard and a Portland paper. Friends Offered Support. “Many citizens of Eugene have come to me and asked for a mass meeting that the majority of the people of the city might condemn the action of the Commercial club and show the people of the state that the resolutions passed by that body did not reflect the true sentiment of the community,” said Mr. Eaton. “To all of these requests I said no to relieve the Board of Re T BUSINESS DIRECTORY Phone 243-J. C. B. MARKS, M. D. Specialist Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Glasses Correctly Fitted Office, Brown Bldg. Eugene, Ore. DR. M. C. HARRIS Dentist Room 402 C. & W. Bldg., 8th and Wil lamette Eugene, Ore. DR. W. B. LEE Dentist Room 404 C. & W. Bldg, cor. 8th and Willamette Sts. Underwood Typewriter Compiny "The machine you vill eventualh> buy Rents, Repairs, Supplies New and Rebuilt Underwoods 691 Willamette St. Eugene Branc OLIVE C. WALLER Osteopathic Physician C. & W. Bldg. Phone 195 Residence Phone 615 Hours 7 A. M. to 6 P M-Phone 155 W. P. BAG LEY ° o Doctor of Magnetic Healing and Sug gestive Therapeutics Treats all acute and chronic dis eases. ® Matlock Bldg., room 4, Eighth and Willamette Sts., Eugene, Oregon. DRi C. B. WILLOUGHBY Dentistry 204 Brown Bldg. Cor. 9th and Oak DR. MILLER Dentistry 204 Brown Bldg. Cor* 9th and Oak Office Hours: Phone 531 9 to 12 A. M. 1 to 5 P. M. DR. L. L. BAKER Dentist Instructor’s diploma N. U. D. S., Chi cago. Office 310 C. & W. Bldg., 8th and Willamette Sts., Eugene, Ore. DR. J. I. FISCHER Chiropractor Nerve and Spine Specialist. Phone 410 Office hours, 9 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 P. M. Evenings and Sundays by ap pointment. •" 317-318 White Temple. Eugene, Ore. Office Phone 552. . Res. Phone 611-R DR. E. L. ZIMMERMAN Suite 200, White Temple Office Phone 619. Res. Phone, 1082. Eugene, Ore. Phone 1186 DR. L. E. GEORGE Dentist -first Nat. Bank Btdg., Room f-. Eugene, Oregon. DR. R. T. BURNETT | Phone 769-R. Office, White Temple I gents of any pressure that might be brought to bear upon them.” When Mr. Eaton had concluded his remarks the board went into execu tive session, and it was not until : shortly after one o’clock Sunday morn ing that their decision was announced. “I felt sure that when the regents ! had heard my full statement they j ! would do as they have done, clear me of the false charges of disloyalty to | my government, brought by the local | | Commercial club,” said Mr. Eaton, Sun ‘ day afternoon. -Board’s Action Final. “The fact that they accepted my | resignation was a disappointment to me, but, as I told them last night,: whatever decision they m,ade would be received by me as final as far as the University is concerned. | "I will, as soon as I am able, make a full statement of the case to my friends and neighbors in Eugene, to ^ny colleagues in the faculty, and to the students of the University, who have waited patiently for it. Now that the board has met, I feel free to do this. “I have no plans for the future to announce. “In offering my resignation to the regents, I believed I was doing the best thing for the University. In ac cepting their verdict as final, I hope that I am doing the same thing. At the end of this week my work as a member of the faculty of the Univer-! sity will be ended, but my interest in1 and work for the University will go on.” It is understood that within a few days Mr. Eaton will arrange for a mass meeting and at that time will give a full statement of his case to the students of the University and the people of Eugene. No provision for the continuance of Mr. Eaton’s classes in art apprecia tion have been made, according to President Campbell, and it is probable that they will be discontinued for the remainder of this semester. Faculty.Asks Retention. The one communication to the board asking that Mr. Eaton be retained was one signed by 43 members of the faculty. While admitting that Mr. Eaton’s attendance at the Chicago meeting was an unwise act, the peti tioners declare their “absolute con fidence in the patriotism and high minded intentions of Mr. Eaton,” and express their belief that he has suf fered already beyond his utmost fault. It is signed by the following: George Rebec, Ellis F. Lawrence, W. P. Boyn ton, W. F. G. Thacher, John J. Lands bury, E. L. Packard, R. M. Winger, Julia Burgess, Mary H. Perkins, Hugo Bezdek, E. E. DeCou, Elizabeth Fox, Mable H. Parsons, E. M. Pennell, Har riet W. Thomson, James D. Barnett, H. C. Howe, F. G. Young, Joseph Schafer, H. D. Sheldon, R. C. Clark, M. H. Douglass, Frederic S. Dunn, Er nest S. Bates, O. F. Stafford, F. L. Shinn, B. W. DeBusk, Warren D. Smith, C. H. Edmonson, Robert P. Reeder, Eric W. Allen, John F. Bo vard, Percy P. Adams, E. W. Hope, George Turnbull, J. H. Gilbert, Har than de Fell, E. Thorstenberg, A. F. Reddie, A. H. Schroff, F. G. G. Schmidt, H. A. Clark and M. Cummings. IIITATRICK SPEAKS FOR LIBERTY LOAN ON TOUR (Concluded from page 1.) pearance in his district would be in stantly expelled. After the meeting the banks were crowded to the walls with people, mostly of the laboring class, who were vieing with one another for a position in line at the Liberty bond window. The U. S. Marine Corps, at its aerial station near Marshfield, was repre sented by a sergeant, who was among the first to place his subscription for himself and the men under him. Farmers Found Most Backward. In closing, Mr. Kilpatrick said: "My general impression is that the laborer and the business men, although per haps not fully awake as yet, are be ginning to realize the true seriousness of the situation. The farmers are the most backward of any class— which is probably due to the fact that ; they have not had the proposition placed before them as clearly as the other classes. The newspapers, withj one or two noticeable exceptions, are j back of it, and the sentiment of the| people is so strongly against the other | faction that obstruction is rapidly disappearing. STUDENT DANCE FINANCIAL SUC CESS. The first student body dance, held in the gymnasium Saturday night, was largely attended and the treasury of the student body netted $65 from the affair. Of this amount $25 will be used to complete the payment on gold football fobs given to the members ; of last year’s championship football I team. GIVEN BY MISS TINGLE HEAD OF DEPARTMENT OF DO MESTIC ART OFFERS SUG GESTIONS FOR CONSER VATION OF FOOD Wheat, Meat, Sugar and Fats Named As the Necessaries to be Saved. Groups or individuals seeking help ful suggestions as to food economy will find Miss Lilian Tingle, head of the department of domestic art, and her class in food economics willing sources of information, according to a statement made yesterday by Miss Tingle. “Wheat, meat, sugar and fats are the foods we must conserve," declared Miss Tingle, “and it is principles of conservation and not definite recipes that will help out there. There must be less waste of milk, and by that I mean that we should not stop using milk, but rather use every particle of what we have.” “Don’t throw away a drop of sour milk; make it into cottage cheese,” she suggested Miss Tingle explained that the shortage of the milk supply is caused by the big prices dairymen can get. from the butcher for their dairy cows and the high prices of hay and feed. Sparing of Butter Urged. Butter should be used only at the table, and then very sparingly, Miss Tingle says, and she suggests the use of fruit butters in its place. “Fruit butters don’t take the place of butter is fat, they merely make the bread go down,” she says, “we can get the 'at substitute in our other foods.” Nuts she points out are an especially ?ood source of fats and protein. “Use perishables freely,” commands Miss Tingle. ‘Fish instead of beef; fresh fruit instead of canned.” Fears Sugar Famine. Miss Tingle is especially concerned ibout the sugar famine, which she says will be upon the United States by December unless the present rate of consumption is lessened. “Stop eating candy, and use less sugar at die table,” she gives as a means of oelping out. Potatoes, says Miss Tin gle, are an excellent substitute for bread, and other cereals should be lsed instead of wheat. JNIVERSITY GIRLS CONTINUE WORK ON SEVENTY-FIVE CONVALESCENT ROBES Mrs. M. L. Bugbee to Tell at Wednes day Meeting What Eugene and Oregon Are Doing. Work on the seventy-five convales cent robes, started at the co-ed party on Saturday afternoon, will be con tinued at the Y. W. C. A. meeting at four o’clock Wednesday afternoon, and the girls are asked to bring their thimbles. Talks on “What Oregon md Eugene Are Doing” and Red Cross work in general, especially at the front, wil be given by Mrs. M. L. Bug bee, of the Eugene chapter. Faculty md student viewpoint on real campus service will be discussed. The Y. W. C. A. bungalow is in al most constant use, according to Miss I'irza Dinsdale secretary of the asso ciation. Fifty-five girls have taken Dut yarn for knitting, and one girl has knit a sweater since a week ago Sat urday. There are regular hours for knitting at the bungalow on Monday md Thursday. The honor roll wil' be completed this week and a picture of each article that a membe'' of the Red Cross knits will be placed alter her name. Those si the head of the campus auxiliary cf l e Red Cross are anxious to have the girls who have joined in other places to transfer tiieir membership. An effort is being ru&de to get a sew ing machine, which will make quite i saving of time. URGES CUTTING DANCE DATES TO ONE Dean Straub Also Suggests Ten Cent Admission to Student Hops. Dean Straub hopes that this year the fraternities and sororities will give only one dance during the entire school yeSr. “I feel that this will in crease the democratic spirit on the campus,” he said yesterday, "and I would be very glad if it could be accomplished.” Ten cents per couple as the price of admission at the student body dances, which are scheduled for every three weeks, is another one of hit ideas for the dances this year. ‘‘The purpose of these dances,” he said, "it just to get the students together sc that all may become acquainted, anc not to make money. The dances art to be informal.” Following are the dance dates whicl i have been granted: October 27, Mary1 Spiller, Chi Omega and Delta Delta) Delta; November 3, Kappa Kappa' Gamma; November 10 and December 1. student body. Ohio State University is planning a liberty loan drive with the object of leading all other colleges and uni versities in the country. Princeton’s graduate school is suf fering more from the war than any other branch of the university. NO ASSEMBLY WEDNESDAY Assembly hour tomorrow will be devoted to conferences between students and professors. All of the freshmen will meet with their fac ulty advisors and the sophomores and upperclassmen will confer with their major professors. All of the conferences will be held in the of flees of the faculty members and students “cutting” will have to make up the conference later, or be credited with cuts. D.W. GRIFFITH PRESENTS Mae Marsh Dorothy Gish Lillian Gish Blanche Sweet Henry B. Walthal Robert Starron in Her Condoned Sin at the EUGENE THEATRE i:ii Friday and Saturday, Oct. 26-27 A&iT“ Buy A Liberty Bond “And when they had tied him up with the thongs, Paul said unto the Centurion that stood by, Is it lawful for you to scourge a man that is a Roman, and uncondemned? And when the centurion heard it, he went to the chief captain and told him, »ay» ing, What art thou about to do? for this man is a Roman. And the chief captain came and said unto him, Tell me, art thou a Roman? And he said, Yea. And the chief captain answered, With a great sum obtained I this citizenship. And Paul said, But 1 am a ROMAN born.” This was nearly two thousand years ago. Paul boast ed of his citizenship. He was “a Roman born”. We are born citizens of the United States, the great est nation that the world has ever seen. Are we also proud of our citizenship ? Do we value it for what it is worth ? Our country is calling on us to subscribe for Liberty Bonds. Are we doing our part? The banks of Eugene have arranged so that any stu dent can purchase a $50.00 Liberty Bond by paying $5.00 down and $5.00 a month for nine months there after. These bonds are the best security in the world. Every student should own a bond or at least have an interest in a bond. If you belong to a fraternity or sorority and do not feel able to meet the cost of a bond yourself, see that your society purchases a bond and that you have an interest in that bond. In future years it will be a pleasant memory to you that you have helped in this national crisis. Eugene Clearing House Association First National Bank United States National Bank Bank of Commerce Have you bought your Liberty Bond*? Do it now! California Winter Sunshine Delightful days at the Beaches, Surf Bathing, Fishing. Golf, Tennis, and all outdoor sports. Round Trip Tickets to Southern California now on sale, with stop over privileges. You can visit many delightful resorts. Ask for our California Booklets John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent 5 * o 0 oo ° *0 ° SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES O o