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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1917)
o * ? ? T Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y f Y COATS ca, SUITS t * Copyrigii I'l; tig The Wooltcx Tailora Smart in style and practical for winter wear. Are you buying your winter coat !»: or suit this week? Then our splendid •*' display will be of supreme interest to you. You will find the same dependable qual- !j! X ity which we have always maintained. ♦{• V ? The materials and workmanship of the best. \ These fine garments are exclusive with •»; us — every one fresh in appearance and clever in style, expressing the new fea tures of the season in collar, belt, sleeve or pocket. i Here are exceptional garments—warm, y durable, practical in every sense — and they are the best expressions of the new- •} est vogue. All have the youthful smart- *j ness that is the right style note today. Coats .$10.00 TO $75.00 Suits.$25.00 UP * Y * I LARGE’S 865 Willamette St. EUGENE, ORE. ►v.****..%«v.%»v**«v*t* v«!*vv*!**t*\* v\*vv*t**!* *!*%**♦* v****!**!~t*%**!*%**!*v*!**^,'!*‘>t**!**t*%*%**t**t**t*,v\**!*%* Kuykendall Drug Store 870 WILLAMETTE STREET. PHONE 23. OREGON STUDES IN PHOTO; Onthank Receives Picture of Drafted Army From Ralph Allen '13. Itnlph Allen, a graduate of the Cni vereity in the class of 1015, who is now stationed at Camp Lewis, as a second lieutenant in the officers reserve, has niit Karl Onthank, secretary to Presi dent Cambell, a picture showing 111),000 members of the national array assemble! at Camp Lewis to hear an address In William C. .McAdoo, secretary of state About fifteen former Oregon student: and graduates of the University are uov stationed at Camp Lewis along with tin llugene ambulance corps which is com posed almost entirely of University men and a number of privates drafted durini the summer. The picnic will be postet in the library. 'S103G PLEDGED TO FRIENDSHIP FUND; PMimiH (Continued from page one) — versify Y. M. C. A. or Y. W. C. A. Miss 1 Idnsdale receives calls every day for girls to do odd jobs for an hour or two. A co-ed on the campus has promised to give all she makes taking care of chil dren for the next month, to the Friend ship fund. One girl offers to give all she can make at stenographic work while an other will knit sweaters any color or de sign desired and will do mending for a restricted period to aid the fund. Most encouraging reports come from eastern colleges. Ohio State Universty subscribed $9000 with the campaign still on. One Latin-Ameriean boy gave $500. Ohio University in .‘50 hours secured $2400. 74 per cent of the students and 100 per cent of the faculty subscribed. Indiana reports as follows: Depauw University with a goal of $0000 has rais ed $0,012 with the campaign still on. Indiana Central University, with seventy students enrolled, gave $500. Seventeen students at the preliminary meeting gave $250. Butler college with 400 students enrolled, reports $1500 pledged and cam paign incomplete. All the societies at Cornell College in Iowa are giving up their initiation ban (luets. At the end of the first day's work $3,300 was reported and half the students not yet reached. They received several pledges of 100 each, some fifties, and many twenty-fives, some of the larg est contributors being poor students. (irinnell secured $2.2U<l from one-tmra Of the students, Dos Moines college, in less than one hour had $1500 pledged fiom 160 students. At Iowa State Teachers’ College, stu dents arc given the privilege of securing leave of absence to work for the benefit of the Friendship Fund, providing the time taken fro instudies does not exceed one week. The faculty decided to give six days’ pay each and their contribu tion will total over $1000. From a preparatory school one boy who earned $128 last summer gave every ci nt and four scholarship boys who work in the library pledged all they earn this way during the whole year. (Continued from page one) taken along there probably will be a few substitutions before the fray is over. If a fair advantage is gained during the ! first hqif Walker intends to give cvery j one possible a chance to show what he can do. Efforts are being made to arrange a j game with the winner of the Portland Interscholastic Dengue to be played on 1 Kincaid on Friday, November 10th the day before the California game. Since I it will be impossible for the student body to finance this contest. Walker is try ing to have the class of 1921 subscribe to a fund which is to be used for this 1 purpose, llis idea is to make this con test an annual affair of tho incoming , frosh classes. The men who will start on Saturday against Willamette are: 11 K.. Cosgriff; 1 U. T., Trowbridge; ID (!.. Dresse; C., . Strachn: D. (D. Robinson: D. T„ Mautz; ! D. E., (iilhert; (>., .Taeobberger; ID ID, Masterson; D. 1!.. Chapman; E„ Rlake. (Continued from page one) over, our boy goes to Europe and soon into the trenches. He spends days cov- j ered with mud, cold and weary and hungry. When he finally is released from duty, and staggers bac kto the rear, what is he most in need of? Food, a bath, rest? Yes, but above all distraction. He must forget it all for a little while and relax his shattered nerves. So the Y. M. C. A. gives him a game, a book, a little music and presently re-action sets in and the sol- ; dier becomes a human being again.” Dr. Doney spoke of the disentigra tion of the Italian and Russian armies, and said he attributed it to moral fa tigue. He said a few Y. M. C. A. huts ; erected in their camps would give the armies a new spirit. Bring Boy Back Clean “If you want your soldier boy to come back a clean, sane man,” declared the speaker, “give all you can to the Y. M. C. A. fund for establishing aid posts in I the war zone. “McMinnville College and Reed Col- 1 lege have already raised three times their | quota. Oregon’s quota is $1000, but I want to see her go far beyond that. She j should surely raise $4000 and $5000 would not be too much to expect.” At the conclusion of Dr. Doney’s talk ' President Campbell said a few words in which he gave his hearty endorsement to 1 the campaign and urged all the students to give generously. Miss Elizabeth Fox, dean of women, and James Sheehy, president of the stu dent body, also gave short addresses, in which they expressed their hearty ap proval and co-operation. WOMEN’S LEAGUE 10 GIVE TO RED CBOSS (Continued from page one) mints and trusted that Oregon would do likewise. Reports on Conservation Emma Wootton gave a report of the food conservation campaign telling how every one on the campus had responded to the pledges. Dean Pox suggested that she would like the league, as representing the women of the University, to take a stand in regard to 11:30 as the hour for closing parties. The committee went on record as in favo of this. Dorothy Collier urged that upper classmen should not neglect their spon sees. Those present at the meeting were Helene Delano, president of the league; Roberta Schuebel, secretary; Essie Me guire, treasurer; Frances Elizabeth Rak er. on the municipal service and pub licity committee; Dorothy Collier, on the sponsor committee; Gladys Conk lin. chairman of consumers’ league; Cora Hosford, president of the Women’s Glee club; Ruth Wilson, president of Y. W. C. A.; Dorothy Parsons, president of Kwama; Beatrice Wethcrbee, president of Triple A; Harriet Garrett, president of Triple and Ruth Westfall, head of the campus auxiliary of Red Cross. Fats are fuel for fighters; bake, boil and broil more, fry less. “THERMO” HEATHER SWEATER COATS $6.50 Just the thing for street wear, school wear, autoing, etc. These coats are made of a very fine genuine Scotch Heather fabric and come in Grays, Reds, Brown and Tan sizes for men or women, button style. “CHESTERFIELD” CLOTHES $25.00 “Chesterfield” Clothes distinguish the fellows who wear them from those who do not. They are cut with a cer tain snap and style that appeals to particular college men. “STYLEPLUS” CLOTHES Are Still $17.00 STUDENTS' NEEDS Besides a Full Line of Sporting Goods and Gym Supplies, we carry: BICYCLES RAZORS SWEATERS CUTTLERY PEERLESS NATL. MADZA LAMPS SLICKERS BOOTS RAIN HATS We Do All Kinds of Repairing, Lockwork and Key Filing. EUGENE GUN COMPANY ARTHUR HENDERSHOTT. 770 Willamette. Phone 151 SEND THE SOLDIER BOY ONE OF THE BOXES Prepared by the Table Supply Co. ! GOOD THINGS TO EAT PREPARED IN OUR OWN KITCHEN. 9th and Oak. Phone 246. The Best Meals Served. Most Central Location. Telephones in All Rooms HOTEL SMEED Eugene. Oregon Rooms Steam Heated. Hot and Cold Water. Try the Varsity Barber Shop Eleventh Ave. and Alder St. Near the Campus. ■s El LISTEN! Do All Kinds of Dance Music Sound Alike to You? Let Us Demonstrate the Superior Brand at Your Party. “PARTY PLAYERS 20TH CENTURY STUFF JAZZ STYLE V H. EICHOFF, Mgr. New Music Rendered in Metropolitan Fashion Phone 565 O O Campus