Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920, November 13, 1917, Page Four, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Telephone 579.
N. \
The Imperial
LUNCH ROOM
J. FRED GEROT, Proprietor
Special Service in
FRESH CLAMS
CRABS
OYSTERS
CHOICE STEAKS
CHOPS, ETC.
721 Willamette Street, Eugene, Ore.
Copy i 1317
Th« Hovue of hupim»iiolra«r
Ku ppenheimer
Clothes
The ultimate in style for young men
$20.00 TO $35.00
Made to your measure if you prefer.
ROBERTS BROS.
Home Coming
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
— and —
FOOTBALL GAME
EUGENE
U. OF 0. U. OF 0.
Saturday, Nov. 17
LOW ROUND TRIP FARES
From stations Portland to Cottage Grove inclusive to
Eugene on sale Saturday, November 17th, return limit fol
lowing Monday.
Ask your local agent for information.
_John M. Scott, General Pnssomr.'r Ap-.m-o_
Portland, Oregon.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES
PROGRAMS SENT OUT
FOR EXTENSION WORK
i _ _
List of 1917-18 Lectures Given
High School in State to
Create Interest
in U.
Department Ready to Send
Speakers to Any Part of Ore
gon at Request of Citizens.
The lecture programs of the exten
sion division for the year 1917-18 have
been completed and are ready for publi
cation. These programs are sent to the
High schools throughout the state, to
interest the people in 'the subjects
taught in the University. As far as |
possible the faculty members of the
University are put at the service of the
people of the state, ready to give them
information and training along any line
desired.
The following is a copy of the pro
gram:
List of Lecturers With Subjects
Kegulur Extension division speakers:
Earl Kilpatrick—Educational prob
lems of the Small Town. The Evolution
of the Oregon Community. Shall We
let the War Into the School? The
Red Cross (Modified to Meet the Need),
illustrated. Getting Ready to Live in a
New World (Community Problems).
Alfred Powers—Oregon Literature
(Illustrated). Footnotes to History.
Some Business Habits of School Tench
( ers.( Suitable only for teachers’ meet
ings.) The Red Cross (Illustrated).
Our Flag in Song and Story (Illus
trated). There Were Seven Brothers
(A Community Talk).
Faculty members who have regular
j work in other departments but who have
' indicated a willingness to give extension
! lectures as far as the burden of their
work will permit:
E. E. I)eCou, Department of Mathe
matics Fltimate World Peace and the
World War. Twientieth Century Can
ada. The Teaching of High School
Mathematics.
B. W. DeRusk, Department of Educa
tionOur Physical T'npreparedness.
Mental Conflicts and Undesirable Con
duct. The Misfit Child. Factors That
’ Affect Efficient Learning. The Ily
| giene of the School Environment,
i Frederick S. Dunn. Department of
Latin Rambles in the Classics (Illus
tated). Vergil’s Aeneid (Illustrated).
The Iliad and Odyssey (Illustrated).
Latin Wit. and Humor. Greek Temples
(Illustrated). Through Rome (Illus
trated). The Passing of Old Rome (11
lustated). The Catacombs (Illustrated).
Rome in the Romance Centuries (Il
lustrated). Christmas in Fact and
Fancy. The Origin of Easter. Saint
Patrick. The Ton Christian Persecu
tions. The Biggest Bear Story Ever
Told.
i . ii. lMimonason, uoparnnoni or
Zoology—Japan. China and Her i’rob
lems. Insects and Disease. Prehistoric
Life in America. Tahiti of the South
Seas.
James II. Gilbert, Department of
Economics—Rural Credits. Taxation
| and Vexation. Education and Democ
! racy. Topics of Interest to Working
Classes. Democracy and Great For
tunes. General Topics in the Field of
Economics. Education and Public Opin
ion. Minimum Wage. League to En
force Pence. Economic Value of Im
agination. Foundation of Success
John Landsbury, Department of
Music A Peep into the Workshop of
Music. Community Sings (Dr. Lands
bury and Mr. Evans). Mathematics of
Music. The How of Composition (Illus
I trated). Music and Poetry. A Study
in Temperament. And others.
Mrs. M. 11. Parsons, Extension Div
ision- H. G. Wells, Prophet and Re
viewer of the War. Philosophy of Our
War Poets. The New Patriotism Edi
torially Spoken. Old Fads and New Is
sues. The Newly Popular Criticism.
Yachel Lindsey and Vagabondia. The
American Short Story. Straws from the
Magazines. Moliere and Sheridan. The
French Revolution and English Poets.
The French Novel and the English
Novel.
11. D. Sheldon. Department of Edu
cation Mob Mind and Its Cure. Psy
chology and Pedagogy of Leadership.
Some Superstitions Concerning Scho 1
mnsters. What History Is Worth While,
in Education. Education to Meet German
Competition.
Joseph Schafer, Department of His
tory—America’s Social Future. Topics
in Oregon or Western History. Topics j
in History Relating to the European
War. Conditions of Community Pro- j
gress.
Warren D. Smith. Department of
Geology—Philippine Islands. China and
Japan. Egypt. Geological Subjects.
O. F. Stafford, Department of Chem
istry—Topics Connected With Chemis
try. Popular Science Lectures.
Albert R. Sweetser, Department of
Botany—Ort gon 'Wild Flowers. Native
Trees and Shrubs of the State. Ferns
Past and Present. The Physical Bases
of Heredity. Sensible Sanitation and
Health Hygiene.
Mary E. Watson, Department of Eng
lish Literature—The Aesthetics of Rus- i
kin. General Discussion of English Lit
erature. H. G. Wells and the War.
The Personality of Shakespeare. The
Modern Woman in Shakespeare. The
Influence of the War on Recent Fiction.
Civic Problems in American Novels.
Some Contemporary Novelists. The
Teaching of Literature. Democracy in
English Poetry.
The following members of the faculty
will be available for work in their par
ticular fields:
Eric W. Allen, Department of Jour
nalism—For State and County Editorial
Associations.
E. S. Conklin, Department of Psy
chology—For occasional general lec
tures in the Spring.
E. S. Rates, Department of Rhetoric
—For Clubs and Drama Leagues.
E. W. Hope, Department of Law—
For County Bar Associations.
W. F. G. Thatcher, Department of
Rhetoric—To Groups Interested in Spec
ial Phases of English.
EUGENE’S COMPANIES NEED I
25 MORE MEN ‘FROM HOME’
Adjutant-Genera! Urges Boys to Join
Group with School Chums
and Acquaintances.
Eugene's own company, her company
she raised herself, and filled with her
own host boys from the many she has,
tliis company needs more Eugene boys
to fill it to full war strength. Do you
want others in your own company? Do
you want your own company to be short
of men? If you must be drafted any
way why not join the Eugene company,
where all the boys went to school with
jou and are friends of yours from your
own college?
This is the substance of an appeal
sent ( ut by the acting adjutant general.
John M. Williams, received Monday. All
the twelve coast artillery companies
need more men, and it is the desire of
the commanding officers to fill the com
panies from the same neighborhoods and
towns that the companies came from,
that the boys may not be among
strangers, but with the folks from
home.
The Second company wnnts seventeen
more boys from Eugene, and the Third
company wants eight. Only twenty-five
more chances to be with the bunch from
li >me! It is not an appeal that the ad
jutant general sends out. but an oppor
tunity. The vacancies, if not filled by
volunteers, will be filled with drafted
men, so the company is not worrying.
It is the boys who will be drafted who
will worry, when they find themselves
in with boys from Alaska and New
Mexico, and never a one from home.
Following is the list of vacancies:
1st Company, Ashland .10
2nd Company, Eugene .17
3rd Company, Eugene . 3
4tb Company, Roseburg . 9
orh Company, Albany . 5
Gth Company. Cottage Grove .15
7th Company. Medford . (1
8th Companjh Portland . 0
Otn Company, Astoria .1(1
10th Company, Tillamook .20
1th Company. Marshfield .10
12th Company, Hood River .10
TO LECTURE Oi\l IRONMAKING
. “How Iron Is Made,’’ is the subject !
on which Professor O. F. Stafford will
lecture Wednesday evening from seven
to eight, in McClure hall. The lecture
wlreh will he informal mid invite dis
•ussh ns, is planned especially for fresh
men taking chemistry, but other students
and townspeople who are interested, are
I invited. Professor Stafford is giving a
series of such informal talks to his
students.
Marion Orehel. ex-TD, is attending
i business college in Portland.
SEND THE SOLDIER BOY ONE
OF THE BOXES
Prepared by the
Table Supply Co.
GOOD THINGS TO EAT PREPARED
IN OCR OWN KITCHEN.
9th and Oak. Phone 246.
“Travelectric”
To the Manufacturers’ and Land Products Show
Portland Auditorium
Three Weeks—To November 24.
Oregon Electric
Railway
Low Round Trip Fares from
Willamette Valley Cities, No
vember 19, 20, 23.
Trains stop in the heart of
the metropolis.
Music and Vaudeville every
afternoon and evening.
Exhibits of tremendous ad
vertising value to the state and
its producers.
Homecoming Week Nov. 17.
Thanksgiving Fares Nov. 28
and 29. Return Limit Dec. 3rd.
H. R. KNIGHT, Agent, Eugene.
Back up our Boys with Food as well
as Guns,
The Best Meals Serv'
Most Central Location.
FREE AUTO BUS
HOTEL SMEED
EUGENE, OREGON.
Rooms Steam Heated.
Hot and Cold Water.
Wednesday Only
Return Engagement
MARY PICKFORD
— In
ner Great Patriotic Drama
The Little American
Rex Theatre
;Xkkk--X“XX'*xkxxkk^kkkk-<~xx~xkkkkks~xkk“X~xkX‘«X‘->.xx~x
* KEEP POSTED ^
All Dip late Periodical and Magazines. Buy your-i
Literary Digest, Saturday Evening Post and
all other magazines at the
University Pharmacy
give us a trial.
Corner 11th and Alder. Sidney P. Allen, Prop,
.j. * >-i-- i
•K^VSV*'!1 «X> wS-KVV^S^»V>.\.V^aaaj.a a .«. «■ t .. .■-■