Yoran’s Shoe Store — FOR — Good Shoes 646 Willamette Street. Try the Varsily Barber Shop Eleventh Are. and Alder St. Near the Campus. "ARROW form'fit COLLAR UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER CO. “The machine jva will eventually buy” Rents, Repairs, ^applies * New ard Rebuilt Underwoods 691 Willamette St Eugene branch Din TOf E!l HILL Mrs. Gerlinger, Regent, Guest at Hendricks Friday. Mrs. Roy Bishop Also Enter tained by Girls—Formal Event Next Month. A family dinner' at Hendricks Hall Friday evening will mark the opening of the new University woman's dormi tory, where 40 girls have already taken tip residence. Mrs. George T. Gerlinger. member of the board of regents, and Mrs. Roy Bishop, chairman of the woman's build ing committee of the State Federation of Woman's Clubs, will be guests of honor. Mrs. Gerlinger and Mrs. Bishop are the first to occupy the guest suites at the hall. University and Eugene people will be guests at a formal open house next month, says Dean Elizabeth Fox. head resident at the dormitory, when all ar ral Co. All Flowers in Season. Corsage Bouquets a Specialty. Prompt Delivery, REX THEATRE BUILDING. Phone 962. The Best Pure Cream Caramels PHONE US FOR ICE CREAM OR PUNCH. PHONE 1080 / The 0. S. Government eeds Your Help We are engaged in the greatest war that the world has ever saw. We must win. WE WILL WIN. Every dollar you carry in your pocket, or keep locked up out of circulation is working for Germany. Every dollar you have on deposit in a bank, or have invested in Liberty Bonds or War Savings Stamps, is fighting for the United States and it’s allies. Are you helping to win the war? Eugene Clearing House Association. FIRST NATIONAL BANK U. S. NATIONAL BANK BANK OF COMMERCE rangements in the new home for Uni versity women will be complete. The hall, named in honor of T. G. Hendricks, member of the first board of regents, can accommodate 150 girls. It is a three-story brick building, built at a cost of $50,000, on the unit plan, which permits of the addition of three more wings. All arrangements are strictly modern and sanitary conditions are of the best, according to Dean Fox. Provision has been made for a furnished study, dress ing room and sleeping porch in each suite, to be occupied by four girls. Until the demand for rooms increases, two girls will reside in each apartment. The building is equipped with many conveniences, including shower baths, long distance telephone booth, laundrx tubs, electric fixtures, etc. The general living room, finished in gray, is furnished in Colonial style, with mahogany finished gate-legged table, old fashioned grandfather clock, spinet and other articles. Mrs. Gerlinger is re sponsible for the selection of all the furniture. The rooms in Mary Spiller hall, the old dormitory which accommodated 22 girls, will be used by Miss Lilian Tingle, head of the department of household arts, for classes and laboratory work. QUINT TIKE BRACE Fill AGGIE BATTLES (Continued from page one) own to good advantage at guard. Robin son, at center, and Kreuger, at forward, complete, the five which the inexperi enced Varsity five will meet during this week-end. As opposition to this fast quintet, Coach Hayward intends to use practical ly the same outfit that started in the Willamette game. Medley has recov ered from his injury of the beginning -of the year, and will undoubtedly play in one or both of the contests. Morri son will play one forward, and the other is belwoon Grebe and Fowler. Comfort will hold down the center position. '.Steers ami Wilson will probably start, at guards, with Medley as a likely substi tute. Varsity Beats Freshmen. Yesterday afternoon, the regulars held the first-year five to a 40 to 08 score. A decided improvement in passing was noticeable, and had Morrison been up to standard in shooting, the game would have ended with a different score. Time and again the midget was unable to locate the basket. The contests at Corvallis will open the conference schedule for the Varsity. Two return games will be played in Eu gene on the 22nd and 23d of next month. Coach Hayward will take Comfort, Morrison, Grebe, Fowler, Steers. Wilson, and Medley with him to Corvallis, leav ing here at 1:50 on Friday afternoon. BEZDEK THINKS WELL OF PIRATE PROSPECTS Big League Manager Busy Building His Team; to Develop Needed Punch; Praises Bigbee. Hugo Bezdek, bead of the University physical training department and Oregon football mentor, now on leave of ab sence, finds time to do more than keep himself warm in the winter-bound pre cincts of the east, according to news paper reports drifting westward. Right now he is busy shaping a team of Pirates that will uphold the honor of the Smoky City on the big circuit. Last summer eastern baseball critics thought they detected promising signs in the Pirates and Philadelphia Ath letics. The Mackmen have crumpled to a certain extent, but the Pirates may make good. “If I land one player I am after,” says Bezdek, “Pittsburg will have a good team. So far, I have lost only one man I wanted to keep. I did not like to part with “Chuck” Ward, but I had to do It to put over the Brooklyn deal. Ma maux was a dead asset and Burlegh Grimes was dissatisfied. Ho and I did not agree last summer, and he wanted to get away. “We need hitting, and we’re going to get it. I hope Bill Hinchman will be able to play, for he can slug. Surely there it, driving power in aD outfield composed of Carey, Stengel. King, Hinch man and Bigbee. Bigbee is also a clever infielder. “The Pirates cannot be called exact ly a youDg club, for we have Carey, Afollwitz, Hinchman, Stengel, Cutshaw, and Saier. That is a good liberal sea soning of veterans.” Mrs. Charles Taylor, ’12, of Tacoma, is visiting her parents. Dr. and Mrs. George De Bar, of Eugene. Students at the Ohio State University ere using their tennis courts for skating rinks. Ice is frozen on the two campus courts. “Bez” to Get New Head gear on W. S. C. "Ooc'’ Bohler Stakes Chances on Oregon and Loses Hat. Bill to Arrive Later. That Coach "Boz" is probably holding his own among the big league moguls in the matter of headgear is intimated in the following clipping from the Oregon •Journal of this morning: Yep, there are men's hats that cost $1S. Fred Bohler, athletic di rector of the Washington State col lege bought one, although one won ders how a staid college prof, would explain an $tS howler in A peaceful hamlet like Pullman, Wash. But Bohler did not buy the kelly for himself and it will not be parad ed on the main stem of the cow college town. No. indeed; That $1S kelly will be among those present iu the lobby when the diplomats and admirals and munitions manufactur ers congregate at the Biltmore or the Blackstone or the Copley Plaza or the Bellevue Stratford or the Planters this summer. The man below may not he a .less Willard for size, a Julian Eltinge for grace or a Jay Kerrigan for beauty, but lie is a Captain Kidd for gall. When Oregon played Washington State last fall, Hugo Bezdek hot a -hat” with Or. Bohler that Wash ington would beat Oregon. Bohler, of couYso. wanted to make sure of a Washington victory and. knowing that his luck was rotten, jumped at the chance to take Oregon. W. S. C. beat. Oregon, 20 to d, and Bez told Dock that he'd delay getting the hat till ho got to Portland and have the bill sent to Dock. Of course, since Bezdek is going to remanage the Pittsburg ball club this year, he felt duty bound to be well hatted while making the rounds of the big league hotels. Since Dock Bohler is going to stay in Pullman this summer and won’t see any ho tels to speak of. lie is wondering whether the new lids for sale in the city are gold plated or platinum lined. (Continued from page one) ,i piano and a couple of monstrous fire places. There is always some sort of entertainment going on in the hostess house. There are three parts, the main lobby, which is always full of quietly talking men and women; the restaurant, which served over 27,000 last month, and the smoking room, where the men and officers mingle and have a chance to smoke and read in comfort. It simply gives that, one touch of home to what would he an otherwise dreary way of living,” said Mr. Tiffany. While at Camp Lewis, Mr. Tiffany talked with many of the former Univer sity students, among them being William Burgard, who is now lieutenant in the same regiment with Lamar and Leslie Toozc, and Allan C. Hopkins, instructor in the school of commerce last year, now a second lieutenant. DICK NELSON KEPT OUT OF ARMY BY BAD ANKLES Former Baseball Star After Trying Five Branches of Service Is In Settle Shipyards. Because of injuries received to his ankles during his 'three years on the Varsity baseball team, Dick Nelson, ex '17, must do hin bit by working in the shipyards at Seattle. Nelson has tried to enlist in five different branches of service, but his ankles put him out of the running every 'time. Nelson was first baseman for Rez dek’s nine for three seasons, and last year, while a senior in the University, was center on the Varsity hasbetbull team. Nelson injured his ankle* while running bases. APPOINTMENT FOR AVISON Ex-Law Student to Be Assistant Pay master in Navy. J. Bothwoll (“Botts”) Avison, LL.B., from the University school of law with the class of T7, has passed examinations and been recommended for appointment as assistant paymaster in the navy, ac cording to word received here this week. Avison is now in Seattle awaiting his appointment. lie was manager of the glee club last year. Don’t forget Bob's Barber Shop—just around the corner, on 7th. Doris Photo Shop. Phone 741, 5-6 7-8 Cherry Building. Barber Shop, rear of IJ. S. Natioal Bank Shaving 10c. haircut 20c. ALLIES USE SCOUT METHODS! IMS Colonel Leader Tells of Modern Watchful Warfare Which Parallels Tales of Cooper. Can Tell Civilian Footprints From Soldiers’; “Halt!” by Sentry Out of Date. That scouting methods, many of thorn similar to those used by early American Indians, are now in use by the allies on the western front, was told by Col onel Leader to his class in military sci ence. Tuesday night. To know that a man, walking, leaves an even imprint of his heel and toe, while a man in'running digs in with his toe, and that the direction a horse is going can be told by the fact that his front foot are larger than his hind feet, is just as useful now as it was in the time of ,1. Fenimore Cooper’s “Chln gaeh-gook.” This brand of scouting art extends even farther, according to Colonel Leader. A civilian footprint, can be dis tinguished from a soldier's because a soldier is trained to walk with the weight on his toe and the civilian walks so flat-footed that lie is known to men in the service as the "flat-footed civil ian.’’ Also the men on the western front avoid crossiug over open fields and outlining themselves upon the sky line, and when they hide in tree tops they are careful not to leave their tracks around the trunk—the same practices avoided by Leatherstocking, Tippecanoe,1 and Sitting Bull. Sontry Code Is Told. “Halt! Who goes there?” no longer, rings out in a loud clear voice from ! the darkness, as is the popular supposi- I tion. Instead, the sentry taps the butt | of his rifle, the scout or soldier ehal- i longed answers in code by tapping his rifle butt. Then he advances toward the guard, who stands with fixed bay onet until he is able to recognize or properly identify the challenged. A loud dramatic challenge would only let. the enemy know the position of the sentry, something that is far from advisable on the western front with the Germans, said Colonel Leader. Sentries and scouts now carry out every precaution against observation, from the enemy. Nothing which glistens is worn, and smoking on sentry or scout duty is strictly taboo, as the movement of troops, the bayonet charges, and practically everything except sleeping is done at night. And particularly is this so of the scouts, for it is always easier to reconnoiter the position of 'the enemy at night. Smoking Is Forbidden. In connection with the information that smoking was forbidden the seout. Colonel leader said that n match when lighted could be seen by the enemy at a distance of 1)00 yards, and a cigar for 300 yards, while the man in uniform «i| night could be ovserved only at a very short distance. Colonel Leader told of an Englishman, just arrived in interior Canada to hunt wild game, who became lost, and after four days was found lying unconscious from thirst on the bank of a river. After recovering consciousness, the young Englishman was asked why he did not drink from the river. “I didn’t have 1 any gluss,” explained the young hunts man. “Resourcefulness is just as much a part of a scout’s work as it ever was— and probably just a little more import ant,” says Colonel Leader. NEW TABLES FOR WORKING Each Girl to Work Alone in Department ' of Household Arts Laboratory. New tables are being installed in the department of household arts at Mary Spiller hall. With the new equipment i each girl will have a table to herself. “The department is much more beauti ful, and efficient now,” said Mifes Lilian Tingle. Dorris Photo Shop. Cherry building. Phone 741. Copyright llart Bohaffner & Marx Many of You Will Like This For the man or young man who doesn’t care for a belted suit, there’s noth ing in better taste than the new . Varsity Fifty Five suits by Hart Schaffner & Marx Single or double breast ed sack, with one, two or three buttons; stylish la pels; patch pockets if you wish. They’re all-wool, too, | and guaranteed to satisfy yc|u in every particular. \ Wade’s The home of Hart Schaff ner & Marx SPALDING EQUIPMENT FOR OUTDOOR WIN TER SPORTS. Skates and Shoes, Iloekey Supplies, SI.’un, Sweaters, Jerseye. The Spalding Hne affords you the wid est range of selection with a guarantee that every article will give satisfaction and ser- < vice. S A. G. SPALDING & BROS. Broadway at AJder. Catalogue on request, FOR REAL FUEL ECONOMY USE GAS For COOKING HEATING Oregon Power Co. PHONE 28. BROWN BLK Patronize the advertisers! Kuykendall Drug Store 870 WILLAMETTE STREET. PHONE 23.