Captain to Put Team Through Paces Under New System; Outlook Good Says Tiffany. Five Letter Men Are Ready for Work—Season Schedule Not Yet Fixed. Oregon is to adopt student coaching of baseball for the corning season. The new system resembles the one used at O. A. C. for the past few years. One member of the team will be chosen as coach The man elected is usually the captain, and since the captain of the Oregon team has not been elected, it is impossible to sav who will hold the posi tion. According to Registrar A. R. Tif fany, it. will probably be Jimmy Shoohy or Walter Grebe. Hamilton May Coach. A possibility of avoiding the neres uity of resorting to the student-coach is seen in Professor Hamilton, of the school of law, a four-year ull-star Mis souri valley baseball player, who is suid to be p vailable to coach this year's team. “This is the best year that we have had for many years to produce a win ning baseball team,” sail] Mr. Tiffany. “Never before were so many favorable prospects put on paper. It is true that these paper teams are not always the ■winners they are expected to be, hut this is all we can say at this stage of the gnme. Several of the old men nre back this year, and they will be sup ported by some fine material from last year’s freshman team.” Five Veterans Available. Five of last year’s letter men nre now on the campus ready to take up the ball and bat for a few Oregon vic tories. The old men nre Jimmy Sheehy, Walter Grebe, Dot Medley, and Ilurobl Mniaon. Last year the baseball season was •topped almost before it started, and due to this fact there is plenty of new equipment for the beginniug of this •enaon. The conference schedule has not been made out for the season, but R has been 'decided that no northern teams will g* to California, nor will the southerners try for mny victories in this part of the country. It will be a very simple mat ter for the team to get a large number vt practice games to fit them for the •truggles of the conference schedule. ---¥ Board of Women's Lcnguo Will Not Meot Friday. *-* C..J V.. ,'.l; ■. i —.’.f. T" - “ALASKAN BLACKLOCK” TO LECTURE FOR Y. W. Rev. G. E. Lewis Will Use Own Motion Pictures to Illustrate Talk on Life in North. Pressed in Alaskan costume, and ac companied by his wolf dog, Gold Fang, (Rev. George Edward Lewis, known s the “Alaskan biacklock,” will show his motion picture, and will lecture on Alaskan life, in Villard Hall Friday night. There will be two performances, at G:45 and ait 8 o'clock. Before going into the ministry, Rev erend Mr. Lewis was a lumberjack in Alaska. The pictures were taken by him there about a year ago, and come highly recommended. They will he shown hereRtander the auspices of the Y. W. C.IfAa which hopes by this means to raise money for ‘he upkeep of the Bungalow. The upkeep has increased since the surgical dressings work is being done there, due to the expense of fuel and other items. MEN’S Mil IFF FOR AMERICAN LAKE (Continued from page one) second bases, Harold White, and Irving Rowe. The following program is to be given: Part One. Sailor’s Chorus . Parry Club. Baritone Solo, “Evening Star”. . Tunnhasuer-Wagner Curtiss Peterson. French Folk Song. Salsedo Club. Pianoforte Solo, “Hungarian Rhap sody” . Liszt Rex Strnttan. Baritone Solo, “Toreador Song” (Car men) . Biset Faguy-Cote. Mulligan Musketeers . Atkinson Club. “’Moore the Magician” Moore and Ellis. Part Two. A Glimpse of College Life, “Love’s Old, Sweet Song” .Molloy | Club. “A Bit of Jazz” McClain, Eickhoff, Ellis and Strattan. Burlesque John Flinn. Interpretative Dance Henry Eickhoff. “As I Sit and Dream at Evening"... . Nelson Club. Eleanor McClain, '12, and Palm Cow don, 12, passed through Eugene from Silverton last Wednesday, en route to I <San Francisco, where they will spend (i month. NEXT TO MOTHER'S our milk is the very beat for babies. It is rich, pure and absolutely free from perms or dirt of any kind. Properly diluted it makes u perfect ly balanced food for little ones and a safe one. Don’t take chances with milk of unknown character. Make sure of the best by getting your supply from us. The only clarified and pasteurized milk in Eugene. EUGENE CLARIFYING &. PASTEURIZING CO. 144 9th Ave. W. Two Dally Deliveries Phono 390 Proposed Structure to Cost $5000 If Eugene Donates Money; Otherwise to Cross Mill Race. New Work Will Begin Probably in Month, Col. Leader Announces. Bridge building is the work planned for the military training class after the trenches are completed, according to Lieutenant Colonel John Leader. “It will take about four more working Sat urdays to finish the trenches,” Baid Col onel Leader. “Then we will begin to build a trestle bridge across the mill race.” If the money can be raised, a perma nent military bridge will he built across the Willamette river. It will take about $5000 to build this bridge, and the money is to he raised by donations from the municipality. Should it be impossible to raise the necessary amount to build the large bridge, the class will build small bridges across the mill race, or anywhere possible. “Training in bridge building is need ed,” said Colonel Leader, “as there will he a lot of it ‘over there.’ There is « bridge to build over the Rhine when we eome to it.” Professor E. H. McAlister is to be in charge of the bridge building. ORDER OF 0. IN SESSION Elects Officers and Reorganizes Asso ciation. May Give Dance. Old letter men met today at 4 o’clock in the Varsity room of the men’s gym nasium, to elect officers and to reor ganize the Order of the O. The men who have already made their letter in their major sport, and who are to initi ate the new men, are Walter Grebe, James Sheehy, Dot Medley, Harold Maison and Oscar Goresczky. The purpose of this Order of the O is to keep up certain customs and tra ditions of the campus, and is for the interest of the letter men. The club is intending to give a dance for the new members before long, hnt nothing defi nite has been decided on yet. SKELTON AND BILLS ACROSS Former U. Men Now in Aviation Corps Arrive in France. Luck was with .Toe (“Bones”) Skel ton and “Heine” Bills, and they were able to cross over to Prance with the aviation corps on the same transport, according to a letter received here yes terday. The letter was written on the way o\er and mailed upon their safe ar rival in France. Both Skelton and Bills were students in the University last year, and members of the Alpha Tail Omega fraternity. They withdrew from college last spring, and have been pro moted to first sergeants and given con siderable experience in flying before taking the transport. Eulalie Crosby, T7, is teaching in The (Dalles high school. Dorothy Hunziker, cx ’20, is attend ing the University of Washington. MUSIC TO BE SUPPLIED RED CROSS WORKERS Many Talented Persons About Campus to Supply Entertainment While Women Make Bandages. If mnsic gives inspiration, the girls who are making surgical dressings lit the Bungalow will be well supplied, as Claire Gazley, chairman of the mnsic committee, has been busy the last few days in search of persons who would offer their services, and she has been . rewarded by a number of talented volun teers. It is planned to have a few min utes of music each hour while the girls are working. The music will not neces sarily be of a war variety, and one of the treats which Miss Gazley promises is a piano monologue by Professor John fcjtark Evans. Other people on the list are Mrs. Daise Beckett Middleton, Professor Ar thur Faguy-Cote, Miss Winifred Forbes, Dr. John Landsbury, Curtiss Peterson, Jessie Fariss, Ruth Davis, Jessie Gar ner, Mrs. William Case, Beulah Keagy, Hazel Radabaugh, Margaret Mansfield, Alice Vandersluis, Ada Matthew, Mabel Cochrane, Genevieve Rowley, Olive Zim merman, and Martha Tinker. STERN SENIORS TO HAVE REAL SURPRISE PARTY Jeannette Calkins, Chairman, Says It Will Be “Some Affair;” Plans Not Yet Made Public. “The stern old seniors are going to 'have a regular surprise party in the very near future,” announces Jeannette Cal ; kins, bead of the party committee. “The kind,” she says, “that one wall look back on after the lapse of a few years, and say fondly to your old grad neighbor, '‘Well, that sure was some party, that 'February affair, where we—but the inner workings of the committee have not been made public yet, and will not be until after the next meeting. The last lottery dance was considered a decided success by the whole senior class, and the coming party is to be a lottery dance—and then a whole lot more. But the very nature of the thing requires such a great amount of work and preparation on the part of the com mittee that they are not yet willing to set forth their definite plans until more is done. ‘There is one thing we’re sure won’t lack, if we are any judge of human na ture, and that thing is ‘pep’,” said Miss Calkins, “and that usually goes a long 'way towards making a good time.” CHARLES TAYLOR, U. OF 0. GRAD, *12, VISITS CAMPUS Former Backfield Star of Oregon Foot ball Squad Now Enlisted in Dental Corps. Charles Taylor, T2, one of the best known backfield stars Oregon has ever produced, and a four-year letter-man, is visiting on the campus this week from Fort Lawton, Seattle, where he is a first lieutenant in the dental corps. Taylor was captain of the University football team during his senior year, and weight man on the Varsity track squad. After graduation from the Uni versity. he practiced dentistry in the office of his father in Vancouver, Wash. He is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. Mrs. Taylor, who was Miss Mary Do Bar, is accompanying her husband and visiting her father, Dr. George O. De Bar, of Eugene. Your Attention is Called to Our Military Goods Regulation Sweaters Kuitted of good quality regulation O. D. Yarns, in sleeveless or full sleeved models. Priced $6.50 to.$8-50 R. & W. Military Vests, the most popular garment of the kind for officers. Khaki Coveralls Of fine quality, very reasonably priced. Wool Sox that are soft and absorbent, just the thing for hikes. French Mirrors that are really mirrors at.65^ OTTOS FRESH PULLED TAFFY WHEN IN NEED OF GROCERIES, CALL UP 18 And we will see that your order is filled promptly witil Fresh, Clean Groceries. WEISS GROCERY COMPANY MASK AND BUSKIN OF A. U. P. PRESENTS “HER HUSBAND’S WIFE” LYLE McC-ROSKEY ARVO SIMOLA A Comedv in Three Acts. CAST INCLUDES: MORRIS BOCOCK MARGARET CROSBY FRANCES FRATER RUTH YOUNG BUSINESS MANAGER, NORMAN FIIILLIPS; STAGE MANAGER, BOB McNARY. FRIDAY EVENING, FEBRuaki 1. ADMISSION 35c. GUILD HALL SATURDAY MATINEE. FEBRUARY 2. ADMISSION 25c.