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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1918)
TRIANGLE PRESENTS Roy Stewart KEITH of the BORDER He knocks ’em dead and then some. ADDED ATTRACTION Keystone Komedy “DANGERS ct a BRIDE” They’re too numerous to mention. FRIDAY and SATURDAY TIi eat re Bust In. CO! Music Treat Promised for Con cert to Be Given Friday Wight in Villard Hall. Program Carefully Selected by Miss Forbes During Study in the East. The University orchestra's annual concert, which is considered the music classic of the year, is to take place Friday evening, April it, in Villard hall. The orchestra consists of L’fi members and each one lias been working faith fully to make this concert the test that I J. W. 6.oackenI)iis!i • HARDWARE 1 GO E. 9th St. Phone 1057. — TRY OUR — CENTENNIALS. OUR OWN MAKE. Don’t Forget The WIAKX BARBER SHOP 729 Willamette. Tollman Studio For Best Photos Phone 770 I BROKERS BROTHERS. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Fresh, Corned and Smoked Meats. 80 W. 8th St. Eugene, Oregon. Phone 40. TIJY Eggiman’s Candy Kitchen | K For Good Candies and Ice Cream. I Springfield. 4tli and Main Streets. *.A.%A.SAA A •. ••» A. •. A A .•> *w. •. .* .», CANDIES—JOHNSTON’S and KRAUSE’S. ALL SIZES 5C TO $1.00. ALWAYS FRESH. UNIVERSITY PHARMACY. COR. llth and ALUER. TELEPHONE 229. Phone Yours For Service THE TABLE SUPPLY COMPANY Delicatessen and Grocery. OTH AND OAK STREET I has ever been given. Miss Winifrec Forbes, director, took si)ecial efforts while in the east last summer to seleei the best eon ert music which could b< obtained, and, with the members work ing on these from the first of the year the concert promises to be a rare mu sical treat. Mr. Arthur Faguy-Cote will sing ant Miss Forbes will complete the program with a violin number. Mr. Cote needs very little introduction to music fol lowers, as his singing ability has gained him a good reputation among the stu dents and people of Eugene. Miss Forbes is one of the most accomplished violinists on the coast, and she is very well known in music circles of the state. The concert will begin at S:15 o’clock. The program will be as follows: Jupiter Symphony .Mozart Iia.Uet Music, from “Ilosamunde”.. .. . Schubert Orchestra. Caprice Viennois . Kteisler Winifred Forbes. Adagio I’athetique .Godard Valse Suite .Brahms Orchestra. Vision Fugitive, from “Ilerodiade”... . Massenet Arthur Faguy-Cote. Spring Morning Serenade.T/ieombe Fairy Tales .Komzack Wedding Day at Troldhaugen.... Grieg Star Spangled Banner. OSCAR GORECZKY AND MABEL VAN ZANTE WF.C Ceremony at Noon in Alpha Phi Housi March 25; Will Live in Portland. One of the first; events of the vaca turn was the wedding of Mabel Viu /ante and Oscar Goreczky, which oc curred at tlie Alpha Phi house on Maret 05. 'I'he ceremony wus held at higl noon, in the presence of a few members of Alpha Phi and Sigma Nu fraterni ties of the bridal couple, Father W. T, Kerley, of Eugene, officiating. The bridal party descended the stair way into the living room, while Mrs. \V. F. (!. Timelier played the Lohen grin wedding march. The bride and groom were attended by Elizabeth Oar son as bridesmaid and Hugh Thomp son as best man. The house was decorated for the oc casion with cherry blossoms and daf fodils. Guests at a luncheon which imme diately followed the ceremony were Mrs. I>. Van /ante, of Portland, nother of the bride; Miss Mary Perkins, Mr. W. F. <J. Timelier and Mrs. Thacker, Eliza beth Parson, Adah and Elsie McMur pkey, Helen lirentom, Elizabeth llad ley, Until Young. Hugh Thompson, Charles Comfort, Owen and Edward Bentley, and Huber Kambo. Mrs. Goreczky completed her college course with the second term and will be graduated in June. Mr. (ioreezky was lender of the band and a prominent track man. They will be at home in Portland. OREGANA SUBSCRIPTION CONTEST CLOSES FRIDAY Two Hn nil rod Paid But Five Hundred Necessary to Make Expenses on Year Book. The Oregana subscription campaign closes Friday, April t>. So far only 1100 subscriptions have been paid, according to 1 height W ilson, chairman of the cir culation committee, and it will take about 7 hi pain up subscriptions to make the expenses on the year book. It is planned to have the Oregana ready for junior week-end, giving less than a month to collect the subscrip tions. Those who have been overlooked by the circulation committee in the cam paign are asked to voluntarily subscribe, and those who have subscribed are urged to pay their subscriptions immediately. The Oregana is considered one big way of advertising the University of Oregon, and it is the duty of the Oregon students to support it. It is through the Oregana that the high school stu dents become interested in the Univer sity. as it gives it clear picture of the life on the Oregon campus. The Oregana will be unusually bettor and larger this year, according to the editors. The military department will be featured, and there will be as com plete it record as possible of the war activities of both the University men and women. There will also be con tributions from the former Oregon men in the training camps and pictures of the enlisted Oregon men. Y. W. C. A. CABINET PLANS WORK First Meeting of Board Will Be Pre sided Over by Essie Maguire. The first meeting of the new Y. \V. A. cabinet, to be hold Thursday aft ernoon at t o'clock at the Y. W. C. A. Kuugalow, will be devoted to the plan ning of the work of committees for the remainder of this year and next. F-sic Maguire, the new president of the >.s s viati c,, who succeeds Kuth \Vil» us. will preside. MILITARY M/iPS WIN COL. LEWS PRAISE Charts Showing Trenches and Surrounding Territory Made by Class in Topography. Two Chosen From Twenty to Hang- in Office of Com mandant. Military maps drawn by Paul Scott, and by a group consisting of R. X. Allen, A. X. Ely. and It. H. Ely, mem bers of Professor W. D. Smith’s class in military topography, have won the praise of Colonel Leader. Selected out of 20 or more maps presented at the end of the term's work, these two maps have been placed on the walls of the 1 commandant’s office in the men’s gym nasium and may be observed by anyone I interested. The maps cover the territory between East Adder, Nineteenth street. Thir teenth street, and the trenches con wLiucicu ny i oiouei i.ieaaer s classes in military science. "The quality of work shown on these maps, and the evidences of the grasp the men have on military questions , shown in them, have greatly surprised me,” said Colonel Leader. ‘‘It is par ticularly gratifying in that this work is practically a requisite before commis sions in the army can be granted." In addition to the present course in military topography which will be con tinued, and is open to any man in the University interested in this line of work, Professor Smith will offer an ad vanced course, open to about six men. This class, for which advanced credit will he given, will make a large relief map of the country around the Univer sity for use in military instruction, in sham battles, and in the study of mili tary tactics. About 50 men began the course when it was first offered, at the beginning ! , of the last quarter. Only about 30 finished the work. Edwin Cox, a junior in the Univer sity last year, who took a similar course 1 at the University last spring, was put in { full charge of the construction of a large military relief map of Fort Ste- | vens. Cox made the map under the ; direction of the United States military j authorities stationed there, and it is ! now being used for instruction of the men in case the fort is attacked, and j for general teaching of military tactics. | G. E. DYAR MEW SECRETARY Acting Head of Extension Division Ap pointed to Suceed E. L. Keezel. Guy E. Dyar has recently been ap pointed acting secretary of social wel fare of the extension division. Mr. Dyar graduated from the University of Southern California in 1905, and since that time lias been teaching. For the last two years Mr. Dyar has been at the head of the English department of the Eugene high school. E. L. Keezel, who has been acting secretary of social welfare for the last three months, has returned to his former position ns as- i sistant instructor in the school of edu cation. CO-EDS ‘PEST’ AT NEWPORT ' Six Spend Vacation in Hikes, Surf Bath i ing. Fishing, Beach Breakfasts. Etc. Six University women spent their! ! spring vacation at Newport. Surf ! bathing, breakfasts on the beach, Fish- 1 ing. and hikes, were a few of the things at which they spent their time. Those who took the trip are Miss Tirza Dinsdale, Miss Ida Dinsdale, Ruth Westfall. Eleanora Vossler, Helen Wells, and Helen McDonald. They took , a cottage at Nve Beach. “Twenty-six things" is the oat eh they report for one day. Among the “things" they declare there were enough flounders and rock cod for a meal. I RSBQR&S!?! A Home for You Away From Home. FURNISHED MODERN APARTMENTS. — With — f Steam Heat, Light, Water, Phone and Private Bath. Near U. of 0. Hull Apartments j Corner 11th and Alder Streets. EUGENE. ORE. S AH Flowers in Season. Corsage Bouquets a Specialty. Prompt Delivery. ! REX THEATRE BUILDING. Phone S62. i ' I Eugene Dyeing and Cleaning Works EVERYTHING POSSIBLE IN DYEING AND CLEANING L Witty, Agt., Friendly Hall. 245 Ninth Ave. E. Phone 122. BETTER HURRY! It is none too early to make arrangements for next WinterVSlabwood Supply. THE BOOTH-KELLY LUMBER CO., 5th and Willamette. Phone 452 Favorite Resort of Students. Dinner Dances, leas and Banquets a Specialty. WHEN IN NEED OF GROCERIES, CALL UP And we will see that your order is filled promptly with Fresh, Clean Groceries. WEISS GROCERY COMPANY WING’S MARKET THE HOME OF GOOD MEATS, FISH AND GROCERIES. 675 WILLAMETTE ST. PHONE 38. BASEBALL GOOIiS TENNIS SUPPLIES FISHING TACKLE Everything You Want In Sporting Goods. The EUGENE GUN CO. AR THl R HENDERSHOTT, Manager. 770 WILLAMETTE.