DOUGHNUT BASKET BALL WILL START MONDAY (Continued from page 1) game the Betas are conceded the edge on the game as they have three members of their last year’s five back, around which to form a nu cleus, while the Bechelordon is a new organization this year and will be out for its first appearance Mon day. In the Beta line-up will be Claren, center; Lorenz, Beggs and Dresser, guards; Manerud, Miller, Patterson, forwards. Of this line up Lorenz, Beggs and Dresser all played last year, Claren is a frosh as ‘is Manerud, and Miller and Pat terson both substituted on the Beta team last year. Buren is acting as manager of the Beta quintet. In the Bachelordon line-up! will be McCourt, Wellington, McIntosh, Benedict, Woods, Heenret and Allen, all men of high school and club ex perience. In the S. A. E.-S-Maralda game, both teams will play their first doughnut league game, as they were not represented last year. In the S. A. E- line-up will be McDaniels, center; Gassoway, Liebe and Russ low, forwards; and Moore, Purdy and Harper, guards. Butler is man aging the S. A. E. five. The S-Mar alda five will be selected from Lang, P. Laselle, E. Laselle, Oden Stickles and Michelson. Friendly Has Reed Coach. The Sigma Nu versus Friendly Hall quintet will be a keen contest. , Friendly is being coached by Paul Stone, a former Reed College star, who will play a forward position and they also have Clark who played a guard position on last year’s five, while they have a big representation out for practice every night to se lect from. They have not announced the remainder of the team. The Sigma Nus will line-up with Dud ley, center; McKinney and Bar rager, forwards; and Hollenbeck, Gilbert and Shattuck, guards- The last three named played last year on the Sigma Nu quintet. The A. T. O.-Frji game promises a hard fought contest and both are out for first blood. The Fijis will line-up with Ritter, center; Gray, Darby, and LaRoche, forwards; and Houston, Furrey and Bain, guards. Of this line-up the entire team with the exception of Furrey and Darby played last year. These two are freshman aspirants The A. T. O.’s will start with Folts, cen ter; Couch and Williams, guards; and Huggins and Eggleson, for wards- These men with the excep tion of Huggins are all new mem bers of the quintet.-- Couch and Folts are freshmen. Williams is captain of the team. Sigma Chis Have Old Men. Of the other teams in the league the line-ups will be selected from these men: Sigma Chis, Crandall, Breed and Brown, for center; Hill, Maxwell and Leslie, guards; and Farley, Watters, Birchtorff and Hazard as guards- Farley has been elected captain of the five. The Kappa Sigs have Carson and A. Shields, center; Burnett and F. Shields, guards; and Moffitt, Stra horn, Brock and Benefield as for wards. Beller, captain of the Kappa Sigs squad is laid up with injuries. For the Delta Taus, Base will line up in the center position with Med ley Brown and Beaver forwards; Alexander Portwood, Maden and Garretson, guards. Brown and Mad den are the vets from last year’s five and Brown is manager of the team. The Phi Delts have H. La tham, center; M. Latham and Gavin, forwards; and Holmes and Gamble, guards. Mark Latham and Gavin are the bulwarks of the last year’s team, and Latham will pilot the '■.earn this year as captain. The Uwl quintet will De seiecteu from Porter and Evans, center; Davis, Ross and Walker, forwards; and Header, Say, Craven and Hayter in the guard positions. Porter will manage the team. The Oregon club have not announced their line-up as yet, but will be in the running. The Table Supply Co. is installing a two-barrel bread mixer. It is the largest one in the city and will en able the store to supply the needs of the students from now on. The price of bread will not be raised. NU BONE CORSETS—Mrs. A. True Lundy, 155 E. 9th. Phone 292-L. Repairing odne. RELIGIOUS SECRETARY nil WORKERS FOR T. W. IN CAMPUS School To Be Held In Seattle; Course Can Be Completed In Three Weeks Because of the urgent need for Y. W. C. A. secretaries in the north western field, Miss Sueanna Ham merly, recommendation secretary of the personnel bureau of the national board of the Y. W- C. A., with head quarters in New York, is making a six weeks’ tour of the northwest in teresting young women in this work. Miss Hammerly was at the Y. W. C. A. bungalow of the university Wed nesday afternoon and Thursday morning interviewing local girls who are interested in the work. The need is so pressing, according to Miss Hammerly, that for the first time a special training course of three weeks will be given in Seattle, beginning next January. The direc tor will be Miss Eliza Reece Butler and the faculty will be composed of j the most prominent members of the national board staff who will con duct the regular course in New York city. There will be no tuition for this course, but each girl pays her own expenses. Heretofore, it has been necessary for girls enter ing Y. W. C. A- work as secretary to take a training course in New York, either six weeks’ summer course or a ten months’ winter course, tuition for which is between eight hundred and a thousand dol lars. Last year 220 girls went through this school, of which our local secretary, Miss Urith Daily, was one. The Y. W. C. A. has a total staff of 3,965 secretaries. lireat upportunmes unerea. Speaking of the opportunities of fered, Miss Hammerly said that those girls who made good in local work may look forward to a super visory position in one of the eleven fields of the work in the United States. From there she may look forward to a possible position on the national hoard staff, with head quarters in New - York, where she will be directly in touch with na tional work. Or a secretary may look forward after local -work in this country to a broader field of service in one of the foreign coun tries in which the association is doing work. These countries at present are Belgium, France, Italy, Roumania, Czecho-Slovakia, Poland, Armenia, India, China, Japan, Rus sia, and South America. Workers Sent Abroad. “In addition to those now in the field,’’ said Miss Hammerly, “the Y. W. C. A. is attempting to send five hundred secretaries to foreign coun tries within the next five years. These countries will include Russia, South America and the Orient, and the fact that these secretaries for foreign service are to be chosen from our own experienced workers, makes it more necessary that our local ranks be filled with young col lege women to whom the same op portunity may come later.’’ In order to be eligible to a posi tion as secretary, a young woman ' must be a college graduate, must be a member of a protestant evangel i ical church, must be between the ages of twenty-one and forty, and must be especially adapted in per sonality for association ahd Chris ' tian leadership among girls and wo men. NOTICE. i • All Masons are asked to at- • • tend an illustrated lecture in • • Professor Dunn's room in Vil- • • lard Hall, next Tuesday, No- • • vember 25- • NOTICE. i Indoor gymnasium work for sopho more women and major students will begin Wednesday, October 29 Nine o’clock class for majors meets Monday, Tuesday and Thursday; 3’'.5 j class, Monday, Wednesday and Fri day; 4:15 class, Monday, Tuesday | and Thursday. Women should rc ^ port in gymnasium costume Wed (neday at 3:15 or Thursday at 4:15. MUSIC RECITAL MOV. 25 UNIVERSITY INSTRUCTOR TO AP PEAR ON PROGRAM Violin and Piano Concert Will Be Given at Methodist Church Next Week A violin recital will be given by Mr. Rex Underwood, head of the violin department of the school of music of the university, together with Mrs. Jane Thacher and Mr. George Hopkins, both of whom are instructors of piano in the school of music, next Tuesday evening,: November 25, at 8:15, in the Meth odist church. The recital is compli mentary and everyone is cordially invited to be present. • The program will be as follows: Sonata (G Major)......Grier Mr. Underwood. Accoompanied by Mrs. Thacher. The Nuptials .Liszt Three Dutch Songs .. .Josef Hofmann Ride of the Valkyries. .Wagner-Brassin Mr. Hopkins. Adagio . Ries Viennese Popular Song.Kreisler Orientale . Oui Tamborin Chinois .Kreisler Mr. Underwood. Waltz in A Flat.Chopin Two Preludes .Chopin Polonaise in A Flat.Chopin CURTISS PETERSON TO SING Music Student Will Appear at Port land Recital Next Week Curtiss Peterson, a senior in the University of Oregon, and a student in the University School of Music, will sing in Portland next Friday afternoon , November 28, in a re cital which is being given under the auspices of the MacDowell and Mon day Musical Clubs of Portland, in the ball room of the Multnomah hotel. The first number on the program in which he will appear will be a solo, “Vision Fugitive,” by Massenet. He will also sing a duet, “Calm Is the Night,” by Goetze, with Mrs. Fred Olson of Portland, a member of the Monday Musical club. These two numbers ar& the only ones made public on the recital program as yet. New Mexico U. Bars Fox Trot. “The fox trot will be eliminated from all college dances.” This is one of the new rulings at the state col lege of New Mexico. You are invited to come to The Church Study at H :30 for an Informal Bible Class period University Women You are invited to come to The Manse at 11:30, Miss Marin Ashby Cheek, Mt. Holyoke College Speaker Church Worship at 10:30 Cordially Yours Win. Moli Case Central Church 10 & Pearl J WANTED—2 -Shoemakers. Apply at Real Shoe Shop, 597 Willam ette St. J. W. Hubbard, Eugene, Ore. mm music boxes IF YOU CAN’T SING Buy a Bird. We have them. Come in and get one or a dozen, while we have a good bunch to choose from. The Ideal Feed Store 131 E. Ninth St. 131 Park St. Walker Furniture Co. Dean H. Walker Ninth and Oak St. Phone 824 Sewing Machnes Dishes Cooking Utensils Stoves and Ranges Window Shades Curtains & Draperies Linoleums and Mattings Beds and Bedding Rugs and Carpets Furniture When you are giving your DRAMETIC PLAY CLASS PLAY Planning Features for your Dances—in fact, when something EXTRA is to be given, let us help you plan the affair and give you suggestions. Myers Electric Supply 2 REMEMBER Romane won the State Prize for Photographs Have Them Taken Where You Will be Satisfied Romane Studio