OREGON EMERALD Official student paper of the Univer sity of Oregon, published every Tues day, Thursday and Saturday fo the coilege year by the Associated Stu dents. Entered in the postofflce at Eugene, ! Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates fl.50 per year. By term, $ .50. Advertising rates upon application. Edited bv LEITH F. ABBOTT Dorothy Duniway.Associate Editor . Lyle Bryson.News Editor Nell Warwick.Asst. News Editor Harry A. Smith.Managing Editor Helen Manning.Dramatic Editor Maybelle Leavitt .Proof Reader Special Writers Adelaide V. Lake Louise Davis Victoria Case Sport Writers Floyd Maxwell.Raymond Lawrence Reporters Earle Richardson, Ariel Dunn, Ja cob Jacobson, Charles Gratke, Mary Lou Burton, Eleanor Spall, Stanley Elsman, Annamay Bronaugh, Eunice Zimmerman, Frances Quisenberry, Wanna McKinney, Mauna Loa Fallls.i Esther Fell and Mildred Weeks. BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager WARREN KAYS Associate . Raymond Vester Advertising Manager....Webster Ruble Circulation . Elston Ireland Assistant . Floyd Bowles Staff Assistants: Lee Culbertson, Charles Lamb SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1920. OREGON SCHOLARSHIP NNOUNCEMENT of scholarships granted to members of Ore g o n ’ a graduating class tends to empha size anew the high standards achieved by Oregon students de spite the handicap orf limited fa cilities due to shortage of money. Men and women of Oregon,are keeping up the record of high scholarship set years ago and carrying it forward. But there is a limit beyond which Oregon cannot safely go in economizing on education. That limit has been reached. The finest type of students will not come to an institution which is gradually losing its strong fa culty members. The danger Oregon is facing is that such teachers can not be replaced un less the institution can offer sal aries which will compete with those paid in other state. Cer tainly first rate inspiration to scholarly achievement can not be radiated by second or third class men. The time is near when such will be all that are available for Oregon. Unless— Here comes the bright' side of the picture: If the millage bill passes, it means the dawn of a day of adequae classrooms, ade quate library facilities and the assurance of the retention of the inspiring type of instructors. The passage of the millage bill j will be one long step toward the acquisition of a chapter of Phi j Beta Kappa. Oregon will be. | in an educational way, decidedly j on the map. Oregon will con-! tinue to develop scholars in her own institutions. She will de-; velop and retain her own lead-! ers. Is this worth anything to! Oregon? J. S. EVANS TO RETURN AFTER LONG ABSENCE Instructor has Been Studying In New York for Past Year Under Masters. John Stark Evans, who left the University school of music Inst year to continue his study of music in New York, will he back to take up his duties ns organ instructor In the school of music at the beginning of the summer session. Professor Evans during his leave of absence from the University has studied composition under Rubin Goldmark and piano under Rudolph Cans;. He will remain through the summer and the fall term. Prof. John l.andsbury, dean of the school cf music, announced that his department will offer an excep tionally fine summer course. Registration in the school of mu sic, be said, had increased 36 per cent since last year: ^iiniuiuiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiuiiiiiniiiuiiiiiiniiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiniiiimimiiiniiniiiii^ | CAUGHT ON THE CAMPUS ( hiisMnmnuiiiimtiiHtnimuiiiminiiinaimimiflanitaimiijiiiiiiiiiiiimiinnjinmmuiinHUui^’' Architecture Club to Dance. The architecture club will give a matinee dance at the Anchorage Tea House, May 1, between 3 and 5 p. m., according to Horace Foulkes, president of the club. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Guests Members of the retiring Y. W. C. A. cabinet were entertained at din ner on Thursday evening by Mrs. O. R. Gullion, treasurer of the Ad visory Board, at her home on Hil yard street. Dr. E. S. Bates, professor of rhet oric and American literature, has not met his classes this week, owing to trouble from a severe infection in his arm. He is in a hospital in Port land. Dean Lawrence Going East. Dean E. F. Dawrence of the school of architecture will leave Portland Wednesday for Washington, D. C., where he will attend meetings of the American Institute of Architects and the Intercollegiate Schools of Architecture. Dean Dawrence is one of the directors of the former society. Hendricks Hall Entertains. Hendricks Hall is entertaing as dinner guests this evening all mem bers of the faculty, and a few of the students. Dean Elizabeth Fox was hostess at the hall during the ab sence this evening of Miss Gertrude Talbot, head resident. Students who were invited in ad dition to the faculty guests were: Vera Houston, Inez Lacey, Roberta Sanborn, Marion Nicholai, Florence Skinner, Mary Truax, and Eva Bene fiel. GIRLS TO TALK OVER THEIR EUROPEAN TRIP Dean Fox and Miss Burgess to Be Heard on Itineraries and Other Phases of Journey. A meeting of the University wom en who are planning to make the tfip to Europe in the summer of 1921 will he held on Tuesday night at 7:20 at the home of Dean Eliza beth Fox for the purpose of organi zation. All the women whose names were announced during the first term in connection with the tour and any others Interested in Join ing the group are urged to reserve Tuesday night for the meeting. Miss Fox and Miss Julia Burgess, who are to be conductors of the tour, will discuss intineraries which might he chosen for the trip and will use illustrations from old pho grnph albums which they kept dur ing previous trips in Europe. The equipment, which the party should provide for themselves will he con sidered, and suggestions will be made concerning various articles convenient to take on such a jour ney. Courses of study for next year will be talked over to give the girls some idea of studies that would be helpful in preparing for the trip. Suggestions will also be made for hooks for summer reading which some of the girls will have time for. The plan is to make the meeting on Tuesday night the first of a series of two or three. JUNIOR CLASS TO HOLD MEETING WEDNESDAY Plans for Staging of Annual Week end to be Perfected, Says Nish Chapman. A very Important meeting: of the Junior class will ho held next Wed nesday afternoon at four o'clock, in tho.Y. M. 0. A. hut. according: to Nish Chapman, president of the class. The Junior Week-end committees will report on the progress of the preparations for that event and other relative matters will bo taken up in the meeting. On account of the proximity of the fete it is es sential that plans for it be protected at this meeting, said Chapman. The previous meetings of the class have not been well attended and the members have shown very little class spirit, be said The immediate cooperation of every junior is need ed if the annual week-end is to be staged successfully, and every mem ber of the class must be present at Wednesday's meeting if this coop oration is to be secured. Emerald want ads. bring results. Patronize Emerald advertisers. GREAT ACTRESS MAY | BE ENTERTAINED BY ! SCHOOL OE DRAMA Celebrated Margaret Anglin, at Eugene, Tuesday, May Dine With Students Entertainment Tuesday afternoon and a dinner Tuesday evening may be given in honor of Margaret An glin, celebrated actress, by Univer sity students of the drama,' it was learned from University officials this afternoon. No word has as yet been reecived from Miss Anglin who will appear at the Eugene theatre Tues day evening in “The Woman of Bronze.’’ “WTe have not ascertained wheth er Miss Anglin will arrive sufficient ly early for an entertainment, but it is hoped that University students of the drama will be given an oppor tunity of meeting her,” Miss Char lotte Banfield, instructor in pub lic speaking, told an Emerald re porter this afternoon. Miss Anglin is said to have in “The Woman of Bronze” one of the most powerful vehicles to which she has ever applied her extraordinary talents. Scores of mail orders for seats are being received daily, the management of the Eugene theatre announced this morning. WATERMAN piano school Five Rooms Each Equipped With New Pianos. Roy J. White, manager of the■■ Waterman Piano School, has opened a music studio in Eugene at 917 Willamette street, that ranks sec ond to none in the State of Oregon. Sound-proof practicing rooms are available for those who wish to do their practicing at the school. Each piano is a sound proof room. Nearly 70 students are now enroll ed, of which twenty are from the University. Besides the short meth-> od of ragtinme which this school teaches, a very thorongh course of harmony is taught. Ruth Lane Starts Long Tour. Ruth Lane of Eugene and a jun ior in the Ur. versity of Oregon, left Friday for Kingman, Arizona, where she will begin her work of Junior su pervisor and general cashier with the Grand Cannon circuit of the El lison-White Chautauqua system. In the four months that she will be on the circuit, Miss Lane will tour Ari zona, California, Oregon, Washing ton, Idaho, Nevada, Montana, and Wyoming. Send the Emerald home. < i---*' Eggiman’s SOLICITS YOUR TRADE FOR THE COMING COLLEGE YEAR. Eggiman’s SPRINGFIELD, ORE. •-. FOR REAL FUEL ECONOMY, USE | GAS ' For COOKING LIGHTING HEATING I MOUNTAIN STATES POWER CO. Phone 28. 884 Oak St -+ . OH, YES !! BlITTtR-KIST Pop Corn CANDIES 13th and Kincaid «ntfTHii]DJOB!ianauflnintiinnmmmmiuiiiiiaiiTumni!iniinminmnnmiHiiirniimiiini!inaC ^MimmiiiuuiiiiiiiiiuiuiimiiiiDiifiuiuiiiiiuuiiuuiiiinii STUDENT CLUBS ATTENTION Buy a Building Site for your future Chapter House in an ad dition that is restricted to use for residential purposes only. Kincaid Addition immediately adjoins the University of Ore gon campus and will be sold to student organizations on very liberal terms. Write Wester L. Kincaid 526 Henry Bldg., Portland, Ore. SMEED RESTAURANT For SERVICE and QUALITY Have You Planned A Dinner Dance in the ANCHORAGE HALL for this term ? MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS EARLY. Progressive Shoe Shop FIRST CLASS REPAIRING 73 East Ninth St. Eugene, Ore. W. R. (OBAK) WALLACE CIGARS, CANDY, SODA, BILLIARDS AND PIPES FOR COLLEGE MEN. 804 Willamette St. Eugene, Ore. Phone 48. Brown Oxfords for College Women Wear them on rainy or sunny spring days—with or without spats—effect equally stylish. $9 to $13.50 GRAHAM'S Where College Folks Buy Footwear