CONCERT TICKET SALE WILL BEGIN TUESDAY Three Artists Will Appear Here This Fall CYRENA VAN GORDON FIRST Season Tickets to Cost $1.50; Single Admittance $1 Next Tuesday morning has been set as the date for the opening of the ticket sale for the series of concerts which are to be given this term under the auspices of the Woman’» League, and committees have been appointed to make arrangements for the disposal of as large a number as possible. The sale has been so planned that all the organizations, the campus, and the down town districts will be covered. October 25 will mark the appearance of Cyrena Van Gordon in Villard hall, the date having been changed since the first announcement of the series. It is the idea of the committee in charge of the affairs, of which Lois Hall is chairman, to make the greatest drive for tickets before the first con cert, as it is thought that a large proportion of the sales will be season tickets, which are $1.50 for the three concerts. Single tickets for each con cert are $1. Reputation Is National Miss Van Gordon, who is the at traction for October 25, is a prima donna mezzo-contralto of the Chicago Opera company, and an artist of na tional reputation. Her roles in such operas as “Aida,” and the difficult Wagnerian operas, have been attended by much favorable press comment in the east. J. Irwin Mutch, baritono, who is at present with the Ellison White chautauqua company, will be here No vember 12, and Dean John J. Lands bury, of the school of music, will give a recital on December 9. Margaret Beattie has charge of the ticket sale, and under her will work the following persons: Alpha Phi, Margaret Peterson; Alpha Chi Omega, Gwlladys Keeney; Alpha Delta Pi, Gladys Mathis; Chi Omega, Carmel Sheasgreen; Delta Oanimn, Hilda Til - linghnst; Delta Zeta, Gertrude Smith; Gamniti Phi Beta, Margaret Kerns; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Margaret Alex ander; Kappa Alpha Theta, Marcella Berry; Pi Beta Phi, Luella Hauser; Delta Delta Delta, Florence Riddle; Zeta Rho Epsilon, Maud Gorrey; Hen drinks linll and Susan Campbell hall, Maud Graham; Alpha Tau Omega, Jason McCone; Beta Theta Pi, Allen Smith; Rachelordon, Dan Woods; Chi Psi, Kay Deep; Delta Tau Delta, Russell Gownns; Delta Theta Phi, Frank Michaels; Kappa Sigma, A1 Krohn; Kappa Theta Chi, Don Zimmerman; Phi Sigma Pi, Carl Epping; Sigma Chi, Arthur Rosebraugh; Sigma Nu, Ward Johnson; Friendly hall, Marvin Ebv; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Ben Reed; Phi Delta Theta, Knot Digerness; and Phi Delta Phi, Hal Simpson. Downtown Alda Named Those who have been asked to help out on the drive down town are O. Livermore, west of Olive; Glen Morrow, business district: Florence Garrett, north of Eleventh, and Marion Linn, south of Eleventh. WOMAN WHO FED PROFS ON ROYAL FARE IS BACK Mrs. C. A. Brown, Fixer of Foods at Friendly Hall, Once Boarded Teachers Sumptuously Some vein's ago, at 1300 Emerald street, there was a faculty boarding house; a boarding house not to be re motely associated with the mnearoni Mondays and the corn beef ‘n’ cabbage Wednesdays of fiction: but a boarding house where tables were set with foods of ambrosial delicacy and plebeian plenitude, to tempt the eve and palate of faculty members, fresh from the Classified We do hemstiching, It) cents per yard «lUni;k.stud white thread furnished. Sin. ger Benin.- Machine Co., <’t0 Wiliam Plant and , ut ' lOWt ' • foi " lie • Short 151- Columbia, Photic toll L. Tu. Bat. tf. PUBLIC STENOGR APHF.R. « Willamette st.. tT-’ J tf LOST V small gold pin in shape of WL with word " Euterpe" written across it Finder please call Gladys Hurley, Hendricks hall. okS. LOST Cameo ring set with pearls Finder please leave at Library, Reward LOST Three blade silver pen knife Finder please return to Prof. Pair banks. LOST—Bottom of gold fountain pen name engraved. Please return to M Inabnit, Susan Campbell hall. Reward erudite pursuits of the classroom. The name of Mrs. C. A. Brown, and the number 1390 can still conjur up, for some of our doctors and professors, visions of soups, and fruits, and pies and graham gems, that mother could hardly surpass. When Mrs. Brown and her husband went away from Eugene to a logging camp in the coast range mountains, her boarders mourned the loss of her motherly kindness and her culinary achievements, and sought to find solace in the strings and shreds of food in other and inferior boarding houses. Mrs. Brown has come back to Eugene, pulled, she admits, by the same feel ing that brings the old grads back at Homecoming. “I missed it all,” she said, with her easy laugh, “I count my nine years here, and my associations with the University faculty, the hap piest of all my life. It is good to be back.** Mrs. Brown is not keeping boarders at 1390 Emerald stret, however. She is cooking for Friendly hall. She pre pares all th& meats and the vegetables and if they are of a surpassing delicacy and tenderness it is easily explained by the presence of Mrs. Brown in the hall kitchen, as any of her former boarders, now on the campus, will testify. DR. H. K. BENSON TO SPEAK Government's Peacetime Work In Chemistry, to be Topic Dr. H. K. Benson, professor of in dustrial chemistry at the University of Washington, will make an address un der the auspices of the Kiwanis Club next Monday evening, October 17, at a. dinner at the Osburn hotel. Dr. Ben son's subject will be Government’s ; Peacetime Work in Chemistry. He was active in the chemical ware fare service at Washington during the , war, and is widely known among chem i istry men as an authority in the in I dustrial branch. The Kiwanis elub , cordially invites faculty members to ihear Dr. Benson, and the invitation is reinforced by the department of |hem-: istry of the University. Faculty mem bers who expect to go are asked to telephone Mrs. Fitch at 793 not later than Saturday at 11 a. m. RESERVE DEPARTMENT AT LIBRARY GROWING Carpets and New Furniture May Replace Makeshift Now in Use After First of Year The present equipment of the reserve section of the University library will probably be replaced in part after the first of the year, according to M. H. j Douglass, librarian, who says that the makeshift now in use was necessary j only because of the lack of available ! funds to purchase newer. Carpets will probably be placed on the floor and ! new desk furniture secured. That the reserve department is growing continually is clearly evident I from a comparison of the average num ber of books on reserve during the first twelve days of October, 1920, and the ' first 12 days of October this year. Last j year the number on reserve at that time was 706 and this year 768. The telephone, formerly open for use of students in the basement of the li brary, has been transferred to the re serve section on the second floor. All students who wish to use the telephone are free to use the one in the reserve section. FROSH PRESIDENT RUMORED MISSING,. EVE OF ANNUAL MIX (Continued from page one) to be present on Kincaid field this I afternoon. The success of the tourna- | ment depends upon full attendance of j the student body. Only with full rep- ] resentation of all the school can we ext pect justice to be wrought.” The program for the afternoon is as follows: Attendance and singing contest (Girls only) . 5 points : Yelling contest (Men and Frosh).... .5 points jTug of war (30 men each) .. 5 points ! Stunts by Frosh and Sophs ...15 points ITie up Rodeo (30 men each) ..15 points !Swagger stick rush (50 men each).... .10 points 'Flag rush (50 men each) .35 points Sandbag scrap (50 men each) 10 points Kodak Finishing Is Our Business STEVENSON’S The Kodak Shop 10th and Willamette Sts. Phone 535 IF YOU NEED An Electric Toaster, An Electric Heater, An Electric Iron. If you need anything in the Hardware line Call QUACKENBUSH’S 100 Ninth Avenue East. For To-night For To-night For To-night MAYER’S EXCLUSIVE COLLEGE DANCE Dreamland Hall Old Armory Whoa! Stop! Halt! U 1 1?H ^ur Sandwiches? 1 IV I 1 j I' Our Oregana Chocolates ? HUH? The Oregana The Student s Shop. © B. K. fc Co. The Finest Clothes Ever Made Are Here for You $25.00, $30.00, $35.00 ,$40.00 KUPPENHEIMER and STYLEPLUS SUITS and OVERCOATS —Men, you had better plan on visiting our Clothing Department this week. You’ll be surprised at the wonderful showing of smart new clothes and delighted at the modest prices—40 per cent less than last season. —Our courteous salesmen never urge one to buy, but they do love to show these clothes. ' > L E JL'A l F cc vnA* > “Say it with Flowers” Eugene Floral Co. J. A. Hooning, Prop. Store, &2 Ninth Ave. East. Phone 3231-J. Everything in Music and Musical Instruments. MORRIS MUSIC HOUSE 912 Willamette. WW V V V v y y V*****1^******^*********** ♦*♦ ♦*♦ <^M> FOR MEN SCHAEFERS BROS. FOR WOMEN 4 Smart New Patent Pumps and Oxfords Men’s Dancing Oxfords Very Special, $6.25 Sav fellows, we want you to get in on this one. High grade patent leathers: Goodyear welt, flexible sole: plain toe. and the lowest price you have had for several years. 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