ACTIVE TENNIS SEASON Oregon and 0. A. C. Will Play During Junior Week-end The Oregon tennis team will leave for California May H to participate in the coast conference tennis champion ship to be played at the University of California, May 11, 12, 13. The Var sitv team has not been selected but at a meeting of tennis players Wednesday night in the “Y” hut it was decided that the ladder system of selecting the team will be used; that is, each player will have the right to challenge the man above him for the latter’s position. The scores of these challenge matches must be handed in to Dr. Daneefield or Ken Smith. The three men highest on the ladder will constitute the Varsity team. The first game of the season will be played here April 29 with Willam ette. It is probable that W. S. C. will meet the Oregon team May 4, and on May IS the Oregon racquet wielders ■will mil with Reed college in Port land. O. A. C. and Oregon will meet here during Junior Week-end. Oregon has two open dates, May 5 and 6, for which Captain Smith is endeavoring to schedule matches A frosh-rook tennis meet is under consideration and if plans materialize the contest will be played during O. A. C.’s Junior Week-end. No meet between the first year men of the two schools has ever been held before and this meet should act as an incentive to the frosh tennis players to get out to practice for the proposed contest. studenFvolunteer HEAD VISITS CAMPUS Y. Bliss Mary Baker Scheduled to Address University Women During Stay Wednesday and Thursday Miss Mary J. Bakor, traveling secre tary for the Student Volunteer asso ciation, will be a guest on the cam , pus today and tomorrow. During her visit she will confer with the variouH student departments of the Y. W. C. A. and will be entertained at several of the women’s organizations. This morning she will meet with the leading religious workers on the enmpus and will be entertained at luncheon at the Anchorage, tho Life Service Band acting as hosts. Tuosday afternoon at, 5 o’clock thore will be a meeting of both tho old and the newly appointed cabinets of the Y. W. to con fer with Miss Baker. The advisory board will ontertain with a benefit silver tea at tho Bunga low on Wednesday afternoon for the expenses of minor rofurnishings for the association rooms. Following the tea there will be a general open meeting of the Life Service club to which all interested students will be invited. Miss Baker will address this meeting, which will bo conducted at the Y. M. C. A. hut. She will leave for Corvallis tomorrow evening. embryonicTlawyers to TRY CASE THIS EVENING Assault and Battery Is Charge Against Men Who Maltreated Student; Joy Fluid Is Mentioned A charge of assault and battery aris lug from an incident which received widespread attention on the campus at the time, when William E. Coleman, a Student in the law school, was attacked 'When riding in an auto on East Thir teenth avenue near the library, and thrown out upon the pavement with consequent serious injury, will come be fort- the trial practice class this even ing, when the case will be tried before Judge E. O. Cotter in the county court house. The trial will begin at 7:00 p. m. The plaintiff, Coleman, alleges that the two defendants, William Ralston and Harry Skyrman, asked him to ride in their car, and when they got him into tin' automobile, assaulted and knocked him out of the car, as a result of which his leg was broken and he suffered considerable physical and mental in jury. Ib> is seeking judgment for $000, to repay him for time lost and expenses resulting from his injury. That the plaintiff was under the in flueme of gasoline or some other vela tile liquid is claimed by the defense, which denies the allegations of the plaintiff, and to support their stand they call attention to the fact that a bottle of the inspiriting fluid was found near the place w here the scene occurred Earl Conrad will represent the plain tiff in the case, and l'red Howard will net as attorney for the defendant. CLASSIFIED ADS Minimum ciarff. t time. 2ftc : 2 times, 4&C : 5 times, ft. Must In* limited to ft tinea, over this limit, ftp per tine, Phone t*fd. er leave copy with business office of Kwhsvle. in 1 niversity Tress. Payment in advance. Office hours. 1 to 4 p. m. LOST Leather notebook, Spanish reader, fountain pen and an ever sharp pencil with the name "Olita Sullivan” engraved upon it, in Villard hall Eri day. Will the person who made the mistake please call 436J t I IS A1S LOST Brown -oik umbrella with wooden handle and brown leather strap. Call 31?6R. 147-A15 3 LOST Red silk umbrella with a white handle, aomewhere on eampus Saturday. 149 A 19 9 DUNN IS WRITING ARTICLE Slides and Explanatory Lecture or Aeneid Given Before Lecture Class F. 8. Dunn, professor of Latin, pre ! sented the first part of the story of the Aeneid yesterday afternoon by means of slides and an explanatory manuscript which he prepared for his Roman history class, and Prof. IT. A dark’s Virgil class. The pictures included reproductions from the Vatican manuscripts and copies of Turner, Corot and other mas ters. One picture showed the place known as the entrance to Hades, which Professor Dunn visited last summer in Venice, and which he described from his own personal knowledge of the sub ject. Upon entering the place all was darkness, according to the professor, and it was necessary at one point of the trip for him to be carried on the back of his guide because of the water. Professor Dunn is now preparing for publication an article called “The Van ishing Footprints of Virgil in Naples,” material for which he partially collect ed this summer. Y. M. C. A. OFFICERS WILL BE ELECTED TOMORROW Annual Installation Banquet to Be Held in Evening Election of officers of the Y. M. C. A. for tho coming year will be held tomorrow. A ballot box will be main tained in the front entrance of the library from 9:00 in the morning until 3:00 in the afternoon. It is expected that a larger vote will be cast this year than in any previous “Y” election. The nominations for the various offices, which were made last week, are as fol lows: President, Webster Ruble, Bruce McConn ell; vice-president, Floyd Wright, Earl Shafer; secretary, Lot Boatie, nenry Karpenstein. Annual Banquet to Follow The election will bo followed by the annual banquet and installation at the Osburn hotel, which will take place at 6 o’clock on tho same evening. Tickets are being sold in the lint now for the banquet and will bo disposed of by representatives in the various men’s organizations on the campus. The re sults of the election will bo announced at tho banquet, and a report of the past year’s work will be made. The newly-elected men will take of fiee immediately, as the “Y” year runt from April to April. Committees will be appointed to handle the various phases of the work during the coming year, and a complete departmental or ganization will be effected. To Attend Conference The retiring administration has beer working on a general and complete re organization, which is now about ready to be put into use, nnd which will pul the local campus “Y” in a class with such associations in the larger univer sities of the country. As a start-off for their work, the new officers will attend a state officers’ training con ference to bo held at Corvallis during the coming week-end. All men on the campus who are elig ible to vote are asked by the committee in charge of the election to cast a bal lot tomorrow. OREGON GIRL DEBATERS DEFEAT 0. A. C. SCORE 2-1 Good Prospects for Next Year, Says Debate Coach Edna Largent and Florence Furuset, upholding the negative side of the ques tion, “Resolved, that the prine.iple of the cdosed shop be adopted in American industries,” won the decision over their O. A. C. opponents in Corvallis Saturday night by a score of 2 to 1. On the same night the affirmative team, com posed of Glenn Frank and May Fenno, was defeated by Hortense ITollebeke and Olga Samuelson of O. A. C., in Guild hall, by a score of li to 0. This debate was the last of a series of intercollegiate forensic contests in which Oregon has entered teams this year. Of the eight debates in which University teams have participated, six have been won by Oregon. Interest in debating among co-eds is increasing, and prospects for next sea son are excellent, according to Profes sor C. D. Thorpe, who coached the teams, as many of the veterans will be back. Zeta Kappa Psi, honorary debat ing fraternity, is taking an active in terest in the subject and is planning to I train a number of members'for the next, series. Charles Lennon, a Portland lawyer, Professor Erickson of Willamette uni versity, and H. H. Savage, debate coach of the Salem high school, acted as judges here Saturday. NEWMAN CLUB ELECTS OFFICERS FOR YEAR Nicholas Michels President; Agnes Kennedy Vice-president; Freda Goodrich Secretary Nicholas Michels of Oregon City was named president of the Newman club for the coming year, at the annual F OOLISH WIVES ? Indian dSicyc/c<) JUST IN! BRAND NEW! Moderately priced! You’ll need one of them this Spring. We excell in— General Repair Work Smith-McKern CYCLE CO. elections conducted Sunday morning, after the monthly communion breakfast of the club. Other officers elected were: Agnes Kennedy, Portland, vice president; Freda Goodrich, Portland, secretary, and Vera Tracy, Eugene, treasurer. The executive council appointed by the president is composed of Helen Manning, Margaret Sheridan, Geraldine Troy, Terry Johnston, Freda Goodrich, George Royer, John J. O’Farrell, Ber tha McGuire, Bill Collins and Dick Berg. There are approximately 120 mem bers in the Newman club at the present time, all of them being Catholic stu dents or faculty members of the Uni versity. The monthly breakfast held Sunday was attended by about 60 members of the club. Prepare Now for Junior Week End Get your hanging baskets, porch tubs and boxes filled now so that they will look bright and cheerful then. We are better prepared than ever to give you good serv ice in this line. ThejUniversity Florist Phone 654 993 Hilyard St. Rolette trad* mark pat. applied tarn Silk Stockings They stay toiled up Why Roll Your Own? The new silk hose with shirred gar ter tops—a recent Kayser origina tion—is the mode of the moment. We have the new colors and a variety of combinations. As always* first at our hosiery counter. Sold in Eugene by f oh' \r) if QOAL/rr r i cc\c," ■ Put this down in black and white! s IT’S A FACT— listen: You know what you’ve always wanted a cigarette to do. Chesterfields do it. They not only please your taste but they do another thing— They satisfy. They give to your smoking a “completeness” that is altogether new and different. Those fine tobaccos—Turkish, Burley and other choice Domestic varieties—are blended right. Just right! That’s why you get “satisfy” in Chesterfields. And the blend can’t be copied. There’s no use looking for “satisfy” anywhere else. Don’t try it—try Chesterfields. —and the blend cant be copied