MUCH GRADUATE WORK i
IN NEXT SUMMER TERM
Many Easterners Expected to
Attend Sessions Here
CLASSES II\TUNC0LN HIGH i
City School Equipment to Be
Used in Portland
Strong and varied courses, attracting
students from all over Oregon and the
Northwest, will be offered at the com
ing summer term of the University, ac- I
cording to a summer term bulletin
issued this week by Earl Kilpatrick,
general director of the summer session.
Eugene registration will take place
Wednesday, June 21, the day after
commencement, while those who regis
ter for work in Portland must sign up
Monday, June 19.
Many of the students attending the
summer session will do graduate work.
Dr. E. 8. Conklin, professor of psychol
ogy, has been appointed special ad
viser to graduate students.
Easterners Come West
Mr. Kilpatrick reports that it is be
coming almost a custom for easterners
to come west for the summer, spending
part of the time in study and part in
recreation. He says that the Portland
center will have a number of such stu
dents this year who will spend the
week-days in the metropolis and the
week-ends in hiking and side trips of
various kinds.
Uolln V. Dyment, dean of the school
of literature, science and the arts, is
director of the campus summer session,
while Dr. George Bebec, dean of the
graduate school, will have charge of
the Portland activities. Eugene ses
sions will use the campus equipment,,
while Lincoln high school will bo util
ized for the University work in the
city.
Besides the regular University fac
ulty members who will teach during the
summer term at Eugene, are Samuel
Bannister Harding, Ph.D., professor of
history at the University of Wisconsin,
and Orville C. Pratt, superintendent of
schools at Spokane, Washington, and
formerly head of education at De Pauw
university; Ben H. Williams, Ph.D.,
University of Pennsylvania, and Otis
Richardson, University of Idaho. Mrs.
Eric W. Allen, wife of Dean Allen of
the school of journalism, will instruct
in English.
The Portland session faculty will also
include a number of well-known schol
ars. Edward T. Devine, associate ed
itor of the Survey and one of the lead
ing sociologists of the nation, is prob
ably the biggest figure of the group.
.T. Duncan Spaeth, Ph.D., professor of
English literature at Princeton, is also
a dynamic leader who has been procured
for work.
f rom urner uoueges
Faculty members from other institu
tions are: Clyde Eagleton, M.A., 8outh
Methodist University, Dallas, Texas;
Emilio Goggio, Ph.D., Romance ian- i
guages, University of Toronto; Edward
L. Schaub, Ph.D., education, Northwest
ern University; R. M. Wendley, Ph.D.,
philosophy, University of Michigan;
William H. Boyer, music, Portland pub
lic schools; and E. Albert Cook, Ph.D.,
Pacific University, Forest Grove.
Two main features of the summer
session are the Oregon Conference of
Social Work, to be held in the central
library, Portland, June 19, 20 and 21,
and a meeting of Oregon superintend
ents and principals in Eugene, June 24
and 26. The latter will be under the
auspices of the school of education.
MRS. DUNN RETURNS
Mrs. F. S. Dunn, wife of Professor
Dunn, who is head of the Latin de
partment of the University, has re
turned from several months spent in
Berkeley, California.
Fishing Season Opened Saturday, the 15th
for six-inch trout or over
Rods, Lines, Reels, Hooks, Spoons
Base Ball Season Now on
Gloves, Mitts, Shoes, Bats
Hauser Bros. Gun Store
Rock Springs, Utah \ T
and Beaver Hill VJ “ w ™ r\ ™ M~j
RAINIER COAL COMPANY
830 Willamette Street Phome 412
If You Value Money
Trade at
The Sample Store
Men’s dress shoes.$3.98 to $10.30
Men’s suits . , ..$13 to $29.50
Ladies* patent strap
pumps.$3.85 to $4.95
One lot of ladies’ pumps at.$2.98
Buflded Along
Lines of Permanency
Merit wine. Twenty years is a long time. A. great
deair can happen. A mis-step often turns back the
hands, of achievement. Not infrequently
comes to snatch victory from the goal of success.
Day by day and step by step for twenty years the
business of this Company has been moulded along
lines of permanency thru consistently protecting my]
serving the people.
It has won a notable victory only because it has
merited it—it has reached its twentieth anniversary
this April because of the good will of the hundreds
of thousands of people it serves well.
When H2O Isn’t Water
“/GENTLEMEN” said the Chem. Prof., at
V_T the end of the term, “You’ll probably
remember only one thing of all I’ve tried
to teach you. And that is that Water is H2O
—and then you’ll be wrong.”
Even shaving soap isn’t always shaving
soap. A correct shaving preparation like
Williams’ Shaving Cream must do a lot
more than simply make a lather.
—rlt must be generous with its lather. It must be
thick and creamy in cold water or hot.
—It must hold its moisture. Williams’ will not
“freeze” dry on your face.
—It must soften your
beard right down to the
very roots.
— It must prepare your
face for quick, gentle
shaving. Williams’ is
so pure and whole
some that it actually
helps the most tender
skin.
/
A Try it—
J tomorrow before
lA chapel.
Williams
Shaviig Cream
I
College Bar
I Oc EVERYWHERE
Delicious Ice Cream with Milk Chocolate
Coating
Manufactured by
Eugene
Fruit Growers Ass’n
Home of College Ice Cream
Where Do They Go When the Sun Shines?
For Your Approval!
Come—See—Buy
The New Spring Flowers
HERE!
Tulips—Hyacinths—Daffodils
They’re really very beautiful!
Rex Floral
Eugene Theatre, Tues., April 25
Seats on Sale Tomorrow Morning at 10 o’clock
Mail Orders Filled Now in order of Their Receipt_
AMERICA’S GAYEST, FLEETEST, & MOST ANTIC REVUE
The Most Noteworthy Girl and Music Show
That Has Ever Visited the Pacific Coast
^ecora
tnci
pcamnH
Annual PMusical Comedy or
Latin Quarter
fleuToOKsJ
Greenwich
VILLAGE
FOLLIES
in
.> i
H
"nNBEBT SAVOY 6 JAY"BRENNAN
ORIGINAL GREENWICH VILLAGE THEATRE COMPANY
8 Months in New York—12 Weeks in Chicago
THE AMUSEMENT EVENT OP THE YEAR
PRICES: ..Lower Floor, $2.50; Balcony, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50.
Gallery, $1.00.
YOU will be delighted with the enchant
ing subtle odors of rare perfumes which
carry a distinctive and lasting fragrance so
pleasing to those who demand the
uncommon.
“Houbigan’s Ideal”
Houbigan’s Quelques Fleurs
“Decoty’s Styx”
Lorigan
“Hudnuts Three Flowers”
All the accomplishment of Master Per
fumes.
Linn Drug Co.
'-NILS tVERPOINTED
And otlwr MtfiiJ PwkiIs
’’HR name VRNUS is your
guarantee of perfection.
Absolutely crumble-proof,
smooth and perfectly graded.
7 DEGREES
aB soft ec blade H turd, haul
B soft iH hard
F turn |H extra hard
HB medium—roe general uj*
i5f trr tut** of 12 ItoJsj
41.>0 p*f d*n*n tut*$
It your dealer cannot su^f'lv you wm«u*.
American Lead Pencil Co.
tlS Fifth Av»., Dept. , New York
/4%Jt f a ohotlt tit* tUfW
VENUS EVEH POINTED PENCILS
THE NEW STORE
Offers for
Saturday Only
Dollar Day
GOOD GOODS FOR LESS
—COME IN—
Peoples Cash Store
Formerly Hampton’s
University Symphony Orchestra
Home Concert
‘‘One of the best orchestral concerts ever given in Van
couver.’ ’—Columbian.
“A program of quality.”—Oregon City Enterprise.
“Professional quality."—Pendleton Tribune.
The Armory, Fri., Apr. 28
Dance After the Concert