YEARLINGS MEET
COLUMBIA TODA)
Heavy Prep Team Confident
Frosh in Good Trim from
Five Days of Practice
Campus football enthusiasts will hav
their first opportunity of seeing the Ore
gon freshman gridsters in action toda;
when Coach Baz Williams’ proteges
crippled by injuries but brimful of tight
lock horns with the heavy and formid
able Columbia unversity eleven of Port
land on Hayward field. The game i
scheduled to start promptly at “:30.
The Portland team arrived in Eugeni
at 6:45 last night and is housed at th>
various fraternity houses. From tin
much-touted Schulmerieh to the las
substitute they are indeed a husky look
ing bunch, all of them confident tha
they will take the measure of the frosh
And they have some ground for eonfi
deuce after the way they perforntec
against the O. A. C. Books last week
But, though “Baz” and his men art
not saying much, it may be assured tha1
they will give the metropolis lads all ir
the way of fight that they can stand
Five nights of the most strenuous prac
tice since the season opener with Mt
Angel last Saturday have made a worlc
of difference in the yearlings and they
will trot on the field today a fairly
consistent and smoother working team
The babes showed a weakness at carry
ing the ball last Saturday and .a good
deal of the practice this week has been
devoted to remedying that failing. On
the defensive they- are veritable stone
walls and it will take a most crushing
attack to get through them. Columbia’s
heavy eleven is said to possess this but
it is doubtful if they- are as good as
the Varsity-, who were only able to dent
the Frosh line after most stubborn
fight.
Several of the most promising of the
freshmen are still on the injured list,
among them Shreeve and Purvine, both
backfield men, but in spite of this han
dicap they are primed for the battle.
When asked for a comment on the
chances today, Coach Williams said,
“Columbia is said to be chuck full of
confidence. All I say- is that they are
likely to have that confidence jarred out
of them before the game is over.”
The lineup which will probably- start
the game is Gosser, center; Wilcox and
Hunt, guards; Albert Sinclair and Bob
Mautz, tackles; Bass and Carlberg,
ends; Anderson, quarterback; Purvine
and Poulsen, halfbacks; and Broster
house, fullback. Pearson, McMillan,
Bailey-, Bliss, Toole, May-s, and Scrip
ture, linemen will all probably get into
the fracas before it is over while the
backfield substitutes are Stoddard, Na
vet, Mills and Shreeve.
Manager Jack Hunt requests that all
students be sure to bring their student
body- tickets this afternoon or face the
prospect of not seeing the game.
LEMON PUNCH HAS GOAL
_ *
Manager Wants to Increase Circulation
to 2000; Editor Believes
Comic Is Better
Lemon Punch now has a circulation
of 1350 copies each month, according to
the circulation manager of the publi
cation.
John Braddock, editor of Lemmy, ex
changes copies of his funny book with
the publishers of the other 76 college
comics in the United States and is
proud of the fact that Lemmy stands as
fifth in the whole list. He declares
that Lemon Punch could easily be first
in the list if the students only showed
a little more cooperation with their
humor.
At present the circulation manager of
Lemmy is trying to increase the circula
tion of his publication to the set goal
of 2000. During Homecoming the old
grads will be solicited and the manager
believes that the Lemmy drive will go
over the top.
Those who have not yet received their
copies of Lemon Punch should call at
the publishers office back of the Co-op
and get their copy.
HAROLD NEWTON TALKS
(Continued from page one.)
not be judged by the actions of a few
and said that misrepresentation was al
ways harmful.
Morals of the Japanese people are not
different from those of the Americans,
said Mr. Newton in answer to a ques
tion asked by one of the students. He
believes that the morality of the Orient
als has been misinterpreted through the
actions of a certain class which former
ly came to America. “Woman is a sa
cred subject in Japan,” said Mr. New
ton. “A woman can stroll among drun
ken coolies and not be insulted. The1
morals of the Japanese, it is true, are
standardized, but they are just as good
as ours, and perhaps in a certain sense
better than ours.”
Japanese Love Children
Japanese love the beautiful in nature
and love children, stated Mr. Newton
when speaking to a class during the;
dav. The love for children is especially'
characterized by the race, he said. Old
men. bent with age and bodily ailments
brought 'on by improper nourishment,
play with the youngsters and carry
them around on their backs.
During the day Mr. Newton spoke be
fore the class in newswriting. Dean1
Allen's editing class, one of the com
merce classes, and the philosophy class.
Upperclassmen in the school of jour
nalism and members of Sigma Delta
Chi met with Mr. Newton at a luncheon
in the Campa Shoppe at noon.
J Mention of the noticeable change in
the appearance of the Oregon campus
during his absence in the Orient was
made by the former student, who is a
member of the Delta Tau Delta frater
nity. He suggested that it was rather
| incongruous to go hastily across the
campus and bump into students who
say •'hello” and “excuse me” in prac
tically the same breath
Mr. Newton is now on his way to
Washington, D. C., from Kobe, for a
‘ consultation. He expects tc return to
Oregon from the Hast the latter part
of tiie year.
■ COMMISSION IS FORMED
Girls Organize to Further Welfare of
Student Activities
A commission consisting of nine
freshman girls was recently elected to
further the welfare work and student
activities on the campus for the coming
year. The commission will function un
der the auspices of the Y. W. C. A. The
first meeting of the commission was
held at the Y. W. hut yesterday with
(Helen McCormack as presiding officer.
Officers elect are Helen Gripper, pres
ident, Murine Buchanan vice-president
with Helen Weber and Elnore Brock
man tieing for the postion of secretary
trasurer. Phyllis Coplan was elected as
reporter for the commission.
CONCERT SERIES WILL
START TOAAORROW EVE
Registration at Portland School
Totals 193
The Methodist church choir is to
open its year’s work with a series of
Sunday evening concerts beginning to
morrow evening at 8 o’clock. This year
John Stark Evans, choirmaster and or
ganist, has gathered together a quar
tet of soloists who will appear in all
of the concerts. Besides these Mr. Ev
ans also promises an instrumental so
loist in most of the concerts. The series
i is to be of several weeks duration.
The quartet of soloists is made up of
Madame Rose McGrow, dramatic so
prano and instructor in the University
school of music, Vera Price, contralto,
for several years a soloist in the choir,
Glen Morrow, baritone, men’s glee club
soloist, and Roy Bryson, tenor, member
of the glee club.
Frank Badollet, flutist, will appear
at the first concert. He, Rex Under
wood, violinist, and Mr. Evans, organist
| will be the instrumental soloists for the
i series. Mr. Badollet is a member of
:the Castle theater orchestra and was
formerly of the Rivoli theater orchestra
in Portland. Mr. Underwood is head
of the violin department of the Univer
sity school of music and director of the
University orchestra.
Mr. Evans merit as an organist should
be known to all who have been on the
campus before this year because of his
former work in the church choir.
The program for tomorrow night is
as follows:
Anthem—Saviour, When Night In
volves the Skies.Shelley
Glen Morrow and choir
Solo—Lead Kindly Light.Protheroe
Roy Bryson, tenor
Organ Offertory—Meditation from
Suite in B Minor.Evans
John Stark Evans
Anthem—Fear Not Israel.Buck
Vera Price and choir
Flute Solo—The Swan.Saint-Saens
Frank Badollet
Solo—He Was Despised.Maunder
Mine. McGrew
CLASSIFIED ADS
Minimum charge, 1 time, 25c; 2 times,
45c; 5 times, $1. Must be limited to 5
lines, over this limit, 5c per line. Phone
951, or leave copy with Business office of
Emerald, in University Press. Payment
in advance. Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m.
Table Board—Best home cooking on
the campus. 1488 Alder. Phone 1229 J.
44-017-tf.
For Rent—Two room furnished apart
ment for students only. Call at Campa ,
Shoppe. 61-021-22.
Board and Room—Convenient room,
close to campus, good home cooking.
1488 Alder, Phone 1229-J. 62-021-22.
Lost—Gray silk umbrella with part j
amber handle. Lost day of frosh par- j
ade. Left in Oregon building. Beatrice =
Fish. 9-13-22.
For Sale—Oldtown canoe in perfect
condition. Call Paul Staley, Phi Gam
ma Delta or write W. R. Buren, 179 N.!
Commercial St., Salem. 60-021-27.
Dressmaking, altering, repairing, sew
i»g of draperies and linens for fraterni- I
ties. Mrs. Fannie L. Stansbie, 6521/, E. j
13th Ave. Phone 341 Y. House to rear. !
3-04N3. !
-.--—_ I
Wanted—dour kodak finishing busi- \
ne-ss. You’ll like the bright, snappy i
pictures we make for you. Our 5 hr. j
service is making a great hit. Ander- j
son’s Film Shop. Opp. Rex theater.
59-021-22. I
j
SPECIALS
Gold band dinnerware
26-piece set at $4.25 j
42-piece set at $8.50
50-pieee set at $12.25
All above sets are open stock patterns.
Charlet Bargain Store, 63 W. 8th.
Phone 1122
39-0-15 N15
SCRIBE'S DANCE IS
TO BE HI ONE
Plans Made by Committees
Call for Jazz Affair;
November Date
Attention’ journalists! Ponder on
those things. Soon you are to be given
the chance for merry making. Theta
Sigma Phi and Sigma Delta Chi, wo
men's and men's national honorary
journalism fraternities aro making
plans for the annual jazzy and jubila- i
torv jinx, colloquially termed the jour
nalism Jamboree, to be held sometime
next month, probably on November £5,
the Saturday before Thanksgiving va
cation. Committees composed of Mary
Lou Burton and Lenore Cram, repre
senting Theta Sigma Phi, and Fred Mi
chelson and John Piper, representing!
Sigma Delta Chi, are cooperating on the
matter which requires immediate atten-1
tion.
Dean Allen of the school of journal-1
ism has requested that the get-together
be held earlier than usual this year.
The reasons he sets forth are many and
varied. The school of journalism has
been more “out-of-luck” than ever be
fore on account of the loss of the main
section of the time-honored “shack.”
In years gone by, ever since the erec
tion of the homely structures, jolly
journalists were wont to gather within
the walls of the newspaperman’s sanc
tum, fraternize with the professors, call
each other by their nicknames, and be
times sat themselves down upon the
reporters stools and whacked away at
the instruments called typewriters,
which were much better threshing ma
chines, and reeled off copy for the old
Emerald.
Nowadays things are all changed
Disappeared is the little white school
house where was located the old copy
desk and the reporters rendezvous. In
crowded quarters, herded like sheep into
a corral, are all the prospective news
papermen and women of a future day,
rubbing elbows as they pass from their
classes, scarcely recognizing each other,
and having no time to tarry even to
exchange invectives against the editors
to say nothing of the copy desk. The
frosli have little opportunity to get
together with each other, and the old
students find it hard to keep in touch
with oue another, and maintain the
spirit in the school which marks it as
individual.and outstanding for its good
fellowship.
It is thought best that with the close
quarters preventing close acquaintance
ship of students, something must be
done immediately to remedy the situa
tion. At the earliest possible date,
which is in November, and not before
the 25th of that month, the men and
women of the school of journalism will
gi t together for their annual day, that
is to say their yearly jig.
What the nature of the hop will be
:ias not been decided. Nor has a place
been chosen. It was a lottery lns1
year. Some speak of making it a free
for-all, everybody-eome sort of an af
fair. Others would like dates to be in
order and lend a little dignity to the
occasion. The problem will be thresh
ed out in the near future, and before
the 25th of November, all the battling
over the matter will have been done
and the arrangements completed. Keep
your eyes pealed for the dates, and your
ears open for the dope.
OREGON GIRLS ARE CHOSEN
Final T yoais Are Scheduled to Take
Place Monday Afternoon
Fifteen girls have been chosen for the
final tryouts for the women's glee club
which will be held in the music building
Monday afternoon at 3:110 o’clock. This
tryout is to consist of part singing with
the club, and some solo work.
Because ihe club is limited ti 20
girls, and so many of last year's mem
bers returned, there are only six or
eight vacancies to be filled. Approx
imately 67 girls, exclusive of old mem
bers signed up for tryouts. Almost all
these have excellent voices and the
process of selection has been exceeding
ly difficult.
The following girls are to report
Monday: Josephine Lindley, Edith
Clave, May Fenno, Olivo Merry, Cath
erine Lyon, Alberta Carson, Frances
Hevburn, Ruby Spears, Vida Derfling
er, Alice Tomkins, Helga McGrew, Mil
dred Brown, Hortense Hough, June Dal
ton. and Betty Smith.
NEW GARDEN IS PLANTED
Plans for a sunken garden at the
south side of Susan Campbell hall are
well under way, according to Mr. II.
M. Fisher, superintendent of grounds.
A sod bank has been constructed around
Ihe sunken portion, which will be filled
in with an array of bright flowers. A
few bulbs, but chiefly asters, chrysan
themums, zinnias, and dahlias, will form
i center of vivid color, which will be
Every Little Bit
Added to What
You’ve Got
Makes a little bit more.
Likewise, it is the extra
touch, almost undefinable,
which we give our printed
products, that reflects the
unmistable stamp of the
skilled craftsman and
makes for superior print
ing:. Remember, that in
printing as well as in other
commodities, there is al
ways a “best,” This is al
ways our aim.
Brodie & Co.
“Where Quality Is
Everything1 ”
26 West Seventh Avenue
Catholicism, Citizenship
and Education j
Sermon by the Rev. Frank Faye Eddy at the
FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH Sunday
morning, discussing
THE SCHOOL BILL
Violin solo by Miss Alberta Potter
Services at 10:45 A. M.
“Adams of Religion and Science’’
is the topic in the
Young Peoples Class of Church School
mKsrK.ivmm m « b ■ :■ « b..«m b b b ie b a kub
|
| TheOregana
[
| Between the Corner Drug
9 Store and the Barber Shop
| is the niftiest little place
in Eugene to get that
j
| sandwich or thirst quench
er. The Oregana stands
i
t for high quality food at
K a low cost.
George’s candy is quite the “
■ real thing ■
i i
E. A. C. D. 1
R 1
B-l K ri:« K ft ft/B'ft'l! ■ ^B,B!l;'B>a::|r||
surrounded by a border of small shrubs.
On the east side of Hendricks hall
the rose hedge will be extended to the
eemtery. The parking on University
avenue will be planted with suitable
trees and shrubs.
The land south of the Woman’s build
ing will be covered with rock dust, in
jorder that outdoor gymnastics will not
j be interrupted by muddy ground.
Any suggestions, as to what flowers,
i trees, or shrubs, that could bo used in
these new plans will be greatly appre
ciated by Mr. Fisher.
TONIGHT
BIG TENT THEATRE
Macy-Baird Comedians
“The Call of the Woods’’
Presents
15—PEOPLE—15
Vaudeville Between Acts
9th and Pearl Streets
Prices: Kids 20c; Adults 50c
U. S. Government
Inspected
Meats
■■■MmiaisMHnM
You have the U. S. government’s assur
ance, besides our own, that our meats are
strictly fresh and wholesome. Moreover,
the prices that we ask are no more than
meats not government inspected. You can
see the wisdom in making your meat pur
chases here.
D. E. Nebergall Meat Co.
Two Phones, 36 and 37 66 East 9th Avenue
Plant and Office
245 East Ninth Avenue
Phone 122
Main Office
829 Willamette Street
Phone 75
3 S ■ afKFMBKBB
MARX’S
Eugene Dyeing and
Cleaning Works
Everything Possible in
Cleaning and Dyeing
Special Attention Given to Fancy
Dresses, Dress Suits, Etc.
EXPERT We Also Do
Cleaners, Dyers and Accordion, Knife and
Prossers Pox Pleating
ll!!iaillllBlllHI!IIHIII!MI!!l!aii!IHIIlilHIBIIilUI!!!inil!ai!IIIH!ll!HI!l!iHillia!]l!HI!WB!iiliai!llllll!ini!ll!aillllB!IIUIIIIiai
Educator Crackers
Biscuits and Wafers
fe, To fill the demand for this famous family of Health Crackers
s„ we have fresh stocks ready for yon now. Included in this
[. line are crisp and dainty wafers—containing all the body
building elements of Educator Whole-Wheat Clour. Baby
educators, the teething ring which contains nourishing food
properties.
If you wish something different, call for Educator Crackers
' or Wafers.
I STOP AND SHOP
Grocery Savings This Week
Lipton’s Coffee
Selectc(l Coffoee of the
highest grade in the new
srew-top tin, lb.
42c
Lipton’s Tea
Choice blend Orange Pe
koe Black Tea, yellow la
bel. lb. pkg.—
85c
King Apples
Fine quality and size for
rooking or eating, box
75c
Palm Olive
Toilet Soap
“Keep that school-girl
complexion’’
7 Bars 49c
■ a. ■ m m m ■
| DO YOU KNOW
® the steady increase oi sales in tiie Model Kitchen Products is
® entirely due to the uniform good quality and the large assort
1| incut of Polls, Cake . Cookies, Pies, French Pastries, Salads,
§i Meat Loaves and Cooked Foods a 11 made particularly deli
cious and sold direct from our Lleetrie Ovens FliESII each dav.
Dice Grocery Company
Eighth and Olive 3 Phones, 183
:■ r * oca ■ ■■:!!» :■ ■■■ a ■ mm ajmMBni