WORK DN GOURTS PROGRESSES WELL Two Ready Junior Week-end; Piping and Wire Goes Up Next Week Work on the new tennis courts near Hayward field is progressing rapidly and at least two of them will be ready for use by Junior Week-end. The crew at work arc laying the surface on some of them now and with about ten days in which to harden, the courts can be used. The piping and wire will be put up next week on some of the courts. They are completed one at • a time and as soon as the first two are finished there will be an additional one ready for use each week thereafter until the ten are completed. The courts are to be standard tourna ment size and will be as nearly perfect as any can be made. There will be no tennis courts on the Pacific coast that can compete with them when they are finished, Dean John F. Bovard said yesterday. When the whole 20 courts, that the plan calls for, are finished Ore gon will have as good a tennis sytem as any University in the country, he said. There are several interesting features not found on most tennis courts. The drainage gutters between the courts will earry all water off and leave a dry sur fact at all times. They are perfectly level in the playing direction and the Blight slope that is necessary to drain off the water is from the center toward the sides so that the player is always playing on a level court and not up hill as on the ordinary courts. Each will be entirely enclosed so that balls from neighboring courts cannot in terfere. The gates will be of steel and the netting will be extra heavy instead of the common chicken wire usually used. Several drinking fountains will be in stalled for the benefit of players. Another feature not generally found is the solid slabs of cement. Most courts are marked off in squares to prevent cracking but the surface on these will be absolutely smooth so that there will be nothing to deflect the ball. Heavy wire is laid under the cement also to prevent cracking and ruining the surface. There will be adequate water provided on each so that they can be washed off each day. A man will be hired for this purpose and he will keep the courts per fectly clean so that particles of dirt will not accumulate to cause players to slip. Every thing about the courts is built for permanence. Dean Bovard estmates that they will last at least 30 years. The building of them is only a part of the general plan for a number of athletic folds i.nd the new gymnasium that will be built in that section of the campus. Y. W. C. A. MEMBERS TO GO TO SEABECK MAY 9 Picnic Is Arranged For Those Who Plan To Attend Annual Convention; Florence Buck in Charge For the University women who plan to attend the Seabeck conference, as well ns for those who are interested in the event, and for members of the com mittee having charge of arrangements for the affair, a picnic has been set for Wednesday, May 1), according to anouncement by Florence Buck, chair man of the Seabeck committee. Those who plan to go on the picnic are asked to sign up at the Y. W. Bungalow be fore next Wednesday. Although no place has as yet been selected for the picnic, the girls going to the affair will meet at the Bungalow at 5 p. m., on Wednesday, and it is thought that a hike will be taken to some nearby place. The purpose of the picnic is to arouse interest and enthusiasm among the Uni versity women over the Seabeck con ference and to discuss the plans for the trip. The conference is scheduled for June 2d until July b at Seabeck, Washington. Sixteen women from the campus have signed up to go to Seabeck, and twenty more have expressed interest in it and stated that they may go. The conference this year will be of unusual interest, as several speakers of national prominence will talk. Also a list of sports including swimming, canoeing, hiking, golf and tennis have been ar ranged for the girl’s recreation per iods. Those who have stated that they would attend the conference are: Mrs.' George Bolder, Miss Dorothy Collier, Miss Louise Davis, Mrs. W. M. Case,; Mary Clerin, Helen Andrews, Charlotte Winnard, Marian Linn, Elizabeth j Phelps, Edna Largent, Eloiso Buck, Virginia Keeney, Jane Campbell, De Loris Pearson and Eugenia Zieber. DELEGATES WILL VISIT Library Association Representatives To Be Quests At Luncheon At the regular library staff meeting held at the Anchorage Friday noon, plans for entertaining delegates from the Pacific Northwest Library Associa tion which meets in Corvallis Juno 11 were discussed. The idea of hL H. Doug las, librarian, is to invite as many of the librarians who will bo in attend ance at the conference as can cowo to Eugene following the close of the Corvallis sessions and bo the guests of University library and possibly the Eu gene library which will be askod to co operate in carrying out the plans. A luncheon will be given for the visitors under the direction of Mrs. Edna Datson at the Women’s ’•'•'ilding. The plan as it now stands would be to take the guests in cars about Eugene and the campus. Plans are under way to arrange for the transportation from Corvallis of the librarians who care to visit the University. It is expected that about 50 will take advantage of the Library’s invitation and visit the campus June 13. PUTNAM LEAVES FOR POSITION IN PORTLAND Appointments Will Be Made Next Fall; Present Work Carried On By Members L. P. Putnam, secretary of the Y. M. C. A., left for Portland yesterday where he will fill the position of director of church activities for the First Presby terian church. Dr. Harold Leonard Bow man, minister of the church with which Mr. Putnam will be affiliated, is well known among the students and faculty on the campus. Dr. Bowman will be here on his annual visit to give a series of addresses at the Y hut on May 9, 10 and 11. A new secretary for this spring will1 not be appointed, according to M. H. Douglas, librarian. A new appointment will be made next fall and in the mean time it is planned to have the work carried on by the boys who belong to the Y. M. C. A., assisted by Rev. Mr. Bruce J. Giffen, pastor of the Presby terian church, and Walter L. Myers, of 1 the Eugene Bible University. Both will i have office hours during the day and with the assistance of the boys and Mrs. Donnelly, hut mother, the work can be carried on. At an advisory board meeting last night the members of the advisoryj board presented Mr. Putnam with a | small electric table lamp as a farewell gift to show their appreciation of his j work here. The advisory board approved the ac-1 tion of the Y. M. C. A. members in their ' suggestion that they have a separate; budget from the advisory board bud- j get. The members are undertaking to j raise money to pay all the expenses of the hut activities except the salaries of the secretaries. These expenses will in- j elude telephone, stationery, newspapers, special stenographic help, games and j speakers. The members are planning | to raise more than $800 for these . things. Come and See for Yourself Come and investigate for yourself and bring your questions. We teach the Unity of all Christians—and Divine Healing We have nothing for you to join,but Christ— no creed but the Bible. THE CHURCH OF GOD 3rd and Monroe Streets Take the 8th Avenue Car and get off at 3rd Avenue WSTEP/OUS ENOUGH TO UPSET < THE STRONGEST NERVES' - LAWRENCE REAMER.N.YHERALD Heilig Theatre, One Night Only, Tues., May 8 matt. ORDERS NOW—SEAT SALE MAY ;7th. Prices— Lower Floor, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50; Balcony, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00. First carload shipment of the new Gray cars will arrive in Eugene May 15th, and will be on display in our sales rooms. Deliveries begin immediately and will continue in increasing volume daily. World’s Most Economical Car Touring Car $648 Complete with starter, speedometer, demountable rims and tire carrier Bringle & Calkins Local Representative for Jewett and Gray Automobiles Corner 9tli and Olive Phone 672 VARSITY BARBER SHOP Next to Oregana Service Our Aim. Final Close-Out Sale ^ggBgg ► * On May 19th the Peoples Cash Store Closes Its Doors fot Good and Forever HURRY — SAVE y -— \ Peoples Cash Store Last Times Today TOM MIX in His Greatest Thriller “THREE JUMPS AHEAD” A tale of the plains where the best man wins. Added Attraction | CORPORAL EDWARDS | of the Royal Northwest | Mounted | Silver Voiced Tenor And Other Heilig Features Starting Monday— LUPINO LANE in the Super Comedy “A FRIENDLY HUSBAND” Kamp Phonograph Suitcase Style $5.00 down, $5.00 a month You can now buy the best canoe, porch or camp phono graph on easy payments. You can have music anywhere, everywhere you go, for a nomi nal sum. $40, 45 and $50 Eugene Music Shop 9th Avenue Music Store Pianos $195, $225, $265 and up In Our New Home We are indeed pleased to announce that our new furniture store is complete and ready for viewing. A POPULAR PRICE STORE While we have new and better quarters our lines of furniture will contiue to be moderately priced. 1 Used Furniture In this department we have a high grade of used furni ture, most of which we have taken in on new furniture. Exchange Dept. Here we exchange your fur niture for some other style or a different ;article. New goods are ready for ex change here. Manville Bros.Furniture Co. “A POPULAR PRICE STORE” Phone 650 67 East Ninth Our Double Guarantee 1— Freshness— 1 I All our meat is bought from local stockmen g which insures its being perfectly fresh and g in the best of condition when you get it. S 2— Purity— * Government inspection insures the purity | of the meat. We know our meat comes from | healthy cattle but inspection is added as- |j surance for our customers. C= Take these two important points into consid- fj eration when ordering your Sunday roast. _ Eugene Packing Co. ( Phone 38 E. A. C. S. I « ' - . ——— MX.PE P.IMENTIHG WITH ♦———— ———— -3^ ' ' ■ » GARNETT IN THE ROTAZ SOCIBTTr ♦ The First Electrochemist 8ITR0US oxide, accord ing to thei’science of .a century ago, was “the principle of contagion when re spired by animals .in .the . minutest quantities.” Mere:say-so. Imaginative yet skeptical Hum phrey Davy, who believed in ex periment rather‘than in opinion, respired ”j[it and lived., It was this:restless;desire to test beliefs that-made him; one of the Founders of modem, science. Elec tricity *Hs~a new.force.a century ago. Davy 'used ' it toxdecompose potash, soda, and .lime into potas sium, sodium,/and calcium, .thus laying the foundations ofielectro chemistry..With a batteryof/two thousand platesihe produced the first electric arc—harbinger of modem electric-illumination and of the electric furnace. CzarfAlexander I and Napoleon met on'a raft to sign the Treaty of Tilsit while Daxywas revealing the effect sof electricity on matter. '* What is Europe ? ” said .Alexan der. “ We are Europe.** The treaty was at.that time an important political event»framed by two selfish monarchs for the sole purpose of furthering their per sonal., interests. Contrast with it the unselfish.efforts of'Sir Hum phrey Davy. His brilliant work has resulted iniscores of'practical applications of electrolysutnn;uH dustry * and ,aJ wealth of chemical knowledge'that benefitfnot him* self but the entire^workL In the Research.Laboratories of the General Electric Company, for instance, much hasjbeen done, to improve the electric furnace (a de velopment, of Davy’s. arc)xnd new compounds haye been electro chemically produced, which make it easier tocast high-conductivity copper, to manufacture, special tool steelsjjand to produce carbides for better arc.lampsv. General^Elecflric (jenertl Office COIIipiliy' SchcuecUdy.N.Y, l * 95*34°