VALUE OF UNIVERSITY ' PROPERTY COMPILED L. H. Johnson Completes List After Months of Labor An inventory of the property of the University of Oregon which has just been compiled under the direction of L. H. Johnson, comptroller, reveals the fact that the institution represents a total investment of $2,329,884 in land, buildings and equipment on the campus. This inventory has been completed after months of labor on the part of the University comptroller, whose duty it is to supervise all purchases made for the institution. The volume containing figures on the value of every item of property and is enclosed in a heavy binding, owned by the University measures about an inch and a half in thickness Two copies have been issued, one going to’ the secretary of state, to whom a statement of the University’s finances in this form is due at specified times, and the other will be kept on the campus. The items in the inventory are segre gated by departments, the value of the buildings and apparatus of each being recorded in detail down to the smallest expense item represented by a pencil sharpener or a paper cutter. The copies were made by Gilbert! Tyson, local accountant. Among the significant items which are displayed in this inventory is that of the estimated value of the 33 buildings on the campus, which is $1,500,536, and it is noted that the sum of $563,848 has been expended to date for equipment. These figures are exclusive of the school of medicine in Portland, the Warner Art collection, Penton Law library, Indian Art collection, Bobin son exhibit of paintings, and other gifts made to the University since its establishment. The largest single item for apparatus is that of $162,771 for library books, since these are the part of the equipment of the campus which is used most generally by members of all departments. U. H. S. FIVE TO START PRACTICE ON THURSDAY Three Members of Championship Team of Last Tear Lost Through Graduation Route Regular basketball practice at the Uni versity high school begins Thursday af ternoon. The first part of this week is being devoted to hikes and gym work to get the players in shape for practice. Three members of the team which won the state championship last year have been lost through graduation. Clarence Bradley, all-state center, must be re placed, as will Don McCormick, froward, and Ted Ruch, guard. The loss of Bradley will be the most keenly felt by the team, since very few in the school are qualified for that po sition. However, Dick Fields, who play ed on the second string last year, is ex pected to show a great improvement this year and may fill this position. The guard positions will be amply £aken care of by Tom Powers, all-state guard, and DeVerl Hempey, who played on the team last year. Ridings, also an all-state man, will play forward, but the position as his partner is still open. Two other letter men, Lester Hanks and Clemens Hayes, will be out Thurs CLASSIFIED ADS limited to 5 lines; over this limit Be per line. Phone 961. or leave copy with Bus iness office of Emerald, in University Press. Office hours. 1 to 4 p. m. PAY ABLE IN ADVANCE ONLY. Lost—Near the A. T. O. house, one Parker Duofold pen and an Eversharp pencil. Finder please return. Reward. Call 730. TODAY and Wednesday JACK LONDON’S Famous Story » “THE CALI. of the WILD” Great as a Literary Achieve ment, Greater as a Picture Will Rogers in “JUST PAUSIN' THROUGH” First Pictures of the Great Race ZEV vs. PAPYRUS 20 Cents Any Time day, and several new men, including Les lie Swarthout and Fred Barton are also expected to be among the recruits. ADDITION TO LIBRARY WILL BE CONSIDERED Building Committee of Board of Re gents to Discuss Means of Be lieving Present Congestion The proposed measure of building a wing to the library to relieve present congestions will be discussed before the building committee of the board of regents at their meeting next week. Even though finances permit a new library to be planned it will be two or three years before it would be com plete and in the meantime the crowded conditions must be relieved. The original suggestion was to build a one-story addition. It is believed, however, that a smaller three-story building would meet present needs bet ter since this way all reserve books could be kept together in the new building. Otherwise, some of the books would have to be kept where they are now in the main building and the rest in the one-story addition. The reliev ing of the congested conditions of the reserve department is at present the greatest need of the library, according to M. H. Douglass, librarian. If the addition is built, it will prob ably be on the north side of the library and it is hoped that it could be com pleted by the opening of the fall term next year. ENROLLMENT IS LARGER IN ALL DEPARTMENTS 276 More Men Than Women Registered; Business Administration Leads Professional Schools Total enrollment of the University for the fall term is 2,412, according to Carlton Spencer, registrar. Of this number, 1,344 are men and 1,068 women. Figures have also been compiled by departments. These figures do not in clude students who are taking work in a department, but who are not regis tered as majors there. The school of architecture and allied arts, 43 men, 86 women, 129 total; school of business administration, 339 men, 61 women, total 400; school of education, 28 men, 119 women, total 147; school of journal ism, 91 men, 105 women, total 196; school of law, 45 men, 3 women, total 48; school of medicine, 186 men, 17 women, total 203; school of music, 10 men, 74 women, total 84; school of physical education, 26 men, 83 women, total 109; school of sociology, 2 men, 31 women, total 33; college of litera ture, science and arts, 574 men, 489 women, total 1,063. The increased enrollment in nearly all departments and the substantial in crease in the registration in the Univer sity is made this year in spite of higher scholastic qualifications exacted from the candidates for admission, ac cording to the registrar. NEW COURSE OFFERED SENIORS IN LAW SCHOOL Aim Is to Give Student Public Spirited View of Work; Is Offered to Seniors of Department This year, for the first time, there is being offered in the University of Oregon law school a course called “The Administration of Justice.” It is taught by Dean William G. Hale, and is for seniors in the school. In explaining the object of intro ducing the course into the law school curriculum, Dean Hale stressed the im portance of it, declaring that though the student generally leaves here pret ty well informed on the different phases of legal work, when he gets out into the field as a practicing attorney, he is confronted by problems which do not strictly belong in his work, but which are of considerable importance in the successful performance of it. “The real aim of the course,” ex plained the dean, “is to give to those who plan to enter the legal profession a public-spirited attitude toward their work. “Too many men, after they finish their special training and get out into the world, settle down to their own small task, and once settled, devote all their time to it, oblivious to the opportunities for service in their com munity. We are giving the course in the hope that it will inspire onr gradu ates to go out into their chosen fields, and either help the limited few who are striving to keep the altar fires of public welfare going, or get the young lawyer to start such altar fires for himself.” There are always issues and move ments on foot which, in their further ance, can- use good, well-trained work ers, according to Dean Hale. Bight now in Oregon, for instance, there is a general feeling among barristers that there Bhould be a revision of require ments for entrance to the bar, making them more strict. Apropos of tjhis ■movement, Judge F. A. Wilson of The Dalles, president of the Oregon State Bar association, together with the secretary of the association, and Dean Hale, is contemplating a trip to eastern Oregon, to make a survey of conditions Leather Coats, Vests, Pants and Riding Habits. Made to measure cheaper than you can buy ready made. Direct from manu facturer to you. LISTON Manufacturing Co. 719 Olive Street Get a I Haircut Between Classes Campus Barber Shop Next to the Co-op FRESHMEN— Have you ever stopped to think how much your folks would like to see what is going on at the Uni- * versity ? They are vitally interested in you. They send you to college. Send the Emerald Home <| It’s the little things that count in this world. A remembrance such as this means much to your par ents. Subscription price by mail 75c per term; $2.25 a year, payable in advance. Call at Emerald busi ness office, basement of McClure hall, between 2 and 6 P. M. Don’t Wait-Subscribe Now! ' and sentiment there. Also, explained | the Dean, the attorneys of the state cm j do much toward bringing about lavs reforms. This subject is being taker up in the class. “In short,” summarized the dean “we are putting into the course in the ! administration of justice those things ; which do not properly belong in any I other courses in the school, but which, we feel, are essential to the make-up of the successful lawyer of the type : for which we arg striving, the lawyer 1 with a deeper educational background.” DRAMATIC CLUB FORMED University1 High School Students to Present One-Act Performances A dramatic club composed of 46 stu dents of the University high school was organized Friday. Tom Powers was elected president. The organiza tion was divided into six sections, each of which '.wijl present one-act plays at the assemblies. In February, a three-act play is planned, the cast to be chosen from the entire group. Each section will have a student director and stage manager, who will be responsible for many of the rehearsals. Other officers of the group are: Vice president, Vera Folts; secretary, Lova Buchanan; treasurer, Helen Hanna; general stage manager, Fred Burton; general property manager, Lester Mc Donald. PADD7 -THE-NEXT-BEST-THING NEW ATTRACTION AT CASTLE More than a quarter of a million dol lars were spent on the production of “Paddy-ithe- Next- Best- Thing,” Mae Marsh's latest photoplay made in Lon don and Ireland, in which she makes her formal return to the screen after an absence of two years, and which has been booked as the feature attiac tion today and Wednesday at the Castle theater under an Allied Pro ducers and Distributors Corporation re lease. V t Advertise! rENUS PENCILS ArluyertwCa! UOH the student or proL, the superb VENUS outrivals all for perfect pencil work. 17 black degrees—3 copying. American Lead Pencil Co. 220 Fifth An. New York m: Write for VSMITH Pencil! end r Vbmus KvaaronmD Mechanic*! Pencil! PATRONIZE EMERALD WANT ADS 1 1243 Alder Next Door to Ye Oampa Shoppe LEMON O PHARMACY 1243 Alder Next Door to Ye Oampa Shoppe OPENING SALE Continuing This Week Come in and Get Acquainted with Us “O” — SPECIALS — “O” 75c Popular Books .49c $2.50 Electric Curling Irons.$1.59 $6.00 Electric Irons .$3.98 $10.00 Vanity Boxes .$7.48 $16.00 Vanity Boxes . $11.98 $6.00 Vanity Boxes .$4.45 $5.00 Vanity Boxes .$3.78 25c Scott Tissue Toilet Paper .5 for 98c One-Cent Items $1.25 Face Powder .2 for $1.01 $1.00 Face Powder .2 for $1.01 50c Face Powder .2 for. 51c 60c Cold Cream .2 for 61c 60 Vanishing Cream.2 for 61c $1.25 Bath Salts.2 for $1.26 $1.00 Toilet Water .2 for $.01 50c Talcum Powder.2 for 51c 25c Talcum Powder .2 for 26® $1.00 Compacts ..:...2 for $1.01 $1.50 Compacts .2 for $1.51 25c Tooth Paste.2 for 26o 35c Tooth Paste......2 for 36c 50c Tooth Paste .2 for 51c 35c Shaving Soap .2 for 36c 10c Shaving Soap.2 for 11c 60c Massage Cream .2 for 61c 75c Massage Cream .2 for 76c $1.00 Massage Cream .2 for $1.01 10c Creme Oil Soap .2 for 11c 15c Castile Soap .2 for 16c 25c Castile Soap .2 for 26c 10c Jergens Soap .2 for 11c 5c Crystal White Soap .2 for 6o 25c Carbolic Soap .2 for 26c 25c Sulphur Soap .2 for 26c 25c Sandalwood Soap .2 for 26o 15c Toilet Soap .2 for 16c 75c Toilet Soaps .2 for 76c 75c Bath Salts .2 for 76c 40c Almond Cream .2 for 41c 50° Almond Cream .2 for 51c 65c Almond Cream .2 for 66c $2.50 Water Bottles .2 for $2.51 $3.00 Water Bottles .2 for $3.01 50c Chap Lotion .2 for 51o 50c Box Stationery .2 for 51c 75c Box Stationery .2 for 76c $1.00 Box Stationery.2 for $1.01 $1.25 Box Stationery .2 for $1.26 $1.50 Box Stationery .2 for $1.61 $1.75 Box Stationery .2 for $1.76 $2.00 Box Stationery .2 for $2.01 $1.00 Correspondence Cards 2 for $1.01 40c Pound Paper.2 for 41c 50c Pound Paper .2 for 51c 20c Linen Envelopes .2 for 21c 35c Linen Envelopes .2 for 36c “O” — SPECIALS — “O” 15c Hair Nets.14 for $1.00 Playing Cards ..29c 60c lb. Chocolate Creams, 1-2 lb...-23c 250 Pieces of Ivory Values to $4.00 Each Your Choice, 98fc One-Cent Items 50c Hair Brushes .2 for 51c $1.00 Hair Brushes .2 for $1.01 $1.50 Hair Brushes .2 for $1.51 $2.00 Hair Brushes .2 for $2.01 $3.00 Hair Brushes . 2 for $3.01 $1.00 Ladies’ Combs..2 for $1.01 $4.00 Ivory Mirrors .2 for $4.01 $3.75 Ivory Mirrors .2 for $3.76 15c Hair Nets .2 for 16c 60c Coffee .2 for 01o 60« Tea .2 for 61c 25c Spices .2 for 26c 40c Extracts .2 for 41c 25c Perfume ....2 for 26c 50e Perfume .2 for 51c 75c Perfume .2 for 76c $1.00 Perfume .2 for $1.01 60c Violet Cold Cream .2 for 61c 50c Tooth Brushes .2 for 51o 60c Vanishing Cream .2 for 01c 50c Cocoanut Oil Shampoo ...2 for 51c 50c Brilliantine ...2 for 51c 35c Bandoline . 2 for 36o 30c Bromo .2 for 31c 60c Bromo .2 for 61c 60c Day Cream .2 for 01c 60c Night Cream .2 for 61c 60c Cleansing Cream .2 for 61c $1.00 Waterproof Japanese Parasols .2 for $1.01 50c Youth Craft Hair Tonic 2 for 51c 10c Epsom Salts .2 for 11c 15c Epsom Salts .2 for 16c 25c Epsom Salts .2 for 26c 25c Peroxide .2 for 26c 25c Tissue Toilet Paper .2 for 28c 10c Crepe Paper .2 for 11c 5c Violet Breath Perfume .2 for 6c 35c Witch Hazel Cream .2 for 36c 10c Oil Paper.2 for 11c 15c Wax Paper .2 for 16c 50c Rouge . 2 for 51c 15c Safety Pins .2 for 16c 25c Tooth Powder.2 for 26c 75c Hair Pomade .2 tor 76c 75c Hair Slick .2 for 76c 50e Trailing Arbutus Cream 2 for 51c 50c Bath Powder .2 for 51c $1.00 Bath Powder .2 for $1.01 Many Other Items on Sale Not Listed Here , iWe Reserve the Right to Limit Purchases LemonO Pharmacy 1243 Alder Street