Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 08, 1923, Page 3, Image 3

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    JUANITA JACKSON TO BE
FEATURED IN MUSIGALE
Recital to be Held at Guild Hall,
November 15
Juanita Jackson will be presented in
a combined dance and music recital at
Guild hall next Wednesday, November
15, assisted by Mrs. Elizabeth Nelson
and Jean Harper. The combining of
musical numbers with dance interpreta
tion is a new feature. The only other
program of this kind that has been giv
en on the campus was the Dance Drama
presented by the pupils of Miss Lillian
Stupp of the department of physical
education last year.
A widely variant program will be
presented by Miss Jackson whose selec
tion ranges from a piquant Garden dance
to the studied East Indian Temple
Nautch. She will portray Miss Buth
Denis’s own visualization of Brahm’s
Waltz Number 15. Her last number
will be a highly colorful Gypsy dance,
heightened by the natural love of Miss
Jacksofc for this particular type of dance.
Mrs. Nelson will give three vocal solos,
and one piano solo will be contributed
by Miss Harper.
Miss Jackson was on the campus a
year ago, when she did solo work and
taught classes of University students.
During the past year she has been
studying the Denishawn method in Los
Angeles, specializing in ballet and toe
dancing as well as in Denishawn tech
nique.
Beginning next Monday, tickets will
be on sale at the Guild hall box office
and the entire house will be sold at one
price, fifty cents.
DR. TORREY INSTIGATES
NEW SYSTEM ON CAMPUS
Biology and Business Ad Departments
Keep Picture and Complete
Records of Students
Students in the school of business
administration and the department of
biology on the campus may marvel at
the familiarity which their instructors
display with their names and faces on
the campus.
An investigation into the secret, re
's eals the reason in a set of carefully
filed folders in the offices of each of
these schools containing photographs
and information concerning the life of
each student enrolled.
The results of the extra five min
utes demanded during registration in
both >of these schools are scon ii\ this
cataloguing system which ?o far has
been used only by them and originated
at the instigation of Dr. H B. Torrey
of the zoology department. Its use
fulness was soon recognized by Dr. E. C.
Bobbins, dean of the school of busi
ness administration, and is now one
of the features of his office, on the
third floor of the Commerce building.
Dr. Bobbins explained the benefit of
this system in facilitating professors
in beeping a check on all 3tudents in
this school, and in making it possible
ti become familiar with them by be
ing able to consult a photograph when
considering any matter pertaining to a
student’s course or welfare. In addition
to the University record cards which
arc included in the files, the folder
for each student contains notes on all
his campus activities as well as on his
scholastic achievements.
The system is proving satisfactory
and of invaluable assistance, according
to members of the staff of the school
of business administration, and is in
line with the movement throughout the
country at present to put student’s
courses on a scientific basis, according
to their propensities and ability.
Numerous colleges are giving mental
tests as well as keeping a photographic
record and detailed account of the life
history of undergraduates.
WOMEN’S OREGON CLUB
WINS IN EXCITING GAME
Pi Beta Phi Loses to Hendricks Hall,
Team I, With Score of 2 to 41;
Losers Fight Hard
The women’s Oregon club won the
basketball game with Susan Campbell,
team 2, in the fastest game played so
far this season. The score was 19 to
15. Both sides displayed wonderful
team work, Adah Harkness, forward,
starring for Susan Campbell. The Qu'.n
lin twins played their usual excellent
game as forwards for Oregon club.
Susan Campbell converted 4 out of
8 fouls, and Oregon club, 7 out of 10.
There was a good deal of fouling, due
to the speed of the game. Emma
Waterman refereed.
Hendricks hall, team 1, beat Pi Beta
Phi in a one-sided game played last
night, running up a score of 41 to their
opponents’ 2. Grace Sullivan was the
star for the winners. The Pi Phis with
an inexperienced team put up a con
sistent fight throughout, making their
two points from converted fouls.
Florence Baker was referee.
BUSINESS EXPERT TO TALK
E. C. Moore Will Lecture to Students
on Management of Industry
E. C. Moore ,superintendent of opera
tions for the Montgomery Ward com
pany of Portland, will address students
of the school of business administra
tion on methods of business manage
ment this evening at 7:30 in room 105
of the Commerce building. All persons
i interested in this subject are urged to
; attend and students taking courses in
organization and managment, records
and statistics and management and
merchandising are expected to attend,
i His talk this evening will deal with
; points concerning efficiency of manage
ment in industry and bears directly
upon subjects which these students are
, considering in classes this term.
JOSEPH W. HALL WILL
GIVE ASSEMBLY TALK
(Continued from page one)
soldier of China. During his three cam
paigns against traitorous militarises,
Hall accompanied him and gained his
confidence to such an extent that he
was made a member of Wu’s staff dur
ing the campaign of the summer of
; 1922, which resulted in the general’s
I present power. After that event, Wu
became dictator and Hall acted as chief
of foreign affairs and intermediary to
foreign consuls until there was a re
establishment of the government at
Peking.
President Is Expelled
Wu expelled the illegal president
from the Chinese House, and
sent Hall with a special train to Tient
sin to negotiate with the deposed
president for his return to office. As
a result of Mr. Hall’s part in the af
fair, his name stands first on the guest
book of the president in Peking.
After the earthquake at Kansu in
December, 1920, Hall was sent to visit
the ruined area under the auspices of
the International Famine Belief com
mittee. Besults of this expedition he
wrote up for the National Geographic
magazine.
At one time he was editor of the
“Peking Leader” and several other
Chinese newspapers. His control of the
Leader was gained in a manner which
seems characteristic of his unusual
experiences. The former editor was in
a rickshaw, fleeing for his life.
“Take my paper,” he yelled as the
rickshaw sped past Hall.
“Where are you going?” queried
Hall.
“To Belgium.”
Hall never saw the man again-, so for
some time he held the editorship of the
paper.
Chinese Language Learned
A striking fact about the tioted lec
turer is his familiarity with the Chinese
language. He has addressed many Chi
nese audiences in their native tongue,
and declares that he can think more
easily in Chinese than in English, as
he finds the Chinese more concise.
Press and personal comments of Mr.
Hall and his lecture have been highly
complimentary to him. Some of the
outstanding ones are:
Oregon Journal—“It was told with
the sureness of a participant and with
the naivete and charm reminiscent of
the South Sea stories of Frederick
O ’Brien.”
Lord Northcliffe—“I wish I had a
hundred young men who knew as much
about China as Upton Close.”
Isaac F. Marcosson, prominent editor
and author—“If anybody outside of
God knows Chinese politics, Hall does.”
Charles E. Crane, ex-minister to
China—“As a correspondent, he is ac
curate and trustworthy, as a speaker,
vivid and witty.”.
FOOTBALL HOP SATURDAY
Dance Will be Given at Laurelhurst
Club in Portland; Crowd Expected
The Football Hop for University stu
dents who are in Portland for the
Oregon-Stanford game will be given at
the Laurelhurst club, Saturday night at
8:45.
As this is the only university dance
given in Portland over the week-end, a
large crowd is anticipated. Good music
is assured the crowd by those in charge
of the affair. Both Oregon and Stan
ford teams will be guests at the dance.
Get the Classified Ad habit.
CLASSIFIED ADS
Minimum charge, 1 time 25c; 2 times,
45c : 3 times 60c; 1 week, $1.20. Must be
limited to 5 lines; over this limit 5c 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 — Student-body ticket signed
Katherine H. Sergeant. Finder please
call 851, or return to Alpha Phi hou9e. j
N-8 !
Lost—A Phi Delt fraternity pin, white
gold and pearls. Believed lost in or,
near military barracks. Beward. Paul
Krausse, 127 Phi Delta Theta. N-8
Leather Coats, Vests,
Pants and Riding
Habits
Made to measure cheaper
than you can buy ready
made. Direct from manu
!
faeturer to you.
LISTON
Manufacturing Co.
719 Olive Street
I
I
FELLOWSHIPS OFFERED
TO AMERICA STUDENTS
Dr. Warner D. Smith Has Data
Concerning Applications
Fifteen fellowships, each carrying
an award of $200 plus an addition of
18,000 francs payable in Paris with
the privilege of taking advanced work
; for one year in one of 17 French uni
versities, are being offered by the
American Field Service organization.
The fellowships are capable of being
renewed the second year if circum
stances warrant such action.
Dr. Warren D. Smith, head of the
department of geology, has the data
concerning the requirements for Appli
cation. One graduate student, he states,
is considering applying for one of these
fellowships.
The awards of the fellowships were
begun five years ago. When endowed
they are to be named after the men
of the American Field Service who
died in France. The organizatoin pro
poses to make these awards for
advanced study in France for Ameri
can students selected from American
colleges and universities.
The ability to read French books is
one of the requirements for the candi
date. Moral character, intellectual
ability and the personality of the candi
date will be considered. American
citizens of the ages between 20 and
30 preferably, are eligible provided
they have had college, or sufficient
technical, training.
The fellowships cover practically all
fields of study offered in any univer
sity of rank. Applications must be
1 in the hands of the executive secretary
before January 1.
Dr. Smith and Mr. Wells Gilbert of
Portland, are the two Oregon members
of the advisory board of this organi
zation.
DEAN STRAUB IMPROVES;
PHYSICIANS OPTIMISTIC
Grand Old Man Will Not be Back for
Homecoming; Bisk from Trip and
Excitement Too Great
P. L. Campbell, president of the Uni
versity, is in receipt of a card from
Mrs. John Straub, on which she states
that Oregon’s Grand Old Man is get
ting along very well. Though his re
covery is not so rapid as was first anti
cipated, physicians and friends are
optimistic.
However, it is not expected that he
will be able to be back at the Univer
sity for Homecoming, because it is
feared that such a trip would be a great
risk, the journey and the subsequent
excitement possibly causing a relapse.
He is now able to spend a great part
of his time in a wheel-chair, aud is
permitted to walk around the corridors
of the hospital occasionally.
TOM MIX IS AT BEX
IN “LONE STAB BANGEB”
A combination of actor and author
that should attract the attention of the
most fastidious of motion picture fol
lowers’and provide a distinct treat as an
entertainment comes to the Bex theatre
today with Tom Mix, the William Fox
star, and Zane Grey, the noted Ameri
| can fiction writer.
The screen offering is “Ths Lone
Star Banger” with the saddle monarch
in the title role. The story is an adapt
ation of Mr. Grey’s famous book, which,
according to its publishers, has been
read by mors than five million people
in the few years since its appearance, on :
the literary market.
With Mix, Lambert Hillyer, the direc
tor, has accomplished new heights in the
fields of romance. He has assembled
a talented cast. Miss Billie Dove, the
beautiful Ziegfeld Follies dancer, plays
the feminine lead. Others are L. C.
Shumway, Stanton Heck, Ed Peil, Frank
Clark, William Conklin, Minna Bedman,
Tom Lingham and Francis Carpenter.
The production was staged in the
heart of Texas.
FORMER HOOP ARTIST
ATTENDING HARVARD
“Eddie” Dumo, After Year of Success
ful High School Coaching, Resumes
Study of Medicine
Edwin B. Dumo, ’22, former varsity
basketball star, is now in attendance
at the Harvard medical school at Cam
bridge, Mass., having resumed the study
of medicine after a year of most suc
cessful coaching of athletics at Medford
high school.
While coaching football and basket
ball at Medford last year, “Eddie”
turned out teams of championship cali
bre. His football team ran up a season
score of 359 points against the oppo
nents’ 28, including the O. A. C. Books,
who faced defeat until the last two
minutes of play in a game which they
won, 19-14. His basketball team repre
sented Southern Oregon in the state
STACOMB makes the hair stay combed
in any style you like even after it has
just been washed.
STACOMB—the original—has been
used for years by stars of stage and
screen—leaders of style. Write today
for free trial tube.
Tubes—35c Jars—75c
Insist on STACOMB—in the black,
yellow and gold package.
For sale at your druggist or wherever
toilet goods are sold.
Standard Laboratories, Inc.
750 Stanford Avenue Los Angeles, California
Sand coupon for Free Trial Tuba.
STANDARD LABORATORIES. I no.
760 Stanford At#., Lob Ansalea, California, Dapt. 1
PUtM send bn free trial tuba.
Nana ■ '
Addraaa—
For a Really Nice
Dinner Party
with well-cooked food, served elegantly,
and so managed as to aid materially in
making the dinner a graceful success—
THERE IS BUT ONE CHOICE
If you have been here before you already
know the choice, if not, come and see for
yourself, at the
HOTEL OSBURN
QUALITY AND SERVICE MEAN EVERYTHING
Try Our Week-Day
Luncheons at 40c
Sundays a la Carte from 7 to 9 P. M.
Entertainment
by Ye Towne Shoppe Trio
Caterers French Pastry
Punches Home-made Candy
Ye Towne Shoppe
ERNEST SEUTE, Proprietor
tournament and forced the strong As
toria team to play overtime to win the
privilege of meeting University high.
Despite his success in coaching and
the efforts of Medford sport fans to
dissuade him, howevor, he has returned
to the study of his chosen profession.
MEN’S GLEE CLUB TO
APPEAR AT ASSEMBLY
Several Numbers Which Were Popular
on the Washington Trip Will be
Repeated Today
The appearance of the Men’s Glee
club will be an interesting feature of
the A. S. U. O. assembly this morning.
The club returned last Sunday from a
tour in Washington. They appeared
in concert last Thursday night at Pull
man in a joint concert, which was one
of the main features of W. S. O.’s
homecoming program.
Several numbers which proved popu
lar on the Washington trip will bo
sung. Special features of the pro
gram will be “The Kashimiri Song”
and “In the Harbor of the Mountains.”
New members of the club this year
are: Dick Adams, Siemon Muller, Hugh
Walton, Jack High, Arthur Rhodes,
Fred West, Henry Karpenstein, Ted
Larsen, Bruce Kidwell, Edward Sox,
Hal Lundberg and Bert Holloway.
Patronize
Emerald
Advertisers
RAINIER COAL CO.
for High Grade
Coal and Briquets
HOTEL HOFFMAN
Phone 412
Give Photographs
Shop as much as you will, you cannot give family or
friends a more acceptable gift than your photograph. A
dozen photographs will solve a dozen puzzling gift prob
lems. Appointments are best arranged for now—free
from the bustle and confusion of Christmas week.
Kennell-Ellis Studio
Hampton Building
Telephone 1697 Opposite Post Office
|.jB;«anaiiiiiiiiiiia!j!!i
DR. ROYAL GICK
Correct Glasses Furnished
Eyes Carefully Tested
878 Willamette St. Phone 620
H. Y. SPENCE, M. D.
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
M. & W. Bldg. Phone 228
DR. WILLIAM H. DALE
Surgery Radium
X-Ray
217 I. 0. O. F. Bldg., Eugene, Or.
DR. WRIGHT B. LEE
Dentistry
404 M. & C. Building
Phone 42 Eugene, Oregon
DR. B. F. SCAIEFE
Physician and Surgeon
203 I. 0. 0. F. Bldg.
Eugene, Ore.
Office 70-J; Residence 70
F. M. DAY, M. D.
Surgeon
119 East 9th Ave.
Chiropodist
DR. M. L. HANDSHUH
Foot Specialist
Corns, callouses removed without
pain. No needles or acids used.
Just scientifically removed with
out pain. Bunions, fallen arches,
all other foot ailments positively
cured. Ground floor.
613 Willamette St. Phone 308
DR. J. E. RICHMOND
Dentistry
Room 207, I. O. 0. F. Building
Phone 237 Eugene, Ore.
OLIVE C. WALLER
Osteopathic Physician
ORVILLE WALLER
Physician and Surgeon
M. & W. Bldg. Phone 175
DR. ROBERT M. GRAVES
Dentistry
774 Willamette
Phone 65 Eugene, Oregon
DR. W. E. MOXLEY
Dentist
Phone 73 Castle Theatre Bldg.
Eugene, Ore.
DR. L. E. GEORGE
Dentist
First Natn’l Bank Bldg., Room 7
Phone 1186 Eugene, Ore.
W. E. BUCHANAN
Dentist
Office Phone 390, Res. 1403-L
Suite 211, I. 0. O. F. Temple
Eugene, Ore.
DR. L. L. BAKER
Eugene, Ore.
Demonstrators diploma North
western University Dental School,
Chicago. Gold inlay and bridge
work a specialty.
DR. IRVIN R. FOX
Physician and Surgeon
Phones: Office 627, Res. 1507
310 M. & W. Bldg., Eugene., Ore.
J. F. TITUS, M. D.
Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon
Office, Brown Bldg., 119 9th Ave. East
Phone 629
Residence, Osburn Hotel, Phone 891
and 629
DR. S. D. READ
Dentist
White Temple Phone 397
Dental Surgery
DR. LORAN BOGAN
Practice limited to extraction
Dental Radiography
Diagnosis Oral Surgery
938 Willamette Phone 302
DR. A. J. ATWATER
Dentist
M. & W. Bldg. Phone 627
DR. M. M. BULL
Reasonable Prices for Good
Dentistry
874 Willamette Phone 78
E. L. Zimmerman, M. D., Surgeon
C. W. Robbins, M. D., Director
Western Clinical Laboratories.
L. S. Kent, M. D., Women and
Children.
304 M. & W. Bldg., Phone 619