ART COLLECTION TO BE EXHIBITED Paintings by Lie, Waugh, and Garber Included DEAN LAWRENCE LAUDS Display of Work Planned for First of June A series of art exhibitions ter minating in June, and including 30 paintings by Jonas Lie, Frederick Waugh, and Daniel Garber, have been planned for the little gallery in the arts building, Ellis F. Law rence, dean of the school of archi tecture and allied arts, announces. “The best exhibit of art we’ve ever had here—by far the best,” Dean Lawrence says of the June exhibition. Lie is one of the most virile painters in the country, doing strong, slashing things. His series of the Panama Canal made a great reputation for him as an in dustrial painter. Waugh is fast be coming pre-eminent as a miarin'e painter, while Garber’s work is im aginative, decorative, and very mural in character. A combination of canvases of considerable variety is thus afforded. Several Port landers have written to Dean Law rence asking the dates for the ex hibit, which will be held from June 1 to 14. They plan to attend it here, since it will not stop in Port land. The University is able to have it at all only through the cour tesy of the Seattle Fine Arts asso ciation, which postponed its date so that the paintings could be here during the school year, Dean Law rence said. Wall Hangings Shown There is also an exhibit of wall hangings from the Monroe Hewlett studios. It will be on the campus from Feb ruary 15 to March 5, when it will be shipped on to the Portland Museum of Fine Arts, and then to the University of Washington. Fifteen paintings by John Carl son, New York landscape painter, will be here April 1 for two weeks. They will be sent here from the Portland Art Museum. This col lection is being managed by Can ned and Chaffin, importers of fine arts, Los Angeles, California. From here, the collection of pictures will be sent to the Seattle Fine Arts association. Other Displays Coining The work of N. B. Zane, art in structor at Jefferson high school, Portland, will be shown the last of April or the first of May. This will include pastels, decorative painting, and crafts work in tex tiles. An invitation has been extended by the school of architecture and allied arts to Prof. Leo Fairbanks, head of the fine arts department at Oregon Agricultural College, and brother of Avard Fairbanks, Uni versity professor of sculpture, to send some of his work here for ex hibition. Word has not yet been received from him. FINE ITALIAN DESIGNS FOUND IN ART GALLERY (Continued from page one) tury oriental design. Corn flowers and lotus printed with metal stencil on blue velour makes up the frag ment of a curtain for the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, New York, which has all the charm of its 16th century Italian tradition. “Ponce de Leon” in green and yellow gold on black velvet is surrounded by small conVentionalized spouting foun tains in an example designed by Ezra Winter. New York. Besides the method of stencil, a most effective bleaching process is used by Mr. Hewlett. In some ways this gives a more artistic effect, since the design becomes more a part f CLASSIFIED ADsj I Minimum charge, 1 time, 25c : 2 time*. ! | 45c : 3 times, 60c: 1 week, $1.20. Must I I be limited to 5 lines: over this limit I | 6c per line. Phene 951, or leave copy I 1 with Business office of Emerald, In I I University Press. Office hours, 1 to I I 4 p. m. PAYABLE IN ADVANCE ONLY | O -■ --♦ For Rent—Room and board for two ladies—also board for one. Phone 1666-J, or call 973 Hilvard. F12-17 Lost—Brown Chinese box purse, made of native grass with alligator flap. Finder please call 941-L. F 15-16. Be a Newspaper Correspondent— With the Heaeock Plan and earn a good income while learning; we show you how; begin actual work at once: all or spare time; experi ence unnecessary; no canvassing; send for particulars. Newswrite s Training Bureau, Buffalo, N. Y. F-1245 PROGRAM FOR TODAY OF SIXTH ANNUAL NEWSPAPER CONFERENCE o---— FRIDAY MORNING All Sections—Joint Session George P. Cheney, President, in Chair 9:00— Registration. 9:30— "The Results of a Two Years' Scientific Investigation of the Causes of Errors in Proofreading”—H. R. Crosland. professor of psychology. This will be the “release” of a story likely to be of wide interest. The pre sentation will be enlivened by a demonstration of methods. Discussion. 10:00— Appointment of Committees. 10:05— A Short Course in News Writing, conducted by a group of editors under the leadership of Dean Colin Y. Dyment. Discussion—Paul Iveltv, Bert W. Bates, Jerrold Owen. ' FRIDAY NOON 12:15— Luncheon at fraternity houses and Dutch luncheon by groups. FRIDAY AFTERNOON 1:45— “Publicity vs. Journalism ” A presentation of the free space problem from a fresh angle likely to provoke animated discussion—Marshall N. Dana, A. E. Voorhies, Robert W. Sawyer, E. B. Aldrich, W. V. Mc Kinney. Discussion. 2:45— •“Some Little Visits to the Offices of European Editors”—Eric W Allen. 3:15— “State Economics and the Newspaper.” (The newspaper men present at the Farm and Economic Conference at the O. A. C. voted unanimously that certain things were brought out that ought to be called to the attention of the larger gathering expected at the Conference)—Edgar B. Piper, Claude C. Ingalls. Discussion. : 45 State Editorial Association Miscellany. President Hal E. Hoss will present some questions that have come up in connection with news papers in various parts of the state. Discussion. 4:45— “The Up-State Paper and State-Wide Questions”—F. H. Young. Discussion. 5:00— “Some Practical Problems Confronting Publishers”-—George Putnam, E. A. Koen. 5:30 Report of Committee on Newsprint—Elbert Bede. Discussion. 5:45— “Our New Plant: Our Ideas Working Out”—J. E. Shelton. The Eugene Guard is planning its future development and will invite the editors to inspect the new building. FRIDAY EVENING 6:30— Banquet at Osburn Hotel. Toastmaster, President P. L. Campbell. A program is being arranged to include leading Portland editors and others. The banquet program’ promises to be crisp and interesting. Mr. Lloyd Spencer, advertising promoter for the Seattle Star, who is one of the best after-dinner speakers on the coast, will be on hand to tell some of his famous stories. Tentative Program for Trade and Class Journalism Section FRIDAY MORNING Participate in Joint Session FRIDAY AFTERNOON Stephen Hart, President. 2:15— “Essentials of Trade Journal Editing”—George F. Cornwall. 2:45— “Subscription Getting”—Stephen Hart. 3:15— “Humanizing the Trade Paper”—Jerrold Owen. 3:45— “The Decision of the Federal Trade Commission in Relation to Printing Costs”—Louis Sondheim. | of the material, and not an overlay, j However, they have not the gorgeous aspect of the use of metal. In a fragment of Italian tapestry design, the Copenhagen blue with which the velour was dyed is bleached out with acid where the pattern is put on. Hand coloring added to the metal gives a lustre of rose and green to i the bronze and gold of the metal on ia large black velvet hanging. A dog land falcon in a gondola is the 15th century Venetian design used. Sym bolic figures are done in gold on a blue velour alter piece printed in metal and pigment. Conventionalized vases of flowers, printed on linen with hand coloring, after Jean Bap tiste, may be seen. Two more realistic hangings are the scenes, “Winter,” and “Sum mer.” printed on black velvet, using Summer and winter sports, boating nnTI skating, in the composition. They are printed in pigment with hand coloring added. The largest hanging is a strange and very inter esting one, inspired1 by Berain. a ■gorgeous combination of small peach trees, grape vines, dancing figures ! and birds. CONCERT TONIGHT HAS DIVERSIFIED PROGRAM (Continued From Page One.) interview. “They have a number of excellent voices and lots of pep. ! They desire the hearty support of the Oregon student body. It was mostly due to their efforts that the Uni versity of Oregon glee club in Salem was a success last year. The Willamette glee club is just FOR A GOOD SQUARE MEAL Depot Restaurant Open All Night finishing its tour of southern Oregon. In the spring, they plan to tour west ern Washington, going as far as Vancouver, British Columbia. Following is the program which will be presented: Wreck of the Julie Plante .. O’Hara Glee club La Paloma (Cornet Solo) .. Yradier Albert Warren Impersonation . Goodman Lloyd Waltz Scotch songs . Selected Joe Nee “Heaven” . . Arr. by H. T. Burleigh Glee club Tommy Lad . Margetson “The Bed Chamber Dream” . . (Chinese Opera Selection) Fa Fa Sze Part II The Old Boad . Scott Glee club Etude Opus 10 .Chopin Byron Arnold Where My Caravan Has Bested . Lohr Willamette Octette Uncle Borne . Homer Lloyd Thompson Who Swallowed Jonah . Negro Folk Song Glee club Impersonation .Selected Lloyd Waltz Jolly Students . Mendenhall Ode to Willamette .... Mendenhall Glee club G»t the Classified Ad habit. TO GIVE PIANO RECITAL Other Members of Music Faculty Will Assist Theodore Walstrum, who is ap pearing in piano recital on the cam pus for the first time Monday even ing February IS, in Alumni hall of the Woman's building, will be assist ed by John B. Siefert, tenor, ac companied by Aurora Potter Under wood. All three are members of the school of music facnlty. Mr. Walstrum was a resident of San Diego, California, where he taught piano and harmony, prior to coming here last September. While in that city he was a pupil of Dr. Humphrey J. Stewart, official organ ist of the Spreckel’s organ, the larg est open-air organ in the world. Dr. Stewart studied under von Billow, one of the founders of Trinity mus ical college, England, and later was music critic on the San Francisco Chronicle. Before coming to the Pacific coast, Mr. Walstrum studied piano and theory five years in Ridgewood, New Jersey, a suburb of New York City, under the last Professor Jacob von j Wagoner, a pupil of Dr. William C. Karl and Guilmant. Mr. Walstrum is very active in school of music activities. He had a prominent part in “The Hour Hand,” a folk-opera, recently pro duced on the campus and in Port land. He was chairman of the last student recital and is acting in that capacity for the one to be given to ■morrow, and is also director of the second orchestra. He was recently; initiated into Phi Mu Alpha, men’s national musical fraternity. CONDUIT FOR ELECTRIC WIRES CONSTRUCTED Improvement Furnishes More Direct Connection Between Press and Chemistry Rooms A conduit for the purpose of car rying electric wires is being con- j structed between the chemistry lab oratory and the University press in | McClure hall. The old ' temporary I j connection which ran over the roof j of McClure is to be dismantled, according to the University electri cian. To construct the new conduit, it i was necessary to drill a hole , through two brick walls. Through these holes the conduit was passed.! This will put a direct connection between the two rooms. In the past, the printing plant has been getting its source of electricity for its two 220-volt motors from wires j that came down from the roof of McClure. They passed through an open window into the printing room. The new arrangement will assure | better fire protection, the Univer sity electrician declares. MU PHI PROGRAM WELL RECEIVED AT ASSEMBLY Eight Vocal and Instrumental Numbers Given; Ruth Akers’ Solo Outstanding A varied program of well-chosen instrumental and vocal numbers was presented by the members of Mu Phi Epsilon at the assembly yesterday. All of the eight num bers were well received by the crowd, which almost filled the audi torium space of the Woman’s build ing. One of the outstanding numbers | of the program was the soprani: solo sung by Ruth Akers. “Ah! Love, But a Day,” by Gilberte, was her number, and the audience greet ed her rendition of the song with enthusiastic applause, as a tribute to her superior handling of the sub ject. The instrumental numbers, espe cially those of the quartets, were also well received by the audience. The first number on the program, “War Dance,” by Skilton, played Coming— GLORIA SWANSON IN “THE HUMMING BIRD’ Your Spine may have a vertaberal lesion as shown, which may be the cause of your ailments. ^ The Chiropractor corrects i these subluxations— lib erates the nerve impulses —Health returns. DR. GEO. A. SIMON 916 Willamette Street a cello, was a delightful piece which found favor through its unusual ness. It was a collection of Ameri can Indian melodies of the war dance. The other selection of this quartet, “Adagietto,” by Bizet, was also very pleasing through its con trast with the first number. The other instrumental quartet, com posed of a violin, a cello, a flute and a piano, gave “A Japanese Sunset,” which was well received. The other numbers, a flute solo, a piano number, a selection by a double quartet, a contralto solo, and the Triangle Song of Mu Phi Epsilon, received their share of ap plause. Those members of Mu Phi Epsilon who took an active part in the pro gram yesterday are Gwendolyn Lampsliire, Jane O'Reilly, Nina Warnock, Katie Potter, Bernice Yeo, Eloise McPherson, Beulah Clark, Claire Collette, Ruth Akers, Elizabeth Nelson, Mrs. T. A. Pear son, Mildred Berkeley, Gayle Roberts, Leona Gregory, Mrs. C. A. Whitten. NIGHT SCENES IN “GRIT” HARD TO GET To take the night scenes by the river front for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s crook-story, “Grit,” now playing at the Castle theater, was no easy task. The scenes were actually taken at 1 Carol the Co-ed Comments on Eugene Shops Anne dear: I’m just, thrilled about my now campus coat I bought today at Large’s. It is a “Betty Wales,” so you know what that means. It is a soft plaid camel’s hair like yours, but in a different shade of tan, with warm brown and orange in the plaid. The back has a Russian cape effect and the collar has a plain tan cuff. You’ll love it I know. I dropped in at the Style Shop to see the new spring hats and they are darling. Mrs. Rockes and her designer Miss (j Jenkins, have just 1 come back from a buying trip at the San Francis co millinery open- - ings and the girls on the campus , will have a hard time to decide between the creations they are offering. I’m so glad you told me about i the lastest ' song hit, “Just One, More Kiss.” Isn’t it a wonderful fox trot though? We got a copy at the Eugene Music Shop and we have kept the house pianist busy ever since playing it. It was our best number for our “ Dime Crawl” music Wednesday night. The next time I write to you I will use my new crested stationery that T am having done at Coe’.? Stationery. Tt. is like your favorite polo cloth but is tan instead, with a gray thread. It is “Renais sance Sandstrom,” and you’ve probably beard of it. It is so good looking and is only 85 cents a pound for the open sheets. Tt costs 50 cents to have it crested, i You ’ll be surprised to know ; what a dressmaker I’m turning J out to bo. I told you about Hie nice little portable elec tric sewing ma chine 1 bought ■tat the White Scwi/np Machine company, didn’t 2? I ! Mrs. Liston, of the state dress making school, has charge of the free school of dressmaking they run to buyers of machines. T have made one sport blouse and soon I’ll make a real dress. Let me know right away just everything you are doing. Yours lovingly, CAROL. MATTRESSES MADE OVER Returned same day O’BRIEN MATTRESS CO. Phone 399 - nijrlit. Ordinary electric light could not be used in the street lamp, for plain lights do not film well at all. So a special cable had to be laid and a sunlight arc put in the lamp. This necessitated a great ex | penditure of time and money but the effect secured was most realistic. Glenn Hunter, well-known por trayer of “boy-roles,” has the prin cipal part of an East Side youth who strives to break away from a ! gang of thieves and go straight. The supporting cast includes (Jlara Bow, Osgood Perkins, Roland Young, Helenka Adamowska, Townsend Martin, Bore Davidson and Martin Broder. TEXAS STUDENTS START CAMPAIGN FOR STADIUM UniVersity of Texas—A campaign was started.recently by. the students of the University, of Texas to raise funds for the building of a new athletic stadium. The stadium, when completed, according to pres ent plans, will seat 65,000 people. Rose La Vogue Beauty Shop Manicuring, Scalp and Face Treatments. Marcelling 13th and Kincaid Glenn Hunter Clara Bow —IN — A melodrama ! I that illuminates; New York s , / underwood S Glamorous with Romance, Interwoven with Pathos and Heart Throbs The CASTLE TODAY and SATURDAY Continuous Performances Every Day 1. Freshness— All our meat is bought from local stockmen, which insures its being perfectly fresh and in the best of condition when you get it. 2. Purity— Government inspection guarantees the pur ity of the meat. We know our meat comes from healthy cattle, but inspection is added assurance for our customers. Take these two important points into con sideration when ordering your meat sup plies. Eugene Packing Co. Phone 38 iiiiimiiimiiimiiimiiiiMiiimiiiiMiiiimiiimiHimiimiiiimillHIIIHIIIIMIIIMIIIMlilMIIIII "Pelham” A new model that blende style with utmost utility, shown in Patent leather with a eat out of dull Kid. Made with medium wood heel and flexible sale. To Dress Your Feet Smartly, Fittingly, Comfortably YOU can turn confidently to Queen Quality, America’s best-known brand,' the leading make of women’s shoes, fo ! perfect fit, enduring comfort and authenti style in footwear. Your every requiremen is covered by Queen Quality service, and your satisfaction is assured by the Trade Mark stamped on every pair. Prices $6X0 to $10.60