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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (March 31, 1926)
Rapid Progress Is Reported On Canoe Fete Work Two Cups to be Awarded F^ats Best in Humor And Artistry Canoe fete plans are progressing rapidly, Earl Chiles, chairman of the committee, said yesterday. Most of the houses have appointed their individual committees and already are at work on schemes. Each house is expected to have worked out some tentative idea and met with the house it will work with hv now. Rapid work by the committees is necessary, since the actual time re maining for the work on the floats is very short. Among some of the details the committee is planning is a short entertainment, which will immedi ately precede the fete. The canoe fete itself will be handled on a slightly different basis than pre viously. This year two cups will be offered in place of just owe. One prize will, as before, be offered for the most artistic float, the sec ond for the most humorous. In accordance with the new sys tem of awards, there will be two sections, one the artistic and the other the humorous. The committee anticipating a rush to the humor section, has limited its number to the first five to turn in their names to Earl Chiles, teleplidne 660. Eor this reason the houses are requested to get together as soon as possible. The committee has also seen fit to limit the height of the floats to twelve feet. This has been done to prevent mishaps and to preserve accord with the decor ating scheme. The lighting com mittee is perfecting ideas, and plans for the setting are being worked out as well. It is the idea of the committee in charge to give the effect of the floats coming upon the stage instead of merely floating down the race. (CAMPUS ^ Chat Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wadeligh are receiving congratulations on the birth of a son. Mrs. Wadleigh, ex-26, was formerly Helen Rey nolds. She is a member of Sigma Beta Phi and Theta Sigma Phi. Mr. Wadleigh is a senior in mili tary. * * * Jeanette Calkins is in Woodland, California, visiting Katherine Do bie, a graduate of the University of Oregon. Miss Calkins left for California in her car March 23, and intends to be back in Eugene by Friday. * * * Clarence R. Hotchkiss, U. S. mar shal for the district of Oregon, visi ted the Oregon alumni office Friday on a business trip to Eugene. Mr. Hotchkiss was a graduate from the law class of 1911 of this University. » * * A poem called “At Oregon”, by Raymond E. Baker, graduate stu dent in the school of education and professor of education and psycholo gy at Albany College, appears in the March number of the Extension Classified Ads 1 O--—-■ — ^ FOR RENT — Study rooms and sleeping porch, with or without kitchen, $6.00 and $8.00 per month. Suitable for 4 or 5 boys. Close in. Phone 2357-Y after 3:30. 662-E 14 street. HELP WANTED—Female: Teacher or College student for summer va cation. Guaranteed salary $175 and liberal commission. Many earn from $300 to $1500 during vacation. Address Emerald 1895-B. HELP WANTED—Male: College student or teacher for summer vacation position. Guaranteed salary of $175 and liberal com mission. Many earn from $300 to $1500 during the vacation. Ad dress Emerald, 1895-A. BOOM and board at the Three Arts Club, 1415 University Ave. Phone 2264. FOB SALE—Farland concert grand banjo, $45. Gibson mandolin, finest grade $45. Both in splen did condition. Call at Taylor and Elliott. Apartment 104. i;!!a!!:aii!!IB!!!]BilllHI!!IBiai!IIB!!l!nii!iiinil1IBIil!IB i 1 1 Jazz Dance 1 I ■ m Coburg Bridge i 1 i | EVERY FRIDAY m | NIGHT ■ I s Monitor, which enme off the press recently. Prof. Hnrl Douglass, of the school of education, addressed the Lane County Teachers Institute at Cot tage Grove last Saturday. His topic was “Modern Devices in Test ting.” Hermann Radabaugh, .senior in business administration, left Sat urday for Yakima, Washington, where he will be employed by the Stephens Trucking company during the spring and summer. • « • Mrs. Gerturd.e Bass Warner is on her way to Washington, D. C. where she will join her mother. VMrs. Warner is not expected to return to the campus before fall. Burle D. Bramliall, a former stu dent, has been visiting on the cam pus yesterday and today. He is now with the Marine National |Bank, bond department, in Seattle. Mr. Bra mh all went to Siberia | with the Red Cross during the war. j He returned in 1919 on the ship car I lying refugee children from Rus jsia. | During the year 1916-17, Mr. Bramhall was manager of the Emer ald. j Beatrice Loennig of Haines, Ore igon, senior major in English in the j University, has returned to the cam WRKLEYS Probably one reason for the popularity of WRIGLEY’S is that it lasts so long and returns such great dividends for so small an outlay. * It keeps teeth clean, breath sweet, appetite keen, digestion good. Fresh and full-flavored always in its wax-wrapped package. pus to resume her work after an absence of two terms. Miss Loen nig has recently spent some time visiting friends in California. When the baseball nine wore whiskers, and “Mob the Umpire” was the national college yell, Anheuser-Busch was nationally known among good fellows. And nowT, when we laugh if we win and grin if we lose, and umpires need no bodyguards, (A-B) PALE DRY is the favored drink of college men, because, like the college man, Busch Pale Dry is a good mixer everywhere and every time. Anheuser Busch StLouis ALLEN & LEWIS Eugene, Ore. Distributors 1 P. A. throws AND the bigger they are, the harder they fall, as Shakespeare or somebody said. You can prove this beyond question with a jimmy-pipe and a tidy red tin of Prince Albert. Any time. Anywhere. As a matter of fact, tackling pipe grouches is P. A.’s regular business. Cool and sweet and fragrant, P. A.’s wonder ful smoke comes curling up the pipe-stem, filling your system with a new brand of pipe pleasure. You smoke—and smile! For the first time in your life, you’ve found the one tobacco that scales to your blueprint of bliss. Slow or fast, no matter how you feed it, P. A. never bites your tongue or parches your throat. Those important items were taken care of in the original plans by the Prince Albert process. Get yourself a tidy red tin of this friendly tobacco today. Fringe albert —no other tobacco is like it! © tttt. R J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem. N. C. P. A. if sold everywhere in tidy red tins, pound and half pound tin humidorsp and pound crystal-glass humidors with sponge -moistener top. And always with every bit of bite and parch removed by the Prince Albert process• LAST DAY Tlie Glorification of the American Girl “The AMERICAN VENUS” 3 A laugh in every line WITH FORD STERLING ESTHER RALSTON and the Bathing Beauties AND GILMORE REVUE “SPRINGTIME” A musical Revue and Style Show 10 — PEOPLE — 10 NIGHTLY-7:25 - 9:30 POPULAR LANE PRICES COMEDY Me Donald m FOOTWEARS Where College Folk Buy Footwear 828—WILLAMETTE—828 111 H Yes, They Are Balloons 1 $8.50 the Pair Sliort in the vamp, broad and still broader in the toe—rocker bottom Smart Collegiate Shoes iiiiiniimiiiniiiimiwiii QUALITY—SERVICE—SATISFACTION Graytones Have “Caught On” Young men are buying them in their spring suits Graytones certainly give young men a big choice — any number of the smart new lighter shades to pick from. Along with smart British style lines — wider shoulders, snug hips, fuller trousers and custom features, it’s a com bination that can’t be beat for style or value — 1 or 2 trouser suits. $35 to $50 WADE BROS. HART SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHES