Coach to Take Hoopsters on Southern Trip Christmas Period Set For Game Series In California Prospects Bright for Pennant Season A barnstorming trip through Cal ifornia has been scheduled for the varsity basketball team which turns out for the first time Monday after noon at 5 o’eloek, according to Coach Billy Reinhart. The trip will be made during the Christmas holi days and a number of independent elubs will be played, among them being several who were met on. a similar trip last year. Oregon’s team, ehampions of the Northwestern Conference in 1925-6, will open the season with excellent prospects for another march to the pennant and a fine chance for the coast title. Three regulars from last year will don their uniforms. They are Gun ther, all-Coast forward; Boy Oker berg, center, and Algot Westergren, another all-Coast selection. Captain Howard Hobson and Charles Jost will bo missed in their old positions at forward and guard. "Bed” Scallon, Gordon Ridings, Keith Emmons, Mervyn Chastain, and Bernard Hummelt, all graduates of the frosh team, and Edwards, Kiminki, and Flynn, from the super varsity of last year, are all good prospects for the vacant positions. Okerberg will have no one to worry him at center for the frosh were undecided as to whether or not they had a center last year, Ridings and Dave Epps alternating in that place. Westergren will probably play running guard as of yore and the man to plug up the hole beneath Oregon’s basket will be picked from Pat Hughes, Joe Bally, Scott Mil ligan and soveral holdovers from the previous year’s substitutes. Washington will probably be the biggest obstacle to stand between Oregon and the pennant, Billy Rein hart thinks. The Huskies turned out for practice last week with a galaxy of veterans and frosh that is sure to surpass their 1925 show ing. The Idaho team will bo chiefly made up of seniors. Washington State College team has all of its old stars back to help it in its drive for the pennant. O. A. C. has been practicing since the beginning of the school year in an attempt to put a team on the floor that can stein Oregon’s rising tide. Most of its brilliant performers are back in harness, Captain Loris Baker, for ward, boing the biggest loss. Two men were more instrumental in keeping Oregon from winning the Coast title last year than any others. These two played for the California Bears and were named Higgins and Carver. When the diplomas were passed j out, both of them were honored and I California ’» basketball stock took | a sudden drop. Carver will be re I membored as the player who shot most of California's points in the second game after going through a season with scarcely a basket to his credit. The new basketball pavilion will be finished for practice about Dec ember 10, it is said, and until then, the Lemon-Yellow team will prac tice at the men ’a gymnasium. Two men who show up best in the pre-season practices will be tak en on the barnstorming trip. Coach Keinhart has arranged tentative games with the Olympic club, 8t. Ignatius and the Yonng Hen's In stitute, all of San Francisco; and with the Auburn Cubs, Grass Val ley Golds, Vallejo Bedmen and sev eral others. Unique Performance To Be Given in Eugene By Symphonia Choir The unique performance of the Bussian Symphonia Choir, under the direction of Basile Kibalchich, will be presented in Eugene November 29, as the first A. 8. TT. O. concert of the year. This is the second trans-continental tour of the choir, which is under the management of Daniel Moyer, Inc., of New York. “A symphonia- choir each as Mr. Kibalchich, the former head of the Archangelsky Choir of Petrograd, has built up and adjusted to near perfection, is an entirely new idea. It embodies 9. new principle—the principle of the symphony orches tra) tho principle of timbre and tenal flexibility which has seldom been applied seriously to vocal mus ic,” according to the Boston Even ing Transcript of January 18. OREGON SHINING PARLOR Ladies and Gentlemen Shoes Dyed and Cleaned, Anykind 863 Willamette Across from First Nat. Bank A Cup of Steaming Coffee — —With a soul-satisfying home-cooked meal in the cheerful, rustic atmos phere of an old English Tavern. I m m e d i a t e 1 y one’s thoughts yearn toward— oflje Aurijorage Over the Old Mill Race Phone 246 104 9th St. E. T 1 F S A Weekly Bulletin Published for House Managers by the TABLE SUPPLY CO. A Food Department Store ! Phone Phor Phood A never-tiring and an always smiling attention awaits your phone order at the Table Sup ply. It is as safe to phone for your food as it is to put money in the bank, and it is as convenient to order vour food over the phone as it is to lie in bed on Sunday morn inf;. We want to help you, and by saving you steps,, we are doing you a good turn. Phone Phor Phood. The Meat You Buy It is a popular idea that the fresher the beef you buy the more tender. If it were killed and dressed today, then tomorrow it should be cut up and sold. That is a fallacy. Beef must be aged hung up in a proper temperature for the proper temperature for the proper length of time — to be at its best its most tender and delicious state. The best beef must not be _ strictly fresh. It must have j time to relax and become j tender. This is the kind of meat you j got at our shop. j I Tang O’ the Sea j Clam Chowder { Tang O' the Sea Clam Chow der is a home made product j from lloekaway Beach — an i Oregon product. It contains | all the ingredients of clam chowder except salt and pep per which are added to suit | the taste. After it is heated, | it is ready to serve. We sampled this chowder be fore we would buy it. We found it to be delicious and on a par with the rest of our foods of which we carry none but the best. We are sole agents for Tang O' the Bea Clam Chowder in Eugene. If you like clam chowder or clam soup, you should try this by all means. It comes in li-oz. tins only. Table Supply Company 104 9th ST.. EAST PHONE 246 I ■ I ■ ■ mm Bearg Reported Weak on Passes And End Dashes ‘Nibs’ Price Striving for Combination to Stop Oregon Attack By WRIGHT C. MORTON Daily Californian Sports j BERKELEY, Calif., Oct. 29— • (Special to the Emerald.)—Coaeh [ John McEwan and his horde of Ore gon Webfooters arrived in Berkeley this morning and installed at the Hotel Whitecotton. A light workout ; in the Memorial stadium this after i noon will suffice to acquaint the Oregon eleven with the turf field of the huge bowl. The Oregon team has shown its strength all year in a flashy and brilliant aerial attack coupled with a pleasing dexterity in wide end runs. The California varsity, al ready having suffered three consecu tive defeats, is extremely veak in just these departments of the game. California has on its roster four good wingmen, but only one has shown capability in breaking np wide end tears. Coach “Nibs” Price has been put ting his men through strenuous drills all week, laying off today for a little stretch of well-earned rest before tomorrow’s battle with the Yellow and Green. With a stupendous and baffling problem as to whom to choose as a starting backfleld, Price is work ing his hardest to find an efficient combination. The way the names are now stacked points out the weaknesses in the Bruin team. Captain Bert Griffin is in good condition and has played better football than any other back this year and will be the one tower of strength in the starting lineup. Dick Blewett, quarter, is the best defensive man on the team, but is far surpassed by “Duteh” Clymer, quarter, in the kicking department of the game. Clymer, on the other hand, is weak in defensive play. With "Brick” Marcus, "Plash” Perrin and Jim Cockburn on the dis abled list through injured legs, the backfleld representing the Blue and Gold looks weak. Earl Jabs, who gained many yards through oppos ing lines last year, may be able to garner a few precious yards tomor row. Then there is Gene Van Horn, who has shown up well at half and will probably start the game. Har old Breckenridge, California's third quarterback, has been shifted to halfback and will probably aid in that position. California has a good defensive line this year, and if the backfleld functions as well as the line in the Oregon tussle, the Webfooters will meet tougher competition than they expect. It will be a battle of wits and brawn. Both coaches are wary of each other; Nibs Price is trying to stage a comeback after three de feats, while John MeEwan is doubt RUTH-ROBERTSON POWDER CO. % Paints, Brushing Lacquers, Brushes A Full Line of Building Supplies 44 E. 7th St. Phone 924 SOMETIME SOON — g —You will want a marcel or a finger wave and- ■! you will know that the best can be had at— H I THE MODEL BEAUTY SHOPPE g Lemur Permanent Waves, $12.50 Phone 2362 ® Obak’s Kollege Krier OBAK WALLACE, Editor *_ R- E. C. Office Dumbv Yolumn 5 ___ Number 5 Obak has started oft' again with a dandy week-end the college has declared a holiday for all those feel I ing in their own minds that they deserve a holiday on Saturday. Na turally, every one has taken it this honor system is something like a water system—it runs away with itself. Laugh if you can. • * • Now if you are feeling tired and rather disgusted with the school on the hill, must be on a hill to be a school even if it is going down hill— Come to Obak’s his courses are cin ches and maybe clinches too. But even at that you can drag some good hours away. Just one more good drag from some of his good cigarettes will make you feel all hot again. ‘Get hot’ is his motto and an old one but fitting of these here Equatorial days. The Alpha Gammas don’t ap prove of their pajamas and the Kap pa Delta tong like all of the boys but they love. Bob. But the D. G.’s say right out that for them they wish that the trees about the S. A. j E. house were ever green—in keep j ing w ith the ranks within. The 8. A. E’s represented by the one and only Billurn Pento Grasp has let out that the cry the women surrounding them on all sides are loud speakers—they talk so loud that with little or no static they can here what the Chi Chi O’s think of them. The Cap paws think they eat with their knives—meaning the sleep and eat boys. The football game at Cal sure you thought Obak would give a front page story on that why no. that is out of state you see in a mis state ment. ••That would be hell wouldn’t it,” said the student who decided to write a new Inferno. ful as to the relative merits of the team. The Yellow and Green per haps feels as do other eoast teams— that the Bear is down and out, and the time for feasting for Bear meat is nigh. The spirit at the Bruin en campment points to a gallant fight and struggle for victory for the Blue and Gold. Scholars (Continued from page one) riving at a decision, and Would have found it not unseemly to have sent six, for of the ten there was not one man who would have disgraced the University at Oxford, or the exam inations in Portland. Candidates Ail Young “When finally named the ehoiees were determined as the conditions of the Rhodes will require on a range of consideration extending in part beyond the matters of sheer scholarship and intellectual ability. In several eases, postponement of the candidacy for another year or two would give the candidate a better chance because of the ad vantage of maturity. It was a striking fact that all the candidates were nearer twenty than the dead line of twenty-four,” he concluded. Patronize Emerald Advertisers KEARNEY’S Groceteria Now Open for Business SPECIALS Best grade sugar in 100 lb. sacks with a suf ficient amount of other goods. Per sack. Oregon Walnuts 2 lbs. for . Best Grade Hard Wheat Flour Per sack ...*. Swans Down Cake and Pastry flour, per Pkg.i-... B. B. Prunes in 5 lb. pkge. per pkge . Sweet Potatoes 6 lbs. for . Small White Beans, 3 lbs. for . Pink Beans, 3 lb-s. for . Try our new Soda Fountain Serve Yourself and Save at Kearney’s Groceteria THOS. J. KEABNEY, OWNEB 625 Willamette 3 days starting Monday iThe Picture |ithat Thrilled Broadway!^. * 1 $1 i More than a year in the making! A east of thousands! Tfie biggest picture of the famous director and author of "The Four Horsemen"! Thrill*! Danger! Excite ment! Beauty! Suspense! Mystery! Romance! The most amazing film in years! A story of love and war yen’ll never forget! Sen trio by WtfKs Goljbtck Phototropky by John F. Seitz Matinee, * 35c Night 50o