Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1929)
Appointments of R. O. T. C Cadet Officers Made Effective April 12; Rank j Of Lieutenant Colonel Awarded McKenna Announcement was made yester day of the appointment of cadet officers in the local unit of R. O. I T. C., to be effective from April 12. j There was , ne appointment for lieu- ! tenant cole iel, that of Francis W. I McKenna, and the position of major | will not be filled till later. The other appointments were as follows: For captain, Louis K. Harthrong, Hoy L, Herndon, Keith I. Ingalls, Robert •). Keeney, Herbert W. Las sclle, Wade Ncvvbegin, Francis P. Schlegel, and Lawrence C. Shaw. For first lieutenant, Earl A. Claus, William .1. Crawford, Claud; A. Kldridge, Jr., Frank H. Hallin, i Walter E. Hempstead Jr., Robert B. Hyud, William R. dost, William K. Morgan, W. Vawtor Parker, Philip .('. Smith, and Robert Y. Walker. The appointments were made by Major Barker, in charge of tile local unit. Library Has Volume Of lH57 Papers Bound They had newspapers in Portland as early as 1857 and the main li brary has a bound volume of tile “Portland Democrat Standard” for December to October of I hat year to prove it. Tile volume arrived from the binders yesterday. The paper has been treated with a tissue like preparation to keep it from deteriorating. II was print ed bv lh" A. Behind and Company and sold for the price of per year. The type used on it was a small body type and there was a decided lack of heads. Another paper of the ’50's to be found in the library is an incom plete volume of the. “Oregon City, Argus” for the years 1855-1850: //. Powers CwVls Job In Hawaiian Islands l>i\ Kdwin T. Hodge, head of tty e I geology department, lain received word of the appointment, of Howard Dowers to the position of geologist with the United States (leologiral survey in Hawaii. Dowers received liis master’s degree here in litlifi, , and will get liis I’h.D. from Harvard in June. According to l)r. Hodge, under whom Powers studied geology, the appointment is not often attained Ii,v such a young mail, l-lis work in Hawaii will deal with the volcanic rocks of that country. It Wasnt the Fault Of the Fish This Time The fish may he biting on the Siuslaw, but Fred Johnson, prom inent business administration and accounting major employed at the comptroller’s office, is not in a position to sav whether they arc or not. Fred loves to fish, in fact, it is his hobby, according to his fellow business administration ma jors. For weeks he has been pre paring to enjoy a fishing expedi tion on the first day of the season. For weeks he has prepared his r GOLF CLUBS There is a certain subtle (something: about the “feel” of these clubs which just natur ally impels you to have more confidence in your game. Come in our store and swing a set of these clubs. Tou'll be particularly inter ested in a complete harmon ised. sot, every club of which is built in the proper mathe matical relationship with its mates. It is not just a gruess that aueh a set will impiove your golf game. It is a fact which is being established daily on golf courses from one ocean to tho other. What is good for these golf er8’ games is also good for yours. You will also be interested In our other lines of merchan dise. We carry a complete stock of sport goods. Hendershott’s volt SPORTING- GOODS 770 Willamette Phone 151 , tackle-—lines and flics, plain and fancy bait. For weeks he has dreamed of landing his first fish. Five o’clock Monday morning Fred, with a fellow-enthusiast, loaded a car and started on his long trek up the Sinaiaw river. After traveling for 120 miles, a favorable spot for fishing was found, and the two sportsmen prepared to spend a long day of pure joy. They began to .collect their paraphenalin, but Fred seemed to have lost something. Provisions and other accessories flew from the car as he searched. Then pandemonium reigned-—he had forgotten his pole and tackle! On Wednesday evening, members of Alpha Lambda chapter of Alpha Xi Delta were guests of Alpha Delta chapter at Corvallis at a formal banquet,, celebrating the ,'!0th year of their founding at Lombard col lege, Illinois. ToastmistresH for the evening was Miss Elizabeth Scott, and thobe who spoke during the dinner were Miss Margaret Edniunson, Miss Fay Clark and Miss Elaine Hearing. Members of Phi Delta Phi, na tional law honorary, held its second spring term dinner at the College Hide, Thursday evening. Fowler W. Harper, professor of law, and Frau:' Wagner, junior in pre-law, spoke during the dinner. About 2t junior and sophomore members of Delta Delta Delta were entertained by the Eugene altininae of the sorority at the home of Mrs. Carlton E. Spencer, lust evening. Mr. and Mrs. Hex Undt'rWuod en tertained after the David Campbell concert, Tuesday evening1, for a group of friends to honor Mr. Camp bell. The guests included ®r. Camp bell, Mrs. P. L. Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. G. Timelier, Afir. and Mrs. John Stark Evans, M'r. and Mrs. George Hopkins, Dr. John Landsbury, Mrs. Anne Landsbury Heck, Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Miller and Madame Rose MV threw. Williiim Griffith, professor of psyehology ;it Rood college, mid George .Tt‘iialso of Rood, were entertained by Is)r. and Mrs. Sea shore at lumhoon on the cainiius yesterday. President Hall Returns I® Eugene on April 29 President Arnold Beanelt Hall will let urn to Eugene on April ’Jb from a two months trip to Gali fornia and the east. President Hall is now resting in Evanston, Illinois. He intends to stop a few days in Portland on university business be fore resuming his duties here. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Campa Shoppe Grille Dance FRIDAY ONLY Phone Hersh at | 1849-J Smart New Styles iu Spring Footwear for Young Men WeyCo • art1 Featured Here Exclusively Priced at $5.50 to $8.50 , Hamilton Shoe Co., Ine. 1032 Willamette St. It was dark, in Guild, (theater and there was the padded hush of an almost empty room, the suspense of waiting. Then through the cur tains came fragments of a lilting French song, sung by a man with a bit of a sob in his tenor voice. Someone was hammering, someone else laughed, and a third hummed a gay American jazz tune that somehow crushed the whimsical charm of the little “chanson.” But the mixture of it all—French songs, nails and “I’ll Get By”—gave you the “feel” of a dress rehearsal. You didn’t need to see back of the curtains to know it. And then, when the curtain , did come back, you knew something else. You weren’t in rain-sodden Eugene, in 19128, you were in front of a little brown-roofed Frenchi man’s cottage, a long time ago. it doesn’t really matter how long. It matters more that there were Frenchmen who wore green and blue suits, with lacy things around their necks and buckles on their knees and had powdered wigs; thatj there was a rosy-cheeked French man who wore a red shirt and talk ed very fast, that there was a flat old crock jug that must surely have had some of the “ wolderv wine” that the Gods of the Mountain lov ed— and that there was a tall French woodcutter, in a green shirt: who had a beard and could beat , his quarrelsome wife—beautifully. You didn’t have to know what they were saping to know that it j was funny. You could laugh at , them, just because they were real 1 people, doing funny things that were ' real. It’s “be Medccin" Le Mai'gre bui,” Moliere’s 17th century farce, that was being “dress-rehearsed”! last night and tonight it is being given at Guild theater at 8:15 o’clock. It’s the story of a wood; cuttci whose wife, wanting revenge after a lively quarrel, pretends that her husband, is a very famous doc tor, capable of curing a girl who is suffering from a peculiar malady in which she cannot talk. Sganar Films—Kodaks Carl R. Baker FILM SHOP 7th and Willamette FRAMES — BOTH STAND AND WALL Table Flowers are just as jjS* essential as good linen No table can look its best with only a bare white expanse—for the pretty dinner it is imperative to have colorful and beautiful flowers. We make up bouquets in baskets at a very reasonable eost. Only the most select^ blooms are used' and the effect is very attractive. Potted plapts for home decoration University Florist Member of Klorisf. Telegraph Association Plionc U5-i V x Czechoslovakian Woven Sandals The smart shot's for ram pus wear . . . over prae tieal ami ”t»tul looking. Contrasting bright colons woven in an interesting manner. $5.00 and $6.00 pile, the woodcutter, has a pecu liarity—he is a great doctor but he pretends to be a woodcutter until he is beaten, his wife tells the sick girl’s friends. Well, anyway, the friends convince Sganaifelle that he is a doctor—and that’s what’s funny. The costumes are charming. The action is lively. The technique of French drama, as the cast has car ried it out, is interesting. Accord ing to French students who watched the rehearsal last night the lines | are well handled. And then, whether you know what1 they say or not, there's the tall Fheneh woodcutter with the Beard and the big clock ,iug—who heats his wife. Students Write Letters E. C. Howe, professor of English, has asked the students in his class of teaching of literature, who ex- ° pect to teach, to write recorn tm-nda-, ►ions for themselves, stating the qualification^ they possess that ivouk! make them 'competent teach ers. These recommendations will bo filed with the applications and are used by Professor Howe as a basis when writing out references for the appointment bureau. PLBDCHNG ANNOUNCEMENT Phi Mu Alpha announces the pledging of Herbert Pate, ( larenco Veal and Vernon Wiscarson. ,4'V They gave the express rider a good start Henry Wells, developing the mail and ex press business of Wells Fargo, knew the neces sity of careful preparation and alertmanagement. Communication was more than the picturesque racing of pony express riders; behind the scenes there was always the systematic planningof routes, the watchful inspection of outposts and men. Communication today is immeasurably faster than it was then, thanks to electricity. And to a vastly greater degree has the work of prepa ration behind the scenes become important. In the Bell System, management must con stantly look ahead to provide the sinews of ser vice against growing public demand—material 4 and men must be mobilized to extend and keep open the lines of communication. BELL SYSTEM # nation-wide system of inter-connecting telephones "OUR PIONEERING WORK HAS JUST BEGUN” A Great Little Place To Come and Dance Every Friday and Saturday night the Lee Duke is THE place to dance. Good music and floor, together with excel lent surroundings. Dinner Dance, Wednesday, 6 to 7:30 i Grille Dance, Friday and Saturday Nights, 9 to 12 Cover Charge, $1.50 (Including Refreshments) o ■ .■ I 1 • ; • i : Lee - Duke Cafe ■ Get Reservations Early * Phone 549