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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1932)
EDITORIAL OFFICES. Journalism Bldg. Phone 3300—Nawt Room. Loral 355; Editor and Managing Editor, Local 864. BUSINESS OFFICE. McArthur Court. Phone 3300—Local 214. Member of the Major College Publication* Represented by the A. J. Norris Hill Company, Call Build ing. San Francisco; 321 E. 43rd St.. New York City; 1206 Maple Ave., Los Angeles. Cal.: 1004 2nd Ave., Seattle; 123 W. Madison St.. Chicago. III. University of Oregon, Eugene Richard Neubergt-r, Editor Harry Schenk, Manager j Sterling Green, Managing Editor EDITORIAL STAFF Thornton Gale. Assoc. Ed. Jack Bellinger, Ed. Writer , Dave Wilson, Julian Prescott, Ed. Writers UPPER NEWS STAFF Uscar Munger, wewa t,a. Francis Ballister, Copy Ed. Bruce Hamby, Sports Ed. Parka Hitchcock. Makeup Ed. Leslie Dunton, Chief Night Ed. John Lross, Literary Ld. Hob Guild, Dramatics Ed. Jessie Steele, Women'* Ed. , EJoiae Dorner, Society Ed. Kay Clapp, Radio Ed. DAY EDITORS: Bob Patterson, Margaret Bean, Francis Pal lister, Virginia Wentz. Joe Saslavsky, Hubert Totton. NIGHT EDITORS: Bob Moore, Russell Woodward, John Hollo peter, Bill Aetzel, Bob Couch. SPORTS STAFF: Malcolm Bauer, Asst. Ed.; Ned Simpson,! Dud Lindner, Ben Back. FEATURE WRITER: Elinor Henry. REPORTERS: Julian Prescott, Don Caswell, Hnzle Corrigan, I Madeleine Gilbert, Betty Allen, Ray Clapp, Ed Stanley, Mary , Schaefer, David Eyre. Bob Guild, Paul Ewing, Fairfax Roberts, Cynthia Liljeqvist, Ann Reed Burns, Peggy Chess man, Margaret Veness, Ruth King, Barney Clark, Betty Ohlemiller, Lucy Ann Wendell, L. Rudd Henry. ASSISTANT SOCIETY EDITORS: Mary Stewart, Elizabeth Crommelin, Marian Achterman. COPYREADERS: Harold Brower, Twyla Stockton, Nancy Lee,, Margaret Hill, Edna Murphy, Mont/? Brown, Mary Jane Jenkins, Roberta Pickard. Marjorie McNiece, Betty Powell, Bob Thurston, Marian Achterman, Hilda Gillam, Roberta Moody, Frances Rothwell, Bill Hall, Caroline Rogers, Henri etta* Horak, Myron Ricketts, Catherine Coppers, Linda Vin- j cent. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Gladys Gillespie, Virginia Howard, Frances Neth, Margaret Corum, Georgina Gildez, Dorothy Austin, Virginia Proctor, Catherine Gribble, Helen Emery, Helen Taylor, Merle Gollings, Mildred Maida, Evelyn Schmidt. RAD'IO STAFF: Ray Clapp, Editor; Harold GeBauer, Michael Hogan, Ben Back. BUSINESS STAFF XI_ it_o..l i. I /*; i.. . : Ifl xvianager, narry acnenR Adv. Mgr., Mahr Keymers National Adv. Mgr., Auten Bush Promotional Mgr., Marylou Patrick Asst. Adv. Mgr., Ed Meserve Asst. Adv. Mgr., Gil Wellington Asst. Adv. Mgr., Bill Russell Executive Secretary, Dorothy Anne Clark Liircumiion lt*K* •» uiuiii> xiit-um* mel Asst. Circulation Mgr, Ron ! How Office Mgr., Helen Stinger Clans. Ad. Mgr., Althea Petergon Sez Sue, Caroline Hahn Sez Sue Anst., Louise Rice Checking Mgr., Ruth Storla Checking Mgr., Pearl Murphy ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS: Gone F. Tomlinnon, Dale Fisher, Anne Chapman. Tom Holeman, Bill McCall, Ruth Vannicu, Fred Fisher, Ed Labbe, Bill Temple, Eldon Haber man. Elisa Addis, Bill Connell, Wilma Dente, Hazed Fields, Corinne Plath, Murian Taylor, Hazel Marquis. Hubert rot ton, Hewett Warrens, Donald I Matt, l’hyllis Dent, Peter Gantenben. OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Patricia Campbell, Kay Disher, Kath ryn Greenwood, Catherine Kelley, Jane Bishop, Elma Giles, Eugenia Hunt, Mary Starbuck, Ruth Byerly. Mary Jane , Jenkins, Willa Bitz, Janet Howard Phyllis Cousins, Betty Shoemaker, Ruth Rippey. The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Asso ciated Students of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday, during the college year. Mem ber of the Pacific Intercollegiate Press. Entered in the post office at Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates $2.50 a year. Advertising rates upon application. Phone Manager: Office, Local 214; residencce, 2800. Men must be nt liberty to say in print what ever they haze a miiul to say, provided it wrongs no one. —Charles Anderson Dana, New Cork Sun - - AN IDEA OF SCHOOL SPIRIT TkA’ARK TWAIN once said about the weather: iTl. “Everyone talks about it, but no one ever does anything about it.” At least the first half of that pertinent aphorism pertains to what is commonly known as “school spirit." Virtually everyone refers to school spirit in a deferential, off-hand manner, yet comparatively few bother to reason out what it actually means and represents. The average layman is inclined to regard school spirit as being represented by the success or failure of a university’s football team. If the eleven wins its games, that college has attained the zenith, so far as school spirit Is concerned. Should the team lose its battles and end in the cellar of the con ference, school spirit is at a low ebb and all is lost. Unfortunately, this attitude prevails generally in our fair land. A considerable proportion of high school students measure universities and col leges by the standard of athletic success and junior proms, and then matriculate accordingly. A large part of this is the fault of zealous high school jour nalists, who fill their columns with long tirades on how the sixth term ball or the recent baseball victory is certain to make their high school out standing among its kind. This is to be regretted for several reasons. Only one need be set forth here. It is ample. The light in which school spirit is largely regarded is not a true one. Football victories and rallies and dances do not produce school spirit. After all, colleges arc essentially cultural and educational centers, and a notable achievement in research is far more impor tant than a basket from the center of the court or the latest Uipsy-doo waltz. The Harvard university football team was bat tered about from pillar to post this autumn. It even lost its traditional game with Yale by three touch downs. In the common conception of school spirit, this event would lower Harvard’s morale to a zero point, while Yale's would increase proportionately. The incongruity of this attitude is apparent at once. Harvard students still take a deep pride in their school. Thousands of fathers who hope to make attorneys of their sons continue to look covet ously on the Crimson’s splendid law school. Yale won several football games, yet no more young men hope to enter its excellent scientific department than did before. School spirit does not represent rallies, serpen tines, bonfires and dances, it might be represented to a small degree by such events, but that is us far as the connection goes. It rather stands for a mili tant loyalty and enthusiasm that has been built up lor years and years and rests on a foundation that wild-eyed pep rallies tannot strengthen nor lack of such tear asunder. Academic excellence, tounded upon tradition, is liic surest way to attain such a spirit and attitude. Outstanding examples of colleges whose cultural and educational achievements have established a school spirit that will exist for generations are Dartmouth, Yale, Drown, Rutgers, Harvard, Prince ton and Stanford. We conclude by clarifying our points. We do not believe the under-graduates should transfer their enthusiasm from athletics to classes, giving three cheers for tne mathematics department in stead of rallying for the football team, but we are of the opinion that a school spirit founded upon academic achievements and a deep-rooted pride in the college itself will be far more durable and steadfast than one which depends upon the flectiu.; aura of athletic glor; cud social delights. UNDER WAY AT LAST 'T'O REFER in sports vernacular to a matter that j ■*- vitally concerns sports, the Oregon athletic • committee started for first base yesterday after keeping its bat on its shoulder for a considerable time. The placing of full responsibility and power in the jurisdiction of one responsible person was an encouraging forward step. Now, more than ever, the A. S. U. O. needs an individual in charge of its athletic department who can be responsible to the executive council and student body for the success or failure of the system. The present financial ; exigency required and demanded the legislation | which was effected yesterday. Now that H. E. Rosson has been named what j literally amounts to the University’s executive ath- j letic officer, this pcper is satisfied that the firstj step has been taken in the gradual elimination of j the athletic committee as an instrument of legis-1 lation. The Emerald Sieves its function should be, at most, advisory, and that it presently will either be relegated to that status, or abolished completely by vote of the student body. This paper, when it made its initial plea for an executive head of the athletic department, advo cated no particular individual. It was ready to co operate with whomever obtained the post. There fore, it wishes Mr. Rosson the best of luck upon the assumption of his new power and responsibili ties. The Emerald believes it is wise that respon sibility accompanies the authority, because under such an arrangement the student body is assured of the maximum in endeavor and cooperation. The first step in the reconstruction of Oregon’s athletic structure has been made. Further progress and advance should be imminent. IS LEADERSHIP BANKRUPT? IN AN address to students at Oberlin college, James G. McDonald, chairman of the Foreign Policy association, said, "The older peopl^ have very little to say which is worthwhile for young people to listen to, for we have made a mess of our job while you have been growing up. . . . There is a bankruptcy of leadership in a very real sense, whether from the national or international point of view. . . . They have failed to lead in any worth while or constructive accomplishments.” The speaker concluded his talk by saying that the world that the college students are about to enter is much different from that which preceding generations have entered, adding that America's hope is that the students may be able to give the qualities of leadership which the world so sorely needs. There is considerable truth in what Mr. McDon ald told the Oberlin students, and he is in a posi tion to know what he is talking about. His outlook for the future is much more optimistic than his judgment of the present and the past. The world needs leaders, and it is looking to the college men and women for that leadership. It was gratifying to learn recently that one Oregon gradu ate, Yosuke Matsuoka, a member of the University of Oregon graduating class of 1900, is the leading member of the Japanese parliament and has been appointed the Imperial Japanese government repre sentative for the League of Nations meeting that will be held in Geneva in November in connection with the Manchurian difficulties. After all, Mr. McDonald was referring to inter- ■ national leadership probably more than anything; else, and it is in that great worldwide movement that colle'ge students are going to find a place as leaders in the future. Every Oregon graduating J class should have in its membership some men and women who will go into the world as international leaders, although it is not, to be expected that: everyone can be a delegate to Geneva, an ambas-1 sador, or a member of the president's cabinet. THE OREGANA WILL BE PUBLISHED IN SPITE of the depression, curtailed income, and 1 feeble support from students, the Oregana will come out as usual spring term of 1933. With the budget slashed almost in half, the executives of the year book, promise an annual that will not be materially reduced in size or quality. Part of this saving comes from the general decreasing price of materials and labor. The rest of it comes from a more carefut buying and placing of contracts. It is seldom that the Oregana makes money. Last year and the year before, small cash surpluses accrued, which were returned to the general A. S. U. O. revolving fund. Most Oreganas have gone in the hole, it being the theory of those in charge that the cost of the book should equal the income received. The Oregana is a fine tradition of the University of Oregon. It preserves in a durable form activities and memories of college days. Its utility is evident around fraternity and sorority houses. No one, we believe, would seriously consider doing away with the Oregana. Every student on the campus uses it at various times, the only objection to its exis tence comes at times from those who are asked to support it financially. The Oregana will be published. The executive council has promised that. Under the capable lead ership of Virginia Wentz and Roger Bailey, the book should be of as good quality as in former years. _ I POST CARDS AS EMBLEMS OF GOOD WILL HE DOVE has long been a symbol of world peace, but how about postcards as emblems of good will? Students and faculty members who had personal contacts with the members of the Japanese Good Will team last week received post cards yesterday from members of the group. Such thoughtfulness showed that these students were really interested in promoting good will everywhere they went. "Many, many thanks for your kind hospitality 1 shown toward me during our stay in Eugene. You were so good to me that l didn’t feel like being in ^ a foreign land." was the manner in which Ta*l Yamada expressed his gratitude to one of his Eu gene hosts. It was typical of the other Cards. The Japanese mail from the United States to Japan has leceutly decreased, due perhaps to con ditions, of the times and not to any enmity. Yet sensitive Japanese have felt that it was an attitude* of dislike. If you have friends in Japan, write to 1 them. Post cards are trifles, but it may be the trifling things that will mean the most in bringing, about international good will. I Hypocrisy is the homage vice pays to virtue. La Kochefaucauld. Switzerland has only two radio bn-ndca-ting sta tion*. STRONG beer . By KEN FERGUSON | CAMPUS CARAVAN _By DAVE WILSON TJ/HY worry about a drop in the ” football receipts? Well just borrow a hundred thousand dol lars or so from me ueconsirue tion Finance poration. ♦ ♦ ♦ “Well, ■ not ? Doesn't me « government owe everyone a liv-' ing? “Sure. Just like J Europe owes us I the war debts.” I * * * ft And while we I are seminaring on finance, I note Ed Bolds mat me rresnman class nas qa-m-m left out of the sum allotted for fall berm by the graduate mana ger’s office. Does this mean that they spent $6.JO on THAT bon fire ? *3 « S: Here’s a sane suggestion for solving the cotton-suit vs. wool suit in re sanitary tank swimming controversy. Abolish mixed par ties and let nature-in-the-raw pre vail. * «: * Esteemed - contemporary Carol Hurlburt, the brains of “Prome nade,” warns that “the back lines will be down on formal dresses this season.” The old w'heeze about “How far is up?” will soon become “How far is down?” Hi * # “How far is aowm?” replied Ed die Bolds. “Well. I hear that j dresses are to be worn around the j shoe-tops this season.” You may take your seat, Ed ward. * * * Optimism is not dead in Amer ica. The downtown merchants have sunk real cash in Yuletide decorations. * * * Internecine strife has broken cut in the committee in charge of the Christmas Revels. They can’t decide who's going to be Santa Claus. It was first voted to accord the honor to Chancellor Kerr on the grounds of seniority and decades of experience at making everyone happy. When the chancellor de clined the offer, the battle was on. * * * N. B. Zane, George Andrieni, John Casteel and Andrew Fish, all candidates, were' declared ineligi ble on the grounds that they fell below the Santa Claus weight di vision. Steve Smith was willing, but refused to shave off his mus tache for the occasion, as he did when he played Ben Franklin at the Colonial Rout last winter. Er nest Moll dropped out of the race when he learned that he would have to make his beard and mus tachios a platinum blonde for the evening. * * # Waldo Schumacher and Virgil Earl are now fighting it out alone. The winner will swoop down from the balcony of Gerlinger hall aboard a flying trapeze. There is no chimney. . $ « sj: Wonder if Amos Burg ever climbed Skinner’s Butte ? Contemporary Opinion A New Idea The experiment conducted in small Westminster college, Fulton, Mo., offers interesting and impor tant information for those who care to absorb it. Last year Westminster boasted a football eleven that was unde feated. It had a wealth of letter men returning for the next season. It possessed in its hire an excel lent coach. All of these gridiron points of advantage notwithstanding, the board of trustees of Westminster decided to abandon football as a sport unduly emphasized and as a demoralizing influence on the stu dent body. In spite of the fact that the ac tion raised a storm of protest, the board of trustees had the follow ing favorable report to make after a short experience under the new order. "It has been deemed impossible to have an undergraduate body en thuse over a college Without the inspiration of a winning eleven. Hut faculty and upperclassmen are practically of one opinion: there is a belter spirit on the campus than has been noted for several years. Possibly the reason is because ev ery one of the approximately 300 men is himself actively interested in some sport, as compared with I former times when about 40 men! were on the football field and the' rest had little to do but complain." In the matter of attendance, the! effect of abandoning football ap-! parently had little influence. The report revealed a ?j per cent drop in the freshman enrollment which drop was considerably less than that suffered by many Missouri schools that were athletically or thodox. It appears, therefore, that on the surface Westminster college has conclusively proved that intercol legiate football is not so desirable a quantity as it ordinarily is con sidered to be, and that the sport, much to the contrary, is a decided detriment to education. However, to avoid the risk of seeming super ficial, let us look into the situation a second time. Our first important point of in terest is the fact that the enroll ment of Westminster is "approxi mately 300." Immediately we must, discount much of the report given by the trustees before we can ap ply it to any educational institu tion that is from 10 to 100 tunes as large. We marvel that Westminster i should have done as well as she evidently did in her 1931 football schedule. Any college that ap proaches the size of the Missouri institution could not be expected! to maintain for long a team which would accomplish the same results ami purpose that is accomplished! by the football eleven of a larger school. We must therefore remove all common grounds for compari son on this basis for the simple reason that, financially, football at Westminster never was capable of contributing to the success of so-called minor athletics in the manner as football in larger insti tutions. Three hundred athletes, the en tire student body, actively inter-! ested in athletics again appeals to our sense of amazement. Some of this emotion is natural surprise j that such an Utopian situation could be attained, but the greater feeling is a curiosity as to where Westminster got the money to fi nance this “athletics for all” pro gram. Neither Purdue, nor any other school of its size and circum stances could even approach such an ideal condition were it not for football receipts. The small amount of evidence on the detrimental effect of foootball upon grades and spirit is neither common nor sufficient to convince us that a college is not made a more enjoyable place to be educat- i ed by the fact that its students can take their fall week-ends off to witness a thrilling contest in which there still exists, regardless of comments to the contrary, an appreciable amount of pure spirit. —--Purdue Exponent. .-. [ promenade by carol hurlburt little pig went to market; x This little pig stayed home; This little pig had roast beef; This little pig had none, And this little pig cried wee-wee wee All the way home.” And so on . . . one line for each of your little pink toes. * * Si In writing a column of this na ture, one must note each passing whim and fancy of that fickle jade, Lady Fashion, but, remem ber, even so, that when one is in Eugene, one must do as Chancel lor Kerr, bless his heart, and the dean of women dictate. So here is a fashion which I am not advo cating and about which you may use your own judgment. •Is ♦ H* • i On the Riviera none of the wo men are wearing stockings with their evening clothes, and, open work sandals being in vogue, they all have beautifully pedicured feet, the brilliant and shiny toe-nails peeping out like provocative imps from under the delicate strap pings. » V In Monte Carlo toe-nails are lac quered a deepish pink: at Cannes, St. Tropez. and St. Ivlaxime they are lacquered a brilliant garnet. At Cannes these charming little toes look like "japonica blossoms,” while at Monte Carlo ‘‘they are more like pink shells. At Cannes both the finger and toe nails are painted garnet right to the tip of the nail with sometimes even the underside of the point reddened. * * * Artists have always insisted that the best way to improve the hu man race would be to decrease the amount of clothing;, for then peo ple would be forced to take ex quisite care of their bodies. "The vogue of the open-sandals certain ly supports this theory." says one correspondent. “Never have feet been so attractively soignees as they are today." In France the profession of pedi cure has become so important that a number of hair-dressing estab lishments have attached Chinese masters of the art. Sometimes wo men wait hours for an extremely clever one. (Capitalizing on this fad might be an idea for some of our unemployed!) * * * Aside from this polish, very lit tle make-up is worn. Eyes are scarcely shadowed cheeks are lightly touched with rouge. Only, the lips are a brilliant pomegran ate. Hair is cut short, sometimes with almost a boyish verve, or it is tucked behind the ears and curled high on the nape of the neck. * * # The Orientals have for a long time paftl a great deal of atten tion to the feet of their women folk, and it has been a question1 which I have long pondered as to why Oriental fashions have not1 influenced our mode of dressing, internationalism being one of the creeds of our modern society. In one of the last issues of Vogue, However, a tea gown wail pictured under the title, “Seduction after the Japanese." It was fashioned of starkly white satin with full ki mona sleeves winch were lined with brilliant cerise. * * * We Select for Promenade: Mar guerite Tarbell because she wear a smart campus frock of wine and green plaid, made with huge j puffed sleeves terminating just above the elbow, finished at the throat with a white man’s collar, and trimmed with shiny green and metal buttons down the front. Washington Bystander By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 30 ™— (AP)—Less than a week after his election as president, Governor Roosevelt was called upon to give the country—and the world, incidentally — an advance taste of his qualities. He was called upon to formulate what amounted to “No. 1“ in the file of the records of his admini stration, and that nearly four months before he actually was to become president. Whatever else may be said of that initial document of the Roosevelt presidency, none can read his acceptance of President Hoover's invitation to discuss at the White House the war debt and other unspecified national prob lems without sighting again that quality of political astuteness in Mr. Roosevelt now so widely pro claimed. It ran through every line of the Roosevelt telegram. It was appar ent even in the cheerfully infor mal and personal tone that char* acterized it all. Some commentators scented a bit of mischief in the Roosevelt declaration that he would be “de lighted” to meet the president as the latter had suggested. They seemed to think he had adopted that famous Rooseveltism of another epoch with malice afore thought. >1® $ What impressed the Bystander particularly was something quite different. Left open to surround himself with a battery of expert advisers of his own selection, Mr. Hoover having made his invitation wide enough for that, Mr. Roose velt elected instead an informal cross-table talk with the president. He neither committed himself in advance to any course of action or policy, nor did he embarrass in any way the personal problem he must so soon tackle of picking out his own cabinet. It looked like a neat escape from a possibly per plexing situation. Then Mr. Roosevelt also sug gested that “in the last analysis” responsibility in meeting the im mediate issue raised by the debt notes rested with President Hoover “and legislative authority.” That last phrase especially impressed the Bystander. It appears to be a graceful recognition of present congres sional leadership, including that of the democratic house, from the titular head of the party whose own functions do not apply direct ly at all to the present congress, s * That idea is supported by Mr. Roosevelt's explanation to the president that he expected to hold conferences with party congres sional leaders—that is leaders in the present congress - at Warm Springs, and that what might de velop in his talk with Mr. Hoover as to the president’s views on the debt situation would be “helpful” in that connection. Certainly no democratic senator or representative new charged "with responsibility could have his feelings hurt by this delicate sug gestion that Mr. Roosevelt merely hopes to be helpful to them in reaching decisions that only they can reach. The governor makes his first move in the game of national leadership in diplomatic fashion that suggests to political observers keen understanding of the human elements in the situation. CLASSIFIED LOST—Gold ring, initial I, at Condon. Return to Ramp, 700. Reward. TUTORING German by experi enced teacher educated in Ger many. Terms 50 cents an hour. Anna Grapp, 1798 Columbia St. Phone 2630. FOR SALE—29 Model sports roadster, Pontiac, terms. C. O. Groves, 979 Patterson. "BOB'S'' for Permanents. Sham poo and finger wave, now 75c. 27 E. Broadway. Phone 838. Emerald Of the Air Featuring Ilo Wilson, vocalist, and his piano accompanist, Ted Charles, the Emerald-of-the-Air brings you a 15-minute musical program today at 12:15. These programs of music on Mondays and Thursdays offer a variety of the best talent the Uni versity has to offer, and they are well worth your attention and ap preciation. Listen! Three Decades Ago From Oregon Weekly December 1, 1902 We Have Progressed In the Thanksgiving day game with the Multnomah club, the var sity suffered from sawdust and stage fright, putting up the poor est game of the season, save only that first affair with Albany. Ore gon lost, 16 to 0, before a large crowd—about 4,600. * * * Regent S. H. Friendly made a trip to Portland Wednesday, part ly to see the big game. * * * The Good Old Days The football team went to the Baker Thursday evening after the game and gave a few Oregon yells, just to let the people know they were there. * * * Professor Condon will address the assembly next Wednesday on “The State University at Work.” * * * Cryptic Statement One of the town papers says there is a Societas Quirinaiis at the University. There used to be. * * * ^ In the junior farce, “To Oblige Benson,” Dave Graham (in his makeup) was as handsome, at tractive and fascinating a young man as any lawyer’s wife would ! wish to receive attention from. Treat Yourself to the Best EUGENE HOTEL BARBER SHOP Complete Courteous Service Harold L. Parmeuter, Prop. \ Eugene Hotel "■ ■' .. 1 ELLIOTT'S GROCERY DELICATESSEN FRESH MEATS When your appetite calls for something different, drop into our store and look over our new lunch and sandwich specialties — Anchoves, A n c h o v e Paste, Antipasto Caviaar, and different spreads. 1 m port e cl cakes and crackers. Special today—1 doz. pts. Pabst Ginger Ale, $1.10. ELLIOTT'S GROCERY loth and Patterson Phone 95 I A large assortment of Chinese Brass, at the low est prices in years. Come in and set1 these real bar gains. Ideal for Xmas ! Sifts. Artist Supplies C o m p 1 e t e s t o e k of brushes, tube colors for oil and water color'painting. Pottery — Big selection of Roseville Pottery. Artistic Picture Framing Ludford’s