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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1933)
EDITORIAL, OFFICES, Journalism Bid*. Phone 3300—News Room, Local 366; Editor and Manauinir Editor, Local 364. BUSINESS OFFICE, McArthur Court, Phone 3300—Local 214. University of Oregon, Eugene Richard Ncuberger, Editor Harry Schenk, Manager Sterling Green, Managing Editor ‘ ~ EDITORIAL BOARD Thornton Gale, Assoicatc Editor; Jack Bellinger, Dave Wilson, Julian Prescott. UPPER NEWS STAFF Oscar Munger, News £>a. Francis Pallister, Copy E<1. Urucc Hamby, Sports Ed. Parks Hitehcock. Makeup Ed. Leslie Dunton, Chief Night Ed .jonn urose, L/iierary r.n Bob Guild, Dramatics Ed. Jessie Steele, Women’s Ed. Eloise Dorner, Society Ed. Ray Clapp, Radio Ed. DAY EDITORS: Bob Patterson. Margaret Bean, brands Pal lister, Joe Saslabsky, Hubert Totton. NKJHT EDITORS: Bob Moore, John HoIIopcter, Bill Aetzel, Bob Church. SPORTS STAFF: Malcolm Bauer. Asst. Ed.; Ned Simpson, Dud Lindner, Ben Back, Bob Avison. .FEATURE WRITERS: Elinor Henry, Maximo Pulido, Hazel ] Corrigan. REPORTERS: Julian Prescott, Don Caswell, Madeleine Gilbert, Ray Clapp, Ed Stanley. David Eyre, Bob Guild, Paul Ewing, Fairfax Roberts, Cynthia Liljeqvist, Ann Reed Burns, leggy Chessman, Ruth King, Barney Clark, Betty Ohlcmillcr, Lucy Ann Wendell, Huber Phillips. ASSISTANT SOCIETY EDITOR: Elizabeth Crommclin. COPYREADERS: Harold Brower, Twyla Stockton, Nancy Lee, Margaret Hill, Edna Murphy, Monte Brown, Mary Jane Jenkins, Roberta Pickard, Marjorie McNiece, Betty Powell, Bob Thurston. Hilda Gillam, Roberta Moody, Frances Roth well, Bill Hall, Caroline Rogers, Henriette Horak, Myron Ricketts, Catherine Coppers, Linda Vincent, Claire Bryson. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Frances Neth, Margaret Corum, Georgina Gildez, Dorothy Austin, Virginia Proctor, Cather ine Gribble, Helen Taylor, Mildred Maida, Evelyn Schmidt. RADIO STAFF: Ray Clapp, Editor; Harold GeBauer, Michael Hogan, Ben Back. i BUSINESS STAFF A(IV. IVI^r., .Viiuir iveyrners National Adv. M*r., Auten Bush Promotional Mur., Marylou Patrick Asst. Adv. M*r., Ed Mcserve Asst. Adv. Mkt., Oil Wellington Asst. Adv. Mtfr. Bill Russell Executive Secretary, Dorothy Anne Clark mel Asst. Circulation Mgr., Ron Raw Office Mgr., Helen Stinger ClanH.AdJ.MKr., Althea Peterson Sez Sue, Caroline Hahn Sez Sue Asst., I^ouiBe Rice CheckinK MKr., Ruth Storla Checking Mgr., Pearl Murphy ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS: Gene F. Tomlinson, Anne Chapman, Tom Holeman, Bill McCall, Ruth VHnnlce, Fred Fisher Ed Labbe. Eldon Haherman, Elisa Addis, Wilma Dente, Hare] Fields, Corrinne J’lnth, Marian Taylor, Hazel Marquis, Hubert Totton. Hewitt Warrens, Donald Platt. Phyllis Dent, Peter Gantenhen, Bill Meissner, Patsy Lee, Lorry Ford, Jeannette Thompson, Ruth Baber. OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Patricia Campbell. Kay Disher, Kath ryn Greenwood, Jane Bishop, Elma Gilea, Eugenia Hunt. Mary Starbuek, Ruth Byerly, Mary Jane Jenkins, Willa Bite, Janet Howard, Phyllis Cousins, Betty Shoemaker, Ruth Rippey. __ The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued Tuesday, Wednesday, 'j hursday and Friday during the college year. Entered in the poatoft’ice at Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscrip tion rate* $H.50 a year. —— |j The American people cannot be too careful in guarding the freedom of speech and of the press ... against curtailment as to the discussion of public affairs and the character and conduct of public jjicii. —Carl S chare. A PAPER IS DEMANDED TOMORROW THE EDITORIAL heads of the Emerald will in sist that a paper be published tomorrow. The executive council passed an unconstitutional piece of legislation when it limited the Emerald to four issues a week. The by-laws of the A. S. U. O. call for a ‘‘daily paper. The judiciary committee has ruled that anything less than five issues a week is not a daily news paper. Therefore, tne executive council will have openly defied the constitution if it does not permit the Emerald to publish an edition tomorrow. The constitution is the safeguard of the student’s right on this campus. Each student pays $10.25 in fees to the A. S. U. O. every term for these constitutional rights. (Five dollars of that goes to a previously-voted building fee. i The students must have a say in the affairs of their government. The executive council was not within its rights when it ordered the Emerald to reduce its publica tion days. If it is the students’ mandate that the Emerald be published only four times a week, the editorial heads of this paper will gladly obey their edict. Until the students vote a constitutional amend ment to article VI of the by-laws, the heads of the Emerald will continue to insist that five issues be published every week. Let it be understood that the Emerald’s heads are willing to publish on a four-day schedule if such is necessary to the financial security of the associ ated students, but they will do so only iF the stu dents themselves order the change. As yet the executive council has not taken the matter before the student body. Until it does, the Emerald will continue to demand a five-day paper. However, should the council give the students their proper voice in the matter, the Emerald will support the reduction to four days a week, pro vided, of course, that the graduate manager’s office can present public figures to prove such is finan cially imperative. Wc reiterate the constitution must be upheld if there is to be any semblance of order maintained in our student government. CAMPUS FIRE HAZARDS T LEAST two very definite fire hazards exist continually on the campus. They are the half barred doors to the main floors of Oregon and Com merce halls. Practically every morning as students start to leave these two buildings at the end of classes there is a jam-up because only half of each door may he opened. The other half is locked with some sort of contraption which seems to defy all efforts by students to unfasten them. Should there be a fire in either building and it be necessary to clear the building immediately, it is probable that several students would be injured if not trapped within the structure. Though there is little likelihood of fire breaking out in either build ing, this possibility should be considered. It is not likely that the duties of the two jani tors are so heavy that having them check ttic doors in question each morning would be an imposition. They have to unlock one half of each door and it would not seem unreasonable to ask them to take care of the other half. This also would facilitate the movement of students between class periods. AN ASSAULT ON HHiHKK EDUCATION /AN THE rather ridiculous premise of "why should 1 pay for the education ol some rich man's son,'' the Woodburu independent mildly ud vocates the withdrawal of state funds for the sup port of higher education. The Woodburn paper pomL. out that college,. are not operated tor th - benefit of the general public and that students take advantage of their facilities merely for per sonal gain. It also emphasizes the benefits to be derived from elementary and secondary education, but says the advantages of higher education are "obscure and hard to define.” It would be agreeable to dismiss the Indepen dent's statements as high school emanations from adult minds, but with the axe of impossible econ omy swinging dangerously closer to higher educa tion all the time, it must be realized that Woodburn is not the only place where ■mch mistaken and "dark-age" opinions are nourished. The Independent defeats its own purpose by referring to us as “rich men’s sons.” From then on we can be sure it is groping in the dark and knows not what it says. The Independent defends the elementary and secondary schools, but asks for the withdrawal of state appropriations for the in stitutions of higher education. The paper then pro ceeds to claim that our higher educational institu tions are not for public gain, but purely for per sonal advantages. In this respect, how the Inde pendent differentiates between elementary schools and colleges, we must admit we are at loss to deter mine. We rather imagine it would be useless to try to tell the editors of the Woodburn Independent of the advantages of higher education. From the biased nature of their remarks, it would seem as though it would be futile to explain of the benefits of his torical backgrounds, social science, philosophy, economic theories and the scientific attitude. We only can hope that the Independent, in its stand on higher education, is an isolated publication among the newspapers of the state. A BOON FOR CRAMMERS SEVERAL schools have inaugurated the plan of filing final examination papers in the library for the use of students at the end of each term. Bound in book form, they are placed on reserve and are available to students immediately preceding ex aminations. Some such a system undoubtedly would be a good thing at Oregon. Many fraternities and sor orities now file examination questions, but their files are mostly incomplete and fragmentary. Bound copies extending over a period of years would prove a godsend to last-minute crammers. To the independent student, who has no access to examination files, such availability seems no more than fair. Under the present arrangement his competition with an affiliated man or woman is not on a basis of equality. Although his study ing must necessarily be of an individual nature, access to examination files would place him on a more equitable footing. Professors may object to having examination papers, extending over a period of years, made available in the library. They may argue, and truthfully so, that there are only a certain number of fundamental questions that can be asked in a course, and one of the prerequisites of passing should be the ability to pick out these fundamental principles. But since the system exists and living organi zations are allowed to keep a file of questions, it seems to us that most equitable way of dealing with the situation is to have them readily available to everyone. A court in Brantley county, Georgia, spent six hours establishing ownership of a farmer’s hound. Washington Bystander By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 12—(AP)—“Citi zen" Franklin D. Roosevelt, returned to pri vate life for a two-month interval before he becomes President Roosevelt, put something in his first pub lic address after his retirement from the New York governorship that may prove significant. It was said in that three-cornered democratic love feast at Albany between Mr. Roosevelt, former Governor A1 Smith, and the new governor, Herbert Lehman. "It is time for closer contacts between the presi dent and the governors,” Mr. Roosevelt said. * j|; sj« From that and the fact that the president-elect throughout his two terms as governor gave close attention to the conference of governors, grows the intimation that Mr. Roosevelt may have plans for calling the governors into consultation early in Hia administration. The immediate subject he had in mind as he spoke at Albany was elimination of overlapping federal and state taxation. But since he was first inaugurated as governor he has been hammering at simplification of governmental agencies within the states. If he should summon the 48 governors into con ference it is a safe assumption that lie would fol low up that line in additoin to the overlapping tax ation problem. And as President Air. Roosevelt will be in an un usually advantageous position in seeking to estab lish a sort of council in his efforts to forward cooperation between the federal and state govern ments. \ All but 9 of the 48 governors who will be iu office after the Roosevelt inauguration will be members of his own party. There is a more top heavy democratic majority among the heads of state governments than in either house of the new con gress. It seems possible that a democratic president could seize the opportunity thus offered to weld the federal and state executive officers iuto a more intimate relationship that might have some permanent place in the national political scheme of things. $ * * Still, Mr. Roosevelt s hopes of any such results almost must be tempered by the fact that gov ernors are potential nominees by tradition. In recent years, since popular election of senators be came a fact, there has been a wave of senatorial ambition. Eyen there, however, usually the senators most talked of for possible promotion were former gov ernors, and the same thing is true as to house mem bers. Presidents AlcKinley and Harding were both former governors erf Ohio. In view ot the tact that the governorships are the accepted training school for presidential lim ber. Atr. Roosevelt might find it difficult to work out any lasting machinery of l’ederal-state cooper ation through such agencies. Dirt, But No Dust By KEN ferguson i flP ‘ 1 • HRH MESH * MB MflBVBflBMBflMBBfljBEHHHHi^l I A Message to Garcia I By Dr. Fred N. Miller (Head of the University Health Service) ,rpHE Oregon legislature now in -*• session will have for consid eration many other important mat ters besides balancing the budget. One of the most important propos als of recent years is the Basic Science Act. This measure in brief proposes that any person, before he may be licensed by the state to treat the sick or injured must pass an examination in the basic sciences. This examination is to be given not by those who are , treating the sick and injured and who therefore might have certain pfednttar therapeutic theories but by experts in these basic sciences of anatomy, physiology, pathology, chemistry and hygiene, j In very simple language this means that any practitioner of heal ing no matter what his methods 'or affiliations shall have a funda mental understanding of the hu i man body—how it is made, how does it work, how may disorders | be recognized correctly, what in jmate (chemical) changes occur in I its interior and what are the rules Jfor efficient maintenance and op ! eration. In other words any prac I titioner of the healing art like any auto mechanic should understand the machine he "tinkers” with. The Basic Science Act proposes that competent non-biased scien tists shall determine whether or not candidates to practice the heal ing art does understand the basic I or fundamental sciences that re I late to the human body. * * * The Oregon bill has been very carefully drawn after a study of the way in which similar bills have successfully operated in other states. It will of course not affect those already in practice. It will also not pit one group against an other for the examination will not be given by medical doctors, chi | ropractors, osteopaths or any oth er group: in fact the bill specifi | cally states that "no examiners ■ may be actively engaged in the ! practice of any method or system j of healing or have any financial i interest in. or be a member of the j faculty of any school of healing.” This quotation is taken from the bill and refutes positively any claim that may be made that the bill imposes any disadvantage on | any particular school or cult. ' Opposition to this bill by any cult or school is tantamount to admission that its candidates are not trained in the basic sciences. The supervision of this examina I tion shall be by the State Board of Higher Education which shall 1 "appoint such examiners as are necessary to conduct the examin ations provided for.” and “such examiners may be selected from the faculties of the University of Oregon or the Oregon State Agri cultural college or any university lor college accredited by the Ore gon State System of Higher Edu cation.” Further to safeguard the members of the various schools or cults it is provided that the ex aminers shall not know the school or cult to which the candidate for license belongs. Such an examin ation will be perhaps even more impartial than a final examination given in any of our state institu ! lions of higher education or for teacher certification. I » * * *\o matter how widely separated our theories arc concerning the ! ’-oatmet: t of disease we should not object to the necessity of giving evidence of our knowledge of the fundamental facts on which all theories must rest. We should not ask less of our so-called healers than a garage owner would ask of his mechanics, a knowledge of the machine that needs service. The states that have attacked this problem with at least some degree of success have enacted so called basic science laws requiring practitioners of all schools of heal ing to be examined by non-parti san educators in the fundamental sciences. Only thus does a state license in any healing school or cult assure at least a reasonable acquaintance with the underlying facts concerning the structure and functions of the body in health and disease. It also gives at least some hope that the practitioner will be acquainted with the scientific method. Altogether it is a sane proposal in a field where neither charlatanism nor ignorance should be tolerated. Assault and Battery litchcock || We see that the boys from Al pha Delta Sigma were parading about the campus in sheets last night. Trying to imitate the Ku Klux Klan, we suppose. Our sug gestion is that a bunch of indepen dent Ku Kluxers organize tonight and tour the sorority houses. Might be useful. ' * * * Which reminds us we ought to announce the publication of our new booklet: “Twelve different ways to obtain entrance into a sorority house and why.” Examples— 1. Pose as the Fuller brush man. 2. Pose as the building inspec tor. 3. Pose as Queen of the May. 4. Pose as Eddie Cantor. (In a pinch, Mickey Mouse will do.) 5. Tell the girls you want a date. They probably won’t believe this, but try, anyway. 6. Pose as the dean of men. 7. Stay home and read the Col lege Humor. 8. Pose as the campus prowler. 9. Just pose. * # * Now that Paul J. Schissler has thrown his hat out of the ring, it’s up to us to pick his successor. We think that there is no one who could fill the position more emi nently than Dean Gilbert. He has all the plunging drive and power, and it has lo’rig been observed that against him, the opposition never had a chance. * * * Or perhaps we could put the coaching deal at our sister college on sort of a “technocracy .basis” with all the Monday morning foot ball experts at Corvallis and the “Board of Strategy” at Eugene handling the situation. It’s about time that the football technocrats got their due recognition, anyway. Wouldn t have to pay them any thing, either. * * * Jonathan Butler, much discussed promenade by carol hurlburt Those charming gentlemen, the technocrats, who make night and day hideous by the rumpus they have raised, predict that if the whirl of life goes merrily, madly, on without any control, we ll all end up in a terrific jam. The French danced on the eve before Waterloo, and even if we’re heading toward a terrific hola caust, we ll continue dancing . . . till 12:15. The Dean of Women has begun to make out her social calendar, and the formal season is on. (The Krazy Kopy Krawl, however, is strictly informal.) * * We've become quite elegant this 1 winter, and in the East there even appears to be an acceptance of formality in masculine attire. "Tails it is!" College men at Yale,! Harvard, and Princeton have be-! gun to don formal dress for eve- i ning. Out here in the West, though, "where men are men find women are careful." the tuxedo is still acceptable. (You don’t even, need to wear a black derby unless | you want to.') * a* ^ Parisian gowns arc gorgeous, sumptuous: fashioned of metal i cloth, gold lame, brocade, and sil-; ver tissue. Dramatic creations are designed with capes and brassiers of brilliants. The 'debutante and co-ed are dancing in chiffon, in net, and in taffeta. The chiffon is demure, graceful.; and youthfully entrancing. It has tiny sleeves made from floppy, ex otic poppies, and a bunch of bril-1 liant poppies enhance the low dee ollctage in back. The fine and lace-like. 1 embroidered in glinting beado iud bugles, or flanked with “star dust.’’ The taffeta is romantic, white, with a hint of Grecian influence and a dash of cherry red. * * * Stunning gowns are made of' sheath-like satin in black or of thickly crinkled black silk crepe. One of these crepe frocks has shoulder straps looped through gold and silver rings and was worn with alternating gold and sil ver bracelets. Cartier has designed bracelets of fur, set with semi-precious jew els and lined with a flexible gold alloy. These are to be worn with colored evening gowns of the new soft and supple velvet. * * $ For the coming spring season, Chanel predicts a great vogue for tulle, and is showing a bouffant froek of Havana brown tulle, j which is to be worn with a big sleeved jacket of tulle in turquoise blue. * * qS Another of the newer innova tions is the scarf, which is fast ened to the gown with a cluster of brilliants either at the front or on one shoulder and draped to suit the. wearer, or allowed Cb float around the figure like a cloud Sr j angel wings. * * If we could dance until the dawn comes ‘round! * * * We Select for Promenade: Clav Sherman, because he wears ‘a brown siiirt of English cord cloth with a brown suit. This shirt, by j the way. has a round tab collar, especially designed by Harveys, which is very, very auart and new. special investigator, is no such formidable figure in real life, as jress reports would have you be ieve. On the contrary, he is a slight, mild-mannered man, rather luick and nervous, inclined to be ' luite voluble, excited at times. 1 iVsks questions all the time. Al ways interested in whatever is in !ront of him at the time, whether; t be a 20-page report or a stein. * Vfight be called dapper. • L. - —-1 1 Campus Calendar !; Heads of houses Oregana pic- j :ure will be taken today at 12:40 it the east entrance of Condon. i Oregon Yeoman meeting Mon lay evening, January 16, at 7:30 >n the third floor of Gerlinger hall, if you are unaffiliated, be there! Tau Delta Delta, musical hon orary, announces the pledging of Norma Zintser. Women’s intramural swimming Friday at 4 o’clock. - I Social swim, 7:30 tonight, for | men and women. Towels and suits furnished. Come before the game. Beta Lambda wiir meet Monday at 7:30 in the Memorial Union building in Corvallis. Eugene members urged to be present. _ There will be no open-house meeting at the Westminster house this Friday evening, since the Wesley group is entertaining. Everybody of the organization meet at the dance at 8:15. I Emerald Of the Air Bruce Hamby, Emerald sports editor, will give his first sports talk of the winter term, which will be a regular Friday feature, on over KORE today at 12:15. Saturday’s program will be an nounced over the air. Monday’s feature will consist either of a fashions talk by Carold Hurlburt or a musical program by Lenny Hoyt and his Royal Collegians. A Decade Ago From Daily Emerald January 13, 1923 More Big Business Shy Huntington has not yet ac cepted the one-year contract which ] was offered him by the student body through the executive coun cil late last term. It is rumored' he will not renew his $4,000-a-year contract except on a three-year I basis. * # # Dean Allen hopes to dedicate the new journalism building in March, during the editors’ conven tion which meets from March 21 to 23. No classes will be held there until after that time. *s* Wandering Girl An undecided but splendid stu-' dent has been wandering around the campus trying to find a major she considers worth changing to. The only school she plans not to visit is the domestic arts depart ment, for which she is not, she thinks, intended by nature and temperament. * * * The old shack which stood west of the Oregon building and was used as a bicycle shed has disap peared along with the unsightly bulletin boards in front of the lib rary and Deady hall. * * * Change Needed Fire hazards on the campus | were found to be worst at the lib rary, McClure hall, Deady hall, and the heating plant, in an inspection made by Deputy State Fire Mar shal Horace Sykes and J. S. Glea son yesterday. Contemporary Opinion . . . pUBLIC opinion in the United! States can do a great deal to j smooth the way of the second ses sion of the Conference for the Re duction and Limitation of Arma ments. I urge as far as possible mass meetings, which under stim ulating leadership would be fea-1 tured in the papers; and individ-' ual letters and wires to senators and congressmen. I am inclined to think that nothing is more ef fective than the latter. There are a great many people in the United States interested in what may be accomplished at the conference. But many do not give any indication of this interest to their senators and representatives. Mobilized public opinion in Great Britain has already accomplished a great deal; we have a more dif ficult situation in the United States because of our size and dif ferences of many sorts, but I be- ' lieve it is possible to rouse the people to a realization of the crisis and the responsibility resting upon the individual. i The above was written by Dr. Mary Emma Woollery, president of Mount Holyoke college. It was taken from International disarma ment notes.) Books ^olk-Say IV . . The Land Is Ours; edited by B. A. Botkin, Univer sity of Oklahoma Press. Sojnewhat less than a half doz n years ago, Mr. B. A. Botkin in erested himself in the develop nent of a new phase in American iterature, which has since come o be known as regionalism. In he words of Mr. Botkin, the move nent is restricted by no one mood, jut gives free expression to “epic, yric, idyllic, or satiric” alike. The ndividual contributors are “dream ers and interpreters seeking to illy themselves to a native tra dition that is at once provincial md cosmopolitan, social and indi vidual. Not content with a folk heritage that leaves the individ ual in economic and cultural bond jge, they inquire not only ‘Where did we come from?’ but ‘Where do we go from here?’” Regionalism has today many prominent advocates in literary circles; Mr. John Gould Fletcher and Mr. Allen Tate may be listed is two of the better known figures. In this latest collection are in cluded such well known writers as George Milburn, Nard Jones, Mary Austin, Alice Corbin, and Erskine Caldwell. But without further in troduction let us skip over them to the final selection, “Paul Bun yan: An American Symbol’.’ by Pat V. Morrissette. For those who have followed the advance of Mr. Morrissette in poetry, the remarkable and meri torious progression of this his lat est poem, over earlier work, will become quite obvious. He had shaped the American mythological figure of Paul Bunyan, mighty logger, into new epic proportions. And aside from the freshness and originality, the presence of a great amount of color, and the reappear ance of a spirit which has long lain dormant in American litera ture, there is in addition whole sections of the finest and the pur est poetry that Mr. Morrissette has yet written. By way of illus tration one might quote any of a half-dozen passages to demon strate the vigorous spirit and the poetry. Such a fragment chosen at random from the poem as “Into chaos drive the chisel! Out of order draw the strength of song! With hands of gods, of men, of labor ...” may well illustrate what Mr. Mor rissette has accomplished. The poem is divided into sec tions, each devoted to a period in the life of the hero and his big blue ox. Disregarding the symbol ical significance, the poem might be dedicated to any man of less gargantuan proportions. It is the disillusion of the eternal idealist that Paul Bunyan meets. In his youth, his is the confidence of the passage quoted above. And then, impatient as experience grows up on him, he asks irritably: “Is it enough to sit upon the prairies ? Is it enough to eat and dance and die? Is it enough to flirt with poetry and art? Stand naked in the thundering skies. Lift new burdens as a free man should.” And then, with age heavy upon him, he sees his defeat. Even lus ty supermen, who are only less than gods, must ultimately go down; and in a passage which communicates something not un like physical pain, one of the most poignantly sincere in the poem, Paul Bunyan concludes that “This is the bitter winter. This is the desolation The prophets knew when Time was young with hope. My battles are over, and over in vain.” In this handling of the ancient American myth, Mr. Morrissette has developed more of its poten tialities than any modern Ameri can poet, and, in doing so, he has achieved a distinct personal tri umph. CAMPUS NOODLE SHOP 825 E. lath Open from 6:30 a. in. to Midnight Specializing in Daily Lunch at 20c Chicken Egg Noodles Toasted Sandwiches and Pastries Our Coffee Is the Best in Town A FREE Cup to Any One Bringing in This Ad INVEST 25c In a Good HAIR CUT University Barber Shop (Next to Campa Shupi