Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 18, 1934, Page 2, Image 2

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    University of Oregon, Eugene
Sterling Green, Editor Grant Thuemmel, Manager
Joseph Saslavsky, Managing Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
Doug Polivka and Don Caswell. Associate Editors; Merlin Blais,
Guy Shadduck, Parks Hitchcock, Stanley Robe
UPPER NEWS STAFF
Malcolm Bauer. News Ed.
Estill Phipps. Sports Ed.
A1 Newton, Dramatics Ed.
Abe Merritt, Chief Night Ed.
Peggy Chessman, Literary Ed.
Barney Clark, Humor Ed.
Cynthia Lilieqvist, Women’s Ed.
Mary Louiee Edinger, Society
Ed.
George Callas, Radio Ed.
DAY EDITORS: A1 Newton, Mary Jane Jenkins, Ralph Mason,
John Patric.
EXECUTIVE REPORTERS: Ann-Rced Burns, Roberta
Moody, Newton Stearns, Howard Kessler.
FEATURE WRITERS: Ruth McClain. Henriette Horak.
REPORTERS: Clifford Thomas, Helen Dodds, Hilda Gillam,
Miriam Eichner, Virginia Scoville, Marian Johnson. Rein
hart Knudsen. Velma McIntyre, Pat Gallagher, Frances
Hardy, Ruth Weber, Rose Himelstein, Margaret Brown.
SPORTS STAFF: Bill Eberhart, Clair Johnson, George Jones,
Dan Clark. Ted Blank. Don Olds, Betty Shoemaker, Bill
Actzel, Ned Simpson. Charles Paddock, Bob Becker.
COPYREADERS: Elaine Cornish, Dorothy Dill. Marie Pell,
Phyllis Adams. Margery Kissling, Maluta Read, George
Bikman, Virginia Endicott, Corinne La Barre, Charles Pad
WOMEN’S PAGE ASSISTANTS: Betty Labbe. Mary Gra
ham, Bette Church, Marge Leonard, Donna Theda, Ruth
Heiberg.
NIGHT EDITORS: Bob Parker, George *Bikman, Tom Bin
ford, Ralph Mason.
ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Henryetta Mummey, Vir
ginia Catherwood, Margilee Morse, Jane Bishop, Doris
Bailey. Alice Tillman. Eleanor Aldrich, Margaret Rollins,
Marvel Read, Edith Clark.
RADIO STAFF: Barney Clark, Howard Kessler, Carroll Wells,
Elwin Ireland, Eleanor Aldrich, Rose Himelstein.
SECRETARY: Mary Graham.
UPPER BUSINESS STAFF
William Meissner, Adv. Mgr.
Kon Kew. Asst. Adv. Mgr.
William Temple, Asst. Adv.
Mgr.
Tom Holman, Asst. Adv.
Mgr.
Eldon Haberman, National
Adv. Mgr.
Pearl Murphy, Asst. National
Adv. Mgr.
Ed Eahbe, Promotional Mgr.
Fred Fisher, Promotional Mgr.
Win. Perry, Circulation Mgr.
Ruth Rippey, Checking Mgr.
Willa Bit/.. Checking Mgr.
Alene Walker, Office Mgr.
ADVERTISING SALESMEN: Hob H ell i well. Jack Lew,
■ Margaret Chase, Bob Cresxwcll, Hague Callister, Jerry
Thomas, Vernon Buegler.
BUSINESS OFI'ICE, McArthur Court. Phone 3300 - Ixical 21-1.
EDITORIAL OFFICES. Journalism llklg. Phone 3300 News
Room, Laical 355 ; Editor and Managing Editor, Local 354.
A member of the Major College Publications, represented by
A. J. Norris Hill Co., 155 E. 42nd St., New York City; 123 \V.
Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Ave., Seattle; 1206 Maple Ave.,
Los Angeles; Call Building, San Francisco.
The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the
University of Oregon, Eugene, published daily during the college
year, except Sundays, Mondays, holidays, examination periods,
all of December and all of March except the first three days.
Entered in the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon, as second-class
matter. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year.
WAR FOR THE WILLING
COMPULSORY military training, long a subject
for campus discussion and occasionally an
issue for desultory action on the part of small
groups, yesterday became the object of an attack
by a student committee. Signed by the committee
of about 25 members, the petition was read at the
meeting of the University faculty. The request,
which has not as yet been acted upon, asks the sub
stitution of the term, “optional,” for Hgtat of “the
minimum requirement” in description of lower divi
sion courses in military trainng.
Determined groups on many campuses have dur
ing recent years championed successfully similar
revisions of the compulsory feature. The federal
law, contrary to popular conception, leaves this
phase of military curricula to the individual school.
Significant action on military training was taken
by a nationally organized student group which met
in Washington during the year-end holidays. While
conservative student body presidents and editors
from 175 colleges were rejecting proposals for the
liberalization of military training at sessions of the
N. S. F. A., the National Conference of Students
in Politics was taking an active stand against the
R. O. T. C.
Eleven student organizations were represented
at the latter sessions, which were given official rec
ognition through the principal address given by
Secretary of Agriculture Wallace. Taking to heart
his remarks about the complacency of college stu
dents, the group outspokenly declared its opinion
on the subject of the R. O. T. C.
The committee at work on the Oregon campus
has not proposed the abolition of military training,
but merely the removal of the compulsory feature.
The group has made significant progress in having
its petition placed under the serious consideration
of the faculty. It would seem there is no more
reason for making military training compulsory
than to demand courses in other departments as all
campus graduation requisites. The mildness and
fairness of the proposal should go far in determin
ing its fate at the hands of the faculty committee.
AN APOLOGY
"E' I-SEWHERE on this page is a letter in which
the proprietor of au eating establishment com
plains that the Emerald has by implication injured
the reputation of his shop, by grouping it with
other places outside the "beer zone" where disorder
liness has accompanied the sale of beer. After re
reading yesterday’s editorial, we find that the com
plaint is amply justified. Although the Emerald in
previous issues had been careful not to impugn any
individual establishment, we carelessly erred yes
terday and hasten to apologize.
In one point we believe our correspondent in ■
error - he has obviously read into another editorial j
on the same subject a meaning never intended nor
implied, if he believes we classified his establish
ment as a “bootleg joint."
Disorderliness has been prevalent in several
establishments downtown and on the outskirts of
the city. Of so much we are eye-witnesses, in some
cases, and have indisputable evidence in others. Yet
«s far as the establishment represented by Mr. Rob
inson is concerned, which is largely freciuented by
students, the Emerald has seen no cause for com
plaint and has had no intention of injuring or ma
ligning it.
The error resulted simply from the Emerald's
eagerness to show that a four-block dry zone does
not prevent students from obtaining beer if they
want it, and to establish the fact that supervision
Is impossible if students are drinking beer ut tv dis
tance from the campus. The unfortunate juxtapo
sition of these arguments in the editorial undeniably
injures the reputation for clean business methods
which Gosscr’s has built up, and the Emerald is
sorry f"1’ the careless mistake; nevertheless, th >
basic arguments involved remain uadi puled.
PASS THE CHLORINATED LIME
TJ UDY VALLEE and his mate flaunt their sordid
little personalities at each other while the pub
lic gapes.
Mae West goes to court in ermine and wows a
packed house with a couple of feeble bits of repartee
in accusation of a man who stole her jewels.
The Wynekoop trial unreels its ugly spectacle
while women are crushed on the courthouse stair
way.
The Mdivani boys forsake their Lothariac activi
ties to defend their management of an oil company.
This is a composite smear from the front pages
of our best dailies. Its dripping juiciness is a
startling contrast to the rest of the news that sur
rounds it, the grey, hard-boiled information as to
the CWA, PWA, NRA, CCC, A. F. of L., ICC, RFC j
and the rest of the three-letter organizations.
Surely the editors kuow better, at least the edi
tors of the respectable, influential dailies, and the
men in charge of the press services. They are
mostly men of good education and wide interests,
who know what is going on and who have a real
sense of values of events. It is pretty safe to bet
that they aren’t all het up over this sort of sewage.
Then it must be the public that demands it. If
it is, it’s now a very encouraging index of the in
tellectual capacity of the great American electo
rate.
It is a bit disheartening to see a nation whose
principal interest is the consumption of such drivel
trying to pull itself out of a monstrous economic
snarl. When every voter knows as much about the
national budget as he does about the actions of
crooners on the night of August 12, we may have
a chance of getting something done.
OVERFLOW
WE stumbled onto a clue yesterday that
may explain why we men are fast becom
ing a race of anchorites.
We were hashing over the movie situation
with a young lady of our acquaintance, who is
about to become a university graduate. The
talk turned to “Thunder Over Mexico.” There,
we said, was one movie we wanted to see.
“Thunder Over Mexico?” queried the young
woman, of good Christian parents, too. “Wasn’t
that here a long time ago, Walter Huston and
Franchot Tone, and —oh, no. That was
‘Gabriel Over the White House.’ ”
A little rest and quiet is all we need.
Contemporary Opinion
A Salem View
WE entertain little enthusiasm over the “peace”
which Willard Marks has patched up with
reference to higher education affairs in Oregon. It
looks too much like a Chinese victory all round:
a general saving of faces. The festers are still
there, the antagonisms are still there. And the
creation of acting presidents on the campuses at
Eugene and Corvallis merely gives spearheads to
these antagonisms. The board is vfery apt to find
that these acting presidents stir up trouble rather
than allay it. The relationships are complicated
between chancellor and board and acting presidents
and inter-campus deans. The acting presidents will
speedily become walking delegates for their own
institutions; and the board will be even more beset
with controversy and intrigue.
Wc could tolerate this experiment in pacifica
tion were it not for the pusillanimous resolution
which the board adopted at the Monday meeting.
If ever a body stultified itself the board did in this
resolution in which it rubs its own nose in the dirt.
Its backdown from the “ringing resolutions” of its
October and December meetings offers an open in
vitation to recalcitrants to defy the board on occa
sion. The fresh assertion of threat at what it will
do when profs and deans thumb their noses at the
board in the future has a hollow sound. The apolo
getic tone of the board resolution is apt to be inter
preted as a jellyfish surrender. If the action seemed
wise to expunge the past and make a fresh start
assuredly it should have been done without such
penitential abjectness as the board voices in its
resolution.
In its zeal to save faces the board seems to have
served every one except itself. Salem Statesman.
STUDENT BODY FINANCES
(Continued from Faye One)
legiate debate, for instance, is in a fair way to die
out completely unless more financial support is
given in the future. The budget item for Philo
meletc is the only financial assistance given by
the Associated Students for the benefit of unaffil
iated women; an increase of $100 would not be mis
directed if applied here. The leader of the band is
receiving a salaiy far from commensurate with
services rendered. The Emerald’s publication sched
ule has been reduced until there are gaps, for in
stance, from November 30 to January 9 during
about three weeks of that time, school was in ses
sion. The addition of 30 issues during a year would
increase the budget item by about $1000, we esti
mate. More artists of the calibre of Roland Hayes j
should be brought to (lie University; an increase of
$3000 in the uiuial budget would be amply justified
here at present the concert item covers little more >
than the labor cost of transporting chairs to Mc
Arthur court and similar services.
Therefore we Uuiate that the normal expan
sion of the A. S. U. O. program should call for an
additional $5,500 at least. This would bring a total
normal year’s non-athletio expenses to the neigh-j
borhood of $18,000. As an estimate, these figures
are open to criticism. The Emerald believes them j
to be fair.
* * *
Assuming that it is desirable to maintain alii
these student body activities, which some advo- j
cates of optional membership do not at all concede,!
the question arises: Will the student body be able!
to maintain its present program if those who do!
not wish to pay student fees do not do so?
In a succeeding issue we will attempt to discuss
tlie possibility of meeting these obligations with i
optional payment of fees. This will be followed1
with a brief analysis of the legal status of the stu
dent corporation, and other phases of the problem,;
on which the outcome of the present investigation j
of the board may depend. Students should give
careful consideration to all these factors before
making up their mind, on the problem now con- ■
fronting them. |
A Step Forward - • By Stanley robe
Dr. Boyer’s Selection Praised
“What is your personal reaction
to the appointment of Dr. C. V.
Boyer as “acting president” of the
University of Oregon?”
Seventeen members of the Uni
versity faculty were asked this
question yesterday with the fol
lowing results:
Dean J. R. Jewell, school of edu
cation: “I’m sure that I can co
operate with him to the very high
est degree. During the year and
a half that I have been on this
campus I have found him most
cooperative. I have been per
fectly glad to go to him with
teacher training problems and set
tfiem before him. I found him not
only cooperative, but judicious
minded. Fair, able to look at the
thing in a detached, unemotional
way. I can talk to him freely
and frankly with the feeling that
he will get and understand our
point of view and to the extent
that he does approve, work for it.
M. H. Douglass, librarian: “All
things considered, the appointment
is the best that could be made.
Dean Boyer has a great deal of
executive ability, and he works
well with the chancellor.”
R. C. Clark, head of the history
department, was enthusiastic
about the appointment: “It was a
very wise appointment. I approve
it completely."
Earl M. Pallett, executive sec
retary and registrar: "Dr. Boyer
is a very fine man and excellent
to work with. It was a kind se
lection.”
Wayne L. Morse, dean of the
law school: “The appointment of
Dean Boyer to the presidency of
the University of Oregon is in
deed a meritorious one. He is not
only an able administrator, but a
recognized scholar, and hence he
will undoubtedly give to the Uni
versity of Oregon what it so sadly
needs—namely, educational philos- j
ophy and program.”
it.. r. Liawrence, clean oi tne art i
school: "The division of Fine Arts I
is very much pleased by the ap-1
pointment of Dr. Boyer, who has :
always had a rare understanding !
of the status of the fine arts in |
the cultural life of the university j
and society."
Edgar E. DeCou, professor of i
mathematics: "Dean Boyer is a!
gentleman and a scholar. He is|
fair and judicially minded. He is [
sympathetic and understands j
thoroughly the needs and prob- !
lenis of the University. I think
he will make an admirable presi
dent.”
F. P. Sipe, professor of botany:
"My slight acquaintance with
Dean Boyer would lead me to ex
pect a fair and efficient adminis
tration of his work as acting presi
dent."
O. F. Stafford, professor of j
chemistry: “For many reasons i
Dean Boyer is the best selection
we could have."
Will V. Norris, professor of
physics: “I think it is a fine
thing. He is certainly qualified!
and if given the proper amount
of authority will improve the sit
uation."
Hugh Kosson and Tom Stod
dard. graduate manager and as
sistant graduate manager: "We
are heartily in favor of Dean
Boyer. He is one of the outstand
ing members of the faculty and
is very ably qualified to discharge
the duties of the office of presi
dent of the University."
Dr. L. S. Cressmau. professor of
sociology: "1 think the appoint
ment of Dean Boyer, a man of
Hide scholarly training, the bal
anced judgment which comes
from a study of the law, courage,
fairness, and a genuine interest
in his men and higher education,
as acting president, takes us far
along the path out of the educa
tional morass in which we have
been, and that he deserves the
loyal and aggressive support of
all people interested in the wel
fare of the young people of Ore
gon.”
Robert H. Seashore, associate
professor of psychology: "I feel
that the University is fortunate
in having a man of such broad
interests and abilities as Dr.
Boyer. The appointment should
help to pave the way for under
taking a number of research and
other technical investigations in
the University.”
Dr. Warren D. Smith, head of
the geology and geography de
partments: “I heartily endorse the
faculty vote of confidence given
to acting President Boyer today.
This appointment of one of our
own faculty of our own choosing
is a great step forward for us and
for higher education in America.
We have at last caught up with
the universities of Europe and
South America in this important
aspect of university procedure.”
Dr. Edmund S. Conklin, head of
the psychology department: “I am
very happy about the appoint
ment.”
Dr. George Rebec, head of the
philosophy department and dean
of the graduate division, actively
approved the selection of Dr.
Boyer.
“I feel,” he said, ‘‘that he will
meet the demands of the position
admirably. Dr. Boyer is a man
of fine intellect and scholarship,
of thorough and rich culture and
good sense, poise of spirit and j
tact. As a member of the faculty
he has always stood in favor of
the finer ideals of what a univer
sity should be.
“While a practical man, he is
never carried away by the mere
spirit of bigness and ballyhoo
which aimed to multiply the Uni
versity into a loose mass of so
called “services” and roads to
success, but rather his ideals have
been qualitative instead of quanti
tative. He has believed that the
development of human personality
and realization of the cultural and
spiritual weal of humanity is more
important than pushing in the di
rection of more efficiency at ar
riving at money and place.
“I believe Boyer will be able to
do a great deal to heal the un
happiness of the last couple of
years in the institution and in
Oregon higher education, but be
yond that I am looking to his do
ing affirmative service in helping
Oregon higher education into a
new era.”
Scanning the Cinemas
i
MCDONALD “My Lips Be
tray," Lilian Harvey, John
Boles, El Brendel. Also,
"Eight Girls in a Boat,” Dor
othy Wilson, Kay Johnson,
Kent Douglass.
COLONIAL — "S. O. S. Ice
berg.”
By J. A. NEWTON
The Artistic Movie
“S. O. S. Iceberg" is great artis
try. It is unequaled in thrilling,
gripping drama. No movie has
ever had such perfect photography.
This show is its own standard, it
stands so high above the general
run of motion picture entertain
ment. Its greatest star is Nature
in all her unconquered magnifi
cence.
Actually this show is not “enter
tainment” in the sense of diver
sion or amusement. Rather it is a
bit of art which is to be expe
rienced through the eyes and ears.
As a matter of fact, one can actu
ally feel it. You feel the cold,
clinging wetness of the heavy
clothing on the man who attempts
to swim four miles in ice water
from the berg to the last bit of
land the strange craft will pass.
You feel the biting wind as it
whines over the glistening ice. You
experience the thrill of the pilot
of the rescue plane as he maneu
vers it above the icebergs.
The number of spoken words in
this masterpiece is very small.
Words are not necessary. Nor is
great acting ability. The princi
pals might be great actors or poor
actors: it matters little.
But as an artistic unit, “S. O.
S. Iceberg” is nearly complete as
any attempt at movie art can be.
It has musical background which
fits the mood and scene exactly.
Us photography is unparalleled.
Us movement is constant and com
pelling.
No other medium but the mo
tion picture could have ever pro
duced this work.
King and Cafe Singer
“My Lips Betray" opens today
at the Mac. And, customers, if
li’l Lilian Harvey doesn’t drag
them in, I've lost my
judgment of personal
ity
Miss Harvey is one
of those cute and little
girls. She weighs
about 95 pounds, and
walks a tight-rope, not to keep
the hips slim, but to keep the sense
of balance in trim. Her purpose is
certainly accomplished. She is a
delightful dancer and can express i
almost as much by bodily action
as by facial expression or the
spoken word.
And, customers! John Boles!
breaks into song again. Remem
ber his "It Happened in Monterey,"
which he sang. I believe, in "The
King of Jazz" ?
Incidentally, we mustn't forget
that long white streak which the
young king uses for an automo
bile.
On the same bill is "Eight Girls
in a Boat.'-' The teaser is frighten
ing. There was the scene where
the girl falls down, apparently af
ter a swim, and says in a tear
strained voice. “I'm going to have
a baby?" Overdone.
Vf/E switch the "mike" to the so
ciety department of the Em
erald for the feature of this after
noon's broadcast. The trials and
tribulations • in the local social
w hirl come to you through our *
Emerald
of the Air
society editor^ Mary Louiee Ed
inger. At 4:30 the asbestos is re
moved from the mike. At 4:30:05
Mary Louiee starts a fifteen min
ute grapple with said apparatus.
At 4:45 you have all the dope con
cerning social functions of cam
pus.
The Safety Valve
An Outlet for Campus Steam
All communications are to be addressed
to The Editor. Oregon Daily Emerald,
and should not exceed 200 words m
length. Letters must be signed, but
should the writer prefer, only initials
will be used. The editor maintains the
right to withhold publication should he
see fit.
To the Editor:
As the proprietor of an eating
establishment outside the recently
existent beer zone, I have watched
with considerable interest your
campaign for its abolishment. May
I say at the outset, in order to
avert the impression that this ex
pression of attitude arises from
prejudice owing to my position
relative to the campus, that the
campaign of the Emerald is one
with the principles behind which I
have been in sympathy and most
hearty accord.
I take exception, however, to
some of the methods resorted to
by the Emerald in its crusade. The
constant reference to students
walking three or four blocks to
drink as much beer as they de
sired, could of course mean no
other establishment than Gossers.
With these allusions, had they
stopped here, I have no quarrel. X
do resent the suggestions made in
the Emerald, an example of which
may be found in today’s paper, in
which it is said: ‘‘that students
who wanted beer were simply
walking three or four blocks far
ther, to places outside the beer
zone; that no attempt was being
made in any of these places to
maintain orderliness.” A recent
issue of the paper referred to the
“bootleg joints” on the outskirts
of the zone. Insofar as these
statements refer to my establish
ment, they are not only lacking in
factual basis but were stated so
carelessly as t;o be altogether rep
rehensible. In my place of business
an attempt has and is being made
to maintain order and, I may add,
with entire success. It must be
realized, of course, that when a
group of students are assembled
in an eating place, whether they
are drinking coffee at the College
Side, milk shakes at Taylor’s, or
beer at Gossers, that any one up
on entering could not possibly ob
tain the impression that a G. A. R.
convention was in progress. I ob
tain this impression not only from
my business association with stu
dents but as a comparatively re
cent graduate of the University
myself. In my opinion the Emer
ald might have carried on an ef
fective campaign to abolish the
beer zone and thus helped the cam
pus restaurant owners, without
resortin'g to tactics which would
unjustifiably injure someone in
such a position as my own.
Sincerely.
MAX J. ROBINSON.
January 17, 1934.
To the Editor:
“The Tragedy of a Corporate
Death”:
The wailing of the A. S. U. O.
officials over the movement for
optional fees is reminiscent of a
practice common in medieval Eng
land. Upon the discovery of one
afflicted with leprosy the monks
would attend that individual and
escort him with great solemnity to
the church where he, standing
among those present, would listen
to the funeral ceremony. Then he
would accompany the monks to
an open grave, and would watch
the burial of his legal existence.
Thereafter he would be given a
wooden rattle and a bowl and
would be turned into the forests
where he would live the remainder
of his days, begging from the
inhabitants of the countryside for
his food, and warning all persons
of his affliction by the rattle, yet
being legally non-existent while
thus living as a parasite upon the l
fringes of a community.
Is it not apparent that the pres- I
ent situation is somewhat akin
thereto? The relatives of the lep
er. in all probability, mourned over
his synthetic death. The A. S. U.
O. officials must find themselves
in a like position by mourning over
the possible decrease of a corpor- J
Innocent
Bystander
By BARNEY CLARK
rjiHE prize for the cutest trick of
the season goes to Ike Donin.
We are informed that ’way back
in last term, when the Hill dance
was first planned, Ike rushed up
to Dean Schwering and asked if
they could serve apple cider at the
brawl. “Certainly,” says the dean,
little suspecting the murky depths
in Donin's soul. So-o-o-o Ike rush
es out then and there and pur
chases a barrel of apple cider.
A few days ago word of this
reaches Dean Schwering and Ike
is summoned before her.
“Donin,” says she, sternly,
“what did you mean by purchasing
that cider so long ago. Didn't you
realize that it would become
HARD cider if you let it stand?”
“Sure,” says Ike, “that's what I
was hoping!”
The Theta tong ate at the
Pi Kap dive last night, and a
brief survey conducted before
the event indicates that every
girl was SURE that her part
ner would be Mike Mikulak.
It seems almost certain that
SOMEBODY was disappoint
ed!
* * *
You have to keep an eye on
these honoraries. The latest scan
dal concerns Alpha Kappa Psi. At
a late hour last night, it was re
ported that the boys were whoop
ing it up in Heinz “57 Varieties”
Hueber's apartment with the aid
of a keg of BEER! Seatmates of
these Alpha Kappa Psi lads in
morning classes are warned to be
on their guard, or they may find
a load of suddenly sleepy class
mates deposited in their lap!
The pride of Newt Smith’s
life just now is his new beer
equipment. The boys around
the joint treat it like a new
baby, and are seriously think
ing of getting special brass
polish for its fittings! How
ever, they don’t know much
about its mysterious inner
workings yet, and when they
attempted to put the plunger
in a new keg yesterday, the
keg blew like an oil well,
soaking Donin, Bill Holmes,
and an unidentified customer.
Donin generously declared
that the customer would not
have to pay for his free beer,
however!
OGDEN GNASHES
“Beer is a curse,
Beer is a sin,
But beer is better
Than 90 proof gin!”
* x *
“Sorry, sister, but I'm broke!”
ate existence. It, at least, has its
element of humor to those who
look on.
Very truly,
CARL H. COAD.
Reading Courses Out
The printed announcements of the
new “Free Time Correspondence
Reading Courses” are ready for
the public.
LONG NAP,
BRUSHED
WOOL
SWEATERS
High, Crew
Neck
Black, Brown
and Blue
$1.95
* * *
C. J. Breier
CUT RATE DRUGS AND
TOBACCOS
— 80-1 WILLAMETTE —
$1.10 Yardley Perfume . ggc
•-5 Dr. West's Tooth Paste . 15c
Krank's Lemon Cream . 29c
1.00 -Match King Lighter . 79c
.15 lxool Cigarettes—2 for . 25c
.•>0 Kleenex Tissues . 25c
.35 Lifebuoy Shaving Cream . 19c
1.00 Ovaltiue
67c
1.00 Ambrosia Powder . 29c