Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 02, 1935, Page 2, Image 2

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    PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF
THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon
EDITORIAL OFFICES: Journalism building. Phone 3300 -
Editor, Local 354; News Room and Managing Editor 355.
BUSINESS OFFICE: McArthur Court, Phone 3300 Local 214.
MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ,
The Associated Press is entitled to the use for publication
of all news dispatches credited to it or not othriwise credited in
rhis paper and also the local news published herein. All rights ,
of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
A member of the Major College Publications, represented by
A. J. Norris Ilill Co., 155 E. 42nd St., New York City; 123
VV. Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Ave., Seattle; 1031 S.
Broadway, Los Angeles; Call Building, San Francisco.
William E. Phipps Grant Thueinmel
Editor Business Manager
Robert Lucas
Managing Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
Parks Hitchcock, Fred Colvig
Assistant Editors
Malcolm Bauer, Barney Clark, Bob Moore, J. A. Newtor\
Ann-Reed Burns, Dan E. Clark dr.
UPPER NEWS STAFF
Clair Johnson . Assistant Managing Editof
Reinhart Knudson .-. News Editor
Ned Simmon .—. Sports Paditor
Rex Cooper . Night Chief
Ed Robbins . Telegraph
George Bikman . Radio
Dan Maloney . Special
Ann-Keed Burns . women
Mary Graham . Society
Dick Watkins . Features
BUSINESS OFFICE MANAGERS
Assistant,— r reel risner
Executive Secretary — Jean
Cecil
Advertising Manager — Ed
Labbe
Assistant--Bill Jones
Merchandising Manager—
Eldon Ha berm an
Assistant—Ed Morrow
Assistant—Cliff Thomas
Assistant—.uuuiie tjuu
National Advertising Man- j
uKer—Fred Heitlel
Circulation Manager — Car
roll Auld
Classified Manager Dorris
Holmes !
Sez Sue— Virginia Welling- J
ton
Assistant—Patsy Neal
Copy Man Ed Priaulx
GENERAL STAFF
Reporters: Wayne Herbert, Phyllis Adams, Signe Rasmussen,
Ruth Storla, Marjorie Kibbe, Helen Hartrum, Hob Powell,
Jane Lugassee, Charles Paddock, LcRoy Mattingly, Fulton
Travis, Hallie Dudrey, Norris Stone, Al Fajardo.
Copyreaders: Victor Dallaire, Margaret Ray, Virginia Scoville,
Dan Maloney, Margaret Venees, Betty Shoemaker.
Assistant Night Editors: Gladys HatiJeson, Genevieve Me Niece,
Betty Rosa. Lou iso Krucktnan, Kllanme Woodworth, Ethyl
Eyman, Betty McGirr, Harilyn Khi.
Sports Staff: Bill Mclnturff, Gordon Connelly. Don Casciato,
Jack Gilligan, Kenneth Webber, Tom McCall.
Women’s Page Assistants: Margaret Petsch, Mary Graham,
Betty Jane Barr, Helen Bartrum, Betty Shoemaker.
Jay Editor ..... .Virginia Kndicot
Night Editor This Issue ...Mohan V. Raj
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 except the first seven days, all of
March except the first eight days. Entered as second-class matter
at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year.
A Night for the Champions
/"OREGON Sidle Heavers, newly crowned
hoop champions of 1 lie northern division
of the Pacific coast conference grace the
Igloo floor tonight.
While Oregon's Web fools toppled the
high-riding Huskies from their title-threaten
ing spot early this week, tin' Orange dazzled
Idaho’s Vandals to clinch the league’s high
est honors of the 1!Wf* campaign.
Tonight’s battle between the sophomore
Ducks ami State’s brilliant hoop artists of
fers to Oregon stmlejils their Iasi chance to
see this year's edition of Mill Reinhart's
lute-season wonders in action.
Oregon State confidently expects to make |
a clean sweep of the four-game series.
Oregon, inspired by their comeback
which has become (lie biggest sensation of i
the current season, is determined to end the j
year in a blaze of glory.
if the Ducks' devastating attacks upon
Oregon Stale in their last two games is any i
indication, tonight’s hall game will be fierce. |
breath-taking, with the Ducks favored to
embarrass the northern loop tit lists.
Back to the Facts
COM ft of our confidence in the jotmmlisl ic
^ technique of the editors of tin- Morning j
Oregonian was restored yesterday morning
when the following editorial entitled “They
Are Academic Fees" corrected one of tin*
Oregonian’s errors cited in yesterday’s him
era Id editorial.
In correcting the statement that dot) Ore
gon students faced suspension for failure
to pay student activity fees the Oregonian
says:
Through error which is hereby acknowl
edged—in the chagrin to which commission of
error sinks the erring—The Oregonian said
that student suspensions impended at the
I'nlverstty of Oregon because of tardiness in
paying student activity fees. It was student
academic fees that were Involved, not student j
activity fees.
The point was that it is wrong to make
student activity fees compulsory, because
there are many worthy students who cannot
afford to participate. That point is streng
thened by the fact that some 850 students
an- having difficulty in finding money w here
with to pay their essential academic fees.
When that is difficult, how much more diffi
cult is it lor them to raise a ■ ...Ulitinn.il live
dollars a term for extra-curricular diversions,
however worthy?
it is conceded, we say again, that Ihc
extra-curricular activities are worthy, hut
they should not lie made compulsory upon
struggling impecunious students.
One Man’s Op in ion
EWS comes over the wires Hint the national
' administration is planning to enlarge the
personnel of the OCC to iuchnle a quarter of a
jnillion more men.
In common with many another man on the
street, we have often wondered if all the motives
behind tiiis organization were so completely al
truistic as they seem. When the COO was first
organized there were a great number of theories
advanced ns to the ulterior motives of the ad
ministration. Prominent among these theories : i
the one which said the government w.t ■ coyly
introducing a project which would train hundreds
of thousands of young men in the discipline they
would encounter as regular army men The in
ference being that the government was mulling
its plans to put a vast army of men in training
to that in the. event of a war the ia\v material
would not be quite so raw.
B> Stivers Vernon
After viewing the training winch the c chaps
undergo, it would seem to us that such is not
necessarily the case. True, there is considerable
discipline but not quite the same sort that one
would expect In an army training camp. We can
not quite conceive of this motive as the primary
one in the minds of the government heads when
they organized the CCC.
What does strike us with considerable force
is that the democratic party is building for itself
a truly excellent chance of staying in power just
about as long as it likes—or as long as it con
tinues to have so many jobs at its command.
A press association estimates that there wiil
be 8500 jobs in the new expansion program which
might be termed political gifts: That certainly
does not seem like so very many. The assumption
would be that these 8500 votes for the democratic
administration a. .he next election would not cut
much ice. It was alf > mentioned that there would
be some 25,000 other jobs which would go to
competent men regardless of political affiliation.
We may be wrong but we personally fail to
see what difference it makes whether the jobs
are outright gifts or whether they are earned by
virtue of technical ability. It is a dead cinch that
mighty few of these job-holders are going to
vote for a national administration that does not
guarantee the continuance of those jobs.
So instead of 8500 votes at the next election,
there will be thirty-odd thousand for the present
administration. Add the families and immediate
friends of the job-holders and you can figure
nearly a hundred thousand more.
Then there are the CCC boys themselves.
These are not. all eligible to vote. Assume that
half of them are. Of the million men that will
have held CCC jobs by 1936 over half of them
will vote for the incumbency. Add their families
and their friends and you have another million
or two.
It mounts up and up and up. Indirectly, the
new expansion will affect several million votes
in the next election. We do not accuse the demo
cratic party of using the CCC for political pur
poses. That would be carrying it too far. But it
is to us a remarkable coincidence that such a
worthy and altruistic move would affect favorably
several million votes which the democrats are
going to need in 1936.
The Passing Show
PKOTCETION THROUGH FHAK
MEETING in Portland Wednesday, Methodist
ministers from Pa-cific Northwest churches
decided to undertake to arouse pubilc opinion in
their communities against the U. S. naval maneu
vers to be staged this year in the north Pacific.
The ministers fear that a great display of Ameri
can naval strength in those waters will be taken
as a threat and a challenge by Japan with war as
the probable result. The group set the expected
date for the war less IJjan two years away.
The first consequence of the ministers’ action
will, of course, be bitter editorials in two or three
Oregon papers calling the members of the group
everything short of communists. The moment
anybody starts scrutinizing standard practices
and official acts of his government in the cold
light of enlightened reason, some people always
jump up and shout, “Radical!” And to such folk
the word “radical” is written in red. They would
probably never recover from the shock if they
could ever realize that some of America’s best
radicals were named George Washington, Thomas
Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and Alexander
Hamilton.
But -to get hack to ihc subject of this dis
cussion—arc the ministers shooting idealistic
bullets at an imaginary vulture? Is there ground
for believing that the maneuvers may stir war
fervor in Japan? In answer to both those ques
tions we’ll cite the curious effect of announce
ment of the annual Oregon national guard en
campment plans last year or the year before.
Word came that Japan had heard reports of troop
mobilization on the U. S. Pacific coast and had
seen in that mobilization a threat of war. Givfen
a trace of a sense of humor, any American citizen
would laugh at such a report. The Oregon national
guard ranks pretty high among American citi
zen forces, but the thought of a few inexperienced
regiments and batteries encamped on the Oregon
coast as a menace against Japan is ridiculous.
The Japanese reaction probably resulted from
inaccurate information, but the significant thing
is that willingness to believe was present in the
Japanese psychology. It makes little difference
whether there was any excuse for such belief or
not. Disastrous wars have resulted from mis
understandings more incredible than that about
national guard mobilization.
rue iron Die is mat a lew tacts uncieny mo
Japanese willingness to believe. For one tiling, tlie
American naval strength has been concentrated
in the Pacific of late and the defense of Hawaii
played a principal pari in its war games last year.
For another, the United States, as si government
and as a people, has stood out against Japan’s
operations on the Asiatic continent. And then
there was the immigration trouble which struck
a st vert' blow at the touchy Japanese pride.
Americans know none of these was intended as
an offensive blow at Japan, but just try to con
vince the nationalistic Japanese of that!
The proposed naval maneuvers would work
out problems involved in the defense of Alaska
and the north Pacific const til' the United States,
with the Hawaiian islands as one of the tower
corners of a great triangle of ocean. What po
tential enemy other than Japan could the maneu
ver be designed to prepare for?
To the list of facts printed above should have
been added the introduction of a $37S,699,4K8
army supply hill in congress and the presentation
of a $477,221,000 U. S. naval budget. .So far as
Japanese popular feeling is concerned, those sums
air already ns good as spent and the navy,
scheduled to play about in the north Pacific, is
already enlarged ami supplemented by a tre
mendous land force.
The pcuce-bv-pivpaiodnc.ss school would hold
that such a display of invincible st length would
scare some sense into Japan’s bellicose head, but
the theory doesn’t seem to work out in practice,
l'eur is probably the most prolific breeder of
war... it tlm naval maneuvers thoroughly frighten
O', r'.md Japanese people, thi. countr- had b"'
tci stand by for trouble.—Eugene Mcmmg Ncv •
Rhapsody
In Ink
_____ By the Octopus ___i_
TIME FLOATS ON (support
ed by a pair of water wings).
People
First editor of Rhapsody in Ink
colum was THE Octopus. During
his 14-day term he built up the
Rhapsody to a point where the
deans didn’t even experience joy
in reading it. After a fortnight of
nerve-straining drool Editor Octo
pus collapsed amid a sea of inky
eye juice.
Substitute ’squids toiled in his
place, lifted the column to new
heights. Original editor Octopus,
black with jealousy at his succes
sors' success, mashed the Under
wood with a crisper precision . . .
Hysteria gone, he expects to cre
mate every "shot” within miles.
Broken, last week, was one of
the Octopus's strongest resolutions,
in providing that no good shall be
| said of anyone. The old basket of
nerves forgot all his bad intentions
toward society upon sighting Tom
McCall, who with Cosgrove La
Barre is co-holder of the title of
Campus Giraffe. Upon sighting
McCall quoth Octi:
“My what a fine young Amer
ican that hoy seems to be!”
Science
Last week Stuart Mockford, his
architectural studies temporarily
completed, attended a downtown
cinema. Midway in the course of
the screen antics a sharp scream
v/as rung from Mockford’s torture !
frame. A small bonfire, caused b/
the ignition of matches in his pock
et, was roaring merrily with dire
results . . . The Mockford flesh
w'as done to a turn.
Corporations
The Norman Lauritz-Jane Lee
concern of Eugene last week term
inated a short stormy partnership.
Both members of the corporation,
which, for some time, has been
headed for the rocks, refused to
comment.
Smart local business authorities
attributed the downfall of the com
pany to the mutual disinterest of
the two principal stockholders in
each other’s personal assets.
Fifty letters arrived today deal
ing with the Marshall Harison
mustache. Forty-nine of the mis
sives slated that the lip hedge was
a “flop." while the other one (from
a. young Theta) stated, in part—
i "it is as the young spring grass
I rising to the call of the early
robin."
Opined Harrison hotly, when
reached by a tentacle:
"That little girly is the only one
of the fifty with the right idea . .
Now get out!"
As the press representative took
a hurried glance in mid-retreat, he
saw Harrison attempt to twirl the
"handlebars,” miss the all too deli
cate growth, and drop to his
haunches.
TIME SINKS.
The Curious
“Worthwhile people in a nice way."
Letters
Today, the curtain rises and the
Cub is pleased to present: ALVIN
L. TEMPLER, music major in his
I sophomore year. Alvin is one of
that rare race of people who is not
a music major because he can
think of nothing else to take, but
because, in his years of rambling
around the globe, he has found
music something of real value. It
is his one passion, the central,
driving, motivating force of his
life.
He was born in Marysville,
Washington, September 2, 1907
and although he doesn't care to
talk about it particularly, he has
led a highly adventurous and in
teresting life, with his musical
ability in a great part being respon
sible.
Heading'.' "1 very seldom road
anything unless it's on music. If 1
had more time, my reading might
be extended to more musical load
ing but as it is, 1 have only time
for the technical side of this sub
ject," Alvin likes poetry and in
this connection, he put the creative
"Bug" precisely where it belongs:
"l went through the usual high
school English stage of writing
poetry mostly because my teacher
wanted me to and I'd do anything
for her."
Hobbies? "Not any more 1
i in'* h o, - time ' He ’becked him
elf tnd• laughed. "1 don't knovt
how to classify it, byt I enjoy Phil
bert (in Colliers,i and Doctor
Lesch will be surprised to know
that I also appreciate Pop-Eye!"
Regarding dates, he politely in
with—but worth it!
(censored) business. Alvin is
formed Bruin that was none of hits
brunette, fairly tall, sports a mous
tache and is hard to get acquainted
Ohmart Speaks
Editor, the Emerald:
Mr. Neuberger and myself have
been selected to represent the Stu
dent Relief committe in Tuesday’s
debate. We hope the facts pre
sented will serve to clear up points
of doubt and dispute in the minds
of mapy students.
We do not care who represents
the opposing side, and feel the
ASUO should be free to select
whom it wishes, to present its
case. We have heard that certain
alumni favor the ASUO’s side
rather strongly. It is amenable
with u.s, if they represent the op
posing arguments. After all, the
purpose of this debate is to clear
up important problems, and both
sides should be free to select, those
people whom they believe best in
formed on the situation.
We extend the courtesy of
| friendly opponents to whomsoever
i carires .the ASIJO standard. We
hope the debate will be of value.
Howard Ohmart
fine Music Heads
Radio Programs
I
By Dick Watkins
Emerald Feature Editor
RADIO The air waves will be
j euck full of good music of all de
j scriptions today, on both chains
j • • . Bichard Hbriber's orchestra,
| with Joey Nash and David Rows
j coming on at 8 p. m. (CBS); Rich
j ard Bonelli, operatic baritone with
Andre Kostelanetz’s orchestra and
i chorus at 6 p. m., featuring gems
i by Wagner, Gershwin and Jerome
| Kern (CBS); . . . Lily Eons and
| Tito Schipa from the Metropolitan
in Bellini’s opera “La Sonnambula”
(first produced in Milan in 1831),
at 10:55 a. m. (NBC); . . . Sig
, round Romberg’s program, saluf
i ing the festive New Orleans Mar
di Gras, at 5 p. m. (NBC), . . . the
Portland Symphony orchestra, di
rected by Gershkoviteb, with Vir
j ginia le Rae, soprano, at 8:30 p. m
(CBS); . . . Roxy and His Gang
program playing the sweet music
from Arthur Schwartz’s “Band
uagon” and “Three’s a Crowd,” at
5 p. m. (CBS) . . .
SENIOR BALL — this makes
us look like a bunch of pikers of
the first water . . . the University
of California Senior Ball is to be
held at the Palace hotel in S. F.
with Ray Noble and band furnish
ing the music from 10-3 and Tom
Coakley’s orchestra taking it over
from 2-4:30 a. m. . . . and we have,
to take our dates home at mid
night! . . . Such crust!
* * *
NAMES here are a few sam
ples of some song-titles turned ouc
by Tin Fan Alley lately: . . . “The
Mad Waffle Eater,” “Death Takes
; Poison,” “Shine on. Harvesting
Machine," now for some rare gems:
i With Two Broken Legs,” “Yester
j “Perilous Bide on a Running Board
; day’s Ice Cubes Are Water To
day,” “I Stayed Home All Day the
Day I Was Born” . . .
* * * '
DANCES Three campus jigs
on the line this eve, with music be
ing furnished by both out-of-towr
I and local bagpipers . . . Sherwood
Burr and tribe will ring' the rafters
at the Kappa Kappa Gamma win
ter formal and the Alpha Omicrou
Pi winter formal, while Jimmy
W hippo's Whippowills from the
j cow college will do likewise at the
Phi Sigma Kappa formal dance
i . . . for the rest of the campus
i gigolos and gigolettes, the 10 Com
Inlanders are still blasting forth out
at the Park . . . till Tues., adios
Showing at Mac
Of course anything seems pretty
j tame after "David Copperfield.’
Aunt Betsey Trotwood and Mr
Micawber make most screen char
acters flat after their going. But
if the casts of tire double bill a'
the Mac now are purely conven
tional, the plots have some of the
incongruity of the Dickens elnu
j aeters.
Imagine a blind pilot rescuing
the gal transatlantic flier lost it
fog ovei New York. Feature gang
stei business, champaign, and in
lernes who supervise their owl
major operations all mixed up ir
the same hospital. It’s all in "Wing:
in ’be D ll! m l Ao''ie’\ Pe t ’:
J but don't take it wrong—it make.
By Ruth McClain
a good bill if you like yours light
and easy on the pulse.
Myrna Loy is still too sophisti
cated to be a barnstorming stunt
flier. It’s hard to forget the Thin
Man's wife, but she puils through
nicely and makes the plane hop
from Moscow to New Yu: k as
easy as a ride on the Uinversity
ioop until she hits the fog. at
which point the noble and sightless
Cary Grant risks all to bring her
down safe and sound. Three guesses
what happens next.
There are some neat bits of sky
photography, and Grant convinc
ingly stumbles over furniture as
the blind aviator.
“Society Doctor” is more love,
and war in a hospital, a couple of
good laughs and a too-beautiful
nurse in the shape of Virginia
Bruce. Chester Morris sweats
realistically as he directs his own
sewing-up (by his rival in love!)
wilh the help of a mirror and a
spinal anaesthetic, even managing
remarks to the gallery.
Just a pleasant filler-inner before
“Clive of India.”
Answers
(1) In 1842 by Adam Thompson.
] (2) Taxed bathtubs 30, and in
creased water rates.
(3) Miami, Florida, 1929.
(1) Virginia Dare, 1587.
(5) New Ycrk, 1885, 10 stories.
(6) Oscar Solomon Strauss, Sec.
of Com., appointed by T.
Roosevelt in 1909.
(7) Miss Frances Perkins.
(8) Buffalo, 1924.
(9) 1895 in Chicago.
(10) 1870.
Horn to Head
(Continued from Page One)
the benefit of any students on this
campus who wish to enter the con
test, Horn has signified his inten
tion of placing a reading list on
the subject on reserve in the li
brary.
When questioned as to the pos
sibility of an essay from the Pa
cific coast taking a prize, Horn
replied that it seemed to him that
the Pacific coast entrants had a
particularly fine opportunity. He
has studied the question intensive
ly and was in Europe at.the time
that Hitler was first rising to
power.
Horn believes that the ultimate
solution to the question of world
peace lies in the Pacific basin, as
his conclusions drawn from his ob
servations in Europe are that the
eastern nations have the situation
down to a series of moves ana
counter moves much like a game ot j
chess. The student on the Pacific j
pop ■?£ is fpppc| VHttl ^
comparatively untouched field for
his subject to which he has best
access because of his proximity to
it, Horn feels.
Heart-Rending
(Continued from Page One)
sufficiently convincing to be
heartily booed by the delighted
audience. His spoiled daughter,
Alida, Mitzi Buchanan, was cun
ningly beautiful. Ed Wulzen re
vealed his true abilities as the
handsome hero, and Nell Baxter
was sweat and strained as our
heroine. Mrs. Annil Puffy, “whose
j heart is gold," as an old woman
was Mary Bennett's best role to
date. Dan, her straw-padded son,
“God bless him," was Rodney Bur
den’s contribution to a well rounded
cast. Badger, who seems a villain,_
but is really the angel in disguise,
and who tlnravels the whole des
picable plot, is confidently played
by Fred Cuthbert.
No gesture was too overdrawn,
no innuendo too obvious to fit into
the rococco, flatly painted stage
sets, designed and constructed by
Lance Hart and Art Gray.
Campus Brevities
Visiting- in Hood River — Bill
Corman is visiting with his par
ents in Hood River this weekend,
end will return to the campus Sun
day evening.
* * *
Home for Weekend — Claudine
Gueffroy is visiting this weekend
I v-ith her parents at her home in
Salem. Miss Gueffroy expects to
return to the campus Sunday eve
ning.
Kappa Guest for Dance — Mar
garet Wagner of Salem is visiting
this weekend at the Kappa house
and will attend the winter formal
tonight. Miss Wagner was a mem
ber of the '34 graduating class and
is an affiliate of Kappa Kappa
Gamma.
* * *
Conduct Classes in Portland —
S. Stephenson Smith, associate
professor of English, and Dan E
Clark, professor of history, went
to Portland yesterday to conduct
Sure there’s a reason
why we have a large percent
of the college business—
Our aim is to turn out work that is
perfectly satisfactory—this is the best
way to get new customers and keep
the old ones.
New
Service Laundry
WE DELIVER CALL 825
flamtatmn
their regular weekly classes at the
extension center in the Lincoln
high school.
Visiting in Portland—Lucia Da
vis is visiting with friends this
weekend in Portland.
In Portland This Weekend—Bill
Rice went to Portland this week
end to visit with his parents and
transact some business matters.
He expects to return to the cam
pus Sunday evening.
Visiting in Portland — Gordon
Morris is visiting this weekend
with his parents at his home in
Portland. He expects to return to
the campus Sunday evening.
# * *
Here for Weekend—Harry Han
son and Lee Clark, former Univer
sity students from Portland, ar
rived in Eugene Friday to spend
the weekend at the Sigma Alpha
Epsilon house. . They will attend
the fraternity’s dance Saturday
evening and return to Portland
Sunday.
Visiting in Junction City — Lu
cille Dickey, accompanied by Avis
Negly who is to be a weekend
guest at the Dickey home, went to
Junction City yesterday where she
will visit with her parents until
Sunday.
Spending Weekend at Home—
Bob Moffett went to Portland Fri
day afternoon to spend the week
end visiting with his parents. He
will return to the campus Sund
day evening. £ g ■» j j§
* * #
Spends Day in Albany Eliza
beth Bendstrup visited with friends
in Albany yesterday and returned
to the campus last night.
Leaves for Salem Win Jenks
went to Salem today to spend the
weekend visiting with his parent s
at his home. He expects to re
turn to the campus Sunday.
Parents of students at the Uni
versity of Michigan are engaged
in more than 160 different occupa
j tions, ranging from mining to
aviation.
Forest fires start and burn more
easily in stands of timber that have
i been killed by insects that eat the
leaves and bore into the trunks.
-'I'iHaimn
Again We Say—
Look at Your
SHOES
Have you ever admired j
someone's appearance uu- j
til you saw that person ■
wearing run-down heels? !
|
Crooked heels
do spoil one’s
appearance.
THE
CAMPUS
SHOE REPAIR
Across from Sigma Ciii
Right on the Campus
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
BEAUTY SALONS
Distinctive finger waves, 35c,
Love's Beauty Salon. Phone 991.
DRESSMAKING
PETITE SHOP
573 13th St. E. Phone 3208.
“Style Right—Price Right”
DRESSMAKING
Designing and remodeling—
moderate cost. Mrs. Liston,
1611 Lincoln. Phone 2616-J. '
SERVICE
HAVE your car serviced cor
rectly at Ernie Danner’s As
sociated Service Statius Unex
celled personal service. “Smile
as you drive in ’35.” Phone 1765.
Corner 10th and Olive.
1 time .10c per line.
- times. 5c per line.
PHONE 3300
EMERALD
jjCLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT