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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1935)
Mothers’ Day Program Full Of Activities Students Are Urged to Send Invitations Home Personal invitations from stu dents to University mothers are the next step in the annual Moth ers’ day and Junior weekend plans being pushed towards May 10 un der the direction of Ann-Reed Burns, student chairman, and Dr. Earl M. Pallett, faculty chairman. Programs have been issued by George Callas, advertising mana ger, and students are urged to in clude them in their invitations. The schedule promises to be unusually full this year, giving the guests a chance to see the campus in action. The program includes: Friday, May 10 1:30 p. m. Registration, .John son hall. 3 to 5 p. m. Tea for mothers, Gcrlinger hall, sponsored by AWS and YWCA. S to 9:30 p. m. Reception, Ger Jinger hail, sponsored by the Eu gene Mothers' club and University Faculty Women's club. 9 p. m. Junior Prom, McArthur court. Section reserved for visit ing mothers. Saturday, May 11 8:30 a. m. Executive committee breakfast, John Straub Memorial building-. 12:00 noon. Luncheon with son or daughter. 1:30 p. m. Mass meeting. Guild theatre, Johnson hall. 5:30 p. m. Mother’s day ban quet, John Straub Memorial build ing. 8:30 p. m. Canoe fete. Sunday, May 12 8:30 a. m. Executive committee breakfast, John Straub Memorial building. 11:00 a. m. Special services in all Eugene churches. 1:00 p. m. Mother's day dinner at all living organizations. Frosh Tackle (Continued from Page Three) who took over the initial sack in his absence. Rankling under the lash of p. stinging reversal at the hands of a rejuvenated Beaver, Coach Bill Reinhart’s varsity ballhawks will attempt to put the ambitious year lings in their place once and for all. Pitching choices are uncertain, for Coach Reinhart may experi ment in an attempt to find another effective starting chucker. For the Frosh Connelly will probably ftart with Bob Millard, Coach Kel ly’s ace, in reserve. Killer and Gigolo Lester Miller, left, plays the leading; role in ‘ Small Miracle” as Tony Mako, convicted murderer; and William Cottrell, right, plays Carl Barrett, erstwhile man-about tovvn, in this Guild hall offering scheduled for presentation in the University theatre May 4 and (i. Romance on the Race Changes to Suit for Damages A tale of young- love killed by a dousing in the mill race will be aired Thursday night in Judge Or lando J. Hillis’s court as scores gather to hear the ‘dirt’ on the lat est campus scandal. The proceed ings will be held in the Lane coun ty courthouse as the second in the series of moot trials being conduct ed by the law school class in trial procedure. The difficulties, finally culminat ing in a lawsuit, all started back when spring brought romance to I he campus last year and one John McCulloch took one Ann Hutchin son canoeing. Perhaps the blame lay with the canoe - owned by one Day Bayly; at any rate the couple found themselves gasping in the icy waters and almost water logged before they were finally rescued. McCulloch, upon taking inventory, found that he had ruined the young lady's costume, lost her portable phonograph and also her affections. He is now bringing suit against Bayly for $5,000. “Motions day,” preceding the trial, was held last night in 105 Oregon building, with Judge Hollis presiding. Participants m ihe proceedings Thursday night will Include George Belt and Howard Bobbitt, attor neys for the plaintiff; John Casey and John Kendall, attorneys for the defendant; Glen Hieber, bailiff notary; Bill Palmer, clerk; Alva Goodrich, reporter-sheriff; John McCulloch, Bertrand Isaminger, and Roy Kilpatrick, witnesses for the plaintiff; Day Bayly, Robert Foley, and Fred Hellberg, witness es for the defendant. “EUGENE’S1 OWN STORE” McMorran & Washburne MERCHANDISE OF MERIT ONLY -PHONE 2700-» fj ^ 0rt LAY Ee oqQ 3 t! Here's the Stijle Sensation j 1935 You can yodel It-you can sing il-you can shout it from the mountain lops-here's thei style sensation of 1935 - fhe Yodeler Peasant Shoe A Atodcrn Misj Creation $c.oo A style that's sweeping the country . ... in white nu-buek with calf trim of white, brown or blue .... and blue nu-buck with white calf trim. FIRST FLOOR Yeomen Give Spring Dance at Del Rey Cafe The Oregon Yeomen, indepen dent men's organization, Friday night entertained with an annual spring informal dance at the Cafe Del Hey. “Spring fantasy” was the theme for the decorations, with an outdoor setting featured. Ell wood’s White Coats played. Patrons were Mr. and Mrs. E. C. A. Leach, W. A. Dahlberg, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Shumaker. Lee Ellmaker was general chair man. About 50 couples attended the dance. Anything Goes (Continued from Page Two) hold of good music, for besides Weeks, the Beach has secured Ben Bcrnie, Eddie Duchin and Henri Busse, among others, to play lim ited engagements there . . . the IT. of California senior class has en gaged three orchestras to play for their activities during Senior Week . . . OH HUM ... the Hotel Oak land has signed up an all-girl band, known as “Sylvia’s Orchestra for a summer engagement . . . the in novation deserves a hand, and judging from the success of Phil Spitalny’s all-femme combine on the air-waves, they have a fighting chance to ring up a smash hit . . . SHIFTS — Bay Noble is set to re place Jiliy Coburn’s band in the very ritzy ltainbow Room atop Rockefeller Center in N.Y.’s Ra dio City . . . The Rainbow Room is the original spot, Noble came over here from England to play for, till the musicians’ union raised a loud squawk and kept him off the boards, and now that he has done the wise thing and taken out U. S. citizenship papers, all is tranquil and life is once again just a bowl of cherries for the ex-English mae stro . . . 3 CHEERS DEPT . . . for Itegi Portland Council Will Endorse Bill The Portland city council Wed nesday will vote on a resolution endorsing the referendum of sen ate bill 204, giving the state board of high education authority to levy a S15 per year activity fee, Richard L. Neuberger, state chair man of the student relief commit tee, sponsor of the referendum, will present the resolution. nald Owen’s swell acting as the buttinsky waiter in the Good Fairy” . . . Owens is the first com edian a natural we’ve seen in a coon’s age . . . orchids to the Mac Theatre for bringing a good band through this band-starved town again ... for the AWS CARNI VAL and the idea in general, and to the SAE’s and PI PHIS for hav ing one choice-looking booth . . . their extremely colorful pavilion well deserved top honors . . . for that humorous little weekly col lumn in the Sunday Journal’s fea ture section called, “Little Echoes From Rig Guns,” excerpted from the Congressional Record . . . here are two of the gems: Senator Wheeler (addressing the Senate): “One of the nice chummy letters I got must have come from Gertrude Stein. It says: ‘It makes me sick to think how sick I get when I think about you” . . . Senator Lewis, (during a Senate discussion on cemeteries): “May I be par doned for observing that at lef.st it is a grave subject” . . . OH WELL! . . . Resume (Continued front Page One) intrusion in business and formed what generally is expected to be the keynote of the convention— strenuous opposition to govern ment interference with business. These reports have yet to be vot ed on by the convention as a whole, but their introduction indicated a \ast change from the cooperative attitude displayed at the cham ber’s 1934 meeting. In his fireside chat last night President Roose velt called for enactment by con gress of both the banking and holding company measures. King Aims Blow nl 1\RA WASHINGTON — Long smoul dering opposition to NRA within Democratic ranks broke into the open today when Senator King, Utah, introduced a bill to abolish the recovery administration and transfer its fundamental powers to the federal trade commission. While King was offering his measure to kill the blue eagle, NRA foes and Roosevelt leaders were negotiating back-stage for a compromise agreement to extend the present recovery law until March. Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscription rates $2.50 a year. I ..im | For Your Mother on Mothers’ Day Send Her Your Photograph "It will make her happy." KENNELL-ELLIS 957 Willamette Phone 1697 IllllllllllllllHIIIIIIII! iiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiitniiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiinitiiiiii Events pile up in the papers—fires, mur ders. divorces—things unexpected, that happen to others, happen not often, and entertain you because they haven’t hap pened to you. Yet elsewhere in the papeis are things to make happen to you—every day—in the way you want them—happen pleasant ly, intimately, and at once! Advertised things. News in the advertisements helps you make your daily drama please you most. Helps you find the talcum and shaving lotion that can act best for you. Read the advertisements. They make you pleased about the daily things you do. Kentucky Turns Out for First White Hanging Kentucky hanged its first white man in a generation at Smithland, and here is the scene as X500 ' morbidly curious spectators massed about the scaffold to see a man die. Arrow indicates William De Boe on the scaffold as he declared his innocence of the attack charge that sent him to the noose. Melodies to Float Over Race With Canoe Fete Song Idea “Listen- Music!—” “Shh—Listen closely, it sounds like ‘The Melody of Spring’.” “But, look, the trees along the race, they are as bright a green as in the day time—” The curtain under the arch parts —, but that part of the story will be concluded May 11, the night of the famed canoe fete, with Jimmy Emmett's band playing the ac companiment to the ‘song floats,’ “Bon Voyage to My Ship of Dreams,” “Under the Old Apple Tree,” and many others. 200 Seats Destroyed The recent widening of the road above the Anchorage necessitated the removal of 200 seats along the mill race at an entire loss to the University, according to Ralph Schomp, graduate manager. The seats, however, are being renum bered by student workers, in hopes that some of this number will be made up. Tickets for the event will be on sale Wednesday at Dean Earl's office, the Igloo, the Co-op, and Mc.Morran’s, it was announced from the graduate manager's of fice today. “We are working on a new plan for getting the floats down the race," Bill Schloth, chairman for the fete, said today. “If it works i out, a cable will be used to guide the floats instead of students.” Two silver trophy cups are awarded each year to the men's and women’s organizations who have the most attractive floats. They are now in possession of Sigma Kappa and Phi Sigma ☆ ☆ l /N 'Person Music Corporation of x America—Presents Kappa, who were first prize win ners last year. The cup has the following house’s names engraved on it: 1931, Sherry Ross hall-Delta Delta Delta; 1932, Omega hall-Kappa Kappa Gamma; 1933, Sigma Nu Gamma Phi Beta; 1934, Phi Sigma Kappa-Sigma Kappa. Guild Hall’s (Continued from Pane Une) town, whose attempt to persuad a wealthy young woman to marry him in order to insure his liv ng, and becomes curiously involved in the “miracle,” is played by Wil liam Cottrell, junior in art, who has appeared this year in three other Guild hall productions: "Leave it to Psmith,” “The Ama zons" and "The Trial of Mary Du gan,” in which he played the role of presiding-Judge Nash. Cottrell entered the University this year after two years in the Southern Oregon Normal school where he was president of Alpha Lauri, dra matic association, and not only ap peared in major play productions but had entire charge of designing stage-settings. “Small Miracle” will be present ed on two evenings, May 4 and G. Ticket sale for the production is under way, and the box office of the University theater in Johnson hall opened yesterday in order that reservations may be made. The box-office will be open each day this week from 9 to 12 a. m. and 1 to 5 p. m., according- to Alice Hult, in charge of sales. Castles and Crowds (Continued from Pape Two) lems wage constant war on flexi ble front, with them finally being pushed in the Mediterranean by Ferdinand and Isabella. 1500-1800 — Inquisition. War with France in Italy. War with France in the Netherlands. War with England on the seas. War with Turkey in the East. Revolt in the Netherlands. Civil war and re bellion. Revolt of the Moslems re maining in the peninsula. Con quest of Portugal. Revolt in Ara gon. Thirty Year’s war. Revolt in Portugal. Revolt of Catalonia. Re volt of Italy. Extra! Castile re mains loyal. War with France. War of the Spanish Succession, with England in America. War in Italy. Seven Years’ war. Revolt of colonies in America. War with England on the seas. French in vasion and Napoleon’s brother placed on Spanish throne. ] 800-1935--Revolt against French and guerilla warfare. Revolt against king. French armed in tervention. Carlist wars over suc cession. Military revolts. Mutin ies. Riots. Civil war. Anarchy. Spanish-American war. War with Meyers Appoints Self on King fish's Presidency Ticket WASHINGTON, Apr. 29.— (API —Senator Long (D-La.) has a self appointed running mate if he seeks the presidency of the United States. It is none other than Washington state's Victor A. Meyers, orchestra leader and lieutenant-governor. “The senator has an excellent program in his 'share-t.he-wealth’ idea,1’ Meyers said today, “but there isn't enough wealth to share. What we need now is a party that would advocate ‘share-the-debts.’ “Right there is where I enter the picture. With the senator a can didate for president on his plat form of share the wealth, he can take care of that end of it. I'll handle the vice presidency and bring in my program of share debts. “You can’t beat a combination like that.” Vic says he’s entirely competent to preside over the United States senate after three years experience in the Washington senate chair. “What's the difference?” asked Myers: “Very little,” he answered him self. When Vic was a candidate for • mayor of Seattle he promised host esses for every street car and cracked ice and ginger ale for the owl runs. He also said he thought a small saloon could be made to pay in Seattle. Riffs in Morocco. Revolt in Barce lona. Anarchy. Dictatorship. Re volt in the army. Declaration of Second Republic. Strikes. Revolts, et cetera.” (To be continued) CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY Rader Beauty Salon Smart Hairdressing Eugene Hotel Telephone 2890 Duart permanent $1.75 and up. Shampoo and fingerwave 50c. VOGUE BEAUTY SHOP Brown agate ring left in com merce Thursday. Finder please call 1415-YV. Lost * Shelved by a Sheba? O/c/ C^o/r/ lien a silky siren snitches your escort, there’s no consolation in saying what you think of her... Brighten up by lightin’ up a sunny-smooth Old Gold. It has a positive genius for raisin" your morale. AT TRYING TIMES .... TRY A SntGct/i OLD GOLD