Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 15, 1938, Page Three, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Use of Like Increasing;
Magazines Are Popular
By ELIZABETH ANN JONES
Use of Oregon’s new library is consistently increasing from year
to year, with the number of magazine charges during February jumping
one third over the 1937 figures, reports Miss Lenore Casford, periodical
librarian.
Circulation Librarian Bernice Rise placed circulation figures at
11,513 for March, 1938 as compared with the 10,748 record of 1937—
an increase of 765 volumes for the month.
The current issue of “Life”
magazine, showing pictures of
“how a baby is born” is backed to
boost the April total of magazine
borrowers, judging from the inter
est which students of both sexes
have evinced in this scientific
treatment of an elemental process.
Term Papers Boost
The added activity during Febru
ary in the periodical department
was largely due to the many fresh
man term papers required during
winter term, it was said.
Students are using the periodical
room more in the evenings and on
Saturdays and Sunday this term
said Miss Casford, probably in an
ticipation of more crowded days at
the end of the school year.
Duplicate copies of the more
popular magazines are available at
the main circulation desk, after the
first three days, when they are
placed on the tables in the brows
iing room.
Most in demand are such publica
tions as “Current History,” “New
Republic,” “Nation,” “Stag e,”
“American,” “Good Housekeeping,”
“Saturday Review of Literature,”
the “New York Herald Tribune
Magazine,” “Books,” “Forum,”
“Time,” “Life,” and “Fiction Par
ade.”
Mask and Buskin
To Add 7 Members
Seven new members will be
added to the ranks of Mask and
Buskin, University chapter of Na
tional Collegiate players, tonight at
initiation ceremonies in Gerlinger
hall at 5 o’clock.
Initiates are required to pass an
examination of the national honor
ary before they are admitted. The
new members aie Gerald T. Smith,
Eleanor Pitts Janet Felt, Gayle
Buchanan, Dave Wilson, Alice May
Seiling, and Iris Franzen.
The initiation will be followed
by dinner in the Anchorage.
ONTHANK IS BACK
Karl W. Onthank, dean of per
sonnel, returned from Seattle yes
terday after a week’s absence
from the campus. The main pur
pose of the dean’s trip was to lo
cate openings for University
graduates.
Send the Emerald home. Your
Tolks will enjoy reading it.
I “
Fun-Roundup
Mayflower: “Lancer Spy” and
“Hold 'Em Navy.”
McDonald: “Rebecca of Sun
nybrook Farm” and “Mr. Moto’s
Gamble.”
Keilig: “Heart of the Rockies”
and “Making the Headlines.”
Rex: “Love and Hisses” and
“Tarzan’s Revenge.”
* * *
Dancing Tonight
Willamette Park: College
Frolic.
* * *
Today’s Radio
KORE: 10:30, Emerald News
Reporter.
NBC: 5, Cities Service Con
cert; 9, Gilmore Circus.
CBS: 6, Hollywood Hotel with
Frances Langford, Frank Par
ker, Ken Murray and Oswald;
7, Song Shop; 8:30, Paul White
man.
Dance ctfchestras: 9, NBC,
Bert Block; 9:15, CBS, Sammy
Kaye; 9:30, NBC, Dick Stabile;
9:45, CBS, Ted Fio-Rito; 10,
NBC, Joe Haymes; 10:15, CBS,
Lud Gluskin; 10:30, NBC, Roger
Pryor; 10:45, CBS, Harry Ow
ens; 11, NBC, Herbie Kay.
KORE from 9:30 on.
PIN GOES THROUGH MILL
Washed and ironed and not a
scratch. This was the fate of the
fraternity pin of Keith Battleson,
freshman business ad. It seems
that the pin was left on his shirt
by mistake, was put through a
washing machine and wringer and
came through shiny and intact.
Municipal Laws to Be
Codified Under WPA
Cities Cooperate to
Put Ordinances in
Good Order
The latest in WPA projects is
the codification of municipal or
dinances under the sponsorship of
the League of Oregon Cities and
the Bureau of Municipal Research
and Service directed by Herman
Kehrli.
The Oregon project is regarded
as one of the most valuable re
search and professional projects
ever undertaken in behalf of cit
ies, although it is sponsored by the
University of Oregon to meet
technical WPA requirements, its
operations is based upon coopera
tion, also, of the League of Ore
gon Cities and of individual cit
ties that wish to have their ordi
nances codified.
The ordinances of three cities
have already been codified and
fourteen other cities have signed
up for this service in Oregon.
Send the Emerald home. Your
folks will enjoy reading it.
Easter Corsages
Will she wear flowers <
from you in the ;
Easte.r Parade ?
<
<
Blue Dutch Ins . . . Roses . . . Yellow
Daisies . . . Gerberas . . . Orchids ... 1
Bouvardia . . . Violets . . . Gardenias. J
Deliveries from 7 a.m. Sunday
COLLEGE
FLOWER SHOP
Across from Sigma Chi Phone 3018 -
<
"How about it, Joe, do you
find that Camels are differ
ent from other cigarettes?”
"Any all-cigarettes-are-alike talk doesn’t jibe with
my experience.There’s a big difference. I’ve smoked
Camels steadily for 5 years, and found that Camel
is the cigarette that agrees with me, in a lot of ways.
Good taste. Mildness. Easy on the throat. And
Camels don’t give me jumpy nerves. Like a lot of
people I know, 'I’d walk a mile for a Camel!”'
BILL GRAHAM, seeing Joe DiMaggio puli out Camels, asked his opinion on smoking.
Joe answered: "There’s a big difference between Camels and others.” You, too, will find
in Camels a matchless blend of finer, more expensive tobaccos—Turkish and Domestic.
SM> AP***<1AT* tH^
COStUER TOBACCO
lliilli! liliiiilililillllll
THEV ARE
>AiW lf4
JOE mends a net. His family are
fisher folk. DiMaggio is 6 feet tall
—weighs around 185 pounds. His
nerves are h-e-a-l-t-h-y!
IN THE KITCHEN of his restaurant.
Joe says: "I eat what I like. With
my meals and afterwards, I smoke
Camels ’for digestion’s sake.’ ”
CLOSE-UP of Joe’s grip.
When someone men
tioned a sensitive throat,
Joe remarked: "I stick to
Camels. Camels don’t ir
ritate my throat.”
Copyright, 1938. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Winston-Salem, North Carolina
On the air Mondays:
E-D-D-l-E CAN-TOR
America’s great fun-maker and per
sonality brought to you by Camel
cigarettes. Every Monday at 7:30
pm E. S.T., 6:30 pm C. S.T., 8:30
pm M. S.T., and 7:30 pm P. S.T.,
over Columbia Network.
On the air Tuesdays:
BENNY GOODMAN
THE “KING OF SWING"
Hear the great Goodman Swing
Band "go to town.” EveryTuesday
at this new lime—9:30 pm E. S.T.,
8:30 pm C.S.T., 7:30 pm M.S.T.,
and 6:30 pm P. S.T., over Colum
bia Network.
1
ONE SMOKER
TELLS ANOTHER
“TOBACCO
GROWERS FAVOR
CAMELS FOR
THEIR SMOKING!"
— is the majority
opinion in a survey of
successful, well-known
tobacco planters
“When Camel says
‘costlier tobaccos’ I
know it’s right,”
says Mr. Edward
Estes, capable
young planter, who
knows tobacco from
the ground up because he grows it.
“Take my last crop, for instance.
Camel bought all the best parts —
paid me the most I’ve ever gotten.
The men who grow tobacco know
what to smoke—Camels!”
“Last year I had
the dandiest crop
ever,” says Mr*
Roy Jones, another
experienced planter
who prefers Cam
els. “I smoke Cam
els because I know they bid higher
and pay more at the auctions for
the choice lots of leaf tobacco. They
paid the highest price I ever got
from anybody. Considering that
Camel uses finer, costlier tobaccos,
it’s not surprising that Camel is the
leading cigarette with us planters.”
Mr. Harold
Craig, too, bases
his preference
for Camels on
what he knows
about the kinds
of tobaccos that
go into the various cigarettes. "1 get
the check — so I know that Camels
use more expensive tobaccos. Camel
got the best of my last crop. That
holds true with most planters I
know, too. You bet I smoke Camels.”