Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 06, 1938, Page Five, Image 5

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    115 Preppers
Get State Aid
To Pag Fees
Scholarships Will Be
Given Transfers,
Old Students Before
End of Term
A total of 115 Oregon high
school graduates have been grant
ed one year’s scholarships, cover
ing tuition and fee costs in the
six institutions in the state system
of higher education. The selections
have just been announced by E. B.
Lemon, chairman of the high
school contacts committee for the
system, following a meeting of
that committee last week.
The selections were made under
the provisions of the- state board
granting fellowships up to 2 per
cent of the gross enrollment at
the various institutions. The se
lections just made are for high
school graduates only, leaving a
number of other scholarships to
be granted later in the year to
present students or transfers from
other institutions, according to
Mr. Lemon.
Oregon State college heads the
list just announced with 50 schol
larships. The University of Ore
gon was given 42; Oregon Normal,
11; Eastern Oregon normal, 6; and
Southern Oregon normal, 6.
• Members of the high school con
tacts committee, which made the
selections, are, in addition to
Chairman Lemon, Dr. Earl Pallett,!
University of Oregon; President
J. A. Churchill, Oregon normal
school; Rex Putnam, state super
intendent of public instruction;
W. M. Campbell, Roseburg, presi
dent of the State Association of
School Superintendents; and C. A.
Fry of Roosevelt high, Portland,
president of High School Princi
pals association.
The 42 Oregon scholarships
went to the following people:
Mary Jane Peck and Virginia Will
son of Roosevelt; Betty J. Marshall
of Washington; John Forrester
McCliment and Alan King of
Grant; Shirlie Jane McCarter and
Carol Mary Cook of Jefferson;
Carl B. Bowman and Kenneth El
mer of Franklin; Norman Nelson
Griffith and Maxine Hansen of
Lincoln; and Boyd Lee of Benson
Polytechnic, all of Portland; Wil
bur Armand Bishop of Tigard;
Robert William Currin of Pilot
Rock; Ethel Dixon, Iris Lindbergh,
and Ronald E. Whitlach of Klam
ath Falls; Florence Winifred
Grubb of Halfway; William Hucka
of Fall Creek; Keith Jandrall of!
Seaside; Joyce Jensen of Tuala
tin; Wayne W. Kelty of Clatskan
ie; Doris King of Holley; Dorothe
Larson of Canby; Lois Irene Lee,
George Rieck and Randolph Eaton
Soranson of Eugene; Vesta Low
man of Ranier; Claire Elaine Lyon
of Marshfield; Margaret Mocaud
of Pine Ridge; Vera Olson of As
toria; Ellwynne E. Peck of Lexing
ton; Erros Penland, Albany; Zoe
Welcome
►
to
Three Tree Inn
E. L. ROSE, Prop.
DANCE
WINE
BEER
LUNCHES
On the
Mill Race
Phone 127 W
Anne Shook of Prineville; Caroline
Elizabeth Steed of Salem; Winston
H. Taylor and Edwin O. Wyatt of
Roseburg'f La Verne Van Marter
of Heppner; Stuart Bradley Webb
of Oak Grove; Jessie Marie Man
ning of Oakland; Charles Lund
quist of Richmond, Va.; and Chris
Rosenberg, Jr. of North Platte,
Neb.
Eugene
Hotel
o B 0
DINNER—DANCING
6:30-8:30
COFFEE SHOP
'DINING ROOM
MR. R. KRUSE, MGR.
MEL KOONTZ—FAMOUS HOLLYWOOD ANIMAL TAMER—WRESTLES A FULL-GROWN LION!
HERE’S I^EL KOQNTZ alone in the cage with four hundred and fifty
pounds of lion. The huge lion crouches —then springs straight at
Koontz. Nerves cool as ice, Mel meets the charge head on. Man and
lion clinch while onlookers feel their nerves grow tense. But Mel
shows himself complete master of the savage beast. No doubt
about bis nerves being healthy! And, as Mel points out, one big
difference in Camels has to do with having healthy nerves. Mel says:
"No matter how many I smoke, Camels don’t frazzle my nerves.”
says MEL KOONTZ
TO PENN PHILLIPS
iHiilli:
WM
COS^UtR
cAnA«*^
-*Ey jut ?** fcJ(t
CicAReTtE
On the air Mondays: E-D-D-i-E C-A-N-T-O-R
America’s great fun-maker and personality, brought
to you Monday evenings by Camel cigarettes. Over
Columbia Network. See your local newspaper for time.
On the air Tuesdays: BENNY GOODMAN
Hear the Goodman Swing Band "go to town.” Every
Tuesday evening at 8:30 pm E.S.T. (9:30 pm E.D.S.T.),
7:30 pm C. S.T., 6:30 pm M.S.T., 5:30 pm P.S.T.,
over Columbia Network.
"I guess you have
to be particular
about your cig*
arette, Mel. I’ve
often wondered
if Camels are
different from
other kinds?”
"Take it from me, Penn, any one-cigarette’s
as-good-as-another talk is the bunk. There
are a lot of angles to consider in smoking.
Camel is the cigarette I know really agrees ivith
me on all counts. My hat’s off to ’em for real,
natural mildness — the kind that doesn’t get
my nerves ragged—or make my throat raspy.’’
Camels are a
matchless blend
of finer, MORE
EXPENSIVE
TOBACCOS
—Turkish and
Domestic
MEL KOONTZ and Penn Phillips got to talking on the subject of
cigarettes. Like Mel Koontz, millions of people find what they
want in Camels. One smoker tells another: "Camels agree with
me!” Yes, those costlier tobaccos in Camels do make a difference!
“WE CHOOSE
CAMELS
FOR 00R OWN
SMOKING. WE
KNOW TOBACCO”
-SAY THESE
TOBACCO PLANTERS
“I know the kind
of tobacco used
for making vari
ous cigarettes,”
says Mr. Beckham
Wright, who has
spent 19 years
growing tobacco,
Knows ii irom tne ground up.
“Camel got my choice grades last
year — and many years back,” he
adds. “I’m talking facts when I
say Camels are made from MORE
EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS”
Mr. George Crum
baugh, another
well-known plant
er, had a fine to
bacco crop last
year. “My best yet,”
he says. “And the
Camel people bought all the choice
lots—paid me more than I ever got
before, too. Naturally, Camel’s the
cigarette I smoke myself. Fact is,
most planters favor Camels. So I
know that Camels use finer tobaccos.”
Mr. Cecil White,
successful plant
er of Danville, Ky.
“Like most plant
ers around here, I
sold the best of
4
my last crop to
the Camel people. And at the best
prices. I stick to Camels and I know
I’m smoking choice tobaccos.”
Copyright, 1938, R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Company,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina