4'H'H’4'ri‘4++"4 for every occasion— Esproiallv for Hint nll-impoHnnl fall formal lids weekend your lii" event of Hie lerni! For n eorsnpo Hull *s different, drop in 1o Chase's. • Chase Gardens f)S East Broadway Phone 1950 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 t-jiilliiHiiiiiiiiHiiMiimiiiimiiiii'iinii i in iiiiin Mil 11 ii i ini uni. iimimiiiMi miiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiii.iiimiiiiiiiMiiiiiiMii.ini ii in'||||!i|j||l|| | :i|!yTTnTi!min!!!!lllllll!l!III|||||l|||||||||||||^ “No One, Will Duplicate My Christmas Card— [ii!!!!iiiini!!ninuiiiiii!i::imii!!im!ii!ii;nmui:iiuiu:iiu!munin:ui:ui!uiui; For Mine Will Be the Snapshot Kind” They’re personal and dislinotive, yet inexpensive In send. Choose your best snapshots today . . . eolleel one of our many greetings . . . xve’11 do the rest. *##>*# We have installed a new printer wliieli enaldes you to have miniature strip prints in one continuous roll. Carl R. BakerFilm Shop Phone 535 7th and Willamette liililillilliil We Give Thanks 1 His Is the Land of Plenty Throe hundred years ago our forbears nnvr thanks for a new land. Once again wo prepare for a thanks giving ... in a land oven move fruitful than then, a land whore industry has sprung up. Gas Is Ready to Serve You Today gas offers you modern eonvenienees never dreamed of by those early settlers. Itefrigeration, cooking, water heating, and heating . . . gas gives you these. We Give Thanks M e are thankful that we can provide dependable, economical service, dome in and learn of our special lid-day offer on Majestic Chef ranges. Northwest Cities Gas Co. 931 Oak Phone 28 I' I Flyers Ready For Navigation P. P. Adams Leads Class; Caswell to Teach Meteorology Flying- school students tool their final exam in civil air reg illations last night, ending om phase of ground training, Carltoi F. Spencer, head of the flyinj course, reported. With the government’s laws ant statutes concerning air traffii safely put away, the class wil swing into 15 hours of navigation under the instruction of Assistan Dean P. P. Adams of the ar school. It will have to read Unit ed States official topographic con tour maps, learn to fly blind by use of a “radio beam,’’ and try their hand at dead reckoning. Thursday evening’s class is th< scheduled start of navigatioi work, with meteorology next or the list. A. E. Caswell, head o: the physics department, will taki up added duties as meteorology instructor, when the young bird men receive practical training tc determine when it is safe to cruisr along the airlanes and when it i; best to stay on the ground. Thi.< will also be a 15-hour course witl air instruction practically assurer Date Arranged For Y Retreat With less than a month remain j ing before the YMCA-YWCA cab inet retreat December 8 and 9 j Co-Chairmen Betty Lou Kurtz and Henry Carr yesterday announced six committees that will handle plans for this year’s ‘'meet.” Committees include: food, Wayne Kelty and Mary Wright; discussions, Henry Carr and Bet ty Lou Kurtz; recreation, Larry Hopkins and Elizabeth Steed; transportation, Milton Small and Marjorie Montgomery; resources, Jean Crites and Frank McKinney; and location, Betty Lou Kurtz and Henry Carr. Carr stated that the retreat will probably be either near McKen j zie bridge or at the beach. Ap ; proximately 30 students and fac j ulty members are expected to be present. Chop Sticks to Flash At YWCA Dinner Chop sticks will be in order next Tuesday when the foreign foods group of the YWCA give their Chinese dinner in the bunga low at 5:30 on Tuesday, Novem ber 21. Mary Wright, chairman of the affair, promises food for all plus a very interesting program. All per sons who wish to attend should call her at 784 as soon as possi ble. LOST: Thursday morning some where on campus, Beta pin, name J. S. MacGowan on back. Call 1024. Reward. FINE FURNISHINGS for XMAS ✓a ^lako their homo a finer. more enjoyable plaee in whieh to live with a gift of fine furniture. It' it comes from here — it "s quality. JOHNSON FURNITURE STORE 8 BALL___ (Continued From Page Two) Edith Heath, Nanry Allen, and Jacqueline Eccles. . . . Ted Proudfoot, enterprising BA senior, faithfully reported to every social dancing class this term before homecoming so that he could take a friend to the homecoming dance ... it was a special occasion and Ted was prepared . . . but he didn’t go to the dance. . . . Vic Sears, OSC star tackle played his heart out Saturday for Mary Gro shcng from the U . . . MARY JANE NORCROSS, prominent 1 Alpha Chi, is reported to be planning happily her Thanks 1 giving vacation at Bandon with Bill Moore . , . SUSIES: Norma Smith and Virginia Bubb. THETA: Eadith Heath, from Marshfield, a prize gem , . . Framed! ALPHA PHI’S ARE SWEET . . . when they want to be . . . THEY ARE FUN . . .. most of ■ the time . . . THEY ARE POPU LAR . . . but they also play pranks . . . this story has to do with a frame-up they pulled . . . The time: 10:45. Enters the Siberrian delivery boy (me), “Come in and wait, I’ll go up and get some change,” says she. Then guess what ... the noise parade had nothing on these kids . . . The words “Oh, did you get a pin" started it all and within 30 seconds the Tri Delts began shutting their windows to keep out the noise . . . So, “with a wad of paper in one hand” and a pencil in the other the note taking session began . . . Patty Carson evidently got Don Gilbert’s pin . . . Roma Theobald got a Kappa Sig pin, “Dream girl” Roberta Beck got an ATO pin—and talk about Betapins! They were on a par with three cent stamps,. . . and Lillian Scott—say that girl had four pins! And we hear that Nancy Hay gave Norm Foster, Delt, the well known goodbye . . . A printer’s mistake cut the last line on a poem appearing in this column Tuesday. A postlude appeared cn Angell’s desk yes terday. Without her permission we publish it. We got her goat With a poem we wrote And she still doesn’t Know her would-be beau! The blame fell wrong On a reporter so young Who is doing his best To give Angell no rest! Frosh Riflemen | Start Practice Silence never sets on the ROTC rifle range these days. Six hun dred-odd freshmen have begun practice firing, and lines are wait ing for every gun. In addition a maximum enrollment class of feminine markswomen are always on hand to try their skill. Sergeant Harvey Blythe, in structor in the rifle is the busiest man up at the ROTC headquar ters. He personally instructs ev ery person on the range in the “Relax, Hold and Squeeze” of good riflemanship. Freshman competition will be unusually keen this year, accord ing to Sergeant Blythe. In addi tion to the top shots of the class being picked for the rifle team, a new award for the outstanding freshman rifleman of the year has been announced. To the best freshman shot of the year will go a $10 merchan dise order and a medal. The award is being offered for the first time this year by Byrom and Kneeland of The Man’s Shop. Top freshman rifle shots at present in the different companies are: Earl Homer and Lewis Brain erd of Company A, Dan Biggs, Clifford Anet, and Jim Schiller of Company B, Edward Berg and Bill Udick of Company C, Spen cer Weills of Company D, and Robert Britt and Reid Ferrall of Everything Good to Eat! MILLS IGA STORE Three features make it a pleasure to trade at this store: High Quality Reasonable Prices Free Delivery Phone 1488 East 13th at Hilyard t . r rv-»——~t -w v-v'v > * > . * v . . Sweethearts Face Newsreels; Machine Stars The supposed dream of all girls came true Saturday morn ing to the five contestants for the title “Sweetheart of Sigma Chi” when they fouryi them selves facing a movie camera. It wasn’t a romantic role op posite Tyrone Power or a "grip ping” scene with Robert Taylor, but they were in the movies no less. It was a newsreel camera man who did the shooting. He came to take pictures of Ore gon’s new lawn chair-mower for Universal newsreels and the Sigma Chi candidates were used for human interest. The favored few were: Pat Nel son, Evelyn Nelson, Lorabelle Wraith, Ellen Ann Evans, and Jean Morrison, FREE! FREE! This coupon good for 5e on any sandwich or good for 10c on any short order. BEV’S BAR-B-Q Located on Highway 99 West of city limits Good things to eat served in your ear. We have 100 ear parking space. Barbecued Sandwiches A Specialty Open ’til 2 a.m. ——— WESTERN THRIFT STORES COSMETICS — DRUGS — TOBACCOS Powder Puff Valour 2c Hair Oil 4 °z bottie 9c Light Globes 1000 hour guarantee 19c 804 Willamette — TWO STORES — 917 Willamette Hargis to Lead Donald F. Hargis, instructor in speech, will be first leader for the ail-campus vesper hour after the Thanksgiving holidays, Dr. .Tames R. Branton, head of the de partment of religion, announced yesterday. The vespers will be held in the AWS rooms instead of Alumni hall, Dr. Branton said. 2 FINE PRINTS from each of your good negatives on every 8 exposure roll you send Only f** Q Get quality 25 pic t ures and _ prompt service. Satisfaction guaranteed. Send coin. Reprints 2c each minimum order 25c. WESTERN PICTURE CO. ,jiJ3J513I5fD!JSJ5iSJ3JEM5MSi5)SI3JSJ3JSJD rib 8 You'll be way out in front Ilf you take her to | Paramount 1 Skating I Rink I West 7th jd lomeroy’sl P { ASSOCIATED Building Eugene’s Finest Service Station PROMPTNESS and SERVICE ... __-■*=?■' . . . Hint's what our satis fied customers say about, our call for and delivery service. Make a note of our number, 825, and keep better dressed. New Service Laundry Merchandise Nationally advertised merchandise is tested in the world's greatest testing laboratory— tested by the actual use and approval of millions of Americans from Maine to Oregon. WATCH THE EMERALD for NATIONALLY ADVERTISED VALUES! ^®Is®®s®EEiaMa®arai3J3jaiBMaaia!GMajaaM5iaa®aaiaMaiaaja/aMaiE.vjari More puffs per pack...and T FAST BURNING — creates hot flat taste in smoke... ruins delicate fla vor, aroma... SLOW BURNING —protects natural qualities that pro duce mildness, thrilling taste, fra grance. .. a cooler smoke ... The costlier tobaccos are slower-burning ..milder... cooler ...mellower By burning 25% slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest selling brands tested — slower than any of them — CAMELS give a smoking plus equal to 5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! TVKiOSli mmaSm. Copyright. 1939. R. J Reynold* Tobacco Company, Wicstoe-Saiam. N. C. J Man\ a smoker has switched to Camels because his value-sense applauded the thrift of getting more puff's per pack. But ... that’s only one small part of the story of slow burning. You get a lot more than savings! You get extra mildness! Common sense tells you that a fast, fiery, hot-burning cigarette will not smoke comfort ably or yield a delicate taste and fragrance. And that slow-burning tobaccos naturally would be mild and mellow. You get extra cool ness. You needn't be a scientist to know that the slower tobacco burns, the cooler the smoking. Yau get extra-fine flavor. Excess heat ruthlessly destroys the subtle elements of flavor and aroma. 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