Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, December 06, 1939, Page Six, Image 6

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

    »■music
LOVERS
Banjoes — $18.00,
$25.00, $40.00
$00.00 and $90.00
Violins —
$5.00, 7.50
$10.00, 25.00
$50.00, 75.00
and $100.00
I
Saxophones
$25.00, 35.00,
and $45.00
Accordions—
$7.50, 12.50,
$19.50, 35.00,
$50,00, 70.00,
$125.00 and
$145.00
BARKER
MUSIC STORE
7<i0 Willamctlc
Publisher Accepts
Willcox Manuscript
A political study by W. It. B.
Willcox of Eugene, has been ac
cepted for publication by For
tuny's, 07 West 44th street, New
York, it was announced in New
York last week.
The book, entitled “Taxation
Turmoil," is a study of govern
ment income and expenditure un
der the present economic system,
and the influence of this transfer
of wealth on the man in the street.
Publication date is as yet indef
inite, but work on the book is go
ing rapidly forward.
...
THE Qift THAT
KEEPS ON GIVING
0
UNDERWOOD
UNIVERSAL PORTABLE
This Christmas
give an Under- $44.50
wood Portable
Typewriter .. . with case
a model lor
every purpose BUDGET
at a price for TERMS
every purse.
STEVENS
TYPEWRITER CO.
1.12 East, fidwy. Pli. 34H
llllllllllllililllllltlillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllltlllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllll
Competition Is |
Keen in Riflery
* __
Bullseye Popular
As Winning Team
Overcomes Foes
With (he finals of thoir two-man
team competition yesterday, the
women's PE rifle class completed
its firing for the term. Top team
was that of Alice Guistina and Su
sanne Cunningham who shot a
score of 193 hullseyes out of a pos
sible 200.
Second place went to Marion
Barrett and Barbara Todd who al
most tied the winning team with
a score of 192 points. Monday the
two teams did tie, and were forced
to shoot the match over.
The team of Darline Warren and
Barbara Miller was third with 188
points.
First place in the individual com
petition went to Barbara Todd with
an almost perfect score of 99 bulls
eyes out of a possible 100, second
place to Alice Guistina with 98,
XMAS
CARDS
Made •
to
• Order
wfitihiteb
935 Oak St
I’lione 2!)7
Stray Articles
To Be on Block
To add to their scholarship fund
the Associated Women Students
will sponsor an auction of "lost
and found" articles on the steps of*
the Commerce building tomorrow
between 11 and 12 o’clock.
Raincoats, slickers, umbrellas,
pencils, pens, notebooks, jewelry,
and a small library of stray books
will be put on the block by Auc
tioneers Phil Barrett and Woody
Slater.
These articles are just a few of
the things which were turned into
the "lost and found” University
depot and which after due adver
tisement have been turned over to
the AWS for sale.
Jeanne Haehlen was appointed
by Prexy Anne Frederiksen as
chairman of the auction.
and third place to Eleanor Seely
with 97 points.
Sergeant Harvey Blythe, instruc
tor in marksmanship, was highly
enthusiastic over the girls' scores.
"It looks like Oregon will have
another championship rifle team,"
he said. Sergeant Blythe is well
known for his top rifle teams, with
national as well as local champion
ship records to his credits.
The top 24 girls of the fall term
class will go into the winter term
rifle course and will be trained for
the girls’ rifle team. They will be
joined by eight girls from last
year’s much-publicized team.
Honorary to Initiate
Beta Alpha Psi, accounting fra
ternity, will initiate William Es
sary this afternoon at 4 o'clock in
room 2 of the school of .business
administration.
After the initiation a banquet
will be held at McCrady’s cafe at
G o’clock. Spencer Collins, a prac
ticing certified accountant in Eu
gene, will be the guest speaker.
Rayon satin luxury
slips! Deep lace or
embroidery. Bias
four gore cut! 32-44.
Rich Rayon satin! Di
agonal woven stripes,
or lace trimming in
bias cut gowns! 34-40.
GIVE HER THE SIFT
SHE REALLY WANTS
but doesn’t dream she’ll get!
Play Santa Claus as generously as you would like
to—Surprise your family and friends with gifts
that make their eyes sparkle! You CAN do it at
Wards. Just write out your list and then come and
tee how little you have to pay for everything
yr nicked! Wards shelves are bulging with
lovely Christmas lingerie that is LOW PRICED!
1059 Willamette
Rayon satin pajama with
a shiny stripe! High V
cut and full trouser legs!
Sizes 34-38.
$1.98
A favorite gift robe! Soft
all wool flannel, in wine
or navy. Small, Medium,
Large $3.98
50c value! Lovely styles
in lace trimmed rayon
panties! Cut for perfect
fit! 36-44.
Burkitt Named
Prexy at NYU j
!
Second Straight
Time for UO Grad
To Be Selected
Ed Burkitt, an Oregon graduate
on a scholarship at New York:
university, has been elected presi
dent of the graduate class there, ;
according to word received from !
Larry Crane and Willis Watson, 1
Oregon graduates, by Dr. N. H. |
Cornish, professor of business ad
ministration.
T O Grads Twice in Row
This is the second consecutive
year that a student of the Univer- j
sity of Oregon has held the office
of president of the graduate class
at New York university. Last year
Jack Enders, class of '38, was
president.
“This is a distinct honor for the
University of Oregon, as there are '
at least ICO other graduate stu
dents on scholarships from the
universities and colleges through
out the United States attending
New York university," Dr. Corn
ish declared.
Six University of Oregon grad
uates are attending New York uni
versity on retail scholarships this
year. They include: Ed Burkitt,
Larry Crane, Willis Watson, Lor
mine Hunt, George S. Humphrey,
and Jack Lindner. Ruth Ketchum
is on a retail scholarship at North
western university.
Kertes Gets CPA Title
Alvin Kories, graduate assistant
in the school of busines administra
tion, received word Tuesday after
noon that he had passed the ex
amination in the state of Washing
ton for his certified public account
ant certificate.
Warren Numerates
Library's Magazines
Willis C. Warren, periodical li
tr.itlan, is compiling’ a list, of all
volumes of magazines in the li
brary. The data will be sent, to the
Union List, of Serials to be added
to similar information from al
most every college in the United
States. The volume which will
come out early in 19-tl is the sec
ond edition of this work.
the latest . . .
|> our new
Plum Pudding
i' Ice Cream
Tl's delirious, and only 2d
rents a quart. Served by
our Dutch ”jrls, you will
enjoy the tasty snacks.
“The neat white shop with
the Dutch blue shutters.”
Curb Service
“EUGENE'S FINEST”
Dutch Girl
On Willamette between
12th and 12th
A TIMELY TIP FOR YOUR
COLLEGE
roip
YT v
I Send your baggage direct to your
campus address by nation-wide
Railway Express —the con- i
venient college route. When I
everything's packed and ready
just phone. We ll call tor trunks, Dags or coxes ngm at wu. •
charge in all cities and principal towns. (The low express rates also include re
ceipts and $50 insurance per 100 lbs.) Then board your train with peace of mind.
Now's the time to solve your college laundry problem —easily and economically.
Arrange to express vour laundry “home-and-back” regularly by our swift, dependable
service— collect or prepaid! For complete details and courteous service merely phone
East of S. P. Pass. Station
’Phone 20 Eugene, Ore.
RAILWA
AGENCY
XPRESS
INC.
NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE
Special
Ski Edition
T omorrow
Watch for it.
WRITE A NOVEL ABOUT FLYING ?
\iyi,onejiist did!
Tiio Storys Take away today’s lighted airways;
take away radio beams and you’re back in the ’20’s
.. .with the hard-shelled pilots who flew the mail “by
the seat of their pants.” Here’s a novel of one reck
less flyer who inherited a bankrupt airline, a handful
of insubordinate pilots, and a girl manager who pre
dicted he’d have to grow up—or crack up.
The Audios*: When an expert flyer is also an ex
pert writer—that’s Leland Jamieson! Millions of Post
readers know his short stories. His first full-length
novel is part autobiography, part fiction—all superb
entertainment. Right now, as High Frontier hops off,
Capt. Jamieson is at the w'heel of a DC-3 somewhere
between Miami and New York, where he regularly
flies day and night runs. •
HIGH FRONTIER
by LELAND JAMIESON
3^**/ tveedd 'Txrf
ihi4 M**1*!
“TOO YELLOW TO PLAY FOOTBALL?” He was on the
sidelines now. lie was the guy who had broken Billy Cooper’s leg. The
guy 85,000 people were waiting to boo. And today was Game Day.
A short story by Paul O'Neil on page 22 of this week’s Post.
THE PLASN PEOPLE FACE'THE WAR. The writer, John
W. Yandercook, recently talked with French shopkeepers, peasants,
heard their stories; then motored into Germany and spent hours with
Nazi small-town leaders. New insight on how the common people of
two countries are taking it.
HOLLYWOOD HUSBANDS HAVE SO-O-O MANY
PROBLEMS! Reuben Rosen, Hollywood’s Boy Wonder, was a
wow at changing scripts into happy endings. But could he kill his
wife's infatuation for her new leading man ? (Quick, get the script-girl!)
A short story, Suggestion for a Happy Ending, by Edith Fitzgerald.
WILD COYOTES BREAKFASTED WITH US! Snowed in
eight months of the year, seven thousand feet up in the High Sierras,
the author of this unusual nature article and her husband actually
taught wild coyotes “table manners”! Read The Coyotes Come.
MARRY FOR LOVE-REPENT AT LEISURE. A boy of
nineteen marrying a woman of thirty-one? It won’t last, people were
saying. But the wife, desperately in love, had the courage to find out.
Read Please Let Me Come Home, by Helen Deutsch.
IT WAS SMART TO BE RED. Eugene Lyons gives you a
IF/io’s Who of Communism’s elite ... how they line up unsuspecting
professors, naive clergymen, writers, and “society” folk as a front
for their propaganda.
AND .. .Short stories by Maurice Walsh and David Lamson; articles,
poems, editorials, Post Scripts and cartoons. All in this week’s issue
of The Saturday' Evening Post.