Co-op to Trade Cash Dividends For Reciepts Deadline, May 20, Set for Students To Make Exchange A survey of the books show that the student cooperative store has enough profit on the black side of the ledger to declare a dividend of five per cent to its patrons, Chuck Skinner, presi dent, declared after the last busi ness meeting of the board. The board also declared legal all cash receipts issued since the beginning of fall term but those given out before September would not be honored. May 20 was the deadline set for students to redeem their receipts for this year, Skinner stated. Pur chases made at the Co-op after this date will be honored next year, it was decided. -"Springtime in Vienna” Maritime Group Will Hear Morse The committee on maritime legislation of the City club of Portland will hear a speech giv en by Dean Wayne L. Morse, University law school head, at the Portland hotel there today. Dean Morse spoke yesterday at the Eugene hotel meeting of the local Active club. •-"Springtime in Vienna” Junior Fete to Draw Board Officials Here With the prospect of junior weekend and Mother’s day com bined into one three-day period of spring festivities on the Ore gon campus, many prominent Oregonians are to be in Eugene this weekend. Among the visitors will be Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Sammons of Portland. Mr. Sammons, a mem ber of the Oregon state board of higher education, will speak at the Mother’s “flay banquet to be held Saturday, offering greetings to Oregon mothers from the board. Vice - President Burt Brown Barker of the University of Ore gon will be here from Portland. He will award the Vice-Presiden tial cups at the Junior Prom, one cup to the women’s living or ganization and one cup to the men’s living organization making the highest scholastic standing for the year. Mr. Willard Marks, president of the Oregon state board of higher education, will be here from Albany for the Canoe Fete. Also to see the Saturday evening millrace exhibition will be anoth er member of the state board, Mr. Charles D. Byrne.. Mrs. C. C. Wintermute, presi dent of the University of Ore gon Mothers’ club, and Mr. Joseph F. Riesch, president of the Ore gon Dads, will both be on the campus from Portland. Chancellor Frederick M. Hun ter will not be able to be here, but Mrs. Hunter* is expected. Also expected is Rev. George Swift, pastor of St. Paul’s Epis copal church of Salem. -“Springtime in Vienna” RQTC Rifle Team Gets New Troplig A new plaque has recently been added to the already large col ^ lection in the ROTC shack. It is the William Randolph Hearst trophy won by the University of Oregon men’s rifle team this year. The Hearst rifle shoot is the only intercollegiate event in the world embracing so many insti tutions of all kinds. Last year, the University had the cup, first award, in their possession, but this year they took only second place. The plaque is 26 by 18 inches on a wooden base. A spread eagle on the top and a rifle on each side are in bronze, and the silver center has University of Oregon inscribed with the names of the members of the team. Jack Casey, Tom Taylor, Clif ford Collins, Steven Rice, and Dean Forbes were members of the team. Tom Taylor won the coast in dividual championship. -“Springtime in Vienna" A Catholic Labor College has been established in Buffalo, N. Y., to teach the “rightful position” of the working man. Mother Remembers ...Don’t you forget! Sunday, May 12th, is Mother’s Day . . . Remem ber her with a delicious box of fresh VAN DIJYN candies. We’ve special packages to de light on this day of days. Mail candy early for prompt delivery. Bring Mother down to Seymour’s for lunch or dinner or a refreshing foun tain drink. We’re giving e.xtra special service to students with their mothers. "Speed wins in motor-cycle racing! Slow burning wins in the cigarette field!” way M A MOTOR-C FOR SPEED II r I KEEP My SMOKING ON THE SLOW-BURNING SIDE WITH CAMELS. THAT WAY I GET A LOT OF 'EXTRAS'— IN MILDNESS, COOLNESS, < FLAVOR—AND CAMELS SLOW WAY OF BURNING MEANS EXTRA SMOKING PER PACK m J' says Jimmie Kelly, Champion Motor-cycle Racer and Enthusiastic Camel Smoker ON THE FAST SIDE—A 50-mile-an-hour skid, and Jimmie Kelly (No. 43) whips into the lead on the ocean beach at Daytona. On a racing motor-cycle Jimmie Kelly is a riding champion, but "when it comes to cigarettes, this record-breaking driver is ... "ON THE SLOW SIDE”-That’s Jimmie Kelly’s way-and the way of millions of other smokers —of saying that he prefers the slower-burning cigarette... Camel. "That’s where the 'extras’ are in cigarette pleasure and value,” explains Jimmie {above), ___/VA_ HAMPION Jimmie Kelly (right, above) is just one of thousands of experienced smokers who have discovered that Camel’s slower way of burning means several definite advantages. Being slower-burning, Camels are free from the drying, uncomfortable qualities of excess heat.Theygive you extra mildness and extra coolness... always so welcome. Slower burning makes the most of the full, rich flavor of Camel’s costlier tobaccos. Camels give you extra flavor... don’t tire your taste. The extra smoking in Camels is a matter of the smokers’ experience as well as of impartial laboratory record. So get more pleasure per puff and more puffs per pack. Get Camels. Penny for penny, Camels are your best cigarette buy! ' • In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25% slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest-selling brands tested—slower than any of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plus equal to EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS Copyright. 1940. R. J. ReynoldsTobacco Company Winston-Salem. North Carolina BtSSfo.*? ' ' _ ’ ' extra FLAVOR ®§||P