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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1933)
mum University of Oregon, Eugene Sterling Green, Editor Grant Thuemmel, Manager Joseph Saslavsky, Managing Editor EDITORIAL BOARD Doug Polivka. Associate Editor; Julian Prescott. Guy Shadduck, Park* Hitchcock, Francir. Pallistcr, Stanley Rohe. UPPER NEWS STAFF non lasweu, i\ews Malcolm Hauer. Sports Ed. Elinor Henry. Features Ed. Hob Moore, Makeup Ed. Cynthia Liljeqvist, Women's Ed. A1 Newton. Dramatic Ed. Marv i-*>uiee r.umgcr, .society Ed. Barney Clark, Humor Ed. Peggy Chessman. Literary Ed. Patsy Lee, Fashions Ed. George Callas, Radio Ed, DAY EDITORS: Rill Phipps, Paul Ewing, Mary Jane Jenkins, Hazle Corrigan. Byron Brinton. EXECUTIVE REPORTERS: Betty Ohlemillcr, Ann-Reed Burns, Roberta Moody. FEATURE WRITERS: Ruth McClain, Henriette Horak. REPORTERS: Frances. Hardy, Rose Himelstein, Margaret Mr own, Winston Allard, Stanley Bromberg, Clifford Thomas Newton Stearns. Carl Jones. Helen Dodds. Hilda Gillam Thomas Ward. Miriam Eichner. David Lowry, Marian John son, Eleanor Aldrich, Howard Kessler. SPORTS’ STAFF: Boh Avison, Assistant Sports Ed.; Jack Mil ler, Ciair Johnson, George Jones, Julius Scruggs. Edwin Poolcy. Bob Avison. Dan Clark. Ted Blank. Art Derbyshire Emerson Stickles. Jim Quinn, Doji Olds, Betty Shoemaker Tom Dimmick. Don Brooke. • COPYREADKRS: Ejaine Cornish. Ruth Weber, Dorothy Dill Pearl Johansen. Marie PeW. Corinnc Lg'Barre. Phyllis Allams Margery Kissling, Maluta® Read. Mildred Blackburne. George Bikman, Milton Pillette." Helen Green,® .Virginia Kndicott Adelaide Hughes, Mabel* Finchum, Marge Leonard, Barbara Smith. WOMEN’S.PACE, ASSISTANTS : Jnni* Worley, Betty I,abbe Alary Graham, Joan Stadelman, Bette Church, Marge Leon a I'd, ,C;?t her in e E ism a n. o NIGHT EDITORS: Fred Bronn. Ruth Vannicc, Alfredo Fajar • do, David Kiehle. (Jeorge Jones, Abe Merritt. Bob Parker ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Eleanor Aldrich. Henryetta ° Mummey. Virginia Gather wood, Margilie Morse, Jane Bishop Doris Bailey, Marjorie Scobert, Irma Egbert, Nan Smith Gertrude von Berthelsdorf. Jean Mahoney, Virginia Scoville RADIO STAFF: Barney Clark, Howard Kessler, Cynthia Cor © nell. SECRETARY: Mary Graham. BUSINESS STAFF 1VIC18MICI. nuv. .vigi. Fred Fisher, Asst. Adv. Mgr. Ed Labbe, Asst. Adv. Mgr. William Temple, Asst. Adv. Mgr. Eldon Iiaberraan, Nat. Adv. Mgr. Ron Rew. Promotional Mgr. Tont Holman, Circ. Mgr. jjiii rcrry, asst. Lure. ivigr. Betty IJentley, Office Mgr. Pearl Murphy, Class. Aclv. Mgr. Willa Ititz, Checking Mgr. Ruth Rippey, Checking Mgr. Jeanette Thompson, Exec. Sec. Phyllis Cousins, Exec. Sec. Dorothy Anne Clark, Exec. Sec. The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the University of Oregon, Kugene, puhlisherl daily during the college year, except Sundays. Mondays, holidays, examination periods, all of December and all of March except the first three days. Entered in the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon, as second-class matter. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year. A member of the Major College Publications, represented by A. T. Norris Hill Co., 155 E. 42nd Si., New York City; 12.1 W. Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Avc., Seattle; 1206 Maple Avc., Los Angeles; Call Pudding, San Krancisco. LET’S CLEAR THE ATMOSPHERE—II 'T'UESDAY the press carried the information that •*' the University of Idaho shows a substantial in crease in enrollment over last year. The University of Washington reports a student body 17 per cent greater than in 1932-33. Linfield, Willamette and other small colleges of the state report increased enrollments. But the University of Oregon shows a five per cent drop and the Oregon State college has ap proximately a 14 per cent drop from the registra tion last year, when enrollment was supposed to have reached its lowest ebb. The reason is that high school graduates are not attending Oregon’s state institutions of higher learning if they can go somewhere else. They are shunning Oregon’s schools because higher education here is under a clouct,. and has been under a cloud ever since the nefarious Zorn Macpherson bill was foisted upon the voting public. That measure for school-juggling was submerged in the greatest tide of negative votes ever aimed at an initiative measure in the history of the state. But selfish interests and tinkering politicians were not content to let Oregon's educational struggle subside. It was periodically stirred up and the old battles were refought until it was necessary for the governor to take a hand. He restored a make shift peace by asking the resignation of a board member. Constantly these feuds were kept before the public in headlines and editorials, until many citizens were convinced that Oregon’s system of higher education was rotten at the core. Now they are sending their children to schools outside the state, and the University and the college suffer, though they are innocent of blame and still retain their splendid physical equipment and their able • faculties. It would be unreasonable to suppose that per sons'interested in the welfare of the University and the college would stand by and see the institutions sink ir. prestige and enrollment without lifting a helping hand. Ift Eugene interested citizens, with the assistance of Greek letter organizations which have large investments to protect, organized a re cruiting campaign under the name of the Associ ated Friends of the University. It is a mistake for the Morning Oregonian to assume, as it apparently has done, that this cam paign was organized for the purpose of undermin ing Oregon State college. Letters are on file with officers of the Associated Friends of the University showing that prospective students were actually referred to the state college when their interests lay in the technical fields represented on the Cor vallis campus. ii Oregon scuuenis were aueimmg oieguu schools, there would be plenty of students for both the University and the college. The campaign wa= intended to bring to Eugene students who would otherwise go to the University of Washington, the University of California, Stanford, or elsewhere, and to make it possible for financially restricted stu dents to obtain a University education at Eugene. The Bell-Schulmerich bill which unified the state institutions of higher learning has proved that it contains a fatal weakness. It has failed mis erably to provide a publicity program that will bring students to Oregon's colleges. Empty dormi tories are their own silent testimony. With stu dent fees aggregating about one-third below normal, the institutions can not long operate at full effi ciency. It was time for action, and the Associated Friends of the University, with the support of the chancellor, took over tlie direction of a recruiting campaign and filled the need that the publicity de partment of the state system of higher education had faded to fill. Until a better scheme is devised, the work of the Associated Friends should be car ried on and enlarged. ALL Ql lET AT THE 1*1 M.ALOW \ PPARENTLY the Y. W. C. A.'s private tempo*: ■f a in h teapot has subsided, leaving the dissenters still dissenting and lire Yr officials still aggrieved. Nothing much has been accomplished save a slight paring of the Y. W. C. A. budget and an injury to Yr. W\ C. A. prestige that will seriously hamper its program for at least a year to come At our distance from the scene of carnage the whole affair seems very trivial and unnecessary. If the budget needed trimming, as the Emerald is convinced it did, it could have been accomplished without all the noise and shooting. And if the Y. W. C. A. stressed politics at the expense of religion, as the Emerald is convinced it has in the past, then that was a matter for Y. W. C. A. officials to settle. Unless we are mistaken, that matter was already being brought under control by Helen Bin I ford, president of the organization. The whole affair seems to have resolved itself into a very unseemly and undignified cat-and-dog fight between the president of the A. W. S. and 1 the president of the Y. W. C. A., with honors about even. The course of action that recommends itself ; at present is for both parties to retire from the I fray with all the dignity available, and devote themselves henceforth to the serious business of conducting the affairs of the A. W. S. anu the Y. W. C. A. BIFF NILSSON ; SOMETIMES a fellow can be so good that his j ^ value is overlooked. Sometimes a man can do | his job day after day, year in and year out, and i do' it so well and so efficiently that he never get3 Ja tumble from the grandstand. That's the way.it has been with Biff Nilsson, veteran Webfoot tackle. Biff is now out of at least two important games with a serious knee injury. It’s the first time Biff has cracked up, in three years of freshman and varsity competition. Biff’s record is something for the wise ones in the stands to know about. He played 516 minutes in his sophomore year and 595 minutes last year, which is something to shout about, because an aver age conference season comprises only about 600 minutes. He was in every game, playing smart, clean, hard-hitting football, opening the holes for the ball carriers, and doing his job so smoothly that the grandstands pretty much passed him up, and so did most of the sports writers. Now Biff is lost to Oregon for a time, and the coaches are wondering how they’re going to find a pair of shoulders and a couple of driving legs to fill that hole at tackle. For two years Biff's tower ing strength has been taken as a matter of course; he was indispensable—a man who played cracking good football when the team was going strong and equally good football when the rest of the team was weak. There never was a worry about scho lastic eligibility. Biff is the best student on the team. All of a sudden the coaching staff and the var sity men have realized that they have lost probably their most valuable player. When he's back in uni form and ready to launch his great bulk at an op posing line, and the stands 3re roaring their wel come on his return—then Biff will know, perhaps for the first time, what it is to be truly recognized and appreciated. It’ll be pretty good to have Bill Tugman and Ajax McGurk return from their vacation at the coast. We have been missing them this hunting season. Contemporary Opinion (Editor's note: The following letter is re printed from the Portland Oregonian of Oc tober 10.) 'T'O the Editor: I have been very interested in your stand taken regarding the fraternity mat I ter at Oregon. A few facts from personal expe rience may point out that the fraternities deserve a fair chance to survive. Entering the University in 1922, I found a long wailing list fo- the women's halls. The same was true with regard to Friendly hall, at that time the only men s hall at Oregon. Both Susan Campbell and Hendricks halls were open as well as Mary Spiller annex. Consequently, many students boarded in town. However, University officials were sug gesting and aiding the formation of local fraterni ties to petition for strong nationals to solve the housing problem at Oregon and bring the many students out under University control. That such colonization was not stopped at the proper time by the same kind of supervision that is now be ing exercised by University control to protect dormitory investments (which, in turn, are tax free while fraternities pay very high taxes) has been (he sad thing as far as fraternities are concerned. So now that they arc here, certainly they should be protected (whicn means the protection of private investment) by as lenient a program as possible as to freshmen living in the various organizations under Greek letters. In answer to the argument that first-year people can't choose wisely, that they don't know fiaterni ties, etc.; be it said that alumnae groups through out the state and elsewhere are so active that con tacts are made from freshmen in high school on up. Add to this all of the advertising that is being done by the University in one way and another (Associated Friends of the University in Eugene are canvassing for money properly to advertise the University to increase enrollment) and there arc few entering students at Oregon who do not know what they are coining to, and the ratings of fra ternities, etc., long before entering. The news story carried in the Oregonian a few days ago giving figures on students returning from year to year is a bit deceiving when one stops to consider them from the point of view of fraterni ties. As Oregon fraternity women land I am sure that fraternity men will concur in my statement), we, too, might see the plans used in other colleges that of freshmen living in dormitories were there any certainty of depending on previous year stu dents. We can't be compared to eastern colleges chiefly because we do not have the moneyed people here in Oregon. Our dilemma in higher education in Oregon has made it quite noticeable that those who do have more money for college are coming to Oregon for fraternity pins and association and then trans ferring to other colleges. In that, we alone are not suffering, but the University as well. Depres sion has, of course, increased the one-year student problem. Let the University back the fraternity situation at Oregon, and it will be found that the work of fraternity people from Oregon will swell the enroll ment proportionately, not only here but at Oregon State as well, as good times leturn until neithvt will be too severely put to cases to protect itself. VIVIAN HARPER PITMAN' 12t)t> Mill Street, Eugene. Sail on... Sail on By STANLEY ROBE The New Germany By RICHARD NEUBERGER Editor’s Note: Few magazine articles in recent years have aroused as much interest and dissension on the campus, as this descrip tion in the current issue of The Nation of Nazi anti-semitic atrocities. The author was editor of the Emerald last year, and traveled through Europe during the summer. He is the first Oregon student to write for the lib eral weekly and one of its youngest contrib utors. It is reprinted by permission of The Nation; because of its length, the article will be divided into four installments. It is copy righted, 1933, by The Nation, Inc. 44TTITLER and hia lieutenants must smile behind their hands when they watch tourists leave Germany with stories of the courtesy and fine manners of Na zi officials. In the August issue of the National Geographic maga zine Alicia O'Reardon Overbeck describes Freiburg as one of the most gemutlich cities of Germany because of the “friendliness of its people.” In Baden Baden we met a score of refugees from this ha ven of peace and tranquility. One of the refugees was a lawyer who | had dared to say in public that | the people should run the govern ment. While he was away on a brief trip to plead a case, Nazis entered his home and sold at auc tion all his possessions—his law library, his files, valuable art treasures, his furniture. He and his son protested; the latter was fatally wounded and the father had to flee i to avoid arrest. He was at Baden Baden under an as sumed name and with his appear ance disguised. The others who had fled from Freiburg, the most gemutlich of cities because of the "friendliness of its people,” were Jews, several of them schoolboys burned on the legs and feet. Their Nazi schoolmates had forced them to run through a bonfire of burning books! "It is difficult to comprehend how any tourist with the slightest knowledge of German can return from the Third Reich with praise for the Hitler dictatorship. Hitler's "Mein Ivampf," approximately 800 pages of the chancellor’s egotism and hatred, is on sale at all book shops, available to visitors and cit izens. Listen to this brief excerpt from its pages: " ’If the Jew wins . . . his crown of victory is the death of human ity. and this planet will again, as it did ages ago, float through the ether, bereft of man . . . While 1 defend myself against the Jews. I fight for the work of the Lord. " 'The black-haired Jewish youth lies for hours in ambush, a devil ish joy on his face, for the unsus pecting girl whom he pollutes; with his blood and steals from her own race . . . Bjt every means he strives to wreck the racial basis of the nation ... he deliberately befouls women and girls ... it was and is the Jew who brought negroes to the Rhine, brought them with the . . . intent to destroy the white race ... by continual bas tardization. to hurl it from the . . . heights it has reached ... he deliberately, seeks to lower the race level by corruption of the in dividual' "It is this book which has filled the vacancies left on the library shelves by the destruction of vol umes by Helnie. Thomas Mann, I Remarque, Feuehtwanger. Ein stein. Sinclair, and London. The chancellor's unrelenting fanaticism is reflected in the cruelty of his followers. Not once in the score ot small communities we visited did we see a Nazi show mercy or understanding toward the object: ot his liate. Lven small children are victims of the brutality. We saw one little Jewish girl come from school with a great welt on her forehead. Between sobs she told her mother that the son of a Nazi had hurled an inkwell at her, and the teacher, a man in S. A. uniform, had commended the act. “Horrible as these systematic, persecutions are, there is another equally ominous aspect to the “new Germany." It is Hitler's obvious intent to lead the country into war sooner or later. He is converting Germany into a fortress bristling with hate and martial fervor. The saber rattles more loudly than un der the Hohenzollern. In the parks and public squares one hears mili tary bands and the tread of march ing feet. The Nazi troopers are armed with bayonets and revolv ers. They have official permission to carry firearms, a privilege de nied to those they persecute. The children also are active partici pants in martial revival. In the foothill districts of Bavaria and Wurttemburg we say boys—none of them more than fifteen years old—parading in review with wood en spears on thefr shoulders, and children of six practicing the throwing of hand grenades, crawl ing on their stomachs as to a trench attack. “Despite the contention of Wal ter Lippman of any other erudite authority that Hitler’s May peace address was sincere and "the au thentic voice of a great people," no one who looks behind the bar rier of censorship and deceit in Germany can doubt that one of the major premises of the Nazi move ment is intense preparation for a war of aggression. I wish those who were deluded by Hitler’s peace speech before the Reichstag could have been with me one afternoon on the train between Frankfort and Munich and overheard a high officer in the Reichswehr talking to a friend: “ 'Yes, we’re fooling the French and Poles all right. Were only supposed to have 100,000 men un der arms according to the treaty, hut we're training 250,000 new ones every three months. At my camp I command a squad of lawyers — I the chancellor now makes all new lawyers enter a training camp. Then we have the S.A. and the S.S. men and the Reichswehr. We’ll have 2,000.000 in arms in another year, besides all the chil dren were teaching to fight for Germany. Then watch us con quer again.’ "It is the old story of Deutsch land Uber Alles" but under worse auspices than before. No ingen ious means for inflaming and arousing the people has; been over looked. In cabarets I heard the i music of the ’new Germany.’ The masterpieces of Strauss and Wag ner have been subordinated to the Nazi marching song and filthy ditties denouncing the Jews. 1 saw the official Nazi propaganda film. "S. A. Mann Brand." Its appeal was based largely on military en thusiasni Ccauuusists rcr trayed largely as brutes who spent their time shooting down little children or lolling in luxurious apartments with scantily clad wo men. The villain was a Semitic looking merchant who discharged his employees for trivial reasons, but was made to atone for his deed when Hitler came into power. But the Nazis—ah, they were pictured is the very flower of German man hood. Sir Launcelot in search of the Holy Grail could have appeared no more noble and courageous than the stalwart Apollos who por trayed Herr Hitler’s gentle dis ciples.” The Safety Valve An Outlet for Campus Steam All communications are to be addressed to The Editor, Oregon Daily Emerald, and should not exceed 2G0 words in length. Letters must be signed, but should the writer prefer, only initials will be used. The editor maintains the right to withhold publication should he To the Editor: In the issue of Saturday, Octo ber 7th, you carry an article de scribing the anthropological exhib it in the main library. The article correctly reports the interview, vith one exception, viz., the "hazel, spruce roots, and other materials were prepared by the Indians and used in weaving, which was usual ly done by the men. while the wo men built the houses and did other heavy work.” The last part of this statement | is entirely incorrect in regard to any of the baskets in this exhibit. The baskets, so far as I know, were always made by the women, and your reporter became confused by some general conversation we had with reference to the division of labor among the Pueblo tribes of the-southwest. I make this correction because I it is a matter of fact that should not be permitted to pass. Very truly yours, L. S. CHESSMAN. Professor of Sociology. Mannequin I By PATSY LEE ANNEQUIN goes interior decoration today! So settle ! down right now for a survey of i the most attractive boudoirs on the campys. After all, our study t ? i rooms, while struggling for the higher culture in life, are tem porary homes. They express the personality of the inhabitant in rolor, neatness, and general furn ishings. Kappa Alpha Theta very gra iiously allowed me to barge around to my heart's contents yesterday. And before I start on the individ ual domiciles, let me utter a word n praise for the spacious halls in the Theta domain. Four people .'ould easily walk abreast and not ?e knocked down in any kind of rush. Personality expresses itself in tverything. I became more ton-. vinced of that idea as I walked into dainty Libby Crommelin's sunny, bright room. Cool green pervades, and, lady, the curtains! Lovely glazed chintz hangs frilly like over dotted swiss, and painted green furniture completes the in terior. Peggy' Chessman’s room is a fur ther demonstration of personal daintiness. Pink predominates soft, creamy pink furniture, pink bookshelves, and ruffled curtains frame the large open window. The entire effect was more harmoni ous and restful with the late af ternoon sun streaming in. Of all the attractive curtains I have ever seen, Martha Chapman's glazed chintz drapes patterned in a fireside scene take the prize. A heavily woven couch cover ap pears both practical and elegant combined with green furniture and yellow rugs. Comer shelves com pleted the “well-equipped” appear ance. Straying far from the effeminate type of room, Elesa Addis has suc cessfully combined brown and green in the decoration of her more serious type of study room. The curtains — heavy basket-weave stuff—hang straight from rod to hem. And Elesa, what a swell brown dressing table! Sally Siegrist goes for lavender and real comfort. The ruffled, comfortable boudoir chair struck me as being a complete necessity in a college room. What’s more— lavender is combined with grey furniture, and the odd combination is devastating along with a very modernistic picture done by Sally herself. It was always doubtful to me about the combination of green and blue, but Mary Babson has completed the task, because she has the correct shades of each col or. The grass rug is different, and two huge maps of Paris and some place else lend a tone of real so phistication. Oscar, the turtle, re clines leisurely on the window-sill under oddly printed curtains. Which is the most attractive? I’ll leave that up to you. Reading ' Writing PEGGY CHESSMAN, Editor TVJARGARET FISHBACK’S re cent book of poetry, “Out of My Head,” is a collection of ob servations made by a shrewd, ob serving New Yorker. Her subject matter comes from the metropolis and is written in an extremely light, brisk way. She has a nimble style all her own, a style that has won her distinctive recognition among such magazines as "The Saturday Evening Post,” “Harper's Bazaar,” “The New Yorker,” “Mc Call's,” "New York World,” “Uni versity,” "Life,” and “Judge.” Her rhymes, nonsensical and yet full of common sense, could such a description be made, are those of an alert writer, always ready to see the humor of a commonplace situation. One of the poems, “Apostrophe to a Sparrow Loafing Outside My Office Window,” is an example of the quality that has endeared her to her multitude of readers. ‘Please tell me just one reason why A sparrow should elect to fly Up to the thirteenth floor. I do Not know what birds are coming This is an office, foolish bird, Can't you imagine how absurd It sounds to stage a chirping ses sion Right in the midst of this depres sion?” Despite the name of her book, she also creates rhymes from out of her heart—those dealing with men and love. They are clever ob servations, showing a great deal of insight. Undoubtedly her "Short Inspirational Talk for Young Wo men" would be of great benefit to the co-eds on the campus, for Miss Fishback quite tactfully ex plains just how to handle males The Emerald Greets — Today the Emerald has an extra special greeting to offer: GERALDINE AND EILEEN HICKSON— The Hickson twins, blonde prides of the Phi Mu house, cele brate their birthday today en masse. Eileen was reticent when it came to explaining the advan tages or disadvantages of being a twin. “At least, it’s novel,’’ she said. Between them they have a long list of activities: Y. W., Student Christian council, forensics, Phi Mu Epsilon and two other honor aries, besides Kwama and Mortar Board. Having twin Mortar Boarders created quite a sensation last spring when the two girls were pledged. DEMOSTHENES GEORGE CHRONES “I tell you, I almost froze this morning,” said Demosthenes Cbrones, lately installed in Sherry Ross hall with his brother from Honolulu, wlfere the temperature is now registering around 80. De mosthenes and Michel, the broth er, have some difficulty because their middle names are the same; so they are Demos and Mike. KAY BRIGGS HAROLD PRICE_ Emerald of the Air The “Emily Post” of the Emer ald comes to you as the feature of the Emerald-of-the-Air. Mary Lou iee Edingcr, society editor, cuts loose with all the latest gossip of what’s what, who’s who, and what’s doin’ and future dances, teas, par ties, et al., will be discussed dur ing this 15 minutes. KORE. ,4:30. in general, telling just how they must be humored and be made to feel their supposedly superior po sition. “Progress,” “Comparative Val ues,” and “An Unbiased Point of View” are all written about met ropolitan life, but may be adapted equally well to campus life. (High Hat Libe.) Something to look forward to— Robinson Jeffer’s new book of poetry, “Give Your Heart to Lhe Hawks.” i HUDNUT’S I 1 NEW I MARVELOUS 1 COSMETICS a a Ask us about the U Free Lipstick and 3 Eye Brow Pencil Combination I KUYKENDALL’S S DRUB STORE a 870 Willamette — Phone 23 Classified LOST—Small, gold wrist watch with black cord band. F. L. G. engraved on back. Reward. Phone 485. LOST—Taward’s Soviet America by Foster somewhere on cam pus. Call 1882. FOR SALE—1920 Chev. touring, good condition, $35. Phone 1882. LOST—A pair of glasses in faded green case on Oct. 9 somewheres between Old Libe and College Side and Villard. Finder return to circulation desk, Old Libe. * OR SALE—A good looking musk rat fur coat in excellent condi tion. Call at 595 Washington Beat Washington via SOUTHERN PACIFIC $g.50 Eugene to Seattle and return Good in Coaches Only l $g.50 for the round tnp Good in Tourist Sleeping Oars (Double lower berth, $1.88; double upper, $1.50—each wav.) LEAVE FRIDAY, OCT. 13 Lv. Eugene. 5:25 p.m. Ar. Seatttle, Sat. 6:45 a. m. KKTIRMM, Lv. Seattle, Sat. u:45 p.m Ar. Eugene, Sun. 11:40 a. m Oi leave Seattle on any regular train Sunday. PHONE 2200 FOR DETAILS Southern Pacific A. J. GILLETTE, Agent.