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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1934)
University of Oregon, Eugene Sterling Green, Editor Grant Thueoomel, Manage: Joseph Saslavsky, Managing Editor EDITORIAL BOARD Doug Polivka and Don Caswell. Associate Editors; Gu; Shaddock, Stanley Robe UPPER NEWS STAFF Malcolm Bauer, News Ed. Estill Phipps, Sports Ed. A1 Newton. Dramatics and Chief Night Erl. Elinor Henry, Features Ed. Peggy Chessman, Literary Ec Barney Clark, Humor Ed. Cynthia Liljeqvist, Women’s Ec Mary Louiee Edinger, Sodet Ed. James Morrison. Radio Ed. DAY’ EDITORS: A1 Newton, Mary Jane Jenkins, Bob Moore Newton Stearns. EXECUTIVE REPORTERS: Ann Reed Buras, Howard Kess ler. Roberta Moody. REPORTERS: Miriam Eichner. Marian Johnson, Velma Me Intyie, Ruth Weber, Margaret Brown, Eleanor Aldrich Eos lie Stanley. Newton Stearns. Clifford Thomas, Robci Lang, James Moirison. SPORTS STAFF: Bill Eberhart, Asst. Sports Ed.; Clair John w-ii. George Jones. Dan Clark. Don Olds, Bill Actzel George Bikman. COPY READKRS: Elaine Cornish, Dorothy Dill, Marie Pell Phyllis Adams. Maluta Read. George Bikman. Virgini; Endicott, Dorothy Dykcman, Mildred Blackburne. WOMEN’S PAGE ASSISTANTS: Mary Graham, Bolt ( lunch. Ruth Heiberg. Betty Shoemaker. NIGHT EDITORS: George Bikman, Rex Cooper, Tom Ward Orval Ettcr. ASSISI AN 1 NIGHT EDITORS: Henryetta Muminey, Irm; Egbert, Margilce Morse. Jane Bishop, Doris Bailey, Alio Tillman. Eleanor Aldrich, Margaret Rollins, Marvel Read Mary Ellen Eberhart. RADIO STAFF: Howard Kessler, Eleanor Aldrich. SECRETARY: Mary Graham. UPPER BUSINESS STAFF William Meissner, Adv. Mgr; Ron Rew, Asst. Adv. Mgr. William Temple, Asst. Adv. Mgr. Tom Holman, Asst. Adv. Mgr. Eldon Habcrman, National Adv. Mgr. Fred Fisher, Promotional Mgr. Pearl Murphy, Asst. Nationa Axlv. Mgr. Ed Labbc, Circulation Mgr. Kuth Kippey, CbecJring Mgr Willa Bitz, Checking Mgr Sez Sue, Janis Worley S e» Sue* Assistant, Jeur McCuskcr. Alene Walker, Office Mgr. ADVERTISING SALESMEN: Bob Ilelliweil, Jack Lew Hob CleMWell, Hat-up Callister, Jerry Thomas, Phil Gil strap. Jack McGirr, Gertrude Boyle, Blaine Balluh, Mary ann® Skirvina. OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Gretehen Greytr, Janet Hall, Dolorct Belloni, lloris Oslund, Mary Jane Moore, Cynthia Cornell Mae Sehellbacher, Pat Nelson, Thelma Cook, Betty Gullaher, Vivian Wherrie. Jean Pinney. BUSINESS OFFICE, McArthur Court. Phone 3300—Local 214 EDITORIAL OFFICES, Journalism Bldg. Photic 3300--News Room, Local 355 ; Editor and Managing Editor, Local 354. A member of the Major College PublicaiioHs, represented by A. J. Norris Hill Co., 155 E. 42nd St., New York City; 123 W. Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Ave., Seattle; 1206 Maple Ave., Los Angeles; Call Building, San Francisco. The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the University of Oregon, Eugene, published 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. THE FORGOTTEN CLAUSE AT least three proposals for the rehabilitation of the A. S. U. O. will be tossed in the lap of the state board of higher education at its meeting of April 16. From faculty sources may be ex jrected a plan based on the Bovard suggestion of last week, heavily loaded for faculty control. From student leaders will come a plan altering the A. S. U. O. only enough to conform to the letter of the law; they will take care that nothing detracts from student participation in administering extracurric ular policy. Alumni who have materially aided the A. S. U. O. by loans in the days of financial dark ness, will probably concur in this plan, for they will be anxious that no change be made which would endanger their interests or work harm upon the A. S. U. O. as a business institution. Lastly, those students who sought the attorney general's decision will probably submit a plan, although its outlines are still unknown. Strangely enough, both the proposals which we have thus far scanned fail to take into considera tion the original plea upon which all subsequent ngitation has been based the demand for relief from compulsory fee payment by graduate students and needy students. Whether the board adopts the Bovard plan or the students’ proposed plan, it would still be ignor ing the rights of the highly vocal minority which started the whole controversy and has successfully carried to this point. Here the state board will find itself on the horns of a dilemma. It has already acknowledged, by its decision of January 29, that the heavy load of stu dent activities cannot now be safely borne on a foundation of optional membership. But even though it cannot decree full optional membership, the board should insist that in the solution finally evolved there be included provision for exempting needy students and graduate students from the compulsory payment of student body dues. THE GULLIBLE 1»R. WIRT A ND now comes another squelch for the already hard-pressed Dr. Wirt, who sent up his sky rocket a couple of weeks ago when he sounded the cry against Brain-Trust Bolshevism, A. A. Berle, New York city chamberlain and one of the original ‘‘brain trust," gave an interview yesterday in the Daily Prineetonian in which he further belabored the doctor. In the first place, said Berle, the brain trust is a myth. The group that gave rise to the term, consisting of Johnson, Moley, Taussig. Tugwell. and Berle, advised the president before he took office, but disbanded the night before inauguration. In Die second place, Berle declared that “some of the boys" in Washington diverted themselves one evening by working Dr. Wirt into a fine case of jitters by solemnly remarking about Roosevelt as the Kerensky of our revolution and Rexford Tug well as the coining Stalin. "Now that story is absolutely on the level," he said. And from what has been seen of Eerie, that should constitute pretty good authority. The idea of the brain trust has been one of the pet notions of the laity during the last hectic year. Somehow it matched the private schemes of Utopia that most people, at one time or another, build up in their minds. To find that Roosevelt has been Rooseveit, and not a mystic council of technical wizards, will be a jolt to most people. None the less, it is perfectly believable. And the picture of some of “the boys" neatly taking the doctor over the jumps is an amusing one. It is certainly more possible that Wirt’s aber ration was instilled in him by some such occurrence than that he thought it up all by himself. On Other Campuses Provincialism? No! Ur | vhE college newspaper is growing provincial.’’ This is what a sociology professor at Yale told a group of eastern college editors recently, and with him we disagree. Provincialism has been one of the faults of the college newspaper of the past, unfortunately. Few editors have looked beyond their own campuses for material to run in their columns, and few have bothered to inquire what was going on in the world and interpret it for their readers. But to say that provincialism is growing is an untruth, because it is actually on the decline. If one were to compare the college newspaper of five or ten years ago with the present day edition, one would be surprised at the wider variety of stories and editorial topics which are printed today. A graduate student at this university made such a survey of the Daily Trojan recently and found to her surprise that the number of off-campus news stories had increased seven times in the last ten years, and that the increase in editorials about world and national affairs had been tremendous. Ten years ago current topics were seldom if ever recorded in the editorial columns; today the paper has become both a mirror and molder of public opinion. This doesn't indicate a growth of provincialism locally. Neither do we believe that college news papers generally are growing along narrower lines. Other Pacific Coast papers, especially, bear this out, for at least three of them print intelligent dis cussions of state, national, and international poli tics and sociological problems. In the middle west there are a dozen which reach out beyond the cam pus for editorial topics. Among these papers provincialism is on the wane. It must not be supposed that the greater in terest of the college editorial in affairs of govern ment and the nation is due to a remarkable and peculiar influx of intelligence into the editorial chairs of the nation’s universities. Rather it is but an indication of the greater consciousness on the part of youth in the importance of acquiring both a knowledge of, and an interest in government.— -1 Southern California Trojan. Straighten ft -jut Now ~ JUST why there should he a distinction betweei j “major” and “minor” sports is a question whicl has long puzzled the Daily. Answers have been many but largely inadequate It is argued that football and basketball draw larger crowds than do fencing and golf. Anothei idea frequently put forth is that it costs more tc finance a track squad than a handball team. , But these answers overlook the basic principle of athletic awards. Block and cups supposedly are given for athletic endeavor. Governing the size ol the block by the size of the appropriation necessarj to maintain the sport, is inconsistent with the spiri' of the award. Just because an athlete’s interest happens tr be in sports, termed minor for any one of a •num ber of insufficient reasons—it is unfair to him tc "brand” him with a Circle “S” like a dude ranch meanwhile passing out a Block "S” to his brother who is no more of an athlete, but whose interest happens to be in a “major” sport. Men in minor sports have to spend just as much time becoming proficient enough to represent the University in intercollegiate matches as do theii fellow-athletes in major sports. Minor sports training is not a bit less rigorous and the workouts are just as stiff. A boxer has to take just as bad and sometimes a worse beating “for his alma mater” as does a football player. The only difference is that the boxer takes it in front of a thousand people and the grid “hero" gets his in front of 90,000. In many cases even this “justification" isn't present. For instance, soccer and swimming usually draw bigger crowds than does tennis. This distinction between sports is not in line with the spirit of American amateur athletics, the supposed model of all colleges, which spirit assert edly works from the basic proposition of sport for sport's sake. Differences created between sports, largely on the bases of appropriations and the size of the crowds, lend to lay emphasis on gate receipts or costs of the sports. Why not forget minor ami major appropriations and give the same recognition for the same amount of work, whethei in gymnastics or baseball? The control of this question is found in the by laws of the A. S. S. IT. constitution. Those by-laws are now being revised. Now is the time for the K.\ Committee to remove or amend an inaccurate, unjust, and misleading classification. Stanford Daily. CANDIDATES FOR JOBS WILL PETITION TODAY (Continued from l\uir Our) Johnson, George Jones, Dan Clark. Don Olds, BUI Aetssel, Bill Mcln turff, and George Blknian. Copyreaders are Elaine Cornish, Dorothy Dill. Marie Pell. Phyllis Adams, Maluta Read, Virginia Endicott, Mildred Blackburne, and Dorothy Dykeman. Assistants on the women's page and society staffs ate Mary Gra ham, Bette Church, Ruth Heiberg, and Betty Shoemaker. Collaborators with Newton on the night staff are Rex Coopet. Tom Ward, and George Bikman a - night editors. Assistant night ed itor,. are Hcaryettu Mummey, Irma Egbert, llargiUe Mijrc-e Jane Bishop, Dorris Bailey, Elea nor Aldrich. Margaret Rollins, Marvel Read, and Alary Ellen Eb erhart. Mary Graham is secretary of the Emerald. A staff meeting- has been called for this afternoon at t o'clock in 100 Journalism to announce the annual special editions issued each I spring term. HERBERT AMES TO BE SPEAKER ON THURSDAY (Continued /non Pane One) nearly $50,000,000 for the support of wives and dependent relatives of Canadian soldiers. travel in Australia, J a p a n , Egypt. India, Europe. United state, and the We.-t Indie;, lias ot-t copied considerable of the lectur er's time, who lias given much at tention to discussion of trade ques tions. tariff and treaties with oth er countries. He was created Knight Bachelor in 191,r. and holds medals from the governments of Belgium and France. Sir Herbert will arrive in Eu gene Wednesday afternoon and in tends to remain for several days to lecture before University and city groups. He will be available tor several social engagements, ar rangements for which may be made by calling Howard Ohmart. president of the International Be la lions club, at the V M C A. hut. Victor P. Mortis, professor of economies, is chairman of the committee which ha charge of Am a s vital. ~ j Estimates By J. J. G. j 44rT'HE sun also ariseth, and the sun goeth down, and hasteth I to its place where it ariseth.” j Which might apply to columnists, as well as to politicians, brain ! trusters, best sellers, nature cult | ists, birth rates, death rates, tax rates, incomes; which might well i apply to each and every circum stance in the life of man, as of course it does. My sun hath arisen, and my sun ! shall go down; but at the present | writing I am a full-fledged col umnist with complete possession of the field. | Whan the editor of this most i estimable sheet issued the solemn pronouncement that I might lum ber about at will in the profoundly vast and eternally green fields of literature (for that is to be the subject of this column I, choosing my subjects at random, I seized Liie opportunity with avidity. This, then, is the result. I shall proceed for an undefined time along un charted ways. But one word more by way of introduction: comment and communication will be at all times welcome, and I suspect, with a secret inner wisdom, that it shall not be withheld. Contro versial material upon any subject pertaining to literature is invited, the only qualifications being those which preface the Letters to the Editor column appearing else where on this page. We are launched. It has been my particular good fortune in the past two years to become more than casually ac quainted with the work of the South African poet, Roy Campbell, i consider him highly worthy of a long past due appreciation. In the first place (though I am often guilty of grossly exagger ated estimates) 1 believe him to be one of the few satirists worthy of the name in contemporary lit erature. Secondly, he has written one poem. ••The Flaming Terra- j pin,” which, conceived on a larger I scale and written with a greatei ! force than any contemporary pro duction, is much more likely tc live as the truest representatior of the age in all of its aspects, anc particularly those which concerr man and his relationship to the universe, than T, S. Eliot’s “Waste Land,’’ Hart Crane's “Bridge” oi the effusions of E. E. Cummings In recent years I have seen but one appreciation of Campbell (there may have been others), and that appeared in the Bookman for December, 1932. However, a poet who writes satire like the follow ing (Satirical Fragments: On Some South African Novelists) 'should be better known: You praise the firm restraint with which they wiite— I’m with you there, of course: They use the snaffle and the curb all right, But where’s the bloody horse?” Or on a more familiar theme: "The English muse her annual theme rehearses To tell us birds are singing in the sky. Only the poet slams the door and curses, And all the little sparrows wonder why!” As Arthur Colton comments in his appreciation: “Edmund Gosse was a Georgian for the later years of his long and valuable life, and so far as his verse goes, was no doubt a sparrow of no very great size.” But more important is the sec ond poem mentioned, “The Flam ing Terrapin.” Philosophically, it is a more vital question that the poet sets out to answer than is the one of modern social ad justment which Eliot has posed for so many years. What, asks Campbell, can a modern poet, a product of the war years, feel to ward a universe that consists only of sheer unbounded power and a deity that is only a force? in a degree the force is personified by the Terrapin. I cannot in this Innocent Bystander By BARNEY CLARK ' W’K! informed you some time ago ” that there was reputed to be i a number of girls on the campus I that smoked cigars. It. is now j our painful duty to inform you 'that there is a Chi O lhai smokes la PIPK! Just who, we don't know, nor want to know. We : shudder at tne thought. -j * * The spring weather lias made the Pi Phis playful. V few days ago t Ill's water-bagged Jack Mulder (No, mermaids have nothing to do with it!). These activities are liable to make people leury of going up to their hovel, as a great man) people don’t like water. Here is an example of the sort of thing an editor has to put up with. Green got this in the morn ing mail. “Dear Mr Kditor: “1 was talking to one of the committee of 00—do 1 hear 55 V Going, going, gone to the gentle man with the board for 50 -and he told me that Tom Tongue was > nly a Kerensky, and that the committee of Is)! intend to re-: place him v oh a tlatiu. 1 wj. , also talking to a member of the committee of 23 skidoo, and he said that Tom Tongue was only a Von Hindenburg, and that the committee of 23 skidoo intended to replace him with a Hitler. I was also talking to a member of the committee of 1 (onei and he told me that Tom Tongue was only the four Marx brothers, and that he, or they, (the committee of one) intended to replace him with Ted Healey and his Stooges. "I am an education major and will some day be known as the author of the regimental system of education. "So far I have talked with mem bers of only these three commit tees, but I intend to talk to mem bers of all committees I can find and will keep you informed. "Just who this Stalin-Hit ier Ted Healey-and-his-Stooges is is not known, although it was em phatically denied that it was! either George Bennett or Gyp. “Sincerely. "Z. Z. Nertz r. S. It is my personal belief that the committee of 50 is only ! stalling." How would YOl like to be an j editor brief compass quote at length from the poem but it should speak for itself. The poem itself con tains great energy. Though it is a common enough thing today to compare certain poets with the Elizabethans, this can be done truthfully enough when the poet is Campbell. As it is a poem which could never stand alone without its magnificent decora tion it has also been compared with Keats’ “Endymion,” but the comparison could go no further. Here is one example: "His was a crest that from the angry sky Tore down the hail: he made the boulders fly Like balls of paper, splintered ice bergs, hurled Lassoes of dismal smoke around the world, And like a bunch of crisp and crackling straws Coughed the sharp lightning from his scraggy jaws while Perched on the stars around him in the air, White angels rinsed the moonlight from their hair.” In the poem "To a Pet Cobra” he is capable of such a phrase as the following: “I, too, can hiss the hair of men erect Because my iips are venomous with truth.” But that is not enough to show the poet. He deserves a closer ex amination. I know of no poet who achieves so well his purpose. Cer tainly the better known James Stephens, with all his trumped up j eloquence, never reached this ap proximation of the force behind the world. Reading -and Writing PEGGY CHESSMAN, Editor A WEEK would hardly be com x plete without the publishing of another book on Hitler or the Nazi movement. Strange enough the hundreds of books published recently on those subjects do differ a great deal in content, and offer a great many angles on the pres ent German situation. Last week Reading and Writing recommended Leland Stowe's “Na zi Means War." a clear-cut book of facts as gathered by a veteran newspaper reporter whose praise CLASSIFIED Advertisements Rates Payable in Advance 10c a line for first insertion; ' 5c a line for each additional 1 insertion. Telephone 3S00; local 214 FOR SALE CHEAP Lady's rid ing boots. Size 5, in excellent condition. 1274 Lincoln, or phone 13S7-R. ROOM and board for SL7 per month at 710 E. 13th. FOUND—Best place on the cam pus to get good tennis equip ment. Bancroft frames. John ■ on gut. All grades of tennis ball.-, herd tuber. Flione btjj. | worthy work has earned for him ' several Pulitzer prizes for report 1 ing. Stowe shows how inconsist - , ent Hitler is in telling the world that peace is his utmost goal and then teaching all the youth and children of his nation the glories | of war. Today Reading and Writing .suggests that those who are stu dents of moder affairs read “Na zism: An Assault on Civilization," a symposium edited by James Wa terman Wise and Pierre Van Paas sen. The 22 writers whose works are collaborated in this book de pict Nazi Germany as a menace to society, they have painted it as a merciless wolf. No majbr phase of the Nazi program has been left untouched. True, at times their points are somewhat hampered by ! sentimentalism, but nevertheless, the authors have some very valu able and interesting facts. What’s recent in popular novels: “The Claimants," Archibald Marshall. "The Golden Barrier," Hallie ! Erminie Rives. “Here Lies Love,” Peter Traill. “Sunshine Stampede,” Dote Ful ton. “Gates of Hell,” Erik R. V.Kuhn elt-Leddihn. “Cabaret,” L. H. Brenning. “Strangers at the Feast," Bea trice Lubitz. “The Perfect Pair,” Lois Mont ross. “Magic Valley,” Margaret Bell Houston. “Strange Paths,” Louis Gerard. “The Caballero,” H. L. Gates. Emerald of the Air and Elsewhere By JIMMY MORRISON Anyone who does not know who Glen Gray is, and who has never to his or her knowledge has heard the Casa Loma orchestra will scarcely if ever be interested in the chatter which is to come in this column. Anyway, Glen Gray and the Casa Loma orchestra get my vote, and I will at any time debate on the topic of the relative merits of Casa Loma and Guy Lombardo, oi ls it Lumbago and his Seven Panes ? All of which leads up to the first edition of the Emerald-of-the Air this afternoon at 4:30. Jack' (Floyd Gibbons-Sam Hayes) Mil ler, fast-moving silver-tongued sporting reporter will give his interpretations of the news of sports today and every Tuesday to come this term. Miller moves mountains. CAMPUS LIKE BOUQUET OF COLORED BLOOMS (Continued from Page One) of 14 years of planning and plant ing on the part of Sam Mikkelson. All flowers for decorative pur poses used at the many University functions, -such as assemblies, banquets, and commencements, are grown and supplied by him. Daffodils, tulips, iris, roses, glad iclas, antectal poppies, gaylard ias, delphiniums, are a few of the many cut flower varieties grown at the many nurseries which he 1 maintains. The shrubs and trees which are constantly being planted and re planted on the campus are given their start in the nurseries. Among these may be found the evergreen ! privet, and the golden privet, of- j ten useu for hedges. Also the scarlet hawthorne, catoneaster; franchetti, catoneaster simonsii, ! mountain 'laurel, montbretia, an thony waterer, flowering pome granite, arbor vitae pyramitallis, and dozens of other types and va-1 rieties of infant trees and shrubs, j Mikkelson attributes the early blooming of his flowers and shrubs ; WIN BETTER GRADES own a ROYAL PORTABLE Precisely the model you need! Latest design ..low est price! Complete! Easy to use..even if you’ie wrier typed before! Built for a life time ot writing conveni ence! A small initial pay ment, and it is yours! Pay the balance on easy terms. UNIVERSITY “CO-OP” EUGENE Royal Typewriter Company, lac. 2 Park Avenue, New York City The Safety Valve An Outlet for Campus Steam All communications are to be addressed to The Editor, Oregon Paily Emerald, and should not exceed 200 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 see fit. To the Editor: A few weeks ago an editorial appeared in the Emerald ridicul ing Phi Mu Alpha’s (music fra ternity) smoker, which will he held this Friday—the thirteenth. The editorial writer entertained the stereotyped idea that a "smoker ’ is a place where pugilistic fisti cuffs simply must occur. He could not allow himself to consider the possibilities of such a thing as some very fine music being played in lieu of a knockout or two to bear the manly appellation of smoker. Webster's international diction ary defines “smoker" as an eve ning entertainment, as a social club, at which smoking is permit ted. So do a lot of other diction aries. Now, if we pass out big black cigars, may Phi Mu Alpha have its smoker without feeling too much like a bunch of pansies ? JIMMY MORRISON to the temperate winter, and re marked that this is the first time since his coming to the University 14 years ago that such a phenom enon has occurred. TOTEMS, MOCCASINS OF ALASKA ON DISPLAY tContinued front Pnt/c Our) from Alaska by Mary Kent of the extension department who recent ly visited there on a summer ex tension tour. Here are replica of the native dugouts, which they say are strewn along the short, unused, replaced by the power boat, for even the Alaskan aborigine has succumbed to the speed bug. And here is a grotesque oil bowl, shaped rather like some strange frog, which holds the oil that is the butter to the northern native, so essential to his diet. Here is a tom-tom and, here, beautiful bas ketry. The exhibit was arranged by Miss Beatrice J. Barker, head cat aloger of the University library. O.S.C., OREGON CHOIRS GIVE JOINT CONCERT (Continued from Page One) is too bad that he could not have been present. “Hospodi Pomiliui,1’ a chant in which those are the only two words used, was sung for a second time this year by a chorus. The Gleemen in their winter term con cert in the Igloo introduced it, and the chorus heard Sunday improved upon their rendition with the in troduction of alto and soprano singers. It is a fine number, be ing of a very stirring nature. It begins very loudly, fades away to a whisper, then grows again until it attains a very strong climax. Such a number bears repetition. Special Program to Be Given by Spanish Club A special program, celebrating Pan-American day, will be pre sented at i meeting of the Span ish club, to be held at 7:30 tomor row night in room 5, Oregon hall. Holly Seavey will talk in Span ish on Diego Rivera, the Mexican mural artist; and a Spanish play, “La Primera Disputa,” will be acted by Maxine McDonald, Daph ne Mathews, and Bill White. Mem bers of the club will sing group Spanish songs. “Patronize Emerald Advertisers." Ride to Q ^ PORTLAND while you ^ SLEEP The toundtrip fare is only — $375 — plus the charge for a tourist lower berth each way — $j[25 ■—and it’s the best way to travel because you lose no time what ever. You get aboard the train. T ou go to sleep in a big, roomy berth (6 feet, 2 inches long and 3 feet, 1 inch wide, to be exact). 'X hile you sleep, an experienced engineer drives you swiftly and smoothly to your destination. When you awake, you're there. The night Pullman from Eugene is ready for occupancy at 12:30 a.m. and arrives in Port land at 8 next morning Day trains leave Eugene for Portland nt 12:20 p.m. and 5:25 p.m. Southern Pacific t. J. Gillette, Agent—Phone IMOf’