»■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 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.