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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1931)
EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE REGISTER-GUARD PagiS Ten August 21, 1931 'I! Id AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER (Published every evening and Sunday) EDITOB AND PUBLISOEU ... Alton F. Biktr MANAGING E1HTOR .... William M. Tugman NEWS SERVICE, Associated Press, United Press MEMBER ...... Audit Bureau of Circulation The Regiater-Guard'a policy la the complete and Impartial publication In lis Dews paxes of all n?ws and statements on news. On tbia paRe, the editors of The Register-Guard offer tbelr opinione on rents of the day and matters of Importance to the commun ity, endeavoring, to be candid but fair, and helpful In the development of constructive community policy. A NEWSPAPER IS A CITIZEN OF ITS COMMUNITY FIRMNESS IN IMMIGRATION rpHE Wlckeraham Commission's aharp criticism of the way Uncle Sam deals with the aliens whom be has to send back to their homes Is a healthy reminder that a change has come over the old gentleman In recent years, Uncle Sam, In fact, seems to have grown rather peevish and irritable not to say downright hard boiled. We like to think of him as kindly and Judicious. Cartoonists almost always draw him that way. But there are times, evidently, when that picture hardly fits him. For a great many years America was a magic name to the people of Europe especially to the people who were the victims of man's Inhumanity to man. However bad things might be In the old country, there was always the vision of a promised land across the Atlantic a land presided over by patri archal Uncle Sam, who would receive any fugitive from anywhere without asking any questions, and who would offer the most down-trodden of men a chance to make a new start under a more kindly sun. But that has changed now. Uncle Sam stands at the gates, and he quisles new arrivals Tory sharply. It he catches anyone getting In without his express permission he acts sternly and swiftly. This, of course, was Inevitable. Conditions aren't what they were half a century ago. For a lme Uncle Sam was a bit too hospitable for his own good. ' Nevertheless, If the old attitude had to change Uncle Sam hardly needed to become truculent about It. The Wicker sham report discloses that aliens have been bandied arbitrarily In many, many cases. Injustice and downright stupidity have been ex hibited by the guardians of the gates all too frequently. All of this can be remedied without In any way relaxing the restrictions that are Imposed on lmml grants. Uncle Sam can be stern without being hard-boiled. He can be vigilant without being peevish. He can defend his own Interests without losing sight of his sense of Justice and fair play. HARDIHOOD SURVIVES rpHE trying times of the frontier are a long way removed from most Americans. Nevertheless, there are still times when sudden emergencies compel people to display all the courage and hardi hood of the pioneers. A forest fire recently swept through the Priest river valley, In Washington. Out of It, afterward, came news of the remarkable way In which Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Daly, who lived on a ranch In the path of the fire, saved the lives of their three children, Daly had been out In the rorest with other men trying to check the flames. Unable to do so, the men retreated to the ranch. There the fire sur rounded them, and the ranch buildings caught fire. The Daly children were sick. The only place of refuge was a small creek that ran a hundred yards or so from the house. So close were the flames that the water In this stream was warm to the touch. Down to the crook the Dalys carried their child ren. In the mud near the water they hastily cooped out a pit, In which they placed the child ren. Then they covered them with wet earth, leaving only their heads exposed. The heat, however, was so Intense that the children could hardly endure It. So, for the rest of the day, the two parents stood there and poured the warm water from the creek over the heads of their children. It Isn't often that such a tale of hand-to-hand combat with the elements reaches the newspapers. The whole Incident sounds like something that came down from pioneer days. It Is a of a piece wltb the heroic and traglo stories that dot the records of frontier communities. this. You can't expect people to get excited about your Ideas If you don't get excited yourself. BRITISH FINANCES JJECENT activity by American financiers to strengthen the English financial structure serves to emphasize the fact that a financial or Industrial breakdown In England would have ter rific repercussions In the United States. An article In the current Magazine of Wall Street points out that England Is now the United States' leading customer, having passed abead even of Canada. Last year England bought more than 1670,000,000 worth of goods from United States ex porters, and sold to the United States more than 1200,000,000 In return. In addition, United States Investors have over $500,000,000 In BrltlBh industries, while scores of American firms have extensive branches In the British Isles. The readiness with which American bankers responded to recent English pleas for new credit accommodations Is easily explained In the light of these facts. What helps English business will help American business also. FRANCO-GERMAN ACCORD TJR. WILLIAM A. RAPPARD, director for the School for Higher International Studies at Geneva, made a sane comment when he told the Wllllamstown Institute of Politics the other day that a reconciliation between France and Germany would save Germany from "a dangerous flirtation with Bolshevism." Unbiased students of international affairs have been saying that for years. The difficulty, so far. has been In getting the people of France and Ger manyespecially the French to realize that Is true. As long as hatred and suspicion mark Franco German relations, Germany's recovery from Its pres ent situation will be difficult. If the German nation eventually swings over to Bolshevism, French statesmen will have a great deal to answer for. SIDE GLANCES met tell us grasshoppers mouths are under their chins. Not that It made any difference out In Nebraska and the Dakotas. it Manene Dietrich's a love thief, It's a cinch JoBef von Sternberg didn't mind being robbed. WHAT OTHER EDITORS THINK THE EDITOR'S JOB (Salem Capitol Journal) tTDITlNG a dnily newspaper is an easy thing. There is noimng to the task. The fart that so many people i ". irurijiinn man me eitltor him self makea It bo. The nnhii ? -..- i,.i.,r..i - - j , bashful about wiggeations n to improvements. If the editor miys the day is warm half the readers tiinHgrrt, Hnq KH.V II IS too rnn . If he mr. It . t the oilier half say ho la rearhinv lila rt'nlnvn If" hn points out that, times are not as burl as thev appear, halt the readers disagree, anil If he says times are bad the remainder believe him eraiy. If he attempta to better conditions he is a reformer. If ho diaagreea he Is a fanatic anil a radical. If he enullons auninst too much thrift he Is a spendthrift and otherwise he la a ui"7' j '" ,n church they any It la onlv a Mind and if he remains at home ha Is a heathen. It he makes public speeches he likes to hear the sound or hfa voire and If he rofr-ntiin l, i. .Ann.inj ...r ably. If he criticises certain lnw or politicians he fs attacking the fundamentals of government and If he reirnins rrom comment he has no backbone. Iha editor and average newspaperman learns early In nis career that the mit, nn.,intiAn r.n. general classes half are doing their utmost to get their ,r. ... ,,nr ami llie other half is moving heaven and earth to keep their names from pnblli-atlon. All Of Wit Ch tends to mnlfA 11,. tif- k. almple existence, for finding It Impossible to plense everyone, he nasses his days suiting himself. In personal expression of opinion, tsking events as they transpire and publishing events as they occur. , . nr 1 """" Grove. Elbert Rede, hum re marked Those that cuss nut the editor for saving things about them In the newspnper should go down on their knees everr nlpht mil n..b j r i does net publish alt he knows." " " ""rn WASHINGTON LETTER By RODNEY DUTCHF.R . NEA Service Writer WASHINGTON. Aug. 21.-Th 1 science Fund" continues to do WHEAT AND HUNGER. ("THE price of wheat on the Liverpool market has fallen to within one-fourth of a cent of the price It commanded In the year IBM. This Is not only a painful reminder thnt the price today Is far too low; It also Indicates that the price In Elizabethan day was far too high. The wealthy clnss In England In those days was made up of the landed gentry, whose tidy, neatly bedgd farms produced wheat as a staple crop. The enormous wheat flolda of the United States, Canada and the Argentine had not yet been tilled; as a result there was never quite enough of the grain to go around, and England held many very hungry reoplo In consequence. Today the American wheat belt holds plenty of hungry people, too: but they are hungry because there Is too much wheat. That fact underscores the difference botnenn this depression and preced ing ones and It Indicates thnt the solution, some how, should be a lit Uo easier to find than It has been bofore. DISARMAMENT SOLUTION UTHEN Stanley IIlRh, editor of the Christian Herald, told the Wllllamstown Institute of Politics the other night Unit the cause of disarma ment needs people willing to go on the soap hoi for It, he was giving expression to a simple and obvious truth. No great cause ever began to make genuine progreas until It waa able to fire Its advocates with a crusading spirit. As long as the arguments are put forward with dignity and moderation from cloistered pulpit and secluded editorial office, no body pays much attention to them. But when people, as Mr. IliRh says, get so wrought up that they are willing to go out and mount soap boxes nd, occasionally, to he Jeered at as fanatics -things start moving. Proponcutt ol diearuiauienl might ponder on famous old "Con- hn.lnn.. .1 The amounts rm-eivnit and, ho tl.n from persons who say they once cheated their Vnr-te Sam fluctuate ncrhnns as wiilolv n tlin tinman conscience Itself and there Is never anything to Indicate that hard times either stimulate consciences or cause folks to hold back who otherwise might contribute. Rut there is stn-sys something coining mid an estimate from the treasury indicates that the amount sent hr anonymous per.ons In the fiscal year 11111 1 about equals the ?(t..'!71 received in III.'IO. . Tbe "fund" received $.10.(100 In 1020 and only JllS.itl In 1028, the lowest amount In a very long time. The hig year was 1H10 with Its $M.)'J,1, 'thanks to a record-breaking deposit of $.10,000 by a gentleman concerning whnc identity the treasury hasn't the slightest Idea. Since the first contributor naid S!i in 1S11, the government has received about $000,000 in this msnner. There Isn't really a "Conscience Fund." as seekers after donations or loans for worthy causes have to be advised again nnd again. The government takes the money, which Is often sent in an envelope without explanation and often with the comment that the sender once defrauded the government, and accounts for it under miscellaneous funds as "money received from persons unknown." The cash goes' into the general fund. Recent receipts have been largely from income tax evaders and veterans whose memories, go back to the war days or who have since received money from the Veterans' bureau to which ttiey were not entitled. Hut there is the annual crop of folks who "once used a postage stamp twice" and so sent In an uncancelled stamp to square things. Keligion titures importantly In the explanations. A man in t'hicago recently wrote: "I want to get this off my mind. I have been converted and am now at-i'rpting opport unit lea to preach the Gospel and do not want this to stand in my way." Some years aso. It appeared, he had taken a box of cartr ilces from a National Guard rifle range. Ministers nnd directors of missions often address the treason- for information about the "fund." apparently on behalf of persons who think they owe the government some restitution. S-onetlmes they them selves send along nionev received from such persons. . Others send articles, the significance of the gift being mysterious. Three electric .ignal h n, rstorhare come in, addressed to the "Conscience 1'und." more or less recently. tine man sent in a fen 'dollar, with the assertion that he had been impelled to do so hv "voices in the air." Classic cases include thnt of the innu who mailed a quarter to pay fnr pebbles, acorns :u,. leaves which he had taken as Siuvenirs from the Getnshnrg national eemeterv sesrs pri-vinns1 : ia CiTj' nr veteran who p,, in J'.'mt p,,t n.ruiv (e:irs ago for a muln stolen during his service: i he man who sent a nickel because he had ouro f mi nl "Hf on flip utrcct nnd Kfpt it; h vmunn uho .-ni four ivnti lcmuf hail oni-i rciuovi'd n no w sptlpir from tho fit- t tin l.ihrnrjr nf Toncrr nI I In inait nhn nnnicl 1n urnd .tH.tHn). but nit tin M. in b.ilf nn.l n-miMn't m! Hit other half until ronrimej thnt the fir, ivicknge An rvtM.Mirr rrrrntly wrote to fit,.? nUt If ) iinMcnlifif., "bu.M" who V yvnr hm Im.I .tnlm S'.M from hi pniiln n lit lri n it h..mr!.t:int ir:innort bflll t tvrr be co mi ootl-ir'iiro.sft'i-p,, , ,,., jj-j (1 thr 'fnml" If th- bvr ruK Mil! Um H. Ihf $-'!. DAft inn j ft bffu if.fnrU, i g)193l BY" NEA SERVICE. INC. 2g "It't the big time for me now, Gu s. I've found myself. Walt'll you hear me make the banjo sound exactly like a mouth organ." DAILY HEALTH SERVICE SUDDEN LOSS OF APPETITE. WEIGHT MARK DEFICIENCY IN VITAMIN B By DR. MORRTS FISHBEIN (Editor, Journal of the Annricnn Mfilirn! ARsnriation, and of Hy pfia, the Health Mngazin?) LJ I STO R IC A LLT vitamin B comm tirnt. nut Ukraine those vitamins are recognized in the human mind nl phabetirally they are here beinrf dio punsed in alphnbetirnl order. It will be remembered thnt vitnmin Rl wn really discovered by Eijkmnn. who fpd the polishine of rice to the snilorn nnd thereby prevented beriberi. Hun dreds of feeding experiment have been conducted with thin vitnmin since thnt. time. Indeed, much Is nl rend.v known concerning Its rbemicnl rhnrncler, but that knowledge Is so complicated and technical thnt It Is of Hltle value to the average reader. n ordinary people who live on diets quite deficient In vitnmin li there will develop general wenkness. loss of appetite, disturbance of the tissues generally nnd apparently a lowered resist nnce to Infection. If the vitnmin R deficiency becomes ex ceedingly great, serious nervous symptoms result, which have given to this vitnmin the name of nntl-neu- ritic vitamin. Much addiliounl studv, hns been mnde, however, on the other! symptoms thnt have been mentioned. 1 he conspicuous effect of a defi ciency of vitamin B is a sudden losn of appetite. Coincident with any loss of appetite, there is a loss of weight nnd an interference with nutrition. The question of the palatnbility of the food is apparently not involved, be cause the feeding of vitamin B re stores appetite regardless of the fact thnt, the same type of food is being fed. Hence it is being well accepted tlint one of the important functions of vitnmin B is to stimulnte the ap petite. Apparently it ip also related to stimulntion of the secreting func tions of the stomach and intestines nnd to the power of the stomach and intestines to move the food along. Failure of the motor functions of the stomach and intestines results in lal sorts of serious reactions. Hence, it is important, that a sufficient amount of vitamin R be taken to prevent nil of the conditions that can occur from such failure. As with vitamin A there seems to be nlso a relationship of vitnmin U to general body conditions, including proper metnnohsm or carrying on ot the chemistry of the body, reproduc tion, nnd ability to provide the infant with milk. The infant gets its vitnmin R through the mother's milk, but in vestigators are convinced that the amount It gets inny not always be suuictcnt tor its needs. MAIL BAG GLORIOUS "CARCASSONNE" I'm growing old. I've sixty years; I've labored all my life in vain: Tn nil thnt time of hopes and fears rve railed my clearest wish to gain. I see full well thnt here below Rl ss una loved there is for none. My prayer will ne'er fulfilment know 1 never nave seen arcassonne. I never have seen Carcossonne! Tou see the city from the hill. It lies hevond the mountains nine: And yet to reach it one must, still Five long and wenry leagues pursue And to return as ninny more. Ah! had Hie vmtnge plentnus grown! The grape withheld its yellow store; I shall not look on I arcassonne, I shall not look on t'arcassonne! They tell me every day is there Not more nor less thnn Sunday gay; In shining robes and garments fnir The beonle walk unon their way. One gazes there on castle walls As grand ns those ot Hnoyion A bishop and two generals! I do not know fair i nrenssonne. I do not know fair Carcassonne! The vicar's right; he says thnt we Are ever wnvward. weak and blind; ne tells us in bis homily Ambition ruins si I mnnkmd; Yet could I (hero two da.vs have spent W hile sti the autumn swuetiy shone Ah. me I 1 might have died content. When I had looked on t arcassonne. When I bad looked on Carcassonne! Thv pardon. Father. T beseech. In this my prner if I offend: One. something sees Iveyond his reach From childhood to his journey s end. Mr wife, our little boy Aignnn. Have traveled even to Hurbonne: My grandchild hns seen Perpignnn And I have not seen ( nrenssonne. And I have not seen Carcassonne! So crooned, one dny. close hv T.imoui. A peasant, double pent with age. ltte up. my friend." said 1 : "With you I II go upon this pilsrimace." We left next morning his abode. Rut i brawn forgive him 1 halfway on The old man died upon the road. lie never gn?.ed on Carcassonne, Each mortal bus hi Cnrensonne! tU'STAVK NAIVVI H. laugh? No! Nor no one else around mere, 'there are tunes for "guts, also times to use common sense. FRANCES GOUDB. COTTAGE GROVE NEWS - COTTAGE GROVE. Aug. 21. i special i tred I'nmter and familv Trom Rend enme Wednesdnv nnd Mr. Fainter has gone to Ft. IVrrv, Ohio. ' me annual national rifle shoot. .Mrs. rainier and children will visit with Mrs. Painter's brother. Frefl Hanger and family while her hus luuid is at the national shoot. Mrs. Mattle Clark and son Kenneth came Wednesday night from Portlnnd and are visiting Mrs. Clark's parents. Mr. nnd Mrs. ,T. H. Rnrtles. Kenneth Clnrk hns been in the C. S. Navy the past two years nnd is now home from Birmingham. Wash., where his ship the S. 8, New York Is in harhor. N. E. (iln.s motored to Mnbton. Wash., with bis family Sunday where they visited with Mrs. Glass' mother. Mrs. Fowler. N. F. Glass returned home while Mm. Clnss and the two sons remained for n visit until school begins. Mr. and Mrs. .7. C. Johnson came from Gold Reach Wednesday. Their iirx HER AUNT TOLD HER CONCERNING ADVICE CIl.TCOOS, (rr (To llie lMitor J Thnt nM ninn nt lhi 1'ninn titirn Hint Minn t'-lls ns nl"iit vi-rr lutrtimllr nn ll"llll ns "full of con.l crnl'' nml Unrw 'sliori tln'ro sav pltMitr mnri. Ho hntl not hMi out of work for months, n fnniily !''- nrnilinir on him for support, I rrrnll II full crown smilinff mnn itiviiis nil tIio to Ill-wnr-oM cirl ho uss sufforinc with till tnlh.H'hi II' snul tust think of soniplhine os fr- i ciM It. lunch. Aflrrwnnls he irol the I tnuthiU'hr. 1'icl ho forsi't It mnl I Where the Brit of Work manship Com No More. Hoffman's Jewelry Store Brodiy nd Wlllmtt jL "ArrtR rny baby was born I took Lydii E. Pinkham'j Vegetable Compound for a bet ter appetite and more strength. My aunt recommended it. "This medicinehelped me more than anything else. My appetite is improved. My nerves are steady. 1 have pood color and feel stronger. 1 will write to women about the Vegetable Compound." Mrs. Harvey Super. 211 Greet) ' Street, Brooklyn, New York. EGETABLE COMPOUND daughter Mrs, W. F. Lehow Was broujjht home from the Pacific Chris tian hospital Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Graham return ed Thursday from their cabin on Sharp's creek. The Roy Short fnmilv with cousin Olivian and Julia Kinith returned from Portlnnd Wednesday niht. The two .Smith Kirls are visiting their grand mother. Mm, Mary Hmith nnd aunts Mrs. Charles Reidler and Mrs. Jes sie Mathews. George Wilson from Seattle, Wash., is visiting his mother, Mrs. G. W, Sweet and fnmilv. Miss Gladyn Sprouts returned from a six weeks' visit in Portlnnd this week. Her uncle Robert .Myers and family brought her home. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Oard came up Wednesday from Weudling and are with Mr. Oard's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Tate. The following ladies gathered Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Roy Phillips nnd presented her wit h a handkerchief shower. Mrs. Fllu Tiller. Mrs. Nettie Sailing, Mrs. Kvn Aubrey, Mrs. Nettie Sweet, Mrs. Fda Jones, Mrs. Julia Ashhv. Mrs. Manilla Tee ters, Mrs. Elizabeth (tohdii, Mrs. Eva Hatch. Mrs. Elizabeth Fabrenwald. Mrs. Harriet Leonard. Mrs. Nettie MvKibben. Mrs. Laura McKernan. Mrs. Carrie Hemenway, Mrs. Malinda Aubrey. Mrs. Julia Gover, Mrs. Emily Elser. The Roy Phillips family are leaving next week for Rubens. Idaho, near Le wist on where they will make their future home. Shorley Ann Rurkholder was eiuht years old Thursday. Her mother Mrs. Dana Rurkholder had ice cream and cake and Mrs. Carmen White and daughters and Mrs. Rosa Peterson and daughters Louise and Marie with the other daughters Charlotte and Hnna Burkholdcr and hnd 'a little party. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Adam" with Mrs. Frank Knox and daughter Elojse came up Thursday and visited with their many friends. Miss Merle Stradcr from Grants Pass came Thursday and is visiting Miss Evelyn Groves. "Old English" Comes To Colonial Friday 'Old English," regarded as the uiuttterjiitf&u of cm mm drama by the iniitf rpiecc of cinema drama by the sen ted at the Cuiuinal theater i riuay an one of ibo outstanding feature, of "Uld Favorite Week," in place of "Disraeli originally announced, it is mated by W, ii. McDouald, (Jolouial manager. "Disraeli" was recently taken out of service, due to the fact that the sound ia only recorded on disc, now obsolete, and the Colonial waa uu ablo to obtaiu the print. It is be lieved that "Old English'1 will prove even more popular as one of the "Favorite" selections. "Old English" is the story of an old English gentleman, who has lived and loveu, and though he has grown old, still bus plenty of fire and intrigue left in him. How ho maneuv ers and manipulates people to gain his ends mnkes one of tiie most ab sorbing stories ever screened. Arliss, of co u rue, gives a matchless per formance as the old gentleman. The picture will show but one night only, and on .Saturday the fa moua I f u rold Lloyd lau gh feature, "Feet First," will conclude "Old Favorite Week.' Stayton Woolen Mill to Re-Open SALEM. Ore.. Aug. 21. CU.R) The Stayton woolen mills of Stay ton, closed for three years, will re- New York Weddings Show Slight Slump NEW YORK. (U.R) The number of mnrriaire licenses issued in New York for 1W!0 show a very slight, de cline over 1 f l. In 10!. 0 there was a total of 74.(!42 licenses issued in the five boroughs ns conipnred with 70. 525 for 1020. June eontinues to le the most popular wedding month. MAY PURCHASE ARM SALEM. Or-.. Auc. HI. U.P Purchase of an artificial arm for Julian Mason, former inmate of the state prison who niet with accident in the state flax industry may he authorized by thes tate boird of con trol. Attorney General Yan Winkle hns ruled. Twenty-nine states have laws pro hibiting intermarriages between ne groes and whites. EUGENE FOUNDRY AND MACHINE CO. EXPLAIN SIMILARITY OF ROASTING PROCESS AND HOUR-GLASS Hills Bros.' Patented Process Produces a Fine, Even Roast Because Coffee Berries Pass Through the Roasters "a Little at a Time" it iaid h.r open immediately, today. The mill will specialiie i ,;. goods, hire about 40 Bi,n , under a new management accorrfi to the report. ordln, ,,.., AUTO TRACED SALh.M, Ore., Aug ii n . , State police were tracing "tod,, ownership of an mi tomJ tA" a . ' Here yesterday by Carroll Harvey of anconver. Wash., who 1. k held for investigation. The TZf reported that he had been robbed? HAVE FUN 7? Sunday, AUG. 23 - - ' ' infl' at 0DELL LAKE Mile High in the Cascades MACHINE SHOP! OPPOSITE CANNERY PHONE 1054 A stream of sand sifting from s globe on top through a narrow neck into a corresponding globe on the bottom . . . that's an hour-glass. And just as its accuracy depends upon an even, continuous flow . . . a little at a time ... so the match less, uniform flavor of Hills Bros. Coffee is produced by Controlled Roasting Hills Bros.' patented process that roasts evenly, contin uously . . . a little at a time. Temperature and flow of coffee through the roasters are automati cally controlled with this process. As a result, every berry is roasted to the degree that assures perfect flavor in every pound. Bulk-roasting methods seldom achieve such a thing. It is Controlled Roasting that gives Hills Bros. Coffee a flavor no other coffee has. Insist on Hills Bros. Coffee. It is packed in vacuum cans. Air, which destroys the flavor of coffee, is removed and kept out of these cans. Even ordinary, "air tight" cans won't keep coffee fresh. But Hills Bros. Coffee is ever-fresh. Order some today. Ask for it by name, and look for the Arab trade mark on the can. Hills Bros. Coffee, Inc., Portland, Oregon. 1031 ROUND TRIP Excursion Train Leaves Eugene 8:00 a. m. Ar rive Odell Lake, 11:15 a. m. Start back, 5:30 p. m., noma at S: 30. Enjoy a thrilling train ride through the scenic Cas cades and an enjoyable out ing of fishing, swimming, boat, ing, hiking at this sparkling blue lake. Children 5 to 12, half fare; under 5, free. SOUTHERN PACIFIC F. G. LEWIS. Agent Phone 2200 1 If It's a Summer Cottage camping site, or a suburban home away from the heat and noise of the city near the cool breezes of a stream where you can enjoy fishing, boating, golfing, swimming, etc., let the Register-Guard assist in finding just the place you want no trouble or inconvenience. Your pencil, shears, tele phone and daily Register-Guard Want Ad section is all that's needed. Select your summer home from your arm chair tonight; turn now to classification 200. Complete Real Estate Directory of Eugene!