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OULD you like to leave the turmoil and rush of the city and camp in some delightful 
retreat beside a mountain stream where the fragrant pine needles cover the ground; 
and where one may sleep and eat and sleep again and forget that he has nerves? On 
the Cascade National Forest in Oregon there are a thousand beautiful spots by lake 
or stream or in secluded mountain park, easily reached by automobile, with horses, or 
on foot. You may match your skill against the elusive rainbow, steelhead, and Dolly 
Varden trout; hunt deer or bear in a paradise of mountain scenery; scale glaciers on 
a glistening peak; bathe in warm mineral springs; or sit down with a mountain appetite to venison 
and trout broiled on your own camp fire. The clear, sparkling trout streams rise on snow-clad 
peaks and dash in tempestuous fury past lava flows and cliffs, and through magnificent forests of 
Douglas fir. The days are clear and sunny, the air full of ozone, the nights cool and glorious. 
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