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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 3, 1925)
..Yidnv Evening, April 3, 1925 Today's Gross Anotuer definition for 1 vertical, known especially among the elite of . ta n-hnr regular folk call 1ail. A term tn t.n t. " v of defining 27 yertical. Now try it. v" , 4.3 -"1 3 3 A J s 7 a 5 " y 33 T34 3 1st 7 38 sr r" 5 J1 STY L 4S it-1 M 1 iii 1 1 I h HORIZONTAL To provide foorl. H20. More painful. Os (pi.). Toward. To subsist (second person). Groove. t Point of compass. Steeps in aluminum compound. Lukewarm. Obtains Steel rod In jail. Carbonated drink containing lee cream. Before. Exposes. Eleven minus one. A knot in wool fiber. Fine powder contained in smoke. Almost a donkey. Dogma. Tree with tough wood. Destruction. " Period. Money changing premium. Angered. Smell. Preposition. Diving bird. Witticism. Direction between north pole end Europe. Fifty-two weeks (pi.). Edible fungus. Flat circular plates. An embalmer. VERTICAL Icebox. Measure of area. Horses harnessed together (pi.) Sins. To border on. i Radio Programs Professor H. G. Tanner of Eugene will answer the question "How small can anything be and still exist?" in his lecture on the microscope tonight over KOW. Various things that have infinitesunnl eiistence will form the content of one of the most generally interesting lectures of the series given by the university's extension service. Did you hear KOO'S "Smiling Through" last nicht? As predicted, it was a dramatic masterpiece. The Broadcast Listeners' club, open only to residents of the university dis trict, a suburb of Senttle, has been or ganized to clear up electrical inter ferences and exchange radio ideas. TONIGHT'S PROGRAMS tPaetflo Coast. KOW, Portland, 4111.5 meters 5 p. m Children's program; 6, Concert by the "Columbians," dunce orchestra; 7:15, Weather, police and market re Ports and news bulletins; 8, Univer sity of Oraeron extension lecture, "He jond the Microscope," by H. S. Tan ner, assistant professor of chemistry ' tthe University of Oregon; 10:30, Hoot Owls, Hose City trio, and other features. KFAE. Pullman, Wh 3S4.8 mo t"r 7:30 9 p. m., Glenna Garrett, prano; Erna Nelson, resder; Home T.'l.nt trio; Helen Clans, pianist; I.ola Graham, violinist; "The Wear and Tear of Auto Tires on Level I!-.irts." Dean H. V. Carpenter; '.rowing Berries in the Home Gar-d-n." M. D. Armstrong; "Preparing "r the Spring Garden." Professor C. 1.. Vincent. r KFI, Los Angeles, 408.5 meters I'" P- m., Examiner's musical half ""ur: 6:t-7.raditorial talk; 7-8, Ex rminer. V. Dodd's ayncopstors; 8-!. Ai-nimn residence pipe organ recital, Jm MrFarland. organist; 9-10, Eve n ng Herald danch orchestra; 10-11, i'l'la Itohr. enntranto, with instru mental accompaniment. KFOA. Seattle, 3S4.4 meters-4-: p. m., William F. Hoffman's Olv nit'c hotel concert orchestra; 6:45 '. Sherman, Clay and company; '-10. Times program; 10-11, Eddie "nrkno" and hii orchestra. KFWB. Hollywood. Cal., 252 me ' 7-S p. m.. dinner ionr music; "10. KFWB feature program; 10-1 " m.. llrandstetter'a Hollvwooil Mon ttunrte cafe dance orchestra. MO, Oakland. Cl.. 301.2 meters - j n. m.. studio musical program; ' :. concert orchestra. Hotel Sc. r rmy Los Angel.s. 405.1 meters " ' 10 p. m.. Art Hickman's Blltmorc ""el concert orchestra, Edward Flts PntricV. director; 0:30-7:80. little slo " American history. Professor Wl t"! s."lv'"r Hertiog; play, pupils of Mvth McGrath: Incle John; 7:30, " f Trail" Gladys DeWltt; 5 ln: Jnl" C. Feys sr.d associates pre ,'"'mt Arin trio. Jennie Dnrk. ""'; soloist; Carl Bnrattl. enruet "": i.amut male quartet: Sara Hinds. rooanist. i0.n Ar, HjCKm,n., "nor, ,,, inft orcllCT,r K,r '-"eft. leader. t!.X. Oakland. Cal.. .VtS.2 ratre- " m. organ recital; 7:45 0:45, - Word Puzzle 7. Carries. 8. Half an era. 23. Bundled. 10. Platform in theater. 12. Kind of an automobile. 18. Implement. 19. Distant. 21. Thick soup. 23. Bundl3. 24. To change a setting in a ring. 27. Chewed. 28. Drunkard. 32. To arrange. 3. Fitted. 35. Wood peg. 87. An incorrigible person. 88. Inn. ...... . 40. Approaches.' 42. Performer. 44. Moderately dark. 45. A few; any. 51. Three-toed sloth. 53. Second note in scale. Answers to yesterday's croBS-word puzzle: studio program ballroom. KNX, Hollywood, Cal., 336.9 me ters 6:15-7:30 p. m., dinner hour music; 7:30-8, program, Eastern Out fitting company; 8-9, program, West Coast Theaters, Inc.; 911, KXX fea ture program; 11-12, Abe Lyman's Cocoanut Grove dance orchestra from Ambassador hotel. KPO, San Francisco, 429.5 me ters 4:30-5:30 p. m., Hudy Seiger's Fairmount hotel drchastra; 8-9, pro gram, Cleveland Six orchestra. Mountain Stations. KOA, Denver. 322.4 meters 7 r. m., dance musijc by Fred Schmidt and his orchestra; 7-10, concert by the KOA orchestra. KOn. State college, N. M., 348.6 meters 0:30-7:30 p. m., popular science course and lecture, "Forest Functions and Farms." Home Hints ALWAYS wipe off the outsido of the milk bottle before you set it in tbe refrigerator. Makes Brown Crusts There if no better way of obtaining a fine shiny brown crust on pies than by glaxing over with the white of an egg. Watoh Refrigerator The contents of the refrigerator should be examined daily and no stale food should be allowed to stay there. To Clean Silver Gray or oxidized silver should be cleaned by washing in hot, soapy water. Shiny Nickel Nickel ran be kept bright and shin ing by rubbing it occasionally with a paste of whiting or a fine scourer. Use Perforated Spoon A perforated spoon is the best f utensil to use for creaming butter and sugar. Use Sleev Boards Sleeve boards are useful not only for ironing sleeves, but also for iron ing small articles that need but little space. Won't Let Plate Slip To prevent a plate from slipping when you set it on a cake of ire in the refrigerator, pat a rn rubber such as you use on a mason jar un der it. To Cat Fresh Bread Before cutting freshly baked bread, dip the knife in boiling water. To Sinus a Chicken To sing a rhieken, up brown wrapping paper and there) will be no blackened spots on the fowL MUTT AND JEFF fJGFr, Hcae'j som? f rr msmostht fboi'N - ft -lot of soob it'll do fx chumming juityOv I BiM toewi Fofc 7 ATTORNEY OP NCuj York CITY ) I NOW on VOO CAN SIT Yool ALU THel LVKfiLV I f j HOLtoltOl "WS HArJbCUfF ) V Yool J ; IS 60pjwA PADLOtle ALL YH I AT HOeAfi Afotj (jT IrJ tiOMPS UlILL MAVS BIS J J I klMt foOU. ANa A I 1 J f " 1 JAZZ- PALACSS ANb CLUli IY6VJR CUCNlNGi PLAYINS ) PAtiUOCKS 0WTM4 FLOCK OF PAfcLOOCJ Pf f ,yt TOT THAT HAJ& BTM V10LATIN6 SOHTAU! J I arJ0S. V MGAMS MOTHINS IM I mutt? ijl I PRjBrnwlf v j fT--T-x ' r v. KVS Yoofot UF6i ; j"j ' "1 Jerry On the Job , I 1 ' . BAREE. SON OF KAZAN By JAMES OLIVER CUBWOOD ; Copyright, 1817, bj Doubleday, Paga A Co.. "BAREE, SON OF KAZAJ," a Vltagraph' Picture, With Wolf, the War Dog, Is an Adaptation ot This Story SYNOPSIS Hidden benenth a huge rock, Ba ree, the untamed wolf-dog, was ter rified to see Pierrot, the half-breed trapper, and Nepeese, Tils daughter, shoot and kill Wakayoo, tbe black bear. This was slaughter, but for the two human creatures it was the business of life. Nepeese went after Baree and tried to entice him from his hiding-place. For thc first time the dog had a name. It waa the In dian princess, who called him Baree. (Continued.) JN THAT moment Nepeese felt the pressure of the rock on her shoul der, and into the eyes that had been glowing softly at Baree there shot a sudden wild look of horror. And then there came from her lips a cry that wns not like any other sound Bnree had ever heard in the wilder ness wild, piercing, filled with agon ized fenr. Pierrot did not hear that first cry. But he heard the second and the third and then scream after scream as the Willow's tender body was slowly crushed under the settling mass. He ran toward it with the speed of the wind. The cries were weaker dying away. lie saw Bnreo as ho cnmo out. from under the rock and ran into the chasm; and in the same instant he saw a part of the Willow's dress and her inocrasined feet. The rest of her was hidden under the death trap. Like n mad man Pierrot begnn digging. When a few moments loter ho drew Nepeese out from under the boulder she whs whito and dent lily still. Her eyes were closed. His hand could not fool that she was living, and a great moan of anguish rose out of his soul. But he knew how to fight for a life. He tore open her dress and found that she was not crushed as he had feared. Then he rnn for water. When he returned, the Willow's eyes worn open and she was gasping for breath. 'Thj blessed saints be praised!" sobbed Pierrot, falling on his knees nt her side. "Nepeese. ma Nepeosr!' Impelled by the wild nlnrm of the Willow's cries and the sight of Pier rot dashing madly toward him from the dead body of Wakayoo, Baren did not stop running until it seemed as though his lungs could not draw another breath. When he stopped he was well out of the canyon and headed for the beaver pond. Exactly wherein lay Baree's fears it would be difficult to say hut surely it was not because of Ne peese. The Willow had chased him hnrd. She had flung herself upon him. He had felt the clutch of her hands and the smother of her soft hair, and yet of her he was not afraid! If he stopped now and then in his flight and looked bark, it was to seo if Nepeese was following. He would not hare run hard from her alone. Her eyes and voire and hands had set something stirring in him; he was filled with a greater yearning and a greater loneliness now and that night he dreamed troubled dreams. Baree was glad when the dawn came. He did not seek for food, but went down to the pond. There wns little hope and anticipation in his manner now. He. remembered that, as ploinly as atiimnl ways could talk T'misk and his playmates hail told him they wanted nothing to do with hfm. And yet the fart that they wera there took away from his lone liness. It was more thnn lonelinf'M. The wolf in him was submerged. The dog was master. In one oi the larger ranals Bnree surprised a big heirer towing a four foot cutting of birrh as thick through as a man's leg half a doten break fasts and dinners and auppem fn that one cargo. The four or five inner bnrk of the birch are what might be called the bread and butter and potatoes of the bearer menu, while the more highly priced barks of the willow and young alder take the place of meat and pie. Baree smelled curiously of the birrh rutting after the old heaver had abandoned ft in flight, and then wmt on. II" did not try to hide him self now. and at lat half a doxn beaver had a good look at him be . . THE 4.30- t-T" JuSttwe Sam ZZ ' A Mill- WLBes OMHiMf- W QUIT AT J&-' fk Vll '" - Sr ' 2 II I fore ho came to the point where the pond nnrrowed down to the width of the streum, almost half a mile lrom the dam. Then he wandered bnck All that morning he hovered about the pond, showing himself openly. In their big mud-niid-Btick strong holds the beuvcrs held a council of war. They were distinctly, puzzled: ' It may be that the beavers dis cussed the matter fully among them selves. It is possible that Umlsk and his plnymntes told their parents of their adventures, and, of how Ba ree made no move to harm them when he could "quite easily have caught them. It is also more thnn likely that the old beavers who had fled from Bnree that morning gave an account of their adventures, again emphasizing the fact that the strang er, while frightening them, hod shown no disposition to attack them. All this is quite possible, for if beavers can tonko a large part of a contin ent's history, and can perform engin eering fents that nothing less thnn dynamite can destroy, ifis only reas onable to suppose that they have some way of making one another un derstand. - However this may be, courngeous old Beaver-tooth took it upon him self to end the suspense. (To be continued.) I On Gardening 1 JANY annuals are as valuable or even more vnlunble for their fol iage than their bloom and are very useful in the garden. Some of them owe their entire beauty to brilliantly COLEUS, eolored foliage. Tbe prickly poppies, argemones, now coming In fine double hybrids and ranging from white to j light yellow, have handsome thistle like foliage of gray tones with white j vcinings in addition to their silky ! bloom. They are always ornamental. The most brilliant of the foliage annuals is the amaranthus, a glorified I pig weed which has arrayed itself in gorgeous garments. Btirhnnk has pro duced some wonderfully brilliant types of this plant. Hanging from dark purple to glowing scarlets, these easily grown annuals make brilliant display. The cannns of stately folinge and Half Holiday When Saturday afternoon cornea, a lot of folks stop In the work they've been doing all week. Ambition and vigor and vim go kerflop, and they take on a lazy-like streak. The half a day off ia a bully fine thing and we plan what we'll do all week long. There's this and there's that that reel pleasure would bring, but how oftn the planning goes wrong. On Monday and Tuesday and Wednesday we fret. Oh, the rest can't come any too soon. On Thurnday and Friday, as closer we get, we still long for Saturday noon. The half a day off wa are anxious to cop. for we kinda Just feel that we'll shirk. And, by the missus, we're dragged out to shop, which ia wor than our regular work. (Copyright, llii, EU'QEUE GUAED Padlocking; the Jazz Palaces Means Nothing to Jeff. CROSS-WORD FOR LITTLE FOLKS C AJPE3A SJP ALJA 1 lEIu R M ERS l oTw D Answer to Little Joe's puzzle: gorgeous bloom are not hard to raise from seed if the hard, shot-like seeds are filed thin on one side and soaked in worm water for 24 hours before planting. They bloom the first sea1 son from seed. The "dusty m'llers," cineraria mari tima and cenlausen candissiuia, can be raised in quantity for edgings from a single packet of seed. The euphorbias, close relatives of the bril liaut poiiisctta of holiday season, give two showy annuals, the old-fashioned green und white snow-on-th-mountuin nnd the Mexican fire plant, K. bet- erophylla, a miniature poinsetta with brilliant acurlet heads of leaves. T feverfew and nasturtium come hi bright gnldtfi leaved forms useful for their foliage alone. The coleus, most brilliant of foli age plants, may be raised as easily from seed as the salvia, a relative, and the purple-leaved perlllaa so much used in tho park are also easy to grow In quantity. Of the ornamenfiil grasses, the an nunl pennisetums are much used and aro huudsome edgings. They are Aby sinninn grasses with feathery plumes and bronzy foliage. They grow as RlCINUS -CASTOR fctAH- readily as lawn grass and make quick display when they have been given a good start. AUTOS DESTROY ROADS VIENNA, April 8. W) Because the 30,000 pleasure automobiles, mo tor trucks and motrocvcVf in Austria are cutting up the roads not built originally to ftand such traffic, own ers of the vehicles will have to con tribute to road maintenance. The money will be collected through a system of taxation. MvA Mrvice. Inc.) FLAPPER FANNY says; Clothes make the aotor, but look of them often makes the actress. Wallpaper for The Nursery It's not tho kind of wallpaper you'd put Into any other room hut the child ren's room. Such wall covering cornea in ail kinds of designs, with animals, playing children and other similar subject a quaintly painted on it It Is not costly, either. Today's Styles This new frock in festurcd with flowers od the skirt whlcb resemble a leopard's skin. if! S A Member of the Non JACK DAW'S Story br Hal Coohran Drawings by L. W. Redner AT LOO RIVER CHAPTER 29 rpiIE little adventurors went up to the door of the mill and peored in. "Come on right In," shouted friendly voice. So Jack and Dotty started exploring the mill machinery. They watched hugo logs slide along a pathway and then run under a new to be cut in short pieces. I HTTIKN in another portion of the mill they saw queer-looking machinery atrip all the bark off of the logs. It was all very interesting and one of the lumber mill men walked along with' the visitors and explained everything to them. JIo had to shout loudly because' tho sawing made such a noise. "VOW this ia the place where we housea with," said the man. slit Into long flat pieces. "When lumber boats and they are taken to (Continued.) On a bright day In spring, sitter Bess Ksld "I'll clean this old straw bet, I (1) With a rasp and a (2) She attacked it the (8) And you nevsr did see such a H). ' (1) Opine. (tl) Row of soldiers. (3) Time being. (4) Food (as prepsred br bride) Page Seven By BUD FISHER - Workmen's Union ADVENTURES make the planks that they use to build And Jack and his cousin saw long logs these are made wa load them on the big cities," continued the lumber man. Stocpls Jack You cling to a steeple, Amazing the people Who wntch from the streets far below. , Ton pnint snd yon clean ' Till It plnlnly is Neon That willi ciesuliuess the steeple's aglow. THE BUTTON SHOP fleeting. Buttons snd Hemstitching, tO 7tb Ave. Gsst. Psoas 1715 J. OREGON MOTOR CO. Phone Pli 030 Oliw INSURE WITH HENRY TROMP.