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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 15, 1925)
EUGENE GUARD Pago Seven MUTT AND JEFF. At That, the Little Umpire Was Probably Right By BUD FISHER itfs Cross-Word Puzzle . in this puizle. But a few of them are rather fc mostly, words mar give you more than ordinary oMbepto know that the unkeyed letter ; of 02-horiiontal .BrenfaftAprillS. 1925 rrTTTT I7 I 8 9 ' -mr $r -rr- "ij Mi -JP lfpgH IE"'" Eg 1 "Jill" 1I !s nr- LJ I ! I I I I Horizontal of a roof. up. r. urn. up. ition Altar; also macaw. em. tree. npt . power supposed to pro D0ti9m. treasure boat. r settled upon wife at marriage. ,rnj of addressing male. re for mother. rve. Bilk threads, introduced the skin by surgeon's ist f. cut from which arrow ondence received daily, with lips closed. !ttee. electrical resistance, ed by sun. a wool fiber, rk. ' Vortical ght of container, note of scale. ur. a lion. 4-5 Truck tised for furniture. To weep. Wily. Skill. Nay. Relieved. Excited palpitntion. Yellow Hawaiian bird. Part of the foot. Inhabitant of the city. Simpleton. Pink meat salt-water fish that comes to fresh water at spawn ing time. Printer's measure. The fluid in a tree. The other half of neither. Three-toed sloth. Strips of leather with a buckle at the end. Friend. Griefs (var.) To make verse. Mixture of earth and water. 2000 pounds (pi.). Exclamation of surprise. Possesses. Males. Lawyer's charge. Department or prefecture In China. To accomplish. Xe. Jerry On the Job The Bloodless Duel Tuore.nuo Busts-ou-ttuegei riQvrnws Uke a Vas. of ciasu ost Ax put A SibP ro it. Answer to Yesterdny'H cross-word puzzle : P1L UMESHSTAIR.1EBS LXL s oILML o q $WEEu lllillEsEljAlJ TL L SEIglgOMS r AI N E ESlQERSaPLSl Q S SwEAjLE.Sk AS. SO sTiIe IgIEIsEmiaitieishsi -14 adio ograms rebe station at Richmond ngaged the Adamo Sym rt orchestra, to broadcast iy night on the late pro orchestra knows no jazz, ice the usual jazz on tho i. aod will be rebroadoast Davenport, Iowa. martre cofe dance orchestra, Mel Pe desky, leader. KGO, Oakland, Cal., Sfit meters- 4-5:30 p. m.t concert orchestra, Hotel St. Francis. KH.I, Los Angeles, Cal., 405.2 me ters 6-6:30 p. m., Art Hickman's Biltmore hotel concert orchestra, Edward Fit zpa trick, director; 6:30 7:30, littlo stories American history Professor Walter Sylvester Hertzog; Dick Wiuslow, juvenile reporter; Baby Muriel MacCormac and Mickey Mclian, screen starlets; 8, Dr. Mars Itumgardt, scietmfic lecture; 8:dU i:30, program by Fillmore, Cal., chamher of commerce; i):30-10, the Valvoline trio; 10-11, At Hickman's Kilt more hotel dance orchestra, Earl Kurtnett, leader. KJK, Seattle, Wash., 3S-J.8 meters 6-6:30 p. in., "What's Doing at the 1 - - ' , . , ... -SL.a-.w 1 "ViViLJSJ Vvsk f BAREE, SON OF KAZAN By JAMES OLIVER GUEWOOD Copyright, 1917, by Double day, P&ffo Oo. "BARKIS, SON OF KAZAN," a Vitagrph Picture, With Wolt, tha War Dos, Is an Adaptation of This Story SYNOPSIS Pierrot, the trapper, and Ncpeese, his daughter, made, the rounds of their traps to sre what omnia la. had been caught. Pierrot never left the girl alone for he was fearful of Me Taggart, the unscrupulous factor, wfio was determined to marry her. Barce, the volf-dog, always accom panied them. Nepeeae made a pet of the dog, but Pierrot occasionally struck the dog. "If I make him hate me, he will hate all men," be ex plained. The futher was looking into the future for Nepecse. MOW the tonic-filled days and cold, frosty nightH of the Bed Moon brought about the big change in Ba rce. It was inevitable. Pierrot knew that it would come, and tho first night that Baree settled back on his haunches and howled up at the Bed Moon, Pierrot prepared Nepecse for it . "He is a wild dog, ma Nepeese," he said to her. "He iB half wolf, and the C?all will come to bim strong. He will go into the forests. He will disappear at times. But we must not fnsten him. He will come back. Ka, he will come back!" And he rubbed his hands In the moon-glow uniil his knuckles cracked. The Call came to Baree like a thief entering slowly and cautiously into a forbidden place. Ho did not un derstand at;.first. It made him nerv ous and uneasy, so restless that Ne peeso frequently "heard. . him . whtrio softly In' his sleep. Ho was waiting for something. What was it? Pierrot knew, and smiled in his inscrutable way. And then It came. It was a night, a glorious night-filled with moon and stars, under which the earth was whitening with a film of frost, when ther heard the first hunt-call of the wolves. Now and then during the summer there had come tho lone wolfhowl, but this wns the tonguing of the pack; and as It 'floated thrown tho vast silence and mystery of tjm night, a song of savagery that had come with each lied Moon down through unending ages, Pierrot knew that at last had come that ior wnicn Baree had been waiting. In nn instant Baree had sensed it. His muscles grew taut as pieces of stretched rope as he stood up in the moonlight, facing the direction irom which floated the mystery and thrill of the sound. They could, hear him whining softly; add Pierrot, bonding down so that ho caught the light of the night properly, could see him trembling. v "It is Mee-Koo!" he said In a wbisner to Neneettp. That was It, the call of the blood Jack Ne:.siii, -Aval Older of Moose sta 'sehearl, 111., now brond t The tinrod studio in tfce se. Ciiii'uz!. State Bfijd-o at the Ken- . was revmtly officially ' Theaters '; 8:30-0:30, I'-.st-Intelligen .iirt, r iit studio concert; U:.tiMU, travel ogue, .Mirmiin l ierce. KLX, Oakland, Cal., S0S.2 meter 8-10 p. m... American theater or chestra; 10-11:30, Sweet's ballroom. KNX, Hollywood, Chi., 38U.U me ters o:4.Vt:15 p. m., Wurlitzer pipe organ studio, sports talk, Sid Ziff; 0:15-7, dinner hour music; 7-8, Am- exp.'iiiliuires for VV2-1 bnaaailor hotel concert orenpstra, jo- Mw.vn and 60 per i ef Bosenfcld. d. rector; 8-10. pro t, tho programs. ! grain. Broadway department store; "1 10-pj, Hnllywoodland community 3HT'S PROGRAMS I dance orchestra. Pacific Coast KPO, Son Francisco, Cal., 420.5 "tian'l, 41M.5 mtr- S ! meters 6:30-7 p. ra.. States' resnu- ui a ; ph Hroaucasting company 'ding .'tOAiini hours of pro. An analysis of iren'i program; 6 p. m., ! rant orciinstra; It. ind li I J- me- ', p" m- vmlin quariPt; :;n. r-ador; Kveiyn l:,?" Jn'J.chlnn, vio--u 1 rv-h-? Amplifiers," "rpnrrr; 'Home Kgg U. N- MiHer; "No", I 01 'miK-.' I'rofeWor ' "f the Now ',A: ' ' 4iK.r. mi. ' '!:f.i ial talk; -'J !., bv Si.k liar- l- 1 Owin. Klm- '''l,f. Kxamt ; l'J-U. I'at 'ra. Hi-ttr . 'i-I't. ;.ji,v V 'I P!'"- II.,;, c a., i.-, Irr.i,.. , 1 'ii.h r '! h,.ur s,,ymfmr; lt ';r. I)k '';"ia jonl. 1 i ., 'Sf-".m: Arrow- tt-i 10. ,. ! HINTS UPON HOW TO BE BEAUTIFUL No. 1 Care of the Hair Uiirly Sc.- ur -'J! hW it fir. 555S4Kj8 : Bright Hcd WfT ' ' : ?. I Cftol f : , ..Mi ! I TV'S y -twW LS TVK i Flo Kennedy Z3A-JS I!r KI.O KENNEDY oliiuru t Mpinriv j ; eer's Fnirraout hotel orchestra: i :.HJ- '"! bj Lillian .Swan'son, ' s. t'onn llnud Inntrument cimipnny; sfMrot Non, accompan-' ' s tl' Atwater-Kent artists' program; a1-, w-atir, polire anil "l- instrumental and vocal selee ncs bulietiua and tinns; 10-11, Johnny lluick'a Amphi N n. i i . .... , ans. .vino Minn v a trio; l.i'jti I X' 1) T lewis. I UNN liilii IS One of the newest under-arro baes is is one of bright rd leather with f (;ONSIIKIl my hair mjr greatest L neTer use one twice without washing 1L My balr la tery thick, but I brush beauty asset. I de,o more time j -ly . .i.,1. . to it than any other phase of beauty ( mnd tLd bfUtU up .j of ,own. culture, probably becaast it responds This kep the umlp in a healthy more quickly to care and it shrieks j condition, and if tha smlp is healthy , j the buir is almost bound to be thick neglect more loudly. , fJ (() hm wtn mhn I pin aiy faith on the hairbrush. ! f, fortnijrbt 1 wah my hair a wide strap and buckle to keep one's; Virst. t rount he ot (toivi quality wixn in pure casttle soap ann water ana vuluabk fafe. It contains a red i firm, but not too utiff brittle. Thn dry it by hand. I never wear hat leather vanity ou'fit inside, reduced it alwaya must b immaculatljr clean. 1 when I can avoid it and give the to tb least rouble spaca and bulk., I Lave several bruahes so that J i air and sunlight every chance at it that was running swiftly In Bnree's j veins not alone the call of his species, but the call of Kaaan and Ciray Wolf and of his forebears for generations unnumbered. It was the voice of his people. So Vierrot had whispered, and he was right In the golden night the Willow wns waiting, for it was she who had gambled most, and it was she who must lose or win. She uttered no sound, replied not to the low voice of Pierrot, but held her breath and watched Baree as he slowly faded nway, step by step. In tho shadows. In a few mo ments more he was gone. It wns then that she stood straight, and flung back her liend, with eyes that glowed in rivalry with the stars. He must have been nenr.tho edge of tho forest, for she had drown a slow, waiting breath or two beioro , he was back at her Bide. But he bad come, straight as an arrow, nnd he whined up into her fnce. Nepecse put her hands to his head. "You are right, mon pere," she said. "Ho will go to the wolves, but he Villi come back. He will never lenvo me. for long." With one hand still on Baree's head, she pointed with the other into the pitless blackness of the forest. "Oo to them, Baree I" she whispered. "But you must come back. You must Cheamao!" No longer, ns in the days of old, did the darkness of the forests hold a fear for Barce. This night bis hunt-cry had risen to the stars ami the moon, and in that cry he had, for the first time, sent forth his de fiance of night and space, his warn ing to all of the wild, nnd hiB accept ance of the Brotherhood. Ho ran straight into the dnrkness to the north and west, slinking low under the bushes, his tnil drooping, his ears aslant the wolf as the wolf runs on tha night trail. The pack had swung dua north, nnd was trav eling faster than he, so that at the end of a bolf hour he could no longer hear it. But the lone wolf-howl to tha west waa nearer, and three times Baree gave answer to it At the and of an hour he heard the pack again, swinging southward. Pierrot would easily have understoon. Their quarry had found safety be yond water, or In a lake, and the muhekuns were on a fresh trail, ny this time not more than a quarter of a mile of tha forest separated Baree from the lone wolf, but the lone wolf was also an old wolf, and with the di rectness and precision of long cr perience, hs swerved in the direction of the hunters, compassing his trail so that he was heading for a point half or three quarters of a mile in advance of tha pack. This waa a trick of the Brother hood which Baree had yet to learn: and the result of bis ignorance, and lack of skill, was that twice within the next half-hour he found himself near to the pack without being able to Join It. Then coma a long and final ailenca. Tha pack had pullrd down its kill, and in their feasting they made no Bofind. Baree had not forgotten Nepeeaa. A dozen times he turned his hurid back and whined, and always hi; picked out armrately the direction in which the cabin lay. But he did not turn bark. As the night Iciigtln-ned. his search for that m uterioiiH some thing which hi had not found con tinued. His hunger, even with the fading-out of the moon and the com ing of the gray dawn, was not suffi ciently keen to make him hunt for food. (To be continued) Cynthia Grey Says: 4 Pear Miss firt-y: I am a girl in in t'en and have been going Ffndy with a young ui.-in fur ciglit umntiu who ia two years by aeuior. I am quite sure that he is in love with me. but nif father objects to him. Ist night be went io far aa to fell bun not to come bark any more. Do you think ft is any of hi huiineis who I go with? Hnould he talk to my boy friend in this rough way? "111uj Kytd Hal." I don't think your father should have been so harh on the young man unless he had a very good reanon for doing so, but who you go with certainly it his busi ness. The chances are he had a very good reason why you should not go with the young man. and ordered the young man out of the houae bemuse of hla lore for yoi Why don't you ak him Just yah At his objections to the young nt.n are, and yon tniy find out tiist be ia right FIAPPJEG FANNY says X tlt2t WIA MWVKX IMC A close shave makes the course of true live run smoother. On Hardening JACK DAW'S ADVENTURES Story by Hal Coohrma Drawing by L. W. Raduar MT8TERT ISLAND CHAPTER 8 yitRJ raft was very aea-worthy and just floated along on the light waves. Jack and Dotty sat down and watched tho lumber boat ns it slowly but surely wont out of sight "I wonder what part of the ocean we are in?" said Dotty. "Bight in the middle, I imagine," replied Jack. "Wo can't see land anywhere.' 'JIIRRF! are eight good masons, ac cording to the department of ag-1 riculture, why a farmer should not raise nnd plant his own seed nrd thereby save for himself the profit others usually derive in selling him seeds. These eight reasons why he should not try to raise his own seed are nlno pxcellent reasons why he should buy his seed from experts trainer) jn the harvesting, denning ond testing of the seed upon which the bounty of his fields depends. These eight reasons, summarized, are as follows: 1. His fields may be foul with nox ious weeds. m. Soil, climatic and other condi tions on his farm may be unfavorable for seed production in a given year. .1. Altitude, latitude or rainfall in his locality may preclude thf produc tion of a particular bind of s'cd thai year. 4. He may be able to buy better seed nt a lower cost than can be produced in his loc.'iljiy. 5. He may find it. more profitable to grow a crop fnr hay or forage purposes than for seed production. n. He may not have the facilities for harvefttini;, cleaning, curing or otherwise preparing his seed for planting nurpfwes. 7. He may need seed of a crop that has not been grown by hint for sev eral years, tf nt all. H. He may have to replnnt his fields either with the same kind of seed, his supply of which may have been exhausted with the first plant ing or with seed of some catch crop. Karmers have three sources for procuring seedy, their own farms, other farmers, nr from dealers. A survey made by the bureau of mar kets shows (hat central mid northern farmer buy respectively only U and H per cent of their seed from di-nlers as contrasted from to '14 per cent in eastern, southern and fur western sections nnd also accounts for the tardiness in tunny sections of the in crease Jn crops per acre. T WISH we would hurry up and drift loni placa," continued Dotty. 'Td like to itxt hack on dry land where we could iret aomethliut to tH "Let's ent something out of the cook'a basket," eintnested Jeck. Bo Dotty took the basket out of the burlap iack and peerei Inaide to eee what wis tlir-ri. HUB shouted, "there are sandwiches, some funny looking crack ers, a whole slab of nacon, ana iota or oiner minus. umi.u . i ever sein crarkera like those before?" asked her cousin. Then he ei filnined that they were sea biscuits. "They are made hard o they will last," he said. (Continued.) Home Hints 11KMOVB the stains from marble by ' rubbing with a slice of lemon dipped in salt. Leare on for an hour before you wash off with clenr water. , J-rr, asm?J To Clean Floors One of the best ways of cleaning hardwood floors that have become I spotted and dirty is by wiping them up with gasoline. Will Remove Inkspots To remove old inkspots from A var- Janitor In huildir-g or fist Is where you come to bat, And day aftt-r day work Your tenants, of course Know that von are the source Of rvlief whene'er hoinethitig goes wrong. nlotig. m I I v rj nisbed flesk, mix eousl parts of vine Kiir and linseed oil and apply with soft ciotb. "Oh. my love, let me sini you s ditty," Said a benu who was new In thf ill Hut the hoys of the (2) Strm k the poor fellow (3) Which we might stiy was rather a (4(. (t) Itreding place of slickers. () Territory surrounding Main street. - (3 Kmhrio mustache. . (41 Inspiring commiseration. KWENE COLLECTION AGENCY, 82S in .TO MINKII Hl,lfl, I'HONR ooo w. ii. ui.owiaiM. muu. d