The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, April 17, 1925, Image 7

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    ffrmfng. April 17, 1925
THE EUGENE QUAED
Page Seven
foday
's Cross-Word Puzzle
MUTT AND JEFF
Umpire Sir Sidney Introduces An English Custom Into Our National Pastime
vBy BUD FISHER
- ur Bible? Then Be whether you can tell 44 hori-
'-fW 4.7
tea
p. J
Sw Or
P!?75 T
Lil; &j
. . 22. jjra 2i
"PT HSr
isr'ra
i&iSi liaiw
s Sri r
flsli52 '
Lki '.
- FT
1H" 1 1 if' I H
SIR SlDwiy, s SPRAIUCD ry
ArJKLC AND CAN'T UMPlftC,
tdav so i: ijuamt vov
TO OFFICIATE IM Nvy
BUCKS Fol? TWO
HOUM" WOtH IS SOFT'.y
AB "Yoj oaj?
'"'horizontal
with n bowl at the end
!St4 for smoking. '
,'uintfr of yenr lived.
:rou pn''i)ilnti".
'o travel from lilnee P1M t0
tcture.
tone.' '
rbiter.
'on and I.
.inful.
'iluos.
'onfincl to a particular plncc.
Ulance.
lolstens.
'fl (e sirk.
in wod filter. rt
rovtdpnt insect.
loSlem' territory,
iffinite article.
ntrtiRtation over n port,
t kind of a mow shoe,
imily of fish which includes
Ike'and pickerel.
kimo home,
rrtinn.
crthe handle.
essels for flowers.
iant kitiR of Rnshnn conquered
r Mo.s.
ipaHied.
oiut of romp-iss or direction to
ape of fiood Hope.
Tufts Hint dilate the eyes.
ase of the teeth (pi.).
enomouR snake.
arth.
VERTICAL
small brook.
WW.
realise on morals.
nlliM-tion of facts.'
ittobe.
;tk worm,
ein, way.
aint of compass hetween north
lie and Kuropo.
0. Griefs.
11. A very Bmall quantity.
12. Pertaining to air.
14. Quietinff.
10. Holes in a retaining wall to
drain off water.
15. Small house.
20. Pmull flies whose bite carries
disease.
22. Lariat.
23. Artless.
24. Existed.
2t. Kind.
28. Gender.
88. Winds.
35. Escapes.
87. .Smell.
80. Tart of a stove. i
40. Hymn.
41. Corded cloths.
48. To barter.
4. Scarf of feathers.
47. To tear.
4(1. To subsist
50. Therefore.
i
Answers to yesterday's cross-word
puzzle:
lEloiAILc,Sy.nlFlDlnl"
LL t nWJEI NJH E glA
nds BaMa Ms n aTp
" i SUaE a. p i as
s c AaESaiRDP
B A Y eTsMd A L. E S3
L E Ej SirTKEEBTIA T
RIR9 RMtHOUIE R
tIaItIesHa1sIpIi Ire
ladio
Programs
do you remi a newspaper? Do
cud half an hour rending the
the headlines and sports
fely. I lenn Iic V. Allen -of
is gniujj f !rl) you over K1V
nt H o'clock how yon should
ur newspaper to act the most
t. lan Altt-n s;iys the svernRe
t.s fnun l.'t tninutPfl to 30
"TMflinp tlio ila-ly paprt ; if ho
n rod the whnjo paprr it.
:ake from S to 10 btfura. For
' nt'WspipiTs pri'Iital'ly I ru
Ims laid down the following
"First. roTiccntrato on whflt is
white: STcrtil. notice carrfnlly
. o
New Styles I
d v tI
. fell
. ." t..t.-.e A.
I"' -'f r . -
n ' EPf' n Vi-rv pop-
. r'ri"i,'!il H-t. nlthongh
fnn from
f nrintM
the source of each Rrticle and third,
attempt to read with an unprejudiced
mind."
'"The linn on the Box" by the KGO
players 'last nicht wns un to their
usual high. standard. Jtain cleared the
air considerable, greatly improving
reception for local funs.
m
When connecting wires inside you
set, scrape them until they ere bright
at points of contact. This insures a
good connection and also aids in sol
dering. '
TONIGHT'S PROGRAMS
Pacitio Coast
KUW, Portland, 41)1.5 mfters 5 p.
aii., Children's program; tf:00 to 7:00
p. in., Helen M. Caples, pianist; Law
rence Woodfin, baritone and Lora
Teshner, cellist,
7 : iH p. in., weather, police and mar
ket reports, news bulletins and base
ball scores. 8:00 p. ni., University
of Oregon xetens on lecture by Eric
W. Allen, dean of school of journal
ism on "How to Head a Newspaper."
10 p. in., Mulflioiuah Hotel Strollers.
KTI, Los Angeles, C'al., 408.5 -meters
5:.'.0-(i p. m., Kxaminer'n mu
sical half-hour; 6:45-7, Knditoriul
talk; 7-S, Examiner literary program;
8-0, Evening Herald hour of dance
music; 9-10, Loren Robinson and the
Apollo male quartet; 10-11, Tilda
Hohr, contralto, songs of Italy, France
and Germany.
KFOA, Seattle, Wash.,' 454.3 me
ters 0:45-8:15 p. in., Sherman, Clay
& Co, program; SMO-lO, Times pro
gram; 10:n5-ll:30( Eddie Ilarkne.is
and his orcht'Stra.
KFW'lt, Hollywood, Cnl., 252 me
ters :4j-0 rj. m., Ina Mitchell But
ler, soprano; Mc Winters nnd Fox,
Vaudeville banjoiats; Holly sisters,
Blues singers; 010, Merry land ball
room orchestra and entertainers; 10
11, Harry Seymour's hour of popular
numbers, short talks by movie peo
ple; 11-1, Montmarte cafe dance or
chestra. Met IVdcaky, leader.
KdO. Oakland. Cal., 3H1 meters
4-5:30 p. m concert orchestra, Ho
tel St. Francis.
KH.T. Los Angeles, Cal., 405.2 ma
ters 0-0:30 p. m., Art Hickman's
Biltniore hotel concert orchestra, Ed
ward Fitzpatrick. director; 6:30-7:30.
littie stones American history. Pro
fessor "Walter Sylvester Hertzog;
ltirhard Ileadrick. screen starlet,
boys' sextet of San Francisco high
'hooI; 8-10, program, Western Auto
Supply company, arranged by J. How
ard .lohnwon; 10-11, Art Ilickman's
Biltmore hotel dance orchestra, Earl
Burnett, leader.
KJIL S-attle. Wah.. SCS meters
0-6:30 p. m.. "What's Doing at the
Tbater?"; S:30-H:30. pnst-lntt lligen-.
rr studio recital; 0:30-10, chamber
of commerce program.
KLX, Oakland. Cal.. meter
' 7 p. m.. nrenn: 7:45-9:45, stpdio
program; 0:45 10:30, Sweet'a ball
room. KNX, Hollywood, Cal.. S3H.0 me
ters 5:45-t:I5 p. in., Wurlitzer pipe
frgan studio: '1:15 7 :30, program.
Beverly liidire omianj'; 7:3t-N. pro
gram, Fa'tern 'tutfiiting cunipuny; Ji
ll, program. Went Coast Theaters
Inc.. br r".nof control; 0-11, KNX
fattue prnrram; 11 -12. Abe Lyman's
ocsniit (Jrove drf orrhestrn from
,mt.ador htel; 12-- a. m, Wur
li'ier N'ghi hawks on hetra.
KPO. San Francisco. Cal., 420-5
meters 8-10 p. ro., Wurlltier night
ol&b6am: v" , ' Vi " V
Jerry On the Job
Time Makes A Difference
! C AN
BAREE, SON OF KAZAN
By JAMES OLIVER OUEWOOD
Copyxlght, 1017, bf aoobUdar, Par 4b Oa
'BAHESl SON OF KAZAN," VSUffmph Pioture, With WoU,
the War Dos, it ba AdaptaUoa of This Story
(Continued)
GAIN oaught unexpectedly, Ba
ree went down with the J wolf's
fangs at his throat. But in him was
the blood of Kazan, and for the first
time in his life he fought as Kazan
fought on that terrible day at the top
of the Sun Hock.
That fight, if it had been fair,
would have been a victory for Baree,
even in his youth and inexperience,
In favrness the pack should have
waited; it was a law of the pack to
wait until one was done for. But
Baree was black; he waa a stranger,
an interloper, a creature whom tliey
noticed now in a moment when their
blood was hot with the rage and dis
appointment of killers who had missed
their prey. A second wolf sprang in,
striking Baree treacherously from the
flank; and while he waa in the snow,
'Ins jaws crushing the foreleg of his
first foe, the pack was on him en
masse.
Such an attack on the young cari
bou bull would have meant death In
leas than a miuute. Every fang would
have found its hold. Baree, by the
fortunate circumstance that he was
under his first two assailants and
protected by their bodies, waa saved
from being torn instantly into pieces.
He knew that he was fighting for his
life. Over him the horde of beasts
rolled and twisted and snarled; he
felt the burning pain of teeth sinking
into his flesh; he was smothered; a
hundred knives seemed cutting him
into a dozen pieces; yet no sound
not a whimper or a cry came from
him now in the horror and hopeless
ness of it all.
It would have ended in another
half minute had the struggle not been
at the very edge of the bank. Under
mined by the erosion of the spring
floods, a section of this bank suddenly
gave way, nnd with it went Baree
and half the pack. In a flash Baree
thought of the, water and the escaping
caribou. For a bare Instant the cave
in had set htm free of the pack, and
in that space he gave a single leap
over the gray backs of his enemies
into the deep water of the stream.
Close behind him half a dozen jaws
snapped shut on empty air. As it
had saved the caribou, so thin strip
of water shimmering in te glow of
the moon and stars nnd saved Baree.
The stream was not more than a
hundred feet In width, but it cost Ba
ree close to a losing struggle to get
across it. Until he dragged himself
out on the opposite shore, the ex
tent of his injuries was not impressed
upon hira fully. One hind leg, for
the time, was useless; his forward
left shoulder was laid open to the
bone; his head and body were torn
and cut; and as he dragged himself
slowly away from the stream, the
trail he left In the snow was a red
path of blood. It trickled from his
panting jaws, between which his ton
gue was bleeding; it ran down his
legs and flanks and bejly, and it
drioned from his ears, one of which
was slit clean for two inches as
though cut with a knife. His instincts
were dazed, his perception of things
clouded aa if by a veil drawn close
over bis eyes.
He did not hear, a few minutes'
later, the howling of the disappointed
wolf-horde on the other sido of the
river, and ho no longer sensed the
existence of moon or stars. Half
dead, he dragged himself on until by
chance he came to a clump of dwarf
spruce. Into this he struggled, and
then dropped exhausted.
All that night and until noon the
next day Baree lay without moTjng.
The fever burned In his blood; it
flamed high and swift toward death;
then It ebbed slowly, and life con
quered. At noon he came forth. He
was weak, and he wobbled on bis
legs. His hind leg still dragged, and
he was racked with pain.
A red ferocity grew in Baree's
eyes as he snarled in the direction
of Inst night's fight with the wolves.
They were no longer his people. They
were no longer of his blood. Never
again could the hunt-coll lure him or
the voice of the pack rouse the old
longing. In bim there was a thing
new-born, an undying hatred for the
wolf, a hatred that was to grow in
bim until ft became like a disease in
his vitals, n thing ever present and
insistent, demanding vengeance on
ther kind.
Chapter XIX
At the cabin on the Gray Loon,
on the fourth night of Baree's ab
sence, Pierrot was smoking his pipe
after a great supper of caribou ten
derloin he had brought in from the
trail, and Nepeest was listening to
hia talc of the remarkable shot he
had made, when a sound at the door
interrupted them. Nepeese opened it,
and Baree came In. The cry of wel
come that was on the girl's Hps died
there instantly, and Pierrot stared
as If ho could not quite believe this
creature that had returned was the
wolf-dog. Three days and nights of
hunger in which he could not hunt
because of the leg that dragged had
put on htm the marks of starvation.
Battle-scarred and covered with
dried blood-clots that still clung ten
aciously to his long hair, he was a
sight that drew at last a long breath
from Nepeese. A' queer smile was
growing id Pierrot's face as he leaned
forward in his chnlr; and then slowly
rising to -his feet, and looking closer,
he said to Nepees:
"Ventre Saint Gris! Out, he has
been to the pack, Nepeese, and the
pack turned on him. It was not a
two-wolf fight n.on! It was the
pack. He is cut and torn in fifty
places. And nion Dieu, he is alive!"
In Pierrot's voice there was grow
ing wonder and amazement He was
incredulous, and yet he could not dis
believe what his eyes told him. What
had happened was nothiUg short of
a miracle, and for a time he littered
not a word more but remained staring
in silence while Nepeese woke from
her astonishment to give Bnree doc
toring and food. After he had eaten
ravenously of cold boiled mush she
began bathing his wounds in warm
water, nnd after that "she soothed
them with bear-grease, talking to him
all the time in her soft Cree.
(To bo continued.)
FLAPPER FANNY says
ID IMS SV NCA SCRVICC MC. ,
JACK DAW'S ADVENTURES
Btory by Hal Cochran Drawing by L. W. Redner
MYSTERY ISLAND CHAPTER 7
Many a girl who travels all the time
never gots anywhere
Home Hints
pONOEE silk should be thoroughly
dried before it is ironed and then
ironed on the right and wrong side.
Cleans Piano Keys
Lemon juice and salt will clean
Phone Man ;
When the service goes wrong,
Tou, right soon, come along,
And hie to a pole top, and then
You monkey around
Till the trouble is found,
And the phone is soon working
again.
piano keys. Be careful to let none
of the liquid drop between the keys.
Removes White Spots
To remove white spots on wood-
jjAViSiaAal U 11
work apply alcohol with an old cloth.
Hub off quickly and polixb.
ETHEL: NOTHING LIKE GIVING AWAY THE OLD WORLD
LOVE. t.t-"
THE. WOPLD
ly MIME- '
IT UotD TO GL
11 TVliL. OLD
CTOPY"
now rrs
"THE. oAME,
OLD
" JUDVE- MEV
jjFTTi AMD THE. wo.d
'JJOTIIINi at all is the matter," replied Jack.. "I was just greeting
the coming of the morning sun." "Maybe, when it is high enough
to give us real light, wo can sight some land," said Dotty. So the little ad
venturers sat down cloBe together and watched it grow brighter nnd
brighter.
PPIII3 break of dawn brought a bit of wind and small waves started to
roll. It was a good thing the raft wns a big one, or Jack and Dotty
might have been swamped. As It was, the affair rode gently up, and theu
down, on the water. Instead of bring afraid, Jack and Dotty enjoyed the
ride.
, b'TKIi several bourn Dotty suddenly shouted: "Look! Isn't that a row
of trees?" Jack Jumped to his feet nnd held hid hand up to his forehead
to phnde his eyes. Away off in the distance he could see what Dotty was
referring to. And it surely looked tike a small Island of some sort. (Con
tinned.)
f IXwm Helps
; 4
jAUMKUS in the northern states,
sad particularly the Dnkotas,
have been much intercHted in a strain
of hull-lens ot wih:i has come across
the border from Cttninhi. The Smih
Dukota station has conducted con
sidernblp research work into thin new
oat. Some of the finding declare ih:it
the Inill-lfHK oat is excellent to pro
vide fn id fur young animal), par-
hciiinrlr young pts.
"A liiill-leftrt (Ht, but little known in !
this country, s(rvs well for poultry
and swine, wiiil varieties with hull
nrn preferable for oilier stock," says
one report.
Comparative yields indicate that
hull-lenK out ft yield a somewhat l"Wer
number of buehels per acr than the
best standird varieties of ordinary
ontw. The same comparative yield
indicate that a hull-lex variety yield
a lower number of hiiNheltt per aer
than the beat ntnndnrd varieties, even
when the hitter are reduced to a hull
len bafis.
Sample of hull-less on Is, ssys the
hulietui, contain a lusher prrceiitue
of raw protein that the wlmle grain
of ordinary varieties, but n lower per
centate than the kernels of the same
varieties, grains with hulls removed.
The higher yielding varieties of or
dinary outs produced a lrer yield of
raw pmtein per acre than hull-lev
oafs both on n basis of the whole
grnins and on n haxis of kernel'',
grains with hulls removed.
The mult of one season's test at
Brooking!) seemi to indicate that hull
less onts, where produced, should be
intended n a special feed for certain
classes of animals, rather than as a
general farm crot for all conditions.
Further experiments are being con
ducted to determine t lie value of the
new oat.
Low Pieces in
Tall Room
ll TO
Be
The hish-ccilinged room is not easy
to furnish, hut it can be "hrought
j down" with the use of low furniture.
I r.vcn thin relief noma mane an
ttnpoKsible room, became of the big
wall spaces left. Ho the next best
thing to do is cover a wnll or so with
a series of pictures or a long tapestry,
as showo here.