THE EUGENE GUABD
Page Seven
.,...:-ir fr11- .
.-"
MUTT AND JEFF
Jeff. Gets Awny With Some Rough Stuff in Africa
By BUD FISHER
s Cross-Word Puzzle
rJOW i i I'-riu-- '.il
. Ribla and crosa- word paule fans. It refers mainly to i
rfo' April 27, 1925
iToday
T " . J: Co--;. j 631? - . Jt out, -hath 5 .
jP LXyj 57" rP 4 2fl3 , ' .c-r-r ., t c M.. iw l4tv
S "42 hi73 I ' Jerry On the Job , ' ' A Sporting Proposition is Offered
r4T" Pj -r-r , .
UJ 'EM A-ASiooe ttf&Si I "tub Pooa aa I I '. . I . Tl ; J I I'T'.s?1 V ,
ir
Horizontal
G,D-
jjjun. Gen. 3i.
Competent Gen. 15.
Sual lull. Gen. W.
One: some. Gen. -i.
Guide. 1st. 3
Sakelike fish.
Cold. Gen. 31.
To tipire. Gen. 2.
jw. Gen. 40.
Home ol a bird.
VM.t inn of Judah. Gen
Capital of Moab. Num. 21.
To respect. Acts 27.
Forced to remain. Gen. 42.
To derair. Gen. 2.
To law ; delay. Deut 23.
One of twelra bones in man's
Ant Gen. 2.
lift. John 2.
Collection of facts.
Narrow passage. Luke 14.
Hj to. Matt. 16.
Food. Gen. 2.
Stiff of irass. I Ki. 14.
First woman. Gen. 2.
ll.onr.tain in Moab. Num. 23.
Vertical
To rest Psa. 25.
Son of Shobal. Gen. 30.
No. Gen. 18.
Son of Eliphaz. Gen. 30.
U hours (pi.) Gen. 1.
Every bit. Gen. 3. ,
Act. Gen. 20.
Caused to eiist. Gen. 2
To tilite. Gen. 22.
14. Negative. On. 13.
16. Is wrong. Geu.21,
20. Fashions. Gen. 2.
Serpent.
To help. Judg. 0.
To observe; lo. Oen. 10.
Itefore. Kxod. 1.
Little child. .
Place near Ephrath.
Suffering. Psa. 48.
Great grandson of Shcm
10. .
.Moment. Gen. 20.
Fur advnnced. Psa. 127.
Variation of "a."
Drew' near. King. 4.
Ratio. Ex. 10.
40. Hairy, ehaggy animal. Sa. 17.
42. Wet Boil.
44. Upper part of thigh, where one
holds a child. 2 King.
Answer to Saturday's cross-word
puzzle: - .
folrlplPlAlVlFKSAIVIOIWlAILISI'
M R BWC E Ba SPj I V AL
B AREE, SON OF KAZAN
By JAMES OLIVER CUBWOOD
Copyright, 1917, by Donbladay, Page A Co.
"BAREE, SON OF KAZAN," a VltagTaph Ptoturt, With Wolt,
the War Dot;, la an Adaptation of This Story
Cynthia Grey Says:
i liAjr In StgTr 1e Ie In IJyI :
Radio
Programs
Colltje iocgs, lung by college boys
. ,i. W-....7 a -i ..i.,k I. a
xol Tba occasion will be the Sun
t:uciico com me rein 1 club luucheon
miaiu, 11 Will UO IIIC lUOt UI a Bfl KB
4 tight which have beeii furnished
-r uf foienaiDmeni or l'utuo iuns
7 leidiDj San Francisco business
w- The Stanford Glee club's pro
pu will coosilt of nine uumbera,
ixi will be given on the 1 1th floor
f ik Merchant Exchange building,
oe of the San Francisco commer-
ana. iwo lone wires will carry
'WricillT th Rminilo nf t ,,-.! t vlfoa
the bay into the KtiO antenna
'iiwb ur out irom the center of the
CT'I MtlUlHnn KtDiiint-iI'D am.rni-u
J be directed by Warren G. Allen.
T0NI6HT'8 PROGRAMS
1 Paclflo Coast
IW, Portland, 401.5 meters 3
a. cbildrea'i proarura. II p. m.,
' recinl from public auditorium,
ftfderlck W. Goodrich, courtesy
FJeclrlc company; 7:15 p. m.,
lki police ,nd market reports,
n Wletins and baoetall scores.
""'P-iiu, Silent for long-distance
T;con.
Kir; PrJlm,n, wsh 84f 8
n. n, ..l ..:..;..
Hsney Wii.on; Josephine
"rnildl reader; "Art In Relation
iTK- B- J"1": "Choos
hi r Ym,r Ilo"." I'rof.
..Mi "m"B- 'A" the Japnnese
fc rD'- K"d " Vl"t": "Septic
in t Hoh'" A
t"S""i.C"' ' 40S !5 m!
"k'": 6:30-6:45. SlaeDanlel'i
tjT? '": 6:45-7. ltndi-
tiM ' tven'n Herald ltn-
v, , u "'Pny. Tilda Ruhr
lin A"cl's Zither quar
Prozraiu, Walter M. M,lr.
t. tX? tmsf"r- PI'i'.liarmonic
a. ri', T"'" ri"hri' "
It- w i,' t-IBm-ner; special
' W""- M.8 me- :
ti-i-K';." m- T.mes program;
Sm-n -..Tlr"'' Program.
uo'l','"1'. Cel., Pacific I
Associnted Boys' rouueil; ii-lU, liro
grnm, Adohr Stock fnrms.
K.IK, Seattle, Wnsh.t 384.4 meters
-1:20-2 p. m., talk on styles, Doris;
8:30-0, Goraon Kilbournt and his or
chestra; 0-10, Post-Iutelligeucer stu
dio program.
KLX, Oakland, Cal 50S.2 meters
-0-7 p. m., organ concert, American
theater; 8-0:15, studio program; 0:15
0:45, American theater orchestra;
0:45-11, Protective order, Lake Mer
ritt Ducks.
KNX, Hollywood, Cnl., 336.9 me
ters 5:45-0:15 p. m., Wurlitzer stu
dio program; Sid Ziff's sports talk;
U:30-7:;0, Detmer'a Optical company
program; 8-0, program, Los Angeles
Income Property company; 0-10,
KNX, feature program; 10-11, Good
rich Silvertown Cord orchestra, Lil
ynn May Challenger, contra-contral-to;
11-1J. Abe Lyman's Cocoanut
Grove dance orchestra from Ambas
sador hotel.
KPO, San Francisco, Cal., 429.5
meters 1-2 p. m., Rudy Seiger's
Fairmont hotel orchestra; 5:30-0:30,
Hook of Knowledge; 0:30-7, States
restaurant orchestra; 7-7:30, Rudy
Seiger's I-'airinont hotel orchestra; 8
O, Theodore J. Irwin, organist; 0-10,
program. Dorothy Goodsell Camm;
10-11, .lohnny Ituick's Amphisns. '
KFSU, Los Angeles, Cal. 275.1
meters Silent night.
"Jowcled Hosiery,
doweled hosiery, while it is not ex
ploited by the most conservative
gowned woiuarj. is nevertheless shown
in the most exclusive shops, at prices
that are quite staggering.
rrPrtin. Hacienda
'V r,5tlu ml atiar;et.
I New Styles j
or a
ti a nil i miiwi ii i iii i it m s m
Honoi'a
earner Uro
i . ----.11 I . OftPM Mnn.n.
Born.". ro'r" ,;ri"f nnartet;
u,-V ,c"or,,""i; J- Grapen-
H. ..S: "rr; Hi Motjl-
u. . ."""-a, r!ol
v-., ln; 101
"I .!: m" I,'ndstatter'
S J ,?'" "' dance or-
v 1 -a oance orrnes-
n,M n-Wl ''Am"-ican Forest
Wildo
ho Noed
Richard
Hooka.1
' 'Vr"'" Palish.
S:TiDr' Alheriine
it.. " Arm'
iht at home.
4
1
A bruhnl wool iwMfr, hite
bound and roltrd with black wool
it Terr much liked for prinf dv.
It Is worn ith tailored blouie arid
pleated axirt.
(Continued)
'T'lIERE were plenty of rabbits in
Pierrot's traps, and Baree did
not go hungry. He reached the sec
ond trap-line cabin late in the after
noon, after ton hours of traveling.
He met with no very great disappoint
ment here, for he had not anticipated
very much. The snow had banked
this'cabin even higher than the other.
It lay three feet deep against the
door, nnd the window was white with
a thick coating of frost. At this
plnce, which was close to the edge of
a big barren, nnd unsheltered by the
thick forests farther back, Pierrot
had built a shelter for his firewood
and in this shelter Raree made his
temporary home. AH the next day he
remained somewhere near the end of
the trap-line, skirting the edge of the
barren and investigating the short
side lin of a dozen traps which Pier
rot nnd N'epeese had strung through a
swamp in which there hHd been many
signs of lynx. It was the third day
before he set out on his return to
the Gray Loon.
He did not travel very fast, spend
ine two days in covering the twenty
five miles between the first and the
second trap-line cabins. At the sec
ond cabin he remeAned for three
days, and ft was on the ninth day
that he reached the Gray Loon. There
was no change. There ware no tracks
in the snow but his own, made nine
days ago.
And then, of a sudden, Baree
made a change. . He spent a night
In the tepee. After that, whenever
he was at the Gray Loon, during the
day he always slept in the tepee. The
two blankets were his bed and they
were a part of Nepeese. And there,
all through the long winter, he waited.
If Nepeese had returned in Febru
ary and could have taken bim un
aware, she would have fonnd a chang
ed Baree. He was more than ever
like a wolf; yet he never gave the
wolf-howl now, and always he snarled
rlerp in his throat when he heard the
rrv of the pack. For several weeks
the old trap-line had supplied him
ttith meat, hnt now he hunted. The
tepee, in and out, wns scattered with
fur and bones. Once alone he
caught a young deer In deep anow and
killed it.
Again, In the heart of a fierce
February storm, he pursued a bull
caribou so closely that it plraiged
over a cliff and broke Ha neck. He
; lived well, and in siae and atrength
' he was growing swiftly Into a giant
: of his kind. In another aix month
1 he would be as larga at Kacan, and
his jews were almost aa powerful,
i even now.
The winter passed, and spring
came, and still name continued 10
haunt his old trails, even going now
' and then over the old trap-line as
far at the first or the two cabins, ine
traps were rusted and sprung now;
the thawing snow disclosed bones and
feathers between their Jawa; under
! the deadfalls were remnants of fur.
and out on the Jce of the lakes were
picked skeletons of foxea and woles
, that had taken the poison-naus, i n?
last snow went. The swollen stream
.an in the forests and canyons. The
grass tiirned green, and the first
flowers came.
Sure'y this was the time for Nc-
I n Mm hnmf! He watched
for her expectantly. He went still
more ircfiaeniiy w inir nwimmiin
pool in the forest and he hung closely
to the burned cabin and the dog-corral.
Twice be sprang Into the pool
and whined as he swam about, as
though he aurely must join him in
their old water frolic. And now, aa
the spring paused and Bummer came,
there settled upon him alowly the
gloom and misery of utter hopeless
ness. The flowera were all out now.
nnd even the bakneesh vines glowed
like red fire in the woods. Patches
of green were beginning to hMe the
charred heap where the cabfn had
atood, and the blue-flower vines that
covered the princess mother's grave
wer reaching out toward Pierrot's,
a if the nrinc" mother herelf
were the spirit of tbem.
All thew things were happening,
and the birds had mated and nested,
and still Nepeese did not come! And I
at last something broke Inside of Ba-1
ree, his last hope, perhaps, hia last
dream; and one day ha bade good-bye
to the Gray Loon.
It was early In August when Baree
left the Gray Loon. He had no ob
jective in view. But there was atill
left upon his mind, like the delicate
impression of light and shadow on a
negntive, the memories of hia earlier
days. Things and happenings that
he had almost forgotten recurred to
him now, as his trail led him farther
and further awny from the Gray
Loon; and his earlier experiences be
came real again, pictures thrown out
afresh In hia mind by the breaking of
the last ties that held him to the
home of the Willow. Involuntarily
he followed the .trail of these impres
sions of these past happenings, and
slowly they helped to build up new
interests for him. A year in hia life
was a long time a decade of man's
experience. It waa more than a year
ago that he had left Kazan and Gray
Wolf and the old windfall, and yet
now there came back to him indistinct
memories of those days of hia earliest
puppyhood, of the stream into which
he had fallen, and of his fierce battle
with Papayuchlsew. It was hia later
experiences that roused the older
memories. He cams to the blind can
yon up which Nepeeae and Pierrot
had chased him. That seemed but
yesterday.
And now, for the first time In many
weeks, a bit of the old-time eager
ness put speed Into Baree'a feet
Memories that had been hacy and in
distinct through forget fulness were
becoming realities again, and aa he
would have returned to the Gray
Loon had Nepeese been there to now,
with something of the feeling of a
wanderer going home, he returned to
the old beaver-pond.
(To ba continued.)
A taxicab la more expensive than
the old-fashioned horse and buggy.
But at least you don't have to keep
tying the reins around the whip,
A woman doesn't mind if her hus
band has made love to other women
before he met her . , , but how
she hates the other womenl
Dear Miss Grey: My husband walk
ed out of the house in a huff the
other day because I tried to Induce
him to cut down on his smoking. I
don't object to him smoking some, but
hs seems to me to be endangering his
health After he left the house angry,
he didn't como back until late that
night. What should I do with him?-
Mrs. Palmer.
I don't believe it will help the
situation to keep after him about
It. Nothing gets on a man's nerve
more .than a nagging wife. Possi
bly In your anxiety to protect his
; health you have been nagging him
too much. That won't moke him
quit smoking. The chances are he
will realize before very long thnt
he is Bmoking too much, but don't
change hia evening smoke from a
Joy into misery every time he
comes home.
FIAPPER FANNY says
ri
O l'US BV MCA BCrWKC INC.
JACK DAWS ADVENTURES
Story by Hal Cochran Drawing, by L. W. Redner
MVSTHUY ISLAND CHAPTER 13
'
IT WAS enough to scuro anybody, the way the animal opened its grout
long mouth. "Ion't let him snap at you," wornrd Dotty. "Just try
cross-word For
little folks
Answer
tii ipr isiaTc
e ZZ ZZlR
aceLiIwe
M A RlglL E S
i rJemmIet
dulMLJBlEjD
Farm Helps
TN ADDITION to freeing his seed
supply from dirt, chaff, weed and
other foreign seed, the seedsman
baa also the task of freeing it from
tha germa of diseaae, the spores of
the Tarioua smuts and blights which
causa devastation In certain areas.
Constant experiment la going on to
find the best methods of disinfecting
K".d' .V .,
in tregon in. cicuiibl. bi. rii.r
Imentlng for chemicals that will de
stroy wheat smut without weakening
or killing the seed. Usually formalde
hyde or bluestone treatment haa been
employed, but this la found generally
to cauae some damage to the seed,
and also to affect the promptness of
Its germination,
Coppor carbonate as a destroyer of
rant Infection has been tried with
much success. It la claimed for thii
treatment that It doea no injury to
eed or seedlings If desired, while the
older treatments required the plant
ing of the seed soon after the appli
cation of tha disinfectant. Dusting the
copper carbonate over the aeed is re
ported aa being aa effective ss liquid
treatment. Copper carbonate does
not have very much effect, however,
the reports aay, In preventing Infec
tion from smut-contaminated soil.
Tha removal of smut is done In
great part by the 'seedsmen as the
careful fanning to which seed is sub
jected removes tbe smut balls which
are found In ihe whest from infected
fields.
Wide Choker Popular.
Th wide choker of fur, fntend
on the side with a wide satin how, is
very practical for wenr with the new
' spring coals that have the mannish
coilar line.
Names
iCochfans
DAILY I
After all, aren't we people a right funny lot? We're never quiie
with th. T,.m.. that we've rot. Objections we feel may he all
j torn my rot, but wa all feel the eame aa to names, like as not.
Marie would much rather tier name naq neen i eari, inr rnn -.-.n.
to fit just her type of a girl. And Lilly and Ilnid, if pinned to the truth,
admit that they wish Ihey were Gertrude and Ruth.
The feelings of fellows run on Just the same. They're never quite
pleased with their own given name. Krnest had chosen, when he -w as a
boy, he wouldn't be Fsrnest but Arthur, or Hoy.
With names that are common, like Mary and Grace, the owners winh
odd ones had taken their place. And those that are odd like Theresa and
June, to folka who are called them, eecm way out of tune.
Can anyone tell why we make such a fuss, o'er names that onr parent,
have handed to ns? It's you. not your name, that will carry you far. Don't
worry "bout WHO, but abont WHAT you are.
Even a champion golfer never tries
to drive with one hand.
Home Hints
"1LASS that has been washed in
warm water with either sodu,
ammonia or soap should be wiped at
once.
To Make Pastry
For making pastry use the heat of
shorteninga and the best flour available.
Watch Turpontlno
Turpentlno nhnuld he stored in
tightly closed containers nnd kept
awny . from ' Ihe fire. Ilrushes and
cloths used with turpentine should
he washed or kept in tightly closed
containers after use.
Brighter Polish
W'hen cleuniiig silver use a paste
of whiting end ammonia. This will
give a brighter nnd more lasting polish.
Sandpaper Baby Shoos
If you will'gn over Ihe soles of a
ann cuaso mm naeti in llio water. .inca mm oncKou a lew leeinmi Juki
banged on the ground wllh the tree limb. Finally the alligator swung about
nnd slid bnck Into the stream.
"VOW, how um I going to get ncrouM','," linked Dotty., Jack looked nil
about him for something to ptih out ln(n the water for Dotty to
walk on. Nething was near at hand. Then he looked up at the great tree
thnt hung down close to the stream. "I'll tell you what I'll do," he shouted.
"I'll pufth one of the branches over and you run swing across on it."
LMI
lit
IN KfloiiT notice Jnck was ftcnunhling up the tree trunk. When he
reached the firnt long hfinginR limb he wht part way out on it and
straddled It. l.enniiig forward, he made the limb droop lower and lowvr
until the very curl of it hung riitht In front of Dotty. ' Now get a hold of
it," shouted Jack. (Continued.)
bahr's shoes with sandpaper before
they are worn, it will prevent slipping j
and f.flls. 1
Making Paper
Take Berries Out
The berries you buy in box"e will
keep better if you spread them out
on some fiat dih.
Preventlna Rust
To keep steel from rusting cover
with sweet oil or mutton tallow and
wrap in no ft paper.
Brush Your Hats
A hat should he hruhed after earh
wearing if yo.ii wont to ke-p it in
goofl condition.
Kitchen Clock
A clock that keeps accurate, time
is a necessity in the kitcHen.
(Copyright, 1W5, NEA Service, Inc.)
Gingham Coat.
A strnning coat is made of Ind a
gu King in yilfw, green and red pla d,
t.nd it his rerere and a lining of yel
low lin'n. Obviously, it is f.r country
. wear.
Sofl Woven Tweeds
j Tweeds, particularly the very soft
i weaves in very delii nte l'ies are
liked for spring coats and jumper
idretsef.
j'jj. Jpll
If you have a highly decorative
wall paper, with a Urge, ovrnl d"
nign, you can make It appear anti,"'
by giving it a coat of orange shellac.
The shellac at the anrne tim pre
serves the life of the paper.
IPS
Lest Eccentricity.
Kccentric accesorieg have lost in
terent fr the best drrcd womn and
fumv gloves, mrtnvn trapped pump
ltd ilnbortite hniidtmg huve passed
into the discard.
Manicurist
We . understand.
You hold our band
To fix our nails up nice.
You cut and trim
With lot of vim.
I ntil they nuke suffice.
FTOKNB COMiFKTION AGENTT.
rC'S -ail-riO MIXKK HM-O, PHONK
liiKL W. II. lU.OWEKS. MOIL tf
Mutual Life, U. M. Uprague. 20 B
6 th. tf