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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1925)
THE EUGENE QUAEu Page Seven, jjay's Cross-Word Puzzle i . . v0T4t, hard an d easy, make this just the kind of 1 "J'lhe average ,an- Two ,",ke',e, together may hold 3 . . -h e. ; , ( ' " 1 - - - LJ lb 17 BkSSM Mm I . I. i will lppj pnXaM rw -rr :n sn Insrj T L. Ml. U - n P . ; p h-jr" i i44 n ft :sii l 5-1 HORIZONTAL Susoned. Hrd cowrinfcs of nuts. Hiring a tendency to catch the Portable lota made of canvaa. cSlSidatrt curt ot milk used h food. OtoIhi. Ace Hstenw. jnotrat tt which person Is ap prtiwd with reference to aasess- Eitrt dividend out of accumu late profits. Sprinkled. Pondered (eap. over a book). Portioned. Enflish coin. Devoured. . " ' Fenale deer. Pom of the rents. Diitritrates. To pierce with horns. To fly aloft. A rising into view. To place aftflin. Conveyed a deed. VERTICAL A machine for cutting bread. Dormant. Largest plant. -Sea eaitles. To prevent. Strict. Home of bees. Level ' A cat Seeing, hearing, feeling, etc. Interjection meaning stop. African antelope. Thoroughly proficient. Heverentiul fear. Boy. . Where one sleeps. Lyric song. A carrier of luggage. Metal tn natural state. Roves. AVorsltiped. Quantity. Tried. Nimble. Relieved. Kspecially large book. Itcgion. Solitary. Open work fabric of beautiful deaign. Answer to yesterday's cross-word puzzle; MUTT AND JEFF MOW fRS 0U CONJUlNCeO IMflT TrlAT 6yJ SHOOTS HARt MOU6W TO tRoP ANY AwiMM. in HtS .Ca The Rhino Thought The Bullet Wa3 a Flea Alighting on hi3 Back By BUD FISHER T. Ul Trie SKiW of Wl ShinoV h ...o.., lT P-,. wH-y. lr THf X IEfl RHinO HAi V . ffif I Jerry On the Job Must Be Kept Awake Somehow ply. rje. r aom o RjiJoiM l C k 2jEi3 IHMzl l 1 1 aEtijR HI 28105 'DEE QjaAlPlEEOlMlElRl . I 4-so Radio Programs TONIGHT'S PROGRAMS Pacific Coast 'GW, Portlam, iULa meters 5 p. children's program; 0 p. m.t St. ucji choir; Catherine . Covac Oritl, rtetor. 7:15 p. m., AVenther, ft md market reports, news bul 3 ind baseball acores. S p. m., terrily of Orejron extension ser ; H. E. Rowan. "On the Spenker of the Microphone." 0 p. in., in concert from Shermnu-Chiy new studio; 10:.10 p. m.. Hoot s. including liose City trio and 'r ffiturea. FAK. rulluian. Wash., 318.0 me- 7:110-0 p. m.. children' night, eld IlichnrnVin, pianist; "Keepins iti." Charles Stone; John Xn 'b. harmonica ol..it: melndr with a ind banjo, the Three Pyes; ie Cenling. pianist : "Nutrition Its IMation to Child Health." ''or I.ila Hunt; 'The Child in llnme." renn A. 11. Cleveland; . .? Chi,d Welfare and Kduca- Alice Limlsey Wehb; "Wash- Asricultnre for Mnv," It. M. r. ij- Jjos Aniteles. Pal.. 40S.5 me 7vj3?e P- m- Kxaminer's nitisl W hour; .:-, McI)nniel'9 1 rdoint,; 0:4-,. 7, ratlitorinl talk: l J-vaminer; Sonnv Clny's TrSft-S. Kxaminer; ' "f Cross." Thomas K. Green, " -'ationnl Cross; 8-9, n residence vipe organ rcHtnl. ""srlsnd, organist; 0-10, Eve lieraw a bm.r of dnnce music; i Manna. Rrer, raezio-soprano, istmg artists. A;,S''::"'' '"-. 4M.S me-v-w-8:,a 9- Sherman, Clay IMl. K,Idie Harknes. and his -7 la.Hn?nrW'w1, C"'" 242 m J m-. program, Star m""0; Warner Bro. J1'"; Dorothy Dodd, Henry J, "Moehamp, ppnlar Jan.! i Ul,prrn' danr orches-Xsi1"- ",loit: v it ho"r nf ir d Jollity U - n "f ,,an7 Seymour; !t.r-; "t'''ter's Hollywood l, lfl2, ro orcliMtra, Mel ' bS. ! P"sram; 4- H ret., i . rsiln" orchestra; ... - u.ir ters 5:45-0:15 p. m., Wurlitzer stu dio program sports talk by Sid Ziff; 0:30-7:30, dinner dance music; 7:30-8, program, Kastcrn Outfitting com; jinny; 8-9, progrnm, West Coast The aters, Inc.; 9-11, KNX, feature pro grnm; 11-12, Abe Lyman's Cocoanut Grovo dance orchestra from Ambas sador hotel; 12-2 . a. m., Wurlitzer Xighthawks. Kl'O, San Francisco, Cal 429.8 meters 1-2 p." in., liudy . Seiger's Kuirmont hotel orchestra; 7-7:30, concert, Palnce hotid; 8-11, Tnlace hotel concert. KFSH. Los Angeles, Cnl., 275.1 me ters 7:30 to 9:15 p. m., auditorium service, crusaders rally, evangelistic sermon of Aimee Seniple Jlcrherson, special music, silver liflnd under direc tion of (J. X. Nichols; 9:15 to 10 p. m. Judge Carlos K. Hnrdy of the superior court in an address concerning reli gion, crime and the youth of America, music by Marion Knott, saxophonist, accompanied by Mnrgnret Leek, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hill in duets; 10 to 10:30 p. m., band concert presented by the silver band, directed by G. N. Xichols. fit.. nour; Ksther Wood ko,,im" Art "" "M Fi..rT orchestra. 'We .'tort '': :30-7: r tt-.i. . m"can history. ' W.7 TTtrt 7 Jci": S-IO. r,ro,r., "10, nrograin. J ii '''T "Tanj-: ar il .7 Howard iV ore hotel dance t, ' " ""- Pari ,"","r dl '"P. o . meters : l-..-2."iL'V",I,"llifr tna. ' " t'5- "'T'w. Kaymond W,30. PoM-Intel-t?l : b 10, chamber ''l: S-10. studio ,v' J!-1" Tom Gera ".!r.oot CaL. m.9 e- New Styles j L; fe Germany spnd us thew cbapaun as its bt lupRstion for milady's spring bats. AbnT? is a crife cap male of straw and ribbons. Below a gray cap decorated itb straw desigrtt. BAREE, SON. OF KAZAN By JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD Copyright, 1917. by Doobleday, Pag A Ca "BAR.EB, SON OF" KAZAN," Vltaraph Picture, With Wolf, the War Dog, la an Adaptatfon of This Story across; bis greatest pleasure came to be not in eating but In destroy ing. The fires of his hatred burned fiercer as the weeks passed, until nt Inst he would snap and tear with his long fangs at the Bnow where Mc Taggort's feet had passed. And all of the time, away back of his mad ness, there was a vision of Nepeese that continued to grow more and more clearly in his brain. That first (.rent Loneliness t he loneliness of the long days and longer nights of his waiting and seeking on the Gray Loon, oppressed him again as it had oppressed biin in the early days of her loss. On starry or moonlit nights he sent forth hia wailing cries for her again, and Bush McTnggart, list ening to them in the middle of the night, felt strange shivers run up hia spine. ' . The man'a hatred wan different from the beast's, but perhaps even more implacable. With McTaggart it was not hatred alone. Thero was mixed with it an Indefinable and sup erstitious fear, a thing he laughed at, a thing he curBed at, but which citing to him as surely as the scent of his trail clung to llaree's nose. Itaree no longer stood for Nepees. That was i the thought that insisted In growing I in McTaggart'a ugly mind. Never a j day passed now that he did not think of the Willow; never a night came and went without a visioning of her face. IJe even fancied, on a certain night of storm, that he heard her voice out in the wailing of the wind and less than a minute later he heard faintly a distant howl out in the j forest. That night his heart was filled with a leaden dread. He shook himself. He smoked his pipe until the cabin was blue. lie cursed lift i Neat Pelmet Curtains (Continued) ALL that day Hush McTaggart fol- left traces of his presence. Trap after trap he found robbed. On the Inke he came upon the mangled wolf. From the first disturbing excitement of his discovery of Baree's presence his humor changed slowly to one of rage, and his rage increased as the day dragged out. He was not unac quainted with four-footed robbers of the trap-line, but usually a wolf or a fox or a dog who had grown adept in thievery troubled only a few traps. But in this case Bnree was trnveling straight from trap to trnp, and his footprints in the snow showed that he stopped at each. At dusk he reached the shack Pierre Eustach had built midway of bis line, and took inventory of bis fur. It was not more than a third of a catch; the lynx was half ruined, a mink was torn completely in two. The second day he found still greater ruin, still more barren traps. He was like a madman. When he arrived nt the Becond cabin, late in the after noon, Baree'a tracks were not an hour old in the snow. Three times during the night he heard the dog howling. The third dny McTaggart did not return to Lac Bain, but began a cautious hunt for Baree. An inch or two of fresh snow had fallen, and as if to take even greater measure of vengeance from his man-enemy Bnrcc had left footprints freely within a hundred yards of the cnltin. It was half an hour bofore McTaggart could pick out the straight trail, and he fol lowed this for two hours into a thick baiiksian swamp. Baree kept with the wind. Now and then he caught the scent of his pursuer; a dozen times he waited until the other was so close he could hear the 'snap of brash, or the metallic click of twigs Against his rifle barrel. And then, with a sudden infpiration that brought the curses afresh to Mt'Tag gart's lips, ho swung in a -wide circle and cut straight buck for the trap line. When the Factor reached the line, along toward noon, Baree had already begun his work. He had killed and eaten a rabbit: ha had robbed three traps in the distance of a mill., and he was headed again .straight over the trap-line for I'ost Lsc Bain. It was the fifth dny that Buh Mc Taggart returned to his post. He was in an ugly mood. Only Valence of the four Frenchmen was there, and it was Valance who heard hia story, and afterward heard him cursing Mario. She come into the store a little later, bigeyed and frightened, one of her cheeks flaming red where McTaggart had struck her. While the storekeeper was getting her the can ned salmon McTaggart wanted for his dinner Valence found the oppor tunity to whisper softly In her ear: "M'leu Lertte has trnpped a sil ver fox," ho said with low triumph. "He loves you. mon ami, and he will have a splendid ratch by spring---and sends you this mesnc from his cabin up on The Little Black Bear With No Tail: Be ready to fly when the soft snows come!" Marie did not look at bim. but she heard, and her eyes shone so like stars when the young storekeeper gnre her the salmon that, he said to Valence, when she had gone: "Blue I'eath, but she is still beau tiful at times. Valence!" To which Valence nodded with an odd smile. By the middle of .Tannarr the war between Baree and Bush MTsgrart had become more than an incident more than a parsing adventure to the beat, and more than an irritating happening to the man. It was, for the time, the olemental raison d'etre of their Jives. Baree hung to the . t:n 1 1 h.nta.l it liLc tit-. raVtatinc .ern and earh time that , ur not waving goodby to your wife. ree, and the storm but there was no longer in him the bullying courage of : old. He had not censed to hate Ba j ree; he still hated him as he had ! never hated a man, but he had an even greater reason now for wanting in mil ni in. n came 10 mm iirob in his sleep, In a restless dream, and after that it lived, and lived the thought that the spirit of Nepeese was guiding Baree in the ravaging of his trap-line! (To Be Continued) A simple, neat dcafgn for pelmet valance and curtains is shown here. The pelmet is a piece of cross-stitch or tapestry needlework, while a bor der, of similar stitch, is attached to the straight curtains. On Gardening, COIL condition, as to whether It is alkaline or add, that is, lime im pregnated or lacking In lime, has be come a vory impotrant question In gardening and one which is only be ginning to be appreciated for its real value. An acid soil, commonly known as a tfour soil, ia one in which lime is lacking. SoiU which are annunlly mulched with pine needles or ook leaves are very likely to be cid, , these leaves, decaying, produeo an acid condition. Saifdy soils are likely to be acid because the sand Is made up of fine particles of silicon, which is not what chemists know as a base, substance which unites with and neutralizea an acid. Lime does this and lime In the soil Is necessary to counteract acid ity, A sweet soil Is an absolute ne cessity for vegetable growing. In the flower garden there are a number o-f plants and ornamental bushes which will not tolerate a sweet or lime soil, but they are few and the only ones likely to be found in the "ordi nary garden are some of the lilies, such as the gold-handed lily of Ja pan, LUium anratiim, whHj will not flourish in a sweet or limy soil. This is the reason for the poor success in growing this plant In moit gnrdens. The continued nse of chemical fer tilizers is ahio likely to produce an acid condition. So it is necennry to alternate lime dressings In the fall with commercial fertilisers in the .spring. Liming the soil also helpa to liberate certain plant fnod elementa and place them in a form available for the. planta. Members of the mustard family, to which the radish, cabbage, turnip and many other vegetables belong, want lime soils. Ro do members of the legume family to which belong the pens, ben and clovers. Pulverised limestone la the cheapest and easiest method of applying lime to the soil. Hydra ted and air slaked lime come next. They, however differ hardly at all from the pulverized limestone after the sinking process. Scatter the lime o the soil looks as if a light snow had flallen and rake or hoe it In. Amber Laoe Fans. Lace fans with lovely amber or carved ivory stocks are a pleasant change from the more common plum ed varieties. To Remove Paper When tinner sticks to the polished top of a table, remove it by putting a few drons of oil on the paper and rubbing gently with a soft cloth. AU (Cocluaris DAILY ) had FLAPPER FANNY sel The blushing brlda savos rouge bills. ' . I A. v 1 JACK DAW'S ADVENTURES Story by Hal Cochran Drawing, by U W. Itednsr MYSTERY ISLAND CHAPTER 17 (News Note: Woman in Kt. Louis granted divorce because husband his hair permantntly waved.) Ah, ha, here's a warning that men can't be scorning. It cornea from a rae in Hi. Louis. We've gotta beware of the waving of hair, lest , our wives take offense and taboo us. &l seems It's OK for the Missus to eay, "Ho this and do that to my Hair." But husbands, by golly, are flirtin with folly unless they be wise and beware. By one man 'twas tried, and heN now shy a bride, for his better half gave him the air. Home locks, combed onstraight, broke a permanent date. ; and he minted wedded blis by a hair. j Sure, he may have looked rlar, hut not to his lasnie. flhe merely considered him pelf. Ho. don't bt a limp, and put up with a crimp when J It may put a crimp In yourself. f Lest love light be dimmed, when yon have your hair trimmed, you had better consider the strife, r- r you fall for the Mire wi a wave, just Cynthia Grey Says: rrO have and to hold for better or for worse. The two man and woman prom ise that to each other at marriage. In the words la Implied a sncred partnership. It la a division nf woo and weal both material and mental. Other words are also spoken. But the above are moat Important. What he has shall bo hers. And what belongs to her shall he his. But the old order of things hus not been entirely lived down. The male still considers that what la his of worldly goods shall be hia to dispense as he sees fit. Wifcy wanta a new coat. She must cajole for it as her sisters down through the ngea have cajoled for favor of the main. That is the source for womanly wiles, trickery and such like accicd I ted to her. But the time is at hand for a change. In partnership the partners share thn profits, too, aa well ns the losses. Why shouldn't women have entry to the checking account mid a mutual control on the family purse. That would strengthen renpoi, nihil ity. And it is only fair, according to the promise mndc. Dear Miss (Jrey: My mother found cut tho other day that I hud been smoLlng clgareli when I went out on pnrtiet witb other young folk. Hhn h-Tame very angry and naid chit no decenr girl smokes cignreia. I tried to argue that many reitpectahli girls did tut she only became aiiricr, la be right t j t It? Lolita. Strirtly speaking, there mny he nothing wrong in a girl smoking cigarets. I know the mother nf two children, who cnrcK for tliei.i most tenderly, and yet ihe smoke a package of rignrrts every th-ctj days. Hut It Is certainly true lint the repuiati"n of suy girl is not helped by clgnret smoking. Whe ther Jtntly or not, she is at oti -stamped as some sort of a w 'd woman. I believe it wou'd he he ter for your healrh and your reputation if you uirt rnoking. "VOW that the boea have gone," he continued, "let's look over by that Irea that the hear came from, ami sen if we t-nn find any honoy. "A few bees wer still buzzing around the tree, but the main part of the swarm hud left. Jack took off his cap nod waved it and finally chased the straggling beea away. (Coutiuued.J l he sniffed afresh the scent of the Factor from Lac Bain he was Im-! nreed still more strongly with the! instinct that he was avenging himself i m.nn a deadly memr. Again and aram b outwitted McTaggart: hr ! t continued to strip his trap of thiri bait; the humor grew in him more ) I strongly to destroy the fur be came S WTZ Home Hints alcohol is spilled on vnrmh, wah with wo ter immediately ur pour oil. Avoid Strong Acids. o nt tine strong acids or alkali me tii It (M.nnected with pluioMng. CHOSS-WOUDFOH Lirnj-: folks I Answer to Little Joe's crows-word puzr.le: (Copyrifbt, 1925, NKA BerTice, Inc.) 'MM I.T.I . I r'"s TIU RE EN l omms w E R AlS E S MMMKoM Rug That Won't Curl. To keep mn ill rugs from c-urliug, sew some; stiff material like buck ram or hHirrloth on the undertide of the corners. Keep Soup Simmering, A soup tiiiit is not kept at the sim mering point nil the time it Is cook ing will be lacking in flavor. 4 9 Cook Puddings Slowly. All purl lings that should be smooth and creniiy such as cmtnrd, bre.id. rice. Inpi'-ca and the like should b.tke or Ft am a'owty as they are tough if cooked rapidly, Lemon With Rica. A tcnpoouful of lemon juice to n lunrt of wiiter will make rice very white and keep the grains separated t wln n boiled. I Warm the Milk When baking custard, warm the ' milk before adding the egg and ; water will settle at the bottom of 1 the dish. 'T'HRN the little fellow let out another howl and started to run again. This time ho ch ringed his course and rnu away from the adventurers, Instend of townrd them. "Something has frightened the animal," said Dotty. "Yes, and I know what it wan," suid Jack. ''There is a whole awarin of bcoa chasing him. No wonder he howled.' "QH," Hl!OI!Ti:i Dotty, "We'd belter get out of the way or they will be taking after us." But the bees seemed intent on stinging the little black henr. Tho youngsters watched the bear and bees disappear from night and then Jack suggested that perhaps the hear had poked his nose Into the heea honey home. Little Sister You're dainty and neat; They all call you sweet, Herause you're behavior Is fine. And hence. If you please, Mom's glud to say, "She's A dear little daughter of mine." In House Cleaning Kmpty the vacuum hag In a larga paper sack Instead of shaking It into a newspaper. This eliminatua flyu( dust. f : li '. ! ? 1 r