rsday Evening, May 7, 1925
THE EUGENE GUARD
Page Seven
Thn:
MUTT AND JEFF
Jeff Imitates a Hat on a Rack
Today's Cross-Word Puzzle
By BUD FISHER
h rt words may b found In this punle. But that
Suu". easier to et than the longer words. Just try.
thj; re
rhino can't K i . " i...,,.vv S . . ... 1 I o"-'l k.s."v. mutt, i bidh'tX I
I5' EL- ZDlE3LL - - - . -
7 HlL 6' Jerry On the Job ; : - Up Goes the Stipend
U 1 1 TZi ' iO V r J " h EEPANMOGrA . ii JUST r?EWOMED JtCRVaTMEUVLt. S 3 V. .OHELF- .
OMK- 7 7 alwe-i suppose ipw.rmwy. ' frow tu at stoolM 6c Hiee Ss
?f . . 1 OO&.HX TO ENTtt? I k nail . A(?E TOO tew J KBVT VlEEK . ) t ""
osui " '
' HORIZONTAL
I Babbit,
i Paragraph'
4 A Quick movement.
(. Verbal.
II. At any tiny.
11 Special topic In a macazme.
jfi. One to be relied upon in emer
iraey. I. Rodent , . ,
19. SAnlance used In making lnc-
qner.
1. Aurora.
22. Melal used for pans,
ft fork.
Collection or iacts.
Borjy land.
Colonizea.
2(t. To weep.
SI. Open spot in the woods.
The supreme ikmuk.
SS. Aged.
Sk Arid.
37. Beer mug.
To nap.
41. Period.
43. Lurked.
45. To total.
17. Large Tessel UBed in tanning.
45. Green plums.
49. Organ of sight. ,
. By.
52. Hawaiian food made of taro.
H. Beer.
Beasts.
Remnrkable.
fS. Back part of neck.
63. Being in health.
64. Disagreeably shnrp.
65. ' To abolish.
Not aa much.
VERTICAL
White with ape.
Decaying.
One in cards.
Truck for furniture.
To value;
Flushed with confidence.
To reprove.
Male swine.
To perform.
Covering on a bed.
Instruments used in sewing.
Meadow.
Auctions.
Procreated.
To submit.
Quantity.
Chain of rope passing through
mast.
Gazing.
Lowest tides.
Quantity of yarn loosely rolled.
Due.
Baker on stove.
Past.
Havine.
Compartment of a window.
Geographical drawing.
Dined.
Smooth long fishes.
Verb of permission.
Field.
To be indebted.
Every.
Answer to yesterday's cross-word
puzzle:
Silk worm.
To be sick.
Obstinate.
Lair.
7 Eagerness.
8. Playthings.
IpIaIlIl o R KS33vv aEE SS
D e t sffl He 1 1 Em Edj
! uSn tW HjtfegJLEiiP
j B.Y NAIgD BRlRNlE,
Tad5los iHILiflkE. 2
I 5-b
Radio
Programs
PACIFIC COAST
Tontnht
K(1W, Portlund. .11I1.3 meters 5 i).
.-Children's program, bv Jean .Ad-
tou; 7.15. Weather, police and market
"porn, tews luilloiina and baseball
Koreans, Program by Dregouian con
rt orchestra; J), Atwntcr-Kent muaic
Mmory eontesl, presented through
litMgh the curtesy of the Sunset
tttric company, and ulaved bv Jul-
i Walter, pianist; 10, Uwight John-
M'a Slulluoinah hotel Strollers.
ihl'l, Los Angeles, meters
"i V. in., Kx.iiiiiuer's musical hal?
(lti:lo, JUDnniel's nightly do
"b; fi.43-7, ll.ulitorlnl talk; 7-8, in
iniiMoial trio; s-ll, program, Stand
w Oil cumpauy Cnliiornia; U-10,
luIo:oia .NTt-ii.iders flu
ItJ-ll, Ks:ilU;iHr. linnnlav annn
UUA, Seattle. 4.14 :t n,o, n.T
J . aluiiio program, .Murau school
lit Dt,J s.
.!). HmIKwoo.L 2.V
i:45D
Blare
m.,
meters
P. ni.. .Seven lt.itf Pii-lrera nr.
ra; sain,, 1!rMi ,ill(cr. ,,.
'..."'. male quartet;
:'V "'n. baritone; Ila-Nl,-'ks
tri.f: 10-11. War
' T'"m' Ii ur of fuu. under per.
'u.rer,,,of Harry tefmoit; 11
UmZ" "r"'-''-'tter's Hollywood
"f ,1""t'c orchestra, Mel
W'J, O.ki-.n.l, Ml meters 4-
. P- 111., ci.n. ..rl,,.. M,l
'""'; 7:1.-,. .Air i...
- "lrll ,r f'.n T..11 '
I'nrv 11 "w, X
t(5U A"S"''-i. Iti.i.2 meter. -wel;"'"
Ar' "'fkman'i Hiltmorc
?Tn "" Kdwrd Fits-
'; i:S.1M,, little .to
kn : '"'lory, Professur
fc.-iL.i "''rtzng; Dickie
"-'""" M,rl": U"d w'ail
I lHhp M. I,vell; .S HI.
.. bright, Hie Hight
!L iTt , '' 1 John; 10-
iiw,, --. nmmore Hotel
K i'.''! ''' 1:,rl liurlnett leader.
"i.. Wiirlitzer pipe ir-
"" '-nk. N.d Zilf: 0:15
s i.f II ,.!;.. i
N. I.. IturVer T 6 i
a ... " f-:ima tnik. J. It.
tenor; 0-10, Don Lee-Cadillac night;
10-11, Johnny Buick's Cabirians.
KFSO, Los Angeles, 275.1 meters
7:3) -9:15 p. m., auditorium service,
water baptism nnd evangelistic ser
mon, Almee Semple McPberson, mus
ic by the choir and soloists; 0:15-10,
Gray studio program featuring the
Temple choir with assisting artists,
G. X. Nichols directing; 10-11, organ
recital program ot Esther Pricks
Green, assisted by Warren S. Hor-.
ton, tenor, nrd Gladwyn NichoU,
trumpter, organ numbers will include
(1) "The Nightingale," by Saint
Snens; (2) "Nocturne," from "Mid
summer Night's Dream," by Mendels
sohn; (3) "Scotch Melodies," arrnnif
td by Edwin Lemare.
KJH, Seattle, 884.4 meters 1-1:30
p. m., Post-lntellingencer musienle;
1:30-2, home ecooiomics talk, Bernice
Itedington; 10:30-12, "Keep Joy Kiv
diating Order of the Hats in Their
Iielfry."
Mountain Stations.
KOA, Denver, 322.4 meters 6-7 p.
m., band concert.
SMART HAIRDRESS
Whether one wears ones hair short
or long, the smart effect to achieve n
one of sleekness and smoothness
howing the modeling of the head.
WHITE AND BROWN
White conts nre frequently handed
with brown fur and lined with brown.
DELICATE TONES
Evening gowns of charmeuse in
delicate tones, but particularly in
white, are untrimmcd save with bril
liantf.
Mis
Ah Lt man's Cv
orrhAtrs from
11-12. mmm..
of I'nirersirj .if
.., ' N'" Kairnvourit
r r 4 : 3:m.4:3(, I'ala.e
r rmmtnt hntl nr.
BAREE, SON OF KAZAN
By JAMES OLIVEE CUEWOOD
Copyright. 1917, by Doubleday, Page ft Co.
"BAREE, SON OF KAZAN," a Vltagraph Picture, With Wolf,
the War Dor. is an Adaptation of This Story
I IAiM
Si
i-4. ,
li.M
r'-slaurint or.
T Sogers Ka:r-
S U, Theoloe
Once a tramp, going hither and hence.
Saw a pie cooli,-g out on a (1
It was made by a -
And the tramp nearly (S
When he ale it ihe pain was .!.
(1) Paling, e.pnlier.
(21 Ilri'leg room's wife.
I.'ll W inked out.
141 Manifesting Ihe height of
T.tiii; johll England, distinc'ure character.
(Continued)
A STRANGE humor possessed Cnr
vel as ho began the southward
journey. He did not believe in omens,
good or bad. r-uperstltlon hud played
a small part in his. life, but he pos
sessed both curiosity nnd n love for
r.dventurc, and his years of lonely
wandering hud developed in him a
wonderfully clear mental vision ot
things, which in other words might
be called singularly active imagina
tion. Ho knew that some irresistible
force whs drawing Ilaree back into
the south that it Was' pulling him
not only -along a. giveu line of the
compass, but to an exact point in
that line. For no reason in particular
the situation began to interest him
more ond more.and as his time was
valueless, and he had no futed des
tination in view, he begnn to experi
ment. For the first two daya he
marked the dog's course by compass.
It was due southeast. On the third
morning Carvel purposely struck a
course strnigjit west. He noted j
quickly the change m Hnrec Ins rest
lessness at first, nnd nfter Hint the
dejected manner in which he followed
at his- heels. Toward noon Carvel
swung sharply to the south and east
again, and almost immediately Buree
regained his old eagerness, and rnn
ahead of his master.
A week later Haree answered Car
vel's question by swinging westward
to give wide berth to Post l.ac Bain,
It was mid-afternoon when they cross
ed the trail along which Hush Mc
Tnggart's traps and deadfalls had been
set. Knrce did not even pause. He
headed due south, travelling so fnst
that at times he was lost to Carvel's
sight. A suppressed but intense ex
citement possessed him, and ho whined
whenever Carvel stopped to rest al
ways with his nose sniffing the wind
out of the south. Springtime, the
flowers, earth turning green, the sing
ing of birds, and the sweet breaths
in the air were bringing him back to
that great Yesterday when be bad be
longed to Nepeese. In his unreason
ing mind there existed no longer a
winter. The long months of cold and
hunger were gone; in the new vl
sionings that filled his brain they were
forgotten. The birds and flowers and
the blue skies had enme back, and
with them the Willow must surely
have returned, and she was waiting
for him now, Just over thero beyond
that rim of green forcsL
Something greater than mere cur
iosity began to take possession of
Carvel. A whimsical humor became
a fixed and deeper thought, an un
reasoning anticipation that was ac
companied by a certain thrill of sub
dued excitement. By the time they
reached the old beaver-pond the mys
tery of the strange adventure had a
firm hold on him. From Heaver
tooth'B colony Bnree led him to the
creek along which Wnkaynn, the black
bear, had fished, and thence straight
to the Gray Loon.
It was sarly afternoon of a wonder
ful day. It was so still that the ripp
ling waters of spring, singing in a
thousand rills and streamlets, filled
'he forests with a droning music. In
tl.t warm sun the crimson bakneesh
glowed like blood. In the open spaces
the air wns scented wnn me pcriuin
i of Blue Flowers. In Ihe tr' and
Imehe. mated birds were building their
ilr.ests. After the long sleep of win
ter Nature was at worn in an ner
glory. It was 1'nekepe.iin. Ihe Mat
ing Moon, Ihe Home Building Moon
and Haree was going home. Not to
matebnod but to Nepeese. lie knew
that she was there now, perhaps at
the very edge of the chasm where he
had seen her last. Th-y mould be
plaring together again soon, as Ihey
had played yestredav. and Ihe day
before, and the day before that, and in
his joy be barked up into Carvel's
fsce. and urged him fo greater speed.
Theo Ihey came to the clearing, and
once n.ore Haree atood like a.ro.k.
Carvel saw ihe charred ruins of the
burned cabin, and a moment later Ihe
two graves under the tall sprue, lie
; began to understand as his eves re
fta ! turned slowly to the waiting, li.ten-
irjg dog. A great swelling rose in his
I spoon salt, 4 teaspoon pupriku. -;
flips cooked dried limn beans, tl tlr.i
sliles bacon.
! Cook tomatoei, onion,, celery, sug.ir
and salt lor 1!0 minutes. Hub throui;'!
. fl coarse Mr.linor. Add beans and pnp
: rikti and turn into n liaking dish. Cov
er with very Ihin slices of bacon and
hake in a hot oven until bacon K
c rip.
Strawnorry rlulf
, , , ' l While of 1 esg. 1 cup powdered
throat, and after a moment or two he i ,,., , ,. a.,lwi,,., ries. ,
suhI softly, and will; an effort, i,,,.,.,,,,.,.,, ;, large miN-
Hoy, 1 guess you re linine. . . how ,, brt .,, lov,.,. ,,,,,.
Puree did not hear. With i s head ; Iuj ,,,,,,, , 1(
up nnd his nose ilted to I he blue sky ; wii, ui(, ubuul ,,,,, ,,,
he was sniffing the nir. lint was it ; f ff nM alu, frv(, ,
that came to h.in w. 1. the perfumes
of the forests and the green mend-!
nw? Whv n-ti. it that- Iia from,.,.!,1 ' A
now as he stood there? What was
there in the air? Carvel asked him
self, and his questing eyes tried to
answer the questius. Nothing. There
was death here death and desertion,
thut was all. And then, all at once,
there enme from Baree a 'strange cry
almost a human cry and hci wj
gone like the wind.
, (To be continued)
FLAPPER FANNY seg
In New York
Home Menus
DKAN
,- -Sl-U-KUWillR
down liroiulwuy I suw
peusivt; and wistful anil
a pluid tan coat una a
small tan hat pushed well dowu on
lty JAMES W
: VKW VUltK, May
up and
I ;n...n fiioi,
Jr thai'iuiug iu
her head. Oh, yes, George. Jean Na
than, the critic, was along. . . . Seeing
1 many young ladies with their pokes
1 pushed far hack oil their heads and
! dcein it a very ugly mode, inaHiniH'li
Ilreakfast Clewed prunes, cenal, (as thiso who wear their bounds that
way have the louk of morons
Saw Alfred Kreyniborg, poet nnd
critic, and he iinprc-iKed me with his
austerity. . . . Saw ninny editor
here in convention and 1 would like
all repoiteis to kumv what, good
sports their editor are when away
from home. Itut all mi'u are like
that Saw Princes Maria 'Mat-
chabelli, a woman of vivid personal
ity and vivid clothes Saw Wul-
meat dish in which to use a ctirap j tor Catlett, Ihe comedian, w ho says
cut of meat. However, a child under m j building a sunken garden for
school age should be nerved an fnlln women Saw " WeluT and
or a lamb chop for his dinner in p!ac?j l-Ufids and find little to laugh at
I
i
ims at unvici wc.
m. a , ,, J
JACK DAW'S ADVENTURES
Story by Hal OochrmM Drawings, by I W. Re4nr
MYSTERY 1SLAN D CHAPTER 21
thin cream, fried cornineal musu,
maple sirup, milk, coffee.
huncheo!i--Toirato succotash, brown,
bread and butter, orange and rhu
barb marmalade, milk, tea. ('
Dinner IleefMeak pie, rreame 1
new potatoes, buttered asparagus. !
radishes and onions, strawberry fluff i
on sponge cake, graham bread, milk,
Coffer
of the '.'msde" meat dish.
Tomato Succotash.
Two cups canned tomatoes, 1 table
spoon minced onion, cup minced
celery, 1 tablespoon sugar. 1 tea-
Feather of Fabric
i Jl-.m -j
Fabric feathers trim many a smart
hat. Sometimes they are of silk or
satin or even of wool. They have
quill ends, and are inevitably placed
at a jaunty angle.
in their antics,' albeit almost every?
one else does Saw Klsic Jauis
and heard her sing the old "hiuky
dinky, parlez-vou" .ng and thought
of many o( the vente the fellow
used to sing in camp which Klxie does
not sing Saw Mr. John Per
ching, commonly known as "11 lack
Jack" l'ershing. I believe the chief
i-c arson for him being a great soldier
is that he looks like a soldier..
Suw Benedict Mm Quariie, one of five
brothers of San Francisco who all
went on the stage, Benedict's brother,
! (fforge, is playing in the same piece
with him and they both make love to
I (lie BU luc Itlir inuj. .... ,.inr, wiiii:im
J Hughes, who is so boyish he is alunrnt
girlish, paradnxicnlly speaking. Of the
! younger generation of actors he is
one of the beat Saw K. JI. So-
I thern nnd Julia Marlowe, whose pri
vate romance is as sweet a anything
they have played on the stage and
i whose lives dtHprove the common be
lief that all stage people are uiiirtial
ly unhappy
.
Summer visitor will find here
such sightseeing buses as they have
never before ridden in. They nre
great de line affairs with thick up
holstery. They are enclosed in glass
for foul weather mid the most unuHiial
feature is a glass top through which
one may rubberneck at the sk scrap
ers without getting dirt in the eye,
It baa been set down here before
, More than one now hat la worn out.
that many ot New York's hotel are
cities complete within themselves.
They nre equipped to meet any
emergency of the guest. An inslnnee
of that occurred during the publish
ers' convention. A Cleveland man suf
fered with a cinder in his eye, A clerk
Inquired a to what troubled hiin and
called an attendant who escorted the
guet to Ihe hotel hospital. There the
eye was treated without charge to the
guest. It was explained that guests
receive free treatment at the hotel
for any injury sustained within the
building even though the manage
ment is not at fault.
TACK, of course, followed his cousin. And right behind them, came
0 Flip nnd Flop. "Oh exclaimed Dotty, "this la dandy boat Flat-bottomed
and nice and wide. It surely can't tip over. "Then she jumped in
nnd started pushing the boat away from shore with an oar. "Wait, till I
get it free," she suggested.
Home Hints
JIirnAKH pie is delicious made
with a thick meringue filling in
stead of an upper crust.
Use Lemon Juloe.
Lemon juice may advantageously be
substituted for vinegsr in salad dress
ing. Brushing Bread
If yoti bnmh over bread with milk
or butter before baiting it, the crust
will be darker.
Plated Utensils
1'lntrd utensils for general rooking
on the range are not a wise choice,
as the t plating ultimately wests
through, particularly if you um
abrssive for scouring.
Serving Mush
Muh left over from breakfast may
be packed in greased linking powder
ni n h nnd later he sliced evenly dipped
In flour and fried for another meal.
Baked Crackers
To serve with soup, split common
cracker and spread with butter, al
lowing, one-fourth of a teaspoon of
butler to each half cracker. Hake un
til Ihey are d'licnteSr brown.
ill
A FT Kit n few hard shoves the boat alid out Into the water, and Jack,
Flip and Flop, all scrambled aboard. Jack had brought the lunch bas
ket with him nnd It looked like they were starting out on a regular picnic,
."I'll row," announced Dotty. And she aat right down, put the oara ia
place and started pulling up stream.
rTlHY had gone but a short Aistance when a rumbling roar greeted them.
X Dotty stopped rowing and looked a bit frightened. "What waa that?"
she asked. And, a the roar came again Jack looked ahead and saw a
st renm of water go up into the air. "We'd best wait a minute," he an
oounced. "There'a something just beyond the bend." (Continued.)
HAT MATCHES FROCK
This season the hat usually match
es the frock In color, and quite fre
quently the hosiery matches the frock
too.
ram r M-vut lum
Land Settlement
Is Drawing Card
J heard an oid-time song today, (bat runs in sweetest rhyme. Twas
ears ago we used to play. ."The iood Old Summertime." And, too, an
ancient member that, of old. made dancers sway. Why surely, you remem
ber it. that tuneful "Moonlight Hny."
. How ey one can backward drift, and in the old days he. Your mind
can take the Journey swift, to tunes like "Sweet Marie." Old "Alexander's
Band'' was played; the tune was changed, and then, the strains of "Annie
Laurie" made me feel ral young again.
, I closed my even, and drifted tbrmgh, "The Trail of the I. on-some
Pine," and then a song we once all knew, rame forth, "Swet Ad"lin-."
They all may ring tin-panny. yet they make us want to sing, for mystic
and uncanny are the mein'rie that they bring.
Th-re's quite a thrill to listen to this mimic on the strM. You don't
know -.hat you're miston', if you're missed this summer treat. It trsvels
through the airway and lo years ago 'twill span. iive credit, in the fair
way. to the Hurdj -fiordy map.
lOltTLANI. Ore., May 7. (Spe
cial). Namea of L'tlTO settlers Inter
ested In Oregon's sgrlcultural oppor
tunities' were received yesterday by
the land settlement partment of the
Portland chamber of commerce from
II. W. Byerly, general itniiiigration
g'nt of the Northern Pacific Railway
ruipaiiy, a a result of the joint ad
vert iftirjg campaign confl icted by the
three tr.ii,' .ntint nial lines co-operating
in developing the northweit.
This new lit Is in addition to 2.W1
inquiries received by the department
in March from .)n co operating linen,
Bt.d an additional (fH) received earlier
in the year. A total of more than 10,
( inquiries have been received since
the first t.f the year, according to W.
(I, Id?, mnmiger.
BLACK ROSE PETALS
A very attractive evening gown of
heavy pmg fcilk crepe 5le chine is
trimmed with black velvet rose petals.
Chairs Always
In Need
Where there ia a oomnina,tlon liv
ing ami dining room in a house, the
essential furnishings for thla room
consist not only of a good-sized gate
leg table that can be folded down and
set aside outside of mealtimes, but
plenty of seata. The seats are needed
for use at the dinner table.
Grocery Girl
You're kept on the run,
Yet, it must be real fun
To work around good thing to
eat.
From morning till night.
There are foodstuffs in sight.
No wonder your manner is sweet.
LONG CUFF TIES
Chiffon ties with long, floating ends
are very lovely (,n the summer frock!
both at tie neckline and at the waist
line.