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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1925)
;-'-!5'May 9,1025 'the-euqenb quasd Page Seven MUTT AND JEFF '- Mutt Must be Lyin' When he Says he Craves Excitement In the African Wilds. By BUD FISHER Today's Cross-Word Puzzle snunathiie with their comrade in the sketch shown jletsfl", -jt ,,en there's the fl-vertical to consider. ( VILLVte: I i tr' 4 5 i 7 e I"")3'"" r-j3i 1 I J4' 53 r ' I'.'. J GOT A MWlwe POBTCR JA ' " Tr ' Mi . C S ' : ..... ... 42- tLk HORIZONTAL j S picture. ft ftStf word for addressing man. U. Movine truck. It Fither. u Electrified particle. i;. Pushed ahead of another car. & 'Sbb. . & Premonition. 3. One thing you con do in jaiL & A owe myiiioiogj. JS. Funeral pue. ft. To accomplish. $ Measure of area. 5 Exclamation of disgust. JO. Ursest deer. JL King of Bashan conquered by Mosw. Hebrew word for Deity. St t'art of the leg. & Instead. Not so much. & To weary of. ft Made of oak. 41 Liquid. IS, Fourth note in scale. & Grain. 50, Devoured. 32. Toward. & What 2 Horizontal is doing in picture. VERTICAL L Imprisoued. & Bone. ; ' ' t Thread-like mark. ... . 5. To press. ..... . t At any time. 7. Manufactured. i Indefinite article. PACIFIC COAST Tonight KOW, Portland, 4111.5 meters 6 D. u George Weber and his orchestra; 'R veather, police and market re rxu, neits bulletins an dbaseball '; 8, Lecture on Christian mce by George Shaw Honlt. p.. a .Jnember oi the board ol lecture t'ip of the mother church, the. First (Wei. of Christ, Scientist, Boston. Sixth Church of Christ, Scien j't; 1(1:30,, Hoot Oowls, including ,r" "itl other features. krAE, Pullman, Wash., S4S.B me-(-r.30.9 p. m.. music week, Alter. aU8ic MnrMflrita Ar;il- .1: Si "Wmitive Sources Waters of ,,'"". t ranees Lockwood, ""twite Miller, sonronos: nrrr, Mlnels Vay Kerns, contralto; pio- . auu 8uaia, cowuoy music, 'ima Johnson, ninnivf- mi Frances l'remo, pianist; mod f American composers, .Marguerite '"er: bamn i.' . J,Jr"0: "('"inporing of Spring .iuimsor ilenry Holtz; : ""'" and Kitchen," r Stanley A. Smith; "Ancient v.. d . ' "rKe Ij. undei; " Books,' Alice Limlaey Webb. " A-l-n. ItlS..-. metcrs C o'"l; I"",i,"'r's "'"sical half ; M:lr,, M.nanicl', nightly d- V IlnJi'Jl""l talk; 7-8. 'n,.'; Dc" "1"5io: 8-9. Aeolian vm "ri!'n 'Mc trd . nrt. 10.ni Ml' mini, pupil, 0f ji,n Smal! Krrii . . 1:15 . 1 "''1- '''3 meters (!:4;V m ,. " ' m "id com- Timm pro ' K,l,!i' 'lrknem nnd liii 17 M' 232 me.ers- H. v n ,ur' ""ten, 4L. h,',J violin, and Chns. I'nor; .!(,, ,.bMr, W' '?r: ilU''" trio: IJorothy M. l K' ll. Warner ier i:" . r lu" md frivolity, 'Hi - V ' """J' Seymour; leader "icuesira, .ilel nirV halfhour- .H"CI,;ei!l,1"?'- "V-ir.ck. (l r.,.(. l4M ill ; . 'iVfr ' J- Carier . . : "HI it ; fun " ' ' ia V"--. "in !7r T:;i rtrixvn vw-.. - :. -r1 '-lit: o:in.fi:m 4i5, It.,? .0 Hre.il ,. Radio Programs "tel dame c o 0, He is sometimod a j:iy." 11. Therefore. 14. River in Italy. 16. Bow of the head. 18. Boil on eye. 20. See picture. 22. See picture. 24. Money or your fine. 26. Garden tools. . 31. To harden (as to bone). 33. Warning. 35. Kind. 37. Limb. 39. To fly as a bird. 40. To satiiite (one -night in prison is enough. 41. , Territory watched by a cop. 42. Person opposed to something. 44. Sun god. 47. Preposition- of place. 49. Correlative of either. 51. Half an em. ? Answer to yesterday's cross-word puzzle: R iaIrIePi ItIeMsEDIaIRIti Grove dance orchestra from Ambas sador hotel; 12-2. a. m., Wurlitzer Xighthawks, from te Wurlitzer stu 'dio. , KPO, San Francisco, 429.5 meters 1:30-2 p. m Kudy Seiger's Fair mount hotel' orchestra; 4:30-5:30, Rudy Seiger's Fairmont iotel orches tra; 6-7, Loew's Warfield theater; 7-7:30, Rudy Seiger's Fairmont hotel orchestra; 8-11, Palace hotel. . KJR, Seattle, 384.4 meters 1-1:30 p. m. Post-Intelligenced musical; 1:80 2, book review, Raymond David Hol mes; 8:30-9:30, Post Intelligencer program; 9:30-10, chamber of com merce program. KFSG, Los Angeles, 275.1 meters 7:30-0:15 p. m., auditorium service crusaders' rally, evangelistic sermon of Aimee Sample McPherson, special music, stiver band under direction of G. X. Nichols; 9.15-10, Judge Carlos S. Hardy of the superion court in' an address concerning religion, crime and the youth of America, music by Mar ion Knott, saxophonerst, accompanied by Margaret Leek, Mr. andMrs. Har ry Hill in duets; 10-10:30, band con cert presented by the Silver band, di rected by G. N. Nichols. Mountain Stations. KOA, Denver, 322.4 meters 6-7 p'. m., municipal band concert; 7, folk songs. KOB, State college, N. M 848.6 meters 6:30-7:30 p. m. musical pro gram. Blanchard Jury Unable to Agree PORTLAND, May 8. The jury which tried Edgar Blanchard, dis missed Portland policeman, on a churge of assault nnd battery in con nection with a raid March 21 on the tt' ine of David Foulkes, reported at 11 p. m. Wednesday that it was hope-M-Hly divide t nnd was discharged by Circuit Judge fcMpworth. The policeman was charged with striking David Foulkes, Jr, Blnnchtird denied that he wilfully struck young Foulkes. He said the blow wn delivered as be was trying to force the door, winch was being he'd by the hoy. Blanrhard said he Apologized when he realized that he was attempting to entir the wrong home. A house scrota the street was the one which had been picked lo raid, the officer snid. YELLOW SATIN GOWN A very nttrarrive gown is of yellow satin with n deep hem of yellow os trick feathers. . ; : Fashion Plaques I Tt.. w,.,ir,. irr rrwk of this Se- pH o r a l CrlP N F pB gjATHEBL A CMnMe Pi P1tTnBb acoInWaMa" Fg"NH5 E TTLETsiactoi nrus tie' t SlisME ffjpli b N E A r E igHAlp IdIgivbiaibiait ie I3lIeIs rchestra. Kl-1 jT WTV ...... jr m w jm. juvenile;' r. 3L (IC '. 2 meter.: jT J -!. studio i V3-"yt- dinner hour j ton frequently has the shoulder ber- j th tied in the front the style when j framimother a girl. It i" f-rj Inrely on slender, youthful shoulders. I but not so food on tin broad, ath letic cut. Jerry On the Job 'I 1 BAREE, SON OF KAZAN By JAMES OLIVER OUBWOOD OopTrtgbt, by Dtnbledar. Pa Ox "BARBHI, BON OT KAZAN, VtUgraph pictnr. With Wolf, th War Doff, Is an Adaptation of This Story (Continued) QARVEL had thrown off his pack. He dropped fiis rifle beside it now, and followed Baree. He ran swiftly, straight across the open, into the dwarf balsams' and into a grass grown path that had once been worn by the travel of feet. He ran until he was panting for breath, and then stopped and listened. He could hear nothing of Baree. But that old worn trail led on under the forest trees, nnd he followed it. Close - to the deep, dark pool in which he and the Willow had dis ported so often Baree, too, bad stop ped. He could hear the rippling of water, and his eyes shone with a gleaming fire as he queBted for Ne peese. He expected to see her there, her slim white body shimmering in some dark shadow of overhanging Bpruce, or gleaming suddenly white as snow in one of the warm splashes of sunlight. His eyes sought out their old hiding places; the great split rock on the other side, the shelving bankB under which they used to dive like otter, the spruce boughs that dipped down to the surface, and in the midst of which the Willow loved to screen her naked body while he searched the pool for her. And at last the rea lization was borne upon him that she was not there, that he had still farther to go. He went on to the tepee. The little open space in which they had built their hidden wigwam was flooded with sunshine that came through a break in the forest to the west- The tepee was still there. It did not seem very much changed to Baree. And rising from the ground in front of the tepee was what had come to him faintly on the still air the smoke, of a small fire. Over that fire wa&; bending a person, and it did not strike Baree as amazing, or at all unex pected, that this person should have two great shining braids down her back. He whined, and at his whine the Person grew a little rigid, and; turned slowly. Even then it seemed Quite the most natural thing In the world that it should be Nepeese, and none other. He bad lost her yesterday. Today he had found her. And in answer to his straight out of the soul of theshrd whine there came a sobbing cry straight out of the soul of the Wil low. Carvel found them there a few min utes later, the dog's head hugged close up ngaim-t the Willow's breast, and the Willow was crying crying like a little child, her face hidden from him on Baree's neck. He did not inter rupt them but waited; and as he waited something in the sobbing voice and the stillness of the forest seemed to whisper to him a bit of the story of the burned cabin and the two graves, nnd the meaning of tbo Call that bad come to Baree from out of the south. That night they was a new camp fire in the open. It was not a small fire, built with the fear that other eyes might see It, but a fire that sent its flames high, in the glow of it Mood CarveL And as the fire had changed from that smouldering heap over which the Willow had cooked her-dinner, so Carvel, the officially! dead outlaw, bad changed. The beard j wa gone from bis face; be had thrown j off his caribou-skin coat; his sleeves, were rolled up to the elbows, and there was a wild flush in his face that; was not altogether the tanning of wind and son and storm, and a glow tn bis eyes that had not been there fr five yars, perhaps never before. Ilia eyes were on Nepeese. "J o morrow or uie next any i am in to Lac Bain," he said, a bard going to Lac Bain." he said, a hit .na Dinar a - irorshiD in his Tnire. I will not come back until I havi! killed him." The Willow looked straight intoj the fire. For a time there wat a j nilenc broken only by the crackling j of the flames, and in that silence t r- vel's firgers weared In and out of the silken strands of the Willow's hair. ) His thought flash.il back, "hat a chance he had nuseed that day on uh McTaggart's trap-line if he had only known! His jaws set hard J. J : as he saw in the red-hot heart of the fire the mental pictures of the day when the Factor from Lac Bain hod killed Pierrot. She had told him the whole story. Her flight Her plunge to what she had thought was certain death in the icy torrent of the chusin. Her miraculous escape from the wa ters and how she was discovered, nearly dead, by Tuboa, the toothless old Cree whom Pierrot out of pity had allowed to hunt in part of his domain. Ho felt within himself the tragedy and the horror of the one terrible hour in which the sun bad gone out of the world for the Willow, and lfl the flames he could see faithful old Tuboa as be call on his last strength to bear Nepeese over the long miles that lay between the chasm and his cabin; he caught shifting visions of the weeks that followed in that cabin, weeks of hunger and of intense cold in which the Willow's life hung by single thread. And at last, when the snows were deepest, Tuboa bad died. Carvel's fingers clenched in the strands of the Willow's braid. A deep breath rose out of his chest, and hey said, staring deep into the tire, "Tomorrow I will go ,to Lac Baih." For a moment Nepeese did not an swer. She, too, was looking into the fire. Then sheiaid: "Tuboa meant to kill him when the spring came, and bo could traveL When Tuboa died I knew that It was I who must kill him. So I came, with Tuboa's gun. It was fresh loaded yesterday. And M'sieu Jeem" she looked up at him, a triumphant glow in her eyes tos she added, almost In a whisper "You will not go ttt Lac Bain. I have sent a messenger.' "A messenger?" "Yes, Ookiraow Jeem a messenger. Two days ago. I sent word that 1 had not died, but was here waiting for him and that I wonld be Iskwao now, his wife. Ooo-oo, he will come, Ookimow Jeem he will come fast. Handy Rack for Magazines Above is a sketch of a handy rack for books and magazines that are in use at the time. The rack may be placed beside a comfy chair, as shown, or in front of a sofa. What are you sayin you think it's too hot? Real nummer weather seems ell torn my rot? Startin' at kit-kin' and raitn' ral NedV tiny, baa the heat simply gone to your head? Not so long back you were pusHm the snow; wifhin" and nrayin that winter would go. Frost-bitten ears made you hope fur the mm that bring forth the heat when the summer's begun. Uy, but you're changeable. Well, so sm I! Who's ever satisfied? Show me the guy. Now we're perspirin' and quite ill at eae tellirj' otir friends that we'd much rather freeze. U:t1 I L. ...... trnea H'itli 'Lw.tr ej,lr... . rwl I ! nAai H ai fi(,k Whether it s heat, eather w .Imply can't get. rr.i.. Jl ....;-. - her we simply can't get Taint no ue fussin' or cusain' or plishes much. Hummer is here and it's beat of whatever we've got. (Copyright. H25, And you shall not kill him. .Non!" Kbe smiled into his face, and the throb of Carvel's heart was like a drum. "The gun is loaded," she said softly. "I will shoot" j, '"Two days ago," said Carvel, "And from Lac liuin it is " "He will be here tomorrow," Ne peese answered him:- "Tomorrow, as the sun goes down, he will enter the clearing. I know. My Mood has been singing it all day. Tomorrow to morrow for he will travel fast, Ook imow Jeem. Yes, he will come fast." Carvel had bent his head. The soft tresses gripped in his fingers were crushed to his lips. The Willow, look ing again into the fire did not see. But she felt and her soiel was beat ing like the wings of a bird. "Ookimow Jeem," Bhe whispered a breath, u flutter of the lips so soft that Carvel heard no sound. , (To be concluded) Cynthia Grey Says: j rBAR Is a terrible thing. A child never knows fear until it is taught to-be afraid. And one of the most cruel and senseless things th-at wetl-intentlon'-'tl parents do is to teach their offspring to be afraid. "Take oare. you'll fall!'' a mother will say to her young son who is run ning around after the fashion of a sari -footed mountain goat. It would be better for the child to have a bump or two than to acquirn the habit of mind that makes him con stantly on the look-out for some hurt or other. Then there is the fear of the dark. Almost all children have It Tire ogre in the fairy-tale book la hidden In tlie corner of the room, they imagine . . or perhaps Bluebeard himself! , . . Children shouldn't know about such dreadful figments of the Grimm Brothers' Imagination. The mother who sits down in -the dark sleeping room, and quiets her child's mind by a cheerful lullaby or n aappy sort of story la giving him strong nerves for his grown-up years later on. And there will be no night marea to fill hia baby dreams with horror I Then there la the "daddy" bugbear. "I'll tell your daddy when he como home, and be can punish you!" How often we're heard mothers say thin I wonder if they realize what an ef fect thli ha on a child's mind , . . to keep It In fear of daddy's homo coming all day long. I'm aure If they atoppod to think they'd never do it. They'd try to keep their children's mind frae from fear ' . , . which. when you look at It clearly, is a kind of moral disease. Slender Lines In aport clothes the Jumper idea la generally liked because it achieves the slender straight line without any extra fullness. Favorite Combination The front flounce or set of flounces and the plain back form a much fav ored cotnbinntion for kuhuiht frock. Will Whiten Linen To whiten linen that has yellowed, add n teaspoon of cream of tartar to each quart of water. Wo Corhfa POEM or it a eo'ld. we all fret, longing for such. What we alt wlh ne'er accom bound to be hot. Lt's make the NF.A Hervice, inc.) FLAPPER FANNY ses Lots of (fir Is who are poor britigo ' players are good at holding hands. j I Home Hints IT IS wiser to put your winter furs in storage In the summer if pnHxihle since they are so easily attacked "by moths it is difficult to store them a way. Vogotnhle Hint ' All vegetables, such as spinach, cab bage, turnips, carrots, etc., may be cooked in boiling water, then chilled in cold, drnined nnd put away unlil serving time, when they may b heat ed and dredged with butter sauce. Use Adhesive Tape Use adhesive tape for marking rub bers, con ts and caps. In Cooking Mutton Before cooking mutton always re move the thin skin that comes next to (he meat an 1 1 j j is wlint. impnrts the strong flavor to the meat. Rich In Iron Remember that dried peas, dried lima beniiK, string beiin.i, spinti'-h, lei tuce and onions are not only rich fn iron but urn inexpensive an well. Baked Bananas Baked bananas are a good choice of dessert only when the meal iinelf has been comparatively light Bend Pioneer Will Guard Mr. Coolidge j BUND, Ore., M(,v K.- Thomas ,Tee'( Civil wur veternif nlid It-od pioneer lm le-rn tunned u member f I'rejxletjt 'o'diuge's In mi rrary boflj -)i!;td n connection with tfie .iliuerva j f fu of the snnivcrnitrj of ,j, Kir.fl I Vr'gn.n wttlemeni in Amajrint, il.iib wiil be held in Minneapolis the ; firwl week in June. Mr. 'I weet did no: enMert 10 be able to attend but yen lenltiy It wax nrmoiinced t:t:at be h,vl itir.itind lu itinke the trip. 'Jweef enlisted n June, 1WH, after the fiit brittle of Hull Bun and served inn-inborn the war. He was one of tin frm of HteidJ and Tweet, who Op 1 ersted the f i rt sawmill iu Bend. A JACK DAW'S ADVENTURES ' Story by Hal Cochran Drawing by U W. Rcdner . ." MYSTBHY ISLAND C11APTKH 22 ' ' YytU.liK the Utile adventurer sat mid watched, a third Htream.ruae inlo the air and then a huge form appeared in the middle of the stream partly bidden by Rome trees. "Oh, it's a baby, elephant!" shouted Dotty. "And 1 beljeve bu is coming toward us." ' Jack immediately became a bit frightened nnd stood up in the boat. Y'IIV, he could tip our bout over viili one (brunt of bin trunk," lm exclaimed. Klip in the meantime also begun lo take notice. He perked up his ours and stared nt the animal fur n few second. Then he dove over the side of the boat nnd swam to whore.' Once on dry bind, (he dog started barking loudly. ; jiAl'M the hoy, limited Jack, "frighten the elephant away." Klip raced down at clone as be could get to tbo elephant and barked us loud na he could. The big nnimnl nccmcd mirpriMcd for a moment. Then he dipped Imm trunk Into the stream and blew n great nuruy of wuUr on the dog. it wax n funny sight to see, (Continued.) If 1 full to mi.v "jeewmn" or "thmik.v" ! I'll explain why I seem to be (I) My poor nose is so It JuhI hurts more and - .'t) Our new girl used co'd starch on my (4). 11) Peevishly unreasonable, m Irritated. (ft) Iti ei reeding quantity. (4) Hi nation flag. Perfectly Good Excuse Cowboy ton bail from (he weM, Ami ip ipieer garb you're dressed. With your chaps ami a sombrero lint. You can bulldog a steer With no feeling of fear, And vmisjtnow how , to handle "Kit." The patent off left issuea an aver ago of a dn&"n nut nuts a week on radio inventive. ; 1. M I; , i i i. " , S i ' i f' t . 5 i ' Si I.J. t ! i It s,1