The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, May 14, 1925, Image 7

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    ;day Evening, May 14, 1925
THE EUGENE QUAitU
Page Seven
Today's Cross-Word Puzzle
MUTT AND JEFF
Broadcasting From Station B-U-N-K In Africa
By BUD FISHER
mid-wek pusaler, more difficult than the average, but cap
H" 1 ired like all the rest. Don't jret impatient with it.
1 g J i4 37 29 '
jj fP 70 ' j" i w
r U-H"l 1 H-n 1 I
9.
mutt, Hesse's a
oo urrcKWG you
fOO FOR A ZeBRA'.
IBt! I THAT' MerctW6!f80 I ZtmA OLD PLO& S.eT MS BACK "1 1 . I
-Trt rT-i"rT'iiav v.iiiVM 1 . . . . . . .. r 1 - -- - - 11 1 n
Jerry On the Job
Tactics
HORIZONTAL
1, Swings .in the wind.
I Blue grass.
I Blue Sss.
To dine.
U, Seixed by force.
H Snake-like fish.
i; Instruments for making impres-
. lion.
U. Seniors,
il. Pice.
a Grain.
Pnrtame douwk.
Name of ione.
39. To remain.
Kinds Hearings.
Fertile spots on desert.
35, Spike on oariey or ouib.
' Weight (for precious stones).
Pronoun.
Secured.
tt Rifle.
Point 01 compnRS.
& A constellation.
45. Peak
A Adage.
30. 2000 pounds.
SI Paints.
51 High priest who trained Sam
uel.
55. Upon.
Musical dramn.
& Measure of area.
Circumstance.
41. Strong cord. !
C To form a breakwater out of
ftonea.
ft. To degrade.
lV Hole left by smallpox.
A large division or class of in-sects.
'1. Anger.
73. A kind of theater used in ancient
Greece.
Metal used for cooking utensils.
Violin "lubricator."
VERTICAL
Point of compass.
To dissipate.
JL Listens,
I Total.
5l Matter from a sore.
8. Correlative of either.
7. To mimic
& To total.
LA
Apparatus umm! iur charging
mineral waters with gas.
10. Hard coating of a Beed.
11. Hebrew name of God.
14. A weapon.
15. To choose.
18. Suitable.
20. Aurora.
21. Pertaining to the supporting tis
sue of an internal organ.
22. To cook slowly.
24. To reduce to order.
27. Inlet.
25. Itoad house.
30. Chemical which yields BUgar.
31. Froths.
33. Pertaining to air.
34. Self.
37. Collection of facts.
38. Shrub used tn making indigo.
44. "White crystalline substance.
4fl. To rap lightly.
40. Foretoken,
47. By.
40. DrynCBS of skin.
52. Ulcers of cheek and mouth.
f3. More crippled.
50. Cluster of knots in cotton fibre.
58. Altar.
00. Parched.
62. Fairy.
64. Edge.
or. Pan.'
06. Lair.
67. To obstruct.
OS. River in Italy.
70. Third note in scale.
72. Half an em.
Answer to yesterday's cross-word
puzzle:
A IP
r- 1 1 ST 1 vm NEW Mmm
f HtVLFlPOUT O0VOUNWNO 1 30T SlX I Ol HTTu VJWAT IX MEM Or4 IV , T&SZ&r
( AOOUMD J VACATOrJ l MV GOV. y aACt I 7 O VAAVE Mm 4 Wt 1 CouLT )
LEAVES FROM LIVES OF PIONEERS
Essay For Pioneer Pageant Written by R oxford Ruthvon Eld son,
Of the Eighth Grade, Glen wood School ,
the spring of 1852 thirty or so famil
ies convened into a train and Immi
grated into the ynat unknown west.
When their old homes passed from
view tears shone and glistened in
their eyes but with determined hearts
and unlimited courage they ever forg
ed ahead brushing aside the flow of
tears, and letting the past become but
a vague shadow yhicb as the years
rolled on would be forgotten.
Illinois had been the former Wal
lace home, and hardly a more beauti
ful home Tould be found but like all
l the early pioneers, were caught by
the Tarrant spirit to to into the un-
i
k e y B maPOt 1 gjH"t" kM3 1
I I PO N HNl pjHjrjojRjEj !
I lAlCff jOflTHAIMIAaAlx e.i ;
(Continued) wart mainly nailed along the valla,
Charlie Humphrey'a mother tried the writing eurface of these deska
to persuade him to take refuge with waa anything but adapted to school
the other children in a wagon that j work, being very uneven, unpinned
had been drawn within the circle of and unpolished, often the desks bore
the other wagons; but he refused, he deep earrings. The seats were but
said that he was going to help guard ' split logs with four pegs for legs.
M,lnu; v" "uu "l i"',c.u 'V' lm"r a,c" bounded west to build new home,
uioKea riue mm ue pusnu.Bi-u, nuu u. i iutcu uio (.-euier 01 iu rouni. vjitu ipnft Harlow route was taken the
intended to use it in defending the j the children went to achool in nJ ! train w. on the trail six full months
camp from the Indians day to learn then came home to teach i ,, W(.re the ,, ,, ,,,.
After all was in readinesa for the j their parents what they had learned w enPounl,red h but
redmen, the inhabitants of the camp . in the eveningj in this manner a dou-; emunT ,h gbrloy recounied
lepsed into a silently patient wait, but , ble learning was enacted which pro,- . ,, f ,heir drnm, d b.
long they waited and no Indians p-; ed not only to broaden their Intellect , ,., vl,,blo tPhinl ,,lr, fnr ,WBT
seen, at a distance, a company 01
soldiers coming at a swinging pace.
tl.sre were no more than fifty of
every line.
At that time the mall was received j
at Springfield, and there also molt t
FLAPPER FANNY s&yv
thorn the alarm hod boea falso audfof the general trading whs dons.
Radio
Programs
J.-Utrnj hall. Southern California
cuml""'); 10-11. Examiner:
ong I
PACIFIC COAST
Tonight.
KGW, Portland, 4111.3 meters 5 I).
children's iirosrnm by Jenn Ad-
:li, weather, nulice and uiar-
tfporn, news bulletins and base
M icoret; S-H, concert by couitesy
( tbe Vale Limulry eoinnaiiy. 10 Ilcr-
Kflliu'H Mtiltnutiml, Utl
(slri am tl,,. l.innnr.1 -l,isir.il
tliiornian.' .l-,,... ..c 1,
uiuii-eiiu ul i JSii'
, KM, Us Atigf.-. 4(17 nief.rs
"''-tip. 111.. Ks.iini,icr's muiscal half
"; .l."., MeDaniel'l niL-hllt ,1.,-
6:40-7, Ita.litorial inlk- 7-S
Mra California; S-'J. nrmram.
Mird Oil cuninnnv ( California:
pr jrsm by remote control from
KjsUr
ki-u-u r. ... .
uoiiywoou, Xo meters
D. in.. nr..r., ... im: 11.
J i eoniisny ( culver City: War.
- Bro:r,,r, ,.,.,. Miller',
al Il.wiian trio; poupiar
" if M,l!,ew- 'Charlie Well
, llrownie-, donee orchestra;
Auiiutr. Currnn I r.-tA
'-iinerh? In. ii ii 1.1
Ur.fi. ii'i'uiu xiuermun s
8II-'. ra; 11 n'-l a. m.,
""ixter's Hollywood Montmnrte
ir. orch""r"' M" 1'edcsky,
L'lM. .. .
u -"-ana, i si., 401.2 meters
htfi- - p- ,n" luQcheon concert,
s. - Kiectric company; 4-
r.t. V," 0r'h"tra. Hotel St.
Wi"wt; "Kriend Boy"
K v 'L uwl "15, golf lessons.
aV ' !U,,T Min" K(i0
H-Jmi , ,no: 10 P- m--l m..
Klu 7 orcinntra.
5a.7 Aneeles, 4.rK).2 meter?-
ra ,"l -iBntoD'i Arcade cafe-
t .u ,, ronsnaw, lead
U Art !'Ckman's Biltmore
f-i;-trT"1 or-hf9tr"- Edward
--u uisiory, I'roiesoor
t: ' Jir""' Hrtxog; Dickie
.3. ' "D JT"iil; Uncle John
campus night, students of University
of California, Bouthern branch.
KIM), San Francisco, 4.2D.5 meters
3:30-4 :K0 p. in., Palace hotel con
cert; 4:30-5:30, Rudy Seiaer's Fair
mount hotel orchestra; 0:30-7, States
restaurant orchestra; 7-7:30, ltudy
Seiger's Fuirmount hotel orchestra;
8-U, Theodore J. Irwin, organist; t
10. proKrum, I'n Lee-Citdillnc com
pany; 10-11, Johnny Bunek's Cnbir
ians. KFSfi, I.os Angeles, 275.1 meters
3.30-4:30 p. m., organ recital, program
of Lrnest Ballard, with assisting vocil
soloists; 7:30-0:15, auditorium broad
cast; water baptismal service onl
evtwiRelistic pennon of Aimce Scmple
McPlicrson; music by the choir qua.
tet and soloists; 0:15-10, Gray studio
program featuring the Temple choir
under the direction of G. N. Nichols,
insisted by vocal loloists; 10-31, or
Rai. recital progrnin of Esther Fricke
(irnen assUted by Alfred C Green,
lyric tnor, "Little Pells of Our Lady
of L'iirdeji" (Harvey Gnul); "To a
Water Lilj" (MacPowell) ;
Ostrow" (Ui?binstein).
Rabbi Wise may
Go to New york
PORTLAND, Ore., May 14. Rabbi
Jonah B. Wise, who for the past 10
years has been rabbi of Congregation
Beth Israel here, has received an in
vitation to consider a call to go to
New York as rabbi of the General
Synagogue.
Before definitely acting on the mit
ter, Rabbi Wisest night referred tbe
invitation to a committee of the trus
tees rf questing mission to conside
the offer. The committee,- while ex
pressing regret ever the possibility of
hi leaving Portland granted the privi
lege requested.
how disappointed the younger men of
the camp were, but nevertheless per
haps it was by far the best, just the
way it turned out a joke.
The wagon train passed some fifty
or sixty miles south of Salt Lako
City, through Utah and then at length
into Nevada. After days of merci
less, broiling toil through burning
sand they came to the Humboldt Riv
er. Summer with Its long hot days had
gone when they entered the northern
portion of California for the last
stretch before reaching the land of
their dreams. The exact day is not
known when they entered Oregon but
it was sometime during the month of
October. They came by way of Med
ford. Some wagons forsook the main
troin in search of what they pictured
"the ideal home spot' but the major
ity did not hault until they had readi
er what is Washington county. Here
the Humphrey family made their
home but for some reason Charles
did not like tbe country, so after five
years he returned practically alone
to Linn county where he remained for
four years but still he was not wholly
contented. Then being at the age of
twenty-two he, with a single family
moved to Lane county. They located
near the present aite of Jasper, where
he built s log cabin and soon after
Kamonoi Buried. What occurred mer
strictly happenings that mignt ne sup
posed to fill the life of a pioneer.
Many of the interesting facts are not
alive. Ever since Mr. Humphrey has
lived on the same place although a
fine new house has taken the place
of the original home, which still how
ever, stands.
Wheat varied from three to four del
lars a bushel. Calico of the cheapest
material and simplest print was twenty-five
cents a yard.
The original school building was
erected on Fred Warner's land dona
tion claim, far from the present
school site. This first school stood
near a large, old oak tree under
which, and near which were several
was hand bewn and engraved, even at !
the present timo the inscription the ,
stone bears is distinct: j
"John Fathergirt, Died May 15, j
1855.
He was an Knglifh nobleman and j
ptn m MA stsvtct wt
JACK DAW'S ADVENTURES
Btory by Hal Cochran Drawings by L. W. Redner
MYSTERY ISLAND On APTER 20
On Gardening
in gentle ever rising mountains until
the long, dim velvety groy hnrinon
came up to end the appealing vision,
above rising only a screen azure sky
i uninnrred by clouds.
Tho treacherous Snake River was
crossed in safety although great care
land caution had to he taken to select
I a place to ford where no qufrksnnd i The modorn girl makes nor ap
obstructed their path, ever waiting ' poaranoe boforo she appoars.
in silent patience to pull down '" , ,
living being to a horriblo, slow deuth,
and too, tbe water waa exceedingly
swift, this also hindered and was
raallv Ai, tnr aha
eraves. onn trrnvn in tnHnv cnnrinliv . ... ' . . . .
, . . , , r . .7 norse ana ruler nugiu ne swept into a; C
d.songuishable by a large stone which otli(.kfl(im, nr . wnBnn S
caught just right by a swirl of siirhu-
Jcnt current would be overturned and: i h nrntw- tn tnWm vim pi.
cast against sharp boulders almost 0wly and h(rfl nnmn lmn(y man tn ,)
entirely submerged, which would , it Thwr( jB technique to spading
quickly reduce It to kindling wood. n eipert foreign gordener can
Tl.. ,.. !... . ,Mo. ; . ,. , , . .. . a t
rin tn Orcimii with fl (omnRnnm . . ..... . ,r" " ' ". mw-
. - : . , . dhow rorunnu, tnen up toe wmam-
years before bis death. BOW anfJ tnen W(goBl C1)t awnT
i V'"'" ""J from
inuiiitfim, uiii.v n RTr.i nuiti n nuif;
above where the present bridge ;
stands. Very little of the road from i
Fall Creek to Natron was made at
WDINfl is a greot exercise but
wagon ; nnt nnm , t th. -..-- citlxeii
" 1 craves to add to his dally dosen. It
I'M GOING to climb up in that tree and put the Utile thing back in
it's nest," said Jack. "That's a fine idea," replied Dotty. Then she
told Jack to climb up to the first witch n the tree and she would hand
tho bird to him. Jack was up there In a minute and leatied over to take
the little bird. Then he looked around for the nest. '
the main body to establish 1
homes of their own by the wayside.
The Wallace family with several oth
er families stopped to build their
ln,nA .... tl,n ,. ul .1,1A nl lh W'il. i
that time, the main traveled course j lhat. i..nA. i.
, . ' , , ' lamctte opposite where Jasper is to-
led over mountains and through j . nn(ft.a , nvmm
I the construction vt the new Wallor-e
preached the home began; rough logs were cut
don't do half a job of spading and
don't turn the soil much more then
1
Fashion Plaques
farms.
Reverend M cA da ras
first sermon, Inter there were Doug
las Star, Fredkins Vsughan and otb
ers. The. first celebration waa held
forty-four years ago rear the Fall
Creek store and postoffice combined
which was called "Toy."
There were as many Indians then
as whites who lived neighbors. Chief
Fisherman, chief of a tribe that is
now extinct and the name forgotten.
from the nearby forest and pulled by
oxen to the chosen spot where the
home or rather simple lug cabin was
to be built. The walls were thick,
and while cracks shewed through, that
w-re later clinked with moss -and
clay; the floor was Just hare hard
parked earth. There were no win
dows but only a single opening seven
by three feet, which served both as
II.
would bedeck himself, each fall, in , door and window, a single tsnned deer
his best feathers and go from one skin was bung over the hole when
white dwelling to another collecting the westher was severs. To provide .
rent he said was due bis people for both heat and light one Mge fireplace
me innsrmmg oi inrir grouuiis. owme- i uini uiiea up iiu'jbi ine enure pnrr
times in payment he would receive j of one end of ths small one-roomed
a stiver quarter or a bushel of pota- cabin, was built; also a dutch-oven
r cr
COOOtCT
METHOD. rr r
BLADE Of V V f
SWOl HtlO 'i" J h
KRPlNllK.UUfl,A V"
ttf? ORDINARY vl V
f'JP'V-- M6.THO0 ,H :
-V-
ho exclaimed, "I can't see any iichI up here." Hut at that
moment there was a fluttering of wings and tbe mother bird enme
swooping down right toward Jock. "Look out," shouted Dotty, "she'll
peck your eyes out." Hut, much to the little girl's surprise the mother
bird merely nmbd on a limb near Jaek and chirped loudly.
Progr-im l'-ifi fi..i
i,irt,i(g Will-
t i ,. : ' " J- Howard John
!.', ''J"u'-2't. prorsra. FitijeralJ
't,, ,pi"y: W:30-U:30, Art
iuimoT hotel dsne or
Hurtnett, leader.
"!. M.4 meters 10:30-
' 'D JOT lt.itmtin. fir.
, Wit.
"1 J
1 1
Bats.'
.VnrUa. 33A.9 meters
W'orlitier nine orran
.... - u- Oarrer, test-
M ,iT,r'" T'"lt of teat of
0-Tao, dinner hour
.r..T j Murphy, director,
-., i-y" took 'tore; 8-10. jiro
v i," ''""'o srartmenta: 10-11.
hll .'V'1BU Gro.e danre or
" Anhssssdo, hotel; U-U
rwlti, A "Y i. j.
This new bit of millinery Is noth-
DORA (BARUItE) LYONS
"O what a glory doth this world pnt
on
For him, who, with a ferrent heart
goes forth
Under the bright and glorious sky,
and looks
On duties well performed, and days
well spent;
For him the wind, ay, and the yellow
lesres
Shall have a voice, and give him elo
quent teachings.'
Longfellow.
The Barbre family started for Ore.
gon May a, IStH. The sue of the
train they traveled in. or me nara
i shins encountered on tbe way are not
: remembered by Mrs. Lyons, who was j
then bnt a very small girl.
l'ractically the first thing Dora
Itarbre ever rememliered was seeing!
tne yose oi o-u um u,-hju.-u i t
father sold by her grsndfather. Some
! time after that her father bought a
: small, two year old colt for the tre-
mendous sum in those days, eighty
! dollars.
i In 1W7 the aBrbre fsmily moved
i to Fall Creek, at thia time there
were aix or seven families living
there: the year following two more
families moved in. Then il ws de
cided to build a arhool hou, as e, h
family had sn average of five chil
dren and th most of these were of
school sge. The people were prosper
om, they had had but little education
and yet they wanted tbeir children to
go to school. ,
The school house was con'trucfed
toes and nevertheless how small the
payment It always satisfied him.
III.
MARION WALLACE
"Among the beautiful pictures
That hang on memory's wall,
Is one of a dim old forest.
That seemeth best of rill."
Alice Csry.
When .Marion Wallace m-s. n very
small boy. Indeed, being j'Mt four
ycers old, his father decided that Ore
gon was the pier, for them; so in
was msde In which It is ssid very
good pies could be baked.
(To Be Continued)
Blaok Still Good
Black continues to be extremely
smart for afternoon wear, with color
relief Introduced by costume jewelry.
tlaoorate boon
When the frock Is very simple, the
scarf may be very eloborste and very
colorful.
I
I
! ill m Mx
(Sinn k i km r k a ivth tioctiran
I
Daddy buys a paper, hen he's on bis homeward war. To that there's
nothing very strange. It's come to be a habit, and he does It every day.
And every time, the nwsi gives him change.
Mother buys some groe'ries, or some drugs down at the store, which,
after all. fs nothing of con-rn. It happens In the present time, as In th
e days of yore and always, she getnpennies in return.
Seems that all we grown-up' as we're spending through the day,
collect the pesky "coppers" hy the Fro re. We put them in our pockets,
but they very seldom star, for kidlets seem to know just what they're for.
A tiny hand comes beggin", when you reach your home at night. It's
habit, is this little kiddie prank. You reach down in your pocket and your
pennies come to sightthen jingle In a little penny bank.
Home day, when you are older, and your tots are older, too, think
bark on all the pennies that you gave. It's likely you'll consider 'twas a
goodly thing to do. It helped to teach ths little ones to save.
ing but jorkey cap of biark vjivet , ms.nly of unpeeled fr k-gs. the floor
wb a silver burkle in the frnl It ' d d.ks were made from thirk
is decidedly a new line, and is very mgh lumber mt in th- old sw m.Il
" . ' k. th with that bad been built by t'ornelius Hills.
' i . n utMl acouisi- I The mill stood where the Js-per gritt
SJL jmill now stsnds. The writing desks)
I
six inches deep. This Is probably
true, beraute we are accustomed to
thrust the spade into the soil along
the line of least resistance, which is
In a slanting direction. We get easier
leverage with the foot and quicker
penetration, but sacrifice depth in
doing so.
The correct manner is to drive the
hladn of the spade into the soil In an
almost perpendicular position and then
turn over the soil. TMhJs much hard
er work Id an the ordinary method,
but it secures much belter depth. Al
though slower, it Is well worth the ex
tra time and labor In results, for It
ad. In two or three Inches to the cul
tivation of the soil as compared with
!. ..-. I.,-.. ..., .. i... ).,.,,
I Having turned over tbe sonde of
soil, pulverise it with the edge of
the epad, shattering the larger and
harder lumps with the fist of the
blade By taking the tank slowly,
thrustiitg the spade in ss perpendtcu-
larly as muscle permits and pulveris
i ing finely an you go along, ths garden
will be in much better trim, the plants
will mnke much faster growth and
commercial fertilizer rsked into the
soil will penetrate readily to greater
depth and come Into contact with a
greater root spread than tn ground
spaded in the usual shallow manner.
The drawback to this perpendicular
I spading is that It Is much harder
(work as the leverage necessary
turn over a spsneim 01 -arm is
heavier than In the ordinary slant
wise half-bladeful of earth turned
up. Il la worth the effort, although
I It tskrs much langer. Try the Krig-
lish spsdlng method and note the results.
I'LL bet she's trying to tell you something." said Dotty. "Well. I can't
understand bird language," laughed Jack. After a short time the
mother bird jiailed into the air again, and. after circling around a few
times, finally settled down among some thickly growing leaves. "That's
where the nest Is," said Dotty. (Continued.)
Home Mints
TF YOUR room has paneled walls,
be very careful to choose your
wall pictures carefully, and use very
few.
! Your Electric Iron
j Keep your electric iron in a cle
t ' "
(Copyright, 1&25. NBA Bervice,
dry place and always disconnect the
cord from the outlet when not in use.
To Remove Lacquer
When lacquer has been partially
removed from ornaments, brass beds,
etc.. the rest can be removed by
to sponging the article with alcohol.
Tuck Them In
In selecting sheets be sure they
are long enough to tuck in well at
the foot and wide enough to tuck In
at the sides.
Drapes to the Floor i
Tf you want to make a wall look
higher than it really is, bring your!
Dinner Tables
Dinner tables in steady use ought
to he washed and polished monthly
window drapes clear to ths floor and ; if you want them in the pink of con
make your vslancs very narrow. t tjltton.
Drummsr
Ah, there, Mister Drummer,
In winter or summer.
You always are out on the road.
In all towns you're stopping.
Continually hopping
Alt over the Lund, like a toad.
Remove Fruit Stains
Remove fruit stains from the hands
by rubbing them with cornmeal and
vinegar.
Washing Lace
Wash delicate luce in skimmed milk
to which a little bluing has been
added.
'i '
i
. 1
IN
S ?V""Tef K