The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, May 28, 1925, Image 7

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    THE EUGENE GUARD
Today's Cross
..i i - U.il diffieultr With
ind unkc- ...tiers. Two of the. long words have, in f.c. three
krjed letr in a row. But you o urht to recotuire tlieiu by their other
Idtrrs-
HORIZONTAL
Batnrn or any large body re-
TolviDf about aun.
Degraded.
One skilled In stuffing animals.
Jewel.
Mexican dollar.
Jelly.
Butcher's Instrument.
Very small.
Hebrew word for Deity.
Woody stalk of a plant
Gaelic.
.Preposition of place.
Animal used for food.
Double (time).
To employ.
To hnrass.
Sorrowful.
Any animal that burrows in
wood.
To go in search of.
To carol.
Deadly.
Truck.
Wants.
Before.
Tendon.
Seated.
Three-toed sloth.
At sea.
Region.
Toward.
Account.
Clubfoot.
Small eccentric wheel.
Epochs.
Portico.
Those who treat with others
with a view to an international
agreement.
Decayed.
Oration.
VERTICAL
Scheme. ' -
Particle.
To sleep.
To elicit.
Plowed.
Radio
Programs
TONIGHT'S PROGRAM
Pacific Coast
KGW, Portland, 401.5 meteri 5 to
i:30 p. m,, rhilflreu'a program: 7:15
p. m., weather, police and market re
port new bulletins and baseball
Vores. 8 to 9 p. m.. Concert by cout
tey of the Yale Laundry company;
a to 10 p. m., Old aong program by
tourtesy of J. 1'. Finley & Son. 10 p.
to midnight, Herman Kenin's
Multnomah Hotel danr orchestra.
KFI, Loa Angeles, Cal 407 ma
ters 5:30-0 p. m., Examiner's matl-
program; 6-0:15, MiDaniel'a
ijbtly doings; fl:4,"-7, Raditorisl talk;
''O. Kathleen Ogilvie, soprnno,
Catherine Ogilvie, readings, J. Jfosa
Jl'Kenrje. comedian in Scotch Hum
eri; 7:.10 S, a half hour of old mel
Halph Keilly, tenor; 8-0. two
liirt one-act plays, KFI, players;
JJ-10. program from Chickering hail
8y remote control broadcast by Nouth
'm California Music company; 10-11.
"miner progrnm, vaudevilla artiBts
lfia My Wall.
KrOA, Seattle, Wash., 454.3 me-
l-o:15 p. m., Olympic hotel or
tra; 6-7, Moran school program.
KVi. Holljieood, CaL, 252 me-'r":-l5-y
p. m., program, Climax
'r I'hone company of Culver City:
"1. program, l'aulais. Inc.; 10-11.
"irn.r liroihera' frolic, direction
ltiie Wcllman. .
K'. Oakland. Cal., 3!1.2 meters
p. m., concert orchestrs. Ho-
M. I rancia; 6::W-:30, "Friend
" K;i." (ieorge W. Ludlow; 8, Cali
'"ra:a State association of Optomet
It. C. Fndriss. presideut; Alice
j;" Kcdriss, violinist; Joseph Var
'y trnor; Winston Petty, clliat;
-Jnr Thorpe, pianist; selections
r"m mb4 opera "Kigoletto," Claire
!'"t'-r- "prano; Albert W. Gillett.
, r,,M': Wanda Richards, contral-':eii.-I
quartet; Claire Upshur, so
ao; lioiiie,,,., m,e quartet; Fred
"'T. r ilior soloist; Lyman X. .North.
T; I!i-hsrd Lundgren. bass; Mary
Richar.lt, contralto; Albert V.
'.i.tte. Inritone; 10 p. m.-l . m.,
llaNte.d's orchestra.
,,K"! Atigeles, Cal.. 406.2 me
' .1011 p. nj., Leighton't Arcade
''"f.a orchestra, Jack Cronstmw.
,;'; e Art Hickman's Bilt-
1" ' ""'1 concert orchestra, Kd-
H '-:'patri.-k. director; 0:30-7:30,
e i-HTiPs American history, I'rof.
j, I''r Silvester Herteog. Jetnne Ie
,'' '" pianist, Tiggly Wig
J..'"'. 'rir' trio, Jan Hughes,
j'nrnile. Amanda ' 'is rd-n.
. ' Mry Tirella. rianiat; 7:3".
Farrell, pianist; 8-10
.'"". John 'W'riiht, the right tai
,,; 'rr'"'M by Uncle John: 10-11.
. " k,-'n' ftiltmnre hotel dance
"'r-'. Karl Rurtnett, leader.
.,TNy Ii"llywood, Cal., 3TA9 me-
.'ji p rat Warlitaer pipe
""Jl" 4 Ziffn sport talk: 6:
c - . ., "aveiogue. W. F. Aider;,
1 --'V pr-.gram. Is Angeles ;
- J A'ocntl)B of Optomeuiatt, I
I r? e1xjji.mhu. r rs ,, tneisjoser . -sn. "OMI" '. ) jS3TS -z y UOMT ei p y .
' ll3 " iH 1 SL "T J '" ' ' 1 .w. ., ..J.T,.r -
5ri Ij 7 - ' Hr Jerry On the Job - """" " Tlie Balance of Testimony
S5" p iw!Ui, ti ' ; ; ; ; '
'"T I " .IftK fSiGKrDoTUE6imt '0Uyjuu-ia r?N 'trJT hANmsrft 'SSVcrM VbbTV
'J!;"--1" s n viuul: tm eos .eWoC. sbe.ou , tv .CiAo ue v SiJr i"1' ilwwwilvJ .) .
- Word Puzzle
...... I. 1. 1
Unit of electrical current.
Litters.
Almost a donkey.
To fill.
Poetic line of two measures.
Plant yielding bitter drug.
Birds similar to ostrich.
Grass land (South Africa).
To relieve.
Refuse.
Heathen.
Impels.
Ocean.
I'ong smooth fish.
Box for flour.
Unit.
riume.
Melody.
Small glass bottle.
Low tide.
Granted facts.
Animal food basket,
rart of year.
Wrenches.
Platform.
To impede by estoppel (law).
Proclivity.
Box and contents.
To soak flax.
Metal in rock.
Answer to yesterday's cross-word
punle:
5-27
Ziegler's orchestra; 7:30-8, one-act
play, KNX players, Edward Murphey,
director; 8-10, program, Radium Ore
Revigator company; arranged by G.
AUiaon Fhelps; 10-11,' Abe Lyman's
Cocoanut Grove dance orchestra from
Ambassador hotel; 11-12, collegiate
night by atudenta of University of
Cti5ifornia.
KPO, San Francisco. Cal.. 42S.3
meters 4:30-0:30, Rudy Seiger's
Fairmont hotel orchestra; 5:30-0:30.
Aunt Holly and her kiddies; 6:30-7,
States Restaurant orchestra; 7-7:30.
Rudy Seiger'a Fairmont hotel orebca
tra; 8-0, Theodore J. Invin, organ
ist; Gladya Sarrett, soprano; 0-10,
Johnny IJuick's Cabirians.
K.IR, Seattle, Wash., 884.4 meters
10:30-12 midnight, "Keep Joy Ra
diating Order of the Bats."
KFSO, Los Angeles, Cal., 275 me
ters 7:30-0:15 p. m... Angelus tem
ple water baptismal service, conduct
ed by Aimee.Semple Mcl'heraon. as
sisted by choirj 0:15-10, G. N. Nich
ols presents Angelus Temple choir in
special chorus, group nod feature
numbers from Grey studio; 10-11, or
gnn recital progrnm of F.sther Fricke
Green, assisted by Kdna Joyce Mrs
ener, soprano, and Viola Peterson, so.
prnno in duets; organ numbers will
include: 1, "Adagio," from the second
annntn, by Josef Itenner; 2, "Elgie."
by Mnsaenet; 3, "Caprice," by Ralph
Kinder.
Many Stitches Hera
A hlaek topcoat is stitched all over
with cire braid, while another is over
patterned with soutache.
Will Brighten Pan
Cooking fruits and acid vegetables
in an aluminum pan will brighten it,
while alkali compositions will discolor
it.
I Fashion Plaques
Here i probably tbe mt uaiq'ie
scarf that hai rome out of Pari thrti
mnnnn. It ftiw down the bs-k
with small pearl buttfiua and . (
the effect of a choker in frBt. Or i
It can be -rn the other way around
if the wearer prefer. A acarf will
do practically anything you wnt Hj
to tint year.
53 L asipMfFr a l
i a bjaEf? I AO A II L 3
lAlvCTTIElAlclHlElREgslol
MUTT AND JEFF
.(.TCN)'. ACL I ASK VOU "
-O Do I BLACKeeo vjP I
,Not CRESS LK6 eM
FRtCAM NATVUC An6
YOO EeFVJSS. DO too
BooHco
(Continued from page onej
with real cutlets and creamed cauli
flower. Glory tried to eat. . . . But she
couldn't. There was a lump in her
throRt, and her eyca were full of hot,
jealous tears.
Oh. why did she let Stan Way
burn make her feel this wny? . . .
Why should it make her angry and
jealous to see him with another wo
man? ilory gar her plate a little push,
and laid down her fork.
"I don't believe I'm hungry after
all," she said to Dick. He looked up
in surprise.
"Well, tou sure are some kid'." he
ejtclnimed. "You drng me 'way down
here and order a three-dollar meal
.... and now you cau t ent it.
"I know . . . I'm sorry," Glory
said.
She sat there miserable while Pick
finished his meal in puzzled ailence,
"What do you want to do ... go
to a morie?" he asked as he helped
her on with her coat. Glory shook
her head.
"Let's go home. I'm dead tired,"
she said. She was, suddenly. Her
spirit drooped like spent wings.
She wanted to get out of that
hateful restaurant . . . away from
the sight of Stan and his Sonya
Chotek!
She rememhered a line of poetry
she had heard somewhere . . . .
"Life is a headache in a noisy
street,"
And so it was! ... It hurt unbear
ably at times. Now, for instance. . .
Early the next morning Ranghild
Swanson knocked on the kitchen door.
Glory heard her and ran down
stairs to let her in.
'I came to start work, even if U is
Sunday," Ranghild said. "But I've
been to early church already."
"The better the day the better the
deed, Itanghlld," Glory told her,
laughingly.
The very sight of Ranghild cheered
her up. Bhe was so blond and smil
ing that she seemed to have brought
the morning sunshine into the kitchen
with her.
And ehe could cook! Even TMck
had to admit that the cherry pie she
baked for dinner was as good as any
that Maggie had ever made.
"But we can't afford her," he said
to Glory. "You'll have to look around
and find someone for us for about
$10 a week. That's my limit, ab
solutely!" Gloria didn't answer. She walked
around the table to Dick and kissed
him with little, light coaxing kisses.
"All right, go ahead and vamp me
all you want to!" Dick bantered.
"But I mean what 1 suy all the
name. . . . We've Just got to cut
down on our household expenspa. A
fpw more weeks like this last one
would land me in the poorhouse!"
The next morning Glory could
hardly wait for Dick to leave for the
office. The moment he wss out of
the hou-ie, she ran upstairs and dress
ed for the streei.
A half hour later she was etroUlng
down street.
Behind thir plate-glass fronts, the
store windows bloomed like garden,
no filled with color were thy.
Here a bat perch,M airily on k
stand aliove a rainbow pile of import
ed handkerchiefs . . . thre a beaded
bag caught the light, lik a bit cut
from some rare old tapestry.
CJlory sighed with )"7 ... she
would have that very bag In a few
minutes!
She opened the swinging doors of
ihe store and w-nt straight to the
buints office.
"I am Ms. Richard Gregory Jun
ior, and I wonld like to opn a
charge account." "he said calmly to
the hard-eyed rrwiu manager.
She gave Dick's office address and
the name of his bank.
"AH right. fr. Gr-gory." the cred
it man said cordially, after he had
looked op Diek'a rf rene. "The
More is yours. And we'll do every
thing in our pwer to plraae you."
He Trd the g lava door of bit
of fir with a fiourtftfc. d bowd
(tlory out, quite as if sbe nan been a
(iin.
This if the only way to shop!
rT- I Twe &OTTA QwiT FOUN4 IfANSWdft MeStf NOO 40TJ A DO ftUujORK. Cg r VjjAH, OONT BS Sol!- MAV Bi Br' "'lt ? ' "
?t' aiCoT sacramcmTo cABLea) r Be ! uortfoSMtAa uoMi 1 nwn g ot witw ft t.ow .- -5-
KjJ vi roDAV ABOUT we S BL,CK.t flL LASSO TrtCM A EAT I TfOvj ro BuACIv. H rHAT"S BLIND? J
PSIWK
Burton " atw tc
. . . No bargain-hunting, no counting
out change! Simply to ask for what
you wanted, and order it sent home!;
"I'd tikw to see afternoon dresses,
. . . something really good," Glory i
said to the saleswoman who came to-
ward her across the gown deparul
niont ' 1
She ant In a comfortable chair
while the saleswoman brought in
dress after dress. Finally Glory
chose three ... a peacork blue, a
black velvet, and an old-roue crepe.
"I'll try those three on. and see
which one suits me best," she said.
They were all wonderfully becom
ing. Glory couldn't make up her mind
which on to buy. She whs in deli
cious dMipuir,
"Madam is lovely in any of the
gowns!" (ho saleswoman declared.
Sho knew her business, Hint aiileR
woinau! "Why docs not madam take them
all 7" she asked carelessly. "It is
not every day that she will find three
so perfect gowns!"
Glory hesitated.
"Hut the price!" slie breathed.
"Only three hundred dollars for
the three of them?" the saleswoman
asked in surprise. "Itut that is noth
ing! They wcro twice that much nt
the beginning of the srnnon! Thcjf
arc a bargain . , . those dresses!"
"All rigbtv I'll tke them all,"
Glory snid suddenly. She felt that
she simply couldn't go awny and
leave one of those three wonderful
dresses in tli r shop for some other
woman. . . . They belonged to her!
They were made for her! All three
of them!
"Of course I don't really need a
bat . . ." Glory thought, an she drift
ed into the millinery department. Hut
down in the bottom nf her mind she
kuew that she waa going to buy one.
"I'd like a drehs hat . . . something
with plumes, I think," she said to
the white-haired womnn who came
forward to serve her.
The antes woman shook her mar
celled head.
"No plumes," ahe said smiling, "for
so young a face. We must keep you
very simple. . . . Won't you have this
chair, please?" She glided away.
Gloria watched her opening and
shutting drawers and cupboards.
In a few minutes she came back
with a wide-brimmed hat of creamy
satin.
"Hert'a madam's hat," the millin
er said, setting it on Glory's red-gold
head. Simple but smart!"
. . . The saleswoman waa right!
It was Glory's hat. She graced It.
"How much It Is?" Glory asked.
"Kifty-five dollars." the milliner
answered In the tone she might have
used In saying "two for a nickel."
Kifty-five dollnrs! (ilory wondered
Oh, daughter of .Mother Mahre,
Ai.d ber friend w-nt to walk by Ihe
(1,
Now, she's not vt '2
And she's built hk a GD
Rut br friend hes a limb bk - s
14, .
( I Overgrown pijddle.
fJt Huge, gigantic.
3t A'Mencnt Im.b.
l4f Woody, MrniuaI ptai.t.
I .GUESSWOBP
1 m&M
Sim
Doesn't Jeff Look Cute
TIAPPER FANNY sftvw
eas ftv'sfcA sritvict. inc
Often a heavonly looking man la
no earthly good.
whnt Dick would say If slie paid
that much for a hat that hadn't a
scrap of trimming on it. . . .
In the end she took itcharged ft
to Dick.
Next Glory bought the beaded bng
she had seen in the show-window.
It was $30.
Charge it and send It," she said.
She gave her name and address with
a feeling of excitement. She hail
never owned a charge account before
In ber life.
. . They were like wishing rings,
these charge accounts. You simpiy
ordered what you wanted . . . mur-1
mured "Charge it" . . . and It was
yours!
On her way out of the store Glory
stopped at the toilet-goods counter.
Idly she picked up lipsticks nnd
eyebrow pencils In their silver hold
ers. She needed neither.
Her lips were a natural scarlet.
And the blaok lashes, planted thick
around here eyes, gave her a "made
up" look, as it was.
. . . Still, she could always use
fuce cream end scent
"I want some perfume, she said to
the pretty clerk who came to wait
upon ner. ".ot rose or violet, noma-
thing spicy and oriental.
Finally she bought two kinds , . .
mimosa and lotus-flower.
After that she bought nail polish,
night-cream, bath-powder, and a large
wooden bowl of elder-flower soap
that would float in the bathtub.
"Twenty-two "dollars," said Uie
saleswoman, adding up the cost of
theae lrunsien,
' 'haige it," Glory said.
The noonday whistle were blowing
when (ilory left the store. The street
was filled with btiimMN girls on their
way to lunch, the:r faces gay and
frehh as flower.
And to think tluit only a few weeks
ago she lind been one of them! Why,
it hed taken her months to earn as
nitieli nn he bed "pent that morn
ing on a f;w clothe!
How long would It take Dick to'
earn that f i
Olorv kn-w that he wami't half as'
Hi
Tsal I I
rich a she ti once suj.pontfi he : throw ing away ferliltT that ran be
,, replaced only at rnmdernble eipenfe.
.Suddenly he wss frightened nt j Wood aliea vary In effective fertiln
what she bed done. She in ml up; log material, bardwood ashen being
her mind t tc phone the nfure to richest and aoft wood leant ri-h.
sy that she didn't want the thing Allies of vegetable- refune are valuable
he hnd Just bought, . . . No, by Jinks. hU'. )-ing a good fertilizer, aiihouitli
he did want them! And Dirk would not of the strength of the hardwood
jnit have to pH)- for them, by some j hes. When you burn leavea or old
hook or crook! j vege'able vin- or flower stems,
upremj the tulle over the gnrden.
Glory hurried home and waited for j Wood aahev are chief iy valuable no
her purha-ii to be delivered. j, fertiliser whi'h furniahea potah-
I.ate in the afternoon tbe came, j , nreajiry element in ripening of
She rii-hed up to her room and rrMt Bn4 )n fltrmni rontl t j nrdi
tried on the three new dree. . .jMr,y furnnhed by chemical sails
one after the other, quickly, before BUf.h - (1)(ltp , milr-I nf potM-h
Dick should come home. i r by a mineral fertiliser known as
Ah, they were lovely . And she M.f rhjf of
was lovel, in them. . . She tried ' , rertilifera came from Germany before
e, herself with S.an hjn rh(1 r ,ml l()ere wss a poU.h f.m.
a she turned and twisted befor , 0l,r w,r 0(Jt of rfltmn,rf.r
C.t77 aeroa. the dressing-!
table and amiled at her d.s.iing sdf ; " wi.l.ln
in the glafii.
"ou darling!' she M.d ! b'" are an old standby
Then sue berd the aound of Dick's j and wore appreciative now than at
latcbky in tb dor downstairs! j any previous time, ao much so thst
And befute she bad bad time tofliey are known to be an effective
in His African -Make-up?
take oft the new blue dress ahe waa
trying on, Dick waa in the doorway.
"So here you are . , ." he began j
nnd stopped.
I lis eyes swept the room, from the
dresses slung over the foot of his
wife's bed to the wrapping paper that
Ititered the rug.
Then he looked at Glory with a
question In his eyes. She waa speech
less. (To ho continued tomorrow)
e
Cynthia Grey Says:
T'fl commencement time.
In every school there are many
romnnces, and commencement seems
to stnrt many a young couple think
ing about marriage.
Some of them want to marry be
fore either the girl or the young man
has flniahed the school course.
Others want to marry the dny
after commencement.
J am rtit an advocate of young
people waiting until they pass any
certain age to marry, hut 1 do be
lieve "commencement" marrlugcs are
n miNinke.
The young people have been living
in a school atmosphere all their life.
They hnven't humped against the
world.
And how things do chnnge, the day
after a young man or womnn gradu
ates from school. The graduate soon
gets an entirely different aspect of
the world.
Hut more Important than this, I
think the romantic couple ought to
wait until the young mnn has worked
up a notch or two in his chosen work
or profession.
The married life, nine times out of
ten, will he happier if they do,
:
I Home Hints I
'rO-UKMOVE glue from fabrics.
soak In hot water and vinegar or
in vinegar alone. Should vinegar af-
feet the color, sponge with diluted
ammonia fallowed by chloroform.
House Llohtlnn
Avoid flickering or drizzling lights
nu f I.Ako fipsuliirtt r ut ruin am I linnil
j a) hp. -j iin )ittilt hould come from
above and over the shoulder.
leaning
i purposes, add a few drops of oil of
: HasHafrns to each ipiart of gasoline,
On Gardening
I 1 ,H -w"' mrt(,
throw away wood ahee. for It ia
Sassafras Oil
To deodoriie gasoline for
' '
JACK DAW'S
Story by Hal Cochran
. TOT GAVE
TACK thu put the kiddy enr at th
took Flop under his arm. Then
rest of the party. "Well, we can
that, Jack and Dotty trailed along
heels.
CI'DDKNLY a rny of light appennd ahead. "That's one of the work
k rooms," explsined the hermit. And when the adventurers reached
the spot they aaw some nf the funny little round men squatting on rocks
and whittling away, making wooden dolls. Several of the finished dolls
stood in a corner of the work room.
4,JKK, I'd like to have one of the dolls for my very own." said Dotty.
"Well," laughed the hermit, "Just pick up anr, one you want." So
Dotty looked fhein all over ond finally chose, one. "Why, this little fellow
looks just like you," she snid to Jack. And, sure enough, It was just like
a model of her cousin. (C'outiuurd.)
menus of furnishing lime to the noil
mid nn aid in sweetening the ground
and liberating other fert Hieing ele
ment. These suites on the garden you
are both liming the soil and helping
to correct any acidity or sourness
Dint may exint and furnishing potash
fertiliser as well.
The. lime is as essential as other i
Geo, but 1 witdi I was hack in tnv teen; back lie a mere freckled kid.
I can remember the old bo)hood scones, nnd all of the thincs that 1 did,
Itet it's the miiif way with all other men, if they'd realty come out
with the truth. Met you d all like to go back, niico agttin, jutt to dabblu
around in your yuth.
'Member the day a when nn old pair of pant, an a sweater were all
Hint you wore? Wasn't it fun, j"M to lonf. when by chance, you were
hurriedly aent to the store? '
'M- ndter how toughened your fet ued to ret, when you shed both your
stfiekmiri and ehocV Wpn't it great, when the radway w wet, and
the mini 'round your ankles would ooe?
All of thone tneni'ne come back now and then, to a man in a sort of
a base. Gee it's no wonder e wi.h, once; nguin we were hack in thom
barefooted days.
' t , - j,u"i.'itf7''t"ti''
Copjrilit, l1-5.
By BUD FISHER
ADVENTURES
Drawing! by L. W. Red ner
CHAPTER T
sldo of the entrance to Toy Cave and
he re-entered the care and joined the
go on now," said the hermit. And with
behind him, with Flip also right at his
fertilisers to keep the eH up to the
reiutaitn growing quality although Its
application la not needed sa frequent
ly as other fertilizers. Without lime
the efficiency of fertilirera la greatly
lesnened. ll is needed in the anil to
liberate other plant food elements.
Suva sit wmd ashes or ashes from
bonfires. Spread them on the gnrden.
M:.V Service, Inc.)