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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1925)
Friday Evening, June 19, 1925 THE EUGENE GUABD Pajre Seven IIIITT a k . mu i i Alu JEFF The Tourists Are With Gov. Al Smith in Albany Today By BUD FISHER -yBeark Burton O mm am una k .'Continued from pag. ooe) tdof puttin it Into a lUr, tor Jm, sake? . . . Unlet, it wa. ihinit that he didn t want anyone hear. Ah, that must be it! . . . "filoria picked up her nail file from tor trar of toUet thinta. She tUpped Ju sharp point under the loosened So of the envelope. Then she stood still, looking down ,1 the sedate syllables of Susan Rrires name. . Bfe was filled with sudden self- tfVhat a snealfme thing she was joins! Opening another person', let ter! Gloria flung the envelope down on vfr dresser as if It had been a live JjJ. She pressed the flap down Then she snatched it up and went kaek into Pick's bedroom. "looky here, Kikky," she began. "to you think it's fair of you to write , letter to Miss Briggs' and ask me tomtil H tot you? Particularly when ton five it to me nil sealed up for (Mr I might take a peek at it. . . . H,rf it is! I'm not going to post it for you." She tossed il down onto the coy rri of Dick's bed. ' "As if I care a snap of my fiDgers for what you've written to your old Miss Briggs!" she added scornfully. -You' flatter yourself!" Dick threw back his head and Utifht'd. "By Jove, I believe you do care, t that!" he said. "I believe you do!" The thought that she might be jealous of Mist Briggs seemed to please him immensely. He ripped open the envelope. "Here's the letter I wrote to her, Glory," he said. "Want to see it?" Gloria took the two sheets of pa per that he handed to her. One was a bill for a hat that Glo ria had bought two or three weeks before on one of her shopping trips with May. The other sheet was a note to Miss Briggs. Gloria rend it with frank curiosity. 'Dear Miss Briggs, it ran. "'inis have told Dick how she felt about Stanley Wayburn from tb. moment when he had kitted her in his dressing-room. That would have been the square thing to do! But the whole affair had happened so gradually . . . that she hadn't rea lised that it had completely separated her from Dick until it was too late. But was it too late, after all, to put Wajburn out of her life? Couldn't she forget him and try to be a good wife to Dick? ... After all, what were a few kisses, a few .utomobile rides with "ayburn? There had been no real harm in them and Stan was going away soon. Gloria stared out into the street, thuily veiled by gray April rain. 'I U try to get that money and give it to Stan and then I'll never see nira again!" she said defiantly. It was at if she disputed something with herself. She put her handkerchief up to her eyes and brushed the welling tears away. ... The telephone busied loudly in the quiet room. Gloria glanced at her wrist watch. It was 2:30. And 2 ol-lock was the time that she usually met Stan for . drive or a hike! He was prob ably phonoug to ask why she had failed him! "Shall I answer the phone, honey?" Dick asked. "No. no! Let me do it!" Gloria rushed across the room like a small whirlwind and took the instrument from his hand. Hello." she said nervously. To I her relief it was not Stan's voice i that nnswered. j inis is Moggie, ma'am," the grim voire at the other end of the wire said. "Will you please go up to the hospital right away? Dr. Seymour has juRt taken Mr. Dick's mother there to opernte on her for appendicitis!" Dick's mother! Gloria could scarce ly believe her ears Mother Gregory with her bright eyes and the blown roses . in her ! Mutt Awt jcfi ARe ma coavt T COAST Too ANB THev GoTTA Sr THROUGH OUBIOO OR Sir STRAMlet. IF THv Bofc.vu ft RD csmT THSY'LL LOS THetB. MCMBeBSHlP IN THe LION TA Me ft CLAjB. THY WILL Pe lJ OTICA AN GlOUERSUlllC Jerry On the Job v C "N AwKAT Do oo GuvT ft"414 60TA SCAM THaS " f f vuKo uiAl'N F RorA MAVoR tioo BUM, WOT Llcvm , ' 1 THS? MfiAM BV Bumping Ilttc: 7 uetTeP, (m-m-m.'I , thm- LeTtsfc HAckctT 6ivin& do ou aam p THIS A.M. 1.70 GAS today . .411 F'lUMC TTJ FBBAi -f CASHonHANbtZtT Misinformation FWpYas GE5AC0S -r aiw? W&$ ra I K W.l L bifl is okeh. Will you please send j cheeks, was the last person in the ' i theck with it? Sincerely your, Hichard Gregory. Gloria looked at it dumbly. "What did you think I was writ he to Miss BripRS? A love letter?" Dick asked good-naturedly. "Did you think I was having an affair of the bouI with her?" Hia wife nodded and hung her bend. "I'm afraid I did," she sai(V in a ititmed undertone. Dick took her hand and held It in one of his. "Well, you nepd never be afraid of that sort of thing," be answered her. "I'll never cheat, Gloria. No miller wnui i tin, i ii ue uv"i " yon. If I ever find a woman I care for more than I care for you, I'll teQ you all about it . . . even before I tril her!" Gloria looked at him thoughtfully with her wide, brown eyes. Ton don't suppose you ever will rare for anybody but me, do you?" ihe asked, startled. She was surprised to fpl the surge of jealousy that swept through her it Jhe thought of Dick ever falling In lore with any other woman. "Not a chance in the world," Pick innwered. "You know 111 never care i rap about anybody but you. Hut I'm just telling you that you needn't worry about letters I write to Miss Briggs or any other woman living, so that you won't worry. Bee?" Gloria couldn't answer him. A lump rose in her throat, world who looked like a hospital case, .Mr. Dick s father is out of town," Maggie went on. "And I do- think someone of the family should be at the hospital when they operate on poor Mis' Gregory. . , Please don't let Mr. Hick know about it; manm. It might kill him the way his heart is, and all!" "Of course, I won't." Gloria snap ped, as she hung up the receiver. But how to keen lick from know ing about his mother. That was the! question. . ' j She couldn't go away- and leave, him all alone in the house, sick and ' helpless as h was! I And there was no one to stay with j him. It was Mrs. O'Hara's day off.1 Hanghild had gone to the dentint i and wouldn't be back before 5 o'clork. '-. Suddenly Gloria thought of Mis Briggs. . . Yes, she would have to ask Miss Briggs to come and stay with Dick in her absence. There was nothing else to do. "That was my dad on the phone," Gloria fibbed to Dirk. "He says my mother's sick and 'wants me to go over to the Iioiisp right away. , . . Would you mind if I phoned Miss Briggs to stay here with you while I'm gone?" Dick considered. "Oh, I can stay here alone, cant I?" he psked. after a minute's pause. "There's no need to bother Miss Briges." 'That's nonsense! Radio Programs You can't stay Dick was so honest. So decent, here bv yourself!" Gloria cried. She He was too good for her! I picked up the telephone and called What would he say if he knew jhrk s office number. that she had let Stanley ayburn mike love to her? She raised a pointed finger and rubbed it hard cross her lips. She felt as though they were soiled by ttan s kisses, Miss Briggs' low, sweet voice an swered at once. "Could you leave the office for an hour or two, and come out here to the house?" Gloria asked her. "I've She made a little movement with i had some bad news from my mother her hands almost as if she were wringing them. SJie was terribly ifraid she was going to cry. And she ,turned away and looked out of the window so that Dick shouldn't sec her face. . . . "I'll never cheat," he had said to her. What on ugly word "cheat" was! Gloria saw now that she ought to 4 I Outdoors Costume and I've got to leave Mr. Gregory for a little while. It's your sister's day off duty, you know." "I'll be there right away." Miss Briggs answered. Gloria was sure she could hear a note of eagerness in her voice. "Did Miss Briggs say she'd come?" Dirk asked. "Did she say she'd come?" Gloria laughed with cutting sarcasm. "Oh. boy, she did! Why you couldn't keep her away with wild horses! Her idea of a perfect time is taking care of you for an afternoon. . . . You flip it from me, Kikky. she has a jenl crush on her boss! And don't you forget It." "Why don't you phone mother to come instead?" Dick asked, ignoring Gloria's remarks about Miss Briggs. "I'd rather have her. - She hasn't been here for on age." "Oh. she's not at home today.' Glo ria replied. "I happen to know." She had h sudden vision of Mother Greg ory in the whit operating room of the hospital. "I've got to hurry!" she stid. "Here put your arms into your bath-robe! And let me brush your hair. ... I must doll vou all up for Misa Briggs." She straightened the rovers of Dick's bed and laid' the volume r( Stevenson's "ValHma Letters" on his bedside table. "There's your book," she said. "Tniir 1nrlin.T Susie can sit here with her best bedside manner and read it vnn nil afternoon in her Booming iekroom roice ... and rou wont mt.. r Gloria a bit!" And again she was surprised at the sharp pang of jealousy that prickled through her at the thought of Miss Briggs sitting thtre with Dick all at- j ternoon. i "If there's anything I fmn lo ff vour mother let me know." Dick call ed after hr as she went into her own room to dre. Hia kindness was a reproach in itself. How good h was to her! And she didn't deserve it! Gloria was ready to go long before the doorbell rant. When at last it did. Gloria snatch"! up her coat and ran downstairs im patiently. "If I'd had sny sense Id haTe sent a eab for you. Time connti in a thing like Una!" aha said sharply to Mips Briggs as they went up to Dir " F0?!l- a,,.,- rinmh,A She knew thsi what Gloria meant was that if she , bad bad any sens she would hsrs hurried to the house In a cab herself. , . She bit her Hp arm phi nnn.uB. iiift-m anlrsi SrP lle f. It .V . nnH the ROOr of ' dMinite place in the summer j pirk f fnnm there was a radiant smile on program for camping, hiking. hpr eyPlt L.-''0r snd general out door wear.t ..(j.by. yoo two." Gloria said, e knickers ars of oyater colored twJ WM g0D. j "" and the shirt ia of phages in a confirmed, hade. I PACIFIC COAST I KGW, Portland, -lit 1.5 meters ti to 7 p. m., Shaw Jubilee singers; . tu 10:.i0 p. m concert by Slicrmnn '-, -'l;iy &c I'u. trotu lhiu-Art stutliu. WMi) p. in., to luMninlil. lltMit Owls j iuhidtug ise City trio, llltn Nurd- ; stroin and other fenturett. KNX. llttHwi.od. till.. me ters r.;otM:l."i p. ni., Wuriitz.'r pipe! (rgun studio, Sul Ziff's spurt talk; (:.."., navel talk. W. V. Aider; 0::iO 7 :H f. program. Ueverlj ridje c.inp:iny. 7 :.'((. program, l-'asteru On', fit ting company; N-l, prognim. West t'oast theaters; 1MU, Order of tlie Uptomiat Dunut, Davis 1'eriVctioti Bread cotn psny; 10-U, June rursell, the KNX girl,, singing popular, mmgs; 11-12, Ahtj Kyinan's c ncoaimr (iiuve' dainre nrchetftra from AmbnHsador liolel; 12 2 a. in.t Wurlitzer Nightliuwks ii'uui W'urliiKer studio. KI'O, San Krancisco. lal;, 42S.:. 0:l-" -i p. m., Warfield theater; 7-7::tO I'nlace hotel (-onert; M il, Geue James and Kose ltuom ltowl orches tra. Kl'StJ. I.os Angeles, t'a.., 275 me (org V::iO-U:oO p. m.. t rusailers ser vice, with sermon by Aimee SempK' .icrheinon. S.lver baud, temple choir aud soloists; il.ttU-lUSiU. Uroy aiu dio program thrugh the courtesy of Myru Belle YickiTB, prt-Mcuting her artist pupils. Kl.X, Oakland. tal 5(Hl meters :t;15-0 p. m., baseball; 7-7:.'H), news items, weather forecast, markets; 8 !):;iU, studio prog rum of vocal and in strumeiitul music arranged by Jom-ph Carey uml broalcust through th courtesy of the John Hreuner com pany uf Oaklund, Sacramento and Stockton; .:30-lU:.tt, music by Tom Gfrunovit h's ballroom enter tinners." K1I, I.os Angeles, Cal., 407 mc ters o.M) p. m., Kiamiuer's musical mutinee; ti. McDaniel's nightly doings; 0:45, radiitorial talk; 7, Examiner progrom. arranged ly Leonard Bob bin; 3, Aeolian residence pipe organ btudio. Dan Mcl-'arland, organist; 0. au hour of American folk songs and humorous sketches, arranged by George l-'renger; 1U. vocal recital, ar ranged by J"hn Hmatlman. KFOA, Seattle, Wash., 454.3 roe tern 0:45-8:Jfi p. in., Sherman, Clay & Co., 8:30-10, Times program; Ki ll. Kddie Harkness and his orches- KFWB. Hollywood, Cab. 2.2 me tera 7:45-9 p. m., KFWB, feature proiram of old-time melodies; 0-10. program, Frarisr mountain park, and fisheries; 1U-U, Warner Brothers' frolic, direction Charlie Wellmsn. KIU, Ios Angeles, Cat., 405.2 roe-.ertG:30-6 V. M., Ieighton'a Arcane cafeteria orrhestra, .lack Cranihaw, leader; 8-0:0, Art Hickman's Bilt more hotel concert orchestra. Ed ward KitKpatrick, director; 0:0-7 :8-i, little stories American history, Pro fessor Walter Kylvester Hertsog. Kichnrd Headrick. screen starlet, Nel lie M. Gill, mouolngue, Vyola You. srreou juvenile, bedtime story, I'uelc Jidm; S-10. continuity program, by Frank A. .Schilling. "A Camp Fire I'arly at the Bench"; 10-11. Art Hick man's Hill more hotel dance orchetttni, Karl Butnett, leader. Cynthia Grey Savs: j r "JAHHIAGR is unfair to -women. So let's baniih the home."' rhi- is the jiimple siiggestion ;C lr. MarK.net PaitnlM of New York. "Not only wives, but liiittlnnds. too. are livin; urder ti lutndlrsri." r. Dun iris told members d the Ntioiml Wo- i men's 1 V' he other day. 1 "I-effttl marriage and individual j home retard the progress of woim-u I and the advam-cnu-m of the race. The responsibility of a home is a great U.r!en on n nun. Tins idea of protec tion for women -that's another lintid iap. A wiman in first of all a hu man beinp. free and independent," When asked who would raisr the children, it the home was abolished, I r. I taniels scid: "As it i. all women are not n.K- tirnl litiilhct'a Mmiv umiiihii nliinllt- Ihate the r chihlren rodnv. Vnriirnl Vntothers would bear the liiMreu. and the st tile W'tiild support tliem and their childrrii. ' "A society in whi.-h men and wo men could mate freely and In whicli Wnnipn wmilil Iim ni'inniiiiiinlli' lnH pendent would be healthy. Women lnve just as imii h ability us men. Just as fine mentally, ami just as great creative gi niui." There's one phase of marriage which the faddist Dr. Margaret has iiinorcd There are millions ami millions of women who recognise, the fact that housework is drudgery, and that mar ried life ties tin1 in down. Put in spite of tlieup thlnps.i they prefer mairiiine to any other kind of life. , , finiply beraime it means living with the one man on earth for vliiu they care, mid bearing his children. And so long as the majority of wien feel lbs w.iy, marriage will re main the thing that it is toiliy. ,. . not a perfrct institution, but a fins one that answers rather satisfactor ily the needs of a great many nor mal, contented peopls. Home Hints AN EXCELLENT fruit aaucs la made by thickening ths sirup from canned fruit with cornstarch. Coffee Leiss Aroma The longer coffea Is kept aftar roasting, particularly if It la ground, the more of its aroma It loasa. Ths Bsat load Tea The best iced tea is msda by pour ing the hot bereraga over lea. To let it rool before It Is iced makes tt loss Its flsTor and bars stbrhtlj msdlclnal taats. T Clsfts) etrwr To dean sttrsrwrnrs nolstsa swft doth wtth water ami dip It hi Am whiting and apply. Aftar It has dried rub off with a soft cloth, and polish wun cnimoia sain, narar scour su rer plstsd knlTas or forks. TTAPPER FANNY g&: Vv'"' iv fi Tb:. r. ma tame, mm. TM flrt . "Vi ut I. t. IM y try tn kIM ralrjr 4 Spend the Week-end up the McKENZIE For A Real Outing go up the ' McKENZIE SEYMOUR'S Watch for the Orange and Black Siena SOFT DRINKS REFRESHMENTS SUNDRIES TIRES TUBES A PIra.ant Sile for Your I'arly Make Plans Now For The Fotirth God's Country Calls King's Grocery AT HENDfllCK'S BRIDQB Beautiful Camping Grounds Spend the Week-end Here Get Your Groceries at the Alder Grove Grocery Vi Mile above the latchery (ias, Oil, and Free Camp Grounds O. W. MILLICAN, Prop. illl; Walterville Garage FIRST CLASS MECHANICS TIRES TUBES -ACCESSORIES GAS AND OILS Prompt StrvlM Fair Prloei Free Auto Camp Ground on River Fra. Air, Repairing, Tlrn and Tubas Vida Service Station PAYNE & OAUGHENBAUOH The Best of FISHING Rainbow Garage Storag. an, Fr. Air TIRES AND TUBES Eiptrt Aula n4 Tir. Rllrioi - j. w. Mcdowell, Prop. THOMSONS RESORT WHERE YOU GET THE BEST ON THE McKENZIE RIVER 33 Miles East of Eugene Beautiful Sites For CAMPING Cascade Resort K Mile. From Ejgan. WARM TANK FOR SWIMMING DANCING FISHING TENNIS t'ftltj.i for Koi. Kirnihl or VnftirnithH SPECIAL CHICKEN DINNER EVERY SUNOAY SPARKS' RANCH Forty. (Iv. MIL. Ent of E.gtn. IIOMK COOKED MEALS Ho ma Mad. Ic. Cr.am and Candlaa SUNDAY CHICKEN DINNERS A SPECIALTY The Water is Cold but OH BOY! NIMROD INN THE PLACE TO ENTERTAIN YCYUR VISITING FRIENDS FOR DINNER