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About Morning register. (Eugene, Or.) 1905-1929 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1926)
How Are You . - : On Solving New Riddles? ' Riddles from the north and iouthl Riddle from the cut and west! Riddles from children liv ing in all parts of this country liar been coming in to the Riddle Editor in bushels I Some children tent as many as twenty-five at a tfrne, while others sent only one. And these that axe given today eertataly made the Riddle Editor think but he didn't give up, and finally guessed them. 141. Why are the tallest people tbt) laxiestt Ruth Smith, St. Louts, Mo. , 142. What coal does not smoke 7 Josephine Jolliff, Weston, W. Va. ., ,143. What kind of coat has never had a button on it yet, and haa a very easy way of being put on wett Elnor Wiechert, Belle ville, III . 144. There was a crowd at a banquet, and no one said anything but Help. Who said this? Kath lyn Jackson, Dallas, Texas. ',148. Why did they bury George Washington - on the hillside T Gertrude Bartell, Milwaukee, Wis. 14$. Why do young ladles in love like the circus? Eola Mon aette, Taeoma, Washington. 147. ' Why is a bald-headed man tike heaven? Dora B. Bates, Dick ton, Tennessee. . 148. What kind of plate cant yon eat out of ? Virginia Crom Ueb; Indianapolis, Indiana. .149. What haa a head and a foot and two eye or more ? Lucille ReynoldVSioux Falls, So. Dakota, i 180. What was Joan of Arc nade ofT Qoise Foster, Crowley, Louisiana. ; ' How about a riddle? Do '' yea know new, original one ' tkat yoa'd like printed on tkla page with your nam? Send it in to the Riddle Editor, ear of this news peaer, and watch f or it! We Have Different ideas Of Beauty f mat-Ufpretty?" '- lid different places and to differ ent people "pretty" means various things. -For example, although Americans like slender women, the Turks like them fat. . Among certain barbarous tribe it is the custom to stretch, the tower lip until it is very large. In that community, therefore, the per son having the longest hp is the Most beautiful. Even among some Df the nations of Europe a sword tear on the face of a man is thought to make him handsomer because it indicates that he has been valor ous in conflict. v So yon see, what yon think is pretty, some one else might think quite ugly and the other way around, too. But that only proves that nobody really KNOWS what pretty" is, doesn't M it My Pet- 'A. . Cat and dogs, ponies and squir rels rom Canada to Louisiana and -from Maine to California let tars by the dozens have come to the "My Pet " Editor, describing the pet American boys and girls have. ' This week we have chosen the description that 12-year-old Robert S. .Regan, of Port Lavaca, Texas, give of "Jimmie," hi fox terrier. "Jimmie" is a jumping dog, Robert writes. Ha has erected a jumping stand, and every time he goes to jump, 'Jimmie" follows and jumps, too. It is pretty good, for "Jim mie" stand but one foot high. . f. Another pet we wish we could meet is the one belonging to Belle Parker, of Custer, Montana. Belle writes that he will put his front paws en.a-ohair and lay, his head down on thorn, as though he were saying his prayers. When she says "Amen" he gets down. He will play "dead dog," too, and when she says "Picture," he sits up as if ha were holding a camera, with his front paws taking a picture. He will roll over, and will bark when told to speak. Belle says she al ways gives him something to eat after he does his tricks. We think she has a clever dog don't you? "vr.m. RiirVer. of Little Rock. Tmu anf. iib s snjin shot of her dog sitting up. Melba says "Peps," a black and white terrier, can walk across a room on his hind legs, can sit up and speak for food, can play ball, will go into the water and bring back sticks, and can bounce the basketball with his none several time. We'll bet it is a lot of fun to have pet like that! ttY yen PT Writ nd Ml . , yt" Keiff, la .' Move To Save Spreads At one time vast areas of Amer ica were covered with dense for ests. The Indians who were the country's only inhabitant loved the trees and lived among them. But when the white man came to these shores with his advanced civilisation the slaughter of the forests began. The ruthless cutting of the trees has continued now for three hun dred years. Cities have spread across the entire country, and the thousand and one uses for wood have caused great forests to be PERMANENT CROWN SEVEN TO TEN FEET ABOVE SURFACE OF GROUND.: CUT OFF LOWER BRANCHES PRESERVE FIBROUS ROOTSjCUT OFF SMOOTHLY EVERY BROKEN ROOT PLANT TWO INCHES DEEPERTHAN BEFORE w . I r-. FILL TO LOWER ROOT LEVEL WITH MIXTURE OF. ROTTED MANURE AND GOOD SOIL chopped down. Little has been done to replace them. Every one knows that a nation must have forests. Not only are they necessary to provide wood for houses and the various uses of in dustry, but they are needed to keep the air clean, to furnish shade, and to provide foods for man. There fore many thoughtful people, alarmed by the rapid disappear ance of our forests, are promoting a tree-planting movement. Every boy and girl in the coun try can take part in this move ment and perform, a real service to his country by .planting a tree. Theodore Roosevelt said, "A peo ple without children would face a hopeless future; a country without trees is almost as helpless; forests which are. so used that they can not renew themselves will soon vanish, and with them all their benefits. When you help to pre serve eur forest or plant new one you are good citizens." In 1876 the government made its first investigation into the forest situation. This year is therefore the semi-centennial of the forestry project, and it is hoped that many sprout will bo planted now which, GOOFEY MOVIES GOOFEV MOVIES o,. PRESENT V. r COCOANUTSAND PEAPLS A COLOPFUU DSAMA OP THE .TOOPlCS IrJTWflEEjPAQTS SCErJAOO BV JACkVcjIMOW CAMERA UJOOK BY FRED tOEfct?. Mm hattib FINOS THE BIGGEST PEARL. EVEft DISCOVERED IN THOSE WATERS.. Forests All Over N. A. when the Centennial arrives in 1976, will be fine, taU tree. It is not hard to nlant a tree. First you should pick a location where the tree will have room to grow. Then choose a tree that is suitable to the climate and the soil. Moist earth should be kept around tho root of the shoot until they are placed in the ground, so that they will not become dry or bruised. Early Spring is the best time for planting, when tho trees have not yet started to bud, but when the ground is no longer froien. Cool, cloudy days are best for the occa sion. The hole should be dug large enough to hold the root without BURLAP OR, OTHER SOFT MATERIAL 2"X 2" WOOD STAKE SIX TO "TEN FEET LONG; TWO FEET IN GROUND. '. MULCH OP UTTER. TO CONSERVE MOISTURE RICH EARTH PACKED FJRMLY ABOUT ROOTS bending, and deep enough so that a six-inch layer of good loam can be put in before the tree is planted. After the tree is placed, the soil should be worked around the roots with a stick so that no air spaces are left, and it is a good idea to soak the soil with water to hold the shoot erect. Where there is a chance that there will be strong winds a stake should be driven into the ground beside the tree to sun port it, and if it is planted along the street, a guard should be placed around it. The soil around the roots will re quire some cultivation for the first two years, and as the tree grows it can be pruned to the shape which the owner desires. - Perhaps the tree that you plant may some day become famous. In Iowa, John Finn planted one in memory of Lincoln on the day after the president was shot, and now it is so large that tourists come from all over the land to see it. Parents sometimes plant trees when new babies are born, and school classes often plant them upon graduation. But whatever the reason, the planting of a tree is a Teal patriotic deed. Cnthe SOOTH SEAS.' UHEGE THE UI4VES SUJCi TENOft AKJOTH6 PAUAA -TBEBS OAKJCe THE EMIQMUASJD PUIW3, UP6 JIS 0U5T, OWE tslAP. " ;AFTEft.ArJQTH$ft; I I Uncle Dud TELLS ABOUT IT Not very long ago, ono of my young friends told mo that tho nickel plate on his bicyclo had be come rusted, ami asked me if 1 knew how ho could remove the rut- 1 didn't ItttV know, but Inter, I tL r-l another friend told mo that if you grcaso the Articles woll, then, after a few dnys, rub thorn with n rag charg ed with ammonia, tho rust will come olT. If tho rust spots porsist add n few drops o f hydrochloric acid to tho am monia, rub. wipe off at once. Next rinso with wa ter, dry, and polish with tnpoli. . It occurred to mo that any num ber of fellows might liko to know that. So I coonccivcd tho idea of establishing this littlo corner, where wo can talk nhout nil sorts of things, and toll onch other of our experiences. I went down to Now Orlenns for the Carnival recently. Maybe you didn't know that the word "carni val is taken from the Latin mean ing "farewell to flesh-meat". And the present observation of the event means just that. Carnival is always Just preceding Lent, and as you know, many persons do not eat meat during Lent. In New Orleans, the Carnival season really begins on Twelfth Night, when there is a great masked ball'. There is a secret Twelfth Niirht organization that gives this ball, and the members of it appear in costume, present a fanciful tableaux, and then dnnce. The first twelve dunces are known as "call-outs" that is, the masker call out tho names of the younc ladies they wish to danca with, and the girls never know their partners. After twelve such dances, during which the girls are much feted, and given many souvenirs, the mask ers leave and the floor is thrown open to the "blackcoats", as the men in evenirg clothes are known, and then everybody can dance as at any other ball. There aro many such Carnival balls held in the two months pre ceding Carnival Day. which is al ways the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday. Each ball has its king, who is under mask and is never known, and a queen and members oi bcr court are chosen from the loveliest and most popu lar debutantes of the season. During Carnival week itself, the fun is at it height. Thore are many parties and balls, and there are half a dozen magnificent streot fiaradcs, each of them miles in enirth. The flonts. all of which carry out a single thome, are gor geous, and maskers on them throw souvenirs to tho many thousands who lino the streets. The night parados are most beautiful of all, for then each float fs illumined by means of gasoline torches, and tho wholo looks liko a scene from Fairyland. ' On Carnival Day, it is tho cus tom for many of the people to mask and go out on the streets. Lots of young people get together and charter an automobile truck for the day, and rido all over the city, singing and playing. On this day, Rex, the king of Carnival, makes his appearance on the streets, and chooses his queen, who fee SdUTAQY SAM, A BEACH COMBER, COMBS FOR WHAT-' EVER fT IS BEACH COMBEPS.COMS SEACMSS jl Foa,' SOUTARV SAM" ARE SuBG I Jf OLITARV SAM HEAP-IMG OP HATTIE5 GOOD FORTUNE, AWKES EYIL- DBSK3US ,OUkTHBP.eARUi Equinox Marks War-End Between Winter, Summer By W. BOYCE MORGAN Three months ago the sun, after swinging southward fur six months in its yearly journey, roached tho most distant point in Its cyclo, and again begun to mnvo toward tho north. Now the half way point on its return trip tins been reached, and wo call this point tho Vcrnul or Spring Equinox. Of course tho scientist would tell you that tho sun really dors not niovo at VII. That grent bull of lire from which comes all the earth's heat ami light rest -slii-lionary in tho mlilut of all tho solar svstom. while tho planets, in cluding our earth, move around it. The purlin path around tno sun is in tho form of a huge eclipse, or UVlll. Now, as tho eifrth moves about the sun. only, half of It can recolvo llirht at ono time. However, be sides the movement around the sun, tho earth, as you know, also rotates on its axis, which causes us to havo day and night. When our sido of the world is exposed to tno sun It is dtiv. and when our slilo moves around Into the shadow it is night, j If the axis of the earth, on whirh it rotates, were exactly vertical, all our days and nights would be of the same length. You remember that a few months ago we had day. light only for about eight hours a day. Since then the Joys have gradually become longer, and you know that next summer It will be daylight for almost lfl houis of tho day. This chango In the length of the day is caused by the fact that the axis of the earth is tipped, and as the earth moves around tho sun, the rays of the sun strike it ut different angles. Thus in mlil-summcr the rays come from almost directly ovor- head, and the weather is hot. In December and January tho ray come from a great angle, and are therefore not ns powerful. That is tho reason that it is so cold in winter. In March and in October the earth is iq such a position in rela tion to the sun that we receive light for lust hair of tho Z4 hour. Scientists call theso times the spring equinox and the autumn OUR MODERN MAGIC , I used to sigh for the old days of boutlng knights, and queer magic. And then I happened to think why was any of the lcRcndary map;ic of ancient times as wonderful as our magic is today? When Merlin brousht a voice out of nothing was that as wonderful as our radio? When Sinbnd rode through the Hides on a carpet was that as wonderful as riding in one of our airplanes? When the Hanging Gardens of Babylon were built was that as wonderful as our modern architec ture? The ningic of today is more romantic, more wonderful than that of the ancients ever was. We ar very fortunate to be alive now, instead of then. j. g. views his parado, with , tho mem bers of nor court, from a gallery built in front of one of tho down town clubs. I could talk a lot longer about the Now Orleans Carnival, for wo had such a wonderful time, but I am afraid my letter is too long already. i . We'll have another chat next UNCLE DUD. Film UOSE BV.MAITI WATTIE A PEARL DlVJEtt, DIVJES r FOft PEAQUS. ' HAITI HATTIE- ' ......THEUMA klTTy equinox. "Equinox" tomes from two Latin words, Aequus, meaning equal, and nox, meaning night. Tho spring equinox occur about the twenty-first of March, and Is supposed to mark tho beginning of Spring, From now on the days will gut longer mid wanner, until In June and July the longest, hot test duys of tlio year will coma. March, tho month of the spring equinox, is the stormiest, most blustery month of tho year, Tho old Romans named this month March after Mnrs, the Cod of War, because It was symbolic of strife mill conflict Mors was the son of Jupilvr and Juno, and always dressed In a flno coat of armor and a plumed helmet, and carried a wicked spear, ilellonn was tho Goddess of War, and drovo Mnrs' chariot when ho went Into battle. There i an interesting legend about Mar, lit fell In love with Ilia, one of the followers of Vesta, tho Coddvs of Fire. They were married and had twin ions, Romu lus and Remus, Tho Cods were nngry, becauso tho followers of Vesta were not allowed to marry, and the two little boys were left in the woods to die. There a wolf found them, cared for them as though they were her own children, and they crew to manhood. . 1-nter Romulus founded the city of home. Home, which was a warlike city, always revered Mars, tho God f War, end had great feast for him during the month of March. In olden times tho armies of Rome could not march in the winter's snows, so that March and the be ginning of Sprlnir meant for them the opportunity for more glorious battles and mora victories for the brave Roman soldiers. For us, too, the coming of Spring means a chance to get out of doors again. And although tho month of March is stormy and windy, wo must remember thnt It Is dedicated to Mars, God of War, and marks ths final bnttlo between winter and summer. Summer, like tho armiea of Mars, is always victorious, and wo can now be sure that winter Is in rapid retreat, leaving summer to rulo the world for the next fow months. CASn OU CREDIT Mrs. Buy-on-Timo "How much is thnt hat?" Clerk "It's ton dollars cash." Mrs. B. "And how much by In stallmcntsT" Clork "Fifteen dollars ton dol lars down and a dollar a weok for five weeks," Fun For Young Folks ils'pOOC'HATTIB going to Lose hec pearl ?,voull leapm im this theater KJEKTujeEK. , Jewelry Was First Thins Savage Made One of the first ways In which man used hi brsln, oven while he was i i i oui a savage, was In mak. ing tilings with which tn ..I..,.. himself. Thu began tho making of Jowolry, Tho most uncivilized pcoplo ln the world are found tn lu, ort of personal decoration, Hliells dried berries, small stones pierced with a shnrit iimti'iim.mi brightly colored feathers aro strung ur uou runnier ami nung around their arms, legs and nerks. Muny savages oven mnko holes tlirminh their car and noses so Hint they will have still other places to wear their crudo juwatry. In ninny undent countries thu ornaments worn by men anil women woro wougni to bo symbols of good lurk, and therefore when ik owner died Ills jewelry was burled wnn mm. in this way scientist have learned much of anrlnit pro pie from pieces of metal found in craves, wliero they havo lain fur centuries, Many thousands of dollars am now stient each year by people all over tno world for precious mcUli and stones worked into hnndtome ornaments, and the business of firnducing theso has become a great ndustry. Great rare must be taken in the factories where lew- lry i mailo becauso of the value of the material used. In some foe- lories the workers are required to wash their hands before Irsvlnir the building, and the water Is kept so thnt any bits of valuable mater ial sticking to their hands will not be lost. Who'd Like To Take A Bath In Butter! Imagine taking a bath in butter! Yet that's what people did long ago instead of eating it on their food. That is, they used butter as an ointment, rubbing it over Utelr faces and limbs. There lira still some huropesns who do tills, using olive oil on their food. Tho Arabs are thought to have discovered the process of making butter because they were obliged to tnko long Journeys over ihe desert carrying their milk on ths backs of the camels. I he constant motion of tho animals had the samo effect as hours of churning on our own bck porch at home, and tho result butter. In India butter will not keep, so it is rondo fiesh ench day by shak ing milk in a bottle. What's the Matter? Answer will be found elsewhere on this page. 2eFUN BOX A I.ONO WAY Vlrmt Vrml, fin ninth OXM!!) How for are you from tho correct answer" Second Frosh: "Two soais. Ltsson in qalurt iludyLtlluei loses ill heart at long as i ttff ' Htaa. OH, ALL RIGHT "Take a dollar chance on an am, t itnn't rnnnl nnt." ' Thars all right, you may not v it. nwi i nr ma APPOINTED TtnothUek! "IJo-ht or dark, slr7 Absent-mlndod profossors "I m not particular; but ploaso aont give mo tho neck." Fat Girl) "I have an ppctlt like a eanary." ft.! HV.. have. I0U 1 II III VIII 1 1 1,H, A I. -A - II ,, eat a peca at a tunc. A Din MfQTATTII! Toncher (entorlng class room). Abso'nt-mlnded atudont: "Egff sandwich." ANSWER TO "WHATS THE MAlTlfiKT ., It is very disrespectful to sit down when your elders are stand ing. , ANBWKRfl TO '""'" . In HI. Ilocnnse Ihey are the lonest IS bed. 142. f'hnroonl. HI. A cont linlnt. 144. Help. Hlf. Uecsms "! oeso. no. Tney ante nn . I he rlni. 147. neenuse thsre Is nil P- "It PU 10 LmiS .'W,rjiT Ilnvs . . I Hurry, for ,,,; vvhcrBtherewt anIml for u Wi "rat group? j 1 .ft Beheid i won! atcki and getawriustbtyji wear swiy ml pt m by; behead the untujpi behead each and pi si behead high and pt erj behead high wnptttfsii to coaiumi; beludbjsi organ of bearing; ttball get to be free fres. Ths beheaded lettni In Ut' proper ordn,isli mow animal, I .4-1 Guest this word iim around dinpnu i t I TICIl 1 I ' . -4- Find In till iittiie tanlmalllf tin iVMsssimI mri Ml) an ttccalftrnmiVn Add a letier ! and celt wild eat, Word Sfltwfts Thlt cewptul"1.' fartta W" vcrylntereitinfMt, The mrdi Will to! arerooUoIiirMW" Is a part of a .i ,1,. minted Mi Blue r ' fa . ! that -A annate, youM'"" ths puui" 1,' TtMWtoAi r&i)' 7. To d-,1 0. SwtffcT, ,, , ' la. ToimpW if s'oudiM' io, ...rtui"1:. "J'!?k.i-t2L i "J 1 eriV VH5ft AM with cBlfflren In It. 100. Msla of