Evening Star Newspaper, June 14, 1925, Page 25

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JUNE 14, 1925—PART 1. 25 NORTH POLE LONG | =~ = acmmss 1(7] ARE CRADUATED [t tscttistsst oot it 80 B s B s St B B B s MG 0 G a9 ) The Susan Riviere Hetzel Chapter i was entertained by Mrs. Edmund Pen- b dleton at the final meeting of the year v at her apartment in Stoneleigh Court. Mrs. Pendleton is honorary vice re- gent of the chapter and sister of the # o late Susan Riviere Hetzel, who found- A ed the chapter and for whom it is 2 g 5 Iraccessibility Has Acted as |names. oo hapior ‘seia” s annusi | Central College Has Fifth An- . » election of officers, after which tea Magnet to Explorers. yas served, with the vice regents,| pual Commencement at 7th to 8th to E—_FAMOUS FOR QUALITY SINCE 1860—Franklin 7400 Mrs, Lesiie’ Watson and Miss Mary . Williams, at the opposite ends of the . Is One of Six. tea table. A number of guests joined Dunbar High. in the social hour that followed the —_— Lusiness meeting. The chapter voloed < = Two poles of the world's -jlts appreciation of the able manner| 1enty.one chiropractic students 14 erote simoly are orld's rather gen- | which: the regent, Miss Margaret | sy ciohonest by the Cantrar Chte onaay— enuine en rire! rous supply are monopolizing atten-| Withers, had conducted its affairs the | [F &P RCRe 08 G TR0 n® (AU tion just now—the North Pole, in|past year by electing her by acclama. | Pract ¢ Colcgs st the f7a aanusl search of which A ) tion to the regency for a second term. , held last night in the auditorium mundsen dropped | yro. “Yyithers in a neat little spesch b g g Fileh School. from sight, and the North Magnetic | of ueceptance promised to uphold the | °f Lhe Dunbar Higt B g ° Pole, whose machinations in throwing | standards of the soclety and chapter | ARITSSSeR (9o 100, EEARASE, Were explorers off their route cartographers | in the future and urged co-operation | Dr. Winfield S. Whitman. Dr. and instrument makers for the Mac. | With the other district chapters in all | Charles A. Thompson presided. Class Millan Arctic expedition are seeking [ committee work of the national soclety. | honors were presented to the stu- to clrcumvent The following officers were unanl- | dents by Dr. Kthel G. Wood and di. But | mously elected: Regent, Miss Margaret . , these are not the only poles | Mmousl plomas were awarded by Dr. Edwin that the earth has. a bulletin from the | (- Withers; first vice regent, Mrs. J-1 B Henderson. National Geographic Society points lie Watson: second vice regent,| “Those receiving the degree of doc- out. “Tha earth's polar possessi Miss Mary J. Willlams; recording | tor of chiropractic were: £0 by twos, says the bulletin. s r e T““&;{':;‘(z Waymond Blessengale, South Car- actly opposite the North Pole is the SR . olina; Clifford James Bagnell, Georgia; \ 3 g 9 5 South Pole, and in the hemisphere op- McPherson; treasurer, Miss| Asbury Hull Cooper, Georgla; Geor: Yo / 1f you never before had a surprise gosite the North Magnetic Tole fs the | Mildred Chancellor; registrar, Mrs. | gle’ Rnna ~ Coleman, corgla; Ethel j in Wash Suit val Mott uth Magnetic Pole. In addition | % S5y » Mrs.| Jouvinia Caldwell, North Carolina; mn S 1 h\ & i there is a pole of cold both for the e o brarlan, e ebar?| Willam Channing 'Green, Texas: Al 4 a uit values, others, that northern and the scuthern hemi.|Anderson; s 2 veda Cora Harding Gates, Illinois; 3 CEC Spheres. The eartn mao te ereqmny. | Brownell; in charge of the calors, Mrs. | Koy Raeh Gaimsr, Ot Tamols: thrill will be yours tomorrow when therefore, with six fairly well recog. | Harry Lee Rust. The regent appoint-| Syivester Hardy, Alabama: Dabney SRR, ed ];\\:h;ld:\!nrris L. Croxall chairman William, Jackson, West Virgini { I 0 A n l X you see the clever styles, the faultless North Pole Greatest Lure. o Rtk Dotk Ll R (oo n ur nnua ¢ “More has been written and thought | | Fleanor Wilson Chapter held its May | 154" Kgeton Lev workmanship the quality . Sk AN, 0 ing at the residence of the regent, ook 2 3 i g about the North Pole, undoubtedly, | meetng at Ul : ney Loguria Mahoney yland; Vir- 3 . Than al the other poes together, The | Mrs. Courts, 1518 Thirty firat street. | 165, Logirla, Mahone SR ” of materials—and the great northern hemisphere, with its concen | o> John M. Beavers, State regent, | {ijjjym Webb McClain, Missouri: ” i - tration of land, became the field for | 53, EVSSt O NoNeT Eave of BCCOUNt | Miiton La Salle Perry, North Caro: variety of styles offered you the world’s greatest civilizations and | oo™ Ofher guests were Mra, J. N, lina; Laura Virginia Stavenson iDis SRR e e e anatone, D N e | Roberts anniMs ¥Maritn Neing. atas R CEEROTCOIEMEIE: SEVE C S hase ) s staging of this Saptured and held the popular inter|1iss Lea and Mre Wade Allison sang. | g noeopson, L e n e Oca e H 1 i got because it is the most inaccessible | The chapter closed @ gratifying vear | 0desea Margaret Ussery, Texas, n wel established annual place In the region in which most of | o “worlk, with all “obligations met,| Parthenia Roberts s, Georgla. e A::;iihhfli:ne“ssil‘led:mn 50 toward the new audi-| . %0, ErECHAtes oo e W e OOI' event. R Soite OF he! casly I h 1¢ | torium Drs. Jay Arthur Pe 3 “In spite of the e: : eterson, Marie El- exarrea e eE T ol Bas e sie Whittey, Joseph Albert Minor, ree 2 = ited only once in all recorded time. Dabney Smith, James Walter Kosse, D) . Rear Admiral Robert . Peary reached | the north end of a compass needle | Charles Augustus Thompson, Levi ] it on April 6, 1909, and spent 30 hours | points. The needle dips as the mag- | Cornelius Whiting and Edward Jones 0 s e » \ ()ur Best ]‘I’ake i making observations in its vicinity. | netic pole is approached, and, when | Bryant. / 1S St e on land, but in | Boothnia is reached, stands on its| Those receiving honorary degrees S T e e T O ok ot |point!: Tn'tha Avctio Feglons Borthfiwere: Drs. Bawinr B Hendcon. course, by thick ice. Through a hole |of the pole, the needle points south, |Charles H. Blackledge, Harvey F. ‘t ne in this ice five miles south of the Pole | Of if northeast of the pole, points|Streiber and Christopher McConney. 4 Peary took a sounding, paying out m;iul?:“em. 1‘“"18 w‘hwrhexxi::ll,\'\‘com- S = 9,000 ¢ wire without finding |plcate navigation in r North. . . , 2 Bottom~ ° ® | ke e, mivifauen rossis| - CUBAN BANKER HELD. Little Price : : S or the MacMillan ex : 5 Every Direction South. United States Navy is now construct-| - ® v Seteral oo blels t “It requires imagination to appre- |ing charts with ‘meridians’ radfating | SAN FRANCISCO, June 13 (®).— : ciate the North Pole. It is the im-|from the magnetic pole instead of | Extradition papers were issued by makers have C,‘,flpcralcd aginary point where the imaginary |from the North Pole. a United States commissioner here to- g ; axis of the earth emerges. As one| “The south magnetic pole does not | day for Cero Gonzales Del Vallie, alias . liberally to make this stands at the pole, every direction in |lie directly on the opposite side of | Marial Hernandez Gomes, who is G ) ; which he can face is South. In the[the carth from its northern counter- | charged with embezzlement of $13,000 - event the dominant one Summer the sun makes complete | part as one might expect. If it had|from the International Banking Co. Ch 2 circle near the horizon every 24 hours, | this theoretical position it would be|of Cuba. The accused was formerly : of the season —and bv never dropping out of sight: in the |situated directly south of the point|& manager of one of the branches of H E £ 2 Winter, if one could stand there, he [of India on the 70th parallel of|the company. } reason of that fact we would see the Pole star directly over- | south latitude. Instead, it lies east-| Del Vallie came here from Cuba and S, 5t orils head, while all the other stars would | ward nearly a quarter of the earth's}was convicted of passing worthless can invite you to attend S 1 . Stan b 5 cks. He was taken on the Cuban appear to wheel around it. Standing |circumference near the 155th degree | chec SR on e Meeth Bole ta oo oElof Gaut louptufs, month of Eie|tisewe ufier He Saitsguvas bl oant prepared to take advan- would merely pivot once each easternmost point of Australia. It|ence in a & i 8 hours. A man standing on the a- | comes much nearer to its theoretical : tage of savings far be- tor at the same time, however, would | latitude, lying at 70 degrees south, g 5 be carried along from west to east | Whereas, the north magnetic pole vond vour expectations. at the rate of 16 miles a minute. lies at 70 degrees North. It is be- £ T B “It is belleved that the temperature |lieved that both magnetic poles are 3 Just to give you a vague at the North Pole hardly ever rises |Totating very slowly in opposite di- C SE N above thp“frpczing point in Midsum- | rections around the geographic poles. idea of what we mean, mer, this in spite of the fact that Earth Has Poles of Cold. | B T o the siite it during June and July and parts of [ .. : y . 5 N many ot the suits in the May and August the sun pours out | qri e et ol rame of agd gz . : lot would sell in a regu- the Inclination of the earth's axis and | Srabnic, Poles would ,',"’,m: Tolow = lar way at twice, and its rotation did not bring about a cor- | It (eMDSERtUTe, Dut the arrange. I ) even more than twice Teaporiing lonegverion Of Jarkness. | eftect, and land and altitude, tending SEE ANNOUNCEMENT — S X » 166 and EAI InaltS © Arctic| toward cold, makes the theoretical| TUESDAY'S AND SATURDAY'S STAR. Monda little price. ce and make the pole & heat center. | poles of .cold fail to conform exactly > North Pole Wabbles. to thde lph_vulcal poles. Temperature v 0 2 he southern polar regions i st . The North Pole is rigid enough, | e¢0rds for t 4 D »|are rather meager, but it is probable : i 7 but it cannot boast that it 15 abso-|enae the southern’ pole of coid s in 3 R i Tables Piled High Co-operated lutely immovable. For reasons not i With These Fine Suits, 1 the highlands of the Antarctic Conti- e l “fld entirely clear, it wabbles, describing | nent, not far from the South Pore. arg s Grouped in Sizes to Fa- a rough circular path about 50 feet In | "5, a0, 4 Lom, the South Pole. cilitate Selection. Ex- diameter ab very 14 hs—a 0 ; tion e Snact? he Tties s (oo Northor afemiepners, Sipsca Y tra Salespeople —All Ready, Relocated Boys’ that of Eurasia, th the majority of places on the earth's | cora 15 far from the Somn Pao® of SHIPS T gurface by amounts ranging from a|is situated west of Verkhoyansk, a Shop, Street Floor! few feet to 50. Scientists are 1aso | Siberia, about 200 miles inland from ready to believe that the pole may|the mouth of the Lena River. This have had a very different position |region is supnosed to be coider in at some time in the distant past, for | January than the North Pole itself coal deposits in Spitsbergen and|and has the lowest mean annual tem- Ellesmere Island show that in these | perature of any place in which rec. polar lands tropical conditions once |ords have been made. It boasts a eld sway. 1 record of 94 degrees below zero, but 1 ' § e : i The South Pole, twin of the-North |jts usual temperature during Janu- 3 * o Styles include— Pole geometrically and geographically, - " % & Z has not been the objeciive of ncezrfg- 25 15 ahont 100 \asexses Midlow Hiwrol e\ Oliver Twist, Middy, Balkans, French e e one: et It Basihean Assigned to University. See 7th St. Window : Middy, Sport Flapper, Long Pants, Middy, in December, 1911, and by Scott a| tarrant Officer Orestus J. Kincaid . . € . mdows ; College Sport, Vestees, Beach Suits and Lum- month Iaees. ""rf"fi 1*‘(‘_‘;\"&‘:5)‘[;“;&;“_1;5 has been relieved from duty as an in- i ber Jacks. Long and Short Sleeves. orn twin, the South Pole is situated ST e A L : o and. such a large mass that itgimilar duty at Wilberforce Uni. h: P to_be called the A cf e " i .-Z’r‘.cfr?g?.f.t °hnu‘;q “?nh° the “,,,}:é‘;“?;;‘fi secsttvOntpe o S area about the South Pole, that point et 5, T S AN Yh(lzse at 1:1; .\'\?r(h Pole. Yll"x fact, so - cold are the Summers and so con. P 1 tinual the winds that - the " entire riffith ff " oal orporation Ar;t;rr;uc]al;‘(:n;ilpenl 4s practically de- d I vold o e. — ar'e'[rr‘n:rg‘;s tEs, carih fectine aan . R ruly earth features than | the hical poles, for they have | [[[[!! the cfi;}’fié:;’ hical potes. tor:they nave | || AN AARRIA Y located by any sort of astronomical : observations. They lie more than a FURNITURE g R \7 thousand miles from the true poles 2 and are believed to be Sowly chang. RENTING Fast-Color Fabrics— {1"7 poshilmn Thh\‘se pfl::s have Lhelr For n, cause the earth a uge 3. M maghet, probabiy duc o 18 routlon. || Household Parties ONE WAY RAIL Linens, Poplins, Ever- It is only wit compass dl. 5 73 Y ice of rail 1 ¥ I o S it 8 Sopase noedie o || Receptions Drives Yol fast Suiting, L in e n theexistence of the magnetic poies Conventions Office Crashes, Invincible Suit- gl be determined. It is their effect H . anRL et cora sl el ic Wil fothe: IRl o ““““fse:“““ aip) Summer ing, Goldencloth, Devon- hand, that has made navigation fairly “'_;'_ ‘:lno:;fl rates, “Am&mn bit. ?ocl'd shire Rajah, Pongee and simple. tion. CI“ IVana, a of i) < Magnetic Poles Not Symmetrical. H. BAUM & SON Europe in the New World, in- Anderson Gingham — a “The north magnetc pole lies on ® spect the Panama Canal, truise id ange of desirable the Boothnia Peninsula in the Jatitude | 464 Pa. Ave. N.W. 15 happy, restful days on two wide rang i 1 of Foint Barrow, Alaska, “and the | Franklin 5383 ;;c:‘nl anc'lvi &= ;:: Ocm:lynz: colors and combinations. stop-overs at points of interest, &L Sizes 2 to 8 Years Round Tri Have The Star Follow You $PJH i . 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