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ame a Bos = l N convine n its d : Pe os Be atisfactor { vine ed when the piste 3 eve us it possible to be, and vher t dissent from each oth n var " Cer ch d nce of opinion t ) ned and learned uu \ trust to posses f en doubtful, they they seek is one and confidence ir is true public that she » her per lowa mm: “regarde sonal amb ituation, says, “What o wives? Why do I work so hard? For myself? For my ow eds 1 could work only sa day and have enough for ec nent, I work for my wife. jo we all Id that she f divorce your wife to notify the wor is ax “wide open” in t booze she is in th It seems to be a fave 4 drunk, or get rid o and you'll be surprised to see how such attractions draw In her mayoralty ele Talk about reckless government expenditures—when John Quincy Adams was president he bought a mirror for the White House which cost $36, and it stirred up such an outery that he had to pay for it out of his own pocket. Snow You've se snow in the In the Land of Eternal What do you know about the 0 pictures of the standin heavy furs, and probably decided they looked too stupid to be int ting. But the Eskimos are a remarkably fascinating, Strange people, according to an interview with Donald B. MacMillan, the polar explorer, published in the Christian Register. si Parents select their children’s husbands and wives among the Eskimos. Men marry at 20, girls at 12. A man’s at liberty to have two wives if he can support them. The first wife is never jealous of the second, for she knows the newcomer will, by custom, do the household drudgery. Orphan children are gladly given a home with any family they select. And Eskimo children never are pun- ished. The old are deeply respected. Life up there is a problem of hunting wild game for clothes and food, with no other industry that amounts to much. Eskimos have no calendar, no days, weeks or years. No woman knows her age. Time is taken as it comes, without worry, without measuring it. Until they were discovered by explorers in 18380, says MacMillan, the Eskimos thought they were the only people in the world. They have, in their mythology, two people who started the human race, an Adam and an Eve. The old men pass on to succeeding generations a legend about “a great flood that long, long ago came over the tops of the hills 2,000 feet high.” The Eskimos have always believed in a life hereafter as fi s in this existence on earth. They accept this belief as too sensible to doubt or argue about. Heaven, they eve, will have less cold than here, with better hunting and a reunion with loved ones who have died. The mos, says MacMillan, are the happiest, most carefree people in world, tho terrors of darkness, tempest, cold and famine are ever at their doors. “Many children die at birth, the mothers a hard- days it will s in the Far jOS1S, working; but if a child lives four or fiv live until it is 60, for there are no diseas North—no cancer, pneumonia or tubere What? A country with no disease? A people among whom every day is Sunday? A race where parents are respected by their children and families are supremely happy? That won't do. We must hurry up and CIVIL- IZE them. The other day an Indian lady from Duluth came to Washington and made a bitter attack on the Indian Affairs bureau, charging it with caring naught for the poor Indian and being generally a place for political job hunters. Secretary of the Interior Work, like Brrer Rabbit, “jes lay low and say not! and then » week later comes out with a detailed statement showing that of the 5,400 employes of the Indian Affairs bureau more than 2,000 are red Indians themselves! Atta boy, that’s the way to answer ‘em. L. A. newspapers declare that unusually warm currents are bringing strange equatorial sharks into Los Angeles “harbor.” Bat L. A. resk dents need not worry. Equatorial sharks are not land animals. We hope that the ghost of George II. is within hearing of the effort, in the house of commons, to abolish hereditary titles. We Sure Are Great There is no question about the inventive genius of us United Staters. No matter what the situation, we are equal to it! No matter what the obstacle, we can sur- mount it. No matter what the demand of the moment, we can meet it. No matter what the emergency, we are prime and ripe for it. We are simply great. That's what. If anybody doubts this, let him examine into the schemes, plans, methods and inventions we, some and many of us, have employed to neutralize the force and reach of the prohibition enactments. Wonderful and awe- inspiring. If all this mental concentration and inventive genius could be directed and applied to the big problems of the world, instead of the parched thirst of men, we would soon have peace on earth and good will toward men, Nothing—not even Lenin and Trotsky and chaos—could stand against it. Our commission to Mexico Is determined to indicate to that country thal “we desire to be a friendly neighbor.” Heretofore, Mexiew thought We were merely a thirsty neighbor, Divorce © mity be # bad thing, but, as a prominent woman writer points out, “it keeps a lot of men in circulation.” And women, (00, say wet Anyhow, “Hammer” Clara got her name in th er “ity ' PAovably, 8 © papers pretty con: THE SEATTLE STAR a 0 They Know Seattle? You B Of day ut th at the Thousands Turn Out to |Crowd Packs Arena to Hear Galaxy of who were to give the speeches of| ed; ™ the day jer; A y. J. Ralph Magee was cheered | ¢ ost their lunch in the big auditorium, tive of the progressive life of the city drove home sufficient | facts to convert every one of them into a walking informa-| tion bureau. all the “Kno n Seattle, Tues-| Ad club las the or thereabouls, ats ; we're ready! rico & Carter, Bar Btatt Photoxrap Come on, tou “Know Seattle’’ Lunch Speakers at Ad Club Rally fonned , « day and neon, under t bureau nerce at} The Chamber of Commerce cho- rus, with {ts songs, was one of thi led by R,| features of the luncheon, Following on jazz|the musical selections by the po t tunes,| Hee band Tughson's orchestra places,| tho rema’ ers on the pre emed alive| ram ro introduced and tol attle” spirit thelr connections with the handling the meal Community| of tour visit the city. t. H. Vivian led the| Other speakers were ser rousing| Louis Lucan, hotel clerk; William 1 of cam-| Short, State Federation of Labor to get acquainted with her] Jimmy Walker, messenger boy; G. C. Taylor, policernan; Margaret Stev of thelenson, telephone operator; B. L. t the| Smith, street car operator; A. Natoli, entatives| tax! drive A. Boyle, station mas attle's city lfo,| ter; Mi sche, elevator start a Busche, theater ush auist, president Letter ern’ association, and Frank tes, manager of the tourist park anches ¢ spoke to the! ¢ THE HURDY-GURDY BY ROBERT D. LITTLE No by a touch of green upon a hill, Nor mating call of robins on the wing, ity dweller feels a sudden thrill: ‘The swift persuasion of returning spring mid the walls and lofty towers #8 from Italy's sunny clime »| unes, ax fresh os April shower The south winds whisper of the summer time. Trundle Dear Folks I'd heard of the Ad Club's "Know Seattle" lunch; they sata they would fill it with vigor and punch; that Seattle's fairest would be on the scene, and make us a specch—and each one was a queen, A since {t looked like a splendid event A . 1 WE And did they come thru with the promises made? And did they put other events in the shade? And did they tive up to their wonderful rep, and give us a program with vigor ‘nd pep, including Jim Walker, the mossonger kid? THEY DID! And ns for the girls, were they all one could wish? Were Miss Clara Bushoe and Emelia Fisch and Margaret Stevenson all of them queens, with wit and Intelligence filling their beans—threo samples where wisdom and beauty conour? veh ei Y WERE! And will we remember the things wo were told? Will Seattle Spirit revive as of old? And will we, together, a tight-welded band, go preaching Seattle all over the land live up to the goal that our city has set?..... + YOU BRT! a 4 : ot Flint-Like “Carbon” All motor oils deposit some carbon- aceous residue called “carbon,” as all makers of oils know. But different oils deposit different kinds of ‘‘carbon.” A hard, gritty, flint-like “carbon’— hard enough to score your cylinders and scratch pistons, rings and bearings— causes these four motor troubles which you can eliminate. Due to the abrasive action of this flint- like “carbon,” cylinders and pistons are scratched and worn. Parts of this hard “carbon” become in- candescent and cause premature firing— pre-ignition results in “knocking.” Spark plugs become coated with the hard “carbon.” Thus the spark plug is short-circuited and the motor misses. The gritty accumulation around the valves prevents proper ecating, 80 a loss of compression results. You avoid such troubles by using an oil which leaves a friends ha me go bac When td be granted tablets andj HERE STAR ation wit certain w had been he had asd subjects hi penitentia: of these were Cana West. Indi He said wh the British em up the surveilland closes. thal the diseast ‘The rec office sha McNeil we 1922. Of t§ four to one to Ch men ha’ fsland duq was inca den Arch _ Avoid Motor Oils containing peraffin, asphalt or any other non advanced processes, designed to remove everything! the crude which has no }ubricating value. } soft, fluffy residue instead of the flint-like Fluffy, Light, Non-Clinging Aristo Motor Oil leaves but a little—half toa third as much of this other kind of residue. Soft and fluffy, most of it blows out with the exhaust. It has less tendency to cling than hard “carbon.” It is softer than cylinders, pistons, rings and valves so cannot score or wear them. It doesn’t become incandescent. missing. No grit around the valves so compression isn’t lost. Motors run thousands of miles farther with+ out cleaning. You save expense. Made by the lubrication engineers and spe cialists of the Union Oil Company, equil with every facility for the most exhaustive fe. eearch, this oil is a pure, sure lubricant as fine a8 knowledge and experience can make. ‘ Famous race drivers have tested it under cons ditions more severe than any that your car ever know. End “carbon” troubles with it. smoother-running, longer-lasting car. For sale at all first-class garages and service stations, {aeterate h ce initial Ends the Have @