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FRIDAY one) The Seattle Star ws: Was he trying to beat his way back thru the icy wastes on foot? Now Amundsen reappears, safely, with his expedition, little the worse for wear as a result of his hardships Amundsen, world’s man of four long, anxious weeks, mystery for beet *s again * just a plain human being. And the public, anxious only for the thrills, the suspense, the dramatic turns from Amundsen to follow the fortunes of mM Donald McMillan, who has just fared forth from Boston on another attempt to penetrate the northland, with the mystery still before him. : It’s the old story of a fickle public. Eyery person who has occupied the lime- * tight has found it so, The recent history making round the world flight by American aviators was only another demonstration of it. Cheered, i} feted and lionized in every country of the > globe while the flight was on! Columns ; devoted to them in American newspapers during the course of the race! | : But just as soon as American soil again was reached, the public applauded —and promptly forgot them. Forgot them so completely that, last week, when Eric | Nelson, one of the flyers came to Se- | attle, he completed his visit and was | | ready to get on the train to depart before anybody knew he was in town. Such is fame! Determined on woman's rights, Mrs. Margaret Bail, of Yonkers, N. Y., sues for divorce Mr. Ball won't buy false teeth for her Touched Where We Live 2 NCE MINISTER SOKOLNI- . KOFF, of Soviet Russia, smiles when | told that the nations may organize to cut * off soviet credit. Can’t be done without the United States, says Sokolnikoff, “and haven’t we but just bought $55,000,000 worth of U. S. cotton?” | How that dear Mr. Sokolnikoff under- | * stands us. We can’t conscientiously recog- | * nize Russia’s government and we are * bound to see blood every time Herr | Trotzky sneezes, but the sweet profit on | $55,000,000 worth of business—that’s an appeal to our hand and heart that other nations had better not monkey with. because | aes | Calvin Coolidge has reached that period in presi as dential life when a fellow can’t wipe the sweat off his brow without being accused of harboring third » term ambitions. When the Slide Comes HERE was something beautiful and 4 inspiring about the, rescue of Bob + Hill, the Baltic mine driller, and let us not miss it. hina Such Is Fame! | at. the mine shaft outh, And, thru TOUR w Roald Amundsen and | the long hours that were all night to him i ‘ hey the | Bob was cheerful ea vinen BE Ser Nonna Pitot Put yourself in his place, And many Spitzbergen a shed into north i man finds himself in a similar place land. They were und f North ometimes a man gives all that’s in Pol him to his vocation and there comes Bole. diately eves all over the world | ® landslide of all that he has built turned on Spitzbergen—and stayed there Losses, error weaknesses bury him As day after day passed, and no word deep, entomb him in da and friend came from flying expedition, the lessness, load him with what seems total RS lita tena id more anxious. Talk ruin, But, always for such there is tha a eee aie collet expeditions. Plans | Which Bob Hill still had down in hi for rescue were made, Some of them | black tomb—hoy _ibsolute trust in the were preposterous plans, such as sending Sate ates Aun in "the basic sympathy o a ae et Poke me eddy » Buy But, there was something else magnifi Bere Wh enliy he? Wa ay pat cent and beautiful that this husky miner gue. here was he? as he los of the Baltic mines had “T sure worried about Jim Munroe, I thought the was right on him.’ With Death’s claws at his throat, worry slide ing about his old pal! How many men, crowned with success, rich in all the good thir of life, have their chief worry in the fellow who may be deep beneath the slide? Hope! All may have it, even in their blackest hour. It may be grasped thru the slide of a mountain of rock and dirt or thru an avalanche of direct failures. And love for your fellow, Jim Munroe, is | that for which Christ taught and | suffered. When the slide comes to bury you in darkness, lonelin and oppression of ruin of earnest effort, as that slide comes to most men and women, sometime, re member Bob Hill in his tomb, with hope steadfast and turning his thought toward somebody els If you will, a mountain cannot hold you down. There’s more than a miner saved, in this rescue of Bob Hill. With him, from his dark hole in the depths, is dug a beautiful lesson of faith and brother- hood that’s good for everybody Columbus, Ohio, can't be up on the qui vive, Her r has. had to advise that pedestrians “step twice as fast,” as a traffic improvement, In most cities running as If the Old Boy were close behind is the improvement | Lady, Beware! ADY DARWIN, daughter- | the illustrious tartling view She ginning to make monke The possibility that, | from, man is about to ascend to gorilla, is enough to discourage strongest among us. Also, Lady Darwi opinion is positive insulting. There's nothing to do but call her attention to the certainty that the general term'“‘man” applies to woman as well. If they convict man of apehood, no woman is going to | be permitted to go around bragging about | her rich ancestry Gosh! Mow rages! IL, police chief orders that ther ing of false intolerance Crawlordsvitie, be no more wash. | teeth in public drinking fountains. Private Contracts | HEN private contractors take the Chicago-New York air business, they will get 16 cent ounce on what they carry. After only eight weeks of operation, Henry Ford is carying air cargoes from Detroit to Chicago at an expenditure of 1 cent per ounce. peep ; gre 2 ‘ontra s the thing—for pri- : For 56 hours Bob was buried 200 feet Ey tir : te act is the thing—for: pri +4 7 vate contractors. % : underground. No light, or water, or food, had cll Ach a + or companionship. big strong fellow Te ' Bn th oe ne big strong fello ’ Another new, star found in the southern sky. A ‘ in the prime of life, entombed, with a few more and ‘we'll have as many as Hollywood, ? wife and three children in terror up | and they'll twinkle longer | a : \| P 2 Answers to Your Questions PP | ——<—— —_Y ‘ @ For what is the reign of Em- ,S———————_ 1 “When Thie Cruel War te # anuel 1. of Portugal best known?!! YOU can get an answer to ver,” by Charles C. Sawyer A. Emanuel J., styled The Great, any question of fact or in- |} CAGES or “The Fortunate,” succeeded John\ | formation by writing The Seat- | ; It, in 1495. His reign was the) | tle Star Question Editor, 1322 | i golden age of Portugal, He pre-|| New York ave, ashington, | pared the code of laws which bears| | D. C., and inclosing 2 cents in | cer Power Desire tis name, and made his court a| | loose stamps for reply No | Faith Power.” These center of chivatry, art and science.| | Medical, legal or marital ad- | | icore att published in 1922 Vaato da Gaina’s voyage round the| | ¥ice. Personal replies, confi- | eer Cape, Cabral’s discovery of Brazil, | Geatial. All letters must be] ) What is the » aaah to and the expeditions under Albu-| | ned. | |use in ‘speaking the sun and querque and others, encouraged by | * Tee ae ee | moon? pa Emanucl, went far to make Portu-livere afterwards separated The A, The correct pronoun in English gal the first naval power of Europe\army appropriation bill of 1 had' for the sun and moon is technically and the center of the commerce of\a rider attached prohibiting the | “it.” but very often the pronoun ) thejacorta. employment of federal troops for|“she” is used for the moon, and * 246 the enforcement of territorial law| “he” for the sun, particularly in Q What is meant by a “rider’’ to| in Kansas. literature a bil? | cee OS A. A provision added to the bill} @Q What is the total Jewish popu some words in foreign to the bill itself, being/lation of the world? meaning “to a merged with important bills by a A. It is estimated at 15,518,798 Pleasure make beau F aninority, making the passage of the lina tiful DU with the rider or amendment] @. What were some of the best, 0° Wentkadestha” means to give the condition of its passage in any| known songs of the civil war? Pleasure and “Wiyostha” means to shape. Miders are sometimes added A. “Battle Cry of Freedom,” by| "7K Beant fihe ote fo prevent in @ measure the ex-|George F. Root; “Rattle Hymn of ceutive’s veto, the important Billlthe Republic,’ by Julia Ward| %& How are violets propagated? carrying the rider thril, They are| Howe The Bluc and the Gray?’ A. One of the most common ways mostly attached to appropriation| by Francia Finch; “Dixie,” by Al-\ 1% 1? the crown, This is 4 Wills. The first usc, of national im-\ bert Pike; “Just Before the Rattle | Witally done in the apring after the portance, was the joining in 1820! Mother,” by George F. Root:March Aided it | season te over.; The plant} Sof the» bill for the admission of\ing Thru Georgia,” by Henry C.\% lited and the soil shaken off Maine (o that permitting slavery in| Work; “Maryland, My Maryland,”|@%@ then tt may be readily pulled Misaourt, 10 as to compel the ac-\by Joseph It. Randal apart, and the amail plants cither| ceptance of both or neither. TheyTramp, Tramp, by George I “Tromp, : act in beds or flats, Violets are not| soed. | grown from } ay ey) | Q. Who led and who came second : ; \ in the major baseball leagues in . Coch: Ons the number of home ryns in the ie DAILY 1924 season? ) Pa \, Babe Ruth led the major Ieagues with a «total of 46. Joe} ° baseball, no matter how hot. Keep out of the sun? Why, It's alll prooklyn Nattonala’ were ted fort tommyrot, You did the same thing when « kid, like aadmot iccond place, each’ having #7 home| Wee Willie admits ho'#h pitctitr supreme, Ie also admits he's the head! puna fo his eredit a of the team. Ho'll tell ya quite frankly hs got lots of steam. When | batters strike out you should nee the kid beam ei \ Three men likely face him each inning; no more them of chances to score He's baseball enthusiast Riera cine aes ite f A Thought Kkriows what each move and each action in for sy ee " ait But, say, let Wee Willle come up to the bat and, frankly, he doesn't Ho that hasteth (o be ric | Know where he is at. He swings very wild and his efforts fall flat, He hath an evil eye and considereth — | vhortly returns and sits down where he sat ? i Lat: “How come; Mister Pitcher?” I asked(lilm one day. “When batting, your| NOt Wat poverty shall | cone worth to your team fades aw “tm takin’ each thing,” he replied, “in| UPON bn—t shh al A | its turn, and battin’s one thing that I've still got to learn. The moral, 1 guess, 1s, you're do them up right, as they come i (Copyright, 1925, for The Star), mart, and not dumb, to take ° things and| POVERTY treads close upon | the heels of and weallhe-Kivarol, great un expected THE RUSTLER. ‘What's the Farmer Thinking About?) * This Is What One Wrote to the Editor of The Star! EE 8 BY wiLuaMs|BRYANISM MENACE ——| |TO CHURCH; SCIENGE if YES SUH-IM FROM 1H’ HEALTH Y * | C A N ( vA RE FOR ITSEL® 4} ~=OEPARTMENT, AN I Gor SsTRicH | . aa | fil 4 4 feet 77,/| ORODVUHAS “T'GIT S& SAMPLES | iTS ALL OFF \ PE, " BY CHE TER H. RO VELL ne g O YORE COOKIN’ “T' BE ANALYZED || Boy a! bE \5 ate O' \ best meng f thi news Bt is is “not ZZ PURE FOOD LAWS, I SPECT ONE : py Bp meee potas ace in modern life re PIE AN A DOZEN DOUGHNUTS Orit pros d it in i Mi LL BE ABooT ENUF Sedat ‘het modern man hé treat to the water where knowledge } not penetrated, and the educated would be left to fifid satis- the religious instinct outside forces of re- monopolize » custody faction of the church, if at all. The they action, even if cannot religion, might of its traditional institutions and estab- ished equipment This is doubtle the reason why s0 I defense of y clergymen are knowledge springing to the Rowell 9 uiled in the ostensible name of religion. They may be no more interested than other cltizer | Most of us p ally are nov b i. but t re t 6 ’ rtue of med ‘ 4 Baas ¢ , Pa mill ; ‘ rets of the We Need Science ~ calitiedines For Existence that vision could be much | if “ re ” A mod sake SRY y t bly t n day, if t an impose the Jim! deprived of 1 hich ow of past on the know estors, citing Moses, Id of the prese persecuted as witch It most, segregate those unfamiliar with that owled, to live in our time What Folks ‘ e mental life of another age. Editor 1 ta f secing | aps I exaggerate | . | a 1 mapoee every Sunday =e om, Are Saying | (SMOKING ROOM $300,000,000 Is Annual ners pa | a: BY LEO R. SACK BE ABR Rr or aety Se ee aes Mavis toe 4 A eae se meecn't 7 St Sciences —_ _WM, DENT | Hae Hear me and buy exte na of firms wide or a As 1 an completed ¥ t " i fund st K, ¢ k in T ™ ‘ mH. a: rea P tr t 18 frauding a wh t argeh 4 f « of Onbh ¢ of fin thru the of merchandise money ur taining Mr. Fixit of The Star Undertakes Here to Remedy Your Troubles if of Public Interest u : eh | Mr. Fixit; What is the prop called me down waa very em er food for a baby chipmun | barrassing. I have heard of his _ @ and what is the proper caret treating others the same way. y that the chipmunk may not die, | WA. &, ; OM. F No d necessary to * Kuudson, of t vd make frequent changes in the 1 zoo, says that cream from | traffic laws to meet changing cows’ milk is the proper food. | conditions. And of course, the life of a traffic cop is not a bed | until it will eat, and keep it-in | of roses it Is no wonder that a nest where it will keep warm, | he has occasion to get cross bars } many times during the day, but Mr. Fleit: Opposite the hotet | 4f ho can not restrain himself there I live, there ta a sorvice and be fairly decent to all, he is station. Every morning tie | Not the man for the job. Your man tho runa it sits in his car | letter, without your name, has | heen forwarded to the traffic de with a field giass and watches the front rooms of the hotel, | partment We must pult down all blinds nip at and dress by artificlat light Mr, Fiett: 1 was considering WPhal caw bay down. WhOut. thd the purchase of @ home in the M88 1 north end of the elty, which is ; supposed to be a restricted dis Tf, YOUN mre Mure Of yous, Lacie trict, but gave it up when I und will report this to the chie found that a building there was of police, Lean Bethe nd loca being used as @ public dancing Stott) ne vail mele abut estoy tO achool. 1 understood that the thia Or if you would wait on this man during his busy hour permit for this place was taken and ask him in the presence of | OM! @ wear or tivo ago: for a his customers to discontinue the | Fenderice, ditte teas later: made practice, it ought to got results, | {nfo this school, What 1 t0ish It neither of these work, pull | [0 Know ia what ts to hinder down the curtains, and forgot | tla from being done in any there s mich a man atill living, | Part of the otty in. reatricted ¢ 68.8 districts? Taey a Mr, Piet: What can be done Thin igo matter for the resi about my netghbor'a dog that'is dents of any restricted district to tied up, and howls from morns | handle, A report to tha building ing wnittl 11 o'clock at night? department that a permit grant AD) ed for one type of house wa Call the Murnane society, Gar being used for another, should field $100, and report theanattor bo suffidient, in the event it got Chis should end your trouble > DY the building inspector, As to i tal tho particular ease you mention, Mr, Ptaoit Why do they an action at law might bo nece change the traffic lawa ao often, | sary to settle this, and why do some of the traffia | copa take delight in “bawling THE SPANISH floet in tight out" any one who ignorantly | ing sharks that Kt off sardines, offendar 1 had been out af. tire but Seeretary Wilbur think clly for two months, and did that setting our navy to flght nol know that 1 waa making a ing rum runners that kill off blunder The way the officer Americans wouldn't be etiquette. Kelly ever built | | WheNew Kelly Way } The drawing shows how the bead of the new Kelly Cord is formed by en- closing strips of braided wire in the loops of the cord fabric, The cords which form these loops are continuous from the beginning of the inmost ply to tothe end of the outer. The whole tire thus has a flexibility and ‘‘give” that is necessarily lacking in tires made by | the ordinary method. ELLY Flexible Cords are big- mileage high pressure tires ° that are almost as easy riding as balloons. The reason they are som comfortable to tide onis that the in- tegral bead construction, used only by Kelly, not only anchors the bead firmly in place but also permits a flexibility of carcass and tread im- possible in the case of a tire built by the ordinary method. For sale by all Kelly-Springfield dealers KELLY-SPRINGEIELD TIRE CO, SACTORY BRANCH 412 Ninth Ave, Seattle | BRAIDED WIRE ISSVIATED IN RUBBER. Distributors of Kelly-Springfield ‘Tires and Tubes RUBBER SERVICE Co. Geo, C, Vogt, Mgr, Wast Pike at Bleventh Phone: BA st-0606 | |