- tfC ' ' <• ' » A RALLY T ID iy G S ,cri*p^tB>d,yftfterQ00Dte ■ . * ' - - "'Jt - '• '•.'iTWfcdfc < «t l.ity fu{ort' ANOTHER CHAMPION ' I Imagine laying 218 ton» of brick in lass than m hoars! That would mean about five carloads, almost 000 of them. Would you want to tackle it in a weak, u less . V tvoo a single day! • That is exactly what Indian Jim Brown did bricklaying contest in a midwestern city the other Think of the physical perfection necessary for a fe a t Think of the stamina, the Will power, naem to go through with it 'successfully. Visualise the hmm control necessary to keep arms, legs and back moving absolute precision so that there would be no lout dm no waste of effort. \ - In these, days of machinery such.® feat tykes on i mous proportions when one thinks of its being doe hand, piece by piece. Locking a t snch a pile of'Jr the average man would have been staggered, beetei fore He started. g Had Indian Jim lived back is olden dayrf, the stoi his feat would have been handed down from genen to generation. Certainly deeds of less magnitude been celebrated in story and song. Today, he is known merely as Indian Jim Brown bricklayer. Yet he is a champion* 4> o Btoal i-r e e M ob U m » g M ataa t h e Tear rv,’. . - w L o n d o n , 9e»t. 88— aotenee. Mowers are enormous ta d Mach of the vopataUoa re- damblos that of tropfeal region«. Thia strange valley pete IU individuality from hot * springs. AHhongh the rarrou&dtag moun- ONB W AT TO KAPPOnpM t j ? Following the death recently o f an inBnfanoe e^pen 1 Monday b third, with I f par at Hartford, Connecticut, the postmaster of the .city ta «•at. • . ‘ '»( vealed for the first time an interesting story. The man had •»■day, Taeaday, Wednesday THE PARK GARAGE AS wehderful an the Valley for twenty five years «made it a practice to inquireea^ l and Thursday, contribute between • ■ ’•- , — * "i . '* . .V - • emed to Scott and bto « * - THB RESURRECTION: — Jeaus said unto ber,"*l am the resur­ year before Christmas as to the number of letters is equipped to There to one Matoon to ovary) chanto, the-airplane waa eqoafly rection aad the Ute: he that belleveth to me, though ho were dead, packages addressed to relatives of immigrant« in the Old as wonderful to the natives to yet shall he live; And whoeoever llveth aad belleveth to me shall World, and held for insufficient postabe, and to make up The number of saloons de­ uevqrdle. John 11:38, S3. PRAYER. — Lord, we thank thee that we live, because thou this deficit so that they might be forwarded to their des­ creased by 57« during the year; llveot, tin a tio n « in time for Christmas. but the number of licensed clubfc in a jiffy No a spectacular practice to be sure, yet the happi­ tacreaaed by 318. Bring your oar in and avoid trouble with tbs Beer to far and away the fav­ ness it caused is hard to estimate in dollar* and eents. orite drink With a consumption WHAT IS EDUCATION? Certainly it was unique. ■ ■ Of 18.41 gallons during the yepr Children have been back in school only a few days. Probably the entire expense attached to it did not run The routine of enrollment in new classes is over. New over $50 each year, yet it probably caused mope Christmas .<» »te teachers and new work confront them on the opening of joy than many more costly gifts of millionaires. ’ It has Whl the new term. They have picked up the task of getting paralleled more closely, perhaps, by the habit some g"1* “ an education where they left it last Jnne. thoughtful citizens have of caring for letters address*}) that » What is an education f The parent, looking back on each year to Santa Claus. ' , and io his own school days and glancing at the array of new Who knows but that this man had himself some time * •“* 1 NO “VACATION" FOR text book» at the opening of the school year, is inclined been friendless and alone, far from the warming presenip *<* «»< to wonder. How much he learned has been of no practical of relatives and dear oneB, when a letter or a tiny g ift . THRIFTY DOLLARS use to him. How much, on the other hand, gathered out would have meant much to smooth out life ’s rough -gpot«. ~ of school during those impressionable years has been of In any case, he hit updn and developed a thought- r—— estimate benefit fulness for others which is rare to find, and which, no • . ' Don’t give your bank account a ’‘vaca­ **Jf,I had only known what I was going to d o,” he is doubt, gave him considerable personal satisfaction. inclined to say, “ how mrich better I might have equipped All of which goes to show that one doesn’t have to be tion.” Dollars working for yon an the for i£ ” j wealthy to bring happiness to others. After all, it is the I bank; work just as hard on hot days as on F But certain things do not depart. T he ability to small ¿hings, the thoughtful things, which count. destroys stndy, once acquired, is n o t quickly lost. Specific know cold days. ledge'goes if it is not used more or less constantly, but the FLIES power to dig into to subject, to gather its essentials and MOSQUITOS apply them practically, need never go if the student will keep his brain process in good working order by practice. MOTHS Part of what every child learns is this ability to The Citizens Bank of Ashland ANTS study, to make his memory work for him, to put his brain Small saddles Ashland, Oregon into harness. Another part is a broad survey of the world and girls to ride ROACHES as it is, some o f its sciences, a little of its historical and on, cheap. $9.00 and up. See to your plow* and harrow*, Etc. I and literary traditions. He learns that he .is a social be­ to be ready fdr the firm rain ing, that he is the heir to a vast heritage o f thought, and Poets aad fencing. I bare a fow W b |t* Sewing Macfltnm left that life is not simply a span of three score years and Simpson’s over. W ill close them oat for ten but a continuity of mental lives. Plato, Shakespeare, 388.08 ouch, at Hardware Goethe—there are hut stepping stones by which the Strange to any, big bores at-* thought o f mankind has crossed and is still crossing to ways bave amati bore Intellecta. PEIL’S CORNER Winchester Store what unknown heights. Lias need a lot ot words to . Edocatibn is worthless if it is viewed simply as a back them up; truth needs but means to personal advancement. It should not rest at NOW W FULL SWAY—00M B OT TODAY lew. ■ / » equipping the individual for a competitive existence. It —— o----- THIS IS YOUR ONE BIG OPPORTUNITY fails in anything but a narrow and selfish porpore if it ' Tboee wbo make the big mon­ GOLD PLATED does not early rouse the child’s mind to a sense 0 / the soli­ ey oa au M e* are rarely those GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR darity of humanity in this continuous intellectual life in­ wbo originated It. BRAND NEW with One Bottle herited from the ages. More than that, it should persuade Making a million to eaay him to take a part in it, to add his quota to the heaped up Lilac -Vegetal pared with keeping others treasures for his children and his children’s children to taking It away from you. Shaving Lotion Inherit - « mo value The American public school is perhaps man’s high­ When you paaa people going est effort so far to make a reality of human solidarity the other why, remember It may While on Display in Window s It recognises no classes, no division based on economic be you who la headed In the wrong direction. or social prestige. The humblest and the highest may meet here' and be friends. Hownnuch the public school Hee Heek says: “A fool la a W itlTOutflt Oreriatiflg has done outside of its curricuRun in fostering those toller wfioee Ignorance continuée at sturdy standards of democracy and free opportunity on to grow on him without any which the hope of America, dnd the world, is based no one interruption." B M M tttttttt'ttttU U can say. Education might be more direct and more efficient KOBB TRYING TO BE PRINCIPAL SILK POET if each pupil knew in advance just what he was going to do, to what station is life he was to be called. But part KOBB, Sept. 38— ;(U. P.J— Bench, of the adventure o f our American life is that no one knows Silk merchants her* are work­ AdfMf y