^SjH«L A»N;P ¿, D A J L Y , T I D I N G S Published Every Evedlng T O tASHLAND F P Editor »ager Idltor Telephone 39 OFFICIAL CITY PAPER Entered at the Ashland, Oregon Doetofflce ns Second Class Mall Matter Subscription Price, Delivered in (Sty One Month _. Three Months Six Months ... One Y ear....... DI3PLAY ADVERTISING RATES Single Insertion, per inch .............. - ,........................... Yearly Contracta One insert ion a week Two insertions a week Dally insertion ..................................................... Rates for Legal and Miscellaneous Advertising First insertion, per 8 point line .....................................- ....... Each subsequent insertion, 8 point line ............................. Card of Thanks .......................... Obituaries, per l i n e ............... - ................................................. WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING “All future events, where an admission charge la made or a collection taken is Advertising." No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders. donations No donations to charities or otherwise will be made in advertis­ ing or job printing — our contributions will be In cash. NOVEMBER ft« 1088 z RULES FOR RIGHT LIVING:—Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and evil speaking be put away from you, with all malice: end be yet kind one to another, tender-hearted, for­ giving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you. Ephesians 4:31, 98. ' ' PRAYER: — Fill our hearts, O Lord, with thy love wherewith Thou hast loved us, and then we will think no evil. RACK MIXATION INOOURAGRD BY PROPAGANDISTS Those whd believe in race equality, as*a political institution, have a hard time to keep out of the discussion the question of social equality — the social equality which is incomplete until intermarriage takes place. Where populations*’are already mixed—as’ the In­ dians and whites and negroes are mixed in the United States—this question of political vs. social mixture must be met or dodged as we can. It would be impossible, be­ cause of both physicial and sentimental conditions, either to expel or to destroy the Indians from the United States. Equally it is faheifiri to imagine that negroes conld be killed off or destroyed. And equally, of course, it wogld be impossible for one or both of these races to destroy or to expel the whites. The chance for the Indians Was. lost when Columbus landed. ' > So that, in the United States, whatever instincts there are to prevent mixation, whether these instincts are shown by whites or darks, must be directed toward social efforts to make mixation repulsive. It cannot be attained by expulsion or destruction. » But this problem, with regard to people from other shores, now, is quite different. We can prevent mixation, if it is desirable, by stop­ ping immigration. We do not have, as yet, to first admit and then try to keep separate. •• We can understand those who believe so thoroughly in the brotherhood of man that they believe there should he no political interference with intermarriage. f And we can understand those who believe for some reason in the continued separateness of the races, and that this separation should be kept up even at the cost of legal restrictions or of extra legal force, such as lynch laws. * But we cannot respect the sort of namhypamby thinking that supposes that men and women of various races can mingle cm the streets and in the fields, in busi­ ness and the workaday world, through successive geu- .erations, without the-production of a mongrel race. --------------------------- A MARTYR TO amt Poor Remain lie Tiroff-Erte! He thought he could come to Hollywood, from Paris, and carry out his ideas of art! True, art uses as its materials the draperies of the human body. But tliat to him was the highest possible art. The human body is the most beautiful thing he can conceive of. And as all art consists in part concealing, part revealing the actualities of life, so he had trained for years n the ways of concealing and revealing the p er sons of beautiful women. . . . * ■ • n . K He had a great vogue, in Paris. But great as is Paris, great its opportunities, after all, Paris is poor in money, And lioraain De Tirtoff-Erte had heard that all the niohey in the world was flowing toward Hollywood. What bet­ ter place for him, where easy money wonld free him from the crimping of the‘means of a r t f _______ ____ So, when J k > got an qffer to go to Hollywood, lio was overcome with joy. He was much like the beautiful Wo­ man who sees in a rich man’s offer of marriage a chnoee to be more lieautiful to more people. But ho found, like­ wise, that the movies thought they had bought him. They had courted him and won him with money, and they pro­ ceeded to try to use him to make more money. He found that he was to be fitted into the conven* tional forma of accepted motion picture methods. He wonld clothe a farm girl as a farm girl should he clothed. But the star insisted on milking her cows in silk and lace. He proposed to make women of society appear as tlielr iostnets would cause them to gown themselves. Instead the stgrs who played these parts insisted on aping tin clothes with which they had heard the members of 4‘high society ” Would dress temselves. And so, Romain De Tirtoff-Erte leaves Hollywood in disgust. lie will go back to Paris, whert? they liavs less money, but more appreciation of the scope of an art mod- NOTICB IS HEREBY GIVEN to the legal voters of School Dis­ trict No. 6 of Jackson Comity. State of •Oregon, that aSCHOOL MEETING of said district wW be held at City » sit, Ashland, Ore., on the 17th day of November, 1196, at two o’clock In the afternoon for the purpose of dtecusetaf the budget hereinafter set opt with the levying board, and to rote ^n the propositien of levying a special dl,trThet total amount of money needed hr the said school district during the fiscal year beginning on June 30, 1926, and ending June SO, 1617, le estimated In the following budget and inoludea the amounts to be received from the county school fund, state School fund, elementary school Bind, special district tax, and all other moneys of the district. BUDGET Thursday, November B—Trinity “ ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES Guild— Parish House. PERSONAL SERVICE No. Salary IhrawYtoMF Friday, Norember « — •Fraternal 1100« 98000 Brotherhood Party — After 1. Superintendent .....— ................ I meeting. Busin« genlor High Friday, November S— W., F, M iunior High Society of the M E. church At Mrs. Harry Yeo’s, 2:00 p Friday, November «—Ladies Aid Presbyterian church. 2:00 p. m. At the church. Monday. November A—Ashland 4. Janitors .......................................... 2 1110 Afternoon, .Janitors ................ ....................... 2 1000 < Monday, November 6. Clsrk ft office expense 1 600 6. Stenographer ...— ............ .......... 1 750 Club— Evening, at Wagner. TOTAL - MATERIAL AND SUPPLIES., A - D. A. R. Luncheon— 1. Forniture (deakh, stoves, curtains,.etc.) .......J .On November the twentieth 2. Supplies I chalk, erasers, etc Laboratories, Primary, e t c . ----- -----~ ~ -----------------— Mount Ashland Chapter, D. A. R. ...... ...... ...................... . will have a “No Hostess” lunch­ 8. Library books 4. Flags, typewriters, replacement, maps, etc. eon at the Llthia Springs hotel. B. Equipment, near ......•...••..■■■fc.....*. Each daughter is privileged to 6. Jsuiter's suppliee _____ ____ ___________ 7 • Fuel bring one guest. The bubiness meeting will be 8. Light 9. Water ft Commencement............................. held in the ball room following 10. Postage, stationery and 'printing ............ luncheon, which Is at one o’clock. TOTAL Announcement la made thus early, that the date may be held MAINTENANCE AND REPAIRS 91830 All, «building and grounds . by the Chapter and •plana made accordingly. TOTAL . . a . , , . . . . a a . . . . . . . . . . a Through thoughtlessness the slight cough er cold of a child le often neglected a r t becomes ser­ ions. A few dpoeq of FOLEY’S HONEY AND TAR COMPOUND, at small cost, taken nt the onset « the col15000.00 9 800.00 800 91500 • 91600.00 TOTAL - „ > Total estimated amount of money for all purposes during the year ............. , ESTIMATED RECEIPTS From county school fund during the coming school year........... ................'............................... I (Use amount of county school fund received last year as.basis in making this estimate.) From state school fund dbrlng the coming school year ........ ................................................. (Use amount of state school fund received last year as basis In making this estimate.) From elementary school fund during the coming school year ........ .................................. Batlmate amount to be received from all other sources during the coming school year ............- ..................— ........................... — (Do not include the money to be received from the proposed tax.) THREE BIG * PRIZES V of First, Second and Third. Contest to .be held 994266.60 Saturday, November 7,1925 For Further Information Call Hamaker Motor Company 8ervice Worth While 1 Total estimated receipt«,' not Including propoeed tax ............. ................................. RECAPITULATION Total estimated expenses for- the year ........,...! Total estimated receipts not including proposed 9 27340.00 Balance, amount to be raised by district 906916.50 tax ................................ ,...z...^.................... The Indebtedness of District No. 6 is as follows: Total bonded indebtedness ............................. $45000.00 Total amount of ail indebtedness............„..|45000.0© Dated thia 4th day of November, 1035. Attest: , F. S. ENQLB, V. O. N. SMITH. District Clerk/., K Chairman Board of Directors. «{by WHY DOES rami ÍA ÍPUBLIC UTILITY H Tidings classified do the business ñeed T money ? A pubftc utility such as The California Oregon Power • » vom pany tunaanea an almost continuous opportunity tor the tavaatmeot of capital. That is a healthy sign of growth.1 - Mrs. Louie Dodge 1 W han you bufld a naw house and caO upoq the powef company So “turn on the lights,” the company immediately' begins to draw on n e w e g p /ta / So buy and install new pdas, MW wires, a transformer, a mater and other equipment. , honor Oonfsrred 1« a deserved re­ cognition of het effective work for the schools through that or­ ganisation. At the opening session, Tues­ day evening, M m . Dodge was pre­ siding officer and made one of the addresses. Ashland feels just­ ly proud of Its representative In the state council of the Parent- Right at the aSart, each new connection coats aa much as all it will ssrn for the next frvv or six years. Por every dollar of naw revenue each yegr, the company must invest at least five or afat dollars to new and Improved facilities to reach that detox*. And every so often, whan the growing market for power ragehes a certain point, it moat build additional ( Continued On Page Three) fashioned breakfast that Uford. never.f.Utag »t* hfftCtiMl ÍR eyery AnjeridUI id h has takan rag tor ggtotol aa ha aecurities grow to ratogk Or, ag « naw torearan you gga equally interested to tbs hlgbsr appraisal of (topeo Pretom d track as shown by tbs dividend rara of W nsw Jsáuu-*Í.JJ% n e f on tk» Swnrything TA« JVom« imp#«’1 THE CALIFORNIA ORBGON POWER COMPANY ? i - OFFICBtr -