> A ASHLAND’ DAILY TIHIH.ÇS , , • . ,, . . . I . I I ’ . M « » i < apolli," who has boon V e n a li of U n . W. Ä. Eastman on the Boule vard. return«! to her home yss- ItrBff. Miss CtassboU sxpsete to ro ta n to Ashland tatet lad I Í 111Ifàè H 111 __ . •j Q» October 6, 1 W , th< land Voeh Day febeo* * t fohl ÄfuChttoa 4fbhU, < on P«fo,offIce as fiecopd Ckjsp bW l NMteT Price, Delivered là City / « Montb ... Months Months ... Y ear----- rso «Jo O y insertion a week TBo Insertions a week uy IO BDIllwu ...........d .......... Lwly insertion ........... »..— ........* Rates for Legal and M iscellaneous Advertising at insertion, per 8 point line ............ ........ .......—r™.™—: eh subsequent insertion, 8 point line .........— .—A.-V-4 •d of Thanl^ gY .r i- —I ----------- .--.—-..t-a-l, ituarles, per line ^ . y . . . ........ Mt* of tbe Hartman Syndicate, Incor King ¿a^es, Version of the porated W1M b* holtf at the office B«We te.ased as ^ te c t la all tbs e f fee eomppny, JS5 Ftesoer pnbMc school.. It pitted grade» and, tye sjtate course of Avenue, Altaian«!, Oregon, at mohín» later 'with mohtri» with an ah sure enrollment «tidy is followed 8:00 «¿clock p. m. Thursday. Of around 2*0, with the six B ad Map 27, 1P26. ded the second semester. . Hartman Syndicate, Inc. ■ In cfoslng a* open amejntlf Chai. D. Crouch, Pres. ¡was. held at the Methodist Epkst- copal church with seating room jet a premium and at which the more, than 860 pupils present pre- seated an hour af song, dramatis ation. readings and clast drill.. — T f/u » Ÿ o v URC4, à é ê â .H . m *tréu e z 1 - The Ashland W eekD sy Behoof THCRe LUA’S TöSTWÄWD A jot Religious Education wap es o r tetB R W B C lS » NAToRfez </H<CW A * « -0A3BD tablished adder*the direction of OM KALaMltUdfriOWS eQJALLY O M © R A «eO O S, the Ashland Evangelical Associa Fm«. IHWT/4NCÄ -m. ' tion of Religious Education nnder Its supervision and that ef the Ashland public school board and the Superintendent of Schools, George A. Briscoe. Five of the churches financed the school and the school board released the pupils, having per mission from parqpts or guard ians to attend, for one hour a week for seven months of the cur rent school year. Grades three, four, and five were used the first semester, with the six B added the second. The teacher was se lected by the Association with the approval of the school *board. Rooms in the Methodist and tN *TA w S ez O S K Ä C 0 O S A Congregational churches were M E S O P O T A M IA .IN S O M N IA furnished and the pwpOs from the above grades were conducted Y P S IL A N T I O S H K O S H <<»£ from and to their rooms by tbe teacher in charge. From aa initial enroBment ef 167, the first month. It was in creased until at the • close ol tho term the total earollMent has been around 800. The hlgheet enrollment from any one grade has been 34, (a five A) and Me , Few of us worry over how room seat forty pupils. The low çtuch money we make, but we all est percent from any room h»s korry over how much money we been «8 percent and the hlgheet the 100 peroent; two grades send ing their entire retssr—a six Band a 2. B. The majority av • It is easy to think of something erages from seventy-five to wen to dp after It is too late to do it. In the nineties. « lidsQ T he. attendance has been av reghfar as that of the different January postal receipts showed rooms and tbe interest teen. a 7 per cent gain. Have you paid Many of those not attending this year indicating their attention to your Christmae bills yet? attend next year. I The venture has proven so eue- ’ cessful that it ham been decided What’s in a name? Mussolini to employ the teeeher for Che fa« continues as the strong many cf tim*and to add two more grades Italy. to the original number having the work. * The budget has been raised and United States is so poor. Has the expenses paid. The coordin only 83 per cent of the world's ation of parent, teacher, public autos. schobl teacher, Association and school authorities has been ideal and Ashland feels justly proud of Chicago murderer has a Lard the success of the movement for time. Has to work so fast he ie Religious Education in the Week liable to shoot some of his many Day Bible school. Many informing things hdve frlonds. been brought to Ught during the year .The librarian reports mere Bible stories taken out than ewer before and a demand for oertaln collections insistent. Mere Bibles for children have bed» purchased and many children who do not attend Sunday school are enroll- 01 Everett True igle lnsertfon, . per I iMb liticai. Display, per inch X t¥* o r BtocKtfo&Mwr ¿NNUAIs HBSTINO t*«- itoeifiofdefr cineM fOUrtl ft*d IHM* möffittÖCMHM tfrttl I ......................................... . 8.76 m •¿heel. M o titt BpHytous .dr * DONATION» No donations to charities or otherwise will be made In advertls- um <* i°b printing — our contributions will be in cash. BEAUTY AND DUMBNESS J . • ’ * Said a feminine1 lecturer over the radio the other t “ No woman ean lie ‘beautiful but dumb’. For if she i^dumb, she will not be beautiful. Beauty is as much a p |rt of mind ajul soul as of body. ; “ Tbe really beautiful girl will reflect her cliarm in d |ily Christian living, im unselfishness, in intelligence and individualism as much as in sliapliness of figure or come liiess of |ier hair and »eves.” * Many, of us want to believe this. Moral and intel lectual beauty are doubtless preferable to mere physical beauty, by any really high standard. But when we con sult the standairds that seem to prevail today, what do w£ find! . . i ' . '-*r ‘ ",J J Take tbe rank arid file of “ prize beauties.” Take tifi? accepted beauty displayed on our stage—both “ legi timate” and movie—mòre lavishly and frankly than ever bìfore. Take our current magazine art and onr Sunday Mfjiplement portraits. Take our feminine advertising. Thousands of feet of beauty films, and how much in- tdligenee? Tons of fair “ models” iu-tbe flesh, and how n in y ounces of brains! Whole newsstands full of mag nane covers, and how many glimpses «of mind or soul! Miles at billboards« arid bow often a-ttàce of character! Ypt all these go by the namfe of “ beauty.” } The fact seems to be that the present generation s$ m s to have fallen into the worship of a cult of beauty tljat puts a premium on “ dumbness.” THE EXCAVATING HOUSE president, who wouldn’t help him when it came his turn. BY CHARLES F. STEWART NBA 8ervice Writer WASHINGTON— One hears the question raised, down in the Senate lobby, in the lest few days, If President Coolidge’s blood hasn’t been turning a Tittle too . cool recently for his own good. ’ .The taik began w ith the case of Senator McKinley of Illinois. Mc Kinley was very loyal to the ad ministration. When it came time for the Senate to v<He on Amer ican 1 entrance into the world court, the indications were that he ought to cast ■ negative bal lot, If he had a proper regard for his own political good health. The president, however, want ed an affirmative result, so Mc Kinley obediently voted affirma tively. Then came the Brookhart-Steck contest. If Senator Brookhart, an In surgent Republic won, then the field was clear for Senator Cum mins, a faithful administration man, to get a Republican renom ination in Iowa, for the coming autumn election. He. said he wanted the contest decided on ltd merits but he undoubtedly hoped Brookhart would be allowed. keep his seat. But the administration seems to have preferred Steel»’» conser vatile DgHSocrácy to ÉYookhart’f Insurgency. True, the president said he didn’t care, .either way. Nevertheless, the senatorial quartet who are recognized as preeminently the Coolidge mem bers of the upper house— Butler and Gillett of Massachusetts-and Dale and Green of Vermont—- were for Stock. . Ilere ip a tannliar apriog scene. Perhaps you can Seattle Now Has see it out of your window. 450,000 People In a vaerint lot several teams of horses are moving, Shortly afterward tbe moment aQ" day along, ..on a course that roughly corresjipnda to arrived for him to seek a renom- SEATTLE, Wash., May 6.— (U tlje orbit of a returning edinet. They are hauling scrap- lnatlon for th« Senate, from the P )— Seattle today-is a city cf <’CS. digging tbe cellar for a new house. Around and Illinois Republican electorate. 480,000 population, it was esti abound they gto, slowly and patiently, but steadily and, Backed by tho administration, he mated by C, A. Bross, Polk coun probably would have won It. but ty manager, who based his fig a f it apjiears sifter a dny or two- with remarkable effet’t- the admlnlstratioa kept strictly ures on a new census taken for a i^ness. Scraperfut after sctaperful of dirt is scooped" obt of the fight and McKinley city directory. Bros» said Seat fikmi tbe excavation, hauled up gUch a sloping incline lost, mainly because he had voted tle has increased by about 20,- a t were the* stones dragged by Egyptian slaves for the for the world court to please the 000 persons during the p itt jeaY( pyramids, and dumped at the other end of tbe ciroult, o £ a great *niound for future removal or in a depression , t«> make .another level lot. :« C' Wliat of it? Nothing, perhaps, except th There isfedill work for horses. t NA-M-NA —X A steam show! might do tliat job. A tnutyor might MEVER KHOVUEO da it. But-such machinery is for bigger contracts and O we . P a ir o ’ M -M sM - W f , I n£>re extensive eg«*aVhtions. For this lightei1- smaller F E E T COULO B in soff rum ' task tlie docile, flexible horse, representing a small in- H O L D SO MUCH T or B oll A l l vdsinn nt, is still It is one o f a few tashk kript for S E H ie A & H O U vnin T ér a n ' b in out of mai^/TTauggriats that in spite of tho edriquer- B e F O R f ! y O lD K l' v C nov N < A A -A A AH ! / i T T ll J is T HW? gaR engine,'fbe horse may remain with us yet a long OUT OURÜWAY . NON ! • The great increase in Pfe of motor can« anif puck? on. cdnqtry roads and «-itv streets, with eppsequept (lenian4 paved tborpiiglifares, has brought. about¡¿i, gro.wth vfJjBPtti’ly 150 per cent since 19.10’ in yardage <rf asphalt pwr»ig laid throughinit the country, approximately 140, OOttjXXl square vards liefn|Uaid last yeah 1 iIKv 11 ' y Bv W ill lam fi 1,O M n d lM ? kNHA-AAAB’/S e t - heb , -Hie. ßu H O ÿ f Q ü -r r f - q c u »vus» IT* â n o t h o w w e ll tH e o il? o u use lubricates during th e first fe w m iles it Is in th e crank case th a t counts. A n y good o il w ifi lubricata w ett a t first.,’T t’s th e c a d o f th e run that V e t-fc S -E B l J » CIYILlblR vulod through the section* ^of our ,ry which ] c out’ gold, silver copper. Iqa4 and ’•res, must etqicH for Alie men who invest their and thei tM- U produiqrig jtbese «M r e would be no civilization without such patera) n. No industries, in the rve greater encourageip* **t than do these bj a woman’s gentle liMiage'/’ nay PW«1 Action U V l OVER» prtsldcni of the Study d u b Is ■ -grin -sw n a w r o r w a? civic work.