M Ito: ...- I-call! tau-u 4-.. 4 .. war not CONSOLIDATI-2? of on» Ashland dis- trict at the high school and grade 3;-no-.,.1, the plan would be attempt- ed in more communitit-as. The Ash-~ }‘nd.¢hou] 33-gfgm is said to loci aw q,-qug] to any other in lloon: (‘oun- ty. Since tlix co-operation of the! “fa,” of up, ptople of Ashl3nd,t several tural schools have cloned as; the attendance did not justify a- teacher. .Tl1l5 joining tuszvther of W’; 5., {areas ;.id¢?.l greatly in the develop-'_ l2l'.‘:‘.’. of a better teaching staff, and the procuring of athletic train-.-rm! The ma ey, previously divided: gmoug many rmnll rural :'t'lmul."~ 33'! now nixed in one bit? l-W.l‘«‘~‘i- Am‘; in the laztt election the approval of; 1),; 1.. opt.» wax 2-hum: l'._\‘ lllt"F(‘3l1Tllllf’ ‘the annual tax rate fol‘ sclnml pur-‘; po:-es. A to Broadway in being go.-our-..'ll;' u.)- oerved. The public have been ral- uratcd that such 3! lav: is in cfiec-1.1 It has alr.'ady cost some persons in loarn that then.» was such a law. ..- . .._,_... _..._..-4..o....._ __.....,-........ ..__.4 ..._.. . ,..,-»-—.—......>......._......-. ...__,, _ . a_ ‘ _ 1“ .’§"7’.”‘. \ ;_ : CA.» ' ‘ VA: -1. i“ -. _ * "_".:.¢w5. j ' ‘J . ‘-15-. -. , . ‘ .: .- - u.«_.e I - t ‘ . -~ ’ " ,_ our 1 Pr“--°.. _ ‘ * ..o‘oo .....$L. 885 [LC .IIll IOuIfl»).... .35 110 LC" ootnflo Ouch ....t.It 350 C30 __,.,.__...._.g—..-——-o——---~e~—--'—"""-""" o coloeoouooooooooo-00000909 . —._..<—... —._—n-— It sglls that with the success at Tr:.nsp.ation lihft also been fur-i hisbed in some of the di:atr.ct-.. Thiw 1 I gives the children an op;>»rtunx*_v: to corm to the better :-.:ha..l own: if they 121". re‘.-oral mile:' from tlr‘ building. 'ri‘.Q‘i't‘ )5. no doubt tlw... the cu.-opt-native :.;.'-.-tun hz‘. its zzd-V; ‘ . vantages, and people are tr mint’. tug. . realize this fact more (".‘crj.' d.'n;.‘. A \'t0l..\'!'Et) sror 1..t\v i Re-::'rtly the ‘City fkzuncil pa: ("ii an ordinzinc; which l‘."t|'.:i:‘.'.'~. that all motor car: cotnc to a complete step bcfm‘: cnts-sing: .’.'lx.‘.f: Sitrr-ct from C"m::d‘r ‘ml S‘|"’k°"l"“"‘ “'3'” mm’ careful motorist; appreciate the ef-'3 forts of the official: in p:t:'.;'.in5: ur- dir.:tncc;- that are intcn~.l-:.z to mnko-4 driving .~af-r. 113- atop lnur 3-_-ore-rnim: -' nlt':.nu-E I Bu: the stop law on Ninth Street in not ro generally oln\erved.. Nu- merxux motorists enter Ninth Str-;ct daily at this intersection without. ‘ making an attempt to stop. A fcwi fines might relieve the condition some but some method must be used to acquaint the motoring public: thnt such a law is in existence. A Sznp laws are good. when ob- urved. But if not observed by all motorists they are likely to de- feat the purpose for which thcyi exists depend upon motorists to ~,atop. The idea of the law is‘ to let: all people know what an approach i in: car intends to do. No serious omidents have yet occurred at this- ' '.iu\er-section but when some ob:;:-rve ‘the lav: and some don't it makes th. situation worse than it originally van. The law is on the statute books and violators of this law should be made to observe it. AJ-‘OREIVGN SQVICE SCHOOL Amcricanfiiplomats of the future will b.- thoroughly trained. At last. that is the aim of President lcolidgc in establishing a_ foreign service school. to train the person- url of the diplomatic corps. America's diplomat‘: service to- thy is a service which has just grown to meet the increasing‘ needs of the nation. Civil service and merit appointments are nmv requi- Iitrs of our domestic‘ services. but -the foreign service has until re- cently been permitted to-remain un- systcmat The fint clnsl in the nevi; school has twenty-five‘ students, the sur- vivors of exammations which 200 took. They will have a year of instruction’ and other tcsti before ‘receiving. their first foreign os- algnment. Even this will be pro- "‘ battouary, contingent upon their ' 5-'-o;:t::ph_\' will 21llU\\' that ht‘ ha < plum and citzmieters. when we think I Q ‘. v ti 3 §’ 3 E digging into all fields of human endeavor and ull_types of the hu- man mind. llis vocabulary was an immtu:.e one, pcrhnpl the largest ever pusscsagd by any one man. For thi.: rt-axon he found no difficulty g_'i'.'ing txpression to the most .1 llrutv nuances of thought. "i'l=.c-re have been literary critics who have indicted that Shakespeare P‘ v:u:; in szcme period of his life a -.:lilu:~, f.-r “The Tempest" is filled with technical nautical terms which. ~-... tiny :‘.:_v, only a rzailor would lu:'.'-- ma ztcry over. There are oth- «~:':; urlio :r(-it to show that he \v.1;1 :1 imtani:-t because he named nearly -.1-ry l:nov.'u form of plant life in his '.t'r.2ln5::. Still other: believe l:r- could have b:~.—n nothing: but :2 ;.-hy:.i.‘E::r.. for H: knovvledgre of an- :.;..:..;.-. u-~ it-fltctcd in he; plays, ‘V1; 3; ti tp 1-In‘. llu: $llZLlfl'Z.']'l(‘3l'¢ was none of ti-.: 1-. then :1 casual glance at his d t‘.. time to (lt'\'ul:- to :1 tletall-d Study «f tln--'.« ):rut'u.~.v.;~ior.s. lie was first 1' all an i:..1-.::;triuu.'< and often hun- rry ;.l:tyvn-igthtz he wax a worried, 'lic.'mie;tl nianztrvr: h— was, in car.- rt’ :1 «lire need, an actor. When we ldt: to set-luxl:: himself and spend months p.mc‘e'.ing over his plays, of tin: jet-ring and igtnurant crowd uhich filled the pits of the l-Ili'I:*.- ncthan thatcrs: when we consider that the man woe: always forced la: vgrite at white l:t":'.t in order to turn his bread for th: next meal-then his xnnius looms latter than ever. Out of this rapid and often un- revised writing came such charac- ttrs as llnmlet, Lear :~.nd'f);hello-”— . oharact:r:. that are as ren: ntie 7.:--l convincing today as they Wt‘?! w:;t~n created 300 years ago. Perhaps the world will never see :‘.n0‘.h:r intellect comparable to that of Shakespeare. Certainly his light will not be com,-letely dimmed so long as human beings are able to read and think. - ._...._.._ The my at Ellis Island now is- “The Germans Are Coming." The German theatrical seasm may open without stars. it it'll} also open without an audience :: Another aristocrat has tired of the European type of adulation: Sn he is coming: to‘ America this sum- mer. - ' Do those men who are the cham- pion needleworkers of London ever make their wives help with the’ dizhes? We see another argument for liv- ing in a small town when we real that Chicago policemen are ordered to shoot to kill. The shoe bill for the United States is $l.500.000,000 a year. That is a lot. of money to spend to keep the country on its feet. »'1'hey any that In great saving is being made now_that they can man- ufacture print-paper out of stun-.v. But considering some of the things that are printed, are uncertain about the saving. ' ' ' ; G Wasliinzztnn dispatch:-5 are t?”~\'.‘l'?tl'lt(-ht of Russia. The tlisagtv-.d in fact. they didn‘: believe it. The letter the hei 1 lndeed. or else t hemselvcs. don't swallow whole the stu he newspapers print must expcc o to prison for the rest of ln l THECALE-;131—)_A_1?_'] . ’ ‘ uh-, 7-- loom. "Apr! £7.10 p.m.—"lo hdlo."otuo- op:-votu.vrtllhegtvcuotthr8t.t-plus: in Africa. and its health .tn:l relief , Institu- tions in many distracted realms. Last year the council settled a dispute that had nearly led to war rkey and Britain con- may accept l.'.c decision Jfit court -—b<»caus:- their tempers had C0.ll¢‘d and they saw that compronihze paid hc'.te:- than war. In a world torn by and criss- t hntrerls, Ln.-ning. ind Punishment. 1:: Sun. soldiers in the arm "if the l?:~.ite.i Stat!-~'. anl stationed} have . just trnced to prison for forty offenzte t‘.’l'lli2tf! :1 letter to tlv (.*C'll'.\l' of The ne-.c.~.p.1per in question had taking cer- xvhn t printed in a newspaper. Up to this time it had not l)(‘£'l‘- generally lgnown that it was ‘..-zwful even for :1 soldie 8 is one of the prime articles in the But army men, believe. They keep their Th Which, somehow. seems a high cc to pay even for so great a c. he Divorce Mill. 1)‘ z is -far ahead of Christian America in uphol divorces were granted in the United ne divorce to ev- 1905 only nt, that in eighteen years the num isen by ne 100,000. or more than 140 per cent, while the population increased only glance at Advocate (Methodist). tells us.t.hat " g in the as fast ‘as the population. For more r divorces have ry car more three times as’ fast as the popula- tion. and the end is not yet in sight. in _l922 the number of divorcu was gone divorce to every 7.6 s for the whole country. Iony states, however, have a much higher divorce rate -than the coun- 'ii ''-‘’,.-.....5..’ :.o.-- 53.5.5" #3. 3 V. ‘ ’t-.x° ca A of 4 nditaon of our American family lie. Can ‘e we.‘ '0' the mmnuag thei u“The religion of Jesus is charac- ' ' which when America has more divorce: in‘; l°"§‘d by m’ “nun! "hm _ .‘ dnxk ,~r in wowmm to M ll. gives to the child and to the fun population than has such pagan country as Japan, and more than all the rest of the Christian civili nations put together! Them 1'' American family and home life ainea. It has nap S9!) - y wrol-~ unbelief. 'l‘h:- ."~’.‘iil'llL‘(’S. therefore. are a di- manxty. We need more Chriastianfiy rec: punicl-.ment fur venturing to ' ° u r to read spirit of skepticism .- stuff the newspapers print I}! .__..t. v.._..,- ._____.__... -- 1§qruu,oa_ataNrty: in am. mmdmamuwdmgfgvrfit d _ V In H H m,m,, ,,,_ to 134k’? vrhilc- ml 0! f°1'W“°'* materi lstic interests. . t l ._ ufontinued from page three-J .Iourna1i.s-in Graduate ‘We to’ replace our poem I we-~ °‘*=..:'*:‘.*'*::°-M.-.:.t‘~.':.:*. Evan-pngoa_-JoponI:o:lin1919 a”7”"‘°'"' “V ‘ 1,.“ am,” nu lb,‘ 3,, Unwemhomo life, with a more socialized Staten. fur lthod cndy one divorce} Ch"l“'l”‘ “l"““’d' go ",3 cum ,,m1.1u,,,_ will place the child at the center of ad. the home and the family. and we { will try to safeguard the Rhlld and j the home life in every way from 321- . - n and al ‘ If we do so. we lly. It is itself based upon the some ..__t.‘- ' ~ ' . - ' . . o .‘ pa 1 11 r -A tutoto ntousrnr on cam 10 noonotuc or Large Firms Hut lmpnvemuItI- floral Scull Compulu ’ 30 By Consolidated Prom. NEW YORK.——Amerim'o newest Inn A ‘no § values as an ideal home life. These l"""""'l"“ i" values, such as love. service. uncri- ‘ fleets, and brotherhood, can scarce about that there in sometling radi-1 “"""‘ '“' P‘l:’~°"".f“t’,‘w"“,’ ,2"-‘,'.“°:,‘§ cally wrong about our home and! of men ‘it 1''’ i‘“ U 2 ‘thvuule. 0,, family life. Yet divorce is only 3: “:1: hm’; ‘re zmdufhencénuf M, of- symptom and not a cause. nor to it,’ 3 m. pet-laps. the greatest evil connected . . up ',with our family life. We cannot‘ um" do” modtm safely conclude. however. that 31;; "HM; mu‘. and ,,,,.,,.,..,._,..,;,;,,,," '*°°'"*"¢ M" “Winn We *9: ?.§’.§.§§l'i‘.§’.§“..°.'.‘.'§‘i‘..‘2L‘."’£.il‘§.'iI7"i.¢" vorce is increasing among us four‘ - -_ ' . and five times as fist as our popu-i :15! Modern ‘on? :.?,(hm$;,,.u:R ‘w lotion. It is surely time that the “e um’ n . " " Church turn its attention to Amcri- . , - - , ., , can home ‘if’... ; primary relations of lift rt pr: some It is sufficient to state. u-ithout' by the system of concrete values not it- oci gree . A l men cannot be soc-inbred lfl °.lt.ISv d the home and by the family; if the ideals of love, l0)’nlll'. M‘Y'\‘l(‘€‘. “““i"3, the °l’°"‘t' lh” h‘""*‘-5 sacrifice, forgiveness, and concilia- "' "W9 l’ ill‘ ‘hid. tion cannot control our l)cl1a'.‘:m- in b“"" °{ “D clvmfillz u'“d“-5°“ the family and in the home, then it Wm _1l}!t the f-mils’ i=*— is idle t.. think out they will he ' “ll”: "ad!" °f "“""7-“u°"‘r 07 "ml" found pi-ncticrll in the larger rela- ahty. and even of rclisrion-" "v tion: of life. The indispensable pre- then, the family becomes irreligious lgminar}. 1-0, ml‘ unchrmfianv "l" “'l‘°“ 5°"l“l can society is to Christianizc the life i:- bound to become lil:ewi!_1'. {;m,;)_\- “.1 ti... 1..."-_, m,-. of m, d " l"""‘i""'"‘ “‘“l75"°~“ “'°Vl‘°l' American people. Until'the Christ- i" N"" Y_""l‘_Cl‘5' t‘‘“’‘ l’'- E“V°"’°‘l zzpirit dwells in the American home, that notion: rmrrrm-s him so much .=t will not aw.-it in America." as the pagan character of the family ______. ..-_ -..-... . an ideal of in-; and the home life nf the present, 1 “lie finds it mate-rialistic, self-seelv _ inc. dominated by busine.-is and ‘commercial interests. and ::tll)0r(li- noted to everything except the we}. 7"" 0‘ ll“"""‘il)'-" Small umntler. with :1 luncheon today in honor then. that the prevalence of crime ..f 3153.. Jennie 130.-tmdn,-, . in the United States is beyond any- ‘ thing velgich the police can cont.-..1 . v- ‘ irnit. R Dr. l".llo\'t-od‘s3t-4 ll. _ _-I ‘ , _ “The chief thing wrong with Iunnhd Lab’ eel‘ Amtrican family life is the unsu. ciulixcd individualism of our stand- ards with n.{(.n,nu. .0 manmge and ~it'l’. Ruth, to Bond Delbert Jones me family. “'0 kn“, made am“, on April l5 at \Vit:hita. Kan. M things matters of individual eonven- cl‘ " _ ;,.m.‘.' ;;,stud 0; man,” coficerning -.~t' .lu1xrnnl|.==m. the W,"-“.9 uf huma,m’.' and of mu Mr. a-ml Mrs. Jones will be hikhcest ideals and values. We have 1 tried to build the family lift‘ upon Wu “'-(‘hm eaclfishness, and we have failed. The family life must be centered in the Child. for the child stands for int- (‘hristianizing Ameri- I90E71§TY"l _..———. .\ir. and Mrs. F. ll. Butler an- nounce the ntarringze of the ir ‘daugh- 2" 9‘ in :1 grtuduztt: of the School at home May 15 at ‘I312 Perry Ave- Womcifs Clubs ‘ all. to make a proper 3.. N. c,,|,,.,... ,, m..,..,,, if” "” "*““l- “'9 "'“ ‘Mn 0 ‘ xv:v«.heltl inst we.-1. :it"Rend mu tion world Just as soon.»-all clfil- and 1),-_ J_ g_ Ankeney tamed d""_‘ ha“? 9‘? °Pl‘°"mml5' t0 W9“ “Color as Used in Modern Paint- up in a Christian atmosphere. It is ;,,,,_-' superstition to think that it is liu- ;n'(iy-‘Sting by M, exhibit of mam- mun nature which makes us so often i ' b('l‘.::\'(‘ like pagans. a superstition “‘h'°h- Wt‘ hm‘? 509"» science has Club will be held May 1:: and will. thOTOUpl‘.ly exploded. "9 b(‘l18l'9 1,; dgg-otpd t0 bu5ineg5_ A ikc pagans, it is only because u5'e - - ——+ -~——— Ermv up in an atmosphere in which P1''Tl' 51355 ll‘ H°“°'°d- pagan traditions. such as self-inter- P¢’T<‘!~' K1855 W“ "‘°9ml.\‘ est. pc\v.er and pleasure as the ends mi! of life, are tolerated. And the home W‘-‘t atmosphere is. as we _ ’ 3°‘ Y, Tie Fortnightly Club will not to m‘“‘'‘' m“""3¢° “la the hmne _ '9 hold its regular meeting on \’t’ednea- '1“? WW‘ fur adults. butrabove clay. because ,0: the Minneapolis ‘"930 ' OH is. The next meeting of Fortnightly do n member of the Public Own-I hip League of America and the,‘ have seen, the International City Managers‘ Asso- chief part of the social atmosphere-riution. ding the ge relation, gathered by the Census Bureau and cited by so- In Japan the grist of ___.:_..._.-_ - -»_-.-...-_....__._- —~—_2__.... (A Recent Letter From Dr. E. R. Hedrick to “23” Transfer and Storage Company) Mr. W. R. Hulett. Business Manager. “" " Transfer and Storage ('on1]‘.:u\_\', 10 N. Tenth Street. Columbia. Missouri. My dear Mr. Hulett: I have been meaning to write to you for some time concerning the shipment of my household goods from Columbia to Los Angeles. and I am reminded of my de- lay in doing so by the receipt of your letter of April 3. I am sure that you will understand that this is due only to the fact that I have been very busy with the duties of my new life here. 7 Let me say now that the furniture came through in very good shape and that the packing which you had done was praised by the men who handled the shipment at this end. While it is true that one or two articles which contained glass parts were slightly damaged and while there were minor scratches on some of the wooden places. there was nothing which could not be repaired. and the entire expense of such repairing was borne by the railroad company without even using my insurance on the shipment. I do not know the amount of this dam- age because it did not cost me anything whatever and my furniture was finally delivered in perfect condition. Thanking you and your firm for the care which you exercised in this matter, I n. ., ' Very sincerely yours. . ' - j E. B. H$DRICK., ll cap 3, p )- obly will go an of existence within the n:-xt aixtyar ninety days. ‘ They; disremtrdlfi such trivialitiea as 00 patentyinfringements and lack of tion Collar!‘ 150541 th 3,-xper and working cap- cation hour ital. proceeded to turn out radio votional eke « ts of it sort that a huge public to new officers, there was a short‘ rogram of songs» including a solo‘ ting. The chief cause is the hot by man 1] competition among the big fellows, y_ ‘ ‘bu, with money and experience cgcam 3 , __ In accordance with custom, superur product at competitive N‘, Wnidem on uuptgng in.‘ fice read the Christian Coll:-‘N \‘.. Manufacturers caught in the w_ (j_ A_ 1,013“ which is; ’ pinch have thrown their product on. To make the nmpm a place the market for what it will bring.‘ ¢i'‘'''\|f 1'" "' 5" lxaders in the industry estimate ' l"' that the period of liquidation will ,.,..,,,,.,,., be over for the most. ptrrt in t «- next two months. When the delzris *‘_"'l““"‘ "ml ‘ '""°‘ '6 that cleared away the chances hastened to buy. Their sun is set- S but-it of them, are turning out price 3. are that prices generally will start ll rise. 0! necessity they must rt"e to a point where there is a decent profit in the business. Tile biggc-:.t and strongest com- panies in the business or: nmking sensational plans for the imme- vlllfllf‘ future. Revolutionary devel- opments in amplification. loud .~'p('8ltt'r8 and .