Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1926)
ÖAiLY TIDING 3 The Principal • re # cuja. Tfasto bs Quite ft*« from tan itim &fz oa«'s m IAL CITY The next day there appeared in that reportor’s newspaper, which wasn’t vmry frtoodty to the president, Oom Pphl, a vM- leot attach on the latter Mr showing such consideration te a crowd of man who deserved severe punishment tbdt the dis tinguished American author, Bamael dem ons, envied thorn their prison lot. Pbstoffire as Secoi Ids, Delivered'to The authorities were enough to take the Mat. Insertion a vreek .. 1 . . . . ^ . . ^ . . . . . . ^ . ^ . - . . . . . tnwrttons a ^ve«8c ........... - lnsertlon .......... ■ .. ...My......... Rates for Legal and Mlscellaneons Adyortâatng : insertion, per 8 point line .......____a..____ _________ > subeeunent insertion, 8 point line ............................... * of Thanlts ......... .......... WCS-CX- MOM) ready Liberties, of which there had been noae too many, wera cur tailed, and "our menu." related Hammond, "already vary re stricted, waa materially cut down, ao that, for several days, we were near the starvation measure of calories." DOTATIONS * A Jto donations ta charities or Otherwise will be made la advortls- ir Job printing —- onr copfolbutlons will be In cash.________ __ WHAT OONWJT ü T i Î h ADVERTISING : "AU future eveuts, whet* an admission charge to made or a etlon taken to Advertising.” No discount will be allowed Religions or Benevolent Orders. W AN VfZ H U li Silhouette« *' ** 3 7 W to/AtT WAY 5 *' JANUARY 19 1920 ' * GOD PROVIDES— "And the water In the bottle* was spent, gnd lto»cast the child under one of the shrubs. * • And God tosartf- A voice of the lad, and eaid, What alleth thee. NaggfT, *”• j£u p the lad. • • • for I will make him a gredV UaUoh. And-God Boned her eyes, and she saw a well of water*; and She • • *- gate K in d to drink.” Oen. 81: fS-1». . Jf-PRAYER — Per T h o n /0 Jehovah, art my W age! Tb'ortjtost g d e the Most High Thy h a la t io n ; For He will . M rb I s Ifirge over thee, to keep thee In all thy ways. ' 7 . .s.' z , SENATE “ STALLING” ON COAL MINES : £ The Senate of the United States iff showing iw utichie lismte in adopting any pian to manage the inoperative'èôal nçnes. { ~ ‘ r. So far, that august body is doing what, in the lang uage of the street, wc term “ stalling.” s?< The President left this unwelcome infant on the door- sftn of Congress. And Congress is in no hurry, to take it. im _«**«**.*»•' *•*' i . At that/ we .4»M.Afeitellf -give the .Senate the credit i'flr-.sense, or caution, enough Tfbt to “ pass thé buck” back t$£he President. RathW, they fell, dilly dally for awhile t the matter than to give the president a free hand. Ï he might actually do something! And it very likely lid he something that would dismay tlie Senate. ANÔ (®«iggRX^40SES f Coming “touches" cast their flatteries before. Close your eyes and think If ; The President.appealed to Congress, as the law-mak- you want to see the biggest iSA body of the United States, to jMMkbat should be <#lngp> . . 4^ gy « f ie about the coal strike^H&.dhOToqjmkAipngwfs tto i’" ” ’• ■.■ y A woman mast i c able to hate ( f i t . He did not ask C e n f i f g to? | w e h W l frdç lihn< asked Congress to say Wnajfefl0.should do.''< ‘ -, welb before A e to a b le : to Itfve Senator Copeland o f S w Ybrfc, being an adtiVe tician of the opposite pq^itical party from the Presl- To understand one thing well t, thought it would be smart to pass a resolution, au- to better than to understand rizing the President to do what be pleased about the one - hundred? ke. That, lie said to hintoelf and perhaps, to ’liis party ciates, will “ put Coolidge in a hple.” There are i When you know a, trouble to ty of other mombers of the Senate quite willing io coming, ybu get some relief when it actually arrives. j f i Coolidge in a hole. Bnt they could sec farther than (fiela n d . They put the resolution itself in a parliament .flatter us, so we -have tatty hole. i • h to • Friends fall baek on our -enemies to t AN IMPOSSIBLE AtTE&NATIVE - The fact is that neither President nor Congress know 1 to do about a great labor strike and lockout of this No action has lieen suggested as yet hut would play o the hands of either the workmen or the operators. If the Government seizes the. mines, it must work m in some way. If it works them in the way proposed the workmen, it will he fighting the operators. If it (■ks them in the way proposed by the owners, it will fighting the United Mine Workers. ' If the Government should confiscate the mines, it hid then have to decide on a labor policy of its own. (t should buy the mines, the owners would he satisfied,. E the workmen would still be demanding a scale of Bee on which the Government would have to pay labor I ds out of the general treasury — that is, tax the rest ms to keep the minek going. , There is an -unsolved problem in copnectirtn with Be coal mines. Do the owners actually “ earn” any4 ¡urn from th em !' , ' 'J By that i s not meant earning a return on the original -estment.. Do they, in addition, earn a return on the t of ownership! Do they, through their ownership, kribute something to the raaintonance and the advant- y t f the mipOWU • ■ V *• -______ Nearly every other owner does earn his return In 9e way. By his manageynent of his property he justi- I his relation to the property. For the moot part, the railroads of the United States ao longer “ owned.” This is why they are lp »Uch Various position. ** « They are constructed by promoters, who get “ theirg” ; of the profits of promotion. Aqd the stockholders get interest and speculative return out of the dbideuds ft are paid. The managers give to thpiusplvce salaries, b rest of the income is taken up with taxes and cost of Nearly every amali business fully justifies its “ own- 8o do most large mercantile or manufacturing dnessee. The “ ownbr,” aside from being a mere iu- kor, “ does eomething” for the busiuess, and takes his for what be does. i Db the mine owners “ do” auything for the mines! |y<e is considerable questuiti whether they deserve any ta h fiiiG w b ì wlfcìn the-coal dispute. tell the * truth about us. Hqp Heck says: "Don’t try to *be a successful philosopher until you have a fixed income big enough to protect vou from hard work.” .; t Scientists have changed the set' Of salgmhnders.' Maybk they did so by bobbing Its hair, and letting it smoke clgarets.' By CHARLES j f . STEWART NBA Servlee Writer- , *• • »• i ' ^WASHINGTON — Thirty yeaVs ,&o abop| npw Mark Twain, ou lls way around &be world, gpth- tin g material tor Ms hook, Just because the paper says /, Allowing the Equator,” land- it ; to going to be warmer that’s in PretsHai Wapltol ’ af the n of It Is going to be coldesU/ en Boer republic of the Trans- al, 8quth Afrfcq, and while tl ere decided to call on hie I One poor way of committing fi lend, Jahn. May# Hammond, suicld» Is by buying a used ear tl e multimillionaire mining en- and wprking yourself to death g neer. v supporting It. It happened that H’amcipnd wps la. He was Indeed— In jail. ¡Me and some dozens of other This Locarno peace pact hasn't Uftlanders, or foreigners, were stopped the fighting In Chicago. locked up. accused of.,rebellion against President Kruger's gov ernment. While they are arguing raH mergers why not merge a couple Coming out, Mark stopped of Pullman berths so a pas b y. a Boer newspaper reporter. senger can stretch his legs? Mr. Clemens,'’ Mid this scribe. ' how did you God conditions liX t>at Jail ” He’d found them Some people are so darn dumb Perfectly unprintable, they were they have got to have a reason so'* awful, but, '"Why do you for being happy. askf" he queried. "Because complaints have behn made con- cdknlng them," the reporter es> OUT OUR WAY ‘ , ; SHANGHAI, Ôhlna,, Jan. ■ 18— (Ü. P .)— EsUMtohajent of - f new provisional government - tor China at Wnchang^ (Bankow) to planaed by A lakge group of former members of parliament who have gathered In the Yhng- tsse city. The parliamentarians, adher- entg of the Chihli party, grere driven from - Peking tost winter after Marshal : Chang Tao-Lin of Mukden had triumphed over W'u sPsl-fu, the Chihli general, and established Tuan Chi-Jnl as pro visional chief executive 1 of the Chinese tephbttc. * T k i charge brought- Against them was that they., had participated Id the bribery and corruption which marked the election of Tsao:Kun to the presidency. Inlarsd h ers’ w k *a»s r one ¿Apry brtek w a ll( colgupM ‘ shortly? h if fore npon.tdUay, Workmen ¿Mere tearing down the j old brftMlni.' l i v e 'm«n S r « * , burled the mass', of* brick .and The dead A are:/ Joe ■ Mutnane.’ manager . of ^ tb eD o a n Wrecking anO Construction company? and an nnidtattfisd m in ./ T h e .iu - jnred are:'|T ^ J.-B rl^ pm ? ard Johnson - and W a lter-T o il- man. -'-'J' ! W ' The building toga near the tenter of the down town dtstr^V- Noon crowd«, ' o n , their way t° lunch, h u r le d ? to-..the rescue. Well dressed clerks yoUed their clothes picking debris away from the Injured. The crash came , b a rely th ree mlnntea before, the. men would have left thelr' work, for lunch/ Portland — Portland Electric Power Co.. wUl add JO^SOO k- W. tu rb ine/coatin g'1800,000, to Its local power plant dnAttg 1»«. By’ Williams O n f Vz's, o u t n r l * o w i û a i l k O I D I N O U |? J yoiqp 'ifjjib slmyto. cou«W5 Of esids Miks them »?< shobM ap t I s . » « t o W . Thaw la «« byttst rsmafr (r ip .” VMHM MÖT h SRS C-eT G R A S IM FOR A BftO 6N6MING. Ifltok rsMbi tu im /tQ « « b s a»< soldi thaa 'V>tog*a , Hoimy . kipl colds ttopu Fbtoy*s«Heemr * sad Tar ComboM. "Ay sra»(b>bi|d scald sot m rottoi- whatsvvr from A iyfvy •lm d 'd ro o tr 'co»fto uatlt I aavs Mm FM«y*s Hofasy mtok-Tar.*’. Write. Frtsr U a « K Moyersdslf. - P*- K m m ta'fcottto OB i hand 'tor' aa> t o m e n c y . Bold «vsrywhsrs. ? Protect Billings Agenoy John Jacob Astor ’ egperimeht station at Astoria yielded 4*1 tons per sere' of -turnlpe and rntsbahss. '•*- M e d f o r g — OwM-Oycgòn Lumber Co., plans 8800,000 plant Improvements, -tbto i year. tbsy w r rMacsi b' »i i d.’fW l * ' a ¥' an