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! |yat 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