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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-08-22
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rent Seven roomed nished, all modern Possession at once. ffloe. 37-8 ap. One Underwood 1 in use for two to Box 1243, News 85-8t tomobile, this years ss than 2000 miles. somebody. Might d lot for part pay- 32. P.O, Box 3. 88 a r sale or exchange, y, 22 acres fruit cotenay, 1 miles Jct station and same est Robson, facing Good stream of wat- ugh centre of pro- ox 1842, News office, 88-6 x hole range, sult also a few household 239 Montreal St, e. 37-6t 3 WANTED, or two furnished rd. Central location. ox. 519. 36-t OR TO RENT y to let A fully mod- ouse, richly furnish- onveniences, centfal- 1 give possesion im- pply Box 341, News 32 RENE gt; room shack, gas ply to Box 896, P. O. 87-8t TED for vacant store er of Montreal Street ine location for any onable rent. Living Immediate posses- 1d overhauling will be G. G. MacBean Co. ulldin loatt S WANTED or 6 roomed bunga- Furnished. Immed- ldren. 35-tt (ER WANTED NTED For Bowell irst or second class estant. Apply, stat- ) usually paid. A. EL ary, Bowell, Alta. 31tf RSONAL. remain alone? The on Club is a reliable, um for placing in congenial, marriage- strictly private; high- Seventh successful Ire and full informa- s. Wilson, Box 1776, 37-6 USICAL NS Miss Colp, late atory of Music, Bos- ge to give lesons at ntil studio is secured. - 645. Montreal St. 35-3 TO LOAN LOAN Private money dential property. Ap- x 857. 35-8 URSING )SE Trained Nurse. . Phone 747. -35-12t D ACCOUNTANTS RSON CO., chartered and auditors? (estab- ditors, city of Medicine Medicine Hat, Leth- Gibsen, C.A., resident e198. Burns. Block. 276att SETIERRE 2 rsets made to meas- i for one year against isting. At office in Main street, from 2 p. Office phone 594. At Avenue, opposite east School, in evening. 699. Mrs. Matthews. Au 22-3 m, ADIES' AND GENTS othing, shoes, watches, revolvers, valises, sult musical instruments, pocrat waggons, bug. , dleycles. carpenter hides and furs, horse fathers, bought and ) the Harvard Tailoring rth avenue, atre. P. 0, box 368, 1 Best Prices Pald tor 29Dtt. INE HAT HIDE, FUR lt; CO. The above have est selection of Second n the city. We carry ves and Bedding, new and Clothing, Clocks, sIry, Rifles, Guns, Re- ms; Buggies, Harness, w line of winter goods, thing mentioned above est prices. Call at 504 St. or Phone O87. tf opposite - doeteateateateedecteatecteatpaterteateeteatesteteatecteatcteateatedteateateaeatiate-te rete stratecteatecteatestote ste steateete eater Separation ; Parting with a few dollars + in return fora pair of the superbly made Weh-Crer Shoes is not a painful part- ing. Shoes of the Wad-Quer brand make every dollar do its duty. i. e You will like their long wear. TURPIN BROS. THE MEN'S STORE Where you get the Big Dollar s Worth DUHNAN S DEMANDS CW. A. P. Dispatch) Toronto, Aug. 22. Eddie Durnan, champion oarsman of America, is asking in addition to the guarantee of 150 offered, a share of the gate Yeceipts, which amounts to a good sum, on the Thames. Should Barry agree, Durnan will leave here about September 7th and be in England about five weeks before the race in October. Governor Baldwin will be unani- mously renominated by the Democra- tic State convention of Connecticut next month. The Daily News delivered in city 35 a month. the May Stop Big Smoke ANNIVERSARY OF FIRST AMERICA'S CUP RACE In was on August 22, 1651, just sixty-one years ago today, that the first international race between. American and British yachts was Tek around the Isle of Wight, and the Yankee vessel, America, defeated the English yacht, Aurora. Since then there have been thirty-one con- tests for the America s cup, the tro- trophy originally offered by the Queen, and only once have the Brit- ish yachtsmen succeeded in winning a race, That was back in 1871, when je English yacht Livenia succeeded in capturing one of a series of three contests with the Columbia. The American boat was,disabled, and in the two previous races a few days before had clearly demonsteated its superiority. In 1901 Sir Thomas Liptons Shamrock I came near wiming a heat.g The challenger fin- ished first, lost the race on a time allowance of forty-three sec onds. The last race for the cup was commenced nine years ago today, Aug. 22, 1903, between the Sham- rock, IIT. amd the Reliance, the: lat - ter winning all three contests. Since then there has been much talk of another challenge from Sir Thomas, but it is now certain that there will be mo race for the cup this tear, as the rules provide that no contest can take place later than the first of November, and a challenge must be made ten months before the date set for the race. If the cup is to be contested in 1913 it will be necessary for the English yachtsmen to file a challenge before Dec. 1 next. Whether Sir Thomas will challenge again is a matter of doubt. It is certain that.he would spend half his immense fortune to win back the cup for Great Britain, and he himself has remarked that he would give his right arm to re- gain the traphy. His three brave trials with the Shamrocks marked him a thorough sportsman and a game loser, but of late it is inti- mated that he believes that the New York Yacht Club has not been that a fow years ago he sent over a lines suggested did not conform the deed of gift, and the New York club was strictly within its rights in refusing to consider the proposition. These rules were agreed upon at the beginning of the intermational series, and it is hardly fair to accuse the American yachtsmen of unsportsman- like conduct in refusing to agree to changes that would benefit their op- ponents. PEPEEEEEREEL ES BIG LEAGUE + SCORES + * EEE EEE EE EEE NATIONAL bE bE Brooklyn ... Pittsburg .. i Rueker and Erwin. Williams, Warner and Gibson. Boston ,. Cincinnati. Perdue and Kling. Frill, Rumphey and McLean. New York . Chicago . Richie and Fisher. INTERNATIONAL Providence . 1 3X0 Montreal . 2 8 0 Bailey and Schiltze. Matters and Burns. Jersey City . Toronto . Doscher, Manser and Rondeau. Lush and Bemis. CENTRAL INTERNATIONAL Superior . Winnipeg Rhoades and Word. proposal that was turned down by the New Yor club. This was not a formal challenge, as is generally sup- posed, but merely an inquiry as to whether certain conditions. would be acceptable to the Americans. The to Seoeteatestecteeteatectesteate ates AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit .. Groome Boston . Chicago New York Calwerl ist gam Toledo Minneapol Liebhart Packard Larey an Clemens Ist Schliitzer tle for pennant. Seaton, Bliss and Jones. Grand Forks ... 0... 4 9 Duluth ... .. strictly on the square with him. This impression may be due to the fact Meyers and Edmunds. x Johnson and Hargrave. Washington . Lake Works and Tacher Blanding and O'Brien, Hall and Carrigan, B, James atid Land, Columbus . St. Paul... Louisville . Milwaukee ... .. Indianapolis Kansas City . Link and McKee. Rhodes and O'Connor. Merse and McKee. and Hene; Cleveland . Benze, Peters and Schalk. and Sweeney. eo Toledo ... . . Minneapolis W. James and Land. Patterson and Owens. 2nd game aad Owe and Smith, nd Maraball, and Ludwis. Nichols and Block, and James. the International AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Joe Kelly's Toronto team has come to the front on the run and fs giving Rochester and Baltimore a real bat- Ledgue HONOR INVENTOR OF FIRST FLYING MACHINE A memorial tablet to Prof. Samuel Pierpont Mangley, inventor of the first heavier than air flying machine, erected in the Smithsonian Institu - tion at Washington, will pay tardy. 8)tionor to the great physicist and as. 2/tronomer whose birthday all aviators will celebrate today. Prof. Langley, after a lifetime devoted to the cause of humanity died six years ago a broken-hearted man, as the result of the ridicule and abuse heaped upon him by the public and press after 2/his unsuocessful attempts to navi- llgate the air. Of a highly sensitive disposition; Prof. Langley felt keen - ly the shafts of wit aimed in his di- rection. A man of great achieve- 4 ments, the head of America s great - lest scientific institution, it broke his heart to see a life of devotion to in- tellectual and material progress go for nothing, and to be classed by his 3 countrymen, whom he had sought to benefit, as a charlatan, a crank and a fool. Prof. Langley discovered the principal of heavier than air fly- ing machines, and it was only the mechanical application of those prin- ciples that was at fault. Had the gods of chance favored him, he 2) might have been hailed by the popu- lace as the greatest man of the cem- tury. Fate was against him, and so the mob only jeered and hooted. Prof. Langley was born at Rox- buty,: Mass., seventy-cight years ago today, Aug. 22, 1834, First an as- sistant ii Harvard Observatory, he was soon appointed a professor of mathematics at the Annapolis Naval He director of - the AHeghany Observa- tory at Pittsburg. In 1887 he was chosen as secretary of Smithsonian Institution, a position he held until his death in 1906. sss H early became interested in areo- investigations of the flight of various kinds of birds and fowls. A bird so why can t I he asked, answered the question in the af- Then he sought to prove his theories shy, practical application me toeteatpatpatosfestectoat Academy. He spent twenty years as/- and Yitilt;.a,... number of flying ma- chines, trying in turn steam, com- pressed air and carbonic acid gas as motive powers. In 1893 he had produced a ma- chine which be thought would fulfill the required conditions of being launched at a certain initial speed and in the face of any breeze that might be blowing. A spot on the Potomac, about twenty-five miles be- low Washington, was chosen as the site of the experiment. The first at- tempts were utter failures,, and it was not until late in 1894 that a launching apparatus that would work properly was completed. Next the wings proved faulty, and many , im- provements had to be made in these. On May- 6, 1896, Langley's aero- drome made two trips over the Po- tomac, each a half mile in distance, and the problem of aviation was sol- ved, in theory. The first machine was a mere model, weighing about thirty pounds. Seven years Inter Prof. Langley had completed a ma- chine large enough to carry a man and to be controlled. in its fight, but accident after accident, as well as a lack of funds, prevented Prof. Langley from carrying the epoch- LEEEE EERE EE EE EEE EEE EEE EEE JOHNSON S RETIREMENT MEANS DEATH OF WHITE HOPE CLASS * + + + + + + gloves. As long-as there is no + champion, there is no need of white me nall over the country train- + ing hard and trying to develop into products capable of conquering ++ the sons of Ham. The first talk of White Hopes came after John- +h son defeated Tommy Burns iii Australia on Dec. 26, 1908. There + was such public clamor for somebody to whip the new chief in the. ++ heavyweight class that Jim Jeffries was forced out of six years re- The pale-face was beaten in fifteen everyone knows, and ever since then met alt sh over the country of sufficient weig fall sorts of trades in order that they might develop into fighters +b tirement to defend his title. +f rounds at Reno, nauties, and made long and tireless ood nough-to-conquer the big black. *k years nobody popped up that would have a chance to-defeat John- f son, and consequently now that + There is nothing now left for the White Hopes to do but to g0, *h back to their plows, brewery wagons, mines, butcher shops, and 0 *h forth. Jack Johnson's decision to retire for good and all time makes sf it unnecessary for any more White Hopes to perform with the *f can go back to their old trades, for there is no longer any necessity * for White Hopes, as in the announcement of his retirement Johnson *h bas knocked them al loff the pugilistic map in one fell swoop. SOLOS OEESESOMESOOOOOD ISIGHT OEES SPORT NEWS Lostock ate eeorioe este oshette die dtontp ete cestode etoey making invention to completion. The machine for which he had hoped 807 much was consigned to the scrap heap, and it remained for the Wrights and others to prove that Langley was right. After this failure, the world beoke into a howl of derision, It seream ed and hooted at the aged inventor, called him a fakir, a with perpetual motinn fakirs a other madmen.and charlatans, and made his name a byword, until he found peace in the grave. Today, om his birthday, the world puts wreaths on his tomb. JOHNSON'S CASE UP ast New York, Aug. 22. Whether Jack Johnson, heavyweight pugilist of the. world will be allowed to box in this elty, probably will be decided by the State Athletic Commission at a meet ing scheduled for this afternoon. A bout between the champion and Joe Jean tte, another negro, has been billed for September 26th, before the St. Nicholas Athletic club. Subscribe now for The Datiy News, - e - colored man bearing the title of Sede ob ee 8 In the intervening two he has retired, all the big whites ofeoke she ohooh a ee Open Evenings During the Sale Men s Suits 6.95 Men Wh 9.95 s Suits. Men s Fine Hose, regular 60c. value, d5c Men s Men s Men Dees Shick Men's Uadervesr Mon s Pakete 20 te, Cent. collar at- . I. . tached, Seuntists a Buin at BST Hate, Ta igs ff Dross shirts Discount vee to 1.25 value. per garment val. to 2.00 Val. to 1.50 On all Men s 5c 9c 4c 95 2c 5c me Men s Suits ' Values up to 12.00 Values up to 15.00 J Values up to 22.50 Values up to 25.00 Values up to 30.00 16.95 To-day Just as much to You as if You had Paid Full Price for it. BUT fay SAVING ON COST IS YOUR BENEFIT NOW, FOR WE ARE OBLIGED TO DISPOSE OF OUR ENTIRE STOCK TO MAKE ROOM FOR THE ENORMOUS PUR. CHASES MADE FOR THE COMING SEASON. WHETHER IT S A SUIT, HAT, SHOES OR FURNISHINGS YOU NEED COME TO THIS.GREAT MONEY SAVING UNLOAD. ING SALE AND GET THE BIGGEST LOAD OF BARGAINS YOUR MONEY EVER BOUGHT. LESS KELLER, Men s Outfitter - Exhibition Week IS CLOSE ATHAND. YOU'LL NATURALLY WANT TO TOG UP. AND LOOK YOUR BEST. YOUR MONEY WILL WibL GO. THE FARTHEST 18: AT T THE EARTEEST IS AT THE ere you can save from 5.00 to 7.00 on a suit. The savings you can devote to the pleasures of the Exhibition. You know the KELLER CLOTHING - It stands for all that is BEST IN MEN S WEAR. TORONTO ST. Assiniboia Hotel. MEDICINE HAT. THE SPOT WHERE Look ForT With The Blue Signs Open Evenings Evenings During the Sale mn Blue Pelee. all Dress Shirts 088 ppetach. ane ar leathers; able collars excellent values to quality vane oie 0c 3.95 he Store
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Image 338 (1912-08-22), from microfilm reel 338, (CU1772452). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.