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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-08-28
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you build, consider TY first. Don't be per- to buy CHEAP LUM- cause it's cheap use the st. We have it, and ey- s the Builder requires, SASH, FIR FINISH, , OAK, MAPLE, BIRCH LR FLOORINGS. ave the agency for the ed Morgan Dore, DOOR BEAUTIFUL T, WOOD FIBRE, LATH CEDAR POSTS, WIL- Low Posts EAVER ;OARD PAY MORE e s Drug and Store :: it popebetnbebabatatedatataty B. CURTIS irivinieeleinininininfed SON LEADER Decorating. TRACTORS AND BUILDERS FIGURE WITH YOU PLACING - YOUR oT FOR A BUILDING IMATES FREE. Next to City Hall. ininfninlnininieinfalontet SLEY BROS 3 SSeS s and Contractors. Ave., Phone 434 O. Box 304. imates Free. ns Prepared. NE STABLE PHONE at S. FOLLIS acting Co. TORONTO ST. ug. Sand, Coal Graved ting a Specialty, eavy Horses for sale at Dieta ir LYON RACTS FOR -TEAMING AND EXCAVATING and Sand for Sale, q i Phone No, 418, 4 0. Box 31. Simmonds R amp CONTRACTOR at MEDIOINE HAT DAILY NEWS. We Can Sell You The Best. Cars Built That is a big statement but it s true. No farmer in this country is looking to pay more than he has to, and that s the reason we are selling Studebaker E-M-F 30 and Flanders 20 cars. Dollar for dollar they can t be equalled. Stude- baker cars are built of the best materials money can buy in the biggest and best factories in. the world, and everybody knows that.on the road they give constant and unsurpassed satis- faction. now. We once, now, we will than a good source of h Yes, you can get your car areready to make deliveries, nickel trimmed and the latest models. We have a few cars and can get a few more, but the demand is heavy and we recommend your acting at If you place your deposit with us ll see that you get your car when you want it. Plenty of money for crops can t purchase anything more satisfying automobile. It is use- ful, not a luxury but a constant ealth and pleasure for the whole family. Don t delay. You buy a cer- tainty in a Studebaker car, The 1000 Studebaker-Flanders 20 Nickel Trim Equipped with Top, Windshield, Prest-O-Lite Tank and Speedometer, 1125 f. 0. b. Walkerville Studebaker-E-M-F 30 Touring Car 1400 Studebaker-Flanders 20 Roadster 950, Delivery Car 1050 The Studebaker Corporation of Canada, Ltd. Walkerville, Ont. AGENTS : SCOTT MOTOR CO., Edmonton, Alta. CECIL FRANK, Manville, Alta. STEFFER BROS., Morinville, Alta. ROY BARKELEY, Vegreville, Alta. WESTERN AUTO CO., Lethbridge, Alta. hip your Grain to Us Take advantage of our experience. We never sacrifice grain that farmers ship to us, We know HOW and WHEN to sell on bulges, and we avoid selling on de- ctines.. Our business has been built up on our, motto: G00D RETURNS TO FARMERS Wo have been established for twenty-eight years Don t you believe our experience could be made valuable to you? Our commission is ONE CENT serving the identity of per bushel too small to-pay grain, and also assuring to agents. We have no you get paid for every ; you get THE FULL NET you put into the car. at which your grain: is Send us a six or eight ounce sold, less our Ic per bushel com- sample of your grain and we mission. will advise you its real value. It your car ie loaded and you PveR the Poorest, qualities can cannot wait for shippiig instruc Pe,mage 10 draw good price if Hons, and if you are on the CP. stand this business thoroughly, Bean Bros, Fore Willian, and (hose are the points that Be eT a ee yealt count. Write us for market pros- Bi Port. Arebun ic pects; you need the-BEST; it Does noe ar means MONEY to-you, We are If at -all possible we strongly not looking for very low. prices advise loading direct from your this coming season. wagon into the car, thus pre-' We are licensed and bonded. NOTE A large yield of grain this fal does not mean low prices. Europe needs every bushel of our grain, and would be willing to pay good prices for it, Should prices st below-a-fairtegitimate value, don t sacrifice. Write us for advice. Reference :BANK OF HAMILTON, WINNIPEG, MAN. McBEAN BROS. shed since 1884 and still at it. Winnipeg, Man, Bank of Hamilton, Winnipeg, Man. your that bushel LIVE MERCHANTS ADVERTISE IN THE NEWS sa et The Perry Electric Supply Co. Now Open for Business ESTIMATES FURNISHED ON ALL CLASSES OF WORK. Full supply of material always on hand. Prompt service and satisfactory work guaranteed. We will appreciate an opportunity to figure on your work, appreciate the results. The Perry Electric Supply Co. ; ROYAL BANK BUILDING, 38-tf 4th AVE. MEDICINE HAT. EER eivicieivicieieinieininleininininielnlelelelsinlelelninlninfeinl 1 ee You will iebteltet Conspiracy.to Marder Korean Governor Afoot Seoul, Korea, August 27, The prestige of the court would be com- pletely lost if some Koreans now on trial should be convicted and pun- ished on the ground that they con- spired. against the life of Governor General Torachi, - according to the plea of counsel for the defense. The proceedings were continued today. When the barrister for the defen contended that Barons Yienk Ki Tak and Yanchtho, two of the most prom- inent prisonars wer) young Koreatts who were afraid of the Korean offi- clals and therefore confessed. They asserted that prisoners who had con- fessed had cen released afterwards and concequently also should be liberated. The possesston of revolvers and swords by the accused was argued as not sufficient evidence since anyone could obtain weapons. M. Miyake said he believed Baron Yunchiho, who was formerly a court minister, had confessed for the pur- pose of saving himself and therefore the confession was worthless. Bar- on Yunchiho rejoined the secret ser- vie of the Sinmipo, believing it to be a peaceful organization. In that he had been misled but that he deserved punishment for that mistake. The alleged meetings, continued M, Mi- yake, had not been proved and other evidence was also weak. OKLAHOMA DEMOCRATS Oklahoma City, Okla, Aug. 28 This city was today the mecea for the Democratic leadera of Oklahoma At noon a mass convention asembled to ratify the nominees of the recent primary and adopt a platform. Ear- lier In the day the new State com- mittee, met and completed its organ- fration. State Chairman Harrell was elected for a term of two years with- . ont opposition, Both Whitman, Chief Gambling District attormey of New York ounty doesn t sound like an impos ng job, and yet there are times when t is productive than the Presideney of the States. William Travers Jerome cuined international fame, while dis trict attorney, Shrough his prosecu- tion of Harry Kendall Thaw. Char- les Seymour Whitman, the young Re- publican who succeeded Jerome, will of more publicity United celebrate his forty-fourth birthday today very much in the limelight, owing to his activity in connection with the Rosenthal murder, the gam- bling probe and the police depart- ment investigation. By his able handting of the ease he has succeed - ed in indicting a number of gamb- lers and underworld toughs to vio - late the first commandment of their religion, Thou shalt not squeal. Norwichi Conn, boasts of being the birthplace of Charles Seymour Whit- man, and Aug. 28, 1868, was the date of his arrival in the world. He graduated from Amherst College and New York University, where he was known as a conscientious stndent, but not as any marvel of precocity. His father, the Rev. John Seymour Whitman, was a Presbyterian clergy- man, and it was expected that young, Whitman would follow in hus foot- stops, instead, he chose the law, and paid his way through law school by teaching im Adelphi -College, Brooklyn. Whitman's first important job came in 1901, when he was appointed as- sistant corporation counse for the city of New York. he was senu to Albany to watch the? State luwwakers and see that they didn't put anything over tin would be isimical to the interests ut the metropolis. The young attorney discovered and started a hue and cry Figute In Probe, 44 Today true imwardness would have turned the streets of New York over as a gift to the traction magnates. The bill was defeated, thanks to Whitman, and he made a lot of enemies among the who woukl have profited from the paswage of the bill. He's just a rube from the backwoods of Connecticut, re- marked those astute gentlemen, and. while he s got away with it once, we'll soon show him who's who around these parts. And they did not Along in 1904 Mr. Whitman was made-a member of the board of city magistrates, which deals out inox- pensive justice to the poor folks who can't aflord to carry their troubles to the more exclusive and costly tribunals, and eventually he became president of that body. His interest in police affairs dates from that time, as a New York city magis trate necessarily learns a lot about the bulls and their methods. His first muck-raking task was directed against the alliance between the Po- lice and the professional bondmen. It was the pleasant custom, im those days, for the members of the fin- est to arrest those who follow the oldest profession n the world and drag them into court every so often, in order that the bondsmen might wrest their toll from:misery and shame. The police got rake-off from the ignoble trade. - Whitman found a remedy in the establishment of night courts, which gave an im- mediate hearifg to the unfortunate women of the street, and put the Solons In that capacity ondsmen out of business. Tg 1909 he war given the Republi- can nomination for district al.torney, and was elected. He has shown him- self 4 worthy successor to Jerome, and his friends predict that he will disprove the rule that a man chosen for district attorney never gets any against what appeared to be an in- nocent measure, but which in its higher. Count T olstoy Down to Gehenna or up to a throne, He travels the fastest who travels alone. This dictim of Rudyard Kipling in regard to marriage.- expressed an opirion shared by the late Count Teco Tolstoy, according to a book of mem- oirs just published by Prof. Lazurski, who was a personal friend of the great Russian and the.tutor of his children. Today is the cighth-fourth philosopher of Yasnaia Poliana, whose death shocked the whole civil- wed world. Since the sensational flight of the eminent Russian from his . home, wife and children, to whem he never returned alive, much illumina- tion has been sh d upon his mode of life and his domestic relations. Prof- Laxurski gives the folowing as ex- pressing Tolstoi's opinion of matri - mony: A man goes his way alone. If he places a load oi.fifty pounds on his shoulders he can still be happy de- cause he is alone; but if he chains a woman to his leg and drags her along she hinders him at every step. And more: Marriage is not a feast or a fes - tive holiday. Two beings units to be in each other's way. If a man wants to mary let kim so.s0; perhaps he may find the means to make his life happy. Before doing so, however, he should consider that he is about to, take a step downward and that he must do everything in his power to make marriage hazpy if that, after all, be possible. This pessimistic view of marriage doubtless was a case of sour grapes. Count Tolstoy was an idealist, at times a visionary dream- ex, while the Countess was intensely practical. Between people of such warring natures there could only be, at best, an armed truce. The Count- ess had an immense admiration for her gifted husband, toiled for him unceasingly and without complaint, bore him many children, and was in every way a faithful and devoted wife. Tolstoi s adaptation of Proud- hon s Property is robbery, how - ever, she could not accept. The Count wishod id give his property to the peasants who labored cn hi tate. The Countess, quite naturally, held that she and her chikiren had rights which the Count was bound to respect. This led to disputes and differences that embittered the hearts of both. At Jast, in search of peace which he could not find amid the luxurious surreundings which all his written words-eondemned, the olth man left Yastaia Poliana on that tragic pilgrimage to the desert, where a grave -and peace awaited him. Christians who belong to the Greek Chareh witt-obserre-today the Repgse of Theotokos, which cor responds to the Western Church's feast of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary. Theotokos i the title to be applied to the Virgin by the Eastern Church, originally by the third oc- cumenical Council of Ephesus, and Chaladan. a Catholic and anniversary of the birth of the social this was repeated in the symbol of Anglican as Foe Of Marriage Relation churches will observe St. Augustine s Day today. Augustine, or Austin, the Apostle of the English, lived in the: sixth century. He was sent with forty monks to imttoduce Christian- ity into Saxon England, and convert- ed Ethelbert, King of Kent, and 10,- 000 of his subjects. That little girl of yesterday is a young lady today her summer frocks are most becoming, it is the happiest time of her young life. Nothing but a picture can keep her as she is. Now really isn't it worth a picture? Make the Appointment Today. THE BARTLETT STUDIO, FOURTH AVENUE. If You Are Curious to see a transformation that will astdnish ju and one de- voutedly to be wished, send a suit of clothing, your fall over- coat or a tailored ladies suit to us and you will have it. It is astonishing how our method of sry cleaning reaprates. four Shements'so-thae they look Just like new when they are return- ed trom THE GLOBE CLEAN. ING PRESSING CO. Rear of Yost Office on Fourth Are, T. F. Reynolds PAINTER, ETC. samples in Wall Paper ighth Ave, Phone 690, Special Prices for Fair Week B.C, Granulated Sugar, 20 1b, sack. Regular 1.60; Fair Week Special 1.85; 100 1, sack, Regular 7.50; Fair Week Special 6.60. Coffee, finest blend Mocha and Java. Regular 50c; Fair Week Spec- ial 40c per 1b, or 5 Ib. for 1.90, Coffes, good and strong. Regular 40c; Fair Weeek Special 806 per Ib, or 5 Ib. for 1.40. OUR SPECIAL FOR FAIR WEEK: 3 Ibs, Challenge Cup Tea (Reg. 50 Ib.) for 1.00 This Tea is equal, if not better, than any 50c Tea on the market. Preserving Peaches (Crawfords) 1.25 per case, Red Rose Baking Powder, Regular 2c; Fair Week Special 2 for 35. or 6 for 1.00, x . Tomatoes, 3 lb. cang. Regular 20c: Falr Week Special 2 for 35 or for 1.00. gt; Corn, 2 Ib. cans. Regular 12 ; Fair Week Special 3 for 356 oF 9 for 1.00, - Peas (Barly June) 2 Ib. cans. Regular 15c; Fair Week Special 2 for 25c, or 1.40 per dozen cans. Greengage Plums, 2 lb. cans. Regular 20 ; Fair Week Special 16 ., wr 7 for 1.00, Monk Glass Jelly Powders. 25c., or 90 per dozen. One pint packet Custard Powder given tree with every 9 packets of Jelly Powder. McLaren's Jelly Powders. Regular 10c; Fair Week Special 3 for 26 4 or 90c per dozen. 6 glass dishes given free with every dom m. R.C. Soap. Regular 250, Frir Woek Special 2 cartoons-for 45e. Suolight and Litebuoy Soap, Reg. be: Fur Weok Speci Cooking Apples, large 50 Ib. boxes, galar 3.90; 32.50 per case. Baitiett Preserving Pears, Sv iv. care, 2 Specia 7.75 per case. Crabapples, 50 Ib. case., 2.50 per care. Sheriff's Maramlade, 7 Ib. tins, Regular 1.00; Fair Week Sadia Spices Pickling Spices, White and Black Pepper, anes Spice, Nutmegs, Cinnamon, Allspice. Reeviny ae are Special 3 for 25c. Regular 10c;.Fair Week Special 8 for ROBIN HOOD FLOUR: Regular Price 3.90; Fair Week Spatial 30. ver 7 98-Ib. sack, Result 1007 Fate Extracts Lemon and Vanilla, 16-2. bottles. Week Spectal 76e per bottle. Valencia Raisins. Regular 12 ; Fair Week Special 6 Ibs. tor Be, Currants, Regular 12 ; Fair Week Special 5 Ibs for 55c. Evaporated Apricots. Regular 25e per 1b les gaa 2 Ibs. for 5c., or 4.25 per case of 25 Ibs, os Evaporated Peaches. Regular 42 c per 1b; Fai Week Bec ois for 40c., or 3.00 per case of 25 Ibs. Prunes. Regular 15c. pet 1b; Fair Week Special 2 2.50 per case of 25 Ibs. z Marmalade (Cairns) 7 Ib. tins, Regular 1.00;Fair Week Special 85. Molasses, 10 Ib. cans. Regular 90c; Fair Week Special c per can. Molasses, 3 1b. cans. Regular 25c; Fair Week-Special 200 per can. Sardines, Crossed Brand. Regular 16 ; Fair Week Special 2 cans for 25c., or 1.40 per dozen. Pork and Beans, large 3 1b. tas, Regular 360; Fair Week Special 25e per can. : z ihasdtay 85c., or H. MORROW *PHONE 177. N. RAILWAY ST. GanY ouBeat This? Section Hleven, Township Thirteen, Range Three, for sale at BLEVHN DOLLARS yer Two dollars per acre down, balance term of Hight Interest at five per. cent. Must be sold within thirty days. Write owner A. Jochem, . Milk River, Alta. acre. Years. 4i-tot. Taxi Taxi Taxi - : ALBERTA TAX COMPANY All Orders Promptly Attended to. New Cars, Careful Drivers. TOURING CARS FOR HIRE. Phone 666 Day. 211 Night. News Want Ads. Pay. Try Em.
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Image 376 (1912-08-28), from microfilm reel 376, (CU1772439). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.