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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-08-23
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SATURDAY 60; week End Special5 8. 7.50; Week Enq 8-be--for- he- 50... Week End Spe- k End Special 30c. d Special 2 for 35c or d Special 85c. per can. eek End Special 2 for. d Special 2 for 25c. eek End Special 3 for k End Special 15 . or ek End Special 85c. a reek End Special 40c. ek End Special 20c. a Veek End Special 260, c. per packet, eek End Special 1.00. per, Cayenne, Pastry Reg. 10c,; Week End ial 250. 1b. pecial 85 , Ib, Special 50c. tin. d Special 25c. tin. nd Special 20c. Sp cial 30c. Reg. 45c.; Week End Raspberry, Pineapple; g. 1.00; Week End pcial 5 Ibs. for 55 . k End Special 5 1b, jeek End Special 20c. End Special 85 per Special 8 for 25c. 1 or 7 for 1.00. jal 40c. per gallon. pecial 2 for 25c. ectal 75c, each. clal 49 oach, Special 5c. for 35 , Ibs. for 25c, Week End Special 5 celal 2 for 25c. End Special 2.50. lain. Reg. 3 for 25c. pecial 25c. bar, 2 for 35c. id Special 2 for 36e. - 250. Special 22 for 1.00 ek End Special 400. ecial 40c bottle. End Special 3 dozen End Special Bic, ecial 40 . Special 30c. a Special 25c. 1 Special 2 for 25c. 0c. Special 50c. gallon: Week End Special s. Reg. 10 ; Week al 20 , tin, per Ib. jal2 Ib, for 35 . special 15 . or 7 Ib. per Ib. or 2.25 per L0c. per pk. 10c. per pk. or 25 .; Week End with dishes free. CITY, C.0 D. Ow ATLWAY ST. SS Taxi MPANY Careful Drivers, it. ) y, Mrs. Brindin, the see, paint ponded. *You er Jearned to Anniston, Aln., posal to adopt of government. ews delivered 1a have the the night. Friday, August 23rd, 1912. DRINK OF ROYALTY IS FAMILY SECRET THOUGH GIVEN OUT Queen Alexandra Tells In- timates of. Marvellously Refr Fruit Tipple le. DANISH FORMULA PROVES POPULAR Described as as Being Like Frigid. Honey on the Lips Famous Beverages. London, Aug. 22 Queen Alexandra has presented to society a most delec- table beverage, imported from her na- tive Tand, Deniiark, ana entirety to England. One who sips this drink lauds it, not because it is in a sense the gift of royalty, but for its own attractions and merits. For it is like frigid honey on the lips, stimulating in the slightest degree, yet thirst-satistying. . At Garden Parties. At the garden parties given by the Queen mother during the season her guests drank the mysterious lauld, placed before them in tall cut-glass decanters, and called her blessed, Her Majesty's intimates begged her for the recipe, and she never refuses them a favor. The result s that the drink is now being enjoyed at all the smart coun- try houses, where it is in particular request at tennis parties. King Edward, who had a pretty taste in wines, invented a cup com- pounded of German wines, of which he was very fond, liquors and certain other ingredients, But he kept secret the composition of the cup, possibly because he desired to be present when his friends drank it, and to watch and enjoy their Joy. .-Hotel Has Secret. One of the very few persons who knows how to brew this royal cup is the manager of the hotel at Biar- ritz, where King Edward passed sev- eral successive seasons. King Alfonso of Spain, that gay young monarch, has invented a drink Which he calls Nonpareil. Those who have enjoyed it declare it is well named, and vow, admiringly, there is nothing Iike it. Tight Spanish wines and liquors in which float. delicate fruits, compose it. King George, like his father, is fond of German wines, but is extremely temperate. The King and Queen, like many London clubmen, have always iced barley water near at hand; it is their last drink before retiring at English Women Too Bashful To wards-a-cure, while the L Gon- Take Many Baths v0 oi tie atieed soneined. They are Behind Yankee Sisters in Personal Cleaz- liness, It Is Declared. London, Aug. 21. Dr. Richard Quine, a Manchester physician, ex- ploded in the Sanitary Congress in York, a bomb which has shaken every English home. He asserted that the English people, especially the English women, do not bathe en- and tl of cleanit teemels-taorable infvence, om jeanli -ye temalsiaxorable influence on all oe net cont oo acute febrile forms oF 7 Un ness they-are inferior to. American women. To false modesty he ascribes the Hnglishwoman s dislike of the tub. He said: Tt seems to be agreed that Ameri- can women are less bashful than English women and are not afraid to Tass along the corridors to the bathroom, while English women have very strong objections to doing so. This accounts for the fact that the American women make greater use of the bathroom. They are also apparently better provided with elaborate dressing gowns than the English women. I found no evidence that the compara- tive infrequency of bathing by Ameri- can men is due to bashfulness. Dr. Quinn asserts that among na- tionalities the order of frequency in bathing is: Scotsmen, Englishmen, Irishmen, American women, English women, American men, Frenchmen, Germans. He laments that 95 per cent. of the English hotel guests do not use the bath any day and de- clares that the clerbymen are always shy of the tub. NEWSPAPERS SEIZE.CHANCE TO RAP HOTEL RATES. This morning s newspapers all seize on Dr. Quine s point regarding hotel baths and deplore the high changes and the fact that few hotels have a bath attached to a room. The Express says Dr. Quine makes insufficient allowance for the number of people who. passively resist the extortionate charges for the hotel bathroom and for others who resist actively by performing their ablu- tions with basins. I?-an Englishman is determined and averse to extor- sion he circumvents the hotel-biil and preserves his self-respect by standing in a basin on the floor and pouring a jug of water over his shoulders. That man has surely had a tub, although no direct evidence of the fact may be forthcoming. The most rapacious hotel dare not make an extra change for a little spilled water. collentiiexample of the Anirican wo telaand* are ceasing to look upon th buth ns* am expensive luxury to be remembered in the bill. A bath to-every suite is not to every bed- room is the order in almost every up-to-date hotel. Commenting on the high price for hotel baths, the Standard observes: It is impogsible-to expect the ma- jority of men to be gcrupulous iit this matter ifthe effort involves much cost e ther of money or trou- ble. But when cheap and effective facilities become universal we may hope ab least to reach the standard in Japan, where dockyard collies luxuriate in ahot bath at least once a day. Mental pansy on New Principle Found Successful French Doctor Tells of Great Work Among In- Sane Has Dealt With More Than 50,000 Cases. MENTAL SPECIALISTS MERE HEAD WARDERS Suicides Have Diminished Marvelously Arousing Favorable Comment Paris, Aug. 21. Some remarkable facts in comection with the treat- ment of the insane were brought be- fore the Academy of Medicine yes- terday by. Dr. Magnan, head of the large asylum of St. Anne. Up to the present the generally accopted theory has been that when the in- sane were relegated to asylums it was in orler to prevent them from doing mischief, and doctors. rather aimed at perfecting the safeguards against their eseape then at curing the inmates. Dr. Magnan, however, that a mental specialist should not be transformed into a mental head warder, but should treat his patients as specifically as he would do for any other disease. In an asylum the specialist should be made to look upon the insane as his colleagues regard patients under their ere for physical diseases, and should treat cases of intellectual de- rangement by the same definite rules as organic and functional diseases. IS NOT HOSPITAL. The St. Anne is not a hospital, but the mentally afflicted who have been admitted there deem to, have benefited far-more than if they had been in the lunatic wards of any Teg- ular hospital. During his long car- eor at St. Anne Dr. Magnan has dealt with more than 50,000 cases of insanity, and he has found that, through what is called bad treat- ment, in the large majority of cases the disease progressed rapidly' to- cellent. In most cases of insanity the pa- tient-ie fairly robust in health, but if some other affection, the salutary ef- fect is astonishing. Dr. Magnan s system consists sim. ply in placing all the inmates in big wards side by side and he found that after a short time he was able to dispense altogether with separate cells and straight-waistcoats. The form of-treatment exercises an der it attacks of delirium become less frequent and finally exceptional. Sui- cides have also diminished in an. ex- traordinary degree. Since 1897 out of 4000 cases per annum St. Anne has only three cases of suicide all men. SUPPORTS STATEMENT. Dr. Gilbert Ballet, of the Hotel Dieu, supported Dr. Magnan by the statement that he had latterly plac- ed the delirious insane in ordinary wards with other patients and had achieved excellent results. Both these eminent practitioners energetically supported the superiori- ty of women as nurses in lunacy wards over the usual male attend- ants, and expressed the hope that they might soon be substituted for men in all asylums. Dr. Magnan s communication is arousing much en- thusiasm, although it is not new. Nevertheless, insanity unfortunate- ly is on the increase, and the night- mare of the old-style asylums, with the: strait-waistcoats, forced douch - es, and herculean and.non too gentle wardens, bas always deterred rela- tives from sending suflerers to these estgblishments. The substitution of feminine care and bed cure would rob the asylums of most of their terrors, and. with the prospect of improvement in the patients, if not restoration to nor- mal mind, much freer recourse is likely to be had to this treatment, with possibly a pronounced decrease in the statistics of insanity. MODESTY. (Sudge.) The dashing young lady was anx ions her aunt, who was rather old fashioned, should ook as present- PI able as possible in her bathing cos- tume. Sure, Aunt Ella, said the girl rather cautiously, you re not going Indeed, I am, replied her aunt. The Daily Mail remarks : Our hotels are following the ex- UNCLE SAM BAITS Proves Good Matchmaker PROPOSAL Married Couple Was Want- Pribilof Islands there are a few white people but many Aleuts and the prog- eny of the -ous and ignorant, De-the States Bureau of Fisheries, which is the real Government of the Pribilofs and the Aleuts and seals which there abound, has been delegated the task of bringing light where heretofore was darkness. the islands is a division of the work of the the intention of the Government to have two teachers on each of the lar- ger islands of the group. The fisher- ies people man teacher and .g woman. They also prefer to couple. bureau found that Alvin C. Whitney of Cronton, Mass., wanted to become an Alaskan Whitney passed the examination and was just about to be appointed when it was explained to him that mar- ried teachers were wanted. biologist of the Department of Agri- culture, whose secretary Mr. Whitney, formerly was, asked: could fill the vacancy at the Island of St. Paul, to which you will be as- considers si will telegraph and find out about it right away. ing despatch to his fiancee, Miss El- sie J. Gibson who was school for Sollege. tion for you Islands. trimony prerequisite. Answer paid. ceived this answer: Sunday morning. Fisheries and told Chief Barton W. Rvermann that for the other teaching vacancy. mam. want to make out the papers until Monday it will be Whitney, he re- plied. BANK THEIR SALARIES IN early Sunday. her and, armed with the necessary license they sought George Ferguson of the Chureh, and were married. Monday the couple appeared at the Bureau of Fisheries. Mr. Evermann gave them their commissions, calling for salar- ies of 1,200 each and their penses. ing. the time, definite disposition of your salaries here, as there are no banks in Aleutian Islands, he said. deed, would be ever go good of you if you would bank our salaries here for us. Stee 384 Main Street, where you can get a special agent of the bureau of Alas- ka, who related the story. of one of the patrons of his office, a boy of thrifty, not to say penur ous, stock. When the lad to the postofiice he will thrust his wizened face up close to the window and, in his slow, Yankee drawl, in- quire most earnestly: in the intensity of his thought the question he has to decide, - al- ways stops for a while to weigh the consequences. Finally, he will reply solemnly: Companion. displayed his characteristic quick wit. As he came to one man, Nothing shall induce me to take off another thing. a MED CUPID'S HOOK WITH TWO 1,200 JOBS in Case of Teachers for Alaskan Service. BY WIRELESS ed, and Bachelor Whit- ney Filled the Bill Promptly. Washington, Aug. 21. Onut of the Aleuts are both numer- The school system of Bureau of Fisheries. It is prefer that they have a have them a married Casting about for new material the school teacher. Mr. Dr. C. Hart Merriam, one time Do you know of any one who 7 Sure, replied Mr. Whitney. I So Mr. Whitney sent-the follow of Burlington, Vt., attending the summer teachers at Dartmouth UIN REDCLIF United jf fy rea DATs S. Reo eebielad Ge We ane All Be Farmers We Can t All Be Wage Earners We Can t All Be Captains of Industry But we can all of us make big money in safe investments. s the Safest and Best Investment now offered to the public. REDCLIFF has four large factories in operation and making REDCLIFF famous as the Building Products centre of Western Canada. These factories have a present pay roll of 000.00 per month. More Factories Are Coming More Railroads Are Coming Real Estate Is Booming We also have Medicine Hat snaps and good farm lands at low prices and easy terms. ASK THE ABOUT IT 395 Toronto Street Have offer for good teaching posi- at St. Paul, Pribiloff Salary twelve hundred, ma- Twelve hours later Mr. Whitney re- Mr. Whitney went to the Bureau of he. had a candidate Name, please? said Mr. It's Gibson now, but if you don't the POLITICS AND POLITICIANS. of Governor Hiram Johnson, of Cali- fornia, who has second place on the Progressive Party national ticket, is Leaving for Washington, arrive the sixth Johnson to be nominated for Vice-President of States. The first was R. H. Johnson, of Kentucky, who was elected with Van Buren, tn 1836, and four years) later went down to defeat with Van Ever- Buren. Georgia, was the next to appear on the Democratic ticket has drawn at- in 1860, In 1864 Andrew Johnson furnished seven vice-presidential can- candidate for the Congressional nom- Tennessee was elected on the ticket with Lincoln. Hale Jolnson, of Illinois, was the Prohibition can- Gidate for Vice-President. in 1896. Gidates, of which number -two were inafion on the National Progresive Republicans and five Democrats. ticket in the Twenty-sixth New eg district. Johu Laws, ninety years old, has been elected for the thirty-first time Adlai E. Stevenson, of Illinots, for- as register of deeds in Orange Coun- mer Vive-Prosident of the United States, will take the stump for the Democratic national ticket. - the United ree--years. porch and wave a Fug beater. Cleveland Plain Dealer. The nomination of Governor Thom- as R. Marshall for second place on Hamilton Fish, ex-Congressman, treasury and former speaker of the Herschel -V. Johnson, of ticket with Stephen A. Douglas Acsmall want ad ti The SEPARATE ACCOUNTS. Miss Gibson arrived in Washington The bridegroom met cout the Rev. People s ex He also gave them his bless- As your expenses are paid all you might wisk to make a the Why, thank you very much, in- said the bridegroom. It She was an all fired pretty girl, SHOPPING INSTINCT. A rural postmaster tells this story Hav ye got any postal cards? Yes, the postmaster replies. Haow much be they t'day? A cent: apiece. Then-the boy, screwing up his eyes over Wal, I'll take one. Youth's KNOX S SARCASM. Secretary of State Knox, it is id, while passing the collection plate one time in his youthful days distin- guished for his wealth and pazet mony, he was waved gruffly aside. Nothing, said the man, I have nothing. Take something, then, the poor, you know, said the 3 youthful Knox, this collection is for Dollar s Worth for a The New Store Just Opened at dollar s worth for a dollar. We are carrying a Full Line of Hats, Caps, Shirts, Ties, Shoes, Clothing and all Gents Furnishings. Our line of Sweaters cannot be excelled. We have now all styles and colors in stock. Our stock is composed of the Very Latest Styles, bought. from Eastern Manufacturers: therefore we can, and are, i selling at Eastern Prices. Give Us a Call and Convince Yourself Don t forget we handle The Monarch Overall The Best Made
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Image 348 (1912-08-23), from microfilm reel 348, (CU1772451). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.