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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-09-27
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) rounds at South awn defeated Jim- fm 10 rounds at and Tommy How- -round draw at defeated Jim Mc 5 rounds at New: previous fight Me- ho was a heavy- knocked out the rat round. defeated Tack ivan in 20 rounds les, i knocked Gut Pat 5 rounds at North knocked out Char- in 2 rounds at New es knocked out fe in:4 rounds at ary defeated Cy- y Thompson in 10 Iwaukee, vin and Battling nt 10-round draw own knocked. out n 1 round at New, Canadian Piahc SPOKANE NTERSTATE FAIR SEPT. 30 O0T. 6, e191 SPECIAL OUR R TO - ane, Wash. Dates Sept, 28-Oct. 5. Return Limit Oct 7th, DR. Ss information and tick- jany C. PR, Ticket 6, MeNEILLIE, DAit. Passenger Agent, Calgary, Alta. When. Undecided whether to give a euit ot ola *4 , Clothes away or have it re- novated, decide on the renovat- ing and bring tt 0 us you'll be mighty giad you did, be- eaase We Wwitt probably save You the cost of new clothing, Our methods of cleansing are scientific and right up to date. Give us your work: THE GLOBE CLEAN- ING PRESSING Co. Rear of Post Office on Fourth Ave. Builder 711 Ottaws St. 626, Box auu-es for sale. One under construction in High School Annex, Block 25; one on Ot- tawa St, finshed, Block 88; One on Highland St gt; ft Pave several good fon which T can build a Bouse: ae- scruing to your own design. Preiluiinary. plans. supplied Fee, Se me for your alterations or fen work of any kind, Will + it-rvompt attention. tained, for a poor dairy cow was an nprofitable investment. A good dairy Gow wiiild yield abut 6,000 pounds of milk in a year, after testing 8, Rese incroonce see Rihad ae ive i ty ae nd return the-goods. House Mover, SAND FOR SALE EXCAVATING HEAVY TEAMING FACTORY AND. FARM Together They Build up.the Ideal Home Market No better example of the tnterde: pendence of the manufacturing and agricultural interests is required than Ontario, It is not necessary to go into the enormous industrial expan- alon In the ii the last two years. This is everywhere evident. But what of the farm? The field crops of-Ontario. last year were valued at 250,000,000 or an average of Ix from each of the 180,000 farms. Five Years ago, the value of Ontario's ag- sricuitutal output was placed at 145 millions, and ten years ago it was not more than a hundred millions, The number of farms to share in that one hundred millions was larger then than mow, so that the average Income of each farm was considerably less than 1,660. In fact, the average income fn 1901: was about 600, according to calculations made from statistics pub- Yshed by the Department of Agricul- ture. This means that the Ontario farm of today is giving its owner, returns that are at least 160 per cent. MUST KEEP OUR RAW MATERIAL Pulpwood Exports are Instance of En- ormous Lose That Has Accrued to Canadian Industry The Department of the Ottawa, has issued a report on wood in part as follows If the pulpwood exported if 191T bad been reduced to pulp in Canada, it would have supplicd 68 mil's of the average size of those in Canala, Thus one hundred and twenty mills instead of, ffty-four would have een operating in Canada, employing Can adian labor anid advancing Canadian Adian industry. The provincial laws affecting the export of pulpwood with: in the exporting provinces have changed cousiderably in 1911 A 1909, pulpwood from private lands in Oatario and from dl lands in Queber and New Branswick could be shipped to points outside of Canada. In that Year, however, the province of Quebec Pulp Tt waar tttysetgnt years-ago today, on Sept. 27,1854, that the newly- organized White Star steamship line Degan to pay ita frightful toll to Nep- tune. On that date occurred the first of the long serics of disasters that ing of the unsinkabte Titanic. The steamer Aes, with over t00-aouts on board Was plowing through fog off Cape Race, Newfoundland, en route from Liverpool to New York, The Artic she Vesta, an iron propellor. was injured so severely that quickly filled with water, hours after alie was struck she went Jantio, ; carrying with ner about 950 people Less than fitty of the pas- hamp red*the work of the rescuers, Nearly a score of years passed be- Anniversary of First White Star Disaster f culminated thig year with the sink- when she was struck by the steamer Three down into the graveyard of the At- sengers, and crew were picked up by down, alone remained to tel the tale the Vesta, as a dense fog greatly of the Naronic s disappearance. -; average size, if the high production - be at work if Cariadians had been far- Jasued more restrictive regulations, Which came into force on the 1st of September, 1910, prohibiting the ex- port of unmanufactured wood cut. on Crown lands within the p:2vince; and in 1911. New Brunswick passed legis- lation to the same effect, coming into force on the firat day of October of that year, too late to affect the 111 cs rade. Legisiation Needed, The effect of the Quebec legislation is noticeable this year. The export of raw pulpWood from that province was decreased by 142,864 cords, or 182 per cept. Its domestic consump- tion increased by 47,671 cords, or nearly 1 (per cent. and three new mills. were the other provinces taken together, the export of raw pulpwood increased by 47,662 cords, or 29.per cent.; the domestic consumption. was increased by 26,130 cords, or 10.2 per cent; and one mill less reported. It 1s evident that tilly legislation is already having the desired effect in stimulating the growth of the industry. It would also seem to have been effective in stimu- lating the export of pulpwood from other provinces, and from private lands in the province of Quebec. AIL the provinces are fully alive to the importance of preventing the ex- port of this valuable taw material. So far as it Is in thelr power, they have taken st ps to prevent: it from being carried of to build up the in- dustries of another country, yet more that half the pulpwood cut in Canada s still carried over the border to sup- ply the pulpmilis of the United States Nearly: all of this wood is cut from privately owned land, over which the provinces have no jurisdiction. Only the federal -anthority, by the impo- sition of prohibitive export tax, could stop this export. Loss to Canada It is interesting to note to what ex- tent provincial industry would have been Increased if the pupwood ex- ported to the United States had been converted into wood-pulp on Canadian Soll. The 636,136 cords exported from Quebec Would have supplied material for a year to forty-five pulp-mills of the average size operating In Quebec. In Ontario, six mills of the average size could have. been kept running with the pulp logs exported from that province. The 122,698 cords shipped from the ports of New Brunswick would have supplied ten mills ofthe Of 1909 be taken as the normal ca Betty ok tnt ats 6 ae province. More than twice the number of mills in the Dominion might iow seeing enotigh to manufacture their Wn raw products. THE DAIRY INDUSTRY J. W. Mitchell, of Man toba Agricul- ture College refers to the dairy branch of farm work as a manufacturing in- started in addition to several others under construction. In for. greater than they were in 1901. tario is worth 10 an acre mur than tm i903, and another significant fact 4s that the area of these lands has extehded in the last ten years fully 4,500,000 acres, showing that farming fs actually becoming /a more widely followed pursut in n: io. What is true of Ontario also applies to Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and other provinces, The greatest prosperity Is where a fertile farming istrict is tributary to a good factory town. The one helps the other.- The Dest market for the local farmer is the home market and the best pro. duce for the citizen is from the near. by farms and gardens. RAISING LIVE STOGK Grain Growing Alone is Not Adequate In Southern Manitoba It takes time to change from grow- ing grain to raising livestock and Gairy cattle. But southern Manitoba is being both induced and forced into the change. The crops in the last three years hate not been as good as they used to be, and the demand kinds of small food products froth markets like Winnipeg and from the new settlers in Saskatchewan and Alberta has been, such as to prove the Profitableness of feeding grain and fodder instead of growing grain alone. The result is that many a station platform is decorated with t2n-gallon milk cans these days, waiting to be rushed to city dairles or to be con sumed by a local creamery or cheese factory, Last year the district be- tween Winnipeg and Morden, which is merely the central portion of Mant tobs, marketed 6,472 head of cattle, 2,790 horses, and 10,338 hogs, an in- crease of nearly twenty per cent. in every department over the previous yar. In daity products he Manitoba farmer last year sold 700,000 pounds more butter than in 1910, and realized over 200,000 more for his work. Creameries produced and sold nearly 400,000 pounds more butter than in 1910, and comparing total receipts for the two years for dairy products, over 1,636,000 was recefved in 1911, as This Season will see further increases in these items, OUR PULPWOOD Sufficient Cut Yeariy to Keep One Hundred and Twenty Mills Going, Fifty-six per cent. of the pulpwood cut in Canada during :the. year 1911 The growing value of the output of the farms can only result in one thing. and that is the increased value of tho Tend. Thus, te latest records of the assessment cf the rural areas show that the farm lands of Ontario are worth over 108,000,000 more than in rst years of the last decade. To make the comparison still mor-strii- ing, the atsessed rural land of On- years ago today, Sept 27, 1851, and volved in another terrible tragedy of the deep. The Atlantic, then one of the-best baats of the White Star fleet, while speeding toward New York on November 23, 1873, was caught in a gale and driven hard on Marr's Rock, of the coast of Nova Scotia. Nine hundred and seventy-six people had fore the White Star Line was in- 28, 1909, she was rammed by the Ital- Maifed ou the Atlantic,-and of thous 547 went down with the ship, Those who survived found thelr way, to shore in open, boats, after days ter- rible hardship and perilous adven- tures. In February, a score of years ago, ceurred the third of the seri s of White Star disasters. Tho -Naronie left Liverpool on her second trip acrogs the Atlantic with a erd of fifty-flve and twelve cattlemen on board. She was the fastest freight boat then in the transatlantic ser- vice, and was considered the last word in steamship construction, Where and how she met her doom is not positively known. A lifeboat, picked up on the Newfoundland banks near where the Titanic later went B.C. Granulated Sugar, 20 Ib. sa: Blue Ribbon. Tea, 8 1b packet: Moose Brand Tea, 1 1b, packets. Royal Household Tea, 3 Ib, tins. Coffer; good: blend. buying every day. The Republic was the next White Star Hner to go down. On January 8 Ibs, finest Rice. fan ship. Florida, and began filling, 5 Ibs, Currants. placing the lives of 1,500 in peril, Jock Binns, the wireless man of the ship, sent out-his mmertat C. Q.-D, to the four quarters of the sea, and while Neptune got the ship, the toll of human life was only six two on the Republic and.four on the Florida. What is called progressive journ- lism by its friends and yellow journalism by its foes is the compo- site product of many minds. Arthur Brisbane, Morrill Goddard, Joseph Pulitzer and 8. S. Chamberlain were the pioneers in the new school of Newspaper work, but to Chamberlain probably belongs whatever of credit or discredit attaches to the discovery, of the basic principles of saffron Journalism. Samuel Selwyn Chamberlain was born s Walworth, N. Y., sixty-one duated from New York University at the age of twenty. He commenced his newspaper career on the Newark N. J., Advertiser. Within two years hehad made good so effectively that Beunett gave him a position on the New York Herald. He remained with that paper four years, when Pulitzer offered Mm a better salary on the World. After a year he returned to the Bennett forces, becoming editor of the New York Evening Telegram. Going to Paris He edited the Euro- pean edition of the Herald, and in 1884 founded Le Matin. This publi- cation Iater became the property of P, Bunau-Varilla, prince of Panama Canal grafters, and Chamberlain re- turned to America. While Chamberlain was in Paris, William Randolph Hearst had- become the proprietor of the San Francisco Examiner. From a journalistic wreck he had built it up until it had dally circulation of 25)000. Not satisfied with this minor success, Hearst was looking about for a man who could make the Examiner the big paper of the Pacific coast. He found his man in Chamberlain a man familiar with all the methods of the most sensational newsapers of the time, and with host of original ideas in his teeming brain. Atteeeeeeee eee + FIRST THINGS. * Feeeeeegeenesalt S. S, Chamberlain Was the First Yellow Journalist Rewspapers. When Hearst tought the Cosmopolitan Magazine, berlain was given the task of making it over, which he did quite Buccessful- y value of sensationalism as a news- paper circulation buflder, Tain was also the first to see that the Public appetite had been satisfied and to gradually return to less flamboy- ant methods of presenting the news of the day. much to say that his influence has been felt in every newspaper office im America, and that his ideal of the newspaper as a public servant is now generally accepted. Against 1,372,000 in the previous year. rences, the first American newspaper, was issued in Boston 222 years ago today; but it was suppressed by the appeared. home. Aylmer Scotch Marmalade, 1 Ib. g Tomatoes, 3 1b. tins, best brand. From the day Chamberlain arrived. in San Francisco, what has since beea called yellow journalism may be said to date. He did things that no other newspaper had ever dream- of doing. He financed expeditions to capture wild animals for the San Francisco zoo, reseued people from watery graves, secured signed statements from prominent men and women on all- questions of popular interest, and ori ited. the sober sister squad with Winifred Black as the pioneer in that peculiar journ- alistic development. In short he Red Rove Baking Powder 1 1h Apples, 40 Ib. boxes, Cooking an er case. Chow Chow Pickles, large bottles. Marmalade, Sheriff's and Cairns, per tin, made em laugh, he made- em shud- 4 for 2ic. der, he inade em weep. Every big ( Custard Powder, pint, packets, 1 news story was a romance in which 40c per box. tragedy, love, hate and sudden death Were deftly intermingled. The dry as dust style of newspaper report- ing was taboo in the Examiner office. In a few years Chamberlain. had boosted the circulation to some 70,000, and Ver since the Examiner has made Droft of from 850,000 to 500,000 year. What he aid for the,San Francisco paper Chamberlain repeated as edi- tor-in-chief of the New York Ameri- can from 1905 to 1907, and Iater as supervising cditor of all the Hearst Crossed Fish Sardines. Fels Naptha, 10 bar cartoon. per can, Spices all kinds. GOODS DELIVERED TO ANY a Fi. MO Phone 177. As he was the first to perceive the Chamber- 5 5 small engine, the invention of Wil- liam Hedley, was usedasa.subst - tute for animals in a colliery. Steph- enson constructed tis first locomot- ive in 1814. The first successful loc- omotive, the Rocket, was completed in 1829. Such were the beginnings of modern railroadin: It is perhaps not too SOUNDED LIKE HIM. (Judge.) They tell. a story out my way about a Kansas man .who, in the days when Mark Hanna was promin- ent, went to church, took his seat in a rear pew and went to sleep. When The first number of Publick Oceur legislature before the second issue Princeton University had ts reai beginuing 160 years ago today, when the board of New. Jersey's first col- lege, established few years before at Elizabeth and later removed to ton National Monument Society, or- ganized for the purpose of erecting a tig woke up he awoke with a start, and he must have thought himself t a political meeting. The first meeting of the Washing- Morrow's Baking Powder, 1 1b. tins. Corn: Flakes (Krinkle) Week End Special, 3 for 25c, Bracknell's Club Sauce. Week End Special, 2 bottles for 45c. WeekEnd Special: Morrow s Cash Grocer eks. Week End Special 1.38. Week Hud Special 1,00, Week End Special, 50 per Ik, Week Bnd Special, 1,00 per tia, Coffee; finest Mocha and Java, Week End Special 40 per Ib. Week End Special, 35 per Ib. We list below an assortment of Groceries that the majority of our customers are a One 2b. packet Christie s Soda Biscyits, 3 tins sliced Singapore Pineapple, 8 tins Yellow Crawford Peaches, 1 Wb, Featheratrip Cocoanut. Three 2-oz. bottles Lemon or Vanilla Essence. 8 packages Jelly Powder. 1 tin Lownoy's or Cowan's Cocoa. 6 Ib. packet Canada Laundry Starch, 3 packets Canada Corn Starch. 8 Ib, sack Rolled Oats, One-f-Ib; tn: Kitehen-Brand-Molnsees, This is a very useful assortment, for ev Price 5.00. ay lass. Week End Spetial 2 for 35 Week End Special, 2: for a6c. Corn, 2 Ib, tins, best brand. . Week End Special, 3 for 35e. Week End Special 2 for 35 . Week End Special, 2 for 5c. Eating. Week End Special 1.8 Week End Special 30 per botth 7 Wb. tins. Week End Special 86 Sunlight and Lifebuoy Soap. Week End Special 22 for 1.00. Pork and Beatis, plain and tomato sauce Pork and-Reans, Plain and Tomato Sauce Week End Specis doz. in box. Week End Specia Week End Special, 2 for 25c. Week End Special, 70c per cartoon. owan s Cooking Chocolate, Week End Special, 20c per cake, St. Charles Gream. Week End Special 9 for 1.00. Coffee, Mocha and Java; 1 1b. fancy tins, Week End Special 40 Week End Special, 3 tins for 25 . Jelly Powders. Week End Special, 85 per dozen. Plums, large red. Week End Special, 1.00 per case. PART OF THE CITY, .0 D. TEGMN CASH. RROW North Railway Street The minister has just thunde To him that hath shall be and to him that hath not shall taken away even that which hath. 3 Who said that? asked the wildered politician who had awakened. The minister stopped, looked the sleepy interrupter and then ; laconically, Well, A resolution calling on Bg workingmen to imitate the Contii tal European custom of-obser May 1 as Labor Day, was adopte Trades Union Congress at Newp Wales, the other day. was exported to the United States. national memorial of the first Presi- Work must te done on business prin- Giples. Good cows must be first ob This is the fact shown by statistics Newark, voted favorably. onthe. fol- lowing proposition: ent In the capital city, was held in Dr. Guthrie informed a doctor, who gave evidence, that If a person is at How aminutes, that is in law an accidental death. collected by the Forestry Branch of the Departmnt of the Interior. The total quantity of pulpwood cut in Canada during 1911 was 1,520,227 cords. The quantity exported amoun- ted to 447,939 cords, while the, re- maining forty-four per cen. (672,285 the Ot yer 335 herds. throvehout be. However, Prof. Mitchell that the average was only It was much more profit. have only 6 cows to keep and ian 12 poor ones, and 6 yield as much as 12 poor was 5,840,592 (an average of 6.29 per cord.) Had the: wood been retained in Canada end manfactured here, it is estimated that the value would have beeti Increased to about 16,000- 000. Had Canfda manufactured into wood-pulp all the pulpwood she pro: duced, she could have had enotigh te Supply hundred and twenty-two mills of the Average size of those Accidental Death At the Hackney Coroner's Court, point of death, and receives a which accelerates death by two - SUNOEETE WORK. . J.J. LAIT 16 RONTHEAL STRERT *Phone 260, MEDICINE HAT LIVERY COMPANY Horse Repository oppeaite arrangements for carrying on business of Livery Keepers and il Feed Stables, Single and le, outfits of all descriptions for le or hire. says the Expreri operating in Canada, instead of the fifty-four she now bas. Quebec could Pitty yw York schoolchildren are, to have their jaws Trustees that two hundred acres. of cords) was manufactured Canada 4 leo one thousand pounds. proc. jee - King William rd, who was a branch of the illustrious House of Nassau.t al with capital letters as George Ade. the city hall at Washington seventy- nine years ago today. John Marshall, the famous Chief Justice of the United States, was the first president of the society. On his death ex-president James Madison became his successor. Since then the president of the Un- ited States has been ex-officlo society, which fs still in for the college was broken existence, The foundation of the in wand the college was com- monument was Inid in 1848 and by pleted and opened In 1766. The first 1889 the society had collected suffi. edifice was called Nassau Hall, as ex- ofent funds to carry the shaft to 11 Pressing the honour we retain, in height of 156 feet. During the civil this remote part of the globe to the war and reconstruction the project Immortal memory of the Glorious tagged, but in 1876 Congress pro- vided for the completion of the mem- orial, and in 1884 the cap stone was set In position on the highest mon- ument In the world. The total cost was 1,500,000. The total heleht That the college be fixed at Prince-. ton upon condition that the inhabi- tants of said place secure to the woodland and that ten acres of clear ed land which Mr. Sergeant viewed; In those days writers were as Iiber- That Her Royal Highness the Duch- ess of Connaught is most thoughtful of all those who minister to her conifort was proved again, as cho was leavitig the Vancouver hotel. keeper, Mrs. MoCrae, wishing to ex- Press her appreciation personally for make the Vice-Regal party comfort- OPERA MEDICINE HAT widened to improve their mentai de- velopment. The doctor who recom- mended the treatment contends that have supplied sixty per cent. more mills than she s now doing, and New Brunswick conid quadruplex telegraphy sending four messages along one wire was made between London and Live: The first successful experiment in above the ground is 555 feet. the Stock Monday, The first real raidroad inthe world a small lower jaw means small brain epact i APREEAON OF Mapleine number rail ty. Evangelical fields are now profit- ably worked by the motor car, de- clares N.S. McClurkan, who has travelled California for years as an itinerant saver of souls. Since re- placing his horses with a Studebaker 1, 30 , Rey, McClurkan has covered an nyerage of 1,000 miles a month, reg- istering four times as many .conver- sions from evil ways,-as he hag been able to make when traveling by wa- From the Land of Hot Calves and Flapjacks BiG HORN HUNTING LODGE The Company undertake all descrip- tons. of express.delivery by horse or Automobile. Baquiries solicited vy day or night Phone 703, eg Grocers soll Mapleigg gon, five-yeursago today. Thla was hailed by the scientific world as a tremen- dous achievement, although in these days of wireless telegraphy it seems commonplace. sidered impossible to eend more than one messgge along a wire at a time. succeeded in transmitting two mes- sages in concen directions simultan- cously. two messages ow the same direction. The duplex telegraphy apparatus was ol thirty: in England was opened for passeng- er traffic eighty-sev n years ago to- day. The cars on thia/ploneer line were drawn by horses. The builder of the Ine were Edward Pease and George Stephenson, the latter the invehtor of the locomotive. A statue of Pease Has been er cted at Darling- ton, one of ifihe terminals of the first passenger railway, As early as 1602 In 1855, Stark of Vienna sent/ :the coal merchante-of Newenstie het utilized timber rail for their coal earts, and,this was the germ of the modern railway, An tron track was Until 1353 t was-con- in that year Dr. Gintl, an Austrian, Perfected. by Stearns, an. American, Gf net, write, fl Wantad in The Dally News FG.C8, seattie, Wn. cities Coldiip will bring results and W assoon followed bY the quad- lafa at'a colliery in 1776, but was ruplex telegraph, destroyed by. the colliers. In 1813 a MR. PAUL Tickets Sellings Today CURTAIN 8.30. 'Housekeeper at Hotel Is Honored ; Thoughtful Duchess Makes Prese able. But Mrs, McCrae was not 30 Her Royal Highness wrote he note expressing her thanks, and n tioning how comfortable and ho like their suites had been. A 5 enclosed beautiful dull gold broach with letters L, M. standing for Lor all the pains that had been taken to Margaret; the Duchess name top with a gold crown. HOUSE ONE NIGHT Oct. 7th GILMORE AND ALL-STAR CAST IN THE SUPREME DRAMATIC SENSATION OF THE DAY The Havoc A Guaranteed Attraction. 1.00, 75c, 50c CARRIAGES 10.45.
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Image 558 (1912-09-27), from microfilm reel 558, (CU1772685). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.