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583
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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-10-01
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HAT DAILY NEWS. Tre Caital Investment Co. 420 MAIN BT. . PHONE 799. BUY NOW uit until prices are 100 per cent. higher. The fall boom is just starting. iS AND SISSONS 2, four lots, 450.00 each, terms. Exclusive listing 6, 60 tt. on Main St, 100 ft. from City Hall, Best buy in, the Dusiness wection. 36,000, terms, Exclusive listing. B, 100 ft. on Montreal St. 5500.00, terms. Exclusive PARK Block 5, 28 lots. 16,100.00, terms + Block 5, two lots corner. 1650.00, terms, Lockwood Street, modera, seven rooms. 3700.00, terms, Two houses under constriction, modern and up-to-date in every way, will be sold at practically cost of constrdey tion. Small retainer asked untll construction completed dons month according to plans. K 108, 8 lots corner. 1950.00. 4, four lots: . 600.00 each. lt; -Blook 107, two. corners, 75 x 180 each, 1950.00 per corner, . terms. . . Jock 77, two lots on Broadway. 1550.00, terms. terms. VISION 208 lots. at 165.00-each, terms. ARRISVILLE DIVISION 98 Jots at 165.00 each, terms. KIPLING PARK 2 The finest sub-division in South End. Level and adjoining industrial cite. 210 per acre if sold at. once. This is the snap of acreage propositions of Medicine Hat. DIVISION . - i See us for good subdivision buys in west/and south ends of city. See us for cheap acreage adjoining the city. GIVE US YOUR LISTINGS. Block 4 , four lots on gas, water and sidewalk. 275.00 each, INSURANCE We beg to announce that we have taken over the Insurance business of the Fewings-Rubidge Agency. We solicit a continuance of the patronage given them. .., As this will be one of the most important parts of our business, we can assure you that your insur- will have the prompt attention it warrants. i. W. IRELAND. iH, 8. ELLIS. A. T. CLAXTON PHONE 305 ROOM 4, BECKER BLOCK. The Medicine Hat Security Co. The Cap For All Occasi For work-days, as for play-days, an , Eastern Brand cap is just what gives you the most value in re- turn for your money. They have fit, style, comfort and warmth and they keep their smart, natty look long after an ordinary cap would be shabby. You can t do better next pay day than to investa little out of your envelope in an Eastern-Brand cap. Go to it 4 Salem, Masa, Sept. 30 The wide- ly discussed case of Joseph J. Etter and Arturo Glovannitt , the ludua- trial Workers of the World leaders in whose behalf William D, Haywood recently proposed a nation-wide called for trial today in the Essex called fo rtrial today in the Essex County Superior Court of this city. Few cases in the history of criminal actions growing out of Industrial dis- putes have attracted equal attention. The widespread interest and. import- ance with which the trial is regarded was manifested this morning by court room filled with newspaper cor- respondonta from many sections of the country. Bttor and Giovanniti, who hall from New York City, where the former was engaged in editing a labor paper with Glovannitti as his assistant, are charged with accessories. before the fact in the alleged murder of Annie Lopezai in Lawrence, January 9, 1912, The Killing of the Lopezzl woman oc- curred in a street riot during the Great textile strike in Lawrence last January. Joseph Caruso is accused of belng the principal. in the murder, It is contended by the government that the buliet which killed the wo- man was intended to kill a Lawrence police officer. Ettor and Giovannitti went to Law- Fence shortly after the outbreak of the big strike in the woollen mills, I.W.W. LEADERS ON TRIAL Are Being Tried at Salem for Accessories After the Fact in Girl s Alleged Murder. As officers of the Industrial Workers of the World they sddresned meetings of the striking operatives and coun- aeled theflm ag to their conduct dur- ing the disturbance. A few days after the beginning ofthe strike the dis- turbances became alarming and the militia was ordered out. Serious rioting, in which street cars were at- tacked, took place on the morning of January 29. The police and strikers clashed that same evening in front of the Everett Mili and Annie Lopeasi was mortally wounded by a bullet, The day following the killing of the Lopezal woman Ettor and Glovan- nit Were arrested on the ground that their speeches had incited the principals, to commit the acts of vio- lence which resulted in the shooting. In April indictments were returned against. them and they have since deen held without bail to await trial Since the arrest of the two leaders a nation-wide campaign th thelr be- half has been waged by the Indue- trial Workers of the World, which has pictured: them as martyrs held in prison bys the interests. Not- withstanding the prevailing bellef that-the men have been dented trial up to date by the government, the records of the court show that all continuances of the cause bave been at the request of counsel fur the de- fence. It 1a expected that the trial will occupy at least six weeks, Plate World s Canada. It has just een discovered that Canada posgesses the key to the European naval problem. When Schneider in 1889 introduced the use of nickle into the manufacture of Steel armour plate, he little realized that he was placing in Canada s hands a great means for maintain - ing the peace of the world. Battleships without nickel steel arngour would be utterly helpless be- fore modern guns. If nickle were no longer obtainable, armour construc tion would go back a quarter of a century. Canada today produces about 90 per cent. of the world s supply of nickel. Practically-all of the remain- der comes from New Caledonia, an island.in the south-western Pacific controlled by France. In 1910, the value of nickel ore and matter exported from Canada to the United States was approximately NICKEL USED. FOR NAVIES Nickle Necessary in the Manufacture of Modern Armor Supply Comes Largely From America are in the United States, nearly 6-7 of the Canadian nickle was Yefined to the . south of the. border. The refining process raised the value of this Canadian ore to nearly 12,- 000,000. The major portion of this nickel is used in the manufacture of nickel steel. Consequently, if Canada were to prohibit the export of nickel, the nickel steel industries of Europe would fall into decay, and high-grade armour place for battleships would be an impossibility. Naturally such a course would be a bit hard on the Canadian nickel producers, but then see what it would do to the world s expenditure on navies. 2 In these times of wars and rumors of wars itis ssstiring to know that Canada possess s such a potent wea- Pon making for world peace. Eee As the only refineries in Mother Country in Case of What with the Panama Canal af- fair andthe German bugaboo, and one thing and another, the .mother country across the deep blue ocean faces many perils, and a new one was jiiam Ramsay. OPERA HOUSE MEDICINE HAT ONE NIGHT Monday, Oct. 7th MR. PAUL GILMORE AND ALL-STAR CAST IN THE SUPREME DRAMATIC SENSATION OF THE DAY The Havoc A Guaranteed Attraction, Tickets Sellings Today : : 1.00, 75c, 50c recently pointed out at a meeting of the British Science Guild by Sir Wil- In case of war de- clares Sir William, Great Britain would soon be forced to beg for peace for want of ammunition. He assert- ed that , England has no adequate supply: of nitric acid, which is abso- lutely necgssary for the manufacture of explosives. He explained: Bngland relies on the importation of nitrate of soda from Chile and Peru. In a state of war this supply, would cease. Foreign ships. would intercept the cargoes and a dearth of nitrate would follow. At present we could not carry on a war for any Tength of time, for we should have no explosives. Practically every other country, including Germany, Italy, Sweden, Norway, Austris and Rus- sia, have factories for preparing ni- trates from the atmosphere. Wheth- er this. pays or not. js a matter of secondary importance, and until some such steps are taken by England we are standing on the edge of a pr ci- plee. Sir Willlam Ramsay s scientific at- tainments, which won for him many honors, including knighthood, gave his warning unusual weight, and the state of unpreparedness for war he Pointed out will probably soon be remedied, The eminent savant Is a mative of Glasgow, and today rounds out three score years of life His father, the late William Ramsay, was distinguished civil engineer. Sir William was eduacted at Glasgow University and the University of Tu- bingon. For many years he was pro- fessor of chemistry at Glasgow Unie veristy and at University College, Bristol, and was principal of the lat- ter institution for six years, 1881-87. He is the author of numerous learned worke, including text books on chemistry, The Molecutar Surface- Energy of Liquids, A Constituent of the atmospher: Disoovery of the Constituents of the Atmosphere, and Heliu a Con- stituent of Certain Minerals. His additions to the sum of buman know- ledge have won recoguftio from the Sir William Ramsay Points Qut New Peril to England Ammunition Has No Nitric. the hundreds of bands of redskin pil- War Would Soon Be Out of tof Ireland, Berlin, Bohemia, Leyden, Turin, Rumania, Sweden, Mexico Geneva and Frankfort. For manly yeare he has been member of the faculty of University College, Lon- don. While his tame is chiefly based on his attainments in chemisiry, Sir William is a noted Nnguist, a moun- taineer of wide fame, and a student of literature and languages. . Not long ago he published 2 magazine article on phonetic spelling, in which he said: Our speling has bin inherited from our forefaatherz, It iz in many in- stansez rong. It z:jn aul instansez unsurtain, for it i poles dificult tu remember that a wurd iz spelt con- sistently than tu remember a gro- tesc speling. Whi .du we not. aulter it? Furst, I thine, becoz fu peepl hay considerd the mater, and the very Strong argyments in fayor ov an aulteraishon. Sekund, we taic pried in whot we hay Jur? with dificuity, eoven though it be owlet pyesles. Thurd, becoz it iz supposed that. it aultered, our sp ling wil cees tu bee yuenlform. Quaint Indian Ceremony Held Aborigines of New Mexico Celebrated Annual Event Yesterday. - One of the most spectacular, quaint and interesting of Indian ceremonies is the celebration of the feast of San Germenimo, which was held yester- day at Taos, in New Mexico, This festival is Observed by the aborigines of New Mexico on the last day of September each year. Utes, Apaches, vajos, Mexjcans and hali-breeds from hundreds of miles around gath- er at Taos for this great Indian event, and the customary quiet of the lovely Taos valley is broken by gtims from all over the Southwest who tarn toward their Mecea for the festival day of their patron saint. The program of-the/day began in the exuberance and enthusiasm by the Presence of paleface officers and spec- tators, are au interesting feature of the day, but the greatest interest centres in the ceremony of climbing the greased pole. On the top of the pole is fastened a live cock, a live sheop, and a basket of all the var- ities of fruit and grain grown by the redskin tillers of the soil. The vietor in the climbing contest cuts loose the trophies and casts them down to the crowd. Next come offer- ings to the gods of the harvest. The festival concludes with a bountiful feast, and all who with may share in the meal. San Geronimo Day has been celebrated at Taos ever since the Indians were converted to Chris- tianity, and before tat time a har- Vest festival had been observed at about that time each year by the adherents of the ancient Indian faith. The festival at Taos differs only in jbeing more spectacular and largely attended than - other harvest-time celebrations held by the untutored red man in whatever sootions of the United States, Canada and Mexico they may be found. The festival is an expression of the Indian faith in the powers of the unseen world, whether im the Christian heaven or the happy bunting ground of their forefathers. As such, these tribal feasts constitute religious rites for the propitiation of the gods of the harvest, the god of the growing comm, and the rain god. Among the In- dians of various parts. of North America the corn dance, held when the com begins to tassle, is the chief eclebration of the year. San Geronimo, whose memory is: now per- peruated among the Indians of the Southwest by the annual festival at Taos, is Spanish for St. Jerome, whose feast day was celebrated yes- terday throughout the Catholic world. The Thanksgiving feast of North America, the harvest festivals of the European peasantry, the . similar celebrations of the farmers of India and Chima, the floral fiestas of the Pacific coast, and the Indian dances are similar to the harvest. celebra- tions of ancient Egypt, Assyria, Greoco and Rome, and all have. a common origin that antedates all religions. These festivals recognize the Kinship of mankind with Mother Earth, and human dependence upon her bounty. Me desks obs fe ob oe oh be ob fe oh oe he + + , + - ae Boke oh be be oe be oh be he oh oe oh of The first voysge of an American vessel around the worki was-made by the ship Columbia, which sailed from Boston Sept. 30, 1787, just a cen- tury and a quarter ago. Th. route was by way of Cape Horn to the northwest coast of Ar.erica, where the ship took on a cargo of furs and sailed. for China. From the latter country it sailed around the Cape oj Good Hope and returned to Boston in 1790. The Columbia was in com- mand of Capt. Robert Gray, who was the first white man to ascend the Columbia river, although the mouth of that stream has. previously heen disvoVered by a Spanish ex- edition. nat The first free trade convention, in America met at Philadelphia eighty- one years ago. Free trade principles were first advocated by Adam Smith the English economist, in 1776, and triumphed in England when the corn laws were abolished in 1846, and the commercial treaty with France was adopted in 1860. FIRST THINGS. The first cathedral to be built - in America is that. at Lima, Peru, which was consecrated Oct. 1, 1625, just 287 years ago today. The sent ttifice occupies the original site fronting the beautiful Plaza Mayor, Zs ON SALE DA carly morning, when.an Indian chief Legiofiy'd'Honneur,* the Institute, of Fi ad the scientitic sicademies cln uim a black gobs deliver d a re- citation 'tonthe mulfitade. The trib- Jal dances, somiwitwt. toned down in FOR THE WOMAN WHO THINKS AND FEELS. Some women complain that they ings, or dizais in the head, 5 i should not ocour to the normal healthy Womea, But morrat eam, eating ibe to there pains at some time in her ie, due t0 absormal ceatfidtes ta iis eae 1s corsets, aver-taxed . bad aie, poor or improper lood aree liver, eto, A regulator female tonic made from pure slycorin, and without the use.of aloobol, called. *t'* medicinal roots with DR, PIERCE S FAVORITE PREsC has proven ite value in thoysandd of eases, like the following ne oar tetas du fot I have tied he Yor thirty pe ae eoale eat ine hundryde of Geliars In doctors Wie oe Preseripn. ton and Golden Metical Discovery and take: together, I never gt; was disappointed in your remedies and tale in recommending ite teak pours mations. tk ina et See a : ro : pee fat nd ealthy. fea uber are SOU Pay indy cares welts a it gel Gi RE il aboans Dr. Piracu s Gunat Fascty Docron Boos, The Ye isar, newhy revised oe tosaeie or married, ought : one-doat temps, fo cover cost of wrappiag aad selling canes CANADIAN NORTHERN STEAMSHIPS, LTD. Announce XMAS EXCURSION RAIL RATES From the West in connection with THE ROYAL LINE Most direct route to Bristol, London and the Continent. B icket on gale November 7th to December 31st, incluslye, with re- turn limit of five months from date of issue. Good going on Royal George (12,000 tons) from Montreal Nov. 18th. CHRISTMAS SATLINGS: Royal Edward (12,000 tons) from Hallfox Noy, 27th. Royal George (12,000 tons) from Halifax, Dev. 11th. Berth reservations and full information from any rafi or steamship agent, or write A. H. DAVIS, General Agent, Scott Block, 272 Main St, Winnipeg. A ES POL OLO-LO-HOhO POT TO Te L OTe heTene O-ehe+oLom 3 3 ? i THE REVELSTINE SAMAMLL GU UD, ze i We carry in stock a full line porate 3 of Building Material ee you the cos Lumber, Lath, Cement, Plaster, 8zc., Seen + Fir Finish and Flooring a Specialty. + Give us you : ? THE GL Yard, North Railway Street. : : Phone 59 ING Pl Toa ThSe Rear of Post Foterc40peo-t01040+010berebeberete obebetetene in the heart of Lima. The ground for the cathedral was Isid out by Pizarro on the very day on which. thirty-cighth anniversary of the Brit- ish occupation of the 200 islands com- posing the group. In 1859 the Kings J. A. the site of the ity was chosen. The and chiefs of the islands offered vol- Car construction of the caftiedral occu- untarily to ttansfer the govermment. pied nearly a century, wing to de-/to Bngland, but at that time Britain 7 lays incident to changes of viceroys, did not care to. take up the white Phone 626. changes in plans, and damage caused man's burden in the Fijis. In 1874 Masta: (or by earthquakes. In 1746 the cathed- the offer was renewed, and the for- construction ral and practically the entire city mal annexation of the group o the fpnet 4 was destroyed by an earthquake, and British empire took place Sept. 30 of Gnetan fais a dozen years afterward the new cathedral, occupying the same sijte, was completed. The edifice is the most imposing of its-kind in Ameri- that year. Have severa oS which I can cording to Frank If Not Honest. *Preltmina From the Atlanta News, ca. Its two sides are formed of ten Sonat : : . for John Sharp. Williams, of me fe lapels, in one of which lies the re- or Jeo work - i : Rothe Mississippi, had occasion to hire a mae It peOks colored man to work round. his house. There were several applicants, but the waiting list had finally been re- duced to one man. The Senator cross-examined the man carefully. After he hid gone, in to his antecedents, and all that, he asked: Are you honest? ruthless conqueror of Peru. In the church and in the vestry there are many magnificent, old and valuable paintings, including a Murillo. Dir- rectly opposite the cathedral, across the square, is Government House, now the President's residence,- but once the palace of the viceroys. The Fiji islanders, in their distant Honest? Sho I fs, I's bin arrested Poge Whales ee Ted Annual Winter Excursion Rates MANITOBA, SASKATCHEWAN, ALBERTA and the KOOTENAYS GREAT BRITAIN, IRELAND, SCANDINAVIA and the CONTINENT ROUND TRIP FIVE MONTHS LIMIT ILY, NOV. 7th TO DEC. 3ist SPECIAL EXCURSION SHIPS 8. S. Empress of Britain from Quebec, Friday, Nov: 15th. . S. S. Empress of Ireland from 8. 8. Lake Manitoba S. S. Empress of Britain from EARLY APPLICANTS HAVE GREATER CHOICE TICKETS RATES DETAILS From any Railway or Steamship Agent. J's. CaRyeR, General Agent, 210 Portage Ave., Winnipeg home in the South Pacific, celebrated fob stealing three times an let off Occupation Day yesterday, the ebery time. ude Ones yet eo FROM ALL RAIL WAY STATIONS To St. John, Friday, Nov. 29th. St. John, Saturday, Dec. 7th. St. John, Friday, Dee. 13th. from 8, S: Empress of Ireland from St. John, Friday, Dec. 27th. , MEDICINE BA: BERTH RESERVATIONS CAN NOW BE MADE: Herse SALOON SECOND THIRD Rear 12 Fox Beg to announce pleted arrangen the business of General Feed double cutfits) gale or bit The Company tions of express automobile. Bnquiries: sol Pt OR WRITE
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Image 583 (1912-10-01), from microfilm reel 583, (CU1772700). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.