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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-07-16
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Transcript
Keep Out the Weeds Weeds unchecked will ruin the crop. It isn t sufficient to plough and sow well in Spring and Fall and leave the rest to nature. - There are weeds to fight. There are weeds in Business, too weeds of Opposition of public indi ference from without, and of lack of enterprise hin weeds that unchecked seriously sommpetiti from retard business growth. Keep cultivating and the weeds never get a chance to thrive. There is a combination plough and harrow, fertilizer and oe Srey, effective: wood Giller: tha weeds. It is not enough to peongt and sow well with advertisements in Spring and Fall and leave will keep s Advertising the rest to human nature. Human nature and the respect your customers bear you are not proof against the Summer weeds that can thrive on rest and apathy. ) You must keep busy in the hot weather you must keep cultivating. Turn Summer dullness into activity by Sum- Plan Summer attractions lant for a crop of Summer profits, and Be verusing cultivation will keep out the on mer Advertising. Keep Cultivating Keep Advertising * KEEP OUT THE WEEDS business an ilter- out the a pees advertising problems 1s nyailable through any. recognised Canadian the Canadian Press Assocation, Boom 609 Lumaden no obligation on your part o write, if interested. ERNE SEES FALL OF AVIATOR Lad Leaps From Machine and is Instantly Killed. MOTHER ON Victor Smith Stanford Un- iversity Student, is Vic- tim of f Tragedy. Palo Alto, Cal... July 13- With a message in his pocket from his moth- er to his sweetheart, both of whom witnessed portions of his flight, Vic- tor Mossis Smith. Jr., der Stanford University student, was in. aeroplane. A score of spectators Witnessed tle accident. Young Smith dropped from a height of about 200 feet and his neck was broken. The youthful aviator set out this morning from his home at Mountain View to fly fo Ravenswood park, scheduled for to- GROUND his mother gave him a note to carry to Miss- Marle Wilde. a Palo Alto high school student, to whom the tad was engaged to be married. Loses Control Flying north to Palo Alto, Smith circled over the town, then shot across the Stanford campus and start- ed for Ravenswood park. While crossing a prune orchard Sinith en- eavoured to make a sharp turn to reach an open field near the, park, The machine veered and it was seen that the aviator had lost:control, The biplane plunged downward and when within about 30 feet of the ground the boy jumped. He was dead when aid Teached him. Mrs. Smith arrived in an automo- hile shortly afterward and the body. was taken to the family home. When Miss Wilde, who had witness- ea flight from adistance, was in- formed of the death of her fiance she fainted and was carried to the auto mobile in which Mrs. Smith had come to-the scene of the accident. Mast Sion Pass The Acroplans a and the By. AN eka a FEVER BRIGADE nf can Ker-chooers er-chooers Will Hurry ( Off to the Camps Where Reliet From. Dreaded Affliction Is to Be Had. This week will witness the begin- ning of the annual northward hegira of the sufferers from hay fever, and the resorts: of Canada, Vermont and other sections where immunity is to be had are preparing for their annual influx of sneezers. Along about this time each y ar, in cities all over Am- erica except a fortunate f w, a loud, earth-quaking, explosive ker-choo is. heard, and the Ker-chooers who can afford it realize that the time has come to pack the trunk for a hurried trip to that land of promise where hay fever is unknown and the sneez- ets are at rest, Those who have to stay at home and seeze it out get Scant pity or sympathy from their as- sociates, Hay fever is really a dis- tressing ailment 8 any on who hi it will inform you, between suatffles, but the hard-hearted scoffers consid- er-it only an excellent joke. man who is afflicted with nerves in pt. Rubs Hay fever is deseribed in the dic- merriment that greets the hay fever 0nary as a catarrhal affection of victim, If the unfortunate visits his famify physician hoping for reiief from he paroxysms of sneezing that Tack his frame, the man of medicine only smiles and says the trouble will soon wear itself out, and .adds, Two dollars, please. To the hay-fever- ite, the world is divided into two war- Ting camps of humanity, with those who have it ranged on one side and those who haven't on the other. Small Wonder that the tortured and ridicul- ed afflicted have formed , themselves into a body called the American i PARTRIDGE PLYMOUTH ROCKS This is a breed of Poultry which meets every 2 juirement.+ The util. yohird-ef the ventas; f large, ontenes plumaged -and wnexceelled in iz malities. ekerels for Higgs 00 and 5.00 per set- ye Z, N. TERRILL, NEWS OFFICE eptetene epee odo seeeee Itieve the congestion. Fever Association, for purpos s of mu- tual protection, and hold annual in- ternational conyentions for the thrange of may not interfere with the d tions and promises that he: Verge of discovering a surB lt the dread disease, gree hay fever fan always to it as the dread disease.) Thus buoyed up by hope, the victims return to their homes, happy and contented until hay fever s open season begins again. the mucous membrane of the eyes and nose, attributed to irritation caused by the pollen of various grasses and plants. Victims, however, have been known to describe it by one single jskort and ugly word- Doctors have denied that the popular theory as to the cause of hay fever is correct, but they have offered nothing definite to take its place, ana eo the sneezing brigade continues to cuss the-gold- en rod and ragweed and other treed- ers of noxious pollen. The victims -jusually begin thelr sneezing matches the.first or even the middle of August. A permanent cure for hay fever has et-to be found, but physicians say that the ferocity of the attack will be scmewhat mitigated if the sufferer abstains from meat;-rich-food; epices;+) acid and alcoholic beverages; takes a cold bath each morning, permitting the water to dry itself without the ap- plication of a towel; wears loose clothing and takes plenty*of physical exercise, so as to draw the biood from ithe -head-as-much-as-possible and-re- HOLLINGER AGENCY Have Some Extra We 1200, 50 ft., RESIDENTIAL 384 Main 384 Main St. The only thing it can do Ja to dive under the water out of-the-Treack-of the birdman. 4 Ws about the middle of July, although in 4 ss an engine of war Col. de re Tes tee aeeackw hold o tsyntilt de, hold off untill; ovwis says that that a slight enlarge- face-- t-have Operations of Under- Craft. Inet fective. (Washington, July 6 The possibili- ties of the aeroplane and the hydro- lane conbidered 8s war engines, as ent manoeuvres here and abroad, tion of the submarine to the funk- heap. Many American and English fmen believe that a battleship equip- ped: with aeroplanes and hydroplanes Wilt tive no need ofother protect fon from the submarine. Demonstrations of Lieut. Gregory of the British Navy at the Royal Nay- al Manoeuvres at Weymouth, . Eng- land,*have shown that. submarines can be detected while travelling at twenty feet under water from an aero- Plane 200 feet above the surface. Captain De Forrest Chandler, one of the foremost of America s military aviators, belfeves that submarines can operate with safety only under cover of night or t-excesstvely cloudy weather when they are being watched by aviators. He sald it was practi ally imposstble for them to operate successfully in clear days as their presence can be detected in an in- stant. 3 The deadly aeroplane gun invent- ed by Col. N. I. Lewis, U.S. A. 18 con- recent years in perfecting the aero- ment of the barrel of the gun and the use of an explosive bullet-will render the submarine a nonentity. I believe it will not be long before under-water fighting will be trans- ferred into the said Captain Chandler of the Army Aero Corps. The -perfection of -Col Lewis gun and the recent work of Lisut: Gregory at Welmouth are going to do much to sound the death knell of the sub- marine. The usefulness of. that ter- Tible little boat is going to be great ly compromised as a result of its be- tected and fought from above the sur- Pion es Gition-ot effective searchlights to the aeroplane and hydroplane will enlarge their usefulness to include night work. The aeroplane, of course, has every advantage over the submarine, Because the boat Cl Col. Lewis believes that it will not x Your Last Chance to Secure One of the Greatest Pai a a Cigale ( The Grasshopper ) byEdouard Bisson, the first, of The News series of the world s greatest pictures, was honorably placed in the Salon exhibition at Paris. It is a beautiful painting, one of the best of its - La Cigale is a story picture, Nearly everybody remembers La Fon- taine s fable of The Sresphopper and the Ant. Done into American rhyme it runs this wa: A grasshopper gay. Sang the summer away, found herself poor By the winter's first roar. Of meat or of bread, Not a morsel she had; So a-begging she went, Till the season came round. How spent you tne summer? Lawiti-pay you, she quot On an se faith, At the borrowing dame. Double weight on the pound Night and day to each comer Ere the harvest 18 bound. I eang, if you please. The ant.is a friend, You sang I'm at ease: hi x j f For the hagnber ihe ant. (and here she might mend) For It's plain at a glance, Which we ber to a Now, madam, you-must-dance, - * La-Gigale is Bisson s-idealjzation-of the human counterpart of the the grasshopper of the fable. The summery figure shivering in the wind im- presses the story of the nobility and necessity of labor. Nee A-Photogravure 22x28 inches. - -This Picture Never Sold ACooyribt: 1011. by EY IFE has mon in them seems The tongest a Paised was o talns.In the St 1 Was on a skete serving the traits an use in my work asa So far as form in Jogieal park or in serve his purpose, the wild In thetr nati vulptor portray tho essential to.a true f world of beasts. My guide was a: Martin, and although as mou as light elimbing on of kbaki, light in w re legging, and oui with projecting spik able us to get am tied a revolver in a b the sketching outfit, paints, was in a thin -provistons. We started in ou peaks one-bright wi to a realm of- snow ascending at what m mountain, the elimbtr fully slow. The sumt crowned with white, year the sides are in to the top we worked among the clouds, wi purplish crags. gt; It Is'one of the wo able to keep so. secur men inaccessible per see them at times lea to another, although 1 holds whieh they had As one essays these dea of the agility and atures. Even they, to miscateulate thelr d We bad started at seve times we crawled so sh and snow that It se reach them. The air v thatsre.were In a glo: velns from the exercis cliffs, which, In the ai with here and there.a. peared to be endowed in the twinkling of an Shot: For the most part, watch the capers of ow concentrate our attent Jems of asceut. The n with musks of I e ands over the beds of torre with the utmost cauth eaused us to fall'Into th descent of hundreds o close of the expedition tee which velled the roe we could place our fee explorers. See Upon the 7 This was painfully s conditions It would hay not have cared much to 1n the Cascades 1s ditic After cutting footho balanced ourselves, cut the slightly sloping sic to the next notch in this Bleck 54, Montreal St., 1-8, 6, 12. 1200, 50 ft., Block 80, Montreal St., 1-3: 6, 12. 2,000, 50 ft., Block 58, Ottawa St, (beautiful view.) 1506, 50 ft, Bock 83, Braemar St. 1500, 50 ft., Block 86, Balmoral St. We. want listings of all your property, , We wil. sell tt for you. be long before battleships will be ful- ly equipped with aeroplanes and that the submarine will be abandoned. Good Propositions in tainly there was atmos gion. At several point by these compantonw which in the distance w benetrabie to man. Then came a larg e the dark surface of th perpendicular ascent It Business Property. THE COST IS 10c. and Six Coupons Thes pictures cannot be sent by If you are a housewife you cannot reasonably hope to ba healthy or beau tifa by washing dishes sweeping and doing hotisework all day, and crawling. into hed dead tired at night. You must get out-into the open alr and sunlight. If you do this every day and keep your stomach and bowels IN-Root-ar- er by taking Chamberlain's Tablets wh n needed, you should become both healthy and beautiful. For sale by ail Main St., 500 per foot. Toronto St., 400 per foot. Montreal St., 400 per foot, eorner. from the front page of The Daily News. Act at once. deale:
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Image 85 (1912-07-16), from microfilm reel 85, (CU1772129). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.