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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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947
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Date
1912-11-20
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TO BXCHANGE TO TRADE TEAM ON and lot, oF lot in Med - Chas, Shipley. 138 Mon- 112-3 OMS TO BENT, D ROOM TO RENT FoR fF man and wife. Apply 12-8, -FURNISHED ROOM IN two blocks trom sts- 304 2nd Ave. or phone Ue FURNISHED FRONT bath connected; central: 112-8 3 ROOMS. NO CHILDREN ply 198 1-2 Braemar St. 25 REGISTERED BERK- Both sex, about seven Also three registered and cow. Apply Dem- farm, Medicine Hat, Al- 200-12 .00 per bushel, 0.3, Mo- Sask. Sl-i-80 COCKS ,HENS, COCK- - iets, in RC. and 8. C. orns. Will sell cheap if unch. Apply P. Riches, St. 109-6 iT AND FOUND . R. TICKET (LISTOW- ). Finder kindly Ieave at a1att WEEN ROLLING MILLS ll, a silver, ..wateh and WC. on Case. Reward WEEN MEDICINE. HAT y Products a horse col- of fifty cents for return. 2 to 4,.7 to 8.30. Resi- loy- St. Residence phone CELLANEOUS ike WANT YOUR STORM 1 doors on, and a good te box 477, hird Ave., or general de- postoffice, sot CINE HAT HIDE, FUR aranteed for one king and rusting; House No. 7, School te east side of uf 699 for appointment o pox 72, Mrs, Matthews, NOW for the Daily Ni 0. 19-1m exception of Harvard and Yale. + men carefully guarding their and growing younger as the mile- f BIG SMOKE BREATHES EASIER Kpeeetortoetes aren OMELET SESLIOTCTPERIOOOESESOD OOS ' p O R T. N E WwW S THREE FINGERS LOLOL EL LLEEEELOLLDOE LL LOLOL LLL DLL LED LLL OSOROR LL DEEP O ERODE Penge aionledreetonteteey fs Soegesgoece. eee aX Sosy Se eseatooys eters There s jsomethi about Walk-Over Shoes that make people en- thusiastic over them The more you know of them-the more your en- thusiasm grows Ever listen to a bunch of: Walk-Over wearers talking Shoes? It must be the merit of the shoes Turpin Bros. The Man s Stone Where You Get the Big Dollar's Worth FOR FEATHERWEIGHT BELT Kilbane to. Meet Morgan in Twenty-Round Bout. Soon (Special to the News.) Cleveland, Nov. 20. An agreement, between Johnnie Kilbane, feather- weight champion, and Eddie Mor- gan, an English boxer, was reached 4ast night whereby the two will meet soon in a twenty-round hout for the championship. The date has not been agreed upoti, but itis said the match will take place on the Pacific coast within a couple of months. Morgan has been n. this country but a few weeks TO BE AN UMPS. Three-Fingered Brown of Cubs to Join Ban s Arbi- trator Staff. (Special to the News) Chicago, Nov. 20. Mordecai Brown, former star pitcher of the Chicago Cubs, may be an umpire in the Am- erican league next season. President, Johnson has two vacancies on the staff of umpires to fill, due to the Yetirement of Sheridan and Egan, and it 4s sald that Brown is being con- sidered for one of these positions. Harvard has an advantage over Yale thi year in that its team has deen practically intact for six or seven weeks, while Yale has been making more than the usual number of shifts. Penn State is said: by Philadelphia experts to be the football team in the country, with only the possibl gt; Loose Leaf System The News Job Department has every facility for sup- plying the: most satisfactory land, tops the list cf third) basemen. MONCTON CURE AGAINST JOHNSON HIS BEEN DROPPED Burden is Lightened a Lit- tle Mann White Slave Act Charge Yet to Be Faced. (Special to the News) Chicago, Nov. 20. Jack Johnson's heart was considerably lightened to- day when the oharge of abduction of bis sweetheart, Lucille Cameron, was dropped by the prosecution, because, it was Impossible to prove it. The girl and her mother, Mrs. Cameron- Faleonel, were not in court. They are federal witnesses against the dusky champion of the world, and at the present time are at Rockford, Ill. Miss Cameron, however, will not be released untii after Johnson has been tried for violation of the Mann Whiteglave Act: It is feared that should the girl be released, she might again fall into the hands of the prize fighter. ATHLETICS LEAD IN CLUB FICLDING Figures for the American League Issued by Ban Johnson. Chicago, Noy. 20. Clubd fielding honors of the American League go to the Philadelphia club for the 1912 season, with the world s champion- ship Boston team second, according to official averages issued tonight. Chicago was third and Washington fourth. Although fourth in the list, Chick Gandil, of Washington, is the real leader in the: fielding among the first , basemen. He made only 12 errors in 117 games, during which he ac- cept 1,174 chances. Borton, of Chi- cago, officially heads the-list with an averoge of.977, He player.31 games, handled 328, chances and made only one error... Morris Rath, of Chicago, outrivaled two veterans, Lajoie of Cleveland, and Collins, of Philadelphia, at sec- ond base. He handled 816 chances with only 31-errors to his credit. MoBride, of Washington, leads the shortstops, while Turner, of. Cleve Figutes rhow Strunk, of Pbitadel- phia as the best among the outfield- ers, with Sam Crawford, of Detroit, a close second. They made only three errors each during the season. Cobb, of Detroit, made 22 errors, and is more than half way down the list. Three pitchers played errorless ball the entire season. White, of Chicago, and Plank and Coombs, of Philadelphia, each finished the sea- son with an average of 1,000. Walsh, of Chicago, who generally is regard- ed asa good fielding pitcher, made 15 errors, the largest number of any pitcher in the league. Cady, of Boston, did the best work among the catchers. Once more Peter Maher comes Across with a challenge to miss up Sandy Ferguson or any other white hope now at large roaming the country. They can all-talk about coy wo- age stones are left behind, but it. there is any class of humans who excel the young athletes on this point they remain undiscovered. THOSE SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD PHENOMS. It's a great habit to keep the bloom of youth on the youngsters of athletic fame, particularly after they have journeyed through the amateur to the profession ranks. And he s only 17, is a favorite expression after the merits of the Morning Afternoon Evening Cosy Roller Rink SESSIONS AFTERNOON Skates 25c. EVENING Gent s admission, with skates, 35c. Ladies admission with skates, 25c. Music Every Afternoon and Evening. 10.30 to 1200 2.30 to -5.00 7.30 to 10.00 combed: for good shortstops during 1905... FIGHTS SCHEDULED FOR TONIGHT. Jobnny Coulon ys. Charley Gold- man, 10 rounds, at Brooklyn. Battling Hurley vs. Paddy Sullivan, 10. rounds at Brooklyn. Charlie White ys, Pal Moore, 10 rounds, at Kenosha, Wis. WON IN TWO STRAIGHT FALLS (Special to ths News) Duluth;-Nov- 20, Walter Miller, of St. Paul, defeated Otto Suter, of Cleveland, welterweight wrestling champion, in two straight falls here Jast, night. One hour six minutes and: thirty seconds was required: for, the first fall, while the s cond was: made in 23 minutes, HONUS. WAGNER. IS STILL THE KIN The Old Fellow Has Not Batted Below .300 in 16 Years. STILL A FINE MAN FOR THE INFIELD- Same Clumbsy, Lumbering Way Gets Him (Over Lots of Ground Yet. There was abundance of good short stopping during the season of 1912, but it was mostly done by the veter- ans. Although the minor leagues. were the fall and winter, and a platoon of young. shortstdps- tried their skill on Sonthern fields, not on young man showed up with such impressive style that he was given rank among the truly. great ones of the game. The old boys were the best and, when you count every point of all- Tound value to his team, the oldest one of all, Honus Wagner, takes the crown. The only slowing up'to We seen in er s work during 1918) was hig failure to steal as many bab sl ag ih earlier years, and even'ther, few, if any, of the other shortstops swip- ed any more. cushion: The great old Dutchman still hit hard and often with the usual pro- Portion of long wallops yw Cotteies sade ae sod SS ta ping, there was no flaw in jts he or execution. Ja Ges seca tema, tomberinr, but eftedtive way, he continued to get over acres of ground, handled every kind of drive as well as ever, and, to summarize it all, was just Honus Wagner, meaning that h was the best of them all. Wagner's 16-Xear Record Year G. AB. e H. AV. 1897... 61 241 83, 343 1898. 148 591 a 180 205 1899... 1900 .. 1901 .: 14 1549 202 197.359; +184 528 107 201.360 +141 B56 100 196, -.52 1902 .. 137 538 105 177.329 1903... 129, G12' -97 182.365 1904 .. 132, 490, 92.171. 849 197 548 114. 199 363 440 516 103.175 339 142 616 - 98 180.350 1906 . 1907 .. 1908 .. 151 568 100 201 .354 1909 .. 137 (495 92 168 339 1910 .- YO 556 90 178 320 i911 .. 130 473 8 158.384 1912. 146. 562. 92 193 326 Totals. . 2169 238 1502 2829 .343 THE MARKET REPORTS EX-SULTAN'S DEPARTURE FROM SOLONIKI TOLD Jeare cretca sowor tad about the wame at Hs and Chicago; BY nnESPONDENT Eee, a Mapoed at First to tenes sero a Monet ith ac me an Warship. 0 retee activity and the close was strong, shorts cov ring on Tuceday HE WAS NOT AS la total of 1,603 care were inspected HE WAS of which 1,003 were wheat. This ia an iuerease of 161 oars on telconteoated with the question . TO BE) previous record of 1,442; there were whether he shall throw out of '800 im sight. Weather reports show hundreds of thousands of Republicans Showed Raigiskable Know- beht snow at Swift Current and Cal-/now working for Unclg Sam ledge of Affairs Re- * : : Cables closed: Liverpool, 2 off; marked on Two Wars. paris, 14:to 3 up; Budapesth, tow- (special Fo the the. News) substitute Democrats, or action of his Republican Paris, Nov. 205M. Lauzanne, in'an lgeq oe Deo. 78 , 794; May 63 , article in the gives details of ps3. sors for the last sixteen years the difficulties tered in induc Qats Nov, 334, 898; Dec. 314, S14; 391 300 FEDERAL JOB LIE IN WELSON S HA 4 Officeholders Anxious to hold Republican ands Under Civil The vast'army of government em ployes in Washington and. elsewhere tenterhooks. fast anda fiand-car this seven o'clock, two White Mouth, The tw -stantly killed, but by jamping, continue in foree their oracles many of these employes competitive clagsified civil service. ing ex-Sultan Hamid to leave May 335, 33 . Ree ee eee Te bees the German guard . Wax Nov. 121, 120; Dee. 122, 109 ment. Of these ship, Lore May 117, 113. to inations under the the commander f the Lorelel, in the Wheat No, 4 Nor. closed 614; No. and their joba have ce Uniform of the German navy, was political ai, af usher d into Bis) presenc , the: sul- aaa I have every confidence, he said, . POSITIONS: in the loyalty amd friendship of the The civil service act has been in Kaiser. Under sch auspices I will) Chicago, Nov. 20.- Wheat today re- ree twenty-eight years. At first it The ex-sultan provided surprise went to a low level on hi of the government positions. Al- to those on board ship. It was Ben-lcrop. Receipts northwest, Sea though no xact figures are at hand, erally supposed the had fallen into a Xang- i has been extended by one presi- he displayed instead, a remarkably started 807. to and nearly all except a few higher posi- accurate knowledge of affairs. Bass Be o eS Te OE ani tions, such as fret, second and thind Two Wars'a Great Deal. then fell back to 90 . May oats, l*SS Postmasters, internal revenue all through life, qwas never able to 32 and certain supervisory officers in speak more then twenty words of Mivaepciia tee BO itiocr Dee, Yarous branches of the government. French, he began) to speak French, pened 80, closed 803; May 863, 86 . President Taft transferred bodily extraordinary ace nt.. Dieux geur- opened 844, closed 85: M: 5 90g; masters from the field of political res mal heurouses:dans 1a meme an- Fujy ic ny SOE 008; Reititenentalta:* he. lawelbed, sor) Imee. C'est beaucoup. (Two bad vice, and he added more than. 4,000 ENGLISH CATTLE r deal), he rem itked. Hewes very making a record as against all presi- curious ito know whether: SiriConan (C. AP Cable) dents. i Doylezoras still amusingJthe world Glasgow, Nov. 20 Watsoh and To the casual reader this might Mhesd stories-were the only ones:that -oity, report that large supplies of nt-elect Wilson, it would seem, Trish RAttlo Ar offered. but best OUht mot even to consider interier 3 qudiity d e scarce with top steers in with the executive. orders of his have made a i ae chief of police. ondary 11 1-2 to 124-2 cents. is another aspect, to the matter, Presents-for-Oticers: Rowever, which is. being deeply con- Lorelei to Convey personal re- leaders who-are advisers of the next ee eee DODERRE. 16 - ELECTED wtae er ateahtidn showa him Nationalist Giver bad Beat- Many thousands of-the employes anid Gave chit officer: ing in Hochelaga- Bye-El- now under the classification rules are, dlamon Ee cee tees transferred tq, this classification + When the Yoraze ase (Special to the News) which now serves to keep them in Bey; Abdul retus d to oct derre, the new Secretary of State, Why should we continue. in office gone by had sheltef a in Etpress was elected for Hochelaga in the bye- this Republican machine, built up by of France, but decf i d: to be install- ed in the smail p Villion adjoining) jority, his Nationalist-Labor oppon- the question which the Democratic ier oe ent, Louis Doyen, losing. his deposit, Jeaders are asking themselves. Then once again relapsing into sil- The vote stood 4,222 to are answering it by. rent to all those af6und, he became such a thing.. They are ee oe absent in thought This spell did eager to have Mr. Wilson, when ' he. not. last Jong, for soon he began to lets into the White House, rescind Meeting of Ranch Commis- sion Held Yesterday at High River. On Juno 30, 1911, when the At first he flatly refused, but when CASH PRICES... Reta ee fan's tone of defiance tagged INCREASE OF CIVIL SERVICE follow you all over the world. flected. weakness at Liverpool and 8 applied to less than ten per cent condition ordering on iocy, But eq from 4 lower to t advances, May tt Miter andtier until it includes Moreover althongh Abdul Hamil, which started unchanged to a shade 24 customs collectors, fiscal agents not only with scouracy, but with an Chicago, Nov. 20. Wheat, Dec, Ore than 50,000 fourth class post- wars in the same year. That is a good other positions to the classified list, with-thesexploits of Sherlock ae cattle importers, of this Seem entirely reasonable, and Presi- fetching 13-1-4 to 14 cents, and sec- PFedetessors in this respect. There hit ate pegged the coamander of the sidered by many of the Demoeratic iliam forthe consideration and/ 7s) bss DEMOCRATS WANT. TH JOBS. or ; igdtette ection. merely Republican political appoin- Montreal, Nov. 20. Hon. Louis Co- office. palace itself, the pl rt election today by an enormous ma- McKinley, Roseevelt and Taft? is euse and appearing entirely indiffe- saying that there is no reason for take an interest fn the fowls and the order by which President Tait lifted 50,000 fourth class postmast- ers out of politics. turkeys in the court yard below, and called for seme corn to feed them, On learning that one of the officers of the guard for whom te had ja certdim liking, bad been called away to his sick wife, he remarked on hearing of the mav distress: Ah, well, the poor fellow bas on- lz one wife. What would he do if he had ten, as I have? (Special to the News.) High River, Noy. 19. That leased land should not be subject to the ir- rigation act, except insofar as the lessee is concerned, the -government should give more liberal assistance toward the extermination of the tim- Bubseribe now for The Daily News. boy have been discussed at Jength by admirers. But more often than not the 17-year-old boy phenom is healthy votes. Bobby McLean, who flashed upon the amateur skating, firmament last season, was heralded as the 16- ld sensation. Norval Baptie, Knows McLean well, says the go skater is 19 years old if he e i sag For many years Edmund Lamy wae galled the infant wonder on the ateel Diades. Even today the Saranac lake boy sometimes passes as youth un- der 20 years, Lamy may be able to retain eter- nal youth in some quarters, but it would be a futile undertaking if Norval Baptie happened to be around. Back in 1903, nine years ago, Bap- tie and Jack McCullough took trip to Saranac Lake to witness some skating races. And do you kiow; What happened to Lamy right in his own town. He was barred from com. peting in the race for 16-year-olds Because he- had passed that delicate age. That was in 1903,-and yet, to- day, out of Saranac Lake, Lamy Is atill a minor. 2 Pal Moore and Young Shughrue matched to box in Water - in, Thankagiving Day, old enough to have put by several WITH THE BOXERS. Bob Fitzsimmons, the former heavyweight champion, and his son Bob Jr., are giving boxing exhibitions om the vaudeville stage. ber wolf and that closed leases should be for a period of not I ss than fif- teen years, were the main recom- mendations of the ranchers here to the Dominion Ranching and Grazing Commission. Soostentetodtesteete Be 620 6b0e If the average business mah had time to carefully investigate every proposition put up to him, he would pay. less attention to first impressions and judge less by appear- ances, But he i is called upon to think: and act f.quickly, and he must base his judgments 2 what he can take in at a glanee: Using poor stationery or printing is poor business however you look at it, because it Tepresents you, and you cannot prevent it. The safe thing, therefore, is to use paper and printing so good that you are willing to have your work or your goods judged by it. There are certain things that are Impossible to say About Your character, the esteem you ald for your business, your thtesrity these are things that cannot be advertised. Bat you can. eee them through your stauonesgijund pzinted matter: A handsomely printed tet ane stock will at once. impress your man a. ferently. print d letterhead on ordiuary.ppper:might have)scarce gained attention. It ts not exaggeration to say that the Ateceds of your let- ters often depends upon the' printing nd paper you buy. We will gladly submit samples t6 you. We know that we can please you. Medicine Hat News, Limited. ELECTION DAY. The proposa to atrengthen the secrecy of the ballot by voting by mall reminded Senator Wiliams 6 an election day story. es Voting by mail, he saidjiee radical proposition that I'd B to advocate without further but I do, most heartily, favor violable secrecy as regards the Patsy Hogan, one of the old school of lightweights, has been appointed boxing instructor of the New Orleans Athletic Glub. Promoter. Coffroth, of San. Francis- co, will try to arrange a match be- tween champion Wolgnst and the win- ner of the Mandot-Rivets bout. in: January, toi who ecently the lightweight land. 3 going to dear? swered, Wil he vote a Republican ticket? I en't know. after the interests has establish a to fighters. in Clavel f states that I Wander if he'll vote Democrat? ho has 40 boxere Wuder bls manage. T don't know. 116 a He wouldn't surely *T don t know. The grocer as he thed up the it- 4 tle girl s package sneered; x Well, you don t know. ape and. that s fact lt; You know lesb the Uttle airt answer d, or you wouldn t-be askin - s0. many questions A small want ad jn The Daily News Classitied Column will bring results, Subscribe now for the Dally News. QL LEAP PPS hange for vote Prokibition, Tommy Ryan, former middleweight champion, announces his retirement from the game entirely, We thought that/Tommy had r tired several years ago, but his recent announcement shows that we ar five or six years behind in our boxing dope,
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Image 947 (1912-11-20), from microfilm reel 947, (CU1773117). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.