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1235
1235
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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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1235
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Date
1912-12-26
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CLOSED New Williams Sewing Machine Won by Mrs. Ferguson, Bridge St. CUTLERY, SKATES and HOCKEY wey AT POPULAR PRICES - HARDWARE - HEAT Opposite Freight Sheds The Ghali of Sirus 2. Brady se the gale with the wind sobbing like lost souls in some inferno through the hills and over pines, the snow beeting upon Ber, the, sleet. cutting her face if she dared to turn toward the storm. Generally he Jett her alone in the'quieter Dut in the tempest he stood wat on guard by her side, but protecting her, sheltering his presence then was Mecessary, maintained a footing... The force. of the wind might hinve hurled her down the mountain bit for his strong arm. When the cold grew too great he led her back carefully to the hut and the warm fire. Ah, yes, life and the world were oth beauifel so hee Cee ae in day, by sunlight, by NOW ON months. Reduced prices by the block. G0, MacBean OPEN EVENINGS FAIRVIEW THE MARKET Pricestfrom 200 to 300 TERMS One-Quarter Cash; Balance 6, 12 oe 18 ROOM 7, IMPERIAL, BANK BLDG, 4th AVI 4 Shi Lovet to Stand In the Full Fury ef-the-Gale,- calm and stcrim. Yet it made no dif- ference what.was spread before the jwoman s eyes; what glorious picture was exhibited to her gaze, she could mot look at it more than a moment without thinking of the man. With tthe most. fascinating panorama. that the earth's surface could spread. be- fhitelaw Reid was the r of one of the very ors. fi the English fo the age of forty-two 1d a bachelor, but now fife newspaper world comfortable means he duige In some of the and among them Was arried the daughter of , millionaire, who died r two ago, and estab- . ne of the finest homes, Their daughter Jean Hon. John Ward not son, Ogden, is man- the Tribune. Before 4 ambassador to the ames Mr. Reid served n several diplomatic ch of them displaying ent of the highest or- , standing in England, remark that the news as conveyed to Presi- a cable, ftom King lor never before ac- reign ambassador. aeetesireteatrtregectreteatestesteet See eS Beet osteo ob * oe Sees jystem The News Job gt; every facility for most satisfactory. ews delivered in the nth.t 7 Toronto St., Co. Beaver i uiaber Co.. Extends to EVERYBODY The eae of the. Season eh lock 108, each: Two corners in Block 76. 200.00 to 450.00 each. , COUSINS AND SISSONS 1500.00 pair. Terms. 2 lots in Block 20. a HERALD Nee Two Idts in Block 9. Usual terms. . Usual termefe Residence iots in all parts of the town. Terms. TOWNSITE fe yhave some of the best buys in the eity In- closein properti s. See us mbout this, SUBDIVISION PROPERTY f have 6000 acres adjoining the city suitable for subdivision. falso have a half section hear Redcifff at farm land pices. ay RIVERDALE We bave only four lots left in Block 8 at, 400. 5. GIVE US YOUR LISTINGS. I Realty Co. Phone 799 THEY ARE improved, fore human vision to engage her at- Itention, she looked into her own Peart and saw there this man Oh, she had fought against it at first, but lately she had luxuriated iin it. She loved him, she loved him: And why not? What Js it that wom- en love in men Strength of body? She could remember yet how he had carried her over the mountains In the midst of the storm, how she had been so bravely upborne by his arms to his heart. She realized later what a task that had been, what a feat of strength. The uprooting of that sapling and the overturning of that huge Grizzly were child s play to the long portage up the almost impas ible canon and mountain side which had brought her to this dear haven, Was it strength of character she sought, resolution, determination? This man bad deliberately withdrawn from the world, buried himself in this mountain, and had stayed there deaf /to the alluring call of man or wom he had had the courage to do that. Was it strength of mind she ad- mired? Enid Maitland was no mean judge of the mental powers of her acquaintance, She was just as full of life and spirit and the Joy of them as any young woman should be, but she had not been trained by and thrown with the best for nothing. Noblesse oblige That his Was a mind. well Pirie hegocecortoriodie Seeteoteoetin die doeste cody By stored with knowledge of the most, varied sort she easily and at once perceived. Of course the popular books of the last five years had passed him by, and of such he knew nothing, but he could talk intelligently, inter- estingly, entertainingly upon the great classics. Keats and Shakespeare were his most thumbed volumes. He had graduated from Harvard as a civil engineer with the highest honers of his class and school and the youngest man to get his sheepskin Enid Mait- Jand herself was a woman of broad culture and wide reading and she de- Mberately set herself to fathom thi: man's capabilities, Not tnfrequently, much to her surprise, sometimes to her dismay, but generally to her sat- isfaction, she found that she hed no plummet with which to sound bi steater depths. Did she seek in him that fine flow- er of good breeding, gentleness and consideration? Where could she find these qualities better displayed? She was absolutely alone with this man, entifely in his power, shut off from the world and ite interference as ef- feotually ag if-they had both been gbantoned fm Afi ice floe at the North Pole of casbigway on some lonely is: and in the South Seas, yet sho felt as safe ax if she iad been in her own house, or her uncle's, with every: pro- tection that buthan pswer could give. He hadynever pr simed tipon the sit- aifetion in the least degree, he never ipee: referred. to the circumstances fora meeting in the remotest way, We never eyen discussed her reseue fromthe flood, he never told her how jad. bore her through the rain to peueloney shelter of the hills; and in did he say anything that the most keenly scrutinizing mind would torture into an allusion to the pool and the bear and the woman. The fineness of his breeding was never so well exhibited as fi this reticence. More often than not it is what he the story of certain persons Who drank of it ai ever thought of these things. Had fand heard again the scream of the melf and upon thought too firm, his brow wrinkled a ttle; but. he wi fictency that met who can do things ce Gourage conquered peace st Golorado vee mm what he does that see ao ras ms. 5 It would be folly to deny Red he he forgotten them there would be po merit in his silenee: but. to remom- ber them and to keep still ayo, that showed the man He would close his: eyes in that lictl iroom on the other side of the door And see again the dark pool, ,her. white shoulders, her graceful arms, the lovely face with its crown of sunny hair rising above He had Ustened to. the roar of the wind through: the. Jong nights, when she thought him asleep if-slie thohght of him at all, storm that hud broveht ber to his arms. No guow drop that touched his. cheek wien he was abroad but hime-of that night tthe gold rale when he Bad held her close and carried: hor om. He could not sit and mend her boot without remem- that white foot before which he would fain have prost Q would have pressed passionate, kisses if he had siven way to his desires. But he kept all these une his heart, pon ered them no sign. Did she a y in her lover? Ab, there at last-he failed. Avcord- ing to the .of perfection be did not measure ap to the standard. His: features: were irregular, his chin triffe too sq his. mouth to look at)for he looked strong, he looked clean and he looked true, There was about him, too, that stamp of practical ef- always have. You Jooked at-him and you felt sure that what he undertook that he would. accomplish, that de- cision and capability were incarnate tm him, But atter all the things ate sald love goes, whore. it is sent, and 1, at least, am not the sender, This woman loved this man neith: eribecduse nor inspite of these qualities, That they were might a count foy her affection, but if they had not been, it may be that that af- ? fection, that that /piission, would have iuhabitated her heart -still, No. one can say, no one ean tell how or why those things are. She had loved him while she raged against him and hat- ed him. She did m ither the one nor the other of, tho e two Inst things. now, and she loved him the more. Mystery is a great mover; there is nothing so attractive as a problem we cannot solve. The vyery situation of the man, how he eame there, what he did there;why-fe remained there, questions to which she had yet no. answer, stimulated her profoundly. Because she did not know she ques. tioned in seoset; inferest was aroused and the transition to love was easy. Propinguity, too, is responsible for many an affection: The ivy clings to the first met tree. Given a man and woman heart free and throw them together and let there be decent kindness on both sides, and it is al- most inevitable that each shall love the other. Isolate them from world, let them see no other compan fons but the one man and the one Woman, and the result becomes more inevitable. Yes, this woman loved this man. She sald in her heart and 1 am not-one to dispute her conclasions that-she would have loved him had ho been one among imilifons to stand Before her, and it wak true. He was the complement of her nature. They differed in temperament as much as tn complexion, and yet in those dif ferences ns must always be to make. Perfect love and perfect union, there were striking resemblances, necessary Points of contact. There was no reason whatever why Enid Maitland should not love this man. The only possible check upon cher feelings would have been her rather anomalous reliition to Arm. strong, but she reflected that she had promised him definitely nothing, When she had met him she had been heart whole, te had made some im pression upon her fancy and might ve made more with greater opportun- ity, but unfertunately for him, luckily for hor, he had not enjoyed that priv- flege. Sho scarcely: thought of him bi Pisce hohe bh bob ob bob oh the Ladies Silk Pressed, Waists, Gloves, Feath- ers, Htc., Gents Suits, Dry Cleaned Partictilar attention paid to travellers work, suite preised up on short notice, Thu-tf. Pa ORE Ge sor, z PLAYS AND PLAYERS. z ts (Special to the News) Philadelphia has four successful stock companies. i Willard Holcomb has a new sketch called Vice Versa. Hal Reid is to. write a three-act drama for Bob Fitzsimmons, Adelaide Kem has been appearing in revival of Fanchon recently. David Warfield is to go to the Pa- cific Coast for an extended tour. Emma Trentini has scored a suc- cess with The Firefly in New York. Carter De Haven is writing a play in which he intends to act himself. Joseph Cawthorn has been engaged for the cast of The Sunshine Girl. Wallace Eddinger has left the cast of Officer 666, now playing in Lon- don. The marriage is announced of Alla Nazimova to. her leading man, Char- les Bry: Ffoliott: Paget 1s to act Mrs: Mala- prop in Annie Russell's Y vival of The Rivals. A new musical play shortly to be produced in Chi ago is called Friv- olous Geraldine. A hew production to be Made in Los Angeles is called The House of Glass, and is by Max Marcin. John Mason is going on a long western tour in The Attack, with Martha Hedman as leading lady. Maude Adams will soon celebrate her eight hundred and twenty-fitta performance of Peter Pan. James Moatgomery, author of. Ready Money, has just finished an- other comedy which he calls My Hero. Our Wives' is soon to begin an engagement jn Chicago. Edna Von Luke has deen engaged for one of the roles. Eleanor Kent has joined the Eddie Foy Company in Over the Rtver- In the spring she is to appear in a new opera. Harty Lauder, the Seotch comedi- an and singer, will begin his Ameri- can tour in New York about the last of the month. Bought and Pald For, is to be Presented in January in London, Frank Craven will go abroad to play his original part. Winthrop Ames will produce Jolin Galesworthy s play, The Eldest Son, at his Little Theatre, New York, next season. She would not have been human if her mind had not dwelt upon the World beyond the sky-line on the oth- er side of the range. She knew how those who loved her must be suffering on account of her disappearance, but knowing ilerself safe and realizing that within a short time, when the spring came again, she would go back to them and that their mourning would .be turned into joy by her ar- rival, slie could not concern herself yery greatly over their present feel: ings and emotions; and besides, what would be the use of worrying over those things? There was metal more attractive for her thoughts close -at hand. And she was too Ddilssfully happy to entertain for more than a moment any sorrow. She pictured: often her return and never by any chancg did she think of going back to civilizetion alone. The man she loved would be by her side, the church's. blessing would make them one. To do her justice, in the simplicity and purity of her thoughts she never once thought of what the world might say about that long win- ter sojourn alone with this man. She was 80 conscious of her own inno cence and of his delicate forbearance, she never once thought how humanity would raise its eyes and fairly cry upon her from the honse tops. She did not realize that were she ever pure and so innocent sue could not Row Or ever reach the high position which Caesar, who was none too rep 7 (To be continued.) Harry farkins novel, The Red Button, is to be ramatized and will be produced by John Cort, with Hope Latham in the leading role. Paul Armstrong has written a play called The Love Storp of the Ages. which deals with reintarnation. It will be, produced by Oliver Morosco. the Los Angeles theatrical manager. SHOT MOTHER-IN-LAW AT WEDDING PARTY Taylorville, Il, Dec. 26. John Bel- der, carpenter, armed with a revol- yer, intruded upon a wedding party at the home of his mother-in-law, Mrsi Midna Fisher, last night, and shot and Seriously wounded Mrs. Fish; fired -a number of Inetfective abd at his wife, at the bridal couple, and at pAliceme/who were summon- ed -to the ho and was himself mortally wounded by one of the polide officers, Mrs, Fisher, a woman of 68, wilt dlo, it Is feared, The wedding cere- mony was performed after the ex- citement abated, CURES COUGHS EXCURS ae pea EASTERN et ii inclusive. Hin 5 Viekets issued in connection partment-Library. ial Limited and Toronto E ONS DEC I-31, 1912 Medicine Hat to Toronto Return Medicine Hat to Montreal Return Corresponding low rates to oints in Ontario, Quebec and. Reaves Provinces. on sale December Ist to 31st within 3 months. Liberal Extension Privileges tic Trips on sale Nov. 7th to Dec. 31st inclusive, and. limited to five months from date of issue, with privileges of extensioa- * Finest equipment, Standard and Tourist Sleep- ing Cars, Dining Cars on all through trains. Com- Observation ears on Imper- THREE EXPRESS) TRAINS DAILY Sold 6.20 Tickets Good to return with Trans-Atlan- xpress. SPECIAL THROUGH TOURIST C ICE in connection with these -excurs dates of departure and reservations aj agent. Lines. Mlekets via all rates For full information, rail and stonshahty apply to L. A. Dobbin, Ticket Agent, Phoni Medicine Hat, or write to R. G. McNEILLIE, District Passenger Agent, Calgary, Medicine Hat Agricultural Se PUBLIC NOTICI Will be delivered under the auspices of the Medici cultural Society by Hat Agri A. D, CAMPBELL and LORNE McCOMB, at 2.30 p.mion 7 Tuesday, January re 191 in the Council Chamber, City Hall, ieee Hat, before close of the Seed Fair, which i is being held on that date. SUBJECT OF LECTURES: of the Soil ; Preparation of Seed Bed ; Methods of Conserving Moisture. JAMES RAE, persian H. HASSARD, Secretary Proper Cultivation Best BUSINESS PROPOSITIONS 50 feet, on Toronto St. North, Block 24, 25,000.00, 2 50 feet, corner Montreal St, one block from depot, 25,000.00. Goo terms, 3200.00 per foot, Toronto St. Souths, Block 51; 950.00 per foot, Toronto St, Block 16, 500.00 per foot, Main St., First class investment on Main St, two storey block for 42,500.00. Block Good Terms. 58 foot corner on North Railway St.. 28,500.00. Good terms. - See us for a Good Acreage Proposition, God terms, Our Hist of Inside buys cann Hollinger PHONE 433 TOWN ENGINEER, COLDS All O. F. LANGE c. EB. U. Civil Engineer and Landseape Architect. Sewerage, Water and Gas Supplies. Street Gradings, Industrial Spur Subdivisions, Layout of Parks, Steel Constractions. Designs and specifications for MOTTO: First-class responsible service LIVE MERCHANTS ADVERTISE DY TH iuictestbaren toes Er a bs ribbons won this year on. entries. Eges for hatching from stock bring. / 3.00 per sei REDCLIFF, ALTA. my exhibition Golden feathered race. Groat winter the best table fowl. GEO.N. BARTLETT 48 Fourth Ave. Irrigation, ete. Hones, ete. t Reasonable Prices.
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Image 1235 (1912-12-26), from microfilm reel 1235, (CU1773542). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.