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1243
1243
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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-12-27
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1243
Transcript
ND LIVERY STAB- EN PERSONS. well stocked ani ing good dudinees. interests. epository pare, jon double outfits tions for sale itomobile De- imes, DR SALE. he load. No. 2 ale or ton. 1E 703. pees for the Daily News. ent xesaanaascmmmmale FAIRVIEW Prices from 200 to 300 TERRE Oe Cee a Balance 6, 12 and 18 Reduced nee ee thie pack. wil be delivered under the auspices of the Medicine Hat Agricultural Society by A. D, CAMPBELL and LORNE OME, ESQs. at 2.30 p.m. on Tuesday, January 7, 1913 in the Cov. lt;il Chamber, City Hall, Medicine Hat, before close uf the S ed Fair, which is being held on that date. SUBJECT OF LECTURES: Proper Cultivation of the Soil ; Preparation of Seed 1 Bed Best Methods of Gonserving Moisture. JAMES RAE, President H, HASSARD, Secroay Capital Realty Co. 420 Main Street - Phone 799 REDCLIFF NOTE THESE PRICES. THEY ARE. -s SNAPS - - 8000.00; 75ttcornerBlock-108, Usual terms. 2000.00 each. Two corners in Block 76. Usual terms. 200.00 to 450.00 each. , Residence lots in all parts of the town. COUSINS AND SISSONS 2 lots in Block 20. HERALD x Good view of the river and B 1500.00 pair. Terms. 9 1400,00, Terms. town. Two lots in Block 9. TOWNSITE We have some of the best buys in the city in close-in improved properties, See us about this. SUBDIVISION PROPERTY We have 6000 acres adjoining the city suitable for subdivision. We also have a half section near Redeliff at farm land -prices . * RIVERDALE We have only fonr lots left in Block 8 at 400. GIVE US YOUR MisTINGS. BUSINESS PROPOSITIONS 50 feet, on Toronto St. North, Block 24, 25,000.00. Good terms. 50 feet, corner Montr al St, one block from depot, 25,000.00. Good 300.00 per foot, 950.00 por foot 3500.00-per tot, Main SE) Bock 4, First class, invest SBiaiin St, two storey block for 43,500 00. * Seat ro See 58foot cornemoen fay St.. South, Block 51, Block 15, 28,500.00. Good terms, ge Proposition. All my exhibition olden the feathered race. 29'ribbons won this year on 24 entries. Great winter layers and the best table fowl. Eggs for hatching from this ? stock bring 3.00 per settins, GEO. N. BARTLETT 218 Fourth Ave, MERCHANTS ADVERTISE IN THE NEWS * He U4 andottes, hie most beautifal of ff neem ishment, his as God completed his ax teresting. But there was one book - The Ghalice of Gourage + te sor af eran persons Wh, dank oft an conver eta 2. Brady a. Se Continued) utable himself, would fain have his lation and love itself if it be true and ite own reward. unworthy and may the unlatching of Beloved, yet it yore t ence paves aioe t satisfact Ror there ip w yea despair of the truly Enjd Maitland, however, did Daye to endure indifference, or Inst a passion which ae. with Tesponse, for thjs: man et tee love that was greater even her own. The moon, in the trite aphor- ism, looks on many brooks; the brook Sees 0 moon but the one abave him fa the heavens, In one enge his merit in winning her affection for him- self from the hundreds of men she knew, was the greater; in many years hhe had only. seen. this one woman. Naturally she should be everything to Duried himself in and in all that time he 1 body like Enid gument which had been exploited show why she should love him be turned about to account for his passion forher. They. are not necess- ary, they are all supererogatory, idle words. To him also love had been born in an hour. It had flashed into existence as if from the fiat of the Divine. Ob, he had fought against it. Like the cremites of old he hed- been scourged into the desert by. remorse amd another passion, but time had done its work. The woman he first Joved had ministered not to the spir- itual side of the man, or if she had 80 ministered in any degree it was be- cause he had looked at her with a glamour of inexperience and youth. During those five years of solitude, of study and of reflection, the truth had gradually unrolled itself before him. Conclusions vastly at variance with what he had ever believed possible as to the woman upon whom he had frst bestowed his heart, had got into , his being and. were in solution the this present woman was the precipitant which brought them fo life. He knew now what the old appeal of his wife had been. Rew appeaj/of this woman was. In humanity two things in life-are tmexiricably intermingled, body and soul. Where the function of one be- gins and the function of the other ends no one is able to say. In all human passions are admixtures of. the earth earthy: We are.born the sons of old Adam as we are reborn the sons of the New. Passions are complex. As in harvest.wheat and fares grow. together until the end, so in love earth and heaven mingle ever, He remembered a clause from an an- Gient marriage service he had read. With my body I thee worship, and with every fibre of his physical being, hhe loved this woman. It would be idle to deny that, im- possible to disguise the facts, but in the melting pot of passion the pre- ponderant, ingredient was mental and spiritual; and just because higher and holier things predominated, he held hher in his heart a sacred thing. Love fs like a ros beautiful blossom; the spiritual factor fs the fragrance which abides in the rose jar even after every leaf has fad- knew now what the rcise-dominion over bi of Golorado is acceptance of the penitent by talking away his life, is wife rose be- on that last and meys, her devo- s0 great she out of her sight fatuously And queer turmoil of ed himself for every- memory, - in which be be: him and which spired. fone out in the world, a pMmilght have forgot- of these things, he might ; down. Saner clear- would have come to him. morbid. self reproach and self com been changed: them alone for AS Do-pate nor and pride, the only things that may successfully fight against: love, yercome him. He The Dark Face of His Wife Rose Be- fore Him. Could not.give way. He--wanted to, every time he was in her presence he longed to sweep her to his heart and erush her in his arms and bend her head back and press lips of fire on her lps. But honor and pride, held him back. How long would. they,con: to ex: Would the time come when his passion ris- ing like a sea would thunder upon these artificial embankments of his soul, beat them down and sweep them away? At first the disparity between their situations, not so much upon account of family: or of property the treas- ures of the mountains, hidden since creation he had: discovered and let lie but because of the youth and posi- tion of the womam-compared to his own maturer years, his desperate ex- perience, and his social withdrawal had reinforced his determination to live and love without a sign. But he had long since got beyond this. Had he been free he would have taken her Miko 2 viking of old, f he had to pluck her from amid a thousand swords and carry her to a Deggar s/hut which love Would have turned to.a palace. And she would Same. conditions. He aid not know that. ro-steate-i Women the material part is the Rave learned through centuries of sweakness that fine art of concealment which man has never mastered. She never let him see what she thought of ed away, or which may be expressed Bim. Yet he was not without sus- from the soft petals by the hard cir- Piclon; if that suspicion grew to cer eumstances of pain and sorrow tuntil tainty, would *e control himself then? there is left nothing but the lingering perfume of the flower. At first he had sought to keep out (of her way, but she had compelled His body trembled if she Jafd a, Bim fo come in. The room that was and upon him, his soul thirsted for ther; present or absent he conjured Before his tortured brain the sweet- hess that inhabited-her breast. He had been clearsighted enough in an- alyzing the past, he was nelther clear- gighted nor coher at in thinking of the present. He worshiped her, he onld haye thrown himself upon his Imees to her; if it would have added to her happiness, she could have Killed him, smiling at her. Rode she fn the Juggernaut car of the ancient Mol, with his body, would he have un- hesitatingly paved the way and have) deen glad of the privilege. He longed to compass her with sweet obser- gervances. The world revenged itself upon him for his long neglect, it had gummed up in this one woman all its eharm, its beauty, its romance, and had thrust hef into bis very arms. His was one of those great passions which jlluminate the records of the past. Paolo had not loved: Francesca Knewshe loved 1e power of mor- how fron his re- int; hor the imposition hig will, fe one his heart hidden, passion undisclotied. No one could Bechet, his Jove for Papa ways, ren the toa when: Bio tares to turn her Was eloquent of his neyer gaidia word, how: ver, he h ld his lips at least fettered and bound for h beli ved that honor and its obligittions welghed down the Dalance upor the contrary side tc which his inclinations lay. He was not worthy of this woman In the first place all he had to of. fer her was a blood stained hand That might have been overcome in bis mind: but piety is self pun ishment, his resolition to withdarw Fesolution to withdraw (To be continued.) oleate pene oe Idtchen and bed room and: store room for him was ch erles iand somewhat cold. Save at night of when he was Dusy with other tasks ontside they lved togethed in the great room, It was always warm, it) was always bright, it was, always ehee:ful, there. The Uttle piles of manuscript she had noted were books that ho had written. He made no effort to con- ceal such things from her. He talked frankly enough about his life in the hills, indeed there was no possibil- ity of avoiding the discussion of such topics, On but to subjects was he inexorably silent. One was the pres- ent stato of his alfections and the other was the why and wherefore of his lonely life. Sho knew boyond per- adventure that he loved her, but she had no faint suspicion even as to the reason why he had become a recluse He bad never given her the slightest jclew to his past save that admission that he had known Kirkby which was in itself nothing definitive and which jshe never connected with that pack age of letters which pho still kept with her. The man's mind was too active and fertiie to be satisfied with manual labor alone, the books that he had written were scientific treatises in the main. One was a learned discussion lof the fauns and flora of the moun- jtains. Another was an exhaustive a count of the mineral resources and geological formations of the range. Ho fad only to allow a whisper, a suspicion of his discovery of gold and sliver In the mountains to escape him, jand the canons and crests allke would Ibe filled with eager prospectors. Still a third work was a sclentific analysis of the water powers in the canons. He tad willingly allowed her to read them all. Much of them she found technical and, aside from the fact that he had written them, unin- SUBSCRIBE NOW for the. Daily News ee oe eSoetoale-egetoatoaeoteets PHONE 904 Sooo ee so-eteeto-s ey 8 oto ogoateey rte : ALBERTA BOOK CO. eateesoeto ete PHONE 904 ALBERTA BOOK CO. : PHONE 904. Seeteeteatenetreteateeteceeteateatentectetecreteatend eetee OPED LEED ED etede The Board of Trade will be the Annual Meeting of the held in COUNCIL CHAMBER of the City Hall Thursday, Jan., 2nd. 1913 at 8 o'clock pm. HH. HASSARD, Secretary. IF MONEY 1 VALUE TOYOU Read This Our brand new stock of Men's Furnishings, Boots and Shoes, Mitts and Gloves, Sheepskin Conta, eten 1s DAILY ARRIVING We are selling these for a very small. profit. We atill have some ofthe old stock. Ladies and Gents? new and second-hand Clothes, Boots and Shoes and lots of other arti eles which we are selling at your own price, If you are one of our custom-,, ers you know the truthfulness of this ad. If not, we ask you to come in and prove it for yourself, HARVARD TAILORING CO. Opposite Dreamland. Phone 295, D. DAVIS, PROPRIETOR aH Canadian Pacific Railwa Home Visitors Excursions - UNITED STATES RETUEN FARE FROM MEDICINE HAT Minneapolis or St. Paul 41.25. Duluth 38.95- Qhieago 57.25. Kansas City 62:70. Corresponding fares to many other points Biekets on sale December 1 to 31, 1912. For further particulars call on L. A. Dobbin, Ticket Agent, Med- icine Hat, or write to MW. CORONA BAKER MANUFACTURERS OF THE CELEBRA IPEERLESS BREAD L. KOMM, Prop. Phone 751. Meditine Hat, O. F. LANGE c. EE. Bou. + 40h Engineer and Landscape Architect. werage, Water and. Gas Supplies. oSireet Gradings, Industrial Spur Railways, Irrigation, ete. Subdivisions, Layont of Parks, Steel Constructions. Design and specifications for Holses, ete. MOTTO: First-class responsible service for Reasonable Prices. TOWN ENGINEER, REDCLIFF, ALTA. LIVE MERCHANTS ADVERTISE IN. THE NEWS
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Image 1243 (1912-12-27), from microfilm reel 1243, (CU1773585). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.