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532
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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-09-24
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SSS . you build, consider r first. Don't be rer o buy CHEAP LUM- use it's cheap use the - We have it, and ev- the Builder requires. t stock or LUMBER, SASH, FIR FINISH, OAK, MAPLE, BIRCH t FLOORINGS. MALIN R SMUT Quart ....Pint ' PAY MORE 2s Drag and Store : : 2 B. CURTIS SaleStables cams, Drivers, Saddle orses for Sale. D HEAVY DRAYING. Hay for Sale. SLEY BROS. ES J. S. FOLLIS racting Co. TORONTO ST. ing. Sand, Coal Gravel vating Specialty. leary Horses for sale at All Times. LYON TRACTS FOR 7Y TEAMING AND EXCAVATING and Sand for Sale Phone Ni P. 0. Box 81. oe Reynolds ITER, ETC. mples in Wall Paper. th Ave. Phone 690, nt Sostadeenseeseseeesese AD Soda ele prio tio eho rio eto oatotipaoes STILL ANOTHER FACTORY for So efo-footecteas REDCLIF ; immediately THEH WALLOFF MOTOR CO, of Minneapolis, will start build Building to be completed in six weeks. The Redclit plant will Be. known as the Redcliff Motor Co., Limited and starts off with '75 men, which will be largely increased in a short space of time. This means money to the wide-awake investor. Three Factories Secured in One Week and More to Follow. REDCLIFF IS RAPIDLY BECOMING A BIG MANUFACTURING CENTRE AND POPULATION Is POURING IN. IMPO RTANT RAILWAY ANNOUNCEMENT, SOON TO BE 70: Pay Roll Pay Roll 9: Pay Roll Roll 12,500 5,000 5,000 800 Redcliff Realty Redeliff Hotel Company Stores, Bank, Lumbery: ard etc. 12; Pay McLean MeLachlan Co. (CONTRACTORS) Redcliff now has industries and their pay rollis as follows Redcliff Brickand Coal Co. 150; Pay Redeliff Clay Products Co. Alberta eee TronCo. 65; RedcliffMill Elevator Co. 6; Pay 10; Pap Roll 900 Roll Roll 1,000 15; - Pay Roll 800 1,200 FACTORIES TO BE BUILT AT ONCE ARE: 4 THE DIAMOND FLINT GLASS CO., OF TORONTO, LARGEST GLASS FACTORY IN THE WEST. H. MUNDERLOH COMPANY, OF MONTREAL, GARGEST WINDOW GLASS FACTORY IN CANADA. WALLOFF MOTOR COMPANY, LIMITED, CANADIAN FACTORY FOR WEST. THESE THREE NEW CONCERNS WILL EMPLOY FROM 500 TO 1,000 MEN. NOW IS THE INVESTORS OPPORTUNITY TO GET IN ON THE GROUND FLOOR, BEFORE PRICES BEGIN TO SOAR. THINK WHAT THESE NEW FACOTRIES WILL MEAN TO REDCLIFF S FUTURE AND THEN BUY ALL THE REDCLIFF PROPERTY YOU CAN HANDLE. SEPP SEPP HOPED etesioey Toronto Street, Medicine Hat Seeoetete toate cecteetesdiagenteetpite slo eate eater ateateate toate peatoatesotoateofeate eesti eefocteateesteeteatectoateateatree feat See the Stoner Agency About it Work on C.N.R. Line Into Medicine Hat Being Rushed 25 Miles of the Road to Be Completed This Fall. Eamonton Sept. 23 Work was be- gun last Thursday by Northern Con- struction Company on the line. of the Canadian Northern Railway starting from Bruderhelm and running east- ward via Vermillion, thence south- ward through Wainwright and Med- icine Hat to the intbyraitionad boundary, Build 25 Miles This Fall. The clearing of the right of way has-been begun at Bruderheim and will proceed eastward along the route of the line. A. T. Fraser, district engineer of the Canadian Northern Railway, states that a large outfit will be put on to grade at once, and a considerable amount of grade should be put up this fall. If the season.re- mains fairly open until about the middle of November, 25 miles. of grade will be constructed but the company undertakes to construct at Teast 15 miles of grade this fall. One of the largest outfits will be employ- ed Snd the w rk pushed with. all speed. : 200 Miles Guaranteed. The Une is one which was guaran- teed during the last session of the Alberta Legislature, the amount of the guarantee being 13,000 per mile for 200 miles, It takes the place of th -Hne a charter for which was ab- tained in 1909, starting from Ver- million and running westwerd to- wards Whitford Lake for a distance of forty miles. At the last session of the Legislature the Canadian Nar- thern got the charter revised to cov- er the country mentioned above and Teceived a guarantee of bonds in res- pect to 200 miles of line. Fine Farming Country. + The country which will be opened up by. the line is one of the finest farming districts in Alberta and one Which has been settled for quite number of years. It will pass through the Whitford: Lake and the present time much of this country unbroken, owing to the fact that it is too far from the railway for the farmers to haul thelr wheat in to the elevators, but the district contains some of the finest stock to be found In the province. Several large far- mers have stated that now the railway is under way they will break up big areas for wheat. raising. Work to be Pushed Forward. Frank Walker, M. P. P. for Vic- torla, who ha staken an active part in getting a railway to build into the country north of the main line of the N.-R. and south of the Saskatch- ewan River had an interview with Mr. Fraser,-who assured him that the work just commenced will be pushed forward with all possible speed this fall. Z The mileage guaranteed by the Provincial Government will cover the Gonstruction of the Ifine from Bruder- /heim through Vermillion to a point south of Wa.nwright. WORLD'S CONFGRENGE ON COMMERCE 600 Delegates From All Parts of the Civilized World Are Gathered at Boston. (Special to the News) Boston, Mass, Sept. 24 When the opening session of the Fifth Inter- national Congress of Chambers of Commerce and industrial and com- mercial orgdnizations was called to order here this morning by Charles 8. Smith, the executive head of the Congress, the big ball room of the Copley Plaza Hotel was filled to its utmost capacity by more than six hundered delegates representing com- mercial bodies in all parts of the cly- lized world, M. Louls Canon-Le- grand of Brussels was introduced as the presiding officer of the Congress by Mr. Smith, thereupon Charles 8. Nagel, Secretary of Commerce and Labor of the United States, welcomed the delegates from other countries on behalf of the United States. Sev- eral of the foreign delegates respond- ed. The Congress will remain in ses- sion three days, with meetings every morning and afternoon and will close on Thursday with a monster banquet at the Copley-Plaza Hotel, with Pre- sident Taft as the principal speaker of the evening, It is expected that nearly one thousand delegates and other invited guests will take part in the banquet. The list of speakers includes, in addition to President Taft, Governor Foss of Massachu- setts, Mayor Fitzgerald of Boston, Louls Canon-Legrand, president of the permanent committee of the In- ternational Congress; Angelo Sal- molraghi, president of the Milan Con- gress; and F. Faithfull Begg, on be- half of Charles Charleton, vice-pres- ident of the London Chamber of Com- merce. President Joseph B. Russell, of the Boston Chamber of Commerce, will preside at the banquet. This is the first time. that the In- ternational Coigress of Chambers of Commerce is held upon American Soll. The former sessions were held at Liege, Milan, Prague snd London. The attendance at the Congress open- ed to day greater than at any pre- vious Congress and it is expected that the present gathering will also sur- pass ts predecessors In the'jlliport- ance of the results of its delibera- tions. Many subjects of great importance to the commercial interests of all nations will be taken up for consid- eration and thorough discussion. M. Canon-Legrand will speak on the subjects of establishing a fixed date for Eeaster, reforming the calendar and regulating international exposi- tions. Prof. Dr. Max Apt of Berlin M. will opeh the discussion of the pro- position to establish an internation- al court of arbitrai justice for suite between individuals and foreign states. The unification. of legisia- tion relating to ch ks will be dis- cussed by Dr, Hans Trumpler of Frankfort-on-Main aid Prof. Dr. Max (Ratt, Dayton, 0., Pittsburgh, Apt of Berlin, Dr. Alfed, Georg, vice- president of the Chamber of Com- merce of Geneva, Switzerland, will be the prineipal-speakers on the sub- Ject of internationay. postal reform in view of the next conference of the Universal Postal Union in 1913, The subject of commercial statis- tics and the immediate institution of an international office will be intro- duced by Eugene Allard, president of the Belgian Chamber of Commerce in Paris. Charles 8. Haight, of New York City, will deliver the principal. address on the subject of the desir- ability of an international conference upon the yalidation of through-order- notify bills of lading, and of legisia- tion and other means for making the system more effective, Mr. Wilbur J. Carr, director of the American Consular service, 18 scheduled to speak onthe subject of the desirabil- ity of international uniformity of ac- tion in the matter of consular invoices and Prof. Irving Fisher, of Yale Uni- versity, will open the dscussion of the delrability of an international con- ference. on prices And the cost of living. During the three days following the close of the Congress the foreign delegates will be the gcests of the Boston Chan.oer of Commerce and an elaborate program for the entertain- Ment of the yisitors has been ar- ranged. On the following Monday the delegates will board special trains and start-an extensiye tour with stops at Worcester, Buffalo, Ni- agara Falls, Detroit, Chicago, Cincin- Wash- ington, Philadelphia and New. York, where. the tour 8 expected to end about October 20. At the various cities mentioned the delegates will be entertained by the commercial bodies of thege cities and the citizens in generat, Most of the foreign delogates in .at- tendance are leaders in the commer- cial life of there home cities and countries, many of them having na- tional and even international reputa- tions. Half of their number have served in national legislative bodies and are thoroughly versed in com- mercial matters as well as in the methods of legislative deliberations and actions In their respective coun- tries, Houses for sale on easy payments or will exchange for real estate. Ap- ply to Hotson Leader. 54-tt Loose Leaf System The News Job Department haz every tacility for sup- piyingthe most. satisfactory. THE CONSERVATION OF HUMAN LIFE Great Gathering of Noted Men at Washington To- day. . EXTEND KNOWLEDGE OF AYGIENIC PRACTICE Is the Object of. the 15th International Congress at U. S. Capitol. Washington, D. C. Sept- 23 With thirty-two leading governments and forty-eight states pouring their weal- th of knowledge to improve public welfare and to prolong human life into-one common fund for the world s use, the Fifteenth International Con- gress on Hygiene and Demography opened its week's session here this morning. Four hundred and fitty of the foremost sanitary authorities in the World in. formal addresses. will contribute the latest discoveries and methods in thelr respective countries in the realm of adding comfort and years to human life. It is expcoted that the attendance at the nine sec- tions into which the Congress is di- vided will number five thousand in- cluding many of the national, state and city health officials of this coun- try. While the object of the Congress is. to extend the knowledge and improve the practice of hygiene and public health in all the countries which par- ticipate, it fs believed these benefits will accrue in largest measure to the country which is for the time being the host .of the Congress. That the state and municfpal public officials of this country attending the. Con- gress will have support outside of immediate sanitary circles In scek- ing to put into effect various health reforms that will be suggested by the Congress 8 indicated by the action of large business enterprises in be- ing represented at the procoodings. Among these fs the Association of Life Insurance Presidgpts, which s represented by its general counsel, R. I. Cox of New York, and by tt health committee as follows: F. W. Jenking, chair Binghamton, . Y .; J. R. Clark, Cincinnati, 0.; W. F. Dix, New York; J lL English, Hart- ford, Conn; J. K. Gore, Newark, N. J.; Dr. A. 8. Knight, New York; E.'S. Scott, Springfield, Til. The committee has systematically subdivided the program of the Con- gress so that at least one member will be present at each address of interest to it, In particular the com- mittee is following that part of the work of the Congress dealing with the control of contagious disases, including typhoid fever, diphtheria, cerebrospinal meningitis, tubercu- losis, etc., with the sanitary aspects of public water supplies, including the sanitary control of water sheds, the purification of water by storage, water purification in Europe by bio- logical methods; water sterilization by chemical methods and with the disposal of sewage and wastes by the various processes now carried-on in Buropean countries. Wherever knowledge as to improved methods Is obtained it is the intention of the life insurance interests to systemat - cally ald constituted authorities in applying those methods to conditions in this country. In this way, it is hoped to improve the mortality ex: perience among life insurance : poll- ey holders. It has Been contended for some ttme by Prot. Irving Fisher of Yale University that the -practical appli- cation of all the reforms now wnown to modern hygiene would add fifresn years to the span of life in the Nn- ited States. CONFERENCE, OF CATHOLIC Washington, D. ,, Sept. 28 The .bi- - ennial meeting of the National Gon- ference of Catholie Societies begamits sessions at the Catholic University today, with the Rt Rev. Mgr. T. J. Shahan, rector of the janiversity, in the chair. Notable clerical and lay representatives of the church thro- ughout the country a e taking part in the conference, which will last three days Among the subjects scheduled for discussio are the con- vict and his family, desertion and non-support, the education of de- pendent children Jn public institu- city ehivironments; th protection of young Girls who go to large cities, recreation and the ition that should exist between organized so- cietles, Loote Leat Systeni The News Job Department has every facility for supplying the m st atistactory. The Daily News elivered in tho city 35 a month, British Columbia Mines Paying: Good Dividends. Are Declared Total 3 Have .Not Been. Distributed Heav- ier Out is Anticipated. Nelson, B. C., Sept. 23. It is in- teresting to note that several British Columbia mines are now dividend paying, while two or three others are likely to come into the dividend ranks very shortly. The best show- ing made for years was made in tho period from June 9 to July 15, It was as follows: DIVIDENDS. June 9 Dividend on 24 cents a share on 2,000,000 shares, paid by Standard SiiverLeed Mining Company, Slosan, 5 June 20 Dividend of 50 cents a hare on 120,000 issued shares, paid by the Hedley Gold Mining Com- pany, Similkameen, 60,000. July 1 Dividend of one shilling a share on 120,000 shares, paid by the Le Roi, Now 2, Ltd, Rossland, say 29,400. July Dividend of 2: cents a share, paid Wy the Standard Silver- Land Mining Company, Slocan, 50,- July 16 Dividend of 15 conta a share on 591,709 issued shares, paid by the Brtish Columbin Copper Sompasy, Ltd., Boundary, 88, - Total of profits distributed: in six weeks, 278,156.85.) means shows the total of sarned profits only the proportion that quite recently has been divided among the shareholiers in the sev- eral companies appeating on the above list. The first shipment of orp from the Red Cliff mite, Portland canal dis- trict, consist ng of BlL tons, to the Tacoma smelter, gave of 15 2. ton in copper Setond shipment ae
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Image 532 (1912-09-24), from microfilm reel 532, (CU1772746). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.