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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-09-21
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Transcript
ay wis Saturday, Sepleaiber 2isi., 8a September 2lst,, 1012. tality you build, consider first, Don't be per- o buy CHBAP LUM- use It's cheap use the - We have it, and ev- the Builder requires. st stock or LUMBER, SASH, FIR FINISH, ' OAK, MAPLE, BIRCH t FLOORINGS. ro the sgeney for the d Morgan Doors, DOOR BEAUTIFUL , WOoD FIBRE, LATH -EDAR POSTS, WIL LOW POSTS PAVER OARD 1 10.22 Terms 35.00 Down, TWO MILES FROM CITY. oO Balance 5.00 Per Month OSGI LOLSFELELEEOTETESLOTOTS OOESODIG SS OPO ELEDODR ELH MOI Serevy rr ereeereseeererey 7 AY CO LUMBER PEOPLE X 29,. PHONE 57 There is no investment on Harth so safe as a investment in Harth. itself Get in onthe ground floor, at the right price. We shall have ; Street Cars in the near future and then this acreage will beome lots CLOSE TO THE NEW ie WORKS; - Quart . Pint PAY MORE a te te ee 2's Drug and Store : : : RIMMER SMITH, PHONE 478. eS NORTH RAILWAY ST., MEDICINE HAT. LOOT ELI DEST SS TOSSES TSE OSS SSS S OLS ESOL SHOTS ES ' SOLE AGENTS: HYGIENE EXPERTS AT WASHINGTON 3,000 of World s Leaders on Sanitation Meet in Congress. TAFT TO OPEN MEETING AT CAPITAL ON MONDAY Some Notable Addresses of SaleStables eams, Drivers, Saddle orses for Sale, World Wide Interest are D HEAVY DRAYING. on the Programme. Hay for Sale. (Special to the News.) Washington, D. C., Sept. 21 More than three thousand of the world s mos tnoted experts in hygiene and sanitation are gathered in this city D McCLAIN- : PROPRIETOR teenth International Congress ot Hy- giene and Demography, which is to open here on Monday and will re- main in session through the entire week, This will be the first thne that the Congress meets upon Ameri- camsoll, and there is every indica- tion that the gathering next week will surpasa all its predecessors in attendance and general importance. This year s congress is held under the auspices of the United States Government, and President Taft 1s scheduled formally to open the Con- gr 8s of which he fs the honorary president. . Every country of Europe, practi- cally every civilized country of the rest of the world, including the Un- ited States and Canada, and the South and Centcal American repub- lies, are represented by delegates and many of the principle countries are also represented in the exhibi- SLEY BROS. SSS 3 and Contractors. Ave., Phone 484 0. Box 304. ONE STABLE PHOND 2 728 J. S. FOLLIS racting Co. TORONTO ST. tion of hygiene and demography. ing. Sand, Coal Graves which was op tied a week ago and rating a Spectalty. will continue for two more weeks to ay Mcbeaa ok inc supplement the congress. The dele- an le at Bates assembled here include experts. Ze aa Tepresnting very State of the Union, more than one hundred munictpall- ties, scores of organizations active L YON 0 in matters of hygiene and sanftatton and nearly every prominent univer- sity and college in the United States and Canada, as well as many sclen- tifle bodies. Dr. Henry P. Walcott, chairman of the State Board of Health of Massa- chnsetts, will be the presiding offi- cer at the sessions of the Congress, while the exhibition is under the con- trol and direction of Dr. Joseph W. Schereschewsky, of the United States public health and marine hospital service. The congress will, be divid- ed into nine sections, cach of which will have its own program. The ex- TRACTS FOR 7Y TEAMING AND EXCAVATING and Sand for Sale, a N P.O, Bor si Se Reynolds ITER, ETC. mples in Wall: Paper. th Ave. Phone 690, at present, waiting to attend tha Fif- hibition is held in a number of spec- ially constructed buildings in Poto- mac Park and s attracting great in- terest. The general subject of hygiene in all its subdivisions will be discussed at the sessions of the congress next week by experts from all parts of the civilized globe. Among the sub- ) fects of practical interest to bo dis- cussed are Sewage Disposal by Di- lution, with Reference to Condition in Tidal Waters and Large Streams; Water Purification in Europe by Biological Methods; Disposal of Waste The Campaign Against Noise Hygiene of City Babies ; Sanitary Aspects of Housing Prob- lems ; Sewage Purification by Ox- dation Meth Bacteriological Examination of Market Milk ; The Nutritive Requirements in, Early In- fancy ; Importance of Flies and Other Insects as Carriers of Infectu- ous Diseases ; Prevention of Wat- er-Borne Diseases in River Traffic ransportatio and Urban, Health The Model Law for Municipalities ; ir Pollution ; Hygiene of Street Traffic ; State and Municipal Hy- giene ; The Sanitary Aspect of Public Water Supplies ; City Plan- ning ; Rural Betterment State Insurance in Relation to Public Health , and scores of other prob- lems of an economic and hygienic ature. One whole section of the congress will be devoted to State and Munt- cipal Hygiene and Symposiums have been arranged for the discussion of public health organization and ad- ministration in England, Germany, Denmark, Japan and other countries. One of the most interesting papers will be One by Colonel W. C. Gorgas, chiet sanitary officer of the Isthm- ian Catal Commission, on Adminis- trative Methods and Results Obtained in the Canal Zone, In addition to these and other gen- eral subjects there will be discus- sions of a number of specific sub- jects, lke infantile paralysis, the hookworm disease, taberculosts,-bu- bonie plague and other important subjects, by some of the greatest authorities and experts on these sub- Jects known to the world. In view of the former great achievements of these hygienic congresses it is be- lieved that the present congress will lead to even greater and more far- Teaching results, than its predeces- sors. This congress was called Into be- ing in 1952 to meet the problems connected with the great cholera ep- Idemic in Europe which began in 3847 and raged for eight years, Since theh tremendous progress in gener- al sanitation and in the control of certain diseases like cholera and other endemic and infectuous diseas- 7 es, including diphtheria, tuberculo- sis, malaria, typhoid and hydropho- Dia, bas be n made as a result of the work of the international congresses, on hygiene and demography. The last gathering was held in Berlin, in September, 1907. NAVAL LORDS NOW HAVE OWN TASKS Winston Churehil's New Order Gives Each of Them Specific Duties,. London, Sept. 21 Mr. Winston Churehill, first lord of the admiralty, in continuance of his plans for the reform of the navy, has announced further administrative changes. The main feature is the allotment to each lord-of the admiralty of specific du- ties, which are precisely defined, and which correspond to the qualifica- tions of the respective lords. These are: Firet sea lord and admiral of the fleet, Vice-Admiral Sir Francis Bridgeman; second sea lord, Vice- Admiral Prince Louls of Batten- burg; third sea lord, Rear-Admiral Charles John Briggs; fourth sea lord Captain William Pakenham, and cly- i ord, George Lambert, M. P. The whole reorganization aims, 1ske Mr. Churchill's other reforms, at running the navy on business lines. Vitally: important changes in con- nection with naval: discipline as. ity 4. affects the lives of thousands of men on the lower deck are made in Mr. Churchill's circular deter. It sets forth a series of new regulations, which will replace many of the most severe rules dealing hitherto with naval delinquents, The putting into operation of the reforms indicated s declared to be the most important step yet taken for the benefit of the personnel of the fleet since the abolition of the press gang. The new regulations are the re- sult of the work of a. special com- mittee which for many months has been enquiring into the whole sub- ject. The committee reported to the admiralty six weeks ago, and its re- commendations were promptly car- rled into effect. WILL CONTROL WIRELESS . (Cc. AP. bie) St. Petersburg, Sept: 20. The pos- tal authorities have called a confer- ence for the purpose of formulating regulations for government supervis- ion of wireless stations.and for the use of wireless telegraphy on foreign ships in the Russian waters, Loose Leaf System The News Job Department. has s bry faciltty for supplying. the most, aitlsfastory. SUPPRESS INDIANS WHO MAKE TROUBLE Provincial License Inspec- tor Takes Steps to Ban- ish Trouble. SIXTEEN CASES FROM CALGARY. STAMPEDE Selling Liquor Without a License and Gambling Also Added to Court Coffers: Following close upon the murder of a Mounted Police afficer at Brooks, who was shot down while in pursuit of some Indian offenders, the atten- tion of the Aftorney-General's De- partment was brought to the occur- rence through a circular letter from the Department of Indian Affairs at Ottawa, and a letter accompanying it, asking for the co-operation of: the complimentary and conspicuous upon the life work and devotion of Rev. John McDougald, Rev Arch- deacon Timms, Rev. Father Lacombe and others who have labored among the Westerh Canadian Indians for many years. There are always some men who so far neglect thelr duty to their neighbor who, forthe pur- pose of gain and greed, will endeavor to debase themselv s and debauch the Indians, and it was this class that was particularly watched by the Liquor License Department men dur- ing Stampede week, and the energy of these men and their Indian Spe- clals haa-no doubt much to do with minimizing this particular class of lawlessness. During the Stampede, fh addition to this work, officers of the License De- partment obtained convictions against one man for running a gambling game on the exhibition grounds ana against two negroes, each charged with selling Iquor without a license. Fines of 100.00 were inflicted in each of these thr e cases. ADVOCATES REPLACING POSTMASTER-GENERAL Attorney-General s. Department of Alberta in the. suppression of this class of trouble and more particular, Ty in connection with the large gath- ering of Indians of various tribes at Stampede at Calgary carly in this month, when several thousand Indians encamped fm and around Cal- gary to enjoy and participate in one of the greatest holidays and .pow- wows ever celebrated in the Canad - an west, and where royalty reviewed the Indian pageant and hob-nobbed with. the Indian dignitaries. The re- quest for co-operation between the two departments was met by Attor- mey-General Cross referring the In- alan. Department's request to the the Liquor License Bransh. Chief License Inspector Forster detailed this particn r branch of Stampede work to Provincial Detective Hodg- kins, who employed half a dozen men to assist him, two of them In- diags and two half-breeds. The re sult of the work was that there were fourteen convictions of Indians for imbibing too freely, and two convic- tions of half-breeds for supplying Mquor to Indians. In both the 'stter offences there were prison terms of three imonths fnflicted. Sixteen of- fences among a large number of In- lians under such circumstances does not appear to be an unreasonably large proportion, and would stand fayorable comparison. with the num- bet of similar offences amon, the white section of Calgary's ypula tiom.during Stampede week, It is, in fact, an olitstanding commentary * London Times Suggests Boatd of Directors in Britain With Permanent Chairman. London, Sept, 20. The Times, in view of the deterioration which has taken place in the telephone service since t came under. government con trol, advocats the abolition of the Office of postmaster-general, and the substitution of a board of directors, with a permanent chairman. It is argued that the postmaster- general can not master the detalls of such vast concern during: the life of a single government, and, more- over, regards the office merely as a stepping stone to promotion in the: cabinet. The plan is that with a permanent chairman there should also be, a colleagues a director of posts and a director of telegraphs, these to sal sisted by five business men, fees, and who should be summon to fortnightly meetings. AMERICANS AT MAZAYA gt; (W. A. P. Dispaten) San Juan Del Sur, Nicaragua, Sept. 20. A foree of American mar- ines under the command of 8. D. Butter, which left Managua Sunday morning to open Granada, occupied the town of Mazaya Wednesday. The germs which make brewers Yeast are stronger alcohol producers than any other yeast DOWNWARD MOVE IN FOOD PRICES So Says the Department of Labor in August Re- port. INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENTS SHOW FALLING OFF Disputes and Strikes for Past Month Also Show Big Decrease. The decline of two points in the Department of Labour s index num- ber of wholesale prices for July, af ter continuous rise for twelve months, was followed in August by another drop, the index . number standing at 193.4 as compared with 134.8 the. previous month, Last year, however, at this: date t stood at only 127.2, The decline during August was due chiefly to decreases in prices of grains and fodders, fruits and vegetables, with slight ncreases in dairy prodivcts, fish, metals, and coal. These index numbers are per- centages of the average prices of some 250 articles during the decade was. considerably. Strikes; these were, duration inmost cases tions Were generally the end ofthe month. eon Charles many conspicuous. member of the Na- tional House tered upon his 1890-18: Industrial Accidents. trial accidents muintained in the De partment of Labour, that for the month of August showed that 88 workmen were killed and 305 injured compared with 108 fatal and 272 non- fatal accldents- during the month of July; OF a decrease Of 20 in the num- ber of fatal and an Increase of 33 non-fatal accidents compared with the Feoord for July. The largest number According to the record of indus , opening . solemn high masa will be celebrated at the Catholic University tomorrow miorning, The sermon will be preached.by Biahop Canevin of Pittsburgh. The regular sessions will begin Monday and continue three days. of fataliti s occurred in the building trades and in the steam railway ser- vice, there being 11 workmen killed service, the largest number of non fatal accidents occurred, thy being 65 in the case of the former and 53 In the latter. Strike Sitnation More Favourable, The Department of Labor s record shows the influence of labour dis putes upon the industrial conditions during August to have been not 0 serious as during July, fewer. dis putes being recorded as in existence. An improvement, too, over July con- ditions s seen In the fact that of the seventeen disputes which commenced ocopered in during August a definite termination, EMANCIPATION SEMI-CENTEN- : IAL. 4n the former and 25 in the latter. In should receive substantial directors the metal trades and steam railway negroes of the Retoas ed ne-Fecora the celebration. of Versary of sipation. r Lincoln, Sept. 2, i300. The celebra- Ftton wilt 1 tomoziow and will continue four days. In connection with the celebration there will be held an interdenominational religious con- ferenes of national scope and a two days session of the National Congress of Colored. Bduesiors. Money aud Brains. No man hss: mora jnoney than the case of -eleyens brains) who haw braiis nough, to Subscribe now for The Daily News. T am poftation in different ee eee
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Image 512 (1912-09-21), from microfilm reel 512, (CU1772782). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.