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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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1912-10-23
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SPO Soetoctectoate ete tect etee ate stostesaottoale ette doo dene Grate INP oe ee roe BED Derenrarendrenirining POSS Show Me hat s the very type of man we are after the one who says Show me, when we claim to offer the finest men s garment in town the 20th. Century Brand make. We can show you if you but give us the oppor- Heny: Fall styles now ready. es TURPIN BROS. THE MEN S STORE Where you,get the Big Dollar's Worth MILLIONS OF FARMS FOR YOUNG COUPLES: LEGISLATIVE. SCHEME Society for Abolition of White Slavery Would El- iminate the En Evil By Lay- ing Axe at Its Its Root. WOULD PAVE WAY FOR BETTER HOMES Senator John D. Works will Antroduce Bill at the next Session of Congress. San Francisco, Oct; 23 Farms for 3,000,000 married couples are sotght in a bill which, the Society for the Abolition of White Slavery announced here today, it will ask United States Benator John D. Works of Los An- eles to introduce at the next session of congress. Under the bill, as devised by offi- cers of the society, almost any on can get married, so far as financial considerations.are noncerned.. Three million couples, to be exact, are to be provided for, The government, under the provisions of the bill, would sub- Alivide some 20,000,000 acres of its 78,000,000 acres of unclaimed land, build houses, barns, and fences, sup- ply tools horses and seed and install on these farms newly-wedded- cou- ples. There's nothing quixotic about Such a proposition, eald Secretary John G. Lawlor, of the society; to- day. Much the same thing s done ta New Zealand and Australia now. Long term payments for the pro- erty would be granted, the bill con- templates, with the provisio that for each child to reach the age of four- teen, thirty-three per cent. of, the mortgage would be charged off. Thus, three children would absolve the hap- By parents from all indebtedness to the government. The bill, said Mr, Lawlor, would reduce immensely the number of young women who go wrong because it would increase the number of mar- viages. It also would increase the birth rate, reduce the cost of living, It Ys not generally known that thirty counties in Missouri and seven in Cal- instead of and stop infgration to the cities. fornia Jost population Baining in the last ten years. For the-instruction of the city far- the winter courses in ugricultural schools and mer, Mr. Lawlor said, travelling instructors would serve. Sappho Up-to-date, Encouraged by success in the-small towns, a budding manager decided to take out a Sappho eompany tour of the second-class cities. for To play it right we will have to die on the Iaggard. carry our own stairway, his stage : Tanager told him. The Carlisle Indians are using Stairway nothing, replied the their 1911 eriss-cross again this year, manager, this is going to b a city she Get an leyator. Life, Houses for sale-on easy payments. or will exchange for real estate. Ap- Boston. bert Many a bewhiskered man has been ply to Hotson Leader. Kntown to telt baretaced Iles. bowling was magnificent, thelr feld- a Australians Win Defeat. Winnij imnipe Oricketers by Seyen ets Their Play Brilliant. + (W. AP. Dispaten) Winnipeg, Oct, 23. The Australian ericketers completed their visit. to Winnipeg last might after defeating the local fifteen here by 7 wickets. As was expected, they proved them- selves to be the superior team tn ev- ery department of tho game. Their ng was as good as could be expect- ed under the circumstances and their, batsmen showed themselves capable of doing what they liked. by attack. CENTRAL STATES FIELD TRIALS, Hamilton. 0., October 23. Scores ot handsome pointers and setters, the preduet of years of careful breed- ing and training, are entered in the annual triais of the Central States Field rist Club, which began today on the club preserves near this city. BASEBALL NOTES. Big Bd, Reulbach, the Cubs great flinger, pitched regular championship bail in the Chicago, city series. In signing Mordecai Brown to man- age the Colonels, it looks as if the Louisville owners have copped the right party. Two famous .400 hitters of former days, Hugh Dufty and Jesse Burkett, were pals once more during the championship games. - The Three-I League moguls have announced April 24 as the opening date and Labor Day for:the closing games. for next. season. In purloining 116 sacks during the past season Ralph Meyers, of the Spokane. Northwestern League team, has established a base-stesling, re- cord President James Gaffney, of the Boston Nationals, js cleaning house. He vill have a new manager, a new secretary and new players for next) me A new Central League of eight, in- stead of twelve clubs, will probably be formed with the following cities in the circuit: Grand Rapids, South Bend, Fort Wayne, Springfield, Day- ton, Youugstown, Canton and Brie. Just to show how the advance dope on the world s series ran for Sween: ey, Young Forrest Cady proved to be a better backstop than the veteran Bill Carrigan; the star outflelder of the Red Sox had nothing on the Giants gardeners; Red Murray came back and was there with the wallop; Yerkes, of the Sox, didn't blow up as was predicted; Bedient, the unknown, pitched his way into the baseball hall of fame and Heine Wagner upset the dope by playing the best all-round game of any play- er in either outfit. FOOTBALL NOTES, End rush Vinal, of Williams, pro- duced some real football in the Har- vard-Williams game. Hill, left guard, who weighs 181 pounds, is the heaviest. man in. the Carlisle Indians lineup this fall. Work on Yale's new football stadi- um and clubhouse is to be started within the next few weeks. McGuire; of the Harvard eleven, is showing more activity at right guard than he did before he was hurt. Swarthmore gained 263 yards by rushing against Pennsylvania, the Quakers plays from scrimmage covering 153 yards only. Clarence Weymouth, Yale's old gridiron star, fs officiating in the football games being played in Wash- ington, Baltimore and Annapolis. Harvard has been doing Ittle with the direct pass for rushing. from sorimmage this fall, Yale and Prince- ton, however, haye been using. the diregt pass frequently, but with no especially. good results. is Spanking a six-foot football player sounds like kidding, but at Cornell it 1z-no Joke- At Ithaca the coaches have a large paddle within easy reach, ang when aplayer starts to loat, whackety bang goes the pad- but find the play harder to put over. Coach Haughton aljowed the Harvard football players a day off in order to attend. the Red Sox-Giants game in FOOTBALL GAMES SCHEDULED FOR THIS DATE. Bast. Yale University vs.Washington and Jefferson College, at New Haven, Rarvard University vs, Brown Un- iversity, at Cambridge, Mass. Princeton University vs. Dartmouth College, at Princeton, N. J. University of Pennsylvania vs. La- fayette College, at Philadelphia, Weat Point vs. Colgate University, at West Point, N. . Annapolis vs. University of Pitts- burgh, at Annapolis, Md. Cornet University vs. Bucknell Unt- versity, at Ithaca, N. . i Syracuse University ys. University of Michigan, at Syracuse, N. Y. Tufts College ve. Wesleyan Univer- sity, at Medford, Mass. Amherst College vs. Trinity, Col- lege, at Amheist, Maas. Holy Gross College ys. Massachu- setts Agricultural College, at Wor- cester, Mass. New Yors University vs. Williams College, at New York. 8 University of Vermont vs, Spring- field Training .School, at Bunhnetae vt. University of Maina vs. Bates College, at Lewiston, Me, Swarthmore College. vs. Johns Hopkins University, at Swarthmore, Pa. Rutgers College vs. Union College, at Schenectady, N. Y. Haverford College vs. Franklin Marshall College, at Haverford, Pa: Bowdoin College vs. Colby College, at Brunswick, Me. Hobart College vs. Hamilton Col lege, at Geneva, N. . Pennsylvania State College vs. Gettysburg College, at Bellefonte, Pa. Lehigh University vs. Ursinus Col- lege, at South Bethlehem, Pa. Muhlenberg College vs. Delaware College, at Newark, Del. West. University of Chicago vs. Universit, yat Chicago. University of Minnesota vs. State University. of Iowa, at Minneapolis, Minn, Northwestern University vs. Indi- ana University, at Indianapolis, 11d. University of Kansas vs. Kansas State Agricultural College, at Law- rence, Kas. Wabash College vs. University of Notre Dame, at South Bend, Ind. University of Missouri vs. Univer- sity of Oklahoma, at Norman, Okla. Ohio Wesleyan University vs. Case Sclentific School, at Delaware, O. Western Reserve Untyersity Oberlin College, at Cleveland, 0. Kenyon College vs. Wittenberg Col- lege, at Springfield, 0, Heidelberg University vs. Adrian College, at Tiffin, 0. St. Louis University vs, Miami Un- iversity, at St. Louts. Marquette University vs. College, at Milwaukee. Rose Polytechnic ys. Alumal, Terre Haute, Ind. University of North Dakota vs. Purdue vs. Lawrence at Macalester College, at Macalester. Minn. Lake Forrest College vs. Culver Military Academy, at Lake Forrest, WOMEN PASTORS ARE INCREASI Firct One in United States Ordained - as Congrega- tionalist in 1853. Women preacher were few a gen- eration ago, Thelr number has in- creased In E-Years with the in- vasion of all fi lds of business and professional life by women until now there are in th United States more than 2,500 ordained women preachers, Saye the New York Sun. For the most part they belong to the liberal denominations. The Unitarlan and Universalist faiths claim the miijority of them. Several have been ordained in the Methodist and Congregational churches. Women in the pulplts are positively forbidden in the Catholle, Episcopai and Lutheran churches. Many of these women preachers have gained a national n some an Inter- national reputation, Ond of the most widely Known of them is Rey. Caro- line Bartlett Crane. of Kalamazoo, Mich, who preaches not only the: creed of the Unitarian church, but also the gospel of civic cleanliness; and whb belleves:that a clean city is on the way to moral one. So stic- cessful has she been in preaching the latter gospel. that her septa ts now international. The first woman to become a min- ister in the United States was Rev.) Antoinette Blackwell, who Was or- dained in the Congregational church fm 1853. Later sheichanged her faith and became a Unitarian, and now preaches once month in All Souls church at Blizabeth, N, J, Rev. Phoe- be Ann Hannaford delighta to tell how she was the first woman preach- er to.,perform the marriage service, and she believes herself to be the on- ly woman. preacher who officiated at the marriage of her own daughter. She also had the Pleasure of ordain- ing her own son, She was the first) woman to act as Chaplin of a state) legislature. This Was while she was. pastor of a churctr in-New Haven, Ct./ The New Haven ministers were in- vited to undertake the duties of chap- lin in the Connecticut legislature and Mrs, Hannaford took her turn with the men preachers. An ususual in- stance is presented by Rev. Mr. Croc- ker and his wife, Both are preachers, but of different denominations. Mr. Crocker is a Unitarian, Mrs. Florence Crocker is a Universalist. For 50 years Rev. Olympia Brown, of Racine, Wis. has been preaching fron. a Universalist pulpit, having been ordained in 1859. She held sey- eral pastorates in the east before go- ing to the central states, and has lec- tured in almost every state in the union in the cause of women's rights. She was a close friend of the late Susan B. Anthony. In the early 70's she was married to John Henry Wil- lis, of Racine, who is entirely in sym- mi. Olivet College vs. Michigan Agricul- tural College, at Lansing, Mich. Huron College vs. School of Mines, at Rapid ity, S. D. Morningside University vs, Crelgh- ton Univeraity, at Sioux City, Ia. Washington University vs, Rolla School of Mines, at St. Louts. Drake University vs. Simpson Col- lego, at Des Moines, Ia Ortgon Agricultural College vs. Mount-; Angel College, at Corvallis, Ore. + Som, Vanderbilt University vs. University of Mississipp , af Nashville, Tenn. University of vs. University of Alabama, at Columbus, Ga. University of Virginia vs. Richmond College, at Charlottesville, va. Georgetown University vs. Carlisle, Indians, at Georgetown, D.C. West Virginia University vs. Ohio University, at Morgantown, W. Va. Virginia Polytechnic Institute, at Ra- leigh, N. C. University. of South - Carolina Charleston College, at Charleston, 8. o. Sewanee University vs. University of Tennessee, at Chattanooga, Tenn. Washington and Lee University vs. Wake Forest College, at Lexington, Va. St, John s College vs. Maryland Agricultural College, at College Park, Md. University of Texas vs, Haskell Tn- ians, at Austin, Tex. Clemson College vs. Citadel College, at Clemson, S. 0. Virginia Military Institute vs. Wes- tern Maryland College, at Lexington, vi Texas A. M. College -vs. Univer- sity of Arkansas, at Dallas, Tex. Foster's Shoe Repairing Depart ment is saving others money. e mot yout The Daily News delivered in the city 36c a month, Subscrite now for The Dally Nev University of North Carolina vs. pathy with her ideas of woman's in- dependence. A cuflons feature of thelr marriage was that Mr. Willis agreed to his wife's desire to keep her own name and to be known not) as Mrs, Willis but as Mrs, Brown. No Powder For French Ships France May Have to Go Outside the Country for Tts Supply. Paris, October 12 The Temps an- nounces that the ministry of marine has giyen orders to subject to ex- haustive tests fifty tons of powder from Sweden and Italy With a view of using it in the navy. If this is troe, it marks a notable and most welcome departure from the hitherto inflexible rule to employ only powder manutac- tured by the state, which, unfortun- ately, hgs never proved satisfactory, and is Wniversally believed to be the original cause of moat of the terrible catastrophles which have occurred of late years on French warships. Last year a great scandal was un- earthed by one of the state powder factories, but it was more or less hushed up, The disaster on the bat- tleship Liberte led to the disembark- ation of almost the whole of the stock of powder in: the fleet, and even dently useless to indulge in recrim- tions, and the vital question agita- the minds of those cognizant of p tacts realizing the eventual dan- Sb, whether the government by the measure it bas just taketai*ea me tp-aeknowledge the in- sisi ge state factories) may wot find ,be induced to yield to preasure offippinion and abolish the monopoly. ing the last thirty years ministers of marine and a large section of expert opinion have recom- mended throwing the manufacture of powder open to private industry. The mament this is done there can be Iittle doubt that competition would soon produce ff not perfect powder, t least an article infinitely superior to the death dealing product furnished by the state factory in accordance with theoretical formulae, which have too often proved im practice inex- plicably false. Eyer since the Liberte catastrophe and the accesion of M. Delcasse to the ministry of the marine there has been a strong durrent in favor of the suppression of monopoly. At present private industry may not manufac- ture powder, being forbidden, but no- body doubts its capability; and it would be hard to find a single man of common sense. who would prefer France being dependent on a foreign supply of powder to calling upon native capital and enterprise to meet national needs. The military and naval needs of the country and equally its econom- fo interests can only be safeguarded as the Temps points out, by re-estab- lishing the liberty of manufacture instead of continuing the present policy of suicidal monopoly. The purchase of fifty tons of foreign pow- der is looked upon as a hopeful sign that the government recognizes the danger of relying any longer on a state-produced explosive. THE MARKET REPORTS Winnipeg, Oct: 23 Purther ad- vances in prices of futures today in- dicate that developments in eastern Burope ate considered of importanoy in grain cireles. There is a good export demand and firms*in this line were free buyers of October... Mhere is also a fair cash trade, but offer- ings are by zig. means free. Heavy) receipts, howey r, tend to keep pric- Jes down. + For the week ending Monday, 8,867 ears were inspected which should sum up over 10,000,000 bushels. Ar- gentine crop prospects are excellent, The weather, though favorable today, has symptoms of a change, being cloudy generally over the Cafiadian west, Receipts were 1282 cars in- spected and/ 1,000 in sight. Cables clo Averpool, unchang- ed to 1-2 up; Paris, 1 1-4 to. 1 34 lower; Berlin 3-8 lower; Antwerpt, 3-8 up. Oct. wheat opened 90 2-4, elosed 92; Nov, opened 90:1-8, closed 90 3-4; Dec. opened 86 +4, closed 87 1-8; May opened 91 1-2, closed 92 1-8. Oct. oats opened 38 1-2, cloned 38 6-8; Nov. opened 35 1-2, closed 36; Dec, opened 32 7-8, closed 4 1-4. Oct, flax opened 134, closed 135 1 Nov. opened 183, closed 184 1-2; Dec. opened 126, closed 129. Cash Prices, Wheat,*No, 1.Nor, 91; 2 Nor. 88:/ 3 Nor. 87; 4 Nor. 88 1-2; 5 Nor. 74; 6 Nor. 63; feed 58. Winter wheat, No, 1, 91; No. 2, 8: No, 3, 87; No.4, 83. Oats, lo. 3 CW 87; extra No. 1 36, Barley No. 3, 55 1-2 rejected, 48; feed 48. Montreal, Oct. 23 There was 8 bad break in . P. R. towards tioon today. The*stock closed yesterday around 263 9-4 and this morning fell to 260 3-4, The balance of the market was soft under this depresing influence with the exception of Bell Telephone, which went to 176 1-4, 2 new high to 110, Richelieu fell off from 114 to 113 3-8. The market generally was yery dull with fractional de- clines. American. Markets. Minneapolis, Oct. 23. Dec. Opened 94 1-4, closed 94 3-4. 1-2, closed 98 3-8; July closed, 95. pushed the market higher. Export ales discouraged the bears. Favor- able, weather and Big rec: then the gravest doubts were ex- pressed occasfona ly whether the, m8? proviston substitu: of much better quality or safer. At the present moment: it pered in naval circles that si be suddenly declared more the French fleet would be fire a shot, there being no the magazines. that the Admiralty is absoliitely norant as to Where the ni powder could be found in case ergency, aud that Its by no mi sure that foreign powders are table for French artillery, ig, Whis- eer hate The Temp aaderts e at 98 to 93 1 touched 92 1. f-Oats became firm in the ab- five of selling pressure. Decembe 4 and 28 to 32 3-8 and ranged bet ween 3201-4 and 32 1-2c. MLuiverpool, Oct, 2: Steady, No. 3 Man., +8 4d 8.10 3-4 0; Dec, Tg10 8-H roh 78 4 Sta. feed 37 1-2; No. 1 feed 37; No. 2 feed 10. 4, BL 1-25 jevel for this stock, tater breaking wheat opened 88 3-4, closed 89 1-2; May Chicago, Oct. 23. Dec. wheat open- ed 93, closed 93 7-8; May. opened 97 Chicago, Oct. 23 War news. in- duced buying of wheat today and tended to be regarded as having been Aisconnted sufficiently for the pres- ent. The opening was the same as and then rose to 93 1-4 and ixteenth to 1-8 higher at 32 Wheat, spot, futures, Correspondence With a Parte Southern General. (Montreal Witness) Mr. Adolphe Bissionette, High Con- war stable of Montreal, Patriarch of the Court House in years of setvice to Cor the Government, has the remarkable And 1 record of officiating at two Hundred sonette 6 and four sessions of the Court of his King s Bench, embracing a period of jter to i fifty-one years service in his eapac- in one ity as High Constable to the court replica, in the City of Montreal. At the age of elghty-two he is seen every. day at his. post in the Court House, a familiar figure, always on duty, for he has failed to report but once in all that time, the result of an 0 accident in 1911, caused by a fall on the fce, which laid him up for a week. Mr. Bissonette was born on Sept. 3, 1880, less-than ten-years after the great Napoleon Bonaparte died-in St. Helena, and the same year that the other. chan ey: immortal American, Abraham Lin- of the coln,;cast his first vote in th coun- nena cane Wao try of which he afterwards became teemed friends the martyred president, Come. aay net Brom 1854 to 1861 he was sub-obiot Was Mey five: years of police, and at the age of thirty-two Captain Young twenty. was appointed to the position which Met before and the meeth he now holds jointly with afr. st, P Rotable one in the lives Mars, the duties of which are aivided *W2 Mee. around whom hangs between the two. Gifted with a'svon- MOosPhere far removed from dertul memory, he is able to recall 92- the stirring times of the 1847 rebett- , For Mis great age the work fon, and remembers the soldiers uniform everywhere through the city, who in some quarters ordered the citizens off the streets at nightfall. One of the most celebrated cases that came before the courts in Can- ada took place when the Confederate Army/sent Capt, Bennett A. Young, Qak 2 ence in the Court Room, * io ag ew ed on him from all minion BER BEF ee death. Ap a commissioned officer, to conduct a host of Soee rald on the town of St. Albans, in *l walks of lite, She best Vermont, which was silecestul f vie cicada nal a es the citizens ee : B trial Insted from Nov. 20 til Dec; 18- sy. 1869, and every day the Court was in . session thirteen of: the twenty men of tive ery t were taken from the jail on Notre underneat Dame street to the Court House by He roused High Constable Bissonetto, then in -f. out. It his fourth year of office. The raiders sf. night, -bu admitted taking 75,200 trom the ftom wher Bank. of St. Albans, and put up the + Lady Bar defence that t was as contraband of -f. ed, and war, and such was the verdict of terror to the. two judges before whom the case up for hal was tried. The raid was an act of al silence, an more, 1 the morni the instar Rossmor In sails from business, I my thanks and e to been accorded me for the Past would bespeak for my successor, a continuance of the same. The Bulg first thing Tt ts not th impression, as ugly as i it his bi face. But t Sxpreasion ing in the You look at by. This com of body and are the mar the brightne sion that ar town give y Bulgarian s terial. He fe which we s He 18 a pe his own. 1a1 oxen tou his circum: Work, 1 nee he t Treat For The ale Le Thursday and Friday Evenings ... Admission and Skates Free Let them All Come. A morning and afternoon pee mgpelnding: skates. eb
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Image 744 (1912-10-23), from microfilm reel 744, (CU1772831). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.