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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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1912-10-25
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in an urgent cnse gt; and. the diagnosis as to advise calle oN rk Dr. Jacobi has a es at the end of Juv ke George, where he launch, takes a hand mips about the eour: - reak-in his, work and hat he takes throuxh- tributes his general IR A WIFE. the rnder tribes of physical excenice wert, for a brive du: e oue. w people of Ama. Wilt WRK ae lie ash old all oLbers wwe om, after two bouts , ( pursuers wis: re re altogether snd. the pursued. With, , but bis horse sud turned anxiously, ay the hapless povi- fortunate Zeaders, 1 triumph, bending mane, shouted at She, making a gad- her horse almost to belr path and made ree others instant at In thelr burry to. horses were dashed other ay that both Lover on the plain. , for she thought. ) the single horse- dat where her lover arsuer was rarely easily shaken off. te effort he dashed ind, stretching out ed the- unwilling her head to ber gtasp and wheeled mounted horseman er, Nor lover's arm nd amid the ehoute aes toward th - iy; No. 8;58. ST OERPAP oSeehe diene eo ete eter ae. Show Me - That 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- tunity. Fall styles now ready. TURPIN BROS. -THE MEN'S STORE Where you get the Big Dollar s Worth THE MARKET REPORTS (W. AP. Despatch) Winnipeg, Oct gt; 25 The market opened a little lower than at yester- day's close but gained strength dur- ing the course of the morning's trade. The whole tone was nervous amd -ffuctuations, though narrow, were rapid. Trade was very active at the opening and well sustained. October oats were a little firmer, Flax had a further. slight decline. Heavy receipts and the indifferent cash and export demand caused the prices to keep down to a lower level than generally anticipated. Weather conditions continue excellent for de- livery and transportations. Inspec- tion. made another record--with 1441 cars as a total. Cars in sight, 1,000. Cables closed: Liverpool, 3-4 lower; Paris 1-4 to 1 1-4 lower;, Berlin, 5-8 Grain Quotations T day. Winnipeg, Oct. 25. Oct.. wheat opened 90 3-4, closed 95; Nov. 90, 90; Dec. 86, 86 1-8; May 91, 90. Oct. Oats 38 3-4, 39 1-4; Nov. 36, 36; Dec. 34, 35 7-8. Oct. Flax 135, 133; Nov. 184, 182; Deo. 129, 126 1-2. Cash Prices No. iNor. wheat closed 91; No. 2 Nor. 87 1-4; No. 3 Nor. 85 1-4; No. 4 Nor. 82 3-4; No, 5 73; No, 6 63. Feed 53, Winter wheat, No. 1, 90 1-4; No. 2, 87 1-2; No, 3 85 ; No. 4 8 1-2. No, 2 C. W. Oats 36 3-4; No. 3 C. W. oats 36. Extra No. 1 feed, 36; No, 1 feed, 36; No. 2 feed, 36. Bar- Chicago, Oct. 25. The expected lib- eral world shipments tended today to press the wheat market downward. Bearish sentiment led to a lack of de- mand rather than to an increase of selling. Continued big receipts north- west cated as a hindrance to. the bulls. The opening was a shade low- er to a like amount up. December Started at 93 and 93 1-8 unchanged, to Sixteenth higher, and declined to, 92 5-8. Onts showed relative steadiness on account of receipts not accumulating. December which at the outset was 32 1-2, a shade up from last night, held later at 32 3-8 and 1-2. Minneapolis, Oct. 25. Dec. wheat opened 88 1-2, closed 88 1-2; May, 04, 4. Chics 9, Oct. 25. Dec. wheat open- d lowed 93; May 97 3-4, aly 4, 94, Liverpool, Oct. 25: Closing wheat spot steady; No. 3.Man, 8 8 40; fu- tures easy; Oct. 7s 10 3-8; Dec. 78 Mai imacuror ot MIapleine From the Land of Hot Cakon ) NH. Hitton makes a deli- and. leo. a rors Sendioe, cus. sastion. tarda and Grocers soll. Mapleino, oie net, write. CRESCENT MFE.C0, Seattle, Wa. SP a ae eo UE SOOT POS SSSA SEG OOD OS PPS cea heeds Cosine din din Boat ionte dase cte dioceses Coste IN THE ROLLIE ZEIDER RANKS WITH BEST ART OF STEALING It will be stole from. sr, Zate that Winnipeg , Zeider, is op fight of baseball cracks- There was many a disappointed horesman at the Lexington meeting because of the failure of Joe Patchen H. and Braden-Direct to meet and try conclusi ns in the rich Tennessee Btake for 2.05 pacers. Both famous pacers were named in the Tennessee and as the season progresed and woek after Week each paced brilliant races the meeting at Lexington was an- xiously awaited. It was looked for- ward to as a feature attraction. The same week that the Tennessee was decided Joe Patchen IJ. had a 5,000 engagement at Springfield, M., and rather than meet Braden Direct, he filled it and won in straight heats, It was riot through fear, of being defeated by the son of Baron Direct that Joe Patchen vacated the big line, but because his owner wish- es to keep him eligible to the 2.04 class and also because the purse at Springfield was much more. attract- ive. ; Both Great Pacers. Joe Patchen Ii. and Braden Direct are the best pair of stake pacers that have graced the Grand Circuit since 1908 hen Minor Heir, 1.58 1-2 and Eel, 2.02 1-4, made their-debut, and horsemen anticipated another such contest as that which took place when the famous grey and brown stallions met in that memorable con- test four years ago. A few even pre- dicted that some inferior pacer would play the part that Jerry B, 2.04 1-4, took in 1908. That one would wait until the great pair had raced them- selves into the ground and then come to life and win the race in slow time. Difficult to Compare. It 1s a difficnlt task to draw com- parisons between these two great pacers and determine which is really the greater. Each one has 2 host of friends and both have proven that they are mighty horses. Nothing but a series of races between them would decide the supremacy. Joe Patchen IL is a fully matured seven year old horse, while Braden Direct is only a four year old, but the later has prov- en that he is capable af achievements that few aged nd fully matured have the ability to accomplish. Bra- den Direct is undoubtedly -x-greater horse than Joe Patchen II. at the same age, but.we are judging them on present time basis, which is the greatest regardless of Braden GREAT RACE IS EXPECTED WHEN JOE PATCHEN THE il. MEETS BRADEN DIRECT Last Great Race Was When Minor Heir and the Grey Ghost Met in 1908 in Race for Supremacy. He has outcladsed his field In every start, and his one defeat was due, we believe, alone to the unfortunate circumstances that. surrounded it He has displayed sensational speed in a number of his races and We are informed worked a mile while at Columbus in two minutes flat. Braden Direct Wins. Braden Direct has made eleven starts this season and won ten, suf- fering his only defeat in his first start at Grand Rapids. He has had Severe pacers that were capable of miles arourid 2.04 and a number of his races were. heat wins. He was a sensational ree in his race at Lexington and Won as though he could defeat anz stake pacer started against him. However, great as he is, many belleve that Joe Patchen II. can take his measure and so it will remain, matter of opinion, until the pair come together on the field of battle. Grounds Ottawa, Oct. 25. Ottawa is evi- dently to be the recruiting ground for the N. H. A. this season. The latest Ottawa amateur to receive a contract from one of the National Association magnates is Punch/ Broadbent, of the champion New Bdinburgh amateur seven. Mr. S. Lichtenhein, of the Wandeters, ig the star and he has forwarded one. of th N. H. A. forms for Broadbent to fil out. Whether the local puck-chaser will acceptor not is not yet known but the chatices are that he will not ALL THAT SIR THOMAS WANTS 1S AFAIR SHOW Famous Yachtsman Dis- cusses Prospects for An- other Race for the Amer- ica Cup. Toronto, Oct. 24. It they will only let me race under their own rules, that is all I want, said Sir Thomas Lipton, the English yachts man, when interviewed on his arriv- al here, I do-not want to race un- der the international rules, which govern yachting in Great Britain and throughout Europe. All I ask rules, which govern yacht racing of Direct holds the taster record, but he was marked at the beginning of the season and Joe Patchen has start- ed.in fourteen races andwith excep- tion of one, his race at Fort Erle, he has won them all very handily. The baseball season just closed will long e remembered by reason of the records set up by twirlers. Marqnard s mighty roll of conseca- tive victories, and the scarcely Jess remarkable feats of Joe Wood and ex late arrivals among the boxmen, have made the year just one. sensa- tion after another, and have eompen- sated for the lack of a/elose race in either of the major lesgues. No pitcher of the year is better entitled to a niche in the taseball hall of fame than Joseph Wood, of the Bos- ton Red Sox, who will today cele brate the seri s of articles day. commencing to- Most fans know that. Jobs as he used to be generally called, commenced his professional career in Kansas, but there is one phase of his early life that he would rather have forgotten. Asa boy he played with a bloomer girl team which toured the middie west, and clad in an aub- urn wig and bloomers he made a -Yery charming as well as capable. Joe Wood---Ex Bloomer Gil ARTICLE I. BY GRAVY all-kinds in the United States, with the exeeption of the race for the American cup. Biven under these conditions Americans would have 2 slight ad- vantage. But as hollers of the cup, girl. Few of the fans along the kero- gene circuit suspected that sex was not what it was supposed to be. To keep up the deveption meant that the razor had to be applied two or three times a day, and Joc. Soon tired of the life. Wood, who tands five feet ten and a half inches, and weighs 175 pounds, is a thorough athlete, and a gentleman who does honor to the profession. To him more. than. to any other player due the fact that-the Boston Red Sox captured the flag. He was the mainstay of th twirling staf all season, and it was his great box work that enabled the Red Sox to get away to a good start when the of the-team-was showing class, Witt-proper support Wood. might have excelled Mar- quard s record, and as it was. he took sixteen straight and thus tied Walter Johnson of Washington for American Leagite honors. The strain of attempted record-breaking was bed for him, however, and bad he riot lost when he did he might have) become a nervous wreck. 5 The story of Wood's career will little Ottawa is to be Recruiting man whd gt; wants to land the ocal) ford, Jack Fournier and Billy Smith C Leng is a chance to race under Universal * of Pro Hockey are all in demand by George Ken- nedy. Duford received contract the other day and will talk over terms with the Canadian magnate upon his next visit to Ottawa. There are al- soa couple of otfier amateur stars who are in line to receive offers to turn pro. - Carl Kendall, the New Bdinturgh player; -wh6mi ePxtrick has signed up for his western league, will Jeave on the first of December for the coast. He is aed to have received a contract calling for 1,000 for the season. Kendall is a speedy man and eiould make good in the perhaps, entitled fo that and cer tainly do not wish for any modifica- tions. But the American cup rules are another thatter altogether. Bear in mind that no other yacht club in the United States would perait me to race with-a toat such as I would have to build for this special race, such penalties woukl be attached that a race would be out of the question. But what in my present case is more.to the purpose, is that with the growth of freakishness in the type of yacht designed for the Amer- ea s cup it would be impossible for me to find a desiguer in the old country who woul build a challeng- jer lt;0 sail on ts own bottom to New York, which they would consider to have a fair chance. Fife won't do they had in Germany, ind wound up by defeating the Ger- man emperor easily. And I taven t given up hope yet. I have to see the New. York yacht club officials on my return to New York, and I think there are signs that something may yet be done which will make it possible for me to eballenge. There is mo truth in statements that they have absolute- ly refused to consider the sligittes lows, every one of them, thing. can be done I feel be arranged. FIGHT DISMISSAL President J. C. Jones Con- firms Report and Mana- Decision. in his native town. TI cam now confirm the stateu ent that. notice. of the termination of his contract has been served.on Mr. Bresnahan, Jones said after refus- ing all day to discuss the matter. T have a contract with the club for four years to run, Bresnahan said. T will make every effort to force the club owners to live up to their'end oMfit. I have fulfilled all my obligations ta the-club-and will. expect the elub te fulfill its obliga - tions to me. Bresnahan refused to say whether making every effort meant an ap- peal to the National Commission. WEWSY - LALONDE IS JUST SIZING UP HOCKEY SITUATION Tt s Tust a Question of Money With Cornwall Athlete Maybe He Will Play in East, Maybe in the West. Cornwall, Ont, Oct. 25. Edward (Newsy) Lalonde is once more back He arrived ust week from Vancouver, where he is Feputed to have received the highest salary ever fald a lacrosse player for his services during the past season. Newsy s jaunt east at this time is to large extent to see his father. and mother. He says he has not decided where he will play this winter, and was not overly anxious to discuss hockey or any other sporting subject. He will go to Montreal in few di to see his friends in the metropolis, and may consent to be interviewed by some of th managers who may de- sire bis services. He says ho has no plans laid ont for the future, and may yet go back to the coast in time for the opening of the hockey season Then again he may stay in Montreal Rumor has it that George Kennedy would like to secure lis services for his hockey team'this winter, with a view to having him remain in Mont- real next summer for lacrosse pur- Doses. Then h is supposed to have an offer trom Frank Patrick, of the Vancouver hockey club, but Newsy gave no confirmation or denial to either of these reports. Lalonde has lost none of his long headedness dur- Ing his recent absence from home, and he would only tall of matters around the brim, refusing to be drawn to the heart of the subject. It will not be drawing too far upon one s imagina- tion, bowever, to assume that the manager with the best terms will be the one te drop his net over Newsy's shoulders. Newsy is-so different to the rest of the professional players of today in this regard, and the man who bulges his purse-strings nearest to-their-ends-will tand him, no mate ter whether he-is in the east or the west. OLD BUFFALO MAY BE KILLED AT WAINWRIGHT Wainwright Board of Trade Will Se- cure Meat for Annual Banquets In Case Slaughter Takes Place. Wainwright, Oct. 24. Intimation has come from headquarters in Ot- died, refus- tawa to the superimtendent of the as Nat onal Buffalo Park that atepe born in the township of Westminster, , because I want an- County.of Middlesex, 72 years ago, or fifty buffalo enclosed in the local reserve. The Ottawa commissioner is of the opinion that these steps are noces- sary so that the danger of their des- traction by younger bulls may be avoided. A large number of these bulls haye passed the half-century mark and unless they are destroyed they will be victims of the stronger animals, . The Tooal board of trade has ap- plied for quarter of buffalo beet in the case of a slaughter and in-the event of their request being granted the business men of the town will put this on the menu at the annual banquet next month. Fights Scheduled for Tonight. at Quincy, 1. oun OF 10 rounds, at New York. men in the legal profession in the Aq Wolgast vs. Freddie Daniels, 6 New York, Oef series rules will most likely be am- ended before next year, as result of suggestions made by Manager McGraw, of the Giants, to Garry Herrman, chairman of the National Commission, and Ban Johnson, pres- Ident of the American League, McGraw made two suggestions which the two members of the Na- tonal Commission Jhought- well of and which they said will Ikely be: adopted before many months have flown. The other day, in Boston, when the Giants lit upon Joe Wood's delivery. in the first innings and scored six Tuns, the entire New York team was on the anxious seat for fear that their great lead would count for naught as the clouds were gathering thick and fast at the time and it Tooked doubtful if the teams coald play more than three or four dnn- ings. In this case unless-they play- ed the full five innings the Giants would have done all oftheir cannon- ading for nothing. ae The clever little manager sugecst- ed that a rule be made for future world s series games that if rain stopped game, no matter at what stage, play be resumed the following day where the two teams left off, rain checks being provided the fans 80 that they could see both sections of the game. The other rule that McGraw aug- gested was to let all the fans who attend a tie game see the play-off tr e of charge, their seat checks be- ing sufficient credentials to get them into the park. In MeGraw's opinion a fan is en- titled to see the play-off for nothing when ho goes to the box office id-puts up his money he does it with the oxpectation of secing the teams battle to decision. When they play tle he ts disappointed. : University. . He in S etvian de He May Lead . Ontario Bench Career of Sir Wil- liam Meredith, . Whose Appointment. is Rumored He Has Fathered Many Im- portant Acts for the Toil- er. Toronto;Oct. -25. Sir--William R. Meredith, who is generally regarded as the logical successor to the late Sir Charles Moss as chief justice of Ontario, will not be in Canada until next month, He is at present in Europe gathering, as Government commissioner, data on workmen s compensation. It is understood that his promotion to the new position Will be announced shorsly. He ia regarded as one of the strongest province, and has enjoyed a very dis- tinguished career. Sir William Ralphe Meredith was He obtained his edueation, in the London District Grammar School and Toronto University, and was grant- ed the LLB. degree in 1872, and the LLD. (honors causa) in 1989, He became a barrister in London in 1861, and successfully practiced his profession there for several years. Moving to Toronto as a partner of the late Thomas Scatcherd, QC, M. P., he became a leader in the pro- vinclal bar. He was appointed city solicitor and a bencher of the Law Bf i. i i i i : iJ ? i f i : zi i 2 : i if i i ht fy? i sf ge A small want ad in The Daily News Society. In 1888 he was granted Classified Column will bring results. Receipts of the Glass Bottle Blow- ers International Union during the last fiscal year amounted to 230,- 769.25 and the oxpenditures 238,525.- 85, The assets of the International, Jun ) 90, were 222,609.45. Treat For ger Intends Appealing mal notice has been on Bresnahan, manager of the St. National league team, that his 0 club management, although it by J. C. Jones, president of the club, Bresuahhan said he would take every: means to force the club management to live up to the contract. No speci- be continued. wives. tract has been terminated by the has four years to run, was admitted by alt dedtorge Thursday and Riverdal continuation of The ie river banks, beau no bills. Price 250 will make a big. pre ering, growing rapidly J- Get in and buy at one and Bell. wo ablets, ; eotredt that andy, the Ta all aidappear, Wale Let them Admission and Shates Free Sapfirday morning and afternoon children s Cosy Roller Rink JUST ACROSS THE BRIDGE The Ladies Friday Evenings All Come. a:
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Image 763 (1912-10-25), from microfilm reel 763, (CU1772819). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.