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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-07-17
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) Keep Out the Weeds Weeds unchecked will ruin the crop. It isn t sufficient to plough and sow well in Spring and Fall and leave the rest to nature. There are weeds to fight. There are weeds in Business, too weeds of coinpetition and opposition of public indif- from without, and of lack of enterprise from within weeds that unchecked seriously ,) Tetard business growth. . Cultivation is the only effective weed-killer. Keep cultivating and the weeds never get a chance to thrive, fae There is a combination plough and harrow, fertilizer and spray, for every business an effective weed-killer that wil keep out the weeds. It is Advertising It is not enough to plough and sow well with 3 's ( advertisements in pine and Fall and leave the rest to human nature. * : ke e Fi . Human nature and the respect your customers bear you are not proof against the Summer weeds that can thrive on rest and apathy, You must keep biisy in the hot weather you must keep cultivating. Turn Summer dullness into activi amer Advertisi and plant for a crop of Summer the Ravertising cultivation will weeds. ty by. Sum- and gt; leponde a Keep Cultivating When it was recently that Uncle Sam should take over and - operateall the Phone lines of the republic, a horri- fled wail went up from Wall Street and other centers of finance which are the abode of those to whom Prov- idence has intrusted the property in- erests of Anierica. One of the most , horrified of the wallers was Theodore Newton Vail, who was born. sixty- seven Yeatfago-in Carroll county, 0. and in the Intervening years has be- come a capitalist of renown. As for Mr. Vail s motion of dissent from the Proposition for public wires ,there s as Mr. Post, of Battle Creek, would s He is the president of the Western Union Telegraph Company and the American Telephone and Telegraph. Company,the latter popularity known ae the Bell. system. Mr. Vail has -compiled-a-formidable-list of reasons why. government ownership of tele- natural that Theodore Vail, from EE LOSSES eee Setereeereeerdeee requirement. 3 large, beautifully plumaged and wnexcelled in laying qualities. ting. SPP Soeatrtrnto ote ctody aeatectoatectealectoatecfeatectecteate Phone 433, Ownership of Telegraphs -* Mr, Vall s fia (By O. Terence.) - fe aie Suggested Eraph and hello systems would bring his beloved country to the, the - demnttton bowwows,* but his position leaves him not en- tirely free from suspicion of preju- dice. When Theodore Newton Vail was born in the Buckeye State, in July of 1 45,,Prof. Samuel Morse s wonderful invention was still in the experimen- tal. state, and the telephone was still building, way mall service, and in the present head -of the telegraph 5 - and telephone trust, was the friend, adviser and backer of the crack- brained Morse and a firm belfever in the ufility of Morse s visionary en, in 1847, the first message, What God hath wrought went over the wire betweeen Wash- ington and Baltimore, Mr. Vail's Uncle Alt was at the r celving end of the wire. With such an example of achievement-betore him, it was on Tship of It.was Vail who built PARTRIDGE PLYMOUTH ROCKS This is'a breed of Poultry which meets every. Y The utility bird of the century Coekerels for Sale. A. J. N. TERRILL, NEWS OFFICE Eggs 2.00 and 5.00 per set- his neighbors. HOLLINGER AGENCY FOR A FEW DAYS ONLY Lots 1-20, Block 14, Cousins and Sissons, 280 per lot 1-3 cash ; 6 and 12 months. Also 125 feet, Block 27, Central Park for 1500. cash; 6 and 12 months. Lots 23-26, Block G, Herald (corner) 125x150 (snap) 2400. Terms, 1-3 cash; 4 and 8 months, Terms Terms, 1.3 ganized the Dillion-doilar telephone trust known as the American Tele- graph and Telephone Company and who later effected an alliance with the Western, Union Telegraph Compa- ny and became its president. He owns a fine farm in Vermont Speedwell Farms at Lyndon aid can discuss crops with the most expertenced-of And-now Uncle Sam wants to take his trust away-from him. Great grief Subscribe now for the Daily News. the medical profssioniy But, afte Years of study,-he went With his ily to Iowa and secured a situatio telegraph operator, station agent ap man of-alt-jobs-at a little village the Union Pacific, which was Next he entered the at the age of twenty-eight, had risen to the post of national gene: intendent of the railway mail service, With headquarters at Washington, He inaugurated the twenty-four-hour mail Headreamed of. Aifred Vail, uncle of S Tvice between New York and Chi- per: When Alexander Graham Bell in- Vented the telephone, and when sup- Dosedly wise financiers were scoffing Bri asses impracticable toy, Mr. Vail got aboard on the ground. ficor. entered Bell's: employ, and. soon be- came general manager of the com- pany. He engineered the financing and construction of exchanges in all the principal cities of America. He . -father of the telephone, and has-been largely instrumental in bringing Bell's invention to its pres- ent high stage of usefulnesss. up and or- He es + + COMMUNICATIONS + Note While we welcome all munications from our readers, we wish it to be theroughly under- stood that we do not necessarily sub- scribe to or endorse the opinions expressed by our correspondents, All lettera must be signed by the writer, not necessarily for publi- cation, but as a sign of good faith. Ed, com- Eattor Medicine Hat News. The Editor: Dear Sir: Thanke very much if you wint allow me the privilege of seeing this letter In your paper. 1 am just visitor to your city of Med- to locate in. Well E am to belleve that Medicine Hat is the place for me. I have been all over the city and am Yery much pleased with. it, and also Che I must say also that Medicine Hat has jall the other towns skinned in a rifle range. I can see it is the best one in the great West. It is a great boon to your city to have a beautiful park for the citizens to take a rest in the shade, jof the sheltering palm, and I must say that in all the towns T have been in in the West, I have not heard the Natfonal Anthem sung so much as in Medicine Hat, and when Ihear it sung it puts new life into one s veins. I was yery much impressed by the visit of the English manufacturers and am sure your city will gain by their visit. 1 wish to state a few in- eldents that I have noticed: At 12 noon on Saturday, the 13th, a crowd ;of people gathered. I presume more moneyed men were here, this time from the States. They are all as May and I hope they will leave a little money behind in the Hat, as I know that Medicine Hat offers great in- ducements for. these people. But as T'was standing near these people I overheard the following conversation, but could not .nelp ft as it was out. Spoken. One of the party, a Medicine Hat man, greeted them all in turn as man should do, and finally one said (to him, patting bim on the baci Be brave be British I presume you are not British. He was taken with 8 shock when the Medicine Hat man answered: O yes, I am British T4 was born in the-South of England. But. he said, I am Canuck. (cheers.) I have been out here about 28 years. I noticed the color of the other man s face turn; he was stung, and drew away from the con- Yersation. I also heard this Medi- icine Hat man say: This town beats pjibom all; fancy only one dollar for t month s cooking, so it goes to that Medicine Hat is the place fo leap fuel. I certainly will tell m lends wherever I go, of Medicine at. itor, you sald in ohe of your is- es that-the Englishmen are conser- tive people in business matters. It one to be conservative rather han get a shock as our friend did, GEO. EVANS, Medicine Hat. an English inventor, by the British government 122 years ago. today. Saint's machinehad some of the feat. Ures-of-the later Successful contriv- ances, but it had one fatal defect. It Wouldn't sew The inventor who first devised a real working machine for sewing was Barthelemy Door tailor of St. Etienne, France, who obtained letters patent in his native country in 1830, In Thimonier s. appa- Tatus the needle was crocheted, and descending through the cloth it brought up with it a toop-of thread which it carried through the previous- ly made loop, and thus formed a chain on. the upper surface of the fabri Thimonier got nothing from his inven ton, and elghty of his machines, which the had nstalted in a factory, were wrecked by a furious crowd of workers who fear y would be thrown out of employment. It thus remained for oes Howe, an American, to perfect and market a really practicable ma- chine, MAY CHANGE PYTHIAN UNIFORMS, Special to News.) Indianapolis, Ind., July 17. Three days of unusual interest and activity in Pythian circles were inaugurated here teday. It is the biennial session of the supreme asssembly of the Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias. The as- sembly consists of Major General Ar- thur J. Stobbart of Minneapolis, and the brigadier-generals of each of the States, and of the Canadian Provinces, in which he' uniform rank is organ- ized. It is expected that the assembly will take action on the proposal to change the uniform of the rank. Recently there has been a growing sentiment among the members for a return to the uniforms of ten years ago, which included the long coats and the plumed hats. The present uniform is the fatigue outfit. Another matter to ceive the atteation of the assembly is. the proposal to erect a monumen to the late Major-General James R. Car- PERSE EEE ES + * PEE EEE EE EE EEE eine Hat and am looking for a place jwelcome to Canada a3 the flowers in + i Greatest Daily News series of the Salon exhibition at Paris, kind. ; rhyme-it-runs this way: x A grasshopper gay Sang the summer away, And found herself poor By the winter's first roar, Of meat or of bread, Not a morsel she had; So a-begging she went, To her neighbor the ant, For the loan of some wheat, Which would serve her to eat Till the season, came round I will pay you; she saith; On an antmal s faith, Double weight on the pound Ere the harvest is bound. The ant fs a friend, (And here she might mend) Little iven to tend. Your Last Chance to Secure One of the aintings Of the Modern French School he Grasshopper ) byRdouard Bisson the Tirst of The the-world s-greatest pictures, was honorably placed in It is a beautiful painting, one of the best of its : La Cigale is a story picture, Nearly everybody remembers La Fon- taine s fable of The Grasshopper and the Ant. Done into American How spent you tne summer? Quoth she, looking shame At-the borrowing dame. Night and day to each comer J sang, if you please. Ypu sang I m at ease; For it's-plain at glance, Now, madam, you must dance. La Cigale is Bisson s idealization of the human counterpart of the the grasshopper of the fable. The summery presses the story of the nobility and necessity of labor. A Photogravure 22x28 inches, This Picture Never Sold Less Than 2.80 Before figure shivering in. the wind im- from the front page of The Daily News. nahan of this city, who originated the Uniform Rank-ef the Kntgnts of Pyth- fa : mail. To Daily N ewsReaders -THE COST IS 10c. and Six Coupons These pictures cannot be sent by 4 f chinery, Coorrleht 1911 ne the N erlmin new le I fired dreaming and conv 1 expected the time t to the effect of Once was disappotated aj answer was a quick, And the-man who rton, and he knows. Probably no living tails about the indi world, those who are as the notorious croo the Pinkerton Detec will tell you, what ev Pinkerton will telly there ts no possibility be No. I know what the 2 crook never turns st sands of crooks and but men in the class ha become honest not true, as some rec rooks turn honest a crooked, but I believe few men are wilting t mean that every croo encouraged, Dut I dot for any man who has. honest life. And I'll tell you Pinkerton; I'm proud few criminals to bec work I have done in bars, I'm proud of th .thit Pinkerton will de deal squarely with Pi important to keep fait bank president, * I know a gcore of saloonkeepers, bat re eriminal records. lt; Thy have paid their debt cannot tell you their n: them and to their wire have-no suspicion that pasts of thelr bosbend society Giscovers that not Content to cancel t imprisonment st herd ,bave given in expiation I know men in trast were convicts. In man and his employer kno the employer does not tered all over the Wes men, many of them wea who-bave seen the Sing or Leavenwe q who never have suspect xruth. These are good men They have turned away cases have changed the they are not as much man who never was tet erime? I'll tell you abou rotbers, neighbors, abo younger brother, and we war broke out I went tn the iige of fifteen, and John, enlisted in an younger, was not old en the government began o be became bounty jum vounty: money, then- de uncer another name. H Icllows who were engage uivuey, and who found 4 other kinds of crime. When the war was 0 tao und settled down : mechanic. He tried to . but the younger brother 1 to prison. In those days the +Wood for fuel, and the 5 Amos Snell the same Si by Willie Tascott. He-1 and one night Jerry and and stuck up the who everything they bad. J lying in the bottom of t clew through the hack whole band. AJ of them tenced to five years each nto the hands of the pol held up on the street som s the hold-up man, and Judge gave him fifteen ye tence, for Jerry had not Was found out later. Well, John s old Colc men and my father got for John, who had merely And bad taken no part in to work at bis rado-o stayed in Joliel, rebelling Years of his sentence. jerry was put to work prison und soon displays He served out
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Image 93 (1912-07-17), from microfilm reel 93, (CU1739277). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.