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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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321
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Date
1912-08-20
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u butla, Fst. Don't be per- uy CHEAP LUM- ) it's cheap use the consider We have it, and ey- Builder requires, stock LUMBER, iH, FIR FINISH, K, MAPLE, BIRCH Pubsday, August 20th, 1912, LOOREYGS. the ngency for the (organ Doors, R BEAUTIFUL DOD FIBRE, LATH AR POSTS, WIL W POSTS a T- 2 OA CO. (BER PROPLE PHONE 57 4 ALIN SMUT os - Quart -Pint + Y MORE B Drug and a ore 3: if ek eleininleleinfefnfay + y on U laa iy ACING. YOUR R A BUILDING STABLE PHONE 402 728 . FOLLIS ing Co. INTO ST. und, Coal Gravel a Specialty, lorses fer sale at mas, EXCAVATING nd for Sale, Phone No. 416 x Bl. Imonds CONTRACTOR p attended to. gt;. 335. Rogoegerionsectongeaioege sense Cotioase soto ase scree tse oe ae HON He Coe The Industrial Suburb of Medicine Hat FOUR LARGE FACTORIES More Factories are Coming ARE IN OPERATION And making Redcliff famous as the high-grade building products centre of Western Canada. These factories have a present pay roll of over 30,000 per month. MEDICINE HAT DAILY NEWS. 2 7 POPPED PHD DH HL GPU eee sdeepetonteceteaeeteatechea pede eheaeetoateerdedeaee Geepetnds I DRL doodocsoatnnteetrateet More Ra ilway TONER TORONTO STREET AGEN TELEPHONE 396 MMs ncheboe snaia dstinde se SoS 0660660084 Sreaniteeseatoctesseateatreteasoateatoatregoesoatecteateatecsesteiecseate-testeateeteatectestectosteegeat Ploateeteatesthafeateatestestestecteatectesteatestoatoetoateetoatectestee, It Cost France Three Mill- ion Dollars to Give Czar a Good Time, Accord- ing to the Stat- istics. Paris, Aug. 19 -Paris has learned just filed what it costs to entertain Kings and queens. The expression treated royalty will now have a definite meaning for Parisians, Figures show that it cost this city something more than 3,000,000 to be Entertaining Kings is Costly; Hosts Pay High for Privilege host for the Czar of Russia for his memotable visit which marked the French-Russianalllance, but onis 56,000 was spent to give the King of Sweden a good time while in Paris. Three times that amount was dis- bursed to entertain King Alfonso on the visit when an anarchist threw a bomb at him. The King of Portugal was comparatively oP costing only about 40,000. On the King of Norway 63,000 was ex- ended, on the King of Italy 65,000 and on the late King ot Denmarie city of Maine. 60,000, * Trappist Monks Celebrate St. Bernard s Day) St. Bernard's Day will be observed the abbot of the new house, an office with special ceremonies today in all the monasteries of the Cistercian Trappist monks, who will honor the memory of the good saint who was one of the founders of their organt- zation, famed for its extraordinary austerity. Saint Bernard died on August 26, 1153, and was canonized in 1174, by Pope Alexander IIT, since which time-the twentieth -of-August has been a date sacred to his mem- ory on the calendar of the Roman Chureh. z St, Bernard was born of a noble family in Bergundy, in 1097. He was educated at the University of Paris, and then, at the age of twenty-three, entered the recently founded monas- tery at Citeaux, together with his brothers and a score of companions, The rules of the order were extra- ordinary strict, but Bernard observed them all, and so distinguished him- self for austerity, ability and discip- line that he was chosen to lead-the colony to Clairvaux, and was made nn Frank A. Munsey, 58 Made Fortune by Hard Worth A man who has made himself a multi-millionaire by honest and wor- thy endeavor, instead of by the dubl- ous methods of the Street, is Frank Andrew Munsey, owner of Munsey s, The Argosy and several other mag- azines, the Baltimore News, the Wash- ington Times, the Philadelphia Times and the Boston Journal, Mr. Munsey Will be fifty-eight years old tomorrow, having been born at Mercer, Me. Aug- ust 21, 1854. He has lately occupied which he filled to his death. In 1128 he prepared the statutes for the or- der of Knights Templar. He was the promoter of. the s cond-erusade, and was the founder of 160 monasteries. The Cistercian Order, Bernard started on its way to great- ness, is usually called the Trap Order, by reason of the fact that one of the most celebrated of its pioneer abbeys was located in the narrow valley of La Trappe the trap 80 called because of Its inaccessibil- ity: The Fnard has it this did-not daunt him. been perpetuated by the celebrated He merely denied himself of sleep pass of the Pennine Alps in Switzer- land, called Great St. Bernard. The St. Bernard dogs kept there to assist the brethren in thelr humane avti- vities are well known. In the midst of tempests and snowstorm the monks laccompanied by some of these large and intelligent canines, set out for the purpose of tracking those who have lost their way and who are in danger of perishing in the storm. Tomorrow, the Imelight by reason of his acti- vity in promoting the National Pro gressive Party movement, and is one sm juential Of Sok Reawovelt's most Influential isch aye been huge aucc snes and ee seu ean 06 ty OMMOrs Mat failures, He faied in an . Munsey's rec F suc 8 ttempt to build up a daily news- Uttle different from that followed by UU NM Me Men Tk. but his Joura, all men who have won fortune by Takeo ace Hee. RWB: WIE popula servi ad of fleecing the public, *lstic ideas ha ea Ff ne event ta tha ther cities. disgusting one called hard work. * 4 The wealthiest of the world s publish- ers toil, has ope. The public schools of Maine were Mr. Munsey s alma mater. He started his business career in a coun- try store, but soon was consumed by an ambitionto hecome a telegrapher. Sooner or late, practically all rurat youths decide upon a sailway career, but in Mr. Munsey s case this was speedily supplanted by a desire to become a publisher. Having become an expert key- proficient in Morse, he was made manager of th s Union office in Augusta. The capl- ven greater extent than now, the center of the mail order paper publishing business of America. The nabobs and plutocrats of the little city were the owners of the monthly journals that circulated throughout the rural eeetians of America. Mr. Munsey de- termined to emulate trem but b still a boy, determined to woo for- tune through the. publication of a paper for other boys. Thirty years ago the future multi-millionaire landed in New York, and, on capital of pluck, perseverance and capacity for hard work, and a very few dol- lars, started the Golden Argosy. For a long al hovered on the brink of failure, while its pro et cetera worked day and night, snatching-only a few hours sleep be- tween intervals of unending labor. In the darkest days of the Argosy he was unable to buy stories to fill his has had more than his share of and has earned the vacation he taken on hig recent jaunt to Hur- and, after. hard day of office work, wrote serial stories dealing with the adventures and subsequent successes of youthful invaders of the metro- polis. At length the tide turned, and the Golden Argosy made a fortune for its owner, but its success was short-lived, and after a few years the publication again slumped, - leaving Mr, Munsey not penniless but with a huge load of debt strapped on his shoulders. His next venture was Munsey s Weekly, a journal for adults, which, after two and a half years of ups and downs, was converted into Munsey s Magazine. This was the ploneer am- ong the cheap magazines which speedily became so popular, and Mr. Munsey reaped the harvest due to the pioneer. Since then he has founded numerous other magazines, some of Dispute Over Rights Of Hay Cutting at Creston Has Now Been Amic- ably Settled. Creston, Aug. 19 A dispute over the rights to cut hay on the flat lands between the Indians and the white men, which might have resulted in bloodshed, was settled recently by W E.Teetzel, government agent, of Nelson, wha told whites that it violenc one would be nm the government land. Although there are hundreds of acres of hay land that have not been touch d, the Indians who naturally Tesent what they believe to be the intrusion of the white people claim- ing all of the land as their own by trouble for the white hay every opportunity. Claim of Indians. The principal trouble this year oc- curred when some Indians threatened Frank Lewis and drove him from the hay he had already cut. The claim they have cut their hay Particular place for years, while the 1 cutters at Bloodshed Narrowly Averted Between Indians and Whites before been cut there. Mr. Lewis complained to Policeman Gunn, who, as the definite boundary of the In- dians reservation is not known, was at a loss what to do, because no vio- could act. He at once wired to R. L. T. Galbraith, Indian agent, and W. F. Teetzel, government agent, to come and assist in settling matters, Mr. Teetzel arrived from Nelson Wednesday and in conference with warned him to keep the Indians from enalty of losing the right of cutting on : This warning he also gave to the white men, Has Given Trouble, This is only one of the cases occur- ing this year. One farmer whose place is located near the reservation Indians cutting bis fences and. turn- ing: their cattle in to graze on his property, Mr. Galbraith, who was away at the time telegraphed for, will prob- ably come to Creston next week and Bo into the matter thoroughly, the Indians, thongh quieted for a old-time Fanolers say hay has never time, are in no pleasant mood own rear Lomton, te-atsovistred Dy New Forest Now Tourist s Mecca Innkeepers Thank Colonel Roosevelt for Boom in Business. Visit in Company With Sir Edward Grey Awakened Interest. London, Aug. 19. Theodore Roose- velt may not be re-elected President of the United States, but he can be elected President of the New Forest whenever he likes, All the hotel, inn and boarding house keepers, livery stable proprie- tors and shop owners of that historic district will vote for him anyway, for thanks to the distinguished founder of the Bull Moose party they are en- Joying the biggest boom they have known in years, It was to the New Forest that Col thusiastic naturalist, Edward Grey, the British Furelgn Secretary Gust after the former's famous Speech at the London Guildhall) to hear the birds sing, and it Roosoxelt swent with that onier en Bear Soutmmpton, and a8 a-direct result more Americans ure visiting the district this year than ev- er have done so previously. Hush of Tourists. Practically evety one who has come to England from the United States this season, sald an official, has included the New Forest in his itinerary, and they all give Roose- velt s visit as their reason for wishing to the see the region, The result is of course, that all who cater for tour ists in and about the New Forest are reaping a harvest and blessing the name of Roosevelt, Most of the Am- erican: visitors take in the forest on thelr way from Oxford to Caiter- bury and spend two or three days, anyway, in driving in the Forest and doing the historic region round about, Roosevelt's American emulators un- doubtedly are well-repald for their visite to the New Forest. It ia one of the most picturesque regions in land, this mighty expanse of heath, Woodland and fine old tr which takes In some hundred square mile: through which the Hampshire Avan whieh isn't Shakespeare's river flows. Two Violent Deaths, tence was committed whereby he Sisk Alexander got him to promise to see that Mr. Lewis got-hts-hay,amt bresent Stateofticers have 10 Oppo- habitants. They looked-upon the vio lent deaths met by two of the Con- queror s sons, one of whom was killed by a stag and the other by an arrow intended for a deer, as judgment on him. The deer were taken out of the forest in 1851, and since 1877 it has been managed by the Court of Verd- -erers asa public pleasure ground. Drives through the forest generally begin at Brockenhurst, and the sight- seers have a chance, at Castle M: wood Lodge, of looking over the beau- tiful Harcourt domain, which for mistress, the present Lady Harcourt, Tike her predecessor, having been born in the United States. Famous Oak Tree. the Rufus Stone, which records: Here stoo the oak tree on which an arrow, shot by Sir Walter Tyrrell at a stag, glanced and struck King William the Second, surnamed Rufus, on the breast, of which he instantly died, on Another feature of the forest, which Colonel Roosevelt is' aid to have ad- mired immensely, is the Adam and Eve oaks, sald to be 1000 years old. In this region, too, are the-remains of Henry the Eighth s shipbuilding yards, where the Great Harry was built and launched, Richmond, the famous Thames-side an unusual number of Americans this season, the reason given being the presence as residents in the royal borough of King Manuel end Queen Amelie of Portugal. Windsor is as popular as ever with Americans, who also are to be found in unusually large numbers thie year at Brighton and Margate, the Newport and Coney Island of England. GEORGIA GUBERNATORIAL CONTEST. (Specal to the News) Atlanta, Ga, Aug. 20. The Demo- crats of Georgia tomorrow will name governor and other State officers, hamlets and planting trees on their sites, to the rage of the erstwhile in- many years has had an Americary Accused of Robbing Bank 12 Years Ago Prisoner Released in Bost- es to Face Trial in Gan- a. : Boston, August 19. On his release on parole yesterday from the state prison, where he had served more than eleven years for burglary 6f a brewery in Lawrence in 1900, Fred- erick Allen, alias, Joseph Huddle, a band of mon-who robbed the Rast ern Townships Bank of -Danvillo, Quebec, of 15,000 about twelve years ago. The robbers) were captured im they escaped from jail gt Sherbrooke, Quebec, after am exchange of shots with the guards, Mr. Peter McCaskill, a Canad Government detective, iatebnen jt-the prison Here, and came to Bos- swamp after a gun fight Later Allen agreed to. waive extradition rights and g0 to Montreal with De- tective McCaskill. Fi TH THE 60TH ANNIVERSARY Today is the sixtieth anniversary Great Lakes. The steamers Ogdens- burg and Atlantic. met In collision, and more than a hundred lives were lost, principally of Norwegian emi- grants, whose ignorance of English Prevented them from being apprised of their peril and of the means of escape. Eighty-one years ago today Rows reached Cape Race, Newfound- Jand of a terrible wreck in those wat- ers called the graveyard of the Oc- ean, The Lady Sherbrooke, bound from London to Quebec, weht down near Cape Ray, carrying 270 persons to death. Only thirty-two were saved. Fifty-five years) ago members of the judiciary arid repre- another was added to the long ist sentatives in Congress in primaries in which nomination in all cases is con- sidered equivalent to el cton, Inter- est s confined almost wholly to the contest for the gubernatorial nomina- tion, In which the cafdidates are John M. Slaton of Atlanta, Joe Hil Hall of Macon and Hooper Alexander of DeKalb county. A number of the sition for renomination. The maor- ity of the present congressmen Ike- wise will be renominat A prefer- ence vote Is to be taken for the choice Evidently there were woeds-there stated a few days ago at the London Subscribe now for The Dally News. Offices of the big tourist agents that from earliest times, but William the Conqueror-made the district into deer forest by clearing away sev 1 hog Pte states senate bot as Senator Bacon is assured of re-elec- korrors Wreck at Abergele Wates torty-tour years ago today, in which many bat Dersobs wete burned to death. of vessels claimed by the hungry sea, when the clipper-ship ar went lon the rocks near Sydney, ta. Of the 122 persons om: board, only one was saved. and he esdaped with his life only after clinging fo-a rock for thirty hours. Phe day's recora ot also includes failway rels of OM ignited and thirty-three Gal- veston. safe. behind ite seawall, will recall today memories of the burri- cane that swept aver the Texas city on Avgust 20, 1886, killing nearly tion the voting will be of a purely perfunctory character, two score persons and destroying property worth 5,600,009. alias John R. Rown, was Hfor-te-camaiian guiboritics, Allen is charged with being Sne lt;t of one of the worst-disasters on the
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Image 321 (1912-08-20), from microfilm reel 321, (CU1739609). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.