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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-08-19
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yi penimny Ampuogy Y is the leading of the newest cor- feature in which orsets have always There's a model remember- that. t it, SETS figure is suited with our No. Carefully de- fashionable lines. mfort Co, 8,175.50 . 0, b. rmer; 3,635.00 f. 9. bo ted that the offer of the is the lowest, also.I my experience with this eminently satisfactory, no hesitancy in recom- cceptance, Respectfully yours, R. 8. SHEA. REASON WHY 1 Le Devoir and t of Panama displease the American The British authorities to swallow, willy nilly on at the hands of the from Anierica in eon- the policy invariably eentury.. The Ameri- nt has let it be rial ent may be secured to anal legislation provid Britain kept at home rhts, her Prince of the r potulant Lord of the therwise American jin ake the naval demon - rin the eyes of the United States as 2 empt to intimate the conferers of the repub- nad more todo with ithe British govern- ard to Mr. Churchill protests ofthe Canad- . THE SEA done another's decks cannonade. Soon the ul of each other, the izzen mast came tum- ind the Americans at rd, The English pour- u8 fire Into the would- nd the Americans were ut not until after Capt. everely wounded and minus mainmast and a torn and battered r defense was useless sh ship struck up her Guerrlere was sinking e blown up, while the as also badly battered turn to Boston for re Sonstitution performed alorous feats during - years-of the war, and 61 of the people. of the The fame of Old 5 been perpetuated in name, by Oliver Wen sa century ago were from the long-distance y. When enemies met 1912 their first ffort 2 or destroy the masts i n were the motive pow- Then-the -BhIps-ustal eath grapple, side by away at each other jes of thelr guns near- Pistol, cutlass and ) were a part of the ach man, and terrible struggles between the frequent oceurrence- y engagements it, was to distinguish between as'the powder used In ve forth dense clouds obscured the decks. lett. B.A.Sc pal Engineer, Alberta Land Surveyor Spur Railways, . Sewage. rrigation, lans, Ete. erial Bank Rullding, Phone 426 gt; Proposal BET WET. Boy Aepuoyy hoteles J , seecteeteele de atecteate tealonty doateet 99995SENP EHS 0b00000500000005 0060000000000 0 ee, Grandvie THIS IS OUR PROPOSITON : We have Two Blocks, Numbers 27 and 28 in GRANDVIEW division that we are going to sell at 200.00 per Lot. These Lots are all Good Level Lots, Guaranteed, DON'T WAIT. ALL THESE GOOD POINTS Go to show that we offer you a first- class buy in GRANDVIEW. We are oing to sell these lots fast and THEY WILL NOT LAST LONG, and the roperty that you buy willmake you GOOD PROFITS We will gladly show youthis property and you can judge for yourself if itis not A MONEY MAKHBER. THEY WILL NOT LAST SO GET HERE FIRST. SEE-US AT ONCE. GRANDVIEW i. + o foofees Sotertonteet SoaSeateaSeaseegees Imperiat Bank Sully So ehoasoaseate oeteeteaie aie othe she shoate aie eSo ey ctoctoctostortoctoctontostecgecgeeteeeceeetete Leto SoaseasesSoegeeteetor Sessessetostesteate ate ate tie sLoesihtse eoelo eho eho dioate ste ain ato tie eee aie tio tie ie thot eee oae aco tieees GRANDVIEW is the best investment now for s YOU, MR. INVESTOR, GRANDVIEW is well known and has increased double its value GRANDVIEW next year will be worth 300 per lot at the tases GRANDVIEW is on the direct line of the ANSLEY SPUR. GRANDVIEW is in the direct line of the growth of the city. GRANDVIEW is next to Bending and adjoins Riverdale division as the other divisions are too high priced to make much money on a small capital. If you buy in GRANDVIEW now you will make more money within a years time than anywhere else, on the same amount of capital invested. made money in North Yuill, Central Park and Cousins and Sissons. Now it is time to start buying the cheaper property because that is where the big increa ses will be from now on. this year already. being just the same distance from the Post Office, 2 miles. GRANDVIEW is one-half mile from the new CITY RESERVOIR and is therefore sure of water. is only, one-half mile from the new INDUS- TRIAL SITE. CANADIAN SENTIMENT 1S MISREPRESENTED Federal Ministers Carried Off Their Feet in England. THE VIEWS OF JOSEPH MARTIN That Mr. Church- ill Take a Hand in Can- adian Affairs is Pre- sumptuous, Says British M. P. The Globe, Toronto, says: Mr. Joseph Martin, M..P. for Hast St. Pan- cras, London, in the British House, has not forgotten his old time Can- adian habit of talking out in meet- ing and incidentally, calling a spade a spade. He breezed into Toronto on Saturday, bubbling with opinions and perfectly willing to justify the faith that is in him. Fighting Joe , abhors hypocrisy. He is ready to wage war upon the sycophantism of those. Canadian newspapers which would exploit a war scare for their own personal and party advantage. He charges that the jingo element in Engiand, largely for its own social and political ad- vantage, aided by its Canadian min- fons, has set itself to stampede the people of both countries. He adds that the Canadian ministers in Lon- don this summer precipitately capitu- lated to the stampede and were car- ried off their feet by the novelty and delight of the attention paid them. The suggestion that Sir Wilfrid Laurier should meet Mr, Churchill and Mr. Borden for the purpose of agreeing upon a Canadian policy is 2 presumptions one on the part of Mr. Churchill or whoever made It, said he. It is still recognized by Britain that Sir Wilfrid is the ablest, most influential and representative Canadian when it comes to Imperial affairs, and, though I have not always been able to see eye to eye with him, I recogize him as a great tactician, and I have no doubt he will keep himself clear of entangling alllances and maintain his party quite tree to perform the functions of Opposition by dealing with the policy on its merits when it is announced. No Reason for Non-Partnership. There 8 no more reason now for making the naval policy of the Gov- ernment non-partisan, continued Mr, Martin, than there was when Sir Wilfrid introduced his bill to create Canadian navy, Particularly is this so when one remembers that Mr. Ito obtain stationery to write a letter Borden at first supported the naval bill, and then, on pressure from his party and friends, denounced it, and finally, when he attained office, an- mounced the intention .of the new Government to wipe it off the sta- tiftes. Mr. Martin declares that the Can- adian ministers have so far been oar ried off their feet in England that they have sought to make it appear that about-one-half of the Canadian people were in favor of separation, and that the only safety against an- nexation with the United Sattes was the exile of the Liberal party from power. Mr. Borden s speeches have been non-provocative, said he, but I cannot say that for the other mini - ters. Mr. Foster has been the star performer at a lot of Tory demonstra- tions and shortly before I left Eng- land I attended a banquet to the Can- andian ministers, where Mr. Hazen told the people that the Consecutive victory of September 21, last was a victory against separation, Such statements, as Canadians all know, are absolutely unjustified, and would be resented and emphatically repudi- ated by Liberals in this country everywhere, Mr. Martin expressed the opinion that the inspfration of the whole pro- ceeding arose from the persistent manner in which- the Tory press of England aided and abetted by certain of the Canadian ministers, had misre- presented the general election of last year as having been the-defeat of an- nexation with the United States.' The Liberal press in the Old coun-, try, he continued, has been very badly informed, and has failed entire- ly to make it clear to the people that no such situation ever arose in Can- ada. I have no doubt that this has caused Mr. Churchill to come to the Heonclusfon that it 1s: his duty as a member of the Imperial Government, to come over to Canada to teach the Liberal party of Canada that they must be loyal to British connections. and abandon the fancied policy of an- nexation WROTE LETTER ON CUFF. Brazil, Ind, Aug 10. Being unable home, Jack Faulkner and James Hun ter, who are touring the West, sent back a Tetter written on a cuff and buttoned together with a gold cuff outton. They were working in the harvest flelds of South Dakota The missive Is the oddest ever received: here, the post office officials say. Parties holding coupons for two Photographs, can have them extended tll Ist September, but positively must be in by then. Milne s Portrait ' Love Is a Bath Which Purifies The Loved One But It Is Like Electricity and Can t Be Defined, Says D. K. s Letter VIEWS OF A WOMAN When One Can Forget Self In Favor of Another, One May Be In Love Marguerite Mooers Marshall, writ- ing from New York, asks: How do you know when you are in love? The varying answers to this question have all agre d on one point the coming of real love means a cliange at once, drastic and far-reaching in the personality of the lover. Opin- fons as to the nature of the change differ, and perhaps, as Mrs. Hadith Ellis Furness says, love is unlike measles in that each case is a law unto itself. Perhaps, too, that s one reason why it fs difficult to hit on a diagnosis which shall satisfy every- On the contrary, the skitied obser ver detects imitation love as easily as near-silk; indeed the two greatly re- semble each other. Both are coarse of grain, quickly-solled, and without good wearing qualftfes. Also both frequently deceive a credulous public, because of the cheapness of the price t on them. a No Trouble to Mix up 2 Psendo Love Affair. It s the-easlest thing on earth to concoct a pseudo love affair. It has been done in half an hour, and round- ed off with a perfectly good wedding. Not that the latter is necessary or even advisabel. To dignify imitation love with a marriage certificate is simply to steal a trade mark po edly reserved for high class goods. The sentimental thieves usually tire of their bargain and it is returned Jater in the divorce court clearing house. 7 But now for the real thing, the pas- sion which means, as Dr. Talmey told us yesterday, that the lover has in a certain respect died as something spe- cifie ad idividual. If death is com- plete metamorphosis, the getleman who writes the following letter must agree with Dr. Talmey: Dear Madam You ask us to sub- mit a Bertilion system of identifica- tion for love for love, the most llu- either in a calm lke that of the Sar- essa Sea o ra typhoon, Love con- verts the coward into a hero, in the sight of all but bis wife. It makes a spendthrift of a miser, and, converse- ly, a miser of a spendthrift, but not for his own gain. It is the fountain of perpetual youth, a bath which removes all im- perfections, from the loved one. It is the one state of mentl cstacy which leads to self-sacrifice without a tremor. It gives understanding, for Suchis its X-ray power that it can Tejoice in attributes of which the world knows n othing. It cam gather bread from stones, grapes from thorns and figs from thistles. It makes dandies of slatterns and slatterns of dendies, It makes poets of blacksmiths and Pegasus riders of plodders. Jt espells pleasure, pain the mean and the extreme.It brings spir- itual uplift and, despite the cry of the worldlings spiritual catastrophe. It 6 all-pervading iike electricity, it cannot be defined with exactitude. Tt can only be identified by its rev sults. DK This writer brings ,out one point Particularly which none of the other contributors to this discussion have touched upon. Real love is the only real rejuvenator. A Woman Says It ts Shown By Lack of Selfishness. Here 1s another letter giving the woman's side of the question: Dear. Madam I would say that jone is in love when that predomi- nating characteristic of selfish- ness or self-love, the sense of the great I am is forgotten, and one feels toward a member of the other sex that I am ready and willing to forget his many characteristics, not up to my ideal. I never think of self-denial or sacrifice of time or thought in anything for him. He satisties me with his companfonsbip onely long for him eis Separated. Iam glad of the opportunity to sympathize and to bear with unlimited patience the many Uttle difficulties of life he chooses: me to share with him. In short the sinking out of self, with a complete forgetfulness of same (self) and an ever present de- sire to do and live for the other without thought of self-sacrifice are very good reasons for our. thinking that something out of the ordinary and it might be love) has us in its grasp. I believe there is not an infallable sive, and at the same time the most persistent and chronic of all the lapses from the ordinary to which the flesh is heir. Like the wind it blow- Studio, 30-8 eth where It Meth and t results rule whereby we may all gauge the depth of our affection and know we have attained that elystan life love. MRS.) JL. 7. L Of course people are different, but after all, they are also alike. The Colonel's lady and Jude O'Grady are sinsters under their skins. And this matter of love is. such a basic thing, its outward manifestations may dif- fer, but are there hot certain funda- mentals which are common property? Signs of Love As a Man Sees Them I close with another letter from a man who doth protest most satisfy- ingly: Dear Madam: A man is in love When he would rather be made mis- erable by her than made happy by any other woman; when he can thrill at the sight of her with stringy hair and sunburnt nose and pasty cheeks; when the fool things she says sound like a mixture of Helen Rowland and O. Henry; when he is eager and willing to have her inter- Tupt his cleverest story, and when he fecis no-disgust at her failure to see the point of his funniest joke; when he can think of her without disgust as wearing curl papers and.a sloppy wrapper and without her false teeth; when every harsh or cranky word he ever spoke to her comes back to his memory and tortures him like a whip of scorpions; when he blithely goes without lunch for a month to buy her some silly trinket, and feels a thousandfold reward for the sacrifice by the light of pleasure that comes into her eyes; when he can enjoy kissing her just after she has bad beer and-onfons; when he ean do all these things, then he adores her. Not merely loves, but adores. M.S. The Hedgeville editor Henry Fork knows so little that be thinks any- thing fs wonderful just because he happened to find it opt. If a man s gifts to charity did good according to how much it hurts him to give, five dollars from Henry Ford would relieve the poverty of the world. ree Coss says that he is going to get married as soon.as he finds-a girl so homely he won't have to be Jealous of her. are more tender hearted than doctors because they dno't take anything but a man s property. Miss Pafaun gave a breakfast party last Tuesday, Covers and eggs were laid for six. What do you think of my scif- educator book? It places ignoramce withtn Teach of all. Down in Missouri a few years ago man who was about to declare him- self as a candidate for judge asked ja colored constituent to vote for him. TIN PLACERS ON SEWARD bbe The gold produced in Seward penin- production has been derived from sula, Alaska, for 1911, had a value of gold placers, interest hag been rTe- 8,100,000 which was a decrease of newed in the tin deposits, and a pro- about 4,00,000 compared with the duction of nearly hundred tons of figures for 1910. This falling off, ac- concentrates, worth about 350,000, is. cording to P. S. Smith, of the United reported from the tin eae States Geologicol Survey, jis attri- Creek. buted to three main causes first a Not only has dredging for pice decrease in the- amount of winter tin been carried on, but certain lod ) mining; second, a general decrease tin mines near York rte 4 opened under the superin' in the number of mining operations jexcept dredging; and third, the hand- s competent engineer. It is ling of low-grade material. All thesd stood that the company causes may be referred tnore or less ship the concentrates to directly to the exhaustion of the where they will be melted, known rich bonanzas before enter- prises have been established capable Whos your firct choles, of handling cheaply the large am- Tom? asked the prospective ounts of low-grade material, which date. A fare known to exist on the peninsula. Anybody who can beat you waa From this statement t may be in- the unexpected reply. gt; gt; ferred that at some future time the gold production of the Seward penin- Loose Leaf System The News Joh sula will materially increase. Department has every facility for sup Although practically all the mineral plying the most satisfactory. An enterprising merchant is thoroughly alive to the fact that E The High Cost of Living is in many eases an oppressive burden. He knows that the margin between income and buys newspaper space to let people know that he knows. In short, he advertises. The merchant who advertises. has some- thing worth while to telly That. is reason, doesn t it, because newspaper Pots ee soefey Socks oes so- cS space costs money 7 It will pay you, there- se-efees 2s oS fore, to watch carefully the announcements of the stores that advertise. Youll find the good stores advertising in the Medicine Hat Daily fe foeg 2s sfeet News. 2a Pout So-oneage gt; eS You's my second choice, Judge, answered the colored man, according to the Chicago Tribune. -o- 2 re tosiethostotioetosioetonte SOSSSSOSCCS
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Image 317 (1912-08-19), from microfilm reel 317, (CU1739565). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.