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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-09-21
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DAILY eon R.A. PANDO ALP, e VOL. 3-NO. 62 lt;u, MEDICINE HAT, ALBERTA, CANADA. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1912 e ee eet eee 1p a Duke Gi edals DECLARES GRADES ees wae BAD CAR SERVICE Council Discu Sore mas e ARE BEING RUINED S: medi sms ANNOYING DULUTH Ineb and Visits Indians, 1 a ole SMM Ses mat tae an Inebriate . for 20, r. Sam Me f * Governor-General and Par. si nf rt os ie) a eS ae g sah wated out rantonnes tej ee Droperty to al ( Seeing Vancouver. Boma'attae hapal Avices sos SPEAKS AT GOCHRANE,ONT. gt; S/CONDITION 1S UNCHANGED ee sceat thnown tse a Royal College of Music, of which the + a + Does Medicine Hat. need wa ine- at the Sept. ...... 1912. Duke is honorary president. The bbb beh bat bt bob et briate farm? The matter was 7 do, yet the mento work for ie on a form 01 Liberal Leader Urges the Manager of Company Holds Northern Men to Protect Out No Hope For ceremony took place in the Labor which was packed to the WITNESS ILLUMINATIONS crased at the meeting of the City Temple, Council last night, and Mayor Spen- WOULD NOT EAT with you, subject 5 His Royal Highness visited + : Arbitration. i ee Duehess and Princess Pat- ie Taos ein Operated by Miss Newmans oa cer and others discussed the matter ba fy hae bod sa ricia Are Shown Myster- Pautine Johnson, who is il in the (W. A. P. Dispateh) SR EASED (CW. A. P. Dispatch.) in the, Mayor's office this morning. 3 jes of a Salmon Can- . Butte Street Hospital. Miss John-/ Cochrane, Ont, Sept. 21 Sir wil- bi Duluth, Minn. Sept. 21. Small The Mayor brought up the: matter se i at meeting of the Alliance the latter part, he son of the Allfance, the likely be threshed out ite policy Igid down for Tecommentiation which mitted. for consideration e Federal Goverament crimmal code, making ion of the marriage law Canada-as it is in, Italy. ) been suggested that the h American Act be al- it will affect the other the Dominion and not Interfere with Quebec. Ave. Phone 81. 1.35. os ar doz., for 90c, c r Ib. for 20 . r 5 lbs. for Tbe. 100 or for 95 . 10 eab. ozen. oday 90 each. ular: 1.00 for 90c. 1. day 25 . hel lots, of the city. All wotations are for, ps just arrived. R ?. N, PROPS, nery. (W. A. P. Dispatch) Vancouver, B. C., Sept. 21. After the somewhat strenuous doings of the first two days of the visit of the Governor-General, the Duchess of Connaught and Princess Patricia here, yesterday was a quict day. Last night at 10 o'clock they went out in motors and viewed the Ilumination: The first official event of the day's Programme was the presentation of son is the daughter of the chief of the Six Nation Indians, of whom the Duke was made a Royal Mohawk Chief on the occasion of his first Visit to Canada in 1869, While the Duke, attended by Col- on l Lowther and Capt. Butler, was at North Vancouver yesterday after- noon, the Duchess and Princess Pat; ricia, attended. by the other members of the suite, motored out to Steven- son, where they-Were shown through a salmon cannery. BRITISH FIRMS ALL UMTED STATES FLEETS Single Ordinance Firm Of- fers to Fit Out Entire Navy With Required Projectiles. HOME ADMIRALTY PROUD Conditions Indicate. Sound- ness of Policy of En- eouraging Various Private Yards: (C. A. P. Cable) London, Sept. 21 Although no official statement is forthcoming, it is announced that the Admiralty has heard with considerable satisfaction thit one of the great English ord- nance firms has undertaken to sup- ply the entire immediate require ments of the United States mavy ja the way of armor-jfiercing. projec tiles and shells for its twelve and fourteen inch, guns, No American firm was in a position 'to supply more than a ftaction of thes re- uirements and even then only after long delays, The Admiralty is little. concerned whether the British firm gets. the contract or whether the United AN SUPPLY States Government . is willing for strategical cons derations to sup- port the home industries at a cost of about thirty per cent. more, but itis gratified atthe exhibition of the elasticity of the resources of pri- Yate British firms engaged in sup- plying naval armaments. At the present time, nearly sixty p r..cent. of the entire. battleship construction of the world is going on in British yards and this policy of the Admiralty to encourage pri- vate yards and this policy extending over a long period had resulted. ina number of firms capable of coping: with the large problems of the pre, Dreadnought era and these have dc- tually onthe slips vessela building for half a score of foreign Govern- ments, All this Work Js carried on without a check to the large nuin- ber of Admiralty. contracts, these firms have in hand, besides, of course, the great activities of the various Government dockyards. The entire resources of dockyards and private yards in Great Britain are probably nearer three times than twice those of the famous German yards, and in the event of war Bri- tain would be infinitely the better off in reserve resources. FIREPROOFING CO. With COST OVER 76,000 Ask Piece of Land and Free Gas Well Will. Employ at Least 75. At the city council: meeting - held Jast evening, the matter of locating the Canadian Fireproofing Co. was brought up in a report of the Indus- trial Committee. The company ask Yor free site, gas Wels, and other small concessions, They .will spend 75,000 on their plant and employ at least 75 hands. cided that the land asked for by the company would cost too. much money and-therefore they would ask for an- other meeting to consider the matter. Sranted a further extension of time to complete his mill. motion to this effect was made at , 3 PLANT The committes: de- J. H. Preston asked for and was The barbers early closing law is 6 be brought into effect at once. A fat the present time, frid Laurier yesterday bad his first sight of the National Transcontinen- tal Raflway in northern Ontario. Ti gami River, 32 nilles west of Co- chrane, and stopped for a few min- uted to examine the magnificent bridge. Sir Wilfrid disetssed the rumored raising of the grades on the Transcontinental Railway. There were whispers which had come to his ears and through the public press, that the men now responsible for the continuance of the railway were contemplating a degrading of qj, the character of the road. The work the Liberal Government contemplated was a road. which should be perfectly level from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and which was not to exceed in grade six-tenths. of one per cent. Now they claimed that the level was to be graded and the national highway was no longer to be a first-class road, but was to be a succession of camel backs from the town of Cochrane to the city. of Quebec, I, do not charge the Government continued. Sir Wilfrid, hut this is a thing, which, if contemplated, should not be allow- ed to go on, We must not allow this railroad to be degraded. If it be the intention of. the Government to de- Stroy the character of this road, I call upon you men of the north to protect the national road against Such action and to insist that the Tailway shall be completed as it was conceived by the late Government, SHAKE UP POLICE BY INVESTIGATION Toronto Board of Commis- sionrs Will Look Into In- spector Dunean s Acts. (W. A. Py Dispatch) Toronto, Sept, 21. All preparations are ready for the investigation which fs to be held on Monday by the Board of Police Commissioners into the conduct of Inspector Walter The American government sent tata Dansee mS PEEL EE ee ee thao to Ragland and the Bristol au. There is Wo apecitic charge tata + cb thorities immediately shipped him to against the Inspector of Detectives, * HIGH QUALITY WHEAT * /France. Starkey was imprisoned who sat present suspended, but there on the charge of being without the investigation Is likely to be al*i Out of 22 cars of wheat , passport and. after serving his sen- thorough, one. The investigation is + shipped from points in the /tence he showed away and again ar- being called owing to the evidence ++ vicinity of Bow Islard during rived at Bristol. His r cord was given at the enquiry into the Farm- * the week, 21 of the cars grad- - then examined and it was found that re Bank before Sir William Mere-/*f ed No.1 hard. This record ++/he is a British subject. dith, There is a serles of discrep- f s one which will stand for J ancles in the evidence given by the + some time, Fine eating and cooking apples police officials in charge of the case + for 1.75 per box at Lively s today. his car he rode as far as the Matta- fects to be discussed will be munici- a donstruction, munietpal traffic and announced that the Eel of Liverpool has been appointed ;Governor and Commander-in-Chief of New Zealand- Mrs. Leigh, fo Suftragette, Was Startle in Onblin Prison: Despite Forced Feeding and Other Atten- tions. C. A. B, Cable) Dublin, Sept. 21. Mrs. Mary Leigh, the suffragette, was released from Mount Joy Prison yesterday on account of ilbiealth, due to her relusal to eat ani Raving to be for- cibely fed. Mrs, Leigh was sentenced Angust 7 to five years imprisonment on a charge of having wounded John Redmond, leader Of the Irish parlia- mentary party, witha hatchet, which she threw at Premier Asquith's car- riage during the visit of Mr. Asquith to Dublin. Shortly after the incarceration Mrs. Lehigh anounced her determination to refuse to of food and the prison officials restrted to the dras - tie measure of iding nourishment through a tube. When Mrs. Lehigh was. brought. outside the prison hos- Pital in an invalid chair she was in an emaciated condition. According to a suffragist journal her condi.ion was desperate. The order for the woman's release gave her freedom only on Hiense. TO DISCUSS CITY AFFAIRS. Dusseldorf, Sept, 21 Delegates from many countries are arriving in Dusseldorf for the International Con ress.on Municipal affairs, which will meet here en week's ses- sion. A large nee and an Attractiv programme Promise of an interesting and profit able conference. The principle sub- th fostering of arts; sciences publ'* safety in cities. and FOR NEW ZEALAND. London, Sept. 21 It is officially mbine to give boys with accurate stone shots, both- ered some strike breakers last night in Duluth, but no serious damage was done. Three men puifmelled a strike breaker and one arrest fol- lowed. Car service was poor and many complaints were heard at the street railway. corners. At 7.35 o'clock last night, not a car could be seen on the Main Street. Some cars ran without headlights, while others took sudden turns up avenues not marked on thelr sign. boards; still others. were so badly off their schedule that the walking clubs again sprang into favor. A. discon- nected service was in force early today. General Manager Warren, of the street car company, said nothing re- garding the strikers. He holds out no hope of arbitration or acceding to the demands of the old employees, nor do the latter show any desire to return to work. Late today final ar- guments of the mandamus against the street car company in Duluth will be heard, From surface fiidications the strike situation stands unchanged compar- ed with a week ago. CAN NOW BOAST A HOME COUNTRY Great Brita at Last Ad- mits Frederick Starkey is. One of Her Citizens, GAP. London, Sept. 21. After being a man without a.eountry for some time, Prederidk Starkey, of Bristol, wed: his right to remain in England; but, he will stay here under restraint. Last December Starkey was arrested and convicted on charge of theft. Oni telling the court that he was an American he was or- dered deported. On reaching the United States, the man was refused admission on the grounds that he was an undesirable alien. ie and in that of other witnesses. she obs shaisfe of ofp fe ole Ms fe. ofe of ote of Cheapest in town. Phone 367. 60-2 Details of Proposed oi the number of drunks that It appeared to him hard to time. Miles Resolution Pl ing Voi.ce. Ca Londonderry, Ireland, Sept. 21 Sir Edward Carson, former Solicitor General for Ireland, yesterday. con- timed his campaign in Ulster against Home Rul for Ireland. He was the recipient of a remarkable ovation when he arrived here from Belfast, in whieh city and vieinity he addressed several large eetings Wednesday. Huge crowds lined the toad from the railway station to the Guild Hall, a distance of two miles, while others formed in procession and escorted him to his destination. The streets were gaily decorated for the occasion. The enthusiasm - ulminated in a big: demonstration at the Guild Hall at which the Duke of Abercoyn was Bresettt. In the course of his speech Berlin, Sept. 21. Gigantic and un- paralleled plumbing operations to plug leaks in the bed of the, River Danube from the subject of a contro- versy between the governments of Baden and Wurtemburg, which has just been appealed to the Imperial Bundesrat for settlement. The case attracts attention to the curious and almost ynknown geographical fact that a branch of the Danube flows in- to the Rhine and thus finally reaches the North Sea, thousands of miles from the Black Sea, where the main course of the Danube ends. Fof some two or three hundred years a part of the Danube has. been passing through a subterranean chan- nel. from the . vicinity of the little town of Immendingen, in Baden, em- erging again in the valley of the River Aach, some seven miles distant, where it forms sthe largest spring in Germany. The source of the spring i were being, arrested in the city from) time was definitely established some years ago by artificially coloring the water provers leas; Ben offered by. the Ald and divengent. lt;a BIG DEMONSTRATION AGAINST. HOME RULE AT LONDOADER: Remarkable Ovation Tendered to Sir Baward Leader Streets Lined With Throngs For edging Adherence to coming Covenant Was Carried Without a D P. Cable), Infonet Jaare aie become in tomburg, which for water power, b is. steadily growing Wartemburg sert its old water is disclaiming ground that ti Te omenon of nature; the having a deep interest in ture have her way, valley of the Aach, Civil engineers depending on the runaway. the Danub have sprung D propose b. the probelm by carrying a st channel from the Danube to the, electrical power- The bed of the fuel en filled with cem nt,) the total cost: the council meeting last ni; Saskatoon Doctor ts Killed by Fall Coroner W. MacLeod Was Thrown From His Horse on Line of GC. f CN. R. CW. AL PD Dispatch) Saskatoon, Sept. 21. Dr. W. Mac- Leod, coroner, was instantly killed yesterday afternoon when he fell from a restive horse, It became at Wot the operation being much more than 1,000,000, SIR MAX IS INIT (W. A. P. Dispatel) * Ottawa, Sept. 21. Notice is: given lin this week s Canadian Gazette of the incorporation of the Alberta Pacific Grain Company, with a eapi- tal stock of 3,000,000, divided into. 30,000 shares. Rho: head :oMiog ae ee. be in Calgary. This is the company in which RE Bennett, M. P., Sir Max Aitken and British capitalists are interested. TO BEARD PREMIER Canadian Suffrage Assoe iation Will-Offi on Mr. Borden Monday. St. Railway Agreement Part of the Rough Draft of the Agreement Read Before Council Last Night Not Quite Ready for the Lawyers 20 Year Franchise Arbitration to Decide Costs Big Features. of the Danube above Immendingen. Fall to Death from Aeroplane Two. German Officers Add- ed to Year s Gruesome Aviation Record. (C. A, P. Cable) Freeburg, Saxony, Sept. 21 Two: German military officers were killed while flying near here today, This makes the third double fatality in ALL MAY VOTE Belgium Mayi Soon Lead the Way With Law of Universal Suffrage: -(C. ALP, Cable) Brussels, Sept. 21 It is persis- tently reported that the Government fs on the point of yielding to the demands of the Socialists Yfor'the In troduotion in Parliament fot bill Providing tor universal suffrage. The Measure it is expected. will give the Part of the rough draft of the/ The News reprecimtative - revd pany is to start construction inside street: railway ggteement which is at through a large part of the rough lof six months after the granting of present being drawn up was read be- draft of the agreement. The chiet the same and at the end of three fore the Council, at their mecting points so. far noticable.are as fol- months more to have three miles of ast night. It is a long, complicat- lows: line completed, in 12 months 6 miles ed affair, and is yetzto be submitted The franchise is for twenty years. and in 20 months, 9 miles. The first to the lawyers for the knife before Ten months notice before its expira- nine miles is to be built on routes anything will be decided upon. There- tion is necessary taat fhe city may as the Council shall require. The frightened at a freight train on the i the line, i ithout-the District Court Ji shall settle.any m Hight to vote to every man and wo- fore its ultimate fate is as far off take over the line, in or arithout the Di indge any Burope within the prosent month in man when they reach their majority (Cag gt; m2 Teapwd Mp the Goose oT tas ever bee. city Iimits. When the notice is disputes. The baizace of. the lines which members of army flying oorre Lake line of the railway. An exca- vation betwe n the ties caused the animal to fall, throwing its rider 25 feet atid breaking its own neck in the fall. shall be mutually. agreed upon. If the Corporation orders exten- sions, and the company refuses, the Corporation may order another com- pany to erect the line. Thirty days notice to the existing company will then terminate their franchise. This is subject to the conditions of por ulation. If the route along which served the matter of cost is to be arbitrated. It the arbitrators dis- agree the decision rests with the Judge of the Supreme Court of the Province. The value is to be the actual value of the actual tangible property, plant, pavements and eqiripment. In determining rights and Privileges, rovenue, profits and The members of the Council have not committed themselves. That is with the -exception of the Mayor. He thinks that it will be a good thing for the city. He bas many reasons for and against the granting of the franchise, He says that he hras lost lots of sleep in the last week considering the matter. - At were the victims. The machine was of the monoplane type. It was Deine piloted by Lieut. Berger and carried Lieut. Junghans as a passenger in a flight from the Amnitz to Berlin, When passing over this city the ma- chine suddenly plunged from a high elevation to the ground. The airmen were instantly killed and the mono- and a double vote to the heads of families. No official confirmation of the report is available. VOTE-ON IN OCT, 12 Writ Calling fo for Bye-Elec- nt. ffee which G. 0. P, CAMPAIGN OPENS IN GHIO (Special to the News.) tion in McDonald, Mani- columbus, 0, sept, 21 The Repub tet he fe almost Fendy to face the dividends shall not be considered. thty request the line contains 400 plane was smashed to bits. The cause . TOFonto, Sept. 21-7 toba, Has Been Issued. ican campaign in Ohio was. formally. public opinion, no matter what it Tho company shall keep the entire persons per half mile and within one of the accident is. not explained. erin oe opened here today under auspicious may be and place himself on record system in- an efficient state. For cighth mile cither side of the said ye Rood: quest tle Ottawa, Sept. 21. The writ for the conditions. Good-sized delegations as being in favor of the proposition. the first five years the company shall proposed line, the company must LEAVE IT ALONE vakisect Gat oe of McDonald Manitoba federal by-elee - were on hand from eltles throughout The Mayor is considering he says, he exempted from all taxaton. For build. In ease the city cancels the P tates (W. A. P. Dispatch) presented LoiauaoRenmd St. Catherines, Sept. 21 The exe- cutive of the St. Catharines Canadian Club de ided not to endorse the mem orial tothe effect that the naval we takenout of paliiice, the State and much enthusiasm way eae manifested on every hand. The chicf orators of the day were Senator Hen- ditions which hav led him, to teach Ty Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts amd his decision, He will nowdoubt: make former VivelPresident Charles W. ie amipls pany s books. Ifthe eharteris-granted the com- them kno) people s Fairbanks of Indiana. time for charter for the above reason the cost of the line shall be arrived at the sam as mentioned above The Corporation shail grant to the company all licenses and priv- (Continued on page four) the next fifteen years they shall pay the city 5 per cent. of the gross earnings in liew of taxes, The city shall have aceess to all the com- tion, made necessary by the appoint- ment of W. D. Staples to the Grain Commission, was issued early yester- day ovening. Nominations will take place on Saturday, October 5, and Polling on Saturday, October 12, what will be best for the majority of tho citizens. Thore dre many on-
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Image 510 (1912-09-21), from microfilm reel 510, (CU1739661). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.