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392
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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-08-30
From
392
Transcript
August 30th, 1912. EERE EE AND PLAYERS, + * SE be be obo ode ote obs fe oe Up. inning is to appear in ntley is im the cast of n Haters Club. llingbam is to produce of the Skipper. Crews will be seen in by A. E. Thomas. rich will begin her sea Awakening of Minerva. will be seen during the min The Trial Mar sical comedy called The cress, is by Matthew h has been engaged as an of Amelia Bingbam's all will again go on son in his. wife's play, son has just been engag- 's company play- yw play, entitled loman, will begin its n the fall. rern and Julia Marlowe eir season in Scranton, ptember 16. : Sadler, the clever Ger- ane, is te be a member Follies of 1912 com- Hackett recently pro- Francisoo a new play, . Tynan, entitled The outh. ymore will appear to- ter part of Davember in dy written for her by nbers. rle recently completed a musical play entitled juy, which Charles accepted. rome, daughter of Jer- me, is appearing this er father s play, The Third Floor Back. Jones, the musical 1 George M. Coban will son, will open ita sea- ime in September, at mn. Hauptman, the German as written a play, the ars, called The Flight chilling. The hero is genius, who kilis him- xt of an unhappy love uay is to be sent out head of a big company al train de luxe. On e will visit seventy- travel more than 12,000 500 a week and a per- ne receipts, have a com- y vaudeville perform- 1 car for herself, auto r own and will only give ance in each city visited. News delivered in nth. the Seogeaggneteteatate ae retooee tog rs mr Q apetes 0 2 e PoMeor oafe-etee, 2 Zz Pe o Ad : 4 i eed sof 2 gt; f es se-efe Loh st sos et f s bectoctet Me oa ee-te fechoctoat seatecteateet Me Poche Loafers cof Goateaterte oatestoete ate oatediiloeteate cheate he aheeteatesteaip sions Goalete dire eee os lt; gt; Loads Peereeoees ts * oe Restos poe LeSe Re eoetoteatetoy Roeteatesioiocteetoaio es : MacBean Co. All Lots will be 50 ft. We have Received Instructions from the Owners of Mancheste To put 145 Lots on the market This Property has never been placed on the market before. are on the market for the first time. LOOK AT YOUR MAP AND YOU WILL THAT THIS DESIRABLE PROPERTY IS SITUATED IN THE CENTRE OF ALL THE PRESENT INDUSTRIES. BETWEEN NORTH YUILL, ROSEDALE AND CITY VIEW. No Poor Lots will be sold THE PRICES ARE LOW Watch our advertisement for further particulars We will offer a PRIZE OF 25.00 for the best idea of a method for selling this property quickly ADDRESS ALL CONMUNIGATIONS TO IMPERIAL BANK BUILDING Soetoctoateateate-cteateatectouteatoatestecteatestectecteatectoctoatrcfess eatocratesateceatesfeteatectrateceteatetondes Se They IT LIES Se Aaetie ooo eo eeo teenie toe OCH ee N ee HP NCO CPP LO OOD DIVORCE IN RENO, TWO WEDDINGS IN CALDWELL, MAYBE Mrs. Charles Wilfred Hunt- er is Seeking Separation From Jersey Million- aire Husband MAY WED LIEUTENANT Hasband s Name is Linked With That of'a Pretty School Teacher. New York, Aug. 28. The return of Miss Wilhelmina McBride, a tall very fine looking young woman, with an olive complexion like that ofa Span- ish senorita, to-her position as teacher in the public schools of Cald- well, G. J., ext month is to be op- posed by several business men of bur Gould, a contractor and builder, have already appealed verbally to members of the Caldwell Board of Education, asking that the resigna- tion of Miss McBride be determined. They gave as their reason for doir-; so that Mrs. Mabel - Ward Hunter, wife of Charles Wilfred Hunter, who owns millions of dollars worth of real estate in New York,-Fiorida and ere,-leit Caldwell for Reno sev- eral months ago to procure a divorce and that Miss McBride has amoune- ed to various friends that on Jamu- ary 1 she is to be married to Hun- ter. Relatives of Mrs. Hunter admit that she is in Reno and that she has filed suit for divorce. Miss Mildred Bond, a cousin of the millionaire' s who lives on Roseland avenue, opposite the magnificent Hunter home in Galdwell, said today. My cousin is pleading incompat- ibility in the Reno suit. She and Mr. Hunter were married when he was nineteen years old and was at- tending a military academy. She was then seventeen. He is now thirty-eight and she thirty-six. They found that they were not suited to each other and decided that a divorce was the best. way out of the difticul- ty. Mr. Hunter is paying all her ex- penses in Reno. It is generally understood in the family that Mr. Hunter and Miss Me- Bride are to be married after -the di- voree. rs. Hunter has also told me and other relatives that she expects to marry Lieut. Worcester of the Coast Artillery. I do not know his first tame, nor where he is stationed. He is at one of the forts near New York, however. Miss McBride's parents are dead and she lives with a sister, Miss Ella McBride, a trained nurse, at Orange, N. J. The McBride home in Walnut street, near the Delaware, Lackawan- na and Western Railroad, was clos- ed today. Neighbors said Miss Wil- helmina McBride was out of the city. Hunter, who owns property in the northern part of Manhatten that brings him in an income said to be 50,000 a year, is at bis hunting Jodge near Lake Placid. He also owns a handsome estate near Palm Beach, Fla. Miss McBride has taught Caldwell schools for twelve She has long sung alto in the First Presbyterian Church choir at Cald- well and has been a leader in the local dramatic club. So have the Hunters. Mrs. Hunter, who is known as the most beautiful woman in A special general number of the War Cry in connection with the death of General Booth, has been issued. It is an excellent number and contains a large number of photographs of the General, and various scenes conn ct- ed with his life. It also pays the fol- lowing tribute to him under the head- ing Why We Mourn For The Gen- eral : General William Booth, the. founder of the Salvation Army, Is dead. The good gray head which all men knew will be known no more. Not for him will the myriad wheels of a great railway system simultan- eously stand still; not for him even an empire's lamentation, or the mourning noise of a mighty nation; for, as a French general well said to him: You belong to no nation you are Humanity's Man And so the whole round untverse empires, king- doms and republics weep in an un- iversal woe for Humanity s Man is dead. Great captains of industry have died, but the eulogies of their peers have been punctuated by the cures of the oppressed poor; powerful states- men have been laid to rest amidst the sorrow and laudation of their coun- trymen, but subject nations have greeted their death with vengeful Joy; mighty warriors and kings have gone down to their grave aroidet the vol- leying cannons thunder, and the weeping of multitudes, but the wail- Ing notes of the trumpets have min- gled with the curses of conquered peoples and the sobs of bereaved wives and mothers and orphans The War Cry s Tribute to the Late Army Head Caldwell, is an clocutionigt of note. But she never took a stage part in the amateur dramatic productions. Hunter and Miss MeBride always did, and Mrs. Hunter has given much tine to church work, being a mem - bee with Miss McBride of the Cald- well First Presbyterian congregation. Lieut Worcester has been seen in Caldwell frequently. He was intro- duced to the Hunters by Lieut. Bar- clay, a cousin of Mr. Hunter, and the two officers have spent as much asa week at a time as guests in the Hunter home. Children at Miss McBride's school say that the millionaire was often seen-in his automobile waiting for the teacher at the close of the day's session. Hunter is an enthusiastic motorist and a lover of fast ma- chines. He inherited his fortune from his grandmother, Mrs. Maria Halsey, who died at the ago of 101 in 1899. He never has been in business. but not so the death of the General of an army of Salvation; the Prophet of the Poor. He knew no nation; nor numbered a foe, Sovereigns, rulers, and statesmen steeped to the neck in international jealousies or. party strife were one in their admiration of him and n good wishes for his work fnd followers. The white flower of a long, blameless life, the perfume of unparalleled service for his fel- low-man and the honor of his God, made him welcome everywhere. Three generations of British sovereigns stamped their approval upon his work and commanded him to their palaces. American presidents have broken bread with him, and a Jap- anese emperor besought him to help the criminals of his people, while governors and vice-regal personages have vied in doing him honor. Listen to what the late Governor-General of our own glorious Dominion sald of the organization that he, by the grace of God, had reared up: I know of no organization political, religious, or industrial which has left so deep an impression for good on the crust of the world's surface. But not only amongst the mighty ones of the earth will the death of our General be de- plored. In the slums of the Old World and the ehack-towns of the New, will saint and sinner be bowed in sorrow; where the wigwam of the Red Indian nestles amongst the pine trees of the forest, and the round huts of Zulug dot the undulating veldt are woestricken soldiers mourning over the death of the Great Chief; and where Hindoo temples rise in the shadow of stately palms, and the Australian mud for yellow gold, there, too, will men sigh. and say, in sor- row General Booth is dead What hath God wrought? Forty- five years ago the General stood alone on Mile-end Waste and began the work he has just laid down, Amidst the vilest vituperation and fiercest opposition he went on with the work he believed that God had called upon him to do, God honored him and made him the mightiest soul-winner af ite ttine, ap that when he lala down te sword on earth to take the victor s palm in Heaven, a mighty Army, led by nearly twenty thousand Paid officers, marched with bands and banners under his command all round the world, without foe or material re- ward. Scan history's page Look around you Can the story of man show a parallel? He gave God the glory A small want ad in The Daily News Classified Column will bring results, We Can t All Be Farmers We Can t All Be Wage Earners We Can t All Be Captains of Industry But we can all of us make big money in safe investments. REDCLIFF is the Safest and Best Investment now offered to the public. REDCLIFF has four large factories in operation and making REDOLIFF famous as the + Building Products centre of Western Canada. These factories have a present pay roll of over 30,- 000.00 per month. More Factories Are Coming More Railroads Are Coming Real Estate We also have Medicine Hat snaps and good farm lands at low prices and easy terms. ASK Is Booming THE ae STONER AGENCY ABOUT IT Phone 396
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Image 392 (1912-08-30), from microfilm reel 392, (CU1744154). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.