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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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Date
1912-11-23
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November 29rd, 1012, OMS TO RENT. NEWLY FURNISHED de able for two each, Mod- gt; 76 4th Ave. 14-9 LARGE FURNISHED Will accomodate four mea. Toronto, Tee fO FURNISHED ROOMS; nd board, Apply 215 Bast 114-8 188. ROOM TO LET IN. 96, wultable for two gen ply 121, 7th Ave, 11Mtf FRONT ROOM, CLOSE. a. Apply Bor 1423 News 113-3t EN A MMEMRES TP POR SALE i HOUSEHOLD FURNI- uding Famous range, ine, baby carriage, oll Cheap for immediate Apply. 113 Rose St. 112-1. ie AT 83 TORONTO 8T., 2 nattresses; also two gall Gas fixtures, 116-6 26 REGISTERED BERK- Both sex, abou Also three registered and cow. Apply Dem- farm. Medicine Hat, Al 200-12 -4 FINE LOT OF MAR- wheat, grown on new 2.00 per bushel, 0,J, Mo- Sask, 81-4-30 OMS WANTED. ) ROOM. WANTED BY fe. Must be, warm ant pply O. D. Austin, editor- ws office. 118-tt fo KENT -HOUSE ON TORONTO to the Hull block, euie- loctor. Apply Capital Re ) Main Street. 115-3 - STABLE ROOM FOR 6 h loft. Apply 236 Main 114-8 URNISHED HOUSE TO ly 728 Esplanade. 114-5 RD AND ROOM. .0OM AND BOARD, with ty, on the hill, close to 26.El Paso St 114-3 WO OR THREE RE- zn for rooms and board: . Braemar, 200-6 CELLANEOU2 Brus cs ce ee oI AMILY TO KEEP BA- months old. Pay 20.00 or its care. Address Mrs. ox 52, Medicine Hat. 115-3 WANT YOUR STORM i doors on,-and a good rite box 477, 200-6 Se SUES S205 OF WORK CONTRACT- ntifig, decorating, paper- pecialty. Windows clean- beaten, ete. Estimates Court Bros, 723 Third ieral delivery city post 11s-tt CIND HAT INDE, FUR NK CO. The above have dest selection of Secong in the city. We carry yK HERE THE RAW IN IS OPEN. Don t sell r your raw hides till -587 or write P.O Hat. Our price is; from 6.00. Don t forget it, and lt;8, aw hides and furs, hore nd f.ithers, bought ane to the Harvard Tailoring gurth avenue, opposite heatrs, P.O. box 358. The Best Prices Paid for 7 2D UCTIONEERS WNE CO., Live Stock eral Auctioneers, 619 Tor- quare at 1 o'clock. Ranch ck wales conducted any 28 furniture sales con- here, Consult us, our ex- your aIspoeal free. Phone Browne Co, 519 To sate ORSETIERRE CORSETS MADE TO aranteed for one year king and rusting; very House No. 7, School Av ite cast side of high 699 for appointment or box 72, Mra, Matthews, HOW to de Dis ame AT DAILY NEWS. - Doings of Interest to Wage Earners. te CANADIAN LABOR CONDITIONS AS SEE BY SAM GOMPERS The Widening of Commercial Organizations, He Says, Has Broken Down Artificial Boundaries Wonder- ful Development in Labor s Interests Throughout) tne sinister of Labor in the early the Dominion the Past Samuel Gompers in delivering bis nnpal address to the American Federation of Labor in convention at Rochester dealt extensively with the progress made by the organized Ia- hor element of Canada, as he finds t. He said: The year 1912-morks in the development of the internation- al trade union movement in Canada. From the Atlantic to the Pacific there hhas been an awakening to the value of, organization under international unions affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. The marked dif ference between the condition of members of trade unions and that vf unorganized workers has induced thousands of indifferent workers, who hhad neyer identified themselves with the movement, to seek admission to the organizations of their craft or calling. . In all the chief industrial centers) unsolicited applications for memberahlp were received by the bus- fness agents and secretaries of the different labor organizations. Gov- ernment statistics show, that wages have increased during the rast ten years, These statistics also show that where incfeases in wages have been obtained they were almost entirely g- the result of the organization of the workers into international trade un- fons. Reports from every industrial center indicate that by elther collec: tive bargaining: or the use of the atrike, remarkable progress has been made in shortening hours of labor and increasing wages. Statistic? compiled by union officials show that wage increases in some cases have heen as much as two hundred and fitty dollars a year and reduction in working time as much as twelve hours a week. Viewing the question of trade union. membership . from the standpoint of Investment in dues and assessments, the returns for the year show the payment of dividends any- where from 260 to 2,777 per cent: These splendid results, coming at a Gime when public attention has been eonrtantly drawn to the surprising increase in the cost of living, hay contributed to the widespread interest in the organized labor movement, while the value of international affil- has-been emphasized by that solidarity which alone can command the respect of the employing interests. The organizers of the American Federation of Labor, the Internation- al unions, and the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada, have. worked harmoniously to build up trades. and, labor organizations wherever. the. workers could be brought together for that purpose. The consensus of pinion. among these organizers: is that this year has been the best in the history of the labor movement iu Canada.On the other hand, there is Betore Becoming Members of the'Un- fon- Step Taken to Provent Prevailing Prejudice, Every man who joins the Calgary carpenters union will be subjected to a strict examination by a. spectal committee of first class mechanics appointed by the United Brotherhood) of Carpenters and Joiners. The latter union have taken this step in order to'r move any pr judice which may exist at present on the Seoore of the oft heard assertion that anyone who uses a hammer and saw Scan join this union of mechani s and get the top: wage. The union figure that in enforcing this rule the ncompetents will be kept entirely outside the brotherhood and the officials atate that . next spring a new scale of wages will be set which wili be high, but will Suarantee that only first class and fully qualified men will hold unjon cards. In this they say they have the-support of some Dror tractors who have declared themselv- es Willing to pay a higher scale if the examination rule .is strictly ad- hered to. The union -farthermore declares that they-are not concerned with the rate of wrges paid to hammer and saw men; as they. beileve that con- tractors will find it highly unprofit- able to employ these. The aim of the men is to make the union one of, the first rate mechanics only. Any union man about whose abil- ity complaint may be made to the union. will have to submit to this ex- amination the same as those enter- ing the union for the first thne. Year. every indication that the attempts to dovelop the purely C nadian type ot trades unionism isolated trom the general American movement. arg doomed to failure, In the Province of Quebec, where the boot and. shoe worker have been organized pendent United Shoe Workers of Ani- erica, in Montreal, so that only a rem- nant of that movement exists in the city of Quebec. This weakening of the forces of the nationalists was also emphasized at the recent con- vention of the Canadian Federation of Labor when a mere handful of de - egates met to represent a few scat- tered local organizations of miners, boot and shoe workers and miscellan- eous trades, The International Boot m: and Shoe Workers Union is now in complete control in Montreal, and has established unions in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. The convention of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada, held at Guelph, Ontario, September 9-14, in- upive, was the most ful in the history of the Congress, and re- vealed remarkable development. Over 240 delegates from Victoria, B. C., in the West, to Glace Bay on Cape Bi ton Istand in the East, were present to represent between 60,000 and 70 000 internation l trade unionists di- rectly, The report of the secretary- treasurer showed growth in the num- erical strength and surplus of about 5,500 in the treasury. Matters of great importance to the trade union movement of the Dominion were con- sidered at the convention, including the preparation of Labor's case to be presented to the special committee on old-age pensions, appointed by. the Canadian federal government; the re- port of the special. committes on workmen's compensation for the Pro- vince of Ontario; the demand for the repeal of the Lemieux Industrial Dis- putes Act; strong. opposition to the relaxation of restrictions on mmigra- tion, amd an urgent demand for the appointment of a royal commission to Investigate labor conditions among the mine and steel workers of Nova Scotia. Owing to the method of intimida- tion used by the Dominion Coal and Steel Corporation to break up the in- ternational trade union movement, it was urged that a determined effort be made by the international unions 1 terested to defeat the:purpose of this powerful corporation, . The president of the Congres and Organizer O'Dell of the boot and shoe workers, while performing their duties as organi- zers, stated that in the coal and steel districts they. were not only shadowed by the company s special police, but were prevented from holding tmeet- ings among the mine and steel work- era In-some districts. On this ques- tion the Congress took very definite action, and through its Executive Council will demand a thorough: in- vestigation by government- com- mission Situation in the Nova Scotia coal dis- tricta is the attitude of the Provin- lal Workmen's Association, an ot- ganization of miners acting.as sn ally thi 4h bitter opposition to the bona fide international miners organization. To unite the Provincial Workmen's Assoclation and: the United Mine Workers of America is the task to which the leaders in the internation- al to effect a thorough and speedy or- adian Northern Railway Company at Fort William, Ontario; and by the construction mem on th Grand Trunk Pacific and Canadian Northern Ratl- way in Western Canada. The Royal Commission on Industrial, Training and Technical Education, member, of Which 1s-ex-Vice President Simp- gon of the Trades and Labor Con- grens of Canada, is now completing its report. The result of the work of this commission will be presented to part of Decembet, so that the Parlia- ment of Canada may deal with it fp the approaching session. The commissioners not only made a. thor- ough survey of Canada with a view of ascertaining what the country had 4n equipment, what was needed and how these needs were to be met, but also visited the best industrial and technical schools of the United States and several countries In Europe in- vestigating the system of industrial and technical education in operation, The findings of the commission. will be a valuable contribution to indus- tnlal and technical education. The Quebec executive committer of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada has been successful in ob- ty qualification for those running as candidates for municipal honors in the province. This legislation will re- ove one of the most serious obstacles to working class representation in municipal councils. Several accounts of this splendid progress in Canada, furnished by Mr. James Simpson, have beeh published in the American Federationist, and have enabled the trade unionists in, the Dominion to follow this significant developinent in the labor movement. The trade unionists of Canads witnessed a wonderful development in the labor press during the past year, supplementing and aiding. the development in organization. There is today a chain of well edited labor papers from the Atlantic to the Pacific. - st (With the widening of commerclal organization and the development of world-wide markets, has come the fdentification of the alms and pur poses of the workingmen of the countries on this continent and the breaking down of artificial bound- aries. + WILL ADOPT-UNION SCALE Pitteburg, Pa., Nov, 23. Contrac- tors. performing work for the elty will be required to pay the current scale of wages of organized labor and conform to the hours worked by. union men. That is, the finance com- mittee of the city council has recom- mended that such .an ordinance be passed, the opposition to it being on- ly one member of the committee. The bill regulates all city. contracts, stip- wlating therein that competent and first class workmen, must be em- ployed by contractors, fixing the hours of-labor and wages to be paid at the current scale, requiring* proof of compliance, with the ordinance by an affidayit filed with the con- troller agd authorizing deductions to be made from the contract price tor failure to comply with: these condi- tions, While it is contended In some quarters that this legislation will be declared unconstitutional, yet it has been brought out that in other cities similar conditlens have been fm- posed upon city contractors and have been. productive of splendid .re- sifits, both to the workmen them- selves and to the city adopting such measures. STRUGGLE OF TRON OLDERS The struggle of the Iron Molders in Lansing, Mich. for shorter hours al and stect-corporation-and 577 an mereased:-scale- of-wases: is taining legislation abolishing proper- BAPTISTS ENDORSE -TRMOES- UNOS Grand Rapids, Mich., Nov. 23. The Michigan Baptist con- vention, held in this city re- cently, indarsed the workmen sompensation law and the 54- hour week for women. The fiinisters displayed a very favorable attitude toward or- ganized labor tn general, and the social service commission submitted a feport, which in part, is as follows: The right of labor to 7ganiz should be as unquest as the right of or class of men to organize, To. refuse this, is to s ek t perpetrate the stigma pom fabor which has come down from the pre-demo- cratic times living wage aethe minimum In every industry, and the high- est wage that Industry can af- ford is one ofthe demands. of the Immediate future in order to abolish poverty and to raiss the standard Of industrial skill and efficiency, Further, iabor legislation 6 safeguard our workers against dangerous machinery, .6ecupational dis- eases; and unemployment, and laws to extend the present compensation act to cover oc- cupational diseases are .natters of our legislators In the near future. ON EIGHT-HOUR BASIS Quincy, Mass., Nov. 28. Four thou- sand employees 6f the Fore River Shipbuilding Company started on the Veight-hour basis on November 4. With the ddvent of the . eight-hour day the employdes retained the wages formerly paid fF nine hours. This change was brought about by the sc- tivity of the American Federation of Labor, securing. gn amendment to the naval appropriation bill requir- ing-that all contracts let by the Kov- ernment shold pp executed under? the eight-hour day; The Fore River Shipbuilding Company now haa un- der construction the battleship Ne- jvada and two submarines, and in order. to hold its contract it -became necessary to conform to the law se- cured by the American Federation of Labor. MICHIGANDERS BUSY Kalamazoo, Noy. 23. Secretary Homer F, Waterman, of the Michi- out a statement that that body -will be more active than ever before in an effort to secure legislation at the coming session of the legislature. Efforts will be made to have a law Passed permitting picketing, also the passage of a biil for uniform. text- books end more rigid enforcement of sanitary Iaws, slaw providing for the payment of waxes to convicts, another to provide for a street car inspector to be elected by the people in every city where the population SEP EEEED EEE SE MADE FREAK BET ON + SOCIALISTS CHANCES. i *f Thomas Cavanagh of Dun- * dirk, N. Y., missed his guess * as to the number of votes Dunkirk woull give Debs, the Socialist candidate in the U. 8. Presidential elections, so movement must apply themselves still gomg on and has been since May 18, After five months the) ranks of the strikers remain inbro- Ken and although ten of the strikers have been sent to prison for con- tempt of court for the alleged viold- tton of an injunction, yet this bas falled to break the spirit of the stri- he walked th streets of Dun- ckirk-wearing straw. bat, ear- Yaps, heavy fur gloves, and white tennis slippers, carry- ing a jug, an old tin can, and a battered sult caso ted with sebtebob deb bobbed bt bet ole oh ote oe obese feeb te ganization of tho mine and steel workers. Through the joint action of the Ontario executive of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada and the officers of the Toronto Street Rall- way Employes Union, the Provincial Legislature hie passed an act guar- antecing to all employes of the street and electric railway compantes one day off each week and a working day not to exceed ten hours. For violation of the provisions of this act the pen- . pan the employers s a fine of 250 for each offense, Sim- lar legislation will be asked by the street and electric raflway employes 4n the other provinces of the Domin- fon. Obtaining such legislation by organized labor has been the means of strengthening the organizations of street railway employes. Tho Tor- unto unfon alone added over 600/new men.bers to its roll during. the past year, and obtained annual wage fn- creases amounting to 140,000 under three years agreement. ignificant victories for organized labor were achieved by the rig kers, Some practical joker evidently Yoaded up a reporter of the New York Herald in an effort to take a fall out of-Canada s ax-minister of i b is.a bachelor, else the- following story from American would never have the light: With no intention of taking No for an answer. the Hon, William seen abor of Canada, has come to. this city to take Hazel Macfarlane back lights of the, Academy-of Music, where she is playing, to tbe splendor of his home in Canada. Why did Miss Macfarlane. 20 a romance of a girl with a to become' star arainst the tvico of her friends and parents, and workers of Montreal; by the fri handlers in the employ of the Lyon Mackenzie King, ex-minister of bis wife. with-him from the glare of the foot- mines. of the Capadian. years old, come to this city? It is desire ad- rope. EEE EERE EEE ET New York . erican Pub- lished Story in Which the Ex-Minister of Labor Ap- pears Lorn Ad- the fet the wish of the man followed her to make her eed who ha Miss Mactarlane is the dgpghter jot f. D. Mactarjane, inspector * uf joverthent im Yukon. For sgvetal ears lt;ishe has been in Westniinitgy College in in Toronto, and took part in amat eur theatricals. With her sweet? vo c ber future on the stage would be assured. and gave up her social ifs to make: her way alone in this city, caste. Anderson and Charles Cameron, prin- der alleged to have been waged by the two rival local unions of the In- ternational Brothsrheod of, Electri- cal Workers, were given a preiimin- ary hearing in court today, Many According to the police, and Cameron have admitted that they destroy the rival unions by burning buildings in which othe rivals were employed: One Business agent was killed In the war,* and duildinks aggregating 100,000 In value were ried; tt ts aaserted BIG SOCIALIST A SUICIDE J. A, Wayland, founder and owner of the Appeal to Reason; a Socialist weekly newspaper, published in Kans sas, shot and Killed himself in his home, He fired bullet into his mouth, muffling the sound in the bed clothes, Between the leaves of a book lying on the bed the follow- ing note was found: The struggle under the competitive system isn't worth the effort; let it pass. Friends of, Mr. Wayland attribute his act to d spondency aver the death of his wife, who was killed in am automo- bile accident a year ago. Mr, Way- land was to have appeared in the federal court in Fort Scott, Kansas, today to answer to a charge prefer- T i by the government against the several editors and the owner of the Appeal to Reason, of circulating through the mails defamatory mat- ter concerning an official of the fed eral prison at Leavenworth. ACQUITTED OF CHARGE During the summer a number of men who were conducting a strike of the Timber Workers. in Louisiana, were arrested, charged- with murder, as a result, of a riot which occurred: Over fifty indictments were returned: and nine of the defendants have just, jeen tried, and the jury, in the. ca returned-a verdict of not guilty. 7 indictments against the balance ha been abandoned and all the defend. antd set at. liberty. SOCIALIST VOTE 18 DOUBLED According. to tabulations made by Socialist leaders the Socialist. votbr in the U, 8. presidential lection showed an Inreease of more than 100 per cent. over the vote in the last. presidentiol election. The in- gan Federation of Labor, has given crease-is not confined to any partic- ular state or section, but is general throughout: the country, The party leaders moreover, maintain that thelr total would have been much Inrger but for Bull Moose movement, which they declare, attracted many votes from*th ranks of Socialist sympathizers. ees PRINTER FOR ALDERMAN At a meeting of Typographical Un- fon No, 183 of London, held last night, it was decided to nominate E. J. L, Stein for alderman in the com- ing elections, The question has been discussed by the Trades and Labor Council, which body indorses Mr; Stein's candidature. Other labor men Will also be pur ithe fetta dorsed by the Trades Council. TITANIC BANDSMEN HONORED The heroic musicians who Nearer, My God, to Thee; Titanic gank in the Atlant April, ave been honored in by the members of the Mutdal. Protective Unions tablet to the seven bondsi been Unveiled at the clul the organization In Ney HON. MACKENZIE KING MADE BUTT OF NEWSP APER J ther until oe weeks azo. iin Toronto she met , Mr. Be Cupid s dart hit both. whisper that the two nge't King There wore, day when Miss Mactarlane decided lay. in the the: tre th: man 4 od her. - Miss, .Mietarlane Hravgba. he wa in ti the tre in the firsts ds playing in ithont Jetting her know Mrs King went to that. q prominent Toronto doctor is also in the elty, desirous of winning Miss Macfar fane s hand, exceeds 26,000, the use of biit one ballot in the primary election, and for a Jaw that will compel all fire sensational disclosures are expected) Washington, Nov. when the two defendants are tried. general advent im this country of conditions Anderson women in industries formerly con-) tween the union sbop. were delegated by their unions to/men only occurred when women were factory. COMING elpals in the war of arson and mur-/ Will Soon Be Directing 23. The first; sidered the economic province employed a3 coremakers in Massachu- setts in a pump manuf; g eo pose of employers to crowd women into all industries is indisputable. tr ling -with the above statement; the following is an item which clipped from an Eastern publicati Tt won't be long before the sight: of a woman specialist in steel eon struction directing the work fromthe dizzy height of several hundred feet will be an ordinary one, while th woman builder with her cohorts off feminine bricklayers, plasterers, enters, and steam fitters, will have lost its novelty in the eyes of the publio, fora new trade school for women, maimed in honor of Fire Com- missioner Johnson, at Winfield, Long. Island, is almost sh accomplished fact: The school is expected to open the last of this month with a splen- did enrollment of 195 pupils, Ninety was the original limit of the school's capacity, but so many applidations have come t6 the Master Builders Association, which is backing the scheme; that it has been decided to add two more stories to the original plan in order to accommodate 250. Otherwise the school would have been opened October 15. The plan met, with instant approval of women, for, after the first announcement . of beri gily swamped with applications admittance. The requests come: girls in every walk in life; Some the letters are from girls of families; others from the dat of rich parents, the father of ing a St. Louis millionaire and the board ofitrustess was liter- te Tadiana. AND NOW BUILDING TRADESWOMEN A ter hugs close roject being started in Septem- ark- for Weaving trade at Bradford, decided that request stantial adynnee in wages be eubmit- ted. poorly . paid. tinskilled the )San Francis o is being made by other a United States Senator from Sen Francisco Labor Council and the California State Federation of Labor. INTO VC ey 5 5 unton was or A establishment. That it is the pur- t oD A recent meeting of workers ap for a sib- A. ayjeclal efor to organize the orkers of the The Brotherhood of Railway Car- Barbers to push 4 men have received applications for t the coming charters for five new lodges, and lature. they. haye been issued. A number of committees in various parts of the Pethaps. the taken by the c country are holding conferences with t Baltimore was. the management of different roade ObJect the orgs for the purpose of securing increases ets working in J and signed agreements, MORE ELECTRICAL UNIONS International Brotherhood of Electri- cal Workers, reports continued pro- ' gress in the organizing field and factories. year 1911. males and athe states that new local unions have Workers? recently been installed Tex.; Macon, Gi Fort Wayne, Ind; Ottawa and Pet- erboro, Ontario, Canada. Within the unions: formerly. connected with the Reld seceding faction have returned to: the brotherhood, having decided o reatfilfate with the organization in Terrell, riea has 0 Detfoit, Mich.; year enain isto new that is-recognized by the general 1a- bor movement: Detroit, Mich.; Strea- id Danvill Ottawa, Canada, and two Jocal un- ious at Hamiiton, Canada. NOTES FROM HERE AND THE) Alderman Jos, Clark, of Edmont in the field for the mayoralty o capital city. He is recefving th backing of labor unions. Capt. S Edward O'Brien, for Years president of the American, Shier House a ae fwith the necessity -of calling oft Ont, faced Ben-Hur, artived at a settlement Swith ite striking stage and signed a new agreement by which the . union claims tg te. denefited. The strike Had Beem in progres for ots Association, died on Sunday, No- to marry and all was fn thg home of the . etapiey ight and sat jeWhen Miss Macfar- lane discomfed fim her acting Was he But t6 make. it harder for Mr. and winning ways she thought 'that.King, it is said vember 3, while on a train en to his home-at-Pensacola, Fla. O'Briew acted. os legislative azent for many years for the American Pilots Association before the committees of Congress. To instire the owner of a private shaving cup kept na barber shop, that he is its only user, there has been invented a paper cap: to cover it which cannot be removed without breaking a seal. ss The street railway employees, of Sheridan, Wyo., have organized a union. : forty women are learning to become Carpenters and bricklayers. The switchmeh s Union of : America has paid out: 1,538 ity. claims during the last Efforts have been suck organizing the Ship Ctoaners imion,.of San FFanciy Plaster rs in New York. City War 4 four, dollars tor a nine-hour, tay inl Now they get 5.50 for alght) houra The employes: of a Winnipeg sus- pender factoty ave organized lo- cal union and been granted. aychar- tet by the American atleradidn Ao week and umber of large attrac tions were handled, including Er erywoman, * the staff, comps 60 men, was order- ed out by. th international officers after leaving Hamilton. They looked after the horses and camels, but re- fused to totteh the scenery until the hhew contrast was signed. The pro- duction was consequently delayed an hour or more. Trouble was feared, especially In view of the fact that about 8,000 had been taken in at the advance saj ani special trains were rum points. BUTTONS, CAUS Lier , ie has Been declared by 2,000 gt; d by the Lehigh and Wiki Company at Southh and.No. 20 M Gitieans 8 loss of 6,000 TOMI Gasiy in the anthracite Which ip. solbadly needed just PnoW at tidewater, The men declar- ed a strike becaus several of the Workers reftsed to wear union but tons + The Daily. News of city 35 .a month, lt;aH ess
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Image 975 (1912-11-23), from microfilm reel 975, (CU1744603). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.