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789
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Medicine Hat News 1912-07-02 - 1912-12-31
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789
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Date
1912-10-30
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DOUBLE ROOM sUrt- sentlemen. Apply 721 B. 91-6. Tee ee YOR SALE HORSE, GENTLE TO e. Also buggy and har ox 163 City. 94-8 WRITING DESK, ne hall rack; two lounges, Ine, old; carpet; dishes, ds; dresser; and sated: ronto: St. 99-3 ONE HOUSE 24x26, 375, placed on the lot. hen range and one gas J. 3. Lait, 116 Mon- 89-6 heat, grown on new 10 per bushel. O.J, Mo- Sask. 81 .-80 ' AND FOUND EEN MEDICINE HAT auto tail lamp Finder at News office, 4-3 MALL INSIDE BROWN containing sun of rd when delivered. Ap- Bt. 94-3 EEN TASSIE BROS. purse containing sum a keys. Box 1392 News 92-6 SS TED TO BENT FURNISHED HOUSE time, Apply at Bo F- store. 93-8 D RENE lt; HREE ROOM SHACK, kitchen, gas and water. Lockwood St. Phone 93-8 MS WANTED. ) RENT FURNISHED sht housekeeping, close 8. Erickson, 207 Queen 94-1 WANTS FURNISHED lern house at once in 1 and Balmoral. Will be pply..1894 News office. 93-8 0 EXCHANGE FOR MEDICINE HAT. ge clase in, building 24 0 stories, in centre of opposite depot, in Gra- floor used as pool hall ool tables. upstairs, Has Bverything goes for , Stevenson, 518, 20th gary, Alta, 91-6 2 IN GOOD ORDER TO - Medicine Hat lots, or house. Address full p: ox E., Carlstadt, Alber- 89-6 D TO PURCHASE LY (NO AGENTS) hav- sale in Townships Ble ind Thirteen, Range Six, 1ip Twelve, Range Five, location, lowest pric ms and full particulars only. Address Berkeley, reet,, Vancouver, B. C. ears old and has. trim- a Besta, Medicine Hat, sort MEDICAL S ANDERSON Physician Office above Assiniboia Office hours A. M. 10 2 to 4, 7 to 820. Resi- oy St. Residence phone , 19-1m Se asa cas eee JCTIONEERS ese ton WNE CO., Live Stock ral Auctioneers, 619 Tor- ek Sales every . Friday ware at 1 o'clock. Ranch ok sales conducted any- vo turultirs sales con- ere, Consult us, our ex- our disposal free. Phone irowne Co., 519 To- 1s2ats 2ED ACCOUNTANTS ERSON CO., chartered its and auditors, (estab- wuditcrs, city of Medicine g, Medicine Hat, Leth- 3, Gibeon, C.A, resident ome 198, Burns Block. M5 aee sea jelivered in the eins soeseesseseeeeeseeeerebeegteeveeseneOeeegeoee SPORT NEWS gt; . aoe aioe dhohonip ete aieets POD OLOLOSTIOL OOS OOMOED So tosts Sostoetong a a a a a sion TURPIN BROS. The Men s Store where Worth. CURLERS Annual Meeting to be Held on Friday Evening All Interested in the Roarin Game Invited to be Pres- ent. ni The annual meeting of the Curling Club will be held on Friday evening next in the Court Room, City Hall, Jor the purpose of effecting re-ongan- ization for the season. The club should be very strong this year, as a large number of citizens have already announced their inten- tion. of seeking membership... The new rink has solved the problem of preserving the ice during the soft spells and Medicine Hat now enjoys as much curling in the winter months as the average western city. It 1s to be hoped that the attend- ance at Friday's meeting will be fairly representative, in, order. that the n w executive may gain an idea of the, resources which will be avait able in planning the season's pro- gram. - Big Hockey War Inevitable Unless Sammy Backs Down Owner of Montreal Wanderers Breaks Faith With Les- ter Patrick and Signs Annual Meeting Vancouver, Oct. 30. Hockey affairs throughout the Dominion-at. the pre- sent time, appear to be on the verge gcrisis which ultimately willpre vipltate the National Hockey Associ. ation and the Pacific Coast Hockey League into a money-war never be- ore seen in Canada s winter pastime. A settlement must be made at to- hight s meeting of the National Hockey association in Quebec, or else war to je knife will be declared. Lichtenhein the Be. Mr. Lichtentfin, owner of the Mon- Wanderers, has directly been the cause of the outbreak which will Surely follow. unless He backs down meeting and agrees to -eancel the contracts of Johnson, Hy- land; Leman and any other Coast treal cat ' fonigh' sstats which he may have signed. ern magnates would refrain. Patrick contract last season, until Lester had been given an opportunity The end is not yet. Take my word To this both agreed and Patrick kept his promise. Not a player was signed by bim or even approached-that had-signed to them one. play in the East. Sammy Broke Faith. Everything went atong merrily tl ichtenhein went on the warpath. He tendered Ernie Johnson a fancy e the Now comes the re* contract and Johnson fell increased offer. port that Henry Hyland has als fallen, owing to the tempting offe of Sammy, but not satisfied wit this, the Wanderer boss. is searchin for high and low for-Hugh Lehman and Ran McDonald, both members , of last year's Westminster c This is the way Sammy Lichten: pis tout: I think the time thas come to show Mr. Patrick that th of National Hockey Association Tonight at Quebec Will Probably Smooth Matters. While Lester Patrick, the Victoria magnate, was in the East be entered into an agreement with Emmett Quinn, president of the N.H. Ay whereby Lester agreed-not to sien a player that had already signed an eastern contract. In exchange, Pres - dent Quinn guaranteed that the East- from signing any players who had signed Pacific Coast Hockey League can ac longer teach us how to run our busi- ness. Mr. Patrick, while here, mada * proposition which was so ridiculous that the Wanderers will at last refuse THE MAN in the Overalls is the one we are after. We want to put him wise o the fact that we are sole agents for the famous BROTHERHOOD OVERALLS made by eters in Dover, New Jersey and Welland, Ontar- io. None better. you get the Big Dollars PROBLEM OF THE BACKWARD CHILD (Special to the News) New York, Oct. 30 Some of the brightest. minds of the nation assem- Ded at the College of the City of New York today to consider the great problem of the mentally defective child and the,saving of him for use- ful citizenship... The conference is similar to the one held here last year and which attracted international at- tention at the time. Dr, P. P. Clax- ton, United States Commissioner of Education, is presiding over the three days sessions. Other notable partici- pants include Gardner C. Bassett of Johns Hopkins University, Prof. Jas. EB. Lough of New York University; Miss Mary R. Campbell, of Chicago, and Dr, C. Ward Crampton, director of physical training in the New York public schools. NEW JERSEY HISTORICAL SOCIETY Newark, N. J.j Oct. 30 The 67th annual meeting of the New Jersey Historical Society was held today at the headquarters of the society in this city, The principle feature, of, the meeting was an address by Prof, Austin Scott of Rutgers College on William Paterson; New Jersey s Ex- ponent of American Principles. Several Coast League Stars to entertain it. In the meantime there is an open market for hockey players and:th Wanderers propose to get the B st there are to be had. We need some more good men in the East and we intend to get them regardless of expense. However, everyone in the Bast does not think the same as Lichtenhein as the following statement of one of the leading officials of the N..H. A. will show: Mr. Lichtenhein s action, no doubt, will mean war between the National Hockey Association and the Pacific Colist Hockey League. After the friendly manner in which 'Pattick took up the request of the National Hockey Association to join in forming a hockey commission and arrange Jor a world s serles, the ac- tion of Mr. Lichtenbein in trying to take away the men whom Patrick has signed, seems, to say the least, un- fair; although much stronger words could be used. Patrick came here and openly an- nounced that he would not try to take away any player who has sighed with any Eastern clubs, and would only make contracts with those who had 1 not signed, and he stuck to that. for it, St will be war to the knife. Tonight Will Tell. Frank Patrick intends waiting un- al Hockey Association when they convene tonight at Quebec.. If they Ijuphold Lichtenheln, then it will be .twar. But Mr, Patrick does n t think it will come to that. The Wanderer boss is the only one that has as yet violated the agreement between Les- ter and Quinn, and the local magnate is of the opinion that it has been merely for advertising purposes that Lichtenhein has signed the Coast stars. Gardner, Hyland, Johnson, Lehman were all put under the -ban by the N. H. A. last season, and be- fore they will be enabled to play for the Wanderers, the National Hockey. Association must reinstate them, Unless the contracts of the quartette im question are declared void by the N. H. A. then local enthusiasts will bo treated to some real live bidding 0 r h ie 0 he-hears-the-verdict-or the than eben ee Nation) hat it was to do with the irrepres- TWO OF THE CUBS ARE BOOKED TO GO Jimmy Sheckard and Joe Tinker Are Saited to Take Hold of Brooklyn and Cincinnatti Next Season. Chicago, Oct 30, Two of the old guard of the Cubs, Shortstop Joe Tinker, and Left Fielder Jimmy Shec- kard, have played thelr Inst games with the West Siders, according information from an authoritative source last night. Tinker and Sheckard are now fig. uring in two trades, which will be the most important engineered by big league magnates in many years. Joe is slated to succeed Hank O'Day atthe head of Garry Herrman's Reds, while Jimmy is carded to relieve Bin Dahlen of his worries as man- ager of the Brooklyn club. President Murphy admitted that he had several important trades in prog- ress. The West Side magnate de- clared that he could not tell when the trades would be pulled off, but, as he stated some time ago that the 1913 manager. would be named prob- ably before November 1, it is beliey- ed the mammoth shifts will be com- pleted within a week or ten days Joe Tinker, in an interview tast night, admitted that he did not ex- pect. to be with the Cubs next season, and sald: 1 would Bot manage Mr. Murphy's team under any Circumstances, and pity the man WO Will have that bur- den thrust upon iim. T will admit that 1 may not play ball in Chicago next year, but will undoubtedly be in the big league. Tinker and Sheckard both have had experience a8 Dig league manag- ers. Some time ago the last named acted as pilot of the Cubs while the short field star managed the Cubs during the greater part of the 1912 campaign, Tinker has been candidate for the Cincinnati managerial position for some time, When Griffith gave up the job at the end of the 1911 race, it was generally conceded that Joe had the inside track for the place, but in some way the deal was blocked, Tinker has Dean a member of the Cubs since 2902, when he joined the club after a Successful season with the Portland team. Sheckard came to the West Siders in 1906, being se- cured in a.trade for Jack McCarthy, Jimmy Casey, Billy Maloney and Pitcher Briggs. Emma Goldman s Firebrand of France Who 8 Has Some Doctrines W New York, Oct. 30. The govern- ment of France has in. Gustave Herve an enemy who by comparison makes our own Emma Goldman look like a child armed with a hatchet at- tacking the, fortifications at . Sagdv Hook. Herve s doctrines are prob ably less violent than those of America s leading anarebist for he is not-an anarchist-at all pt he has a much larger following than Bliss Goldman and authorities there are probably more sensitive to violent criticism than our officials. All his life, singlehanded, he has been arrayed against: official France, and more than eleven years of . im- prisonment have failed to tame him. He has been sent to prison many) times for outspoken condemnation of woriditions that he finds wrong, but in nearly every instance the Govern- ment has released him before the ex- piration of the sentence; and each time he has walked out of jail to be- come an ever sharper thorn in the side of established power. He is only. forty-one, and may be counted upon to bpttle valiantly for a good many years. RECENTLY RELEASED. Herve was recently released after serving twenty-six months in the Prison de la Sante. During his in- carveration he continued to conduct ris newspaper, The Social War, and now and then wrote one of bis ama- ingly frank and biting articles that have upset the government and re sulted in his many prison terms. For these fresh offences Herve was sentenced to successive cumulative terms behind the bars, and it began to look as if the little revolutionary would spend the rest of his life im side the grim walls of the Prison of Health: But; to the chagrin of the duthorities, the more sentences they piled on Herve the more violent he became in his denunciation of the social order. To tell the truth the government would like to ignore Herve. He is like a red-hot coal, which the more it is blown the hot- ter it becomes. But Herve will not be ignored. So ie his propaganda would eventually threaten the very existence of the French republic. But. just. when. the government had exhausted its repres- sive measure and was wondering sible Herve not liking the task of jailer nor r lishing the role of pard- oner there was an intervention that sav d its life, The courage of Herve and his evident sincerety have won him many friends in high places. INFLUENTIAL POWER. Among the most powerful of these are Anatole France, probably the most talented 'of living French novel- iste: Octave Mirbeau, playwright. and- Jean Jaures, leader of the French Socialists. These three men this railroading of a for what is no more test against man to prison than political result was a general amnesty. But the price paid by Herve tor the privilege of free speech in a mo- Compared With Gustave Herve in Jail Attacks Government by Pen. took the lead in a great public pro- propaganda and the Exploits Tame* ays He is Not an Anarchist hich Land Him Periodically of freedom is tastly greater than the eleven years spent in prison. His whole mature life has witnessed a succession of attempts to break the sprit. He wes born at Recouvrance, suburb of Brest, in Brittany. His father and his grandfather were fun- ctionaries in. the merchant marine. belonging to the upper strata of the working class. Hf tokl me some- thing of his chikihdod- when I saw him today in his tiny flat in the Rue Vangirard, close by. the Gare Mont- pathasse. He is a small man, but sturdy, full,of nervous energy witira broad,, full forebead and blue, eyes, and a smile that simply won't come off. -In intercourse he is open, frank, -cordial and unconventional. SASE IN POINT. T recall clearly when only ' six years. old, said Herve, how indig nant I was when I was face to face with the misery of the Brittany peasants and fish rmen, and won- dered why they were kept so poor. It was pure sensitiility, for I was too young then for it to be a matter of confidence. Herve went to the university, where in time he distinguisbed bim- I loved the university, said he ; albove all, the intellectual independ- ence that it allowed the masters. Clerical and socialist professors en- joyed eqital tolerance, and during the eleven years that Iwas, there my superiors knew my socialist ardor and faith, but never made any ob- servations. In 1901 I was professor of history at Sens, and all I asked then was to develop/my career, as indifferent to honors as to money. CAREER DESTROYED. Even then Herve was an ardent an- timilitarist. A pamphlet -be-wrote at that time revealed to him the ruthless power of the. government he was fighting. He was tried in the local courts but acquitted by a sym- pathetuc jury. Finding it impossible to reach fim in that way, the pow- ers that be calied upon him to resign bis professorship - and he saw hin chosen career destroyed at one blow. Teaching having banged the door in his face, he took up the law and as admitted to the French bar. Four years: ago appeared his acticle on national brigandage in Moroc- 0, senctting the ae campaign of writing ob it be wae satenssd 10 one year in prison and debarred from the French bar. Thus another career was lost to him, yet even this great blow had no effect upon bis anti-military activities. Speaking of his latest prison term, Herve said to me: T feel like an owl suddenly. ken out of the darkness and pik dazzling light. -.iter b so long I was dazed for fl by my liberty. But I have ing quietly, making-small jo into the country, ind you See Ef myself again, CONTINUE STRUGGLES. ae Twenty six months in not, dulled your ardor? T Not in the least, I had time and leisure to probie, whiome before the esason draws around, minal republic dedicated to the cause reser conscience and think things ove ox struggle with more zeal than ever. Herve's scathing criticisms of the authorities quite naturally won for, him a large number of anarchist sympathizers, and for this reason ho is often called an anarchist himvelf. But he repudiates anarchism. T am not at all an anarchist or a commnunist, he said. I am a vol leotivist, a socialist, a democrat with an unshakabile faith in the peo- ple. I believe in state socialism, in the eollestive production and di tritution of wealth. To biring about this desired end I believe all means employed to be good even legal means he aided with detightful irony. when England has ed hers on Bosnia, pounced upon her seems an the of the Powers. says; plish in would send there penses peril, THE FLAG INCIDENT. Herve's great crime, in the eyes of the authorities, was to place the French flag in the muck. He told me he expected to go down in his- tory, as the man who did this. Tmagine the circumstances Sine religion has been officially abolished in France, a great many persons have made a religion of the flag. The nationalists, or patriots, carry this respect to the extreme. It is saluted and bowed to just as the holy sacra- nient was in bygone days. The army was preparing to celebrate the anni- versary of Wagram, the great Lattle when 110,000 French were face to face with 120.000 Austrians, and when, as Herve said, these two herds who had nothing humane left in them flew at each other's throats, drunk with cognac, powder and blood. The combat took place in the sum- mer. the wheat already was ripe, and the exploding bombs set whole fields on fire. Battalions and regiments by flight escaped being burned alive, but the wounded were left behind Among the soldiers badly wounded a Jange number perished in the flames, and those who did not die outright Yay in agony in the wheat for days because they could not be found. Tt is this that:is to be glorified, said Herve. DENOUNCES CELEBRATION. In denouncing . the celebration, . Herve wrote the following: So long as there are barracks for the, edlifieation and moralization . of the soldiers of our d moctacy and in onder that militarism and wars of conquest may be dishonored: before their eyes, I would, lke to see brought together and placed. in a. pile in the principle paradeground all garlyage and muck of the barracks and. solemnly in the presence of troop iin fall dress. see the colomel, fully plumed, and to the sound of martial music, place the regimenta) flag in the muck Herve was not imprisoned for this article, put it is said that it has had fatal effect upon the minds of the juries at every one of his trials since. In defending himself in court last January, among other things he said to the judge: RIGHT AND MORALITY. J am not discussing the qmestion whether you would not do better to consecrate your billions to the re- placing of your industrial machinery, which is the laughing-stock of Eur- ope. I judge your Morocco expedi- tions of hygiene; ope would try to Houses for sale Foster's Shoe not you? oe they not created and world to be massacred, or corralled by the great civihized nations? Mo talk about righb at m into Egypt, when Austria. has and France and-Spain have thrown themselves on thelr prey, Morocco, little maive. I suppose . I to cy the truth brutally in the face If Burope were civilized, he if she really wished to accom- Moroseo a fine work, carry to these inferior brothers no- refine the natives. ment in saving others money. ba THURSDAY OCT., 3 JUANITA RUS LOTS OF LAUGHS : nN Special Four-piece Ladiets Orchestra. This Is the only big Musical Comedy that will visit Medicine ah Prices 1.00, 75e,, and 50c. Cosy Roller sy ACROSS THE BRIDGE Treat For The Ladies Tuesday and Thursday Evenings Admission and Skates Free place in. this DUTY ON CEMENT IN FORCE AGAIN eriod Covered By Order- in-Gounc i ag a Expi fom sonk her when Italy Prey in Tripol her doctors, or missionaries: who, with the funds of civilized Bur- ' found schools and on easy payments or will exchange for real estate. Ap- ply to Hotson Leader. 54-tt Repairing Depart- PERA HOUSE little Comedienne, H. in the Title Role. a AN ALL-STAR COMPANY. LOTS OF * this season. Let them All Come. tion simply fromthe point of view of what is right and moral. Right Morality What have these oft-repeated phrases to do here? Right Have the people of Asia and Afriea any rghts? Were the rights of man proclaimed by your fathers for all these inferior races? Were Our Second Car Load of and... . The Best ds Nothing. the Saturday morning and afterrioon children s ad- mission 15 cents including skates. ee They Have Arrived--. GOURLAY PIANOS ANGELUS: PLAYERS JUST julien But they are going fast--only seven left We are -ordering another cat load at once. Select your style now and have one included in our oct, shipment. ;
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Image 789 (1912-10-30), from microfilm reel 789, (CU1744327). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.