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747
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Medicine Hat News 1911-03-02 - 1912-03-28
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Date
1912-02-15
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MEDICINE HAT DAILY NEWS. . . Thursday, February 16th, 1912 th, 1918 MA Be ii aoreane Sieea le ApaTRIbSTNe It A Drop of Blood Comany seat iam den Suey wae Fort anny MOO ma arateg nerve cotaion tourtolaits sua anoinet tenyusn af tne ted iis, the, decton af Br Pte ge the bet change them for 0 rr Settlement now changing into Win- ee wid rierate Aa oakere hilt eatseenten PAREWELL ECZEMA peruse ne uy Merament vow chaning to Win Shoe anime all ment A M Nireyiie sa nes terae Tea tu eva tro BVP ai bulten lt; CcGNs) W wats aid RABICEVII Caer arerastvey Soule. Voeub,extraot ay coc : 2 Mi iat band of uate, They) rine of onaions gressive, Dr. Pierce s Golden Medical Discovery Im Conjunction With BELL'S P.S. 0 A. thane, then made their way up the lof Witinipeg had then Increwsed from Which makes the stomach strong, promates the flow of didestive juices, re ery the world's oaly: and abeelste cure for Kosema all forms of Skin Bruptions Nelson River to Lake Winni, and the ngie bylding erected Mes yuri riches the Sowtht and were destroy: Taince its discovery. 3 e on of the a e ( 862, to ste fpscibca endl mericbes themnecd ait iM cbeg great apis . 1 you suffer the tortures of tihence to the junction of the Red and Kenney Co, in 1862, to a clu and restorative nerve tonic. It makes men sirung im body, active in mind i nome by, the the Assiniboine Rivers, where they of tiouses, the principle of which were sad cool ta judgment. Get what you sak for order a set up what became known an the Sel- irregularly scattered along the public Hustrated octet So ros Poet oy ot te 095 as eee . Seegeezes soe ot me re s eho Poets arte teas oe s coe Seats seats Ry eat reat RY oat . vs cof . nechesteates . . o fog fe Sof Poatoats Seateate-ofeste Me cog es - oe cot Ry totes reenter Ms v Sot bs RS sfoatoetectoste i Q ee 5 Loorecovesororcoeraces yields in your a eo a Oo 2+ Oeee, Loafoegeateetoege Box 550, ling and juipment, tc. ST. 4 4 QUARANTEED UNDER PERSONAL SUPERVISION THE BELE-REMEDY COMPANY Ji 204 7 farmers the wished to) erates wil rors ams pee winmarmes was. scien prec anton Two Big Snaps. 100 ft. Highland Street, Block 22, Herald. 1000. Terms. ALSO Block 9 River- Only 840.00 100 ft., side. WHOO'LL BE FIRST y PERREEEHS Early History of kirk were BELL'S P.S. of A. A SULPHUR BATH plone CONSULTATION at pany son's yald be In every home an safeguard agai iarke bottle : pers all the held tion Prov lata HOLLINGER AGENCY Phone 433. Ee 2 3 . 384 Main St. GOOD BUYS IN RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY f the junction of the Red and 3550, Cerms, 50 ft. corner, Ceneral Park the Assiniboine Rivers stood the fam- 425 etms, 50 ft Elm Street, North Yuill. cus post of the Hudson's Bay HIN Terms, 50 ft, Queen Street, North Yulll. pany known as Fort Garry, The main the peg. 81300 Terms, 50 ft. Esplanade. 800 Terms 50 ft. one block from High School. 8500 Terms, 50 ft. corner, Block 1, Cousins and Sissons. EUS FOR LOANS AND ENSURANC foundation of the cific north, 5 fiseing + fur trade of the of F tlem the famous early twas Varenn explorers Sleur de la Rivers arrived Verandry Que In 8 a native of 1 ptember, 1781, he ne at Rainy Lake, and erected a fort 80 at estern Canada iccrte sotto rts ot'a Wieleitiiseinieeiniteicite seein it the western shore of t ia ee Woods, paddled down the Winnipeg by It tn now a little more than two battlefield of September 13, 1 River to the lake of the same name. self und a half centuries since white met first set foot in the region known to: as the Canadian West a distant date measured by the continent, notwithstanding th great development that has alr 1 North America, day istory of this taken place this is still a mew world in com Europe, and newer still in co With the Orient, where for centuries civilfzation has be The first white glimpee of ou n stagnant. men to gain st were Pierre Radison, a French-Canadian and his brother-in-law, Medard Chouart, bet- ter known as Grosseilliers, who w born near Meaux, France, emigrated to Quebec, and there married the daugh: ter of Abraham Martin, King s pilot, who owned the plateau to the west of the city, and which fs still known as the Plains of Abraham, the famous parison early as 1659, these adventurous young Crossing the lake he ascended the As men reached the region beyond the iniboine River, and so passed through erall head of Lake verior and came 10) the heart of the district in which now of th Jcontact with the Assiniboine Indians. stands the city of Winnipeg. His sons dred hree years later they Were again In pushed on across the prairies, and on Red River. It consists of a square en: the West, and by some it is claimed New Year's Day, 1743, they came with- closure .of high stone walls. flanked they went as far north as the shores it, sight of the eastern spurs of the at each angle by round towers. With- of Hudson Bay, discovered about fifty Northern Rocky Mountains. Veran- in thts are several substantial wood- years before by Henry Hudson. If qrye established a number of forts, or en bulldings the Governor's resi + tote claim ts well founded Radisson iraaing posts, in our West, and he dence, the jal, and therstorehouses for and-his companion were the first to opiained considerable information re- the Company's furs and goods. The reach the shores of the great inland specting the geography of the coun- shon sea by the overland route. ltry. Me was preparing to-cross the tion are sold, Is thronged from worn- Founding HB, Company Rockies when death overtook him on ing till might by a crowd of settlers A little later Radisson and Gros il- December 6th, 174 eleven years be- and half-breeds wha meet there to liers went to-England, were rge ived fore Canada was ceded to Great Bri- gossip and treat each other to rum os King Charles I1,, and co-operated tain. and brandy, as Well as to make their with Prince Rupert in founding *the A Synonymous History phrehases. Iudson s Bay Company. Both men en- ered the service of the Company and salled a number of times to the Bay, where they assisted in laying the From that time practically down to 1870 the history of the Canadian West forms part-of-the history of the Hud- son's Bay Company, that not omly-en bat the settlers out this country anadian West. celebrated glish travellers, Vis- count Milton and Dr Cheadle, who then on their way to the Pa- Coast, In the account of their journey they have given a description of Winnipes, polls of the quently u The Red River Settlement miles to the northward or Red Riv other migrations ranks. eer farmera of Manitoba Jealousy Ari this time the North-West Com- the aggressive rival of the Hud- Bay Company, bad posts through and they were vi Settlement, There swelled were th that These In spite of injustices cendants on, d the found: of the Clty of Winnipeg and the of Manitoba, just as thi foundation of farming in the ate up thelr cro; hese misfort and the of the Fort still stands one of historical In 1862 it was visited by rt Garry and the Red River set- ent, where today stands the city e commercial metro- West, and destined to become the com- ial metropolis of all Canada. The Old Winniper ort Garry, write our t which we mean the building it- for the name of the Fort is fre for the settlement gen- y. is situated on the north bank ne Assiniboine River, a few hun- yards above its junction with the ellers, where articles of every descrip- for about twent along the of the Red River, and about nd Fort Garry tern Ca Beveridge s FEBRUARY FURNITURE SALE If You Are Interested in House Furn- ishings, Beveridge s February Sale is Your Opportunity. If YOu Are Skeptical, Bring Your Eas- We Will Save You Money on Eastern Prices. J.C. Beveridge talogue. MAIN STREET. Jone of th monuments of Winni- among the vil twolare built of wood. le The drat entertainment, which m3 was really Winnipeg's first night, thought by h: lights, that surgical assistance had to extends by ledge of the lone western prairies, and highway so as to form something re. sembling street, became in the au: tumh of 1867, the scene of a number pro of attempts to Introduce the institu- t tions of a higher civilization tnto that sr oasis in the wilderness of Rupert's n Canad) Red Rive: leaving the vince by the On the south thelr steams or towing a couple tandard, hy is asned an- of barges and euginey one of the barges was th est. has only dawned. Montreat KANSAS Y. MLC. A. MEETING id. Emmerling established DIl- on ity way to Winnipeg, It fs to be Hutchinson, Kas, Feb, 15 Dele- ard table, imported from the United Cared the Lady Dufferin. writes kates representing the city and col- States, in his hotel. The table Was chy authoress of the Jourual, Forty- lege branches of the Young Men's in constant use, and the profits Were five years have passed since then, and) Christian Association in Kansas gath- so considerable as to induce the enter ihy jittle frontier town that. Lady ered in this clty today for thelr an- prising proprietor to add a second ta- Dutferin described bamsbecome a bus- nual State convention, An attractive Coe Te eee eone iness and opulent city. And yet we programme cavering four daye has A theatre was also opened over think that the day of the Canadian been prepared for the meeting. store, On the opening night th whole population of the town may be - said to have been on the alert. Th George Hotet was illuminated with a efeatesoateagecgocts Seateeteege SALLE E IELTS: candle at every pane of glass in the windows of the billiard saloon. The result of this demonstration was very nearly calamitous, as, when every per son Was engaged with other candles set fire to the fur had it not : : xe houses, all of which thers, nishings of a window, and, been for the good offices of an acci- dental passenger, the result might in consequence of the central position of thi have been most disastrous inn passed off very well, marred only by A pecillae acsldent ick Befellicial gt; Teading actor after the jerformance, ae Returning to the stage. after the Hight gy had tesa Dut ut, for the Purpose ot felting some of nls belongioge tnat d been forgotten, he fell in the uk, cutting hs leg so severely with Collin setaar ot eseiot a teoul er on young Winnipes 18, entertaining. It gives an account of fa dinner party held early on the af- q fermoon of St. Andrew's Day. All gy went well unt just about twitisht, when a-slight altercation commenc- fd, respecting the relative superiority between the Highland and the Low) land counties of Scotland. The sub- ge fect was one in which everyone pres- ent felt a lively personal Interest, ana the debate regarding tt quickly swell- 3 ed into a tumult. The whole party be ished with ringing shouts from the meeting place to the strect ish forthwith became the theatre of one of the most formidable scenes of dis- order ever witnessed. within his beat Constable Milifgaa, .whose single arm Was powerless in the presence of the multitude of rioters, who shifted their scene from one corner of the q village to another as victory declared tself alternately on either side of the 3 struggling crowd. But there was another side to the social life of the little village on the be called in. A Dinner Party quotation from this inter Anoth esting ce ce Z 2. 3, 2 Me s te me cur traveller does not forget to point it out, The ladies of the settlement held a bazaar from which a revenue of 70 was received, and a concert and bazaar brought In 100, all of which wag devoted to-vifdritable pur- poses, es oe soege es . ee feed The next two years were years of trouble for Winnipeg and the Red River Settlement, for it was in 1869 that the first Riel uprising took place and for a year the country was prac- tically in the hands of a band of reck- less men, who claimed to exercise the functions of Government. Like a house of cards, this govern- ment collapsed upon the approach of the expedition led by Sir Garnet, lat- er Viscount Wolseley, and, erected in- to 2 Province, Manitoba was brought into the Canadian Confederacy the entire West, known as Prince Rupert's Land, having in the meantime been acquired by the Dominion G vern- ment. Passing over seven years, one ob- tains a view of Winnlpeg from the Journal of the Marchtoness of Dufferin who, with her husband, then Governor- General of Canada, visited Manitoba during the closing weeks of the sum- aon Peak e ee Soefessoegeegers todiotioets he vice-regal visitors could start it, mer of 1877, The vice-regal party entered the Province from the south, sailing down the Red River. The C. P. Re The Mackenzie Government were then in power and were building the Canadian Pacific Railway as a state- owned road. It was being built in detached sections, one being in Man- Itoba. When Lord and Lady Dufferin were in the Province-in September, 1877, construction work on a, short section was was well advanced, and in her Journal Lady Dufferin writes that she and Lord Dufferin each drove a spike in the railway, which Is the first to be built in this part of the world. Effort was made to get the first locomotive on the spot so that Sogeateeteneteeie Soot but it could not be managed. The engineer, Mr. Whitehead, was a sto- ker on the first-ratlway in England, and, therefore, in the world, and now, states the Journal, he is to open the first railway in the North-west. On the following day the vice-regal visitors set out om their r turn Jour- GET THE PAY CASH AND SAVE ? HABIT Ms Ms MONEY Special Prices for Pay Week. Your Money's Worth or your Money Back. : Tea in bulk, Finest Orange Pekoe. Reg. week price 40c. or 3 Tb for 1.10. Tea in bulk, regular price 40c. per I. 3 Ib for 1.00, Tea, Lock Brand, 3 Tb tins. 1.00 Tetley s Finest Mocka and Java. week price 40c, or 3M for 1.10. Amber Brand, Regplar 40c, per T. per I) or 3M for 85 Regular price Coffee, Coffee, price 50c. per i. Pay Pay week price 36c. or 1.25. egular Pay Coffee, English Breakfast. Regular 20c. per Tb ie. per Tb. Coffee, Crescent Brand,, finest Mocha al per. Pi Peaches, Rosedale Brand, (sliced) large 3 Peaches, 2.85 per dozen. Pears, Bartlett, 3 Tb tins. 3.40 per dozen. Apricots, 3 tins, Regular 35c. . Per dozen. Lombard Plum. 2 cans for 25c Fougas, extra fine Peas in glass bottles. price 30c. per bottle. Regular 35c. Fougas, extra fine Mushrooms in glass bottles. bottle. bottle. Olive Ofl, finest in gallon cans. week price 2.25 per gallon. Olive Oil, iarge bottles. Regular price 60c. per bottle. Maconochie s Pickles, large bottles, mixed and Chow. Regular Pay week, price 25 -each. Dewar Watson's Glasgow Pickles, price 35c. each.. Pickles, bottle. per boitle. Pay week price 30c. Sutton s. Worcester Sauce. Regular 20c. price 2 bottles for 25c. Bracknell's Club Sauce. Regular price week price 26c. per bottle. HEP, Pickles. Regular price 35c. Dill Pickles, large. 25c. per doz. Heintz Sweet Mixed and Sour. price 30c. per quart. Bromley s Coffee Essence. week price 0c. per bottle. Sardines, Seabird Brand. 2 cans for 25 . Pay we Regular 40c. Sardines, Crossed Fish. Regular 20c. per can. Pay week price 150. per can. or 7 for 1.00 Jelly Powders, McLaren's Imperial, 3 packets for 250. with glass dish given free or 8c. per dozen. Soap, Palm Naptha. Regular price 6 for 5 cartoons for 1.00. Soap, Santa Claus. 6 for 250. Dustbane Sanitary Sweeping Compound. 45c. Pay week price 35 . per tin. : and, 3 8 Pay week price Vetley's Finest Mocha s a Re 50c. per fb. Pay s re E week price 30 , gular 3 . Pay week price i and,, Mocha ra. Regular 60 , gt; Br iD tins. Regular price Pay week price 25c. per tin or 2.85 per dozen. FE Rosedale Brand (sliced) 21) Uns, Regutar 26e. per a tin, Pay week price 2 for 35c. or 1.85 per dozen. ree 3 1b tins, Regular 35 Pay week price 25c. or 2.85 2 M tins.Regular 20c. per can. Pay week price or 1.40 per dozen. Regular 35c. Pay week price 50c. per bottle. Fougas extra fine Asparagus in glasg bottles. Pay week price 50c. per bottle. Regular price 2.76. 5c. per bottle. Pay week price 25 . per boottle. Pickles, Stephen's Mixed, large 40 oz. bottles. Regular price 35c. per doz. Large bottles. Regular 35c. Regular Ic. per can. Regular 4 squares for 25c. nd Jay week price 40c. or 3 tb for 1.10. Pay week price 25c. or Pay week price 3 e or Pay week Regular 75c. per Regular 75c. per Pay Pay week Regular 35c. per Regular price 40 . per bottle. Pay week 5c. per bottle Pay ek price 26c. Pay week price per quart. Pay week Pay Pay week price 2c. Pay week price Pay week price Large tins. Regular Ovster Shells and Grit. Regular 2.50 per 100. tb. Pay week : price 2.00 per ewt. Velvet Gloss BootBlacking. Regular 25c. bottles. Pay week price 2 bottles for 350. Jams, Cairn s, large 7 tins. Regular price 1.23, Pay week price 1.00 per can. Amonia Powder, large packages. Regular Pay week price 15c. or 8 for 40c. Swifts, white Laundry Soap. Regular 5c- price 6 for 25 . price 20c. per packet. per cake. Pay week Goods Delivered to Any Part of , TERMS CASH. H. MORROW NORTH RAILWAY ST. PHONE 177. : 3 the City, C .0. D.
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Image 747 (1912-02-15), from microfilm reel 747, (CU1854777). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.