"8881910d-5682-4914-9582-701cd6ee197e"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "B.C. Historical Newspapers Collection"@en . "2015-12-08"@en . "1913-11-01"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/delttime/items/1.0079790/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Volume 7\nDELTA TIMES\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDh:\nLADNER, B. 0. SATUEDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1913.\n$1.00 A YEAR.\nTO BE FINISHED\nIN TWO WEEKS\nLadner to Woodward's Landing Will\nSoon Be Ready for Business\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nLanding Almost Complete.\nThe temporary ferry to be established by the Provincial Government\nbetween Ladner and Woodward's\nLanding will soon be ready for traffic.\nOn the Delita side of the river the\nlanding at Ladner, located 'between\nihe Johnson warehouse and the Lanning. Fawcett & Wilson store is\npractically complete, and on the\nother side of the stream the work\nis progressing favorably. The men\nIn charge say that in less than itwo\nweeks both of the landings will be\nready for use, and as the scow will\nbe ready by that time there Is efsry\nreason to believe that the service\nwill be established before the middle\no:' November.\nThe Ladner landing consists of a\nplank road over the dyke and a single truss bridge from the end of this\nto a float. The bridge is sixty feet\nlong and has a width of thirteen\nfeet inside wheel guards. It is\nbung at both ends on hinges, consisting of timbers bored to work on\na bolt made of three and one-half\ninch pipe filled with concrete. The\nfloat Is made of large cedar logs\ncovered with a deck. It is twenty\nbv forty feet on top.\nCONDENSOR MEN\nBUY MORE LAND\nRepresentatives of B.C. Milk Condensing Co. Preparing for Ev-\ntensive Building.\nNEW HOTEL AT PUBLIC DANCES\nPORT GUICHON IN LADNER HALL\nPine Structure Replaces Oldest Hostelry in Delta\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIs Well Furnished, Cozy House.\nAs one approaches Port Guichon\n\"Citizen\" Says Dance After Show Is\nHarmful; \"Dancer\" Says They\nAre Decently Conducted.\nThere is a question in Ladner as\non the river boat one is struck by j t0 the character of the public dances,\nia great improvement at the port\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD! antl the \"free dauce after lt-ae show*\"\nj one sees a green-painted roof and the I heId when the moving picture per-\nwhlte walls of a rather imposing\nstructure, which on landing one finds \t\nto be the new Hotel Guichon, just; signed \"Dancer,\" has been received,\nreceiving its finishing touches. Tllls- gentleman, on the contrary\n_. _ _ , -, , , holds that the dances held in Lad-\nThere has been a Hotel Guichon have been deceuL Bol[h leUerg\nIn fact thej follow:\nTo\nformances of Saturday nights, are\nover has called forth a protest from\n\"Citizen.\" Another communication,\nRepresentatives of the B.C Milk\nCondensing Company have purchased\nanother acre of the W. H. Ladner\nestate on the corner of Westham\nstreet, and Fairview road, about half\nway between Ladner and Port Guichon, to make way for a spur of the\nGreat Northern Railway to their proposed condensing plant. Three\nweeks ago they acquired two acres\nat this point.\nWednesday railway surveyors were j for many long yeari\t\non the ground fixing the line of the origin-al house was built bv the late j To the Editor,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDUp to the\nspur, which is to be an extension! Guichon over hhtnh* vi*******-** -Present we have been boast-\nof the McLelan Mill spur, and meas-1 *M1- L_.tjU1!-on \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'e r, \" llrt'. >ea. nA {\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, as a community of the untiring for steel rennirempnt*- Thp' aso- Then u was a store and hotel' ll\". ds a community or tue uu\nunng tor stee requirements The combined nd served the needs of-objectionable character of our pub-\ntrack wW be laid as soon as the steel 11\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*~; commun tv He amusements and with one or two\narrives, probably within two weeks,' a P\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIleer community. exceptions that boast has been well\nand as soon as -tHe steel is laid to j The property and business were mai:uaiued. As one desirous of 8ee.\nmake possible the bringing in of j acquired by the late Mr. W. L^ Mc- , diversions kept on a high\nbuilding material by rail the com-iBl'\"le In 1899, and since his death ,- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'. - feel impe*ied t0 ]et the **_-ht\npany will begin the erection of its eight years ago the business has been | In on tha- ..fl.ee danee after the\nplant, plans for which are now in I conducted by his widow. I show\" which is held on Saturday\nLast year, Mrs. McBride erected j nights in McNeely Hall. With danc-\na new store ion the premises\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDa fine *ag conducted under proper auspices,\nstructure with a frontage of 28 feet, for the purpose of this letter, I have\nand a depth of eighty feet. In this, nothing to do. Some weeks ago I\na general store business is conducted\nwith as fresh and fine a stock as\ncne will see anywhere\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDgroceries,\npreparation. ^^^^^^^^^^^^\nA RESIDENTTAI. SECTION.\n| felt prompted to turn the light on,\n, but the suggestion came that per-\ni haps ii was die only time that men\nI under the influence iof liquor had\n| 'been allowed on the floor and that\nj obscene language was indulged in\nThe following excerpt from a letter by Mr. Rupert C. Grahame shows\nthe possibilities of Delta as a rest- ^_^^^\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD^^^m^^^^^mm^^^^^^\ndential section and predicts a rapid 'hardware, men's furnishings\" eltc. In\nadvance in the district as soon as this building is Guichon post office.\nbetter transportation is afforded: The new hotel is a fine building, \t\n . . Delta district produces more per containing thirty rooms, and is I .by onlookers. Saturday last, how-\nWednesday, Government Engineer | acre than any other district in Can- j modern in all respects. On the'ever dissipated this idea and fhe\nNapier was on the ground securing I ada, but handicapped as we have ground floor are a spacious lobby,!.thing assumed such proportions that\nrights to cross the property of Mrs. (been it is not surprising that our the dining room and the bar, all! the constable had to make arresits\nMcNeely, who owns the approach j population is but 4,000 when it bright and well finished, with burlap | and stay on duty until the dance\nI should be at least 10,000 or more., wainscotting and good wood work. I closed. The question forces itself\nj W'p have a better climate, and only: The guest rooms are comfortable and'\nland.\nhalf the rainfall of either WestmtT* li-\" \"v\"~\" 7 ' ,~\", ', 1 'Is a dance necessary to the success\n ter or Vancouver Our Boundar-,' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD]T!i T?, \"?''\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' fu,rni8hed \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'* 6\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'Iei of the picture show?\"lf so, in a day\nThe East Delta Auxiliary of the Bav section wH soon become a resi f''\" n \"? *lemant-s \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf any travel-, when picture shows are so popular\nWomen's Foreign U^ Society JtatwS^ \"y the very class of pictures\nheld their annual Tb.ankofferi.ig! and Westminster oh the nlatem in -J ln,tln,s3 and \"Pftairs there shown need no other aittraction to\nting last Friday evening in St, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD rfS^lchlisIfrffsTiaS \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 2 *?* bat\, ro\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDm: Drainage is) gQl the crowd. Then, without hesi-\ni en's church with -, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,1 attPivH ! . v', m-' n ,n ls aDCH\" -\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD *fet made to a septic tank. Ins d-e and'tatLon I say the nicture show Is nnt\n\"H^SSffw KriTfia1 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDE a- the,hotel 'is an attractive \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*-hSl?hoSStottSSiS.To\nAn ^resting address was given Boundary Bay 1? t ^'be found\"several J^^ M^^^e^ Sffii r\"?' V,ewed .-ron- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDY*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD sta,n(1-\nl,v the ltev. J. J. Hastie on \"Mission- miles of splendid sea beach, where and *>ore ma\">\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBe\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '>oth hotel, uo,r.i: a, promiscuous danee at that\n;.:y Work in North Honan,\" beinga I sea bathing par excellence may be''\t\n111A NKOFFERI NG M FETING.\nuoirJ: |\nhour on Saturday evening in an at-\nAPPEALS FROM\nLADNER DECISION\nBIGGEST SALES\nOF SEASON\nMayor Baxter Is Carrying Pheasant | Stevenson Auction Well Attended\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\nShooting Case to Highci\nCourt.\nMayor Baxter, of Vancouver, who\nwith Mr. G. W. Hutchins was fined\nlast -week in Magistrate Mcl*_ee's\ncourt for shooting without a permit\nfrom the Delta Game Protective Association on the farm of Mr. E. A.\nCrawford, will appeal from the decision.\nHe said 'that the case was so clear\non his and 'his shooting partner's\nside that they would bring the matter up merely on certiorari before a\nSupreme Court judge in \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDchambers\nwithout bothering about an actual\nappeal. The situation as explained\nby the mayor was this:\nMr. Hutchins had the permission\nof Mr. Crawford to shoot on Ills\nfarm, and Mayor Baxter accompanying him, Intended to obtain similar\npermission before shooting. He\nhad to walk over the fields before\ntirade Holsteins Brinj;\nPrices.\nGood\nMessrs. Woods, Oliver, Gunn,\nBrown, London and' Chorlton Bros,\nwere among the Delta farmers who\nattended the big sale of horses and\ncattle at the Ben Stevenson farm,\nMud Bay, last Tuesday. Chorlton\nBros, bought four head of grade Holsteins.\nTwenty-eight head were sold, th*\nprices averaging in the neighborhood\nof $120, and ranging from $80 to\n$152. Thirteen horses were sold\nand the bidding on these was better\nthan at any sale held in the Fraser\nValley 'this fall. One grade Clydesdale mare brought $345, and a sucking colt sold for $80. Three hundred sheep and lambs sold at an\naverage price of $6.50 per head, and\nhogs sold well.\nIt was one of the biggest sales of\nreaching Mr. Crawford, and imnie-j the season and there were over one\ndiately was given the necessary prlv-l hundred and fifty farmers present,\nilege. On the way, they were stop\nped by a game warden and asked\nif they had a permit from the Delta\nGame Protective Association. Thei\nmayor stated that they had sent\naway for idle a few minutes before,\nbaft in any case, the law did not\nrecognize ithe association and no per-;\nmit other than Mr. Crawford's was:\nnecessary. The party did not fire\na shot on Mr. Crawford's ranch, but\nlater went on to that of Mr. Dominic Burns, as intended.\nThis side of the case w.i_ put before tiie magistrate, explained Mayor\nBaxter, ibut a conviction was brought\nin. He told the magistrate, he stat-'\ned, that he had not gone on the\nland 'to shoot .but to obtain the permit.\n\"We pointed oui to the\nRICHMOND NEWS.\nSTEVESTON, Lulu Island, Oct. 28\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAt MeGihuess's store on Sea Island recently potatoes weighing four\npounds were exhibited. They were\nproducts of the Williams ranch and\nhad received, it is said, no especial\nattention.\nMr. J. Braden, of the Farmer's\nmarket, is now making his home in\nSteveston.\nMr. W. E. Buckingham was a recent visitor to Victoria.\nThe Lulu Island meat market has\nclosed, but will re-open iu tho\nspring.\nWitb a large number present, Miss\ni Annie Buchanan and Mr. Robert\n*\"!a?'s~ i Russell were married in the Steves-\ntrate also,\" said the mayor, \"that! ton Methodist church, the Rev. J. H.\nlie had not taken down my State- Wright officiating. The young\nment in writing but when we re-;-0Upie will spend their honeymoon\nceived our depositions, we find it Up the coast,\nstill not there. We intend to appeal on ! As many hunters seem to be in\nPOINT GREV NEWS.\n-.;:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'..I of twenty-five years' work, 1 enjoyed!\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-ring the missionary growth in that I Vancouver business men realize1\npart of China. A \"Review\" was j the importance of this point for resi-! EBURNE, Point Grey, Oct. 28.\t\ni given of the East Delta Auxil-j dential purposes and have secured On a foggy night recently a horse\nlair's work of almost ten years, j a large tract on the plateau, on ' belonging to the Cherry Dairy, which\nmosphere a}\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD^_Wis\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnei ^ can^ | the ground also that it was not 3tat- j Ignorance of the new regulat.oa'fo^\nThe first meelt'inig was held in 1904\nwith Rot. T. Oswald presiding. The\n[ficera elected at that meeting all\ncontinued in the same office until\nwhich they purpose to establish a I is situated at the foot of Granville\ncountry club and golf links with a road near the Lulu Island tramline,\nnumber of residential sites for the i was struck By a car and killed.\nmembers of the olub. Tram trans-! The Point Grey Orchestral Soli'\":', and are still active members jpontation, which is now gradually! clety will hold a concert bx an early\nof the Auxiliary. Very practical! working towards this district, will,; date to raise funds with which to\nhelp has been given to the Women's it is expected, soon give direct com-! buy band Instruments. The or-\nForeign Missionary Society for thej munication with Boundary Bay and ganization will hold a practice in\ncontributions have amounted to \ Vancouver\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD:,7_'. The banner year was in 1911\nwith $1114.50. Addresses have been\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDii during these years by Presby-\n'i rial presidents, missionaries, mem-1\n: the Auxiliary and the resident ministers.\nSTART SALMON DURING.\nThree local fishermen have erected a small smoke house near the\n^^^^^^.^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Wadham Cannery, and have begun\nDunn- the evening the polos, \"One; 011 a small scale the curing of sal-\nSweedy Solemn Thought\" and \"My i mon. All the curing on the river\nwere sweeltly sang by Miss! has heretofore been done by Japs\niKenzle, and the choir rendered; Ior the Japanese market, but the\n. ible assistance, Miss Kittson pre-1 meD who are about to give the busi-\nat the organ. The offering'. ness a trvout at Ladner believe there\namounted to $28.25, which brings *g a limited market in British Co-\n_rand total to $1,000. j Iumbia for smoked ealmon, and that\n i In the prairie country and in Eastern\n'i*i:i\" *\"*\" * \"\nm , l'.io-A'n vendors* wiio sdboiulbij\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD nipeg yesterday morning , \",, n.ee Z n. in some cuts fresh\nMr. James says that his present ^ , ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD bcef\nIs due largely to the personal,\" ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ' ' ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt ' ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDgt 14\nwishes of the Minister o Agricul- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD , do,.._\n11 hi. Martin Burrell, who Is I\nmuch interested in the Institution,\nI a cent or two to fifteen cents.\nconcert to be given In Steveston ln\nti, i \" \"__:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD '\"ah. ,.- i,_i-.n,i. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD l. November by the Victorian Order\nThe university authorities desired | M,{k. (;|{1.,.:x ENTERTAINS. 0f Nur-=e=\nadvice in laying out the plans The jj1|nter f-nl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDV] of Tnlrrl\nt'he agricultural section or tne: WtM*Iu.S(1.iy (.Vening quite a num- street, left on Saturday for Scotland.\nrslty, The university site was ^ Qf Ln(iner ln,.n,|s were enter- A recent Eburne visitor was Mr.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDal one in every respect and I\"* ,.,,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,,,* :|I ;i;i. home of Mr. and Mrs. A, (j, Stewart, at one time inspector\nt certain that Ithe Institution would .,i(.,. (;iV(.IL Though it was not 0t schools in Point Grey.\nI rank high among similar Insti- k,ui.v]1 in .,,ivanee it turned out that The contractor. S. .1. '.nnd. ex-\nii the Dominion. He is glad i ,. . n.M Mr Green's birthday, pects to have the Magee High school\nthat the subject of agriculture Is to m^^^^^^^^mM^mMMm9M*mM*m**m**msSmm\nho given prominence\n^ Bon- j founded. I am an ^^^^^^^\nnali. will leave for San Francisco | dancer, and will add that 'from a\nthis week. hygenlc viewpoint, moderate dancing\nThe residence of Mr. Jas. Erskine, | is very' beneficial. It Is about 'the\non the Marine Drive, has been ' only amusment that Ladner affords\nleased by Mr. and Mrs. I, N. Mc- iis people in the winter, also, in m>\nTavlsh, of Vancouver, iopinion, dancing Is less harmful than\nThe minstrel troupe of the Eburne ' many of the juvenile games played\nSocial Club will participate at the here\nin the courses\ninstruction. In Itlme this prov-\n\" will be the home of a large agrl-\n\ pleasant evening w*as spent with completed by the first of the year.\nwhis'i and ,lam ing. The following Mr. D. S. Baynes has been crrnr\nwere -liii'in the guests: Mr. and Mrs. ed n permit for a \"2100 restden\n _ 0 A.' McKee, Mr, and Mrs. VV. H. *'-'-'- *- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\" **-- -\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD -\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-\"' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n;al population, and this portion i ^..]!..)n A]]. aml j]rs p j- Oram,\n\" university's activities^ will n0 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,;r ' .M,',i' \l: . A D. Pi '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Mr.\nbe taken advantage of by * ' ,, ja.cfc Guichon, Mrs, A, E.\n^^^^^mmmm\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD m^m^m^m^m^m' \"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD -H---_---------____Vi-i.i - - .1\nant-\nop\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDany students. ^^^^^^^^^^^\ncorxcil, MEETS.\nmunicipal council met last\n''\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDunlay afternoon for its regular\n* \"ii. but as there was nothing be-\na small amount of regular busl-\nonsisting of live considern'rion\nol two or three unimportant com-\n\"'\"''irations, t'he meeting was n\none, consuming less than an\nhour.\nFawcett, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Kirkland\nMr. and Mrs. S. W. Fisher, Mrs. Richards in, Mr. li. Btehorp, Mr. Bell, Mr..\nMrs. und Miss Sydney Rloh, Mr,\nMurphy, Miss I'lewe.-'. Mr. J. B. Elliott and Miss Elsie Honson.\nEUREKA SOARED.\nEUREKA. Cal.. Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe\n^^-Brdered al\nthreatened .\nwhich he will have constructed on\nDixon road.\nMrs, w. J. Ridley, living on\nFourth street, Eburne, very narrowly escaped serious Injury recently,\nwhen some gasoline accldently spill-\n8*3 on the floor whil\" Mrs. Ridley\nwas cleaning a clock. Ignited anil\nThe classics of a century ngo composed much of their best music for\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthe dance, and many of these were\nthe wisest and beslt living men of\ntheir day.,\nI wish the snld gentleman to understand that I express my views\nwith no incivility to himself, At the\nsame time I think the young people\nof Ladner should noil be di barred the\nfew amusements offered them. It\nwill better enable them to discriminate the dlffi \"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 'i \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ' ' '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD i ' \" right\nand wrong,\n\"DANCER.\"\nINJURED HIS HAND.\nMr. Cecil Willis, who two weeks\n lvrll \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDliu ago cut his hand with a piece Of\n, enveloped ber in flames. Her bus-' broken glass, was tttken to St, Mary's\ni land quickly extinguished the fire, Hospital, New Westminster, la-st Sat-\nbut not before Injuries had lven In- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD unlay evening by his brother-in-law.;\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD flicterl requiring the services of Dr. Mr. E. F. Douglas, it being feared'\nT.owrle. Mrs. Ridley was gathering that serious blood poisoning had set\n_<.ivu.._., \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. - the .asollne op in a spoon when a i in.\nHealth Board ordered all schools spark from her husband's pipe touch-1 Mr. Willis is reported to be prog-\ned It. and there was an Instant ex-i resslng favorably toward recovery,\nplosion. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD and will soon be at business again.\nclosed on account of a\nepildiemic of infantile paralysis\nFIERY ELOQUENCE SMITH, K. C. IN \CTION.\nThere's a young Unionist M.P. who is being talked ol very seriously just now as a possible successor for Leader Bonar Law, of the\nBritish Unionists. His name i.s F. E. Smith and they call him \"-Pierj\nEloquence smith. Strangely enough he is a greal friend ot Winston\nChurchill, but on the Home Rule <\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD uestlon, thej musl differ much for\nin the Ulster crisis Smith represents English Unionism In his wholehearted support or King Carson. The picture shows him addressing\nOrangemen In his recent campaign. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFrom Thc Tatler.\n,.':i-\n'' 'V;\n', I\nSi\n1 ai\n31\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDo\nar\nat\n-hi\n-n|\nEll\nJ-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD(\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDI THE DELTA TIMES\nSATURDAY, NOVEMBER\nStory of the America Cup\nBy Capt. St. John Hornby, R. N.\nCapt. St. John Hornby, R. N., a\nretired officer of the Royal Navy,\nhas sent to The British Columbian\nfrom his home in England a most interesting article on the \"America\"\ncup, for which Sir Thomas Lipton\nhas again challenged. Captain Hornby's brother, the late Major R. N.\nlines to the old world yachts. All\nthe old ideas of yacht architecture\nwere broken through and entirely\npushed on one side. Instead of\nstraight lines, curved and hollow\nlines were seen. There was no\nheavy standing rigging and no top-\nhamper. She had but little bul-\nHornby, resided in the Fraser Val- j warks, these not being above 12\nley for viany years, most of the time \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD inches high. Some one described\nat Clovertlale. After his death his | her, as Cooper, the novelist, would\nson, Mr. L. F. Hornby, moved to i have written about her, if it were in\nDelta where he still resides. I the days of piracy in the West In-\nCaptain St. John Hornby, as a ' dies, as a \"long, low rakish looking\nmidshipman in H. M. S. Triumph. ! craft.\" Her bow appeared to be as\nvisited the Pacific in the early fifties, cruising on the Pacific coast for\nthree years with the squadron commanded by his uncle, the late Admiral Hornby. On this occasion\nsharp as a knife blade, scooped\n\"outside the Nab,\" but eventually,\nfrom kindly and chivalrous feeling,\nthis protest was withdrawn. At\n10:30 a telegram was sent from\nCowes: \"The \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD100 cup for all\nnations was run today and after a\nmost exciting contest wa won by\nthe America, which beat all her\ncompetitors with the greatest ease;\"\nand so passed over to the other side\nof the Atlantic America's cup, which\nhas remained there ever since\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDa\nperiod of half a century. This cup\nis now known In consequence of\nthe \"Deed of Gift,\" as the \"America Cup,\" in honor and in remembrance of the beautiful little schooner yacht.\nRemark*, on the Race.\nThis race was extremely unsatisfactory from many points of view,\nand the wind having veered, both as\nto force and direction, the real merits of the two types\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthe schooner\nand the cutter\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwere not put to a\nMAKES REPLY\nTO CRITICISM\nRallies \"Doubting Thomases\" Who\nCannot Understand Anything Being Done on the Square.\nCaptain Hornby sailed up the Fraser i bit forward of the mainmast, when\nRiver as far as the Hudson's Bay\nfort just above the present site of\nLangley Fort. It was at this time\nthat a number of islands and points\non tbe British Columbia coast received their names. Gambler Island\nwas named for a petty officer of\nthey began to taper slightly towards, the stern, whist, however,\nwas kept wide and full. There was\nnone of the \"old shaped\" yacht\nlure; none of your \"cod's head\" or\n\"mackerel shoulder\" bow here; nor\nwas the stern fined away like the\nthat name; St. John Point was ! \"tail of a salmon.\" Standing on the\nnamed for Captain Hornby, ,then | taffrall and looking forward her up-\nniidshipnian; and Hornby Island , per end seemed to be wedge shape\ntook its name in honor of Admiral\nHornby.\nCaptain Hornby, who is now S2\nyears of age, has always been greatly interested in the progress of British Columbia. When he saw it the\ncountry was In an extremely wild\nstate, but the young midshipman\ncould see the possibilities of the district even at that early period and\nthirty years ago induced his brother\nt_ come to the Canadian Pacific j\ncoast. Capt. Hornby's article on the\n\"America\" cup follows:\nThe spirited challenge of Sir\nThomas Lipton in' his latest attempt\nto \"lift the cup\" and bring it back\nto old England has aroused such an\namount of enthusiasm and interest\nShe drew ten feet of water aft, but\norly five feet forward, for here\nngain a novel principle asserted it- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD----\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD---^^\nself, for the keel rose gradually, di-1 an>' prominent part in the race. Fi\nminlshlng in depth as it went to- j nally the fact of the America not\nwards the bows, merging in a grace- |having sailed the prescribed course,\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHon. W.\nJ. Bowser delivered an address, to a\nlarge gathering of the members of\nWards I and II Conservative Associations in the central committee rooms\nlast evening. He spoke for over an\nhour confining himself almost entirely to replying to the criticisms of the\ngovernment's land policy made by\nMr. H. C. Brewster, the Liberal leader, in this city three weeks ago.\nThe Attorney-General took up Mr.\nBrewster's criticisms one by one. Special attention was given to the assertion that tihe provincial government\nhad given inside knowledge in regard\nto rights-of-way of the railways com-\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ing inoit this province to its favorites.\nweather of it, the cutters seemed to I He showed that this assertion wns\nbe \"pounding\" into it\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDregularly I false and after enumerating what the\npile-driving\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwhile the America ' government had titone in regard to\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDent through it without apparently j railway assistance he declared: \"The\nlaboring in the least. On the other ;'Doubting Thomases' of Liberals can-\nhand, the two best English cutter j not understand anything being done\nyachts, having been put out of the ' on the square,\" a sentiment which\nrace in the manner previously de- | was received with laughter.\nThe Royal Bank of can^\nIncorpora ted 1809.\nCapital Authorized \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.\nCapital Paid Up \" J^\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*-*\nRest \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 5J2*.\nAggregate Assets, One Hundred and Seventy-Five Mil'\nDollar*. \"\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\nIt is the aim of the management of this Bank to make\nposltor welcome, and to give the best possible attention to hi-* t^ \"***\naffairs. \"aanclal\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT.\nas it were, outwards, swelling : crucial proof. To those critics, how-i\ntowards the stern, her sides spring-I ever, who followed the various,\ning boarder until the point of great- j movements of the racing yachts, it!\nest beam was touched, which was a\nAccounts may be opened with deposits of One Dollar and Un\nInterest paid or credited at the highest current rates, on Mav \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*?w,ar'-'-\nNovember 30th each year. * ol8t W4\nH. F. RISHOP, Manager. LADNER, B.c.\nseemed to be tbe almost universal\nopinion that In a stiff breeze the\nAmerica was decidedly superior to\nany of the English yachts. Also,\nwhen a rough or broken sea was encountered the America made better\nscribed, were prevented from taking\nfu'. curve into the cutwater and\nstem and only giving a draft of five\nfeet forward.\nHer length over all was 94 feet;\non keel, 82 feet; extreme beam, 22\nfeet 6 inches; deugth of hold, 9\nfeet. Her foremast was 79 feet, 6\ninches high; mainmast, 81 feet;\nbowsprit, outboard, 17 feet; bowsprit (hollow) inboard, 15 feet;\nmainboom length was 56 feet; fore\ngaff, 24 feet; main gaff, 28 feet.\nShe had three standing sails, viz\nshould have disquilified her from\nwinning the cup.\nlhe Deed of Gift.\nThe syndicate that owned the\nAmerica turned over the \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD100\ncup to the New York Yacht Club\nby a deed, and the actual terms and\narticles of the same need not here\nbe enumerated. It is sufficent to\ndraw the attention of your readers\nto some of the principal conditions:\n(a) That the cup is to be known in\nThere was. declared Mr. Bowser, a\ndeep-seated feeling in the breast of\nnearly every one, and especially\namong those who came from the\nOld Land, that they should own some\nland of their own. This was natural\nand desirable. Nearly one-half of\nthe entire population of the province\nwas centred in or very close to Vancouver. There must be more people\non the land, because without people\non the land n'o country could be prosperous.\nThe present government had done\na lot along these lines, he continued.\nThe Liberals thought more should\nfuture as the America cup. (b) ' be done and they were making many\n^leZtW ^lo^ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDS Si ^Tl tLKT^% ffi p\"?. K^yS IT Tl' i -hftatements.\nreaders a short account as to Low | foot of the mainsal? was l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDed to the |Me^^^^^\nthe settler\nthe cup was originally taken away [ main boom and the foot of the jib lenge to race for it mus- _,*,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_- , i if\nfrom this country, together with a ! was also laced to a boom. This lac- months' notice M* rUlt , t0 sPecl'latc!rs all1(1 \" ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_,_.,.\ndescription of the famous \"America\" | ing was quit a novelty in those days i m time a \"the challenge Is \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,m I ****** l0*^\"1 ^fJ\"* Z\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDti,Z\nvacht Ito English yachtsmen Tho v_*_\. *t\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD - f. cnaJ1enge Is sent, to pav tribute to the speculator.\n\"As-will be shown later on, in the an ^S^3l, gStYnaT yaVwKh * ffiE-dta h\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf *! Th *r\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD is no m,th in that JS*?\"1^\nvarious contests for this cup. the I thority on yachting matters, re- shall .also he 1 be raced : The government is in a better posi\nBritisher is so heavily handicapped marked, aftpr h-vin- i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_-,'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD^,- :,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.. _\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. De se.m' >*e- extreme ! Mm, than ever to look after settlers\nyalhtTnTVaUer? M & Ssf h* intended t0 be r&Ced \%\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\"gove^men. 1. in a\" b\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n-\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDn ,-, BU m\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.v__, uauuiwyp-u | *-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*=\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, after having inspected .length,' extreme ba_m l-iS*?.' ition than ever t0 **\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD after TT**;.-,\"\nas to make if. well nigh impossible closely this beautiful little craft, water line T\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDm \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD J=t_*E i* iAt ,he present time there are I.dUO,\nfor him to win the race. This heavy \"Well, if she is all right, why we'draft of water both m\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*^ 1% 00\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD acres of Fllrve''ed !and hel(1 ex\nhandicapping is owing to what is must all be wrong.\" , aft forward and ciueively for settlers. This land ha:\ncalled In legal language the \"deed\nof gift.\" In order to put the competing yachts upon a fair and equal\nfooting the cup ought to be raced\nfor upon the same terms and rules\nThe Cowes yachting season of\n1351 was more brilliant than on any\nprevious occasion and the town and\nharbor had never presented such an\nanimated appearance as . on the\nas those which were in vogue when ! memorable Friday, August 22d of\nthe first rare for the cup took place, I that year. It was computed that\ni e In 1851 more than a hundred yachts were\nThe'Vacht America. , anchored off the town; the espla-\n_., . , , , nade was thronged with people; the\nThis world renowned schooner i - \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nyacht was* built by Mr. George\nbeach was crowded with sightseers\n .\" '\"'. \"\" . \"!,\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD UCU,'K^ I from all parts, so intensely interest-\nSteers, ot the firm of George and . et, werQ they in the com, racp\nJ-raes R. Steers of New _ork, w*hoTt,ma sheiters were erected\nhad already built several sloops and | .V]]ere p0gsjhie\nbeen surveyed at tihe expense of the\ngovernment and may be had by the\nbona fide settler for the small of $2\nfor 160 acres. He has to do certain\nArmed with the above information, it is pretty well certain that\nexperienced and skillful yacht de- .\nsigners can easily forecast the style i j-nprovement work and later pay $10\nof vessel which will have to be built j - Crown grant. The cost of the\nin order to successfully defend the i ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD -\ncup. To put the competing yachts\non an equal basis, the displacement\ntonnage should be decided upon, and\nther- a free hand should be given to\nthe designers and builders on both\nsides of the Atlantic, so that they\nmay respectively turn out the very\nbest yacht that they are capable of\ngraceful vessels of some eighty to\nninty-five tons. They were thoroughly well and stoutly built, first-\nrate sea boats, schooner rigged. For\nthe most part they were owned by\nthe pilots themselves, who cruised\nabout off New York and would often\nstand away to the eastward as\nlar as the Grand Banks on the look-\noui for vessels bound for New York.\nMr. George Steers was born In\nNew York, and was the son of Mr,\nHenry steers, who nas a native of\nDartmouth, England. Mr, Henry\nSteers was \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD m time connected\nwith the Royal Naval Establishment\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDit Plymouth, but emigrati I I i the\nl nited States and Bet up for himself\nin New York. Tb.e \"Ami run\" was\nbuilt for an Ami rlcan syndics i,\namong whom was Mr, John Steph-\n' i -, commodore of the New York\nYacht Club, for the avowed purpose\nof winning rates. She was designed\nespecially as a \"racing craft.\" Up to\nthis period it had not been the practice In England to build yachts exclusively for racing. Our country-\nmi n certainly raced their yachts, but\nthe yachts were also built with an\neye to comfort and as a pleasant\nmeans of locomotion, for taking the\nowner and his frli :;ds to the various\nports In the South, to the Mediterranean ar.d for cruising. But a\nyacht, as a mere racing machine,\nv.as at that time unknown to our\nyachtsmen, and a \"syndicate\" was\nnot even dreamt of.\nThe \"America\" soon maae a name\nfor herself across the Atlantic, and\nrumors of her speed and r \ploits\nreached the yachting clubs at Com -\nand elsewhere. So much was her\nfame noised abroad that the mem-\ni \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD rs of ibe Royal yacht Squadron\nr< solved to invite the owners of the\n\"America\" to bring her over in the\nCowes yachting Beason. An invitation to this effect was accordingly-\nsent by the commodore of the Royal\nVacht Squadron to the commodore\nof the New York Yacht Club, and\nat the same ri.ne a very handsome\nprize was offered in the shape of a\ncup, valued at \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD100, open to\nthe yachts of all nations, to be\nsailed for around the Isle of Wight.\nThis is the identical cup that cir\nThomas Lipton hopes to win and\n1 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD:'.: g back to this country.\nThe \"America\" in England.\nThe America arrived at Cowes on\nJulj 31, 1851, and the English\nyachting world was In a state of\ngreat excitement. Visitors were allowed on board to look over her,\nand she was soon seen to be a model\not elegant comfort inside, in the\ntest style of what might be called\nluxurious simplicity. With regard\nto her outward appearance it may\ntruly be said that all our yachtsmen were completely \"taken aback\"\nat her style, build and rig. This\nwas not surprising, for she was ut-\nterlv different in every way to\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwhat they had been accustomed to.\nbeing built upon entlrly different\n 1\nsurvey is thrown in.\n\"There is no politics in the Lands\nDepartment. If you are a Liberal\nyou can obtain land just as easily as\na Conservative. As to the government land sales the Liberals say that\nmost of the land is sold to specu-\nators. The wild land tax of four\nper cent, operates against hoLdflng\nthe land for a long period. I am not\njustifying the speculator, but many\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ of them have brought in settlers from\nSince the memorable first race for I Alberta and from across the border,\ncup, ten attempts have been j in 1907 there were three classes of\nTb- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD--\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD f,*-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDii,. a i_ a | made to wrest the cup from the \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD public land, which was sold for $5,\nfor be r cp w-n= Pden,'ie/ \"?\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-n i Amer\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDcans. but hitherto withou_ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD $2.50 and $1 an acre. When we\nof Wleh L^ht \T thS ^ nT\"*8. [ feel sure jt \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ^e hearty ! found the demand for land increasing\nNoSffbiSj a5nd'o t d ' e Nat\" Sffto\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD tflSTS KE__ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* /' ^ l W ^ f*^' **? ^\ \"'\"'\"''\nEighteen yachts were entered, in- | artLi^l?1^^^,^ ^^^ ^^^ : -^.^^ ^,^ ^^l^TooX^\nto bring back triumphant- ly and raised the prices to $10 and\ne America cup. i $5 an acre. The Liberals said then\nST. JOHN HORNBY.\n| every available house was occupied,\nthe town, indeed, was quite unable\nto meet the demands made upon it.\nthe\neluding \"America\"; three of them j ertlons. __ _\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\nwere, however, withdrawn, thus ly to this country th\nleaving fourteen English yachts and !\nthe America to compete for the cup. I\nAmong the English yachts were the\ntwo celebrated cutters, Alarm and I\nArrow, also Aurora. Gipsy Queen j\nand other yachts stout and true.\nThc Knee.\nAt 9:55 the preparatory gun\nSOUTH i.UUNAl'.Y NEWS.\nj that this was unfair to the speculator\nReserved Land.\n\"What have we done with the land\nnt ' surveyed? We have 103,000,000\nacres reserved for the pre-emptor\nMcLELAN LUMBER CO.\nCarry in stock a full line of\nROUGH AND DIMENSION LUMBER\nSand, Gravel and Cement\nPhone 7\nLADNER, B. C.\nBox 1332\n***************\n^****************ti^\nDELTA HOTEL\nJ. JOHNSTON, Proprietor\nLadner, B. O. Phone 2\nSample Room. Prompt Service\n;| Best Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Rates Reasonable \\n***********************************+***ti *******+$***\nLUMBER!\nEBURNE SAW MILLS, LIMITED\nManufacturers and Dealers In all kinds of\nFIR, CEDAR AND SPRUCE LUMBER\nShingles, Lath, Sash, Doors, T timings and House Finishings.\nPhone R14 Eburne. Prompt Delivery by Rail or Scow.\nUhe *Delta U\nimes\nSl.OO A YEAR\nU. S. A. . . $1.50\niPayailn\nthe en-tire area of the province. Included is the vast fertile stretch of\nI FRASER ARM, Oct. 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDMr. and _ _\n!vI-!,'r-E',*ROt!gerS a\"d Iittle SJon have'i and\" 'he bon a Tide\" \"settler, almost'nalf\n_ _._.. lVas \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPlUrn'-d :*'em a five months' trio\nfired from the Royal Yacht Squad-!*0 ,neir o!'' home in the East\nron Hub house and the competing Th^e Misses Deekert will entertain l land in the Peace River district. This\n-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.*sel3 were soon covered with | a Halowe ea party at their hand- will in time be surveyed and thnwn\nvjb* house en Riverway. , opell to settlers.\nThe residents here are sorry to\nhear that Mr. D. Ross, after many\nyears' association as trustee and\nchairman of Burnaby School Board\nin the work of which he has taken\nkeen interest, has resigned, with the\ni lou Is of canvas. At 10 o'clock\nprecisely the signal gun for Ihe\nStart wp.s heard. Before the smoke\nhad cleared away the yachts were\noff in splendid style. The America\nwas not so smart in gettlnc; away as\nthe other yachts, and for the mo-\nsuc-\nment it seemed not nicely that she | Intention of taking up a farm at\nwould be In the \"first flight.\" The ! Kamloops. We wish him all\nbreeze, however, was freshening, j cess in this new venture.\nand she soon showed her powers, j .Votwiths'tandlng the bylaw for-\nwalklng through the waters like a j bidding it, there were a.s\nthing of life and in (ho spa-e of 20\nminute* had left most of her rivals\nbehind her, It was remarked at\nonce how well her sails stood; they l\nwere beautifully cut, standing like1\nhoards, while the sails of the English yachts were slack and bellying\nout.\" At ahnut 11:110 the leading\nEnglish cutters Arrow and Bachante,\netc stood away to the northward\nin o**der to round the Nab, going\noutside the lighishin. The America, however, kept her course and\n(ii.i nol do ;;o. The Volante sprang\nher bowsprit, the far-famed Arrow\nran aground and the Alarm (the\nEnglish fhampion cutter yacht 1\nchivalrously going to her assistance, p-n herself quite out of the\nrace. Tli\" breeze now began gradually to fall, and when off Ventnor\nthe America was more than a mlle\nnheM of 'bo Aurora, which was now\nthe English leading yacht.\nAt the Needle.\nAs tiie Needles were approached\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDdie wind becme quite light and\nthick weather with drizzling rain\nset In. The America was still\nahead at 5:50 and there was not any\nhope for the English yachts unless\nsome light cutter ran up with the\nbreeze. Several of the steamers\nwhich had accompanied the race\nwere hailed as they returned to\nCowes: \"Which Is first?\" \"America.\" \"Which is second?\" and the\nanswer came: \"There is none.\"\nThe America finally arrived at\nthe starting vessel, the signal gun\nbeing fired at 9:37. The Aurora, a\nsmall cutter, arrived at 8:58 and\ntin\n^^^^^^^ many guns\nSunday after the pheasants\n'as on a week-day. This should be\nstopped.\n\n \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDiS;'i.;-p,>' -oaclier has been appointed to Riverway East School,\ncommencing her duties on 'Novem-\nl.''T 1st.\nMrs. Deekert and Mrs. Berwick\nwere canvassing the neighborhood\non-e d iy la-: week for subscriptions\non behalf of the Royal Victorian\nOrder of Nurses, and only met with\none refusal.\nSergeant-Major Driscoll. of the\nIrish Fu-iliers, has removed with his\nfamily to Vancouver for tihe winter\ntn or'i'T to he more conveniently\nsituated for his work of training\nI thp raw material into first-class\n; soldiers of the King.\nMr. W. Walker and his son George\nli '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD la_Pt week on a two months'\nhunting trip in the mountains near\nI Chilliwack.\nRIght-of-Way.\nThe speaker then took up Mr.\nBrewsetr's charge itha-t the government had placed' its inside knowledge\nof where the rights-of-ways were to\nbe a', the disposal of its friends. He\nwent into the history of the negotiations between the government and\nthe G. T. P., the C. N. R., and the\nP. G. E. railways. In each case the\ngovernment placed the land along the I\nright-of-way under reserve for the\nbenefit of the general public. There |\nwas no speculation. In each case thej\ni reserve had been made before the \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nagreement wlith the railway company\nj in order to safeguard the rights of'\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD the public. The same system of re- j\n| serving land had been followed Inl\nregard to the projected Peace River I\nRailway.\nTimber Policy.\nTaking up the timber policy of the !\ngovernm* Ut Mr. Bowser said that the !\nsystem of licensing was a legacy j\nthat had been left them from prev- j\nions government!, Mr. Brewster |\nbad stated in his attacks on the government that they had let out under j\nlease nine or ten million acres which j\nwas a few million broad of the mark, |\nbut a small error of that kind was !\nnot a thing over whieh Mr. Brew- j\nster would be concerned. The an-;\nMr. Pndmore, who had the mis-!nuaI. CllfT^T J'LTVZ nUe*^\nfortune to get his arm badly Injured | f.p~,ifl?. .l'^!18.6!- had been^ icreosed\nby some machinery at his place of\nemployment last August, is now c.i-\nn. .-' recovered from this long disablement.\nMr. A. Macdonald recently paid a\n- leM to friends in Alberta, from\nwhich he has now returned. He\neta-tee that business condi'ions gon-\nerally are very good in the Northwest.\nASSAII.TK'D COI.I.KCTOK,\nuntil it now was a source of revenue\nof over two million dollars, a magm-\nticent sum in addition to the royalty j\nof 50 cents a thousand feet which\nwas payable when the timber was\ncut\nMay Be Increased,\nWhile the ground rents of $140\nper sfpiare mile pf-r year west of the'\nCascade*; and $115 east of the mountains where the timber was smaller,\nwas bringing in such handsome sums\nSAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHo-\n^^^^________________\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD . bart Shorb. a millionaire clubman\nwas the real winner, having sailed ' has been found guilty by Police\nthe prescribed course. A protest j Judge Shortal! o' assault upon Jas. |ln ; rMtnrM\nrim aad vitality. Prs-nature deeav and all sural\n Phoaphaaal will\nthe government was nevertheless\nconsidering making increases in it\nir it was found that the conditions\nwarrant it. For some little time\npast the minister of Crown lands has\nbeen making trips of Inspection in\ndifferent parts of the timber areas\nand interviewing lumbermen and securing information on the condition\nof the industry with a vie wto determining whether or not an increase\ncould be borne without hurting the\nindustry. If the tax could be imposed without bad results the people could rest assured that it would\nbe made.\nForestry Commission.\nThe speaker took up the work of\nthe special forestry commission of\n1910. It had reported total standing timber alienated from the government at about 147,000,000,000\nfeet, with the total still held by the\nCrown at 200,000,000,000. This\namount had been largely augmented\nby information secured later so that\nthe timber now held by the Crown\nwas greatly in excess of two hun-\ndi-ed billion feet.\nHe showed how the forestry department was working, not only to\nconserve the timber areas but also to\nsee that the public treasury was receiving all that the timber was worth\nwhen they made sales. To reduce\nthe danger from fire to various\nisolated areas of timber, some sixty\nsales by auction had been made In\nthe last year. These areas embraced some 300,000,000 feet, and netted the government $400,000. They\nhad been sold, not to political friends\nbut to the highest bidders, aud some\nof the highest prices for standing\ntimber ever recorded had been obtained. These lands must be cleared of timber in from two to three\nyears, when they would be ready for\nthe pre-omptor.\nRailways First.\nThey bad been criticized for being\nsvow in peopling their farm lands.\nImmigration was a function of the\nDominion government for one tiling,\nand there was no use of putting the\npeople on the land until they had\nrailways to Berve them. They were\nfirst concerned In getting the railways, and these later would be active immigration agents once they\nwere ready for business In the great\nnorthland. The time was here when\ninstead of using the bonus system\nfor immigration, we should handpick\nthe newcomers to secure the best\nC.N.R. LINE ON\nVANCOUVER ISLAND\nSurveys Hnve Been Made to N'ootka\nHound and as Par ii*\nQuatsino.\nVICTORIA, Oct. 80.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIt is announced that -the Canadian Northern\nhas had a number of survey parties\nat work in the districts north of the\nAlberni Canal, and also n_rtb ot\nNootka Sound, tihe Intention of the\ncO'tnpany being, it is declared, to extend lits line, now being built to\nAlberni, on to the far north of tl19\nisland.\nA -definite survey has been prepared connecting with the (.'-iiadiaa\nNorthern Pacific at Albeini, and\nrunning tihrougto to Nootka Hound DJ\nway of Malahat Arm, with a branc-\nto Duncan Bay.\nNorth of Nootka the report ot a\nreconnaisaince party is said to favor\nthe extension of a line through to\nQuatsino Seuind by way of the Kla-\nAnoh River district.\nIn the sections of the line now un'\nder way between Patricia Bay, near\nVictoria, andi Atberni, sat if factor)\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDprogress has been made, grading he-\ning well under way. The only section\nnot in it-he hands of the contractors\nis that -into Alberni for about ti-e\nrales along tihe Albermi Canal. H\"e\nthere are .three alternative \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*outes-\nGrading should be completed w\nMilo 100, just, west of Cowichan wn\nby January 31, it is claime I' and '\"-I\ngrade ought to be wiithin five mue\nof Albermi by next August. 1\ntract for grading in the SteaniM *\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\naa^^^^^^^^^^^^^\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD * the\nthat\nI-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'-\ntion near Viotora, expires\nof January, and it is though*\nsteel E'hou'ld be Into this city by\nruary. . , ,,\nThe construction of the vl<*fL\nterminals on the 'So-nghees reser -\nproperty will entail a go\nconsideration, involving as \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nthe bridging of Selkirk water.\nPICKS HiHHPBB'S\nPOCKETS.\nCALGARY, Alta., Oct. 30.\nMr. R\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWhile\nva?\n. _ H. Bolln of Winnipeg\nasleep In his berth on the Ma* i*\\nCalgary Pullman last night, a \"'\ntook $200 in hills from his pec*- - SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 1, 1013.\nTHE DELTA TIMES\n...LOCAL ITEMS...\nTl\nMr. D. A. McKee spent Thursday\nanil Friday at his up-river farm on\nHarnston Island.\nMr. E. P. Douglas was In Vancouver on business Tuesday and Wednesday.\nMr. M. Mends, of Port Guichon,\nmade a business trip to Vancouver\nTuesday, returning Wednesday.\nDr. J. Kerr Wilson was in Vancouver on a business trip Tuesday\nand Wednesday.\nMt. Wm. Wright is reported as\nserious ill at his Boundary Bay\nhome.\nMrs. Cave-Browne-Cave, of New\nWestminster, spent a few days of\nthis week in Delta visiting with\nfriends.\nIn the Jordan stables, Ladner, is\n-Blue Bells,\" an aged mare that is' -Mr*\nsaid to be the fastest goes in Delta1 We(Jn\nmunicipality.\n_-._. H. A. McDonald returned\nWednesday afternoon from a three-\nday trip to Ladysmiith, where he had\nbusiness.\nNORTH ARM JURY AXUiTS\nHARBOR PLANS! OHAilES DEAN\nNEW STORE\nOPENED\nIN THE\nMunicipalities Approached as no\nGovernment Money Is Available\nUntil Plans Approved.\nlight Lasting Since January, 1111.*,\nEnds iu Accused Regaining\nHis Liberty.\nj Old Smith Stand\n| Delta Street Ladnc\n, r^fitSaWKStffi! flp^ ^ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*t Vancouver,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. week, but the warehouses are j Ker! .\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD h\" dlughte\"\nwell filled with Delta products.\nSpecial music will be rendered at\nservice at St. Stephen's church, East\nDelta, on Sunday afternoon, by\nfriends from Ladner.\nMrs. Richard Vorhies.\nFor all Building Supplies and Fuel\nOil, apply to the B.C. Transport Co.,\nLtd., 505 Westminster Trust Building. Office phone 826; wharf phone\ngso.\nA number of Delta young people\nswept down on the home of Mr. and\nMrs. H. Montgomery Tuesday evening as a \"surprise party.\" A very\nenjoyable evening was spent.\nThere was not nearly so much\nshooting on Delta fields last Sunday\nas formerly. Constable Morgan \"was\non the job and rounded up half a\ndozen offenders.\nThe regular meeting of the W. C.'\nT. U. will 'be held Tuesday next,'\nNovember 4, at 3 o'clock, in the\nhome of Mrs. Lindseth, Slough Road.;\nThe subject for the afternoon is \"The\nCurfew Bell.\" .\nHarry Baker, a workman employed -ui the new ferry landing construction work, was fined $5.00 and\ncor:.s by Magistrate McKee Monday\nmorning for disorderly conduct at a\ndance in McNeely Hall, Saturday\nnight.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Geo. Farrell, a shingle sawyer of\nEast Delta, sent up for trial from\nhere by .Magistrate McKee on the\ncharge of indecent assault, was sentenced to 'thirty days' imprisonment\nin the New Westminster Assizes, last\nFriday.\nSalmon fishing is nearly over, but\nthe Orientals are still on the job,\nmaking fairly good catches of dog\nsalmon and cohoes. These mostly\ngo to the smoke house.\nReduce your electric light bill one\nhalf and get fifty per cent, more\nlight by using Tungsten Lamps. A\nfull stock of all sizes carried at\nTaylor Electric Co. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nMiss Katie Plewes returned to\n] Ladner Monday evening from a\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDweek's holiday visit with ber mother\nin Victoria, resuming her duties as\ncashier of the Lanning, Fawcett &.\nWilson store Tuesday.\nA Delta farmer, who is a sportsman, and particularly fond of pheas-\nani -hooting, says that some landowners in Delta are unfair, in that\nthe* hold their own fields for the\n.hooting of themselves and friends,\nbut have no compunctions about\n.hooting on other men's fields.\nConstable Morgan evidently got on\nthe right road last Sunday, for he\nrounded up seven men who were\nbreaking one of the commandments,\nand, incidentally, a bylaw of Delta\nmunicipality.\nDuring the week the pheasant\nig has not been as good as\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD first of the season, the birds\n. scarcer and wilder. On this\naccount more attention has been\nto ducks and some exceedingly\ngood bags have resulted.\nThe mid-week meet of the Ladnre\nDrag Hunt Club was well attended,\nthere being a field of more than a\ndozen riders, among tbem a number\ncf Vancouver's best horsewc. :en.\nThe going was fine and everybody\nenjoyed, the afternoon's sport.\nt Mr. Mason and his daughter, Miss\nj Mason, returned last week from a\nsix-month trip to England, where\ni they visited many of Mr. Mason's\n! familiar scenes. They enjoyed the\n| trip greatly.\nMr. and Mrs. W. B. Harris, of\naver, and Miss Fisher, of Dun-\ndas, (int., who has been a guest of\nthe Harrises, and Mr. Gomery, man-\nif a branch of the Canadian\nof Commerce in Vancouver.\n:upday with Mr. and Mrs. S.\nV'. Fisher, Mrs. Harris and Miss\nisher are sisters of Mr. Fisher.\nA correspondent says that on Tuesday night last while passing along\nChulucton street at about eleven\no'clock he was an unavoidable witness of a fond parting from a young\nlady. He suggests that in future\nthe lights be turned out or the blinds\ndrawn.\nH. Hodgson, fellow members of the\ncommisson, Mr. F. N. Trites announced to the Point Grey council\nlast night that the plans, work upon\nwhich will begin immediately funds\nare available, will be made fully'\ncomplete, requiring no additions fori\nmany years to come. The commission has received assurance from the\nDominion government, he said, that\nonce the complete plans nave been\napproved by the department of j\nmarine and fisheries the funds for\nthe work will be forthcoming.\nAuthorizes Grant.\nThe council authorized a grant of\n$1000 to the commission, and when\nsimilar sums have been contributed\nby South Vancouver, Burnaby and\nRichmond, preparation of plans by\na competent engineer will begin. In\nthis work $20,000,\nby the commission ^^^^^^^^^\nbe expended. Mr. R. Abernethy ex\nplained that the commission would\nreceive no government assistance\nwhatever until the harbor plans had\nbeen approved, and it now had perforce to appeal to the municipalities.\nThe remainder of the $20,000 will\nbe requested once the new 1914\ncouncils have taken office.\nKERRISDALE, Point Grey, Oct. I (From The British Columbian.)\n28.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPlans for a freshwater harbor, I Alter an absence of two hours and\nextending from the uuit oi Georgia \ ten mamtes yesterday afternoon, the!\nto New Westminster and deep! jury empanelled in the Dean case\nenough to accommodate the largest: returned with a verdict of not guilty,\nships now entering Vancouver, will | It was 4:20 p.m. and, since the wlth-\nbe prepared under the direction ofidrawal of the jurors, a fairly large\nthe North Arm Harbor Commission, i crowd had hung around waiting the\nWith Mr. R. Abernethy and Mr. C. | result. The court therefore was\nwell filled and excitement at the\nresult showed itself in applause\nwhich was sternly suppressed, while,\nfor tbe first time, Dean, who had\nbeen leaning over the box with eyes\nfixed intently on his judges, showed signs of excitement, his face being wreathed in smiles.\nOrder restored, his lordship then\nformally discharged Dean, who, be-\nj fore quitting the box, turned to\nI thank the jury, his counsel and the\ni court for their treatment of him. He\nI next shook hands with each of the\njurymen, and, pressed with congratulations on every side, finally\nmade his way to his counsel's office\ncn Columbia street.\nFrom friends of the man who,\nsince his arrest in Los Angeles in\nJanuary, 1912, has beeii fighting for\nit is estimated I liberty, and has faced the ordeal of\nwill ultimately j jury trial twice in a period covering\nGROCERY\nBAKERY\nA complete line of Staple\nGroceries and Table Supplies\nBread a Specialty\nE. L. BERRY\nProprietor\nTELEPHONE 56\nFree Delivery to All Parts of Delta.\nADVERTISING\nFOR\nADVERTISING\nWa will devote this tpr.ee\nregularly to o eerie* of advertisements to stimulate Interest\ntn our Classified Want Ads.\nWo aro publicity advocates\naad practice our own procepts\nbecause we appreciate their\nvalue.\nThis series will be pregnant\nwith pertinent points of general\nInterest, whethor you wish to\nbuy or soil, to employ or bs\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDmployed, to borrow or to lond,\nto find a finder or an owner.\nM will pay us to run these\nadvertisements. That Is tha\nbest proof we hava to offer that\nIt will be profitable to you to\nuse our Olassrned Want Ad.\nOolumns.\nI...MIU- IJ> bf \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD MM,\n_-^-HaB-_QI\nfive weeks, it is learned that he left\nlast evening for the South, Seattle\nbeing given as his objective point, i\nHe staled to them, before leaving, j\ntbat the fact that the case had turn-1\ned out in his favor went to show\nthat he had no connection at all\nwith the crime with which he was\ncharged. He again expressed his\n.-Yl.-'u!--,*-0 dLls__at-i_l ^\"-\"^\"IgratilFclltion^a.The \"methods\nmisapprehension that thc jetty at\nthe mouth of the North Arm is to\nbe built under our direction,\" said\nMr. Abernethy. \"It is a Dominion\ngovernment affair entirely. They\nare finding the funds anel supervising the work, but it will work in\nadmirably with our plans.''\nRAISE SUFFICIENT MONEY.\n__________mmmmmmmmmmmmmm by\nby which Canadian justice is administered, stated that he had no complaint to find with the provincial\ngaol treatment and paid a tribute to\nthe efforts made in his behalf by his\ncounsel.\nGOVERNMENT'S DECISION*.\nLADNER\nHOTEL\nLADNER. B. C.\nSpecial attention given to\nauto parties and tourists.\nTelephone 88.\nH. W. SLATER, Prop.\nTHE DELTA TIMES\nCONDENSED ADVERTISEMENTS\nFor Hale, For Exchange. Wanted to\nPurchase, To Let. Lost, Found, Work\nWanted, Situations Vacant, 1 cent per\nword. Minimum, _* cents for any on*\naclvt. These rates for cash with order.\nAll Want Ads. must be ln by 2 p.m.\non Thursday.\n41 ACRES of ifne Delta land, all\nunder cultivation, underdrained,\netc., ait $300 per acre; one-itibird\ncash, balance 1, 2 and 3 years at\n7 per cent. Ladnor Investment &\nTrust Corporation, Ltd.\nWE KEEP\nMoulds.\nthe Wooden Button\nHoward Bros., badner.\nT. I. ELLIOTT\nSuccessor to P. C. Clark\nto\nMRS COMPARISON JOLD PROBLEM OF\nOF AUGUST WEATHER\nHOW TO GOVERN\nComparative Record- of Sunshine J Point Grey Debates on Best Method\nShow High Average in British\nColombia,\n-Ward Redistribution Raises\nQuestion of Control.\nThe following excerpt from the\nis and Statistics Monthly, of\nmber, giving comparative wea-\nther *'inilitions in the Miifferent sections of Canada for the month of\nAugust, will be of particular interest\nhows a record of sunshine days\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 'I'd by only one section of the\nDominion of Canada:\n\"The weather of the month was\ngenerally cool in British Columbia\nK'ith the rainfall about the average in\n'I siricts. At Vancouver 228\nhours of bright sunshine were record-\n\"; as against 237 ln Victoria. In the\nWestern provinces there was a con-\nible amount 0'f cloudy weather\nthe month with the rainfall |\n! above the usual quantity, but\nally no frost was recorded, al-\nh damage was caused in some\nta by hail. At EkSmonton 225 |\nbright sunshine were record-1\nng bhe month and in that dis-\nthere was considerable precipl-\n'licre being one hall storm\nttle or no damage and rain on\nteen days. August opened in]\nwith a continuance of the!\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD viii.-h bad (prevailed for such .\n\"Hod over such a large por-\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' the province and this was not |\nuntil late in the month when\n11 heavily, effectually checking\n31 fires which were destroy-\n!1L; so much valuable property.\nIn Q ii bee tho weather of the month\nnarkahly fin**- an'd much more\n' able than \"that of thc previous\nIn Quebec 234 hours of\n' sunshine were recorded. In\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD iririme provinces ithe weather\nir the most part fine, warm and\nin ex-tremely high temper-\n\"ing recorded and the precip-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_ ,;\" light.\"\nEBURNE, Point Grey, Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nRedistribution of wards in Point\nGrey will be a live municipal question for the next few weeks and perhaps months. The municipality has\nIncreased so quickly in population\nand in property assessments that, in\norder to conform with the Municipal\nAct, a new division of wards must\nbe made. Shall the district, which\nnow has five wards, be divided into\nsix, or seven, or eight Yhis is the\nquestion which the council will have\nto settle. It is also very probable\nthat at the elections in January a\nplebiscite will be taken to determine whether the ratepayers favor\nthe establishment of a Board of Control.\nConsiderable uncertainty therefore\nexists as to the manner In which\nmunicipal affairs will be administered in Point Grey next year. Under\nanother ward system It is probable\nthat Shaughnessy Heights will have\nIts own councillor, which, being a\npcrtion of Ward One, with D. L. 472,\nIt does not have at present. Assessor\nJehu Clemens has prepared tentative\nplans showing division oi the municipality into six, seven and eight\nwards. One of these bouiide Shaughnessy Heights on the east by Oak\nstreet and on the west by Arbutus\nstreet, thus cutting it off from the\nrest of the municipality. Under two\nother plans Shaughnessy Heights is\ncut in two, the boundary line being\nGranville street. Under none of the\nplans ts the Eburne ward cut to any\ngreat extent.\nCouncillor Cunliffe Is understood\nto favor a board of control for the\nmunicipality. When the by-law\ncreating the new wards comes up.\nthe question will be threshed out.\nSULZER COMES AGAIN'.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA suit to\nmay Invalidate\n. ;1:-V VORK, Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA\n!'fl one which may ln\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD> Peachment of Wm. Sulzer as\n\"I' of Xew York, was filed in\n\"\" ' nited States Circuit Court of\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPDeals here today. W. H. Moore\n\"as named as plaintiff.\nMatch Company Directors Plan\nEliminate Manual Labor Used\nBy Other Makers.\nA tentative arrangement for raising sufficient money to build the\ncomplete machine for match making,\nwhich is to eliminate the manual\nlabor used by other companies, was\nevolved at the stockholders meeting\nof the Dominion Matcn Company,\nLimited, held yesterday afternoon.\nThe meeting was convened in the\nfactory at Sapperton.\nTwo new directors were elected\nIn addition to the five already on the\nboard, Messrs. R. Mounce and Jame3\nWoods.\nWays and Means.\nAid. White, who is a director of\nthe company, occupied the chair and\nthe meeting shortly got down to a\ndiscussion of ways and means. It\nwas pointed out by the chairman\nand by Mr. D. Whiteside, solicitor\nfor the company, that in common\nwith other concerns the corporation\nwas short of money and that this\ncondition of affairs was due to the\nfact that stockholders who had given\nnotes for their shares had failed to\nredeem their paper. Thero was\n$100,000 thus owing to company,\nwhich on its part owed nothing. The\nreal estate, building and machinery\nwere all paid for.\nMr. Whiteside assured the half\nhundred shareholders present that\nthe realizable assets of the company\nwere quite sufficient to pay every\nstockholder his money back. There\nwas no cause for any alarm that the\nmoney invested would be lost. It\ncould all be recovered if jt were the\nwish of the stockholders to wind up\nthe company.\nXo Talk of Winclup.\nNobody, however, seemed at all inclined to wlndup the company. Aftet\nsome discussion, in which it was\nbrought out that about $4500 would\nbuild the big machine, of which a\nworking model is now on the premises, it was resolved that those shareholders who had not paid up lor\ntheir stock should be asked to pay a\nsmall amount of their liability and\nbe given an opportunity to take\npaid-up stock for the amount of cash\nactually paid in, thus ending their\nliability If they wished, the alternative being the forfeiture of their\nstock entirely. Mr. Whiteside\nj pointed out that a small proportion\nof the $100,000 outstanding \"would\nI put the company In a position to\nbuild the machine it needed and\nstart manufacturing.\nTho meeting .passed off quietly.\nAn offer made by the promoters was\ncrnceded to be excellent and disarmed such criticism as might have been\ncontemplated. This offer was that\ntiie promoters, who were paid for\ntheir rights to the machine by a\nblock of stock amounting to 250.0011\nshares and who still preserved that\nstock intact, would not touch It and\nwould take nothing, if the shareholders wished to wind up th\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD com-\nj pany, until every investor had got i tsr,\nI his money back with interest at 6 ! 34c\nper cent.\nMr. Whiteside made this announcement early in the meeting on\nithe authority of the promoters nnd\nHome Rule Will Be Made Effective\nat Any Cost Asserts Premier\nAsquith.\nLADYBANK, Scotland, Oct. 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nPremier Asquith, straight from the\nlecent meetings of the British Cabinet gave the country on Saturday\nnight the eagerly-awaited decision\nof the government on the Irish problem which recently hare Decome befogged by various proposals for\nconferences of the political parties\nand by divergent utterances of the\nmembers of the cabinet.\nMr. Asquith came out emphatically against the suggested formal\nround-table conference, but betrayed a leaning towards a compromise\non the lines suggested by the First\nLord of the Admiralty, Mr. Winston\nSpencer Churchill: namely, leaving\nthe northeast corner of Ulster to\nremain under the Imperial Parliament for a limited period.\nThe Premier intimated that there\nmust not be an inseparable barrier I\nerected which might permanently |\nsever the unity of Ireland or might |\nprevent the Protestant minority J\nfrom ultimately throwing in their i\nlot with the rest of their fellow I\ncountrymen; but the speech is taken j\nto indicate that if the exclusion of\nUlster was the only means of a settlement by consent he would be pre- !\npared to agree to that temporary j\narrangement.\nAnxious as he shewed himself to |\nbe for a .\"riendly settlement. Pre- j\nniier Asquith unhesitatingly an-1\nuounced his decision to establish a\nparliament in Ireland in accordance\nwith his promise, and also if the\nopposition declined 'his suggested\nadjustment of the Ulster problem to\nuse the armed forces of the nation\nin carrying the law into effect.\nHorseshoeing\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAND \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nGeneral Blacksmithing\nW. MUDGE\nHighest Prices for Live and Dressed\nPoultry, Fresh Eggs and Produce.\nConsignments Solicited.\nCity Market, Main St., Vancouver.\nPoultry Wanted\nBest Prices Paid.\nPACIFIC POULTRY SUPPLY.\nEdison Phonographs\nDisc Models\nSee Them end Hear Them\nFisher's Drug and Book Store\nS. W. FISHER\nPhone B Ladner\nMineral and\nSoda Waters\nJ. HENLEY\nXew Westminster, B.\nC.\nManufacturer of Soda Water,\nGinger Ale, and ail Kinds of\nSummer Drinks.\nYour Patronage Solicited.\nWILL FIGHT CUT.\nMaritime Provinces Strongly Opposed to Any Reduction in Their\nRepresentation.\nOTTAWA, Oct. 25.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDProvincial\npremiers and ministers who wi.l take\npart In the Interprovincial conference which opens here on Monday\nhave commenced to arrive in the\ncapital. The maritime provinces'\ndelegates were the first to put in an\nappearance.\nThe representatives of the maritime provinces when seen, said that\nthey proposed to urge more particularly the question of representation\nln the Dominion of the provinces by\nthe sea. They will ask the conference to consider the desirability of\nmaking an arrangement which would\nprevent any further reduction In the\nnumber of their representatives ln\nparliament, due to the more- rapid\ngrowth of the population of the\nother provinces.\nSEATTLE MARKET.\nselect\nfresh\n:. But-\ncubes\n35c;\nBRITAIN AND PANAMA.\nLONDON, Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA committee\nconsisting of heads of the great\nBritish manufacturing, commercial\nand shipping companies was formed\ntodav to ask reconsideration by the\ngovernment of its decision not to\nparticipate in the Panama Pacific\nExposition.\nSEATTLE, Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDEggs\nranch, 35c; April storage 32c;\nEastern 4oe; local storage 35c\nWashington Creamery,\nCity Creamery, bricks,\nfresh Eastern 30c to 31c; Oregon\nSOc to 31c. Cheese. Tillamook,\n18c; limburger, 10c; Young Amerl-\n cas 19c; Washington twins 18c;\nthe statement made a'favorable \"im-I triPletB 18c; local cream l)ricks li,c;\npression I Wisconsin twins llie; Oregon triplets\n___ 17 l-2c. Onions, California yellow\n2 to 2 l-4c per lb.; local $1.50 to\nHl.\ BREEDING IS SPREADING. I $1.75 per sack; fanno $2.50 per\n I sack. Potatoes, local $l!l to $20;\nOTTAWA, Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHon. Charles | Yakima gems $23 to $25; California\nDalton, the celebrated fox breeder sweets $2 per 100; Jersey sweets\nof Prince Edward Island, who has j $4.75 to $5 per barrel. Oats, Easl-\nbeen here for a few days says that; era Washington $28 to $2!\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD; Puget\nfox breeding Is spreading all over Sound $28 to $29. Hay, Eastern\nthe Dominion. Recently Mr. Dalton Washington timothy $18 to $19;\nreceived an offer of $5000 to organ- Puget Sound timothy $14; alfalfa\n1 ize a ranch at Edmonton, but he was $14 to $15; straw $9; wheat hay\nI too busy to accept. I $14 to $15.\nThe Ladner - Steveston\nferry Service\nWINTER SCHEDULE\nBeginning Monday, September 15,\nthe steamer New Delta will run ou\nher fall and winter schedule, as follows: Leaves at 8.30 a.m. add 3.30\np.m. Vancouver passenger, can\nmake connection by taking the 8.30\na.m. and 3.30 p.m. cars at Granville street station. New Westminster passengers should take the\nEburne cars at 8:00 a.m. and 3:00\np.m. and the Steveston cars at\nEburne.\nDelta Telephone Co., Ltd.\nIncorporated 101b.\nWe are prepared to Install slnglt\nline or party line phones at short notice. Long distance ln connection with\nour service. Apply to\nA. Delt. TAYLOR. Sec.\nBrood mares in\nexchange for deeded Point Grey prop-\nerty and South\nVancouver house.\nA. Hcness\n1133 Pacific St. Vancouver\nPhone-Seymour 4494 L\nAUCTION SAL.:\nOF\nfurniture and Effects\nComprising two bedroom sets, bureau, table and chairs; crockery and\ntinware, cookatove and heater; writing desk; carpets and carpet squares;\nlawn mower, garden tools and miscellaneous effects, which 11. \. RICH\nhas received instructions from fhe\nexeoutKWB of the late Mrs James\nMasons to sell by auction, In bhe rear\nof McNeely Hall, La-dner, where it\nbal been removed I *t convenience of\nsale, on\nTHURSDAY, NOV. 6, 1913\nal 2 o'clock p.m.\nTERMS: CASH.\nII. N. RICH,\nAuctioneer, I.adner.\nLADNER INVESTMENT AND TRUST CORPORATION\nLIMITED.\nAuthorized Capital 9250,000.00.\nREAL ESTATE\nINSURANCE STOCKS AM) rONDS LOANS\nH. A. MacDonald, Managing DlrectOT,\nNO SUNDAY .MOVIES.\nEDMONTON. Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAn order\npassed in the Provincial Council yesterday will settle once and for all the\nmuch mooted question as to whether the moving picture theatres of the\ncity may remain open on Sunday.\nThe new order becomes effective\nNov. 1, authorizes the cancellation of\nthe license to do business, of any\npicture theatre remaining open on\nSunday. (guin.\nAGENT BURNS FLAX [ELDS.\nM003E.IAW, Oct, 3 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Arraigned\nupon the char-:.' of letting fire to a\nfield of fiax. Andrew Nessans, sub-\nland agent at Bravelbourg, hi*,' u\ned before .Magistrate .Simpson last\nnight and after a bearing lasting\nuntil nearly midnight he was I em-\nniittul to t'and trial. The alleged\noffence occurred on Septi mber 5 and\ntlie grain was owned by Joseph Ar-\n. ,_:\n'v'*f?\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nrs-'f\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD]\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\ntit\ni\n1 i\nI\n31 THE DELTA TIMES\nSATURDAY, XOVE.MEBElt \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nSYSTEM SHOULD\n8E UNIFORM\nli. O, School Trustees Pass Important Resolution In Convention\nat Victoria.\nFISH STORIES\nOF USUAL BRAND\nDominion Fisheries Official Gives\nAccount of Recent Happenings\nin Interview nt Ottawa.\nVICTORIA, Oct. 24.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe need\nfor greater uniformity iu the educational systems of the Dominion of\nCanada found eloquent expression\non Tuesday at the opening session\nOf the tenth annual convention of\nthe British Co.UK-O.a Association of\nSchool Trustees, held in the George\nJay school. Vernon hoard was responsible for bringing the matter be-\nl'or the convention, and as it met\nwith a spontaneous response from\npractically ail the delegates, a.\nresolution endorsing the sentiment\nwas unanimously adopted, and it is\nlikely that fur:her action, with a\nview to the attainment of practical\nresults, will foilow. Mayor Morley\nwelcomed the hundred delegates\npresent.\nTho evening session was opened\nby the president, Captain D. Mcintosh's address, Mr. J. M. Wright being; in the chair. The president made\nspecial mention of the institution\nWhich has been marking time, tbat\nis the rural school. One stro.ig feature of the consolidated schools is\nthat the farmer's child has all the\nadvantages of a high school education at Its own home without extra\nexpense. One thing the people of\nBritish Columbia ought to be thankful lor is that they are under no\nobligation to provide schools and\nteaching in different languages.\nThe total cost of education ln\nBritish Columbia for the year\namounted to ?3,882,488.47; the\nprevious year's total being $2,641,-\n522.u'.i, and the president went on\nto say that, although salary is not\neverything that causes one to carry\nhimself well In a community, yet\nto be well remunerated has a won\nderful effect in Stiffening\nbones of most, men and women. After all our children are the greatest\nasset our province has, and for\nthem we cannot do too much. The\nprogress within Ihe last few years\nhas been so rapid and inspiration so\ngreat, that we are tempted to think\nthat our present school system is\nOTTAWA, Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAccording to\nan official of the Department of Marine and Fisheries the reports lhat\nhave recently appeared in the press\nto the effect that sockeye salmon\nhave ibis year been prevented from\nreaching their spawning beds in the\nFraser river to tlle extent of decreasing the big fourth year run to\nthe proportion of an off-year, were\nsomewhat exaggerated.\nIll building its road along the side\nof the river east of Hell Gate canyon, the Canadian Northern Railway allowed large quantities of rock\nthat was blasted out to fall into the\nriver. This resulted in a considerable change in the flow of the water,\nThe work was not performed during the past summer, but before the\nrun of tbe salmon to the river last\nyear, but notwithstanding during\nlast season the fish readily ascended.\nEarly Run Got Up.\nThis year the early run of salmon\ngot up, as is evidenced by the fact\nthat at the salmon hatchery at Shus-\nwap lake, much farther up the river,\nmore salmon were caught in the\nhatchery pens early in the season\nthan would be required to yield sufficient eggs to fill the hatchery.\nAs these tlsn would not spawn for\nseveral weeks and as it is not desirable to hold fish 'in the pens for\na long time, they are liberated and\na later run relied on to fill the hat.h-\nery. Shuswap lake is but one of the\nmany resorts of spawning salmon in\nthe upper reaches of the Fraser.\nThe water level In the Fraser during the time the salmon were running was as a general thing unusual\nfor that season. It remained at\nmedium height much longer than ordinarily. In the latter part of the\nthe back- season when the water was at\nWASHINGTON STATE.\nmedium height it was ascertained\nthat many fish were below the obstruction, and as a result a passageway was provided through which ;he\nfish, then barred, got up.\nSufficient Got Up,\nThe official .says there is littl?\nroom for doubt that a sufficiently\nnearly perfect\".\"\"However, \"on\"Inves- larse number of the salmon reached\ntigation many defects can be dis\ncovered. The problems of school\narchitecture, heating, ventilation and\nsanitation have been solved, as also\nmost of the problems leading up to\nutility; bul the question of beautifying school grounds has received\nvery lit lie consideration,\nTrustee Robinson, of Summerland\nand Trustee Wright, Cloverdale,\nmoved a vote of thanks to tho asso-\nciaiion president.\nA report of the Saskatchewan Convention was given by Mr. J. S. Gordon, B.A., municipal Inspector for\nVancouver city schools, and an interesting and concise address followed by Mrs. Ellen R. C. Webber,\nMaple Ridge municipal board, on\n\"Professional Pride In our Public\ntheir spawning grounds to Keep up\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDif not highly increase\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthe b.g\nfourth year run .\nMoreover, In the hatcheries on the\nriver there are at present over tony\nmillion eggs.\nUSES IIVDKAl\"LIC METHOD\nMr. Clair Plaxton of Fort Langley\nMakes Success of Drilling\nArtesian Wells.\nLANGLEY FORT, Oct. 27. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Mr.\nClair Plaxton of Fort Langley has\nmade a decided success in this district in the drilling of artesian wells\nusing what is known as the hydraulic\nmethod and is now preparing with\nfurl her equipment and more men to\nenlarge bis operations. In the Lang-\nSchool,\" showing how pride meant, ley district good water is obtained at\nthe uplifting of al] humanity. An! depths varying from 40 feet in some\naddress a. given by Mr, E, H. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD localities to four or five hundred in\nScammell, F.R.C.L, of Ottawa, or-i others. But a much greater depth\nganising secretary of the Canadian than ibis is not in tho ieast prohibi\nPeace Centenary Association.\no\l,y onk CONTRIBUTION.\nFORMOSA, Ont., Oct. 28.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAt a\nCon lerval Ivi ra ly In the Interests of\nMr. Cargill nt Formosa inst evening.\nHon, C. J. li iherty spoke on the\nnn\ nl question.\n\"One ot ii;\" misrepresentations\nthe Liberals am making,\" said the\nminister, \" that the B ird n p illcy\nis a i \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD)\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD;, ..\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Df \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ontributlons, nol withstanding the tad thai Mr, Borden\nhas dire \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ih ip il this what is\ntrue h tl t we pri pi\" I h's one con-\ntrlbut ion a- n n Bull ol i u Uin i x sting i .'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD nmsi inces.\n\"Later on, when this pr< sen! duty\nis aci ompllshed, we will discuss\nwhat shape the p irmanent naval\npolicy shall take.\"\ntive with the hydraulic drill, over\nI a thousand feet being possible,\n| though artesian water has always\nbeen found at moderate depths in\nthe Fraser Walley.\nMr. Fluxion is the owner of the\nfine standard bred stallion Zobona,\nwinner In the Val'ey this year of\nflrsl prize and championship at\n('hi liwack fair; sec-Jhd place at the\nNew Westminster judging ring, and\nmild place In tha Exhibition Horse\nShow in the track class.\nZobona has n mark of 2:18 and\nwas first prize winner at the Alaska-\nYukon-Paclflc Exposition at. Seattle\nin 1909; grand champion at the\nPortland Horse Show in 1910, and\ngot first pr'ze at Vancouver in\nl!i 12. He was nurchnsed by Mr.\nPlaxton from Mr. A. R. Miller of\nVancouver last spring,\nSIB EDWARD CARSOX.\nSPOKANE, Wash., Oct. 29.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAs\na result of a Great Northern passenger train, No. 1, toppling over\na trestle fifty feet high after colliding with a work train at Waukee,\n60 miles southwest of here yesterday, Engineer Miller and Fireman\nDavis are dead today,\nCounty Buys Holstelns.\nPORT ANGELES, Oct. *_9.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe\nClalam county comomissioaers have\nmade an appropriation of $25,000\nfor the purchase of Holstein cattle\nfor the agricultural experiment station on the county farm, three miles\neast of Port Angeles. It is the intention of the commissioners to\ndemonstrate the fertility of the soil\nin growing all kinds of agricultural\nand horticultural products, as well\nas showing what may be accomplished in the way of a model dairy\nfarm.\nWork Started on Bridges.\nSEATTLE, Oct. 29.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBy the passage of three ordinances Monday the\ncity council created a bridge fund,\nappropriated $25,000 from the garbage fund to start it with, and incur thc necessary expenditure\nagainst the fund, not to exceed $3,-\n000, for preliminary test borings, estimates und other work. The new\nfund will be the nucleus of a fund\nfrom which will come money necessary to construct bridges over the\nLake Washington canal and the\nDuwamlsh waterway.\nFatal Accident.\nWENATCHEE, Oct. 30,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDState\nHighway Commissioner W. J. Roberts, who has completed an inspection tour of highways in this section, yesterday announced that the\ncontract would soon be left for construction of flve miles of the worst\nportion of Sunset highway between\nWenatchee and Waterville. This\nstrip extends from the Columbia\nriver bridge to Orondo.\nHop Growers Stand Pat.\nNORTH YAKIMA Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nTwenty cents a pound is offered for\nhops, but the price isn't satisfactory\nto the growers, who declined to sell\nwhen the market was five cents high-\neu. The local dealers have no orders, and while they are willing to\nbuy they must hav? things right,\nfrom their own point of view, and\njust now that point of view does not\nsuit the growers.\nMothers Get Large Sum.\nBELLINGHAM, Oct. -0.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDMothers' pensions will be a heavy drain\non the finances of Whatcom county,\naccording to figures on the records\nof the probation officer anu the county auditor. The appropriation of\n$7500 made by the county board\nfer the amount needed aad money\nwill have to be drawn from some\nother fund to meet the pensions.\nAged Man Disappears.\nBELLINGHAM, Oct. 3u\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe sudden disappearance nearly three\nweeks ago of L. Goodman, an aged\nresident of Marietta, has caused nis\nrelatives and friends in that vicinity and in other parts of thc county where he is well known, to become thoroughly alarmed. Since he\nleft the home of his son, where he\nhas been living, one evening just\nbefore dark no trace of him has been\nfound, and nothing has ever been\nlearned that in any way gives a clue\nas to his whereabouts or his safety.\nWaterway Project Open.\nSEATTLE, Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWithout official ceremony the Seattle Port\nCommissions new central waterway\nproject at the foot or Bel! street,\nbuilt by the J. A. McEachern Company at a cost of \"1200,000, was\nopened for business Tuesday. This\nis flrst unit of approximately $20,-\n000,000 worth of harbor improvements, building or in contemplation, at Seattle.\nNamed Regent.\nSEATTLE. Oct, 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGov. Lister\nTuesday afternoon announced the acceptance by George H, Walker, of\nthis city, of the appointment to succeed diaries P, Spooner as regent of\nthe University of Washington.\nTo Devise Health Laws.\nNORTH YAKIMA, Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDr.\nThomas Tetreau, health officer of\nNorth Yakima and of Yakima county, has been asked by the executive\ncommittee of the League of Northwest Municipalities to name a committee* of local health officers of\nWashington, Oregon and Idaho to\ndevise whys of securing uniform\nhealth ordinances and regulations in\nthe three states.\nAsk for Zone System.\nSEATTLE, Oct, 80.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDScdtt Calhoun, receiver for the Seattle, Renton & Southern street railway, appeared before the City Council utilities committee Tuesday and Informed Chairman Erlckson that unless\nthe city saw fit to accept the offer\nof the company to sell the road\nwithin a reasonable length of time,\nthe receivers would appeal to the\nstato public service commission to\nestablish a \"/.one\" system within the\ncity limits In order to get a reason-\ncble return on the investment.\nDICKERING FOR RESERVE.\nHint of Secret Negotiations f\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDr\nCapllano Reserve Leaks Out\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nOption Is Taken.\nVANCOUVER, Oct, 28.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIt has\nleaked out through certain members\nof the Capllano Reserve Indians that\nefforts are being mnde io purchase\nthe reserve. An option has been\nsecured which expires on Friday\nnext. The sum mentioned In thc\nagreement is understood to be upwards of $300,000.\nThe negotiations arc wrapped In\nsecrecy bul the Intending purchasers\nar.- believed to be the same parties\nwho tri'd io buy out the Seymour\nReserve a few weeks ago.\nLOCAL MAN IS (STRIKERSLEAVE\nON EXECUTIVE! MAILS llr FLAME\n \t\nMr. John Peck Elected to Office at j Miners Beat Off Guards, Then Upset\nConvention of B, O. School Stove and Burn Down Building\nTrustees. Containing Mail.\nVICTORIA, Oct.\n.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe interior\nTRINIDAD, Colo., Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Violence among the -triking miners in\nJ the Southern Colorado coal fielUs\non yesterday .shifted from Ludlow and\nThursday. Nelson was chosen as the j its immediate vicinity, to Aguilar, six\nmeeting place for next year and the < miles north of the big Ludlow tent\nfared well at the sessions of the B.\nC. School Trustees' Association\nchief competitors among the other\nBritish Columbia cites for that honor\nwiere two other up-country centres,\nVernon and Grand Forks,\nThe new president, Mr. J. M.\nWright, of Armstrong, is an Okanagan man, and the new secertary,\nwho defeated Trustee J. J. Dougan,\nof Vancouevr, who sought re-election,\nie Mr. Grant Lang, another Okanagan\ntrustee from Peachland. Two of the\ncolony. Possible federal complications were precipitated at 'the office\nof the Southwestern Fuel Company,\nwhere Tuesday night and early yesterday morning a battle waged between strikers and a handful of\nmine guards. After defeating the\nguards anld) capturing the mine office,\nin which the poet ofifce also is situated, the strikers are charged with\nhaving knocked over a stove, setting\nfire 'to the building, which was completely destroyed, together with Its\ni contents of United mall, money\nmembers of the new executive com-, orders and money,\nmittee are also from 'the interior. I >l*r\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDils Rilled\nThey are Dr. Jones, Nelson, and Dr.\nPostmaster Arthur Samples late today declared evidence was present\nDELTA DIRECTORY\nthe mouth of the Fraser ii ate- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nfinest agricultural distr ,'lutlH\nThe chief interests In thi n f B-C\nfarming, dairying, flU;. Blta ar(\nt^L^iVi^' sl>*ep .MC\"JSg\nculture\nbreeding. There\"' uV^Uo '\ncanneries in the Delta \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-.\nThere are shipping'f^K^.\nand boat to the markets n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD n ral1\nand the United States -l-S^ii\nyield is the largest per\nThe\ncrop\nada, and the sheep andTo.si. J8*.\n1 Columbia.\nare the finest in Britis\nAlong the south bank of t '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\nEK*8rare 8piend,d -ft\nBoard of Trade\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPresent, D .\nMcKee; secretary, s. \v p .* *\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nJustices of Peace\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDH. D Be, \"'\nJ. Kirkland, J. Mokee *E I T H'\nPolice Magistrate\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJ. j^' B-ri7.\nMedical Health Officer\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDr t *.\nWilson. ' J K*rr\nK1ng and Dr,\nSchool Board.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDS. Wright chali-n-.\nC. Davie, A. deR. Tay 0rP&\nCallum, W. R. Ellis, N, A. McDl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nWilson.\nCoroners.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDr. A. A\nJ. Kerr Wilson.\nmid, secretary.\nFarmers' Institute.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDT T H\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\npresldent; N. A. McDiarmid 25\ntary. ' **re-\nDelta Farmers' Game Prot\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDctive a.\nmembers of the executive are Trustee\nPeck, New Westminster, and Capt.\nStewart, of Point Grey. Caipt. Stewart\nwas an unsuccessful oandidate for the\nfirst vice-presidency, which went to\nMr. J. C. McArthur, of South Vancouver, Mr. A. G. Perry, of North Vaneouver, being chosen second vice-\npresident by acclamation. The choice\nof Mr. Wright as president, succeeding Capt. Mcintosh, iof Victoria, was\nalso unanimous. Mr. Wright wa_\nformerly first vice-president and was\nthe only officer on last year's executive hailing from east of Chilliwack.\nMany Resolutions.\nThe convention members dealt with\nsome twenty-six resolutions.\nSome of the resolutions adopted on\nThursday, synopsized, are: That the\nDepartment of Education be asked to\ntake steps, as soon as possible, to inaugurate some plan whereby school\nboards can get definite and reliable\nliai the mails had been rifled before soclation,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-Wm. Kirkland, pre,|\nhe building was flreld1, since en- dent; A. deR. Taylor, secretary\nDelta Agricultural Society.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-.-.\nKerr Wilson, president; A\nTaylor, secretary\nvelopes, opened, were found nearby,\nhalf burned.\nThe mine office also was completely destroyed with all its contents, the\ncamp having been surrended wholly\nbv the guards.\n\" After working their will with the\nSouthwestern offices, the miners\nwent to the Empire mine of the same\ncompany and there began an attack.\nNo resistance tfas offered them and\nthey withdrew shortly, doing no more\ndamage than riddling the boiler house\nwith bullets.\nNo one was injur**- In either camp.\nA bomb explosion 'in the camp of\nthe Colorado Fuel and Iron Company at Sopris, the burning of a\nbridge of the Colorado & WyomingI\nRailway, between Segundo and Primer\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, arid a pitched battle between,\nstrikers and guards at Delagua were |\nreported to Adjutant-General Charles,\ndeR,\ninformation regarding applicants for I as-happening tonight. A detachment\n! positions in high and public schools;\nj that it is not in the best interests of\nI high schools to admit children that\nhave not passed an entrance examination; that the Minister of Education\nbe asked to consider the advisability\nof permitting supplementary examination in connection with the high\nschool entrance; that the government be asked to sanction the organization by school boards of night\nschool classes for technical work and\nto grant financial assistance; that\nthe government place a copy of the\nofficial map of British Columbia in\neach school room of the province;\nthat the government be asked to increase the grants made in aid of\nteachers' salaries in high schools of\nrural municipalities and cities of thf\nthird class.\nInfilling Instruction.\nAn important resolution adopted\nThursday was 'the following:\n\"In view of 'the vast agricultural\npossibilities afforded in this province,\nand also having It. mind the great\nand continuous source of wealth\nwhich the development of such possibilities offer, this convention is resolved that, while not disparaging\nthe encouragement given tto immigra-\nof militiamen was sent to sopris.\nIMPRESSED BV WEST.\nRt. Hon. Herbert Samuel Tells Englishmen of His Experiences\nin Dominion.\nLONDON, Oct. 28.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe postmaster-general, Rt. Hon. Herbert Samuel, arrived home last night after\nan absence of nine weeks Giving a |Post office\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHours, S\ngraphic account of his visit to the\nMember of Parliament.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJ n Ta\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi-.\nNew Westminster. ' mt>\nMember of Local Legislature\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDp j\nMacKenzle, New Westminster '\nBoat Sailings.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDS.S. New Delta leavei\nLadner every day for Steveston _t\n8.30 a.m., 12.30 p.m. and 6 3\np.m., connecting with the B 'c\nE. R. cars. S.8. Transfer leavei\nfor New Westminster daily excsBi\nSundays, at 7 a.m.; returnlai\nleaves New Westminster at 2 pm\nreaching Ladner at 5.30 p ni ' ''\nRailways.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGreat Northern leav\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nPort Oulchon dally for New Wen.\nminster and Vancouver at 7 am-\nreturning, leaves Vancouver at\n2.30 p.m., reaching Port Guichon\nabout 6.30 p.m. B.C.E.R., Lulu\nIsland Branch, E. Stirling, super-\ninteudent; Vancouver to Eburne\nand Steveston\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCars leave Granville street depot (at north end\nof bridge over False Creek) at 6.39\na.m. and hourly until 11.311 p^\n, Special car for Eburjie at i4\na.m. Cars leave Steveston at 6.;i0\nI a.m. and hourly until 11.30 p.m.\nSunday service\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFirst car ieavei\neither terminus at 8.30 a.m';\nhourly service thereafter until\n11.30 p.m.\nHominlon. Mr. Samuel says the feature of his trip that impressed him\nmost was the degree of development in Western cities.\n\"I had expected to find,\" he said,\n\"at least, remote towns hearing the\nmarks of hastily created civic communities, with badly paved roads,\nunllghted streets and ramshackle\npublic buildings. On the cortrary,\nalthough their growth has been a I\nmatter of very few years, they all I\nprovided themselves with many\nmiles of admirably laid out roads, j\nWVh adequate sewerage, water and j\nlighting systems ruid well equipped j\nschools r.nrl rc.illy splendid public\nbuildings.\"\na.m. to 1\np.m. Mail for Vancouver closes\nat 12 noon; for New Westminster\nand up river points at 6.30 a.m.;\nclosed all day Sunday.\nMunicipal Council.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDMeets in th.\nMunicipal Hall, Ladner, on the\nsecond and fourth Saturdays la\neach month at 2 p.m. Reeve, H.\nD. Benson; councillors, A. D.\nPaterson, W. A. Kirkland, Hanford Lewis, G. Dennis, Chris\nBrown; clerk, N. A. McDiarmid.\nWILL IMPROVE HOSPITAL.\nSYNOPSIS OF OOA1 MINING\nREGULATIONS.\ntion, every effort should be made to I * \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nrealize the splendid opportunities! STEVESTON, Lulu Island, Oct.\ncontained'in the scientific cultivation 28'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIm provements in the building\nof bhe soil. |and equipment to the extent of three\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion, in Manitoba, Saskatchewan ani\nAlberta, the Yukon Territory, the\nNorthwest Territories and in a por-\n\"To further this end and to elevate'to four thousand dollars, are con-\n.griulturnl pursuits in the minds of templated by the steveston Fisher- {ion of the Province ol British C*\nmen's Benevolent Society. The lu'nbia, may be leased fur a ten-\nscope of the hospital's activities have \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' twenty-one years at an annual\nlargely increased during the past .rental of $1 an acre. Not more than\ntwo years, and during the month of 3560 acres will be leased to one ap-\nSeptember some two hundred pa-jPl'cant.\ntlents, thirty of which were Inmates, | Application for a lease must be\nour people, we, the school trustees,\nin convention, urge the government to\ninclude in the school curriculum elementary Instruction on the lines of\nscientific farming, and cause to be\nset aside for experimental purposes\nportions of the school grounds.\"\nControl of Finances,\nA moiion upon which a great mani\nof thetrustees had set their hearts\nwas defeated after a good deal of\ndiscussion. K was to the effect that\nthe School Act be amended in such\na manner as to give school boards\ncomplete* control of their own\nfinances, to have the proportion of\ntaxes payable for school purposes set\nreceived treatment. made by the applicant in person to\n Ithe Agent or Sub-Agent of the district In which the rights applied for\nare situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land\n51 must be described by sections, or\n.legal subdivisions of sections, and\nAnglican. nn nnsurveyed territory the tract ap-\nHoly Communion, first and third ll'1-\"*1 s\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDr shall be staked out by ths\nSundays at 11 a.m, second fourth applicant himself.\nSundavs at 8 a.m.; matins, 11 a.m.; I Bach application must be accom-\nSunday school at 10 a.m.; Evening ,1'anled by a fee of \"15, which w\nwide in \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi.soparate account from that 8^* \"aTl?\" p.m7\"wedMSda?founded' If the rights applied for\nof the municipal council, and to 1*<* 1 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDV9nlng| Lltany at 8.30. Rev. C. C, are n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt available, but not otherwise.\nHoyle, M.A., vicar.\nunder bhe sole control of the trustees.\nThis question of finance has been a\ndisputed one between school fioards Baptist Church.\nand municipal councils, and many of. Pastor\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDRev. D. O. Macdonald\ntbe trustees felt very strongly upon Ladner\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSunday school, 11 a.m.;\nthe Iwue. The mnjorlty took the | evening service, 7.30 p.m.; prayer\nview, however, that the action was 1 meeting, Wednesday, 7.30 p.m.; mls-\nsomewhai radical, and would not be'sionary meeting every first Wednes-\nwelcomed by the authorities. day under the auspices of the Ladles' [inlnins rights \"arc not being \"i\"-\"'*\nMotions Lost. Circle. t*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ti. such returns should 1\" furnishsd\nA mo-ion to ask the govcrnm-nt to n \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDT'^, l8\"\*--l-Sunday school. I at *\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDligt onee a year.\nmake tbe education departmen- a dis- '\"'.Tn T' 5\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ! tr***?* PfS Tho le;,f'e wl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD invh\"W '\"\", t\n.1...*. and \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDepamte office was defeat- k\" ,*\"'1 H1\"le rMdln\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' Tues^y- '\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD mining rights only, bul the MM\n1 \"'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,,,, - , \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,, may be permitted to purrlia.-c \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'li\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-'\ni.'Mfslde ni-iioolhouso\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDUnion Sub \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDVer avallnble surface rights msy M\nA royalty shall be paid on the merchantable output of the mine at the\nrate of five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine\nshall furnish the Agent with sworn\nreturns accounting for the full i|\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\"n*\ntity of merchantable coal mined HM\npay the royalty thereon. S\ned, as was also another Bo create a\nconvention legislative committee to\nlay questions of legislation before tbe\ngovernment from time to time.\nThe plan for a parental school for\nchil'i'ren whose home environment\nday school, i p.m.; singing practice considered necessary for the wort\"\nand Gospel service. Friday, 7.30. *ng of Ule mine nt thc ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf $10.00\nCatholic. ] an acre.\nChurch services will be held every I For full\nInformation .--.pplicatlon\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 01\nmakes their proper educating lmpos- other Sunday, beginning with Sun- 'hould be made to the Secretary\nsible, was rejected, being considered!day, November 14, 1908. Parochial 1 the Department of the lii||,\lor.-_\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\na trespass upon the work of many of,mass at 10.30 a.m.; Sunday school, tawa, or to uny Agent or\nSub-Agent\nthe charitable and public institutions - p.m.; evening devotion, 3 p.m.; 1\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD^ Dominion Lands\nW. W. CORY, . .\nof th\" mi rlor;\n!>? \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD/' FOLLOWERS ARRESTED,\nMEXICO. Oct. 30.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSeven of Gen-,\nera! i-v :\ iiioz. followers, arrested al\nVera Cruz have been brought here,\nand locked up. charged wi-h com-;\nidiriiy in an attiM-Huerta revolutionary plot. Reports were received of\nrebel successes in th<> fighting n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*-ar\nMazatlan, and reinforcements were!\nordered of the federal troops in thai\nvicinity.\nnow in existence. The convention a.m. Rev. Father W. Chaput, parish\na'so rejected the proposal that rural priest, Deputv Minister 01 1.\" \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\ns.hool dirt/riots be gTemted the rigihl Methodist N'.ii.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDl'n'authorl/.ed pu |\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\nto establish dOoeoHdated schools. The _ , . . ,.' ,- ! this advertisement will not 1\"\nuniform school dav B a.m. to 3:20L J^Jf*JiT Lori\ Day at , i1'for.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD30690.\np.m.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthroughout bhe year, was re- ;1\"' **\"'*, '\"!0 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD?\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD da8S meeting,\nJeoted, as was also a motion asking 2?'0J2. t!'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, .m\"rmn? Mrvioe every\nthat employers of labor be prohdblte- !\"f\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDar.{'QSa5b--tl- \"non* -1- lfl *--*-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nfrom employing during school hours ' V,'r*' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.S\",'ulil*;'; Epworth League\nany child between 7 and 14 JI\"? ^ ^\"\"^'y at B p.m. Rev. C.\nThe other resolutions considered Welle\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDley Whtttaker, pastor.\nwere more or less of a technical na- a , Il\"l,,''vs PW\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDbjrterian.\nture Services next Lord's Day at\nSHOT II1MSKLI' IV STO\"UCH.\nNELSON, B.C., O-t. 30 ^\nendeav ring to hold 1 ;,:\":',f\ngrouse, Edgar Rawlea\nn in the stomach with a \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-\n- I iii l II I** M I\" I I III I. II >>!*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' il\t\ni.m. and 7.80 p.m.: week night s-r-tol yesterday, and lies\nvices oil Thursday evenine nt 7-9AI *,,.,.,'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, i,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi,'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi Im b aorlou\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDvening nt 7.30 brook hospital in a **\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\nDr. de Van's Female Pills \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDclot*- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDg*w scll\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDo1 *\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 2*30 p.m.| ____\nA reh.bl. French r-^Uto-, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-1-iHs. These \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'* J' J- Ha8tl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, minister\nollli are excee\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nlot the Delta Times, Ladner, B.C. nglng-d'lrector."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Ladner (B.C.)."@en . "Ladner"@en . "The_Delta_Times_1913-11-01"@en . "10.14288/1.0079790"@en . "English"@en . "49.0916670"@en . "-123.0777780"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Ladner, B.C. : [publisher not identified]"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Delta Times"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .