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This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2017-03-07","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1889-10-29","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/dbc\/items\/1.0346980\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" \u2022overnm.nt Print:\ning offli\nColumbian:\nS \"s*g***SB3*\n70LUMB T\nNEW  WESTMINSTER, B. 0., TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER !I9, 1889.\nNUMBER 103\nPROFESSIONAL MID BUSINESS CARDS.\nu.\nH. HI. N. WOODS,\niAnBI.\u2122EB-AT-I\u2122.W. omssis-MoKeu-\n-lo (Stroot.   \u25a0_. d\"\"'0\n_\u00ab\nT. 0. ATK1NBOH,\nAllttlSTER. BOLICITOH, Ao. OfllfloS-\nMmSio Bsslldlssg, NowWostmmslor,\nABMSTm>.-0 - BOKSTBIN,\nT> -UUSTER.   SOLICITORS.   ETO.-\nJj Masoislss Bsilldlsssj,  Nosv Wssstssslss-\niter,B.0. \u25a0__    dvvsssy4tss\nIOBBOIIID, HcCOI\u2122 \u201e ir.m\u00bb,\nBAItBISTEIlS, 80LI0IT0RS, olo. Offl-\noos\u2014Mnsonlo Bsslldlisiis, Now \"West-\n' ssslssstgr, anil Vnsscoisver, B. C.       dwle\nA. C. nH.VDONB.JAOK, M. A.,\n\u00bb)AllRISTIiR, SOLICITOR, NOTARY\n_! Public, oso, Olllco lis llio Humley\nBuilding, Columbia St., opposite Use Colonial Holol. dwau2tfl\nJOSEPH B, OAVKSSB, U.A..S.L.U.\nGOLD MEDALIST of tlso Cnlvorslli ol\nDublin.   HAimiSTKU-AT LAW o!\n. llie High Court o! Justine, lrelisssd. oillces,\nCss-ssis- McKenzie & Olssrkson Bis., Now\nwostlnlnstor.      dsvle211c\nB. BDBH WALKKR, 91. D\u201e\nT R.o.p.*B.,EDiNBunan. office\nJJ. -Agnes Street, opposito City Hull.\n(WFlcii Housss-U lo 11 is. sn.i 2 lo I and 7\nts\u00bb Blimp, ns. slonMtc\nA, J. 110L1S1KB, D, D. S.,\nQUHOEON DENTIST.  Clrissl\u2122,\u2122 \u201e Use\n0 Ohio Csillosse of siosstut Sssrssery. Is\nnow with Dr. 0. E. C. tlnssvss. Allwssrk\nsUlllfnlly porformed. Rooms B A C, Uisnk\n01B. C\u201e Uolurablis Ht. H wish-8 lo 12 is.m -\n1 into 0 p.m. dilySto\nT.J.TRAP\nGENERAL & SHELF HARDWARE,\nIncluding Tools of all kissds of the best snakes; (IroSS-CUt & Haild-SllWS,\nBarbed Wire for Fencing, and all tho u\u2122-e*isry Utensils for Farming)\nPulley Blocks, Snatch Blocks, Rope & Chain in all sizes! Pitch,\nTar & Oaknmi Tarred and Plain Paper fi r Buildini:! Paints & Oils\nin all oolorsi tlauld Paints in all shades; Floor Paints rcasly to uso; Crillll\nStonesi Wall Paper in all designs; Brooms . Brushes for all pssrposeu;\nlubricating Oils, Traps oi all descriptions', nml a general assortment ot\nAgricultural Implements,\nttr Special attention givon to orders by mail.\n\"T. J. rT\"R^_.*P\"P sa CO.,\ndwjly3to Colum hia Street, New Westmikoter.\nGRANT & MACLURE.\nBoots, Shoes, Slippers,\na. W* GUANT,\ni KOHITECT. Offlco\u2014Corner Mary and\n\\. Olarkson Sts., WestmlnHler.awto^\nOLOW * M ACM.'UK,\n4R . U1TECTS.   Oflloe\u2014Room E, over\nBank of B. 0.,Colnmbla street.West-\nister. dto\nW1LMA1I R. KING,\nA nOHITE0T,SANITAHVENGH.EER,\nl\\ Ae. Removed to ArrastronR's Block,\nColumbia Street, Westminster\u2014Room\nNo. 2.  _.   dto\nW. Till BAUDS AU,\nIAND SURVEYOR AND DRAUGHTS-\nJ man,  Hamley Moot, Now WcHtmiu*\nslur, B. 0.     _j dniyl61o\nA. V, COTTON*\nViOMWION AND PROVINCIAL LAND\nl) SUBVEYOtt. Offloe! Room n, Bunk\nof B, C. building, Wostmlnster, B, C.\nAliBKItV J. HILL\n(M.0AN.80C.0.B.1,\n(^IVILEKGINKER.LANDSURVEYOR\nJ_ ?\"d.  DKAUUHTSMAN       \u2022**-\u00bb--\nBlock,NowWeslmYnater.\nHamley\ndwanaatc\nft. UTrBNDBiaU, .,\nEEAL ESTATE BROKER dhd County\nCourt Agent, Commtsnetlsr, Notary\n1.ibllo,Ao. ltenta collected. Offloe\u2014Me-\nKenzlB Street, Now Westminster, B.0,\nT. J. TllAPP,\nAUOTIQNEER AND APPRAISER.\nColUmmft Stroet,NewWestminster.\nAll I'unimii-ilofis will receive prompt\nand uoreful aitaiuion. Best references\nj-lven when required. \u25a0   mhllBo\nJ. U. FIN LAY SON,      '\nPIANO TUNER, from, Broadwood A\n.Sons, Lmidon, England,;ftpd Stoln-\nwuy A Sons, New York, now residing In\nViimouvor, will attend to orders left*, t\nI). Lyal A Co.'b storo. Trips 1st week of\neaoh' month,  dauSto\n0RDKR8 BY MAIL PROMPTLY FILLKD.\ndwtc\nNew Fall and Winter Goods\nJ.S. MANSON'S TAILORING ESTftUSHMEHT,\nColumbia Street, New Wcsfniinsk-r.\nFosltlvoly tho largest and best assorted stock ever shown in this city, consisting of Fronoli and English Worsteds, Scotch Suitings, Irish Serge, &e.\n^Perfect fit guaranteed or uo salo.\nGLOBE HOUSE.\nWe have now every Department replete with\nNEW FALL GOODS.\nTli!\u2122 ii'-wi!*-!- tiovf-r yarlt...\n...    A mm-vol of\ni-.irilv.',(!-.\"t;.'tli na.! -,vii\u2122It.'fini\u2122t\u2122i'v'\u00ab, Moro\neconomic-J than tlio ordiniii'v kiikU,und\nCHnnoi' bi.' --old in \u21220\u2122iricit!ifiii with llio\nmulLltiid(;(.r low test, Bborl weifjlit alum\norjil-oHi-liiili* powders1  SoUtoiilyln cans.\nROYAL ILYKIN\u2122  POWDER CO., 108 Wall 8t,(\nNew YorH. Htely\nKiqht Bell.\nTelephone 57.\nCHEMISTS \u00a3 DRUGGISTS.\nColumbia St.,\nNew Westminster.\nW;\nE HAVE ONE OF THE BEST\nLONDON GOSSIP.\nThe Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh will Reside Abroad\nfor tho Future.\nTlie Queen will Open the Next Session of Parliament in\nPerson.\nAn Eiiidemiu of Typhoid Fever in\nDublin Supposed to he Caused\nby Stalo Oysters.\nYATES' CAJIi-E LE1TKR.\nLondon, Oct. 29.\u2014Tho queen attended publio worship at tho Crathio chureh\non Sunday week, it being her first visit\nfor a year past. It was the day fixed for\nthe half-yearly dispensation of tho sacrament, and the queen and Princess Beatrice, who sat m the manso pow, took\npart in tho first table of servico and partook of the broad and wine whieh were\nhanded to thom by Mr. Campbell, the\nparish ministor,\nQUEEN AND COMMONS,\nI tiear that tliu qucon will probably\no-ioii parliament in person, in compliance\nwith Lord Salisbury's oarnest wish,\nOf\nselected Stocks in tlio City.   Our\nDrngfi arc perfectly pure   and can be\ntlloronghly relied upon.\n\"Our Own\" Beef, Iron A -Vine\nis, beyond tho shadow of a doubt, the\nbest preparation of   ita   kind   in  tho\nworld.\ndapl3tc\nWANTED.\nAOEsNEttAL SERVANT.   Applj- Us\nUm. P. PUEUI.1\u2122,\nsloc\u2122lo Agss \u2122 Stroet.\nTURN\u2122\u2122, DBBTON _ CO.,\nMERCHANTS. Wlissrt St, Vloloilss.\niH Assents (or Nssrtls British sssssl Mer-\neissstlla insurants. Co. lor Mainland. 11.\nC. Bsscton Js Co., \u2122 I?ln8bury Circus, Lon-\ndon,E;,0. \u2022'\"*'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0!*\u00bb\"\nOS- LOHS9\u2122.\nc.riTAL,     .    ci,\u00abM\u2122\u2122-;.\nKale, as low as any \u00bb*\" \u2022fMS'lSSE:\nSisnlo, dolnB bssslntss, In British Colulss.\nla. \"  \u2122 '\ndJIyWo\nW\"\"j.\"AR\u2122STrWNO.\nAgont for How West,\nBAKER BROS, ft CO'Y\n10 Chapel Walk, South Castlo hi., Liverpool, England. ,\nMia uk Buildings, Columbia Stroot, Now\nWestminster, B. C.\nAOBNVS,\nClHEHL WHOLIMU \u00abER0HANT8 & IMPORTCRS\nAny description of floods Impoiled to\norder and Custom nud Ship I'rokin-*\ntransaoted. Latest Freight and Market\nQuotations. dwauStc\nRAND BROS.\np BUI,. KST ATR IIUOKKH\u2122,\nOouTC^nncers- Oolleoton,\nAnd ltuurauo\u00ab Ag\u00abut*>,\nOiHce-t nt\nNEW WESTMINSTBR: Comer\nMoKoimle and Clarkson Sts.\nVANCOUVEH, Cordova Street.\nLONDON Em-lnud.\nUUILDma LOTS for sale In all sections\nof Vancouver and Now Westminstor City.\nFA1LM LANDS Of suporlor quality for\ninle  nt  Olillliwhnck,   Port  Hnminnml,\nLaiiglny, Mutsqul, Huinas, Mint Day,Ladner's Landing, Lulu InIiui-J, North Arm\nand P1W Rivor.\nMnpsand I'tuns oxhlbltcd and the full*\n.nt Information furnished at all our offices,\nIT IB AN UNDENIABLE FACT THAT\nO-Sk-EtV SIR'S\nTemple of Music I\nIs the Placo to Buy Flrst-Clnss\nPIANOS \u2122 ORGANS\nAt suoh Prices aud Terms as will Suit\nAny Rcwanal-le Buyer.\nFor prlcflu and torms. apply lo CAR>\nTBR'8 TEMPLE OF MUBItf,\nVancouver, B. 0.\n030 Haitlngi Bt. Wwl, daplOto\nW. R. AUSTIN'S\nlayiFgM\u2122\nFARM PRODUCE.\nHard-woofl, Fir-wood, Bark,\nLEAVE ORDERS AND  SETTLE ACCOUNTS AT AUSTIN'B WHAHF.\nHost extensive viirlcty of LATEST KT-lsEH ANI* PATTERNS\nat the VEKV LOWEST PRICES.\nSSTWc are now offering excellent value in LADIES' Ul.STliKS\nand Jackets, also, Black and Colored Cashmeres.\nBoys Wnssted.\nLnjWO HOYS WANTED, from u lo lfl\n,''_' yenrs tils!.\u2014Anply W tlso Korosssnis of\n| tlso \u2122sotor}', R. 0,'F. M. Co.        sloolll\u2122\ndtc\n3_&RB. \"W_M,. _2\u2122\u2122-*]\n0. E. WOODS, Lasssl Surveyor. A. G. GAMBLE, Notary Pnlsllo.\nWoods, Turner & Gamble,\nLAND SURVEYORS,\nREAL ESTATE, INSURANCE.\nFinancial Agents and Conveyancers.\nLand Surveying ia all its branohoa accurately antl promptly carried out.   City and\nSuburban Lands for Sale.     We ctxn show a uuiupletc list of desirable localities. Farming lands, improved and unimproved, throughout thedistriut\nMoney to Loan on First Mortgage at\nCurrent Rate of Interest.\nAgents for the following lusiirauoo Companies!\nWestern of Toronto, iEtna, City of London,\nHartford and Travellers.\nOFFICE\u2014Opposite Post Office, Bank of B. C. Building, Columbia Street, New Westminster. Telephone Call No. 33.\nP. 0. Drawer \" W.\" dseiotc\nMAJOR * PEARSON,\nREAL ESTATE BROKERS,\nFinancial and Insurance igents,\nProporty for Sato In all parts of tlie City nnd Suburbs. Wo also have lUtcd some\nof the finest farming land in the Proviueo, MONEY TO LOAN. HOUSKS TO\nKENT. Agents for the Confederation Lifo Association of Toronto, the Loudon\nGuarantee and Acoldont Co., Limited. Genoral Agenta for British Columbia for\ntho American Steam Boiler Insuranco Co. of Now York, the Itoynl and Atlas Firo\nAssurance Companies of England, Union Vive aud Marina Insuranco Co, of San\nFranclsoo, South British Fire and Marino Iusuranco Co. of Now Zealand.\nOFFICES\t\nNBW WESTMINSTER-Columbia Street, Bank of B. C. Blook.\nVANCOUVER--Hnstini(s Street, opposite tbo Post OIRce.\nTO LET.\nmWO FmiNISIIED ROOMS IN PHI-\nX vate lious;'\\ Firsl*cln.s location.\u2014\nApply at this oilice. iloclOte\nTwo Boys Wanted.\n-I K TO 18 YEARS OLD, TO LEARN TIN-\nJt)  emlUitna trade.  Good chanco for\nSood hoys.  jViiiiiyto\noolite    II. M, CUNNINGHAM ft. CO.\nNOTICE.\nALL CLAIMS AGAINST THE ESTATE\nof Hi. into Kii-icrtii .*_!!vn, trader,\nII0110, R. C\u201e must, bo In bv 1st Novemhor,\n1889, to JAMES .VAItDL\u2122], Hope, Admin-\nIstrnlor. doclmi\nr Hire.\nTWO ORTI1.HK1S TEAMS OF STltONG\nWORKINCI HOUSES.\nFOE  SALE.\nA2-STQREY HOUSE AND LOT, . Uu-\ntitooti MHl-H'.init-stvL-et.near Doug-\nla.. Tlio bulldlnK wns put. up this year,\nnml is i-fti-v. nli'tit in tvery respect, i'rlce\n9I,B2;V. Thlalso* '\nfl NEW LIN\nI\"ei-i'miies, Bruslies,  Sponges,\n(iointis, Toilet Articles.\nA ss'cll-assorlctl stock ssf\nPure Drugs ^Medicines\n\u2014AT\u2014\nT. A. Ml lit * \u20ac0.\"8\nPrescription Drug Store\nQUKEN'S HOTEL BLOOK,\nNow Wostminstor, tfoleplion*) 88.\ntllipliC\t\ndwselOto\nRichards, Haywood _ Mackintosh,\nReal Estate and Financial Agents,\nic Conveyancers, Notaries Public, Etc.\nAgents for Fire, lAfe and Accident Insurance.\nL0AN8   NEGOTIATED,\nCOLLECTIONS  MADE,  SURVEYS TAKEN,  MAPS AND PLANS PREPARED.\nPAH Oil P     Business, Residence and Suburban Property, Improved and Unimproved\nI UK uALt'    FarnlinK Liinds' Timbc' and Mineral Claims.\nColonial Block, 176 G\u2122~# SW\u00abt\u201e\u201e\u201e 5' Yatc,s\u201eS'r^UTA\nNEW WESTMINSTER. VANCOUVER. VICTORIA.\niH\nSa CO.\nReal  Estate,\nINSURANCE\n AND\t\nFinancial Agents\nPurchase Sell and Lease Property,\nCollect Rents,\nMake Loans on Mortgages,\nAnd transact all Businoss relating to\nIleal Estate.\n\u2014AGENTS FOR\u2014\nLondon Aflsurnnce Corporation*\nConnecticut Flro Insuranco Uo.of\nHartford.\nLondon and Lancashire Lifo Assurance Co.\nCanton Insuranco Office, I-t], (Marino)\nOFFICES:\nColumbia St., New West'r,\ncourse nothing will bo definitely settled\nfor two months, but it is her majesty.*\nintention, nil being woll, to preside in\ntliis function, which will most likely be\nfixed for a day in the first week of February, so that tht* qucon may oome to\nBuckingham Palaco for a couple of\nnights when on her way back to Windsor\nfrom Osborne.\nTAID THE PIPER,\nThe whole expenses of the Fredrieks-\nbitrg party were paid for tho King of\nDenmark by the Emperor of Russia, and\ntho total amount was something terrific,\nsinco, apart from the cost of the enter-\ntei'tainmcut of tlio immense number bf\npersons who wero resident at the Scbloss,\nthere was a vast outlay in connection\nwith the army of Russian police agenta\nwith whutn the wholo neighborhood was\nswarming for two months,\nWILL LIVE ABROAD.\nTht Duke of Edinburgh has decided to\nlive abroad, because it was doomed expedient ho should reside at Cobourg for\nseveral months each yoar aa heir to the\nduchy, and boeauso, undor the new family nka.c of tho czar, the duchess must\npass at loast three months of every year\nin Russia unless she wishes to lose one-\nthird of her allowance from the imperial\ntreasury, Tho Duke and Duchess of\nEdinburgh appear likoly to becomo very\nconsiderable porsoimges in Germany, as\nthey are in high favor at Berlin, and are\nnow on excellent torins with the Duke of\nSaxe-Cobourg-Gotha. I am afraid the\nDuchess of Edinburgh can hardly be said\nto have mado herself exactly popular in\nher husband's country, nud several reason, have combined to bring this about,\nbut to the naval oflicers who served under hiin at Malta, she wus everything\nthat was kind nnd gracious, and to thoso\nwlto have boen on terms of sufficient intimacy wittt. hor royal highness to warrant doing ao have sont her little souvenirs ou hor birthday, according to their\nmeans. It is said tho Duke and Duchess\nof Edinburgh nro somewhat anxlor\"\nabout the health of their' sou, Alfret\nwhose constitution has never been n\nbast. Ho is, I \"hear, extremely intil)\ngent and a well-educated boy, butl\nlooks very delicate.\nRDSSIAS VlSlTORfl.\nThe French, who arc painfully anxious\nto bo ou good torms with Russia, point\nwell enough to tbo faet that, although\nthe anticipated visit of tho czar to tno\nexhibition has not taken place, there\nwere, at tho end of last week, no fewer\nthan seven members of the imperial family at Paris.\nOYSTERS ANIl TYPHOID l-'BVBR.\nTyphoid fever haa boon ao general\nin Dublin and neighborhood that pro-\nfes.-it'lial nurses were not tu bo got.\nFor the timo being all sorts ot curious\ncauses are sought for this particular\noutbreak, among other., oysters, of\nwhich it is said, a pnisonuus cargo Arrived at Dublin, They are taxed with\ncausing tlio epidemic.\nNOT TASCOTT.\nChicaoo, Oet. 20.\u2014The photograph\nof a young man held in Philadelphia\nas Tascott, the Suell murderer, was re*\ncoivod [his morning. Police officials\nand others who knew TascuU, say it is\nnot hia picture.\nTIIRV CAN'T DO  IT.\nLondon, Oct. 28.\u2014Tho Genua\u2122 attempt to colonize Taponds Land,\nSouth Natal, has failed. Tlio aettleis\ndispors.d after stilling their property\nand goods nt a suorificc.\nAMERICAN ENTEltl'KISK.\nLondon, Oct, 28.\u2014An American law\nbureau hns been opened nt Frankfort\nby Messrs. Windier nnd Tttsseti.\nLET LOOSE AUAIN.\nDuntiN.Oct. 28 \u2014Dr. Tanner, M.P.,\nfor Cork, convicted of offenses under\ntliu crimes net, wns released to-Oay, hts\nterm of imprisonment having cxpirud.\nQUITE   UNINVEURSTISO.\nLondon, Oct. 28.--The English\nnewspnpora aro singularly dcGciunt in\nenthusiasm over yesterday's marriage\nof Princess Sophia, of Prussia, to thu\nDukti of Sparta at Athens- and in view\nof tho fact that the alliance hns uot\nonly the countenanced, but thespooifio\napproval of tho Queen, the Prince and\nPrincess of Wales and the Empress\nFroderick, tho paucity of any complimentary allusion to tho affair is tho\nmore to bo wondered at. Nono of\nthem, however, go to the length nf\ncriticising it, and tlie publio must por*\nforoe believo that it is a matter in\nwhioh England has no interest.\nBTILL ANOTHER,\nLiverpool, Oot. 28.-Another of\nthe llremen injured by the recent explosion on the Cunnrd steamship \"Co-\npheloniii,-' is dead, making the fourth\nvictim of the disaster.\nLACKS TUM TUH.\nBhlorade, Oot, 28.-Tho ministor\nof furnnco is about to resign because of\nhis inability to reduce the budget,\nCARNOT IS DETERMINED.\nParis, Oot. 28.\u2014President Carnot\nhaa notified hia cabinet that he will decline to accept of the ministers' resignations,\nTUB COTTON CROP DESTROYED.\nShanghai, Oot. 28.*\u2014The cotton\ncrop of the Vang Tbo Kiang valley has\nbeen destroyed by rain,\nWEALTH AND NOTORIETY,\nLondon, Oct 28.\u2014Tho long delayed and mueh talked of action for\nbreach of promise brought by the well-\nknown actress, PhillTs Broughton,\nagainst Lord Dniignn, has been settled\nnt last out of court. By the terms of\nthe settlement Miss Broughton receives\nher. the pecuniary value of which it\nwould bo difficult to compute, and his\nlordship receives his freedom from further prosecution on account of the lovo\nu_air in question.\nSUPPOSED TO BE TASCOTT.\nPhiladelphia, Pa., Oct. 28.\u2014Tho\nman under arreBt hero is BuppoBod to\nbe Tascott, tho Chicago murderer. He\nattempted suicide in his cell this morning.\nA MONOMANIAC.\nFall River, Mbbs,, Oct. 28.\u2014A\nFrenchman named Gillette, aged 40,\nunmarried, has been missing from his\nboarding house since Friday last, In\nhis room was found a box containing\ntho bones of hts deceased mothor,\nwhich ho brought hero from Canada,\nand on it was a letter written by Gillette stating that ho was going to\ndrown himsolf, and requesting that\nwhoever found his body to bury thoao\nbones along with him, No trace of\nthe missing man can be found.\nOTTAWA NOTES.\nOttawa, Oct. 28. -Au application\nwill be made nt tho next session of the\nDominion parliament for an \"Act to\nincorporato t_e Loyal Orange Association of British America.\" Tho rij-\nnuuneem.i\"t is printed in tho Qrantje\nSentinel, and is signed by Clarke Wallace, grand waster, nnd Thos, Kt-y-.-t-,\ngrand secretary.\nHon. J. J. C. Abbott says that the\nidea that the fast Atlantic steamship\nlino is being abandoned ou account of\na lack of capital is a mistake, and that\nas soon aa tiie terminal facilities nnd\n'other matters are arranged the enterprise will go on,\na murderer's confession.\nTacoma, Oct, 26.\u2014It is learned today from city officials that one of the\nthree suspects now confined in the\ncounty jail for tlm murder of Enoch\nCrosby in this city some time ago,\nnamed Sin we, haB confessed to a fellow\nprisoner placed in the jail to pump\nthese men, that ho and Hoyt woro tho\ntwo men who murdered Crosby, It is\nalleged they simply stopped him for\nrobbery, and were not waylaying any\nprominent citizens. Hoyt held a revolver and Stowe wus to have rifk-d\nhis person. When young Crosby\nmade an effort .it defense, Ho} t fired\nthe fatal shot. They then ran down\ntu the railway track and thence beat\ntheir way to Portland. Tho officials\nare reticent &s yet, but it is thought: a\nWritten confession will come out tomorrow.\nCITY COUNCIL.\nLively Proceedings Around  the\nChic Board, Not of tbe Host\nHarmonious Nature.\nThe Session lasts Till Midnight\nand Abounds with Amusing\nWordy Battles.\nThe Street Naming and Numbering\nCommittee at Last Hand in\nTheir Report.\nTHE GOVERNOR'S RECEPTION.\n.. . \u00ab...^\u00ab-\u00abr,t c*   ViCnriA   \u00a38,500 In enhbaldM thi wide ndver-\n41 Government. St., Victoria h,\/^ whioh tll0 matlor hn- givon to\nTiie Programme An-atmcd for llie En*\ntcrtaluiitf-nt or the .'lccoKi-f-.il Party\nnt the Royal Cily.\nWo understand that arrangements\nhnvo been nearly completed for the\npublle reception of hin excellency the\ngovernot-gcnural and Lady Stanley on\ntheir official visit to thia city next\nweek. His excellency and party will\nleave Victoria on Wednesday morning,\nNov. (Hh. If tho admirals consent\nean be obtained, tho party will come\nup the Fraser on oue of the war\nships; if not, probably lt will come by\nway of Vancouver*, in any event it\nwill arrive at the G. P. N, Go's, wharf\nabout 4 o'clock p.m. Hia excellency\nand Lady Stanley will be received at\ntho wharf by his worship the mayor\nand the aldermen, and ho will thore\nreceivo and reply te any addresses\nthnt may be presented to him from\nthe city or municipalities in the district, Tho party will thon go on board\nhia excellency's private car. At 9 p.\nm, hia excellency and Lady Stanley\nwill hold a public reception nt the\nopora house, where nil who wish to bo\npresented are expected to uome, The\nopera house will be decorated for tho\noccaaion, suitable music will be provided, and probably light refreshments\nwill bo served.\nOn Thursday hia excellency and\nparty will go on board a stoamor nt Sapperton at 0:30 a, in.\nand p;iy a viait to the Royal City\nPinning Mills; the steamer will\nproceed thonco to tho fish butchery,\nwhich his excellency haa expressed\na wish to sot*, and the patty will return\nto tho piivate car at Sapperton for\nluncheon at 2 p.m, After luncheon a\nviait will bo matlo to the penitentinfy\nand afterwards ta Quoon'a park, whoro\nit ia hoped arrangements may bo made\nfor n lncrossa match. Aftor leaving\nthe park, fha party will take a drive\nthrough tho oity, or roturn nt onco to\ntho car, aa circumstances may suggest.\nIn the evening his excellency and\ni'aity will nltentl Llm lecture to bn do*\n'.iverud at tho open, houao by Fred.\nVilliers, the war artist ami correspondent of tlie London Graphic. Tho\n?nrty knvos early Friday morning for\nCamloops.\nWo undor it,11 id it iu not his excel*\n1-jnoy'.- w:.ilt ill t miy elaborate pro*\npmutimis sh ulil bo mado lor tho event,\nand thu programme outlined nbovo\nmoots hia cordial approval. It is un*\nderstood tliat these who attend the ro-\noontlon aro uot expected to nppear in\nfull drea.- but every person expecting\nto bo presented must hand to tbe uaher\na card ou which his or hor mum.- is\nplainly printed orwritten. It is hoped\nthe citis-nns will decorate their residences nud places of business, and turn\nuut in forco to tho reception at tho\nwharf ami at the opera house. We\nsuggest also that thu streets and buildings on tho routo which his excellency\ntskus to and fro from the opera house\nboth Wednesday nnd Thursday nights\nahould bo well illuminated, and that\nthe presence among us of theso distinguished nnd representative persons\nBhould bu marked by a proper manifestation of appreciation.\nHnlnlanil vs. Inland.\nIt looks ns though Vancouver Island\nwas to have an exhibition of its own.\nIt remains to be seen whether it is a\nwise movo or not The province eould\nhavo ono good show eaoh year, but\nwhen it cornea to supporting two thore\nis room for doubt. Tho action of the\nMainland, however, has forced this\ncourse upou the Island, mid while we\naro sorry to notice this widening of the\nbreach, whioh is already too great, good\nmsy como out of the ovil; but we don't\nbob muoh chanco for white-winged\npoace to hover, to nny considerable extent, over the rival agriculture associations,\u2014Ktc'onan.\nJob printing of all kinds neatly dont\nat the Colombian offico. Prions will be\nfound as low as at anv other offioo fn\nthe provlnoe.\u2014-Adv\nThe council met at 8 o'clock last\nevening for the transaotion of bust*\nness. Present \u2014 Aldermen Curtis,\nEwen, Calbick, Keary, Reid, Mo-\nFhaden, Shiles, JnqueB.\nHis Worship Mayor Townsend in\nthe chnir,\nThe minutes of the last meeting\nwore rond and adopted,\nCOMMUNICATION\u2122.\nFrom H. H. Williams asking for the\natreet grndo on the corner of oast hnlf\nsurburban lot 55 blk.V, Pelham st.,\nreceived tuiclref erred to tho board of\nworks with power to aet,\nT. Turnbull and others,oalling council's attention te the reckless blasting\nindulged in by the contractor on Pellmm st. and requesting a cessation of\nthe said hostilities.   Received.\nAid. Jaques Baid he had\ntried to restrain thB wild and superabundant energy of the blasters,but they\nblasted on severely, lt was no use\ntalking to them, eaoh remonstrance was\nmot with a blast and a shower of forty j\npound rocks, What could they do\nwith sueh follows?\nAid. Curtis recommended the insertion of a notice in lho local papers warning all persons againBt blasting within\na certain distance of dwelling houses,\nand that blasters would be held respon-\natble for all damage done. -\nAid. Calbick said he had seen a rook\nwhieh had been thrown 1000 feet, and\nhad mado an ascent of balf a mile into\nthe air in transit. The rock was as big\naa one's head, and it oame down and\nsmashed through a thick board fence\nand buried itself nut of eight in the\nground.\nAid. Curtis'proposition wasadopted.\nFrom Johu Grant, mayor of Victoria, inviting tho mayor and aldermen\nof New Westminster to attend tbe official reception to his excellency the governor-general at Victoria on the 31st\ninat, Recoived and clerk instructed to\nreply that counoil will be represented\nby the mayor. '\nW. R, Lewis, asking the line of Columbia st, in front of lot 17, blk. 11.\nReceived and referred to tho board of\nworks with power to aot.\nA. E. Rand, reflecting heavily on the\ncouncil for their action as to tbo sub-\ndiviaions of lots 4 and 25 in suburban ;\nblock. Received.\nAid. Jacques objected to the filing 1\nof this communication before he had\neased his mind in regard to it. He i\nsaid it was a piece of the greatest impertinence on the part of the council to\npresume to dictate to private property\nowners what they should or should not\ndo with their own property; and be\nwould suggest that an ample apology be\nmade Rand Bros, for this uncalled for\naction. The gentlemen had a right to\n\"kick\" and they had -'kicked\" with\ncommendable vigor.\nAid. Keary rose and solemnly asked\nhis worship the meaning of the word\n\"kick\" (laughter). The corporation\ndictionary having been mislaid, this\nphilological query was shelved for fu-\nure examination. Aid. Jaques snorted\nindignantly aa Aid. Keary resumed his\nseat amid the laughter of the board and\naudience.\nHis worship explained that Mr.\nRand had merely been notified that if\ntho street waa not laid out properly\ntho city could not tako it over. Hii\nworship alao explained how street,\nought to be laid out\nAid. Jaques jumped to hia feet and\nsnid, wagging hia pencil at the mayor,\nit would tako you nnd half a dozen\nother mayors and all tho Philadelphia\nlawyers in the world to tell how the\ncity of New Woatminster is laid out.\n(Laughter).\nAid, Reid suid it was a slmme that\nevery man that owned a little pieco of\nlnnd should be allowed to make streets\nthrough it just to suit his own pocket\nond not for the publio good. The\ncommunication after a stormy debate\nwa\u2122 iiled.\nFrom tho ohief uf police notifying\ncouncil thut several hotol keepers had\nbeen violating tho liquor license bylaw of 1880, and asking instructions ai\nto propor aotion to take and Baying the\npolice committee had never been properly urganized according to act of incorporation. Ou motion the chief of\npolico was instructed to make himsolf\nfamiliar with all by-laws and enforoe\nthem without further reference to the\ncouncil.\nFrom tlio chiof of police, drawing\nthe attontion uf tho council to the fact\nthat preparations were being mado for\nthe erection of a verandah iu front of\nStewart & Cash's hotel, contrary to the\nprovisions of the streets and sidewalks\nPI\nby-law, and the resolution passed by\nthe council on the 21st inst. A long\ndiscussion ensued upon this vexed\nquestion and finally on motion tho\ncommunication wai filed.\nFrom the deputy minister of marine,\nacknowledging receipt of the mayor's\ntelegram regarding the resolution\npassed by tho counoil against the erection of the proposed bridge across the\nFraser river at the Mission, and stating that a copy of the telegram had\nbeen forwarded to the department of\nrailways and canals, aa it appeared to\nhiin to appertain more to those departments than to his. Received and\nfiled.\nUis worship said ho had received a\ntelegram from Hon. E. Dewdney asking for the extreme broadth of beam\nof the largest steamer navigating the\nFraser abovo Westminster. Tho Irving had beon carefully measured and\nfound to be 44 feet beam over all.\nThis measurement was sent to Mr,\nDewdney.\nAid, Jaques said it waa more than\nprobablo that owing to the increasing\ntraffio on the Fraser, steamers would\nhave to take scows alongside on their\ntrips, -'and with a 44 foot beam and a\nsoow alongside, it's goin' to be mighty\ntight squeezing to get thom through an\n80 foot draw, and don't you forgit it.\"\nAid. Reid drew attention to the faot\n    that great booms of logs would be con-\n TZ       T   atantly passing down the river to the\nChildren Cryfbt PltcWsCpiWHfc | ww JL Tho rms-Mou\u2122 m.ii\nOo. had a 45,000 acre timber limit up\nthe river, and if they were to get their\nwork done with any despatch the fewer hindrances in the way tho hotter.\nA boom of logs might be a 100 feet\nwide often enough and in such a stiff\ncurront even a much smaller boom\nwould be hard to handle through such\na small draw.\nHis worship said the matter of log\ntowing and scows had been well represented to the authorities in the east,\nTho clerk said that Mr. Hendry\nspeaking at a meeting of the board of\ntrade had said that the log booms were\nnot made so large that they would not\ngo through the draw easily.\nAid. Shiles said that navigating a\nboom of logs was a totally different\nkind of seamanship than that required\nto steer a boat. The boom was apt to\nswing around and in going through so\nnarrow a passage as this draw was proposed to be the result would be unpleasant in the extreme.\nAid. Jaques took the floor and said\nthere were millions of logs to come\ndown the Fraser to the mills, and to\nattempt tu hinder the passage of logs\n\u00abml other craft by patting up a im-an,\nlittle, 80-foot draw, was simply suicidal, It was the C. P. R. that was doing this; it wna a meun, low trick, on\ntheir part to shut off this town from\nthe upper part of the district, and thB\ncouncil would have to make a bold\nstand against that company right hore.\nThoy would have to \"kick vigorously,\nand right on the spot. What had\nmado Westminster was tho farming\ncommunity; if she lost that they had\nall better sell out and quit for pastures .\nnew.\nAid. Ewen said the matter of logs\nfisssing the bridge had been thorough-\ny gone into before and had been carefully pointed oot to the deportment.\nThe counoil bad done all thoy could\nabout it.\nAid. McPhaden said the council\nought to insist on a 100 foot draw at\nthe leaat on aocount of the shallow\nplace on the side when the draw was at\nlow wator.\nMoved by Aid. Jaques, seconded by\nAid. McPhaden, that in the opin'on of\nthis council a draw of leas than 100 foet\na't the Mission bridge would be detrimental to the rapidly growing interests\nof this city for reasons already ox-\npiessed.   Carried.\nFrom Bavie and Bodwell re the\nclaim of T. Gurrie, of Victoria, in regard to the flags sent here for the exhibition, and stating that several Bugs\nhad been abstracted from the package,\nthe value of the said miaaiug Hags\nhaving been added to the amount of\nthe original claim; and also thst they\nhad been instructed hy their eli* nt in\nthe event of non-payment of said\nclaim to institute legal proceedings to\nrecover the same. Received and filed,\nand clerk instructed to inform Mr.\nGome's solicitors that tbo package\nbad not been opened by tho consignees.\nHis worship Baid it had never boen\ntaken from the wharf.'\nAngus Molnnes and others, asking\nthat Halifax atreet bo opened so as to\nprovide communication with Douglas\nstreot. On motion the board of works\nwas instructed to have plans and specifications prepared for this purpose.\nS. J. Pearce and others, atsking that\na aidowalk be laid on Brown street.\nReceived and referred to tho board of\nworks to report at next meeting.\nA. Smith, lock-op keeper, oalling\nattention to tbe unsatisfactory state of\naffairs at the police itation, and explaining the irregular manner in which\nhe is compelled to deal with Bhort-term\nprisoner! owing tothe present arrangements concerning them. Also stating\nthat he could not be responsible for\nany fines uncollected while this condition of things existed. Received and\nreferred to the police committoe with\npower to aet.\nS. G. Tidy, asking permission to lay\nbuilding material on Royal avenue,\nnear Douglas street Granted under\nthe usual conditions.\nJames Cunningham, asking permission to lay a vitrified sewer pipe from\nlot 12, on Agnes Btreet, to the culvert\ncrossing Douglas street. Granted\nsubject to tho usual conditions.\nKBPOHTfl.\nThe police committee's report contained an item referring the account of\nMessrs. Eberts and Taylor for legal\nservices, $350, to tbo financial committee. Aid. Keary took exception to\nthis amount and Baid that if things\nwent on like thia they would lu-ve to\nanticipate next year's revenue.\nThere was a sweet smile of pity on\nAid. Jaques' face as he slowly roue and\nsaid, \"If Aid. Keary had been in this\ncouncil during the last two ye.ws he\nwould think this account pretty light.\"\n(Smiles).   The report waa adopted.\nThe water and aewerege and finance\ncommittees recommended several accounts paid.\nAid. Jaques wanted to know if the\nengineers on the water works survey\nwore working on wages or by some\nother arrangement, and what understanding had been arrived at\nAid. Keary in replying to thii queition, uid the water committee waa not\nthe chairman of the board of worki\n(Aid. Jaques), who hired mon to work\non the streets without saying anything\"\nabout it to the council.\nAid. Jaques retorted warmly, and\nAid. Keary said he would bo happy to\nhappy to answer any question, bnt that\nAid. Jaquea'i questions were pnt in\nsuoh unintelligible shspe tbat it wu\nimpossible for him to understand\nthem.\nAid. Jaques-''Well, I wasn't talking Dutch to him, I spoke plain English.\"\nAid. Keary\u2014\"Queer kind of English, that.\"\nAid. Jaques--\"\\Vell, I'll talk Irish\nto you next time.\"\nAid. Keary-\"A11 right; I'll ba prepared for you.\"\nHis wonhip called the aldermen to    (\nThe board ot worki reported, diking that the 0. P. R. Co. be notified\nto remove all cordwood from Gossett\nstreet, and that a sidewalk ba built on\nProvost street from Blackie to Rail*\nroad street, and on the westerly aide of\nEllico and St. Andrews streets to\nQueens avenuo.   Adopted.\nAid. Keary reported for the water\ncommittee, and uked if It would not\nbe advisable to charter a thip for tho\nspecial purposo of carrying the pipe\nrequired for the water worki direct\nfrom England to New Westminster,\nHe also repotted that the engineers on\nthe work are at present on salary.\nAid. Jaques rose and wid. Aid.\nKeary was quite evidently '-off Ul\nbase'r on the question of engineer!'\nrsee\/onrthpage.l\nUJjJlfl\nhif.ii DAI1V BRITISH OOIUMBU**, MEW WESTMINSTER, B. 0., OCTOBER 29, 1889.\nVOLUME vn.-NO. 10H.\nTHE   DAILY   C0LUIV1BIAN\nFOBlj'.tt'tO\nKvfirj AltaraMB earepl .uud\u2122',\nBV THE\n_C3D*isr*N-Bir>\"sr    Bso-rrsanKfl.\nAi their Steam   Printing Establlah-\nuimit, Columbia Htreet,\nBY   M_.IL-\nFor.l\u2122 uiotithH,.,\u2122\u2122 Kg TO\nFor 6 mouths 8 25\nFOr 8 moutbB...\u2122 - \u00ab * \u00ab*\nDELIVERED IN THE CITY:\nFor 12 months CT W\nFor 6 months \u00ab *} \u2122\nFor 3 months \u00ab- \u2022*\u00bb\nPer mouth \u2122    \u2122\nPer weeK \u25a0   , *a\nPaynieut in all cases [exoept tor wce.iy\nrate) to he made In advance.\nTHE WEEKLY COLUMBIAN\nI\u2122H\u2122<*-I rwry \u00ab>iln'--i\u00abl!t.v Horning.\nMailed, per year *iM\nMailed, 6 months.. 1.20\njlailj) British __.ciwn.bian\nTae.day Evening, Pel. 29. 1889.\nTho Empirtij in discussing the\nvarious health ami pleasure resorts\nof the continent, concludes with the\nfollowing; \"British Oolumbia is\nlikely to bo generally recognized us\nn winter sanitarium of much merit\nTho winters aro suflioiently decided\neverywhere to compel tlio heating\nof bouse., evory day in tho cold sen-\nson. Yet many localities arc us\nwarm as the sea coast of Virginia\nand Carolina. The sojourner can\nhavo this equal warmth, wot or dry,\nas he wishes. Ho can choose Victoria or New Westminster, if be\ndoes not object to abundant rain, or\nif he wants os little wet as possiblo\nho can go to Nanaimo or any other\nlocality protected from the rainy\nwinds of tbe Pacific by the chainof\nmountains running lengthwise\nthrough Vancouver Islnnd, In\nfact, bri tish Columbia affords, within a mdius of a hundred miles, every\ncondition of heat, cold, dryness and\nwot to bo found in the Dominicta.\nThe chronic invalid, if he doesn't\nknow what is best for him, can shift\nhimself from zero frosts to the tmlmi-\niicss of .Southern France in less than\na day's travel I\" In so fow words,\nour cotemporary gives a fair general\nview of the merits of British Columbia, and of the different sections\nmentioned, as a winter sanitarium.\nBritisli Columbia is unquestionably\none of tho healthiest and most agreeable countries to livo in that could\nbo mentioned, antl not only in winter, but all the year round. It would\nbe a mistake to suppose that there\nare not many countries and localities\nwhich it is just as desirable, in tho\ninterests of comfort and health, to\nget out of during the summer as in\nthe winter. And Britisli Columbia\noffers an almost perfect asylum in\neither caso. If the winters nre\nmild, equable, and of short duration\n\u2014utter strangers to the wild blizzards, cruel frosts, terriblo snow\nstorms*, and five months'\" blockades\nof eastern nnd interior countries\u2014so\naro the summers balmy and delightful\u2014the fierce beat, with iti attendant prostration and inevitable sun-\nstroke, so common in many parts of\nthe continent, being happily unknown in this favored province.\nBritish Columbia has long possessed\ntbe climatic advantages that give\nher such a premium over the greater\npart of this continent at least, but\nthe world is just beginning to lind\nit out. The now rapidly becoming\nfamed salubriousness of the Pacific\nprovince is destined to be a very important factor in the speedy settling\nup and development of tho oountry.\nA healthful and agreeable climate\ntbe year round is nn asset that is\nnot to be despised, even when compared with more substantial advantages, of which tlie province also has\nit=< full share. Tho resources and\nadvantages of this province, which\nhave been \"under a bushel,\" so to\nspeak, are becoming better known\nevery duy, und the noxt few years\nwill witness such nu accession to our\npopulation und wealth as will outstrip tiie sensible growth of the\nwholo former period of tbe country's\nhistory. The various cities will\nreap largely in this harvest, especially those that ure wide-awako\nenough to prepare to gather it. Nature bus dono muoh for all of thero,\nbut for nono more than for tbe royal\ncity. With its beautiful southern\nslope, charming surroundings and\ndelightful climate, all that is required is the turning of theae to\naccount, by supplementing tho\ndower of nature with tho improve-\nni'mts and adornments of art, to\nmake this oity the most attractive\nin the provinoe and on tho coast for\ntho JiOfilth, wealth, and pleasure\n.seeker. Tu this end all street, park\nnnd pleasure ground improvements)\nthe introduction of water works nnd\ntho construction of new railway\nlines, tend- and, considering tbo\ncertain future in storo, for Westminster, dependent in a large measure on tlm practical appreciation\nof the fact liy ber citizens, till money\njudiciously expended on tbo objects\nabove enumerated and for kindred\npurposes must in a short time repay\nits expenditure fourfold.\nspring, but others, equally as good,\njoin issue with them. Undoubtedly\ntho development of tho gold fields of\nSouth Afriea is having a great influence on the English market,\nWeek after week, in fact dny after\nday, new South African mining\ncompanies seo the light, and aro\nnearly always fully subscribed.\nMining in South Africa cannot bo\ncarried on without machinery; consequently, shipment.1\" of crushing and\ngrinding mills are a constant occurrence, unci there is quite a rush of\nrepresentatives of English houses to\ntbe gold fields. Another feature of\nimportance, both to England and\nAfrica, is tlie great development of\nagriculture now taking place in the\nlatter country, aud England is taking the bulk of the orders for tho\nimplements necessary for tlto cultiva\ntion of the soil. Tho directors' roport of the Standard Bank of South\nAfrica shows immense material progress, the declared dividends being\n14 per cent, and .\u00a330,000 being put\nto reserve. --During the first half\nof this year,\"\"1 says the Pull Mali Gazette, \"nativo gold was sent to Eng*\nland from tho Transvaal to tho extent of ,\u00a3.390.000, and beforo tho\nclose of tbo year ono million and a\nhalf will have arrived from the same\nsource.\" Burmah, too, is an improving market for English goods.\nTheso are points not to bu overlooked in forecasting the probability\nof tho duration of tlio present state\nof trade in tho Britisli Isles, which\nappear to have just entered into a\nnew period of prosperity, likely to\nendure for a year or two. Several\nimportant iron companies havo lately\nissued their half yearly reports, and\nin nearly every case increased dividends have been earned, in somo instances paying a dividend for the\nlirst time for many years. The demand for railway material is characterized as extraordinary, and makers in many instances decliuo to\nquote. Shipbuilding still continues\nbrisk, and both on the Tyne and\nOlyde high pressure is lhe order of\nthe day. When tho financial chapter in the history of tho year comes\nto be written, ono commercial feature should bo prominent, \/. _., the\nenormous number of limited liability\ncompanies floated on the London\nmoney market. In the winter and\nspring, and even well on into the\nsummer, they appeared by shoals.\nNow the autumn season has commenced, and in one day in the early\npart of this month no fever than\nseven new companies issued prospectuses inviting capital. When\nnew companies spring ou the market\nas thickly as this, it is a dear indication that there is a large quantity\nof capital ready for investment.\nSome of this surplus might surely,\nwithout much difficulty, be diverted\nto Britisli Oolumbia, and the capitalists would bo very suro of a handsome return for  their  investment.\nNOTES AND COMMENTS.\nO' Soup, ono of tbe Sioux chiefs,\nhas placed the wants of his people\nbefore Lord Stanley. His tribe\nwants a stallion, a doctor, a pedigreed bull, and a patenj- windmill.\nWhat better evidence of the advance\nof civilization can be desired 1     m\nIn the Red Gross hospital at\nLyons, France, says an exchange, a\npatient was chloroformed preparatory\nto a painful surgical operation. Being a man of great strength and vitality, at the first incision ho recovered consciousness npd, crazy with\npain, tore the knife from the hand\nof the operator and plunged it into\nthe hearts of the professor and a\nyoung man who was acting as witness.\nHis trial for murder will form an interesting chapter in medical law.\nA sale of thePhiladelphin brewery,\nSan Francisco, to an English syndicate, for 83,000,000, was closed a\nfew days ago, Tho same parties\nhold options on all the other principal breweries of tliat city. If this\nthing keeps on, and tlio English do\nget all the breweries in the country,\nit will be a big lift to tho prohibitionists, for there are a great many\nothers who have invariable opposed\nprohibition who would bo unablo to\nresist tho temptation to \"twist the\nBritish lion's tail.\"\u2014Am, Paper,\nTho London money market is a\nvery fair index of the genoral stato\nof trade in tbo United Kingdom,\nFor many yenrs past a continuous\ndepression has overhung tho com*\n-. merce of England, but, if recent advices are worth anything, thero is a\nstrong indication that better times\nare dawning. Tho latest reports\nfrom all the principal industrial centres speak of a general stiffening in\nprices and increased profits, in spite\nof the upward movement of wages.\nThe iron, coal and engineering are\nundoubtedly lim trades thus affected,\nbut this must produce a demand for\narticles of all,kinds, for when mas-\nters and mon have more monoy to\nspend, every industry must benefit,\nindirectly, if not directly, The\nabundant harvest, too, is nn important Actor of consideration, and will\nno doubt lead to a strong demand\nfor agricultural implements. Some\nexperts, well versed in tho working\nol trado, predict  a  collapse next\nHOW TO  DE ATTRACTIVE.\nA KofUl*.  Homely  Woman  May Ilo HI .tit\n\u25a0'iitt-rtaiuii!,. ami a Fttvoi'Uo;\nThoro ia uu old gating tlmr. to become\nbcnutifulono must never look in i\\ mirror.\n1 romembor roudlp*? this maxim in 1. fairy\ntalo book wbonyoungoiidcrctiuioiisenough\nlo hitei-prct, tilings literally, wriu.-. \"ynieno''\nIn tho Baltimore American. My youth tlid\nnot counterbalance my natural feminine.\nvanity, I longed to bo beautiful, because\nIn tho fairytales tho beautiful maidens\nwere always tlio ones about wlu.ni all tho\ninterest hung, Go I determined I, too,\nwould follow Uio injunction laid down by\nthe godmother.\nI shunned tlio looldng-glass studiously\nami ..0 pointedly that my older sisters remarked tho ..iitldon chango. I remained un-\ncoinmunicative nud nltorcd my tootles. I\nstood before the mirror with my oyos olosed,\nso as lo mislead them. Ono day I for\u00abot\nand opened my oyes, when to I instead of\nbeholding long, shining ringlets, milk whilo\nskin and star-like eyes, uucli as had rewarded tlio girl in tlio story book, my own plain\nlittle face looked at roe in grieved surprise\nfrom the mirror, 1 was, indeed, a sorry\nenough sight willi my frill awry, my hat on\nexactly backwards 1 And this, after my efforts oi weeks. 'Twas then 1 learned tlmt\n\"tlto world wan hollow and my. doll was\nstuffed with saw-dust,1} Tliat ohlldlsji experience waa not without its influence on\nmy oharaoter, I becamo a small oynlo.\nNow I havo learned lho truo moaning of\ntiio fairy talo.\nTin; world of women pays loo much hood\nto iis looking-glass\u2014tho moro physical\nbeauty Is gazed upon nnd thought pf to tlio\nneglect of nil else, bopousp there ia a popular\nbelief afloat thai only beautiful women arc\nattractive. Women who aro plain, boyom]\naU possibility oE ever becoming handsome,\nBtill devote their timo to their personal\nadornment, undor tho Impression that by\nso doing thoy will becomo better looking\nond more obarmlng, when in reality If they\nwould turn tlielr backs upon thoir mirrors\nthey might indeed far outshine the beautiful women around them. If tboy would do-\nvoto the time they now wasto In vain eii-\ndoavorsiorpbyslaal improvement to cultivating tholr minds, improving their manners and conversation, thoy would lind, liko\nthe maiden of tho fairy talo, that tho mirror\nwas \"a delusion and a snare.\"\nTlio most attractive women in society today tire not tho acknowledged beauties In\nmany instances. Often we seo lhc homeliest\ngirl in an assemblage the recipient of the\nmost favor**, becauso of her bright manners,\nbar brilliant conversation, 01* lier keen wit.\nSuch a ono reigns supremo when tho insipid beauty of tho season is no longer admired. Beauty is of itself attractive; it\npleases the eye and charms the beholder\nfor awhile, but beauty alone will not make\na woman popular.\nWomen are much liko flowers; tbo ones\nthat havo beauty and mind, well cultivated,\nare liko the flowers with beauty and fra-\ngrnnco--*tbey tiro never-ending sources of\ndelight. Others aro fair to look upon, buta\nclose inspection discovers a thorn. Tlio\nthird \u2122imt are liko tho homely wall flower,\nneither handsomo or graceful, but so full of\nsiveotuess lhat to bo near thom is joy inexpressible. So many girls, who are brought\nup with the knowledge that thoy aro gifted\nwith fot-iiB and faces of unusual loveliness,\ndepend loo much upou thoso advantages for\ntholr success In lifo. Thoy never realize\nthe necessity of applying themselves to tho\nacquisition of knowlodgo; they grow to\nwomanhood with meager educations, no accomplishments, and a much exaggerated\nopinion of their charms. Tho result is that\nthey oujoy only for a brief timo tho prcstigo\nfor wh hill tne:* nro so ambitious.\nBorne of the plainest women I ever know\nwere tiio greatest favorites. Tholr presenco\nin a room was tho signal for good humored\nenjoyment, Timo never flagged when tboy\nwere of the party. Tho lack of mere facial\nsymmetry was forgotten when under tho\nspell of their gonial influence. It is not unusual to see a haudsomo man wedded to a\nhomely womun, Wo havo all beard, and\nperhaps made the remark, \"Why, what did\nsuch a good-looking man ever seo iu that\nwoman to lovo.' Wo uro thinking of only\ntbo outward appearance, when, in truth, tho\ncuaruotor of suoh u woman may bo so lovely nnd tiiti-ii. tivo to thoso who know hor that\nnono \"Would hnvo her different If thoy could.\nIt is a groat pity wliea a girl allows herself\nto grow discontented and unhappy about\nherlpoks. When this is tho case it is timo\nfor her to hoofi tho fairy's warning and\nshun tiio mirror by thinking I03B of appearances and moro of other things.\nI know a most nttractivo girl, who is far\nfrom protty. I heard her once say in reply\nio a remark thut sho was always so jolly\nmd pleasant: \"Yes, I huvo to bo so or bo\nconsidered u nonentity, for you know I\nhaven't Madge's beauty to tako mo ovor\ndull places.\" And this plain girl, by hor\nown efforts to please, succeeded in winning\nfriends and warm ndntirct-s on ovory hand.\nShe realized Ubr lack of beauty, nnd' knowing that sho cuuld novor remodel tho phys-\nlognomy God had givon Her, sho bent hor\nenergies In another direction, nnd mado tbo\nmost of tho heart and mind which it is possible for all to develop ami improve. In\nEuropo to day tho Princess Mettorufch ia\nalways greeted with enthusiasm and admiration because of her gracious und winning manner, although slio is universally\nconsidered out) of the homeliest women iii\nBoclbty.\nAil women nro capable of boing attractive\nif they would only exert themselves sufficiently. Thero is whero the charm of tho\nhomely woman lies\u2014in her doslro lo mako\ntbo most of hor 0 ipabllltlos. Kculis-ing that\nfine has no boadty of feature, alio turns bor\nattention 10 becoming a lino conversational-\n1st (a most delightful accomplishment, by\nUiowiiy}, a brilliant musician, or making\ntbo bost of whatever happens to bo her spec-\nOhureh union may more be making\nlittle progress; but bucIi cannot bo\ns.iid of church unity. Tho latter\nidea is moving forward, nud clergymen of all denominations are recognizing it. In New York tbo other\nday tho Ohurch Unity Society of\ntho Anglican Church bold its meeting, Thoro were present, besides\ntlio Anglican dignitaries, prominent\nmen in othor communions, us, for\nexample, Dr. SchalT, of tlio Presbyterian Church, Most friendly ex-\npatiences woro exchanged, Tho\nBishop of Pittsburg called upon the\nmembers not to lot tlm differences\namong Christnins dismay them, adding ; \"Somo on boards and some\non pieces of tlio ship ; and so it\ncame to pits. that they escaped ail\n1 to laud.\"   A rather apt quotation.\nThe delegates to tiie American\ninternational congress nre really enduring a sort of martyrdom. For\ninstance, according to the eorrespon\ndent of the New York Tribune, thoy\nretired ut two o'clock the other morning after a banquet in, BullUlo only\nto bo aroused ut six to take the train\nfor Cleveland, and their nppearance\nwas decidedly \"seedy,\" not withstand\ning their manful attempts to look\notherwise. How they lookod after\ntheir banquet at Manchester, N, H.,\na few days beforo, has not been\nstated, but it has leaked out tbat\nthat they were forced to drink sherry\nout of \"ginger-ale bottlos, Now Hampshire being a prohibition stato. Jn\nPortland, Me,, no such attempt was\nmade at ostensible compliance with\nthe law, winos being openly served\nat tlio banquet.\nChildren Cryfor Pitcher'.Ga&toria\nPULITZER'S  SPEECH\nWhere the Note. Now Vork Ne wi-ptip-r\nPublisher i'ivihii.\nWhon Stllson Qiitolifns was tho loading\nnewspaper rami 6f the Wost, \"Joo\" Piilit-\nrsor was doing reportorial work on an ob-\nncure Gorman paper in Bt. Louis, snys tho\nPhiladelphia Ntus, it was ids first experience as n journalist, und lie bad *-. adiialcd\ntail of a wuitership in Tony Faust's rOBttlUf-\nnnl. Monoy was plenty with Huieliiiis, und\none of his hobbies wns an occasional ban*\n'(\u25a0net to the now. paper fraternity, where tho\nquill-drivers could como logoiliovand Bhalto\nhands after their battlos in black ink and\nIcftd, On one of theso convivial occasions,\nalter half 11 score of (ousts hud been responded to, \"Joe \" WoCultogh, editor of tho\n(itobc-Dtmoorat, sprang to his foot,\n\"I move, Mr. GlialrirtatJ,'\" auld McUul-\nhigb, turning with Iftlalorous mirth, toward\nPulit-Cr, \"1 move wo huvo a speech from\ntbo'Dutch' roportor.\"\nA ronr of laughter greeted lho sally. Pul-\n(tzbv's awkwardness made hiin tbo butt of\ntlio newspaper crowd, uud calls for tho\n\"Dutch reporter\" mounded al] along tbo\ntable.   Pulitzer blushed to tho roots of bis\nhair,\n\" I got notbiug to speech,\" ho blurted,\nfinally, in broken Epglfah.\n'Ttitn make a s'pecth without saying any\nthics-V persisted McOuUagh,\n\"Veil, dec,\" tald Pulltrer, \"here's lo\ntlir limit- pto pnt lor of der biggest Dutch\npup**\" in der West.\"\n\" Ami wii\") will it he!\" libit ul McCullflgh,\nwith mock gravity.\n\"J. FuJittflr,-! wa- tbo quiet nnswor.\nA round of tip[t!tti:.p gi.tttd ibe answer,\nand tbe djm'j l.icitK.g \"Duieh reporter\"\nsmiled to liinmll. The \"greatest Gorman\nflaily\" did\u2122'*, :7i.i!eri.tli\/c, but tho rejuvenated Now Yot-u i.'iW.. did. Tho \"Dutch\nreporter\" Is to-lay an-.*of tlit-biagestnows-\npaper proprietors in the world, ami McCul-\nHigh is still working for a salarp.\nfli-ought film Up l\u00ab Time.\n\"Mr, Sampson,\" she said, wltb n blush,\n\"J want Iti ask what yon muy think is a\nvery strango quostion: Do you know if\nyoung Mr. llrown Is a gentleman of correct\nhabits?\" Mr. Sampson grew palo nnd\nhemmed and hawed. \"Well\u2014or\u2014um\u2014\nves,\" bo said. \" 1 think bo Is, but O, Miss\nUmilh-MIss Clara-Clara\u2014\" A llttio\nlater ho looked down Into her oyca and\nmiid: \"Why did you ask mo nbont Mr.\nllrown, dariingl\" \"Because I fancy ho is\nbecoming interested In n vory doar friend\nof mine,\" suid tho girl, unblushlngly,\n\u00bb188jiMgi1Ml\nJAMES   CUNNINGHAM,\nThe Pioneer Hardware i\u00a5Ban\nIs Btill on Columbia Street, with tlio Largest and Best Stock of HARD-\nWARE, .STOVES, TINWARE, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE,\nPAINTS nnd OILS in tho Province.\nW Uo is now handling a line lino of COOKlMQ and HEATING STOVES.\nThe Bales aro increasing daily.   Want of room for tho largo ulock, which is being\nconstantly added to, is felt to bo at thin season very inconvenient, but as soon as\nhis now Jiriok is completed to Front Street a Btock will bo kept on hand commensurate with the rapid increase of tho population of tho oity.\nIu tho Plumbing line, tinsmitmng work is dono on the premises, as usual, by\ngood workmen; no Wide boyB trusted with euch important work, doc!7to\nHold Your Orders\n JLJyTXS\t\nAs wo havo a Car-load of tho Celebrated\nAdams & Son's Lumber Wagons,\nWhich will be hero In about 10 Days.\nWu will also receive a number of Delivery WtlgOIIS by the same ear..\nMainland Carriage Works.\ndoeita d*a*i*r.Bi*sr <sn JS-a-srsoH*.\nZED.   \u00a9.  HALL.,\nBookseller, Stationer and Importer!\n(WHOLESALE AND RETAIL),\nColumbia St., New Westminster.\nEnglish, Foreign and United States Periodicals and Newspapers constantly on hand.   Books imported to order.\nOPENING\nCALL AND SEE 008 NEW STOCK OF SQODS.\nMRS. HI. R. ,VIM.IA81S & MES. i. RASURE OPEN THEIR NEW\nMilliner)' Stock to-diiy (Oot. 1st), lis tlso WINTEMUTE ULOCK, oss\nColumbia Street, tlsis-sl doos- cast of Clssss-cls Street.\nWo mo also prepared to do Fnsllioiuiblc \u00a3)l'essnl'lkmg, n3 sve have a\n0 lirst-class Fitter and Draper frons tho cast.   Perfect lit Rsiisi'risstecd.        doclto\nIs BB-VW-\u2122*-\u2122 a_.*4-\u2122\u2122\u00bb\u2122    \u2122   J\nCorner Columbia and Blacliie Streets,\nOPP. C. P. It. STATION,\n\u2122S\u21223S\u2122S_CS\u2122r_33\u2122*\nTeas, Coffees, Spices, Butter, Eggs, Cheese,\nDried Meats, Canned Goods, Fruits\nand Confectionery.\nJAMES D\n[SUCCESSOR TO I). MoPHADBNJ\nDEALER IN ALL KINDS OF FIRST-CLASS\nJE-\" SHI MS MM <\u2022*     \u00ab\u2122fiz \u00ae_J _\nCoflces Roasted and Ground on this Prensisos.   Fiiio Tossis a Specialty,\ndsvly  -.\u2014\u2014OOLUMBIA STREET\u2122-\nBRITISH COLUMBIA Ul\nColumbia Street, New Westminster.\nVAN  VOLKENBURGH   BROS.\nWholesale and Retail Butchers.\nMEAT PURVEYORS IN fiENERAls.    FRESH A.\\\u00bb  CORNED\nMEATS ALWAYS Os\\ HANI).\n\u2122TSpccial lines sjiioted for tho shipping trade.   Family orders strictly attended\nto.   Hotels svill lind it tn thoir intsis-est to place their orders with tho abovo Urns,\nd\u2122noly\nCROSS t. POINGDESTRE,\nWholesale ami Retail\nTOBACCONISTS\nCHOICE BRANDS OF\nIMPORTED  CIGARS,\nFinest Cigarettes,\nFancy Isnporl\u2122 PIPES, POUCHES, 01-\nOABETTE CASES, ETC.\nChoice Smoking Tobacco\nThompson's Old Pholo Gallery,\nLONDON MARKET\nFront Street, New Westminster.\nMANAHAN &\"REI0HENBACH,\nttfOOOESBOHS TO W. II. TOWNSEND)\nDEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF FRESH & SALT MEAT\nHams, Uncoil, Suusagc, Bologuaa, Etc\n\u25a0Inolyl\nPlants for Sale!\n ATTHE\t\nDouglas Street Nursery,\nOUDIiinS TAKEN FOR FRUIT AND\nORNAMENTAL TREES,  Including\nnil the Icuillnss varieties of\nApples, Pears, Plums, Cherries,\n A1.80\t\nSMAltf lilin\u2122 of ovory description.\nIlnissisicls, 1,'rcnllis nsssl crosses snndo\nto order,\nsldsviipiiyi p. LATHAM,\nThis Lead is known\nfrom Halifax to British Columbia as the\nbest, finest and purest iu Canada.\njiciilM'ti In all kind, of\nroceries\n\u2014AND\u2014\nGENERAL PROVISIONS\nGood\u2122 delivered to any part of the oity\nfree.\nCor. Columbia nnd Douglas St.,,\ndauOyl NEW WESTMINSTER.\n-TEC \"El-\nFook Wo & Co.\nCharcoal forSale\nCHINESE LABOR CONTRACTED FOR.\nOOLUMBIA ST., NEW WESTMINSTER.\n{NonrClcvoltind Hotel.)\ndsio21m4\nCounty Court of New Went*\nminster,\nHOLDEN AT NEW WESTMINSTER.\nmm 81TT1NOOF TIIE ABOVE CSUIItT\nX linslioois postponed from wssdnesilny\nllie oils slay ot November, lo FKMAV the\nHll, slnyolNovrns lier.\nW. II, KALDINH,\nsloc2llil Registrar.\n[!Vt!\u2122 copy,]\nll!.\nG. J. BURNETT,\nPUPIL OF PROF. TOMS, ENGLAND\nAnd recently from tlio\nChicago Oratorio Society.\nPRINCIPAL IWESSOAKATZEHBEROEII,\nWIU bo linppy to receive Pupils\nCORNER MART 81. AND QUEEN'S AVE.\noolodlsn\nintra! Hotel\nCor. Columbia & Douglas Sts.\nSTEWART _? CASH, PH0PB1ET0BS\nKates, $1.00 and $l.50pcr Day,\nACCOltDIKO TO BOOM.\nSPECIAL RATES BY TIIE WEEK OR MONTH.\n\u00ab\u00ae\" rallies uuppllod with till kinds of\nICE-CREAM. dmylmO\nNOTICE 13 HEREBY GIVEN THAT\ntho partnershtp heretofore subsist-\niitir between tlio undersigned uiul or tho\n(Inr namo of Comerforu A McDougall,\nMer-\u2122i'\u2122i(.'J-ill-\u2122.>, lias boen dissolved Mils\niiu*- by jiititti-ii consent. All accounts\nowing i lie Into Arm aro to bo paid to J. A.\nUoDougftll, and all claims against, tbo\nsaid firm will lio sottlod by him,\nT. OOMKBFOKD;\nJ. A, MoDOUGATjL,\nNew Wost., Ai.fr. ..l.lSKf.\nJ. fl.\nWIMj CONTINUE THE BUSINESS\nunder his own namo, at the same\nstore, on Columbia street, nest to P,\nCrake':.. A eontlnuaneo of tiie putiHc\nptjtroniigois ivsiK-cifully t-olloiteti. Satisfaction -j-ua run teed. dwscdlc\nM.A.McRAE\n HAS ON\t\nExhibition\nThe finest assortment \"f\nEnglish Tweeds, Worsteds,\nFancy EPniitings, _fcc,\n&<!., JHSt\nAcall.oliciloil. Armstrong Block, Now\ndw Wostminstor, mli28lc\nAnother consignment of Goods Just arrived.  Wo havo now got\nThe IE est English, Scotch and\nFrench (.oods\nThat oan ho had in tho market, Positively tlio choicei\u2122- selection of Pan tings In\ntlio city, and at prices tn suit everybody,\nfall and be convinced, Notroublctoshow\ngoods. All aro welcome to inspect,\nwhether (hoy buy or uot,\nAH work guaranteed, and done\non the shortest possible\nnotice*\nAlso solo iicoiits on tho Mainland of British Columbia for tho\nScience of Dress Cutting\nWhich In. tire\u2122 a perfect fit ovory timo and\nIs st) easy that a child can understand it.\nBEGGS\"&HEARD,\nLeading Merchant  Tailors,\nI Door Wost of Islcklnson'sBislolsorRlsop,\ndmlilyl        l\u00ab COLUM III A STREET.\nMURDERED!.\nB\" (Abont2P.M.,So*sl.ll) B\nH HIGH PWOES IN BOOTS ANDZ\nX SHOE. |\nI   ROBBED   1\n\u25a0\u25a0OF ALL CULTAS STOOK INS\nJi DOOTS k SHOES. S\nBURIED\nWALL   REGARD   FOE   HIOhS\na FEICES. g\nI WANTED f\ns.  1000 MEN, WOMEN ft CHIL-f\n** DF.EN, |\n\u00a3To Buy Boots that R Boots g\nh. B,jfiiii)TE!sl\nSIUN OF TIIE BUFFALO,\ndwsoistss       coiiVUiiiA aranr.\nSTOVES! STOVES\nk_\u2122 u_ o   _-o \u25a0\nE. S. SCOULLAR &\n-FOB-\nCheap Cooking Stoves & Ranges\nDON'T FOKGET THE ADDKJfSBs\nWater I toi Sisij*\u00abr,\n3 O-EE-    TO .\nSAMUEL MELLARD, \u2022 CHILLIWHACK,\nWhom \\vc have appointed our sole agent for our celebrate\nStoves in that district. Mr. Mellard will supply our Stoves i\nNew Westminster prices. dwnoiyi\nTHIS SPACE BELONGS TO\nH. T. READ & CO.\nHARDWARE MERCHANT'S.\nBUGGIES!     BUGGIES!\nJUST RECEIVED,\nA CARLOAD Of\nPell, Eice Coil-spring iIcLaufhlaii\nMtR mj msn-m_a m tei tm\n ALSO\t\nDUPLEX, HANDY, BRADLEY & OTHER\nDemocrat and Express Wagons!\n\u2122__ .\u25a0.,-...;:...!. i\nlUT The Best and Cheapest Rigs ever offered for sale in\nBritish Columbia.*^]}\ndwftpfitr\noicS <db OTJL-rrie,\nChas. McDONOUGH,\nFront Street, IVew Westminster,\nII\nEXTRA FAMILY BLANKETS,\nFLANNELS, WORSTEDS M kinds Of Woolen (Ms\nK1MDY-MADE CLOTHING.\n X\t\ng^* The only House on the Mainland which keeps the Manufactures of the New Westminster Woolen Mills. Patronize Home\nIndustry. dmhjotc\nROYAL CITY\nPlaning lis Company, Ld.\nRICHARD STREET, NEW WESTM1N8TER.\nM'SUFAS-l'l'HKRS AHO DtMUM IV\nShingles, Shakes, Laths, Pickets,\nSALMON BOXES, NET FLOATS, TRAYS,\n\u2122.*\u2122X> \u2122-_\u2122  JCXJSTDS OS-\nWOOd Furnishing for Canneries.\nDoors,   Frames,   Windows*\nMouldings. Balusters,\nBlinds. Brackets,\nRailings, Newels.\nPLAIN AND F\/JNCV AND ALL KINDS OF TURNED WORK,\nnolOdwly\nVancouver Hit; Foundry & Machine Ms Co.\n( _I\u2122CIT*B1D)\nEngineers, Boiler Makers, and Iron and Brass Founders\nHAVING GREATLY INCREASED THEIR PREMISES AND MAOHIN-\nDry, arts ill is position to sssiilrrtiskss tho oossstrsictloss and repair, of HAI\"\u2122\u2122'\n\u2122i Stationary Engines and Bollcrii, Milling, Mining and Cnnnerr\nMachinery, as woll as Canting,  and Foi-glnga of ovory description.\n. Estimates given t all work guaranteed,\nr. BAKER, A; MoKELVIE,\nSeobbtsUsy. dwJ117lo UmumUMAMoiR, VOLUME VII.-NO. 103.\nDAILY BRITISH OOLUMBIAN, NEW WESTMINSTER, B. 0., OCTOBER 29, 1889.\nHIS NOTIFICATION.\nHow Thornton Executed Hia Oom-\n\/; mission. \/\n\"She'll havo to go; ain't no wayoiito1\nthit. She'll have to skip,\" said Dave Kinney. He squinted in a croas-oyedmannerat\ntlto craoker-erumb oa hiB tawny, scraggy\nbeard, and transferred it carefully to his\nmouth. Thoro was a wedge of cheese on\nhis left knee. When the Fence Corners\nSchool Hoard\u2014originally Fennet. s Corners, but thus aptly abbreviated\u2014held a\nmeetiiiK, it was, by general agreement, in\nold Hi-ilk.' grocery, where crackers and\nohocso, and mayhap a herring, might re*\nliovo its tedium. But to-night there was on\nalleviating interest.\n\"About tho size of it,\" said Silas Saunders. Ho preferred tobacco, and rolled a\nquid undor his tonguo. ''Thi a ain't no place\nfor hor here. Why, I wouldn't answer for\nthe consequences if Bhe staid; there ain't\nno tellln' what might happen, ner what\ndeviltry thomboyB might bo up to. Look\n(it Corny Bourke, six foot two or threo if\nUc'a un inch, and ehuck full, ohuok full,\nchuck full! He's always bc'-t tho ono to\nput, tho teachers out, and thore ain't no\ndoubt but what It's his idee this timo. Bar-\ntinuliti' tho school-house right out bold\nlirst day o' school; now, who butCorny'd\n'u'thought o'tAatf\"\n'i'hora was something of contemplative\nn-i--iii.ition in his tono. ***\"\u25a0\n\u25a0'Uf-iii' to bo done, whoevor's doln' it,'\ni.nid Kinney, exploring his cracker-bag.\n\"(loin1 to git inat eight o'clock to-morrow\nui-iriilii- uu' Bhut up tho door and fasten the\nv\/imlows, and any teacher that gits in'11\nhnvo to git ln through tho key-hole or a\nuracil; what they \u00abW.\" <etv&\nUo bad told it before; He had callod tbe\nmooting tor tho purpose of telling it. But\nit was interesting to dwell upon,   .-\nTliero was an impressive silence.\n\"Wall, we'll have to glvo her notice,\nYou're jest the one to do it, Thornton\u2014ehl\"\nSaunders observed to the third member\nof the board. He was himself uneasy.\n\"Sho got along fust-rate, summer term,\" he\nadded. He appeared to feel a vague and\nwholly impotent regret \"NoecU the money,\nshould jodge.\" -**>.. *--***fi*-'\n\"Shoneed't 'a' .de no calculations to\nteach no winter terra hor\u2014not to Fence\nCorners,\" Kinnuy responded, with Borne\ncontempt. \"If there h'aln't be'n a winter\ni*-riiv*-yettr3 but what there's be'n n rum-\n\u25a0ntB,*i.fl gener'lyHchool abut up, w'y, she\nno-jdn't 'a' looked rer thero pott, to be.\"\nIt iv.m unanswerable, but the Btore-keepor\ne^tcrnl a-a-guI: suggestion over his motley\ncounter,\n\"I shimld think that gang ought to be\n.roi.oiiiV'hosaid.\nlie expected no rejoinder, and got none,\nilie Mi.-Iiool Hoard'ti attention centered upon\n\u2022losti.U whimsical irrelevancy.\n\"'.uckon you're tie one to notify hor,\nI'll .niton,\" suid Saunders, again.\nIlo wriggled unquiet ly on his stool.\n\u2022 Tlus.-iitoiisatmotionle.is. Whether In faot\nor by a trick of the ill-burning lamp on tbe\n\u25a0!(i'.\u2122!>\u2122',hls good-looking faco withlts heavy,\nligliu moustache, appeared pale. Ho sat\n-villi luanrins crossed on his knees and hiB\neye.*- on tho lloor, silent.\n'\u2022\u25a0Tout ho,\" said Kinney, with au air of im*\npar-Hut decision. \"Toucan git it off bettor\n'n ''minders or me, Thornton. You'ro a\nhotter looklu' nun, anyhow, and you'ro better rigged up, he concluded, with politic\naininbleness. ...\u00ab\nTln.yuiado an attempt at a careless dis*\nmisa. lot tho subject. Kinney got up and\nthrew hiB cheeBO rind in the stove. Thornton passed bis hand over hiB mouth and\ns .vui J >wed hard.\n\"You can just put it easy,\" Baid Kinney,\nencouragingly. \"You oan tell her jest how\n'tis, nnd how It's for her own good, and\nain't to bo put off ner avoided. You can\nfcllhor sbe dono fli-st-cftm, summer term.\nW'y you enn toll hor jest what you'ro a-\nmine to,\" cried Kinney, magnanimously.\nTheir colleague arose. Ho was a tall aud\npowerful young fellow, but there was an\nudd laxity in his movements now as ho went\ntoward tho door, He hold his bat-brim to\nItls tips, too, and turned his face away from\ntho light. Hanks stared after him till the\ndoor closed.\n\"I s'spoBe you've found out that Jim\nThornton's about the bashfulest feller ln\ntown, ain't youl\" ho queried.\n, The i-o was no response.\n\u25a0'\u2022 \"And you've prob'ly Buspicloncd, same aB\nother folks, that he's kind o' sweet on the\nKehool-niu'ani, or would bo if hedastl\" pur.\nsued tlie store-keeper.\nThe School Board waa silent,\n\"Wai,\" ho concluded, with a grin, half of\ndisgust, half of admiration, \"you couldn't\n'a' hired mo to be'n that mean to a ycllcr\ndog-not to a yeller dogi\"\nThornton made hia way up tho road\nthrough a warm and lightly falling early\nsnow that whitened and softened and beau-\nlied it, dark as it was from tho infrcquency\not buildings and bubbly with the frozen\ntr. ml. He forgot to put his hat ou till he mot\nit man in a wagon, who stared at him. His\nfuco and huir wero damp with melted italics\nlio wont slowly, almost creepingly, for\nthorn wna in his heart a terrible, sinking\ndread of whut ho must do. It was almost\n.more limn lio could master.\n' Whom whs sho? Bissel's; he knew sho\nhoarded at BIbscI's and It waa not far; ho\ni-nuid seo its light through the snow-laden\nt roes. Tho pain at bis heart waa all but\nphysical; he winced, and kept his hand on\nliii nervous mouth; thoro was a mist in his\n-eyes, aud it grow Into tears. He was uot\ni-m-jaed at them, nor ashamed of them; ho\nwiped them off moehanicolly with his rough,\nstrong hand, He did not know whether\ntbey wore from pity of her or of himself;\nho know not which was tho stronger with*\nIn him; he was not elearly conscious of\ncith or, but of a dull unhapplnoss such as he\nhad never known. \u25a0*.\nHe lookod down at his clothes with faint\nshame; they woro not his best ones. He\nhad a roody-mado suit at home, but thoso\nhis mother had made. Bo wished thoy\nlooked bettor. Tbe light in Bissel's window\n\u25a0\u2022nut id\u2122 long shadow on tho whito ground.\nIt wavered thero, shrinking and lingering;\nthen it pushed on and up to the door.\n< It was not the custom in Fonco Corners\nto rapt It would havo been looked upon as a\nuseless formality. He stepped Into Bissel's\nInrgc, scantily furnished, rag-carpeted best\nroom. * \u25a0 -.\u2022\u2022_\u25a0\nHe gospod as be stood then. He had\nvat-uuly hoped for a littlo reprieve, but sbe\neat thoro by tbe lamp, a tono, bonding\novor some work. Bho rose at his entrance,\nand oame forward a little to offer hor hand;\nbut ho did not soo it, and lhe dropped lt\nback in awkward haste, ada\n\"Won'tyoutakoaohalrl^shesaid. W\nSho brought one forward. Thornton sat\ndown. Ho droppod bis hat as he did so, and\npieked it up with a red face. Then ho sat\nstill. He would bave tried to speak, but he\nknow be oould not; his ton-pie folt thick\nand Immovable, , .\u00bb\u25a0\u00ab\u2022\u00bb .\n\"It's snowing,ain't it,\"said tho school-\nteacher; she boro tho marks of diffidence\nhor\u2122-. .f In her timorous voice and look,\nThortonnodded; lt was all he could do.\nHo stared at her fixedly, almost vacuously.\nHis inlud wandered baok and strove to\nanchor Itself to. something. Once he had\nspen t an ovenlngat Bissel's, on the occasion\nof a sociable, and taken her hand In one of\ntho gumes; onco he had overtaken hor, lu a\nwagon, on hor way to school and given hor\naim. That was ill. Bethought It might\nhavo beon less hard for him if thoro had\nboon something more, but that was all his\nmorbid self-distrustfulness had allowed\nhim. .        .*.-.-'-\u25a0\u2022 ...\nTho ticking of a clock on a oorner-stand\nflltod tho silence. It was a round, ntckoi\nclock, and it ticked ao loudly as to force\nitself upon them, tt -\n\"That's my school-clock,\" satd the teacher. \"I am all ready for to-morrow. Thoro\nnre my books over thero with It and the\nroglster,  \u2014\nTho school director dropped his misorablo\noyes to the faded stripe In the carpet at his\nfeet, but ho did not seo it; hts hat shook\nwith tho trembling of his hands.\n\"I've ho'u thinking how many I'll have,\nlikely,\" tho Bchool-teaohor wont on. His\nmisery imparted itself to her in a degree of\nner vmis.ni!>.!!, and sho lot hor work drop. \"I\nhnd twenty.flvo this summer; there's always moro winters, ain't there 1\"\nUo managed to say yos. Bis oyos wero\nwandering ubout the room now, his lips\nIctlaa if Ior air. Ho saw a new pjinn in\nihe window.! c*>ulUG^y puttiod-a cuibphoi\n\u2022Hittlclcfboutlie molodoon\u2014a bronlriiijbo\n-ano sent of a chair\u2014a small tub fitted wltli\nwhite asters still In bloom. He continued\nlooking ut these,\n\"They're real late, ain't they?\" snid tho\ngirl. \"They're mine, I potted'em myselt\nand 2 guess they'll last best part of the winter; I've beard they will, took care of. Do\n.ou want ono)\"\nSho put down her work and went and\npicked one. Then, with a Bhy laugh, (die\ntook tier. cis.-ors and went back to them.\n\"Mny be your mothor'd liko a few; sho\nhain't got 'cm, has Bhe?\" she said.\nShcmmloa bunch and tied it with tier\nblack thread, Thornton watched her; a\nslight girl in a cheap and well-worn dross,\nher dark hair in a girlish braid, and hor\neyes mild. This she was, but who Bhall tell\nyrtint lid wusl His agony rose, culnihialo-1\nas sho turned to him; ho clutched his hat\ntill us still brim cracked. Sho was coining\ntownrd him with tho flowers.\n\"There, may be sho'd like a fow,\" she repealed, fnin t.heartodiy; but bo did not hear\nher. He folt Ida fuco uflamo li!;e lire, nnd\nacliokmg m his throat. He struggled to\nspeak, and did make tin Inarticulate sound,\nat whleli sho looked at hlm in wonder.\nHo lookod up at hor pitifully\u2014and then fell\nBtumblingiy on hir. knees at her feot nml\nburled his face in Iter skirt, aud groping\nTor her hands, pulled tbem down till they\npressed tits throbbing head and rested\nthoro, her happy, wondering tears falling\nupon them.\n\u00ab       .        #       #       #       #       \u00bb\n\" Dushful'\" said Unvo Kinney to Hanks,\ntbo nt ore keeper. \"I'd liko to know what's\nyoui-Mtvo' bushfulnoss, W'y, Jim Thorn-\nton walked onto' this storo Hint night und\nup to BIssol's straight as a string, und told\nthat Behooltcuchor tliat,owln- to ch-cilin*\nstances that he didn't have no control over,\nsho couldn't havo tho school tins winter, nor\nlikely thoro couldn't nobody else ho'ther,\nbut if it'd bo any consideration to hor, she\ncould have htm; told hor that right up and\ndown, uud didn't mako no bones of it, If\nJim Thornton's bushful- w'y, tho fellor that\nain't's what -T'd like to boo.\"\u2014Emma A,\nOppor, in Leslie's Newspaper,\nTHE LAW'S INTRICACIES.\nWhy a Colored Han Concluded to Get Uu\na Code of His Own.\n\"I ain't gwlno stay here no longer.\" The\ncountry judgo, to whom tho remark was ail\ndressed, looked up and saw a bonch-legged\nold negro standing noar, says tho Arkausaw\nTraveler,\n\"What's the umttorl\"\n\"Wall, Bah, I jost kain't orford ter stay in\nor placo whar do folks beat mo liko da do\nyore.\"\n. \"But what have I got to do with It!\"\n\"You's do jedgo o' do county, ain't youl\"\n\"I'm tho county judge.\"\n\"Yob, sab, yas; an' I has como to seo you\non bigness. Some time ergo I bought cr piece\no' Ian' down on do bayou. Built mc er\nhouso on it, I did, an1 gun ter lib dar in good\nshape, too, but ono dayi sorter stuinblw\nan' felUn debt, an' den, ter keep my bou-\"\nfrum boin' tuck crway frum mc, I had Ii\nmade obor ter my wife. Dat wuz feol;slnir.\nand love on my part, an11 thought dot ui)\nwife oughtor ho mighty thankful ter rae,\nbut whut did fiho doi\"\n\"I don't know,\" tho judgo answered.\n\"Muy bo you don't, but I does. She\nwilled dat Ian' ter er feller dat I doan korc\nnothin- orbout, dat'a whut sho done.\"\n\"Willed it to hlm?\"\n\"Dat'a whut I said.\"\n\"Whon did she dio?\"\n\"She ain't dead.\"    *\n\"How, then, did sho will it to him?\"\n\"Had do papers drnwed up and turned mc\nouten do houso, dat'a how. Er yallor\npreacher come 'roun' an' 'sunded lier; scoun\nnul lole hor tint I wa'n't gwiue ter lib long\nsaid dat do Lawd had tolo him so In ei\ndream. Tolo ray wife, do yallor seouunu.\ndid, dat when 1 died ho'd marry hor an'\nmake hor or powerful lady in de congorgu-\ntion. Do scouiiuulsold do Ian' an' tins dun\ntor do country.   Now, whut's I gwlno dot\"\n\"I don't know.\"\n**WiJl do law hurt mo If I follow dat man\nan' kills him?\"\n\"Hang you.\"\n\"Wall, but what do law gwino to do wid\ndat man fur beatin' me outen my house!\"\n\"I don't know that Itcan do any tiling.\"\n\"But It willbroak iny neck if 1 kills hlm?\"\n\"Yes.\"\n\"Law la mado fur yollermen,lt 'pears\nliko.\" l\n\"Don't know tliat it Is, but this yellow\nman surely has tbe advantage of you.\"\n\"Yas, sah; yas. But do law kain't make\nme lib wid dat triflln'an' no 'count Indv.\nken It?\"\nNo.\"\nThank do Lawd fur dat much, anyhow.\nAn'lflgoea and marries ernoder lady it\nwill bo all right wid do law, won't It?\"\n\"Not unless you get a divorce.\"\n\"Hatter spend ray money fur er 'vorce\nalter sho dun turned mo outen do house?\"\n\"Yoa.\"\n\"Wall, dta is do cuis country I obor seed\nin my life. Laws mndo in fabor o' uo'count\nladles un' yaller men. I'm gwlno make\nsomo law fur myso'f, an' ef you yore a iti-iny\ngun go off an' don yore or yallor man holler,\nyou may know dat do law hab dun gono ra\ntoroffeck.\"\nHUMBLING  A  MOGUL.\nForty Deti-rmiiu-'l Autl-repptir-Iu-tlic-\nSuupJitt. Win a Groat Victory.\nThe autocrat of tho seaside resort is not\ntho man with his millions, but tho hotei\ncook. The clork In the office may imagine\nthat he owns most of tho earth, nnd the\nhead waiter may feel tlmt ho has a war\nrantydocdof tho remainder, but when yon\ncomo right down to facts tlio boss of't h -\nkitchen Is tho boss of tho ranch. Ho is tin-\nunseen powor behind tho throno to which ull\nbow.\nAt our hotol the soup had invariably been\nseasoned so high with cayenne pepper tlr.it\nnot one out of ten could moro thantasto it,\nsays a writer lu tho Detroit Freo Pros a\nTho samo was truo of tho deviled cUimo\nOno day I made n kick, and In flvo minuter'\nI had balf a dozen guests with mc. Wi\nintorviowod tho landlord and his reply was,\n\"Ihavo nothing to aay about it Yo*\nmust go to tho chief cook.\"\nWo Bought an interview with tbatimif-\nnato. Ho was a colored man with the\ndignity of a Boman Sonator. Wo made our\ncomplaint, and ho replied;\n\"Isoiisou dat soup an' dom clams to suit\nmy taste.\"\n\"But it doesn't suit ours.\"\n\"Can't help dat, Bab.\"\n\"Wo want loss popper.\",\n\"Cun't help dot.\"\n\u25a0 'Do you refuse to mako a change t\"\n\"I surtinly do, sab, I 'lows nobody to tell\nmo what to do.\"\nWo returned to the verandah and went\nInto convention. Evory minuto addod H\nour numerical strength, and in a quarter of\nan hour wo numbered forty mon. Then ii\nwas unanimously\n\"Resolved, Tbat if tho cook refuses to uno\ntoss popper we seek somo other hotel.\"\nDelegates were appointed to wait on tb-\nlandlord, and ho replied:\n\"'Gentlemen, I am sorry, but I dare no'\ninterfere.\"\nForty rooms wero vacated, forty trunb\npacked and thon mino host wilted. II-\ncallcd ln tho cook, and, though that iudivio\nual attempted to stand on his dignity, in\nhad to wilt. By this time the excitement\nwas Intense, and had the forty gono thoy\nwould havo been followed by a hundred\nmore. \"Less' pepper\" was tbe watchword all over tho houso, and It meant;:\ngroat deal to the landlord. Wo kicked, wc\nsaw, wo conquered, and the noxt soup mul\noxactly suited tho popular taste. Tin\ncook is still tho unseen powor behind tin\nthrono, but he has skipped a cog and no en\nIs afraid of blm any longor.\nAccording to tho report transmitted tn\nCongress by tho Secretary of War there\nare in tho United Statos nvuiluble for military duty 8,021,(105 men exclusive of those\nlu llm regular army. Of this number nuv\nHiiT nre unrolled itt tho militia force, nnd the\n'Oiuuindor, 7tlKfO,.'0S, are the nblc-bodiud\ncltii-i'iiu over eighteen nnd unflSr forty-Jlvo\nyeara of ago who uro' liable to be called uti\nfor military duty. This give-- lho United\nStates u military atretigtli thnt will proba,\nlily enable hot' in hold hor own In t-uho of\ntrouble with any first-class powor.\n\u2022\u20221 nave used Palne's cclc-iy compound nud lt\ntins imd a unlutni\neffect, ltlnvlgornt\/\nedthesystem and!\nfeci like n in-H\nniiiii. It ImprtiTO.\nthe appetite and\nlaeilltiiU1\u2122 dlgC3-\n,tlon.\" -J, T. CorE*\niii\u2122 d, Primus, 3.0,\nSpring medicine nieiirisraerenuw-a-dtiyaiUaaJt\ndldtenycantngo. Tlie wloterof 168349 kaaleft\ntho norvcfl all fagged out. The ucrves must be\nBtrengthonoa, tho blood purifled, liver and\nbowels regulated, palne's Celery Compound-\n17-c Spring medicine vfta-dny-doCH Oil thia,\nas nothing else can. Prtteribid by PhyHciant,\nItccomweiuicd by Drnggixts, L'luloreed by Ministers,\nguaranteed by the Manufacturers to bs\nSpring Medics\u2122\u00a9-.\n\" Iu tho Bprlng ot isst I was all ntn down. 1\n\u25a0could get up In tho morning with bo tired a\nfueling, and waa bo weak tlmt Icouldliurdly got\naround, iboughta bottle of 1-atno'sColcry com.-\npound, and before I had taken lt a week 1 felt\nvery much hotter. I can cbci-fully recommend\nIt to till who nood a building up and strengthening mctllclne.\" Mrs. fl. A. Dow, Dtirllngton, Vt,\nPaine's\nCelery Compound\nlfl a unlquo tonic and appetizer. Pleasant to\ntke taste, qulok lu Us uction, nnd without any\nInjurtmiB effect, lt gives that rugged health\nwhich makes everything tabte (-ood. It cureE\nlyspcpsla aud kindred disorders. Physicians\npreserlbe lt. Si.oo, Six for |s.oo. Druggists,\nWBUAlUcnABDSOHftCO.,    .   UONTIUUL.\nOIAHOHO DYES f&BS^jSOS,\nUCTATED m. JHttSBSK\nBAPTIST CHURCH, Agnus Street,\nEnst of Mary Street. Lord's Day\nServices at 11a. nu nnd 7 i.n.. Sabbath\nSchool iimlBlbl-T Class ul 2:30 p. in. All\nseats free; strangers cordially welcomed,\n\u2014Hov. Thos. Baldwin, iinstor.\nTITETHODIST    O B V\u00bb C H ,   Mary\n1VI Street. Rev. .f. IT. While, Pnt-tor.\nServices at II u, hi. mid 7p. in,  Sunday\nKehoiil Mid IJil.luCln-v'.iWiMn. Fnivi.-r\nMooting nn Tluii'.-'itiivs nl 7.!IOp.lrt. M'-iitB\nfreo; strnngert* cordially Invited,\nOT, PAUL'S CMVItCIl, John Street,\nO Opposite Ornntto Hall. Rev. Thomas\nHnddon, Pnstor. .Services evory Sunday\nat 11 n. m, and 7 p. tn. Thursday evenings\nat7:!)0 o'clock. Bents free; nil nro rordi-\nnllyliivlted.  .'\u25a0utiiliiyKc-liihil :i|.2:J!l)p. in.\nBUGGIES,\nPHiESTONS,\nMARKET\nWAGONS\nBest Assortment in the Province.\ngSsTSce   our   display at   our   Warehouse before purchasing\nelsewhere.\nF.G. STRICKLAND & CO.\nN. B.\u2014Sulkey, Gang, and Walking Plows always in stock.\n(0_5T.\"Ei CIT\"_T)\nThe Most Flourishing and Rapidly Growing City on Puget Sound.\nflffS* 50 BLOCKS^\nOF LEVEL LAND RIGHT IN THE HEART OF THE CITV.\nDlShnn. 'ft. -MAKV'K (iliritcil; tteclor,\nThe Ven. Arohdetteoii Woods. Services\nin both elittrohus every day. All rents\nfree. Holli cliuri-iii-*\" open all iiuj- tor pit-\nviito pi-nyer.\nPllKSnYTBHIAN    CHURCH    {.ST.\nANDREW'fii, corner Cnrifnrvdu nnd\nHlm-kH-oo'li. Is. Kev. Tims. Keoulnr. pastor, .\u2022services n! ll ii in imd 7 \u25a0) in.; fctin-\ndny-sehiKil nii'l 1'ililc class \u00bbt _.;;tl p. m.:\nPrayer-in oet.11 in on Tlnusilny evenings nt\n7.30.  Sen is free: stritn-feis ivt-leome.\nKP.-ROYAL LODGE NO. 0. Regular\n, Meeting every Tuesday night nt 8\no-iJlocb. Oddfellows'Hnll. Visiting Brethren wuleoino.--J. E. ICNifmT, K. ot R, A ft.\nT O, G. T.-BXOELBIOR I.UTinENO.8\n1, meets'every Monday evoning at 8o'-\nolook, In tboToniponmco Hull, Columbia\nSt. V]sEt'lii!;mt'iiil)*-r--art? cordinllv Itivlt-\nt\u00bbd.\u2014W. V. LOVE, Rec. Sec.\nA O. F.-COURT LOltD DUFFERIN.\nJ\\\u00bb No, GSO-I. The rc-rulnr tneetfiiu's of\nthe above C .tirt nro held at the Fore .tors'\nHall, on tlio first and third Wednesday ln\neaoh month, at8 p, in.\u2014Jno, McMuiii-nv,\nBenr., I'.C. It.\t\nCALEDONIA ta ST. ANDUBW'S\nSOClKTY.-'f ne regular meotlngs of\nthis Association nro holtf on tlio last Tuesday of euch month, nt 8 o'clock p.m. All\nScotchmen nro Invited to nttend,-Jou.v\nBuie, sec.\n\u25a0fir C. T. Vi-REGULAR MEETING\nTV , every Wednemitiy nfternoon nt 8\no'clock at tho W. C. T. U. Headquarters,\nDouglas SU  Loyal Legion In the hnnie\nE lnco every Friday afternoon.\u2014-MflS.JAs.\nUNNiNQHAJt, President; J!its. J. A. (Tn-\nNixtiiiAM, Socrotnrv.\nUJIION LOHOE No, 0, A. F.\n* A. M.\u2014The rogular meetings of this IjOi!f*e nro held lu\n_ . the Miisiiiiic'IVnipIooo the find,\nWednesday In euch month, flt7l80o'clock\np. in. KoJotinilnKhrelhrHii ure cordially\nInvltod to attend.--V\/. C. Coatham, sef.\nBUARD OF TRAUB. lloiml Room,\nOddfellows Brick l.loelt, uu-stulrs\nC'lumdl meels on the lirst Wednesday\nIn   ench   month, at -1 p. ni.  Quarterly\ninei'lliis-s'iit llicKint of Feb., Mny., Ati\u00bb.,\nnnd Nov., nt 7i.il p. in. New members\nmny be proposed .nd elected nl uny Q,unr*\ntelly meoUng.\u2014D. RonsoN,Soo,\nKOT'ICn\nNOTICI\u2122 IS JIKKKBY (MVKN THAT\nI hnvo seized nnd will sell l,y Publio Auction, ut my odlce, In New WprI-\nmlnsler, on tho iiionilnj; of tlm Sixth day\nof November, subject lo lhe payment ny\nthe pttrohasor In addition lo tno purchuso\nprice nil costs, ohnrgeeand expenses connected with tlicsi'iziin-.iicerliilinniiinllty\nof Logs now lying at the mouth'on the\nlitinl-:. und In Scon Creek, :i trlbuliiiy of\nPlttl.nke, in tlio District of New W-..-\nmlnstor.\nT. ft. HIGGINSON,\nCrown Tim ber Agent\nNew Westminster, fiMi Oeloher, 1880.\ndocBinl\nNOTICE OFJISSOLUTION.\nTHE PARTNERSHIP HERETOFORE\nexisting between W. J. Corbett nnd\nT. Kennedy, a.s tinsmiths, etc , lias this\ntliiv been dissolved by nititunl consent.\nAll olnlmoagainst tbo Into firm, and nil\nbills due to sumo to bo paid by nnd to W,\nJ. Corbett, who will coiiflnuolneold (Inn's\nbusiness. W. .1. CORBETT.\nTHOMAS KENNEDY.\nA LARUE LOT OF STOVES Just arrived per O.P. H. thnt must bo sold nt\nonce ns I have not been nblo to pfbouro a\nstiltablo storo to show them.\nW. ,h CORBETT.\noelSdlin In rear of Iliiuk of R. 0.\nNOTICE.\nmHE APOLLINAltlS COMPANY (Ll-\nJ. mltetl) of London, Englnnd, havlni*\nInformnHon thai hpiirloiis wiilers linvi\nboon manufactured and sold In this prov\nlnco as (tonttlno \"Apolllnnrls\" waters In\nInfrliifjemont, of die complifty-H tviuio\nmark duly rogiaterod in Oatiadai\nNotico is hereby given thai prntii-i'dlnKs\nwill bo in. tlluU'-f imninst nil person-, who\nnflerlhls dato sbull iiinnufiiclnre oroll'cr\nfor snlo nny liquid under tho name of\n\"Apolilnarls,\" other than pill up by and\nbenrlnirtho genuine tnide murks of the\ncompnny.\nTHE APOLLINAR1S COMPANY (Ll),)\nBy Drake, Jackson A Hrlsiokbn,\nThoir Solloltors.\nVictorin, B. C, Hth Oct., im,    doDlBmS\nThe blocks are divided into lots 40 feet front by 125\nfeet deep to an alley.\nPricesfrom$\u201eto$12.50perFrontFoot\nSnle will commence on the\n18th DAY OF OCTOBER, 1889.\nAlter each 15 days 5 per cont. will be ndded to tho price.\nis the TIME FOR a FORTUNE\nCome antl sec and don't say yon did not have a chance.\nEDWARD WSCIIEH,\nListsil Agcsst.\nM, L. STANOROOM,\nGenoral Agcsst.\nx*\u2122\u2122S_\u2122ZO-ir\u2122\u2122\u2122xx.\u2122>\nDRESSMAKING\nAt MISS JEKJflfliO,\u2122',\n(Late of England)\nCornor of Ohnrch and Columbln Streots,\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\nsursathfnctlon ffiiaranteed.    dwMte\nDress-Making I\nMisses mcdougall\nCOLUMBIA   STREKT,\nNew Westminster, B. C.\njWj-HatlMfrtcllon frissirAUtessst.       siajllStss\nW, BREGEMEYER, DR, PH.\n(Late Partner of John McYJckcr)\nMINING ENGINEER, U.S. A PROVINCIAL SUUVEYOH,* ASSAYEB.\n8_PRellublQ reports, underground surveys and mapiiof mlnos OJteouted ntlow\nrates, Assays madeon all klndti'Of inln-\nernls, Koldiiud silver bars. Thlrly years'\nexperience In mining In Asia, Europe\nmid United status of America. Si-oaks\nten hinEiUrm'es. Anshj-s from Jt illsttuice\npromptly ailendoil lo. Address Vancou\n%-cr, B, 0. adome\nisroTXC\u2122^\nT HEREBY GIVE NOTICE THAT sixty\n1 [60I days afterdate 1 intend to iniike\nnppllcntlon to tho Chief Commissioner of\nLauds nnd Works for permission to pur*\nehnso the following tract or parcel of land,\nviz!\nAn Island in Now Westminster Dlslrlct\nnorth of Lot 11)4 IMcNab's rancbel ln the\nFruser River, containing five f51 nores,\nmore or less.\nHENRY E, HARLOCK.\nLadner's Landing, Sopt, 12,1880,      d2m\na-TOTIOEL\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT\nnppllcation will bo mndo to the Leg-\nIslnllve Amtembly of tho Province of British Columbln nt Its next session for an net\nto Incorporate n company to construct,\noporatonnd maintain a street railway in\nthe City of Now Westmlnslor, and to\nncqulre lundt- nnd do all thlnjjs necessnry\nfor the purposes aforesaid,\nDated this SS-ui day of Septomber, 1880.\nH. DOUGLAS,\nHENRY V. EDMONDS,\ndiiCtOtc For selves and others.\nNOTICE.\nMONUMENTAL\n\u25a0woEirs.\nColumbia and Church Streets.\nAlex. Hamilton,\nPROPRIETOR.\nI.\nawl\n:t;ifl.,i:i'i rniinov.1 stkkkt.\nVANCOUVER. B.C.\nimporlcrs ami Dealers lu\nMACHINERY\nOK ALL nKf-CIUTIONB.\nMARINE WORK A SPECIALTY.\nawAem\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT\nsixty dnys after dntn we intend to\napplyto 1 ho Chief Commissioner of Lnnds\nnnd Works for leavo to purchase the following lnnds, Kliunl. In lhe District of\nNew Westminster, and dcsorlb-d ns follows: Lotn one hundred nnd thlrty-nno\n|t;,ll, ono hundred and thirty-five IliKl,\none hundred and thirty-six [ISilf, one htm*\nnred and thlrty-elghl, [m], mitionehun-\ndrednnd.forty-one [HI], In Group Ono of\nsnld District, eontnlnlii-' eight hundred\nncros, moii.1 or less.\nPuled loth September, 188ft\nANDREW LEAMY,\ndsolo-2in J, H. GILLESPIE.\nTenders   Wanted,\nSOT LATER THAN THE 5m NOVEM-\nber, or t-irarina 80 acres, more or\n1, of land at Boundary Bay.\nSpecifications to be seen on nppllcntlon\nto Wm, McDowell, Ladner's Lnnd ing, or\nto the undersigned.\nThe lowest or nny tender not necessarily\nncooptod,\nE. M. JOHNBTON,\n81 Government st\u201e Victoria, B. C.\nOctober, 1S88. ocWdwtd\nJ. W. WINGER\nDEALER IN\nHard and SoftWood\nDraying and Teaming\nDone on Short Notice and at Reasonable Tctras,\nSAN JUAN LIME\nAlways In Stock.\nOrders left at the C. P. N. Wharf will be\npromptly delivered, drah29te\nWM. H. VIANEN,\nWHOLESALE\nFisl-Gi(!]J\u2122l\u2122!\nFRONT STREET,\nNew Westminster, Brit. Col.\nt_r Highest Prico paid fssr Furs assd\nDeer Hides.\nCorrespondence iuvllcil.  (^.Telephone\nIssll No. 6, 1IJ118I0\nDOUGLAS STREET\nBAKERY\nFoot op Douglas Stiikrt. Near\ncolomuta stkkkt.\nJ. FKIUil SO\\, PROPR1ETOB\nFRESH   BREAD,   CAKES,   PASTRY,\nConfectionery, etc., etc\nHotel and Restaurant trade solicited,\n, All orders promptly attended to and\ndollverod to any part of tho city.  dml)28y\n\"Land Registry Act.\"\nLet No. 12, Ulock XXII, nud Lot No.\n21, Block XXVIII, City of New\nWestminster.\nACEKTIFICATE OK INDEKEASIDLE\n(Itletotho nhovo mentioned lierotlltn-\nmonlH will ho Issued to Alexander- ouIIb\non the Ilth dny of .Iniiunry, 1800' unless In\nthe meiuillmn a valid oblocibm I hereto\nbo made to the undcrsljriicd In wrlllns by\nsome person olninittiKnno-l-itenr Interest\nIn snld hen .lltnnientssoi Some pari thereof,\nLnml He.lstT.viMllce, New West mlnsler,\n7th October, I8S9.\nT, 0. TOWNLEY,\ndoe7m8 Deputy RPRlstrar,\nCanadian Paoific Railway,\nPACIFIC DIVISION.\nGen'l Superintendent's Office.\nCAUTION.\nOWNERS AND urAHTEKS OF VES-\nsots nnd olbcr Craft nnvlj-'ntini* the\nKrnser River nre otuitloned to keep wllhln\ntho Huovfl painted Wed nnd Wliltc, ro-\nspeeilvely.nt the Mission Brhke, ns during the construction of the Ih-lih-o, navigation between tho banks of the River\nand the Buoys Is dangerous, owing to piles\nbeing driven there,\nH. ABBOTT,\nGeneral Superintendent,\nVancouver, B.O., 7th Mny, It**, dmyflto\nTIME    CARD.\na. ->. xt. 00.\nTlso Fine Flrsl-clssss\nStr. William Irving\nWill Loisve Use 0, P. N. Co\u2122 Whssr!,\n-VIST\nTuesday, Thursdays Saturday\nAT 7 A. M.,\nFOU CHILLIWHACK AMD WAV PMTS.\nKelisrislug Every\nWednesday, Friday & Sunday\nWhen Htiniciciit Inducement offers sbe\nwill proceed to HOPE nnd on such\noccasions will leave hor wharf\nat .a. m.\nConnecting with the C. P. N, Co.-b Steamer\nfor Victoria,\nJOHN IRVING, Manager.\nT, I., BRIGGS, Agent,\nNew Westminster. dnpStc\nTime Table.\n-p--fa THE 8TEAMER\n,-SHrobert dunsmuir\nLEAVES WESTMINSTER every Mondny morning at 7 o'olock for Nnnnimo, via Vancouver, reluming Tuesday,\nvln Vancouver.\n1-eaves Westminster overy Wednesday\nat 7 a, m. for Nanaimo direct, connecting\nWltb Island railway aud Comox steamer.\nIicavoH Nanaimo for Vancouver on\nThursdays mid Fridays and returns snme\ndiiys.\nLeaves Nnnnimo on Saturday at 7 u. m,\nfot Westminster direct.\nFor freight or pnssago apply on board,\nor to T. I*TJbioqi, 0, P. X. wliarf.    dlo\nBRITISH\nGOiuiBi\u2122\u2122\nSTEAM\nnrmTnrij\nCOLUMBIA   8TEEET,\nNew Westminster, It. f.\n(DAILY AND WEEKLY)\n0L9ES7MBQJUIDMSUI\nUNRIVALLED ON THE MAINLAND\n01' BRITISH COLUMBIA AS\nAN ADVERTISING\nMEDIUM\nPER ANNUM, BY MAIL:\nDaily British Columbian, - $6\nWeekly\"      '      * 2\nPAYABLE IN ADVANCE,\nBOOK,\nJOB, and\nCOMMERCIAL\nPRINTING\n\u2014 OK\u2014\nEvery   Description\nEXECUTED IN\nFIRST-CLASS STYLE\nAT MODERATE RATES.\nOUR FACILITIES IN THIS DEPART-\nMENT ARE UNSURPASSED\nIN THE PROVINCE.\nSpecial Forms Ruled\nand Printed.\nHAVING A RULING MACHINE ON\nTHE PREMISES WE ARE EN-\nABLED TO FURNISH\nSPECIAL FORMS\nTO ORDER.\nADDITION'S AKIJ IMPROV\u00a3HEIVTS\nHave recently beon made In the\nvarious Deportments,\nAnd with careful and olKoient workmen,\nfast steam presses, and first-class materials, tv i* tun guarantee satisfaction to all\nwho favor us with their orders.\nKENNEDY BROS.\nnol PROPRiaTORH\n\/AD IS\nWHAT EVERYBODY SAYS MUST BE TRUE.\nThe steady rush of purchasers at ROUSSEAU'S Boot and Sho\nStore shows that our straight-forward way of doing\nbusiness  has  given  the. people\nPerfect Satisfaction\nWe offer no unreasonable inducements; our object in advertisin\nis to give a truthful description of our resources. We hi.ve th\nlargest stock of Boots and Shoes ever exhibited in the Provinci\nCall and see it before purchasing elsewhere.\nLisiiW Kid Button Boots S2.00\nMisssis      slo slo     .... 1.75\nChildren's do do      1,60\ninfant's,    do do     50\nMen's Laco Boots. Sl.fl\nBoy.'      do         l.S\nYouths' slo '       1,0\nWsgss-aus Sllpiscs-s  1.0\nThese goods are all made in the latest styles and manfsctures\nfrom the best home and imported goods, All marked in plaii\nfigures.   Strictly one price at\nJAMES   ROUSSEAU'S,\n81 COLUMBIA STREET, ::::::::::: NEW WESTMINSTEB\ndwto\nC. McDONOUGH,\n(LUNDBOMB BUILDING, FRONT STREET)\nI*\u2122\nGENERAL MERCHANDISE!\nConstantly on Hand an Extensive Stoek of\nDiy Goods, Groceries, Boots & Shoes, Hats & Caps\nCrockery, Glassware, Ac.\nx*x-OCT'S   Sb   bots'    suit:;.\nGreat Variety of Household Articles,   Also,\nGRAIN, SEEDS, POTATOES, LIME and   GENERAL STORES\nN. B.\u2014Farm Produce bought at marl\nIrom tbe Interior promptly attended to.\nCASTORIA\nfar Infants -nd Children.\n' \"CMtn_UwnIltf.pt\u2122\u2122\u2122*\u2122\u2122.-!\u2122! I AM\u2122\u2122 ossr\u2122 Os*. OmHpstl\u2122;\n[sts\u2122nssssessdltMM\u2122ri\u201etousrPlws-lDttS\u2122 I **U BtomMb, DisUT\u2122\u2122, Insists\u2122\u2122,\n\u2122m\u2122 a\u2122-*   TCi_\u2122\u00a3l_nr^ I \u25a0*\u2022*\u00bb\u00ab?\u25a0\u2022\u00ab\"\" \"\"**\u2022 \u2022M 1MM,\u25a0 *\nW\u2122.C\u2122\u2122\u2122l\u2122Bra_-\u2122,*-,_.   |t\u2122Im\u00a3)*i\u2122\u2122I\u2122\u2122Is\u2122\u2122-\n_-tt df\u2122**. OssMMJTT, 77 Msssray Strart, H. Y.\nW.O. LOYE,\noot ui Shoe Kaier.\nRepairing R-Mly Dome.  Cork Bote\nwork a Bpeclnlty.\naarordors promptly ntl ended to.\nOlarkaon St*, ln rear of Colonial Hotel, noxt to Rand Bros.' offlco.   -Incite\nBusiness Notice.\nmRE UNDERSIGNED IS PREPARED\nJL to furnish plans audspccIIlcatluuK for\nnil clauses of buildings (stono nnd brlok a\nspecialty). Will furnish ull tbe necessnry\ntlrairluKS and sit perl nten.l wort through \u00bb\ncompetent foreman, and will guarantee\nperfect work for 3 per cont. of cost, Offlce\nin Bank of Ii. 0, Buildini:, up stairs, New\nWostminstcr. JAMES KENNEDY,\ndwsellto Architect.\nFeed, Livery i Sale\nSTABLES,\nDallas Street, Westminster\njos. mTwise,\nFSOPBIBTOB.\nGOOD DRIVING A RIDING HORSES\nfor Hire. Hacks cnll at all Steamers\nand Trains. Special attention given to\nBoarding Horses,\nCOAL AND WOOD\nConstantly on Hand.\nOrders may he left at the Office of Mathers A Mllllgan, Commission Merchants,\nFront Street, Now West, dseZlto\nESTABLISHED 1859.\nROBT. DICKINSON\nBUTCHER,\nNear ly Oppoiite tbo Colonial Hotel,\nNEW WE8TMI\u2122SrER.\nTHE LARGEST  AND   CHO: -KST\nassortment ot til descriptions of\nMEATS AND VEOETABLES\nConstantly on hand, and supplied to Fam.\nHies, Restaurants, and Steamboats at the\nLOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES.\nTo San Francisco, Cal.\n\u2022WHIM\nBY WAT OF TBE\nXiXXXXt.\nTHE Ml SHASTA ROUTE.\nQuickerrinj\u2122ebthanantother\nMetori\u00abJjaB Mho.\nQRAKDSQENtORODHJF THE PACIFIC COAST\nPULLMAN   BUFFET SLEEPERS\nTOURIST SLEEPING CARS\nFor Accommodation of Socom.Olass Passengers, attached to Express Trains,\nFaro from Portland to Bnernmento aim\nBan Kranolsco\u2014Unlimited, J2..; First-\nelnss (Limited), 8fl>\" Sceond-oliiss (Limited), tiff.\nTHROUGH TICKETS to all points Sontl\nnud Easl, via California.\nTtCKET OFFICER:\nCity Ovpick, No. 184 Cor. First A Al-lc\nStreets;\nDepot Of. ion, Cor. F A Front Street*;\nPortland, Oregon.\n-t.Komi.m___ *^B\u2122R\u2122i.\nKaMand Tusfei\nHACK, LIVERY, STME,\nFeed | Sale Stables\nTHE SUBSCRIBERS ARE NOW PRK-\nPARED TO TURN OUT\n10UBLE AKD SIN3LE RKtS\nAt Special \".-ov.- Rates.\nis-r and AJJ Zinda of Tea&iaf\nDone at Shortest Notice.\nDryf'ordwoo-l delivered to bi.***partof\nthe City.\nOrders by Telephone will recolv i prompt\nattention.\n\u2022r-Stnbles nearly opposite C, P. R.De-\n. pot, Columbia St., NewWcs minster.\ndjallic      QILLEY BRO _. Profs.\nBRITISH COLUMIIA\nLand i Investment Ajency\n(\u2122I\u2122CIT_II> 1\nTHOMAS ALUSOP,\nHENRYSrUASOlt, l 1\n UD, J\nSSUSSSSE  O. UAIS\u2122,\nOUYLER A. HOLLAND\nbead orncru\n15 Serjeant's Inn, Fleet Street,\nLONDON, ENO.\nTbe Bnsiness of ALLSOP A MASON hn.\nbeen merged ln tbe Alsove (\u2122nspa*uians!\nwill Ins carried on by tho Corns. nyTro\u2122\nthis dsste ns st gesserol Lssssd InvoKtment\nand lsssurnnce Agenoy.\nMONEY TO LOAN on Mortgage 1st Low\nRates. Town Loss and Fanning Lnnsl.\nlor Snle on easy lerms.\nVictoria,\u2122 0., May Hth, 18J7. dwjlys\nto imm\nIT YOU WANT TO KNJOY. A OOOD\nCIGAR, ASK FOB TBE\nBRITISH LION\nHENRY LEE,\n\u00ab\u00bb MAINLAND.\nAVThey are not only made of the\nChoicest Tobacco but thev are ol\nHome Manufacture, and should ba\npatronised by all good citizens,\nWM. TIETJEN, Manufacturer,\nHOLBROOK BUILDING,\nCOLUMBIA ITKIT.        NEW WESTMIINTM.\ndwVtnoly\nWM. McCOLL\n.-.\nCHOICE\nFamily Groceries!\nAnd PROVISIONS.\n\u2014AIBO\u2014\nA WELL-SELECT\u2122 STUCK 01\nDRYCOOM\nAND FURNISHMGS.\nAT THE  LOWE8T PRICES.\nLUNDBOHM'H BLOOK,     '\n< .l._l,l. nml,       Kew W\u201el_\u2122,l,f\nnold .ly g,uiii futisii (jtolamliian\nT\u00bb. _J rveata\u2122 Pel. \u00bb, 1\u00abM.\nitmtmm inm \u25a0\"\u2022 tki.mily.\nTras,sle\u00bbIAd,erllsraienls.-PlrBtlusor.\ntlsiss. 10 i-.t. 1'or line sssllil nonnarell' euch\nsis IwseissssmtcsjssecissstlvoliiserU\u2122, Jets, per\ntlssH Advortlsessiessss not inserted every\ndny-tls\u2122 lissortlon, 10 els. per line; ssslsse-\nutsusst Insertions, 5 \"Is. per line.\n-li,:,.Ill's Adv.'rSS>ensents.-rroloiislssss-\nisl or llnslness Onrsls-SI per inoisth. 8pe>\nclisl rat\u2122 lor geucnsl truslo mlverllsltiK,\nneisKsdllis,' to spnee ocessplod and duration\n\" wlion Sales, ss-lsen dlsp!lij'Cd,chnrgi\"l\n\u2122 t>, r cent, le\u2122 mass traiislenl Hilvlss, _\nr.,,11.1, oliursjod isi s_silssr transient sales.\nJ.ilM\u2122*4M<*\u00bb\"inS\u2122.K\u2122l,\u00abu?\u2122-\u2122S\n\u2022.Ut-'-Illl  K-MIW-\"*  -Ji\"\/-'\u2122  i\"\"\".\"6 ,,**\u2014**, \u25a0\n20 cfirper line oiich Insertion.   Hpeoials\nr    \"\"l* \\ .\".\u201e... ii. ni   ,.\u2122,i,,,,,,,I ,-<i fin\nal ets. per nno (-iien inw\u2122w\u00abi   n*\u2122\u2122\nliuurte\u2122 \u2022>- \u2022\u25a0\u00bb\u00ab nioiitii nt reducedrates.\n\"JlrthS, M\u00abtrrin-\u2122.-s aud Deaihs.ll for each\nIrtBcrtlon: Futioral N.itl'-es In couneotton\nwith deaths, 541 ola. each Insertion.\nWEEKLV A0VERTI3IHQ RATES.\nTrmutettl A-lvcrdsemcnts.\u2014first Insertion 10ew. per llne solid nonpareil; sub-\nleunVut Insertions, 7 cts. per line.\nAi'suitlln\u2122 Advoril .rnieiil-i.\u2014Profession*\nat or HiiHliiOKa Uiivds-It.50 per monlli.\nHnecln.1 n\u00bblf-s rnr-Jfut-rftl initio advertising.\nWislai Notice., ntrthn. Marriages and\nDeaths, same rati*\u2122 as Daily.\n<_*\u2122is iiiitstbt'iill i;!.':.,,.I'd forlargpcutB\nitn'cTtru r.-!t' '.'i.i *>i  clinrurd.\n*\u00bb:lVri\u00abJtis MJiitliti-; In Hilvci-tlsenieiila\nnliou Id be carffal '\" \"-''-I'- whether tboy\nHwtoKPIH-Hrlii thi' Dally iMlittnn, or the\nWeokly.orlMit.li. A !i!.ci.il I's-iU-.cl.oii is\nmade wbon in\u00abi HH in dotli. Noinlver-\nUsementliisorii'i! fur less than 91,\n8JJIW0R1 HERS\nWhodoiiotrocoivctiiflt paper regularly,\nfrom the Currier\u2122 or  t!imm*li   the Post\nOffice, will confer a fnvor l-y n-portlni; tlie\nsame to tbo oitlt-u of publication at once.\nNEW ADVERTISEMENTS THIS DAY.\nWanted This Offlce\nCaution to Masters D. llobaon\nN. W. R. A I. A, McMartin\nNotice Job. W. McCallum\nOyster oockfciils at Club saluon. *\n\"Bryan O'Lynn ia not dead yet;;'\nsee Rousieau's new adv. oa third page.\nCloudy weather is equally as good ai\nbright for photography st Thompson's\nstudio. *\nOne car load of cattlo arrived this\nmorning ex C. P. R.'for Nanaimo;\nthere are 20 head in all.\nWalker & Co. havo Sapperton Lota\nnear Now Hospital and Rosa-Mac-\nlareu Mills, at old prices. *\nA boy named David Yeomana, aged\nSI years, died of hip disease at the\nRoyal Columbian   Hospital yesterday.\nPartiei holding tickets will please remember there are only two days moro\nin which to visit Thompson's studio. *\nBartisiin hunters will do well to look\nthrough W. tfc. Ct. Wolfendon's stock\nof Dry Goods, Hats and Clothing, now\nclearing at coat. *to\nMr. 11. F. Anderson was tiie lucky\nwinner of the appropriation of \u00a71,000\nat tho building Bocioty drawing last\nSaturday night.\nTho Tacoma Morning Globe has been\nsold to a syndicate of Tacoma capitalists, who contemplate materially improving tiie papor.\n220 head uf cattle arrived to-day by\nthe C. P. It. for distribution to Vancouver, Victoria, Nanaimo and Westminster.   They are lino stock.\nTwolvo carloads of cattle arrived\nfrom the interior this morning, consigned to patties in Wostfiiin.tur, Vancouvor, Victoria and Nanaimo.\nMr. 3, H. Webb and the big drummer of the salvation army had a\nslight dispute last night, which, it is\nunderstood- will be aettlud in court.\nHi\u201e honor Judge Bolo will preside\nover tho county court pro-ioellihgs at\nVancouver on Nov. 22nd, at which a\nlarge number of cases are aet down for\ntrial.\nTo Fsiniiors.\u2014Messrs. Woods, Turner\ntt G. mblu make a specialty of lending\nmonoy on faniiinu lands; any amount\nfn-m\" 8100 to $20,000, according to\nsecurity. ool7m\nMr. Thos. Earle hna boon returned\n1-y acclamation to represent Victoria\nin the houso of common*, to till the\nvacancy created by the resignation of\nIE. Oro iv Baker.\nThe officers of 11. M. S. Icarua have\nbeen honorably acq uil ted uf carelessness\nor want of proper precautions in connection with the grounding of the vessel\nnoar Plumper's Pass.\nThe Hon. Alex. Morris, ox-lieut.-\ngovernor of Manitoba, and one of\nCanada's most esteemed and distin-\ni\/uistied sons, died at hia residence in\nToronto yesterday morning.\nThe Dunsmuir arrived this afternoon\nfrom Nnnaimo with a full load of coal\nand several passengers. She will take\nnot 40 head of cattle and a Inrgo quan*\nli'y of farm prod&ori to-morrow morn-\nhi\u2122.\nTho str. Irving will leave this poit\non Thunday morning at 4 o'clock for\nHope to brin\u00bb donn a band of cattlo\nfor Van Vol ken burgh Bios. This will\nbe tin- last shipment of Similkameen\ncattlo this season.\nTlie b-idy of tho Stickeon Indian who\nfell dead of hemorrhage of tho lungs\ni'ii Cniutnbi. street yesterday, was\ntaken tip to the hfr-jjltal to-day by his\nfriends, tuul after being laid out and\n(Inaued, was decently iuterrtd.\nCharles Mullt-ry, engineer of tho\nBtr. Fairy Queen, and Mary Aun Win*\ndrim were joined in the holy bonds of\nmatrimony to-day by the Rev. T. Baldwin. Iturnedlately aftor the coromony\nthe happy couplo left on a short wedding trip.\nThoro \"ill bo a general meeting of\nthe rillo as'oclntiuii ht Mr. A. F. Cotton's itfllee |o morrow night to discuss\narrangement\u2122 fur tho annual prize\nmauling, whicli it is proposed to hold\non Thmik-ufvinf! day. A full attendance of tbo members t. requested,\nJudge HnrtUon will preside nt lho\nuoision of tha county court whicli will\nbe held in thin city on November 8th,\niiiHtond \"f Judgo Buie who has been\npriiftS'sionully interest .d in a number\nof the e;.Bi's coming up fm- trial, and\ncould nut, literature,* judicially deal\nwith thc'in.\nTho mayor and council of Weatmin\nster hat o buuu invited to attend ttie\nr. ee|iti\"'i t > be givon to the govornor*\ngeneral at Victoria on Thursday. Mayor Townsend will attend in his olticial\ncapacity, and he will also attend the\nball to ba given by Admiral Hencago\nnnd the captains of the fleet.\nLot* 4 nnd 20, block 7 (Olarkaon\nproperty), Montreal, Melbourne, Clement nud^St. Patrick streets, subdivided into 33 lots, are now on the\nmarket at prices within thu roach of\nall. Parties desiring fine residence lots\nwill do well to call at once, beforo the\nchoice ones aru sold. The lots are\n. mostly cleared. For sale hy Major &\nPearson. *to\nThe following officers of Excelsior\nlodge No. 8,1. O. O. T., have been\neleoted for thu ensuing term: 0. T.,\nBro. O.T. Williams; V. T\u201e Sis. M.\nrfjfc-y Supt. J. T., Sis. E. Latham;\nTTS.- Bro. W. C. Loye; F. S., Bro.\nF. H. Meyer; Treas,. Sis. W. Baker:\nChap., Bro. D. Cameron; Mar,, J, ,T,\nJohnston; Guard, Sia. M. Elliott; Sen*\ntlnel, Bro. N. Preston.\nOn Oolumbia street, near the telegraph office, thero iB a smelt which\nmay be aptly described as awful (if not\noffal), lt is certainly bad onough to\ncall for immediate sanitary discipline.\nSeveral of the neighboring sloro-keep*\ners aro fumigating, deodorising nnd\ndisinfecting their establishments bo\nthat thoir customers may transact business without fear of death from asphyxiation.\nAt thu polico court this morning tho\ninformation against A. M. Wiso for\nhaving driven women of ill fame about\nthe town, wus dismissed. Tho magistrate recommended that an information\nbo laid against Ja's, Monro, who drovo\nthe hack with tho women, and is employed by Mr. Wise asa hack driver.\nSome vory lively legal sparring took\nplace between Mr. Pearce forthe prosecution and Mr. Eckstein for tho defence\nMr. A. Keith-Wilson, accountant at\nVictoria, will open i\\ branch of tho\nBank of Britisli Columbia at; (Seattle\nabout thu 15th of next month. Mr.\nT. S. Millignn assumes tho position\nvacated by Mr. Wilson in tho Victoria\noffloe, whilo Mr. Wyld, the present\nteller there, proceeds to New West-\nmi utter aa accountant. Mr. Barnes,\nthe agent at Kamloops, tykes tho position of nccouutant at Portland, and\nMr. Doclteri!], of lho Now Wostminstor branch, succeeds Mr, Barnes us\nagent at Kamloops.\nA ltl\u00bbw at Itlasllng.\nTho residents of the uppor portion\nof tho city will be relieved to know\nthat blasting operations ure to bo\nstopped at last, bo far as proximity _ to\ndwellings is concerned. This decision\nwas atrived at laat night by tho city\ncouncil, aud a notico in this issvie cautions all persons against blasting within a certain distance of any house, and\nnotifying persons so doing that they\nwill be held responsible for any damages incurred. It is to bs sincerely\nhoped that this action of tho couucil\nwill have the desired ellect, for the up\ntown peoplo hnvo been kept in a state\nof terror long enough.\nOur Exhibits in the East.\nTho O. P. It. oar containing tho\nBritish Columbia and Northwest exhibits was at Toronto laat week and at\ntraot ed a groat deal of attention. Tho\ncuria divided into four sections\u2014As-\nBiniboin, Alberta, Manitoba and British Columbia. The manager of tho\ncar is Mr. J, J. Haslett, a magniliceut\nspecimen of western qenus homo, Aug.\nHolm, immigration agent at Winnipeg,\ntravels with him. Both aro inexhaustible source, of information and\nvory courteous and obliging to all visitors. Iu the course of a week tho car\nwill stait on its United States tour\nthrough Michigan, Wisconsin and\nMinnesota. It will be back iu Canada in February, and will then go\nthrough tho casleru provinces.\nroot Ball.\nEvery member of tho foot ball club\nis expected to attend (he practice at\nQueen's park to-morrow afternoon st\n4 o'clock sharp. Tho match with Vun-\ncouvor takes place at Hastings on Saturday woek, and, therofore, much\npractico will bo necessary in the meantime if Westminster expects to win,\nVancouver will tako tho field with\naeveral new players who aro said to be\namong tho best now in tho province,\nnnd whoso presence will make the\nteam much Btronger than it evor has\nbeen in tho past. Westminster has\nIsi-it several of its host men a:id fheir\nloan will be keenly felt at Hastings if\nVancouver has its lirst fifteen on the\nHold. Thero will be another praotice\non Queen's park on Saturday afternoon.\nTlmrou-sEhbrcil Cattle,\nMr. j. T. Wilkinson, of Chilliwack,\narrived from Hamilton, Ont,, yesterday, bringing with him a carload of\nthoroughbred stock. The cattle aro\nall pedigree Ullimala and will prove a\ngreat acquisition to the ranchers who\nare anxious to improve their herds. A\nram brought by Mr. Wilkinson is a\nparticularly lino animal. It has been\nentered in 43 competitions und succeeded in carrying away 41 prizes, a\nrecord quite wonderful to say tho least.\nTho str. Irving convoyed Mr. Wilkinson's cattle to Chilliwack today. Enterprise of this kind is rapidly extending among tho farmers of British 0o*\nlunibm, and if it is maintained for a\nfew yoars longer Westminster district\nwill contain some or lhe finest h .rds un\nthecmitincnt.\nA I'Ight f.ir the *'<-]'-r..\nMr. Gorrio's tings are still daunting\nbravely in the breeze, and it seems\nprobable that thoy will soon be carried Into the vory thickest of n great\nlegal battle. Davie nnd Bddw'ell are\nciiinr-b-jurors for Mr. Ourrie uud have\nentered the lists armed eop-a-pie in a\ncomplete suit of Blackst .no's famous\narmor. Who will pick up the gdunt-\nlot for Westminster has not yet been\ndecided, but several knights of the\nwig are both willing mid anxious to\nbreak a lance for tho honor of the\nroynl city and tho benefit of thoir private purses. It appears that aeveral\nof Mr. Gorrio'fl now standards wero\nl\u00bbst on tho voyage between Victoria\nand WcBlmInstor, and lie is determined cither to recover Ihem or got\nrevenge littanoiully, The prospects\nare thnt the fight will bo a merry one,\nand flags will probably be cheap before it is over,\nCol-ten Wcdiling-\nAt Uppor Sumas, to-day, Mr. and\nMrs, E. B. Ackerman celebrated tho\nfiftieth anniversary of their wedding.\nEvery relative of tho family in tho\nprovince was invited to bo present at\nthe reception to-day, and very few of\nthem were absent. Tho vonernblo\ncouple were united in tho bonds of\nmntrimony, in Ponnaylvnuiu, juat 50\nyeara ngo. They nre a remarkably\nhalo old couple yet, and give promiao\nof living to enjoy many moro anniversaries of their wedding. Mr. and\nMrs, Aokermon were the recipienth of\nnumerous valuable and beautiful presents from their sons, daughters and\ngrandchildren, as well na from many\nfriends of the family. Tho aged couplo\ncame to British Columbia ubout ten\nyenrs ngo and settled nt Upper Sumas,\nwhore thoy are generally loved and\nrespected by the whole community,\nTuk Columbian joins in extending\nheartiest congratulations.\nChildren Cryfor Pitcher'* Castoria\nCounty Conrt Prnrrdnrr.\nDAILY BRIIISH OOiUMBIAM, NSW WESTMINSTKB, B. O., OCTOBER 29, 1888.\nwith respect to the now rules, as it has\nbeen found iu practico that vory conaiderablo amendments to tho oxisting\nrules are imperatively required, nnd nil\ntho more so nswe nre now viitually entering upon a new era in the administration of justice in our provincial\ncourts, Few people aro aware that tho\njurisdiction in contract and tort ox-\ntends to \u00a71,000, and in equity to 82,-\n500, aud cases involving any amount\nmay be tried in tho county coutts by\nconsent. By this it will bc .-osu that\niu future the bulk of tho litigation of\ntho country will bo disposed of in tho\ncounty courts, so that tho framing of\nproper rules is a matter of great publio\nimportance.\nlucrosse I'o lut\u2122.\nThe ehollongo to tho Vancouver\nlacrosse club haa been delivered and a\nreply is anxiously awaited as the Westminster mon are deairoxis of resuming\npractices without loss of timo Bhould\ntho terminal oity imn decide to play\nthe match. It is generally hoped Vancouver will accept and thus nettle tlio\nchampionship matter definitely.\nMr. Rynll, who arrived from Brandon lust weok nnd played in Saturday's\nmatch, entered upon his dutlos with\nD, S. Curtis & Co. this morning. He\nfa a valuable acquisition to tlie lacrosse\nteam and his coming wiis very opportune\nMr. McDonald, whoso brilliant\nplaying was so generally admired on\nSaturday, i. likely to remain in Westminster. Several gentlemen aro onid\nto havo offered him lucrative employment, but Mr. McDonald will net decide for a week or two whether he will\nremain or not. It ia hoped he will\nstay. It ia understood Mr. MoBean\nwill leave for home in n few days.\nWhere are lhc lobsters?\nThe question is often asked \"when\nis tho fisheries department going to\nsend that carload of live lobsters to\nBritish Columbia?1' It was understood\nthai the lobsters, nfter tho failure last\nyear, would be brought out early this\nseason, but nothing haa beon hoard on\nthe subject of lato. Tho American\ngovernment made n completo success\nof transplanting the caustacua from the\nAtlantic to the waters of Puget Sound,\nand many experts believo that if tho\nlobstors wove only planted in the\nnumerous inlets along tho coast British\nColumbia would soon havo a lobster\nfishery second only in valuo to tho salmon fisheries. A few years ago Mr.\nMowat, inspector of fisheries, und\nCnpt. Pittendrigh made ft careful examination of the north arm of Burrard\nInlet und found tho conditions, both aa\nto tomporaturo and food, highly satisfactory, which report may bo seen iu\ntho fisheries bluo book of that year.\nNo movo has boon made dining tho\npresent year in the direction of stocking these waters with lobstors, and it\nis to bo hoped tho government will\nturn a-1 -ntion to this mattor at nn curly\ndato.\n. mlili'it tle-illi.\nLust night at tho Farmer's Homo an\nelderly man namod Johu Chartcria\ndied of heart disease Mr,,. Charteria\nwna quito woll last night nt elovon o'clock, although slightly undor tho influence of liquor, nnd retired to rest\nasking that he might bo callod at six\no'olook thia morning. Mr. Chartoris\nuaed to be a prosperous wliolesalo manufacturer of cloths and woollens nt\nII udders lit Id, Yorkshire, England, nnd\nmet in his later yeara in that city with\nsoveral heavy reverses and finally failed. Ho was eminently unfitted for lifo\nin this country aud touk hia hard fortune greatly to heart. Ho worked at\nanything he could get, day laboring,\ncanvttssingfor orders for firo extinguish-\nera, usher in the assize court nnd bucIi\nwork. But even in thoso humble vocations tho air of former dignity and\nrespectability never left him, and ho\nwas easily picked out from n group of\n\"horny handed sons of toil\" as not eno\nol' them. He waa a man of fino physique and wus ,1 well-known figure on\nouratreets. He oamo to this country\nnbout fourteen montha ngo, nnd has n\nson in Victoria who haa been telegraphed for. Drs. Cooper and Fagan wero\naware of tho fact that Mr. Charteria\nhad heart disease' An inquest will bo\nheld.\n[From flrst pnee.]\nA meeting of nil tho county court\njudges of tho province will bo held in\nthis oity on November 8th, for tho purpose of drawing np new rules of procedure for the county oourt, aa provided\nfor by the county court aot. Circulars\nhave been issued to the members of tho\nlegal profession asking for suggestions\nsalaries; he would like to know if theso\nmen (thu engineers) wero kopt on salary fit a certain time or only from\nmonth to mouth. It wns a actions\nimitter antl 'ihould bo seriously dealt\nwith and without doubt it wanted looking to badly. During a discussion\nwhich waxed hotter at every sontence,\nAid, Jaques and Aid. Keary brought\nmatters io a climax. Aid, Keary had\nmade a second reforenco to the conduct of the chairman oftho boaid of\nworks, and Aid. Jaquea rose und said\nho had just had about enough of this\nsort of thing, \"Aid. Keary haa been\nthrowing out a lot of dirty little slurs\nat me, and only a cur would do it.\"\nAid. Keary at once demanded tho protection of the chair, aud earnestly asked his worship to order Aid. Jaquea to\nnpologiso then nnd thero for his unwarrantable insult. \"If you don't,\nyour worship, thoro la another way\nby which J can obtain redress.\"\nAid. Jnqucs\u2014\"Aw, go ahead with\nyour other way, I don't cnre a rap for\nit; and what's more, I'll just nsk you\nright hero to -shut up on your slurs at\nine.\"\nAid. Keary again asked hia worship\nto call Aid. Jnquon to order, ua he\nwould not stand auch language.\nAid. Jntjues--\"I don't cnro whothor\nyou stand it or sit down to it.\"\nAid. Keary--\"Woll, thero ia cor-\ntainly another manner in which you\nmay bo mado to cnro,\"\nAid. Jaquea\u2014\"Oh! firo awny.\"\nHis worship ugnin called tho diapu*\nInnts to order,\nOn motion tho matter was left in the\nbunds of the water committee,\nA special report waa road of u special mooting held by tho board of\nworks to cxamino tho charges againat\ntho city engineer; alao thnt the assistant engineer was instructed to proceed\nwith the survey on Lulu Islatid.\nAid, Curtis made a strong speech,\nin which ho charged tho bonrd of works\nwilh uiisropresont.tioti in regard tu\nthat clause of tho report about the\ncharges against the city engineer. On\nmotion, nnd after a vory heated debute,\nthe motion was referred back to tho\nboard of works.\nAid. McPhaden repotted for tho\nstreet naming and numbering committoe na follows: That all streets running east and west retain thu ntimea\nby which thoy are now known on tho\nofficial map, thoso streets not namod,\nrunning oust and west, to be named\nafter towns of tho Dominion. Streets\nrunning north nnd nouth to bo numbered as 1st, 2nd, 3rd streets, commencing ut Park Lane us First street;\ntheuce running to the west end of tho\ncity limits. That all streets from Park\nLane eastward be named alphabetical-\nly, as A, B, O, etc.; all intersecting\nstreets to bo named aftor towns, Tho\nreport wus adopted nfter a most amusing discussion.\nACCOUNTH.\nII. T, Read & Co., \u00a711,50; Jacob\nScott, \u00a74.45; T. J. Trapp, \u00a7206.72;\nThoa. Ovens, $1; Brunette Saw Mills\nCo., 8777.8G; Royal City Planing Mills\nCo.; S993.18; Turner, Boctoii &Oo\u201e\n\u00a733.00; fllmr. Priucese Louiso, \u00a71.40;\nD. Lyal & Co., \u00a735; Armatrong &\nEckstein, \u00a7150.00; Eberts & Taylor,\n\u00a7350 00; N. A. Anderson, \u00a720,00; Joo\nQui, \u00a72.50: Wm, MuOull, \u00a74.55; D.\nLyal & Co., \u00a715-05; R. J. Armstrong,\n\u00a71.00; Ogle, Campbell & Freeman,\n\u00a73.00; Jaa. Cunningham, \u00a72.40; H.\nMorey, \u00a757.00 ; election exponses,\n\u00a734.00.\nNEW llOSINESS,\nTho pound bylaw was read a first\ntimo by title nud on motion got its\nsecond perusal.\nThe park loan uud tho lessen bylaws wero laid ovor until next meeting.\nAid. Curtia said something ought to\nbo dune to secure a thoroughly reliable ferry service, The K do K waa\nunablo to cross the Fraaer when thoro\nwas ice in the wator and somuthing\nshould bc dono ih this matter at once.\nMoved by Aid. Reid, seconded by Aid.\nShiles, that tho matter bu referred to\ntho railway committeo to look iuto and\nreport upon at noxt meeting. Carried,\nA, M, Nelson's chum fov damage\ndono to his bucgy by driving into tho\nmud hole at tho hospital wna discussed\nwtth much vigor. Several aldermen\nsaid that if this claim wero acknowledged a dangerous precedent would\nbo established and claims for damages\nof all kinda would pour in by the\nbushel\nAid. Curtis related hia own experience in a buggy at tho place mentioned, to tho great amusement of the\nboard. He said the city ought most\ndecidedly to pay this claim, ns tho mud\nhole was no better than a trap, and\nbesides, a law suit would probably\ncost ten times ns much as the original\nclaim. The\"claim was a just ono. On\nmotion it was decided to allow Mr.\nNelson \u00a720 for tho damage done to his\nbuggy.\nThe plan of the new firo hall wns\nproduced and examined. Aid. Jaques\nexpatiated upon tho urgent necessity\nof erecting such a building and Aid,\nReid also apoko in favor of tho building. Tho plan, after an interesting\ndiscussion, was received.\nMoved by Aid. McPhaden, seconded\nby Aid. Keary, that tho board of works\nbe instructed to build a sidewalk along\ntho west aide of Edinburgh st. A dis\ncuBsiou, ns per usual, ensued ou this\nmotion, and ti most amusing ono it\nwas. Aid. McPhaden attempted to\ninterrupt Aid. Jaques while that gentleman was delivering ono of his finest\nefforts of oratory on tho sidewalk question. Aid. Jaques turned and shouted\ntit tho top of his voice, \"will you be\nkind enough to let me have the lloor\nwhen I'vo got it?\" Aid. McPhaden\nacceded to thia polite request by collapsing into his chair without a groan.\nThe motion was finally carried.\nHia worship presented n rough draft\nof tho programmo for tho reception of\nthe govornor-gonoral. It will bo published tn a day or two.\nAid. Curtia gave a very humorous\naccount of the procession in honor of\nLord Lansdowne. It was moro liko a\nfuneral procession. Tho band Rot\nseparated from tho crowd and the\nmarshal got separated from everybody.\nAid. Reid aaid thero was a space of\nabout half a milo between tho marshal\nand tho band the latter couldn't keep\ntime and the result was dismal beyond\ndescription. Every elfort will be made\nto mako tho coming reception a genuine success. On motion a committeo\nconsisting of tho mayor, Aid. Keary\nand the clork, was appointed to take\ncharge of tho arrangements and music.\nAid. Keary reported that tho engineer had got up tho specifications for\nthe water worka nnd that one engineer\nwill bo sufficient to carry on the work.\nTho council adjourned this morning\nnt 12.10\nPERSONAL;\nRev. C. Bryant, of Maple Ridge,\nwas in tho city to-day.\nMrs. C. A. Worsnop, who was tho\nguest of Mm. O. D. ilrj tuner for a fow\ndays, roturned to Vancouver yesterday\nafternoon.\nAid. Thoa. Cunningham left fur\nVictoria yesterday to meet Misa Cun*\nninghnm who haa been paying an extended viait ti friends in Salem, Or.   '\nCORRESPONDENCE.\nHurly do\u2122!nk.\nEm-roil Colombian,-*-Siai If I may\nbo permitted to write a few lines, on\nearly closing, to the merchants, through\nthe columns of your valuable paper, you\nwill not only oblige the undersigned, but,\nalso, I have no doubt, the majority of\nthe clerks in the city.\nAs It is well known tho average clerk\nworks from seven iu the morning till ten\nat night, (with tho excoptiou of those\nemployed in the dry goods atores) ami\ntaking off an hour, at noon and at eve,\nfor meals, it leaves eleven hours steady\nwork, whicli Is longer hours than in any\nothor work in the city.. The early closing system, which somo of the dry goods\nstores in this city have adopted, ia one\nwhich tholr clerks fool deeply thankful\nfor, yet if Saturday afternoon weru given, also, they would be able lo engage\niu athletic sports, with tho other young\nmen of the town, thereby refreshing\nthemselves, and gotting exorcise, which\nIs needful for tho health of matt. Not\nonly of tho dry gooda merchants, do 1\nask this, but more especially of theso\nemployed inthe grocery line. In Vancouver, If I mistako not, tho principal\natores close on Saturday afternoon.\nThanking you for your Bpaco, Mr. Editor,\nand with a hope of Boon Rcciug tho suggestion herein contained, carrlod out.\u2014i\nremain- Okb Who Would Fkkl Thank-\nWh fou. SATunnxv An'Riisoos,\nChildren Cryfor Pltcher'sCastorla\nCMllfbrnln Saw Works.\nMr. J. W. Specks, formerly representing the Spaulding Saw Co., is now\nin tho city, Mr, Speck represents\nMeaars. Bird & Haughy, of tho California Saw Works, Ho states that\nthoir new patent bits are now running\nin the Puget Sound mills with great\nsuccess. Mr. Speck formerly introduced the Spaulding patent chisel bit\non Pugot Sound, and claima that Ida\nnew tooth is n great improvement.\nHe expects in tno course of a fow\nmonths to havo a number of those\nsaws in operation in somo of our mills,\nwhon thoy can bo inspected by any\none interested.\nIlrc-u Von-ls at Cost at IToUeiiiien'M.\nOvercoats, Olothing and Gentlemen's\nFurnishings, suitable for present and\nwinter uso, clearing at cost prices, at\nW.&G. Wolfendon's. *_o\nVOLUMB VII.-NO. 103.\nMcleurolo|\u00a3l.nl lie port for Wveh Elulint\nOct. KO. 1889.\n'      , MAX.   Mm.   ItAIN.\nSunday 59.0     \u00ab.0\nMonday fig.O     4..0    0.01\nTatwduy M.O     -17.0    H.08\nWednesday 03.0    51.0   o.i_\nThursday \u00abi.o     47.0\nFriday r,o.o     mo\nSaturday 50,0     -100    0.01\nVery calm   and  mild with dvlizllna\nrains and bright sunshine.\nA. I'-'EM*,Capt'n,\n-Theta Bahy wao oiok, we fiavo bor Caitotla,\nWhon sho was _ Child, oho criod for Caotori\u2122,\nWhen bIib bocarao Misa, aho olutiy to Castoria,\nWhen iiu. had Children, she -javo them CmtorlB\nWANTED.\nA SITUATION   IN   A BliAOKSMITH\nShop; nluoyoursoxp-i-I-iHjo.   Apply\nnt this offloe, doa2BlO\nN. W. Rifle Association,\nAGBNKnAI-MTDBTINGOPTHBNIiiW\nWest. lim.tiT Kill- Association will\nlm lii-ld In Mr. A. I''. Cotton's nlliee on\nWedw-Hdiiyt'it)ih Ins!.,itt K o'clock. Kvory\nmnn tier is rcc-ucsird to ho present as iiu-\nporfuutlmsInoBBivlll bo discussed\u25a0\nIty order,\nJ. A. McMAUTIN,\nSQ.O02C Hoe.-Treati.\nCaution to Blasters.\nVf.OXXOHIB HEREBY GIVEN THAT\nX. any porson or iit-i'-ioni-found hliistin-,'\nwithin tlm limits of the City of Ntw WcM-\nmlnsterwlll bo prosecuted and held responsible, for nil d;i 111:1;'!' flint maybe\ncaused hy such blasting.\nliy order,\nl). nonsoM.\noe2Ddlw City Cleric.\nTruth copy ono week.\nNOTICE\nTHERE WILL BE ROM) AT AUCTION\non ,tlio premise\u2122 of Jos. W. McC'Ai.-\n\u2122r.\".t,oii Novemher Villi, tit 10 .\".. 111., tliu\nfollowing stoek aud Implements:\n0 Cows lu Calf.\nif two-year old Heifers, in calf.\n'} one-year old Heifer.-.\n4 one-year old Steers.\n\u2122one*yoarold Bulls.\n\u25a04 two-year old Steer..\n4 Calves.\n!t work Horses, 7 and a yenrs old.\n1 set double HariipsH.\n_ Wagons.\n3 Saddle Horsbfli\n1 Colt.\n2 Plow:\u2122\n2 Ox Voltes, Chain.., ci-.-.\nTJ3KM8 OV BALI\u2122\u2014Six  months wfthoilt\nInterest on approved notes; amounts nnder ton dollar., net, cash.\nJOS. W. MeCALMIM,\nClayton', Burroy,\nYule ro'td,ulno miles from Brownsville\npt!2l)dw2t\nHolden at   Chilliwack.\nTHK   NEXT  BITTING   of tho ahovo\nCourt will be bold on TUESDAY llio\ninth dny of November, A. D. 1880.\ndwottSaUl W. H. FALDING.\nW.J.fALKER&CO.\nBANK BUILDINGS,\nMary Street. NewWestminster. B.C.\nITKr.Ei'itoNB No, 55,]\n14 CLARE ROAD, HALIFAX, ENGLAND.\nCHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS\nconveyancers; real ESTATE ANO\nINSURANCE AGENTS,\nSTOCK AND SHARE BROKERS.\nLondon and Lftncusl.tre IT Ire *nd\nBrltlBh  Kmplre  Lift  Insurance\nCompanies.\nNbw Westminster Dulldlnu Society.\nAccountant'\u2122 timet). Dloceae of N.W.\nCity Auditor\u2122. lt-'SG, inr,-j and 18H8.\nADVISE CLIENTS IN  THE BUYING\nAND BELLING OF REAL PROPERTY IN THE CITY AND DISTRICT,\nand other monotary Irausaellou.-.\nHavo several good Investments on their\nbooks, and all now coincni will do well to\ncull before doing business elsewhere,\ndwUdoly\nWe are now opening a repeat line of\nCarpets and Linoleums, also, large in-rtri-\nces of White and Colored Blankets.\nOur stock of House Furnishings is the\nmost complete on the market notwithstanding the immense sales of the past\nmonth. . .\nSpecials this Week:\u2014Linen Crumb\nCloths, all colors.\nTHE LEADING DRY GOODS HOUSE.\nilMSOPilC ISIsOtIK,\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\n:arrpbell & co.\nArc now Showing their Complete Line of\nGents' Furnishings!\nTHE LATEST THINGS IN NEGLIGEE FLANNEL\nSHIRTS, 1'IOUE POINT SHIRTS, SMOKING JACKETS ami DRESSING GOWNS, WHITE DRESS VESTS\nund the most complete and best assorted stock of TIES in Windsors, Derby.*,, Puffs, Knots, Bows, &c.\nUNDERWEAR has received our attention and in consequence our stock is right as to price, quality and make.\nGLOVES of all kinds. Wc arc agents for a leading eastern\nmake.\nWe are showing the \"correct\" thing in Head-gear; a glance\nat our stock will prove this.\n\"Quartermain\" is the latest in Linen Collars,\nOGLErCAMPBELL & CO.\nTins -iirgcst Olotliins & Cents' Furnishers in New Westminster.\nerNEXT DOOR BANK OF MONTREAL. .J\nR. J. ARMSTRONG,\nnra.__,x-__i\"i in\nChoice Family Groceries!\nFINEST CREAMERY BUTTER A SPECIALTY.\nXjaToxaclox \u2122\u2122EerxI_i*irs.\n\"Mlaclserel, Salt God,\nAimo-Ji's \"CTnc. Hams,\n-_\u2122.r__s.o*ar's \"CTxic. Bacon..\nFlour. Bran. Snorts,\norUIOHEST FRIOES PAID FOR FARM PRODUCE.\n\u201emw\u2122 t*ro-miUa. Armstrong Blook, Columbia et.\nJAMES ELLARD & CO.\nHAVE JUST RECEIVED\nA Fine Line of New Fall Dmss Goods\nIN ALL THE LATEST STYLES AND SHADES,\n ALSO\t\ntQXJIlLiTlS,\nArt and Chenille Cnrtains,\n_\u2122*.ncl POETIEI8BS.\nA SPLENDID LINE OF\nNAPKINS, SIDE BOARD COVERS, Ao.\nThe largest assortment of All-Wool Kidderminster, Tapestry\nand Brussels Carpets, Door Mats, Hearth Rugs, and\nSmyrna Rugs to be found in the Province,\nPRICES RIGHT.\nLONDON HOUSE,\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\nPractical Watchmaker, Manufacturing\nJeweler & Optician.\nOPPOSITE THE BANK OF MONTREAL.\nWATCHES- CLOCKS, JEWELRY, PLATED WARE, AC.\nBEST QUALITY.   EASTERN PRICES,\nA full line of Spectacles & Eye-Glasses ta steel, rubber, silver uve --..i 1\nframes.   Tho finest rcbblea made, $4 per pair; nil sights suited.\nSpecial attention given to FINE WATOH REPAIRS. Having learn... t!i *\nburliness thoroughly from some of the finest Horologers In England, and aim*** 1\nmanaged tho watch-repairing departments of a few of the heat firms on tb. 0\nnent of America, la a .ufficient guarantor- of good workmanship. Formerly m.\nger for nearly 8 yeara of tho well-known firm of Savage k Lyman, Monti'\nCharges Moderate.\nMostrkal, Deo., 1887.\u2014Mr. F, Crake.\u2014Andw. Robertson, Esq., CHalrmij\nMontreal Harbor Coniimrmlouera, snys: \"I never fpnnd a Watchmaker who A'.\nwell for mo as you did whon in Montreal, and t Siiisorryyon are not hero to-day\ntlwapWto\nii.,i\n\u25a0ui*\nD. S. CURTIS * C\nAGENTS   B,  LAUFiANCE'8   SPEOTAOLEP\nWholesale and Retail Druggists\nNKXT COLONIAL HOTKL, KEW WESTMINSTER, ]!. C.\nIT\nW. & G. Wolfenden,\nCor. Columbia and Mary Sts., New Westminster.\nThe above named firm having fully decided to retire from the\nDry Goods Business and confine their attention to the Grocery\nBusiness for the future, now offer the whole of their\nChoice, New, Well Selected and Well Bought Stock of Dry\nGoods and Clothing at\nCost Prices for Cash.\nA raro chance Is now olTered to Intending purchasers, aa tho itock consists ot\ngooda just auited for tlio present and comlm* season, AU freah and in prime order\nand purchased in tho beat foreign markets at rock bottom pricea.\nSale to commence ou Monday, tho lfith instant, and to continue until tho whole\nof tho stook has been closed out, ltKMKMHKK THE PLACE: Corner of Col*\nmnbia and Mary Btreets.\nW.& Q. WOLFENDEN.\nGROCERIES\nFor First-class Family Groceries and Provisions, go to\nSINCLAIR'S,    -    Oolumbla Street.\nNew Goods arriving all the time. A nice lot of CHRISTIE S\nCRACKERS . BISCUITS just to hand. New SYRUPS, MOLASSES, etc., etc.   Call and get prices, dwtc\nBON MARCHE.\nSPECIAL BARGAINS in New Dress\nGoods, Jackets, Paletots, Dolmanettes,\nand Ulsters.\nA Large Assortment of MEN'S SUITS\nfrom $7.00.\nWALKER A SHADWELL,\n* .Kioto tXnVWR\u2122 RBBKT.\n\u2122__':.'.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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Robson & Co. (1883-1886) ; British Columbia Stationery and Printing Co. (1886-1887) ; British Columbian Printing Company (Limited) (1887-1888) ; Kennedy Brothers (1888-1890).","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"New Westminster : Kennedy Brothers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. 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