{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","Series":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"5295b066-e998-4a4e-8feb-7750f5cc6591","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2017-03-07","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1882-06-03","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/dbc\/items\/1.0346503\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" I'n\nrovinr-inl p,,\n\u25a0Ms      I\nTHE BRITISH COLUMBIAN\nIvciy Wednesday & Saturday.\nROBSON BROTHERS.\n(FFIOE, COLUMBIA STREET. Entrance to Editorial and Business Department through T. R.\nPearson & Co'l. COok & Stationesv Store,\nTaaU-ty tteil, 13 \u00bb year ; $1 50 far 0 am..,\n$1 fbr 3 mns.t pay.ble In Advance. ItelkeeeJ\ntty'Oaerler or Agent, tl por quarter, iiavatlo\nqaerlerly to Carrier or Agent.\nT.N. HlBBEN 4 C\nKm. Harrison \u25a0\u2022\nAlSENTS!\n\u2022\u2022Victoria.\n\u2022\u25a0Yale.\nt, P, FI3IUR AdveiUelag A'geat, 21 Merelinat'e\nKxellMlite., San e'laaclece, igmlttierl.cil to receive\nAdeertlsemerit, for tills paper.\n\u00bb   the fritislt dohtmbhm.\nSaturday HnniliiR. Jnn<* .1, iHWt.\nSalmon Breeding lo llrltJsli\nColumbia.\n' (From Hiimard.)\nINQUIRY.\nHon. ]*h, McINNES (British. Co-\nlumbia) Mfce to enquire\n'^Whether \\l; \\* the intention of the\nGovernment to*ploco a sum' in the Supplementary Estimates for the purpose of\nerecting thia year a Salmon Hatchery on\nthe Fraser fiiver, British Columbia?''\nHe said: I may Ray that, since\nplacing; tliis notico in the hands of the\nClor-kto.be printed on Friday last, I\nfind the Supplementary Estimates\nhave come down, and t regret very\nmuch indeed to see that there is no\nprovision made for the erection of a\n\u2022salmon hatchery on the Eraser River,\nBritish Columbia. Three yean ago,\nwhen I had the honor tu occupy a\nfloat ih the .other branch oi tlie Legislature, I brought this question\u2014a\nquestion wf vital importance to tin in\nBritish Columbia--beforo the notico\nnf tho Minister of Marino and fisheries ami of the tjrovernmeiifcj and I\nfinally succeeded hat year in getting\nthe Minister of Marine and Fisheries\nto promise that a Bum would be placed\nin the Estimates for this year, But\nI regret ret -say*, aa wo all regret to\nknow, that owing to the serious illness\nuf the Minister of Murine nnd Fisheries,\ntie has been unable to take his seat in\nParliament this Session, or to continue\nthe duties of bis Department. Hmv-\nover, I renewed my application to the\nActing Minister- and was lead to believe up till within two or throe days\ntorn that provision would be made for\nthe establishment of a hatchery in my\nprovince. I would ask tho indulgence\n\u2022of the House for a few minutes whilo I*\n\"endeavor to show tho vast importtinoo\nof this in Wry to the Province of\nBritish Columbia, aud to compare tho\nfishery interest of Hint; province with\nthose of the other provinces of this\ngreat Dominion. In tho firat place I\nwill give the total amount in value of\nfish, fish-nils, and of the skins aud furs\ntif the various marine aninmls, products\nof our seas, lakes and rivers. I tiiul\naccording to supplement number two\n\u2022of the eleventh annual report of tlie\nMinister nf Marine and Fisheries,\nwhich is the last that lias been brought\ndown, that tho total value of fish, iisli-\nnils, skins and furs of mnrll.il animals\nfor the different provinces is as follows:--\nQuebec.; \u201e $2,357,220\nNova Scotia  <>,02,),10(>\nNew   Brunswick  2,744,4-10\nPrince Edward Island.. 1,402,31)2\nOntario ,.,,     440,401\nThero is nothing given for Manitoba;\nnnd last but not least comes British\nColumbia with a total of 80,339,321.\n\\ You will observe tliat in British Cu-\nr, lumbia the total catch was neiu-ly\nA 8100,000 more even thnn that of Nova\na Scotia.\nHon. Mil. MILLER-Of fish?\nHon. Mb. McINNES-Of fish-not\n* only including fish, but oils, aud alt\nIy, the products that year of the waters of\n', Neva Scotia.\nI Hon. Mb. KAULBACfl-You will\nk find it is only 950,000.\n4 Hon. Mb. M0INNE8-I did not\nfigure it out exactly, but it is about\n\\ 875,000. It will therefore bo seen,\n\u2022 lion, gontlomeo, that the value of the\ncatch of fish, fish-oils, and fur-boaring\nmarine animals in British Columbia\n1 nmouhted to one-third uf that of the\n<i entire Dominion. I will now call your\nJ attention to tho exports from tho dif*\nliferent provinces. I find, according to\n'\u2022the same report, that thu exports\nAmounted tu $rt,8u7,715- that is, for\nthe whole Dominion, Of that amount\n'J'British Columbia contributed last year,\n\"? according to tho report uf tho Doinin-\nPion Inspector of   fisheries for that\nVOLUME 21\nttEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, SATUltDAY, JUNE 3, 1382.\nNUMBER U\nOntario $ 2\n'\u2022Quebec , \u2022, w. 3\nNova Scotia 8\nNew Brunswick '. 2\nPrince Edward Island 1\nTho aggregate cost of tlie construction of these natcheries has been 930,-\n000, and the annual maintenance $22,-\n000. Each hatchery costs on an average $2,000 per year for maintenance,\nI do not find any fault with the amount\nof money that haa bo-en spent in thoir\nconstruction and maintenance: in fact,\nI believe it would be money well\nspent were it ton times tire amount.\nFor instance, last year I find that tlie\nSandwich hatchery on tho Detroit\nRiver distributed no less than 13,500,-\n000 young fish. In addition to what\nmoney has been expended in tho cultivation and natural propagation of ..ah\nih the Eastern ProviwEosVtliero- is a\nsum placed in the estimates of \u00a7150,-\n000 for deep sea fisheries, Tliat I believe also is a move in the right direction, and before many years will give\na handsome return for the money invested. Now, I wish to draw tlio attention of the House, for a few\nmoments, to what tliey are doing to\ntho south uf us. I iind that in the\nUnited States they have thirty hatcheries or tis'li-breeding establishments-,\ntwo of which belong to the Federal\nGovernment, and cost $470,000\u2014that\nis, including the maintenance of the\ninstitution since it was established in\n1871. Thy fliiMiiil . maintenance of\nthese two establishments is $62,000.\nThe remaining -hutch erios belong to\nthe different States. I find tjuit there\nnre 28 States, each of which lias a\nhatchery\u2014the cost of maintenance\nannually is as follows-:\nMaine,...-. $2,043 00\nNew Hampshire 1,000 00\nVei'tnunt    750 00\nMassachusetts \u25a0. 5,750 00\nRhode Island 1,005 00\nConnecticut 8,320 00\nFor the five Eastern States, the first\ncost of building tiie hatcheries amount\ned to \u00a7201,728.\nTho cost of building hatcheries in\nthe three Middle Status and tlio cost\nuf maintenance is an follows:\nilillltll'llg nml  cinfc        .        ,\nor iiiiiiiituii-iiKKj   ,  ?,\"\"\u25a0\u25a0\nsince Lii.lt,       \u00bb'\u00abli|tt)iinuco\nNow York... \u25a0\u00a7105,000 813,750\nNoiv Jersey...   20,500 3,270\nPennsylvania..   00,530 12,437\nThe following is the coat of building ami annual cost of maintenance of\nhatcheries 111 the other Status 1 have\nabove enumoratod.\nR. T. WILLIAMS,\nr)OOK BINDER, PAPER RULER,\n) and Blank Book Manufacturer,\nMaps nnd Drawing Paper Mounted.\nFiles of Magazines, Illustrated Papers,\notc, neatly and cheaply Bound.        *\nGovernment Street, Victoria, It. 0.\nARTHUR W. SULLIVAN,\nDEALER.   IN\nraEBlL MERCHANDISE\nGRANVILLE, B. I.,\nMORTON   HOUSE,\nSPENCE'S BRIDGE,\nOn Sunny Side of Thompson River.\nTHE ABOVE HOTEL IS NOW\nopen for tho accommodation of the\nPublic, anil tho proprietor will endeavor\nto deserve a fair share of patronage.\nThe very hest of AVixes, LlQr\/ons and\nCi(!.,ns ivifl always he kept.\nC,   MORTON.\nJuly 1, 1881. aiiO\nContractor and Builder.\nPUNS 1111(1 Sl'KIJIl'IC.lTWSS CAKE-\n1'UUY MAUli OUT.\nALflO AIJKNT POR THB\nAsphalt Roofing Company.\nThis ia the BEST and CHEAPEST\nRoofing now in use. Cull and examine'\nmodel roof,\ntW Shop cornor of Mackenzie k Clark -\nsoli Streets, New Westminster.     ap!2\nFIRE INSURANCE.\nHull.\n(If\nMaryland.....\nVirginia ......\nWest Virginia.\nSouth Carolina\nGeorgia\t\nKentucky\t\nOhio\t\nIllinois .......\nMichigan\t\nWisconsin\t\nMinnesota ..,,\nIown\t\nKansas\t\nNobmsku\t\nColorado \t\nCalifornia\t\n.line, lout ce.t\nninieleiuinee\n\u25a0luce luiilL\n870,500\n. 1,600\n. 3,900\n800\n.   2,000\n:  1,100\n. 20,000\n.  3,000\n. ftj,000\n. 118,800\n22,600\n. 22,760\n2,000\n. 1,000\n. 1,200\n. 37,000\nAnimal\nniiltiletiulice\nJ10.580\n3,000\nl,:)oo\n800\n600\n2,200\n14,000\n1,600\n0.1100\n4,860\n4,200\n1,760\n600\n1,000\n000\n3,700\nTIIE LANCASHIRE\n(Amalgamated with .Scottish Commercial)\nINSURANCE COMPANY\nCapital, \u25a0 \u00a32,000,000 Sterling\nRisks accepted nt  Current Rates of\nPremium hy\nJOHN C. BROWN,\nAgent for New Westminster.\nColumbia St., New Westminster. .\nli\n1\" province, whicli 1 have in my hand,\n11,454,331, or one-fourth of tho en-\ntiro export**, of the products of tho\nl waters of our Dominion,   Hon. geu-\nu tlemen who have road or hoard the\nk* Budj-jot Speech of tho Finance Minis*\nI* ter, delivered during tlio present Ses-\nlaion, will thore Ami that tho amount\nJul the Mine \u2022\u00ab I have given.   1 would\nnow oall the attention of Iton. gentlemen to the amount that it has cost\neach   provinco   annually fur  fishery\nofficen:\nJpnUrlo ...\". 812,003.00\nQuebec  12,601.00\nWova Scotia  14,180.00\ntffow  Brunswick  12,21)1.00\n^Manitoba         19.75\nBritish Columbia    1,390.00\n' For overseers nf the different hatch*\ntrios, 120,100, making a total of $80,-\ny02,65. British Columbia cost leas\nthan one-fiftieth of the whole amount,\nt will now show how those overseers\nir fishery officers are distributed.\n-Vccording to the same report, on page\nmLt I find that\nOntario had.,.,  82\n\u2022Quobeo .103\nNova Scotia 240\nNew Brunswick 107\nPrince Kd ward bland  44\n' British Columbia    2\n.Of fish brooding superintending nffi-\nir\u00bb there aro 15, making a total of\n1)4 fishery officers in the Dominion,\nud ef that number British Columbia\nus only two, and tht) actual salary\n.nt they get is $1,250, I find accord*\ng to tho same report tlmt wo have\novon fish-breeding establishments in\nit Eastern Provinces, hew:\nThe total cost of constructing hatcheries or fish breeding cstabli. huutits\niu the United States since 1871, when\ntht first establishment of that nature\nwas constructed, has been 91,300,378.\nThis gives us an idea of what they\ntire doing in the way of artificial pro**\ntmgatioit of fish in the United States.\n1'hey are becoming fully alive to the\nimportance of their fisheries, aud.\nmany rivers aud lakes that were almost\nfished out a few years ago are now\nteeming with fish. I know of ono\nniysolf, tho Sacramento Kiver, iu tho\nState of California, that fivo years ago\nvery few salmon were to be found in;\nthis last year they have caught nearly\nas many salmon in it as were ever\nknown to have buen caught there beforo canneries were established. Anothor reason why I consider that we\nhave a just claim ou the Government\nfor the establishment of a hatchwry in\nBritish Columbia is this.-'Unfortu*-\nnately we were uot a part of tlm Dominion of Canada when the Washington treaty was buiug nogotiated, and\nby some unaccountable oversight British Columbia was left out. The consequence is wu cannot send a pound\nof fish, fresli or salt, into tlie Uniled\nStates murkots, as our friends from the\nMaritime Provinces aro rthlo to do,\nWhy we havo not supplied the peopjo\nof Ontario and Quebec with salmon to\na very groat extent for the last few\nyears, is owing to the fact that it has\nbeen almost impossible to get tho fish\ndown to California aud havo them\nshipped in bond from thore because of\nthe annoyance in conned inn with the\nCustoms duties and bunding .system.\nIt lias been a groat drawback to us\nthere nnd it is ono reason why I think\nwe are entitled to ivsmall expenditure\nof money in British Columbia for the\npurposo of propi-gating thu earlier\nruns of salmon, especially in tho Frasor River. I may any that it was not\nuntil July, 1874\u2014eight years'ago\u2014\nthat the first cannery was established\nin that provinco; it was built iu iny\nown town, New Westminster, and wns\nopened on tho 1st of July of that year.\nTo-day wo have no loss than fourteen\ncanneries, and these last year gave\nemployment to over 3,000 men, women nnd children. Two years ngo tlie\ntotal export of salmon alone amounted\nto 9305,000, and last year we exported\nof canned .salmon $1,0(13,(150 worth,\nWe exported pickled salmon\nto tho amount of 830,332.00\nFresh Salmon  38,450.00\nSmoked Salmon    1,450.00\nMixod FUh, piokled       450 00\nHerrings     1,250.00\nSmoked Herring    2,500,00\n(OnnclmJcil on Third Pug.!.)\nSELLING OFF I\n--AT\u2014\nGREAT BARGAINS!\nTHK BjmilB STOCK OK\nFurniture,   1'kturcH,   Mouldings,\nWail Paper, and Undertaker*'\nGoods,\nIn thu Store lately occupied by David\nWithruW.\nOrders for Goods which arc not on\n: hand will be filled from Victoria on short\nnotice.\nFor furtjicr particulars, apply on the\npremises, Columbia Street, Now; Westminster, or to\nJ.   SEHL,\nVliitni'iu, B. C.\n^ThTwebb,\nGUNSMITH\nColumbia St., New Westminster, B. C.\nSAW   FIMVC,    KI.Y   HTTIXr.,    I,\u00abM'K.\nM.1IITII. <1 n'P.t.KY I'-tOI \\I\u00bb,\nMissoiw nii titi->Ai:ii,\nSEWING MACHINES\nCleaned and Repaired.   Machine\nNeedles for Sale,\nliithiTHn-. .lit-nit r<1. unil tlio n mil Repiilr-\nInn neatly dime.\nAmmunition of all kinds. A full assort*\nment of lie \u25a0hiding Tools, and everything\nrequired by a Sportsman. Kipi,ks, Shot\nCuss, Revolvers,1 and Kwuixo Tackle\nfor sale. clSiy\nADVANTAGES OF THE\nCOAL OIL\nOver Ihe Refined Oils of Petroleum\nfor Illuminating Purposes:\nPopular Market\nCOJMIIU STUEKT WfiST.\nW. J. FRENCH,\nPROPIUCTOR.\nCONSTANTLY ON HANI), the krg-\n\\J   est mul choicest ilssol'tnicnt of\nMEATS AND VEGETABLES.\nLAMB, VEAL, TUBKEYS, to., in\nsenson.\nFamilies, Kestmtronts, ami Steamboats\nsupplied nt- .tjie lowest prices and with\nthe utmost care. '\nNow Westminster, B. C.\ndcIO\nESTABLISHED 1S59.\nKOBT. DICKINSON,\nBUTCHER,\nXcurlj opposite tlio Colonial Hotel,\nNEW WESTMINSTER*\nmillS LARGEST AND   CHOICEST\nJ.   assortment of all descriptions of\nMEATS AND VEGETABLES\nConstantly on haml, nml supplied to*Fum-\nilics, Itcstauniiits, and Steamboats nt tiie\nLOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES.\nPIANOS, ORGANS,\nMUSICAL iisTRUlfflTS\nOF EVERY DESCRIPTION,\nBooks & Sheet Music\nIN ENDLESS VARIETY;\nMUSICAL   BOXES\nA fino Af-ssortmcut; from \u00a725 to ?(i0,\nB.itiNAIjLfeCO.'S\nMUSIC   STORE,\n(iOVKIIHIKXT STItEKT,  VICT0K1A.\nJ.  BAGNALL,\nI'lASOFOUTE&OllfiANTl'NKIlttKm'AMII-'.H\nPURE- CLYDESDALE 8TALLI0\\\n'mm**\n\"GLENGARRY.\"\nTjlIRST PRIZE AT OREGON STATE\nJ.' und District Fairs. iJiun nml Sivo\nimpoi'toil from Scotland; color, liriglit\ntlnpploii.bnyj height. 17 hands; weight.\n1800 lbs. Will make the season nt owner's farm near Victoria.\n-3F1X3 X&.1*X \u00a3$E\nSka.hox\u2014$.S0| due when Maril sent.\niNsntAScV:\u2014S40, duo when Maro in\nfoal,\nMares served at risk of owners.\nMakks riiom Mat.vlaxd met nt Steam*\ner at Victoria and returned to same! no\nextra charge whatever.\n\"YOUNG HAMBLETONIAN\"\nFrom \"Pathfinder\" Mare, to a few Mures\nut \u00a7'25 the Heason.\nJ. D. PKMBKUTON,\najilii Victoria, jl^x 3ih\nTHE BEACON LIGHT is\nan Oil of High Test with a light gravity,\nWhich makes the Oil 11 protection against\nexplosion.\nOno Ordinary Rurnor jrlves ti (Brilliant) Light equal 10 Tun (audio\nWits!\nIts odor is not offensive.   The Beacon\nLight Oil is\nFREE  FROM  SMOKE & SMELL.\nIn point of Economy, the Beacon Light\nOil is\nLlSt-IM  K\\l'i:\\SIVi;  TIIAK OTIIt.lt OILS.\nThe Consume? burning one light\u2014for\nFour Hum's\u2014will not consume over Ono\nGUI, or one thirty-socohd part of. a flal*\nIon. wliich does not tax the Uoiiflumoi'\nmoro than Two Cents (or it whole night.\nOlTEVHfifMER BROS,,\niei Sole Agenta, Victoria, B.C,\n\"PRINCE   IMPERIAL\"\nWMLL STAND FOU THE SEA-\nson of \\SS-2, coiiniioiicing uhout\nloth iiiRt. Season from nrrivul to con-\ntltino till 1st July, travelUiiff from Lad-\nnor's Landing to ('hilliwhacli.\n\"PIUNCE IMPERIAL\" is a dappled\nOrcy, fi years old, stands HI hands high,\nweight about 14.10 lbs,, short-legged,\n(ilosoly built (sired by Myers' \"White\nPriiuui\"), with splendid action; good feet,\nand docile temper; good worker, nnd\nsure foal-getter, Testimonials will at\"\ncompany him,\nTenns for Scnsoh.. $10\nInsurance   10\nCash payable at end of season. Casli\nfor insurance when mure is known to be\nin foal, or has been parted with.\nNot responsible for accidents, hut nil\ncare taken,\nFor further particulars apply to\nR. A. PURVKR.\nLadner's Landing, April 4, 1SS2.      np,\">\nROYAL  CITY\nSILLS\n(X.I\u00abZ*J*BDI\nHAVE ON HAND AND ARE PREPARED TO MANUFACTURE\n\u2014a 1,1, jinscitiraoNS of\u2014\nRough k Dressed Lumber,\nMOULDINGS,\nDoors, Sashes, and Blinds.\nPlanus;\", Scroll-Sawing, Turn-\nlug, Sliiipliif;,\nAnd nil Rinds of WOOD-FINISHINGi\nexecuted to ordor with the\nMOST IMPROVED MACHINERY.\nFISH   CASES   A   SPECIALTY.\nRICHARD STREET,\nNEW  WESTMINSTER,   B.   6.\nJOHN HENDRY,\nMa SAO EH.\nJ. H. PLEACE & CO.\nIMTOnTKHS AST) DEALERS IX\nSTOVES,\nBANGES,   toC, &C.\nSouse Furnishing Go ids,\nPAINTS, OILS, and TURPENTINE,\nSPORTING  GOODS.\nA full assortment constantly on hnnd, at\nthe LOWEST MARKET RATES.\nTinware mwiufactured on the prcmi-\n808.   .Tohbing promptly attended to.\n[101 r.l.OI.I, > STO\\i: III 11 l'!M..\nXrw tVi-siiuliiMi-r.\nSniAltOOATbD.\nIMi        ITHEtiY\nily recommended1\nllillOIIHIII'tU,\nH'*:tiT-.l''lio,   ('on-\nS.lli:iiilllI.IlHll(H'H-\nt>i\/7iiic*.H, Hrnrlliurn,\nf treat It. im* of Ap*.\n-...,.**, .liimuUro. Ia|i of\nlituitopy, Hour (\u25a0.(inuni'ht Llrcr 1'om-\ntilfllut.orti'iy i ili*ii*:---i Miisiiu: fmm tlio Hinm<\nitch, liowclii or1 Kiilufljv*, They art flare.\nlull;!Mitt lhniTiii;;'hIn L!iuir;n:tioii, Froiultoil\nI mHl,li>D,bid\nlaBSJ \"nil  lire\n(10 TO THE\nSAN  FRANCISCO\nBOOT & SHOE STORE\n\u25a0   'AND OUT   YOUR\nMONEY'S WORTH.\nBOOTS AND SHOES OF KVK11Y\ndescription miule to order, nnd re-\n[Xdrett, 'win un\nINFANT'S  SHOE\n\u2014Til    A-\".\nxa.jk.vt'&  boot.\nTho liiglirat CASH prloo jwid for HIDES\nJAMES ROUSSEAU,\nCOLUMBIA       STREET,\nOmisiTi: Tin! Uask,\nimperTal\nFIRE INSURANCE COMP'lf,\n1 Old Ruoai) St. and 10 Pall Mall,\nLONDON.\nINSTITUTED 1803.\nFOR INSURING HOUSES ft OTHER\nBuildings, Goods, Wares, Mcrchnn*\ndisc, Miuiufiieturhitf and Farming Stock,\nShips in Port, Harluu- or Dock, mid tho\nCargoes of audi Veaaols; also, Ships Imihl-\nbig and repairing, Jkrges and other Vos-\nSela on navigahlo rivers and canals, and\nGoods on board bucIi VesBDlfl, throughout\nGreat Britain nml Ireland and in Foreign\nCountrien,\nFROM LOSS OK BAMAtjK BV FIKK.\nSubsoribed and Invested Capital,\n:ei,600s000 STG.\nKates of Premium and evory iufonna*\ntion ban he obtained on application to\nW. .1. AKNSTKONli,\nAgent for Noiv Westminster.\nCOLONIAL\nHOTEL\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nl?6w   Westminster, B. C.\nHAVING PURCHASED AND\ncompletely re-funiished and\nothenvisc greatly improved this\nutII-Juiowu establishment, I have\nthe pleasure to announce that it s'3\nnow\nFor the reccpLibn of Guests.\nConviently located aud well appointed in every department,  with\nBATH ROOMS\nAnd all the most modem appliances, it will be found in every\nrespect the best, as it is the largest\naim most commodious, Hotel on the\nMainland.\nThe\nRESTAURANT\nDepartment is under the very best\nmanagement both aa regards cuisine\nand attendance, and parties desiring\nthem can have comfortable Private\nDilli\".'; U00I..S with special attendance.\nSo\nBAR   KOOM\nIs stocked witli the choicest Wines\nand Liquors, and the best brands of\nCigars will always lio kept on hand.\nThe\nBILLIARD ROOM\nIs spacious and well appointed, and\nprovided with Sfi.AHi.K's Patent\nCUSHION TABLKS, the best in\nuso.\nSaT Good ilttei.d.lnce and  moderate charges.\n.T. E. INSLEY,\nPttOPftTBTOR k MANAOEn,\nJfot-gitlcm-folitnt.\nApril 4, I8S2.\nGranville Hotel,\nGRANVILLE,\nBUUHAKD       INLET*.\nXow Ir Rullt mid Km Iy Furnislicd.\nLnpRt- and Commodious.\nONE OF TKE BEST HOTELS ON THE MAINLAND.\nCommands an unbroken view   of  that\nmagnificent shoot of water known as\nCoal Harbor, the future terminus\nof    the   Canadian   Facihe\nRailway,\nsiiis   of   noon-,   nnt   rnii[.:t>.\nS3' Visitors and Tourists will find it a\nquiet and pleasant resting place.\nThe scale nf charges will  be found to\nbu strictly moderate,\nGood stabling on the promises.\nJOSEPH  MANNI0N.\n0R0 RESTAURANT\nCOIiVHBIA STKKKT,\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C\niKsl'.lHI.l'iHK!, 18IIO.)\nniins WELL KNOWN AND MOST\n.1, cnnveniclitly locntoil cetiiMishiiicnt,\nImviiiL' lieou purolinsoil hy tlie1 mirier*\nsi^'Hetl, will be comhietoil us ti FlltST-\nCLASS\nBOARDINC    HOUSE,\nUnder the personal BUpcrlntenilence of\nMns. Da(!oett.\n'U? \u25a0\u25a0: \"\u25a0 ti \u00bbjc m m\nBoard ti Lodging per Week $0 00\nBoard alone per Week  C 00\nSingle Meals      50\ntST The Mail Stages leave this House\nfor Ilurrard Inlet twico a day.\nS. W.  DAGGETT.\nMny 0,1881.\nFOR RENT:\nrp'HR EAGLE HOTEL,  FRONT-ST.,'\nJL    New Westminster;   opposite   tli6\nWharf j with a License,\nApply to\nHENRY V. EDMONDS,\nmh22 Und Agent.\nBRICKS FOR SALE.\nmHE SUBSCRIBER HAS A KILN\nJL of excellent bricks for epXo cheap.\nDelivery anywhere.\nT. McKAY.\nNew AVestininster,\n,huic'2-i, 188). *'  jn25\nFOR   SALE:\nONE MUTABLE STEAM   SAW-\nmill, now at woi-k iiear Lytton and\nin good condition'.\nFor particulars enquire of\nJAS. MURIE,\nLyttoir,\nOr A. B. FERGUSON,\nmy 17* 1 m Proprietor, Clinton. .\nFOR SALE OR LEASE.\nRiverside Farm, Matsquij\nIN WIIOLE  OB PAHT,\nnONTAININO THK.EH HUNDEED\nyj acres Dyked Lanil, of wliich S.10 acrefl\ncoulil \u00ab:ii;ily be put under crop for next\nBenson-,\n'VITtt wrm'*? 80 FtKT FnONT, nnd\nAJIFI.K IIAIIX AMI OTIIKK\nBl'UIII.VU   ACeOMMOBATIO \\.\nApply td\nC; B. SWOED,\nRiverside.\nWANTED:\nFOR NICOLA VALLEY-A GOOD\nI'tinn Hand, who can milk and\nnudomtnndH the driviiu< and care of\nHorses, and make himself ceueriilly useful,   Waflos\u2014SiU jicr month,\nApply to TRAiU' BROS.,\nap!2 N^v West,\nDAIRY   FAEM\nFOR SALE OR LEASE.\nTHE   FARM   CONSISTS OP  320\nAcres, in .Nicola Valley, known as\n3P, L. Andei-son's lUiucii, of which a part\nis suitable for crop.   It is situated about\n,1 miles from the Public Hall and Road.\nAIsott-75 Milk Pans, Churn, and all\nthe implement** necessary for Dairying.\nAlso\u201420 good Milch Cows.\nApply to\nV. U ANDERSON,\nap-'itc Nicola Lake.\nFOR SALE.\nCABINET ORGAN\nSUITABLE FOR\nChurch or Parlor.\nA T>.OCTAVE Mason &Eani*\nIin Cabinet Organ, with 2 full sets of\nreeds, sub-bass, octavo coupler, vox 1m-\nniana, jjraml organ, and knee swell, 8\nstops. This organ is now used in the\nMethodist Church, and is sweet toned\nami in good order. Will b& Bold for $150\ncash, ns it is intended to procure a more\npowerful one. TJiis is a decided bargain.\nApply to\nT. R. PEARSON k CO.,\nStationers k Music Dealers,\nfe4tc New Westminster,\nFOR  SALE:\nTHK   UNPEEMENTIONED   PEO-\npcrty.\nCity of New Westminstor:\nLOT   4, BLOCK 10,\n\"     10,        \" 32,\n\"      12,        \" 32,\n7,        \" 0,\n\"     12,        \" 21.\nDistrict of New Westminster:\nLot 210,  Clroup L, Nortii shore 1'ort\nMoody,\nLot  102,  Group I,i   .South side Port\nMoody, \u25a0\nLot 110, Group L, near  Hustings,\"Bur*\nriird Inlet,\nLot 302, Group L, Kilso Creek,\nLot 110, (Ironp IL, f\"iMtfli hatit: I'rnsel'\nRivor,\nLots   147,  14S.   1 r.0. Croup IL, South\nbank, Fraser Kiver,\nLot OQa, Croup IL, South Imuk Frasor\nRiver.\nHUNKV V. F.DMONDS,\nmhlS Lund Agent.\nSEVEN THOUSAND!\nACRES\nDYKED LANDS\nFOB SALE.\nThe undersigned offer\nLAND ON MATSQUI PRAIRIE\nTN LOTS TO SUIT,_\nAT REASONABLE fUICES.\nLiberal Terms or Payment given lo*\nBona tide Settlers,\nThese Lands arc of exeellont quality,\nand a large portion of them is ready for\ntile p'.ougn.\nWOOLS k TURNER,\nNew Westminster,\nli. M. .lOHNSOtf,\nVictoria,\nOr '      C, B. 'SWORD,\noc8 Riverside\nSUBSCRIBE\nPoll THK RrltiKh ('nliimltlan, the\nNewa|)!ipor on the Mainland of Brit-\nloh Columbia.   Only .*?3 a year.- NEW ADVERTISEMENTS THIS DAY.\nGreat Salo ' J. T. Steele\nPenitentiary A. H. McBi-ido\nMunicipal Notice A. Peele\nNotice W. J. French\nProfessional Card G. E. Corbould\nWanted Mrs. Cumiingliam\nSpecial Methodist Church\nlhe gJritwh (Jtotambiait.\nMtnrdar Hernial. June 3, linn.\nFish Breeding.\nThe reacVr-rs of this journal already\nknow that tlio Dominion Govern\nment have at last consented to ustnb\nlish a salmon hatchery on tlie Lower\nFraser. Elsewhere in this morning's issue will lie found the Hansard\nro|iort of a speech delivered on the\nsubject in the Senate by Hon. Dr.\nMclnnes. The speech is able and\ninteresting, and is well calculated to\nplaco British Columbia properly before the public in respect of her\n(rreat marine wealth, the development of which, it is proper to remark, is as yet only in its infancy.\nThe carefully collated statistics are\nmost interesting, aud it evidently\ntook the House by surprise to learn\ntbat British Columbia already stands\nat the head of the list of the Provinces in the product of her sea\nfarm\u2014representing, as it does, one-\nthird of the product of the wliolo\nDominion, while her exports are one-\nfourth of the entire export of the\nDominion. The \"Bluenoaes\" in tho\nHouso were evidently not prepared\nto find the Pacifio Provinco o'er-\ntopping Nova Scotia by about $78,-\n000 a year. As has been said, the\ndevelopment of British Columbia's\ngreat sea farm is only in its infancy.\nIt is capable of almost unlimited\nexpansion. Tlie product of the\nLower Frasor has been nearly doubling every year, andj with proper\nfarming, it can bo enormously increased. But there is our thousand\nmiles of sea-coast, with its innumerable rivers, and inlets and fiords and\nbays and banks, all teeming with\nfish possessing great commercial\nvalue, \"bo say nothing of the extensive fur-seal fields. As has been\nseen, this Province hns already\ntaken the front place, By the time\nits marine wealth shall havo been\nat thoroughly developed as that of\nNova Scotia, how will the figures\nstandi We'cannot trust ourselves\neven to guess. It was Well pointed\n\u2022out by Dr. Mclnnes that, while Brit\nish Columbia produces one third and\nexports one-fourth of the entire\nmarine wealth of tho Dominion, she\ncosts the Federal Treasury less thnn\none-fiftieth ! It is earnestly to be\nhoped that the clear and forcible\n.exposition of the subject may lead\nto some approximate apprehension\non the part of the lethargic Depart,\nment at Ottawa of tho importance\nof this industry, and tha consequent\nduty of seeing that its interests are\nproperly guarded and promoted.\nThe determination to establish a\nhatchery has evidently been come to\nwith considerable reluctance, and\nthe amount placed in the estimates\n($4,000) is but a beggarly sum. Still\nit is a step in the right direction,\nand is, we trust, the beginning of a\nmore appreciative policy. It remains\nfor the people, through their representatives in the Federal Parliament, to see that the matter is followed up, until the Pacific Province\nshall have been conceded her proper\nrank and position in this respect.\nIncorporation.\ncsts on Burrard Inlet stand very\nmuch by themselves, and thoy would\nnaturally regard with a certain degree of distrust a scheme for yoking\nthem together with other interests\naud communities in this way. The\nundue tendoncy to overtaxation of\nmost municipal bodies would naturally cause those who have large\ncapital aud land interests in connection with the lumber trade to view\nwith suspicion, if not actual hostility, any attempt to subject thoir\nproperty to the possiblo cuprioo of\ncivic statesmen. Nor havo we to\ngo from home for an illustration of\ntho fact that municipal government\nis not nn unmixed blessing; and\ntho mere circumstance of our own\ncorporation being under a cloud just\nnow is not altogether calculated to\npredispose neighboring communities\nto incorporation at the suggestion of\nNow Westminster. If the committee be correct in their estimate of the\navailable revenue,and \/\/tlmt amount\nof revenue could be obtained without imposing any fresh burdens, and\nif one were quite sure that the\nCouncil would be content with that\nrevenueandexpenditjudiciously,nnd\n,\/\u25a0 it wero quite certain that all the\ncommunities nnd interests proposed\nto be consolidated into one municipality would harmonize, it would\ndoubtless be an advantage in some\nrespectstobeincorporated. But those\nguarantees -cannot be given, and we\ngreatly doubt the willingness of tho\ncommunities to form themselves into\none municipality, In the abstract,\nwe thoroughly believe iu self-government j but we can readily conceive\ntho existence of conditions rendering any attempt at municipal government of questionable utility.\nWANTED:\nA   GIRL   TO   DO   GENERAL\nHousework.\nApply to   MRS. J. CUNNINGHAM.\nNew Westminster, Juno 2, 1882.    jn3\nAs will be seen by reference to\ntho report of proceedings of the City\nCouncil, it is estimated that the\nrevenues which would bo available\nfor municipal purposes, were the\nterritory between tho Frasor river\nand Burrard Inlet incorporated\nwould approximate ten thousand\ndollars a year. The committee have\nnot stated the sources from which\nthat revenue would be derived, but\nwe presume the great bulk of it\nwould come from the wild land\ntax. We are very much inclined,\nhowever, to doubt the correctness\nof tho estimate, and we are still\nmore inclined to question the utility\nof pursuing this matter any farther.\nAs was pointed out last week, there\ndoes not appear to us to be that\nidentity of interest between the different communities which would\nlead one to hope that the whole could\nbe satisfactorily worked under one\nmunicipal government. Indeed, so\nfar as wo are aware, there is really\nnothing to encourage the expectation\nthat the proposition would meet\nwith' favor in tlie principal communities concerned.  The lumber inter-\nGORDON E. CORBOULD,\nBarrister, Solicitor, &c.\nNEW WESTMINSTER,\nBRITISH     COLUMBIA.\nuotio:\nHAVING CLOSED OUT THE\n\"Popular Market,\" 1 desire to\nthank my numerous patrons for pns*.\nfavors, and to notify all thoso whole\naccounts are still unpaid that. an early\nsettlement is rendered absolutely necessary.\nW, J. FRENCH.\nNow Westminstor, June 2, 1882.       jn3\nNEW WESTMIHSTER, B,0.\nThoroughbred Slock.\n\"Distant hills are green,\" says the\nold proverb, and one sees illustrations of the truth of it almost every\nday. There are in this Province,\naye, right in this community, men\nwho will send away to get printing\ndone which can be done, and is\nbeing done, as well and as cheaply\nright here. Wo merely mention\nprinting as an illustration. In\neverything else it is very much the\nsame. There is the vague idea that\nthe farther away they go the better\ntbey will fare. It is of thoroughbred slock we desire more particularly to speak at the present time.\nSome years ago Mr. James T. Steele,\nwith an amount of pluck und enterprise worthy of all praiso, brought\nfrom the other side of the wide continent, nt very great expense, somo\nns fine thoroughbreds as ever\ncrossed the sen, and established\nGrafton Farm, the situation of wliich\nis eminently favorable for stock-\nraising; nnd he has succeeded in\nraising a herd of very line animals.\nNow, what has been Mr. Steele's\nexperience 1 Wo could, if we wished,\nname farmers who have gono far\nfrom home for thoroughbreds, and\nfared, in every sense, very much\nworse than they would havo done by\npatronising Grafton Farm. The\narticle has been no better, in some\ninstances not nearly as good, aud it\nhas cost double, in some cases more\nthan treble. Such is the tendency,\nthe weakness of human nature.\nWere the people more patriotic,\ntruer tn themselves, giving home the\npreference, it would be very much\nbetter for all of us. In another\ncolumn will be found an advertisement, from which it will be seen\nthat, on the 6th proximo, Mr, Steele\nwill hold a sale, when nearly the\nwhole of his valuable herd will be\noffered, and we are in a position to\nstate that the sale will practically\nbe without reserve. There never\nwas a period in the history of the\ncountry when it was so important\nto impiovo the bread of cattle and\npigs and sheep as tho present, and\nthe stock-farmers beyond the Cascades will only be acting in their\nown true interests by taking full advantage of so favorablo an opportunity of introducing into their herds\na few superior breeds.\nMUNICIPAL NOTICE.\nPUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY\ngiven to tlie Electors of tlio Municipality of tho City of New Westminster that I require tlio presenco of the\n\u2022said Electors at the Court House on\nWednesday, 7th Inst., at* 12 o'clock\nnoon, for the purpose of electing threo\npersons to represent them in tho Municipal Council as Councillors, two for St,\nGeorge's Ward aiul one for St. Andrew's\nWard.\nTlie mode of nomination of Candidates\nshall bo as follows:\u2014The Candidates\nshall ha nominated in writing, the writing shall ho subscribed by two Voters of\nthe Municipality as proposer and seconder, and shall be delivered to tho Returning Olllccr at any time between the date\nof tlie notice and 2 p. in. of the day of\nnomination, and in the event of a poll\nbeing necessary such-poll will be opened\non Satuiujay the Tenth Day of June\nINST.\nOf which every person is hereby required to take notice and govern himself\naccordingly.\nGiven under my haml at New Westminster this 2nd day of June, 18S2,\nA. PEELE,\njn3 Returning Officer.\nB. C. PENITENTIARY.\n\u25a0 doz.\n1    pi*.\n\"Whero have you boon for a week\nhack?\" enquired a manof bin neighbor. \"I\nhave not a weak hack,\" retorted ho,\n\"You misunderstand ine,\" remarked his\nMend; \"but if you ever got a weak back\ntry Burdock Blood Bitters.\" It euros all\ndebility arising from (Unordered Kidneys,\nLiver or Blood, and is the best purifying\nTonic in the world. All medicine dealers supply Sample Bottles at 10 cents.\nRegnlar Size $1.00\nA Real Necessity,\u2014No house\nshould bo without a bottle of Hauyard's\nYellow Oil, in case of accident, Then\nis no preparation ollorcd to suffering\nhumanity that has made so many permanent cures, or relieved so much pain and\nmisery. It is called by some the Good\nSamaritan, by others tho Cure-all, and\nby the afflicted an Angel of Mercy,\nTENDERS FOR THE UNDER-\nnientioncd Supplies will be received\nby tho Warden till noon on Thursday,\nJune 15:\nBeef. per  Ih.\nBread (brown)   \"     \"\n\"      (white)  \"     \"\n\u2022Brogans\t\n\u2022Brooms\t\n*Blankets\t\nCoal Oil' (best brand in tho\nmarket  \" gal.\nCoal  \" ton.\n\"Syrup  \"I. gal.\n\"Pepper  \"   lb.\n*Ricc  \"     \"\n\u2022Soap   \"     \"\nSalt (coarse)  \" lOOlbs\nSalt(fine)  \u00ab    \"\n\u2022\"Tolwioco   \"   lb,\n\"Tea  \"    \"\n'Vinegar   \"I. gal.\n\u2022Lamp Glasses  \" doz.\nSalmon (fresh)   \"   lb.\nSalmon (salt)  \"     \"\n\u2022Oatmeal   \"    \u25a0\"\n\u2022Sugar  \"    \"\nTenders to be addressed to the Warden, ond to be on printed forms only,\nwhieh may be obtained, at tho Penitentiary.\nSamples of articles marked * may be\nseen on application at the Penitentiary.\nARTHUR H. McBRIDE,\njn34t Warden B. C. Penitentiary.\nFOR SALE:\nTHREE YOKE OP GOOD WORK-\nOXEN, well broken and in good\n\u25a0der.\nFor particulars apply to\nmy31 ;   A. INNES, Langley.\nGREAT SALE!\nGRAFTON   FARM!\nREWARD!\nON 25TH   INST.,  3 CHINAMEN\nwen drowned at Lytton.   $10 will\nbe paid for tbe ncovery of each body.\n-SPUZZUM' CHARLEY,\nOr KWONG LEE & CO., Yale.\nmy31-lm\nNOTICE TO FISHERMEN\nAND OTHERS.\nmHIS IS TO GIVE NOTICE THAT\nJ_ tho curing of Salmon Bellies,\napart from the Backs, is not allowable,\nunless the remainder of the Fish be utilized for food, cither by salting or otherwise.\nALEX. C. ANDERSON,\nInspector of Fisheries.\nNew Westminster,   \u2022\n30th May, 1882. my3l\nBY-LAW.\nHOUSE\nrpHE SUBSCRIBER WILL OFFER\nX.    for sale by\nPUBLIC      AUCTION\n\u2014ON\u2014\nThursday, Btli July Next,\nNearly lliu WHOM HKIU) of THOROUGH-BRED\nSII0IIT*I1I)I1\\' lllilllllll CATTLE,\nComprising OVER TWENTY HEAD\nof choice aiiimti].--, including 9 Bulls ami\nBull Calves.\nCatalogues with full pedigrees will\nshortly bo issued and forwarded by mail\nto numerous parties, and furnished to\npersons attending on day of Sale.\nA numlicr of PURE-BRED\nBERKSHIRE    PIGS\nWill alio be offered at same time.\nSale to commenco at 12 o'clock noon,\nTerms\u2014All sums under one hundred\ndollars, cash; ovor that amount, one-half\ncash at timo of Sale, and on balance four\nmonths' credit will bo given on being\nfurnished with approved endorsed notes\nbearing interest ut rate of ten per cont.\nper annum,\nJAMES T. STEELE.\nGrafton Farm,\nSpallumcheeii, B.C, May 23, 1882.\n(j\u00bb3-jyl)\nA BY-LAW TO ENABLE THE CORPORATION OF THE MUNICIPALITY OF CHILLIWHACK TO\nRAISE THE SUM OF FOUR THOUSAND DOLLARS FOR THE PURPOSES THEREIN SET FORTH.\nWHEREAS THE MUNICIPAL\nCouncil of the Municipality of\nChilliwhack has resolved to rniso a sum\nof \u00a73,400 for tho purposo of extending,\nmnking#nd' repairing roads and bridges,\nwid \u00a7000 towards building Town Hall,\nand in order to do so will require the sum\nof $4,000 to be obtained in tho manner\nhereinafter recited;\nAnd whorcas it will require tho sum of\n*?4fl3 to be raised annually by special\nrate for the payment of the said debt und\ninterest ns is hereinafter mentioned,*\nAnd jvhcreiia the amount of the whole\nratable property of the said Municipality\naccording to the last revised assessment\nroll, being for the years 1880 and 1881,\nwas \u00a7105,000, irrespective of nny future\nincreaso of the ratable property of the\nMunicipality nud of any income in the\nnature of tolls, interest, or dividends\nfrom the work, ami also irrespective of\nany income from the temporary invest\nment of tlie sinking fund or any part\nthereof;\nAnd whereas for paying the interest\nand creating a sinking fund for paying\nthe said principal gum of \u00a74,000 and\ninterest ns hereinafter mentioned, it will\nrequire an equal annual special rate of\none-half of one per cent, in the dollar;\nBb it thbrefoke exacted by the\nReeve and Council of the Municipality of\nChilliwhack:\n1. That it shall be lawful for the\nReeve and Council of the Municipality\nof Chilliwhack to raise' by way of Loan\nfrom nny person or persons, body or\nbodies corporate who may be willing to\nadvance ihe same upon the credit of the\nDebentures hereinafter mentioned, a sum\nof money not exceeding in the whole the\nsum of J54,O00, and to cause the same to\nlie paid into the hands of the Treasurer\nof the said municipality for the purposes\nand with the object above mentioned;\n2. That it shall be lawful for the said\nReeve and Council to cause any number\nof Debentures to lie made for such Biuns\nof money as may he required, not less\nthan $100 each, and that the said Debentures shall lie sealed with the seal of the\naaid Municipality of Chilliwhack, and be\nsigned by the said Reeve;\n3. That tho said Debentures shall be\nmade payable in eighteen years nt furthest from the day hereinafter mentioned for this By law to take ctlcet, at\nthe municipal treasury of the said Corporation of Chilliwhack, and shall have\nattached to them coupons for tho payment of interest;\n4. That tho said Debentures shall bear\ninterest at and after the rate of six per\ncent, per annum from the date thereof,\nwhich interest shall he payable annually\nat tho municipal treasury of tho said\nCorporation of Chilliwhack;\n\". That for the purpose of forming a\nsinking fund for the payment of the said\nDebentures and the interest nt the rate\naforesaid to become duo thcYeon, an\nequal special rate of one-half of one per\ncent, in the dollar slmll in addition to all\nother rates bo raised, levied and collected in each year upon all rotable property\nin the said municipality during the continuance of the said Debentures or any\nof them;\n0. It shall ho lawful for the said Muui-\nipal Council from time to timo to purchase any of the said Debentures from\npersons desirous of selling the same; and\nall the DobenturoH so re-purchased shall\nbe forthwith cancelled and destroyed\nnnd no re-issue of the Debentures, shall\nhe made in consequence of such re-purchase;\n7. That tins Bylaw shall take effect\nand come into operation upon the First\nday of duly A. D. 1882.\n8, This Bylaw mny be cited for all\npurposes as the \"Roads, Bridges and\nTown Hall Loan Bylaw, 1882.\"      inySl\nO*\nNOTICE.\n,N AND AFTER THIS DATE I\nlmvo admitted Mr. Oeoriie The-\nriEB to a partnership in my Business.   .\nThe Buslnoss will in future bo curried\non undor the name of Woodh k Tuiisbr.\nCHARLES E. WOODS.\nNow Westminstor, Mny 1, 1882.      tny3\nFARMS, TOWN LOTS,\nAND  OTHER LANDS\nFOR   SALE.\nMONEY TO LEND\nAT REASONABLE RATES.\nW. NORMAN BOLE,\nmyl3-2m        Barrister, Now Wont.\nrpHE UNDERSIGNED HAS FOR\nX sale a lew vory lino seed potatoes,\nof the varieties known as \"Early Roso\"\nand \"Lato Roso.\" Price, 'J conts for\npound.\nApply to   \u2022       A. INNES,\naplfi Langley.\nCANARY BIRDS.\nCOMPLETE\nnil\nTRAPP\nBROTHERS,\n8UCOI830HS TO\nR. W. DEANE a CO.\n600DS!\nCONSISTING OF\nBrocaded Silks and\nSdtins, in all shades,\nNew Ombre Trimmings,\nBlack& Colored Cashmeres & Merinoes,\nNew French Satin\nMerveilleux,\nBlack & Colored Velveteens,\nAthol Glaces,   in  all\nshades,\nBlack Paramatta\nCloths, &c, &c,\nOatmeal, Niagara,\nLace Stripes, Foulards,   Momies,  and\nother Cloths,\nWhite  and  Colored\nPiques, in all the newest styles,\nIndia, Mull, Nainsooks, to Swiss Muslins, Lace and Muslin Curtains,\nNew Neck Kufflings,\nSilk Scarfs, Fichus,\nChenille   Necklets,\nLatest   styles   in    Silk\nHandkerchiefs, Silk\nCords mid Tassels, in\nall shades,\nGLOVES,\nJerseys, in Black, Silk and\nLiale, in all shades,\nThoNew Laoed Kid Gloves,\nA fine assortment of Feathers Flowers, Ribbons, and New Millinery Trimmings,\nA good line of Hosiery.\nA large stock of Men's and\nBoys' Straw Hats,\nMen's and Boys'Clothing\n1861.  1882.\nTHE\nCOLUMBIA\nHOUSE.\nA FEW CHOICE SINGERS FOR\nSale, at $5.00 each.   Enquire nt\ntho Columbia Houso.\nJ. CUNNINGHAM.\nNow West., May 28,1882.       my27-lm\nyiUlBEERT & DBESKMAKIK6\nDONE  ON   THE  PREMISES  IN\nTUE LATEST  STYLES.\nJAMES ELLARD & GO.\nCor. Columbia & Mary 818.\nWE HAVE GREAT\npleasure in announcing the arrival of our first\nlot of\nNew Goods!\nFrom England and the East,\nwhich Ave have just received\nas follows:\nPer steamer \"VICTORIA,\"\n78 CASES;\nPer steamer \"G.W. ELDER,\".\n15 CASES;\nPer sailing vessel \"YUCA,\"\n6 CASES;\nMaking a Grand 1 otal of .\nNINETY-NINE GASES\nOf NEW GOODS, consisting of\nSTAPLE ft FANCY\nDRY GOODS,\nMEN'S ft BOYS'\nCLOTHING,\nMen's & Boys' Hats,\n(IN  STRAW & FELT),\nCARPETS,\nMATS,\nFLOOR CLOTHS,\nHARDWARE,\n&c,   &c.\nTHE PROPRIETOR, af*\nter. 21 years of mercantile life in this City, begs\nleave to report to his numerous Patrons that his Business\nis prosperous and the outlook\nfor the future is bright. We\nhope to do a big trade during\nthe present year. We have\nnow in stock a complete assortment of\nWith some heavy shipments\non the way from the Eastern\nMarkets. We are buying\nfor Cash, getting large discounts, which enables ns to\nsell at much lower rates than\nformerly, We are determined to keep the Columbia\nHouse to Ihe front, making\nit, as it has been for years,'\nthe lending mercantile House\non the Mainland. Our stock\nis usually so complete that we\ncan fill orders sent to us at\ncheaper rates than any other\nHouse in this City, and we\nwill do it\nJAMES CUNNINGHAM,\nImporter.\nNam West., Feb. S, 1882.       fell\nFASHIONABLE\nMILLINERY\nDRESS-MAKING!\nAPP. MR.  Cl'XMMIHAM'S,\nColumbia St., New West.\nThese Goods we are now\nopening. ,\nGOME AND SEE THEM\nAs we intend selling at Bed-\nRock Prices for Cash, as we\nhave still larger consignments\nto arrive.\nOur stock is now as complete as any in town, and\nour prices the lowest.\nFurther particulars next\nweek.\nTRAPP BROS.\nTHK UNDEKSIGNBDTAKKS\npleasure in luniomiciiig to the Ladies of New 'Westminster and snrround-\ning country that ahe has received and\nopened out a line assortment of the New*\nest aiul most Fashionable Goods from\nSun Francisco and Eastern Markets, and\nshe is now prepared to execute all orders\niu Millinery aud Dressmaking with\npromptness and care. The latest fashions\nalways on hand. Fancy Goods of beau*\ntifttl design and workmanship. No pains\nwill ho spared to satisfy customers. AH\narc cordially invited to call and examine\nour goods aud fashions, ap)5\nMRS. D. A. MACDONALD.\nH. MOREY\nHAS OPENED THE STORK AD-\njoiiiing tlie City Hotel, Columbia\nStreet, where lie will sell, cheap for\nOASHi-\nGroccrlcs,\nTobacco,\nCigars,\nCandles, \u00abtc\nBy careful attention to business he\nhones to merit a share of the Publlo\npatroniigc.\nNew West., April 20, 1883. apSS\nB0 TS and SHOES\nfaou\nHEATHORN'S\nBoot *\nVICTORIA,\nAT   VICTORIA   PRICES.\n. R THOMAS,\nShop under tho new Oddfellow Hall, Col\nimiliiast., New Westminster.\nHOLT'S EXPRESS!\nPERSONS HAVING BAGGAGE OR\nlight freight to move to the steamers on the morning of sailing, or at any\ntime, ran rely upon having It dona\npromptly by dropping their orders into\nmy box at Messrs, T. R. I'eamos k\nCo.'a Bookstore. Orders should he in\nbefore eight o'clock in tho evening,\nmhlS EB, HOLT. EBMilJiJgjgjgM\nIllinium\n-live glritifsh \u20acolumbi<w.\nHiKitnlay Mornlnp*, Jnii-j 3, IW-W.\nPA S8KNG tilts.\nVor steamer ENTBIIPUISB. from Vidorin,\nAnne 2\u2014Mr nnd Mrs Mul'cr, Mr mil Mrs Olniku,\n^Irs Blair, Mrs Oolil, Him* Oharleai Messrs T\n\u25a0Charles, T Ihmlltuii, rt IJnsliili, A Kwu.ii, Elli-\n\u2022wooil, JAR llunicis 0 two, llnrry.\nPer Btobuot RKUAN'OK, from Yule, Jum*\n*2_Mr\u00ab Butler, Mm Mclm*, Mrs RuthforA,\nMessrs Marcus ftrtltli, Gk-imt, Limy, fleiul,\nJohnston, SmtVi*^ Jonss, Slack-, Evuiis, anil 17\n\u25a0othom.\nCows, bells-off!\nCivic election on tho 7th.\nMr. DeOosmoa came up by the\nDakota,\nA servant maid wanted. \u2014See advertisement.\nMr. Marcus Smith arrived down\n.yestetday.\nTenders for penitentiary supplies\n\"are invited.\nThe mercury wont up to 80\" in tho\n-shade yesterday, -\nAnother Ore has occurred at Esquimau, destroying more cement!\nAbout five hundred beuf hides havo\ncome in from tho interior this week.\nIt is expooted the splendid now\n\u2022steamer R,  P. Rithet will be up next\nWeek.\nSheriff. Byrnes, of Cariboo, leaves\nfor his home in the mountains this\nMorning.\nFour more prisoners arrivod from\nYale the other day|in charge of constable Evans.\nLieut.-Governor Dewdnoy loft Otta-\n; \"wa for the seat of his government on\nf tho 18th May.\n\"A strong foroo of convicts has been\nj at work on tho Port Moody road dur-\nf r ing the past few days.\nKwong Loo & Co,, of Yale, havo reft ceived tlie contract for making 7,000\nL tents for railway workers,\n|,;    Tho sum of $150,000 a year lint been\nI'set apart by parliament fur the sea\n.. fisheries of tlie Dominion.\nTho steamer Ada, Capt. Rogors, ro-\nI'turned from Nanaimo on Thursday\nIt \"with freight aud piwactiKora.\n1;    On hoard tho Strut liairly, in Bum\nK-Fsannisco harbor, on the 24lh ult.,\n11,00!) Coolies wero vaccinated.\nJ Tho water in tho Fraser is rising\n|P rapidly, and is oxpected to reach an\nJlVimisuiilly high stage this season,\nf Jfho ship Sumatra arrived in Royal\n^ Roads on Thursday evening with 900\n'^\u2022Chinamen for tho 0. P. R. works.\nIt is stilted that Mr. Janiya Harvey,\n^\u2022of Nanaimo, has purchased tlio Ftd-\n\u25a0dick & Beck coal lands fur 840,000.\nr? Sister Mary of lhe Cross died nt St,\n\u2022^Tosepli's Hospital, Victoria, on Tues-\nl\/hiy, after a long and painful illness\ny' Aflkira in Egypt are looking very\nLWioiu, Tho British residents havo\nreapplied to the couihuI for protection,\nIt will ho seen hy a notice else-\nffwhero that Mr. French has closed tho\nJf'Popular Market.\" This is tho rusult\n\u00a3$if the \"corner\" iu heef.\nTho steamer Enterprise, Capt,* Gar-\n\u25a0Jjliuor, arrived from Vietnria last oven*\n|nug, bringing freight and passengers.\nShe did not got in till fl-aO!\nTho City Council did a good stroke\nf business in securing the earth from\nu post ollice site for tilling at the\n_. wor end of Columbia street.\nAmongst the passengers hy tho En-\nKerpriso yesterday was J. A, R.\nI$iumur, Esq., M. P., who. has just\nReturned from tho Federal capital.\n' The schooner Bonanza is again\nI*float, having undergone thorough re-\nJ.;.iir, Sho is to ho provided with a\nI'.iiikoy engine for loading and unload-\nIf*\nuThe Globe says tlio writs for the\nnLpniitiion election were issued ou tho\n5-Hh ult., and that tho nominations\nHill be on thu 15th and polling ou tlie\nV.ud inst.\njjJTlui steamer Western Slope, Capt.\nRooro, arrived from Victoria on\nK'ednesihiy night and passed up to\n|*nle. The Slope had quite a number\n\u25a0 passongers,\n[JTho Standard is authorized to state\nlat Mr. Hett will bo a candidate for\nIjipiimalt District at the approaching\nprovincial election.\u2014A good man ill\n*m\\ company.\n\u25a0 jit is stated that the retirement of\nBr A. T. Gait from the High Com-\nJlissionership is attributable to deli\nE$e health aud a preference for rcaid-\nf iu Canada.\nKThe steamer Reliance, Capt. Odin,\n\u25a0turned from Yale yesterday, hring-\n\u2022 considerable freight, n large num-\nir of passengers and tho up-country\nails and express.\nBarnard, M.  P. for Yalo, and\n;Vs. Barnard, arrived nt San Fran-\nuco from Ottawa ou Saturday and\npe up by wsy of Portlnnd.   They\n3 expected homo to-day.\nR. H. Princess  Louise sailed\nfrit England for Canada on the 26th\n\\, in the Sarmatian.   There is con-\nt^rahle uncertainty about tho Vice-\n#al visit to British Columbia.\n[The steamer Western Slope, Capt.\nSore, returned from Yalo yesterday,\njjfnging  a number of   passengers,\npngst whom were Hon. Mr. Justice\nhy, and My. A. Onderdonk, C. P.\n\u2022contractor.\nBt-n apparently well informed Lon-\nV correspondent of tho New York\nirld says thero is no longer the\n\u25a0litest doubt that Dillon and Davitt\nIe superseded Parnell in the leader-\n,) of the Irish party.\nheal estate is moving. On Thnrs-\n3 a gentleman representing a Toron-\nSyndicate purchased between seven\nJ eight hundred acres lying geno-\nbetween this city and Burrard\n|(t. Thu precise terms did not\nfcspire.\n\\\\ parts of Old Canada, in Minim*\n\\ nud in Manitoba, as well as in\nIi parts of tho Eastern Status, de-\nTctivo frosts aud snow wero ox-\nfenced as late as 23rd May. Much\nI has boen destroyed and even 1\nJ crops injured, '\nJas. Reid, Esq., M. P., passed up\ntlio other -day. Ho has induced tho\nDominion (jtovernnient to have an examination made of Cottonwood Canon,\nwith a view of improving the navigation.\nTho British Bcn-aVolefnt Society of\nSan Francisco celebrated tho Queen's\nBirthday by holding their sixteenth\nannual picnic. Two thousand guests\nwere present, \"Hands All Round\"\nwas sung.\nMethodist Church\u2014Rev. E. RoK-\nsou. Service at 11 a.m. and 7><!>>>u.\nSunday School at 2:30 p.M. Seats\nfree; strangers cordially invited. Service at Port Moody at 2:30 p.m.\n\u2014\u2022 \u25a0\u2014\u25a0 \"-\u00bb \u25a0-'\u2014\nThat JttbaEstm*.\u2014Tlio tVi.-N-rf publishes an Ottawa telegram announcing\nthe appointment of Mr. Walkem to\ntho vacant judgeship, but, the Standard\ndenies the truth of tho anuounceinent.\nBtmiuitu Inlet.\u2014There aro fourteen ships, all large class, in the port\nof Burrard Inlet at present, equally\ndivided between the two mills. The\nship Sulatohna sailed from Hastings\nmill on Thursday and the Athlone\nfrom Moudyvillo yesterday,\n\u25a0 \u25a0-\u25a0\u00bb 1\t\nOur Coast Fisheries. \u2014 Tlio news\nfrom tho north-west coastris to the effect that tho run of salmon had set in\nHvoly and that there was, consequently, a \"boom\" at the canneries. We\nhave now six canneries on the coast,\nand thoro would- appear to be a fair\nprospect of a good harvest.\nSerious Accident. \u2014 On $fnnduy\nDr. Tunstall was thrown from his\nhorse, whilo riding away from tho railway head-quarters bolow Lytton, sustaining tlie fracture of two ribs and\nminor injuries. Ho was treated by\nDr. Hanningtoh and, according to\nlatest accounts, was doing well.\n Af,\t\nSouth Ann.\u2014 Thore aro booming\ntimes in thu Delia municipality. The\ncontract for Mr. McKee's line two-\nstory residence at Bayview has boiin\nawarded to Mr. Burns, and tho w\nis going forward. Thu contract for\nMr. A, Fisher's largo barn was awarded to Mr. J. Iluutor, and llm building\nis well under way. alt*. \\V. II. Ladner's fine new residence is rapidly prw\ngreasing.\nToo Tuo.--The work nf blasting in\ntho concrete which ii being roihoviM\nfrom the site for tho new pofltolhce has\nbeen, going on for some time. A few\ndays ago one of these blasts shattered\neleven panes of glass iu tliu adjacent\nbuilding, temporarily used as 11 telegraph ofiiee. Yesterday ono shattered\nsix more panes of glas-i and projected\na quantity of gravel and small'boulders into tlie building.\nPort Moody at Winnii'uu.\u2014El&o-\nwhere will bu found a pretty formidable list uf Port Moody lots sold at\nWinnipeg. These lots were originally\nsold by Mr. H. V. Edmonds, and ho\ninforms, us that tho prices quoted at\nWinnipeg represent a very haudsomo\nadvance\u2014ih many instances as miu>h\none' hundred per cent., so that tho\nWinnipeg dealers are making a big\nmargin. The Mr. Mclagan mentioned\nwas, it will be remembered, out here\nlast year.\n\u2014, ^ .\nCot his Stick.\u2014Yestorday Win.\nBuckler, serving an eightoou month'si\nterm for burning Ingram's barn, nt.\nOsbyoos, was sent out with lunch to\nthe convicta at work on the Port\nMoody road. Ho appears to have\nchanged his mind on the way and\ntaken to the woods with the provisions.\nSearch was made for him yesterday,\nbut without satisfactory results. It\nappears that his term had only four\nmonths to run, aud it was not supposed\nhe would attempt to escape.\n\u2022 Railway Accident.\u2014While the\ntrain was returning to Yale Tuesday\nevoniug one of the cars got off the\ntrack near the Suspension Bridge, and\nsomo of thu workmen feeling alarmed\nat thu situation jumped from the oar\nand got injured; those who remained\nupon the car escaped. Tho injured\nparties were brought to thu Hospital\nhere. The names aro as follows:\nSamuel Qonpo, severe bruisos to the\nright leg. Patrick Rourke, bruises\nto the back and side; aud James\nDohorly, who was coining down on\ntho car ou account of injuries received\nhigher up the line, got further injured\nhy jumping from the oar. Thore are\nat present 7 patients in the Hospital.\nInland Sentinel.\nDistressing Accident.\nOn Tuesday Messrs.- DeBock Bros,\nit Co, hired a young man limned John\nGlen to work at their sawmill. On\nWednesday morning tho young man\ncommenced work, running an \"edg-\nor\" circular saw. In less than fifteen\nminutes his left hnnd-, coming accidentally in contact with the saw, was\ncut'clean off About half way between\ntho wrist and elbow! The injured\nlimb was speedily bandaged and the\nunfortunate young man brought down\nto the eity, whero he was attended by\nDr. Sivewright, aud placed in the Royal Columbian Hospital, where wo are\nglad to hoar he is doing well. He\nbore up manfully throughout, exciting\nthe admiration of the Doctor and\nattendants. It is a groat aflliction for\na young, athletic fellow to meet with\nsuch au accident, especially, an iu this\ninstance, when the vast continent divides hiin from his relatives.\nThe New School House.\nAfter long 3roars of weary waiting\nand tiresome importuning, after wriggling nnd protesting and pleading,\nNew Westminster is to havo a new\nschool house. Not such an one, perhaps, as sho was entitled to expect;\nyet an immense improvement on the\nold ono. The building is 3(i by 07\nfoot; two stories high, the first being\n14 feet and the second 12 feet in the\nclear. The first nut is dividod into\ntwo school-rooms, 35 by 2G\u00a3 feet each,\ndivided by a twelve foot hall running\nolear through. The second flat is not\nintended to bo finished at present.\nThe front elevation will he 30. feet.\nWo are sorry not to be able to praise\ntho architectural effect attained; hut we\nsuppose wo ought to feel thiinkful for\ntho internal accommodation afforded.\n''Beggars connot be choosers',\" and\nalthough tho people of Now Westminster contribute ten dollars towards\nthe revenue for everyone they receive,\nstill they have ta beg and cringe for\ntjho miserable pittance. Tho contract\nhas been awarded to Mr, John Oalbiek,\nwhose tender (\u00a72,430,) was the lowest,\nand tho work will he proceeded with\nimmediately. The fact of its being\nin his hands is a sulliuiuut guarantee\nfor the work being Well and promptly\ndone.\nRailway Hatters.\nMr. Onderdonk arrived in this city\nyesterday and is staying at tho Occi\ndent. From him wu gather the following information j\nWOllKiXU KORCE,\nThere aro now at work 2,000 whites\nand reds, and 4,050 yellows. Two\nthousand five hundred more of tho yellow sort are coining from China, and\nfis many more whites aud reds us can\nbe got will be taken on. It is expected that tho working force will be\n10,000\nstrong by the 1st of August, of whom\nnearly one-half will be on the lower\nsection.\nMIl.LEAflE UNDER. CONSTRUCTION.\nTho whole lino between Hope and a\npoint about,live miles beyond Spenco's\nBridgoj about ninety miles, is now\nunder actual, active construction, mid\nthe lino between Hope and Port\nMoody about eighty miles, is in process\nof clearing. Work ovor all that expended area is being pushocl with all\npossible vigor.\nYale Items. \u2014 Tho following\ngleaned from the Inland Sentinel of\nThursday:\u2014Hon; Mr. Justice Gray\nhold County Court ou Monday.\u2014 Tho\nFire Brigado turned out for a ''wash,\"\nand with 600 feet of hose, threw a\ngood stream ovor a 00 foot pole.\u2014The\nRailway Company's Warehouse that\nstood near Yale Crook Bridgo has boon\ntaken down to Emory, where it is\nmoro convenient for storage purposes.\n\u2014Dr.. Tunstall ia progressing favorably.\u2014Rev. Mr. Horloek preached at\nSt. John's Church on Sunday morning\nand evening, to largo congregations.\u2014\nA flue bell has been received for tho\nnew Catholic Church.\u2014A new Catholic\nChurch is iu course of erection at Lytton.\u2014Nothing new in mining operations.\nThe Bkbf \"Boom.\"\u2014The prico of\nhoof is still upward and the \"cornor\"\nmen aro triumphant. They are in a\npositi'iu to dictate to the butchers,\nand the consumers must stand the\npressure of the \"bulls.\" It is supposed that tlio supply is inadequate\nfor the home market, and still tho cry\nfor British beef comes from beyond\nthe boundary lino. A few days ago\nthe Portland dealers telegraphed an\norder for one hundred head at 7 cts.\npor lb,, delivered here; but the \"corner\" can do bettor, and the offer was\ndeclined. How tlio tublos uro turned!\nThe chief matter of regret is that tho\nstock \u2022raisers in the interior aro not the\nprincipal   gainers by all   this.   Tlio\nis being made with 11 view to having\nthe railway in running order as far\ndown as Murderer's Bar this fall, so\nthat tlie contractor may be independent\nof low watur which usually rendurs\nsteamboat navigation beyond that\npoint impossible in early spring and\nlato fall.- Thecontractor is ahjo anxious\nto havo tho track laid between\nPOUT MOODY\nand Pitt river as soon as possible, iu\norder to facilitate access between the\ntwo water systems.\nThe steamer Sltuzzy has boen sold\nto Mr. Kyle (a brother of Mr. Kyle\nin this city) who intends taking her up\nthrough\nHELL OATH\nif possible, whero sho will do the railway steam boating under contract.\nTho railway'contractor has had a\nlargo force employed for some time in\nforwarding supplies, &c, up past tho\ncanyons, in anticipation of portions of\nthe waggon road being\nby tho spring freshets. There appears\nto bo a general impression that tho\nwater in the Fraser will' be unusually\nhigh this season.\nINDIAN LABOR\nhas proved very satisfactory so far,\nand the contractor only wishes he\ncould procure a few hundred more\nIndians,\nThe contractor disclaims any intention uf constructing wharves at\nTORT HANKY,\nbut ho hopes to' make use of wharves\nconstructed by private enterprise, and\nexpresses great faith in the important\nfuture of that place.\nit is the policy and wish of the contractor to work as large a force as can\nbe put on and to push the whole lino\nfrom Savona to Port Moody to completion at the earliest possible date. It\nis hoped that by tlio close of next year\ntrains may be running between the\nseaboard and tho railway bridge over\nthe Frasor below Lytton.\nThe general health on these extensive works is excellent, ami thore has\nfor some time been gratifying immunity from accident.\nCHy Council.\nTho Council met on Wednesday\nevening, the -3!st ult. Present:\u2014Hia\nWorship the Mayor and. Councillors\nCunningham, Johnston, Curtis, and\nEdmonds-.\nAmongst a number of communications were one from Mr. Scoullar renewing application for permission to\nconstruct tank and lay pipes, and a\nsummons from P. Briggs for #100,\npaid for liquor license in January last.\nA number of accounts, wore disposed\nof.\nThe resignation of Councillors Howison and Elliott for St. George's Ward,\nand Councillor Geo. Webster for St\nAndrew's Ward woro read and accepted and the Clerk was instructed to\ncall for now elections to fill vacancies]\non tho Otli June,\nCouncillor 'Johnston reported on the\napplication of Mr. Scoullar and others\nfor permission to construct tank, <Scc,\nrecommending delay.\u2014Agreed to,\nCouncillor Cunningham handed in\nplans and specifications for St. John\nstreet.\u2014Received and laid ovor.\nCouncillor Edmonds reported that\nthe revenue from wild laud tax and\nother Rourcos from the territory between Frasor river, Pitt river, Burrard Inlet and tho Gulf of Georgia\nwould approximate $10,000, aud recommended that further stops ho taken\nto induce th'o inhabitants to *8rin\nthemselves into a municipality.\u2014Report adopted.\nThe Board of Works reported in\nfavor of granting James Turnbull permission to construct a tank on Agues\nstreet; also in favor of nun-interference with hospital drain. \u2014 Report\nadopted.\nOn motion, it was resolved that a\nHealth Officer bo appointed at the\nnext, meeting of tho Council.\nTho revenue Bylaw was advanced a\nstage. ,\nThe Clerk was instructed to issue a\nnotice about cow-bells,\nOn motion of Councillor Cunningham, specifications to govern the construction of all water-tanks was adopt-\ned.\nCouncillor Curtis gave notico.of an\namendment to tho Cuttle Bylaw,\nTho Council adjourned till next\nMonday evening.\nReal Estate Notes.\nMr. J. C. MoLuguu, hangout For the\nowner, has sold to Mr. Geo. Andorson,\nof Messrs. Perry, Reynolds & Andorson, tho following lots in tho town\nsito of Port Moody*, iu theeub-division\nof lot 20, via.; In block 2!), hits 1 to\n0 inclusive aud HI to 30 inclusive; in\nblock HO, from 2 to 12 inclusive and\nfrom 25 to 30 inclusive; in bluck 31,\n2 to 19 inclusive and from 25 to 30\ninclusive; in block 38, 7 to 12 inclusive\u20145(i lota in'all, at an average of\n\u00a7200 each.\nJ. B. MeArthur, Esq., barrister,\nbought from the smtie gentleman 12\nlots in blocks 29 to 31 at same price\nns above.\nuttMr, Geo. Anderson 1ms resold\" to\nMr. Daviea 3 lots in Port Moody for\n\u00a7800.\nTo John Mucara i lots, for $900.\nTo John McKitinon, 1 lot at S250.\nTo Thomas Watson, 2 lota for $000,\nTo Alfred Marshall, 2 lots for\u00a7600,\nTo Peter Dixon, 2 lots for 400.\nLino-*, Graveley '& Davis sold, in\nPort Moody, B. 0., lots 25 und 30,\nblock 31, Sixth Avenue, toW. Gilford\nfor \u00a7250 each.\u2014 Winnipeg Free Press\n.salmon  Breeding In British\nColumbia.\n(From First l'tigu.)\nTho Livor, tho Skill, the Ktdnoys and\nthe Bowels aro the natural cleansers of\nthe system; securo their healthy action\nbv nature's grand remedy, Burdock\nBlood HUH.ru. It cures Scrofula\u2014It\ncures liver Complaint\u2014It cures Dyspepsia\u2014It curbs Fotnsle Complaints and\n, ,\u201e    - , purifies  the Blood   while   it   restores\nmiddlemen aro puoMng strength and vitality to the shattered\n[system.   Trial Bottles 10 center\nSturgeon     4,210.00\nFresh Trout        201.00\nOolaluins, a kind of fish peculiar to that coast, pickled, smoked aud fresh...   4,311.00\nOf tho fur* seal skins, wo exported\n$104,492 worth, and I may mention\nhere that that industry has sprung up\nwithin the last threo years, Three\nyears ago there was no person engaged\nin it. Now there arc a great many men\nemployed, principally Indians; in fact\"\ntherefore fleets of Indian canoes taken\nout by steamers iu tho morning that\nare fallowed to go olf three or four\nmiles! from tho vessel to hunt seals,\nand when night comes or a storm\nthreatens, thoy return to the vessel for\nshelter. Tho canoes employed in this\nbusiness are from forty to fifty feet\nlong, and contain each a crow of eight\nor ten men and women. Wo oxport\nthe following articles as well, viz*:\nHair Seal Skins  \u00a71,750.00\nSea Otter  0,000.00\nOolnhan's Oil  1,030.00\nHerring Oil  0,400.00\nDog Fisii, Seal, and Porpoise Oil  50,890.00\nDog Fish Oil (refined)  14,850.00\nOther Fresh Fish  45,000.00\nFish Cured for Home Consumption1   2,500.00\nFish Scraps- -dried  200.00\nMaking a grand total of \u00a31,454,321.-\n20 in value, exported last year from\nthat provinco. Now no doubt, it may\nbe asked by many hon, gentlemen.\nIf there aro so many fish, aud especially so many salmon, in British Columbia\u2014and in the Frasor river particularly, why do you want a hatchery f\nHon. Mb. KAULBACH-And'whcn\nyou have no market for them 1\nHon. Mr. M0INNES-W0 havo all\nthe market wo want; and I will juBt\nsay in reply to tho hon. gentleman\nfrom Lunenburg (Mr. Kauthach) that\nno loss than five new canneries have\nbeen erected in tho district of New\nWestminster within tlio last year.\nThat, I think is pretty good evidence\nthat thoy can find a ready t\\ud profitable market. Our men would not invest\ntlieir money in any such enterprise as\nthat, with the experience of the other\ncanneries before them for a number nf\nyours, unless the outlook was a safo\none. Tho reason we want a hatchery\nis this: The early run of salmon\u2014\nwhich is the chief fish canned on thu\nColumbia river, takes placo 200 miles\nsouth of us. That \"run\" sots in about\ntho first of May, and continues uninterruptedly until about tho middle of\nJuly; whereas with us on tho Fraser\nriver, although only 200 miles farther\nnorth, the main \"run\" does not set in\nuntil tho first week of July.   It is. true\nthat a few of the \"run\" which frequent the Columbia river south of u;\nfind thoir way into the Fraser river\nduring the first few days of the month\nof May; but thoy do not come in sufficient qiYantities to warrant tho can*\nuurries in opening ou). So .that, virtually, our run of valuable fish dues\nnot sot in until thu first weejt in July.\naud terminates about tho second week\nin August, making a season of only\nfivo weeks for fishing in British Cokini-\nbia. On tho other baud, in the Columbia and Sacramento rivers, thoy\nhave a fishing season extending over\nthroe, four, nnd even five months.\nNow, I havo tho highest authority ou\nfish culture to sustain me in the position which I havu taken, and 1 think 1\nfully convinced tho Minister of Marine\naud Fisheries of thu importance of lids\nsubject. J pointed out to him that if\na hatchery is established on tho Fraser\nriver-fur that particular \"run'' and that\nearly spring \"run\" propagatdtl, wu can\nextend our fishihg-season over four or\nlive iiKiulliH, instead of fivo weuks as\nat present, and would give employment\nto 4,000 or 5,000 men, women and children, for that Apace of time, instead of the\nshultur period during which work U.naw\nrtilbrdud them. Tt is not for the sake of\nhaving a few thousand dollars expended in British Columbia that I am advocating this, but because I inn fully\nconvinced that if a hatchery is established of thitt nature, and that particular spucies of fish propagated, we shall\nsecure this longer fishing season.\nHon. Sin ALEX. CAMPBELL-Is\nthere any difference- hutwoen tho Bpu-\ncies I\nHon. Mn. McINNES\u2014Ves; on an\naverage, iu point of size and weight\nthey aro moro than double the size of\nIho main \"run\" that sets iu witli us in\nthe month of July.\nHon. Mr, KAULBACH-Won't ono\nspecies drivo the other out ?\nHon. Mit. McINNES\u2014I think not.\nWhen I bring this subject up and discuss it with a great number of htm.\ngentlemen from the east, I am met\nwith the reply, \"You have more fish\nthan you know what to do with.\"-\niloN. Mil, KAULBACH-It is said\nthey are so plentiful that they impede\nnavigation ?\nHon. Mr. McINNES-WolI, it is\ntrue, when that \"run\" wenrespeakingof\n\u2014wliich frequents our Fraser river in\nduly\u2014conies in, the water is nearly\nblaok with them; but that only continues for a short time. So great is\nthu run that nearly all tho canneries,\nnotwithstanding the fact that, they\nhavo their cans made for months bo-\nforehand, and havo a great number of\nboats\u2014some of them from 50 to 75\u2014\nthey cannot take full advantage of tho\n\"run,\" it is so great. The consequence\nis they havu frequently to withdraw,\n(I have seen tins myself), perhaps two-\nthirds of thoir boats. With the prospect of our Canadian Pacific Railway\nbeing completed within four or five\nyears, and of tho Great North-West\nbeing opened up nnd peopled, not by\nhundreds of thousands, but, as I behove and hope, by millions, there is\nno question at all but we shall supply\nnnt only the North-West and Manitoba, with fresh and canned salmon, but\nI believe' that hero in Ontaiio and\nQuebec you will find, in a few years,\nour Frnser river fresh salmon on your\ntables two or threo times a week. Indeed, I should not bo at all surprised\nif they should find their way down to\nthe town of Lunenburg, in Nova Scotia. I do not wish to trespass much\nlonger upon the'patience of the House,\nand having tallied the attention of the\nleader of the Government to thia matter, and ondeavored, in my feeble way,\nto show tho necessity for an institution\nof that kind being established, I hope\nthat tho Minister of Justice will urge\nupon tho Government, of which he is\nsuch a pnnuinout mumber, the advisability of taking steps to construct that\nhatchery before another year has gone\nby. I would add that I rely upon him\nto do justice to us in this matter.\nHon. Sir ALEX. CAMPBELL-I\nhavo great doubt whether hy the hatchery which is proposed, or by and other\nmoans, the salmon whicli frequent this\nrivor can bo induced to come there at\non earlier season than thoir natural\ntendencies will tako them. I distrust\nthe success of tho experiment which\nmy hon. friend desires to have made,\nnud fear it will nut havu the effect, of\nbringing the fish into the river earlier\nthat they are now brought thero.\nHon. Mr. MuINNES-A certain\nnumber of tho salmon run up tho\nFrasor river as early as April, but thoy\naro not in sufficient quantities to warrant the canneries in opening.\nHon. Sir ALEX. CAMPBELL-\nThoii the suggestion is that this April\n\"run\" should bo selected and brought\nthore 1\nHon. Mb. McTNNES-Yes.\nHon. Siu ALEX. CAMPBELL-\nAlthough I distrust tho experiment,\nthere may bo merit iu it; and my lion,\nfriend will bo happy to know that, nt\nnil events, tho Government have resolved to bring down an item, to enable tho experiment to ho tried; the\nitem will ho a supplement to the Supplementary Estimates,\nHon. Mr. MdNNES-I thank tho\nhon. Minister for tho information.\nAll forms of Nervous Debility so commonly prevalent yield to the vitalizing\npowers of Burdock Blood Bitters. It is\nthe best regulator of the Liver, Bowels\nand Kidneys; the most perfect Blood\nPurifier and permanent Tonic known.\nPurely vegetaolo, safo and pleasant to\ntake, and unfailing iu its ofiects ns a\nhealth restorative. Sample Bottles 10\ncents. \t\nTo Public Spjsakers.\u2014Public speakers and singers who would possess a clear\nvoico, freedom from hoarseness and sore\nthroat should use Hagyard's Pectoral\nHakim, a safe, pleasant aud certain\nhealer for the throat and lungs; it speedily breaks up a cold and cures all pulmonary complaints, that so often lead to\niiU'iimblc consumption.\nllngyiird's Yellow Oil is a perfect panacea, curing by external and internal use\nall iufl'immation, pain and soreness, Rheumatism, Stiff Joints, Deafness, Colds,\nKidney Comphijits, Burns, Frost Bites,\nand Flesh Wounds of every variety. For\nsale hy all iWlers.\nBltJB Vitriol\u2014Genuine English\u2014For\ndressing wheat to prevent tho smut.\nScud to Lam-ley k Co., Victoria. Also,\nfor snlo\u2014celebrated Condition Powders\nand Driffield's Black Oils; Both these\nshould he in every stable. mhSO\nWANTED:\nN APPRENTICE TO THE TAIL-\noi-ing Business.\nApply tD \\\\: ELSON,\n.Merdiiint Tailor,\nCokmiliio St., Opposite Lytton Square.\ninMHb\nA:\nNOTICE.\nT HEREBY GIVE PUBLIC NOTICE\n1 that from and after this date I wiil\nnot be responsible for any debts contract-\ned by jny wife, Isabella Magee, she having left my lied and hoard Without just\nen use.\nDated 21st Feb., IS82.\nJaWilt, MA(JEE.\nNorth Ann, Fraser River. t'e22\nDEWTISTEY!\nDR. F. WELSH\nHAS TAKEN BOOMS OVER MR,\n. Ja.mi-s Wink's Store, on Front\nStreet, -where he is prepared to attend to\nall who require his services\nParticular attention given to the pre-\nsci'Vatioii of the Natural Teeth.\nPartial or complete sets of Teeth made\nto order with promptness and care, nml\nwith the aid of the latest .discoveries\nnnd appliances. up'2'J\nFAEM for SALE\nrniiK Undesigned being be*\nJ. sirous, on account of failing health,\nto retire from business, offers for sale his\nfirst-class Dairy Farm, situated on Sumas\nPrairie, consisting of 530 acres, of which\n11 bolit 100 acres uro under fence. There\nis n good Orchard on the place, Dwelling\nHouse, Dairy, Bams, Stables, kc, kc\n' The Dairy Stock,-Horses) fee., Will be\nsold with Farm if desired.\nTerms\u2014One half of purchase money\npayable nt time of purchase; tbe balance\nnt reasonable rate of interest on time to\nsuit purchaser.\nFor particulars apply to\nCHESTER CHADSEY,\nmy2*i-3m Sumns.\nPacific Ooast SteamsMp Do's\nSTEAMER\njy\nVICTORIA\nOAPT.   PLUMMER,\nAV\n7ILL SAIL\n\/ cisco for\nilioiit\nFROM SAN FKAN-\nNow Westminster on\nnth  .phi:,  l\u00bbs-;.\n\u2014W1}1 sail from Ncw\n\u25a0 San Frnucisco on or\nAY, l&rii JUNE.\nBETDBKIN0\nWestminster for\nnbont SATUKD\nFor rates of   Freight  tuul  Passage,\napply to\nUOODAL\nOr to   J.\nmli 18\nA. It.\n1, PERKINS kCO,,\nSan Francisco,\nHOMER,  Agent,\nNew Westminster.\nrrd>   lease,\nON EASY TERMS FOR FIVE YEARS,\nHAZELWOOD   FARM,\nICA.ITZIE,\nCONTAINING   ABOUT 375 ACRES,\nSititnted oil the Right limit of the Fmser,\n11 Miles above New Westminster.\nGOOD DWELLING HOUSE, STABLE, HAY\nSHED AND OUTBUILDINGS.\nTlie C. 1\". Railway passim: through the\nlaud will ensure ;t good nmrkct for produce,\nFour steamers ti- woek each way run\nhind within twenty yards uf the build:\niiiKS.\nFor particulars apply to\nJ. ROLAND HETT,\nBnrrister, Victoria,\nOr G. K. CORBOULD,\nmyiM Barrister, New West.\n11\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. G.\nTlie Only Fire-Proof Hotel\nin the Citj,\nthe (Eix.uir w\\mw\nIS I'NDICR THE CIIAROE Or' AN\nEXPERIENCED ARTIST.\nTHE DNDERSI8NEDBEQS HEAVE\nto announce to the Public that lie\nlias purchased the above Hotel, where\neverything will be found first-class, and\nat reasontihlo rates.\nTin; Parlors anil SlropInK Apart-\nnicills are miller the superintendence\nof Mns. Howisos.\nPrivate Dining Rooms for Ladies,\nFamilies and Private Parties.\nA Private Heading; Room, commodious, comfortably furnished, and\nwell supplied with books nnd papers, is\nprovided for the use of guests.\nTHB   BA.B\nIs supplied with the choicest brands of\nWlNlis, LltllTOllS, ClUAllS, &o.\nJ. W. HOWISON,\nPropiuetoe.\nBUUSVITHIIG\n(AT BRUNETTE MILLS.)'\ny\nHA.VING   ENGAGED   THK mi\n.   ylc'eu of Mr.   dAft* Si'iE\u00abs, and\nfitted our Shop with a set of rirst-clfl.-sfi\nTools, wc are in a potation to turn out\nthe lest quality of work in thia line..\nmy 13 DeTJECK liHOS. k CO.\nCITY   HOTEL\nJiEW  WESTMINSTER\n(Next  Door to  Public   Library),\nCOU'JIHU STRIiKT.\nriiHH ut; niiiiSK:xi:n bkcis leave\nJ. to announce to tin* l'ublie that she\nhas leased tbo above Hotel, mid is pre'\npared to furnish' to tlie travelling Public\nFIRST - CLASS ACCOMMODATION,\n\u2014JT\u2014\nREASONABLE   RATES.\nPrivate llinhi;: lliioins for Ladles\n- ami Families.\nMRS. BONSON,\nse28 MaAUiBki\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA,\nIN PROBATE.\nIn the Goods of GEORGE GARRY- .\nPIE, Deceased.\nrnENDESS IN WIUT1N-C MR THE\"\nX. pUVciiiisc of all personal property\nother than household furniture and one\nyoU\u00ab of oxen, -Six cows, and \"the farming\nimplements, leased to Angus C. Fraser,\nwill bo received hy the undursigileil up\nto 12 o'clock noon on -Saturday, Tenth\nJune, ISS2.\nW. NORMAN BOLE, \u25a0\nSolicitor for Administrator)\nColuiiihhi .Street, New Westminster.\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA,\nIn the Goods of GEORGE GARRYPIE, Deceased.\nALL PARTIES WHO HAVF\nclaims against the said G-sorae\nGarrypie nre hereby required to file their\nclaim's properly verified in the office of\nthe District Registrar of the fynreinc\nCourt nt New Westminster, on or bMbre\n12 o'clock noon' on SattirUity the 1st nV,\nof July; 1SS2; and all persons indebted\nto the said (Jcorgc Garrypie, deceased,\nnre required tit pay same into the said\nRegistrar on or before 12 o'clock noon ou\nSaturday, IstJuly, ISS2.\n10th May, 1882.\nE. A. JENN.S,\nD. K. S. C\u201e N. W.\nW. Nohman Bole,\nSolicitor for tlie Administrator,\nmy20 New Westminster,\nW. RAE\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nJ\nUext Door South of Colonial\nHotel,\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B..C.\nHAS   ALWAYS    ON    HAND   A,\nVARIED STOCK OF\nMERCHANDISE\nGroceries,\nDry Goods,\nClothing,\nCrockery,\nGlassware,\n&c, &o.\n,T!'ST BISCBIVED-A COMI'LETE\nSTOCK I IF\nMILLINERY GOODS\nIncluding Novelties in Fancy Straw\n. Hats   nnd   Bonnets,  Flowers,\nFeathers, Luces, Plain and\nShaded Watered Ribbons,\nSntiiis, Colored Velvets, Velveteens,\nnnd Plush,\nNEW DESIGNS in TIES & RUFFLES\nHATS AND   BONNETS\nMade ami trimmed, and satisfaction\n\"iianuiteed.\nBERUN and ZEPHYR WOOLS,\n^T-A-l Goods Hold at reasonable ,\nrates.   Call and inspect onr stock\nWM. RAE,\nli   \u25a0 Columbia Stii^ct. ami- gtorg-.\nKITH AND KIN.\n(Continued.)\n\"Then I am sure you stall never\nfed it again. 1 promise you that, and\nI beg your pardon, if I havo wounded\nyou,\" no said earnestly, and, hoping\nto turn away her attention from that\ntopic, he add-sd;\n\"But you aaid flomethhig about going to church. Do you think the\nneighbors expected mo to be at church\nthis morning, instead of rambling\nround the lako, and talking about the\nfells with the farmers' boys ?\"\n\"I dare Bay people would bo a little\nsurprised, especially ns it was the day\nafter Mr. Aglionby's funeral.   Theso\nsmall places, you see \u25a0\"\n\"Havo their lex nonscripla, which\nis vory stringent. Yes, I know. I\nought to have gone. I would have\ngone\", if I had thought of it.\"\n\"Aro you a dissenter ?\" asked Judith; \"because there is a chapel-\nMethodist, 1 think\u2014-at Yoresett, aud a\nQuakers' meeting-house at Bainbeck.''\n\"I am not what you would call a\ndissenter, I suppose, but a free-thinker;\nwhat it is no w fashionable to call au Agnostic\u2014a modish name for a very old\nthing.\"\n\"Agnostic\u2014that means a person who\ndoes not know, doesn't it ?\"\n\"Yes. At least, with me, it does.\nIt means that I acknowledge and confess my utter and profound ignorance\nof all things outside experience, beyond the grave; beyond what science\ncan tell ine.\"\n\"But that is\u2014surely that is atheism\n\u2014rank materialism, isn't it V\n\"Scarcely, I think, is it? Because I\ndon't presume, or pretend to say, that\nthose things which believers preach do\nnot exist\u2014all those things in the beyond, of which they so confidently\naffirm five existence\u2014I do not deny it;\n1 merely say that for me such things\nare veiled in a mystery which 1 cannot\n.penetrate, And whieh I do not belierc\nthat any other man has the power to\npenetrate. \"My concern is with this\nlife nnd thia life alone. I have a moral\nlaw quite outside those questions.\"\n\"Have you? Then you do affirm\nsome things?\"\n\"Ono thing, very strongly,\" ho answered, with a slight smile, \"a thing\nwhich partly ngrees and partly disagrees with what you affirm\u2014I am\nsupposing you to be a Christian,\"\n\"And what is that?\" asked Judith,\nneither affirming nor denying her\nChristianity.\n\"This: that to use tho words of the\nOld Testament, 'The sins of the fathers\nshall be vistted upon the children unto\nthe third and fourth generation,' ay,\nand a go-} d<ml beyond that; and that,\nin our system of belief or disbelief\u2014\nwhichever you like to call it\u2014there\nexists no forgiveness of sins. That is\nall. It is not nn elaborate creed, but\nI think any one who really comprehends tt and accepts it, will und that\nhe must lead a life, to come up to its\nspirit, as stern and as pure as that\nwhich any system of theism can offer\nlo him.\"\n\"No forgivenoss of sinB,\" faltered\nJudith, more struck, apparently, hy\nhis words than seemed reasonable.\n\"That is surely a hard lesson. Not\nevon hy repentance!\"\nHe shook his head. \"I don't see\nhow even repentance can bring forgiveness,\" he said. \" 'The soul that\nBurnetii, it shall die,' and 'the wages of\nsin is death.' There is no getting out\nof it, is there ? Tho man who lends a\nsinful life docs not do it with impunity,\nI think. If he seems to escape pretty\nwell himself, look at his children\u2014his\nchildren's children. Look at tho punishments that are transmitted from\ngeneration unto generation 'of them\nthat hate me and despise iny commandments.\"\n\"That is God,\" said Judith.\n\"I know you call ifc so. To mo it\nmeans the laws of science aud nature;\nreason, morality, righteousness, clean\nhands and a pure heart.\"\n\"And you think that would he sufficient to deter people from doing\nwrong and wicked things ?\" she asked,\nstill with an absorption of interest iu\nthe theme which surprised him, for all\nit was a very old and hackneyed one\u2014\na subject which had been disputed\nthousands of times, and he had certainly not thrown any new light upon\nit by his words.\n\"I do not know,\" said he, \"I am an\nAgnostic there, too.   It is to be hoped\nthat if it were not efficacious now\u2014\nwhicli it hardly would be, I dare say-\nit may become so in the course of time,\nas the world grows what I call wiser,\nwhat you denominate more skeptical,\nI suppose.   At any rate the fact remains, wliich no theologian can deny,\nthat the sins of the fathers are visited\nupon the childron daily, hourly, inevitably; and that if a man wish his\ndescendants to eacape punishment\u2014if\nhe wish to escape it himself\u2014he must\nwalk   circumspectly;  he  can't  be a\ndrunkard or a profligate nll his life,\nand   by repenting on his death-bed\nwipe out all the consequences to him'\nself and others; despite all that is\npreached about its being never too late\nto mend, and never too late to be forgiven, he cannot do it.   He has sinned, and the effects aro there,   Surely\nyou will own that)\"\n\"It cannot bo denied.\"\n\"Well, and a man or a woman cannot live a dishonest life\u2014cannot go on\nwith a lie in tlieir right hands\u2014without consequences ensuing.   They mny\nrepent, sooner or later, in dust and\nashes, and may swear, liko Faint aft\", lo\n'eschew sack and live cleanly,' but it\ntakes two, at any rate, to tell a lie or\nto act one;, the effects Bjiread out in\nrings\u2014none can know where or how\nthey will end.   It cannot he escaped.\nSome one must be punished.\"\n\"Then those who come after\u2014is it\nof no use for them to try to expiate\nthe sins of their fathers ? she asked,\nwith the same anxious, eager intent-\nness; \"or, would it not be natural and\nright1 for  thein  to say, 'Since my\nfiarenfs left mo with this blight in my\nife, I'll even live recklessly. No repentance will cure it. There is no\njustice. I will got what pleasure I can\nput of my maimed existence, and the\nfuture may look after itself?''*\n\"I told you the creed was a hard\none,\" he said. '\"We havo no God of\nmercy to go on our knees to for forgiveness. What we have sowed, we\nmust- reap,, God or no God.   It is open\nto us to do as you say\u2014'Eat, drink,\nand bo merry, for to-morrow thou\nshalt 'die.' Or, it is open to you to\ntake your stand as iirnily as may be,\nto -do without the cakes aud ale; to\nsay, 'Whatever I may suffer for my\nparents' sin, none shall have to suffor\nfor mine,' and to livo righteously.\"\n\"And the reward?\" asked Judith,\nlooking at him eagorly and intently,\neven anxiously.\n\"Thero is no reward, that I know\nof, except the one which Christianity\nsays is not sufficient to keep a man\nstraight\u2014the conviction that you have\ndone right and been honest, cost what\nit might, and that whatever you have\nsuffered from others, no others shall\nsuffer by you. That ia all that I know\nof.\"\n' 'Then do you recommend this creed\nto others?\"   *\n\"I recommend it simply as I would\nrecommend truth, or what appeared to\nmo to bu truth, before a lie\u2014as I\nwould recommend a man setting out\non a journey to fill his wallet with dry\nbread, or evon dry crusts, rather than\nwith macaroons aud cream-cakes.\"\nShe leaned her head on her hand,\niu silence, aud at last said:\n\"It is a hard doctrine.\"\n\"Yes, I know,   It is the only owe\nthat I ever found of; any service to me\nin my life.\"\n''It seems to mo that it might be\ngood for strong spirits, but that it\nwould altogether crush weak ones.\"\n\"Then, Miss Conisbrough, it should\nbe good for yours; it should be the\nvery meat to sustain it,\" said Bernard\ninvoluntarily and eagerly.\nJudith smiled, rather wanly.\n\"You imagine mine to bo a strong\nspirit ?\" she asked.\n\"I am convinced of it.\"\n\"You never were more mistaken in\nyour life.   I am a faint-hearted coward.\"   She rose, slowly, and paused\nnear the firo, \"I think, Mr. Aglionby,\nthat there is a great deal of reason m\nyour Agnosticism.   I wish  people-\nsome people, I mean\u2014had known of it\nand realized it a long time ago.\"\nThore was a dreary hopelessness in\nher tone, a blank sorrow in her expression, which went home to him.\nLike many a strong soul which lias\nbeen scarred iu battle, ho shrank from\nseeing others exposed to the ordeal ho\nhad gone through. Ho thought she\nwas going, all dcsolato as she was aud\nlooked. He could not endure the idea\nof sending her comfortless away, and\nhe strove to detain her yet another\nmoment.\n\"Do you mean,'' he hastily asked,\nand in a low voice\u2014\"do you mean\nabout my grandfather ? Because, you\nknow, I try to livo up to my convictions. Ho did wrong, I know\u2014and\nthose who come after him must suffer\nfrom it more or less; but Ihavo elected\nto take the Bide of not lotting others\nsuffer by me, and \"\n\"I was not thinking of my great\nundo at all,\" was the unexpected re\nply. \"You aro harping on the way in\nwhich he has left his money. And\nyou would like to make it right. You\ncannot. I nevor realized until now,\nhow utterly impossible it is. Yes, the\nsins of the fathers shall be visited upon\nthe children. But you have committed\nnot sin. Do not trouble yourself. If\nit wero merely money\u2014though I am\nnearly a pauper, I never felt to care so\nlittle for money as I do now. It seems\nto mo to make so little difference I\nthink I shall try your creed, Mr. Aglionby; it seems to mo to be a manly\none.\" She held out her hand,\n\"But you want a womanly one,\" he\nurged eagerly, yet not too boldly.\n\"No; 1 want as strong, as masculine,\nas virile a creed as I can find. I want\na stick to lean upon that will not fail\nme, and I believe you have extended\nifc to me this night, though I will not\ndeny that it has a rough and horny\nfeeling to the hand.   Good-night.\"\n\"I am greatly concerned,\" ho began,\nnnd his face, his voice, aud his eyes\nall showed that concern to be profound.\n\"Donofcbeconcerned. Ithanky.mfor\nit,\" said Judith, smiling for the first\ntime upon hiin. Aglionby hardly knew\nwhat the fooling was which seemed to\nstrike like a blow upon his heart, as he\nmet that smite, exquisitely sweet and\nattractive, like most smiles of grave\nfaces. He could not spoak a word,\nfor the amotion was altogether new to\nhim. Passively he allowed her to\nwithdraw her hand, and to walk out of\nthe room.\nHe sat with his elbow on his knee,\nhis chin in his hand, gazing into the\ntire, and would have sat there till the\nsaid firo had expired, had uot Mrs.\nAveson at last wonderingly looked iu\nto ask if he had finished supper.\n\"Yes,\" he answered, abruptly, and\nthe word-* of the song came tenderly\ninto his mind:\nil Ai\nNew Stock!\nLADIES'\nHeavy Jackets and\nQuilted Skirts. Colored Merinos, blk.\nCashmere and blk.\nCrape Cloth.\nFLANNELS\nIn White, Scarlet,\nBlue, Gray, and\nPlain, and Stripes,\nand Checks\u2014both\nEnglish, Canadian,\nand American, twilled and plain, wool\nshaker and cotton.\nCOTTONS\nIn white and gray.\nBrown and white\nSheetings. Towels\nof all kinds.\nBLANKETS\nIn colors & white.\nQUILTS and Coun-\nterpanes. Ticking,\nDrilling, and Hessians Canadian\nYARN.\nFURS.\nLadies' Furs in\nMuffs, Boas & Caps.\nCLOTHING.\nMen's Clothing in\nTweed suits or otherwise. Overcoats\nand Ulsters.\nCEO.\nLAND\nTURNER,\nSURVEYOR.\nMcColl's Store, Holbrook's Stone\nBuilding,\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nJ. A. R. HOMER,\nFRONT STREET.\nJ. A. SIVEWRIGHT, M.D.\nOFFICE-MACKENZIE STREET\n(NEAIt DUIM, 8HIi\u00bb).\nResidenoe-Merivale Street,\nDr, Loftus I, Mclnnes,\nPHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,\nOpposite tiie Post-office, Columbia Street.\nOffice Hoitiis\u2014Morning, from 11 to 1;\nlivening, from 3 to 8,\nC. J. LEGGATT,\nBarrister-at'Lnw\nNOTARY PUBLIC   ETO.\nOFPICE-Noxt door to Uren's Photo.\nGallery, McKenzie st., Nov\/ Westminster.\nBROTHERS,\nIMPORTERS &\n-DEALERS  IN\u2014\nGROCERIES\nA. T. D. MacELMEN,\nBARRISTER \u2022 AT \u25a0 LAW,\nNOTARY PUBLIC, &0\u201e\nHAS BEStJMKD PRACTICE IN ALL\nTHB COURTS.\nOFFHIK\u2014Columhia street, bpnosite Hy\naclc. Hall, New Westminster, B. C.\nJAMES   MORRISON,\nCONVEYANCER,\nLand and General Agent,\n\u2014AND\u2014\nAUCTIONEER !\nCOLUMBIA   STREET,\n(Opp, poliinltil lietell\nN E W   W'JSS TM lN'fi T B II\n*3TSeveral good Farms for Pale mul to\nLease. nolo\nfijRNEe,BEETONil\nMERCHANTS,\nWllAUF STREET, \u2022 VIOTOUIA.\nNorth llrillsli and Mercantile\nInsurance Co. for Mainland.\nH.C. BEETON & CO.,\nSO Finsliury Cirona,\nLondon, 1'. C.\n-\u25a0iGLBB-X*-\nPROVISIONS,\nWHARF STRKET,\nVICTOKIA, B.C.\n\u00ab\u00bb^r-*\u00bblS:t'Tn~U,tr'i'vJ\nFEW    SCHEDULE\nTrtreAuGSrESSS\n-*-Fon\u2014\nWHITE LABOR\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\nOverseers $125 00 per month.\nRook Fovetnen... .S3 00 to & 00 I? day\nEarth Foromen,., 2 25 to 3 00    \"\nBridge Foreinon,, 3 00 \"\nBridge Cafpontos,\nlat class  2 50 \"\nBridge Carpenters,\n2nd class  2 00 \"\nMasons 2 50 to 3 50    \"\nBlacksmiths,    1st\nclnss   3 00 \"\nBlacksmiths,\nNOTICE OF\nREMOVAL!\nWILLIAM McCOLL\nBEGS  TO INFORM HIS NUMEROUS patrons that lio has removed\nhis Business to\nHolbrook's Stone Building\n(NEXT TO THE BANK),\nWhero will be found, aa usual, a complete assortme'nt o'f\nGROCERIES,\nPROVISIONS,\nAnd a fine line of\nDry Goods, Gents' Furnishing\nGoods, &c, &e\u201e\nWhich will ho sold at tho LOWEST\nPOSSIBLE PRICKS 'for Cash.\nHe thanks his friends for their past\nliberal patronago and hopes for a continuance of the same. mhl\n2nd\nBlacksmith Helpers   t 50 to\nDrillers  1 75 to\nLaborers .\" 1 50 to\nHewers, 1st class 3 50\nChoppers, 1st class 2 50\nScorers, 1st class 2 50\n2 00\n2 00\n175\nH. W. HUGHES,\nk\nHats in Every Style.\n\"Nocb \u25a0eintiil 1st nni biirakrn;\n(iuili'U Al.rli'l, KiK.ii Jfjucllt!\nDo Mumil ncliUmt u|> du Ilnken\nUim lliiirgutt Unit lie Waclit,\"\nAbout noon the next day, Sir Gabriel Danosdnlo and his son, riding\ndown the hill behind Scnr Foot, left\noft' a lively discussion on politics, which\nbad hitherto engrossed thorn, aud\nturned their thoughts and their conversation toward tho house wliich had\njust come in Bight.\n\"I wonder bow wo shall liko him,\"\nobserved Sir Gabriel. \"At tbe funeral,\nI took good notico of him\u2014you wero\nnot thorn.\"\n\"No, I don't go to them on principle.1'\n''That is a mistake,\" said bis father;\n\"there is nevoy any harm in occasionally confronting in another, what must\nsomo time be one's own hitter ond.\nWhen 1 fairly realized that it was old\nJohn who was being laid undor tbe\nground there, my own contemporary,\nand tho friend of my youth, I assure\nyou that the things of this present, the\nroast and tho boiled, the lands ana the\nhouses, seemed to shrink away into remarkably small compass. It puts things\nbeforo one in another light.\"\nSir Gabriel spoke with a tempered\ncheerfulness, and Randulf replied, \"I\nnover thought of it in that way; I havo\nno doubt you nre right,\"\n\"You aro young, it is no wonder you\nhavo never thought of it in that way.\nBut, as I was saying, I took remarkably good notice of this young fellow,\nand it was strongly borne in upon my\nmind that if he and old John had been\nmuch together, tbe roof of Soar Foot\nmust have flown off under tho violence\nof thoir disputes. He is not of us,\nItandulf; not one of my kind, though\nho may suit your new-fangled notions,\"\n(To 1.0 Continued.)\nGLOVES\nIn Ladies' blank,\ndark & light shades\nin kid. Tn Men's\nGloves, buck, doe,\ndog, kid, sheep, antelope, and cloth\u2014\nall shades, lined and\nunlined.\nB'VXITC.-K-'rXXXM'Crr\nIn Uentlemcn'* Furnishing (ioods.\nLAMPS,\nCROCKERY,\nGLASSWARE.\nPLATE DWARE AND\nTABLE CUTLERY\nTHE BEST.\nIn Groceries ami Provisions\nEvery thing the beBt\nthat can be had, and\nat the lowest prices\nfor a GOOD article.\nW. D. FERRIS,\nCONVEYANCE!*,\nHouse, Land, Court; and\nCENERAL AGENT,\nCOLLECTOR of RENT and DEBTS,\nAgent for (lie THAT EM.KRS* ISSI'U-\nAMI; \u20ac0., or llnn'ord, Coun.\nNew Wefftnlnxler, II. C.\nC, I, MAMTEN,\nWATCHMAKER & JEWELER\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nWATOHE3, CLOCKS, JEWELRY,\nAND SILVER PLATED WARE\nFor Sale,\n.tu kimii \u00abi uolii nml Hii.vi:\u00ab jew.\nEI.UV   nmile It. order.\nETRUSCAN COtOMNC, COLD &SILVER PLATING.\nEniuigeiOTllI    nnd   Weil.tlllK   Win.\nmi.l    Wl-llltlllK\n\u2022prelu.l).\nisr Watches  and  .lewolry oiirofnlty\nrepaired. Old (.old nnd Silver bought,\njnyltc\nHaving established Ihwtnoss in tlie abovo\nLines and by\nRECENT IMPORTATIONS\nEuropean & Eastern Markets\nWe eve prepared to lill orders to thu\nTrade in the following Goods:\nTEAS,\nCOFFEES,\nSUGARS,\nTOBACCOS,\nHAM,\nBACON,\nLARD,\nCODFISH,\nMACKEREL,\nCandles, Rice, Syrup, Cheese,\nDried mills, Canned Goods,\nVinegar. Baking Powder,\nSoap,\nCoal Oil,\nCocoa,\nPearl Barley,\nBEANS,\nBRIOMS,\nWRAPPING PAPER,\nPAPER BAGS,\nAnd nil other Gooda in tlio Grocery and\nProvision Lino.\n'AU outside labor 10 hours per day.\nAll Carpenters to furnish their own\nChest Tools.\nAll Employees to find themselves Bed,\nBoard and Lodging.\nBoarding Houses will ho convenient\nalong the Lino.   Board--$4 per week.\nIt will not he compulsory for Kinploy-\nees to hoard in the Company's Houses.\nWages will he paid monthly, on the\n10th of each month.\nA.  ONDERDONK,\nGkxehai, Manaukh.\nOFFICE OV THK OoNTIUWOTtS,\nCanadian Pacific Railway,\nYale, March 1, J881.\nNEW WESTMINSTEB, B.C.\n-A-Q-HJCTT   1TOK\nTwonto Weekly Mnll 81 00\nToronto Weekly flli.lie 1 00\nMrnitreul npnil.. A Weekly Stnr 1 00\nM-mlmtl Wuekly Wlliii**  1 10\nScirntlflc Amurlrnn .. S 2h>\nSrnttir.li Amcric in .l.iiii nni  .1 00\nfirm Frniictari IlullotJn 2 50\nHitrpcr^ Miifinzinf- nml Wftklv, end.  4 0ft\nfli,(Wn Ij-ulirV tl'ioV  l* no\nSnn FrnttclRCD WVekW Cnl! (HI linoltK freel  1 ST\nFrinik Ut>]\\v'n Publications Rt l'i.Ul*Wa l'rln*.\nOiteini'it I.ifc  2 (.0\nTio.-in.l or Tn-t)aV 2 to\nLlvijrimul Portraits of nival of ltvc!.nVnt**of tl.8.\nAnd nny otlier \u25a0uitiei*. or Mnpii.tncA or ltn|>t>rt*in<-\u00bb*\nin Gum-In or io iV Unltu.1 si si.-. Tin. 1tiill.-i.ii\nUntliU iem it lot of WodN ami plnnl*. YiRtttli' ut tlio\nMnrliiini'-'.-i I iH-liline. Tlie nliove lire nil otTered nt\nIlie Hinne I'liee* r.ltil'gHl by iiiiMEilier-ii mi thtt\nRboiiDl* vnu ii|i|)lv I In* sooner iho pii'mr \\vlll nrrtoe,\nAgmit !br World ItibllMiiiin Cii., flUolnh*, Ont.\nItKNl'Y W. IITHIIIR8, Agr.nl>\nmilt New West minuter, II. 0.\nJtt'a** Oni'tpli Orgnnt,\u2014limit mndp.  1'nrtIruluri* on\neni|niry.\nESTABLISHED   IN   1852.\nL P. FISHER'S\nisr \"aws PAPaa\nDR. SPINNEY & C0,'S\nDISl'ENSARY,\nNO. 11 KEARNEY STREET,\nSAN FRANCISCO, CAL.\nfi\u00b0:\nDVERTISING\nTE3 I*J \u00ab*Z3 \"W\nRooms 2(1 anil HI, Merchants' \u00a3x>\nchange, California SI.,\u00bb. l\\, Cal.\nN.B;i\nEvery Man to his Own Business\nPRACTICAL\nCHEMIST& DRUGGIST,\nCOLUMBIA   STREET\n(OIT. COLONIAL HOTKL),\nNEW  WESTMINSTER,  li. 0.\nMORAL \u2022 If you want u flood article,\ngo to C. G. MAJOll'S: if you want things\ncheap, hut \"ciilttid,\" why, go olaowhcro-\nITEM\u2014What everybody nays imiHt he\ntrue ; ami if true, then tho ImiiclHomci-t\ndisplay of Valuable Uooda, Silver and\nPitttttf'\u00ab undoubtedly to hu found at\nC. G. MAJOR'S,\nOOUJMBIA   STEE11DT,\nNew Westminster,  B, 0.\nPhysicians' Prescriptions and Family Recipes n Specialty.   '\nN.  B. \u2014 Only Gemrino Drugs uhciI.\nOver twenty years' oxperionco.    tur23\nSPECIAL ATTENTION\nlit etilled to the tuidernoted Good*-:, on\nwhieh the moat LIBERAL INDUCE-\nMKNTS will ho offered to tho\nTrade, as we are\nSOLE\nAgents for Britisli Columbia\nWOODS \u00a3 TURNER,\nLAND SURVEYORS,\nREAL ESTATE AGENTS,\nConveyancers & Accountants.\nROTS,  DKBTH, *\u00ab., (JObl\/ECTRD,\nLonm Negotiated, and a Gonoral\nAgency Business transacted.\nAliKSTH  FOR THK\nPhcnU Kirn Insurance (,'ompany or\nBrooklyn, and the\nKqultnblo Life Assurance  Society\nof the United States.\nCOMIMBM   KTUKKT.\nNEW  WESTMINSTER,   B. C,\n1\\ O. Box 40.\nGOOD AS 60UIBAKIXG POWDIR\nTho Best und Chcnpest.\nBEACON  LIGHT  COAL OIL,\nWater White and Pure.\nARCTIC SUGAR CURED HAM\nTurkish Patrol Cigarettes,\nBeing   the  Largest Size und Best\nTolmoeo.\nDU. SPINNEY, well Known m tli* Unn-\ndiirnf lli\u00ab M.mtl.*nl, <('. K.l Mnlit'iil liixli-\nluto, im.l IMu I'l-'ipriftorrit tin; SHNNHYVIM.K\nINF1UMAIIY, would most ronpectfnl))* lulonn\niiin imlii'iitfl nnd (tin ntlHrtod Ri'H\u00abriill,v, Hint liv\nMill coi.tiiuirs t'i li'i'Hl clirtinlciiiitl tiviv.iHN din-\nOMWWitll iliJi.Hlit'Mi'i. tmcOUBH.\nLADIES AND GENTLEMEN.\nIt cm mn tier tlmt prw.rfllt' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0Hon w thu tliief of\nI tm u iu\nCOME AND BE HEALED.\nIt innttcvti not wtnit your trouldni* mny ho, romo\nMini lei tho Doctor oiitmino your ciiho It will\npout ymi n,.||.iii|; for cuiisilltntloii, mi iiluntto cull\niind \".iH**.)' yinir*M!lvi'\u00bb wlmthiT tlm Doctor under-\nHtntultt your ratio. It lit. win ciue ynu ho will tell\nyoll 8a* if not. hu wiil loll you tlmt, tot* lio will\nnot untiortnku n ciwo iihIobi lio Ih contiilunt of df.\ntuctliift a ouro,\n1'nrilon ut n illntauro WlfllilltK troutmont, liy\n\u25a0oudinij ISo itnd it minute dcKcri*iiioti of their\nlioiiltlu'i will rcceivci Iu return \u00bb full Cottrnu of\ntreiitiuent Bceurety pucked nous not tncHello curiosity,\nIHt. SPINNEY will mm run tec to forfeit Fivo\nIluii'li'.'.l [i.'llnni lor oTcry cuso of nny kind ur\nt'luirui'li'r whieh Im ii.ii1iirliiken.iir1 fldls tenure.\nPi 8.\u2014For difliinnes of nhov Hiding, \u00bb full\nconrnp of modiclui'i, suftkitiii cure, with\nnil inMructloiu. will he mint io \u201ejynddrosson\nrocolitt of $10.\nCall or Addvi'SR\nDr. SPINNF.Y to CO.,\ni\u00bb88-1y      No. 11 Koiirnoy.Bt.,SmiKiuwctaco,Cttl.\nADYKIlTlStNG SOMCITKIl\nnil iitwnpnnors pulitlslied Utl the I'lirlflo\nlite Siiii'lVi'lcli lMitntts. .\"olviirHiii, Mexintl.\nI'litiniiiii. YitlpiirnJmi, Jnpnn, Olilnn, New\nil, llm Atintmllitn Colonic*, tin* Kflntont\nmid Europe. Fili'n of tieitrly oVery n\u00abwg-\npnhltsliud on llm 1'iu'iHi* Ooitit urn kept\n' on liiiiol ttlnl nil mlvi\" llnei'*i nri)\nm lioura.\niill.iWi d tree ncccit* to them iluiini; I mill i\n'I'lm ItniTisii Qoldmumv In kept\nlilent till\nOREGON PRINOE\nWILL STAND FOU SKUVICK\nduring tlio sciu-ni, of ISS'J, nu\nthe Km-m of the iiiidersijjncd, Chilli-\nwlmek, nud at Lnnglny, Liulnev's Landing, nnd Mnple Kidgu.\nOllEaOS PltlKCK was foaled in Oregon;\nwill bo 0 yearn old in May; Is a dappled\ngray! stands 17.1\/ Imiula high; weighs l(i7fi\nlhs. ut present, will weigh uhout 1880 lbs.\nduring season; is very gentle, very fust\nu'ulker, good trotter, and a powerful\nhorse in hurness. lie was sired hy W.\nMycr's imported Perehcron \u2014 \"Winto\nI'rince.\" Oukoon Pkinck won second\npi'ixo at tho Victoria Agricultural Fair\nlust November, nnd is tho largest, horsn\nou the mainland of British Columbia.\nTKRMS-S10, $]r>, and 820. Parties\nfrom it* distance Bonding mures will ho\nentitled to free pasturage for ono month.\nR. STEVENSON,\njnylltc. ChilHwhauk.\nBUSINESS NOTICE\n\u2022vroTicB  is\nXST'D'EI'X.\nTo DlSKAeSS, CoMl'I.A!HT\u00bb Will ACClDRerW\nwhicli Ua(.y.miii's Ybli^w Oil. U Kirnnin*\nteed to cine Or relievo either la Man or\nUl'.AST.\nTAKEN IHTEIKAlir PM\nCROUP, | COUGHS,\nCRAMPS, SORE THROAT,\nASTHMA, I COLBS, Ac.\nAPPLIED EXTEIHUIV FM\nRHEUMATISM,\nClIILBLAIXS,\nSWELLINGS,\nGALLS,\nLAMEXESS,\nCONTRACUONSl,\nLUMBAGO,\nDEAFNESS,\nSPRAINS,\nNEURALGIA,\nCALLOUS LUMPS\nSTIFF JOINTS,\nFROSTBITE,\nCORNS,\nBRUISES,\nITCH,\nPAININBACK,\nPAINInSIDE,M,\nEvery bottle guaranteed to give aatiifoc\ntion or money refunded,\nDintBTIOHS WITH IMHIDT1U. Mill aSo.\nT.HIlBTJiaTSOO^Proprlltori\nTUUONTO, OUT. \u2022\nOur Goods are Guaranteed of the highest standard in Quality, and are offered\n\u2014AT THE\u2014\nLOWEST MARKET RATES.\n     HEREBY   GIVEN,\n_ , that tho Biuinou lioratofofo carried\non untlor tlio immo of R. W. Deane & Co.\non Columbia Street, Now Westminster,\nwill from this .late bo carried on under\ntho name of TRAPP BROS., they having\npurchnsod tho above-named Business,\nassuming all liabilities and collecting all\naccounts due the late firm.\nt TRAPP BROS.\nALL ACCOUNTS due tho late firm\nof R. \\V. Deane * Co. must bo paid to\nthe undersigned within thirty days from\nthe date of this notice..\nTRAPP BROS.\nMarch 22, 1882. mh2ii\nTIIE GREAT EM1SII REMEDY\nIm ii never-fulling\n(hire for Nerv\u00ab\nousDebiliir.Kx-\nliausled Vitality\nnf h ny k i n il,\nWoHkiicss, Pur*\nalysia. nnd all\nthe terrible t\/-\nfi-rlB otyoutlifiil\nt^\u2014J-r^m\u2014\u2014m fylllefl, and ex-\nesses In tniiturpr years,\nUK. MINTIK will wc-? to forfeit\nFife Hundred llollnrs for a cuss of\nthis kind the Vital Ket-tornthe (under\nIlls special mlvicn nnd treatment) will not\ncure, or for nuvtliii c Impure or Injurious\niiiun.l in It. DR. MIXTIK trials All Dll-\nI'ttaea sui-cessrully without mereury.\n(JoiiHUltallon free.  Tliorotigh examl-\ntmtiiiii Htiil ml vice, $;V00.   Piles of Tllll\nKrslorallvt', $300 a hottl\u00ab. or four\ntimes the quantity, $10-00; sent to nny\neditress upon receipt of price of C O. DM\nBecnre from obaervutlon, nnd in privnte\nmime if desired, by A.' E, MINTIK*\nHill.\nThose who cannot visit DB. MINTIK\ntn Sun Frnnclrco should semi h full mid\nminute BtiHPmcnt ot their troubles with\n$25*00, nud in return n full course of\nMedicine will be forwarded, securely\npneked, so as not to excite curiosity.\nAl! orders for medicine O. O. D, must\nbe nccnmpnnied with 91.00 (as n guarantee of -rood faith), which will be deducted when the pneknge Is shipped.\nSAMPLE B0TTM! FREK.-Sent on\nnppliuntiim by letter nutltip gymplomi,\nsex mid ngc, CnnimiinieHtlons strictly\nconfiilentinl. jny3l-ty\nII keumey Hirert, Hun Iritnelnro, ChI.\nAYRSHIRE BULLS!\nTHK UNDERSIGNED HAS FOR\nmile on raiHoiiiiblu teriun a few half-\nbred Ayrshire yearling Ilnlls, Hired liy tho\nThorough hrcil Ayrshire Bull\nThe dtiiiis being choice  dairy cows.\nA. S, VEDDKR,\n\u2022   jell SuniflJ,","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"New Westminster (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"British_Columbian_1882_06_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0346503","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.206667","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-122.910556","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Publisher changes in chronological order: Robson Brothers (1882-1883) ; D. Robson & Co. (1883-1886) ; British Columbia Stationery and Printing Co. (1886-1887) ; British Columbian Printing Company (Limited) (1887-1888) ; Kennedy Brothers (1888-1890).","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"New Westminster : Robson Brothers","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","@language":"en"}],"Series":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1882-06-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1882-06-03 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"British Columbian","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0346503"}