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A. i^tclJESili,\nt Port Moody.\ndr to th* GiMtiliU!- Olfic*. New Westminster, will receiv* prompt attention.\nTrailers' Insurance Co,\nTHE PIONEBR ACCIDENT COMPANY\nOF AMERICA, AND THK LABOl-iT\nACCIDENT INSUKANCE COMPANY IN THK WOULD.\nApplications for policies iu this Company,\nforciilirrr Accident or Life Insurance, can\nSw be had from the undersigned  at Port\noody.\nA. CaUplell,\n*17 Inturance, Land, k General Agent.\nP. 3. HAMILTON,\nBahbistib-at-I.aw, Notart Pcbi.ii;,\nSolicitor ajid ArroasKr, Kkal Ksta'ii\nAO*HT      AND       CONVKVANCIR,\nSataxrxav-v- Mtxtsmt.   -   -   B*ort -aatood^\nBUILDING LOTS FOR SALE IN\nevery section nf Port Mood\/. Also,\nSuburbs,, Lots, hy th* Acre, immediately\nadjacent to the Port Moody surveyed Town-\nsite.\nLands for sale on the North tide of, and\nhaving water frontage on, Port Moody\nHarbor, finely situated and exceedingly\nvaluable.\nAlso, Farm Lands of superior quality and\non favorable term*, in New VVettminster\nDistrict.\nCarefally prepared Map* and Plans exhibited\", and the fullest information furnished, at Mr. Hamilton's otflcn\nA. NOON,\nCarpenter tf Builder.\nFiTTislo op of Stores and Office*; a\nSp'-e'diALTV. All Ki!ta of Jobbing\nPromptly Attmuibt) to.\ntW PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS. \u2022*\u00bb\nPORT   MOODY.   B.   O.\nSHOE    STORE.\nQcf.k.v Stmwt, Port Moodt.\nJSJ, or^Wlxite\nWISHES TO INFORM THE PUBLIC\nthat he tt now thoroughly established in business at the Terminus of the C.\nP. R.. arfd is prepared to make and repair\nBoots and Slums at excccrlinuly low rates.\nReal Estate for Sale\n AT\t\nPORT UOODY!\nThe Thompson Property!\nNiw Westminster District.\nSIXTY-EIGHT\nPORf MOODY TOWiV LOTS\naTTC-M'PRISING a part of District Lot 375,\n%*\/ OVoUp I., only twenty-nine chains from\nthe shore of the harbor. No building lota\nmore eligible than these are purchaaeable at\nPort M\"Olly.\nUT The subscriber employs no agents. \u25a0\u00ab\u00bb\nApply to I \"\nthe premises.\nApply tn Iii in personally, at his office on\nivs no\nly, at :\nGEORGE THOMPSON,\n(US Proprietor.\nD. 8. CUHTIH.\nH. CLARKE, H. D.\nMJEDICAL   HAUL I\nD, S, CURTIS & I'D..\nD*r*ct Importers snd Dealers in\nmiUGS AND\nMEDICINES.\nfkM GOODS, TOILET ARTICLES,\nLamps and? Lamp Goods, &c.\nCOLUMBIA   STREET,\nIBW WE8TMIN8TEB,   \u2022   -   B.C.\n(Nwrt Door to the Colonial Hotel.)\nIjWcial facilitio* for the Jobbing Trade\nNEW FALL GOODS!\n^ewFaIJ[GoodsT!\nWm, ELSON,.\nThe Cash Tailor!\nLflrtw 8qoari, New WwrarrNSTXR,\nla opened out his FALL STOCK, and it\nnsw prepared to execute orders,\nfSATrtfACTION Ol'ARASTEED. \u25a0 8\nWOODS * TURNER,\n,MD SURVEYORS\nRaft! Estate Agents,\nHMyaiicers & Accountants.\nORT MOODY LOTS\nFOR SALE\nMONEY   TO    LOAN.\nLUMBIA ST., NEW WESTMINSTER.\naftfte.\ntOL. 1.\nPORT .MOODY, B. C,  SATURDAY, JUNE H, 1884.\nNO. 28.\nBOl'KflOMKF.-PiKT II:\nCHARTKB VIII A 8EU05D VICTIM.\n(From filackwood.)\n(Coutinucl.)\nSuch a corirs|,oiiilenceiii th* essei tisl\nfeatures inevitably auf;g,'St*d an ap.\n|,aHiiig mvatrrv of unity in tliea* crimes.\n-,'itlui as III*, iinir's uf in' man, com.\n\u25a0nu i. rl u.nia-i some inipulw of oioti't-lc-i\nmalignly and thirst for  innocent blood\nur as th* equally appalling ,-llcci ,,l\nimitation acting e iilagioutly upuu *\ncriiurual iinaginaii 'ii, uf which o n-\nl..gi,,ii tln-n- have been, unfortunate!)\nto. \u25a0 in.ny example.\u2014horrible cm,,, a\nprompting oertain weak and fevtrith\ni i aginations, by tbe very horror tlnn\ninspire, first to dwell on, and finally lu\nrealise their imii.tiona.\nIt wat thi* latter hyp itheaii which\nfound general acceptation In.ipea it\nwaa the only one which rented upon any\nground of experience. The disastrous\ninfluence of imitation, especially under\ntbe Inscii anon of horror, waa well\nknown. The idea of any diabolical\nmalice moving one man to pans from\ncity to oil)., and there quietly single oat\nni* victims\u2014both of them, by ihe very\nhypothesis, unrelated to bim, both of\nlieiuatthe  epooh of their livet,  wh n\n\"The    bosom's   lord    sits   lightly   on   its\nthrone.\"\nwhen the pease of tbe heart it attureri,\n,ii>l the future ia radiantly beckoning to\niheiu.\u2014that any man mould choose\nsueh victims for tuch Crimea, \u00bbaa too\npreposterous ad idea long to be enter\nlain.d. Unleaa the man were mad, the\nidea waa inconceivable; and even a\nmonomaniac mutt betray himself in\nnuch a course, because he would\nnecessarily conceive himself to be ac-\neumpliHliingaome sup'emeacl of justice.\nIt was thus I a'g' erl; and indeed 1\nshould much have preferre I to believe\nibat one uianinc were involved, rathr-r\nthan the contagion of crime,\u2014ainc,\none mania-) Must in-vital,ly be .nori detected; ,v hereas there were no assignable\nomit* to the contagion of Imitation.\nAnd that it was which ao profoundly\nagitated German society. In eve.y\nfamily in which there happened to be\na bride, vogue tremors could not he al-\nlaved; and lhe aba,lute powerlr-asne a\ntvnicb. resulted from the utter uncertain!! aa tu the quarter in which thia\nrlr-aded pn.ntorn might next appear,\njustified and intensified tiioae tremors\nAgainst such au apparition there wa-\nli', conceiiab e safeguard. From a city\nairickcn with tit, plague, f on, a district so atricken, flight is possible, and\nthere are the resources of medical aid.\nHut from a moral piaguo like this, what\n4 cape was po sible?\n80 paaei'in ,tr, and profound b\u00bbcame\nthe terror, that I began to share the\nopinion which 1 heard expressed, regretting the widVsprrad publicity of the\nmodern press, Rince,\u2014wn.li many un\ndeniable benefita, it carried also the\nfatal curae of distributing thr ugh house\nholds, nnd keeping constantly under the\ni-xcitementof discussion, im'ofres of Crime\nand h rror which would tend to ppr-\np tu-t ami extend tu excassea uf individual pnssi 'ii. The mere dwelfin.\nlung on such t topic aa this waa fraught\nwith evil.\nTnis and more I heard discus, d is I\nhurried back to Munich. To Munich?\nYes; thither I was posting with a.I\nspeed. Not a shadow of doubt n w remained in my onnd. I knew the ass-\nasxi\", and wst reaolved to track and\nconvict him. Do not auppoan thai\nthis time I .-as led away by the vagr,nt\niCtvity of my constructive imagination.\nI had .-oiiii'iliiiig like positive proof.\nNb sooner 1 art I learned that the murder bad been c ri.mil t--<I at (.ruash'ets\nlohe, than my thoughts at unce carried\nme to a now in, ntorable visit 1 had\nwade there in cump.in.v with Bourgonef\nand two young Bavarians. \\t tne\nhotel * here we dined, we were waited < n\nby tbe niece of tbe landlord, a girl of\nr markable beauty, who naturally excited tbe attention of four, young men\nand furnished them with a I pio of con\nvenation. One of the Bavarians had\ntold us that she woul J one day be perhaps ne of the wealthiest women in the\ncountry, for she was engaged to he\nmarried toa young farmer who had recently found himself, by a rapid suo-\nceasion of deaths, sole heir to a great\nbrewe>, whose wealth was known to be\nenormous.\nAt this in- ment Sophie entered bringing wibe, and I saw Bourg net slowly\nturn his eyes up >n her with a I ok\nwhich then was' roysterbns to me, but\nwhich now spoke too' plainly its dread\nful meaning.\nWhat is there in' a look, you will\nsay? Perhaps nothing: or it may be\neverything. To my unsuspecting, on-\nenlightened perception,' Bourgonef's\ngaze was simply the melancholy and\nball-curious gaze which such a man\nmight be supposed to cast upon a young\nwoman who bad been made the topic\nof an interesting discourse. But to\nmy mind, enlightened as to his character, and instructed aa to his peculiar\nfeelings arising from his own st ry, the\ngaze was obaiged with horror. It\nmarked a victim. The whole succession\nof events rose before me in vivid distinctness, the separate details of suspicion gathered into unity.\nGreat as was Bourgonef's command\nover his featuies, be could not conceal\nuneasiness as well as surprise at my ap-\nriarance at  the table d'hote in Munich.\nshook hand*  with him, putting on as\nfriendly a mask as I could, and replied\nto    squcsti n abuni my   sudden men I\nby aitubuliiig  it  10 un.-tpeeteJ  Mii-lli\nijince received at Salt-bur\",.\n''Nutuini\/ sen us, 1 bopet\"\n\"Well, I'm afr.id ,t will prove v<ry\naeriout,\" I taid. \"But wc siiail >ee\nMtzujwbtls my viait to the Tyrol n us.\nUt given up ur puitp'riied.\"\n'\u2022DoyOu remain Here, then!\"\n\"1 don't kuuw what my uiuVemsnta\nwill b .\"\nThus I had prepare) him fur any re-\n-,-rvr ur strangei,e\u201e, in my maonrr; and\n1 bad cuncealed from In in the course of\n,11V moveO-eiils; fur at wbatev 1 cost I\nwas e.olved to full .w him and bring\n,,\u201e, to ju ticc.\nBut huw! Evdence I had nnne tbat\ncuuld satisfy any one else, huwever cun-\nvrucrng it might be to mv own mind.\nNor did ther* aerm evidence for'h-\nuuining from (1 o-sh sslohe. Soplii\"'s\nbody hsd b en found in tbe afternoon\nIv ng as if asleep in one of the by-paths\nof the wood. No marks of a struggle;\nno traces of the inurdeier. He affianced lover, whs waa at Augsbuig, on\nhe ring of ber fat , hurried to Gross-\nhe-.lohe, but could thr \u25a0\u00ab no light uti\nthe mufdei, could give no hint aa to a\np w-ible motive for ihe ,ierd.    But this\n\u2022 mm- absence of evid.nce, dr even\nground of suspicion, only made my caa--\ntbe stronger. It was the motiveless'\nmalignity of the deed which fastened it\nui, Buurgouef; or rather, it waa the ab\nsencn uf any known motive elsewln-r\nwhich assured me that I bad detected\nthe motive in him.\nHhuuld I communicate my conviction\nto th^ polio'l 1: wat po-aibla that I\nmisfit nnpri'sH them with at least -nil!\npint suspicion to war,ant his examination\u2014and in that case tbe truth Dug \u2022\nbe elicited; for among lhe many barbarities and iniquities of the crimi ,\u00bb\npr-cclore in Continental Htatea whn.1\noften pressheavilv on the innocent,there\nis this c mi) iiautiug advantage, tn l\nthe preasuie on the guilty is teufol\nheavier. If tbe innucent are often un-\nju-nly pu is'jed\u2014imprisoned and inar-\ntr.'akd    before their innocence can  be\n\u2022 tabli-hed\u2014the guilty soldoni escape\nI, Kngland we give tbo eric inal not\nonly eveiy chance of escape, but many\na ivantaget. The love of fair-plav is\ncarried to excess. It eems at times aa\nit ti,e whole arrang nvriU s,f our pro-\nCHiture were e tablrshed with a view to\ngiving a criminal not only tlie\nbenefit of every doubt, but for\nevery loophole through which ha can\nslip. Instead of this, the Continental\nprocedure goes on the principle of cl---\nlug up every loophole, and of inventing\nendless traps into which the accused\nmay fall.    We warn the accused not to\nay anything that may he prejudicial to\nliim. Tliey erua\"gle him in c utradict-\n10ns and cnfvssioiis which disclose lit,\nguilt.\nKnowing this, 1 thought it ver,\nlikely that, however artful Bourgon I\nmig t txr. a severe examination milflil\nextort from bim sufficient continuation\nof my suspicions 10 warrant further procedure. But knowing alao that this resort \u2022son open to me when all others h.i\ntailed, I reaolved t, wait and watch.\nOHAPTKR II.\u2014FIKALE.\nTwo days passed, and nothing occurred. My watching seemed hopeless, and 1 resolved to try theeffeoi of\na disguised interrogatory It migh\nhelp to confirm my already settled con-\nviciiou, if it did not elicit any new evi\ndenoe.\nbetted   in Bourgonef*   room, in t 1\nold place, each'with a cigar,   aud ch\nling   as   of  old   1 n public   affairs,   I\ng, ion iiv apt reached the subject of tin\nr rent mu der.\n1 la it not strange,\" I taid, 'tia\nboth these crimet should have bap-\np-n-d while we were carina ly staying\nin both place-l\"\n\"P.ihaps \u00ab\u25a0\u00ab are the criminals,\" he\nreplied, laughing. I shivered slightly\nat this aulacity. He laughed aa he\n-poke, but the,,, was a hard, mttalliu,\nand almost defiant tone in hu, voice\nwhirl, exa'peialed me.\n\"Perhaps we are.\" t aaid quietly. He\nI oked full at me; but 1 waa prep>re .\nand my face told nothing. 1 added, as\nin explanation. \"Tbe crime beiug ap-\npuretiLlv contagious, we mav have\nbroui-r t ih,- iniiouon from Nurem urg '\n\"0o you believe in that hypothesis of\ninitiation!\"\n\"I dn 't know what to believe, D\u201e\nyou believe in there being only our\nmUr.lerert It seems such a pr\"pusteriuia\nidea. We must suppose him, at am\nrate, to be a maniac\"\n\"Not neceaaarily. Indeed there\nseems to have been too much artful contrivance in both aff ,irs. not only in the\nselection of the victims, butin tbe execution of tho schemes. Cunning as\nmaniics often are, they are still maniac\nand betray themselves.\"\n\"If not a maniac,\" \u00bbeid I, hoping to\npique him. \"be must be a man of\nstupendous and pitiblo vanity,\u2014per\nhaps one of your constant-minded\nfriends, whom you refute to call bloodthirsty.\"\n\"Oonstant-minded perhaps; but why\npitiably vain?\"\n\"Why? Because only a diseased\natrocity of imagination, stimulating a\nnature essentially base and weak in it-\ndesire to make itself conspicuous, would\nor could suggest such things. The\nsilly youth who 'fired the Ephesini\ndome,' tbe vain idiot who set fire to\nYork Minster, the miserablj Frenchmen wbo have committed murder and\nsuicide with a view of making their exit\nttrikingfiom a'world in which their ap\npearance bad been contemptible, would  but your question points to something\nall sink  into   insignificance   be.ide the J more out ot the way.\"\nlowering infiiuv of base ei. which\u2014 for       \"It is ironwork,'  he said.\nthe mere love of pro ucing ar, effect on      Could I U- <l.-.-.-i v.-n'    A third fasten-\ntbe minds of men, and thus  drawing ing of hia surtout was undone'    I hurl\ntheir attention up n bias, which  other-  had seen but two a moment ago.\nwi\u00bbe would never have marked hiuiati\nall\u2014could scheme snd execute crimes 1\ns , humble and rneicusible. In com-1\nmon chanty t\u201e human nature, let ui sup\npo-e the arclch is mad; hccsu.e tir r\nwi.- hi. u, seruble vanity would be too\nlo t':-ou,e.\"\nI Spoke with warmth and bitt'-mrss.\nwhich increased as I pereeivud him\nwincing under the degradation of my\ncontempt.\n\"If hia motive wre vanity,\" be sairl.\n\"no doubt it would lie horrible; but\nmay it not have liecn revenge?'\n'\u2022Revenge I exclaimed, \"what! ou m-\niiroent woinehr'\n\"Vou assume their innoeenc\".''\n\"Good God' do you know anything\nto the contrary?\"\n\"Not I, But as we are conjecturing\nI may as well conjecturo tin, motive\nto have boen revenge, as you may\nConjecture it to have been the desire to\nproduce a startling effect.\"\n\"How do you justify your conjecture?\"\n\"Simply enough. We have to suppose a motive; let us say it was revenge, and see whether that will furnis.li\na clue.\"\n\"But it can't: The f-wo victims\nwere wholly unconnected vvirlr each\nother hy any intermediate acquaint\nanees, consequently there can have\nbeen no common wrong or oommOD\nenmity in existence to furnish food for\nvengeance.\"\n\"That muy !\u201e\u2022 so; it may also be that\nthe avenger made them vicarious\nvictims.\"\n\"How so?.'\n'It is human nature. Hid you ever\nobserve a thwarted child striking 111 its\nanger tho unoH'miding nurse, destroying\nits toys to discharge its wrath? iJiil\nyon ever Rep a schoolboy, unable to\nwri'iik Ifis anger on the bigger boy who\nhas just struck him, turn against the\nnearest smaller boy und bent bim!\nHid you ever know a si'liooliiiu.sirT, lingered by one of the boy*' pttrents, veni\nhis pent-up spleen upon the unoffending class? Did you ever se, a subaltern\npunished because an officer had been\nreprimanded?. These are familial' example* of vicarious vengeance. When\ntire soul ir stung to fury, it must solace\nitself by tbe discharge of that fury-\nit must relieve its pain by the sight of\npain in ntfrvrs. We are so constituted.\nWe need   sympathy above all   things.\nIn joy we cannot  bear to : others in\ndistress; in distress we see the joy of\nothers with dismal erfvy wb.Ych sharpens our pain. That is human nature.\"\n\"And,\" I exclaimed, carried away\nby my indignation, \"you suppose that\nthe sight of these two happy girls,\nbeaming with the quiet joy of brides\nwas torture to some miserable wretch\nwho hail lost his bride.\"\nI hail gone too far. His eves looked\ninto mine. 1 read in his thut be divined\nthe whole drift of my suspicion\u2014the\nallusion made to himself. There often\npasses into a look more than words can\nventure to express In tbtit look he\nread that he was discovered, nnd I mid\nthat he had recognised it. With prefect calmness, but with a metallic ring\nin his voice which was like tin clash of\nswords, he said\u2014\n\"1 did not say that I gopposed this:\nbut us we were on the wide field \u201ef eon\nj'cture,\u2014utterly without evidence one\nway or the other, having no clue either\nto the man, r his motivei I drew from\nthe general principles of huiniui nature\naoonelusion which was just as plausilrlr\n\u2014or absurd if you like -as the conclusion that the motive must have been\nvanity.\"\n\"As you s.iy, we are   Utterly without\nevidence)   and conjecture drifts aim\nlessly from one thing to another. After all, the most plausible explanation\nis that of ft contagion of imitation.f\nI seS 1 this in order to rover my previous iniprinlenee. lie was not deceived\n\u2014though for a few moments I fancied\nhe was \u2014but replied -\n\"I am not persuaded of that either.\nThe whole thing is a mystery, and I\nshall stay here some time in the hope\nof seeing it cleared up. .Meanwhile,\nfor a Titibjeet of conjecture, lef ine show-\nyon something on which your ingenuity\nmay profitably be employed.\"\nHe rose and passed Into his bedroom\nI heard him unlocking and rummaging\nthe drawers, and was silently reproaching myself for my want of caution in\nhaving spoken as I had done, though\nit was now beyond all doubt that he\nwas the murderer, and that his motive\nhad been slightly guessed; but wiih\nthis self-reproach there was mingled a\nself-gratulation at the way I had got\nout of the difficulty, as I fancied.\nHe returned, and as he sat down I\nnoticed that the lower part of his surtout was open, He always wore a\nlong frogged and braided coat reaching\nto the knees\u2014as I now know, for the\npurpose of concealing tha arm which\nhung (as he said, withered) at his side.\nThe two last fastenings were now undone.\nHe held in his hand a tiny chain\nmade of very delicate wire. This he\ngave me saying\u2014\n\"Now what should you conjecture\nthat to be?\"\n'Had it come into my hands without\nany remark, I should have said it was\nsimply a very exquisite bit of iron-work\nAad what am I tu conjecture I\nasked.\n\"Where that iron came from? It was,\nno' from a mine.\"\nI looked at it again, and examiii'd it\nattentively On raising my eyes .;i in\n.juity- fori unately with au expression\nof surprise, since what im-t my eye*\nwould have startled a cooler man\u2014I\nsaw the fourth fastening undone'\n\"You look surprised.' he continued,\n\"and will be more suqjriaed when 1 tell\nyou that the iron in your hands once\nfloated in the circulation of a man It\n's m\u00bbrle from human blood.\"\n\"Human blood'\" I murmured.\nII.- went on expounding the physiological wonders of the blood,\u2014how\nit. earned, dissolved in its currents, a\nproportion of iron and earths; how this\niron was extracted by chemists and exhibited as a curiosity; anil how this\nchain had lioeii manufacternl from sueh\n'xtracts. I Inard < very word, but\nmy thoughts were hurrying to and fro\nin the agitation of a supreme moment.\nThat thero was a dagger underneath\nthat coat-that in a few moment! it\nwould flash forth -that a death struggle was at hand\u2014I knew well, My\nsafety depended on pretence of mind.\nThat incalculable rapidity with which, in\ncritical momenta, the mind turveyi all\ntbe openings ami reiouroes of an emergency, hail assured me that there waa\nno \u00bb'\"pi'ii within reach-that before\nI could give ui\\ alarm the tiger would\n1\u00ab? at my throat, and that, my only\nchance was to keep my eyes fixed upon\nhim ready to spring on him the moment the next fastening was undone,\nand before be could Use bis arm.\nAt last the Idea occurred to me, that\nas, with a wild beast, safety lies in attacking bim just before he attacks you,\nbo with this Ijeast my best chance wa!\naudacity, Looking steadily into his\nface, I said slowly\u2014\n\"And you would like to have sueh\na chain made from my blood.\"' 1 rose\nas I spoke, He remained sitting, but\nwas evidently taken nbar'k.\n\"What do you iiii-anf' he said.\n\"I mean,-\" said I, sternly, \"that your\ncoat is unfastened, and that if another\nfastening is looseml in my presence, I\nfirll you to the earth.\"\n\"You'rea fool.'\"' he exclaimed.\nI moved towards the door, keepinj\nmy eye fixed on him a.s he sat pale and\nglaring at me.\n\"You area foul,\" I said\u2014\"and worse\nif you 1 tir.\"\nAt this moment, I know not by what\nsense, as if I had eyes at the back of\nmy head, I was aware of aome one\nmoving behind me, yet 1 dared not look\naside. Suddenly, two mighty folds of\ndarkness seemed to envolop me like\narms. A powerful scent ascended my\nnostrils fhofe was a ringing iii my\nears, a boating at my heart. Darknea\nrami- on, deeper and deeper, like huge\nwaves. J teemed growing tn gigantic\nstature. The waves rolled on faster\nand Easter. The ringing become a\nthrobbing. Lights flashed across the\ndarkness'. I'onns moved before, On\ncame the waves hurrying like a tide,\nanil 1 sank deeper and deeper into this\nmighty sea of darkness, Then all was\nsilent    Consciousness was still.\nHow long I remained unconicioUl\nI cannot tell, But it must have been\nbmil' considerable time. Wh, n con\nseiousness once more began to dawn\nwithin mi', 1 found  myw if lying on \u2022\nbed surrounded by a group of eager,\nWatching Emm, ami became aware of a\nconfused murmur of whupering going\non around inc. \"Lr lebt (he lives)\nwore the words which greet.' I 11 y\nopening eyet wordi which I recognised\nns coming from my landlord,\nI had had a very ti'irrow escape.\nAnother moment and I should uot\nhuve lived to tell the tale. The dagger that had already immolated two of\nllourgonef's objerts of vengeance would\nhave been in my breast. As it was, at\ntire very moment when the terrible\nfvan hail thrown his arms around me\nand was stilling lr.e -with chloroform,\none of the servants of the hotel alarmed\nor attracted by curiosity at the sound\nof high words within the room had\nventured to open the door to see what\nwas going on. Tho alarm had been\ngiven anil Bourgonef had I 0 n arrested\nand handed over to the police. Ivan,\nhowever, had disappeared: nor were the\npolice ever able to find him. This\nmattered comparatively little. Ivan\nwithout his master was no more te-\ndoubtable than any other noxious\nanimal. As an accomplice, as an instrument to execute the Will of a man\nlike Bourgonef, he was a danger to\nsociety. The directing intelligence\nwithdrawn, he sank to the level of the\nbrute. I was not uneasy therefore, at\nhis having escaped. Sufficient for me\nthat the real criminal, the Mind that\nhad conceived and directed tho e fearful murders, was at last in the hands\nof justice. I felt that my task had\nbeen fully accomplished when Bourgonef's head fell on the scaffold.\nThe recent Papal encyclical against\ntho Freemasons is aimed at no less\nthan 13S.06S lodges throughout the\nworld, with 11,160,543 members, whose\nannual receipts are estimated to amount\nto about $390,000,000, of which sum\nfully two thirds are expended in charities.\nHOMER tf  SON\\\nImporters,\nSHIPPING sad C0MIIS8IO*\nMERCHANTS,\nFront Htreet, New WestHtistef\nURS. M'LEOtt tt Mr.rSrNI.1,\nPhysicians ari\u00ab. Stfrgeolu,\nOFFICE Ctaunbi* Sir**). Op*. C^aaM.\nAkch McUon, B.A , M.D.,C.M.,(\u00bb{oOiBJ\nf .,11,-rly ol New York Polyclinic.\nA.  Uai-Swais, M.l).,(Harv.) LicntlaU ol\nKoyal College uf Physicians, Loudon.\nCaTu'Tici on i.at a.vd sionr \"Oa\nM\nJ.^CURKE*\nPORT   MOODY.\nOffl ;e: -Telephone Building\nCLARKE STKEFT.\nPacific Boarding Houss,\nClarke Stbect, Pobt Mo\n(iEOBGE ANN.4KD \u2022 \u25a0 Proprietor.\nPARTIES VISITINt; PORT MOO0X\nwill find every convenu-nc* and coat-\nfort at the alaive Hotel. Mealaat all Injurs.\nCharges rr.oiin.itt. d I j.'lsa\nPioneer\nDRUG STORE;\nMlkiiav Mthket. Pokt Moodt.\nM. HESLOP; - - Proprietor\nA complete stock of\nDrugs and Patent Medicine*\ntt^Prescriptioua carefully dispensed,\nJ. H. PLEACE k CO.,\n\u2014IMI'OKTEUa  ANI,   1.KAI.K1K   IS\u2014\n;ilRDU|RE.STOVES,RlNGBSf\nPllaW, IPO PIPES AND FITTINGS,\nPAINTS, OILS, #\u00a9\u2022\nAIJ.   COUNTRY   ORDERS  PROMPTLT\nEXECUTED.\nCOLUMBIA ST., NEW WESTMINSTER.'\nPOGUi k BROTHERS,\nCONTRACTORS\n\\*>mr*n\u00a3 rand, Mnktnff Bowrtt <fc Ntrf*ti\n\u25a0-mi. ennvBKAi* work* Nuit\u00abd to\nthe want*, of a Ploitftr Town.\nSATISFACTION  GUARANTEED.\ntST Hotel, Livery Stable, aud Blacksmith^\nShop iu progress, and will so.m be ready for\nercummodation of euatonieis.\nPCST   I^OCI^T.   S.  C-\nUG .A k DE GHTON.\nfiddler!, & flarness-inalters!\nEvary Article In their Linf\nAlways in Stock.\n\"KE   TRADE   SUPPLIED.\nFront St    \u25a0    YALE  B. C\nCITY\nDRUG STORE\/\nNKW WKSTMINSTKI., B. C.\nA. M. Herring,\nWilli],KALI- ll  KrTAII.\nDRUGGIST.\nTlie Largest Stock in tie City\n\u2014AT  THK\u2014\nLOWEST   PRICES\n\u00abr.\\EXT DOOR TO BONSONIS.\nNEW WESTMINSTER\nMa-water Manufactory\nALFX. PHILLIPS & SON\nCAN SUPPLY THK CITY AND VI-,\nC1N1TY with Soda-water (plaia and\nsweet), Ginger Beer, Ginger Ale, Sarsapa\nrilla; Lemon, Raspberry, and all other\nSyrups; Essence of Ginger; Cock-tail Mixtures, etc.\nOrders   from  ths Cocntrt  CarifOllt\nExecuted,\nCOLUMBIA ST., NEW WESTMINSTER\nMAGE mm LINE\n-TO--\nT\nPort Moody\nHE UNDERSIGNED WILL RUN A\nfirat-claas\nFour-Horse Stage!\nBetween New Westminster and Port Moody:\nleaving New Westminster every morning;\nreturning, will leave Port Moody between\n3 and 4 p. 111. These stage* go over th* n*w\nroad to Port Moody direct, carrying both\nPassengers and freight.\nJOS. M. WISM.\ni'.'i\nI\nX I\nI\niaaasar\n6j\u00bb #ort ilinnbq <%ttr.\nSATUBPAY. JL'.VEU 1684.\nTHE   WEEK'S  NEWS.\n110MB.\nThe people of Vancouver Island begin to see that the Settlement Bill is\ntinly a delusion. They say tbe Dominion Government have done nothing\nwith the dock, and keep the lands in\nthe railway belt on the mainland locked\nup This, they say, ia an injustice.\nHut Mr. Cunningham, M. P. P., and\ntown councillor Hendry, lielieve it ia\njust aa it ought to lie. They are a well\nluut.'hed pair of good-for-nothing*.\nIn the case of Johnston vs. Clarke\nChief Justice Sir .Matthew Begbie haa\ndelivered judgment. He says, \"the\nSouthern boundary line of lot 202 was\nHot an extension of the line on Lot 201,\nund that Clarke shall have only what\nhis Crown grant calls for, .teniuiett'x\nso tiliern boundary line to be the ile\nfrrlirlHIlt's limit.\nIn one of those exclusive despatches\nto tne \"Colonist\" we see that 0250,000\nlata '   Um   Nicaragua!! gov-\nfrom   the   United\nState* ,<i build in   r iteroceanic \"coral.\"\ni      \". i trust*** In Victoria is ambition .    II, \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0;\u00ab.,    to shine as a patron\ns, because he  is \u2014 a\n\u25a0n  school   teachers\n..r.     . and the   profits he\niiinkea on their accounts are very large.\nA teacher would take any kind of tea\nfrom a school trustee. Buy your groceries at my store, and do what you\nplease in school ia the ukase issued by\nthe school trustee. In other words,\n\"pay me for your tea, and you will\nprove that you are fit to teach the rising generation.\nThe Hon. A. C. Elliott has received\nhis commission from Ottawa and will\nleuve next week for Metlakathln.\nIn May last, twj hundred citizens of\nVictoria signed a requisition to the\nMayor asking him to call a meeting.\nHe called the meeting, and the city fathers refused to pay for the advertisement Like the tailors of Tooley St.,\nthey imagine theinsclveB to be\u2014the\npeople.\nIt appears by a published report on\nthe adulteration of food in the Doniin\nion, that no one knows what he eats if\nit has been purchased. Half the coffee\nis chicory and pea meal. Tea is gypsum, Prussian blue, foreign leaves, and\nrubbish. The art of labelling is practised in the dairies at Montreal, and a\ngreat quantity of the thing called butter is\u2014something else. Potatoes, salt,\nwater, and vegetables have not been\nadulterated yet. How to escape from\npoison put into food will very soon become one of the great questions of the\nday. Man is more mischievous than a\nmonkey and proceeds deliberately to\nmake a hell upon earth.\nmother ;\" and he fired another shot at\nbis father. The old man rushed out of\nthe room and was followed down tha\nstreet by his hopeful son. Breathless,\nthe father halted, and in imp orinjjton.es\nsaid to his son, \"don't shoot, Tommy ;\ndon't kill me !\" The son deliberaely\nfired again and shot his father through\nthe heart. At this moment Mrs. Moran\narrived ; she looked at (he dying man\nanl said, \"he is my husband ; he did\nnot tieat me v.e'1 ; but I am sorry for\nhim.\" S e cackled to i crowd foi ten\nminutes and proved lhat she tinted Tommy to kill bis father. I he old man\nwas a monster, the woman was fit lo be\nhis wile, and their son, Tommy, is a\nchip of the old block,and a mischievous\nmonkey. Och 1\nTHE UNITED KINGDOM.\nA telegram from London dated June\n5th, says : \"Bismarck was publicly insulted by the people to-day at Ileriin.\nA mui'itude of working men assembled\nin front of a house where the great\nChancellor was sin ing. and shouted\n'down with Bisniirck.' He ordered his\nservants to call the police and assist\nthem in dispersing the mob. The Iiv\ncries worn by the servants increased the\ntumuli, but the authorities kept the\ncrowd quiet.\"\nWhat is fame J A thin* lhat may be\ncreated or destroyed by a howling multitude. It is not to be desired. But\nthe fame that may be won bv directing\nshowers of grape shot on such a mob as\nthat is worth enjoyimj. Is it possible\nthe grea' Chancellor cannot give his\ndarling people a good dose of the whip i\nThey deserve it and .hey oughr  lo get\nTHE UNITED STATES.\nThe national conven ion of Democrats will meet at Chicago on July 8th,\nand Tilden may be chosen as the man\nbest fit to oppose B'aine. Texas is solid\nfor Tilden. He will have ihe Wesr and\nSouth and a powerful support from the\nDemocrats of the North. \"To the victors belong the spoils.\" Which party\nwill grab the dollars ? That is the only\nquestion that concerns lhe great captains\nwho command the two marauding ar\nhiies.\nMr. James D. Fish, the New York\nbanker says, \"I was assured by autograph letters from Gen. Grant that the\nGovernment contracts pretended to be\nheld by the firm of Grant & Ward were\n\"all right and straight,\" and lhat the alleged profits were genuine. 'I his assertion seriously affects the character of the\nGeneral, but it is no excuse for Fish,\nwho was willing io rob the Government\nand did not hesilare to risk the money\nof the bank to make profit for himself.\nMrs, Laws and Mrs. Cook, of Newcastle, VV. 1'., were supposed to be res\npectable members of the community.\nMrs Cook, on Friday last, abused Mrs.\nlaws on the street, and assaulter! her.\nThis lady went home for a butcher-\nknife, relumed immediately, and carved\nMrs. Cook in a snecking manner. I he\nknife penelrared the left lung, and cut\nthrough the back. Newcastle is one of\nthe places where ladies do duty as\n\"Grand Jurors.\"\nCharles Monroe was arrested at Dub\nlin, 0., last week, charged by the widow-\nClarke with assault and battery It appears Monroe was engaged to marry the\nwidow, and she had a daughter named\nLulu. The widow's wooer loved ihe\ndaughter and eloped with her. The\n.yidow pursued the pair and was just in\ntime to stop the marriage. Friends interfered and amused the old woman\nwith words of consolation, while the\ndaughter eloped again. The marriage\nwas consummated, and ihe widow that\nhoped to be a bride went home\u2014a\nmothet-in-law.\nMr. Russell Sage, of New York, will\np\u00bby all his \"puts\" and calls, and the\nbrokers and gamblers will worship him\nas the mil ionaire who could stand a\nhard squeeze. No one will think of denouncing him as the boss gambler of\nWall Street. Mr. Washington O'Connor says, \"Mr. Sage has thirty million\ndollars left, and lhat will be his passport\nto the houses of pious, honest, respectable citizens.\nIn San Francisco, processions and\nbands have been parading ihe streets\nand cheering for Blaine. And to the\nworking man it is a matter of no consequence who is elected President. He\nwill be ruled by\u2014the almighty dollar\nIn Jersey City last week, Tom Moran\nvisited his father, who-kept the half-way\nnouse at No 450 Grand St., Jersey City,\n-md fired a pistol shot at the old man.\n\"Do you want to kill me ?\" said the fa-\n\"Yes,\" said the dutiful Yankee\nThe citizens of London are horrified\nby the late attempt of the dynamiters.\nI he police are powerless and there is\nnol the s ightest clue to enab e them to\ntrace'the desparadoe;. The wildest\nschemes of reprisals aga nst Irish agitators aie talked ol, vigi'ance committees,\ngood ropes, and short shrifts are freely\nrecommended.\nThe genius of man may destro.- a'l\nlaw and order. The invention of dyna\nmite has armed ignorance and malice,\nand rhese two monsters will amuse\nthemselves by creating miseiy. King\nMob will destroy a few Statesmen and\nseveral castles, and then he will annihilate himself.\nThe latest telegrams say Her Majesty\nis in excellent health.\nParis is the hot-bed of iniquity. The\nrepresentatives of all ruffianism are assembled thete Herr GniliameLicb-\nnecht, the Saxon Socialist, is there, and\nat a meeting where the cut-lhroa's of\nEurope and America were assembled,\nIre sail, \"the hour is come; the sentiment of the people is n'pe, and they\nmust use the weapons ot destruction\nplaced in their hands by modern sci\nence.\"   Is he the devil >\nA debate in the House of Commons\nlast month lermina'ed with the rejecion\nof a Bill that provided for the building\nof a railway under the sea from England\nto France. A good deal of nonsense\nwas spoken by those who favored the\nBill. One of ihe orators sairl, \"the closer nations are togelher ihe better\nfriends they w II be.\" France is close\nenough to Germany and where is the\nfriendship ?\nMr. Charles Al'en, the well-known\nsecretary of the Anti-Slavery Society has\nwrit en a s'lort his ory of Morocco. It\noccupies three co'umns in the \"Times \"\nHe says the country is larger than\nFrance and blessed by nature with the\npossibilities of illimitable wealth. The\nsoil is the richest in the wor tl ; the cli-\nmae unsurpassed; and the scenery a\nperfect picture of matchless beauty, the\npeople are slaves oppressed by tyrants,\nand, therefore, Morocco must be annexed. It would be an act of charity\nto hang the rulers of lhat country and civilize the multitude.\nAt a sale of short horns near Towcas-\nter, in England, last week, fifty head of\ncattle were sold for $70,000. The\nGrind Duchess, a milch cow, was\nbought for $5000 And milk is sold in\nTowcaster at three cents a qu rt I\nAlong the banks of the Congo and all\nover the dark Continent there is an army of pioneers taking notes, and in Eng-\nland the general impression is ihat Afri\nca must be blessed by civilization. The\nmanufacturesr of cotton are shocked to\nhear of the mil ions of people who walk\nmother naked over the rich soil. Civil-\nization must try to keep the cotton mills\nai work.\nA Bill to prohibit the shooting of pigeons from traps was thrown out by the\nLords. One ol them said, \"the practice of shooting birds as they fly from\ntraps is brutalizing \" And ihat is true.\nBut the majority of the Lords love old\nfashions. Lord Balfour said that pigeon\nshooting was a low system of gambling\n! he Archbishop of Canterbury voted lor\nthe bill. In 1821 the suggestion to\nsave dogs and cats from human brutes\nwas received in the House of Commons\nwith roars of laughter; but a law in favor of dozs and cats was made in 1840.\nand brutal fellows convicted of lopuring\na dog or a cat may be imprisoned for\nsix months. And shooting the starved\npigeons will be stopped\nTHE  FEUITS OF THE  SETTLE-\niher.\nMENT BILL.\n[From the Mainland Guardian.]\nIt is wejl known that before the honest John Government got into power,\naffairs in the Province were very\nhealthy. We had, besides, an income\nthat covered all liabilities, a good\nclaim on the Dominion Government for\ntwo millions at least; we had the whole\notuld; \"I'll kill any man  who insults of the Island lands in our possession,\nwith illimitable wealth   in tbe  finest\ncoal on the Pacific Coast;   we had valuable mineral hinds at   Kootenay, and\nthree million and a half acres of splendid prairie land at Peace River, which\nwas fit for immediate settlement.    We\nhad, or would have had, at the cost of\nthe Dominion  and  Imperial  Governments,   a   magnificent   graving   dock,\nwhich would   have, ultimately, been a\nnever failing source of  income.     But\nour evil star has imposed   upon us  the\nhonest John Government and all these\nblessings are gone from us forever.    If\nthere had lieen any advantage, immediate or prospecti ve, in parting with our\nwealth, there might have been   some\njustification,   but   we   are   to  receive\nnothing at all.      The only  thing purchased with all this wealth was a little\nfleeting popularity for our four \"ministers\" and the   enjoyment to them of\nholding the reins of Government, with\nwhich they have  steer, d   us   into   the\nslough  of   despond.      The  Dominion\nGovernment felt uwasy under the liability .or our undoubted claim for com\npensation for delays; they wanted more\nof our lands, and they doubted the advantage of building the  graving dock\nat Esquimalt.     Thev found a Provincial Government ready to do  anything\nthey pleased- -the first of the kind that\never existed in this Province\u2014and they\nvery  naturally took  advantage, never\ndreaming that they could obtain what\nthey asked for so easily.    They made\ntheir proposition, and the men whom\nwe placed in office to look after our interests, gave them all they wanted without once  considering   the interests of\nthe people they have sworn   to serve.\nThe  graving dock   was handed  over\nwithout a single condition as to time or\npenalty for non-perfoniinnce.     It was\nto be completed  \" with all convenient\nspeed.\"    Exactly.    When the Dominion Government findB it convenient to\ncomplete it they will do so ; but as that\nis likely to be a very remote contingency, and as the cofferdam will   tumble\ndown some fine day, it may be found\nthat the completion of the dock would be\na matter for further consideration, and\na new Government at Ottawa  may repudiate the whole affair.    The Federal\nGovernment were to use \" every exertion\" to place the lands in the railwav\nbelt in the market at the earliest pos-\nbledate    Just so.      They   will   use\n\/ery possible  exertion to make them\nvery valuable, and then, at the earliest\npossible date at which they can obtain\nthe prices they deem sufficient for such\nlands, tbey will place them on the market, but that time may   be five  years\nhence.    The whole affair so far as the\nLocal Government  is concerned, has a\nvery  fishy appearance, and   we   have\nnothing to do with anyone beyond the\nmen we employed to do  our business.\nAn attempt is now made by the \"Colonist\" to divert attention from tho honest John humbugs, by rating the  Federal authorities.      This   is mere nonsense ; the people have  only our officers to call to account, and as there is\nnow every possible evidence of their incapacity\u2014to call it by   the  genteelest\nnamo\u2014the people sliould   get rid   of\nthem immediately, antl   allow  capable\nmen to call upon the Federal  Government to perform at least its share of the\nbargain, if it is not deemed advisable\nto cancel the bargoin altogether.   We\ndon't see that any employer is bound\nby the bargains   marie for  him by a\ndishonest or incapable servant, and if\nthese,    our   ministers, could   legislate\naway our property, we can get others\nto legislate it back again.\nssss\u00ab*1******\u00abssasss^.sta^*sts^*a*\u00bb**sstsassssM\npurchased by someone else. If this\nmode of \"placing' immigrants is rather\ndisappointing and highly inconvenient\nfor the unfortunate immigrants, it\nmust be nice and easy for the agent,\nwho get* rid of them, for a time, at\nleast, in a most agmeable manner. He\nhas only to take down the map and\npoint 10 any lot, thus sending them off\nrejoicing; but it is pretty rough on the\nimmigrants when they discover the\n\"mistake.\"\n^-*^~*--\nThe London House,\nMDRRAY STREET, ABOVE CALEDONIA HOTEL\nUT\". IF1. aLV-ESL m OIV,     Proprieto\nTHE POLICY OF DETRACTION\nSETTLING THE SETTLERS.\n(From tbs Mainland Ouardltn.\nWe have often had occasion to doubt\nthe efficiency or necessity for what we\ncalled immigration agents, because, in\nthe first place, they were purely political appointees, and at best were not the\nkind of men required for the duties.\nTo our way of thinking, the position,\nif it was required, should have been\ntilled with very energetic and intelligent men, who should have been entirely occupied with the performance\nof their allotted tasks. We learn\nevery now and then of splendid lands\nthat are vacant not far from thiscity,\nthat very few\u2014and certainly not the\nimmigration agent \u2014 know anything\nabout. It is possible that our immigration agent has duties to perform\nnearer home.    If so, he is a delusion\nand a snare as\nan immigration agent,\nbecause he should be able to travel from\nend to end of the district, and not\nonly know of every available acre of\nland, but be able to describe it, and, if\nnecessary, guide the immigrant to it.\nOur local agent, however, if not fulfilling all our ideas of an agent, and giving\nthe necessary time to his duties in this\ncity, is at least ingenious in getting\nrid of the immigrant*. One man had a\nplace pointed out to Kim, which, on inspection, pleased him very much. He\nat once commenced to* erect a shanty\nupon it, but had not made much progress when he was stopped and inform,\ned that there was already am owner for\nit. Someone paid the poor fellow a few\ndollars for the work he had done.\nAnother had a piece of land indicated\nwhich he went to take possession of,\nwhen he was informed that it had been\nFrom tb. Ouardlan.\nParty warfare alt over the world,\nseems to lie acquiring more bitterness\nand losing many of the amenities that\nformerly existed lietween political leader*. Tlie systematic attack by organs\nand organizers of one party upon the\nother, has long been remarkable in the\nUnited States until, at the present\ntime, it has become a recognised institution. But in England, probably, the\nfirst instance of unscrupulous attacks\nupon a rival political leader and his\nparty, was in the case of Mr. Gladstone's onslaught upon Lord Beaconsfield and his policy. The Bulgarian\natrocities and his Midlothian speeches,\nwere simply instances of political claptrap, more remarkable for their ingenious effectiveness with the mob than\neither prudence or patriotism. Ab a\nreward for such stump oratorical tac.\ntics, Mr. Gladstone and his followers\nwere carried into power by the rag-tag\nand bob-tail of the manufacturing cities. Such allies, the unquestionable\nsource of Mr. Gladstone'; recent triumphs, whose representati\u00bb..>8 enabled\nhim to carry most revolutionary measures, are now producing the effects\nthat such evil associations aro sure to\ncreate sooner or later ; the allies in\nquestion are proving faithless, which is\nin consonance with their natural tendencies, and the more respectable of his\nfollowers are ashamed of him, and the\nnation, generally, opposed to his policy.\nMr. Gladstone, at this moment has not\na friend at home or abroad, owing, in\na great measure, to his unjustifiable attacks on Lord Baconsfield and the undoubted fact, now patent to every one,\nthat the policy of Lord Beaconsfield\nwas the best for England. Strange to\nsay, the same discreditable antl unpatriotic system has been followed by the\nConservative party in France, who\nhave been endeavouring to throw discredit on the recent treaty concluded\nwith China, by the Government of Mr-\nFerry. The treaty is not only of the\nmost advantageous nature for France,\nbut it is alike creditable to French\nmilitary and diplomatic skill. The correspondent of the London -'Times\"\nsays : \"The pleasure of detracting from\nthe success of a political adversary to\n\"the detriment of the national glory is\n\"always paid for by some kind of os-\n\"tracism, and those who aspire to the\n\"government of a country must take a\npride in all its successes, which the\n\"nation recollects when it is called upon\n\"to pay its debt, of gratitude to those\n\"who have sacrificed for it their strongest antipathies.\" There would saem,\nhowever, to be a very powerful fascination in \"going after\" a political adversary ; so much, indeed, is this the case,\nthat all the better feelings and high\nprinciples of honourable manhood are\nforgotten, and nothing but the miserable desire for revenge, and victory\npurchased at any price, appears to rule\nthe political detractor's mind for the\ntime. The most striking instance of\nthis mischievous passion is exemplified in the Grit Party of Canada. They\nhave no influence, no power, except\nwith a very small section, composed of\nthe remains of the George Brown par\nty, who have long outlived their usefulness. At this moment they are led\nby a man who can only be expected to\nlead them to defrat, and supported by\na press that throws truth, principle and\npatriotism to the winds, for the mere\npleasure of saying wicked things about\nthe party in power, antl their policy.\nMr. Blake has only, it would appear,\nhis own great importance in his mind's\neye, to guide him in his political action.\nHe has no friends, at least, if he has,\nhe does not appear to treat them with\nthe slightest consideration. He can\nonly contemplate Hiv John A. Mai'dtu,-\nald at the head of the party in power,\nwith the greatest aversion, and it is, ns\nhe supposes, his duty to oust him from\nplace no mutter what destruction l..ay\nfollow the achievement. The well-\nknown fact that the Canadian Pacific\nRailway is a national necessity politi-\nally iin\/l commercially, is nothing to\nMr. Blake ; he only sees Sir John A.\nMacdonald in it, antl he goes at it as a\nbull woultl at a red rag. Can any one\nbe surprised that the Grit party is completely demoralised ? or that with Mr.\nBlake at their head they appear to be\nwithout a leader? Mr. Mackenzie had\none great redeeming quality, he was\nhonest, but his ideas were too contracted. He could never have accomplished\nthe construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway ; the enterprise was too\nvast for his ideas. He meant well,\nhowever, and never sacrificed his country and his friends for the enjoyment\nof spiteful detraction. There are peculiar uses nevertheless to which cunning\nbastard politicians opply this system\nof paltry detraction. It is used like a\ncloud of smoke in order to conceal ignorance, incapacity, and corruption.\nOur own little mockery of a Government is famous for that Whenever\nby gross blundering or dishonest trickery, it finds itself cornered, an immedi\nate attack is commenced by the \"ministers\" on their predecessors. We have\nno desire to hold up previous local governments as patterns, either cf honesty\nor brilliancy, but certainly, they were\nfar superior to the present one. If even\nhis three colleagues were capable, which\nthey are not, the blotch on their escutcheon\u2014honest John\u2014would neutralize their best intentions and disfigure and render hateful, their best\nacts.\nA Large anu Well-assobtko Stock of\nGroceries, Provisions. Dry Goods, Boots & Shoi\nCROCKERY, GLASSWARE, BLANKETS 4COVERLETS,\nCUTLERY Ann FANCY GOODS.\n(bolce Hams and Bacon. First. Bailer and Eggs a Special\nCORFECTIONCRY AND TOBACCO OF ALL 11 KM.\nPAINTS, OILS, TURPENTINE, RED A WHITE LEAD, GLASS, PUTT\nMIXED PALNTS-IN EVERY COLOR-READY FOR USE.\nAgent for the \"ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY OFNORT\nAMERICA,\" of Montreal.\nOitiiEits Pbomptlt Attkmdbd to.\nNEW  FURNITURE   STORE\nCLARKE STREET, PORT MOODT, B. C.\nFALES & CO., Proprietor;\n A LARGE STOCK OF\t\nFURNITURE and   HARDWARE,\n-coNsiKTiNu or-\nBEDROOM SETS, CHAIRS, TABLE8, CRADLES, COT BEDS, WHATNOTS, 80FA1\nMATRESSE8,   PICTURES,   MIRRORS,   PICTURE   FRAMES,   Etc.\nAlso-FRAMES OF ALL KINDS MADE TO ORDER.\nCutlery, Hardware, Glassware, Lamps, Willow-ware, Etc\nGROCERIES & PROVISIONS, TOBACCO 4 CICAR*S,CANNEI) GOODS.\nCANDIES, WALL PAPER, MATTING, TICKINGS, BLINDS.\nSHEETINGS, AND EVERYTHING USUALLY FOUND\nIN A GENEliAL FURNISHING STORE.\nInspect our stock\nTerms Casfi\nCHANGES PROPOSED IN THE FRENCH\nCONSTITUTION.\nUnless the report telegraphed from Paris\nis incomplete, the changes proposed by Premier Ferry in the French Constitution are\nmuch more moderate than those which were\nforeshadowed some time ago when he was\ncompelled to hid for Radical support. His\nconcessions to the extreme Left are rather\nnominal than substantial, and the precautious which he professes to take against a\nmonarchical reaction can hardly be pronounced effectual. The omissions in hii\nprogramme are particularly   surprising,\nWith two exceptions, all of the projected\namendment*, to the organic law relate to the\ncomposition and powers of theSenato. Not\nonly the advanced Radicals, hut a cmii-iider\nable section of the Republican Union, would\nlike to see the upper House abolished and\nsingle Chamber, which should recall the\nhistorical Convention, substituted for the\npresent dual Legislature, Should such drastic treatment prove impracticable, they\nwould insist not only that no more Senators\nshould be elected for life, but that the seventy-five who already held their seats by a\nlife tenure should be placed on the same\nfooting as the other two hundred and twenty-five members of the upper House id re*\nspect of method of election and duration of\noffice, their term to begin from tho date of\ntheir election. M. Ferry is far from yielding to such sweeping demands. He recommends, indeed, that no immovable Senators\nbe chosen hereafter, but this provision is not\nto be retroactive; he refuses to disturb those\nwho are now seated for life, Moreover,\nwhen vacancies in this class occur, tliey are\nto be filled not l>y the relatively popular\nconstituencies which choose tbo ordinary\nSenators, by the Senate aud Chamlier of\nDeputies iu joint convention. The term\nall Senators to be elected hereafter   will\nTHE TAJ MAHAL.\nThe Wondrous Tomb Built by Shah Jehad\nFOR   HIS   PAVflfUTJC  BXAUTT.\nAgra, India, April 10.\u2014India boasts of the\ntallest mountain in the world, the most beautiful building, and the finest echo In the\nworld, the tallest column in the world, aad\nthe largest church iu the world, which are at\nDelhi. Of course, tbe all-absorbing object\nof interest to tourists is the Taj Mahal. The\nTaj is undeniably the greatest architectural\nwonder in the world to day. The main quadrangle. 1,000 by 1800 feet, is red sandstone,\nfinely carved and trimmed with marble.\nUpon entering the (juadrangle by the main\nentrance from the preliminary court without\nthe visitor finds himself in a charming gar-\ndm laid out with trees, shrubs, nowera,\nfountains, Ac., all in keeping with the memorial nature of the place. f*4-oking down\non avenues of dark, beautiful cypresses, he\nsees that miracle of beauty, the Taj, with its\npure white walls, inlaid with every kind oi\nOriental gems, and its great marble dome\ntoweling to supernal heights. It reats upon\na marble platform 3J3 feet square and about\ntwenty feet high, which in turn reats upon a\nred sandstone platform 904 feeet by 329 in\ndimensions. At each end of the saudstom\nplatform are mosques, themselves rare worki\nof art.\nThe Taj was built by .Shah Jehanaa a torn)\nfor bis favorite begum, Mumta\/. .Mahal, fh'v\nwoman was evidently a great Indian beauty\nif one may judge from her photograph. Ho\nname, Mumtaz was abbreviated into Tax, Am\nthis has become corrupted into the pr-rt.cn'\nform, Taj. The work of construction wai\nbegun in 1630, and continued for twsnty\ntwo years, during which time 'iO.OOtMabo'\nwere   constantly   employer!.      Its  coat\nbe\nnine years.\nEqually cautious and conservative is th\u00ab\nprogramme of the Ministry with regard to ,\nthose limitations on the legislative compet-\u25a0 ''^nation\nence of the Senate which Kadicals newspa-\npers have declared indispensable. The financial rights of the Senate are, we learn,\nto bo modified, which mums, apparently\nthat it will be forbidden not ouly to originate, but even to amend, a money bill.\nWith this exception, the Senate will remain\nin all respects a coordinate branch of the\nLegislature, equal in power and,on the whole\nsuperior in dignity, though the other House\nwill always be the road to executive office.\nUntil the draft of the Revision bill was actually submitted, it was quite generally believed that Mr. Kerry would advise that the\norganic law shutild be proclaimed immutable for tbe period of ten years. It was argued that complete immunity from agitation\nof tlie burning questions of revision during\ntha term uamt-d would materially promote\nthe firm impluntiug of republican i.nttilu-\ntionSf and it was asserted that a precedent\ntor sueh a provision could be found in tht\nAmerican Constitution. The truth, of\ncourse, is that our Federal orgnnic law re-\nceivrd ten important amendments liefoie it\nuas two yen:. old, and that the sole restrictions on alteration related to thu representation of States in the (Senate, to tbo levying\nof a capitation tax, and to the importation oT\nnegro slaves, thut branch of commerce being\ntolerated for twenty years. It would pro\nbiddy be a blunder for any written Constitu-\ntion to proclaim itself unchangeable for a\ngiven number of years, and it is hard to soe\nhow a power of amendment once conferred\ncould be annulled or suspended. If, for instance, the Constitutional Convention which\nwill meet presently should see fit to declare\nthe organic law unalterable for ten years,\nhow could this action bind a new joint convention which might be convoked next year\nin equal conformity with the original instrument? All such attempts to gag the future\nwould probably prove nugatory, and therefore we attach but little weight to the recommendation of Mr. Ferry tbat an amendment shall be introduced to the effect that\nin no case hereafter shall a revision touch\nthe atatibility of the republic. There is no\nsuch restriction in the fundamental text, and\nwe cannot see how the present Chambers\ncan tie the hands of their successors, which\nmay have re-actioniat majorities, and which\nwill be equally competent to pass in joint\nsession the precise converse of the amendments proposed. Nobody doubts that the\namendments to tbe constitution of the United\nStates could be reversed by the same power\ntbat passed them.\nIt ia not to be expected that a prohibition\nof doubtful validity, or the puerile veto on\nthe reading of prayers at the opening of the\nChambers, wilt satisfy the Radicals, who believe that the true mode of averting a monarchical reaction is by banishing all members of dynastic families from France, by\nexcluding their partisans from military and\ncivil office, by making the judiciary elective,\nuf American money would be over $15,000,4*\"\nThe following inscription, translated froii.\nthe HuicophiigiiB in which the remains \u25a0\u25a0'\nShah Jehan now repose beside those of hi-*-\nb. -loved queen, contains a good deal of i\u201e\nso   that    it  is  worth   qui t\nTbe magnificent tombnf the King, iohal \u25a0\u2022\nant of he two paradises, Itizwan andKbold\nthe most sublime sitter on the throne iu II\nleayn (tbe starry heaven), dweller in Ferdo*\n(paradise), Shah Jehan Padishah-i-Gazi\npeace to his remains\u2014heaven is fur him. * * '\nFrom this transitory world eternity ha\nmarched him off to the next.' Among th\nworkmen who came from divers countries t>\nassist in the building of the Taj were th\nhead master, Isu Muhammad, whose salary\nwas 1,000 rupees a month; the illuminate\nAmaruund Khan, an inhabitant of .1 hira;\nalso 1,000 rupees a month; another Most*\nMason, Muhammad Hauif, from Bagdad\nalso 1,000 a month, A great many work\nmen were embloycd from link y, Persia.\nDelhi, Cuttuck, and the Punjab, who recei.\noil salaries ranging from 100to \u00bb00 rupees I\nmonth. |lt niut-t U-reii-eml-en-d tbat thi'\nwas in a country where wages vary troi-.\nthree to six rupees a month.]\nThe white ruaible oume from Joypore, |fl\nRajpootana;  the  yellow   from the banks t\nthe Nerhudda. A Bonfire yard of the latti i\ntost forty rupees. The black marble can,\nfrom a place called Charkoh. and cost niuet,\nrupeos per square yard. The crystal can\nfrom China\u2014rupees 1-70 per square yard\nThe jssper from the Punjab. Tbe carnelia\nfrom Bagdad. Thu turquoise from Thibet\nThe agate from Yemen. The lapis-lasn\nfrom Ceylon\u20141,1,16 rupees per square yard\nTho coral from Arabia and the lied Sea. Th\ngurnets from Bundelcund. The diamond\nfrom famish m Bundelcund The plun\npudding stone from Paisilmere, The roc-,\nspar from the Neihndda, The loadston\nfromGwalior. Tho Onyx from Persia. Th\nchalcedony from Villait. Tha amethyst froi\nPersia. Tlie sapphires from I.unka (Ceylon\nAnd the red sandstone, of whieh U4.0C\n(nu loads were used from Fettehpore Sikii\nMany other stones were also used In the ir\nlaying of the flowers, which have no nam\nin our language. Most of these were receiv\ned in lien of tribute from different nation\nunder the emperor's rule, or were made pr\u00bb\nsenta by the different rajahs and uawab*\nvoluntary or otherwise.\"\nThis illustration serves also to give som\nidea of the florid and extravagant literar\nstyle so common among Eastern nation*\nIt might seem that such an inscription ia on\nof place ou such a tomb, but as it is in th\nnative characters, it never bothera tourist\nmuch. The immense amount of work in\nvolved in bringing these materials togetha,\ncan scarcely be imagined, especially ii\nbringing the marble faun Jeypore, 100 mile,\ndistant, ami the sandstone from Fettehpore.\nIt must be remembered tbat that waa fn pre\nrailroad dsys. There has been some debate\nas to where the diamonds were. At preaen.\nnone are to be discovered. They may hav.\nbeen inlaid in aome of the flowers, and have\naK.iig^uiiiciarycieci. -  S^.^^diX^^.^T^\nAbout such trenchant innovations M.\nFerry baa not a word to say in bis sketch of\nconstitutional reform, and, what ia even\nmore astonishing, he foregoes all allusion to\nthe scrutin de litte. But all these topics are\nlikely to be discussed with not a little beat\nand rancor in the course of the interesting\ndebates which are about to occupy, the\nFrench Legislature.\u2014A1\". 1* Sun.\n*=*\" For artistic monumental work apply to\nGeorge Eudge, \"Victoria Marble Works,'\nDougla* Street Victoria.\nOal oil 50 cent*- per gallon at the Colonial\nDrugstore, next tothe Elgin Houte.       *\nPress.\nTHE\nCITY BAKERY\nQUEEN STREET, PORT MOODY.\nD. -A.. MADILL\nProprietGl*-\nfresh bread, pies, oakes, i\npastry always on\nHand.\n.f^A CALL,' SOLICITED.\"*^ -**\u25a0\u00ab\u2022\nfy ^ort 5Huaiiij (Bnjtttt.\nSaVTORDA-,-.   JUNE    14, 18M.\nOuxavUaua   rmdJLo   .Raul-way-\nTina.*   Tatbl*..\naPO*T MOOOT.\n\u25a0 Ind trala aniv a Mat* ra * W*d\u00bb\u00abal*rs, t M p m\nIhvm Td ad... * T  ur. *j.. 5.vr\u00bb ru\nFisslgbt iralir sjrlvs* \u2022\u00bb*nr FrKHi  *Jti>.a>\n>T I a..\u2022 **.rj Saturday  OfjOa.ia\nr.H.aa.n *fj\u00ab\u00abtiBt trtln* wisboot tk**U. at\naUtl\"Da okara tick***   an Kid, \u00bblll tr* .*iijn't to\naa.ddllln.l chars* *ftt taali,\nTba al.\".. tin,' ubl. to tak. atTMt ,u Saturday,\n\u00ab\u00ab.\u00ab\u00ab. IN. \u201e.,.,,\u201e\u201e.\n\u2022 a. OHBIBDartuT. O hi \u00bb\u00ablrt\n0*\u00bb-| M\u00ab*M\u00ab *\u00bb*\u00ab\nTn* contract f*r clearing and grading the\nschool ait* bu aw awarded U air. Alex. J.\nAnnaud. \t\nA substantial railing ha* been built along\neach side of the plank approach to the Cal\ntalonia ttarhlot.\t\nClPT. CUrke'a r**id\u00abnce site on th* corner\nof John* anal Albert street* is heiag cleared,\npreparatory to hia building.\nA new twitch board ha* been put ia the\nPort Moody Telephon* office, and th* Company an now prepared to erect wire* and\nput in instrument* in any part of the city.\nLoria Odin'a new building on Murray\natreet ia almoat r**dy for occupation, \u00bbnd\npresents a \u00bbery neat and compact appear,\nance. ,  \t\nAu- trains on the C. P. R. R. Ie\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab P\u00b0rt\nMoody directly from in front of the Colonial\nIrrug Stor*. Prescriptions carefully com\npounded by C. E. 0*on, druggist.\nMb. Lemont's new bakery and restaurant\nhuildiug, on Queen SL, near the railway, i*\nwall undtr wxy, and will prahably be com\npleted by the end ef tbe sure** 111 month.\nItH-uoviMrlNTS.\u2014An elegant new counter\nand register desk have been placed in the\n\u2022ffice of the Elgin House C. E. C*on,\nof th* Colonial drug store, has adorned the\nfront of hia Mat Rule \u2022tore with eoaee hand\naome signs.\n\u00a5KMOXAL.\u2014Mt. Chat. Foster, of Weeks\nk Foster, returned from a busloess trip to\nPortland \u201en Wednesday... .Mr. W. W.\nWeeks, of the same firm, returned on Thursday evening from an oxtended visit to San\nFrancisco. Ho waa greeted by an informal\nyet highly enthusiastic rece|>tj\u201et> at the hands\nof hia   friend* in \"the bungalow.\" Mr.\nHov.>e, of Howse k Hickman, earweyora.\nNew Wattmiitatcr, i* turveying Tiffin's timber lease, for the Government... .Mr. Chas.\nFoster'* wife armed from the eaat on   Fri-\nPro* Vmw Wmtminstkr.\u2014TbeJteamer\nAdelaiaTe arrived from Wcstrainater^n Tubs\n\u2022lay evening, and as the tide aerv\u00abl well she\nlanded at the new wharf recently erected in\n(font of the Caledonia HoifeL SHc had a\nUrgequautity of freigHt aboatd, principally\ntfor Mersrs. Scott -V Kelly.\nSome \"Punkins\/\"\u2014Sonie one has imposed\n\u2022upon the agricultural editor of the  \"Colm\nblan\"aMd*be has been exposing his ignorance\nla^r talhittg of \"now\" potatoes  \u00ab\u25a0>;   ii.ol.-s\ndiameter.   Potatoes of that   size   ought   to\nthink themselves \"some   punkins.\"\nJriMiiMs from the persevering manner\n\u25a0whieh the iioys are sticking to the practico of\n(limits, they ought soon to be able tn challenge the Province. They could irake muuh\n\u25a0 titter play, however, by having the lilack-\nnmith make a set of regulation quoits.\nThe lumber camp on the Murray estate\n1 resents a lively appearauce, a large gang of\nlcn and two > dk'o <rf oxen being employed\nin getting out logs for Armstrong \u00abfc Burr's\n-mill. The skid road has been completed to\nthe water's edge and some splendid timber\nis being gotten out.\nMadiix's Bakery.--Tiita establishment\n\u25a0is now in full blast and doing a rushing bu\ntineas. Mr. Mad.\" 11 intends to keep on hand\na fresh Stock o(**a,kes, piesand other pastry,\nand it pr\u00abpai*ti to execute special orders on\nshort notice and with perfect eatisfaction.\nRead hii advt.\nThe boar-destr6'yfngNimroadiF the \"Columbian\" office, should remove to Minnedosa,\nManitolu. The last issue of the Minnedosa\n\"Tribune\"   contains   onough  thrilling bear\ntries to cause a violent eruption of poor\nxl cuts and stale puns on every page of\nthe \"Columbian.\" Oo to Manitoba, thocj\nItamrooM\nHatiitno. This pleasant and healthful\nrecreation-is liecoming a favorite one with\n\"i'ort Moodiaiu- of both sexes The neighborhood of Kooky Point offers gooc! facilities\nfor learning the natatory art, while to tho\nexpert swimmer the sawmjll v\"'*1'\" induce\nlimits for deep water spoilt. The little ones\ngrowing up iu our midst should all be tanght\nto swim; it is a necessity\u2014not an accomplishment.\nTjioh. B. flpring, Ksq., contractor and\nbuilder, of Tacoma, W. T., visited Port\nMoody thia week, and invested-in two build-\nlag lots on the corner of Clarke and Pacific\nstreets. He has abne to Taconia to wind up\nhis bufiinesa.anfl will return to-reside permanently in Port Moody about the end of the\nmonth. Ho will build a residence on hia\nlots.\nChurch Notes.\u2014There was a -slight improvement in the attendance at the Episcopal service on Sunday morning.    Kev.   Mr.\nBlanchard officiated The Metlirjdist   ser-\ntfee* were conducted by the Rev. Mt'. Alton,\nif the Ikw-Westminster Reformed Kjnscojrial\nchurch. The sermon was both eloquent and\niractical, and waa listened to with; marked\nattention by the   audience Ths   Sunday\n(chool is a very important factor in training\ni the voung and we are pleased to note that\n'ort Moody parents appreciate this fact\nFrom Victoria.\u2014The str. Dunsmuir ar-\nived from Victoria at 7:30 on Tuesday, with\nUrge cargo ot general freight for onr mer-\nbants. This boat might work up a passen-\nsr business it -sho were not so- slow that\nyoung nun becomes gray and mid and an\nId man die* from age during th\u00a3 passage.\nke did attempt some time ago to make\nuni-weekly trips between here and V.c-\n\u00abria,rbut the< strain waa too groat, and our\nisutifuj harbor is graced by her -presence\nit once a week now.\nA New Enterprise.\u2014Dr. Heslop haa\nmmenced a 66x90 foot building or Murray\nreet. adjoining Louia Odin's. When com*\nsted, it will be used aa a drugstore, doctor's\nice, photographic atud'o and dwelling house\nd the doctor will launch out into the\notograph business. We have seen speci-\nin of the doctors work in this line, and\nI safely say it is first-class in every resit. We hope to see the new enterprise\nariah like a green bay tree\nThe Cooper Promrtt.\u2014H. H. Horsey,\nEa j,, of Ottawa, oue of the syndicate now\nowning the above property, was in Port\nMoody on Thursday. We understand the\nestate will be plotted and placed in the mar\nkt-t initj**--iiate!y. and that Albert street will\nbe graded aud prepared for travel from Johns\nto Kirat street- When this work is completed tbe drive from We-.tomii-.ter to Port\nMoody via the Clarke road aud return via\nthe North rotd will be one of the hmtst on\nthe maiuland.\nRailway Notea.\u2014Lajt Friday's train was\nbrought down by the new locomotive\n\"Nicola.\" A large con-dgnmeut of cattle\nfor Westminster and Victoria butchers ar\nrived per same train Tuesday's train\nbrought all Ue*r passengers to Port Moody,\nthe C- P. N. Co. I-oat having failed to connect at Hammond. Moat of them left immediately for Westminster, by  stage\t\nMr. Johnson's Chins gang arrived from\nMaple Ridge laat Friday, and went into\ncamp ou the Cooper property. They have\ngone to work on tbe earriage road in the\nrear of the wharf.\nThe Sawmill.\u2014This establishment is now\nin complete Horking order, and is doing excellent Hork. Several additions have been\nbuilt, for the greater convenience in handling\nlumber, and au ingenious arrangement con\nreys the sawdust from tlie saw tothe furnace\ndoor, thus doing away with the dust and ore-\nserving our fish. A roof has also been placed over the mill. Tile claas of lumber being\ntamed out is second to none iu the province,\nami we hope Port Moodiaus m ho contemplate\nbuilding will consider the claims of a home\nindustry in preference to those of places at\na distance.\nOver the Rockies.\u2014On the 2(Jth of May\nan important event in tho history of the\nDominion of Canada took place, when the\nrails of the Cauadian Pacific Railway were\nlaid across th* summit of the Rockies into\nBritish Columbia, tlisis uniting that Province by an iron band to its eastern sisters.\nTo Mrs. Brothers, wife of Mr. V. P. Brothers, track superintendent, and to Mr.\nDickey, Government Railway Inspector,\nwas allotted the pica-dug task of driving the\nlast spikes in the Northwest Territory aad\nthe first iu Britiah Columbia.\n\"How to train a Coon\" may be easily as\ncertamed by calling in person at the Colninl\nDrug Store, Port Moody, C. E. Coon, drug\ngi\u00abt. \t\nArM-AL School Meeting.\u2014The first an\nnual meeting of the Port Moody School Dis\ntrict will be held at the Court House at 11 a.\nin. on Monday nexl, for the purpose of elect\ning three fit aud proper persons to serve as\nSchool Trustees iu the place of those gentle\nmen whose term of office will then expire,\nSo fur we have heard but little mention of\nany opposition to the pn-eeiit incumbents,\nmid it is probable they will be ne-elceUid by\nacclamation. In the eweiit of a poll being\ndemanded, it may be well to remind our\nreaders that any freeholder or house holder\nwho has resided in the school district for .-ijj\nmonths, or the wife of any Btich freeholder\nor householder, is entitled to vote at this\nelection.\nNew Time Taulb. \u2014 A neu timetable goe;\ninto effect on this division of the C. P. R.\nto-morrow, The time for arrival of trains\nat Port Moody has been changed from 4*00\n<to (i:35 p.m., aud tbe hoer of departure is\nstill 5:00 a.m. There will be three trains\nper week\u2014arriving Monday, Wednesday\nand Friday, and leaving 'lue-tday, Thursday\nand Saturday. Passengers entering train\nwithout tickets; at stations where tickets are\n-told, will be subject to au additional charge\nof Id cents Port Moody bus recently been\nmade a ticket station. Mr. Karl Aitken of th\nt-dc-i;.pl[ oitj, fl Having been appointed ticket\negen't.\nBrevities.\u2014A brisk fire on tho railway\n;('*.'\u25a0 r-.\\ c, between Douglas and Klgin strentf,\non Wednesday, was a source of some dunger.,\nwhich the active exertions of tho residents\nthereabout-! averted. .. ..MrB. M. A. Kek\ntein's household goods, including a fine\npiano, arrived this week, and the family will\ntake up periu'iutnt residence   here   shortly\n Tlie Dunsmuir IcJt on Thursday with  a\ncargo of shingles 'from Tiflin's mill Fales\nA (\/O. hove added to their stock of furniture,\nami have begun the manufacture of mat\ntressea on the premises... Mrs. Wright has\nrecovered   from   her   recent   severe illness,\n Mr.   W.  .R.   Creig   has Jiung out his\nshingle as a house aud sign  puinter Mrs.\nWilliams has collected about, \u00a7.)0 towards\npurchasing an organ .\/.t the Episcopal so\n< iet v, aud to raise the balance an entertain\nment will probably be given shortly,.. The\ncase of Johiir-ion ---.. Chiike wiih decided hy\njudge Hcgbio of the rSu-jreme Court in tav\nof Johnston. .. .The dead Chinaman has been\nremoved from thefo<-t of Douglas*, street...\nMr. J. |{. Scott ura s hia b.-nd iu slii g, tin\nresult of the fructure of a defective al>\nbottle.\nStaiCATTKHS' MKKTING.\nAu adjourned meeting of nquatters wan\nheld ut Temperance Hall on Saturday -the\n7th inst., at H o'filflBk p. in. It beiug au ad\njoumeti me*thin, IV. Heslop resumed the\nchair, aud Col. Hamilton the duties of Secretary.\nThe minutes of the last meeting were read\nand adopted.\nMr. John T. Scott then led off in a rigor\nout speech in advocacy of squatters claims.\nHe was ably followed by Messrs. Butchart,\nNoon, Lydon, Orr, and others.\nIt was eventually moved hy Mr. Butchart,\nseconded hy Mr. Noon, and\nKcAolved, That tho Chairman, Secretary,\nMr, Orr, ami the mover, be a ciimiiwttee to\nprepare a brief circular memonial so the Dominion Oovernmcut, of which* the .Secretary\nwill procure the print mg of 2,000 conies, and\nthe distributing of the same throughout the\nt'im'-ub squatter settlements of the Province,\ntogether with money subscription lists, with\na view to meeting the expenses necessarily\nincurred in endeavoring to procure the recognition, by the Canadian Government, of\nsquatter's rights.\nTbe meeting.then aflj'qiirned until Saturday, the 14th of June, at seven o'clock p. m.\nPlenty of work to be done in Port Moody.\nCall at the Colonial Drug Store and see for\nyourself. *\nA CURIOUS COAUTION.\nBehold now is the millenium come, and\nitht- lamb and the\" lion th*ay J*lie\" together.\nThe atheistic McGtQivray finds a doughty\nchampion in the Methodistic'.'Columbian,\"\nwhich, in its issue of Saturday lost, goes\nafter the Gazette for attempting to vilify\nthat immaculate gentleman (?) The reasons\nfor.so strange a union are net hard to divine.\nA -fellow feeltng makes us wondrous kind,\"\nsays the great master of thought, and the\nBight of a \"fellow\" like McGtllivray \"fooling\" far .the votes -of -this community in\nfavor of honest John, has made the \"Columbian'1 \"wondrous kind.\" Ever since his\nadvent in Port Moody this man McGillivray\nbaa bad an itch for office, and has been employed in doihjaf scavenger work for the honest John government, under instructions\nfrom the Rev. Ebenezer, such instructions\nbeing given after the Sunday service. McGillivray arrived in Port Moody an avowed\nfollower of Tom Paine aad Bob Ingersoll,\nand made more than one attempt to instill into\nthe minds of young men in this place their\ndamning aud pernicious doctrines, bnt without success. Finding then that tbe provincial -'powers that be\" were controlled by tbe\nsanctimonious honest John, aided and\naberted by Khsatssaji the holy aud David tbe\n\u25a0lumberer, he made a complete change of\nfront and became a regular attendant at\nchurch, relying upon his dy-peptic appear\nance t-funiish bun with the ti-t requisite of\na sanctimonious and godly deportment. This\nrno^e had the desired effect, and his greed\nfor power was appeased when the position\nof Stipendiary Magistrate was conferred\nupon him, and for a tim* his seat in the\n\"Amen corner\" was a dreary waste. But \"a\nchange came o'er tbe spirit of his dream,\"\nas it were, the appointment was cancelled,\nthe cup of j>ower was dashed from his lips\nere its contents had been tasted, and the\ndevoted apostle of Torn Paine and John\nWesley was relegated to a life of privacy\nonce more. Then did he clothe himaelf in\nsack-cloth, sprinkle aahes uj-ou his judicial\npate, ami vow a swear tbat he would worship at the shrine of the Robsou family\nuubiihe secured a job, if it took all winter.\nHe resumed his attendance at church, and\nhis after-eervice confabs with the parson,\nand as in tho former case, his devotion aud\npiety overcame his former bad reputation,\nand the appointment of J. I*, rewarded his\nefforts. True, this was only \"half a loaf,\"\nbut it discounted \"no bread\" by a large majority, and the impecunious gentleman was\nfain to be content for the meantime. But the\nrosy path to greatness waa thickly strewn\nwith thorns, and to remove these now I**-\ncame the object of his existence. The\nGazette had always been a large thorn\u2014a\nveritable spike\u2014in his aide, and his plan\nwas, as formulated in a proposition to the\neditor, to win our influence and patronage\nto the Kobson family and drive the present\nproprieter from the field The editor, not\nbeing an ass, did not entertain this very\nflattering offer, and scheme number one fell\nthrough. Then eame an effort to incorporate Port Moody, the ultimate object, of\ncourse; being the pfcraonal aggrandizement ut\nMcGillivray. This, too, was a total fizzle,\nowing mainly to the personal unpopularity\nof its projector. The next thorn was the\nconstable. This official was open to the\nobjection of knowing nioro of law than the\njustice\u2014and that is a very weak compliment\n-and at the same time was an older supporter of honest John than the newly-\nflcdged J. !'. This constable was also\ncheeky enough to insist on collecting a\nlicense fee from th*c \"judge\" for the privilege\nof doing business as a notary, etc. How to\nremove him was now the question, ami many\naud long were the caucuses between the\nparson and t'le atbe'st. At length aftet\nmuch spying and dodging around corners,\nthis paragon of judicial purity made tbe as-\ntoui.d ng discovery that the constable drank\nbeer, smoked, and used cuss words, und\nthat he was also in th'e habit of doing his\nduty and occasionally affording a nights\nlodging to a poor destitute pilgrim, without\nbringing him before the \"beak\" in the morning. This was the straw that fractured the\ndromedary's vertebra.', and the fiat went\nforth that \"the constable must go!\" Accord\ningly a batch of charges weie tnimjwd up\nand forwarded to headquarters, and McGill-\nevray whispered around that the constable\nwas us good as gone. All this had been\niftoac, without consulting Mr. Butchart a\nbrother magistrate, aud without giving the\nconstable in, inkling as to what the charges\nwere, or the opportunity of preparing his\ndefense. Rut to far as we have been able to\nIrani, this last scheme has also \"bust,\" aud\nthis fellow whom the Columbian dubs \"our\nc-teemed friend\" aud \"a gentleman,''stands\nb'eforo the public branded as a man who\nseeks to remove an enemy by stabbing him\nftom behind and -in <Uic dark. There is one\nthing which we had forgotten, and which\nwill serve to show Dhe unlimited cheek of\nthe man. Just prior tothe lateschoojmeei-\nin5' MoUili-Tay received a letter from the\nProvincial Superintendent of Kdue-ition re-\nijiiesiiug him to attend tt\u00bb the preliminary\narrangements for the me ting. Armed with\ntins \"littlo brief authority,\" he began tv lay\nplans that would make him chairman and\ngraud Jiigh \u00abiuo-k-aiiiin'k of the whole concern, even going so fur os to name who should\nact as secretary to the meeting. Whci the\nmeeting Imur arrived \"the judge\" was not\non hand and our sensible citizens elected\ntheir own chaii*fnan and secretary, and when\nMcGillivray arrived the nominations were\niu progress. Xa depict the feelings of grief,\nenvy and indfgnatlon as displayed on (he\nface of t'-is d H.-ppiiisHssj wirepuller at this\njunetur \u25a0 wonl I r-(f ir-'the i.en of nn Irtftat-\naii'l \u25a0\u25a0 - It iivt- it tn the imnginaMon of our\nreadora, AftT the elections Were over and\nthe names of (be gentlim\/en fof.u.fg the\n*choo| hoard had hreu announced, Mct.i li-\nvrny en mo forwera nnd gave a Icttt-r.iuto the\nhas li of one ofthe trustees. Jt was an application for the posrtion-of leacher..' add [-eased t'i the \"Chairman of the School Board*.\"\nand yet this \"gentleman\" and \"esteemod\nfriend\" of the \"Columbian\" had opened th* inter nnd no doubt made himself master of its\ncontents. Comment is unnecessary. Aud\nnow let us suggest as a text for the \"Cohim\nbiauV next seEinon, thf first five vecscs of\nthe seventh chapter ofift. Matthew.\nconquered, the Poles to-day look down upon\nRussians aa they were wont to in the golden\nperiod of their history. In bis capacity of\nliOHimil flsssfJfll the well known military\nleadtvr, Gen. Gourk, is the chief of ail tbe\nPolish provinces. He teas good M*GeMfsJ\nss he is poor as an administrator. He might\nin a twinklingannihilaie -\"lithe Polish rebels\ndhoti Id they face him in sn \"per leld; but he\nis (juite puwerloas. to cop** with tb<* erst-\ntocratic con*-piratots inthor milont. In t,j-n-\nof a war between Ru-tsia and Germany- -and\nsuch an affair i-t very posi-iM--, lelhwitL\nstanding the latere]** \"nt: of curte-ies be*\ntween the two court*-\u2014the Russians would\nspeedtly have to vacut- PoLi.d\nThe Au trun-Ptucsiaii frontier is fn the\nhands of Jews in g< m-rsl snd of the Jewish\nsmugglers In particular To them patrio-\ntitm is something fotvign. Tbe highest\nbidder  is all  ti J be Csstrll\nGovernment kn-w* no a*****, to eotsnrsl its\nJewish subjects. The Ben mt Baul-EssMsajs\nfrontier, ai well i- ti,. northera -bore of the\nBlank Baa, b B*dsr Jewish c-nt-ol. The\nJew| in,t only eootiol all cK]\u00bboiti and import n, but even deal in white slsve*. The j\nNome Fremiti has recently stated thst in I\nsome hare Q ki * i.-r.uitiiiopb- tb< re were\nfound \u2022\u25a0\"\u00bb\u25a0.-al gossjao Cbfistiaa girls, who,\nas they say, wer* sold by Je*1\nAs to Ode**a, (Jtieen of the Black S*>s;\nSehaetopol, srhsm onto tbsfdata le described\nin Russian text b (graphs as being\n\"an impregnable \u25a0Mfssssj, ' and tbe Crimea\nin general, thnte are at th* mercy of any\nforeign man-of-war. The Beetle tubs of\nAdmiral Pnpoff are looked up ej even by\nRussians as being oidv p-o-rscarecrows. The\nmajority of the Crioieans are Tartars of\nMohammedan fait!), and iu case of need they\nere not to be trusted. For the glorv of the\ncrescent they will gladly de mischief tothe\nworshipper of the cross.\nIn the Caucasus, too, the Mohammedan\npopulation outnumbers the Christian. That\nmountainous ridge between tbe tw> inland\nee.is bus cost the Russians hundreds of\nthousands of men ami millions and mallioas\not roubles, yet they are not safetheie. Lately a frantic Mullah appeared near Baku and\nbegan to preach \"Death to the Cht^tians !\"\nSome oil wells were set on fite, and there\nwere rumors that the Trans-t aucanian Railway was undermined. A panic wm spread\nthere among the Christian population, and\nthe Moscow ''Vedomant.'' and theottierRussian newspapers now demand that the Caucasus be pronounced in a state of siege, aud\nthat absolute power l>* granted for a time to\nthe Governor-General, Prince Dondokoff-\nKorsakoff.\nTbe newly acquired Trans-Caspian region,\nwith the Turcoman robbers ; the Turkestan,\nwith tlie Bocharians and Khivans, ami the\nKirghiz hordes will yet require tor years to\ncom.e a good regular army fo order to keep\nthem tn peace and subjection.\nIn Siberia, un the Cninesc border, and ot\nthe Pacifu: shore Buesians have no means uf\ndefence. There are Russians who, h iVinf\nniaib. a thorough acquaintance with the Ct-\nle-ttiaU-mpire, affirm that Kurope may yet sec\nanother invasion of the Asiatics like the one\ntha*! took plane in the middleagee. Imagine,\nthey argue, the Celestials provided with\nmodem improved arms, and well drilled,\npouring down on Kurope through the Ural\ngates! Wlrni poVafer on earth oould stop\nthem ? Iu view ni' mich a horribbi calamiLy,\nthe Czar s ' bncrnmeiit is goingto se >d to Siberia one mote (^veiDor-Genettl, thus making three. \\V\\**-tt*iu Siberia ami Eastern Ni-\nbej'ia have . a< h a (luvernord oncraJ, uud\nnow the Pacific shore and the Amour region\nup to Lsk'- Baikal will have a third oue.\nLieut.-Gen. Baron Korf ie appointed to re\nform I'yc 1L-: Siberia nnd to keep the Celestials and the ..ther lot a of his Majesty iu proper dread, The peninsula of Kamchatka,\ntbepopalalioD of which 1ms fallen from.'-0,000\nto 0,000, ia to be repealed. The trude with\nthe Japanese* Chinese, and '.'orcans i.-s to be\ndeveloped. The naval posts on tiic Pacific\nare to be rebuilt. Improved ami increased,\ntlie Amour region is tu bo mad\/- a lovely\nplace by Bottling there emigrants from the\nthickly p'Miobiled Russian province* And,\nabove all, the new Governor-General la expected ti> turn tlie iuurJercr-, ndierrs-, thieve*-,\nand other criminals now transported ir. the\nfloating prlaone to the Island of 8ajrhalien\ninto gentlemen. So the Russian newspapers\nsay. Gentlemen or not, the Czar indeed\nwants to gut rid nf all grave criminals. He\nshut.-, up tne internal prisons and sends tbe\nprisoners off t-\u00bb Ss*ghalii u.\nCuriously enough, the empire of the Czar\nis indeed encircled by non-lluaaian nati inal-\nities. The Pinna. Swedes. Germans, Poles,\nJews, Greeks, Tartaro* Tcherkaaaisna, Geor-\ngiaus, Anneiiians, Turcomana#Tnrona, Kirg-\nhiz-s, Samoj'eds, Buriit*. and nuiuerous\nother Siberian tribes, with Laplnniletsio the\nend, complete the ring ofthe Gneat Bear*,\nhuge country. And where ih the Ruaaiatfl\nIn the hole.\nPark to Wes'inmster and return han\nbeen reduced to one dollar since the Colonial\nDrag Store reduced tha price of drugs iu\nPort Moody.\nRUSSIA'S WEAK POINT.\nEntirely Ei\u00bbcibci*ed \u00a3i* Foes or People\nNot to be Trusted\u2014A Wall or\nWeak Blocks.\nSt. Petersburg, May A\u2014\"Ours is the\ngreatest country in the world,\" a Russian\nGeneral said to me, \"but her size is her great\nweakness. Tell me at what point of her\nimmense frontier line ahe oould not be easily\ninvaded by an enemy* On our borders we\nare to-dnv as defenceless as,we were seventy-\nfive years ago. It looks as ft we still would\ntempt our foes to come on to Moscow.\"\nThe German-Russian frontier is virtually\nin the hands nf the, foles, who, as yet,\ncherish a vain hope of restoring an independent kingdom of Pdhtntl. There are 7,900,-\n000 of Poles, and all of -fJhem of the Roman\nCatholic faith. There ire a number of\nfortresses in Poland, but they are considered\nas quite insignificant in the face of the formidable German fortresses on the other side\nof the frontier. There are several Russian\nregiments stationed at and near Warsaw,\nbut their officers are mainly Poles or Russians\nPolonised. It is aii undisputed fact that the\nPolish society, with all its anti-Russian sympathies, holds its own in spite of all pressure\nfrom tbe autocratic Government.    Though\nKYLE HILTON\nIMPORTERS\n\u2014AND\u2014\nWholesale Dealers in\nGROCERIES\nProvisions, Liquors, etc.\nKR0HT   STRKI'T,\nNEW WESTMINSTI R, U C.\ntufa\nAnnual School Meeting.\n4 .PUBLIC MEETING OF THE RESI-\n-C\u00bb dent householders and fr-vh dders of\nPort Moody .School Pistriet, will be held on\nthe ,!rd M'-udf.y in .June, 1884, at the Court\nHouse, Port Moody, commencing at 11 o'clock s. in., for the purpose of ehr-cting three\ntit and proper persons to serv.e as .School\nTrustees iu phu-e of the present Trustees,\nwhoso term of office has expired.\nBy order of the Board of Trda^ees.\nJAMES A. CLARKE,\nSecretary.\nPIONEER\nSTORE\nQUEEN .STUKCT, I'ORT MOODY.\nD. B, GEMT, Proprietor.\nSPB1IG STOCK\nJust Received I\n|IIE   CM\u00bbKJ.-\/'.N'KI;   respectfully  in-\n*      forms tin- ci'i\/eiis <-f Port Moody and\nvicinity than   he   hss just  received a large\nand varied assortment  of seasonable\nDRY GOODS\nu,\nU R O C E R I E B,\nBoots a nd Shoes\nHARDWARE,\nErr,   Etc.,\nVVhicli can lie  IxHiirht at  Keasonab'e\nPries.\nVegetables and Fruits\nIN   SEASON.\nA CALL  RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED.\nMessrs.\nBowse &\nRESPECTFULLY BUG TO LYFOUM\nthe public of New Westminster and\nIii rict, that they have commenced buti-\nness as\nLAND SURVEYORS,\nDRAUGHTSMEN,\nfleal Estate Brokers & Agents\nCONVEYANCERS\nACCOUNTANTS,   Etc\nAnd are now prepare,! to receive instruct,\ninns in their several branches.\nAll BusiEess placed in their\nhands will receive Prompt\nAttention.\nOffice:  Front Street,\nOPP. C. P. N. CO. 8 WHARF.\nH0W81A BIDKsuUr,\n(IFKEI: nil.' SALE\nVaittallS   Town   Irf\u00abl*\u00bb   at\nPert   Moody.\nALSO,\nTOW'S AND SUBURBAN LOTS AT\nNEW WESTMINSTER,\nALSO,\ni'AKMINC LANDS 6>I THE LOW\nER FRASER,\nALSO,\nTOWN LOTS at PORT HAMMOND\nALSO,\nLOTS ON TOWNSITHS AT HAS\nTINGS, GRANVILLE. AND\nENGLISH BAY.\nOffice: Front Street,\nOPPOSITE CANADIAN PACIFIC NAY\nIOATION CO.'S WHARF.\nCOMMffiCIAL HOUSE\nC'larkf. St., Near Dorot-AR,\nPORT   MOODY,   B.   C\n60  TO  TE\nSan   Francisco\nBflflT\nSHOE\nSTORE! !\nAND GET YOUR MONEY SW3\nBoots & Shoes\nJH\n(Frem an Infant's Shoe np to a Man's B\nMADE   TO   O'R.DER.\nRBpairing Neatly EiectM\nIllKiiest Market Price paid for\nHIDES.\nJAMES ROUSSEAU,\nCOLUMBIA   STREET.  OPP. BANK Of \u00bb. C\"\nMrs.  Williams\nHAS JUST  OFE.VEO TRE  ABOVE\nspacious premises with a  large and\nwell-assorted stock of\nDry fiuods and Millinery\nGROCERIES,\nSTATIONERY\nFancy Goods, &o\nA Choice Assortmes* ot\n\u20ac A NDIE S.\nEverytiiing New and\nFashionable\nTrappBros*\nCOLUMBIA  STREET.\nNetc Westminster B (0\nIMPOBTEJ..S 4 DEALEE8 I1C\nRRYGOOPS,\nSTAPLE 8t PANCT\nCLOTHING,\n-AND-\nfients' Funushing\ngoods i\nMERCHANT\nTAILOES!\nWe have iue finest assortment of\nT \"W 13 ES JD S\nCasimeres,  Diagonals;\nBroadcloths.\nSUITS MADETO ORDER\"\nFrom 120.00, at Short Notine.\nGood Fit Guaranteed.\nfiressmaking & Milliney\nDEALERS IN\nHardware, Paints and Oils,1\nAT FACTpRY PRICES\nWE ARE 1T.ET ARtB TOCOttfKACT\nwith parties l.uilding, to supply\nthtm with all materia! in the aiKive-nail.'r'.d\nline, at BOTTOM PRICES. ,\nOrders by Telephone or Stage attended to\nwith promptness.\nAuctioneers\nAND AGENTS FOR\nSINGER MACHTNECO\nPoet Mamr\nNew Westminster\nTOWN LOTS.\nFARMING\nLANDS!\n D\u00bb THE\t\nPHASER VALLEY,\nAnd  OTXBB   BaVROKI Of   S'ew\nWHTsUaVrTaO Dumuct,\nFOR S.13E!\n BV\t\nC.D.RAND'\nREAL ESTATE\nmm mm,\nMSURANCE AGT.\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C\nAn I- spection Solicited and\nSatisfaction Guaranteed.\nTerms, Strictly Cash.\nMONEY TO LOAN\n(\nm\n\u2022in\nI\naLl orders for surveying\nwill receive prompt\nattention. aaasasaa*\n\u25a0 I  stl,\nDOMINION\nCOMPANY.\n(JJatlTED)\nRichard St., New Westminster\nManufacturer* and DatU.rt In\nall kind* of\nRough iV Dressed\nLUMBEB!\nShingles,\nLaths,\nPickets,\nDoors,\nWindows,\nMouldings\nOrders from the Country\nPromptly Filled,\n\u20221 quantity and cost of material for\nbuilding  carefully  prepared\nfree of charge.\nFIRST-CLASS\nGrain-Edged flooring\nA SPECIALTY.\nA. MENNIE Agent\nPORT MOODY.\nWeeks\n-AND-\nPoster,\nESTATE\n-AT-\nPORT MOODY,\nI.  O.\nI\nI\ni\nop rice:\nWith the N. W. & P.\nM. Telephone Co.\nLots offered in everv\nportion of the town-\nsite; also a few desirable Estates in\nthe immediate yicin-\niky of Port Moody.\nsMiS^MsW^k \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\nA correspondent writing to Note, and\nQueries from Lincolruhire, England,\nsays: \"I am told tbat in the Tillage*\nnear here confirmation is considered a\nsafe cure for rheumatism, and that,\nconsequently, old persons are in the\nhabit of presenting themselves to the\nBishop from time to time, as often as\ntbey can get an opportunity, to receive\nthe rite. The following story wa* told\nme latulv as a fact, though I cannot be\nresponsible for its absolute truth. The\npreaeut liiahop of Lincoln, knowing of\nthia belief, was on one occasion almost\nconvinced tbat he had already lately\nconfirmed a certain old man who presented himself among the candidates,\nand therefore he sent Archdeacon K.\nto ask him. 'ihe Archdeacon went up\nto him saving. 'Have you been continued before?' but the mail waa ,leaf, so he\nhad to repeat liisonesUoll, adding. 'The\nliishop thinks he Las confirmed you before.' liut the old man wus, or pretended to be, still unable to hear, so\nthe Archdeacon spoke again in a louder\ntone; 'The liiahop feels rnre that he has\nc I,tinned you before.' Then the old\nman' hearing ut laat, and being perhaps\na little nettled, replied gruftiy. 'Tell\nun he's u lee'er,' with which unique\nanswer the Archdeacon wus forced to\nbe content.\"\nThe facts set forth in the report of\nMr. Ward, British Consul at Bordeaux,\ngive good reason to hope thut the troubles of the French wine growers from\nthe ravages of phylloxera are druwing\nto an end. Had the ullliclioii continued\nto progress as it was d ring up to the\nyear 187M, when the Government was\nfurnished with powers forcombatingthi*\npest, Mr. Ward declares that not one\nsingle acre of wine-growing land would\nnow be left in France. since then the\narea of land and the number of plants\nattacked has gradually decreased. Last\nyear's vintage wus thu most satisfactory\nof any since the commencement of the\nperiod ofthe phylloxera's ravages. The.\npoduction of wine throughout France,\nwhich had fallen to 25,000,000 hectolitres in 1879, und had risen to 29,000.000\nhectolitres in 18\u00ab0, to 34,000.000 hectolitres in 1881, then fallen again to 30,-\n000,01X1 hectolitres in 1882, reached in\n1S83 the liu-ure of 30,029,182 hectolitres\nA hectolitre is equal toabout22gallons.\nThe famous jackdaw of Hheims bas\nbeen outdone by a British tomtit. At\nShenbridge Hall, the resilience of \"Mr.\nLockett, in Kngland, the hull letter box\nis placed in a gate at the roadside, and\nMr, Lockett, expecling u cli\u00bbck from\nLiverpool, went to the box. He discovered that the envelope hud been tam-\npored with and the check abstracted.\nComing to f he conclusion that he had\nbeen robbed, us the letter itself remained while the check bad been taken,\nMr. Lockett ut once rode to Xnnt wicl,\nand gave information at the I'ost-OlHce\nand at the police station. On reti'rn-\nlug later he examined the box more\nclosely, and then found several tomtits\nin it, und further investigation led lo\nhis finding the missing check lying\ntwenty-six yards awuy on the turnpike\nroad, whither it hu,l evidently been\ncarried by a tomtit. Marks of the beaks\nofthe tomtit*, were found on the letter\nan I the check, and the Utter being folded very small, its abstraction wus eusy.\nA singular accident occurred recently\nat Naples in the Church of Han Muggi\nore, where some priests of the so-culled\nmission ure now preaching. The preacher of the evening hud chosen for liin\ntheme the terrors of hell. Tbe churcli\nwas crowded. Near the pulpit stood u\nfigure ofthe Madonnu. All at once, in\nthe middle of the sermon, the lights\nwent out, and the figure of the Madonna disappeared. The priest, striking\nthe desk with an iron chain, cried out,\n\"We are all failing into belli Look,\nthe Mudnnuu Iiuh fieri! Call on her;\ncall, or woe to us!\" The panic was universal; women fainted, children screamed, and there was a rush to the doors,\nwhich were found to be carefully\nclosed. At last the police uppeaied oi,\nthe scene and got tho doors opened,\nand the congregation escaped into the\nopen air without injury beyond a few\nbruises and the loss of various articles\nof wearing apparel.\nA very pretty custom, which has since\nbeen followed, was introduced jtafiwn-\nionable wedding recently ut the Savoy\nChapel Koyat, London. The choir formed a procession down the aisle to\nmeet the bride und then walked buck\nbefore her to their places in Ihe church\nchanting a bridal hymn, A moral support is thus fiven to a faltering girl\nwho has usually to walk up the aisle\nthe observed of all observers, and overhearing perhaps, remarksonthe redness\nof ber nose, or some defect in her dres*\nnot very reassuring. After the ceremony, the choir again formed in procession and walked before the Oride\nand groom down the aisle to the end\u2014\nEntrance Hate.\nThe famous house \"inm rothen\nSchilde,\" in the Jiidengasse of Frank-\nfor , where lhe founder of the Roth-\nehild family wai born in 17-13, is about\nto be demolish,.,i for the suke of pulilic\nimprovements, 'lhe Jmlengiisse bus\nforsome time lost its old picturesqne-\nness, though the pietvof the Hothchilds\nhas hitherto preserved their \"Ktamru-\nbaus\" untouched. Kven now tney have\nattempted to restrain bv legul proceedings the action ofthe Frankfort municipality, but in  vain.\nThe London Medical Times believes\nthat the sympathy expressed for criminals supposed to suffer pain on account\nofthe continued action ofthe heart after the neck is broken in hanging, is\nmisplaced. It cites the recent triple\nexecution at Prague to show that the\nheart may pulsate for a quarter of an\nhour after deaths which are shown to he\ninstantaneous. Many cases are recorded\nwhere the heart's action has coniinuen\na long time after complete decapitation.\nSir Stafford Northcoto had written a letter\nexpressing his regrets that an engagement\nprevented his presence in tlie Hmise of Com\nmons when Mr. Brodrick's amendment to\nthe Franchise bill, excluding Ireland from\nits operation, was put to vote, He says\nthat had he been present he would have\nvoted from tho amendment.\nM. de Lesseps has obtained assurance of\nthe requisite two-thirds vote of the shareholders to carry the proposal to admit seven\nEnglish shipowners to the Suez Canal\ndirectorate.\nAdvices from the English embassy at\nPekin confirm the report that France haa\nobtained the excluaive right, under the\ntreaty of Tien Tsin, to trade on the C'hioete\nfrontiers bordering on Tonquln.\nThe Transvaal delegatea havo agreed on a\nbasis of a treaty of commerce with France.\nIt is doubtful whether England will permit\nFrance to hold the right of interfering between the Tranavaal and foreign powers.\nThe most rancorous bitterness prevails in\nBelgium now in regard to religion. It finds\nreflection in every paper.\nThe Court of Chancery has granted permission to tho Duke of Marlborough to sell\nthe paintings in Blenheim House.\nM. Moet denies that his late wife made a\nwill in favor of Prince Victor.\nIn 1578 a party of Zurich men, moved\nby some very kindly feeling toward\nStrasburg, contrived to reach that city\nin one day in a light boat, bringing\nwith them a huge iron pot, whose contents were smoking on their arrival.\nAddressing tbe Strasburg authorities,\nwbo came to welcome them, the leader\nof the Zurich men aaid: \"You are\ndoubtless astonished to See us bring\nsuch a shabby gift as a mess of millet;\nhut it is only a symbol. If ever which\nGod forbid, Strasburg should be in dit-\ntrees, she has friends wno will come to\nher aid before a dish of millet will bave\ntime to grow cold.\" This promise,\nmade iu 1570, waa fulfilled in 1870,\nwhen Zurich hast.ned to show all the\nkind,leas she could to the unfortunate\npeopl* ol aTrasburg, and now a memorial ia about to be raited in Zurich street,\nut Hrunburg, inscribed: \"1\u00ab70. Tu the\ndescendant*! of the confederates of old\ntime, who, to keep the promise made by\ntheiruiiuestora, came with all speed to\nthe aid ol Strasburg \u2022.lien the wus overwhelmed vtilb uiiMforlune.\"\nA v*ry ablo correspondent writes\nIrom l'aria to a London paper: \"There\nis .1 wiiiespiea,! feeling of uneasiness,\nIn Paris especially, which nothing can\nallay. Not tbat people apprehend immediate trouble, but tney feel that\nthough the republic is established it\noll'ere no Becurity for the future. Consequently there is a disinclination to\nembarx upon new commercial enter*\npiises, and thu hoped-for revival of business in the spring is still to come.\nCuriously enough, the stagnation extends to mutters artistic and theatrical.\nThe latter phenomenon Is well worthy\nof notice, seeing that in the most stormy\ndaysof the First Revolution the theatres ,'is.iluyed the greates activity.\nParis rarely deprives itseif of the fictitious orumu. whatever may be the reul\non a performed there. But though the\nsituation is strained enough, we liuv.i\nnot reached so acute a period, and still\nthere is little novelty.\"\nThe celebrated brigand ZiilTa of Csstel\nGuelfos, Bologna, died recently in the\nState prison ut Anconn, where he had\nbeen confined the last twenty-eight\nyears. He was sentenced for life iu\n1850 for many crimes. He was one of\nthe most during companions of Pttsea-\ntore, the terror of the Ronnignu forty\nyears ago. Among the exploits by\nwhich Zirtl'n and bis companions made\nthemselves notorious) was the following: Une night they entered the city\nof Foaliinpnpoli while a performance\nwas going on at the theatre. They\nwent helioiid the scenes, and, levelling\ntheir carbines ut the audience, announced that every door was closed and\nthat the audience bad better give up at\nonce ull their valuables. Une of the\ngang went around with a bug collecting\njewels and money, and the bund then\nleisurely retired.\nA young Parisian has just got a little\nmore than even with one of those pertinacious bores of biiiicitters who In\nKurope trv lo bully us into buying tnerr\nwares. Tne man theutened young Mr.\nTlleuiler with ipeedy baldness unless\nBtens were at once taken to prevent it,\nml assured the laughing youth thai\nour vegetal, e wsb is of course the\nonly eat'a*,ion,\" and before ho knew\nwhere lie was the nstotner found his\nheud dipping with the precious preparation. Uperations concluded, Mr. Tu-\niensi r p t down before ihe young lady\nat the c unter the two francs be usually\npaid. \"What is this, si,'.\"' she loftily\ninquired. \"The charge is twenty\nfruncs.\" \"Why?'' \"A bottle of our\nregenerator lias been opened for you.'\nin vitii, Mr. launsier explained that\nthis wus not done by bis order; but the\ncourt, to which he carried his case, fined the haircutter $5.\nCaledonia Hotel\nHEAD OF PORT MOODY.\nR.  B.  KELLY,\nProprietor,\nTHE PROPRIETOR OF THE ABOVE HOTEL takes pleasure in\nannouncing that the House is now completed with everj convenience for the traveling public. THE TABLES are well supplied with\nevery article in season, and THE BAR is provided with a well-selected\nStock of\nLIQUORS AND CIGARS-\nTHE BEDS are well aired, aud THE STABLING is extensive\nand the best of Food always ready for Homes.\nIt mny be well to remind visitors that this Hotel is within a few\nminutes walk of the Railwuy Wharf and Station, and just at the\nTerminus of the Now Road, now iu course of construction.\nGUESTS may depend on receiving every attention and a honrty\nwelcome from tho undesigned, whose long experience iB a guarantee\nof everything being comfortable and satisfactory.\nJ. T. SCOTT, Manager.\nELGIN  HOUSE\nPORT  iMIOOlDTr.\nLord Randolph Churchill ir. now fairly a rival candidate wiih Lord SulifTtiu ry\n(or the leadership of the Tory party,\nSir Stafford Nnrthcote being in ifl bealrh\nami ut the best, too niminy-piminy for\nthe time. Lira .Salisbury has the advantage of being twenty years older,\nof huving belrl Cabinet office and of\nhaving latterly been in close contact\nwith Lord Beaconsfield; but he is intellectually arrogant and unsympathetic, \u00abliereus Lord Randolph has nn eminently sympathetic manner und voice,\nwhich are In winning contrast to .Salisbury's sardonic gloom and frigidity.\nWhen Lord Kundolph appeared, bareheaded, before u vust assembly at Hir-\nminglium, uccompunied by his young\nand pretty wife, there was seen the perfect historical typo of the aristocratic\ndemagogue,   \"qui o Men etudie sa bete.\"\nHo'iiain, now performing ut the Gaite,\nParis, iu \"La Cliurbonnhire,\" was\" ter\nibly put out the other evening. In\norder to feign emotion in a particular\npnrt of tbe play, he disappear! for a second behind one of the side scenes.\nwhere an iittendaul, who is wuiiingwilh\na brush covered with white paint, with\none touch gives the necessary paleness.\ntothe handsome countenance ol Horns in\nwho immediately reappears be fire tb\nuurlieiice. Oh thin occasion, when he\nHepped before the footlights after th \u2022\naforesaid operation hurl been perform\ned, ho wus greeted with roars of laughter iu lieu of the customary applause.\nHomo minutes claps,.,I before one ofthe\noilier actors was able tu inform Kumar n\nthat his face had been painted a lustrous black.\nA man or woman-who treats a child cruelly in Japan is an object ot universal horror,\nChar-women will not accept employment\nthere unless they can bring the little one*\nwbero tlioy work with thorn on their bucks.\nIt ie the same with factory women. It is\nfunny to se* the mothers in the fan manufactory at Osato with a pair of sharp, merry,\nobservant, and oblique eyes peering over\ntheir shoulders, and while they work they\nare conatantly turning round to chirrup at\nths young ones aud talk tn then,.\nA new outdoor game for ladies and gentlemen called enchantment, is becoming faah-\ni.nable in England. It ia played with small,\nlight hoops, thrown with wands, something\nafter the manner of grace hoops, though the\nwand is of a novel construction, involving\npeculiar method of casting the hoop A\nmoderately large piece of ground is suitable.\nA famous mollah at C'abul having declared\nthe use of tobacco to be contrary to the Mohammedan law. the Ameer has submitted\ntho question to a council of mollahs from all\npartB of the country. If their decision be\nagainst the indulgence of tobacco, ita Use in\nAfghanistan will be prohibited, but il they\npronounce it lawful the anti-tobacco prophet\nis promised imprisonment at Candahar.\nIt ia reported that there is an agrement to\nthe effect that Alfred Archer, the first of\nEnglish jockeys; shall give his sen-icee to\nMr. Monoton aft. r the claims of the Duke of\nPortland, Lord Hastings, and the Duke of\nWestminster. The term of agreement ex\ntends over three years, and haa been bound\nby payment before hand of a cheok for it ia\naaid, $0,000.\nIn the palace of Fontainebleau, that great\nrambling edifice of the atyle of the Renaissance, the apartments of the first Napoleon,\nnext the gallery of Francis the I., are still\npointed out. Hia bedchamber remaina exactly aa he left it j and in his official cabi\nnet a Bmall round table is shown aa that on,\nwhich hia hand signed away its laat nominal\n) fragment of power.\n\u25a0V*7llllam   inaley\nH\u00abs now completed the BAR AND BILLIARD ROOM.\u2014the letter the Handsomest\nRoom in ths Province, furnished with the FINEST CAROM and POCKJST TABLES\nEVER IMPORTED.\nThe liar will be provid d with the Hest of Wines, f.iqoors am. tig rs.\nThe  Restaurant\nIf now open to the public; it is conducted on the most modern improved\nprinciples by a lirst-cluss Cook.\nWILLIAM INSLKV. - \u2022 - Proprietor\nGeneral   Merchandise\nChas. McDonougrh\nHAS AN EXTENSIVE STOCK OF\nGROCERIES, DRY GOODS.       BOOTS & SHOES,\nCROCKERY, GLASSWARE, HATS & CARS\nnvEoja's dta iOoy's  \u00a9ti ts\nAnd a great variety of articles necessary for a household.   He has also,\nGRAIN,  SEEDS,  POTATOES, LIME, and GENERAL STORES.\nN. B.\u2014Farm Produce bought at market rates or Hold on commission.\nK\"COrders from the interior promptly attended to. al2\nDirect Importation\nE. BROWN,\nBEGS to   inform   the  residents of  New Westminster and\nvicinity, that he is   constantly  receiving from Europe\nshipments of choice\nWINES,\nSPIKITS,\nLIQUEURS*\nENGLISH ALES,\nLONDON & DUBLIN STOUT,\nWhich he will supply\nSS^JNBOND   or   DUfY  PAlD-^fc\nIn quantities to su5* purchasers.\nP. T. Johnston & Oo.\n(Successor to Mitchell Jt Johnston)\nSEEDSMEN,\nNurserymen & Florists\nFORT   STREET.   VICTORIA\nGuniiinglM -i Go,, Clias, McDompJi, and James Wise,\nAGENTS FOR NEW WESTMINSTER.'\ntir Priced Catalogue of Nuraery Stuck, Seed  and   Greenhouse  Plants,' sent  pott\nfree \u201en application.\n{ESTABLISHED 1862.)\nFred.  ~Eickhoff\nOEXE&AL DEALIR IN\nGROCERIES\nProvisions,\n.Dry   Goods\nCLOTHING,\nBOOTS & SHOES,\n<Src** < Sec\nOf First-ciass Quality,\nAND    AT\nModerate' Rates-\nCorner of Front   and Begbie Streets,\nNEW   WESTMINSTER.\nBOOTS & SHOES\nIN EVERY VARIETY\nFBOli\nHEATHORN'S\nI\nMANUFACTORY.\nVICTORIA,\n\u00a3T VICTORIA PRICES\nH.  THOMAS,\nCoder  the  new Oddfellows' Hall,\nGOI.r;UBIAS-I>B.BBT.\nPort Moody\nMEAT MARKET\nMURRAY STREET.\nKeeps constantly on hand a\nstock of first-class\nFRESH BEEF.\nVeetl and Fork,\nCoen'd Beef, Etc.\nFresh Vegetables'\nIN SEASON.\nA CAM. ^m?MCTPVUsY SOLICITED.\nHOLLOWAY'S PILL\nThis Oreat Household Medicine ranks among the lead\nIng nceesaaries ol Lile\nThese famous Pills pufi\/* the BLOOD\nand act most poweifullr, yet toolliingly.\non the\nLIVER   STOMACH,   KIDNEYS\nand HOWE1.8. giting lent, *n*rty, \u2022\u25a0 I\nvia-oi to Hit.* great aUIN HPUINO.S 01*\nL1>E, TI,,-. ar* couatantl. rscouiiusiided at\ns ri.,, r falling remedy In all ea\u00bb. where th*\ncontiilnilon, Irom whatever oeuse, haa a>*-\n'.'oiit* Imp.irpd or weakened, 'lhe, ar* wc#-\n'1*, full, efficsclou* in sll ailment, incidental1\n<o Females \"I nil ages; and at a GENERA..\nr-AJIlLY UEDICIKB\/ar* tiDnirp**\u00bb*d.\nIts searching and Healing\nProperties tre known\nthroughout the World.\nFor the cure of BAD LEGS, Had Breast\nOld tads, Sores and Dicers,\nfi Is an infallible remedy. II effectually rtjb-\nl,ed on the neck and cl eat, aa sail into meat\n,t Cuiea SO E THROAT, Bronohltia, ( oldt.\nCoughs, and even ArMlfalA. for r.l.adulsr\nwritings, Absuesses, Pile*, Fistulaa,\nGOUT   RHEUMATISM.\nAnd ever., kind of SKIN DISEASE,  it ha\never bee,, known io fail.\nThe fills and Ointment are Manufactured\noolj at\nS33 OXFOIiD STREET  Z.0NDOH\nAnd are  .oil by all vendors of Midlines\nrlirouglion, ihecfvi'llzed wo,ld,witbdjr*\u00abiioD\u00ab\nfur ii.e ,n a niosr , ve,y augiiage.\nThe   Trade Mark* of than* Medieinet are\n'effnal'ici*   in   Oirnwa.     Hence,    anv    on.\nIirr,ngl,\u00bb\u201e, the Hfiiif.li Foeaaaatons w o ma\n\u00ab>'f> the American I'ounieneh. fo-sal*, wi't\nhe prosecuted.\nJgJ-Purchnsei* should look lo Ih -   fnu.\n> ih\" Tots and 1,'njtes. Il the address la no\n'\u202239, Ojford Street, London, lliey aie tpnrl\niu\u00ab.\n(trrATJI -WNSCMeS,-\nHead of North Hoik!, i'ort s:oodj.\nJOHN 8. WATKIS\nBEOS TO INFORM HIS NUMEROUS\nfriends that Ire has recently taken the,\nabove house, where he is prepared to do\neverything possiblo fur the accommodation\nuf guests.\n1J1E TABLE is always sure to b* anp.\nplied with all the delicacies of tho season ;\ntbe BEOS aro of the most comfortable, and\nthere is ample and comfortable BTABLINO\non the premises.\ntr BOA I ,S always obtainable on the harbor in front nf the premises, by app ying at'\nthe In,i,an.\nU KBI.0UC0.,\nKEEP A  FULL ASSORTMENT OP\nRough andr Drest-ed.\nL WMBES r\nJOSEPH  WINTEMUTE, Agbkt.\nArlington   Hotel\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nNew Westminster,   -   B. O.\nONE OF THE MOST TOPULAR AND'\nbest   conducted  Hotels in   the   City..\nThe Table is supplied  with  the best th*\nMarket affords.   Tho Beat Qualities of\nWINES,   LIQUORS   AND  CIGABS-\nSupplied at the Bar.\nROBERT CAMPBBII,,\nJan. \u00bb, 188S. 8ole Proprietor.\nPOET MOODT PIMYE\nSamuel Cormier\nRUNS A FERRY DAILY BKTWEKtf\nthe end of the North rioad and th*\nCaledonia Hotel, on arrival of stage coach**'\nfrom Nkw Westminster.\nReturn* in the afternoon, punctually, ia1\ntime for the stage coaches to Now West-\nmilliter.\n\u00abar Freight carefully attended to, Every\"\nattention given to Special Commissions.\nCHAHOES MODERATE\nPort Moody\nSHINGLE   MILL\nDON'T FORGEtfTOUO TOTHE POS*'\nMoody ShitT.le Mill,  where the  itsajt\nof Shingles can be nad at the lowest price*,\nwholesale or retail.\nA supply kept constantly on hand.\nJOHK B. TIFITJT.\n\u25a0   \u25a0        -\nNOTJCE\nMR. P. S: HAMILTON having tannin-\natod'his connection with this paper,\nis no longer autnarited to collect aooonnt* or\ntransact any basinets pertaining to the Pobi*\nMoodt Gazette.\nPort Moody, March 16th, 1SB4.\nI\n*","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Port Moody (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Port_Moody_Gazette_1884-06-14","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0311741","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.282222","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-122.829444","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Published by P.S. Hamilton from 1833-12-22 to 1884-03-08; by L.A. McLerie from 1884-03-15 to 1884-11-15; by F.B. Logan from 1885-05-02 to 1886-07-28; by J.K. Suter from 1886-09-04 to 1886-09-25; by A.R. House from 1886-09-25 to 1886-11-13; and by an unidentified party thereafter.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Port Moody, B.C. : L. A. McLerie","@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":"1884-06-14 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1884-06-14 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Port Moody Gazette","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0311741"}