"b0bef513-4aaf-4f38-b1b8-a6bade299fd3"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2017-03-07"@en . "1889-04-24"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/dbc/items/1.0346777/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Oovernmetit\nprinting\noffl'\nColumbian.\n70UTME 6\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. 0., WEOiNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 24,\n1889.\nNUMBER 97\nPROFESSIONAL AND BU3INE85 CARDS.\nETC.\nT. C. ATKINSON,\nAKRI9TER, SOLICITOH, Ac. Offlces-\nMasoiilc Bulldlns, Hew Westminster,\n, dwto\nW. NOUHAH BOl-1**. H.C.,\nTJ AUB1STER-AT-LA\V, LAND AGENT.\n15 Money to Loan. Ofllce-OlnrkHon Ht.,\nKew Westminster, B C. dli* _\n4oiti-oriu, Mr. on. A JI-.SSR,\nBAURISTEES. SOLICITOUS, otc. Oltl-\nees\u00E2\u0080\u0094Masonic Buildings. New WeBtmlnster- itntl Vivncouvci*, IM\". *l\Ttc_\nA.C. BRYDONE-JACK, SI. A -\nNOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEYANCER,\nAc. Barrister of tlie New Brunswick\n(Supreme Court* Oltlco In the Hamley\nBiillding, Columbia Ht., opposite the Colonial Hotel. dkpBto\nJOSEPH Bt QAYNOH. B.A.,LL.B.\n/*10LD MEDALIST of the Unlvorslli of\nH Dublin. BAltltlSTIiH-ATLAW of\nthe High Court, of Justine, Irelnnd. Oillecs,\nCorner MoKoni-lo A Clurltf-on Sts.. Now\nWoHtmlnstor. dwfe2ltc\nG. W. (.HA INT,\nAROHITEOT-. Offiiw-Cornor Mary nnd\nOlarkson Hit.,, Westmlnitor. dwtc\nCLOW A BAChVHK,\nA RCHlTECTfl. Offlco-Room E. over\nA Bank of It. 0\u00E2\u0080\u009ECoHimblaStroet,West-\nmTiiBter. \" dto\nWILLIAM It. KINO,\nA ROHITECT.SANITARYF.NGINKER,\nA Ac. Hemoved to ArraHironsfH Block,\nColumbia Street, Westminster\u00E2\u0080\u0094Boom\nNo. 2. dtc\nA. r. COTTON.\nDOMINION ANn PROVINCIAL LAND\nSURVEYOR. Oilice: Room D.Bauk\nof B. 0. building, Wostmlnstur, H. C-\t\nW. BOVIIX,\nLAND SURVEYOR AND R15AL ESTATE AGENT. Ofllue - Corner of\nMary A Clarkson Sta., New Westminster,\nil win but c\nU. I'miAIHtK.U,\nREAL ESTATE BROKER nnd County\nCourt Agent. Commissioner, Notary\nPublic, Ac. Rents collected. Oilice\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ate-\nKony-lfl Htreol, New WCHlmlnster, B.0.\nT. J. TltAPPi\nAUCTIONEER AND APPRAISER.\nColumbia Street, New Westminster.\nAll commissions wilt receive prompt\nand careful attention. Best references\ngiven when required. inhia-to\nTURNER, 11KKTON A CO.,\nMERCHANTS. Wharf St., Vloloiia.\nAgpntK for Norlh British nnd Mercantile insurnnco Co. for Miiinlnnd. H.\nC. Breton A Co., :I3 Flnsbury Ulruus, Loudon, E. C. dtc\nMAJOR I PEARSON\nReal Estate Brokers aud\nFinancial Agents.\nAGENTS FOR\nConfederation Life Association of\nToronto.\nRoyal and Lancashire Fhe Insurance Companies*\nnnd District of Westminster; nnd choice\nLots In tbo City of Vancouver.\nPorsons wishing lo buy or -sell city or\nrural proporty should communicate with\nus.\nOffices: Bank of B.C. building, opposite\npostofflce, Westminster, aud Hustings St.,\nVancouvor. ____________ dwaplOto..\nRAND BROS.\nnfiltl- ESTATE -mOKKRS\nConveyancers) Collector**,\nAnd Insurance Agents,\nOtHcos nt\nNEW WESTMINSTER) Corner\nMcKenzie nnd Clarkson Sts.\nVANCOUVER, Cordova Street.\nLONDON, Englnrid.\nBUILDING T-OTS for salo ln nil sections\nof Vancouvor and Now Westminster City.\nFARM LANDS of suporior quality for\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0alo at Chilli whack, Port Hammond,\nLangloy, Matsqui, Sumas, Mud Bay,Ladner's Landing, Lulu Islnnd, North Arm\nand Pitt River.\nMaps and Plans exhibited nnd the fullest Information furnished at all ourofflces,\nALBERT J. HILL & CO.\nCivil Engineers, Land Surveyors & Draughtsmen.\nREAL ESTATE,\nFINANCIAL, SHIPPING A COMMISSION AGENTS\nFin* Elite A Marino Insurance.\nColumbia Bt., - On'. Colonial Hotisl\nNEW WESTAIINSTER, B. C.\nGIVE PERSONAL AND PROMPT AT*\ntention to ull professional orders and\ntender their services to residents nnd nonresidents having City or Country Properly\nto dlsposo of or desiring proQtnblo Investment.\nOur lists of eligible properties are com-\nRrchonstvo and constantly receiving nddl-\nons, and our favorable eastern connections both In Canada and tho Atlantic\nStates give us unusual facilities for business.\nSpeoial attention will bo paid to tho\npurchase nnd Inspection of Lumber for\nRhlpment to foreign ports. Tonnage (-bartered and general shipping business transacted, -\t\nac-fiiss-RS.\nMacpherson & Thomson\n01 Ontario and Marquette, Michigan,\nhave opened a\nIH THE HOIBROOK BIOCK,\nColumbia Street, 3 doors East\nof Telegraph Oflice.\nThoy have a complote nssortn.out of\novoryllilnif usually fmiinl It, it llrst-clnss\nDrug Store, comprising purs and fresh\nDRUGS. OHEMI0AL8,\nPATENT MEDIOINES,\nTOILET ARTICLES,\nENGLISH, FRENOH ANO\nAMERIOAN PERFUMES.\nPhy.lol.ns' proscriptions carefully compounded day aud night. f ^'dlin\nFltl.l.-ISAM)\nCrayon. WaterColnr A I'iinIIIIc Portraits\nnl St. I'aiii Triers.\nINSTRUCTION GIVEN IN DRAWING\nand Painting according lo the best European methods.\nMISS LINNIE LEWIS.\nStudio Cor. Royal Avonuo A Mary St.\nOrders for portraits taken nt D. Lyal A\nCo.'s nud at Studio. d-ipSlml\nTENDERS.\nTENDERS Wlf.L BE RECEIVED BY\nthe undersigned for the\nERECTION OF A MANSE\nOn Sen Island, North Arm, B. C, until\nnoon, MAY 1st. 1880. Tenders to ho for\nthe wholo and also for tho labor only.\nPlans nnd sped'bullions to bo seen at\ntho residence of F. McOlcory, Esq., Nortii\nArm* It, NEWBERY TOMS,\nSen. BuildlligCommltlcc,\nCnro I>\ M('Cr.T*EiiY, Esq.,\ndwap2'Ul Nortii Arm, U, CI.\n.Plants for Sale!\nCI XX XI-A\nATTIIK\nIn uheat Vaiui-ty, Including,\nGIHKANI1IMS. Doublo nnd Single; FU-\nr OHIAS, nil nun' variolic.! II08B8,\nDoublo PETUNIAS, MOON-FLOWEIts:\na fine collection of DAHI.IAH (niitned\nVfl.rlQlle.5i ANNUALS. 25 ctH. per do-.\nMixed nfeDDINQ PLANTS,81.00 por do!!.\nCUT FI.OWEHS lor sale.\nOrders lelt al M, Sinclair's (Oeutrol Oro-\ncory), will receive prompt attention.\ndmp-yl r. IATIUM.\nT.J.TRAPP&CO.\nGENERAL & SHELF HARDWARE,\nIncluding Tools of all kind, of the best mates] 'ross-l'llt A Haild-SawS,\nllarbc.l Wire for Fencing, end all the necc-mry Utensils for FlirmlUgl\nPulley Blocks, Snatch Blocks. Rope & Chain in all sizes; Pitch,\nTar.VOukiimtTor.,J id Plain Paper i>r Bulldlngi Palnls&OUs\nin all colors; Liquid Paint\u00C2\u00BB In all shades; Floor Paints ready touse; Grind\nStonesi Wall Paper In \u00C2\u00ABll 'cslgns; Brooms A Brushes for aU purposes;\nLubricating OilBI Traps of all descriptions, and a general assortment of\nAgricultural Implements,\n\u00C2\u00AB**r Special attention given to orders by mail.\nT.T. TEAPP-SCOO.,\ndwjly3tq Columbia Street, New Westminsteb.\nTennis & Baseball Shoes!\nAmong the New Goods Just Opened by\nGRANT & MACLURE\nColumbia Street, Westminster, B, C.\nCALL AND EXAMINE OUB STOCK EVEN IF YOU BO NOT WISH TO\n. buy. Bon Ton Polish, French Dressing, and several of the best\nkinds of UOOT-BLACKINH on hand.\nStrOrilera by mail will receive prompt attention. dwto\nNew Spring Goods!\nSpring Overcoatings, French & English\nWorsteds and Scotch Gheviotts.\nJ*. S. MANSON'is\nMERCHANT TAILOR.\nColumbln Street, -j NewWestminster.\nGLOBE HOUSE\nR\nMRS. WM. RAE\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCES THE ARRIVAL,' from\nEngland, of\nTWTmSJ^KW GOODS\nIncluding the Latest Styles in LADIES' TRIMMED and UN-\nTRIMMED HATS and BONNETS and MILLINERY\nGOODS of every description. Also\u00E2\u0080\u0094a fresh stock of BOYS'\nand MEN'S FELT and STRAW HATS, SCARF SHIRTS,\nBRACES, &c, which are specially worthy of attention ; all being\noffered at lowest possible prices.\ndecsiite Columbia St., Next Colonial Hotel.\nRAND BROS.\nReal Estate,\ninsurance and Financial\nOFFIOBS .\nNEW WESTMINSTER, 02rmn0ekren\u00C2\u00B0^e%kt8?n\nVANCOUVER,\nCORNER CORDOVA AND\nABBOTT STREETS.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094ANn-\nANDERSON BLOCK.\nGRANVILLE STREET.\nLONDON, ENG. .07 cannon\nFarming Lands /Town Lots\nOF ALL DESCRIPTIONS FOR SALE.\nBusiness Property.\nLot facing on Columbia and Front Sts.,\nln central portion ol tho oity; several\nbuildings bring good rent -822,000,00.\nLot 4, Block 7, near Lytton Squaro,\n60x132 feet, fronting on Columbia and\nFront Sts.-|6,000,00.\nCorner Lot on Columbia St,, 83x60 feet\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n84,000.00.\nAlso\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot and Building with stock of\nGoods, ono of tho bost business stands\nIn tho oity. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nImprovedResidential Property\nLot IS, Block 13; two bouses rented at\npaying flguros\u00E2\u0080\u0094S+,500.00.\nHouso and Lot on Lome St., noar Col*\nnnibla-$1250.00.\nLots 4, . A 6, Block 10; good bouse,\ncordon, Ac.; choice rcsidcucoproperty\n-16,280.00.\nCorner Lot on Columbia St.; fenced and\ncloared-SlBOO.OO.\nHouse mul Lot on Columbia St.; one of\ntbe finest residences in tho city\u00E2\u0080\u0094?7,-\n000.00.\nHouso and' Lot on Royal Avonuo, iioar\nDouglas St.-82,000.00.\nHouso and 3 Lots, corner lloyal Avenue\nand St, Patrick's St.; no hotter residence sito In tho clty-810,000.00.\n1 acre, with 7 houses, near tho Fork\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n16,000.00,\nVacant Residential Property.\nLot 1, Blook 26; corner lot on Agnes St.;\nfino residence sito-81200.00.\nLots on St! Andrew's St., nesr Queen's\nAvcnno--8500.00 each.\nLots on Montreal, Donglss and Halifax Sts., near Clinton St.; fine views\nand well 8iti.ated-S350.00, $375.00,\n8500.00.\nLot on Melbourne St., noar Clintor\n8300,00.\nLoti), Sub-Block 10; fine residence lots-\n8250.00.\nLots on Polham St., near Mary\u00E2\u0080\u0094$000.00\neach, ,\nLot on Pelham St., noar St. Andrew's;\nfino site-8500.00.\nLot on St. John's St., noar Melbourne\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n$350.00.\nLot in St. Andrew's 3qnaro-$300.00.\nLots In Blook fronting on North Am\nroad; finest chanco ln tho market fo:\nresidence or speculation\u00E2\u0080\u00948125.00 ti\n8175,00.\nLots In Subdivision of Lot 11, sub-Bloc)\n12-860.00 to $125.00.\nLot. iu Subdivision of Lot 17, sub-Block\n13-8100.00 oach.\nLot. in Westminster Addition at $15.00\nto $50.00.\ndwantltc\nPOWDER\nAbsolutely Pure.\nThin powder never varies. A mnrvoi of\npurity,Btroneth and wliolcsomenosi. Moro\neconomic*-1 titan tho ordlnm-y kinds, and\ncannot tie sold In competition with the\nmultitude of low test, ahort. weight alum\nor phosphate powders. Sold only in cans.\nRoyal Baking' Powder Co., 106 Wall St.,\nNew York. *. Sfely\nFOB SALE.\nA DRUGGIST'S STOCK OF DRUGS,\nJ__ Patent Medicines uii'l Sundries.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nApplyto HENRY V. EOMONDS.\n clJnlOio\t\nHOUSE TO RENT.\nFURNISHED OH UNFURNISHED, on\nColumbia Stmel, corner of Merrlvalc\nHtreet. Particulars on application to\ndnplSto A. J. Mi-CPU,.\nTO RENT.\nrpHE STORE FORMERLY OCCUPIED\nI by Foulds & Co., In tho Masonic and\nOd I Fellows' Blooli. New West m luster.--\nApply to WM. McC-'LIj.\n dftpgto\t\nTO RENT-\n4 CANNERY AND BAI/FRRY sHunled\non Subdivision Lut-; SAO of Lot 11,\nek 0, Apply to\nT1ENRY V. EDMONDS,\ndno-lto Land Agent.\nSECOND-HAND.\n70\nTUBES. _y, IS. DIAMETER, WA\n,\u00C2\u00AB feet long: and SMOKE STACK, SO\nled long. Applyto ^m&^\nMarch 20,1880. dmliSlto\nTENDERS.\nTENDERS WILL BE RECEIVED 11Y\ntho undersigned up to noon on Tin--.-\nday the seth l-mi.. tov the erection of u\ntwo-story frame hulldliip: on (ho corner of\nColumbia and Douglas streets.\nPlans and specifications cau be seen nt\nmy oflice.\napMtd HENRY V. EDMONDS.\nEXCURSION Q\nRATEO\nTO PARIS EXPOSITION, AM) LOW-\nest rates by all \u00C2\u00ABteumshl<> lines to\nand from Great Britain, Scandinavia and\nEurope generally.\nNow I* the time to secure berths.\nIt. F. ANDERSON, Agent.\ndapl2ml New Westminstor, B. C.\nCOUNTY COURT\nOr Sew Wt'i-lmlUriier.\nTHE NEXT SITTING OF THE ABOVE\nCourt has been postponed for one\nweek on account of llio AssWoHsflrfd will\nho held on .liny Hie Mb, instead of May\nIst.\nAll persons interested will take notice\nnnd B^sern themselves accordingly.\nW. II. FALDING,\nRegistrar of Conrt.\nNow West., April 12, \m. dwapl2td\nT. A. MUIR & CO.\nChemists & Druggists,\nQuiin'8 Hotel Blook - New Wesimikiiir\nA CHOICE LIME OP\nBrushes, Perfumes,\nCombs, SachetPowd'rs\nSoaps,\nTOILET ARTICLES.\nProscriptions and Family Recipes carefully dispensed from puro Drugs.\nNlsl.1 Bell ntlr.Hli.ncr. dnpllo\nso ao.\nReal Estate,\nINSURANCE\n AND\t\nFinancial Agents\nPurchase Sell and Lease Property,\nCollect Rents,\nMake Loans on Mortgages,\nAnd transact all Bnsinoss relating to\nReal Estate.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094AGENTS POR\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nlondon Assurance Corporation.\nConnecticut Fire Insurance Co. of\nHartford.\nLondon and Lancashire Iille Assurance Co.\nCanton Insurance Offlce, I'd, (Marine)\nOKFIOKS:\nColumbia St., New West'r.\n41 Government St., Victoria\ndwseUyl\nNOTES AND COMMENTS.\nThe last Tory Sob mot about Mr.\nGladstone is that he has never had\nhis lifo insured because no oue can\nmnke out his policy.\nWho kills all the dead letters!\nasks n cotemporary, and an exchange\nanswers, triumphantly, Mjbs Direction. That's a Miss Take,\n\"Eli,\" asked Mre. Potts, \"what is\nit that every woman wants uud no\nman ever owns I\" Instead of dutifully giving it up and giving her a\nchanco to say \"a husband,\" the\nwretch merely answered \"the earth.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ex.\nA new invention to prevent collisions at sen, consisting of a small\nplate fixed at. the Bide of the vessel,\nhas boen vory successfully tried on\ntho Thames. Electricity is the\nactive agent. The approach of\nanother vessel within two miles\ncauses a bell to sound, and nn indicating arrow shows the direction\nwhence it comes.\nIt seems funny that a big oity\nlike New York, wilh suburban cities\nalmost equal to it in population,\ncould actually be found unable to\nafford sleeping accomodation to\nvisitors. But this eventuality is\nfeared by tho New York Herald,\nwhich says that already tho hotel\naccomodation is well taxed, and\nthat when the centennial attraction\nbegins it fears that many of the\nvisitors will be obliged to .walk the\nstreets at night unablo to find beds.\nSays an exchange: High license\nis not a meaningless phrase in Boston, judging from the new scale of\nfees just adopted. Inn-keepers\nmust, after May 1st, pay ?1500\ninstead of $1000; inn licenses of\nthe second olass, which now cost\n$600, uro raised to $1200; the\nincrease in the case of common\nviotualers is from $400 to $1000,\nand' for liconses to sell beer, ule and\nwines there is an advance from $200\nto $500. In Boston the police commissioners tix the license fees, but\nthe police commissioners are, we\nbelieve, appointed by the legislature, not by the city authorities.\nAt any rate, they do not appear to\nhave the fear of saloon politics or\npoliticians before their eyes.\nThe once celebrated \"fifteen puzzle\" that \"strained\" so many great\nand sm ill intellects iu its day has\neffectually \"ceased from troubling,\"\nbut the \"aching void\" is plugged\njust now by a new invention of\n\"the enemy,\" to wit, the \"pigs in\nthe olover,\" or, for short, the \"pig\npuzzle\" The \"puzzle\" appears to\nbo very simple, of course. All that\nyou have to do is to corner four\nlittlo balls, that represent so many\nporoino quadrupeds. They aro at\nliberty in a circular box' and must\nbe coaxed into the pen in the centre.\nNothing seems easier; but many\ndistracted minds where the \"puzzle\"\nhas done its fell work tell a different\ntalc. The fiend that invented the\n\"diversion\" is making a fortune.\nWhat have the \"horrid men\" got\nto say to this! Must they plead\nguilty 1 If so they'd better save the\nexecutioner any trouble and go off\nand hang themselves : A typewriter\ngirl thus expresses herself in tho\nIndianapolis Journal: \"I get sick\nof men and their ways. They are\nmessy; they sling paper all over the\noflice, and loll about on the desks\nand chairs in such undignified attitudes. They smoke and chew. We\nhave fourteen drummers who come\ninto our office, and only one of the\nfourteen has ever had the courtesy\nto ask me if cigar-smoke is offensive,\nto me. Then, they are silly; they\ntalk such nonsense as 16-year-old\ngirls wouldn't be guilty of. It is all\nabout neckties, new hats, bullets,\ngood dinners, and so on. If you\nthink man is tho superior animal,\nyou just spend some time in a business office with assortrd sites of him\nand you will see. I am beginning\nto believe that a trashy\ndimo novel is better society than\nthe average man, and equally improving.\" \t\nA Springfield, Mass., young man,\nwishing to bo ctu fait in every thing,\nespecially whore the fair sox is con-\ncorned propounded a \"sticker\" to a\nSpringfield paper in the following\nterms: Given a young man and\nau umbrella, overtaking a young\nlady, without an umbrella, and a\ndrenehing rain falling, should the\naforesaid young man, not having\nthe pleasure of the fair drenched\none's acquaintance, offer to share\nhis water-shod with her, magnanimously hand it ovor altogether, or\nremain politely blind to tho interesting situation, and hurry on, regardless as to whether the young\nlady sink or swim! The local paper\nin question slyly evaded the point\nnt issue by advising the young man,\nif ever he found himself in such an\nunpleasant predicament,' to hunt,\nup a \"mutual friend\" and get an\nintroduction boforo offering either\nthe whole or tho half of hia limbrello\nto the distressed fair one. Other\npapers took the question up, but\nnone vontured to treat it seriously,\nand the Springfield young man is\nstiil Waiting for the answer, pending\nwhich he has thrown his umbrella\naway, to avoid complications. Perhaps some philanthropic individual\nwiil nnswer the voxod question\nthrough Tim Columiuas, and we\ncan send a marked copy to the\nSpringfield young man, before the\nnext miny season sets in,\nYANKEE COURTESY.\nHon. Oliver Mowat Insulted in tlie\nNew York State Senate by\nPresident Hnrpby.\nThe Mariposa Takes Fire at Sea\nand is Bun into Auckland and\nFiro Extinguished.\nA Prominent and Wealthy Seattle*\nite Suicides Without Any Apparent Cause.\nYANKEE COUKTEJ-Y.\nAlbany, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094In tlio Senate\ntliis morning Mr. Pearce naked for tho\nprivilege of tho lloor for tho Hon.\nOliver Mowat, Premior of Ontario, hut\nPresident Murphy objected to any\ncourtesy boing extended to any dependent of the British Crown. Mowat\nwas excluded,\nI'KEUIBB MOWAT IK8ULTBD.\nAlbany. N, Y., April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Premier\nMowat and wife, of Ontario, wero\ncompelled to leave the floor of tho\nsenato to-day on an objection of Mr.\nMurphy to their being present. Murphy i-nid he objected to the senate extending any courtesies to subjects of\nthe British crown. The premier nnd\nhis wifo thereupon left the chamber.\nThey were subsequently given the\nprivilege of tbe assembly floor.\nBICYCLES.\nWashington, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The treasury department has decided that bicycles can bo exported into Canada nnd\nreturned free of duty, providing American visitors thero claim them us personal effects.\nDESPONDENOY.\nSah Francisco, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094John\nHealy, a longshoreman, cut Iub throat\nfrom ear to ear this morning with the\nbrokon blade of an old pocket knife\nand is dying, Despondency brought\non by sickness is tho cause.\nA COllIOOS BEQUEST.\nPrrrsBDBO, Ph., April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The National Reform association, now in session here, adopted a resolution to-dny\nrequesting President Harrison to mention Christ in his state papers, especially in his thanksgiving proclamation.\nDYNAMITE FIENDS.\nTcscaboba, Nevada, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A\ndastardly attempt at assassination was\nmade upon Supt. Price, of the Belle\nIsle Mining Co., and Geo. W. Peltier,\nPrice's partner, in a general store in\nthis place about 2:30 o clock this morning, by exploding dynamite under\ntheir bedrooms. The building aud\nfurnituro were wrecked, but both gentlemen escaped with a slight shaking\nup.! Peltier was warned about two\nmonths ago that such an attempt was\nto be made upon his life, but paid no\nattention to it as no reference was\nmade to Prico at the time.\nUNACCOUNTABLE SUICIDE.\nSeattle, W. T., April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Austin\nA. Bell, a prominent Seattle man, committed suicide this morning, shooting\nhimself through tho head with a revolver, in his office in North Seattle.\nMr. Bell was the sun of W. N. Bell,\nthe pioneer of Northern Seattle; waa\nwealthy and owned somo very valuable\nreal estate. No oause oan bo assigned\nfor the act as his financial affairs nre\niu a very flourishing condition and his\ndomestic relations wero the happiest.\nA coroner's inquest will bo held this\nafternoon.\nTHBMABirOSA FIIIE.\nSan Fbncisco, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094J. D.\nSpreckels, owner of the steamer Mini*\n{msn, received a despatch from Auckland this morning stating that the\nsteamer sailed from there at 4\no'clock p.m. Monday with a cargo of\nflax whioh took fire from spontaneous\ncombustion. Tho vessel immediately\nput back and arrived at Auckland nt 4\na.m. to-day. The firo wns confined to\nthe cargo. The steamer was uninjured. No one was hurt and the Mariposa discharged her cargo and Bailed\nat 8 p. m.\nUNDER PROTECTION.\nSan Francisco, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho cor-\noner'i jury in the case of Calvin T.\nLewis, the youim bar tendor who shot\nbnd killed John Harrington, a ward\npolitician, on Monday afternoon, has\nrendered a verdiot that the shooting\nwas done under strong provocation by\nthe deceased.\nMURDEROUS OLAIM JI/MFEltH.\nFort Reno, Indian Territory, April\n24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A settlor named Goodwiu arrivud\nhere from Oklahoma nnd reported . to\nthe post commander that he and three\nothers had boen fired upon by a party\nof twelve Texas (iluim jumpers. Goodwin wub tin* only one who escaped.\nTho other three wuro killed. A detachment of troops linn been sent to\nthe scene to iu.-ostig-ilc, and arro&t the\nguilty parties.\nSEARLE IS 1IKADY.\nSydney. N. S. W., April24.-Senile\nthe oarsman, hns deposited n forfeit\nfor matches with O'Connor and Teemer,\nfor tho championship of the world.\nTHE HAIUl'OSA ON FIRE.\nAuckland, N. Z , April 24 \u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho\nU. S. mail 3t-.-i-.tm-r Mmipoaa which\nsailed from this port last Monday for\nSan Francisco, returned to-day with a\nSre iu hoi hold. Tho flarucs were extinguished after hard work and with\nsome damage to cargo. Thi mails\nwere found to be untouched. The\nsteamer will Bail again to-night for hor\ndestination.\nFOULLY MUBDBRSD.\nGuthrie, Kans., April 23.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Three\nman who took claims yesterday wero\nfoully murdered by claim jumpers.\nThe names of the assailants nnd victims are not learned. A vigilance\ncommittee it scouring the territory in\nsearch of the miscreant*-, who will be\nsummarily dealt with if caught.\nBUN OVER AND KILLED.\nSan Francisco, April 23.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs.'\nBridget Needham, aged about 60\nyoars, alighted from a cable car this\nmorning and whilo crossing tho Btreet\nwas knooked down by a horse car and\nkilled. One of the wheels almost\nsevered the woman's head from hor\nbody.\nlonsdale's Tiiir.\nSan Francisco, April 23.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lord\nLonsdale whon asked by a reporter\nwhat sort of a trip ho had, Enid: \"Well,\nalthough I got pretty high up\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLat. 75\u00E2\u0080\u00941 was disappointed. I cxpoct-\ned to find plenty of game, and hardly\nfound anything. The journey was\nsomewhat dangerous, and our party\nsuit'erud some privations, but it was\nnothing more than any ordinary man\nof good stamina could have accomplished. I will leave shortly for Winnipeg,\nthonco to New York, from where I\nwill Bail for Liverpool.\"\nNO TROUBLE FEARED.\nWashinoton, April 23.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Acting-Adjutant Kelton lato this afternoon received the following despatch, bearing\non tho situation in Oklahoma, fr-jra\nMajor-General Crook, dated Chicago,\nApril 22: \"Assistant Adjutant-General, Department Missouri, telegraphs\nunder dato of the 21at that he ia just\nin ruceipt of a despatch from General\nMorritt at Oklahoma in which ho says:\n\"Ho will probably need no more troops\nforwarded; that he is sure a show of\nfnicu will prevent trouble, and that\ntho newspaper accounts are probably\nexaggerated, and will continue to bo\nso. Ho reports much confusion on\nthe line of the railroad, but he has cs-\ntibltshed a line of couriers between\nOklahoma station and Fort Keno, bo\nthat hereafter communication can be\nhad with certainty and fair rapidity.\n-,. SUPPLEMENTARY ESTIMATES.\nOttawa, April 23.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho supplementary estimates till June of next year\nwore brought down to-day. The total\namount is $1,313,757. The principal\nitems aro expenses in connection with\nthe Electoral Franchise Act of 8260,-\n000 ; keel blocks for tho Esquimalt\ndock, $8,000; British Columbia penitentiary, 816,000; re-vote for tho Viotoria military building, $21,250 ; improvement nf buildings at Nanaimo,,\n91,000 ; removal of Nicol rock, $5,000;\nFraser River, \u00C2\u00A710,000; Victoria- harbor, complete removal of boulder shoal,\n$0,000 ; Columbia River, improvements between Revelstoke and Arrow\nLako, $0,000; Skeena River, removal\nof snag, etc., $2,500 ; Bonilla Point,\ncable, $4,000 ; steam communication\nNew Weatminsterand Viotoria, $7.-\n500 j wharf at Viotoria, $2,000 ; launch\nfor the Indian Department, British\nColumbia, $5,000 ; ra-vote sums granted for erection of the Indian Industrial\nSchools, Kamloops, Kootenay ond on\nKuper Island, $7,600 ; Metlakahtla Industrial School, $3,170 ; Canadian Pacifio mail servico in British Columbia,\n$16,200.\nDOMINION PARLIAMENT.\nOttawa, April 22.\u00E2\u0080\u0094In the house of\ncommons to-day Sir Hector Langevin\ntold Mr. Wilson (Elgin) thac it was\nnot the intention of the government to\nintroduce legislation thia session to\ncarry into effect tho recommendations\nof the labor commission.\nSir Adolpho Caron, in reply to Mr.\nHolton, said that no arrangement had\nbeen concluded between the Imperial\nauthorities and the Canadian government respecting the defence of the\ncoast of British Columbia. The negotiations had been in progress for four\nyears.\nThe minister of customs Baid that\nthe government had received representations from the Imperial authorities\nrespecting the seizuro of the United\nStates ship Bridgowater ut Shelburne,\nN. S., two years ago. The owner,\nCaptain Allen, asked for compensation to the extent of $20,303.\nTho manufactured goods exported\nfrum Canada to Australia from 1st\nJuly, 1888, to 1st January last were\nvalued at $46,530.\nThe minister of finance movod the\nadoption of the report of the committoe of the whole of the resolution to\nprovide for a subsidy for a fortnightly\nservice between British Columbia, the\nAustralian colonies and New Zealand.\nMr. Laurier moved as an amendment\nthat the house while favoring closer\ntrade relations considered the government had failed to show that the service\nwould be csmmonsurate with the proposed expenditure. The amendment\nwas defeated; yeas 55, nays 77.\nOn the resolution for tho Japan service, Mr. Davies moved as an amendment that the house does not ratify\nthe vote for a subsidy until the correspondence has been brought down.\nAlso that Victoria or Esquimalt should\nbe made a calling place. Mr. Mara\nsnid that Mr, Davies was trying to\nplaco tho British Columbia members\nin a false position. The matter was,\nin fact, not one of jealously between\nVictoria and Vancouver. Tho question nt issue was not a provincial or a\nDominion one, but an Imperial and a\nDominion one. If England gave the\nmajor portion of the subsidy Bhe ought\nto havo the tay in the matter, Sho\nwaa desirous of diverting the eastern\ntrade from its old channels to the\nCanadian route. The arrangement\nshould not bu jeopardised by any conditions. Mr. Davies then failing to\nentrap tho British Columbia members\ndid not call for a division. The speech\nof Mr. Mara made a good impression.\nTho report was adopted. The report\nregarding the Atlantic service was also\nadopted after two divisions,\nEliINBUBQH l'EOl-I.E PROTEST.\nEuiNBURfiH, April 22.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Three popular meetings were held here to-day,\nat each of which a res-ilution was passed protesting against tho presentation\nof the freedom of tho city to Parnell.\nVICTORIA NEWS.\nThe Idnlio Arrives at Victoria aad Buns\non a Bock. A Fashionable Wed-Unff.\nSpecial to tbo Columbian.\nVictoria, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Idaho arrived this aftornoon on her initial trip\nof the now schedulo from Portland to\nall northern ports on the Island aud\nmainland,\nTho str. North Pacific has boen repaired and will leavo for Puget Sound\nin the morning.\nA fashionable wedding was celebrated this aftornoon. The contracting\nSartios wero W. ttidgeway Wilson and\nliss J en ns.\nNothing furthor has boon heard cf\ntho man who robbed Evans of Nanaimo.\nThe Mexico sailed for San Francisco\nthis afternoon with a full cargo.\nThe str. Idaho while coming into\nport ran on a rock at the entrance to\nthe harbor She went on at high tido,\nthe tido is uow falling and the stoamer\nis fast. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nAn immense anti-Jesuit mass meeting was hold at Toronto Monday night\nto approro of tho thirteen members\nwho voted for tho disallowance of the\nJesuits' Estate bill. In hit speech\nDnlton McCarthy, Q.C., M.P., expressed tho opinion that tho government of Sir John A. Macdonald had\nbeen long enough in power. Thit expression wns recoived with hearty approbation.\nSAFE IN ENGLAND.\nRoulangci-and Party Reach England and are Enthusiastically Received.\nThe S.S. City of Paris Hakes the\nSecond Fastest Trip Across\nthe Atlantic.\nThe Sentence on Ur. Condon. M. P.,\nUnder the Crimes Act la\nConfirmed.\nSAFE IN ENGUND.\nLondon, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The train from\nDover bearing Gen, Boulanger. has ar*\nrivod at Waterloo station.\nhmallby's cable.\nLondon, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The coming of\nGen. Boulanger does certainly create\ntome interest if not general enthusiasm\nin London. Most of the papers have\nlong articles un the expected event,\nand if they do not greet him with enthusiasm they treat him as nn important personage. Somo of thein nre\neven prepared to interview him.\nOOLD SEEKER WON.\nLondon, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094This is the second day of the Epsom spring meeting.\nTho Suburban handicap race tor 100\nsovereigns each, entry with a 1000\nsovereigns added, about a milo and a\nquarter, was won by Leybourrie's four\nyear old \"Goldseeker;''Lord Dudley's\n'-Fullerton,\" Becond ; Sir \"K. J&rdhie's\n\"AViseman,\" third.\nCHEERED BOULANOEB.\nLondon, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gen, Boulanger and Count Dillon, and several\nothers ef the party accompanying\nthem, have taken rooms at the Hotel\nBristol, Thore was a large gathering\nof the general's friends in front of the\nhotel, who heartily cheered bim.\nCHEEKED AT DOVEB.\nLondon, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Gen. Boulanger arrived at Dover to day on the\nmail steamer from Ostend. A large\ncrowd was gathered at the pier and\ncheered the general as he stepped on\nshore and passed into the train for\nLondon.\nNO CHEERS AT BRUSSELS.\nBrussels, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094General Boulanger, Count Dillon and six generals,\nhis sympathizers, left at seven o'clock\nthis morning for Ostend, where they\ntook the steamer for England. The\nparty looked gloomy and dejected.\nVery few people gathered, and there\nwere no cheers given, nor any enthusiasm manifested by the few who were\nat the station. The party tailed from\nOstend at 0 o'clock. About 200 people\nwitnessed the general's departure, but\nno cheers were givon. Rochefort remained at Brussels, but it is reported he\nmay be expected to follow shortly.\nGETS A FREE BIDE.\nDoveb, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Boulanger nnd\ncompanions arrived here after a rough\npassage across the channel, during\nwhich he was quite seasick. Numerous friends of Boulanger met. them\nand gfivn them a cordial welcome to\nEtiglaud. A polico commissary from\nCalais watched the party in the interest of Franco, and will report to his\ngovernment every movo tbe general\nmakes. The party proceeded to London in a special train put at Boulanger's service by tho South Eastern\nRailway Co.\nSECOND BEST,\nQuebnstown, April 24.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The s. s.\nCity of Paris arrived this morning\nfrom New York. Time of passage 6\ndays 3 hours and 43 minutes, the tecond best time on record.\nSENTENCED CONFIRMED.\nDublin, April 24. \u00E2\u0080\u0094The sentence of\nMr, Condon M, P., under the crimes\nact, and against whioh he appealed,\nhat been confirmed by the upper court.\nTHE GERMANS LICKED.\nBerlin, April 23.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The North German Gazette publishes tho report of\nan engagement botween tbe orew of the\nGerman gunboat Byane and a party\nof natives of tho Cameroons. The vessel landed a party of 75 officers and\nmen and a hot fight ensued, resulting\nin tlie retreat of the Germans. One\ntailor was killed and two officers\nwounded.\nNEGOTIATIONS STOPPED.\nLondon, April 23.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The negotiations for a settlement of the troubles\nof tho tenants on the estate of Capt.\nVandeleur upon tbe terms proposed\nby Mr. Thomas W. Ruuell, M.P. for\nSouth Tyrone, which promited a\nspeedy and satisfactory ending, bave\nbeen suddenly stopped by the obstinacy of one of tho holders, a Mn.\nDixon. This women is mother ,of \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 au\nIrish-American who returned from the\nUnited States in February and got\npossession of a farm from which the\nformer tenant had been ejected. Dixon installed his mother in ponenton\nof the fnrm and went back to America.\nTho mother, who was evicted from the\nsame farm in 1800, refuses to accept\nthe terms suggettod by Mr. Russell,\nor, indeed, any other than her own\nand the probabilities nre that the hostilities between Capt. Vandeleur and\nhis tenants will be speedily resumed.\nTUBN ABOUT.\nLondon, April 22. -At the state\nluncheon whioh took placo at the Dublin Mansion House yesterday, Archbishop Walth expressed the hope thit\nthe causes whioh led to the abrogation\nof the former custom of electing Catholic and Protestant Lord Mayors alternately would toon be removed and\nthat the reinstated custom would thereafter be strictly observed.\nHEAVY FINE AND IMPBISONMENT,\nLondon, April 22.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The court of appeals at Rome has confirmed tho sentence imposed on Deputy Ghiani\nMameli, resulting from hit conviction\nof fraudulent practices whilst director\nof thoBankofCagialary. Thetentenoe\nis that the deputy- be confined in prison\nfor five years ana compelled to pay a\nfine of 2,000,000 lire.\nTHE BRITISH VOLUNTEERS.\nLondon, April 22.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A large number\nof Belgians, including many members\nof tho Garde Oivique, in full uniform,\nhave arrived at Dovor to witness the\nmanoeuvres of the volunteers. Rawly,\nif ever beforo. have thete military\nevolutions excited so muoh interest\nabroad, as attested by the steady influx\nof foreign visitors, aud the occasion\nwill therefore bo one of unusual brilliancy.\nChildren Cryfor PttchertCastorla\nWl i THE DAILY COLUMBIAN\nPOBLISBID\nEvery ABonmon except Btudsy,\nBY TBI\nX_W-_T2r.eUiry within a wook from\ndate, nnd nny \u00E2\u0096\u00A0nunc*''Monti a* to jirlzn lint\nshould to Ui within the name period,\nT. K. PEARSON,\nBurma ry.\nMW West,, April 22, MN. dwnp23wl\nODD FELLOWS' HALL\nFRIDAY, -\"-Hll APBIL.\nA GRAND MUSICAL EVENT\nIE! TAMOTJS\nMendelssohn (jniatstts\nFor 40 years before the Public\nComposed ol tho following Eminent\nArtists:\nHerr WILLIAM OHLIOKR, Bolo Violin\nConcert Master.\nMr, MANASSA ADLER, Solo Violin,\nMr. THOMAS RYAN, Solo Clsrlnette ind\nViola.\nHerr FRITZ SCHLACIITER, Viol, and\nVioloncello.\nHerr ANTON IIF.KKINO, Solo Violoncellist to lils Majesty llie Klin or Holland, and\nMISS AUOK RYAN,\nPrima Donna Soprano.\nReserved Seat. 11.00. on sale at D. Lyal's.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2p\u00C2\u00BBtd\nDOUGLAS STREET\nBAKERY\nFoot ok Dooolak Stukct, Nrar\nCoi.UMWA BTRKKT.\nJ. FERGUSON, PROPRIETOR\nl-jinF-MI BREAD, CAKES, PASTRY,\nE Confectionery i etc., eto.\nHotel nnd Ileitnnrant trade solicited.\nAll ordcrn promptly attended to and\ndelivered to any part of the city. dinti28y\nMerchant Tailors\nHave Just Received an Immense Stock\nof Imported\nTweeds, Worsteds,\nFAHCY MITINC3, FANCYPAKTINCS AND\n\"Which have never been equalled In\nthe Cily aud which they are\nprepared to make up\nAT rRICEtt THAT Witt lOTNEIEVEN\nTUB EASTERN TAIMRB\nTo Compote With.\nStyle, Fit and Workmanship\nGUARANTEED.\nSSr Call anil Inspect Goods.-*.\nOolumbia St.,\nOne Door West of Dickinson's Bntfiher\nShop, *fewWMl*alnsler.B.C.\ndmhlyl\nTO BE SOLD\nPRIOE AND TERM8 ON APPLICATION.\nLot 6, Kk 34, 214^x132.\nLot~3,Blk 34,132x132.\n[OOBNBK.l\nLot 2, Blk 34,82^x132,\nWith 2-storey Residence, Coach House and Cottage Grounds\nnicely laid out. Fruit Trees, never-failing Spring of Pure\nWater and magnificent view.\nUStfThis Property faces on Royal Avenue, Merrivate and St,\nPatrick's Sts., and is in the Bon-ton part of the City.\nAtplv DIRECT to \t\ndiimj'0 Jt*I.Q>X*LCx\nCO\nS, i\nPL. j\n(*-. *\nI-\n\"I\n** fl\ncm \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nP\nPQ\nHAVE 3ST\u00C2\u00A9 -___\nGet Our Prices and See the Goods. One Car of these Plows to\nArrive about the 20th inst.\nF. C. Strickland & Co.\nWEBSTER'S BUILDING,\nFRONT STREET, WESTMINSTER.\ndwno2tc\nBRITISH COLUMBIA 1EAT MEET,\nColnmbla Street, New Westminster.\nVAN VOLKENBURQH BROS.\nWholesale and Retail Butchers.\nHEAT PURVEYORS IN GENERAL. FRESH ANV CORNED\nMEATS ALWAYS ON HAND.\nfar-Special lines quoted for tlie shipping trade, Family ordors striotly attended\nto. Hotels villi find It to tbelr Interest to plaoe their orders with the abovo firm.\nMOTHER CARLOAD\nJust Received, Direct from Hamilton.\nTHIS MAKES TWO SINCE JANUARY.\nIntending Buyers should make a note\nof this, as it goes to show that we sell\nmore Stoves than any two Houses in the .]\nProvince. Our superior line of Stoves and\nlow prices do the business.\nE. S. Scoullar & Go.\ndwnolyl\nTHIS SPACE BELONGS TO\nH. T. READ & CO.,\nHARDWARE MERCHANTS.\nThe NEW WESTMINSTER\nFront St., New Westminster-, B. C.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2MA.KTXJ'B'A.O-riT'RBI'aS OP\nSTEAM ENGINES, SAW MILL, FISH CANNERY,\nACiltll l l/IHI-AL & ALL HINDS OF MACHINERY.\nBrass and lion Castings made to Order.\nREPAIRING DONE WITH NEATNESS AND DISPATCH.\nP. 8.--All orders from the upper country promptly attended to.\ndwnolmO\nChas. McDONOUGH,\nFront Street, New Westminster.\nI\nEXTRA FAMILY BLANKETS,\nFLANNELS, WORSTEDS!\nKEADV-MADE CLOTHING.\nEE3P The only House on the Mainland which keeps the Manufactures of the New Westminster Woolen Mills. Patronize Home\nIndustry. dmh30tc\nDouglas & Deighton,\nMANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS OF\nHARNESS, SADDLES and BRIDLES\n\u00C2\u00A5HIP8,\nSADDLEWARE, ETC,\nColonial Block,\nColumbia Street, New Westminster, B. C.\nSEND IN YOUR ORDERS. ALL WORK Ob- THE BEST MATERIAL AND \\nWORKMANSHIP. PRICES LOW.\niiolilwly\nROYAL CITY\ning lis Company, U.\\nRICHARD 8TREET, NEWWESTMINSTER.\nMANUFACTURERS AND.DEALERS IN\nShingles, Shakes, Laths, Pickets,\nSALMON BOXES. NET FLOATS, TRAYS,;\nJLND ALL BX2STX.B OB\nWood Furnishing for Canneries.\nDoors. Frames. Windows,\nMoulding*. Balusters.\nBlinds. Brackets,\nRailings, Newels.\nPLAIN AND FANCY AND ALL KINDS OF TURNED WORK.\nnolMwly PITCAIRN .ISLANDERS.\nCurious Besults Arising from a Meeting on\nit. Orltlrfi Vessel,\nThe ship Bounty, December 23,1787. sailed\nfrom Spithead, Eng., bound for the South\n, Ben. To many of tho. present generation,\nsaya tho New York Presn the story of tbe\nmutiny that foUowert is* vague tradition;\nand that tho lineal $8ccad*nts of the mutineers aronowliving, erltbelybythemaolveB,\nen an island in the Pacific ocean very few\nhave any knowledge. Tlio island Is known\nas Pitcairn's Island. Tho'ship was under a\ncommission from tho British Admiralty to\nvisit tho Society and other islands and collect a number, of bread-fruit plants, which\nwere then to he taken to certain of the\nBritish West Indies for the purpose of\nstocking thoso Islands. Tho vessel started\non hor homeward voyage with Lieutenant\nBligh in command. He was of an unusually\noverbearing and insulting disposition. He\naccused Fletcher Christian, tho mate, ol\nhaving stolen somo cocoanuts which ho\nhad bought at Otaheito, ono of tho islands\nthey had visited. 'Christian determined to\nget away from tho ship, and was informed\nby the boatswain tbat tho erew woro ready\nto mutiny. Ho surprised the Captain in hia\nberth, mado a prisoner of him, and took\npossession of the ship. Tbo captain and\neighteen of his officers and men woro then\nsot adrift in an open boat.\nChristian, with-tho twenty-four others\nwho had remained in tho ship, steered for\ntho Society Islands, and sixteen of them\nfinally decided to remain at Otaheite, while\nChristian and. tho rest, taking with them\ntwolvo Othahcltean women and seven men,\nsot sail in tho ship for any placo that chance\nmight tako thom. ... '\nNothing*wae hear-f oLCbrUian and those\nwho' bad gono on tho Bounty for twenty\nyears. At tho ond of that timo an American\nBhip, happening to touch at Eitcairn'a\nIaland, found there an Englishman called\nAlexander Smith (thla name was afterward\nchanged to John Adams), who said ho was\nthe sole survivor of those who hod sailed on\nthe Bounty.\nChristian, thinking tbe island a place\nwhero there would bo little chance of their\nbeing discovered, bad landed there and\nburned tho ship. Things went smoothly\nfor two years, when one of tbo men, having\nlost his wife, insisted on taking one of the\nOtaheiteaii men's. The OtahoiteanB rebelled\nand killed three of tbo whites. The rest of\ntho whites, with tho aid of tho women, then\nkilled all the Otaheitean men. Only four\nmon wore now left on tho island. One of\nthose succeeded In making an intoxicating\nliquor nnd drank himself to death, another\nono wub executed by his companions, and a\nthird died of consumption. \"\nAdams, now an old man, became at last\nimpressed with tho responsibility resting\nupon him of teaching the descendants of\nhimself and his companions tho truth of\nthe Biblo. Tho result was a model community. In 1830 the inhabitants moved to\nNorfolk Island, but in 1850 a part of them\nreturned to Pitcairn. This colony has sinco\nbeen remarkable for tbe purity in which it\nhas retained the principles inculcated hy\nthe patriarchal Adams.\nBetween the years I860 and 1880 a number of ships called at the island. In 1888\nthe American ship Harry Mills visited the\nplace, and one of the inhabitants named\nMcCoy accompanied tho ship to Liverpool.\nIn the samo year another American ship,\ntho Wandering Jew, stopped at tho island,\nnnd on leaving Captain Tapley, tho commander, took with him another ono of tho\ninhabitants. This was Earnest Heywood\nChristian, tbe great grandson of Fletcher\nChristian. Until his arrival at Hull, Eng.,\nEarnest Christian hod never seen a houso,\na horso or any other quadruped. Hir delight and astonishment when ho first saw\na steam engine and train wero unbounded.\nTho'carcor of McCoy, wbo preceded Wm to\nEngland, had not been wholly of an agreeable character. Upon his. arrival in London\naome unscrupulous person, taking advantage of hia utter ignorance of the ways of\ntho world, induced him to hold a sorica of\n\"rccoptions\" at a kind of variety show.\nWhen ho found into what ho had beon entrapped McCoy was very much disgusted,\nand blamed the captain of tho Harry Milla\nfor not having told him the character of the\nplace.\nAs soon as Christian arrived in Hull McCoy wrote to him, beseeching him \"for\nGod's aalto\" uot to come to London, ''for,''\nho snid, \"it Is hell.\" On his arrival Christian waa treated with the greatest kindness, and when he left England took with\nhim many valuable presents for tho Uland-\nOl'B.\nChristian spent threo years on the ship,\nvisiting San Francisco and going completely around tho world beforo ho roturned to\nhis island home. On her Becond visit to\nPitcairn Mrs. Tapely had with her a young\nEnglish girl seventeen years old. She was\ntho youngest person who had over visited\ntho island, and great was tho Interest and\nadmiration Bhe excited among tho girls of\nhor own age, One in particular, Miss Emily\nMcCoy, kept closo to her all tho time, asking her all manner of questions about tho\n'outsido world.\n\" You aro tho flrst girl of my own ago\noutsido of this Island tbat I have ovor Been,\"\nsho said. \"Tell mo nil you can. What do\nhorse-ears look liko? And tho churches-\ndo you have people enough to fill them?\"\nAmong the island women who visited tho\nBhip on this occasion was Miss Rosalind\nYoung, one of the most attractive and enterprising on tho island. Bho was at this\ntime about twenty-three years old, had never had a shoe on her foot, swam like a fish,\nplayed the organ in the littlo island church,\nassisted her father In teaching the -'village\nschool,\" and was the leader in every thing\namong the women on the island. Bhe has\nwritten an account of the island for tho\nCentury, and she told Mrs. Tapley that she\nnevor had an Idle moment.\nThe islanders aro still noted for their\nstrict religious conduct, grace being said\nbefore and after eaoh meal, aad swearing\nor any thing of a similar character being\nabsolutely unknown,\nWbon any dispute arises among them the\nBOttloment of it is laid over till the next arrival of a man-of-war, when it is referred to\nthe captain, and bis decision Is final,\nPUTTING ON GLOVES.\nNever Do Ik When Yonr Hands Are Warm\nor Damp.\nA great deal depends on tho flrst putting\non of gloves, says tbo Dry-Goods Chronicle.\nHavo tho hands perfectly clean, dry aud\ncool, and nover put on now gloves whilo the\nhands aro warm or damp. Whero a person\nis troubled with moist hands It Ib woll to\npowder thein beforo trying on tho gloves;\nbut, tn most cases, If the hands are dry and\ncool, this la not needed. First work on the\nlingers, keeping tho thumb outsido of- the\nglovo and the wriBt of the glovo turned\nbook.' When tho Angers aro ia smoothly\nput in tho thumb and work tho glovo on\nvery carefully, thou, placing the elbow on\ntho knoe, work on the hand.. When this It\n^ dono, smooth down tho wrist and button tho\nsecond button first, then tbo third, and so\non to tho ond. Then smoothdown tho whole\nglovo and fasten the flrat button. Fastening tho flrst button last when putting oh a\nglovo for the first timo makes a good deal of\ndifforonco in tho fit, although it may seem\nbut a very Uttle thing. It dooa not strain\ntho part of the glovo that Is tho easiest to\nstrnln at first, and prevents tho enlarging\nof the button-holo, either of which Ib euro\nto tako place If you begin at the first button\nto fasten tho glovo.\nWhen removing gloves nevor begin at tho\ntips of tho fingers to pull thom 6ff, hut turn\nbaok tho wrist and pull off carefully, which\nwill, of courso, necessitate tbelr being wrong\nsido out. Turn them right sido out, turn tho\nthumb ln, smooth thom out lengthwise tn as\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 near as posslbto tho shapo they would be tf\non the hands, and place away with a strip of\nwhite canton flannel between if tho gloves\nnro light, but It dark colored tho flannel may\nbo omitted. Never roll gloves into each\nother in a wad, for thoy will never look as\nwell aftor, Thero Is always somo moisture\nIn them from the hands; consequently, when\nrolled up, this moisture has no chanco of\ndrying,, and must work into tho gloves,\nmaking them hard and stiff, and of very little uso after, as far as looks or fit nro con-\ni-uniud. A Sinn-alar Florida Tree*\nA citton of Buitts, Fla,, Is said to have a\ncombination trco ln hll garden. It consists\nof a lemon, peach, pear, grape fruit, persimmon, orange and guava, all grafted on\nWMWWijaiMwm.\nw\nANYONE BEFORE PURCHASING I\nBuggieg, Carriages, Wagons\nor MiwtoiM,\n1LI, BAVE CONSIMSBABLE MON-\ney In calling at the Show-rooms ol\nI. J. J. FISHER ft CO.,\nSU 8TOBE STKK-.T, - VICTOBIA, B. C.\nWhero ft complete Block ol Vehicles are\nkept. MA. A fresh car-load expected In a\nlew!days direct Iron, their celebrated\nmtinufnctory st Kincardine, Om.\nEvory Rig Buainuleed. dmliMinl\nThe Undersigned Keeps Constantly\non Hand n\nW. K. DICKINSON,\n0. P.N. WHARF, - WESTMINSTER.\ndm!i2Ste\n-lluwii fso\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB'-\u00C2\u00BB io VisTCRttl\nSESetti't CAT-vdoGUE\n^illustrated) of Plants; Flower and Vegetable Seeds, Cut\nFlowers, &c. Valuable imported\nJapanese Lilies given away to\ncustomers this year.\nG. A. McTAVISH,\ndmllSOmS VICTORIA, B. 0.\nIT IS AN UNDENIABLE FACT THAT\nOAHTBB'a'\nTemple of Music\nIs the Place to Buy First-Class\nPIANOS \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00C2\u00BB ORGANS\nAt sueh Prices and Terms us will Suit\nAny Reasonable Buyer.\nFor prices and terms, apply to OAR*\nTRR'S TEMPLE OF MUSIC,\nVancouver, B. C.\n2S0Ha.llngsSI. West. .\u00E2\u0080\u009Edap]0lo\nx-*mX_txoxt,\nDRESSMAKING\nAt MISS JENNINGS',\n(Latk of England)\nCornor of Church and Columbia Street**.\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0trSatlsfactlon unit nm tied. dwfe7tc\nDress-Makingt\nMisses McDOUGALL\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nNew Westminster, B. C.\nS9T Satisfaction guaranteed. daplSU-\nVANCOUVER CITY\nFoundrylMachineWorks\nrpHE\n... PROPRIETORS OF THESE\n^ works linve much pleasure in notify*\ning tlielr friends and tlio publio lliai lliey\naro now prepared to receive and promptly\nexecute any orders for work In llielr line\nwith whleh they may be favored.\nA. McKELVIE,\nMechanical Manager.\nVuneonver, BC, 8th May, 1888.\ndwmyr2to\t\nPORT HAMMOND\nNURSERY\nFruit Trees, - \" '\nornamental Trees,\nSiuall Fruits,\nAnd GARDEN HTpCK on hnnd In (treat\nvariety. , . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nEverything flrst-class and furnished in\ngood shape. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nTM. Bend 15 eta. tor valuable 80*page|De\u00C2\u00AB\nicrlptive Catalogue with 6 beautiful colored plates. Price Lists Bent free,\nG. W. HENRY,\ndwdelGto Port Hammond, B. 0.\nAUSTIN'S HAY MARKET\nFor Hay, Straw, Wheat, Bran, Shorts,\nOil Cake, -to,\nAUSTIN'S STORE\nFor Groceries, Hardware, Hope, Platform Scales, kc\nAUSTIN'S CELLAR\nFor Choice Potatoes, Carrots, Turnips,\nOnions, kc.\nAUSTIN'S STABLE\nFor Good Teams and Sober Teamsters,\nAUSTIN'S PRINCIPLES!\nSquare Dealing and Total Abstinence.\nJUST RECEIVED I\nA OREAT VARIETY OF\nr. H A1 RS\nFANCY and USEFUL; '\nBedroom Suites, Etc\nTO BE SOLD CHEAP.\nCALL AND GET PRICES.\nTHE BEST STOCK OF HA$Y BUGGIES\non tho way ever ordered from New\n\"Westminster.\nM. Cut petit Unreasonable rates.\ndapSto\nC. E. WOODS\nUnd Suiviy-s.\nA. 0. GAMBLE\nH-TASY I.UIO,\nWoods, Tnnur ft BamUs\nLAND SURVEYORS,\n^Eiltit^l&Bwaaoe, M&oi&lAgdtU\nAND CbNVfcYAKCERS.\nFIRB.-Tlie Western of Toronto.Tlie -\"Etna, The Oity of London, and Tlie Hurt-\nford.\nMI'R.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tbe New York Lifo Insurance Co.\nACCIDENT-The Travellers'of Hartford\nLand Surveying In all Its branches oo\ncurately and promptly carried out,\nOUT and 1-abarbBik Lands tor Snle.\nWe oan show a complete Hit of desirable\nlocalities.\nFuming Landi. Improved i\nproved, throughout the dlalrlot.\nMining and nther Stock be\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0old.\nHoney to Loan ou flrst mortgage at\nlow ratei.\t\nTelbpiionk Cam. Mo. 83.\nP. 0. Dbawkb w.\nWOODS, TUBNSjb GAMBLE,\nOffice, Eumd-i Buk, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Ckumiia Stkit\nnbw westminster.\nroved and unlm*\nk bought and\nITOTIOB\nHENRY V JEDMONDS\nNOTARY PUBLIC,\nCONVEYANCER, REAL ESTATE\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094AND- | (\nINSUHANCE AGE-NT\nHAS REMOVED\nWm. L Daskwoodnlou\nFRESH CALIFORNIA AND LOCAL\nFruits Septals\nALWAYS) ON HAND.\ntJOODS DELIVERED FREE.\n.ijeaiu-\nCorbett & Kennedy,\nMAKOFAOTUItEHS OV\nTIN, COPPER & SHEET-IRON\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2WARE.\nV ll-STl li -. III.OIK (UP-STAIHR),\nFrost Street, - New Westminster,\nII AVING JUST OI-ENED IN THE\nXI abovi* line, we resni-ei fully solicit a\nfhnre of tlio trade, anil trust by careful\nattention io orders and moderate charges\nto merit tbo same. Experienced workmen; sutl-farlloii gnimmieed.\nEstimate*furnished forGulvnnis-ed Iron\nCornice, I-.o-.llmr, Plumbing, Gai-flltlng,\nSteam anil Hot Water Heating, Ac.\nM\" Entrance (o premise-- on Mnry St.,\nIn rear of Bank of B. C. dwinhlltc\nWanted, ShoManilPiipilB.\nTUTR. T. R. DUNCAN WISHES TO IN-\nM lonn tlie Pultllo of New Westminster\n(lint he In now prepared lo elve lessons In\nHliorl-liimd In tlio latest and bi'St systems.\nA complote course guaranteed In Inree\nmontlis. ... -,\nVI.Hu .1,. UM-kt. The teaching ol\nchildren on Hits Instrument a speclaltj.\nAddress, Drawer O, City, New Westminster. daplOto.\nW. BREDEMEYER, DR. PH.\n(Lale Partner of John McVioker)\nMINING ENGINEER. U.B. A PROVINCIAL SURVEYOR, A A8SAYEB. t\nMauosio Temple Blook, Vancouver;\nBr: t. Col.\nHarReliable reports- underground surveys mid maps of mines executed at low\nrates. Assays made on aU kinds of minerals, gold and sliver bars. Thirtyyean'\nexperience in mining In Asia, Europe\nand United Statea of America. Speaks\nton languages, Assays from a distance\npromptly attended to. Address Vancouver, B.0. \nleaet Blver al Maple Mdgr.\nplans and specifications can be seen and\nforms for tender obtained at the Post Offloe, Fort Haney, and at tho office of tho\nunderslirned.\na WARWICK,\nGov't Agent,\nNew Westminster, April 10,1880,\naplBdwtd\nSPRING ASSIZES\nSheriff's Notice.\nXTOTICE IH HEREBY GIVEN THAT\nJ3i all Coroners, Keepers of Gaols nnd\nHouses of Corrci'tlon In my Bailiwick who\nmny havo business thereat, aro requested\nto attend the sittings of lhe Court of As-\nBlze to be holden at the Court House In\ntbo City of New woitminster on\nWednesday tiic 1st Way of\nMny Next,\nAt llsHO o'clock o. m.; thai Iho roll of\nGrand nnd Petit juror** who lmve been\nsummoned for tho Asslz\u00C2\u00BB wfll lie called\novor at 11::*) o'clock a. in. ou tlie date\nabove given; ami nil persons will bo ex-\nSectcd to answer Io tliolr names; Petit\nurom failing in nnswer will ho liable to\nlose their day's pay und subject lliem-\nHelves to a fino,\nW, J. ARMSTRONG,\nSherliT.\nNew Westminster, 17th April, 1889,\ndwaplTW\t\nTABLE\nShowing the Dates and Places of\nCo-art\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 of Asslie, Kill Prlns,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nd Oyer and Terminer, for\nthe Year 1880.\nSPRING ASSIZES.\n[ON VANCOVVKR ISLAND.]\nVictoria Monday 20th May.\nNanaimo Tuesday 4th June.\n[on mainland.]\nNowWestmlnster...Wednesday,., 1st May.\nKamloops Monday flrd Jnne,\nClinton ....Monday 10th.Tune\nFALL ASSIZES.\n[ON MAINLAND.]\nRichfield Wo\"\"----*,' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0SBLSPPV\nOllntofi Wednesday ...28th Sept,\nKamloops Monday 7thOofi\nLytton Monday... Mlh Oct.\nNewWestminster... Wedii('sdny...l8lli Nov.\n[ON VANCOUVER ISLAND.]\nVictoria Monday 25th November.\nNanaimo .....Tuesday 3rd December.\ndaplTml\nTHE ATTRACTION\nOf Columbia Street\nJAS. ROUSSEAU'S\nGREAT CLEARING SALE\nGood-fitting boots and shoes contribute\nmuch to the health and comfort of every home. Therefore,\neverybody ought to know that JAS. ROUSSEAU'S is decidedly the\ncheapest place in New Westminster where the people of this District can purchase the best Boots and Shoes at the cheapest\nprices.\nI will allow io per cent, discount on all cash purchases to\nthe general public ior the next sixty days, to make room for a\nLARGE SPRING STOCK now en route.\nREMEMBER,\u00E2\u0080\u0094if you want genuine good Boots and Shoes\nthe proper place to purchase them is at\nJas. Rousseau's,\nSI Col-u.*-*a.-bla Street.\nCustom Work promptly attended to. dwto\nC. McDONOUGH,\n(LUNDBOM'S BUILDINO, FRONT STREET)\n2________ZB X-ST\nGENERAL MERCHANDISE!\nConstantly on Hand an Extensive Stook of\nDry Ooods, Groceries, Boots A Shoes, Hats tt Caps,\nCrockery, Glassware, Ac,\nMEN'S -Ab BOYS' RUITS.\nGreat Variety of Household Articles. Also,\nGRAIN, SEEDS, POTATOES, LIME and GENERAL STORES.\n, IT. B.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Farm Produce bought at mnrlcet rates or sold on commission. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2tt.Orders\nfrom the Interior promptly attended to. dwjeSto\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nLAND & INYESTMENT AfiBNCY. Ld.\nTHOMAS ALLSOP,\nHENRY S. MASON,\nCUYLER A. HOLLAND,\nDIRECTORS.\nHEAD OFFICE, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 15 Serjeants Inn, Fleet St. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 LONDON, ENG.\nThe Business of ALLSOP k MASON hu been merged In the above Company\nand will be carded on by the Company from this date as a general Land Investment\nand Insurance Agenny.\nMONEY TO LOAN on Mortgage at Low Ratei, Town Loti and Farming\nLands for Sale on easy terms.\nViotoria & C, May Kith, 1887. dwjCTte .\nTFZ\nCASTORIA\nfor Infants and Children.\n\"Cutoria is so \u00C2\u00BB-U-dap(*Jto-bj-d---i thai I CartarU ear*. O-Ho. Oa-a-Hp-Mon,\nIr--o*am-adltassup-*iort\u00C2\u00BBaar*ma-IipOoi> I gj* f-*?\"-*?'^*^ jHwS&t*. tv\nkaown-OBm.\" ttA.Ana*sa,K.D., I \"\"Ji\"****' '\"\" \"* I\"**-\"*\"**\"\nUB\u00C2\u00ABaMiia,\nTm Cut \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ua Com-unr, 77 Hurray Street, N. Y.\nISrOTIOE\nIB HEREBY GIVEN THAT I HAVE\n1 applied to the Hon. the Minister of tbe\nInterior for a license to out and carry away\ntimber (to be manufactured by myself at\nUpper Sumas, B.C.,) from the following\nilencrlbod lands, vis.: North half of Hec-\ntlon 4, north half of Section 0, southwest\nquarter of Section 16, south half of section\n17, south half of Section 18, and the whole\nof Sections 6,7,84 U-all in Township 1C,\nNew Weitminster District \u00E2\u0080\u0094containing\n-1000 ncres, more or less. S. J. RECOItD.\nUpper Sumas, B.C., 15th April, 1880. Im\nLand Registry Ordinance, 1S70\nNew Westminster Suburban Lot No. 15,\nBloek X.\nA CERTIFICATE OF INDEFEASIBLE\nTitle to the above mentioned Lot\nwill bo Issued lo Henry Elliott on tho 10th\nJay of Juno, 1869, unless In the meantime\na valid objection thereto be mado to tbo\nHiiilersiBned.ln writing, by some person\nclaiming an estato or interest In said Lot\nor some part thereof.\nIt. W. ARMSTRONG,\nDeputy Registrar.\nLund Registry Office,\nNew Westminstor, Till March, 1889.\nmh7d8m\nMainland Transfer\nHACK, LIVERY, STAGE,\nFeed | Sale Stables\nthe suBscmnriis ahe now tre-\nPAREDTOTOBN OOT\nDOUBLE AKD SINGLE RIGS\nft At Special Low Rates.\nBraying ui AU Zinds i Teaming\nDone at Shortest Notice.\nBnr t'ordwoed delivered to any pnrt of\ntho City.\nOrders by Telephone will receive prompt\nattention.\nMTStables nearly opposite C. P. IL Depot, Columbia St,, NowWcstminster.\ndjaiitc QILLEY BR08. ruora.\nW. ELSON,\nMerchant Tailor,\nPORT MOODY, B. O.\nMr. Elson will be at the Colonial Hotel\nthe tlrst Wednesday in eaeh month for\nthe purpose of taking orders, dwjaffltc\nIMPERIAL\nFIRE INSURANCE COMP'Y.\nI Old BEOil) Si. and 16 Pall Mall,\nLONDON.\nINSTITUTED 1808.\nFOR INSURING HOUSES * OTHER\nBuilding., Good., Wares, Merchandise, Manufacturing ud Farming Stock,\nSkip, in Port, Harbor or Dook, and tht\nCargoes of suoh Veaaela; alao, Ships build\ning and repairing, Bargea and other Ves\neels on navigable river, and canals, and\nGoods on board auch Vessels, throughout\nGreat Britain and Ireland said In Foreign\nCountries,\nFKOM 1088 0B DiMABK BT FIB*.\nSubscribed and Invested Capital,\n\u00C2\u00A31,600,000 8TG.\nRates ol Premium tnd every inlomii-\ntion tan be obtained on application to\nW. '. ARMSTB0N8,\nAgent fo.* New Westminster.\nFeed,LiverysSale\nSTABLES,\nDallas Street, Westminster\nJOS. M. WISE,\nSJSOI\"BIBWOB.\n/-.OOD DRIVING * RIIIINO H0RSE8\nIt fm-ltlro. Hack\u00C2\u00AB\"S **,A'|t .\n$ailg British Columbian\nWdiNdw Erea-slag, April u. UM.\nADVCftflSINC RATES H\u00C2\u00BB THE WILY.\nTraimlf al A*lveiil\u00C2\u00BB*-*ui-*-ilsU\u00E2\u0080\u0094First Insertion, ll)cts. per line solid nonpareil; each\ntti-i-s'-tliiaist cbtd-tHUiUveluseruon-Sals. per\nlm-', A.ilvi-rtisetucuis not Inserted evoiy\n1 ..\ -first insertion, HI ots. per line; subsc-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2l-i'-iu Insertions, Reis, \\u00C2\u00AB-v Hue.\nM.iMi'.tli-c Advi'Hit-1'iiivuti..-l'rofessloii-\nal tn' Business Curds\u00E2\u0080\u0094fi per month. Hpe-\ncinl rates for general trade advertising,\nin--nrdlng lo space oemtpied and duration\nol -i>nlra-*i.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0- .wiriwn siUt-i- wbun (llsplnyed,charged\ntf, or cwni. los* man transient advts, If\n-loli'l, i:har-.odat regular transient rates,\n-. t-i lal Kellco* among reading mailer,\n-i- i-is per Hue eaoh Insertion. Specials\nluserleu by ttie month ut reduced rates.\nliirths-Murrmsesau-i DeaUiB.tl .'or each\nlij-'i'Ilnn; Kuueral Notices in connection\nWilli sleuths, 50 cis. each Insertion.\nWEEKIV A0VERTI3IHQ HATEJ,\nr**ai!\u00C2\u00BB'*'-il A'lviTltitoinrnta.\u00E2\u0080\u0094first Insertion, Hi ni,, por Jim- solid nonpareil; sub-\nso.-oeuf iir-er[l.-us, Tcfj*. per 11 lie,\nHiitmltnK AdrertHuinenU.-\u00E2\u0080\u0094I'roresulou-\nal nr Bimloesi Cards-Si.W per montb.\nSni-- lit! rules for general trade advertising.\nHue-I..J Noilces, Hin.li>, Marriages and\nDeaths, same rales as Daily.\nlital-i must bu all mt-Ul, ami fur large cuts\nan exlni rate a 111 bu charged.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2urPcrsniis-Kcudlug In advertisements\nshould h<* uareful to stale whether tbey\nare t(i(iii|.iMi-lii \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -\u00C2\u00BB'' Dully Edition, or the\nWeekly, or both. A liberal reduction Is\nmade when Inserted lu both. No advertisement inserted for less than SI,\nTke Vale Lime Hlla.\nThe lime kilns lately put in operation at Yale by Mr. G. W. Itaiureare\nturning out a splendid quality of lime,\nand the luBt burning proved to bo of\nsuperior quality tu tho ono previous.\nTho kilns aro now in operation and\nMr. Rasuro is preparing to build two\nmore, tho first of which will bo commenced this week. Several large purchases of this lime liavo been made by\nprominent contractors, and tho new\nkilns are likely to bo kept pressed with\norders during the whole building\nTho rifles paraded last night for tlio\nflrst time since tho now uniforms were\nnerved out. Thoy presented a flue\nsoldierly appearance, and all thnt is\nrequired is a few weeks' steady drill to\nbring this fins corps to tbe proud position it haa always occupied\u00E2\u0080\u0094the fiwt\nin the province. The company parades iigtiin to-morrow niglit und overy\nman should mnko a special effort to lie\npresent. I'he now band will bo in attendance, and if the weather is fine the\ncompany will march out and practice\nskirmishing.\nSUBSCRIBERS\nWho do not receive tlielr paper regularly,\nfrom the Carriers or through lhe Post\nOfflce, will confer a favor by reporting the\nsame to the oilice of publ leutlon at once.\nNEW ADVERTISEMENTS THIS DAY.\nNcwGoods Ulobe Houae\nC.P.R H. Abbott\nFor Rent - C.J\nTenders J. It. Hall\nDit: 11\nINNES.-AI Victoria, B. C, on the 21th\nInst,, Adam Innes, n native of Banir-\nshlre, Scotland, and recently a resident of Langley, B. C.\nW The funeral will take place in this\ncity on Friday afternoon, 26th lust., on\nthe arrival of the str. Princess Louise\nfrom Victoria,\nSalmon averaged 6 to tbe boat last\nnight.\nTho wnter in the river is falling\nslightly.\nThe now fire hnll on lloyal avenue\nis receiving its finishing touches.\nThe genuine P. D. oorsota just arrived at Jas. Ellard & Co.'b. *\nFreah Eastern and Native Oysters-\nserved in evory style, at tho Olub. *\nThe Globe House has a change of\nadv. in tho usual place, first page.\nSapperton. \u00E2\u0080\u0094Walker & Co. have 45\nlots on sale, from $150; easy torms. *\nRussell's Restaurant, opposite the\nAmerican Hotel, open day and\nnight. a9m3*\nTho latest parisinn styles in long\nhandled parasols now in at jas. ellard\n& co.'s. *\nWork on the now residenco for Mr.\nWarden McBride will be commenced\nwithin 10 days.\nThe str. Gladys left for Chilliwack\n' this morning with a full load of freight\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nd 20 passengers.\nThe str. Dunsmuir left for Nnnaimo\nthis morning with a full lead of merchandise and 15 passengers.\nDon't forget tho lecturo this evening\non Oddfellowship hy the Rev. Mr.\nBaldwin at the Oddfellows' Hall.\nTho Btr. Rainbow left for Victoria\nthia morning taking a cargo of general\nfreight and a number of passengers,\nThe str. Irving arrived down from\nChilliwack this afternoon with a full\n' load of farm produce and a number of\npassengers.\nEnvelopes from $1.00 per 1000.\nExpress pens, Mercantile pens, School\npens, 5 ct-nts a dozen. New Photo\nFrames.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mibs Peebles. *\nMr. A. M. Herring is building a\nwater tank on Royal avenue,, aud from\npresent indications if seems probable\nthat the supply of water will be unlimited.\nA Chinaman almost crazed by the\nexcessive uso of opium, appeared before the polico magistrate this morning and was remanded for medical examination,\nAs will bo seen by an advertisement\nin another column tho C. P. R. is calling for tenders for iho grading and\nconstruction of a branch line from the\nMission bridgu to the boundary.\nD. J. Levy, of 61, Johnston street,\nVictoria, B. 0., is tho only agent H.\nL. (label has in British Columbia.\nHold your orders; ho will be in New\nWestminster (in or about May 1st,\n1880. *to\nMr. Hamilton Mm son. of Ward 5,\nVancouver, has boen elected by acclamation to the city council, to fill Ihe\nvacancy created by the resignation of\nDr. J. M. Lefevre. Mr. Mason has a\nlarge milk tench.\nThe front of the Colonial is receding a brilliant coat of red paint, and\nyot thero arc people who claim there is\nnothing suggestive about the color, a\nneighboring drug house having lately\nindulged in the samo luxury,\n200 tins mi the Thorne road- from\n$05 upwind*., on monthly instalments\nof $10, without interest. These lots\nare only two blocks from ttie park,\nhave u good view, are mostly eleared\nand are only four blocks from the new\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tore. Apply to Wm. Reidt, Front\nitreet. *\n\"Ohalour Buy and its Products, for\n1887-8, with Net and Rod,\" is an interesting patnphlot, written by Mr.\nJohn Mowat, f-ttlior of tlie inspector of\nfisheries fur this province, and treats\nof the fisheries of that famed fishing\nvicinity, besides dUeiwB.ug in au entertaining style various' voxed questions relating tu pisiculture, &c.,\nTbo cmnmittti appointed to collect\nsubscriptions fur the May D-ty celebration report havii'gmet with very good\nsnout-Fa. Tho sums subscribed have\nbeen small but numerous, and tho\n. work is not done yot. There is every\nreason to expect thut tho coming celebration will bu the grandest in every\nway since tliu day was first honored in\nWestminster.\nOn Sunday afternoon a party of\nfour miners went out Bailing at Nanai\nmo. When opposite Newcastle town\nlite the boat capsized and tlio four\nmen were precipitated into the water.\nBefore sssistnnco could reach the men\ntwo were drowned. The other two\nwere rescued, one being in an exhaust\ned condition. The names of the\ndrowned men have not been learned.\nCaptain Frank White, formerly master of the Btr. Premier, end who disappeared so mysteriously a year ago,\nas wis alleged, with $10,000 of the C\nP. N. Co.'i monoy, made his appearance at Port Townsend on Saturday.\nHe has ihipped aa tint ofHoor en the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2tr, tibby, recently purchased by Capt.\nBeechor, ex-treasury agent, and whicli\nfa to ply on Puget Bound. During\nWhite's abience he lias visited Now\nVork, London. China, and various\nother parti of the world. \t\nA 1Vi.mlri-f.il MeelhiK.\nThe Salvation Army continued their\ngreat celebration laat evoning. The\nnovel feature of the occasion was the\npmcesssion of the \"Ten Virgins,\" who\nwere clad in robes of snowy white, and\neach carried in thoir hands a lantern,\nrepresenting the wise and foolish virgins. After the atreet procession\nthere was a grand meeting held at\nHerring's opera house whieh was very\nlargely attended. The Vancouver\nband wus present and a great number\nof visiting officers and soldiers, all of\nwhom were grouped on the stage, Ttie\nprogramme consisted of music, singing, prayers and speeches. The celebration will be continued this evening.\nThe Vancouver Sensation.\nThe social sensation at Vancouver\nis exciting great interest there. Tho\ncase came before tho polico magistrate\nyesterday morning and was heard\nwith closed doors, Mr. Hogg gavo\nhia evidence, and explained the cause\nfor his suspicions againBt Sullivan and\nMrs, Hogg. The evidence givon by\nMrs. Hogg was tho moat important.\nShe point blank accuses Dr. Lnngis of\nprocuring an abortion and challenges\nhim to deny tho truth of tho statements.\nThe time aud place of all her meetings\nwith Sullivan, when they had criminal\nintercourse, Mrs, Hogg gave with great\nexactness. Sullivan assured Mrs. Hogg\nthat he loved her better than his own\nwife. Tho case is still proceeding nnd\nwill probably occupy another day.\nCriminal .Taxes nt Kamloops.\nAt Kamloops last week the following criminal cases wore disposed of by\nMr. Justico Wulkem- under the Speedy\nTrials Act: Wm. Kannagun, charged\nwith assaulting one McKenzie and\nstriking him with a chair, pleaded\nguilty, und was sentenced to three\nmontha with hard labor. _ Ben Far-\nleigh, charged with stealing various\narticles from the house of Thoa. Allan,\nnear Salmon River, was sentenced to\nnine months' imprisonment. Ellen\nDemon, a young woman, formerly of\nManitoba, was found guilty of assaulting Peter Pearson with intent to do\ngrevious bodily harm. The accused\nattacked Pearson with a table fork,\nslabbing him in the arms, legs and\nbody and also beating him over the\nhead with n shovel. The prisoner wai\nproved to be a troublesome character,\nand was sentenced to two years' imprisonment in the penitentiary.\nThe Cuming Concert.\nThe Mendelssohn Quintette Club,\nwhich appears at tho Oddfellows'Hall\non Friday evening, is going to meet\nwith a grand reception. Seats are Belling rapidly, and a greater number are\nnow disposed of than was expected in\nthe begining. Speaking of the concert given by this celebrated\nolub the Portland Press says:\nThe protrramme was a perfect gem\nin its way, and it is difficult to Bay\nwhich number was best received. In\nhis two selections, Herr Hekking\nshowed a perfect mastery of the technique of his instrument, and received\na rapturous encore. The quartette,\nthe scherzo only of which was played,\nallowed nn absolutely perfect blending\nof tones. The rondo, by Horr Ohligcr,\nwas given with beautiful shading and\nexpression, Misa Ryan sang her numbers in a charming manner, and in response to an encore sang a love wnllz\nby Wildor.\n \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>*-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\nThe rorged Notes\nThe cases of Walter Moore and Garret Moore, charged with passing counterfeit bank notes, came before the\npolice magistrate this morning, and\nboth men were held in $300 bail to appear at tho spring assizes. The\nforged notes were passed during the\nprogress of a game of poker in a Front\nstreet saloon, and the counsel for tho\ndefence gave a description of tho game\nto illustrate how easy it wuuld be for\nany man to pass or receivo a forged\nnote during the excitement. So graphic\nwns Mr. Gaynor'a description of\ntho play that everybody's attention was\nriveted, and at that particular phase\nwhen the betting should bo going\nquick and high, the counsel for tlie\nprosecution jumped to his feot and was\nabout to \"go him $5 better\" when ho\nas suddenly subsided and sank into his\naent again with a bluah on hia faoe\nwhioh would have dono honor to a\nmaiden of sweet sixteen.\nWm. Poden, a tailor, waa found dead\nin hia bed yesterday morning at ttie\nWhito Swan restaurant, It appears\nthat before coming here he had been\nwarned not to drink any liquor na it\nwai likely to injuriously affect the\naction of his heart. The evening previous he had come home under tho influence, with tho result.predicted. An\ninquest was held by Coroner McQui-\ngan at the City Hnll yesterday evoning\nand the vordict was rendered in accordance with ttie above facta. Deceased\nwai 30 years old and a native of Scotland,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Newt'Advertiesr.\nChildnn Cryfor Pltcher'sCastorla\nThe scaling sohooner Allle S. Alger\nhas arrived at Neah Bay with a catch\nof 013 souls. Tho skins wore forwarded to Port Townsend, and aa aoon na a\nforesail can bo forwarded to tho Alger\n(ahe having lost her foresail in a htmvy\ngnlo) she will start out on another\ncr-iise, whioh will last ell the season,\nThe ownen of the Alger are elated at\ntho success of their veuel.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Colonist.\nHew VTest-ulaiter and INslrlet.\nThe fine traot of agriculture laud\nin tlie valley of the Fraser will aoon be\nprovided with ample railway facilities,\nas tlie Canadian. Pacific Riilwny ia\nabout to construct a line on the left\nbatik of tlio rivor, from the Mission to\nthe Delta, and tlio Northern Pacific\nRailway are constructing a lino from\nSeattle to New Westminster, thus\nplacing the mainland cf the province\nin direct communication with the United States system of railways. Renl\nestate in New Westminster and district has doubled in value during the\npant month, and it is estimated that\ntho present contracts for brick houses\nin Westminster amount tu 100,000/.\nMany intending emigrants being under\na false impression as to the climate of\ntho sea coast of British Columbia, the\nfollowing official record for the month\nof February will prove of interest:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nMean temperature, 40.1; highest maximum, 54.0; lowest minimum, 25.0;\ndnys rain fell, 12; days snow fell, 2.\nOwing to tlio warm currents of the\nPaciiic. British Columbia enjoys a climate similar to that of the south of\nEngland, but with a liner summer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nColonies ond India.\nSUM Another t'oiix.\nA special despatch to Tin; Colum-\nmax announces thu death, this morning, at Victoria, of Adam Innes, an\nold and highly respected resident\nof this district and an early pioneer of\ntho province. Mr. Lines was a native\nof Bantishir.', Scotland, and came\nto British Columbia about the year\n1860. He mined for a period in Cariboo, and was there during the great\ngold excitement of 1862. Somo 18\nyears ago, ho took up lnnd nt Langley,\nwhich he worked successfully till 4\nyears ago when be went ovor to Victoria, having secured a large contract\non the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway. On tho completion of the road\nhe remained in Victoria nnd worked as\na contractor till his death. He was\none of the oldest and most enthusiastic\nmembers of the Caledonian and St.\nAndrew's socioty of Westminster. Tho\ndeceased was well known generally\nthroughout the provinco, and his death\nwill be learned with deep regret by all\nwho knew him. Tho funeral, which\nwill be conducted by the Caledonian\nand St, Andrew's society, will take\nplaco on Friday afternoon, on the arrival of the str. Princess Louise from\nVictoria.\n s*,-.j\u00C2\u00BB _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\t\nThe Cuiillelil Komi.\nThe attorneys of the Cantield Railroad state that about 300 on this side\nof llio boundary aro now employed on\ntho right of way, clearing und grading;\nthat arrangements have been made for\ntho ties, piling nud bridge timbers\nnecessary; that the iron will come\nfrom Pennsylvania mills, and that all\ncontracts for the construction uf the\nbridges and railroad will be lot within\nten days; and lively work will begin, to\nget thu road completed early in Sept.,\nthus uniting by bauds of steel the international cities of Whatcom and\nNow Westminster. This alao means\nthe building cf the Broadway wharf\nuut to deep water and the erection of\nan ample depot at the foot of Broadway.\nThis railway project was conceived\nin the fertile brain of Senator Canfield,\nwhose very life und pride are interwoven with its success. He is now about\n52 years uf age aud proposes to round\noil* his active business career by the\ncompletion of bis railway system. A\nmnn of less energy and determination\nwuuld have long ngo abandoned the\ngreat undertaking, but tho senator has\novercome all obataclos and the bright\nsunahino of prosperity smiles upon Iub\nefforts.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Revielle.\nA representative of this paper was\ndown near the outer wharf this morning, and observing aeveral boys very\nbusy at the shore end of that structure an investigation was made, when\nit was discovered that the little fellows\nwere at work shrimping.\nThe net they were using had a\nstrongly familiar look about it, (for bo\nit known the reporter is a married\nman) and ho forthwith betook himself\nto tlie crowd of boys and inquired\nwhat they were doing 7\n\"Shrimping,\" was the answer,\n\"What's that you'ro catching 'cm\nwith f\" wus askod.\n\"Thut,\" waa the urchin's reply,\n\"that's my big sister's bustle; I hooked\nit outer her room.\"\nGreat Scott! and so it was a bustle\nwhich looked au familiar to the Benedict' newsman. Closer inspection\nshowed that tho young rascal had taken\nthis very necessary article of feminine\nattire uud hnd lushed it to a lung pole,\nand with this improvised net they\nwere raking out the shrimps at a great\nrnto.\nThe newsman turned silently away,\naud bethought within himself that\nshrimps were not the only unfortunates which had been captured by a\nbustle.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Victona Standard.\nPERSONAL.\nH. V. Edmonds returned to the city\nlast night.\nS. Leiser, of Victoria, was in the\ncity to-day.\nMr. and Mrs. Jenns nre spending a\nfew days in Victoria,\nCol. Wolfenden returned to Viotoria\nthii morning, via Vancouver.\nAmos Bowman, of tho Geological\nsurvey, has returned from Ottawa.\nThe nuptials of Mr. J. Alex. Cunningham and Miss Marinn DeBeck will\ntake place to-morrow morning. Only\nmembers of tho two families will be\npresent.\nMr. A. M, Nelson, who hu been\nconfined to his homo for six weeks by\na broken leg, made his first appearance down town to-day since the accident occured. Ho wns cordially\ngreeted by his many friends, who wore\nall glad to see him un his legs again.\nLATE CANADIAN NEWS.\nIt is slated with good authorty that\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 few days will seo a reconstruction of\nthe Quebeo cabinet.\nAn incendiary tiro Monday night, at\nPort Hope, destroyod John Holm's\nfrnmo grist mill and itonu woollen\nmills,\nTho Athabasca, the first through\nboat of Ihe season at Port Arthur, arrived yesterday afternoon from Owen\nSound.\nNovor befure has (here boen such an\nexodua to tho United States from Quebec ns this year. Within the Inst few\ndays 1,000 people have left for tho\nbrick fields of Massachusetts and New\nEngland,\nChildren Cryfor Pitcher'a Castoria\nB. C. Provincial Exposition\nSubscription Fond.\nFor the purpose of raising a fund to\ncontributo towards the patriotic and\nworthy object of making ute next annual provincial fair, to be held in this\ncity, a grand and unprecedented success,\nthe undersigned agree to contribute the\nsums opposite their respective names (to\nbe paid Into the association or to trustees\ncompetent to receive the same, on or before 6 months from tho date of the last\nprovincial exhibition, and to be applied\nto preparing exhibition grounds and\nbuildings in the city, for increasing the\namount offered in prizes, and for furthering the exhibition in other ways):\nThe Columbian 1100 oo\nSharpe A Paine, Lulu Island 10 00\nI, P Eckstein 10 00\nG D Brymner \u00E2\u0080\u009E,. 20 00\nR W Armstrong. 10 00\nK R Glover. 10 00\nWalker* Bhadweli 10 00\nClaud Hamber. 10 00\nPeter Grant , 10 00\nGeorgo Turner. 10 00\nWJ Armstrong 80 00\nA J Hill 10 00\nCapt A Grant. , 10 00\nJ S Macdonell 10 00\nW O Loye 10 00\nP Ullodeau..- 10 00\nP Q Strickland 25 00\nGilley Bros 20 00\n8 H Webb 25 00\nT Cunningham 80 00\nHenderson Bros, Chilllwhack 10 00\nA B Wintemuto 10 00\nPer Ex-Mayor Dickinson 212 85\nAnnie M J mines t, lo 00\nStewart A Cash 25 00\nJos Cunningham , 60 00\nGrant* Hagstrom \u00E2\u0080\u009E 20 00\nJ W SexsmltTi 80 (Ml\nHev J H Whito 10 Wl\nB Douglas 100 00\nE ft Scoullar 4 Uo 6fi 110\nA pcsllrlsay 16 00\nW C Coiitlnm 28 00\nT M Cunningham. 25 00\nA B Band 25 00\nAckerman Bros.. ill 00\nHeld* Currie \u00E2\u0080\u009E 25 00\nH T Head & Co 00 00\nW H Thlbaudean 15 00\nGrnut * Maclure 10 00\nYoung * Terhune 10 00\nTerhuno * Co 10 00\nNoxt i B^__^^-1M__\nGabriel Dumont arrived at Indian\nHead last evening from Batoohe, on\nhis way to Montana to collect a party*\nof half-breeds and Indian!* who participated in the late rebellion, whom he\nwill take to the Paris Exhibition. He\nleaves for Regina to-day.\n. .-.. * .*s>\"H\t\nThe capture of Donald Morrison,\nthe Quebeo outlaw, as Btated Monday,\nis confirmed, and the prisoner is now\nlodged in Shetbrooke jail to await his\ntrial. Morrison claims tho capture\nwas the result of treachery ou the pnrt\nof the officer. -.\nWholesale our Market.\n_ _ .f, per 100 lbs. ; I 4 50 Q 5 50\nPork \" 7 50(3 8 50\nMutton \" \u00C2\u00AB 8 009 0 00\nPotatoes \" 60 9 75\nCabbage \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 50 @ 100\nOuions \" \u00E2\u0080\u009E., 100\u00C2\u00AE 150\nWheat *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 150O 0 00\nOats \" 135@ 150\nPeas \" 150O 2. CO\nHay, per ton 12 00 @ 15 oo\nButter {rolls) per ft. 0 28@ 0 35\nCheese, \" 0 143 0 15\nEggB, perdoz. ., 0 20\u00C2\u00AE 25\nCord wood (retail) per curd 8 003-100\nApples, per box 80 @ 1 50\nHides(gr'u)por 100 lbs 4 00 a 6 00\n\" (dry) \" .-*. 6 00@ 9 00\nWool, per lb G@ 10\nMeteorological Beport Iter Week Ending\nApril \u00C2\u00ABeib. 18\u00C2\u00BB.\nMAX. MIN. KAIK.\nSunday 58.0 41.0\nMonday 57.0 41.0 0.07\nTuesday 58.0 43.0\nWednesday 00.0 JV7.0\nThursday 00.0 80.0\nFriday 50.0 3X0\nSaturday 59.0 40.0\nSnow on mountains; hnll; lialos; cloudy;\nfair; rain.\nA.PBBi.E.Capt'n,\nWhen Baby was slok, we gave her Cutoria,\nWhen ah* wss a Child, sbe cried for Cutoria,\nWhen the bocune Misa, she clan** to Cutoria,\nWain ibi bad Children, the gave U-sm Cutoria\nBAPTIST CHURCH, Agnes Street,\nEast of Mary Street. Lord's Day\nServices nt li a. m. and 7 p.m. Sabbath\nSchool andBlhle Class at 2:30 p. m. All\nseats free; strangers cordially welcomed.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bev. Thos, Baldwin, pastor.\nT-ifttTHODIST CHUROH, Mary\n1V1 Street. Rov, J, H. White, Pastor.\nServices at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday\nSchool and Bible Glass 2:80 P. in, Prayer\nMeeting on Thursdays at 7.80p.m. Seats\nfree; strangers cordially Invited.\n\u00C2\u00A7T. PAUL'S CHURCH, John Street,\n) Opposite Orange Hall. Rov. Thomas\naddon, Pastor. Services every Sundny\nat 11 a, m, and 7 p, in. Thursday evening*\nat7:30 o'clock. Scats free; all aro cordially Invited. Sunday School at 2:80 p. in.\nnHUROH OP ENGLAND. - HOLY\n\j TRINITY CHUROH; Rector, The\nVen. Archdeacon Woods. S. MARY'.S\nCHURCH: Rector, Tho Bishop, Services\nln both churches every day, AU scats\nfree. Both churches open afl day for private prayer.\t\nTTT C. T. U.--REaULAR MEETING\nVV . overy Wednesday afternoon nt 3\no'clock nt the w. c. T. u. Headquarters,\nDouglas Hi. I-oyitl Lesion In the same\nplace every Friday afternoon.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mrs. Jah.\nCunningham, President; Miss DbBelk,\nSecretary, ^_ _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\t\nCALEDONIA A HT. ANDREW'S\nSOUIHTY.-Tho regular meetings of\ntills Association are held on tlio last Tuesday of ontdi inonlli, at8 o'clock p.m. All\nScotchmen are Invited to attend. -John\nBuie. Sec.\ni O. F.-COUIIT LORD DUFFERIN,\nA. No. 0301. The regular meetings or\nthe ubove Court nro held at llio Foresters'\nHall, on tho first nnd third Wednesday in\neach month, at8 p. in.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Jno. MoMmtriiv,\nSenr., F.C.R.\nUNION LODGE No, 9, A. F.\nA A. M,\u00E2\u0080\u0094The regular meei-\nings of this Lodge are held in\n. , . the Mnsonlo Temple on lhe find\nWednesday In each month, at 7:80 o'clock\nIi. m. Sojourning brethren are cordially\nuvited to attend-\u00E2\u0080\u0094W. C. Coatham, Sec.\n-QOARD OP TRADE. Board Room,\nD Oddfellows Brick Block, up-stalrw.\nCouncil meets on the Unit and third Wednesday In each monih.at 4 p.m. (Quarterly\nmeetings on tlie 22nd of Feb., May,, Aug.,\nand Nov., at 7:80 p. m. New members\nmay be proposed and elected at any Quarterly meeting.\u00E2\u0080\u0094D, Rohson, Bee.\nWanted, Short-hand Pupils.\nfLAO. T. R. DUNCAN WISHES TO Its*-\niVl form tho Put-Hoof NewWestminster\nthat he Is now prenarcd to give b-sons lu\nShort-hand In the latest nnd best t-yt-toms,\nA complete comw guaranteed in three\nmonths.\nViolin also l sn thi. Tho teaching of\nchildren on this instrument a specialty.\nAddress, Drawer O, City,New Westminster, dnpiote\nW. BREDEMEYER, DR. PH.\n(Late Partner of John Sf eVIckor)\nMINING ENGINEER. U.S. A PROVINCIAL SURVEYOR, A ASSAYER.\nMasonic Ticmplk Block, Vancouver.\n'\"U.Col.\nSir Reliable reports, underground stir-\n. tn-f-nrri map--of mines executed nl lou\nriifc--. Assays made on al) kinds n* miu*\neralK, sold ai "Publisher changes in chronological order: Robson Brothers (1882-1883) ; D. Robson & Co. (1883-1886) ; British Columbia Stationery and Printing Co. (1886-1887) ; British Columbian Printing Company (Limited) (1887-1888) ; Kennedy Brothers (1888-1890)."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "New Westminster (B.C.)"@en . "British_Columbian_1889_04_24"@en . "10.14288/1.0346777"@en . "English"@en . "49.206667"@en . "-122.910556"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "New Westminster : Kennedy Brothers"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "Daily British Columbian"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .