"b0bef513-4aaf-4f38-b1b8-a6bade299fd3"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2017-03-07"@en . "1889-03-01"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/dbc/items/1.0346841/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " V\nflovarnmont\nPrinting olBs\nColumbian.\n70LUME 6\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. 0., FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 1, 1889.\nNUMBER 52\nJOSEPH E. GAYNOU., U.A..L1..U.\nG\u00C2\u00B0\ntli el\nthe High Court ot Justice, Ireland. OIHoob,\nCorner McKenzie A Olarkson Hts., Mew\nWestminster. dwfc2ltc\npamioini, Hocou. a jenns,\nBARRISTERS,\nSOLICITORS, ETO.\nOmces. Masonic Buildings, New Westminster, and Vancouver, B. C. jySldffto\nT.\nC. ATK1MSON,\nBARRISTER, SOLICITOR, Ac.\nOffices\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Masonic Building,\ndwfeiotc New Westminster, B. C.\n1X7 NORM AM BOLB.Q.C,\nBARRISTER- AT-LAW.\nLand Agent Money to Loan,\nOlarkson Street,\nso2tc New Westminster, B. 0.\n/IIiOW <\n. MACLt'IlE,\nARCHITECTS.\nOkkioe\u00E2\u0080\u0094Room E,\nOver Bank of B. C,\nColumbia Street,\nG.\nW, OR ART,\nAROHITEOTi\nOpnaR-Corner Mary and olarkaon Sts.\ndw'e251o\nvirlLLIAU R. KINO,\nARCHITECT,\nBCILDINQ 4 LAND SURVEYOR,\nSANITARY ENGINEER.\nOffice\u00E2\u0080\u0094New Masonic Block,\n* daplSto Weatmlnater.\njlTAbLAHDAINB * SANSOH,\nARCHITECTS.\nInnes Blook. - - Hastings St.\nVANOOUVER, B. 0.\ndauSOto\nA, t. lOlTOS,\nDOMINION ASJ> PROVINCIAL LAND\nSURVEYOR. Olllco: Room B.Bank\nor B. C. bnlldlng, Westmlnater, B. C.\nALBERT J. HILL,\nM, CAN. Soc. 0. E.\nOIVII. ENGINEER,\nLAND SURVEYOR and\nDRAUGHTSMAN.\nOffici*\u00E2\u0080\u0094Now Masonlo Block,\ndmhlGlo New Westminster.\nrn a trapp,\n'AUCTIONEER AND APPRAISER,\nColnmbla Street, New Weatmlnater\nAll commissions will receive prompt\nand careful attention. Beat references\n,lven wheu required. inhUMo\nR\nRAND BROS.\nI'UIj ESTATE! BROKERS,\nConveyancer*, Collectors,\nAnd Insurance Agents,\nOffices nt\nNEW WESTMINSTER: Corner\nMcKonzlo und Clarkson Sts,\nVANCOUVER, Cordova Street.\nLONDON, England.\nBUILDING LOTS for sale In nit sections\nof Vancouvor nnd New Westmlnater City.\nFARM LANDS of superior quality for\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ale at Olillllwliaok, Port Hammond,\nLangloy, Mutsqtii, Sumas, Mud Hay, Ladner's Landing, Lulu Islnnd, North Arm\nand Pill River.\nMaps and Plans exhibited and tho full-\ntit Information furnlBhedat all ouroffloes,\nfeMto\nMAJOR & PEARSON\nBeal Estate Brokers and\nFinancial Agents.\nAGENTS FOR\nConfederation Life Association of\nToronto.\nRoyal mnd Lancashire Fire Insurance Companies.,\nM.Vnlnable Lots for sale ln the City\nand Dlstrlot of Westminster; and ohoice\nLots ln the City of Vancouver.\nPersons wishing to buy or sell city or\nrural property should communicate with\nus.\nOffices: Bank of B.C. building, opposite\npostofflce, Westminster, and Hustings St.,\nVancouver. dwapWtc\nJ. W. WINGER,\nDEALER IK\nHARD &80FTWOOD\nD\nRAYING AND TEAMING DONE AT\nshort notice at reasonable terms, f 15\nmBC1C7i\n:\u00C2\u00ABzj\nMm FLANDERS WILL GIVE BOTH\nJ.J. Vooal and Instrumental Lessons at\nW. H. Hlgfrlna', Mary St., or at private\nresidences If desired, besides tbo vocal\nclass beld overy Saturday overling lu tbe\nBaptlat Clmrcli and tbo one at Ladner's\nLanding. For furlhw^parUofc^Ply\nto\ndjaffiml\nMRS. 1\nMary Street.\nW. C. LOYE,\nfuMl. Soot u. Shot lolnr.\nRepairing Ifemtly Done. Cork Sole\nWork n specialty.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0firordem promptly attended to.\nClarkson St., ln rear of Colonial Hotel, neit to Rand Bros.' offlce. dnolto\nDRESS MAKING\nAt MISS JENNINGS',\n(Late or England)\nCorner of Church and Oolumbla Streets,\nNKW WESTMINSTER\navsatlsfaotlon guaranteed. dwfe7te\nDress-Making!\nMisses MoDOUQALL\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nNew Westminster, B. C\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0VSatlafaotlon guaranteed. daplSto\nWM. H. VIANEN,\nWHOLESALE\nFisli i Game Dealer!\nFRONT STREET.\nNew Westminster, Brit. Col.\ntr Highett Price paid for Fnr. anil\nDeer Hide.,\nCorre.pondeneo Invltod. anvTelopliono\n0.11 No. A diasto\nT.J.TRAPP&CO.\nGENERAL & SHELF HARDWARE,\nIncluding Tools of all kinds of, the beat makes; Cross-cut & Hand-Saws,\nBarbed Wire for Fencing, and all the necessary Utensils for Farming:\nPulley Blocks, Snatch Blocks, Rope & Chain in oil bUsb; Pitch,\nTar & Oakum; Tarred and Plain Paper for Bulldlngi Paints & Oils\nin all colors; Liquid Paints in all shades; Floor Paints ready touao; Grind\nStones, Waif Paper in all designs; Brooms & Brushes for all purposes\nLubricating Oils) Trups of all d \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\nAgricultural Implements,\nl descriptions, ami a general assortment of\nr Speoial attention given to orders by mail.\nT. T. t\_\z_a._e>& so oo.,\ndwjly3to p Columbia Strew, New Westminster.\nNew Goods!\nGRANT & MACLURE\nC:\ndwto\nPANT8 TO ORDER\nSS.OO\nj. s. manson,\nMerchant Tailor\nMarshall Sinclair's Old Stand,\nCOLUMBIA ST. NEW WESTMINSTER.\nnoldlv\nAttention! Attention!\nw\nGLOBE HOUSE.\nE ARE NOW OFFERING OUR ENTIRE STOCK\nof\nDry Goods at Bed-rock Prices!\nto make room for SPRING GOODS. Call early and secure\nZ_3__\.___G.-ji__.T__TS. wim\ntmrne MRS. WM. RAE.\nRAND BROS.\nReal Estate,\n___m_t_m.____t-____t_________m\nInsurance and Financi\nA.C3rE3JXTTS.\nOFFIOBS \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nNEW WESTMINSTER 00Rr!\nVANOOUVER,\nl, .& MdKENZIE STS.\nCORNER CORDOVA AND\nABBOTT STREETS.\n~AN1>\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nANDERSON BLOCK,\nGRANVILLE STREET.\nLONDON, ENG. .07\nCANNON ST.\nFarming Lands^Town Lots\nOF ALL DESCRIPTIONS FOR SALE.\nBusiness Property.\nLot facing on Columbia and Front St..,\nin central portion of the oity; aeveral\nbuildings bring good rent\u00E2\u0080\u0094$22,000.00.\nLot 4, Blook 7, near Lytton Squaro,\n00x132 feet, fronting on Columbia and\nFront Sts.-8fl,000.00.\nCorner Lot on Columbia St., 33x00foet\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n?4,000.00.\nAlso\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lot and Building with stock of\n' Goods, one of tho best business stands\nin tho city.\nImproved Residential Property\nLot 15, Blook 13; two houses rented at\npaying figures -Sl.flOO.OO.\nLot 20, Bloek 2t>; corner lot on Agnes\nSt., with 2 good houses.\nHouse aud Lot on I.orno St., near Col-\nunibia-81200.00.\nLota 4, _ tc 0, Blook 10; good house,\ngarden, &o.; choice resilience property\n-SB.OOO.OO.\nCorner Lot on Columbia St.; fenced and\ncleared\u00E2\u0080\u009491500.00.\nVacant Residential Property.\nLot 1, Blook 28; corner lot on Agnes St,;\nOne residence sito-S12O0.0O.\nLot 1, Alice Hardens; comer lot near\nColumbia St.-(700.00.\nLots on Melbourne Stroot, noar St. An-\ndraw's, at $250.00,\nLot 0, Louise Gardens; beautiful situ*\natlon\u00E2\u0080\u0094(000.00.\nLot 30, Clinton Place--8400.00.\nLota 20 A 30, St. Andrew's Square\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n8800.00.\nLot. .on St. Andrew's St., near Queen's\nAvmue-.$500.00 eaeh.\nLots on Mary, i'elham and St. John's\nSts.; excellent for rcaidoncea\u00E2\u0080\u00948500.00\nto 8000.00.\nLots on Montreal, Douglas and Halifax Sts.; tine views and well situ*\natetl-8300.011 to 8-100.00.\nLot on Melbourne St., near Clinton\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n8200.00.\nLot 0, Suh-lilock 10; line residence lots\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nM75.tj_m\nFrom Can. Pac. Ry.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dally (except Saturday) at 1410.\nFrom Victoria\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sunday. Tuesday and\nThursday 16; Wednesday, Frlduy and\nSaturday, 11.80.\nFrom Vancouver, Moodyvllle, Port Moody\nand Burrard Inlotr-Dally (except Bun-\nday) at 16.\nFrom Ladner's Landing and Lulu Island\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sunday, Tuesday nnu Thursday, 18.\nFrom Clover Valley, Hall's Prairie and\nLangley Prairie\u00E2\u0080\u0094Friday, 16.\nFrom Elgin and Mud Buy\u00E2\u0080\u0094Saturday, 11.\nFrom Plumper's Pass\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sunday, 16.\nFrom Nanaimo (direct mnll)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Saturday,\n15.\nPOST OFFICE HOURS:\nGeneral Delivery from9 to 19 (7 p.m.),\nTuesdays,'Thursdays nud Saturday--,: oto\n18, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nexcept when malts are being sorted.\nMoney Ohoer* Savings Ban::.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Daily\n\u00E2\u0080\u00949 a, m, to 4 p. in,\nSaturday evenings,\nPOWDER\nAbsolutely Pure.\nThis powder never varies, A marvel of\npurity,strength and wholi-somene.sK. Mora\neconomical tlian the ordinary binds, and\ncannot be sold In compoiltlon with the\nmultitude of low test, short, weight alum\nor phosphate powders. Sold only ln cans.\nRoyal Bakino Powder Co., 100 Wall Ht,,\nNew York. ;ifoly\nFOR SALE.\nA DRUGGIST'S STOCK OF DRUG.'!\nt\ Patent Medicines ami SimdrM-s.-\nApply lo HENRY V. LOMOND;..\ndjalOte \t\nTO RENT\nEiwry Storo for Sale.\nQTOl K CAN BE KEPT IN\" THK STORE\n1-3 [pv oity trade, or Is good for anyono\nliiien.H.iytofifi'n a iTumn-ysloro. Ooods\nllr.il-.'ins*. OllV-i-fil low lo i lin right man.\nApply at this oflloo. dja23to\nDissolution of i'nrtiicrshlp.\nTHE PARTNERSHIP HERETOFORE\noxlHtlng between T. J. and ft. ft. Manahan, as tho firm of Manahan Brothers,\nllrlckinakors, has been dissolved by mutual consent.\nNow Westminster, Jan.22,1880. 22JaIm\nLoratef, Harris\nSO CO.\nReal Estate,\nINSURANCE\n00!\nagents\nPfiroliasa Sell and Lease Property,\nCollect Rents,\nMake Loans on Mortgages,\nAnd trnwmut all Businuss relating to\nitoiil Estate.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094AGENTS FOR\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nLondon Assurance Corporation.\nConnecticut Fire Insurance Co. of\nHartford.\nLondon nnd Lancashire ItKc Assurance Go,\nCanton Insurance Offlco, Ld. (Marine)\nOFFICES:\nColumbia St., New West'r.\n41 Government St., Victoria\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 tlwseliyl\nPailU |ritish Columbian\nFriday Evciilnc, Murcli 1, l(Ut9.\nNOTES AND COMMENTS.\nWhy not let De Lesseps form a\nFrench cabinet 1 He wouldn't need\nmuch else beside a half-ton of bond\npaper and a private secretary.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ex.\nAn exchange says : Oacur Wilde\nis out with a now essay ou \"The\nDecay of Lying.\" Ho claims that\nlying is a lost art. Oscar is right.\nLying i3 no longer an art. It seems\nto have become, at the present day,\ninstinctive.\nMrs. John Rockwell, of tho\nKingston Women's Christian Temperance Union, has been interviewing the Ontnrio legislators, and says\nthey would grant woman's franchise now if it were not to go into\n.force until after tlio next elections,\nbut this will not satisfy the W.O.T.U.\nIf President Harrison is as successful in conducting his administration on the secret service system\nas has been (len. Harrison in retaining the entire bulk of cabinet information for his own use, the people\nof this country will know as little\nabout our national affairs as will the\nresidents of Mars, Venus or Missouri..\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ex.\nThe Dominion government has\ndecided not to adopt the proposed\nreduction in letter postage rates to\ntwo cents at present. It is proposed, however, to increase the maximum weight for which a letter may\nbe sent for three cents, from one\nhalf ounco to one ounce. A bill\nwill be introduced to this effect\nduring tho present session in parliament.\nAn American travelling baseball\ncompany was recently refused permission to givo nu exhibition of the\n\"national game\" in the renowned\nColiseum at Komo. An American\nexchange remarks: When Cupt.\nAnson was refused the use of the\nColiseum in which to exhibit his\nimported baso ball colts, the old\nman probably felt like butchering\nsomebody to make a Roman holiday.\nA Naples correspondent gives an\nanecdote which, he says, deserves\nto become historical. \"Sitting\nexactly behind Mr. Gladstone in\nchurch I saw a groy hair tumble on\nto the collar of his overcoat. Hearing once how a lemon squeezed by\nthe Princo of Wales instantly\nbecame of immortal value, it occurred to me that a hundred years\nhence this short iron-grey hair\nmight likewise attain distinction, so\n1 carefully picked it off, and held it\nbetween my thumb and finger. The\nnext thing wns to bring it home\nand preserve it, but on the way I\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ndid uot lose it\u00E2\u0080\u0094but sold iti Meeting\nan Italian deputy of high position\nI showed him my trophy, he got\ntremendously excited, seized my hair\n(the grey one), threw mo a five-\nfranc piece, and bolted.\"\nIt has beon demonstrated in V\u00C2\u00ABco\nValley, Cal., says an fxchange, that\npeach pfpiies will nit';' as good a\nfire for household purposes as the\nbest kind of coal in tho market.\nThe fruit-growers, instead of as\nheretofore, throwing lhe pits away,\ndispose of the stones at $6 por ton.\nA sack of stones will weigh about\neighty ponnds and will last ub long\nus an equal number of pounds of\ncoal, and give a greater intensity of\nheat. At many of the orchards of\nthe valley may be soon great stacks\nof peach and apricot stones which\nwill eventually find their way to\nSan Francisco and other places to\nbo sold for fuel. The apricot stone\ndoes not burn as readily ns the\npeach, and will not command as\ngood a price. The fruit-raisers will\nundoubtedly be pleased to learn\nthat they have another source of\nrevenue open to thom. A large\nnumber of peaches Aro dried during\nthe season for shipment. As soon as\ntho owners find they havo 11 market\nfor the stones a greater number of\npounds will bo dried than heretofore.\nAn important addition will\nshortly bo made to the effective\nstrength of the royal navy by the\ncompletion for foreign service of the\ncruiser Narcissus, which was recently built for the government by\nthe Earle Shipbuilding Company of\nHull, and has been fitted for sea in\ntho Medway. The Narcissus is a\ncruisor of Ihe Orland type, and is\nbuilt of steel, having a displacement\nof 5000 tons, with a mean loud\ndraught of 22 feet 8 inchos. She is\nto bo propelled by twin screws,\ndriven by triple expansion engines\nof 8500-horso power, and at her\nofficial trials outside of Sheerness\nharbor, sho realized a speed of\nbetween eighteen and nineteen\nknots per hour on a four hours' run.\nTho Narcissus is to be equipped with\ntwo twenty-two ton breech-loading\nguns, ten five-ton breach loading\nguns, and sixteen quick firing guns.\nThe conning tower is protected by\nplate several inches thick, and the\nNarcissus is also fitted with an armament abovo and below the water\nline, She has a coal carrying capacity of 9000 tons, and with full\nbunkers is capable of steaming 8400\nknots at a reduced speed, of ten\nknots per hour. In the course of a\nfew months the Amiralty will huvo\nsix cruisers of this type roady for\nthe pennant, viz., thu Australia,\nImmortalite, Undaunted, Galatea,\nAurora and Narcissus. Each of\nthese vessels has cost the country\ndose upon -\u00C2\u00A3300,000.\nMUST BE READY.\nHr. Stanhope Says England Must\nbe Ready for the Most Sudden Emergency.\nEmin Pasha Engages in a Great\nBattle with the Mahdi's Troops\nand Defeats Them.\nAt Last a British Minister has been\nAppointed to Succeed Lord\nSackville West.\nENGLAND MUST 11E HEADY.\nLondon, March 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr. Stanhope,\nsecretary of stato for war, warns his\ncountrymen that contingencies might\narise which will require England to bu\nprepared for tho most suddon emergency,\nANOTHER PRIZE FRUIT.\nLondon, Mar. 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pritobard has\nbeen put up to fight Jack Uompsey for\na thousand pounds.\nA HAPPY WITHDRAWAL.\nLondon, Mar. 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho national lib-\noral club since the withdrawal of the\nMarquis of Hartlngton and the unionists has received an accession of 700\nmembers. It is expected now that\nminy of the aeceders will re< urn.\nSTRONG LANGUAGE,\nLondon, Mar. 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Star to-daf\nmake a violent attack on the government. It says tbat W. H. Smith, the\nconservative leader of the bouse of\ncommons, shares Pigott's guilt, and\ndemands hia impeachment. Attorney-\nGeneral Webster was called an \"impudent and shameless liar.\" The Star\nadvocated the criminal prosecution of\nHouston.\nA GREAT BATTLE.\nCairo, Mar. 1. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Deserters from\nKhartoum bring news that there has\nbeen a great battle on the White Nile\nin Bahr-El-Ghazel, between the army\nof Emin Pasha and the expedition sent\nout against him by Khalifa Abdullah.\nThe expedition was defeated with\nheavy loss. Emin Pasha captured\nthree steamers and many prisoners\nwere taken. The remnant of tho expedition is dispersed in the desert.\nHOUSTON IS CAME,\nLondon, March 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Parnell\ncommission resumed to-day. The\ncouJt refused to allow Houston to make\nn personal statement concerning his\nalleged connection with the forgeries,\nor submit a written document containing auch statement ou the ground\nthat tho time was not convenient.\nO'Kelly, Davitt and Campbell swore\nthey did not write tho letters sworn to\nby Pigott as having been written by\nthem. Justin McCarthy denied he\never had an interview with Pigott.\nLewis, Parnell's counsel, swore he never promised Pigott a farthing to Bwear\nthat the Parnell lcttors were forgeries.\nLabouotTcro denied he ever offered\nPigott \u00C2\u00A35,000 to swear tho letters wero\nforgeries. HouBton announced his\nreadiness to submit to a crosa*examination and give security for his continued\nattendance upon llie commission.\nSir Chas. liiisjol], Parnell's counsel,\napplied to tlio court for a interim report by thu commission on tho eenuine-\nness \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 of tho alleged Parnell letters.\nAttorney-General Webster opposed\nthe application and urged Unit ns Sir\nOharles mado the charges of foul conspiracy, Houston ought to be first\ncross-examined. Presiding Justice\nHannen decided nitainst the attorney-\ngeneral. He. Baid tho commission's\njurisdiction is at present limited to the\ninvestigation of the charges and allegations made against certain persons.\n\"It is no part of our duty to deal with\ncharges made, against othor persons.\nThat' 'question will 'bodecided at tho\nnext Bitting of the commission,\" Tho\ncommission then adjourned.\ndr. tanner escapes arrest.\nLondon, March 1.- The house of\ncommons is crowded, the floor as well\naa the galleries. Dr. Tanner, for\nwhom tho i-olice watched every entrance of the parliament building to\narrest him under a crimes act warrant, hu just entered the house, and\nia recoived with cheers and shouts of\n\"bravo\" from the Parnellitea as he\ntakea his seat. The debato on the\naddress has begun. Mr. Gladstone\nis on his feet and is speaking at his\nbest, fle is now replying lo the remarks of Mr. Chamberlain. He is in\ngood voice, fine form and high spirita,\nund monopolizes the attention of both\nthe members and spectators.\nADVISING WAR.\nSt. PETEnsDuno, March I.\u00E2\u0080\u0094It is reported hero the Afghans are advancing\nupon the frontier from Herat to attack\nthe Emir of Bokhara who is preparing to\nattack them. Tho Russian newspapers are lillud with articles advising\nwar.\nA MINISTER AlM'OINTED.\nLondon, Mar. 1. Official confirmation ia givon to tho report that Sir\nJulian Pauneefort is appointed minister to Washington.\nRURUINO IT IN.\nLondon, Fub. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Dailtt News,\nin a leader this morning says: \"The\nTimes tried to destroy Parnell, but\nParnell has destroyed tho Times\nNovor again shall any man who respects himself hear base accusations\nwith guile or the affecting of a languid disgust. The Times is no representative of tho English press and we\ndo not hesitate to say that thoro is not\nauotber English newspaper capable of\nengaging in such abominable traffio\nwhich has led tho Times to Buch abyss-\nmal depths.\"\nCONORATCLATINO PARNELL.\nLondon. Fob. 28. \u00E2\u0080\u0094Parnell was Bur-\nrounded by friends iu the lobby of the\ncommons to-day, all of whom congratulated him on tho collapse of the\nTime's crusade against him. Sir W.\nB. Bartlett, conservative member for\nHorsham, penetrated tho circle, and\ncordially shook hands with the Irish\nleader. Parnell has not yet resolved\nupon his course of action, but it iB\ndefinitely determined to follow up the\nsuggestion of conspiracy put forth by\nSir Charles ltuBsoll.\nWEI1STKH RESIGNS.\nLondon, Feb. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094It was asserted\nin tho lobby of the hmiso of commons\nthis afternoon that Sir Hichnrd E.\nWeh.ilor has offered his resignation of\nthe oilice of attorney-general in consequence cf the collapse of the Times'\ncharges againBt Parnell, but that the\ngovernment has as yot declined to accept it, believing that to do so would\nstill further commie the ministry to\nresponsibility for the allegations,\nW. W. McLellan, Lynn, N. S., writes:\n\"I was afflicted with rheumatism, and\nhad given tip all hopes of a cure. By\nchance I saw Dr, Thomas' Eclectric Oil\nreoomnicnilcil. I immediately sont\n(fifty milea) and purchased tour bottles,\nand with only two applications I was\nable to got around, and although I havo\nnot used ono bottlo, I am nearly well.\nThe other throe bottles I gave around to\nmy neighbors, and I have had so many\ncalls for more, that I feel bound to relieve tho afllieted by writing to you for\na supply.\"\nIMPERIAL PARLIAMENT,\nLondon, Feb. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094In the house of\ncommons to-night, Mr. Sexton (nationalist) gavo notice of a motion to\ncompel the disclosure of the names of\nthe ofliceis who had pledged themselves to associate with Colonel Saun-\nderson, the conservative member for\njNorth Armagh, Ireland, lo violate\ntheir oaths of obedienco to thu crown\nin the event of a home rule parliament\nbeing granted to Ireland. Mr. Timothy Healey (nationalist) said that in\nview of tho fact that Attorney-General\nWobator had roceived in November\nPigott's statement to the effect that he\ncould not stand a cross-examination\nregarding any testimony ho might give\nconcerning the alleged Parnell letters,\nho (Healy) would give notice of a motion declaring that Sir Richard Webster had forfeited tho confidence of\nparliament, Mr. Shaw-Lefevre (lib-\norul) in a speech charged the Irish executive, Mr. Balfour, with taking ad-,\nvantage of a parliamentary recess to\nincrease the rigor of his acts of repression towards tho Irish peoplo. Mr.\nJoseph Chamberlain addressed the\nhouse. Ho contended that the opposition speakers avoided the main issue.\nThe house, he Baid, was asked to con-\nsure the government. This request\ndemanded first that the views of the\ngovernment seeking to succeed the\npresent one should bo sot forth. He\nsujd the opposition should explain its\npolicy; then there would be somolhim?\ndefinite presented to the country.\nIn the course of the debate Mr. Russell made a statement which seemed to\naccuse Mr. Dillon of paying for the\ndefence of murderers. Mr. Dillon exclaimed: \"Tliat is a foul lie.\" The\nspeaker called upon Mr. Dillon to\nwithdraw the remark, which ho subsequently did upon Mr. RusboII disclaiming any intention ot personal application in his remark. Mr. Healy accused\nMr. Balfour of having made a misstatement in roferunco to the O'Brien\nmatter. At thu speaker's request Mr.\nHealy withdrew his remark.\nDOMINION PARLIAMENT.\nOttawa, Feb. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094In the senate\nto day Mr. Mclnnes (British Columbia) drew the attention of the government to the necessity of urging upon\nthe Imperial government the construction of the proposed defences un the\nPacific coast. Three years have gone\nsince the admiralty sent a party of\nengineers to survey tho sites, but\nnothing has boen done bo far. TIiobo\nproceedings, Mr. Mclnnes said, drew\nattention to the war cloud hanging\nover Europe. Tho Russians, he said,\nare increasing their arsenal at Vladivostok, opposito to British Columbia.\nMr. Abbott, the leader of the government in the senate, replied at\nlength. It had not been decided to\nerect batteries in the neighborhood of\nEsquimalt. The negotiations between\ntho Imperial and Canadian governments respecting the preparation of\nthe armaments aro of a confidential\nnature i'liey are proceeding satisfactorily.\nMr. Mclnne3 thon drew the attention of the government to tho necessity of defending other points on the\nPacitrc coast.\nForty Canadian legislators sent a\ncongratulatory cable to-day to Mr.\nI'arueli, congratulating him upon tho\ncollapse of . the Tunes' conspiracy.\nThey include the Hon. John Costigan,\nthe minister of inland revenue, Sir J.\nS. D. Thompson, the minister-of justice, and Hon. Frank Smith, lhe member of tho cabinet without portfolio,\nand sis senators. This cablegram\nreads as follows: \"Tho undersigned\nmembers of tho Canadian parliament,\nof Irish nativity or descent, tender you\ntheir hearty congratulations on the exposure of the plot by which the Times\nsought to oonneot you and the Irish\ncause, of which you are the represent a\ntivo, with tho crimes to which the\nforged letters referred.\"\nMr. Adam Brown's bill for the prevention of cruelty to animals Imd a\nnarrow escape in the house this afternoon, Ou tho motion to consider it in\ncommittee of the whole, Mr. Tisdale\nmoved tho amendment of a six months'\nhoist. On the amendment the vote\nstood, yeaa.91; nays,9I. Speaker Oui-\nmet gave his casting voto in favor of Mr.\nBrown On the main motion the votes\nstood, yeas. 90; nays, 96. Sir John\nvoted with Mr. Brown, but several of\nthe cabinet ministers gave thoir votes\nto Mr. Tiadale.\nThe postmaster-general introduced a\nbill to amend the act relating to the\npostal service. The bill was read a first\ntime.\nMr. Davin's motion for papers was\nadopted after threo hour's debate. Mr.\nDewdney in a clever speech said that\nany change mado in the liquor laws in\ntho torritoriers was a change for thu\nbettor. The houso adjourned nt 10\no'clock.\nVICTORIA NEWS,\nIHolrlrt Trli-srapli Service. rnu-llrliiK\nfor Hie Football Natch, run I Exports\nami Customs Receipts.\nSpecial to The Columbian.!\nVictoria, Mar. 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tlio Victoria &\nEsquimalt Telophone Co. aro arranging\nto establish a district telegraph sorvico\nin this city.\nThe Nanaimo \"Rovers\" nro pruc-\nticing vigorously for tho match, \"Islanders\" vs. \"Mainlanders.\"\nTho total export of coal from Nanaimo in February wss 35,413 tons.\nA seven thousand dollar Methodist\nchurch, having seating capacity for\n8S0, will bo eroctod in Nanaimo this\ncoming summer.\nAll the miners who remained at Co-\nmox after tho strike have rosumed\nwork. A number of Belgians arrived\nand wero immediately employed iu the\nmines.\nTho customs receipts for February\nat Victoria wore 936,427,09, Nanaimo\n94,011,05.\n1560 tons of iron ore wero shipped\nfrom Texada Islnnd in February,\nMayor Hendry is in the city.\n\"BARKIS IS WILLING.\"\nThe United States is Very Willing\nto havo Commercial Union\nwith Sister Canada.\nTemperance Maine will not Grant\nto Women the Bight to\nVote Like Men.\nForty Canadian M.P.'s Send Their\nCongratulatians to Parnell\non His Victory.\nChildren Cryfor Pitcher1 j Castoria\nTHEY/ WANT FREE TRADE.\nWashington, March 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The houso\nthis morning agreed to a resolution\nproviding that whenever it shall be\nduly certifiod to the president that tho\ngovernment of Canada haa declared\nthe desiro to establish commercial\nunion with tho U. S. with a uniform\nrevenue aytitom and internal tax to be\ncollected, and similar impoit duties to\nbe imposed on articles brought into\neither cuuntry from other nations with\nno duties upon trade between the U.\nS. and Canada, he shall appoint three\ncommissioners tu meet liko commissioners of Canada to prepare a plan\nfor the assimilation of import duties\nand the internal revenue tax of the\ntwo countries, and the equitable\ndivision of receipts in a commercial\nunion.\nKENTUCKY JUSTICE.\nCincinnati, March L\u00E2\u0080\u0094Harrison*\nSmothers arrived from Carlisle, Ky.,\nlaat night and brings details of a fearful tragedy. He said he was ejected\nfrom his house because the owner\nwanted it. He built a ahanty on the\nroad over his goods and was attacked\nlast Saturday night and five of his\nfamily killed. He said he came to\nCincinnati because he could not get\njustice iu Kentucky courts.\nTHE DEAR CREATURES.\nAugusta, Mc, March 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho assembly has defeated the woman suffrage bill by a voto of 90 to 40.\naccidental deaths.\nButte, Mont., March 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094John\nWebb and B. Hanley, minars, were\nkilled hore last night. A two hundred pound rock crushed Webb to\ndeath, and Hanley fell fifty feet\nthrough a shaft, the door of which bad\nbeen loft open.\nPASSENGER LIST.\nSan Francisco, Mar. 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Passengers per s.s. Umatilla for Victoria:\nP Davie, J Bnyley, Mrs A Bushby,\nMisB Bushby. S S Gamsby, Miss J\nMust, Mrs McAdaroe, Mrs S M Lock-\nhart, J Porter, Miss V Leighton, J\nTGammel, Miss Haag, RG McKenzie, Mrs A Hapg, W F Anderson, R\nAnderson, D C Rife and wife, Mrs M\nRivers, Mr Mixon and wife, W J\nBrone, L H Bailey, J Hephyn, M J\nHepbyn.\nyellow .tack.\nNew York, Mar. 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The schoumr\nJohn Pierco, capt. John Rogers,* arrived to-day, hiving been forty-threo\ndays on the passage from the West.\nIndies. Mate Junes died from yellow\nfever a few days after sailing and\nothor sailors were soon attacked, the\nschooner being at times helpless. The\nstr. Holly spoke hor and attempted to\ntuw her, but failed, Capt. Rogers\nbrought the vessel to port almost\nunaided. The health oflicer found the\ncrew Buffering from intermittent fever\nand they wore taken to the hospital,\nthe parnell letters.\nNew York, March l.-Smaliey's\nLondon cable to tho Tribune says: It\nis idle to penetrate tho mysteries of tho\nTimes oflice, or to solve the- problems\nof enormity still so carefully kept up.\nIt is the Times which is responsible;\nindividuals are of little consequence,\nbut I will mention, though not vouch\nfor a story current among people likely\nto know. Mr. Buckle, they Bay, was\nfrom the first opposed to the publications of the letters without better evidence of their genuiness and without\nsomo knowledge of the source from\nwhich they were alleged lo have come.\nBut he was overruled by Mr. Walter\nand Mr. Macdonald. The contest between them seems to hnve lasted from\nOct. '86 to April '87. What Buckle's\nfriends assert is that ho implored\nMr. Walter to stay his hand, \"went\non his knees to him,\" was the\nexpression I hoard used. Nor was\nMr. Buckle alone in his opposition, at\nleast ono outsider, a man of some\neminence, heard what was coming and\nvainly tried to stop it. There were\ntwo things which predisposed the English people to believo theso letters\ngenuine. Thu first was the authority\nof the great journal in which they ap*\npeared ; the second was Mr. Parnell's\nrefusal to bring action. Why ho refused to bring action himself, knowing the letters to be forgeries, has\nnevor been entirely explained, Tho\ndistrust of a London jury was not\nenough, I asked yesterday ono who\nought to know, ho answered : \"Becauso wo had no evidence to prove\nthem forgeries.\"\nGOOD FOR TACOMA.\nTacoma, Feb. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Mr. Oakos,\npresident uf the Northern Pacific Railway, arrived hero to-day and was clos*\noted with Second Vice-President Prescott for several hours. A reporter\napplied for an interview and was ad*\nmittod. Mr. Oakes Btated that tho\nNorthern Pacific Railway will eipend\n$6,000,000 in terminal facilities in\nTacoma and will make them as fine as\npossible; $880,000 will bo expended\nthis year and $1,000,000 in each of\nthe following years until completion.\nAbout $500,000 will be put into the\nconstruction of workshops, freight\nhouses and rouud houses. The new\ncar shops wilt employ 600 men and\nwill be tho seoond largest on the road.\nThree new coal bunkers will be built\nwith a capacity of 50,000 tons each;\nthe three will employ an army of laborers and mechanics for ibout four\nyears, and the citizens of Tacoma are\njubilant over the bright prospects.\nPeter Cicffer, Buffalo, Bays; \"I was\nbadly bitten by a bone a few days ago,\nand was induced by a friend, who witnessed tho occurrence to try Dr. Thamas'\nEclectric OU. It relieved tho pain almost immediately, and In four days the\nwound was completely healed. Nothing\ncan be better ior fresh wounds.\" See\nthat you got the genuine Dr. Thomas'\nEclectric Oil, as there are imitations on\ntho market.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 >\u00C2\u00BB ', \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nJob printing of all kindi neatly dons\nat the Colombian offlce, Prices will be\nfonnd as low ss at any other offloe la\nthe province \u00E2\u0080\u0094Adv. THE\nDAILY COLUMBIAN\nPUBLISHED\nEvery AfUrne-u except Bandar,\nBY THS\nX3IWWBlDTr BBOTHBBS,\nAt their Steam Printing Establish'\nment, Columbia Street.\nBY MAIL.\nFor 1'2 months jJ8\nFor 6 mouths 4\nFor 8 montha \u00E2\u0080\u009E..,. \u00E2\u0080\u009E 2\nDELIVERED IN THE OITY:\nFor 12 mouths 810 00\nFor 6 months 6 25\nPer mouth.... 90\nPer week 25\nPayment lu all cases (except for weekly\nrato) to be made lu advance.\nTHE WEEKLY COLUMBIAN\nIssued every Wi-ilni-Mlay Morning,\nDelivered in tho City, per year. (3.00\nMailed, per year. 2.00\nMailed, 8 months ' \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\nS-oilg frifek Columbinn\nFriday Evening, March 1, \ttt.\u00C2\u00BB.\nTho particulars of tho bill introduced into the Canadian parliament\nyesterday by the postmaster-gen\noral, tu amend the act relating to\npostal matters are as follows. It\nwill bo seen that important changes\nand provisions are contemplated by\ntbe bill: Tho mover oxplainotl that\nthe first change introduced was to\ncompel steamships or steamboats\nnavigating in Canadian waters to\ncarry Her Majesty's mails at such\nrates as the postmaster-general may\norder them to be carried at and at\nsuch rate and terms as the governor-general in council may pre\nscribe. The object of tlie proposed\nchange was that instead of giving\nsubsidies to different lines of steamships throughout the different parts\nof tho Dominion for the carrying\nof the mails, and on inland waters,\ntho service shall be according to a\nfixed principle, whether according\nto the weight of tho matter carried\nor the distance. This shall be prescribed by a board appointed for\nthat purpose. The idea was the\nsame as thnt carried one in connection with the mail on Canadian\nrailways. There was another change\nto render the crime of stealing decoy letters just as grave ns that of\nstealing ordinary letters carried by\ntho department. Thero was another\nchange to render more stringent the\nlaw regarding immoral publications\nor photographs. The next paragraph gave the postmaster-general\npower to increase tho rate at which\nregistered letters are carried throughout, the Dominion, with a view to\nrender their carriage more secure.\nThe object of the bill wns to givo\nthe postmaster-general full powerto\nincrease the rate placed ou registered letters to English and American points. Another change was\nincreasing the weight of ordinary\nletters from 3 cents per half ounce\nto 3 cents per ounce. Another\nclause raises the rate on drop letters\nfrom 1 cent per half ounco to 2\ncents per ounce. It merely doubles\nthe rate on drop letters throughout\n. the Dominion to 2 cents per ounce,\nthe samo us in tlio United Kingdom\nand the United States. In no part\n1 of tho world wero drop letters posted\nand delivered at tho same rate ns\nthey were in Canada. Continuing,\nthe poat in aster-gen oral said that the\npostage on newspapers and periodicals printed and published in Canada at less intervals than 7 dnys\nwould be charged at the rate of 1\ncent per pound. Daily and weekly\nnewspapers are still to bo carried\nfree us at present. Another clause\ndefined newspapers according to the\ndefinition given in tbe British postal\nact. Another clause authorizes tho\npostmaster-general to mako arrangements with other countries as to\nthe parcel post. Another clause\naltered the relations between the\ncustoms department and the post-\noffice department in the way of fa-\nciliating tlio delivery of dutiable\nmatter. Mr. Ives asked the postmaster general whether he proposed\nmaking arrangements respecting\nletters not fully paid so that they\nwould be forwarded to their destination and the amount collected, the\nsame as in England. Mr. Haggart\nreplied that the matter had been\nfully considered in tho department.\nThe objection to the system proposed by thn hon. gentleman was\nthnt if it allowed letters to be\nforwarded without u stamp they\nwould revert to the old system of\nsending letters without stumps to\nimpose upon the persons receiving them double postage. If\nthe letters were not sufficiently\nstamped they would go to their destination, but there was the penalty\nof double postage.\nIt is very generally understood,\nsays thn Mail, that during tho present session of parliament, Sir John\nThompson will introduce legislation\neffecting changes in the system of\npunishing for crime. The Mail\ncontinues: Tho existing plan, according to experts in penology, is\ngtrikingly imperfect. It restricts\nthe liberty of the criminal, and to\nthat extent is a punishment. But,\nafter all,tho man in the penitentiary\nsoon accommodates himself to his\nchanged conditions, whereupon the\nidea that he is paying a penalty\npasses away, and regret for the\noffenco ho has committed is forgotten. Under such oiroumstances\n. reform is but of the question. All\nthe convict thinks of is the hour of\nhis release, when ho will be able to\nreturn to tho world, and perhaps\nfollow his evil pursuits with a success born of tho experience he has\njust endured. Two methods of\ndealing with convicts are now under\nconsideration, tho one having in\nview punishment, tho other reform.\nThe first is known as the system of\nisolation or cellular confinement,\nnnd is usually applied to incorrigible and habitual convicts. Mr. J.\nO. Moylab, the inspector of penitentiaries, in his report this year,\nexplains how it has operated in\nother lands, Tho mention of this\nsystem of punishment is, of course,\nsuggestive of the American plan of\nsolitary confinement, w\v.,M was so\nthoroughly exposed by Charles\nDickens. But the two systems\nbear but slight relations one to tho\nother. Tho incorrigible is not.under\nthe system proposed, held for tho\nterm of his natural lifo in a cell,\nwhere he neither sees a human face\nnor hoars a human voice. A living\ndeath is not the punishment suggested. Tlio proposal is that for the\nfirst few months the recidivist shall\nbe given complete privacy, in order\nthat he may think over his crime.\nHe is to have a cell to himself. He\nis not to mix with tho other convicts. He is not to be subject to\nthe evil suggestions of his comrades\nin vice. But, separated for a term\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094say nine months or a year\u00E2\u0080\u0094he is\nto be taught that offences against\nthe law bring retribution, and that\npunishment is really irksomo, if not\nabsolutely painful. This system\nhas been tried throughout Europe,\nand its result has been a tremendous\nreduction in the volume of convicts,\nand particularly in the number of\nrecidivists, A man who has experienced complete isolation from\nsociety, oven from that of convicts,\nfor ti year, repents, or if he does not\nactually repent, is careful not to\nincur the same penalty again. The\nother plan which It is proposed to\nadopt looks to the reformation of\nthe criminal. It is known as tho\nindeterminate sentence system.\nUnder it tho tribunal before which\nthe oltender is tried determines\nwhether or not he is guilty, but it\ndoes not fix tho term of his imprisonment. That matter is left to\nthe prison experts, who are to release the convict when proof of complete reformation is apparent. Education, careful training in some\nrespectable pursuit, and watchfulness over the morals of the patient\nare matters to which the judges of\ncharacter, in the penitentiaries will\nhave to apply themselves. It is\nsaid in support of this system that\nwhere a man sincerely repents he\nshould be allowed to return to society ; but that if he positively declines to abandon his vices hu should\nbe kept, evon though ho remain\nthere until ho die, in prison, whore\nhe can mako no assault upon the\npeace or the property of tho community. There is wisdom in this.\nYet it must not be forgotten that\nthe sharpest and most determined\ncriminals can profess repentance\nwith a greater show of sincerity\nthan can the novice in crime, who\nis really sorry for his misdeed and\nfor the position in which it hns\nplaced him. Moreover, there is the\ndanger, whero tho prison authorities are not almost perfect men, that\ntlie power to prolong thu punishment may be abused. The minis\nter of justice is no doubt alive to\ntho difficulties, for lie has made a\nstudy of the ontiro question. If,\novercoming these, Sir John succeeds\nin his projected attempt to reform\nthe prison system, to reduce the\nnumber of convicts, and to send\nback to society from tho penitentiaries, not criminals more disposed\nto vico than when they entered\ntheso institutions, but reformed\nmen nnxious to lend an honest and\nrespectable lifo, ho will havo conferred a distinct benefit upon so-\ncioty, and will havo earned the\nthanks of his country,\nChildren Cryfor Pitcher's Castoria\nBAPTIST OHUHCH, Agnes Htreet,\nKast of Mary Htreet. Lord's Day\nServices at11 a. m. and 7 p.m. Sabbath\nSchool iiinlllll'le Class at 2:30 p. m. All\nsards freet strangers cordially welcomed,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Rov. Thos. Baldwin, pastor.\nMETHODIST CHURCH, Mary\nStreet. Rev. J, II. White, Pastor.\nHcrvlces at 11 a, in. nnil7p.ra. Sundny\nBchool and Ulblu Olass 2:\"J0 p, m. Prayer\nMeeting on Thursdays at 7.80p.m. Heats\nfree; strangers cordially invited.\n\u00C2\u00A7T. PAUL'S OKI Kill, John Street,\nOpposito Orange Hall, Itev. Thomas\nuldon, Pastor. Hervice.-t every Sunday\natiii. no. und 7 p. in, Thursday evenings\nat 7:30 o'clock. Seats free; all are cordially Invited. Hundny School at 2:30 p. in.\n/-1HUR011 OP FStit. ASD. -HOLY\n\j TRINITY Cllliur-U; Rector, Tho\nven. Archdeacon Wood--. S. MARY'S\nCHURCH: Hector, The Bishop. Services\nIn both churches trem dm/. AH Rents\nfree, Bolh churches open all day for private prayer.\nCALEDONIA & ST. ANDREW'S\nSOOIBT\u00C2\u00A5.-The regular meetings of\nthis Association arch' hi on tholust Tuesday of each month,al 8o'clock p.m. All\nHcotclimnn are invito! lo attend.-John\nBui k, Sec.\n\\r C. T. U.-RKCJUr.AIt MEETING\nVV , every Wednesday afternoon at 3\no'clock at the W. C. T. U. Heiidnunrtorn,\nDouglas St. Loyal Lei-Ion ln tho same\nplace every Friday afternoon.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mns. JAS.\nCunningham, President; Miss DeBeck,\nBecretary,\nJt I'NION LOUGH So, U, A. P.\nymf\p * A. M.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tho regular meot-\npkJrX lags Of tills Lodge are hold In\n/ \u00E2\u0096\u00BC \ the Masonlo Tomple oin the first\nWednesday in eaoh month, at7(8Q o'olook\np. m. Bojoimiiug brethren are cordially\nJnvlind to attend.\u00E2\u0080\u0094W. 0. Coatiiam, Sec.\nDOAHD OP JltA ni:. Hoard Room,\nJ5 Oddfellows Brick Block, up-slulrs.\nCouncil mi-els on the first and third Wed-\nni'Ndny In each monlh.nl.4p.m. Quarterly\nmeetings on tho 22nd of Feb., May-, Aug.,\nmul Nov., at 7:30 p. m. Now members\nmay be proposed and elected at any (.jniir-\ntorly meeting.\u00E2\u0080\u0094D, Roiison, Hoc.\nFor Texada!\n'f\"fitl TnE STEAMER\n^S ROBERT DUNSMUIR\nWILL LEAVF. (WEATHER PBRMIT-\ntlng) tho O. P. N. Co.'b Dock about\nten o'cloclt, .\nSnturdny Morning, Mar. ft,\nFor Texada Gold Mines, via Vancouver\nand Nanaimo, returning on Monday.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFare, round trip, 90. Will remain atthe\nOold Minos about.) hours.\nWM. ROGERS,\ndfoMU .Master.\nHERRING'S\nDrug Store!\nHAVING DECIDED TO\nreduce our immense\nstock, in order to make room\nfor the large quantities ol\ngoods now en route, we have\na Large List of Goods which\nwill be sold at Greatly Reduced Rates on and after\nMarch ist, 1889. Please call\nand get our prices before purchasing elsewhere.\nA. M. HERRING.\nFebruary 27,1880, fe27dlo\nJAMES CUNNINGHAM.\nImporter of Hardware, Agricultural\nImplement*, Etc.\nIn every city there are individual\nexamples of men whose connections\nwith its business pursuits, whose\nprominence in all matters of public\nenterprise, whose record for unflinching integrity, undaunted energy,\nand untiring industry, mnko thom\nobjects of special note, not alone in\ntheir homes, but wherever oxalted\ncommercial reputation is recognized\nand respected, such a man have we\nin the subject of this sketch. Mr.\nJames Cunningham established his\nbusiness in this city in 1SG2 and\nhas, through all tho vicissitudes of\ntwenty-seven years' trade, maintained the even tenor of his way.\nHis transactions have increased\nyear by year, and the circle of his\ncustomers and patrons gradually\nwidening nnd his firm extending until ho now controls a business un\nexcelled by any similar establishment in British Columbia, His\nbuildings are large and commodious\nand admirably arranged and appointed. All this spaco is filled\nwith a complete and extensive assortment of hardware, agricultural implements, paints, oils, glassware,\ncrockery ware, wall-paper, wooden-\nware, stoves, tinware, hoi tow-ware,\nplumbers' goods, house furnishings,\niron pipo and fittings. This house\nalso manufactures tinware of all\nkinds nnd does every variety of\nsheet-iron cornice work, gas-fittings,\nplumbing, roofing, etc. There is no\nhouso in the trade which carries o\nmore complete stock or whoso facilities surpass thoso of this establishment for supplying tho trade with\nfirst-class goods at lowest quotations.\nThe length of timo this gentleman\nhas boen in business and the success he has attained are better\nrecommendations than the loudest\npraise we could possibly give. We\nmay mention, however, to our readers who have not yet become acquainted with this find, that none\nin the Northwest has n better reputation for fair and honorable dealing.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mercantile Iteview.\nTO CONTRACTORS\nTENDERS ARE INVITED UNTIL\nnoon on ftnlimliiy, March 2nd, for\nthe erection of oke or five Cottages for\nW. Norman Bole, a, C.\nPlans ut my oflice. The lowest or any\ntender not necessarily nccepted.\nCI. W. GRANT,\nArchitect.\nNew West,, Feb. 27,1839. dfe27td\nNewStore! NewGoods!\nsrca-vsr pbicbs\nHAVING REMOVED TO MY OLD\nStand lu the New Block, opposite\nColonial Hotel, I nm now prepared to\nshow a full line In\nCrockery, Glassware, China and\nFancy Bric-n-Briic,\nAcholco lot of\nFRESH VEGETABLE & FLOWER SEEDS\nArrived to-dny. V. .1. It011*0*.\nFebruary Sfi.'l.Silii. ddelflm3\nMESSES.\nMacpherson & Thomson\nOf Ontario and Marquette, Michigan,\nhavo opened ii\nl1\nIN THE HOLBROOK BLOCK,\nColumbia Street, S doors East\nof Telegraph Office.\nThey havo a complete assortment of\neverything usually found Ina first-class\nDrug Store, comprising pure and fresh\nDRUGS, OHEMIOALS,\nPATENT MEDICINES,\nTOILET ARTICLES,\nENGLISH, FRENOH AND\nAMERICAN PERFUMES.\nPhyalclans' prescriptions cnrcfullyoom-\npoumleil dny and niglit. feZfdlm\nANNOUNCEMENT\nThe Undersigned Having Opened ft New\nund Handsome\nDrug Store!\nFully stocked with nil the Necessaries\nof a FIHST-CLASH 8TOHE, would\nrespectfully solicit ashnro\nof Patronage.\nSPECIAL ATTENTION\nWill he Paid lo lhe Dispensing of PHYSICIANS' I'lU'.HciurnoNH nud\nFAMILY KECIPE8.\nHaving for several yearn occupied the\nposition of Dlsponsorin the leading Storo\nof Montreal, and having had it thorough\ncourse of Instruction at the Ontario Col-\nlego of I'liarniiii'y. wo feel that our export-\ni'ikt merits the confidence of the Public,\nT. A. Muir & Co.\nPHARMACEUTICAL DRUB0IIT8\nQueen's Hotel Block,\nCOLUMBIA STREET.\nNow Weatmlnstor. dmhlyl\nMerchant Tailors\nHave Just Received an Immonse Stoek\nof Imported\nTweeds, Worsteds,\nFANCY SUITIKOS, FANCY PAHTIH08 ADD\nSPRING OVERCOATIMS,\nWhich have never been equalled lu\nthe Cily aud which they nre\nprepared to make up\nAT I'RM EH THAT Will BOTHt:It KVEDT\nTHE EAMTFRV TAILOR*\nTo Compete With. -\nStyle, Fit and Workmanship\nGUARANTEED.\nKsr Call and Inspect Goods.****\nOolumbia St.,\nOne Door West of Dickinson'a Butcher\nShop, New Writm taster, B.C.\ndmhlyl\nm\nLowenberg, Harris tk Co.\nReal Estate, Insurance\n AND\t\nFINANCIAL AGENTS.\nCOLUMBIA STREET, NEW WESTMINSTER.\n41 GOVERNMENT STREET, VICTORIA.\nFarm Lauds in Tracts from 50 Acres upwards, and from $25 to\nper acre, in various stages of cultivation.\nAcre Property near the City, from $200 to $500 per acre, Improved and Unimproved.\nChoice Business Lots in various Parts of the City.\nLot 132, Delta Municipality, liiti acres, good bottom\nland, partly ditched, houso and fencing, fmo water frontage ou\nFraser Itiver; suitable for mill or cannery site; terms easy.\nLot 184, Delta Municipality, containing IGO acres, prairie\nlaud, read*, for plow, all fenced and ditched, two outlets to\nGulf of Georgia, 40 minutes' walk from Ladners Landing;\n\u00C2\u00A750 per acre.\nLot 145, Delta Municipality, 20 acre tract; \u00C2\u00A730 por acre.\nNorthwest -J Section 4, Township 7, Surrey Municipality\n(Hall's Prairie), IGO acres, prairie land, not subject to overflow, suitable for farm or fruit raising; price \u00C2\u00A72,500, on easy\nterms of payment.\nPart Lot 202 aud 270, Group 1, Now Westminster .Dis-\ntriet (Pitt Meadows), containing 140acres, consisting of prairie\nand high land, with improvements; \u00C2\u00A72,100.\nSoutheast portion of Lot 380, Now Westminster District,\nGroup 1, containing 50 acres, suitable for fruit growing, not\nheavily timbered, stream of water runs through the proporty;\nprice, \u00C2\u00A730 por acre.\nNew Westminster Suburbs.\nLots 7 and 8, Block XIV, Now Westminstor suburbs,\ncontaining 10 acres, well adapted for dairy or market garden, good stream of water runs through portion of property;\nprice, \u00C2\u00A71000 each.\nLot 13, Block III, Sapperton; [containing fi acres, fine\nblack loam, partly cleared; price, \u00C2\u00A71500.\nBlock IX, Lot 5, subdiv. Lot 3, containing 1 h acres; \u00C2\u00A7300.\nBlock IX, Lot 4, acre lots in this subdiv. at \u00C2\u00A7250 per acre.\nBlook IX, Lot 7, 10 one aero lots at \u00C2\u00A7200 per aero.\nBlock X, Lot 9, lots 60 x 132, fronting on Douglas Koad\nand Melbourne street, splendid situation, at \u00C2\u00A7200 per lot.\nBlock X, Lot 14; lots in this subdivision, situated on\nMelbourne street in close proximity to St. Andrew's Square,\nat S200 per lot.\nBlock XIII, Lot 19; choice lots ranging from \u00C2\u00A7120 to $150\nper lot.\nSt. Andrew's Square.\nLots fronting on Montreal and Melbourne streets, prices\nranging from \u00C2\u00A725U to \u00C2\u00A7300 per lot.\nSt. George's Square.\nLots close to public school, commanding good view of\nriver, at \u00C2\u00A7500 por lot.\nSt. Patrick's Square.\nCheap and desirable residential lots with frontage on\ngood wide streets, from \u00C2\u00A7200 to \u00C2\u00A7250 per lot,\nLouise Gardens.\nLots fronting on Royal Avenue at $600 per lot.\nMerchants' Square.\nBusiness lots with a frontage on two streets, prices ranging from \u00C2\u00A71500 to \u00C2\u00A72000 per lot.\nWestminster Addition.\nBlocks containing 10 to 18 lota, each GO x 132, from \u00C2\u00A7100\nto \u00C2\u00A7750 per block.\n\u00C2\u00A712,500.-44 feet hy a depth of 132 foet, situate in the\nmidst of tliu business portion of tho city, with a frontage on\ntwo main streets,\n$10,500.-00 x 132, fronting op Columbia and Front ats.,\nvery desirable business property.\n\"\u00C2\u00A73,000,\u00E2\u0080\u009406 x 132, north side Columbia street, opposite\nC.P.R. depot.\n\u00C2\u00A73,000.-\u00E2\u0080\u0094Six cottages on a well located corner lot in close\nproximity to It. C. Planing Mills.\n\u00C2\u00A72,500.-Comer lot with a good cottage, near Albert\nCrescent, commanding good view of tho rivor.\n\u00C2\u00A71,600.-\u00E2\u0080\u0094Three-fourths of an acre fronting on Royal Ave.\nW. BREDEMEYER, DR, PH.\n(Late Partner of John McVlcker)\nIKB-Rcllable reports, underground surveys und maps of mines executed nt low\nrales. Assays made on all kinds of minerals, gold and sliver bars. Thirty years'\nexperience lu mining iu Asia, Europe\nand United States of America, Speaks\nten languages. Assays from a distance\npromptly attended to. Address Vancouver, B.C. ddel7te\nNOTICE\nHENRY vlDMONDS\nNOTARY PUBLIC,\nCONVEYANCER, REAL ESTATE\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094AND\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nINSURANCE AGENT\nHAS REMOVED\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094TO HIS\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSEW AND EXTEXSIVE PREIISE8\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094is\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBANK BUILDINGS\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nNEW WESTMINSTER, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Ii. 0.\nOpp. Postofflce nnd next doorto lhe\nBank of British Columbia.\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nIN ALL FAlVTS OP TUB\nCity and District of New\nWostmlnster,\n-AND\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCITY \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB VANCOUVER\nAGENT FOR\nThe Canada Lifo Insurance Co.,\nThe National Fire Assurance Co.,\nThe Norwich Union Fire Insurance\nSociety.\nNTLonns imriicd on Itcnl Estate al\nltcasoiialilu Knlt-i.\nESTABLISHED, A.D., IB64.\nrtselSyl\t\n[L.B.] HIKUI NELSON.\nCANADA.\nPROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nVICTORIA, hy the draco of God, of Ihe\nUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and\nIreland, Queen, Defender of tlio Faith,\nAc., Ae.. Ac\nTo Our faithful the Members elected to\nserve In tho Legislative Assembly uf\nOur Province of British Columbia, and\nsummoned and called to a meeting of\nthp Legislature or Parliament of Our\nKald Province, nt Our City of Victorin,\non Thursday, tho Twenty-first day nf\nFebruary, 18W), to havo been commenced\nand held, and every of you\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oiirrtino.\nA PROCLAMATION.\nALEX. E. B. DAVIK, 1 WII Kit MAR tho\nAttorney-General. > moellng of the\nLegislature nr Parliament of the Province\nof British Columbia, stands called for\nThursday, the Twenty-flrst dny of February, 1880, at which time, at Our City of\nVictoria, you woro hold and constrained\nto appear.\nNOW KNOWTE.thatfordlveracausos\nand considerations, and taking into consideration the case and convenience of\nOnr loving subjects, We havo thought fit,\nby and with the ndvlce of Our Executive\nCouncil of the Province of British Columbia, to hereby convoke, and by these pros*\nents enjoin you, nnd each of you, that on\nTuoasnAV, tho TlllRTV-FlltST day of tho\nmonth of .Tanuaiw, 1881), you meet Ve In\nOnr said Legislature or Parliament of Our\nsaid Province, at Our City of Victoria,\nFOR THE DISPATCH OF BUSINESS,\nto treat, do, act and conclude upon those\nthings which In Our Legislature of tbo\nProvinco of British Columbia, hy the\nCommon Council of Our said Province\nmay, by lhe favor of God, boordnlnod,\nIn Testimony Whereof, Wo have caused theso Cur Lettors to be mado Patent, under the Groat Seal nf Our said\nProvince to he hereunto afflxed: Wit*\nNESSthoHonourable HuqhNelhon.\nLieutenant-Governor of Our Mild\nprovinco of British Columbln, inOur\nCity of Victoria, In Our said Provinco, this twenty-seventh day of December, In the year of Our Ijord ono\nthousand eight hundred nnd eighty-\neight, nud In tho fifty-second yenr of\nOur Itolgn.\nBy Command.\nJNO. HOBSON,\nde2Wd Provlntlal Secretary.\nI\nM\nW j|\nV i\n<2\npq\n-__z_tZ____rVl\u00C2\u00A3 IfcTO EQTJAL.\nGet Our Prices antl Sec the Goods. One Car of these Plows to\nArrive about the 20th inst.\nF.C. Strickland A Co.\nWEBSTER'S BUILDING, FRONT STREET, WESTMINSTER.\ndwno2tc\nROYAL CITY\nring II Company, Ld.\nRICHARD STREET, NEW WESTMINSTER.\nMASUFACTL'REnS AND DEALERS IN\nAll Kinds of Ron^li and Dressed Lnmlier\nShingles, Shakes, Laths, Pickets,\nSALMON BOXES. NET FLOATS, TRAYS,\n.\.wz> ______ xiisros oztr\nWood Furnishing for Canneries.\nDoors. Frames. Windows.\nMouldings. Balusters,\nBlinds. Brackets.\nMailings, Newels.\nPLAIN AND FANCY AND ALL KINDS OF TURNED WORK.\nnollldwly\nBRITISH COLUMBIA MEAT MARKET,\nColumbia Street, New Westminster.\nVAN VOLKENBURGH BROS.\nWholesale and Retail Butchers.\nMEAT PURVEYORS IN GENERAL. FRESH AND CORNED\nMEATS ALWAYS ON HAND.\nit&'Spocial lines quoted Inr tlio shipping trade. Family orders strictly attended\nto. Hotels wilt find It to thoir intorest to place their ordors with the abovo firm,\ndainoly\nImmense Sale of Boots and Shoes!\nRUBBER O-OOIDS, &0.\nCommencing February 9th, 1889.\nHAVING DECIDED TO KETIRE PBOM THE BOOT ft SHOE BUSINESS,\ntho undersigned will now place his ontiro atook on tho market at wholesale\nprices) no reserve. Everything most he aold.\n$11,01)11 worth of Boots, Shoes, Slippers, Rubber Gooda, Shoo Findings, 4c.\nAn early inspection will convince the public that wo moan business. Terms\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nnnder 8C0, cash; ovor \u00C2\u00A750, aoourod notce at 3 montha with intereat.\n.A.. B. i^rilTTS3iv(tTJ-TB,\ndwdoalto SION OF IBB __tTJX^-J__X-Ot OOLUMBIA STREET,\nQREAT SLAUGHTER\n xxr\t\nSTOVESJJTOVES!\nE. S. SCOULLAR A CO.\nTTAVE MADE SWEEPING REDUCTIONS IN THIS\n** line to meet the different arrangements now in order,\nand now offer the largest stock of HEATING and COOKING\nSTOVES and RANGES ever imported into the Province,\nAT PRICES THAT WILL ASTONISH THOSE\nTHAT WISH TO BUY.\nWe sell three carloads of Stoves to one sold by any firm in\nB. C, which speaks for itself. Intending buyers will consult\ntheir interests by giving us a call. No trouble to show our\ngoods or quote prices.\nE. 8. SCOULLAR & CO.\nWater St., VANCOUVER.\nColumbia St., WESTMINSTER.\ndwnolyl \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nH. T. READ & OO.\n(Masonic Block, Columbia Street.)\nTHE LEADING HARDWARE MERCHANTS\nIN NEW WESTMINSTER.\nGENERAL HARDWARE, PAINTS AND OILS.\nLargest Stock of CROSS-CUT SAWS in the Country.\nWe keep the finest Stock of BUILDERS' HARDWARE in the province.\nSPECIAL ATTENTION IS CALLED TO OUR'LARGE AND\nVARIED ASSORTMENT OF\nPAINTERS' SUPPLIES.\nWo have on hand a large stuck of Magnetic Oxide Fire-proof Pnlnt*\nwarranted 02 nor ct. pure oxide. So high a grade sold by no othor house in tho city.\n0V*t.urin|{ the yenr (hut we lmve opened we have materliilly reduced the priors of\nover-tliiiiK In our liue.and Impe by (strict attention to business to receive n t-fintln-\niinnce of tno public pntronugt). uoldwly\nThe NEW WESTMINSTER\nFoundry and Machine Shop\nFront St., New Westminster, B. C.\nn_t__.-jxr_e_<3-_ei_et.\nBOBEBT X-A-OT,\n2_ZAJSr-_rZ-?-f-.0-Z-TJBBBB OIT\nI\nSTEAM ENGINES, SAW MILL, FISH CANNERY,\nAGRICULTURAL & ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY.\nBrass and Iron Castings made to Order.\nREPAIRING DDNE WITH NEATNESS AND DISPATCH.\nP. 8,\u00E2\u0080\u0094All orders from tlio upper country promptly attended to.\ndwnoltnQ\nDouglas & Deighton, '\nMANOFACTIIHS MD IMP0RTETI3 OF\nHARNESS, SADDLES and BRIDLES\nWHIPS, ]\nSADDLEWARE, ETC.\nColonial Block, '\nColumbia Street, New Westminster, B. C.\n8END IN YOUR ORDERS. ALL WORK OF THE BEST MATERIAL ANU\nWORKMANSHIP. PRICES LOW.\n' noltlwly\nJ\nc. Mcdonough,\n(LUNDBOM'B HUILDINO, FRONT STREET)\n_.ZZ-_____l IS\nGENERAL MERCHANDISE!\nCoiiat.intly on Hnml an Kxtunaivo Stock nf\nDry Goods, Groceries, Hoots A Shoes, lints & (laps,\nCrocker}', Glassware, Ar.\nXXXtXt-m _*B BOTS1 SUITE. '\nOratfc Variety of HoitaclioUl Artioles. Also,\nGRAIN, SEEDS, POTATOES, LIME ond GENERAL STORES.\nfi. B,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Farm Produce boutilit nl market rates or sold on commission,\nfrom the Interior promptly mli-ndcd lo.\nMLOriti'l'l\ndwjeSte\nLONDON MARKET\nFront Street, New Westminster.\nMANAHAN & REICHENBACH,\nwuccEssoiia to \v. u. townbend)\nDEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF FRESH & SALT MEA\nHums, llncoii, Sausage, Rolognas, Etc.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Inulyl\nTO JLiBT.\nPURNISHED BOOMS IN A'BRICK\nr House on Agnes Htreet Aclilroaa P,\nO. Box'-W, ilJllMIc\nNOTICE IS IIBKRUY GIVKN THAT\nSixty days after dnto 1 Intond to\nmnke nppllcation to the Oblef Commls-\nRlonorof Lands nnd Works for; a grant of\na small Inland nbmit two miles nortli-\nonsifront tho Point Atkinson Llght'lioiiso,\nright abreast or fronting oh* Nolson-s\nclaim, snld Islnnd containing about I\nacres, moro or less.\n' JOHN CANE88A,\nPer his Agent. H. V. Edmonds,\nNew West., Jan. So, uw. djnifiim'J\nWISH TO NOTIFY THE PEOPLE OK\nNew Westminster and vicinity that\nthoy havo on hand for spring planting,\n3,000\nChoice Fruit Trees\nAlao, a Largo Stoek or\nSmall Fruits. Plants, Slirnb\u00C2\u00BB,\c\nAll mnll order* will reootvo nroinnL attention. AiHIlosa,\nWALWORTH, DEWEY * CO.,\nilwttl'ml Now Weatmlnater, B, C.\n0. E. WOODS\nLand sum-yoh.\nA. C. GAMBLE.\nNor-M Puilis.\nWoods, Tanur ft Bamlils\nLAND SURVEYORS,\nI) WBIU-WW|\nAND CONVEYANCERS.\nag-snxb iron\nFIRE,- The Western of Toronto-Tlie /Minn, Tho City of London, and The Unit-\nford.\nLIVE.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tbe New York Life Insurance Ca\nAOOIOBHV-Ttw Travellers' of Hartford\nLnntl Surveying In all lis brnneht'H accurately nnd promptly carried out,\nOity mul Suburban Lands for Salet\nWe enn show a complete list of desirable\nloonlltleN.\nFarming l.nndi, Improved and unliii-\nprovei, throughout the district.\nMining mul other Stoek bought and\nsold,\nMoney to Loan ou flrat mortgage at\nlow rates.\t\nTrisBpiioNR Cam. No. 88. j\nP. O. DHAWKKW.\nWOODS, TVKNRR & GAMBLE,\n0m\u00C2\u00AB, EiuiD'i Blook, - Columiia Iriiij\nNBW WESTMINSTER.\ndnbuto j THE SULTAN'S CAPITAL.\nConstantinople's Wonderful Ba-|\nKara and Dirty Streets.\nThe Oriental Metropolis by Day and by\nNight-Poverty and Laziness of the Avor-\n. ago Turk\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bobbers Protected by the\n- Pollco-The Indispensable Pipe.\nConstantinople is the brightest city by|\ndny ami the darkest by night, writes a correspondent of tho Chicago News. Boon\nnfter night-fall the streets are deserted,\naud except un occasional rattling of a car-\nriago over the stony streets not a sound is\nheard but tlm stick of the watchman striking tlio li ur and the dismal howling of innumerable dogs as they engage in their\nnightly battles, Tho peoplo keep early\nhours nt night nnd late hours in the morning. At niuo o'clock tho city fs just beginning to wake from its slumber. Con-\nstanUnopli) is not a great city, liko Paris\nnnd New Vork, but a collection of a hun-\nUred villages, oach with its distinct name,\nand somo of them with entirely different\nmanners, customs and language. Fora, for\ninstance, iu inhabited almost exclusively by\nEuroponus\u00E2\u0080\u0094French, English, Italians and\nGermans, Hero the language of society is\nFroncb. Btiunboul, on the opposition sido\nof tbo Dosphorus, is tho Turkish quarters.\nIu llvo miliums, by crossing tho bridgo of\nthe Bulla Vorcdo (queen mothor) you\npuss from tho civilisation of tho Wost to\ntho soiiii-barbnrlsin of tho East. Onu hundred thousand' poople pass that bridge\nevery day, but an idea not onco in ten\nyears. Tho toll, averaging livo thousand\ndollars a day, goes to tho Admiralty, and It\nIs badly needed. Whon wo remember that\nIhoTurkBconquorodtho fairoBt portion of Bomal hie 6200 \"hammerless shotgun, unci\nH E HIT THE OWL.\nA Clover .Jul) Put Up on Oue of Boston's\nSuburban Nlmrods.\nOut in one of tho suburbs of Boston there\nlives a business man who is much given to\nguning. and whose fondness for the sports\nof tho Held has according to the Boston\nJournal, passed into a proverb among\nhis friends. Like most hunters ho is\ngivou, also, to relating occasionally, in a\nmodest way, his triumphs with his gun.\nHis lire-arms are always kept in perfect\norder, and in easy reach, as if he expected\nto get a shot at a bear or an antelope in Ins\nback yurd ut any moment. Perhaps his\nnear relatives may have thought he needed\na little \"taking down,\" or else they aoied\nfrom puro mischievousness, when, on a recent night .they put up a job on this suburban\nNimrod. Thoy procured a stuffed owl, and\nwhen darkness had fallen upon tlio earth\nthey fastened this owl upon a high branch\nof n maple tree ia the yard. Tho huntsman's wife was in tho secret. Early the\nnext morning the wife was up, and the littlo girl ns woll. Tho littlo girl wasn't in\ntlio secret. As soon as it was light tho\nmothor, who had gone out of doors for\nsomething, called the little girl out.\n-'Thero is something up in that tree, my\ndear,\" sho sold, \"and I can't make out\nquite what it is\u00E2\u0080\u0094my eyesight is so poor.\nCan you seo what it is?\"\nTho littlo girl looked up into the tree.\n\"Why, it's a great, big owl, mamma.\"\n\"I guess it is;\"\n\"Oh, I'll go und toil paps, ond he'll shoot\nit with his guu.\" .\nSo the littlo girl run'and waked up her\nfather, flayingi .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB;,;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\"Papa, papa, thero'sa groat, big owl up\nIn tho mnplo tree out in tho yard.\"\nTho father did hot need a Becond admonition. Ho got up.dressed himself hastily,\nAsia aud Africa, and woro tho terror of\n, Europe for moro than u thousand years,\nwoarottstoiiished at their present Biipino\n' ami demoralized condition, Tho only\nsafety t f rurkoy iu Euroiio is tho common\njealousy of tho groat powers, nono of which\ncan allow tho other to secure tins splendid\npviao,\nTho Turks aro great eaters; n dinner of\nhastened out into tho yard. There was the\nowl, up high on the top limb of the tree,' \"as\nbig ns lifo und twice as natural.\" Ho could\nhnvo sworn that the bird winked ono oyo ut\nhim. Ho raised his gun, took excellent aim.\nand lircd.\nAnd then down camo a shower of feathers, bran, sawdust and glass-eye, and up\n\"-ent several windows In tho neighborhood,\ntwenty courses is common. When they aro whero tho neighbors, who had been let In-\nnot eating thoy are Bmokiug; when they aro to tl:o aocret and wero on tlio watch for tho\nneither eating nor smoking they aro sleep- performance, had stationed themselves, nil\ning. (.'.--reo i't tho unlvorsal drink of tho provided with tin horns, upon whicli thoy\nEast among nil people. It is ground frosh Mew a tremendous blast. Tho Ininnr\nevery time, and the milk and sugar aro looked at tho remains of tho stuffed owl,\nboiled with tho coffee. It is served In tiny listened to the blast on the tin horns, and\nchum cups of quaint shape and workman- bent n hasty and demoralized retreat into\nBiiip. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0** -h\u00C2\u00B0 house. Ho Bays that tho prico of tho\nThu p-uiplo nro miserably poor. Beggars owl has beon the smallest part of tho cost\ninfest tliu si roots by day and thieves by of his exploit. But he tokos somo little sut-\nntght; nml ns tho city is only lighted in the isfaotion from the faot that he hit the owl,\nEurop.nii quarter\u00E2\u0080\u0094and very poorly ttwrc\u00E2\u0080\u0094 anyway. ______^___ '\nevery opportunity in afforded tho robbers to I J\nply their vocation with success and impunt- JIM-J AM VALLEY.\nty. Tho salary of tho polico is nominally gtPni(R0 oml Xerrible Features of a South-\nsixty dollars it month, hut, as they aro sol- 9ta California mirage.\ndona paid, thoy oko out a, precarious Hying | uI|llho 8ec,uded Jim-Jam Valley of the\nby taking bribes fronji criminals andlottng Ha,. Bernardino Mountains,\" remarked Joo\nthem go. Iho pay of the soldier Ib ten centsa joucbinBon, tho pioneer of San Bernardino,\nday.hut their pay is always in arrears. A toa Bau Francisco Examiner reporter at\nportion of their duty ta to arrest tobacco Uio Palace Hotel, \"there are tho most mar-\nsmugglers. Thoy seize tho contraband XQlou raira , kaovm to tbo woHll ^\ngoods, release the offenders, sell thetobac- wondorflll Hmirages of tho Mojavo desert\nco aad pooket tho proceeds. Bazars of havo to mkeA about J d(jal d\nConstantinople aro full of interest, and give th ar0 ontlUed to aU the p?on-in01,C(;they\nthe visitor a better idea of Oriental navoniul But those of tho Jim Jam Val-\nlife than any thing else in tho city. As you, ev arfl far moro wn\u00E2\u0080\u009Eflflr,\u00E2\u0080\u009E, \u00C2\u00AB -.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\napproach the region of Eastern traffic you\nuro assailed iu ten different languages-\nGreek, Armenian, Hebrew, Arabian and\nNubian. Lot us enter the bazar of\nstuff-. Vt'li.it a rich and dazzling display of goods. Carpets from Persia,\nshnwis from India, Bilks from Broua-\nsa, brocades from Bagdad, scarfs\nof bluo uud gold, so transparent and light\ntlmt they* hnvo neon compared to sunset\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 clouds, tabic covers .embroidered with arabesque, golden vails woven with silver\nthread, robes of crimson volvet bordered\nwith und sprinkled nil ovor with golden\nstars, muntioH of green, ermine, orange and\npurple, bridal vails sparkling with silver\nspangles, and tho satin girdle woru by n\nTurkish lady, ou which tho eyes of no man\nexcept tho husband ovor full. Tho bazar of\nperfumery next invites our uttcntion. Hero\naro to bo found thoso famous perfumes\nwith whicli the poetry of tho Enst hns mado\nus familiar\u00E2\u0080\u0094tho most precious nttar of\nroses shut up in velvet cases, and so costly\nthat none hub tho rich can buy it. Horo nro\nalso tho seraglio paatiles for perfuming\nkisses, and kohl for coloring tho oyobrows,\n.ey nro far moro wonderful than these.\nIt is called Jim-Jam Valley becauso of the\nitmufie things seen there, and I defy any\nman, howover sound of mind ho maybe, to\ngoln there, and not think ho has got 'em\nbeforo ho gots out. This valley is about\ntwenty Uve 1 \"'es long by Hfteen miles\nWide, Itls uiuiihubited. It hi bordered by\ntho mam San Bernardino range on ibe east\naudby aspurof the Slorra Magdalenas on\nthe west. Thero ta no well-defined trail\nthrough tho heart of it. Tlio valley is a\ndesert. The surrounding inpu)i!si'.Imi nro\nterribly serrated and i at up. Tlio peaks\nnro jugged. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Altogether the surroundings\naro vory weird aud forbid din.?, Leaving\nKisk's ranch on tho trail at tho foot uf tho\nBierra Mugdnlonas, you climli nn ertsy grade\nto Dead Man's Pass, tho entrance to tho\nvalley. Go on in and pretty soon y.u seo\nlakes and running rivers, and green border's, uud (lying water fowl. Willows spring\nup hero and thoro, uud lu tho distanco you\nsee water lilies. What you hohold contrasts\nIlncly with tho rugged mountuins, ami you\nare charmed with it and go on thinking you\nhuvo struck an earthly paradise. Indian\nhenna'for tho finger tips, soaps that mako enmps appear ia view, and. lithe oarsmen\nthe skin ns soft as silk, essence from sandal Pr\u00C2\u00B0P\u00C2\u00B0l fllIltnst-c crafts upon tho wators. Ad-\nwood and myrrh, pomades for the hair, | vanclng still further you see dim outlined\naloes to sweeten pipoa, bags of musk and '\"\"mo '\"\"\"\"\" *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00C2\u00BB-\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00AB*- '-\nthousand other powdors aud frugrant waters that call up visions of fuir women\nbreathing nu atmosphere of lovo and sighs,\nBut it is in tho jowolor's bazar that our\nideas of Oriental magnificence is realized,\naud Aladdin's wonderful lamp has coujured\nup a vision of unparalleled beauty, so dazzling that wo rub our eyes and wonder\nwhether thoy can ho roal. Thore is n Brazilian topaz thut would have doligbtod Mme.\nBonaparte; a diamond from Golconda,\nworthy to adorn tlio noek of an Empress; a turquoiso from Macedonia, that\nmight might havo iulloii from the\nscimitar of a Sultan; hero are piles ot\nnecklaces uf opal and pearl, rublos of price-\nloss value and gems of every kind known\nto tho lapidary. To refresh tho oyes lot us\nenter tlio pipo bazar. Dear to the soul of\ntho Turk ta tobacco, \"tho fourth column of\ntho canopy of voluptuousness,\" aud every\nsort of smoking article is provided for tho\nindulgonco of this favorite luxury; chibouks,\nwith stems of chorry and rosewood, amber\nmouth-pieces, polished us crystal and set\nwith diamonds; narghiles of silver of quaint\nand curiouB shapes, sprinkled with gems,\nand their tubas glittering with golden rings.\n- When Byron, who vented his poetical dis*\ngust at Malta, with its \"streets of stairs,\"\nVisited r a.-i.mlinoplo lie uttered nn curses\n\"loud nnd d Tp\" at tho streets of stairs that\nabound in the city of the Sultan, whioh aro\ndescended at I ho risk of one's nock nnd ascended iu diuiu-er of bringing on tho heart\ndisease. Not only are tho streets dpep and\nstonv, but slippery with mud, and some of\nthc.ui r loking with tilth- Tho Turks are the\niniwt. BiitpM i;:;tl conservative peoplo in the\nworld; Uny mako uo changes; as thoir\nfin hon live, no livo they. What was good\nchough for I heir ancestors ta good enough\nfor them. Aliro often benefits an American eity. nhwiges. It as Augustus changed\nBomo j r-c.L-i wood to marble, but \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 firo In\nUonstBiitii!'plo destroys houses whioh are\nnot rebuilt Ho it ta no uncommon light to\nseo tho Hinrrod remains of palaces, bar-\nrooks, mosques, oto., which wore destroyed\nby tiro nml allowed to remain an unsightly\nmuss of ruliiB.\nHOMELY PHILOSOPHY\nItefjtfctiuiM of a Man Who Knows 'All\nAbout the Outrages of Fortune.\nInsincerity Is often mistaken for a lack of\nhonesty.\nTho ring of coin ta often the knell of\n'J'n \u00E2\u0080\u00A2/ never need fear a fall who never\nsen!'; tlio heights.\nAlvorsity undermines many, a structure\nof prosperity.\n. lio v.-ho wisoly uses his wealth need not\nleave It for his tombstone.\nTho sight of a man's money Is ofttimes\ntho antidote for the odor of a very bad char-\nnot er.\nIf you would ovoid tho suspicion of your\nneighbors, novor carry your molasses In a\ndoniijf.hu.\nProsperity awaits all men, aud even pursues some, but it 1s novor found in tho\nhaunts of vice.\nTruo genius lurkelh under cover, while\narrogunco stalks abroad in the full light of\ndny. '\nTho most wonderful work of God Is man:\nbut brand him slanderer and God will disown Uls work.\nTho wisest flsh long escapes the most\ndnngorouB hooks, ahd is finally caught with\na uontJ-up pin,\nTlm ambition of youth looks forward to\nUio triumphs of age, while sated age turns\n, buck a wistful oyo along tho rosy path of\nyou Hi,\nIt is well the book of lifo is opened to us\npngo by pugo, Woro all tbo hard lines\nbiii'il i-i, mice tho task would bo too hard to\ninn 'jj1.,'\nN-.i. only should careless statements re-\nBpmn& our neighbors be ignored, but foots\nthouido-ves Bhould bo often subdued In tho\nintorest of right-thinking and fairness to\nour fellows.-Fnink B. Wolcb, in Arkan-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2aw Traveler,\u00E2\u0080\u0094 '\nforms, things whose outlines you can hardly\nexpress iu words. Somber countenances\ngleam at you from the air abovo. The lakes\nand rivers and the pallid faces shift uud\nchange before your oyes. Sometimes u\nMo/on of tho more or less dimly outiiued\nforms may ho soon, and the pantomime ro.\ninluils you of a strange hobgoblitutance.\nSometimes a storm brews in tho valloy. und\nthen the Bcono ta all tho moro twrriblo.\nForked lijjhluing blazes about, and strange,\nuncouth animals differing from nny you\nhave ever read about aro to bo seen iliere.\nThese phenomena are seen ferni--u< piij af\nabout fiftoon miles up and down Iho middle\nof iho valloy principally, and thoy hnvo ebon\nviewed by u groat many poople. They cau\nnot understand why tho forms o/ the mir.igo,\nif such it may be called, aro so muoh lucre\nstrange than those on tha Mojavo desert.\nEvery body ta ..in awo of tho valley, and\nthere aro mighty fow men, however nervy\nthey may be ordinarily, who enre togo thero\nmuch.\".\nREAL SCOTCH HUMOR,\nBright Flashes Gathered Hero and There\nby a Highland Editor.\nDr. Scott, of Greenoch, soys the Scottish\nWorld, used to toll of a sailor who camo to\nbo married, but whon asked if ho would\ntako tho woman to bo his wife, lookod blank\nand said: \"I would liko to know first what\nyou aro going to say to she.\" At another\ntime whon tho woman was asked if sho\nwould obey, but did not answer, tho mau-\nalso ft sailor\u00E2\u0080\u0094exclaimed: \"Leave that to mo,-\ndlr.\"\nIu thoso days peoplo that felt sleepy during tho sermon used, as now In Germany,\nto shako off drowsiness by standing up; but\npoor human nature made this nt times on\noccasion of display. At Old Monklnud a\nmuu who hud on a rather gaudy vest stood\nup more than onco and threw back his\ncoat, apparently to let hts vest be seen. Ur.\nBower, tho minister, at length said: \" Noo,\nJohn, yo had hotter sit doon. Wo havo a'\nBeen your brnw waistcoat.\"\nIt was to Mr. Bower that tho grave-digger onco said: \"Trade's vory dull tho noo.\nI lioeu a buriod a leevln' orotur for throo\nwocks.\"'\nTho peoplo seoui to havo had V dislike to\nsermons being read. They used to say: \"Ifoo\ncan wo mind tho minister's sermon tr ho\neannaniiud Ithimsol'l\"\nWhut nro wo to think of tho lady who\nscut to hor minister, Mr. Risk, of Dalserf,\na polite messago that \"ho should clean his\nteeth,\" nnd received tho answer that \"she\nslmuM scrape her tonguof\"\nWhon his peoplo sent a deputation re-\nqestiug him to tell them more in his sermons about renouncing their own right-\noousiioss, hb tartly replied; \"It isthoilrst\ntimo I heard that yon had any righteous-\nnosB to renounoo.\" l o}f\nMr. Thom, of Govan, maintained a great\nwarfare against tho Glasgow magistrates.\nOne day, whilo be was standing with tho\nprovost In tbe Btreet, a ragged urchin camo\nup bogging, and was sternly driven away\nby tho provost, who had himself risen from\nnothing, Mr. Thom interposed, and said:\n\"Hey, laddie, there's a penny for you.\nYo'll may be provost of Glasgow yourself\nyot.\"\nOno of tho magistrates saw htm one day\nriding a good horso, and said: \"You're hotter than your master, Mr, Them, for he\nrode on an ass,\" Mr. Thom retorted: *- We\nwould bo willing onough to ride on asses,\ntoo, hut they're no to bo got noondays.\nThey've mado them all magistrates.'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\nWealth ln Wins or Detain somo parts of Africa a man's wealth\nIb judged by the number of his wives. A\nman with sirty wives ta lookod upon as a\nsort of bonanza king. His wives probably\ngo out wushing ut fifty cents a day, or mako\nshirts at forty mi ts a dozon. Iu this country a man's wealth is judged by tho number\nJot dogs ho owns. Tho possessor of eight\ndogs ta generally too poor to pay school tax,\naud his wife takes in washing.\nVANCOUVfft CITY\nFoundry^MachineWorks\nTHE PROPRIETORS OF THEHE\nworks have much pleasure In notifying tbelr friends and the public lhat they\nare now prepared to receivo nnd promptly\nexecute any orders for work In tholr line\nwith which they mny bo favored.\nA. McKELVIE,\nMechanical Manager.\nVancouver, B.C., 8th May, 1888.\ndwmyI2tQ\nTURNER, BEETON & GO.\nMERCHANTS,\nWHAKK STIIEflT \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 VICTORIA.\n_l_.GB2StTB BOB\nNorth British and Mercantile\nInsurance Vo. for Mainland.\nH.C. BEETON 6. CO.,\n36 Finsbury Circua,\nLondon, K. 0.\nPORT HAMMOND\nNURSERY\nFruit Trees,\nOrnamental Trees*\nSmall Fruits\nAnd GARDEN STUCK on hand In great\nvnrlety.\nEverything first-class nnd furnished In\nwood shape.\niti-Send 15cts. for valuable 80-piige De*\nKcrlplive Catalogue with (j beautiful colored plates. Price Lists sent free.\n0. W. HENRY,\ndwdelOtc Port Hammond, B. C.\nCoal,Woods Bark\nTHE UNDERSIGNED KEEPS CON-\nstnntly In t-tot-k tho\nBEST WELLINGTON COAL\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094ALSO\t\nWood and Bark,\nWhich he will sell at tho LOWEST\nRATES and deliver promptly.\nnta. Orders left at the stores of SIr. McColl and Mr. McDonough will receivo\nattention.\nTEAMS FOR HIKE. Stables, corner of\nDouglns nnd Columbln Streets.\nHENRY ELLIOTT.\nNew WBBt,,B.C, Nov. 22,1885. rlri\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2lirn pAtvnitt. Hnd forllanabo\n... Imvn made met\n _,_._. .... Antorlcnn and For.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2UnpHt \- ink. corret*\npondtnctt itrlctljr coiitlilpn 11 ill.\nTRADE MARKS.\nId oan roar mark ts not roatnt ored In tho Pit.\nMt Offlce, epplr to Munjy \ Cn., and prncuri\n'\u00E2\u0080\u0094ledlato ptotecUon. Send for Handbook,\nN?\nMCMN Is CO., l'nl.nt Hollclcor.,\nO.flCl: Ml BBOAOWAT, N. T.\nK8TAIII.I811BB 1850.\nROBT. DICKINSON.\nBUTCHER,\nXewlr llppoallK (he Colonial Hotel,\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\nTHB LARGEST AND CHOICKST\nAssortment of .11 description, of\nMEATS AND VEGETABLES\nConstantly on hand, and supplied to Fam.\nDies, Rentauranta, and Steamboata atthe\nLOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES.\nNOTICE*\nTo Contractors and Bridge\nBuilders.\nSEPARATE SRALED TENDERS will\nbe received by the Honourable Chief\nCommissioner of Lands and works up to\nnoon of Thursday,7th March next, for tho\ncreel Ion of bridges over lhe North Arrmi\nnflhe Frasor River to connect Lulu and\nKen Jilainls with each oilier and with tho\nmainland,\nTwo different designs for tho bridges\nlmve been prepared, upon which separate\nbills must be mode.\nDesign No. I Is composed of nine Iron\ncombination l'nilt truss npims of 140feet\noncli, onn slmllnr span of 100 feet, two\nHow'clrrss swing spnns of HO feet each,\nnnd TOO feet of pi o trestle upproaob.\nDesign No. 2 If coin posed of forty-fleven\nQiieei) tru.sM spans of -1(1 feet each, two\nHowe truss swlna spans of lin) feet eaeh,\nmut 1,60(1 feot of approach.\nThe piers In ci'.eli design arc formed by\nlilies.\nICuch tender must bo accompanied by an\naccepted bunk cheque forn sum eqt'til to\nlive per con I. of theamnuntof the lender,\nnia4c payable to the Honourable Chief\niiiiiinilssioiicr of Lauds and Works. In\nlhe cvenl of a contract boing let, the\ncheque will be retained as pari security\nfor llie due performance of tlie work, Thfl\ncheque will lie returned to unsueees.sfir,\noHiipelltors, but will be forfolted by nny\nbidder who may decline lo execute a contract If called upon to do so.\nThe contractor will bB required toglve\nsatisfactory security, ninounilng to half\nlltccoiilraet price, for tbo tlno fulfilment\nof llie contract,und forthe maintenance\ncf tlie hrldue for a period'of six months\nfrom the date of the completion i-f the\nwork.\nplans nnd spccUlnilious cun lm seen,\nand forms for lender obtained,ill I he office\nof theundcrslgucd.\nThe lowest or any tender nol necessarily\naccepted,\nW. H. GORE,\nSurveyor General.\nI amis ami Wotks Deniirtmcnt.\nVictoria. 21si ,1,-uiiiiiry, 1889.\n djfl28td\n1889.\nHarper's Weekly.\nILLUSTRATED.\nHARPKU'S WFKKV.Yhnsnwell-eslnblish-\ned |)lace as Ihe leading illustrated newspaper in America, 'flic fairness of lis editorial comments on current polltli-t has\nearned for It the respect and confidence\nof all liiipnrtial renders, and the variety\nnnd excellence o( Its literary contents,\nwhicli include serial and short stories by\nthe best and most popular writers, fit ft\nfor tlio perusal of people of the widest\nrange of tnstes nnd pcrsuils. Supplement.-,\nnr\" frequently provided, ami no oxpodse\nIs spared to bring tlio lilgost order of artistic ability to bear upon the illustration of\nthe changeful phases of honieand foreign\nhistory. A new work of fiction from Ibe\npen of William Penn Howells.nnd una\nby Cnpt. Charles King, will he among the\nlending features of tho Weekly for ISSO..\nharper's Periodicals.\nPER YEAR.\nBARPER'S WEEKfjY fl 00\nIIARPKIt'B MAOAZ1XK 4 CO\nRAltPER'3 BAZAR 4 00\nCARPER'S YOUNO PEOPLE 2 00\nPostniro Freo lo all lulttorlbon In the United\nStales, CuiB'ln or Mexico.\nTin- VoliinieB of tlio Weeklv lii-gln will) tlio (lr.it\nNtuulii-r for .latnmry of oticlt year. Wli.-n no\ntime in tiii'iitioiuil, subscriptions will begin\nwith Iho number current nt lime of receipt of order.\nRound volumes of IIAiu'Kit's Wkkki.v,\nfor three years back, lu neat cloth binding,\nWill bo sent by mail, postage paid, or by\nexpress, free of expense [provided tho\nfreight does not exceed \u00C2\u00A71.00 per volume),\nfor 87.00 per volume.\nOlollt Ciuen for each volume, suitable for binding, will be Bent ly inall, punt paid, on rt-culiil of\n$1 encli.\nRemittances slionlil bo mrulo by I'o.-t-Ollire\nMonty Order or Draft, to nvuld clinnee of loss.\nNowspaperg nro not to copy this nrivertl-Mnenl\nwithout tlie oxpnsB oritur of llnrper A Uiulhern,\nAddrosa HARPER-I BROS.. New York.\n1889.\nHarper's Bazar.\nILLUSTRATED.\nHAhi'Eh'fl MazaimvIII continue toiualn-\nlnlu lis reputnllon nsun unqualified family iintrnni. Its nil lllu-dnitions are of\nthe highest order. Its literature Is of the\n(\u00E2\u0096\u00A0linlci-st. kind, and Its Fashion and House-\nhuiii departments of ihe most practical\numl economical character. lis pattern-\ncost of subscription, and Its articles on\nilccoratlvo art, social otlqnotto, house-\nkeeping, cookery, etc., make It Indlspon-\nsable to every household. Its bright short\nstories, and timely essays, are nmong the\nI est published; and not aline Is tuinilt-\nteiltolts columns thnt could ofTend the\nmost fastidious tuste. Among the uttiac-\ntloiisoftbo new volume will bo serial\nslorlt-s by Mrs. Frances Hodgson Riintctl,\nMrs, Alexander, William Black, and\nThomas Hardy, nnd a series of papers on\nnursory management by Mrs, Christine\nTeihunoUcrrlclt,\nIIARPER'S PERIODICALS.\nPER TEAR I\nHARPER'S BAZAR 94 00\nHARPER'S MAdAZINK 4 00\nHARPKR'SWEKKbY 4 00\nHARPER'S YOUNO PEOPLE 2 00\n1-oBtnge Freo to all mbcribora In tlie Unlteit\nSlidesCiuiada, ur Mexico.\nTho Volume* of Hu-n.w.in begin with tho Hilt\nNumber for January of each yenr, Whun no timo\niiiiieiitlumnl, Hubserlpllons will begin with\nihcNumbcrcurrcntat time of recelplof\nordor.\nHound volumes of Haiu-fk-s Razaii. for\nihrec years bnck, In nent elotli binding,\nwill lie sent by innll, postage paid, or by\nexpress, free of cxpentie (provided the\nfrelabl does nol exceed one ifollnr per vol*\nnine), for S7.00 per volume.\nHutli Ci_.,-h f..r fin-h v-liime, wiltnlili' fur Mini-\nlllg, \u00C2\u00ABill tic sent I'v mul. pWtpftlil, mi rnwllit nl\nfl.(K) ouch. \"\nIteiiiitiniHv- Khniild bo mndo by I'Mi-Ofltce\nMinify Order or Draft, loavuld filmnro \"f Ies.\nKfrtTipflptm ore not tc com iliin >ulveHI*>meiit\nvritllDIlt tbe BiprMS otdci nf llflrpflr It Hrt'theii'.\nAddrou IIA11PH1I.. linos.. V-w Vnri,\n1889.\nHarper's Magazine.\nILLUSTRATED.\nHAKPBR'KMAriAHiNnlsll't m -l useful,\nentertaining, mul heiiuilfiil ,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i mli.-ni la\nthe world, Amotib lln iitlrariin tfnrlfft\"\nWill bo anew intvol-nn Amerleali \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2,\nentitled -Mnplii'1- l.h!lils\"-liy foiistaiteo\nY. Wootson: llluslrallons or fjhnko\nsponre's Comedies by E, A. Abboyj a ser*\nIcHofnrMclisnii Russia, lllustnitul by T.\ndeThulstrup; papers on tho -Dominion of\nCnnntlit and a chnrncterlstle serini tiy\nClurles Dudley Warner: three \"Norwe\nRlnn Sluilles,\" by HJornstJorno RJornson,\nlustmted; \"Commodns,\" a historical\nfilaybythe nnthor of -\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Ren-HuiV' lltus\nrated bv J. It. Weguolln, etc. The Editorial Departments nro conducted hy\nGeorge Willtum Curtis, William Donn\nHowells, nnd Charles Dudley Warner.\nHARPER'S TiRIOMCALS.\nPER VRARi\nHARPER'S MAOAZINK 14 00\nHARPER'S WEEKLY 4 00\nHARPER'S BAZAR 4 00\nHARPER'S YOUNO PEOPLE 2 00\nPoiUn Freo lo sll mbwrlben In the United\nSliitui, Umiada or Mexico.\nTlio f olnnn-ii of the Maoauri begin with the\nNumber* for June snd December of each yesr.\nWhen no time Is \u00C2\u00BBpecl!led, subscriptions\nwill begin with the number current at\ntime of receipt of order\nBound volumes of Maiu-ru's Maoarike\nfor threeyenrs back,In nont clolh binding, will lie sent by mnll, postpaid, on receipt of J1.00 per volume. Clutli Cases, for\nbinding, fio cents each\u00E2\u0080\u0094by mall, postpaid.\nIndex to tUnrts',1 M-.in.nsr, Alptmhntiml,\nAnnlytlcNl, nnd Olwwiflnl, forVolmnr* 1 to 70,\nlnchiRi.ii, from Jnne, I860, lo June, InSTi, one\nTnl.,fiV(., Cloth, $4.\nRetnltUnoea ntonhl t>0 mndo by Pout-Office\nMoney Order or Draft, to avoid churn \u00C2\u00BB of low.\nNowipuMN arc not to ropy tbl* ml vert lament\nwllhont the *>pr*M order of lltrper k Brother*.\nAddrew HARPER * BROS., Nsw York.\nBRITISH\nCOLUMBIAN\nSTEAM\nnniMxiiLo\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094HQOMOEKMM\u00E2\u0080\u0094 |\nI lllll III1U\nOOLUMBIA STREET,\nNew Wesfi.iiii8.ff. ll ft\nBritish Columbian\n(DAILY AND WEEKLY)\n0OTMHW5MBLE!\nUNRIVALLED ON THE MAINLAND\nOF BRITISH COLUMBIA AS\n' AN ADVERTISING\nMEDIUM.\nPER ANNUM, BY MAIL:\nDaily British Columbian, - $8\nWeekly\"\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 2\nPAYABLE IN ADVANCE.\nBOOK,\nJOB, anil\nnOMMEROIAL\nPRINTING\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 OF\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nEvery Description\nEXECUTED IN\nFIRST-CLASS STYLE\nAT MODERATE PATES.\nOUI1 HWCIUTIKS IN THIS DEPARTMENT. AHE UNStJKl'ASSED\nIN THE PUOVINOE.\nSpecial Forms Ruled\naad Printed,\nHAVING A RULING MACHINE ON\nTHE PREMISES WE ARE ENABLED TO FURNISH\nSPECIAL FORMS\nTO ORDER.\nHave recently been mado in the\nvarious Departments,\nAnd with careful nml oflicicnt workmen,\nfast Htpnm prcaaca, nml tirst-class mater-\niala, wo can gnnrantoo satlafaetion tn nl\nwho favor ub with their onlors,\nKENNEDY BROS.\nnol PROPRIETORS.\nWho is the Live Boot and Shoe Man\nOF NEW WESTMINSTER?\nA Thousand Tongues will Answer \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nJAS. ROUSSEAU,\nSI Col-u.sn.'bia Street.\nMY FIGURES A.IE TRUTH-TELLERS; AND UN-\nless you take advantage of this GRAND OFFER I am\nmaking in Goods FOR THE NEXT SIXTY DAYS from this\ndate, you will get left.\nCome at once and get your BOOTS, SHOES, SLIPPERS\nGUM BOOTS, OVER-SHOES and RUBBERS from me\nwhile my stock is bright, new and complete. Also, a large assortment of American Goods, from Philadelphia, Chicago and San\nFrancisco. Do not wait till your neighbors have had their choice.\nIO per cent. Discount on all Cash Par-\nchases for the Next Sixty Days.\ntfyOrders from the country promptly attended to.\nJAS. ROUSSEAU.\nSolo Agent for Sabin's Beeswax Oil Blacking; prevents shoe\nfrom cracking. Also, Oil Shoe Dressing, equally a blessing.\nNew WKSTjnjj\u00C2\u00ABBit, Jan. ID, 18S0. dwjely\nCASTORIA\nfor Infants and Children.\n\"CaitoHaia so well adapted to children that I Contort* enres Collo. CMUHpatlos,\nI recoinim'iid itu3Buj.eriortoanrprescription I Solir Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,\nknown to mc.1* h. A. Abctjcr, M. D., I KUta WonaB\u00C2\u00BB S*\u00E2\u0084\u00A2* BleeP\u00C2\u00AB \"^ pr-\u00E2\u0084\u00A20*** *\n111 So. Qsford St., Urotiklrn, N. Y, | Wltlioutinjiirious modlcaUoB.\nThe Centaur Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nLAl&MESTSESTiBEM.M.\nTHOMAS ALLSOP,\nHENRY S. MASON,\nCUYLER A. HOLLAND,\nDIRECTORS.\nHEAD OFFICE, - 56 Hew Broad SI. - LONDON, ENGUND.\nThe Business of ALLSOP & MASON has been merged in tho above Company\naud will bo carried on by the Company from this date as a general Land InveBtment\nand Insurance Agenjy.\nMONEY TO LOAN on Mortgage at Low Rates. Town Lota and Farming\nLands for Stile on easy terms,\nVictorin a C, Mny 18th, 1887. dwJe7to\nW. ELSON,\nMerchant Tailor,\nPORT MOODY, B. C.\nMr.Elmmwill bent the Colonial Hold\nlhe first Wt-dncsdny In each month for\nthe purpose of taking orders, dwja28to\nWo. A. DashwDod-Jous\nFRESH CALIFORNIA AND LOCAL\nALWAYS ON HANI).\nGOODS DELIVERED FREE.\ndjoaito\nAUSTIN'S HAY MARKET\nFor Hay, Straw, Wheat, Bran, Shorts,\nOil Cake, Ac.\nAUSTIN'S STORE\nFor Groceries, Hardware, Rope, Platform Scales, kc.\nAUSTIN'S CELLAR\nFor Choice Potatoes, Carrots, Turnips,\nOnions, kc.\nAUSTIN'S STABLE\nFor flood Teams and Sober Teamsters,\nAUSTIN'S PRINCIPLES:\nSqilare Dealing and Total Abstinence.\nHACK, LIVERY, STAGE,\nFeed | Sale Stables\nDOUBLE AND SINGLE RIGS\nAt Special U.w Kates.\nihyiijf ad All Einis ji* tag\nDone ut Shortest Notice.\nttrt'Cnnlnootl delivered fo any part of\nthe Cily.\nOrders by Telephone will receive prompt\nattention.\nIHPSiflhlcR nearly opposite 0. V. It. Depot, Columbia. SI., Now Westminster.\ndjniitc QILLEY BROS. Viwrt..\nFeed, Liyerj i Sale\nSTABLES,\nDallas Street, Westminster\nJOS. WL WISE,\nPBOPEIBTOB.\nGOOD PHIVING A lllWNG HORSES\nfor Hire. Hanks call at nil Steamers\nami Trains. Speoial attention given to\nDoardliiR Horses.\nCOAL AND WOOD\nConstantly on Hand.\nTale District Tax Notice,\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, In accordance with the Statutes, that Provincial Revenue Tax and all Taxes levied\nunder tho Ausessment Aet, nro now due\nfor the year 1R8JI. All of tho above-named\nTaxes, Ctblleetlhlo within the Hope, Yale,\nT-yltnu and Cnclte Creek Divisions of the.\nDistrict of Yale, are payable at my office.\nAssessed Taxes aro collectible at the\nfollowing rates, viz.:\nIf pnld on or beforo June 80th, 1SS0\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nProvlnolal Revenue, 38 per capita.\nOno-half of one per oent. on real property.\nSeven and ono-half cento por aore on\nwild land.\nOne-third of one per cent on personal\nproperty.\nOne-half one per cont. ou Income.\nIf paid after June SOth, iss;-\nTwo-thlnls of ono per cent on real\nproperty.\nEight, and i\nEfght and one-half cents per acre on\nwild land.\nOne-half of one per cent, on personal\nproperly.\nThree-fourths of one per cent, ou Income.\nWM. DODD,\nAssessor and Collector.\nLytton, B. O., January, 1889. dwflMd\nIMPERIAL\nFIRE INSURANCE C0iUiP'Y.\n1 Om BitOAii St. and 16 Fall Mall,\nLONDON. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nINSTITUTED 1803.\nFOR INSURING HOUSES & OTHER\nBuildings, Goods, Wares, Merchandise, Manufacturing and Farming Stock,\nShips hi Port, Harbor or Dook, and the\nCargoes nf such Vessels; also, Shins build-\ni\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.!\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.: and repairing, Barges and other Ves\nsuFs on BAvtjjante rivers and canals, and\nGoods on board such Vessels, throughout\nGreat Britain and Ireland and in Foreign\nCountries,\nFUOM LOBS OK DAMAtiK BY FIRK.\nSubscribed and Invested Capital,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Sl.600.000 8TG.\nRates of Premium and every information nan bo obtained on application t.\nW. I, AKMSTHONfi,\nAgent for Now Westminster.\nTo San Francisco, Cal.\n, vmii\nBY WAY OP THE\nOrders may be left at tho Oilice of Ma*\nJieraAMlliigantOommr \" \"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\nFront Street, New WeBt,\nTHE MT. SHASTA ROUTE.\nQUICKEBIN TIME THAN ANYOTHKB\nROOTS BETWEEN\nNew Tesiminster and Sao bam,\nGRAND SOENIC BOUTt OF TNE PACIFIC OMIT\nPULLMAN BUFFET \u00E2\u0080\u00A2LUPUS\nTOURIST SLEEPING CARS\nFor Accommqdatlon of Secoml-Claas Ptt\na.ngora, attached to Expreaa Tralna.\nFnro from Fortlnnd to Snoramonto .nd\nKim Pranolwo-Unllmltad, *\u00C2\u00BBl Flnt-\nolaaa (Limited), 82it; 8econd-ol..i {Ll-\nmltedl, SIS.\nTHROUOH TICKETS lo all polnu South\nnnd Eaat, via California,\nTICKET OFFICES:\nCity Office, No. IM Cor. Flnt A Aider\nHlroela;\nDki'ot Offiob, Cor. F A Front SlMeta;\nPortland, Oregon.\nR. KOEnLER, E. P. ROQERS,\nManager. Aa.t.Q.F.ir.Ag't Untli) gtritish (Holumbinn\nFriday F.vealai. March 1. 1889.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0UVEITTI8IN0 RATH FOR THE DAILY.\nTransient AdverIlnenienU.-FIrst Insertion, inula, per line solid nonpareil; each\nsubsequent conseoutlvelnsertlon,3 old, per\nline. Advertisements not Inserted evory\n.lay-first insertion, 10 els. per line; subsequent Insertions, 5 cts. per line.\nftlnnillns AilvrrtlsenicnU.-Profesfiion-\nal or Business Cards\u00E2\u0080\u009483 per month. Special rates for genoral trade advertising,\naccording to space occupied and duration\n\u00C2\u00B0 aSSE^SbIm, when'dlHplayed, charged\n3 ner cent, less tban transient advta, If\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-olid, charged at regular transient rates.\nNpecliil Noll-Mi among reading motter,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A02ft cts per lino each insertion. Specials\ninserted by the month at reduced rates.\nBirths, Miirriages and Denths.Jl for each\ninsertion; Funeinl Notices In connection\nwltb deaths, 50 cts. each Insertion.\nWEEKLY ADVERTISING RATES.\nTransient Advertls\u00C2\u00ABmenis,-Firstinser-\nMoti. 10cts. por lino solid nonpareil; subsequent Insertions, 7 cts. per line.\nStanding Ailvcrtlseineuts.-Fiofosslon-\nal or Business Ciuds-31.50 per month.\nSpecial rates for general trade advertising.\nSpecial Notices, Uiribs, Marriages aud\nDeaths, sumo rates us Dally.\nUnit musMienil metal.and for large outs\nan oxlrn rale u'lll bo charged.\nWF.-iMifis -\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ihIIi^ In .i.|vr.-rUst.-i.i('iits\nshould be eareful tn Mate wl.c-luer they\narotVi appear In the Dally Edltlon.or the\nWeclilv.orbitlli. V liberal reduction Is\nmiiili'whcii lii-*i-rlo(l in both. N'o advertisement Inserted for less than Ul,\nSUBSCRIBERS\nWho do not receivo their paper rwularly.\nfrom the Carriers ov ihmitiih lhe l'u-1\nOilice, will confer:i fuvf.r by reporting the\nBruno to the oilice of publication at once.\nNEW ADVERTISEMENTS THIS DAY.\nTime Tabic\t\nSeeds\t\nTenders\t\nBuilding Society...\n. .Wm, Rogers\n M. Sinclair\n A. tlobeil\n.W.J. Walker\nHot Coffee, Beef Tea, etc , at the\n\"Hub.\"\nSeo now timo table\u00E2\u0080\u0094bteamer Duiie-\nrauir.\nFresh Eastern and Native Oysters,\nserved in every style, at the Olub. *\nTho Pacific express has been further\ndelayed by mud slides in tho interior.\nThe Btr, Adelaide lott for Ohillivi'aok\nthis morning with freight and passengers.\nWe are \u00C2\u00BBlad to seo .las. O'HaHormi\nhome again from the capital, and looking as hearty as ever.\nThe 9th drawing of the Westminster\nBuilding Society will lake placo in tho\ncourt house on the 16 inst.\nIn another column, M. Sinclair, of\ntho'Centrat Grocery, advertises freah\ngarden and field seeds for sale.\nTlie female franchise bill was defeated yesterday afternoon in tho Ontario loftiskturo by a vote of 50 to 22.\nThe government has granted to the\ncity tho reservation tit the head of\nLnlu Island applied for somo time\nngo.\nTho str. Princess Louise left for\nVictoria this morning with 2 carloads\nof cattlo, 20 tons farm produco and a\nnumber of passengers.\nTwo barrels labelled \"sour krout\"\nbut containing opium, havo been\nseized by the customs olllcora at.\nTacoma. Value $4,800.\nThe trip nf tbo str. Dunsmuir, advertised to leave fm* Toxtrla to morrow mt>rniug,has been cancelled owing\nto a break in tlio vessel's machinery.\nBishop Sillitoe did not arrive back\nfrom the interior to-day as expected,\nand, in consequence, thero will bu no\npractice of tho Choral Union to-night.\nTho tenders fur tliu work of construction on the Missijit railroad\nbridge havo all been recoived, and the\ncontract will bo awarded in n fow days.\nThe great majority of our citizens\nthink it is high timo that cattle should\nbo prevented from running at large\nthrough the city. Westminster is no\nlonger a cattlo pasture, us visitors to\nthe city seem to think.\nThe World says that so important\nhave tlio Bellingham Bay towns becomo that hereafter thu Premier will\ncall ti- these on hor upward nnd downward trips from and to Vancouver on\nWednesdays and Saturdays.\nThe city council should pasa a by-law\ninnkiug it compulsory that as soon as a\nslraotis opened thu lot owners should\nhavo their property decently fenced.\nIf tliis were dune tho nppearanco of\nthe cily would be greally improved.\nMr. Alex. Cameron, one of British\nColumbia's ino.it energetic pioneers and\npmspuctorR, has formed a company and\nsecured a leaso of a portion of Coyoosh\nCreek, Lillooet, for tho purposo of\nsinking to bedrock. Mr. Cameron is\nconfident that thero aro bushels of\ngulden nuggets on bedrock, nnd will\nendeavor to eecuro some of thorn.--\nColonist,\nCapt. Robertson, of Moresby Island,\nfrom whose place tho two Chinese took\na ruft and wero carried out into the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0trails, arrived'ill i he city yesterday.\nHo status that tho story ot ill-trout-\nment and mm -payment of wagos told\nby thoiii is simply a pack nf lien, and\nthat thoy aro already telling a different\nversion ot the incident.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Yesterday's\nColonist.\nA meeting of tho teachers institute\nwas held yesterday afternocn at whicli\na resolution waa passed condemning\ndaily marking. Tho inspector of schools\nattended tho meeting and spoke strongly against tho teachers taking such a\ncourse, hut they persisted in their\ndetermination to condemn au innovation which, it is claimed, interferes\nwith thowork of Urgeschools.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Times.\nFeb. 27th.\nAbout I o'clock tlita morning an Intoxicated Frenchman, by the name of\nFurnivul, onlcrod tho Royal Columbian\nUnBpit.il and got into hed in one of tbo\nwards with a man who was vory ill.\nMr. Distby was aroused and orderod\ntho man t:> leave, but ho rufuscd nnd\nexpressed liisdotormitiatton of Btaying\nwhere ho was all night. Tho police\nwas callod and Fur nival wns givon a\nbnnk in tbo lock-up. Ho was fined\n82 50 and o\nc\nthe fit.\nd Boys\nOVE\nX\nfi -ft-\n___!.__-\n0>\u00C2\u00A3\nc\naimer\nNTS.\nATS\n-\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\nwo 2, 1\no\nGent\nents'\npcciall\nX\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2H g - - _|\nf!\nW\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\"\u00C2\u00A7. MM\n>\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2DE l___r\n*>Z mm\n11:0\nw\nX\n0\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2at\nREMAINING STOCK\nIMMENSE SALE\n; ' OP\t\nDRY GOODS, CLOTHING\nhats, _zi_s.-E_,T=s:'^:ts,\nLINOLEUMS, OILCLOTH, ETC., ETC.\nCommencing Oct. 10th, 1888.\nAa wo liavo decided to retire from tbo retail Dry Gooda buaincas this sonaon, wo\nnow place our ontiro stook on tho market at\nWHOLESALE PRICE8. NO RE8ERVE.\nEVBBYTHINO- MUST BE SOLD.\n$6,000 worth of Clothing, Hats and Men's Furnishings.\n$20,000 worth of Dry Goods, Carpets, Oil Cloths and\nHouse Furnishing Goods, etc.\nlarAa wo are known to carry ono of tho largest and host assorted stocks in tho\nProvinco, it will not bo necessary to enmnorato. An early inspection will convince\ntho publio that wo mean businesa, and that tho stook muat be oloaod out before the\nend of this season; thoreforc we havo placed our goods at prices lower than havo\never been offered before in this Province,\nRBMEMBKK-The Slock mint b. cloud ont by the end of th. year.\nCALL EAKLY WHILE THB AMORTHBttT IH GOOD.\nTurns- Under $100, caahj over $100, secured notes at threo month, with interest.\nolOUwlyr MASONIC BLOCK, COLOMBIA ST., NBW WESTMINSTER.\n-OF-\nit j_tk.wmwwatmt ?:,\n. m? w tc rw je\nWool Ooods\nOgle, Campbell & Co.\nJUST RECEIVED, Boys'. Youth's and\nMen's\nOLOTHING\nIn latest styles. A full line of SPRING\nOVERCOATS, and the nobbiest line of\nHATS in the city; new styles in the \"Crra-\nmercy.\"\nNovelties in NECKWEAR & SHIRTS\nCOLUMBIA STREET, NEW WESTMINSTER.\ndto\nR. J. ARMSTRONG,\n_Z.B-___Z.B_3. X2ST\nChoice Family Groceries!\nFINEST CREAMERY BUTTER A SPECIALTY.\nLabrador Herrings,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tvCacteerel, Salt Ood,\nArmour's \"Cmc Hams,\nArrxio-ur's XJxic. Bacon.\nFlo-ax. Bran. Snorts,\nWHIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR FARM PRODUCE.\naowwiy Sooullar-Armitrong Blook, Columbia St.\n-TO BE SOLD AT-\nActual COST PRICE\nfor a Jk ______\nTO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW STOCK\nJAMES ELLARD & CO.\nLOIDTIDOEr HOUSE.\ndwoelSUs\nIF1. CRAZE,\nPractical Watchmaker, Manufacturing\n. Jeweler & Optician.\nOPPOSITE THE BANK OF MONTREAL.\nWATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, PLATED WARE, AC.\nBEST QUALITY. EASTERN PRICES.\nA full line of Spectacles & Eye-Glasses In steel, rubber, silver und gold,\nframes. The finest Pebbles made, $4 per pair} aU sights suited.\nSpeoial attention given to FINE WATOH REPAIRS. Having learned the\nbusiness thoroughly from some of the finest Horologers in England, aud since then\nmanaged the watch.repairing departments of a few of the best firm, on the continent of America, is a sulfiolent guarantee of good workmanship. Formerly moua-\nger for nearly 8 years of tho well-known firm of Savage & Lyman, Montreal.\nCharges Moderate,\nMontheal, Dee., 1887.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr. F. Crako.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Andw. Robertson, Esq., Chairuu.i ot\nMontreal Harbor Commissioners, aays: \"I nover found a Watchmaker who di i so\nwell for me as you did whon in Montreal, ond I nm sorry you are not hore to-day.\"\nilwtinlatc\nD.S.\n&C0.\nAGENTS B. UURftMOE'S SPEOTAOLES.\nWholesale and Retail Druggists\nNEXT COLONIAL HOTEL, NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nSEEDS, SEEDS)\nAt Central Grocery.\nJUST RECEIVED-A LARGE CONSIGNMENT OF\nFerry's Garden and Field Seeds, which aro guaranteed\nfresh and good. So don't send to the United States and other\nplaces for small lots, when you can get them as good and cheap\nat .. Ivlarsnall Sinclair's,\n' ilwnoialo .\"' \"-; .V,-.; : OOLUMBIA STREET.\nW. & 6. WOLFENDEN,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094DIRECT IMPORTERS OF\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nXXItGirXX-OILi^LtSiS\nJUST RECEIVED, EX \"VIOLA,\" A LARGE CON-\nsignment of\nCrosse A Blackwell's Table Delicacies, Mince\nMeat, Plum Puddings, Christmas Fruits,\nSoups, Potted and Devilled Meats, Sardines,\nAnchovy and Bloater Pastes, Calves' Foot\nJellies, Almonds, Figs, Marmalade, Cheese,\nPickles, Sauces, Malt, Crystal and White\nWine Vinegar, etc., etc.\nCORNER COLUMBIA AND MARY STREETS.\nBON MARCHE.\nWalker A Shadwell\nHAVE REMOVED TO THE\nHAMLEY BLOCK,\nOpposite Colonial Hotel.\n. d-neatc"@en . "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_03_01"@en . "10.14288/1.0346841"@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 .