"f3797219-2f56-4826-a7cf-a226131d6ad3"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2017-03-07"@en . "1889-10-19"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/dbc/items/1.0346963/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " intn*****\"'*\nBritish Columbian.\nVOLUME 7\nITlWESSIONAL AND BU3IHESS GAUDS,\nNEW W-ESTMINSTEB, a 0., SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 19, 1889.\nNTJMBEB 95.\nB\nB. HI. N. WOODS,\nAlUtI9TER-AT-I,A\V. OIllcB-MssKoss-\nssle tstrsct.\nilisss''le\n'1*. C. A'l'KINSON,\n' sn AKRISTEB, SOLICITOR, Ao. Ofllccs-\nJt) Misssssslc Ilssllslliss, New Westminstor,\n070. dwtc\nAKMBTlUINa to KCK8TKIN,\nBARRISTERS, BOUCITORS, ETC.-\n.Missossic Bsslldlssg, Nesv westssstss-\n,8'cr, B. 0. slwmy'tss\ni ssssissis us, M-cou, & Jt.v.vss,\n>ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, 0(0. Ofll-\nJj csss-Mnsonlo Buildings, Nsssv West-\nsislssstor, nsssl Visueoisver, H. 0. slwtss\nA. C. IlllVBO-iK-JACK, SI. A.,\nBarrister, soLiorron, notary\nFubliss, _se. onlco lis Use Humley\nBsslldlnsf.OollsnslslisBt., optsoslls, llioljol-\nolsl.lt Hsslol. dwssssgtfl\n-SOSISI'H II, (3 A YNSSS', \u00C2\u00BB.A\u00E2\u0080\u009E',I,.*I.\n/.OW MEDALIST of Hi\" Unlvonillj ol\nij Dislsllll. llAltlUHTKIt-ATI.AW ol\nlis,, lllllll Hour! ssf JissUs'c, Iri'lsisssl. Olllocs,\ns'Hiiivi- McKeissslo & (Jllsrlcsols His., New\nWostmlnster; slsvfssglto\nA. J. 111II.*U;S, D, D. 8.,\ntslJRGKON DENTIST. Gradssssto o( Use\nn Ohio College of isesstul Surgery. Is\n>siosv wltli Dr. 0. E. C. Brosvn. AU svork\nskillfully isorformssd. ltnnms ll A 0, llssssk\n,f It. 11., Colusnlsiss Ht. IIotsrH-B to 12 is.sis.;\n1,5,1 so \u00C2\u00AB|s. sss. 'Ulyme\na. IV. OllA-iT.\nARCHITECT. Olllcc\u00E2\u0080\u0094Corner Mssry and\nClssrksoss Sis., WcssusslsssKsr. slss'lo\nCLOW Os r.SAC'l.UllE,\nI 4 ROHITECTS. Oflice\u00E2\u0080\u0094Room E. ovor\nA Hauls of 11. C.,ColisisslslisStreot,Wost-\niliislor. ''*\"\ndto\nW1LLIA31 ll. KINO,\nAROHITEOTiSANITARYENOINlBR,\n.-;'. Uosssoved to ArniRtronK'H Hlock,\nOolulssbla street, Wssslssslssster\u00E2\u0080\u0094Room\nNo. 2. dto\nW. TIIIHADUEAW,\nr AND SURVEYOR AND DRATjqHTS-\nj J sssisss. nismli'l' lllook, New Wcstmlu-\n11,1', IS. 0. dsssyllsto\nA. P. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0soTri.\"!.\n.OMINION ASSD PROVINCIAL LAND\nw,J SURVEYOR. Oillces Boons n.llank\n..r n ..'. i.'sn .:.'.'.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 s-i.-r, is.,-.\nALBERT J. hii.-.\n(M.OAN.SO0.0.E.),\n1-lIVILEJfGINHUH.LANDSURVEYOR\n\J llisil DKAUUHTSiWAN. llasnley\nBlock, Now Westminster. ilsvnss23lo\ni\n\u00C2\u00AB. riTi\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\u00E2\u0084\u00A2E\u00C2\u00BBai-ul\nDEAL ESTATE BROKER anil County\nAX (Jourt Aueul. Commissioner, Notary\nP'ui-lh-.&c. Rents collected. Omee\u00E2\u0080\u0094McKenzie Street, New Westminster, B. C.\nT. J. TltAPP,\nAUCTIONEER AND APPRAISER.\nColumbln Street, New Westminster.\nAlt commissions will receive prompt\nand .'ftre/ul attention, Best lefi-renceo\nglv en when required. lahUMc\nJ. K. FIN1.AYB0N,\nPIANO TUNER, from Broatlwood A\nHons, London, \"England, and Stoln-\nwnv A Sons, Now York, now residing ln\nVan toil ver, will attond to orders lcital.\n1). Lyal & Co.'s storo. Trips iKtwcckof\ncadi month. -liuiStc.\nTURNHR, BKTMTON ta CO.,\nMERCHANTS. Wliarf St., VIotoiia.\nAgents for Nortii British ami Mercantile Insurance Co. forMalulaii'I. II.\n0. Uri-TON & Co., 3d Klusbury Circus, London, E, 0. dtc\nImperial Fire InsuranGB Oo.\non* x.o'lsruo-\u00E2\u0084\u00A2'. .\nCtFlTAIi, - \u00C2\u00A31,000,001) SIR.\nKatcfl as low ns any other rollitble Companies doing bnsliu-.-H In British Columbia, W. J. ARMSTRONG.\n(011*310 Agont for New \u00E2\u0080\u00A2West.\nBAKER BROS. & CO'Y\n10 CImpel Wnllt, Sonth Castle St., Liver\npool, England,\n11 Bank Buildings, Columbln Street, Now\nWestminster, 11.0.\nShipping and Commission\nAGEKTS,\nCEHEHAt WHOLESAIEHEBOHAHTS & lMf*si*TEFia\nAny description ol (looils Iminsrtosl to\norder assd' Custom and Slilss BroKlug\ntntsssacted. Latest Freight nml Market\n{\u00E2\u0096\u00A0isolations, slsvisssjtc\nRAND BROS.\nOK*.,, ESTATE BROKEBS,\nCoisv.yasicsips, Collector.,\nAsssl lsssssi-anee Aftessss,\nOillces at.\nNEW WESTMINSTERl Corner\nMcKeisssie and Clssrltson Sts.\nVANCOUVER, Cordova Street.\nLONDON England,\n\u00C2\u00BB BUILDING LOTS lor salo In all sections\n[ Vancouver ansl New Westminster Cily.\nI--ARM LANDS ol superior ssuallty for\nlie at Olsilllwlsaok, Port Hammond,\nr.ngley, Matsqui, Susnas, Mssd Bay.Lad-\ner's Lassillisg, Lulu Islaud, Nortls Arm\nml Pitt River.\nMaps assd Plans oilslbiled and tlso fullest Information fursslslsesl sst all ossrolllccs,\nTHOSE WISHING\nFREE-HAND\nGrayou,Water Color or Pastel\nPORTRAITS\n[For Christmas]\nShould Leave tliolr Orders Early with\nMiss Linnie Lewis\nInstruction In Drawing and Painting tit\nStudio-Con. Royal Ave. & Mahy St.\nOrdors rcoclvod at D. Lyal A Co's,\n tlwfie21ml\t\nW. R. AUSTIN'S\nT.J.TRA\nGENERAL & SHELF HARDWARE,\nInoludlng Tools of all kusslsof tlso best makes; 'llross-CUt & HaiKl-Sawii,\nStollCS', Willi I'nper in all slcsigna; Brooms & BrushlM'or all-iliriio-s-sil\nLllliricnlllli* Oils! STrapS el \u00C2\u00AB\" slesorlptlcssis, anil is (-(moral assoslment ol\nAgricultural Im->lh he is diapleaaod with the result\nof the Northern Pacifio election, ho is\ndisposed to make the best of it.\na terrible tragedy.\nSaoramento, Cal., Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Mrs.\nJt.st-ph Smith and a companion were\ndiscovurod iu a house of ill-fame by\nthe former's husband about 7.30 this\nmurmitg. Smith shot, and it ia believed, fatally wounded his wifo, and\nthen attempted the lifo of her companion, but the latter, whose name is un*\nknown, mado his escape. Smith then\ntook his own life.\nelofed with the gardener.\nNew York, Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mary Lehmit,\ndaughter of a wealthy resident of Wexford county, Ireland, and John Burns,\nher father's gardener, eloped to this\ncountry ou tlio stunner Aurauia, which\narrived laat Monday niglit, and wero\ndotained at Castle (Jarden by the emigration commissioners at the cable request of her father. Georgo Lohunt,\nbrother of Mary, arrivod ou the Ger*\nmariio last night and will tako his sister\nhomo.\nWHEAT.\nSan Frantisco, Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wheat\nactive nnd steady; huyer '84, 133jJ;\nbuyer simaon, 141}.\nNkw York, Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wheat quiet;\nOct., 83; Nov., 83J; Dec, 85\u00C2\u00A3; May,\n90.\nChicago, Oot. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wheat quieter;\nOct., 78]; Dee.,81r[; May, 84.\nJUSTICE FOR ONCE.\nBoston, Massachusetts, Oot. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThe senior class of Harvard college\nto-day eloctod Clement Garrett Morgan (a colored mun) class orator.\nThe election was hotly contested, but\nMorgan recoived a substantial majority.\nMorgan entered collogo with little\nmeans and during freshman yoar\nworked in odd hours in a barber shop.\nLast year as competitor fur the Boyi*\nstun prizu lin carried tho audionco by\nstorm and won first placo.\nimportant arrest.\nChicauo, Oct. ln.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Anothor important arrest was made last night in\nconnection with the Cronin caso propor, and to which is attached eoiiflluer-\nnblo impoitanco. The ttnte's attorney\nrefused to divulge the name of tho latest suspect, but it is known that he\nwas a member of Camp 20, wns an intimate of two of the suspeots on trial,\naud was prominent in the conspiracy\nto murder Dr. Oronin.\niKin.iiii exw-osion.\nAnderson, Ind., Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho boiler in R. J. Walker & Co.'a sawmill\nexploded this morning, tearing tho\nbuilding to splinters, and killing Ho*\nraco Koontz and Walter Trimple, and\nuerioualy injuring fivo others.\ndining the delegates,\nChicaoo, Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Elaborate preparations are being mado in this eity\nfor the entertainment of the delegates\nto tho International Maritime congress,\nwho arrive this evening. Four hundred invitations have been issued for a\nbanquet in tumor of the delegates, at\nthe Graud Paciiic hotel to-night.\nTHE NEW GUNS.\nWashington, D.O., Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho\nreported recent trial of the dynamite\nguns on the Vesuvius, was received at\ntho navy department today, and found\nto bo favorablo. Tho board reports\nthat the trials, as far as proceeded\nwith, were a success, and the guns\nthrew shells containing 200 or morn\npounds of dynamite one mile with\nre ii an liable accuracy, The board also\nreports tliAt the orew wore woll protected. The rapidity of fire was not\ntested, but tho board believed that it\nwill bo all right.\nTHE NKW COMHISIONKB.\nWashington, Oct. 19. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Gen,\nRaume, tho new commissioner\nof pensions, took the oath of\noilice beforo Chief Clerk Dawson, of\nthe interior department, at 12 o'olook,\nto-day. He was then officially introduced by Secretary Noble to the officials in tho department. After sumo\ntime spent in receiving congratulations\nof friends, Raumo proceeded to the\npension oilice accompanied by assistant Secretary Bussey. He was introduced to thB chiefs of the division\nby Gen. Bussey and Assistant Commissioner Smith. Gen. Raumo will\nassume charge on Monday. Secretary\nNoble, speaking of the selection of\nGen. Buumc, said that he was chosen\nfrom a number of oxet-llcnt men. and\nhe thought he would mako a commissioner satisfactory t - tlio country. Ho\nfelt mueh relieved now that a com-\nmis3ioner of poiisioua had been selected by tho president. Among iutorior\ndepartment oflicinl^ tho Beleoih.n ii\nwell received, tho only criticism made\nbeing thai llaumu bus not in recent\nyears boon iu autivu political lifo.\nWith the ujipointmeiu of Raumo ua\ncommissioner, tht; rumor is revived\nthat Deputy Commissioner Smith\nwill either bn allowed to resign or else\nbe transferred to some oilier held. It\nsei'ina to bu nc*cptud as it fact thai ho\nwill not remain thu assistant comuiis-\nfdoner of pensions.\nanother express robbery.\nBirminoham, Ala., Oot. 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094News\nnf another big express robbery in Alabama has just leaked out, It involves\nubout $5000, uud occurred nt Mills-\nport, Lamar comity, about a week ago,\nbut the matter had boen kept quiet till\nyesterday, whon Walter Abercomb, a\nyouiig man, was brought to this city\nby a detectivo and charged with the\nrubbery, The agent at Mill sport had\nin his possession ceitain packages\nwhich were worth about $6000. By\nsomo means thu robber learned of it\nand made his haul Tho agent was in\nthe oflice at night when tho robber entered, covered him wilh a pistul and\nmade him hand ovor tho money. No\nfurther particulars can be learned.\nThe cxprts-i people think thoy have tho\nthe thief, but say thoy want to collect\nmore evidence before they talk.\nOTTAWA NOTES.\nOttawa, Oct, 18,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mr. Burgess,\ndeputy minister of tho Interior, has\nreturned from a two months tour in\ntho Northwest.\nMr. Massue, conservative was elected to-day in Richelieu by 200 majority.\nMayor McGee, engaged in tho real\nestate, loan and investment business in\nOahawa, haa failed. Already 830,000\nliabilities arc known.' As far as can\nbo estimated tho nominal as-iets are\n37,000. Tho debts of this insolvent\nare principally duo to farmers; several\nwidows aro left penniless by tho failure.\nA syndicuto with a \u00C2\u00A71,000,000 capital has been organised in Kingston,\nOnt.\nDr. Powell, Buperin ten dent of British Columbia Indians, was superannuated on* October 1st. It is under*\natuod that A. W. Vowell, provincial\ngold commissioner, succeeds him.\nApplication will bo mado to parliament to incorporate tho Alberta Colouration Railway to build a line from\nCasscls, on tho Canadian Pacific, across\nthe Bow river aud through tha Crow's\nNest PasB to the Pacific ocean.\nThe Baptist convention had a lively\ndiscussion to-day on thu question of\ntux exemption. The debate is not yot\nconcluded.\nFROM! ViCtORIA.\nTlicPiisj.-\u00C2\u00AB*V'.t'iiirJiiK-'fiird ttoitlcn \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2lite\nI'titiiiu Slake! (lie Voyage in is iio-iv.-.,\nVictoria. Oct. 19,--The s. s. City\nof Penbla, tiie greyhound of tho San\nFrancisco fleet, ai rived at 11 o'clock\no'olock this morning, making tho re-\ninatkable fast time nf 48 hours from\nSan Frauoisi*-\". This beats the beBt\ntimo by two hotira, nnd she expects to\ndo better next trip.\nAtn int*etui!\": of the tramway sharu*\nholders last ui-;iit it was decided unt to\nchange tiie mute from Fort st. to Victoria weat, but ihe latter line be built\nand running to Esquimalt within five\nmonths. The contractor commonced\nwork distributing the rails this morning.\nThe uiu^l sports nt Beacon Hill\nthis afternoon. Woather like summer.\nA lilt F-iYrfttment.\nMoasrs. Penney and Brown, two\nwealthy young Englishmen at present\nliving in Victoria, yesterday afternoon\ncompleted tho purchase from Mr. Morris Moss of the uow famous Bchooner\nBlack Diamond, as well aa tho fishing\nsLatiuii ou Quecu Charlotte Island.\nTho prico paid for the schooner is said\nto have boon about 83,000, while the\namount given for tho fishing station\nhas not boon mndo public. Tho Black\nDiamond last year rcceivi-d a thorough\noverhauling and repairs, which cost\nabout 81,400. It is tho intentbn of\nMoasrs. Penney and Brown not only\nto engago iu the sealing and fishing industries, but aho tu \"---tul'lisl] a ship\nchandlery and general store at whicli\nthu sealing schooners can refit without\nreturning to the city. The Black Diamond, with Messrs. PetmoynndHrown\non board, will sail on Monday for the\nIslands, with Capt. 11. Smith in command.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Friday's Colonist.\nOn Tuesday aftornoon while a boat\ncontaining nino coameii was being low-\nored from H. S. S. Amphton, one of\nthe davits gavo way, tipping tho occupants into the harbor. The tackle\nblock, as the liberated end of the boat\nwas submerged, swung round striking\none of tlio men in tho faco and inflicting an ugly cut as well as bad bruises.\nRe was not deprived of sensibility,\nhowever, and with his companions at\nonce ttruck out for tho other boats\nwhich had boen previously lowered.\nThe men who woro on dock at the\ntimo tho accident occurred, sprang\nover tho sido in a swarm, clothes and\nall, to tho roscuo, whilo a couplo of\ndozen lifo preservers rained down\naround tho swimmers. They didn't\nneed help, howovor, nnd hi threo minutes aftor the brenkage, all were on\nboard again. H. M S. Icarus was\nyestorday docked for repairs, when it\nwaB found lhat her injury was fully as\nserious as wub at first feared. As soon\nas the Icarus loaves tho dock, the\nAcnrn will enter.- Fridat/s Colonist.\nDr. Bryco, secrelnry of tho provincial health board of Toronto, contradicts the statement that has been\nspread abroad regarding smnll-pox in\nPeleo Island,\nFULL POWEBS.\nSir Julian Pauncefote has Fall\nPowers to Conclude a New\nExtradition Treaty.\nParnell's Health Ib Greatly Improved and he Hopes to Take\nthe Field Again.\nThe Kin-,' of Portugal Died To-day\nand Carlos I. Succeeds to\ntho Throne.\nNEW EXTRADITION TREATY.\nOttawa, Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tho government\nha,; been adviBcd that Sir Julian\nPauncefote, British minister nt Washington, returns to the United States\nwith authority tu rc-open negotiations\nfurtlm anungemont of a new extradition treaty between tho United States\nand Great Britain, and also to arrange\npreliminary matters for the re-opening\nof the fishery queition and adjustment\nof tho Behring sea difficulty. It ia\nlearned from the state depastmeut that\nBlaine has intimated to Salisbury hiB\nwillingness to dispassionately review\nthe matter in dispute informally beforo\nit is formally taken up for final adjustment, to seo if au amicable settlement\ncannot iu this way be secured without\nthe help of arbitration or the appointment of a commission.\nconcessions to catholics.\nLondon, Oot. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sir Edward\nClarke, solicitor-general, says the govt,\nwill persist in making concessions to\nthe IhbIi Roman Catholics, and will go\nahead with the scheme of making further endowments for their benefit.\nNegotiations are now proceeding between Balfoar and Archbishop Walsh.\nHAPPILY FRUSTRATED.\nSt. Petesburo. Oct 19\u00E2\u0080\u0094An official\nmessage states that a plan was made to\nwreck, near Zassy, in Roumania, the\ntrain on which ex-queen Natalie of\nServia recently travelled to Belgrade.\nThe train started ten hours earlier tban\ntho time announced for its departure,\nand owing to this fact, tho plan of the\nconspirators was frustrated,\nCASHIERED.\nParis, Oct.19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The oabinet has expelled Laysant, the Boulangist depury,\nfrom the position of oflicer in the\nterritorial army,\nPARNELL'S HEALTH,\nLondon, Oot. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Parnell has been\ninterviewed on the condition of his\nhealth. Ho says he is better, and expects to take part in the business of\nthe coming session of parliament. Tho\nfall of the Salisbury government, he\nBays, is either at the next session or at\nthe session of 1891,\nDIED,\nLisbon, Oct, 19,\u00E2\u0080\u0094The king of Por*\ntugal is dead.\nTHE NEW KINO.\nLisbon, Oot. 19,\u00E2\u0080\u0094The death of King\nL uis occured at 11 o'clock this morning.\nHe was SI years of age. Crown\nPrince Charles, duke of Braganza, in\nsuocueding to the throne assumes the\ntitle orCarlos I.\nCLARAS MARRIAGE.\nLondon. Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The marriage of\nPrince Hatzfeldt and Mias Clara Huntington will take place at Brompton\non the 28th of this month. It will be\nprivate.\nA DANGEROUS WEAPON.\nLondon, Oct. 19.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Distinguished\narmy officers interviewed on the Zeal-\ninsky dynamite gun aro all of the opinion that it is a dangerous weapon.\nTHAT INTERESTING TRIAL.\nLondon, Oct. 18.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Nearly 200 ad-\nitional policemen arrivod at Marybor*\nough from Dublin this morning, and\nthough the popular excitement'continued, the court proceeded with tho\nwork of selecting a jury to try Father\nMcFadden and his associates for the\nmurder of Police Inspector Marlin in\nFebruary last. The oourt room was\nfilled wilh police, and the indignant parishioners of Father McFadden, whose\nviolence yesterday compelled the court\nto adjourn, were excluded. The main\nobject of tbe Crown attorney appears\nto be to blacken the oharactor of tbe ao*\ncused priest and to destroy hiB popularity with his people. An admission\nmade to-day by one of tho Crown witnesses, a police official, who took part\nin the fighting in whioh the police inspector lost his life, is regarded as of\nthe highest importance by the counsel\nfor the defence. This man admitted\nthat beforo Martin was strack at all, he\nsaw Father McFadden with blood run*\nning down his face, evidently from a\nwound in the head.\nCariboo Waattt.\nBritish Columbia furnishes a protty\ngood illustration of the wages question\nas raised in tho tariff interest In\n18G1 the gold mining excitement was\nat its height. At Cariboo that year\ncarpenters wore paid $16 a day and\nlaborers $22 a day. It was high pay,\ntho result entirely of the natural obstruction\u00E2\u0080\u0094rit*., the abience of roadi\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nto tho entrance of outside labor into\ntho country. But the agenoy that put\nup the rato of wages also iucrcased\nthe cost of living. A meal cost 92.50,\nFlour, bacon and sugar were 92.50 per\npound. A shovel or a pick cost $14,\na pair of boots $36, and an ordinary\ncooking stove $350. It ia a question\nwhether $16 a day at Cariboo at that\ntimo was not pooler pay than $1.50 at\nToronto.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mat\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\nThe Alert Amove.\nShortly after noon yesterday, Mr.\nThos. Earle received the following\ntelegram from Nanaimo, concerning\na mishap to the Alert Bay Canning\nCo.'s now steamer Alert at a point\nabout five miles from the coal city.\n\"Alert ashore at Dod'a narrows. Soow\nooal laden filled and sank,\" Immediately upon receipt of tho despatch\nthe steamer Yosemite, Capt. Jagers in\ncommand, was aent to the rescue, and\nhas not yet returned. The meagre information furnished by the telegram\ncontains nothing in regard to the injuries, if any, received by the steamer.\n\"Dod's narrows\" is a small and vory\ntreacherous channel lying between\nGabriola and Vancouver Islands. It\nis supposed tho scow, a very large ono,\ncarrying 200 tons of coal, became unmanageable in the strong current, and\nswung the steamer on the rooky shore.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Friday's Colonis\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\nChildren Cryfor Pltcher'sCastorla\nLATE CANADIAN NEWS.\nMichael Birtle, who was shot by\nLouis Deas, died at Toronto Hospital\nThursday morning.\nTwo French officers are in Canada\nfor the purpose of purchasing remounts\nfor the French army.\nLieut. Laurie, son of General Laurie, has been appointed a lieutenant\nin \"0\" school at Toronto.\nThe Canadian Pacific earnings for\nthe week ending October 14th were\n8363,000; for the uamo weok laat year,\n$287,000.\nHon. E. J. Flynn has uccuptod an\ninvitation to deliver au address before\nthe Montreal Cnnaervativu club at the\nend of this month.\nChief Justico McDonald, of Halifax,,\nhas Ketitenuod Jos. Smith to Dorchestor\npenitentiary for twenty yean for killing\nGeorge Barrow, a fellow-laborer.\nNews has beeu received nt Yarmouth, N. S., of the murder of Enoch\nCroBsley, plumber, of that place, at Ta*\ncoma, W. T. It is supposed that he\nwas kiliod in mistake for some one\nelse. ' '\nShortly after 1 o'olock, Thursday,\na Grand Trunk freight train, consisting of 17 cars, was approaching Upton,\nQue., when it suddenly jumped the\ntrack and about a dozen cars wero bad*\nly smashed.\nThe body found at Murray canal,\nKingston, is now said to have been\nused for dissecting purposes by Toronto students, who oarried it there iu a\nyacht after dissecting it. Tho remains\nwere buried, but resurrected.\nThe first general meeting of the\nshareholders of the now Montmoroocy\nCotton Manufacturing Company has\njust been held in Montreal, and tho\ndirectors aro elected. China is to be\nmade the principal market for their\nmanufactures.\nAfter the appointment of the Btand*\ning committees iu the assembly, at Re*\ngina, N. W. T., Thursday, a proposition was made that the assembly adjourn for a fow days and take in the\ngrand ball at Banff. After a groat\ndeal of good humored banter, it was\ndeoided to go.\nSixty.four witnesses have been examined in the St. John, N. B., etrychine\npolsomn? case by Coroner Bsrtman.\nSo far the crown has failed io mako\ngood the assertion that McDonald is a\ncriminal, although it has enveloped him\nin suspicion by a dense cloud of circumstantial evidence.\nThe students of Victoria medical\ncollege, Montreal, aro still in opposition to amalgamation with L, va!, but\nthey will probably have to succumb,\nas the churoh has taken the matter in\nhand, and Archbishop Fabre ha3 for*\nbibben rebellious students admission\nto the hospital for praotice.\nWilliam Hall, eon of tho late Col.\nHall, of Guelph, Ont, is a lucky\nyouth, By lho death of hia uncle, in\nEngland, be falls heir to largo estates\nyielding an income of $150,000 a year.\nThe young man, who is a general favorite, has not allowed his birge fortune\nto alienate himself from Iub old\nfrionds.\nSamuel Hich, an Englishman, convicted at Halifax, N. S. of indecently\nassaulting a 6 year-old child, received\ntwenty-five lashes in Truro jail. The\nlogging was administered with a cat*\no'-nine* tails borrowed from a man-of-\nwar. The wretch moaned and writhed\nduring his richly-deserved Hogging and,\njudging by his sufferings, will never\nagain be guilty of a liko offence.\nMayor McGeo, of Oshawa, Ont., engaged in the real estate, loan nnd in*\nvestment businccs, has failr-d. Already there nro $36,000 liabilities\nknown, and it is estimated th :ro ore\n$20,000 more net given or -mm -crated.\nThe nominal assets nro $7,000. The\ndebts of tho insolvent are pri-icipally\ndue to farmers, in amount* of from $1\nto $1,000; but tho resident* of Whitby,\nOshawa and Toronto also creators of\ntho estate. Several widows arc loft\npenniless by the failure. Tho heaviest individual loser is Principal Kirkland, of the Normal school, Toronto,\nwho gave McGee $10,0C9 for investment.\nDr Frank Krauz, a well known\npractitioner, and formerly a popular\njournalist, died suddenly of heart\ndisease lu Toronto, Thursday. The\ndeceased was about 38 yeara of age.\nFor a number of years he was night\neditor of the Toronto Mail, mid it was\nwhile occupying this position that ho\nstudied medicine. He attondod college in the day time and at night managed the concerns of a groat newspaper,\nand with all that tremendous strain\nupon him he succeeded in carrying off\nthe gold medal in his graduating year.\nMany Toronto people will miss the\nkind hearted and olever man'who hu\nbeen so suddenly called away.\nLangley council.\nCounoil met at the town hall on Satur*\nday, Oot. 5, at 1:30 o'clock. Present\nreeve and Couns. Houston, Davey, Norris, Yeomans and Mufford. Tho minutes\nof previous meeting were read and con*\nfirmed. Communications: From Mayor Oppenheimer, inviting tho council to\nbe present at tho official reception of his\nexcellency the govcrnor*genoral. On\nmotion, the reove, Coun. Davey and the\ncleric were appointed as a delegation to\nattend on behalf of tho council. From\nSurrey council, anent bridge on Nicomekl; clork instructed to renew protest against bridge being built without a\ndraw, and also to communicate with the\nauthorities at Ottawa on the subject.\nPetitions from L. McClugan, X. H. Tibbi.\nG. Bartholin! and others were laid over\nuntil next meeting. Clerk was instructed to ascertain if the section lines in\ntownship 9 aro gazetted as publio roads,\naud if not to apply to have them gazetted. The following contracts were\nawarded: James road, to T, Sincock, at\n$35; section lino, to H. Vivian, at 120.\nCoun. Mufford reported having let work\nto following amount: on Brown's road,\nto B. Brown, at $40; on MeOillivray'a\nrood, to A. McGillivray, at \u00C2\u00A750. The\nfollowing accounts wore ordered paid:\nMcGillivray, $50; R, Brown, $40; D.\nHarris, $31; D. Stewart, $14; D. McRae,\n$67.60; McDermott, $40; W. Davey,\n$10; G, Goddard, $30; and W. Empta&e,\n$3. Tenders wero ordered to be called\nfor at noxt meeting for enlarging the\ngraveyard and for bridgo ou town line.\nCoun. Davey gavo notice of motion to\nappoint a constable; Coun, Houston to\nbring in a bylaw for the better observance of tho Sabbath, Council adjourned\nuntil tho first Saturday in November,\nJob printing of all kinds watlydone\nut the Comimman office. FrioM will to\nfound as low as at any other offloe In\nthi proviuos.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ado, DAILY BRITISH OOLUMBIAN, KEW WESTMINSTER, B. 0., OOTOBEB 19, 1889.\nVOLUME VU.\u00E2\u0080\u0094NO. 95.\nTHE DAILY COLUMBIAN\nPT0HL1H11B1*\nRvrry 4nfrn.mii t.-t-c*-*. Mintlay,\nBV TUB\n_CIUl*r**-*T-HIX)_3r BUOTHEK\u00E2\u0084\u00A2,\n\i ilicir Milium ivlnllm: ISstahllsh*\nui.'ui, I'riiiutibiii htreet.\nBY MAIL:\nVor VI initnthK (0 00\nVol 0 tiu.til.ltH :i 26\nK-ir 3 im.iilliH 2 00\nDKLIVEHKU IN THE CITY:\nV>-r 12 months -. \u00C2\u00A37 .-0\nJTor ft i.io-ilhH _ *1 00\nFor 3 months.. '2 2i\npuc uuu.th \u00E2\u0080\u009E..\u00E2\u0080\u009E 75\nPayment tu all eatte'e (exaept for weebly\nraie) lo in* made tn advance.\nTHE WEEKLY COLUMBIAN\niNMurd every WeiluculRr Morning)\nMulled, peryear. 2.00\nHulled, 0 mouths, l.\"\"\"\nflaUe \u00C2\u00A7ritifih Columbmn\nHatur-I***- Evening. Oct. 19. lam.\nA writer in search of a subject\nwould lind ouo capable of filling a\nvolume in the rotation of art to advertising. Advertising to bo a success must be systematic uud persistent. Without, thirfif! i|imlili(--*\ngreat benefit is hardly tu be looked\nfor. In addition to this, if the advertiser can bit upon n striking\nm ean a of tuHinit lho public whut he\nhua to sell, bo much llio better, but\nthis is not an essential, as witness\nthe cuso of Hollo-way's pills. Tiie\nsuccess of thnt pntent medicine is\ndue, wo may say, entirely to persistent nnd methodical advertising,\nin season and out; but, nt nny rato\nuntil recently, tho announcements\nio the papers were of tho ordinary\nkind, and thero was no attempt at\nunusual display in tho wny of cuts.\nBut tho advertisement was always\nthere, hence its success, for a person\nmight lie sure that ns soon as he\ntook up his morning or evening paper he would find the announcement\nof Holloway's Pills staring him in\nthe fa.-e. When tho persistent advertiser sails in the aid of art, he is\ndoubly itemed, and almost forces the\npublic to look at what ho has to inform f hem, and in tho majority of\ncases ho man who leaks onco looks\na second, and perhaps many, timos,\nand tl.o ond of it is that he buys the\narticle advertised \"to son if there is\nany g--oii in it anyway.\" It is only\nof lat > years that the master hands\nof iir t rate artists hnve been called\ninto r (pisition to aid tbe merchant\nin bringing .hie goods prominently\nbefore tiie public \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0yet; but iti is astonishing with what rapidity the\nidea haa spread. When Messrs.\nPears commissioned Mr. Marks, It,\nA., to paint hia well known picture\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'Oleai.Iittoss i-- next to Godliness,\"\nand then placarded overy hoarding\nin London with excellent reproductions tf tho work, peoplo shook their\nheads ind said that fools and their\nmoney were soon parted. Sinco then\nthe same firm have had no reason\nto regret thoir venture, but or. the\ncontrary, so successful was it .that\nagain and again have some of the\ngreatest living painters and sculptor.\"' been called into requisition to\nassist them. Thousands of tine stewl\nengravings of various notabilities\nhavo been scattered broadcast, and\nMi*. Marks'picture 1ms been followed\nby others, afc immense cost, including Sir Everett Millius' portrait of\nhi.* li tie grandson, a fac simile of\nwhich is at the present timo to be\nseen ir- every drug store in tho city.\nWhat this one firm bus done on a\nlarge settle, others bave dono in a\nles-i degree, until it 1ms becomo the\nproper thing for artists of repute to\nlyssif-ti tho advertiser. Only rocently,\nat grealj cost, another soap maker\nbought n picture from the walls of\nBurl in'it'll i House, and lias issued\nthe engraving under the title of\n\"So-clean,\" thus furnishing us with\na, lirst -class work of art by Mr.\nFrith. Wo may mgard this departure\nas being a decided stop forward in\nthe work of education, for few mon\ncan long be familiar with good pictures without being tho better for it,\nand the assertion that \"(lowers and\npictures are the most humanizing\nthinga men can possess,\" although\nperhaps a Mile exaggerated, is not\nwithout truth.\nis drawn by lhe Almighty- ft is,\ntherefore, tt sin to break through it.\nTo prevent the break social relations\nmust bo avoided, and to avoid social\nrelations tho colored people must not\nbe given a footing equal to tbat of\ntho whites iu the churoh. Tliis\ngentleman must have been one of\nthe pro slavery preachers who found\nin the Bible not only a justification\nof the restriction of human liberty\naud tlio traffic in humanity, but\npositive commands that tho colored\nrace be enslaved. In the Southern\nCongregational church, also, tho\nrace question is prominent. In\nGeorgia the church is divided into\ntwo Congregational bodies. One is\ncalled the Congregational association, and is colored; the other is\ncalled the Congregational conference,\nand is whito. The former is ready\nto unite with tho latter; but the\nconference declines union with the'\nohurch of the ostruciBed race. An\neastern cotemporary, commenting on\nthis state of things, says: \"In all\ntha ohurohes concerned the chief\ncause of lhe trouble isprejudico, an\nunchristian feeling born of tbe wicked noss that made the colored people\ninvoluntary servants. It will take\nyears to overcome this intolerance.\nWoro the good Christians who entertain it to look back to tho ancient\nchuroh and to remember that some\nof its lending men\u00E2\u0080\u0094among thorn, in\nall probability, Athauasius\u00E2\u0080\u0094wero\ncolored, they would feel that, insido\nthe churuh nt least, thoy have something in common with the other\nnice.'\nOne of the ticklish questions to\nbe settled by the Episcopal convention now in session at New York is\nthn position of the colored race in\ntho church. In two dioceses colored\nrepresent nti vps havo been declared\nineligible to sit in synod. It is\nhardly necessary to sny that the\ndiocesoi iu question aro in tho Soutli.\nA low weeks ago tho colored Episcopalians mot nud deoided to osk\nthe cluing convention to declaro\nwhether or not these dioceses had\nacted j roperly. 'vis it in accordance\nwith tho doctrines taught by thu\nchurch,\" nuked tho colored clergymen, '-l.hh.ti when men have onco\nbeen admitted to the sacred ministry or communion of tho church any\nrestriction should be made in the\nspiritual or legislative rights of a\ncolored man which would not bo\nmade in thoso of a white man 1\"\nTho Episcnpnl churoh. however, is\nnot alone in its color line difficulty.\nNothing but the color question\nkeeps tho Presbytorian churches of\nthe North and .South nsimder. The\nNorthern church favors tho recognition of both races. Tho Southern\nohuroh, .on-the other hand, will only\nreceive colored ministers provisionally, or until an independent colored\nPresbytorian churoh bo organized.\nNo colored man has complete legislative rights in tho Southern church,\nand Rev. Dr. Vaughan, o( \"Virginia,\nexplains why. fto says: \"The\nnumber of the colored poople in tho\nSouth will give them the constitutional control of the property and\nthe constitutional government of\nthe ohuroh if organized on the principle of a mixed church. It will\nalso be followed by a certain amount\nof social mixture, which in lapse of\ntimo will bo followed by a mixture\nof blood, with all its degrading and\ndisastrous consequences,\" Another\nclergyman argues that the color line\nSCIENTIFIC MISCELLANY.\nCertain officials in Switerzland\nhavo shown symptoms of irritant\npoisoning, which have resulted, it is\nbelieved, from handling somo new\n\"ink-note\"\" printed in green.\nJapan has 31 schools of medicine,\nono of dentistry, and two of veteri\nnary surgery. The University of\nTokio graduates an averago of 100\nmedical students yearly. Tokio\nalone has over !i0 hospitals and numerous active medical societies,\nAt the late British Association\nmeeting, Mr. J. A. London called\nattention to fibrous peat as a material for brown paper, wrappers and\nmillboards, stating that live mills\naro now usjng it. The cost of the\nfiber is 50 per cent. loss than wood,\nand it is very much stronger.\nM. Ortolan states that the proportion of nicotine in tobacco is less\nwhen the stalks grow elose together\nand tho leaves ure numerous ; and\nthat is the reason why the Frenchman poisons himself more than the\nGerman, who is a greater smoker.\nTlie number of leaves to the stalk-\nis limited by government in France,\nand French tobacco has as much as\nsix per cent, of nicotine.\nA Hint trom RU3SIA.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A school-\nem- has been iitted up for the Trans-\nonspian Railwny in Russia, It will\nvisit districts not provided with\nschools, stopping at each place as\nlong a. may ha deumed necessary.\nIn our owa country where home\nstudy is so popular, might not a\nuseful application of the sinio idea\nbe- found in traveling laboratories\nfoi- special scientific instruction!\nAn Ancient Monster,\u00E2\u0080\u0094-According l. Nilsson, the great Greenland\nor right whale (Baleur mysticetus, L)\nweighs over 100 tons\u00E2\u0080\u0094 as much as\n88 elephants or 440 bears. Yet tho\nremains of the fossil whale (/S.prlsca)\nfound ou the coast of Ystiul, in the\nBaltic, indicate that the ancient\nanimal, although not moro than 60\nor 60 feet long must have had\nbody 27 times larger and heavier\nthan that of the common or right\nwhale.\nA Table Lighted uy a Fountain.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The novel display at the\nParis Exhibition is likely to lead\ndecorators to make much use of\nluminous fountains\u00E2\u0080\u0094that is fountains lighted up in various colors by\nelectric lamps conccealed beneath.\nThe Grand Hotel at Paris has already adopted the idea ; snd now an\ningenious amateur in scienco, M.\nGaston Menier, who had already\ndistinguished himself by making an\nelectric railway serve at table in the\nplace of waiters, has placed a beautifully illumined fountain, surrounded\nby flowers, in tho centro of his dining table.\nSpontaneous Combustion of the\nBody.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dr. G. Archie Stockwell, Jf.\nrA, S,, states that, within a period cf\ntwo centuries, some 70 cases of\nmtacaum ebriosug\u00E2\u0080\u0094-the disease of\nso-called spontaneous human combustion\u00E2\u0080\u0094-havo beon reported in medical\nand medico-legal literature. Many\ncircumstances are connected with\ntheso cases tlmt aro mysterious,, to\nsay the least, und unliko thoso of\nordinary accidents by firo. This\ncombustion, for instance, is chiefly\nconfined to the fluid repositories of\nthe body\u00E2\u0080\u0094abdomen, ohost and\nhead ; the clothing, instead of being\ndestroyed, suffers only an immediate\ncontact with the fire; and tho residue of cntacusis is of peculiar character, resembling tho product of distillation rather than of direct combustion. In most cases the evidenco\npoints rather to oxtornal than to\nspontaneous ignition, tho body being\nin fi combustible state. The acoum\nhited crises\u00E2\u0080\u0094including several within the last five or six yoars\u00E2\u0080\u0094have\nserved to establish beyond cavil tho\nfact that an abnormal combustibility of the body may supervene as\nthe result of morbid changes, but\nthis does not necessarily imply spontaneity or even ordinary ignitabil-\nity, It has been shown that mere\nsaturation with alcohol docs not\nmako the animal tissues inflammable.\nOf the many othor explanations that\nhave been suggested, that of tho\ngeneration of inflammable hydrogen\ncompounds by decomposition\u00E2\u0080\u0094which\nhas been known to commence before\ndoath\u00E2\u0080\u0094seems to bo supported by\nconsiderable evidonco.\nTHE RAT'S WORST FOE.\nHow tho Forret Attaoka and Vanquishes Bodonts.\nA Deadly Duol IJutweoii Onu uf lhe Clumsy\nWoasolB nud a Fngiincious It-it\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tho\nWon il orr ul Tomtclly of tlto\nFerrut'R Hold.\nClearing rats out of several large buildings hy the uso oi ferrets recently atavtod\nBomo queer atorlcs of lho relations of tho\nferret and tho rat, which havo excited lho\nderision of a retired rat-catcher\u00E2\u0080\u0094or rather\nrut-exterminator \u00E2\u0080\u0094 says tho Philadelphia\nProa's. Ho ia a man who has prosecuted Ids\ncalling in all tho largo cities of the country\nand once had tho honor of being employed\nby tho Government to clean out thu United\nS,talcs Treasury building at Washington.\n\"X see,\" ho said, iu telling his version of\nferret vs. rat, \"that some ono has tt iscovored\ntliat a rat won't light a ferret, and that tho\nmoment tho ferret gets closo to him tho rat\ngives up. Thai's n queer yarn for a trulh-\ntollcsr. Como along and Fillet you seo for\nyourself. I'm out of tho businoss, but 1 havo\na couplo of terrets, and I've an ocoommo\ndating friend who'll lend mo a Couple of\nrats.\"\nTho two went to tho cx-rat-catehof's residence, whoro ho brought from tlio cellar n\ncage similar to thoso in which rat**e:itoi*mi-\nuators carry their ferrets. Looking through\ntho holes in tho top of it nil tlmt could bo\nscon wore two pairs of smal.1 eye-*, a brilliant, baloful green. Thoybolongcd to two\nbrown ferrets of English stock, and were\nsaid by their owner to bo of a superior breed.\nWrapping tho box in n pieco of paper for\nappearance's sake, ami punching Somo holes\nin it for tho animals' sake, the ox-professor\nset out with tho reporter for tho rosidonco\nof tho friend who had rata in stock. On tho\nway to tho thoaterof oxporiineut tho man\nlearned hi forrcts and rats doscauted on lho\nmiiiutiteof his calling.\n\"You know a rat doesn't havo to bo\nlanglit thut a ferret is his natural enemy,\nand lie has a mortal terror of tho littlo\nbeast. If thero is a ferret within a rod of a\nswarm of rats they'll all clear out and keep\ngoing for a milo to get to other quarters.\nYon must know, too, that whilo a ferret's\nbotiy looks big his hoad is the biggest part\nof liim, aud wherever his head can go the\nrest can follow easily.\n\"A ferret doesn't often catch a rat inn\nrun. for tlie rat is fust and tho ferret very\nslow. Sometimes they do catch ono, and\nthen it's hard work to got that ferret back.\nHo'll loud up on tho rat's blood nud go loafing around, instead of attending to business;\nstay in there, perhaps, to do some hunting\non Ins own account. I'vo lost ferrets in\nstables, whoro they hnvo wandered on into\nside runs, caught n rat or two, and laid out\nft future for themselves on tlio premises.\nSometimes a ferret will como to his owner's\nwhistlo, but generally wo havo to keep a\nsharp lookout nnd pick them up ns thoy follow tho rata out oftho holo. Well, horo wo\nare.\"\nTiie two men entered a sporting resort; it\nwas In the Kensington district. Tlio ratter\nremarked: \"Hilly, I want to show this gon-\ntlL-iinui an experiment; lot's have tho littlo\nroom.\" The little room .wns an apartment\nolglit feet long nnd six feet wide, and utterly without furniture. The window-Bills\nwero high and broad, nnd theso woro used\nfor seats; *\nTiio proprietor of tho establishment ab.\nsealed himsolf a minuto or two and returned wilh a largo rat in his leatlior*\ngloved hand and when tho door was closed\niropped it squeaking on the lloor. From a.\nbox on hia Jap tlio ratter, also with his\nright hand In a leather glovo, drew a ferret\nami dropped it on tho lloor. Tho three\nwatchers of tho impending tragedy wore\nBitting witli tholr feet swinging u foot uud\na huli from the bare, unincumbered floor.\nWhen the rat had lirst beon released it\nhad scampered around lho wainscoting,\noklug for escape, hut when the ferret wns\n'opped it stopped a mouiciitiia if in consternation end then mndo for the corner\nfurthest from tho enemy. As the ferret\nadvanced, stealthily, his neck stretched\nand his noso protruding, the rat mado a\nbvoalc arid f*ut, fai-tbur away, Ttio ferret\nhad some difficulty in following tho rapid\nmotions of tlio rat on account of tho room\nbeing light- but ho kept tlio trailing process\nupuntll within four or fivo minutes from\ntho start tlio rat was In a corner uml whichever way ho turned tho ferret turuotl, too,\nto head him off. This process was kept up\nuntil not moro than ft foot separated lliem,\nand then tho rat deliberately raised ou Us\nhaunches and prepared to light. Tho ferret\ndrew nearer until thoy woro eix inches\napart, and, rearing up ns the other had,\nthero was nn actual sparring match. Tho\nferret mado a plunge for tho rat's jugular,\nbut the latter dodged aud bit back viciously.\nIn an instant the two fought ferociously,\nthe rat malting no attempt at escape, but\nfighting for dehr lifo. They separated and\niigj-m on tholr hnunchoB had another sparring bout. Tlio rat left nn opening, and,\nquick as an expert boxer, the ferret took\nadvantage of it, made a rattlesnake sort of\ndart with his headj and seized tlio rat just\nbehind tho car. There wan n, livoiy wrest-\nling*mntch(-6iit'the'rat could not loose his\nantagonist's hold. He tried to bile, but tho\nhold was such lhat he couldn't und very\napon it was all over with his ratsktp, To\nexhibit the tenacity of the ferret's.hold tho\nriijtmanpiokcuuplhoratby iho hind'log\nand rat and ferret hang dangling in tho air.\nThe ferret, was picked up in like manner,\nbutho would not break his held.\nA socond ratwos let looso with tiio second ferret and tho performance was repeated to a nicety, with the exception that this\nrat was u I rillo moro pugnacious and fought\nharder for his lifo.\n; or 27\nChildren Cryfor Pitcher'.Castoria\nSTRIKING RESSMBLANCES.\nUnited States Suimtor-i Who Look MIch\nOther Ml lite-.mou.?\nVisitors to the Bouatu galleries, nays the\nWashington CrUic, can no;; fail to nol Ice llio\nsingular resemblance;; between hall' u dozen\nprominent member:* of lho present ir-cuuto\nand as many oilier conspicuous figures in\nthe country's political history.\nOccasionally Senator Eustis, of Louisiana,\niitrikes an attitude, or bis features eateh a\npeculiar light, whleli renders his renin*\nbinueo to Blaine ho striking I llat it is generally recognised .-mil commented upon. Although so widely separated in latitude, tlio\nstatesmen from the extreme North and\n.South are so much alike Itrappouranoo lhat\nit la -tometimes difficult to convince a visitor\nthat tho \"man from Mulno\" is not again in\nthe Senato.\nHenator Blair's resemblance to Hayes lias\nofton been commented upon, and Increases\nwith the mnrka that time ia makhiff upon\nthe philanthropic New England Senator.\nThe two men might readily bo mistaken for\neaeh other. Tlio rcsembmnco which iii tho\nease of Eustis nnd Blaine docn not, extend\nfurther thun to the -.imil-u-hy of feature and\nexpression, in this cinuq extends lomunuor,\nvoice, form and bearing:, and in in nil respects seemingly almost perfect.\nTho similarity between thoi'nceniul form\nof .Senator OUllom nud the porlraita of Lincoln, heightened by the fact of their similar\ngcogrnpliicol origin, has been the subject of\nremark for mnny years and has dono ite\nfull part in shaping tho political destinies of\nilr. Cullom.\nHenator Morrill's resomblanco to Charles\n.Sumner in ono of the moBt notable of tho\nMeitnto likenesses, owing to Its singular\nfidelity to overy dotuil \"1\"countenance, color\nof eye, shadoof hair and even to the tonea\nof the voico and ease of gonture.\nTo tho visitor who ij-. seeking resemblances\nthore is littlo difficultly in not Icing n striking likeness between tlie profllo of Henator\nGorman nnd thut of Washington its shown\nby mnny of tho medallion portraits. This\nrescmbhtneo Is sufficiently apparent to liavo\nboon often remarked, und when tho face of\nthe Marylnntl Senator ia iu perfect repose\nnnd tho expression one of ntlon tivo thought,\nit affords certainly tho closest rosomblanito\nto tho faco of Washington of uny now In\npublic life.\nTho now Senators havo displaced sovoral\nof tho Senate gallery of living likenesses,\nbut have added ono of tho most striking to\nthomtmbor\u00E2\u0080\u0094 It Is that of Senator Ditris, of\njMinnesofu, whoso resomblanco to Bon Butler is so great as to impress itsolf upon tho\nmost casual observer.\nJAMES CUNNINGHAM,\nThe Pioneer Hardware Man\nIs still on Columbia Street, with the Largest aud Best .Stock of HARDWARE, STOVES, TIKWAltE, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE,\nPAINTS and OILS in tho Province.\nfir.He is now handling a fine lino of COOKING and HEATING STOVES.\nThe sales arc increasing daily. Want of room for tho large stock, which is being\nconstantly added to, is felt to he at this season very inconvenient, but aa aoon as\nhis new Brick is completed to Front Street a stock will bc kept on hand commensurate with the rapid increaso of tho population of tho city.\nIa the Plumbing line, tinsmitliing work is done on the premises, as usual, by\ngood workmen; no smile hoys trusted with such important work. doc!7tc\nAs wo have a Car-load of the Celebrated\nAdams & Son's Lumber Wagons,\nWhich will bo here in about 10 Days.\nWe will also receive a numbor of DcliYCry WagOHS by the same car.\nMainland Carriage Works.\ndoclto STTXJjBl'Sr &= BBYSOK*.\nZRD. \u00C2\u00A9. HA1aI__,\n(WHOLESALE AND RETAIL),\nColumbia St., New Westminster.\nEnglish, Foreign and United States Periodicals and Newspapers constantly on hand. Boolis imported to order.\nOPENING\nGALL AND SEE m NEW STOCK 8F OOODS.\nMKS. M. K. WILLI MIS & MRS. 3. BASlIRB OPEN THEIli NEW\nMillinery Stock to-slay (Oct. 1st), in tUss WINTEMUTE I1I.OCK, on\nColssmlssa Street, third tloor enst of Church Street.\nWo aro also prepared to do Fnslli <-* e&r eSC* _\nCoffees Roasted and Ground on the Ps'ssiiiisus. Fine Teas is Specialty.\ndwly\n-OOLUMBIA STREET-*\nOoluinbiii Street, New Westminster.\nVAN VOLKENBURGH BROS.\nWholesale and Retail Butchers.\nHEAT PURVEYORS IN GEXERAI.. FRESH AND CORNED\nMEATS ALWAYS ON HANB.\n**s*Spccsal lines quoted for Use shsppsssg trade. Family orders strictly attended\nto. Hotels svill find it to tlscir intorest to pinco their onlera svith tho abos'o firm.\nd2Hnoly\nASlLIDT\nFront Street, New Westminster.\nMANAHAN \u00C2\u00AB& \"REICHENBACH,\n(SUCCESSORS TO W. B. TOWNSEND)\nDEALERS IN AIL KINDS OF FRESH & SALT MEAT\ni, Bacon, Siiusngc, Bolognas, Etc.\ndnolyt\nThis Paint is a rich brown\ncolor. It is the\nBest Paint\nIN THE WORLD,\ncovers double the surface,\nlooks better, and lasts longer than the best lead and\noil paint manufactured.\n. T. .FL&BLdL dts Oo.,\nSOLE AGENTS.\nNew Westminster, It. (!.\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING.\nTnn ConmniAN Fhintino Kbtadlibiimknt has lirut-elnse faculties for\nall kinds ol Commercial Printing, Bill Heads. Letter Heads. Circulars,\nCards, Envelopes, Blank Forms of every description, Posters, Dodgers,\nPrice LlltS, sfec. Prices will lie found as low as at any other ofllon whrre\nflrst-olass work is dono.\nGROSS sS POINGDESTRE,\nWholesale nsssl Beiall\nTOBACCONISTS\nCHOICE H11ANDH OI'\nIMPORTED CIGARS,\nFinest Cigarettes,\nFancy lissiiosteil PIPES, POUCHES, 01-\nSIAltETTE CASES, ETC.\nChoice Smoking Tobacco\nThompson's Old Photo Qallory,\nPlants for Sale!\n0n__IIt8 TAKKN FOR FRUIT AND\nOllNAMKNTAI, TIIKI5S- Inolti'lliig\nntl tliu loiullng vnrlfllioH of\nApples, Pears, Plums, Cherries,\n AI-HO\t\nshall ritriTs of ovory dosorlptlo\u00E2\u0084\u00A2.\nItlllKltlC'lH, Wl-ClllllM .'111(1 ti-li-ist'jt nimlc\nto order*\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ddwnpByl P. LATHAM.\nUenlera In nil kliul-tof\nGroceries\n AND\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nGENERAL PROVISIONS\nCos'. Columbia and Dosssjlas Sts.,\ndnssOyl NEW WESTMINSTER.\nCor. Columbia & Douglas Sts.\nSTEWAllflCASO,PIIOP\u00C2\u00BBiET08S\nRates, $1.00 and (\u00C2\u00A71.50 per May,\nACCORHINO TO HOOM.\nSPECIAL RATES BY THE WEEK OR MONTH.\nnor PAi'tltw supplied wltli nil Itlnda of\nICE-CREAM. dmylmtl\nNOTICK IH HHKEI1Y GIVEN THAT\ntho purtnerHhlp liorotOforo tsiibatnt*\nliii* I id \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\",\u00E2\u0096\u00A0(* 1*11 tin* timli'inlj-iieil ii'Kl'-r Mio\nHit.' niiiiii' of CniiH.-ifonl A Mvltoit-'iill,\nMerchant Tuilni,.-,) hns lic-oiidlssolvt'sl this\ndny by mutual consent. All iiccounts\nowint-iliL'Intoltrm nro lobe pnld to.T. A.\nM'-Jloii-'iill, nnti nil claim;; ii^nliist tho\nMild firm will he sottlod by him.\nT. COMEttFORD,\n.!. A. MoDOIICUM,.\nNow Weal., Aug. 81,1630.\nMr. J. h.\nWILL CONTINUE THE HU8INK8S\nun-li-i- lils own iiii.ini>, nl. Hit- Hume\nWore, (in Columbln ulri-el, next to K\nCr-ihe's. A coniiiniiinco ot the public\nlmn-oiiiii'-i Is \"vspi-ctfnll.v snliclleil, Sntls-\nrabtloii gimrisiiitoetl. dwaeSto\n HAS ON-\nExhibition\nThe lllsest isssortnscnt of\nEiiRKsii Tweeds, Worsteds,\nFiiticy E'liiilinjjfs, Ac.,\nAc, just\nHIT\nAcnllbolieltcil. Armstrong Block, Now\ndw Westminster. mliEStc\nAnother consignment of Goods Juat nr*\nrlvod, Wo linvo uow got\nThe Best English, Scotch ami\nFrench Goods\nThat enn bo lind In tbo mmket. Positive*\nly tlio choicest selection of P-uitingH in\nlho city, nml nt prices to nii'i everybody.\nCnll nml boftonvlncml. No troubletoshow\ngood\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 All nro welcome to lUHpect,\nwhether they buy or not.\nAH work guaranteed, and done\non the shortest possible\nnotice*\nAlso solo nirent-f on thn Mainland of Urlt*\nlsli Columbia tor tho\n-i-\u00E2\u0084\u00A2*BX\u00E2\u0084\u00A2El-_&XO\u00E2\u0084\u00A2A.-\u00E2\u0084\u00A2r\nScience of Dress Cutting\n\"Which insures t\ perfect fit, ovory timo nml\nla no easy Mini u child canumlcratandll,\nbeqgsTheard,\nLoading Merchant Tailors,\n1 Door Wesl of Dickinson's Hotelier Shop,\ndmhlyl 88 COLUMBIA BTBBET,\n| (AlsossIUP. M.,Seist. Ill Q\ntn HIGH I'lUCES IK BOOTS AND 2\ns\u00C2\u00BB SHOJiS. \u00C2\u00A7\nI\n\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0OF ALL CULTAS STOCK IK|\nHOOTS k S110KS.\nBURIED\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2OO TO-\nE. S. SCOULLAR & G!\n FOR\t\nCheap Cooking Stoves & Ranges!\nDON'T FORGET THE ADDRESS:\nWater _ Granville Sis,, taw, |\ni^r..-\u00E2\u0080\u0094assa-sa OB *TO i\nSAMUEL MELLARD- - CHILLIWHACK, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWhom wc have appointed our sole agent for our celebrated I\nStoves in that district. Mr. Meliard will supply our Stoves at\nNew Westminster prices, dwno i v I\nTHIS SPACE BBLONOS TO\nH. T. READ & CO.\nUAHBWAItlS MERCHANTS.\nBUGGIES! BUGGIES!\nJUST RECEIVED,\nsi CAK-IiOA\u00C2\u00BB OF\nPell, Rice Coil-spring iMcLaugMan\nMM MJ \u00C2\u00AB\"-*\"*- \u00C2\u00ABEA M MS tSB\n Aiao\u00E2\u0080\u0094-\nDUPLEX, HANDY, BRADLEY & OTHER\nDemocrat and Express Wagons!.\n63T The Best and Cheapest Rigs ever offered for sale in .\nBritish Columbia.\"^\"\n..ss,,,.*' IF-letcl \u00C2\u00ABfi3 Oiao. rie*.\nBALL REGARD FOR I1IOHB\nA PRICES. g\n| WANTED\nf 1000 MEN, WOMEN k CHIL-E\nB DRKN, \u00C2\u00A7\ni^'To Buy Boots that R Boots g\nH. B. WINTEMUTE'SP\nSIGN OK THIS BUFFALO,\nslwsolSto Uol.vv sua Stusskt.\nChas. McDONOUGH,\nFront Street, New Westminister.\nill\nIL\nEXTRA FAMILY BLANKETS,\nFLANNELS, WORSTEDS _ all kinds of Woolen Ooods\nREADY-MADE CLOTHING.\ng^ The only House on the Mainland which keeps the Manufactures of the New Westminster Woolen Mills. Patronize Home\nIndustry. dmh30tc\nROYAL CITY\nPlaning li Company, Li\nRICHARD STREET, NEW WESTMINSTER.\nMANtTFACTl'KKIIH AHD DKALKI18 IN\nShingles, Shakes, Laths, Pickets,\nSALMON BOXES, NET FLOATS, TRAYS,\njvisri) j_.x_x. iturrsa oir\nWood Furnishing for Canneries.\nDoors. Frames, Windows,\nMonldinirs. Balusters.\nBlinds. Brackets.\nRatlings, Newels.\nPLAIN AND FANCY AND ALL KINDS OF TURNED WORK.\nVancouver Ciiy Foundry & Machine Ms Co,\n(LIMITHD)\nEngineers, Boiler Makers, and Iron and Brass Founders\nHAVING GBKATLY INCKISASBD THEIB PREMISES AND MACH1N-\nory, aro in n position to unitotako tlso construction assd ropislm of Marine\nml Siiiiloiinr) EnKlnes sssssl Boilers, Milling, Mining nnd Cannery\nUiuillller*. ns wnll a. Onstlngs nnd t'ori*lli|*N of ovory description.\nEstimates given i nil work guaranteed.\nD. CARTMEL, A. MoKELVIK,\nOcsnui. Manaisbh. dwjll7t< Mkimkioii, Masasikr. VOWTMB VII. -NO. 9fi.\nDAILY BRITISH OOI.PMBUN, NEW WE8TMIKSTEB, B. P., OQTOBER 19, 1889.\nA MODERN LEANDER.\nUuiquo But Rather Damp Court*\nship of a Romantic Fair.\nA fow ovcntags ago, as I was walking\ndown Wall Btreet to tuke tlio ferry for\nBrooklyn, my attontion was arroBtod by a\nyoung gontloman going tlio Bamo wny on\nlite ot Iter sido of that tlioroughf uro. His faco\nwns ImtulBomorthan common, his stop wub\nas graceful as a young fawn's, his hair,\nwhich was long and inclined to curl, gnrc\nlilm vnllioraplcturowiuolook. Ho woro n\nsuit of darlr blue which iP,tod him perfectly.\nUut theso woro not tho things whioh caused\nmo to keep my oyos flxod upon him. It\nUnshod upon mo as I sighted him that his\n(Itti'lt bluo Bult concealed atiother of an unusual sort. Thoro wus that ln tho way ho\ncurried himself, notwithstanding hia spriug-\nin:*sup, which suggested somo concealed\npanoply. I aonjootured tlmt tto might ho\nbound for Brooklyn to attend a luustjuorado\nparty, and that having thrown aside* his\nbluo suit in tbo dressing-room ho would\nappear in tho drawing-room as Richard\nCtcur do Lion or ono of tho ltulghts that\nfought nt Aglneourt. Whilo I WOB thus\n-peculating tho young fellow and I reached\nlho wharf. But ho didn't outer tho terry*\nhouse; ho turned nnd walked up tho dock.\nHo I dismissed him from my mind, bought\nmy ticket and wont on tho boat. Protty\nr.oon thoro was a commotion. Bomothlng\nin tho water nrfoated tho attention of\npn-staengors whoso oyos woro sharp. Gazing whoro thoy pointed I beheld tho young\nfellow from whom I had parted a fow\nminutes previous lustily swimming out in\ntho direction of Brooklyn, Ho was perhaps\nono liundrcd foot north of tho ferry-boat;\nlio took a long, slow stroke and it must\nhuvo boon evident oven to the dullest ob-\nnoi'ver that ho would huvo resented any as-\nr i..tuucc. 1 noticed thnt tho mon who wore\nin charge of tho boat seemed to tako but a\nhtiiguid interest in tho Bpeotaclo, Ono\nmi'jht luivo thought that a man swimming\nfrom Now York to Brooklyn was an everyday sight to thom. Addressing the ono\nwho Bcemed tho best naturcd, I inquired If\nho knew wbo tbo swimmer was, if bo bad\novor Been him boforo)\n\"No,\" was tho reply, \"I don't know who\nho is, but j for tho lust fow weeks I've\nseveral times seen him going to Brooklyn\nthat way.\"\n\"Perhaps,\" I suggested, \"ho is a professional diver whoso work takoB him into tho\nNortb rivor but whoao homo is Jn Brooklyn.\nBy swimming across tho Hast rivor ho\nsovca fcrringo.\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\"Ho ain't no divor,\" remarked my companion, In decided tones. \"If you got a\ncloso look at hlm you'll soo that ho looks a\nblanked sight moro liko 6, professional\ndude.\"\nBy this time tho boat was entering tho\nslip on the Brooklyn Bide. My curiosity\nhaving becomo thoroughly aroused, I determined, If possible, to find out who tho\nswimmer was and what made him do it.\nAccordingly, leaving tho boat, I took my\nposition on tho HcightBJust abovo thofor-\nry-iiinding waiting for tho bold swimmer\nto land. When I reached tho Heights ho\nseemed to be about -half way over, Presently tho Bhadowa gathorod over the river\nand X lost sight of him. I bad gono to Brooklyn for two objects, ono of business for tho\nTribune and ono of pleasure for myself.\nHaving transacted bybuainossl hastouod\nto a reception which was being given at tho\nhouso of ono of my old frionds on avenue. I hadn't boen long in tho houso boforo\nI noticed au immensely protty girl. And\nwhen I glanced enviously into tho faco of\ntho young fellow upon whoso arm aho was\nlightly leaning, Ifiaw, to my amazement, that\nho was'tho swimmer whom I had lately loft\nin tho Eostrivor. Naturally, I lost no timo\nin getting to my hostess to Hud out who this\nmysterious mormau was, and why ho did It,\nand ull about it.\nTho particulars which Mrs. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Imparted\nto me woro so novel and interesting that\nI urged hor to allow mo to print thom. At\nlirst -tho stoutly demurred, but finally consented on my agreeing to suppress names,\n'rids Is substantially what she told mo; I\ngive her own lauguago, as far as I can recall It;\n\"The young man'_ name la Wchard \u00E2\u0080\u0094.\nHo livos on Madison avenuo, Now York. He\ngraduated at \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 College, class of 183*1-.\nIf you aro familiar with boating matters,\nyou will recollect that ho pulled the stroke\noar In tbe crew of that year. Hia fondnosa\nfor all sorts of athletic sports would seem\nto bo as great to-day as it ovor was. Last\nsummer ho mot tho young lady wilh whom\nyou saw him this ovening, Novor mind hor\nname\u00E2\u0080\u0094wo'll call hor Juliet. Hor fathor\nwas at ono timo profossor of Persian litcraturo in an English college, and I am told\nwas essentially a dreamer and a mystic.\nHer mother, tho daughter of a famous prima\ndouna, waa born in Prance, within sight of\nthe Bouon Cathedral.\n\"Juliet, boysoir, was born at Patmoo.\nProm bis earliest youth bor father had\nyearned for tho opportunity of visiting tho\nisland who. con tho apostlo bad had his\nsublimo and magnificont vision. His imagination kindled whoncvor he thought of tko\nisland and tlio first year or two of his married life ho spent cruising about tho Grecian\nArchipelago, with headquarters at PatmoB,\nimiong the simple fishermen.\n' 'Perhaps it is not so Btrango, considering\nher parentage and her birthplace, that tho\ngirl should be such \u00E2\u0080\u009E romantic creature.\nOf courso all nico girls aro moro or loss romantic, but Juliet has as positive a passion\nfor romance ns\u00E2\u0080\u0094well, ub Edison has for\nscientific discovery. -.-;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\"Her mother bas beon a widow for a\nnumbor of years, and it was while mothor\nand daughter wore summering on Capo\nAnn, near Pigeon Cove, last summer, that\nRichard becamo acquainted with them. He\nfell in lovo with Juliet\u00E2\u0080\u0094all tho young mon\nwho wero on tbo Capo that season woro\nwild about ber. But it was by no means bo\ncertain that Juliet loved Richard. Ho must\nhave looked romantic enough, to bo suro,\nwith his brilliant eyes and his long hair,\nUut Hit-hard is not what might bo called a\nrcmautio talker; hia conversation looks\nfrescoes and his profession (ho is a lawyer)\nis not at all BuggOBtlvo of romance, I have\nsometimes suspected that Richard might\nhavo won hor directly after meeting ber\nhad ha hired a vessel and borne hor forcibly\naway from Cape Ann without stopping to\nask hor own or her mother's opinion of suoh\nproseeding. Of courso after the vessel\nhad got well under way bo wuuld have\nfall*' i othor foot ond sworn that tt was the\nmip t of hor fair beauty that mado bim do\nit, and tbat ho would proceed to\npluugo a dagger lu his heart and jump\no.li nonrdif sbo did not consent to allow\nbim. to mako for tbo nearestport and marry\nhor. But bo didn't perform this romantic\ncoup d'etat and bo didn't get hor. How-\novor, none of tho otber fellows got ber. In\nBe.-, i ember sho returned to Brooklyn, and\nho to Now York. Ho saw a good deal of\nbev during tbe fall and winter, and I have\ngood reason for believing that tbo more he\nsaw her tho moro surely ho became convinced that sho was his fate, and tbat he\ncould uot win hor In any conventional way,\nBut just what todo ho couldn't think. He\nwas a good deal puzzled, but' by no means\nhopeless. Ho realized tbat sho muBt know\n* that ho lovod hor and tho faet that suoh\nknowledge did not induce her to rebuff blm\nho interpreted In his favor. It seemed as\nclear as it bad boon at Cape Ann that no\nman was preferred beforo him.\n11 Woll, suoh wero tho circumstances when,\nono ovening In tho flrst week ln May, ho\noamo ovor from Now Yorkand accompanied\nner to a mooting of a reading and dramatic\nelub. Brooklyn has a numbor of such organizations, you know. During the ovonlug\nJuliet was asked to rood something, and\nconoontod, of ter a littlo urging, to do so. A\nvoiumo of Hood lay on tho tablo bosido hor,\nBho is a beautiful reader, ond gavo tlio\npoem which sbo selected with inimitable\nspirit. I had tho ploasuraof listonlng to hor\nund wasobarmod. Boinganowspapcrman,\nnnd newspaper mon knowing overy thing,\nyou aro doubtlqaa familiar with tlie poem.\nItls tho soliloquy of a discontented damsel,\nwho has discovered, or thinks sho has dis-\n- iv- ml, that romanco has vanished from\nthe on rl h, Evory verso, and thoro area\ngootl many of tbem, ends with hor sigh:\nThere's no romanco fn thatl\nAs Juliet wns rending it occurred to Richard\nthat the poom waa meant for hlm, Boforo\nBho had finished a dazzling pU*m of winning\nher Hashed upon him, and tho more Uc\nthought it over the batter it pleased him.\nSo nt ho bade Juliot adieu that evening he\nlaid to her: 'Miss-\u00E2\u0080\u0094, I thoroughly ap-\nprove of Iho sentiments of tho poem wliich\nyou road, und I havo determined to do what\nI enn, in my own poor way, to revive tho\nspirit of romanco. Hereafter, when you\npermit mo the honor of coming to seo you, I\n-hall uso neither tho conventional ferryboat nor tho prosaic bridgo. I shall cross\nI lie Eaat river an Leaudor used to oroBS tlie\nHellespont wlion ho wentoolllngupon Hero.1\n\"li Juliet had not been do thoroughly enamored ol romanco this spoocb of Richard's\nmust havo. struck her as just a shado\nfunny. An it wan Bho was Immensely do-\nUgbtod.\n\"'Howperfectly Jovolyl1 sho exclaimed\nwhen Richard had unfolded his now\nnohomo of romantic, If not rapid transit.\n'Lcauder has always boen ono of my\nheroes. Hew truo aad strong must havo\nbeen his lovo for Hero to Inspiro him for\niior unite to bravo tho mad currents oftho\nCollcspont night aftor night. You mti3t\nadmit. Mr,\u00E2\u0080\u0094, that tbo figure which that\niIauntlc-,3 youth prosonts to ono's fancy is\nInfinitely moro winning than that of tlto\nmodorn young gentleman who is transported to his lady-lovo hanging to tho i-tra*)\nof a car or crushed in tbo motley crowd of a\nferryboat.' \\n\"'1 don't believo,' Richard replied,'that\nLouiuIct over would havo been equal to tha\nfeat if ho hadn't beon nuro that Horo cared\nfor blm.' You mny well bollovo tliuro was\nalightinRiclmrd'a oyos os ho spuhoihat\nwaa not tobe mistaken. It was as though ho\nhad declared, 'if you don't lovo mo or won't\nlovo nm, Juliot, then I shall only be ablo to\ndrown ita 1 como swimming to you through\nthu East -.'Ivor. But if you lovo mo the\nswimming of a ciozon ICast rivers to reach\nyour sida v.-ould bo an easy task.'\n\"'Of eoui'flO Horo cared for hlm,' answered Juliot, with her oyos firmly (ixod on\ntho chandelier over their beads. 'Nono but\ntho bravo deserve tho fair, aud I imagine\nthat thoy generally get their deserts,' Thon\nhor oyes oamo down from tho chandelier\nand mot his a moment. And ilred by thoir\ntender glauccs 1 am suro that Richard folt\nonualto swimming tho ontiro thrco-quar-\ntorB of tho earth's nurfaco, whlcjt, if I ro-\nmombor my geography correctly, is all\nwater. And so you understand why It happened that you saw my young friend in tho\nEast river this evening. Sinco tbo Ilth of\nMay, whon ho had this conversation with\nJuliot, ho has como ovor to soo hor frequently and ovory timo ho has swum ovor\nfrom New York, Hprhomois on the Heights\njust over tho wator, not far from --\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 street.\nAftor leaving tho rlvor a quick run of\nthroo minutes brings him to tho garden in\nlho rear of tho houso, In tho garden ia a\nbit of an arbor, which bo has appropriated\naud turned into a dressing-room. Heentors\nit n dripping merman; ho emerges in oven-\nlag dress, with a llower in his buttonhole,\nand greets Juliet, whom ho finds walling\nfor him just beyond on tho broad pluzsa.\n\"Well, that's about all there Is to tell.\nHer mothor nnd sho go abroad in tho fail\nand our young friends, in accordance wltli\nJuliet's conception of llio romaiitlo proprieties, uro to bo married at Romo next\nChristinas l.vo. I asked hor tho other day\nwhy slio chose that thne and place. She\nreplied lhat Italy wns tho land oT romance,\nnud J-hat Rome wns tho Queen of Italy, nnd\nthat Christmas Evo was tho loveliest ovo in\ntho calendar. Just now sho is wild about\nfalconry and Richard has proinlaod her to\ndovoto a portion of their honeymoon to\nteaching hor to hunt with a hawk, Thon,\nof coiu'so, sho will have her portrait painted\nwithafalcon on ber wrist, Porkaps you rend\ntho other day in tho Brooklyn Eagloauae-\ncounttiCa correspondence whiclnvus being\ncarried on by a Brooklyn belle and Iter Now\nYork lover by means of oawior-ptgooiifl, lio\nnames woro raontlonod, but I happen to\nknow that Juliet and Richard wero tho per.\nBona roferrcd to. Ho himsolf told mo Of lho\norigin of tho corrospou donee. A fow woolts\nago, In courso of a fervent protest againat\ntho prosaic, Juliot quoted to him a vctso\nfrom that poem of Hood of which I npoko.\nI think I can givo you tho linos, Lct'uBce:\n'OI light guitar I can not bottgt,\nIlo novor soronmloa,\nHo writes nnd scuda 11, by tho post,\nHo dooatt't brtlici tbo iuhUI.;:\nNo stoaltb, no hciii-aia ladder\u00E2\u0080\u0094no,\nHo comes with loud rnt-tat\nThat startles allot Iludrord Rovr\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThoro'a no romanco in thnt '\n\"Tbo result was that Richard concluded\nthat instead of sending It by tbo post bo\nwould orgnnizo a romantic curricr-jilijcon\nservice.\"\nBuch, iu substance, woro tho facts of this\nInteresting opisodo of Now York and\nBrooklyn life which I obtained from Mrs,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094, and which, wilh hor kind permission, are printed in tho Tribune. Naturally\nI asked her how sha cumo to know so much\nof tho affair, Bho replied that nho had\nknown both of theso young peoplo since\nthey woro children and that they wero ooti *\nstantly nt her houso, \"Besides,\" bIic w\AM,\nwith a laugh, \"I nm lilto Dean Swift's servant, I'm good at drawing inferences.\"--\nN. Y. Tribune.\t\nTHE SHARK'S MAtJITS.\nTho Fish Is it Great Cimur.1 In tlto Pn--\n(1110** Of l.ivili;.' M(III.\nTho author of \"Ou Bltio Water,\" a man\n-vho had sailed mueh on tropical seaiiaaill'iiil\niinuy opportunities for studying the nature\nmd habits of fish, treats the common bo-\nief that the shark is a man-eater as n\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2upcrslitlou, Man decs not have his dwelling In tho water, und lt Is only rarely thai,\nby accident or design, ho exposon himself\no tho attacks of tho shark. It in not\nikely, therefore, that ho wuu intended lo\nbo tho nalurnl and preferred food of tho\nlish. Tlio writer referral lo nbovo says\nthat ho had never conversed with any one\nwho bad seen' a living man attacked by a\nilinrk. Ho gives an amusing account nf 'i\n-nooting bctwoon a black sailor and a shark,\nivhioh mnkes it appear that this Hah Is a\ngroat coward in tho presence of man.\nIlls ship, an English one, was lying iu\nBombay harbor. An enormous while Bhark\n'ny plugglsbly on the surface cf the water\nmiy a fow feet from the ship's side. Tho,\nrnilors were making sueh remarks ns \"11 o's\n.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0otitis oyo on ua for supper,\" aud when\nthis opinion wns doubted, thoy challenged\niho incredulous lo put a foot In tho water\nwithin llio shark's reach.\nA negro made a bet of a pound or tobacco\nlint ho would jump into tho wator just an\nIto wns. Tlto bot wns talcett; uud, without\nomovlng any of his clothing, tho man\njumped from tho rail plump upon lho monitor's bnck. Tho lish was largo onough to\nhave swallowed two men, but his fright\njvorcamo any longing for human llosh. The\ninrrator Bays:\n\"I havo seldom soon any thing so scared\nis that shark was; ho plunged off, half his\ntody out of lho water at times, leaving a\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2iiko liko a paddle-boat behind him which\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ould bo traced for threo or four hundred\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ards where ho dived, and nover showed\nlimsolf alongsldo our ship attain.\"\nThis Instanco would, porhaps.bo mot with\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ha objection thnt sharks show a prefer*\nnico for whito mon to feed upon. Thin\nlommon notion has been adoptod fromob-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0erving that the colored South Bealsluiid-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ra spend much of their timo lu tho water,\nwholly indiffcront to tho sharks which h wlm\niroiiiid litem. If tho shark is roally partial\n'.o while victims, ho probably selects thom\nfrom sight, not from tnsto.\nWhon tho shark gets a tnsto of human\nfood, ho no doubt experiences unusual delight, and from that timo on Is a ferocious\nman-hunter,\nTho caso is mueh tho Bamo with the\nshark as with tho tiger. Not ono of n\nthousand of oithor of those creatures standi\nnny chanco of ovor tasting human llosh,\ntnd boforo having dono so thoy both stand\nlu mortal fear of tho faco of man. ,\nIn tho duel botween Do Witt Clinton and\nJohn Bwartwout bnck of Weehawken, In\n1803, Clinton hit Bwartwout fivo Union, and\ninch timo Bwartwout domaudod another\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0diot. Onco ho was hit In the arm, thon In\n.he leg, thon in' the flngorj and finally\ntomowhoroolao; but, whilo struggling on\nho ground In great pain, he insisted that\nio should hnvo .nuother clmnoo- though IiIb\nuilugoulst warms yet uninjured. In view\nif ailoh ridiculous lioi'a latency Mr. Clinton\niimlly cast Ids pistol ou lho ground anil\nivalked off, with the remark thnt ho had in\nMilonco with n man who did uot hnou\nvheu either Ida Wounded lienor or hia\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nunded body was snii-dlcd.\nCleanse\nthe System\n\" \"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"\"*' With thnt most reliable\nmedicine\u00E2\u0080\u0094I'aiue's Celerj\nCompound. It purines the\nblood, euros Constipation,\nand regulates tho liver and\nUd ncys-ofTcctually cleansing I he system of nil waste\nand dead matter.\nPaine's\nCelery Compound\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2omblnes true nervo tonic and strengthening\nqualities, reviving tho energies and spirits.\n\" I havo been troubled for somo years with q\ncomplication of dlflieultles. After trying various remedies, and not Jlnding relict, I tried\nPalne's Celery Compound. Before taking one\n[nil bottlo tbo long troublesomo symptoms be*\niran to subside, and I can truly sny now, tbat ]\nfeel liko a now man. Digestion haa Improved,\nand I havo gamed ten pounds ln wolglit since I\nSavo commenced taking tbo Compound.\"\nHONKSTCS STEARNS, FolCllVlllO, Vt,\nti.oo. six for JK/.00. At Druggists.\nWEI.IS, KlCBAltDBOt* & CO., MOHTJUliU\nSSSSer\nfi Dress, or a Coat, ] /Jm Color\nRibbons, Feathers, \ F0H\nYarns, Rags, etc. J ten cents\nind in many other ways SAVE Money, nnd make\nIhinst look like NEW, by iisin-j- DIAMOND\nDYES. The work is cany, simple, quid\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2olors the BEST nnd FASTEST known. J\nDIAMOND DYES and take no other,\nJbr Gliding or Bronzing Fancy Articles USE\nDIAMOND PAINTS.\nSold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only io Cents,\nA COOK BOOK\nFREE\nBy mail to any lady sending ub\nhor post offioo address.\nvVoll3, Richardson $ Co., Montreal\nTkAPTIBV CUUHCII, Agnes Htreet,\n\u00C2\u00A3) East of Mary Street. Lord's Dny\nServices nt lln. m. ond 7 p.m. .Sabbath\nSchool andBlble Glass at 2:80 p. m. All\nBenin free; strangers cordially welcomed,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rev. Tho*. Ilnldwln, pnstor.\t\nMETHODIST C II Ult OH, Mary\nBtreet. Uov. J. II. White, I'ltBtor.\nHorviiTH ut 11 ii, m, and 7 p. tn. Runduy\nHehool and AUbie Clitii-i 2:Si) ]i, in, Pnijt-r\nMc'iling on Thursdayh at ~.;'-iip.in. .-.onta\nfree: \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tnimjnrw cordially Invltod,\n\u00C2\u00A7T. PAUL'S OHUROH, John street,\ni OppoBlte Orange Hnll. ltev. Tliomns\naddon, Vast or. f'ervtecN overy timidity\nnt lln. in, nml 7 p. m, Thursdny even It\t\nat7:,10 o'elook, Reals trco; all nro cot\nAlly invited, Sinuliiy Hi-lmnl ;tt \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\":;>:! |>. -\nBUGGIES,\nPHOTONS,\nMARKET\nWAGONS\nBest Assortment in the Province.\nce our display at our Warehouse before purchasing\nelsewhere.\nF.G. STRICKLAND & CO.\nN. B.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sulkey, Gang, and Walking Plows always in stock.\n m,; \"sun-\ndnym-liuo! and Ulbla-cliuis nE_80p,in,i\ni'layor-iiiecliiiu'ii, Thnminy evoniiiKSiit\nT. <: \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ill--- fi \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ;- -1 '.'..-U Mil\".'.\nKl'.-ROYAI, I-oiiCIK NO. 0. Regular\na Moot lint ev.'i-.v Tin--.by nlj*ht. ats\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'loel'. Udilfen-mv Hull. VisltlnR Brethren welcome.--.!, K. Kr.min', K.tif R.&8.\nCI. U. T.-B2\n.. turn Ik\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0cry M\nnl\nEM\u00C2\u00BBIOK LODO_NO.fi\n\" '\"eveningat 8o'-\nHall.Ci.hinibln\nenrdlnllyluvll*\ned.-W,0.-,OV\u00E2\u0084\u00A2, IR o. fti\t\n(1AMSDON1A ta sr. ANDIIBW^S\nj SOt'IKTY.-Tlie regular moot Inn of\nth In A-iSfiei.-iiifin nro Inlttun tliolnnt'nies*'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0!;:,v nf - iidi immlli, :il 8o'cl0fll( p.m. All\nKeuiphiiini aro Invited in attend. -Jul***-\nljoi4c,See.\nOTJUT I.OIIlt mil-'FHHIN,\nA \u00C2\u00B0- !' * \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -........\nlr\. No. ftltil. Tin' ivmilur ineclln\u00C2\u00ABs ot\ntlniiiliiivia'mii-l. mv held ui lho t'linwIerH'\nllall.uii ttinlliKtaiiflM.ini Wednesday In\neaoli mouth, at S p. m.\u00E2\u0080\u0094J no, MoMUHl'llY,\nHour., P. 0. ll.\nxrr v. t. u._RHtmr,AR mektinq\ntt . every Wotinondav afternoon ut s\no'olook al, tlio W- 0. T. U. Ileadqtiiirtern,\nlliiuulas Ml. l.d.vi'.l I.,--.>l.m lu Mm midii!\nBtiieu evory Friday ufiornonii.-Stit8.JA8.\nuNNiNtiiiAM,Vrottldenli Mnn. j. a.Cu.v-\nMnciiam, Hoerolnry,'\nUNION' IjODOIC No, I), A. P.\nta A. M,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Tlio regular moot*\nlugn of Mils [,iii!i:i> urn held In\nHi** Miis-iu!''T.-iii|il(-or. tli-.-l.rHt\nVediK'Kilay in r.icli m..1.in, nl 7.U0o'dloOK\np.m. Bojourillngbiillirou are cordially\ninvited loiiilind.-V.'. (', Coatham, Kop.\nBUA1ID OP TI1AHH. Hoard Unotil,\nOddtolluwa UncU Uloch. uu-Miiirs\nCOU1101I im-In \u00C2\u00BBn Lbu iliM Wcdm-vliiy\nIn Often umiilli. nl l ij, iii. ihiai-torly\nmwlliii'N'Hi ilii'^mtof [.-.h., Mny., Aug.,\nmul Nov., oi Tt30 p, m. Now membon*\ntiniy be propoai il ud eleolodnl any tin ar-\nNOTIOE,\nA I.I.CLAIMS AOAI.NS'l TIIK I'HTATI'\nof (he iale Rti|\">ilti Mlv.i, li.nl.t,\nHop.-, II. C\u00E2\u0080\u009E inn-t l,o in liy l\u00C2\u00BBt Ndvemher,\nIKsii.tn.lA.Mt:!' WAUIU.l!, I|npi>, Admin*\nit-tnitor. tloolml\n\TOTIUK IH HMItlMlY (1IVKN THAT\nIN I ImVO NltiM nml will BOll I.;.* Villi*\nIToAuollon, at. mynmec, in New \u00E2\u0080\u00A2j.m.*\niiiltiNter, on Ihe iiiorulni* nf the Klxlh dny\nof Nnvoinhor, niiliJi'i-1 lo llie jiuyment by\ntin- purelinsei' In uddltlon in llm puiolinifo\nprlee nil rout', olini'i-osuiid oxiioiibo'I -\"nil*\niieclcd with llii'iiil/tii'isii-'ei'lnliinnautlly\nof I-nj'-.- now lvim: nl tlie mouth, on tiio\nlninliHillUl In Siolt ti'i'ili, ii triliiiliii-.v of\nPill LakOi In the Dlstrlot of New Wwo\nm Instor.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2p. ft. IIUIQINRON,\nOrowii Timher Aitenl,\nNow Wcilmlnitpr,6lli Outobori I960,\ntlooflml\nMONUMENTAL\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*wro*Kis:s.\nColiimlJia and Clitircli Streets.\nAlex. Hamilton,\nSale will commence on the\n18th DAY OF OCTOBER, 1889.\nAfter each IS daya 6 per cont. will bo added to tho prico.\nNOWis \"he TIME FOR a FORTUNE\nCome and see and don't say you did not have a chance.\nEDWARD FISCHER,\ni.siskI Agent.\nM, L. STAKGKOOM,\nG'lls'ris! AgBSlt,\nX-J_t_t__l-_aXg\u00C2\u00BB_SIA__-_-lX,Xl\nDRESSMAKING\nAt MISS JENNINGS',\n(Late or England)\nCornoi if Church and Columbia Klm-tH,\nNKW WESTMINSTER.\nBWSatlHfnction guarnnteetl. dwfoTtc\nDress-Making I\nMisses McDOUOALL\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nNew Westminster, B. C.\ntf Histlsfaotlon tissssrasstsssssl. slaplDIo\nW. BREDEMEYER, DR, PH.\n(Lnlo Partner of John MoVlclccr)\nMINING ENGINEER, U.S. \u00E2\u0080\u009E J-ROVIN-\nCIALHUUVKYOldft ASSAYER.\nna\"Relluhlo reporth, uud\"*i-*roiind sui-*\neysntid maps of mines execuled at low\nEllOS. As'iiiyK im:kIi>iiii nil IMnd-of mill*\nrnli-, nold and silver bars. Tlilrty yearn'\nDxperionoo In mining in Asia, Enropt*\naud Uiillfil Htntftfi of America. HpetiKB\nten lanauiiitei-i Aomiys from n diuUince\npminptlyallen.l.-ii to. Addies-H Vancouver, ii, a adolTte\nisro^:xcD\u00E2\u0084\u00A2a_\nI IIERKBY GIVE NOTICE THAT sixty\n1 fool dnys after dnte 1 intend tn make\nnppllcntlon to the Chief Coinnils'-ioiior of\nI.hihIm uud Worlts for pernilhHlou tn pur*\ncliiiso tho following true-tor parcel of laud.\nVl\u00E2\u0084\u00A2!\nAll Island In Now Westminster District\nnorth of Ent llll [MoNab's rnnchu] Inthe\nFruser River, containing llvo 'fi| acres,\nmure nr less,\nHENRY E. HAItLOOK.\nLndnor's Landing, Sept, 12,1830, d2m\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2fcTornoB.\nNOTICE IS HEBKIBY OIVEN THAT\nnppllentlnii will bo mndo to tho Loe-\nIslnllve Assemlily of the Province of British Columbln nt lis next hohsIoii for an net\nto Incorporate a compnny to oonstruct,\noperate nnd miilntnln a street rallwny In\ntho City of Now Westminster, nnd to\nurca.xa_EL\nWE THE UNDERSiGNEDBOOT AND\nShoo Merobantu of New Westminster will closo our respective plnccs of\nbusiness evory ovening ntKn'elock sharp,\non nnd after MONDAY, October lllfi,\n1880, oxcept Saturdays,\nA. R. WINTEMUTE,\n-TAMEBROC3SEAU,\nWM. JOHNSTON,\nGRANT & MACLURE.\nNew Wost., Oot 14, 1880. dooltwl\nJ. W. WINGER\nnBALRKIN\nHard and SoftWood\nDraying and Teaming\nDono on Short Notice and at Reason*\nntilo Tarns,\nSAN JUAN LIME\nAlways in Stock.\nOrders left nt lho 0. P. N. Whnrf will he\npromptly delivered. tlmbaOto\nj -^ia-aQ3Mrcjj!33Ee,_-q-c<-*--- J\nnrnnimj\nCOLUM IIIA STREKT,\nIVcw Westminster, B. (\\nHryan O'Lynn had no toots for to wear,\nSo he came to Westminster to buy him a pair.\n\" I'll have one pair of thick ones and one pair of thin,\n- If I can find J. Rousseau's,\" says Bryan O'Lynn.\nHe hunted the stores all along the main route,\nSays he, \"The right one I've not yet found out.\nI want J. Rousseau\u00E2\u0080\u0094I'll buy only from him,\nFor he sells the cheapest,\" says Bryan O'Lynn.\nHe stepped a little west of McKenzie street,\nHe met Rousseau's sign\u00E2\u0080\u0094sure it was a great treat;\nHe lifted the latch, and Jim stood within.\n\" I've found it at last,\" says Bryan O'Lynn.\nWe showed him both Calf Boots, Kip and Cowhide,\nThe ones we praise mostly, without seams at the side.\nWc have Boots of all kinds, from Quebec and Berlin;\n\" Sure you have boots for the million,\" says Bryan O'Lynn.\nlie bought him his boots, which of course were no trash,\nHe paid down the money, for wc sell only for cash;\nTo the public he says, \"lie not taken in,\nBut buy from J. Rousseau,\" says Bryan O'Lynn.\n\" If there is a leak in the toe or side of your shoe,\nJust take it to Rousseau, that's all you need do;\nHe will peg it or patch it just while you are in,\nAnd the charge seems like nothing,\" says Bryan O'Lynn.\nBritish Columbian\n(DAILY AND WEEKLY)\nUNIUVALLI51) ON THE MAINLAND\nOV BRITISH COLUMBIA AS\nAN ADVERTISING\nMEDIUM\nPER ANNUM, BY MAIL:\nDaily British Columbian, - $6\nWeekly\n2\nPAYABLE IN ADVANCE.\nWHOLESALE\nM.Gig Mer!\nFRONT STREET,\nNew Westminster, Brit. Col.\nsr Highest Price paid for Fum and\nDeer Hides.\nCorrespondence Invlled. uts..TcIcphono\nCull No. 6. djaBto\nNOTICE.\nPROPRIETOR,\nI.\n\u00C2\u00BB1lsl\n330-33-1 CORDOVA STKKKT,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nImpi-rt-'i-.'! and llealcm In\nMACHINERY\n01' AM, DfiBOIttTIOKfl,\nMARINE W0RK\"A SPECIALTY.\ndwiloajifl\niii(iit*Kii|HT\u00C2\u00BBir Conrt oi Etcii*\nIsh CoIin-iM-i.\nJ08EPU JiJlOWNi Plaintiff,\nan n\nT.ic.MAnny,i)ifiinUitii,\nNOTICB IH EMUUBBY UIVNN THAT\ntin Omor lm- beon hmhIc in Dio\naliove-iiii'tillniicd u-rllon l-curh)-* dnte llio\nITtli duyofKepti'iniier, liiHiant.wlii'teliy ll\nhuh ordered llial gervlco of (lie Writ of\nMltmmoiiH lieieln and mild Onlor upon\nT..1. Trapp. KacihIiv, and the tualllii'tof\nQomoa ol tlie nkmo by ri.-pnid lotterM-\n(Ir-'UH'd to tlieiili.'vi' iiiinuil defendnnl al\nHi'i'lnn, N. W- T., and tlu' Iiik* rllon of tblM\niinllco In Tin- 1'iiirtail Cot-VMIIIAH ih-wh*\npaiicr fnr one mioilli, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Imutd in* nm l and\nsnllli'leiit Hi'l-vleiMif lite Will of HtimmoiiH\nIn r.-iii. mut Uml In ili'.'nnlt nf Miipi'iii'iini-e\ntlie plnlntlll tuny prm I nn If pnmonitl\nKi-rvlee bail liccn elli<<-leeputy ttoglalmr.\nCanadian Pacific Railway.\nPACIFIO DIVISION.\nGen'l Superintendent's Office.\nCAUTION.\nOWNKI1H ANI) MAHTEna OP VIW*\nnelMimd olber (Vaft uiivlKiillmt ibe\nFraser Itiver are eaulioiied lo Iteep wllhln\nIho IIiiovh pnliileit Hed nnd Willi'-, re*\nNpeellvil.v.ul tin* MIhhImii ltrldi*e, iisdlir*\nIliKtheeniislnii'llon uf Ibe llililkte. uavl*\nKit I hm tH'iweeii the iinni'-, of the Itiver\nand thputioy\u00C2\u00ABlidftngoroiu-owlngtit|>iloB\nbeing driven Ibero,\nH. ABBOTT,\n(\u00E2\u0080\u00A2enoriilHiiperlnteiiikiit.\nVancouver, B. 0\u00E2\u0080\u009E 7lh Mny, iHSfl. dmyHto\nDOUGLAS STREET\nEsS*F-% \u00E2\u0096\u00A0% ni H k B\nPOOT OF DOUOLA3 STHKET, NKAlt\nColumbia Stiikkt,\nJ, FERCiUSOIV, l'ROPKIE'J'OR\nFltKBH BREAD, CAKKft, PAfiTRY,\nConfectionery, etc., oto.\nHotel and Restaurant trade solid led.\nAH orders promptly attended to and\ndelivered lo any part of tlio city. dmbJMy\nBOOK,\nC. McDONOUGH,\n(LUNDBOM'S BUILDING, FRONT STREET)\nmusB nr\nGENERAL MERCHANDISE!\nConstantly on Hand an Extensive Stook of\nDry Goods, Groceries, Boots & Shoes, flats & Caps,\nCrockery, dlassware, Ac.\nBCSN-'S \u00E2\u0084\u00A2Se BOTS' STJITti.\nGreat Variety of Household Articles, Also,\nGRAIN, SEEDS, POTATOES, LIME and GENERAL STORES.\nN. B,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Farm Produce bought at market rates ot Bold on commission. na-Order*\nfrom tbe Interior promptly attended to. dwJeStc\nCASTORIA\nfor Infants and Children.\n\"Ctutorla iBtwirell adapted to ehlldnathat I Outerla ram* Colte, OouUpatton,\nKS^-SK^sr* FJS^***^\n111 So. Oxford 8t.,BrooJ\u00E2\u0084\u00A2ja,N.T. I Wlttwut lajtaiOM medlcatUm,\nTra Cbxtaur Oomfakt, 77 Uut-ray Btreet, N. Y.\nW. 0. LOYE,\nFata*! Soot d Shoo li&ur.\nRepairlua Neatly Done. Cork Sole\n Worka Specialty.\nC-fOrders promptly attended to,\nClarkson St.* fnrearof Colonial Hotel, next lo Knud Hros.1 offlco. (Incite\nand\nQOMIVIEROIAL\nPRINTING\n_ OR\t\nEvery Description\nEXECUTED IN\nFIRST-CLASS STYLE\nAT MODERATE RATES.\nTIME CARD.\nO. ._=\u00C2\u00BB. 3\u00E2\u0084\u00A2T. OO.\nThe Fino Flrat-Class\nStr. William Irving\nWill Loavo tbo 0. P. N. Co,'b Wharf,\n21 *V*B *!***,-5T\nTuesday. Thursday & Saturday\nAT 7 A. M\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nFOR CHIIUWHACK AND WAV PORT!.\nRelssrsslDff Every\nWednesday, Friday & Sunday\nWhen sutllcleiit Inducement olTern sbe\nwill pmpflod to Hope and on snob\noccnslotiH will leave her wbarf\nnti a. in,\nComieet Ing with lho C. P. N. Co,'a Steamer\nfor Viotoria.\nJOHN IRVING, Manager.\nT. L. UltltlOM, Anent,\ndapSto\nitiu*.-**!, Agent,\nNow Wostminstor,\nTime Table.\nTHU STEAMER\nROBERT DUNSMUIR\nLEAVES WESTMINSTER every Mon*\nuny morning nt 7 o'olock for Nannlmo, vln Vancouver, returning Tuesday,\nvln Vnncouvor.\nLoaves Wostminstor every Wednomlny\nnl,7n. ni, fur Nanaimo direct, connecting\nwith Island railway nnd Cntiion steamer.\nLeaves Nannlmo for Vancouver on\nThursdays nud Fridays and returns same\ndiiys.\nLeaves Nanaimo on Saturday nt 7 a. ut,\nfor Westminster direct.\nFor ,freight or iinssnao npply on board,\nr lo T. UllRiaoa, C. P. N. wnarf. dlo\nOUR FACILITIES IN THIS DEPARTMENT ARE UNSURPASSED\nIN THE PROVINCE.\nSpecial Forms Ruled\nand Printed.\nHAVING A RULING MACHINE ON\nTHE PREMISES WE ARE ENABLED TO FURNISH\nSPECIAL FORMS\nTO ORDER.\nADD1TI0\S VN\u00C2\u00BB IMPROVEMENTS\nHave recently been made In tho\nvarious Departments,\nAnd with e ireful and cflicient workmen.\nfast steam presses, nml first-clasmiiatcr-\nials, we oan guarantee satisfaction to aft\nwho favor ua with thoir onlors.\nKENNEDY BROS.\nUOI PnOPRIBTOlU.\nBusiness Notice.\nmiiK UNDERSIGNED IS PREPARED\nJ_ to furnish plnus und spccitlontions for\nnil classes of buildings (stono and brick a\nupeolaltyj, Will furnish nil the necessary\ndrawing.*! and superintend work through a\ncompotont foreman, nnd will goawtntOO\nperfoot work for 3 per cant, of cost, Offloe\nIn Hank of II. C. Hilildlnir, up stairs. \"S'.-.v\nWestminster. JAMES KENNEDY,\ndwsolltu Arebllcet.\nSTABLES,\nDallas Street, Westminster\nJOS. Mi WISE,\n-E>.nox?xtx_mx:o-B,.\nGOOD DRIVING A RIDING HORSES\nfor Hire. Ilaelts call at all Steamers\nand Trail*--. Special attention given to\nBoarding Horses.\nCOUL IND WOOD\nConstant ly on Hand.\nOrders may be left at tlie Offlce of Mathers A Millkan,Commission Merchant)-,\n3*ront Street, Now West. dso21to\nFsSTABLISHKIl 1859.\nROBT. DICKINSON\nBUTCHER,\nSearl, Opposite tbo Colonial Hotel\nNEW WESTMINSTER\nTHE LAKGEST AND CHOICEST\nsiesortsssent of all descriptions of\nMEATS AND VEGETABLES\nConstantly on hand, and supplied to Fum-\nilicB, Restaurants, and Steamboats at the\nLOWWST POSSIBLE PRICES.\nTo k Francisco, Cal,\nBY WAY OP THE\nSouthern Paoiflo Oompany's\nX.XM--EI.\nTHE MT. SHASTA ROUTE.\nQUICKEItIN TIME THAN AN Y OTHEB\nROUTE BETWEEN\nflMNO SCENIC HOUTE OF THE PACIFIC COAST\nPULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS\nTOURIST SLEEPING CARS\nFor Accommodation of Second-Clnsa Tas-\nsongfirs, atlaolied to Express Trains.\nKare from Portland to Bneramento ami\nHun KraiU'isco-lTiilimited, $U6j Flrat-\nclass (IilmHod)i |20i Sc-oond-cliisr* (Li*\nmiiodj.sifi.\nTU HOI''J H TICKETS hi all point\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 Snut'\nund Eust, via California.\nTICKET OFFICER:\nOut Ofkkik, No. IM'Cor. First A Aide\nStreets;\nDkpot Okjtice, Cor. F4 Front Streets;\nPortland, Oregon.\nR. KOEKI-KR, E. P. IUH'ERS,\nManager. Asst.a. P. A P.A'g*\nI\nI\nHACK, LIVERY, STAGE,\nFeed | Sale Stables\nDOUBLE AND SINS! RIBS\nAt speoial Low Rates.\nBnjiii* ud AU H .f taisj\nDone at SborlestNoUbe.\nl\u00C2\u00BBryCord.iom] delivered to any part of\ntbe City.\nOrders by Telej-liotie will receive prompt\nattention.\nWPBtables nearly opposite C. P. R.De-\npot, Columbia St \u00E2\u0080\u009E NowV'estmlnstor.\ndjaiite\nQILLEY BR03. Fuo pa.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nLand a Investment Agency\n(LI JSIITBID\nTHOMAS ALLSOP,\nHENHY 8. MASON.\nCUYLER A. HOLLAND,\n,}'\nIlEAUOriici::\n15 Serjeant's Inn. Fleet Street..\nLONDON, ENG.\nTbo Business of ALLSOP Jt MASON has\nbeen merged in the above Company nnd\nwill bo oarried on by the Company from\nthis date as a general Land Investment\nand Insurance Agency.\nMONEY TO LOAN on Mortgage at Low\nRates. Town Lois nnd Farming Lands\nfor Sale on easy termB.\nVictoria, B.O., May lOth, I8S7. dwjly&\nTO SMOKERS.\nOD\nIF YOU WANT TO ENJOY A GOO]\nCIGAR, ASK FOR THE\nBRITISH LION\nHENRY LEE,\n***** MAINLAND.\nWThcy are not only mude of the\nChoicest Tobacco but they are o!\nHome manufacture, and should be\npatronized by all good citizen.*).\nWM. TIETJEN, Manufacturer,\nHOLBROOK BUILMNO-\nCOLUMBIA STIIEET, NEW WESTMINSTER.\ndwl7noly\nWM. McCOLL\nCHOICE\nFamily Groceries!\nAnd PROVISIONS.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094ALSO\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n* WEU'lEUOTED STUCK W\nDRYCOODS\nANS FURNISHINGS.\nAT THE LOWEST PRICES,\nLUNDBOEM'S BLOOK,\n(olsssssMa Slral, dew WMiMbuiw\nisolslwly DAILY BRITISH OGLUMBIAH, NEW WEaiMINSTER, B. 0., OCTOBER 19. 1889.\ngmlg fritiah Columbian\nMnturd.j Evenlnc, Oct. 10, 1889.\nADVEHTIIIND HATES Ml THI DAILY.\nTsFwaitenl All verlhemeats.\u00E2\u0080\u0094First luBer*\ntb>u, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 (.'tn. per line solid uoiiiiart-il; eacb\ntt ,1'ih-i -lieut ciuiNceut Ivo Insert Ion, 'lets, per\nline, Advertisements not Inserted every\ndKy\u00E2\u0080\u0094first Insertion, 111 cts. per Hue; subse*\nqintiit Insertions, fi ets. per Hue.\nHia luting Adveitlsemenls.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Profeuslon-\nnl or Buslucss uar.li*--j|2 }ier montb, ftpo\nclul rates for general trade advertising,\nui-eor-ling to space occupied und duration\nuf oi in l,ri tct.\nAui'tlou itnles, wbendlspluyedtCbarged\n\"5 per rent, less Mian tniusteut atlvts, \"\nsolid, charged at regular transient rates.\nMo-'sriiil Nntlcfn among rending matter,\nan cts. per Hue encli Insertion, ripeclala\niuierted by tbe tnontb at reduced rates.\nBlrtbs.AIarrlagesaud Uontbs-ll for each\nInsertion; Funeral Notices In connection\nwith deatbi, 60 el* each Insertion.\nWEEKLY ADVERTI8INQ RATES.\nTranilent Advertisements.\u00E2\u0080\u0094First insertion, 10cts, per Hue solid nonpareil; subsequent Insertions, 7 ets. per line.\n\u00E2\u0084\u00A2l>tii.lliiK Atlverll-emenlH.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Professional or Business Cards\u00E2\u0080\u009431.50 per mouth.\nSpecial rates fnrgoneral trade advertising.\nSpecial Notices, Births- Marriages and\nDeaths, snme rntm as Ually,\nfJnisiiUisili'-Ri! m\nnu extra rate will '\njHri'erstiiis seiidh\nshould be oarofitl i\nnreloappeitrln tho\nWeekly, or Ud.li. A li\nmade when limerled m\nMsemcut Inserted fnr let\nlal.Kud (hrlarBOonts\ncharged,\ni In adverl'iaemeitts\nsinio whether they\nnlly Edition, or the\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ml reduction i\u00C2\u00BB\n,h. No udvor-\n:iu st\nsunaoiunERfl\nWho do not receivo ilr-it junior regain\nfrom tho Carriers nr through Ihu I\nOfflco, will confeni favor by roporllng\nsame to the otllce of publication at out\nNEW ADVERT1SEM-NTS IMS DAY\nBuilding Society\t\nWanted\t\nNotico\t\nBoys Wanted\t\nAppointments\t\nInstrumental Music\n....V.J. \"Walker\n...M. G.Terhune\n,S. T, Mackintosh\n..R.C. P.M. Co.\n Prov. Soc.\n....(f, J. Burnett\nOyster cocktails nt Olub saloon. *\nFresh Eastern Oysters at It. J,\nArmstrong's. to\nAnother blank sheet at the polico\ncourt to-day.\nOgle, Campbell & Freeman have a\nnew adv. in this paper in their usual\nBpace.\n\"The moBt delightful weather of the\nwholo year,'' ia tho general expression\nbn the streets these days.\nWalker & Co. havo Sapperton Lota\nnear New Hospital and Ross-Mac-\nluroit Mills, at old prices. *\nHoly Trinity church will be lighted\nwith giiB in futuro. Numerous other\nimprovements havo beon addod.\nTho Dominion government will\nlikely re-build a retaining wall at the\nscene of the recent Quebeo disaster.\nTho str. Princess Louise loft for\nViotoria thia morning with 35 passengers and a full load of farm produce.\nThe Fairy Queen broutjht up n large\nload of freight and a number of pas*\nsengors from the North Arm to-day.\nThe str. Adelaide arrived down from\nup river portB to-day with a few passengers and a full load of farm produce.\nTho stenmer Dunsmuir arrived from\nNanaimo this afternoon with a full\ncargo of coal and a number of passengers,\nBui-gain hunters will do well to luok\nthrough W. &, U. Woll'enden'a stock\nof Dry Goads, Hats and Clothing, now\nclearing at cost. *to\nTho provincial voters' list for West*\nmint*tor city, corrected up to Oct. 15th,\nis uow printed, and contains the names\nof 050 porsons.\nThe Park lano arch is to be removed\nto thu entrance of Queen's park, whero\nit will greatly improve tlio appearance\nof things In goncial.\nViotoria miilu-a a good showing in\nKi-pttimbor for healthiness, as compared with other Canadian cities. Tin\nratio per tluumud is twouty*fivo.\nBalmon trout are veiy numerous ii\nthe river ut present, and iu some in\nstances tho iiahenncn are catching\nmore of those fish than of salmon.\nA scow lend of brick from Winger'\nnow yard, on Parson**.' ehnnncl, wa\ntowed to this city last niglit. They\nwill be used on the Bushby block,\nAs will be seen hy an adv. in another\ncolumn a compotout engineer is wanted\nfor the steamer FairyQueon, plying between this city and the North Arm.\nIn the exhibition prize list Mr. S. J\n. Thompson,, not Mr. A. Mountain,\nshould havo tetin awarded flrat prizo\nf.ir the best collection uf photographs,\nSei-muiis will be preached from the\nfallowing texti lo-monow ntSt. Paul's\nPv. LO. churoh: Morning\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'Actions aro\nWuighed\"; ovtmiug\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"Comeand See,\"\nCr.'sn & Poiugdostro havo just received from Moutrenl another con-\nMginiiciit of the linoBt grades of pipes,\ncigars and tobacco. A call will con\nvince. *lw\nTo limners.--Messrs. Woods-Turner\n& (J iniblo mako a specialty of lending\nmoney an fanning lands; any amount\nfr-.m $100 to \u00C2\u00A720,000, according to\nsecurity. ool7m\nThu Bteamer Irving got oft* Sca-Bird\nBar nt 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon,\nand proceeded immediately to Hope\nwhere she leaded 140 head nf cattlo fo:\nWestminster.\nTho er. esing up the east side of\nMury sheet has been laid, and the\nsidewalk on the north aide of Agnes\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"truer, From Mm / atreet east, has beon\nraised t>. its -m-por level\nW. H. Viuiien shipped 100 bbls, of\nfresh packed suit salmon to Hunt\nBfiniOB & On,, Montreal, to-day. He\nwill eiii|i tin many more carloads as\npiis-ible beforo tho salmon run ends.\nTlm practice lacrosse matoh at\nQueen's park thia nfternoon wns well\npttended nnd the men showed up in\nexcellent form, Tho match was wit-\niieBBi'd by ii large numbor of spectators.\nTho ncoroiary of tho Victoria Football Club has notified tho aecretniy of\ntho Weitminvter club that tho Victoria team will visit the Royal City on\nNoveiiibiM' 23d. and play a champion\nmatch\nSt rick liiiiil & Co. to-day sold two\nmagnificent bmj-iies, miu to Gilley\nBros,, Nuw Westminster nnd ono\ntn Aakur Wester-nark, of Ladnors.\nPeople suoiii to appreciate enterprise\nand a good article. *\nAH accounts against tho colebration\ncommittee must be handed in to tho\ngenoral secretary not later than Wednesday next, as the books will bo\nolosed on that date and the all'aira of\nthe committee finally wound up.\nThe Westminster Building society's\ndrawing for the thirteenth npproprin*\ni tion of 81,000 will bo held nt the enurt\nhouse on Saturday evening, 26th inst.,\nht eight o'clock. Members in arrears\nare requested tu pay tip before that\ndate.\nO. J, Burnett, a pupil of Prof. Toms,\nof England, mid recently of the Chicago\nOratorio Society, 1ms an advertisment\nelaeirhere. stating (hat he is prepared\nto receive pnpils for instrumental\nmusic, af the corner uf Mary st. nud\nQueen's ave.\nChildren Cryfor Pltcher'sCastorla\nTlio speoial prize given by Mr. It.\nJ. Armstrong, ot tho provincial exhibition, for tho best driving horso, was\nwon by Mr. L. Williams of this eity.\nOwing (o this prize not being awarded\ntill tbe last day rf the fair, mention of\nit was overlooked.\nLook out fur bargains to-morrow\n(Saturday) night at Trapp's auction\nmart, in furnituro nuw and second\nbaud, cook stoves, boots and elides,\nre.ady made clothing, chamber Bets,\nand 000 house plants in full bloom, in\npots. Sale at 7 o'clock. *\nWin. B. McDougnll, an old-timo\nnewspaper man, formerlyof Vancouver,\nis dying at tho hospital at Spokane\nFalls, Mr. McDougall ia a Canadian,\nson of the Hun Wm. McDougall, and\nwas for some time editor of tbo News-\nAdvertiser of Vancouver.\nOn Tuesday evoning noxt, at tho\nCity Hall, lho medals won by our\nathletes in tho celebration nuitchos will\nbo publicly presented by tho lady\nmayoress and other ladies. This event\nwill bo n not'iblo one, and should bo\nattended by the public ch masse,\nTlio matoh for tho $10 prize oom*\nmoncoa this morning at tlio shooting\ngallery ou Columbia Btreet. A new\ntarget waa received yesterday from\nVancouver, and will be used fur tho\nmatch to-night. A largo number aro\nexpocled to tako part in tho match.\nTho immense movement of freight\nat present gives (lie regular linea of\ntho 0. P. N. Co. more tlian they cnu\ndo, and extra steamers are called into\nrequisition soveral times each weok,\nTho Bteamer ttithot arrived in port, today, and will load two carloads of hogs\nand 140 bond of cattlo for Victoria.\nSlio will Il-jko port to-morrow morning.\nLots 4 aud 21), block 7 (Clarkson\nproperty), Montreal, Melbourno, Clement and St. Patrick streets, subdivided into 33 lots, aro uow on the\nmarket at prices within tho reach of\nall. Parties desiring fine residence lots\nwill do well to call at onco, beforo tho\nohoico oies nro sold. Tho lots are\nmoBtly cloarod. For sale by Major &\nPearson. *tc\nTho first niattrosa in connection with\nthe rivor mouth improvements waa\nlaid on Thursday, tho second yesterday and tho third to-day. Mr. Sinclair expects to sink seven matressea\nnext week. At this rato tho work will\nbo accomplished in leas than half tho\ntimo occupied by similar improvements in tho past. There ia nothing\nliko push nnd enterprise iu matters of\nthese kind.\nNews has been received from San\nJuan that a demented Greek is cruising\naround Orcns Island in an open boat.\nThere is only ono farm house that ho\nvisits and that is only when no strangers\nare present. He sleeps in tho wot\nwcods at riight without aholtar or bedding. His demeanour ia poacoable, except whon his desires are not appeased,\nand then lio goes into a frightful rage,\nrolling off volley after volley of Greek\noaths and American shearing. As yet\nho has offered no violence to any one.\nNothing ii known of His past lifo,nnrao\nor occupation.\nVOLUME VII.-NO. 95.\nTlie llnfcliery.\nTho hatchery is now receiving aud\nstoring salmon ova at the ruts vt half\na million per woek, but thi- number\nwill bo largely increased between now\nand tho finish of stripping operations.\nTho number of ova in the hatchery at\npresent ia 1,750,000. Some difficulty\nhas boon experienced with lho high\nwater ou Harrison River, where tho\nova i3 scoured. A very Urge numbor\nof fish entered lho traps but high water followed immediately afterwards,\nHooding tho enclosure and allowing\nmany of tho fish to oscape. Thoro are,\nhowever, plenty of fish now in tho\ntraps to supply tho 7,000,000 ova\nwhich it is the intention to hatch this\nyour. Mr. Mux Mowat is in charge of\ntho stripping operntiona, nnd hopes to\nfinish his labors before the disagreeable\nweather acta in.\nENtliticnl Pointer*.\nTho writ for tho election to fill tho\nvacancy in the provincial parliament,\ncaused by lho resignation of Judgo\nBole, is daily expected to arrive, and\nwhen it does n hot campaign will bc\nimmediatty inaugurated. At present\nthe announced candidates aro prosecuting their canvas in a quint wuy, but\nalthough Utile appears on lho surface\nthey are obtaining many pronrnen of\nsupport whon the polling day arrives.\nAn exciting race for tho vacant seat is\npromised to the interested public,\nA Practical .Julie.\nAn adverthoment, emanating from\nVictoria, and without any signature,\n13 appearing in moat of thu provincial\npaper-, (it will bo found in Tni*\nWeekly British Columbian), in substance U3 follows : \"Thu friends of the\nB, C. Agricultural Association are requested to meet at tho city hall, Victoria, Thursday, Oct. 31, at 7:30 p. m.\nBusiness: Election of oflicers for\nthe ensuing your.\" Somebody\nshould inform those anonymous Rip\nVim Winkle.1} who are rcsponatblo for\nthu \"ghiwtly goal;\" abovo, thut the\nolticera of the B. 0, Agricultural Association havo already been elected for\nthe ensuing year.\n , -a_-\t\nMethodists Protest.\nTho Methodist missionary board, tifc\nits laat meeting nt London, Out,, passed tho following resolution: \"Tha!\nwhereas it bus come to tho knowledge\nof this board that out of threo educational institutions established In British Columbia by tho Dominion government two have boon placed undor-tho\nsupervision of the Roman Catholic\nchurch aud the other under tho Angl:\ncan, while the Methodist church, with\naa many Indiana undor ita cure aa tho\nforui'r nnd fur moro than the latter,\nhas been ignored altogether, be it resolved that we enter a most earnest\nprotest at this action of tbe Indian department at Ottawa.\" After a little\ndiscussion relative to tho facts of the\noaso tho motion carried without rlis-\npont.\nFrom I'nrt Dlmpsen.\nTlio C. P. N. Co's stenmer Sardonyx,\nCapt. Meyer, arrived at Victoria Thursday afternoon from Fort Simpson and\nway ports. Sho brought no nows iu\nregard to tho accident met with by the\nAlert, which probably occurred after she\nhad passed Nnnaimo. A young Indian\nnamed Homy Bullor, who had hia leg\nbroken abovo tho kneo about a week\nago, wns brought down for treatment at\ntlie Royal Hospital. Tho unfortunate\nyoung man had been working in the saw\nmill nt Alert Bay, whero his leg wns\ncrushed by n rolling log.\nTho Sardonyx brought down 11,711\ncases ot salmon 8,711 from tho River's\nInlet cannery, and 3,000 from tho Alert\nBuy. AU tno Balmon is for English\nBhipinontbytheLebuand J. H. Hus*\ntode.\nPERSONAL.\nA. O. Hastings, of Vancouver, ia in\nthe city.\nS. T. Mackintosh went over to Victoria this aftornoon.\nMrs. D. Robson wont over to Vancouver to-day to assist in the singing\nnt the Methodist^ harvest festival services, in that city to*morrow,\nJ. A. Macdonald, of Kamloops, ia\nstaying at the Queens. He is taking a\nshort holiday Irip nnd finds tho royal\ncity a pleasant stopping place.\nDr. W. R. Hall, of Chatham. Ont.,\nand a brother of Dr. Hall of this city,\narrived from tho east yesterday. Ho\nwill go to Victoria to take the praotice\nof his brothor, Dr. Frank Hall, who is\nabout to tako an extended trip for his\nhealth.\nThe llynrlis* Uric trance.\nTho members of tho Hyack Fire\ncompany uro exceedingly annoyed at\nthe action of the celebration committee\nin reducing the nmount of the prizes,\nclaimed by them, from $475 to $250.\nThey cad much to any on this subject\non tlio stroots til-day, and many of the\nmembers openly declared that the\nwhole company would resign nnd tho\ncity would bo left without a fire brigade in Icds than n week. Tliu public\nfeeling seems to bo that tho nmount\nsot asido for tho firemen tit tho meeting Inst night was quito aullicient undor the circumstances, whon it is considered that no temna except the Hyacks entered for tho contests. If tlio\nfiremen can ahow that they have a\ngenuine grievance against tho committeo tho citizens will soo that they obtain ample justico, but it would bu\nvory ill-advised under tho circumatan-\ncea to resign beforo submitting thoir\ncase for publio consideration.\nrite ume.\nThe team from tho N. W. R. A.,\nto meet tho Vancouver Riflo Association's team at Brockton Point to-day,\nto shoot a friendly match, left tho city\nin carriages shortly after 9 o'clock this\nmorning. Tho team was composed of\ntho following: Capt. Seoullnr and\nMessrs, Mowat, Cotton, Turnbull,\nFraser, A. Pittendrigh, Fletcher, G.\nPittendrigh and Wilson. It will bo\nnoticed that both tho Chnmberlalus,\nProud and sovoral other crack shots\nnro absent, Tho following nro tho\nmercbers of tho Vnncouvor toam: Dr.\nBoll-Irving and J. D. Stuart, P. N.\nThompson and II. Collins; P. A.\nGrunt and N. MoColl; W. H, Forrest\nand II. A, Brnckleaby; Wm. McGirr,\nspare man. Tho match will undoubtedly result in a victory for Vancouver,\nbut Westminster hopes to put a stronger toam in tho field for tha next match.\nThe annual bnuquet of lhe V. II. A.\nwill Lie held nt tlio Windsor hotel this\nevening.\nAcr-m-dln-*; lo Agreement.\nSome people, wo aro informed, have\nquestioned tho right, as woll as tho\npropriety, of thu notion of the celebration committoe, lust night, in voting\ntho sum of \u00C2\u00A7200 to Mr. S. T. Mac*\nkiutojh for hiB services as general secretary of the celebratiun committee,\nand also for making a tmall appropriation to present a testimonial to Mr. J.\nS. C. Fraaer, treasurer of the committoe. With respect to tho \u00C2\u00A7200 paid to\nMr. Mackintosh, ns secretary, no fault\ncnu bo found, as that was the Biliary\nagreod upon when Llio appointment\nwns mndo. For two months preceding\ntho celebration a vast amount of work\nhnd to bc dono to insure success, A\nthoroughly good and efficient secretary, who should make the celebration\nhia chiof business for the timo being,\nwas a necessity. That Mr. Mackintosh\nproved himself all that could be desired\nin that capacity, ia questioned by no\nono, and tho voting of tho compensation agreed upon for his services was\ncertainly perfectly in order, Mr.\nFruser, as treasurer of tho genoral\nfund, devoted a great deal of time,\nzeal and supererogatory service towards furthering tho bucccqs of the\ncolobration in many ways. Although\nno salary wns attached to his office,\nthe testimonial voted laat night wns\nwell-earned and deserved.\nTbe Larsest leek.\nMr. Josh Curry, of Hnliburton Ht.,\nbrought to our sanctum specimens of\nleeks grown by him in his garden.\nThey aro of immense si-*o, nnd would\nmake a Welshman smile all over his\nfaco. Tho plants aro 4j in length, the\nwhito part being over 12 inches. At\ntho rout the bulb measured 10 inches\nin circumference. Sovoral Welsh gentlemen who havo seen tho roots pronounce them much larger, firmer and\nclearer than any they had Been in\nWales or nny other country. The leek\nis regarded as a -national emblem of\nWnles, and is highly prized ns an article of food.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Free Press.\nThe Celebration Committee.\nThe mooting of the celebration com*\nmitteo at tho city hall last night was\nnot largely attonded, nnd a numbor of\nroporta thnt should hnvo boen handed\nin failed to materialize, consequently\ntho meeting only accomplished half its\nobject. Mayor Townaond occupied\nthe chair and reported verbally for the\nexecutive aud reception committees,\nstating that everything had been sutis-\nfactorilly carried out. Tho printing\ncommittee reported having exceeded\ntho amount of their appropriation by\na small sum. Tins was not considered a serious matter nnd tho report\npassed. Tho procession committee\nshowed a surplus over oxponses, as\ndid also tho boating and sailing committee. The sports committeo alao\nEowed a small balance to tho good, but\ntho muaio and dancing managers proclaimed a deficit, whicli wus occusioncd\nby tho financial fail uro of the citizons'\nball. Tho horao ncing coin-\nmittoo showed a hnnclsomo eiirolus,\nwhilo tho decoration committeo was\nforced tn exceed tho nmount of its\nappropriations. Tlio fireworks committee kept within tho nmount allotted\nit, nnd, together with tbo foregoing roports, wna adopted. The billeting\ncommittee's icport wns not considered\nsatisfactory and it was referred bnck.\nThe bill for tho erection of the judges'\nstand, \u00C2\u00A702.00, woo ordered paid, ns\nwna nlso the secretary's salary. A do-\nficit of 8291, in connection with tho\ngraud stand, was ordered paid. On\nmotion the grand stand was handed, /\nover to tho city on the understanding\nthat tho clubs have freo uso of it when\nmatches are on. Tho firemen's tournament occasioned soveral hot disputes and u great many long speeches,\nTho matter wna finally disposed of by\ntho passage of a motion granting tho\nfiremen $250, and ovon this amount\nmany thought Bhould not bo paid, owing to the fact that the contests wero\nbetween the mon of tho same company; and they had decided to equally\ndivide the prizo money, irrespective of\nwinnora. The treasurer's roport, showing a small surplus, was read and\nadoptod. It was the genoral opinion\nthat tho hard work performed by Mr,\nFraser, on bohalf of tho celebratiun,\nwns deserving of recognition, and a\ncommittee, consisting of Messrs.\nThompson, Eckstein, Grant, Mcintosh and Whyte, was appointed to\narrange for a presentation to tako\nplace on Tuesday evening noxt. After\npassing a heaity voto of thanks to\nMayor Townaond for his efforts on behalf of thu celebratiun, the meeting\nadjourned.\nDelta Council.\nCouncil met at tho Delta town hall on\nSaturday, 12th of Oct. Present\u00E2\u0080\u0094Reeve\nand Councillors Arthur, Pybus and Tas-\nker. Minutes of last meeting read and\nadopted. Petition from Hnuck and\nothers, referred to road committee. Communications from Mayor Oppenheimer\nand Thos. l'l. Ladner, received and filed,\nA number of accounts wore passed and\nordered paid. Jno, Milliguu a contract\nfor portion of Cliilochkcn trunk road waB\nnccepted and ordered paid. Wm. Shivas,\ntender for corduroying the Oliver road\nwas nccepted. On motion, tho contract\nfor gravelling the Goudy road was can*\ncelled and laid ovor for futuro consideration. The clork was instructed to notify\nWin. 11. Burr, jr., to havo tho railing replaced without delay on the Burr bridge.\nOn motion, the clork was instructed to\nreply to the communication from D.\nDove, alao to notify Mr. McDonald to\nhave his outlet bridged where it crosses\nthe publio road. Tiio highway by-law\npassed first timo aa read. Wharf by-law\npassed second timo as read. Floodgate\nand water course by-law passed second\ntitno ua read. Coun. Pybua was cm*\npowered to have tho trunk road repaired.\nA committoe was appointed to select a\nBite for a burying ground. Council adjourned till first Saturday in November\nnt 2 o'elook,\n \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -_-_.> \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\nDress dootls at Cost nt WoHeiitlcn's.\nOvercoats, Clothing and Gentlemen's\nFurnishings, suitable for present nnd\nwinter uso, clearing nt cost prices, at\nW, ft G. Wolfendon's. *lo\nWholesale city market.\nReef, per lOOlbs. llvo weights 4 00(3 4 50\nPork -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 7 00 if 7 fiO\nMutton \" 8 00\u00C2\u00AE 1) 00\nPotatoes,tiow\" 75(3 100\nCabbage \" B0@ 1 00\nOnions \" 100 0 ISO\nWhonl \" 150\u00C2\u00AE 0 00\nOats \" 1 C0@ 125\nPeas \" 125\u00C2\u00AE 150\nHay, ner ton 10 000 H 00\nRatter (rollB) per It 25\u00C2\u00AE 80\nChoose, \" 14 tf 15\nKflgf, per ilo** 850 40\nCordwood (retail) per curd 8 50(3 4 oo\nApples,; por box 80\u00C2\u00AE 100\nHiuoB'srnjper 100 Iba 4 00*3 500\n\" (dry) \" 6 00(3 0 00\nWool, per lb 0 @ 11\n-Thoa Baby wu dok, we gave her Cutoria,\nWlion sbo wm a Child, ehe cried for Castoria,\nWhen she became Mils, sho clang to Castoria,\nV7hon thtt bad Chlldroa, aba *>are tb oin Caatorii\nBAPTIST\nEast of Mary Street,\nommcii,\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E tl's Day\nServices at ll a. m.\" and 7 p.m. Sabbath\nSohool iindlllble Class at i'-so p. ra. All\nseats freo; strangers cordially welcomed.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rev. Thou. I'ahlwin, pastor.\t\nMETHODIST C II UK C II( Mary\nStreet, Uov. J. H. White, I-Wtor.\nServices at, 11 n. m. ami 7 p. in, Sunday\nHijlirml mid Bible CIiuih \"1-:M p. m, Pmyar\nMeeting on Thursdays at 7.30p.m. Reals\nfree; strangers corfllally Invited,\nQT. PAUL'S OMUKCIl, John Street,\nO Opposito Orange Hall. Rev. Thomas\nHaddon, Pastor. Services overy Sunday\nat II a. m. and 7 p. in. Thursday ovonlngs\nat 7:30 o'clock. Seats free; all nre coral-\nnlly Invited. Hinulay School iit2;.1Qp. m.\nCHURCH OF ENGLAND.-\nTRINITY CHimCH:. ~\nHOLY\nRcotor, The\nop. 8. MARY'S CHURCH; Rector,\nTho Ven. Archdeacon Woods, Services\nln both churches every day. All seats\nfree. Both churches open all dnyforprl*\nvate prayor.\t\n-pKmSBYTKKIAN CHUROH (ST.\nJT ANDREW'S), corner Carnarvon and\nBlackwood Sts. Rev. Thos. Scouler, pus-\ntor, Services at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m.; Sun-\nday-school and Blble-elaBB nt 2.30p.m.;\nI'niyer-iiieetlngon Thursday evenings at\n7.30. Souls free; strangers welcome.\nIO. G. T.-EXCl'LSIOR LODGE NO. K\n, meets every Monday evening at 8 o'clock, lu the Temperance Hall, Culumhia\nSt. Visiting members aro cordially Invited.-W. 0, torn, Rcc. Sec.\nCALEDONIA ta ST. ANDKKW3\nSOI'IETY.-Tho regulnr meetings ef\nthis Association aro held on tho Inst Tuesday of each month, at 8 o'olook p.m. AU\nScotchmen are Invited to attend.-Joun\nBuik, Seo. \t\nAO, F.-COURT LOUD DUFFERLV,\n, No. (1301. Tho regular meetings of\nthe above Court are held at tlio Foresters'\nHall, on tlio first and third Wednesday in\nouch month, at 8 p. in.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Jno. McMuitl'llY,\nBomv, P. O. R.\n\\T C. T. U.-UEGULAR MEKTIN-\nVy , every Wednesday afternoon nt S\no'clock nt tbo W. C. T. u. Headquarters,\nDouglas St. Loyal Let'lon iu tho smno\nplace evory Friday afternoon.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Mrs. Jas.\nCunmnoham, President; Mits. J. A. OUR-\nHINGHAM, Secretary.\nWANTED.\nBY A LADY ABOUT TO LEAVE FOR\nEngland, a girl to assist In the care\nnf children dtrlng tho voyage. For particulars apply'at the olllco of the BitiTlsil\nCoLtwniAM. doolSwI\nPOR SALE.\nA W\nr\ ato i\nhi!-. Tho\nIJ-S-STOIIEY HI >UHE AND LOT. situ*\nato on Montreal street, nenr i)ottg-\n Tho building was put up this year,\nand Is convenient In every respoot. Price\n11-825. Tl---' -*' '*\noclTIo\nTenders Wanted,\nNOT LATER THAN THE ftra NOVEM*\nber, for elrnrlns KO neres, more or\nloss, of land at Boundary Bay.\nSpecifications lo bo neon on nppllcation\nIn Win, McDowell. Ladner's Landing, otto tho undorslgnea.\nThe lowest or any tendor not necessarily\naccepted.\nE. M. JOHNSTON.\n81 Government St., Victorin, 11. C.\nOctober, 1888. oclSdwtd\nChildren, Cryfor Pltcher'sCastorla\nNOTICE OFJISSOLUTION.\nTHE PARTNERSHIP HERETOFORE\nexisting between W.J. Corbott and\nT. Kennedy, as tinsmiths, etc , has this\nday been dissolved by mutual consent.\nAll claims against tho lato lirm, and nil\nbills duo to snme to bo paid by and to W.\nJ. Corbott, who will continue tnoold firm's\nbusinoss. W. J. CORBETT,\nTHOMAS KENNEDY.\nA LARGE LOT OP STOVES Just nr*\nrived per C. R, R. that must bo sold nt\nonoo ns I have not been able to procure a\nsuitable storo to show them.\nW. J. CORBETT,\noelSdlm In roar of Bank of B. C*\nNOTICE.\nmHE APOLLINARIS COMPANY (Ll-\nJL mlted) of London, England, having\nInformation that spurious waters have\nboon manufactured and Bold In this province as genuine \"Apolllnnrls\" waters in\ninfringement of the company's trade\nmark duly registered In Cnnndn;\nNotico Is hereby given that proceedings\n,.111 bo Instituted ngnlnst ull persons who\nnfter this dato shall manufacture or offer\nfor salo any liquid under tbo namo of\n\"Apolllnarfs,\" othor than put up by and\nbearing tho genuine trade marks of tho\n\u00C2\u00B0 TlfiYpOLLINARIS OOMPANY (Ld,)\nBV IJBAK B, JACKSON A HBI-MCKEN,\nTholr Solicitors.\nVictoria, B, 0., Uth Oct., 1889. docioms\nBoys Wanted,\n11 WO BOYS WANTED, from 12 to 10\n. yoars old.-Apply to tho Foreman of\nthe Factory, 11. 0. P. M. Co. dooltlto\nWANTED.\nA DULY OERTIFIC-VrED ENGINEER\nfor the steamer Fairy Queen. /\non board, nt Austin's wharf, or to\nTERHUNE, Now Westminstor.\nTS.\n[Vancouver Worldcopy],\n3sroa?jcB.\nALL PERSONS HAVING ACCOUNTS\nagainst the Celebration Committeo\nSSRHR&Sn'i them tomo not later than\nWEDNESDAY, a.'lril October, for on thnt\ndntei the affairs of tbo committee will be\nAnally wound np.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bv order,\n. ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E. S. T. MACKINTOSH,\ndool0t4 Seorelnry.\nPROVINCIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE.\nHIS HONOUR THE LTEUTENANT-\nGovornor has been pleased to mnko\ntho following appointments:\nOth October, 18S0.\nJohn Muwl-'ll, of Comox, Esquire, to bo\nn Justice of tho P'nico In ami for tho\nCounty of Nnnaimo, Province of Britisli\nColumbia,\n10th October, 1880.\nHenry Anderson, of Hot Springs, Esquire, to bo Mining Recorder for all Unit\nportion of the District of West Kootenay\nwhich lies to the oast of tho U7th meridian- vice James Delnnoy, I*.siiiilro, J, P.\ndaalOU\nNEW WESTMINSTER\nBUILDING SOCIETY.\nA GENERAL MEETING will ho hold\nin tho COURT HOUSE on\nSnturdny, 36tli Oct., 1880,\nAT 8 P. M.\nPinu-osE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Drawing for lho Thirteenth\nAppropriation of 81,000.\nMembers in arrears aro requested tn pay\nall duos nt tho Secretary's olllco. Bank\nBuilding, Mary stroot, beforo thnt dato, so\nna to lessen tho Secretary's work on thai\nevening.\nNow members will be admitted to the\nDrawlngon payment of entrance fee. Sit\nand four weeks' subscriptions. 82 por\nshare.\nByordor, WALTEUJ.WALKEU,\nSecretary.\nOotobcr 19,1880. docliH7\n%* J.\nPUPIL OF PROF. TOMS, ENGLAND\nAnd recently from Hie\nChicago Oratorio Society.\nPRINCIPAL IWESSOnKATZEIIDEU,\nWill bc happy to receive Pupils\nCORNER MARY ST. AHD PEEK'S AVE.\noolCsllsss\nHANK BUILDINGS,\nMary Street, New Westminster, B.C.\nITsss.ssriso'SE No. 55.]\n14 01AHE HOAD, HALIFAX, ENGLAND,\nCHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS AND AUDITORS,\nCONVEYANCERS, REAL ESTATE AND\nINSURANCE AGENTS,\nSTOCK AND SHARE BROKERS.\nLondon nnd Lancashire Fir. and\nBrltl.h Kmplre Life Insurance\nCompanies,\nKew Weatmlnster Building Uoolety,\nAccountant's Olllco, Uloa.se or H.W.\nCity Auslltor.; mess, 11*1,7 and 1888.\nADVISE CLIENTS IN Till' IIUYING\nANI) SELLING 01' REAL I'KOPEI*.\nTY IN THE OITY AND DISTRIOT,\nansl oilier sssssssetssry Ll'SlssssstsUossH,\n11,'svo Boverssl good fssvcsliii'ssslis oss llisslr\nIssiolcs, sssssl oil new siosiiers will ilo woll to\ncssll before slotsssj businoss elsewlsoro\nslw8doly\nWe are now opening a repeat line of\nCarpets and Linoleums, also, large invoices of White and Colored Blankets.\nOur stock of House Furnishings is the\nmost complete on the market notwithstanding the immense sales of the past\nmonth.\nSpecials this Week:\u00E2\u0080\u0094-Linen Crumb\nCloths, all. colors.\nTHE LEADING DRY GOODS HOUSE.\nMASONIC BIO{ K,\nSEW WESTMINSTER.\nOGLE, CAMPBELL & CO.\nAre now Showing their Complete Line of\nGents' Furnishings!\nTHE LATEST THINGS IN NEGLIGEE FLANNEL\nSHIRTS, PIQUE POINT SHIRTS, SMOKING JACKETS and DRESSING GOWNS, WHITE DRESS VESTS\nnnd the most complete and best assorted stock of TIES in Windsors, Derbys, Puffs, Knots, Bows, &c.\nUNDERWEAR has received our attention and in consequence our stock is right as to price, quality and make.\nGLOVES of all kinds. We are a;;cnts for a leading eastern\nmake.\nWe are showing the \"correct\" thing in Head-gear; a glance\nat our stock will prove this.\n\"Quartermain\" is the latest in Linen Collars.\nOGLE, CAMPBELL & CO.\nTbe Largest (Jlotlilns & Gents' Furnishers in New Westminster.\n\u00C2\u00AB*rNKXT DOOR BANK OF MONTREAL.-!\"-.\nR. J. ARMSTRONG,\nxz,__ij_.x.__z__t x-**r\nChoice Family Groceries!\nFINEST CREAMERY BUTTER A SPECIALTY.\nX.a*bxad.oz \"Elerrirag-e,\n*L\u00C2\u00A3ac]sezel, Salt Cod.,\nArnaoui's XTiic. XXaxne,\n^.rnaoui's \"CTnc. Bacon.\n*Flo*ur. \"Bran. Sliozts,\nstrHIQHBST PRICES PAID FOR FARM PRObDC\u00E2\u0084\u00A2,\ns-oMwiT 8oeulla*\u00C2\u00BBArmttrong Blook, Columbia Ct.\nJas-EllardsCo\nAre Now Opening\n-THEIR-\nFIRST INSTALMENT\n-OF-\nFALL MILLINERY\n=ALSO====\nA COMPLETE bIJME OF\nladies', Misses9 and Children's\nMantles, Cloaks and Jackets.\nLONDON HOUSE,\nCOLUMBIA STREET,\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0_ CRAKE,\nPractical Watchmaker, Manufacturing\nJeweler & Optician.\nOPPOSITE THE BANK OF MONTREAL.\nWATCHES, CLOCKS, JIWF.L8V, PLATED WARS, AG.\nBEST QUAMIVT. EASTERN PRICES,\nA full Ibe of HliectlteleS & EyC-GlasSCS iss steel, rubber, esss-cr arc -s,l. Robertson, Esq., Chasms;\nMontreal Harbor Commissioners, says: \"I uos-er found a Watchmaker svho di\nsrell for sne ns you did when in Montreal, asssl I am sorry you aro not here to-day\nslsvapl2to\n0 t-tlfD -eSfiS*- %_!<_? if. Si B RTsjfs^\nAGENTS B. LAURANOE'S SPECTACLES\n.hots\nissti.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2oil,\nof\nWholesale and Eetail Druggists\nNEXT COLONIAL HOTEL, NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nlUilt m IT HT.\nW\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 uui .lu-iuiiuuai-\nCor. Columbia and Mary Sis., NewWestminster.\nThe above named firm having fully decided to retire from the\nDry Goods Business and confine their attention to the Grocery\nBusiness for the future, now offer the whole of their\nChoice, New, Well Selected and Well Bought Stock of Dry\nGoods and Clothing at\nCost Prices for Cash.\nA rare oltatiuc in now offorotl to intending purchasers, ub tlio atock constat*, ol\ngoods just suited for tho present nnd toiuini* seiii-on. All fresh and In prima ordor\nand purchased in the host foreign markets at rook bottom prices,\nSale to commeucc on Monday, tho liiili Instant, and to continuo until tho wholo\nof tho stoek hns boen closed ont. HKMKMBKU TUK PLACE: Comer of Columbia aud Mary Streets.\nW. & G. WOLFENDEN.\nGROCERIES\nFor First-class Family Groceries and Provisions, go to\nSINCLAIR'S, - Oolumbia Street.\nNew-Goods arriving all the time, A nice lot of CHRISTIE S\nCRACKERS St BISCUITS just to hand. New SYRUPS, MOLASSES, etc., etc, Call and get prices. dwtc\nBON MARCHE.\nSPECIAL BARGAINS in New Dress\nGoods, Jackets, Paletots, Dolmanettes,\nand Ulsters.\nA Large Assortment of MEN'S 'SUITS\nfrom $7.00.\nWALKER & SHADWELL,\ndwsoiote COLUMBIA STREKT."@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_10_19"@en . "10.14288/1.0346963"@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 .