"4d6d3d31-0aaf-4521-89b3-85cc7e77d320"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "[The Nanaimo Mail]"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-12-01"@en . "1896-08-01"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/nanamail/items/1.0082456/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " -. ..... ,*.- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094.. \u00E2\u0080\u009E.,~^\u00C2\u00BB..\u00E2\u0080\u0094.\u00C2\u00BB HUBS.\nBy the test of public opinion\nand found \"all right.\"\nK Second Year\nAnd increased success of the\npeople's paper, the ,\nn NanaimoMaU^eSHft j:\naitnimo\n-iPri\nnting.\nIs our business, and the superiority of our work commends itself, win leas to prices\nit Is Profitable\nTo deal with us. All classes\nof wurk fur all classes of customers is our specialty.\nVOL. I2.-N0. 12.\nNANAIMO, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1800.\nWHOLE NO. 71.\nSow is the Time\nTO KILL\nALL INSECT PESTS\nInfesting Trees, Shrubs,) 0 0 0 0 0 0:_\n1'lowers and Vegetables.)\nYou want something that will do the business\neffectually, yet will not injure the most\ndelicate flower or plant.\nThe SAN JOSE TREE WASH\nDoes the trick. Try a tin.\nWe also have in stock Whale Oil Soap, used\nby all Fruit Growers.\nWe have a small stock of Fruit Jars\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pints, Quarts and\nHalf Gallons.\nDelta and Duncan's Creamery Butter and choice Manitoba\nCreamery and selected Dairy Butter in 5, 10, 20 and\n30 lb. tubs. Prices away down.\nSterilized Cream from the Delta Creamery, very choice, in\nPint Jars.\nWe have a full line of lhe best Groceries at the Bottom\nPrices. Quality Guaranteed.\nWe have just opened out a large consignment of Boots and\nShoes. Prices^iro right.\nW\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0> ,i i\nCall and See our Stock and Get our Figures. It will pity\nyou. ''\u00E2\u0096\u00A0< . ,.\nThe People's Store,\nVictoria\nCrescent.\nLADIES!\nto come and inspect our stock of\nLadies' I Children's Millinery\nOur stock this season we assure you is\ncomplete in every respect and bound\nto please. It comprises all the latest\nnovelties, etc. A very fine and well\nassorted stock of Ladies' Sailors and\nChildren's Galatea, Silk and Lace Hats.\nJ. S. STANNARD & CO.,\nCrescent Store,\nNanaimo, B. C.\nXV\no, PIANOS, ORGANS\n*\u00C2\u00BB SHEET MUSIC\nFletcher Bros.\nAT\nS^As wo are retiring from business, we will give every person\nwho is thinking of getting a Piano or an Organ a snap\nPOR ONE MONTH ONLY.\nOur entire stock must be sold by August lst.\nWIVES AND HOUSEKEEPERS WANTED\nTo know tlmt tlm.\nBoil mul I'uresil\nPreserves iiiattit )\nIN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nOKELL & MORRIS.\n, A ri? ttiono\n'prepared by\nWo only '.iink-i the bent. Try tbciii.\nI Blank Currant, Strawberry, Bod Currant\nI atul Gooseberry Preserves now ready.\nWhen you want a delicious dish of lea Cream,\ncall at MoKENZIE'S,\non V ctohia Obbsobnt,\nSTRAWBERRY,\nLEMON,\nPINEAPPLE\nand VANILLA\nAlways ou hand.\nIce. Ice.\nThe Union Brewing Co.,\nLimited Liability,\nDelivers ICE at resiliences. Order before twelve o'clock. Terms\nCash.\nUNION BnEWIKG CO.. limited Liability.\nW. E. Nonius, Sutt'ty.\nmako tux and wage equal to an honest\nliving wage of while labor, Puss another aet making a penal offense the\nlanding of either Chinese or Japanese\nof the labor itluss in or on the shores of\nI British Columbia. Further, that no\nA Writer Who Believes That 0,'****-M \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB Japanese laborer leaving\n,. ,,,,,, r. i | shall be ullowed to return under uny\nthe 0nl\u00C2\u00A3Real Remedy. consideration. The remedy may be\n__ severe, but the disease is dire and rap\nidly increasing.\"\nAnd Advocates the Taxation of All\nImmigrants With Capital,\nMr. Ernest J. Wood, who for four\nyears was a member of the Legislature of Manitoba, and more recently\nhas been Dominion Immigration\nAgent at Birmingham, Kngland,\n,, , has been in the Province for a few\nRobertson writes us follows to weeks, examining generally into lhe\ntbe Victoria Times: I Dominion offers for\nEmployers of Asiatic Labor,\nSevere Cases Require\nDrastic Remedies.\nII. J.\nWHERE THE 1VLAME LIES\nFor the Non-Enforcement of tbe\nSabbath Observance By-law.\nIhe .try of combines: We must have ; from the0kl Country. Mr, Wood's\nleap labor to build our railways und iden\u00E2\u0080\u0094whioh is undoubtedly thecor-\nfor our canneries uud other industries; ?) i rect one_is that ft, Ule \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 m .\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nrun by Asiatic labor. That a few may British Columbia, and Canada Ren-\nmake large profits the many shall stiller. erally for t,,at ni.lU requireB jm.\nIhe true definition ol cheap labor is de- J raigrants with at le,,gt a moc]erate\nmoraliisation, for morality and the mis- amount of capital, to assist in (leery of hunger exclude each other. Trace veloping the varied natural resour-\nMrs. A. Baldwin\nOffers her services to the Ladies of Nanainio as an EXPERIENCED NTJR8E,\nwho has bad large experience iu and\nthrough the Northwest Territories, Address\nNURSE BALDWIN,\n80 Nicol Street.\nDRESSMAKING\nLadies and Children's Sewing done\nneatly. Prices reasonable. Address\nMBS. De VILBISS,\n162 Nicol Street.\nit further, it destroys trade, further,\nmanufacturers; further, our farmers;\nfurther, all values in real property; all (y f,\u00E2\u0080\u009E. wo\nand everything suffers in a degree, but this idea,\nthe great burdens fall on those least with him, recently, from the Ol\nable to resist, the poor, The dill'erenti- j Country, a party of 120 agricultui-\natiou of white to Asiatic labor should j jsts, possessing an average of $ 1,500\nstrike the comprehension of all, yet in cash, each, with which to com\nces of the country, rather than the\nass who would come looking simple. In accordance with\nMr. Wood brought out\nhundreds are living apparently unconscious of the fact that the undermining\nof the white nice is going on rapidly.\nHaving a few dollars, the welfare of their\nposterity does nut trouble them. The\nvicious twaddje is talked that thev are\nEditor Mail: I noticed in your\ncontemporary of July 2'Jth a letter\ndealing with the actions of Mayor\nllavison at the Council meeting of\ntlte :27th inst. with regard to the\nExplosives By-law, and more especially with a statement that the\nFree l'ress falsely stated and wickedly perverted to suit the editor's\nown feelings and to injure Mr. Davison\u00E2\u0080\u0094 if that were in his power.\nI am not anxious to deal with the\ndistorted report of the Free Press\nor its correspondent on this point,\nhut in the latter's communication\nthere was a reference made to the\nSabbath observance by-law\u00E2\u0080\u0094evidently used with a bad intention\nand for the purpose of appealing to\nthe feelings of a certain class to help\nthe Free Press out, with whom the\neditor has nothingin common and is\nregarded by the same class as of the\nleast influence to help anything\npertaining to the moral value of\nthe Sabbath. 1 am afraid that the\npublic are not actpuainted with the\nfacts referred to, and as the Free\nPress critic has insinuated\u00E2\u0080\u0094yea,\nhas stated what is untrue of the\nease, an explanation is necessary.\nmence life in their new homes. \"Abstainer\" states that Mayor Da\nThese l'20imniigrants have all been ! vison told the police officers that\nsatisfactorily located in various this by-law could not be enforced,\nProvinces as. follows: 50 in Ontario,! and that this was the reason why\n-lOin Manitoba, 15 in the Northwest, it was not applied; while the facts\nand 15 in this Province.\nLodge Notices.\nTnkerman Lodge, No, SSS, Sons of St.\nGeorge.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Regular weekly meeting Is held\nin'HlHiert'e Hall, Wharf street, on Saturday evening at 8 o'clock. Visiting\nbrethren cordially invited to .attend.\nFiiki). Waosiakf, Sec.\nGod's children add should be freely admitted us equals. Every animal, like I Anti-Chinese Act Reference.\nj man, is formed of the same Bubetances, j li. Smith, secretary of the Miners'\ni yet we do not live like they do, or as- Protective Association, hits received\nsodlate with them. Others think that; from the Provincial Attorney-Gen-\nour superior skill in science and much- j oral an invitation for the Associa-\n' anics is our security, it is insane folly, ! tion to lie represented at the forth-\nfor what thc Asiatics lack in this they looming reference to the Supreme\nmake up tenfold in Imitation. If they Courl of the amendment lo the Coal: it was his intention to enforce the\nure not our superiors in positive they : Mines Regulation Act, prohibiting I by-law if the legal opinion was fa-\nare in negative force. Our labor cannot! the employment of Chinese under- vorable. So that the whole blame\nare\u00E2\u0080\u0094first, that the by-law was referred to the Police Magistrate for\na legal opinion as to whether or no\nil could be enforced. This is at\nleast two months ago, and no decision has yet been given. When the\nquestion was under discussion in\nthe Council, and was so agreed to,\nMayor Davison stated plainly that\nllriuii OT,vim hiul un IhioIh l\u00C2\u00AB wear,\nHo he came to Ximiiltitu tn buy liiin ii palrt\nI \"I'll tnti,' one pair nt thick uml ono pnir nl thin,\n1 11 lean Iiml WliltHeld's,\" says UrliinO'Lynll.\nI Ho hunted tiie stores all along the mnlu route,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Bays lie: '\"Tito riiclitono I've not vet found out,\nI want Wlilttlolrt\" I'll buy only from him,\nFor hu sells the oheapest,' says lirlan O'Lynn.\nHe stepped a little went nf Albert Btroot;\nI He Haw \\ tittiiel.r.- sign- sure 'im its ii trout:\n[ lu. opened the door iiml Oeorgo stood within\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\" I've found tt at lust,\" snys liriiiu O'Lynn.\npossibly compete with them and live ground in coal mines. The question\nlike human beings. Their officials havefto he decided is the constitutionali-\noiit-genei-aleil, out-manosuvered, nnil ty or unconstitutionality ofthe pro-\nHimld out-drive us from Chi mi, but .for- : vision prohibiting the employment\nInnately for us Ihey ure not lighters. of .Mongolians Underground'. The\n\"The cry throughout China by high invitation has been itecepted and\nund low is China for theChinese. llt'n- Mr.Chas. Wilson, barrister, of Ynn-\n| We showed him our calf boots, kid and cowhld\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 The OI108 we limine must -nn senilis nt thc siil\nl We've i,cnis,,t ait kindsfnun Qtiobocand llorlln\nJ \"Sure you've bonis forth\nO'Lynn\nisli Columbia, under the present regime,\nis ii.r combines und Asiatic cheap labor.\nThere ute six or seven times us imtuy\ncanneries ns there were eight years ngo,\nyet the cry is still ilm same, it is obvious thut this must stop. 1 reiterate\nniQlloii,\" soys lirlan that the teeming of our rivers with fish\n[nn trash-\neouver, will represent lhe Associ;\nof the matter is to be found in Magistrate Simpson, who, by the way\n(1 would not be surprised), may\nhave staled his legal opinion to the\nofficers without ever reporting such\nopinion to the Council, and yet\nMayor Davison is blamed for it.\nNobody knows this belter than the\nlion. The date of the argument will Free Psess, yet nobody is so ready\nbe set at the next\nMiner\nli tting of the Court\nMeeting;.\nThe following officers were elected at the meeting the M. it M. I..\n, He bought htm jits boots, whioh nf course wen Instead of being a blessing to our people : '*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A. held this afternoon: President,\nt'o\Ki.u\u00C2\u00AB \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB'*- \"' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2^'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'i*' labor, rendered an Wm. Jones; agent and secretary,\nI Buy only from Willtllotd,\" says Itrlilll O'Lynn actual source of injury, lit no pari of \"illpll Smith (re-elected); treas-\nIf (hero's a loak in the toe or sidoor your shoo, [the United Kingdom would such work l|1'er, James Bradley (re-elected).\nhe tolerated, lu China or Japan it\nwould not he allowed hy the natives for\nlirnrmi.-iii-T it, ii au ir a duy. That the canneries may realize\nWHITFIELD, WIG Shoe MlUl. huge profits is \u00E2\u0080\u009E,y earnest wish; that\nVictoiiia Chksckst, Xaxaimd. i they should do so at the cost of utterde-\n\"T .'hi im I morali/.alion of the white race is my ol\n.lust lake it ti) Whllllehl, Hint's nil ynu need do;\nlie will pen it or patch lust while ynu nre 111.\nAnd the cliurire seems like untliiuc,\" stlvs llriitn\nO'Lynn,\nless Directory\nlSAIHU.STKJiS.\nHamsters, and Solicitors.\nBAIIKKR & POTT\nCommercial street.\ni\ t, CANE, Barrister and Solicitor, Room 11,\nVs. Johnston lilock.\nMclNNKB .v McINNKS, Barristers, Room n,\nJohnston ltloek, I'ouimercial street,\njeetion. To stop forever uny further\nit ignition of Chinese, Japanese or\nother Asiatic cheap labor is the objeut of\nmy letter, not to cause ill feeling against\nthose here now.\n\" I fully realize Hint many benefitted\nand interested by Asiatie labor will condemn my writings: hut, iu addition to\nthe present general Welfare, the very\nto allow a false statement to go\nabroad than the editor of that\npaper; but a consolation remains\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nnamely, that everybody in Nanaimo is aware of this fact, and need\nonly ts be reminded of the truth of\nthe case to direct their judgment.\nMayor Davison would do the\nright thing on Monday night to\nMr. Smith was also elected delegate I demand the legal opinion on this\nto tbe Trades and Labor Council I question at once, and this would be\nwhich meets at Quebec in Septem- sufficient explanation for the whole\nher. A coinmittee was appointed thing and furnish evidence that the\nto make arrangements for the cele-iold crowd were only trying toprac-\nbrationof'Labor Day, the sentiment tice a little of their old methods,\nof the meeting being in favor of! such methods being to think a\nassisting in the celebration at Van-1 tbing a igst themselves and say,\nif not in words, certainly in actions,\nthat everybody must abide by it.\nAxti-I'lasta,\nCOUVer this year.\nOver 1,700 pensioners of the United States reside in Canada, l>(>4 in\nGreat Britian and 573 in Germany,\nIn no oilier foreign hinds do the\npensioneers of the United States\nnumber over ion. The total nura-\nVARWOOU & VOONQ, Barristers, comer of grave question arises, What ure we going hor nf i-ionninnnro is now rorlnnorl I,, invented an attaciiment for loon\n} I'lMiiuio^jiini.iasiious.reeis. _ __ ,uJowl|li ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E. MMfm1 ,fhey ^Jj grcjj. \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\u00E2\u0084\u00A2*\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 j?taaSeSSwaS \u00C2\u00BB** will undoubtedly revolution!\n__ iioTANisT. com pete with Asiatics, Farming offers v{][ steadily decrease. Last year h,ne weaving trade, and reduce t\nril HAUIIY, BqMnlC llrilltltisl, Wllllle'.il (res-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0l. cent. Try Hardy's rile Ointment.\nHKNT1STS.\nDii. MASON, Oculist Bxtraotlni a specialty,\nl.ns nnd Kther iiilnilulslered.\nOltlee, lldilr'cllnu's Block, Niinnlino.\nWJ. CURRY, II. I). S.,l(reell lllnek. lirst-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 clsss work Itualaliteed.\nIIUIIIKIISTS.\npRESOKNT PHARMACY, ll.w.i. A stk.uim in,\nt.i |,rn|,rietnrs. Victoria Crescent, lilspelisinu\nand family recipes a specialty,\nMCDOWELL. ATKINS, WATSON CO., Limited.\nMedical Hall, corner , omuicrcial ami llns-\ntiou slreels. Telephone |.;|..i.\nDYK WORKS.\nNANAIMO DVB WORKg.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dyeing, Cleaning\nand Repairing 11 Nicol street.\n0, OHahi.tom, Manager,\nFISH MAKKKT.\nG MARSH, Wholesale Healer In Fish ami\n. (iiiine, Bastion street. Nillllttmo.\nHOTELS.\nGRAND HOTEL-W. Stbki., Prnprielnr-Victoria Crescent.\nINTERNATIONAL HoTEL-PKTEK WEIOLE,\nJ. Proprietor. Victoria Orescent,\nIN8UHANCE AND FINANCIAL All UNT\nnsiirance Agent,\nH.\nWOLKE, Financial and\nJohnston Block.\nPAINTING, PAPER-HANGING,\nA NASH, House nml Sign Painter, Paper\n. Halieer. etc. Corner Albert and Milton\nstreets. P. O. box 308.\nno inducement, the sen is practically\nbarred for the want of vessels; in fact,\nwe have no opening for our children.\nWhen this il considered, is there uny\nlanguage too strong to condemn the government combine that bus aided and\nabetted this Invasion for years to forward their e\u00C2\u00AB n and thoir supporters' Interests, regardless of the publio ivealJ\n\"Thnt the Dominion Government will\nhelp us there can he no doubt, but before uskiiitf relief il ll\nduty to Inaugurate et\ndeinption. Raising the poll-tax to (500\nwould he a great check, but Ineffective\nin its Hoiking, Ion- half the sum Chinese would he Smuggled in at all risks:.\nThe white settlers will not give up the\ncountry to Asiatics; they will not acquiesce in the invasion, Coalition of\nthe races is utterly Impossible; miscegenation means degradation and shivery;\nthe greatest burdens falling on the females. There is but one jiourse only\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ntotal exclusion of Chinese, Japanese and\nall other Asiatic labor classes. This is\nour self-preBcrvation, the lirst law of\nnature.\n\"British North America Act, 1807:\n' Exclusive power of provincial legislation,' sec. 02, sub-sec. 2; 'direct taxu-\nAnother Labor-Destroying; Device.\nSan Francisco papers report that\na resident of California has recently\nn attaciiment for looms\nze\nthe\nover 80,000 died. The total sum <*\u00C2\u00B0*** \"f fahrics and clothes and place\npaid in pensions bv ibe Republic tne mme ot the inventor in the list\nFast year was $180,749,245.80. There!\"1* i*1'*''*1 **1P11 (,f -he \u00C2\u00ABge. It has\nare yet 21 pensioners of lhe war of l'*'('\" demonstrated^ that the use of\n181a, antl 8,826 pensioned widows\non account nf the war of 1812. Hut\nfor llieircivil war and attendant expenditure, the United States' national taxation would to-day be so\nlow as In render it a most desirable\nplace of residence for a man in or-\nthis attachment on looms will effect\na savinn of front lil) to 50 per cent\nHEAL ESTATE\u00E2\u0080\u0094INSURANCE.\nFOREMAN A HARDY, Real Estate Brokers,\nItnstlnii street.\nSECOND-HAND STORK.\nTAYLOR, Denier in all Hints nf Xew nml\nSeennil linn,1 Furniture, and Fancy Articles ul evcrv description.\nMasonic Building, Commercial street.\nD\niu lhe cost of weaving, lt docs lhe\nwork dreamed about and sought for\nduring the past history of the loom,\nFor 155 years tho weft or lilling\n[thread has been laid in the web by\nmeans nj shuttle and bobbin, nnd\niii, mechanism that will dispense\nCustoms Receipts. with thc bobbin and weave with a\nmini* are the customs returns continual supply of weft will he\nmonth of July: j bailed with delight by every weav-\n.'ollectud (4,528.80! Ing factory of the world. The at-\n.Miscellnneoiis 11)4.114 ] tuchment 'lately built and completed\nTotal (4,718,58 i hy lhe 1IulH ','0(,mi ft\"(,1 V'}hric \u00C2\u00B00m/\nIMPORTS.\ni manifestly our dinarycircumstances,\nir policy of re-\nPol\nfor tl\nDuty\nHoods imported free (21,700.00\nDutiable 15,208.00\nTotal\n.(86,808.00\npany accomplishes all this, and its\nimportance can therefore be readily\nunderstood. It is estimated that\nthe application of these attachments\nto looms will enable one man to do\nthe same work that now requires\nliftcen men. Already letters are\nSpirits .1 un; su l beginning to pour in upon thecom-\nMa.lt ............... 981 sa I pany from till parts of the East ast\nCigars 140.70\u00E2\u0080\u0094$1223.061 well as from Kngland, Ireland,\nFrance, Belgium, Germany and\nlu bind He venue Returns.\nThe returns for July were as follows: IJ\n0. Marker, of the Dominion dairy com-'\nmissioner's staff, has arrived at Chilli-\ntion within the province in order lo the j wack, where he will assist in getting the\nraising ef a revenue for provincial pur-: new creamery started. He will join Mr.\nposes.' I venture to BURgest that these Ruddlok nt Agassis In tho beginning of\npowers should be exercised, if nothing August, and from there they will visil ' known by the cures it bus Diode. His\nbetter be devised. I'ass tin uol taxing j the various funning districts 'of the I'm- \"''' one Trua Blood Purlfla1''\nall employers of Chinese or Japanese vlnee with a travelling dairy similar to\nlabor In a sufficient sum per day, week, that which was in tiiis Province last\nmonth or year, or any portion thereof to I year. 1K.:s. 2,,,\n| other other countries\nMt'.KiT Wins and (hut is why Mood's\nSarsaparilla holds theabidingconfidence\nof the public, Hood's Sarsaparilla is\nHood's l'n.i.s cute liver ills, oonstlpa-\nt'o i, jaundice, sick headache, bilious- GbelRana^moflfoaUl\nruiatsiimi evkuy\nTHliKSDAY AND SATURDAY\nBY IHE\nMAIL PUBLISHING COMPANY\nK 0. Beard, Editor and Manager.\nBastion Street. Nanainio. B. C.\nSDBSCBIPTION KATES.\nBy mail\u00E2\u0080\u0094one year E.oo\nSix months l.ste\nThree months... *^e\nDelivered bv earner y5e. per mouth\nSATURDAY AUGUST 1, 18%\nChinese Restriction.\nThe meeting called for next Wednesday evening should be a large\nand representative one of the people of this district, to the end that\nwhatever action is taken receive the\nendorsement of all classes alike and\nby unanimity give force to the desires of the people. The meetings\nheld in Vancouver were large and\nenthusiastic, as also unanimous in\nthe means suggested to bring about\nthe desired relief, and it should not\nbe said that Naniiimo, which is affected to as great, if not gre iter extent than thc Mainland, lacks enthusiasm or numbers in supporting\nthe movement so well inaugurated\nin Vancouver. Since the agitation\ncommenced in British Columbia the\nlabor organizations and people affected by coolie labor throughout the\nDominion have become aroused to\na sense of their duty and the importance of taking action toward securing effective protection for Canadian labor; and this province, which\nis affected more than any other,\nshould send up a petition signed by\nsuch numbers that the measure of j\nrelief prayed for could not reasonably lie denied, in view of the fact\nthat the Premier has promised to\ncomply with the wishes of the west-\ncm ,,..,,..I.. ;\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00C2\u00BB*l- _ . ti . .1. I \" ,lc\" \u00C2\u00BB' ls I'eiueiiiuereu mu\nem people in this resDect. That the w 1 - . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - n 1\nmeans of relief sought wil be endow-1 f 'Ti P?PktT \u00C2\u00B0 ^\"i,8, a\ned by the labor element o otherpro- tnfle leS8 U*an a ^\"A? %? rhole\u00C2\u00BB\nvin,.L \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E nc\u00E2\u0080\u009E..^.j \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i e ii 0I'e can imagine the faith that must\nmavL mtnT 'in,.PTf,\u00C2\u00B0f WblCl! \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB P!^d \"> Mr. Laurier, whoa*\nS\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 nf ?. T th,atTl a ,eCen P\"mier ofthe Dominion commands\nSrT', ?f \u00C2\u00B0rt0lV'lde9anaH)e support of the majority of\nLabor Council a motion was unan- English-speaking Protestants. But\nThe Leaders.\nThe best portraits we have yet\nseen of the two premiers, past and\npresent, appears in a recent issue of\nthe Illustrated American. They are\nboth clean-cut and correct, and ac\ncompanying them is a pen picture\ndescription, which is also clean-cut\nand correct, to wit:\n\"The late Sir John A. Macdonald\nonce remarked to a friend: 'I can\ntrust Laurier without the slightest\nfear; he is incapable of breaking his\nword even if he wished to do so.' It\nis not often that one political opponent will so speak of another, but\nthe great Conservative leader's tribute is no more than Mr. Laurier\ndeserves.\n\"A shining example of honesty,\nvirtue and straightforwardness, he is\nin every respect fitted to succeed to\nthe premiership which the electorate of the Dominion of Canada so\nenthusiastically bestowed upon him\nat the recent general elections.\n\"For a continuous period of eighteen years he fought the thankless\nbattle of opposition against a powerful government, struggling manfully in the face of tremendous odds\nand ever watchful in the interests\nof his country. Most men would\nhave wearied of this, and retired to\nprivate life filled with bitterness\nand disappointment; but Mr. Laurier ever presented a cheerful front,\nand by 60 doing kept up the spirits\nof his followers.\n\"As an orator, the new Premier is\nwithout a peer in the Dominion. In\nhis private personality he is as he\nlooks, retined,courteous, and always\nthe gallant gentleman. In the heat\nof a debate he has never been known\nto forget himself, parrying the\ncoarsest thrusts with sarcasm well\nchosen if severe.\n\"When it is remembered that the\nimously adopted condemning the\npresent system of Chinese immigration and favoring theincrease of the\nimpost from *50 to $500, in confor\nin this respect the man's worth is\nrecognized, ln official as well as\nprivate life he is a Canadian in the\nbroadest sense of the word. Wilh\n,..,:,.. -.1 ., ... ', _ oiwiuirK, pcunc ui nil. mini. itji.ii\nrlyfZ 1\" PC\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Um t0be f,)rw\"r- him it is not a case of race,religion\nded from this province.\nSimilar action was taken by the\nOttawa Trades and Labor Council\nat a meeting held last week, when\nthe following resolution was passed\nwithout >*. dissenting voice: \"That\nor province first, but simply Canada\nas a whole. To sum him up briefly,\nit can be said that he is a true patriot.\n\" As Mr. Laurier is the man of\nthe present, Sir Charles Tupper is\nin the opinion of this meeting, it is the man of the pa,t. Associated\ndesirable that some action betaken\nto bring tbe question of Chinese immigration to the notice of the Federal Government, and that this\nmeeting instruct the secretary to\nwrite the British Columbia Trade\nCouncils, assuring them of our\nhearty sympathy, andourwilliness\nto co-operate with them in their\nefforts to rid their Province of such\nundesirable citizens.\"\nDonald bam ier Mclniies.\nW. W. B. Mclnnes, the newly-\nelected member for Nanaimo, B. C,\nwho, with his wife, has been here\nfor some weeks, has been made u\nhappy father since his arrival, says\nthe Ottawa correspondent of the\nToronto Globe. The source of his\njoy is a boy, born July 17th, who\nis no doubt a born politician. It is\nproposed to call him Donald Laurier\nMclnnes. Mr. Mclnnes was said\nto be the youngest member of the\nnew House of Commons, but he is\noutdone in this capacity by Mr.\nEthier, of Two Mountains, who is\n23. Mr. Mclnnes is 25. Mr. Logan,\nof Cumberland, N. S., ranks third.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\t\nA New York despatch of July 25th\nsays: In an interview last night Sir\nMackenzie Bowell, who has just returned from London,said: \"The proposed cable will run, if constructed,\nfrom British Columbia to Australia.\nHis most necessary. The feasibility,\npracticability and desirability of\nsuch a system have already been\nestablished, and about the only\nthing the conference will determine\nis the mode of management. What\nwe want to find out is whether it\nshould besulrsidized by the Government or owned by tho Government.\nThat will lie decided ut the conference to tie held in the latter part of\nOctober.\"\nThe French Government will\nissue a decree, to go into effect Aug.\n1, concurrently with the new German act, raising the duty from 7\nfrancs to 12J francs upon refined\nsugars.\n \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\t\nPremier Laurier and all the Cabinet ministers have been re-elected\nby acclamation. Aug. 5 has been\nfixed for the big celebration in honor\nof the Premier at Ottawa.\n \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\t\nThe Rothschilds have completed a\ndeal for the purchase of a gold-mining property in Mexico. Thereport-\ned price is $5,000,000.\n -\u00C2\u00BB>\u00C2\u00BB\t\nSir John Evans has accepted the\nPresidency of the British Association, which meets in Toronto next\nyear.\nThe wheat crop of Manitoba is\nvariously estimated at from 12,000,-\n000 to 30,000,000 bushels.\nwith his old chieftain, Sir John A.\nMacdonald, he had grown accustomed to victory, and the defeat\ncoming at this late day, when for\nthe first time he was forced to de-l\npend upon his individual talents,!\nwill be hard on him. Comfortably ',\nensconced in his office of High Com- '<\nmissioner, it was thought that Sir\nCharles was permanently out oi\nactive politics. But when the dissensions in the Cabinet reached un\nacute stage in January last he hied\nhim to the scene of the trouble, and\nwhile deposing Sir Mackenzie Bowell from the active premiership, endeavored u> unite the antagonistic\nelements of the party. A short time\nlater he was called upon to assume\nin name that which for some time\npast had been bis in practice, and\nfrom then until June 23 he held tbe\ntitle of Premier. His reign was the\nbriefest in the history of Canada,\ncovering a period of but eight weeks.\n\"The aged baronet\u00E2\u0080\u0094for he is now\nfive years over the allotted three\nscore and ten-is still, as he always\nhas been, a great fighter, and tu accomplish an object will overcome\ntremendous obstacles, lt is doubtless owing to his great pluck and\nperseverance that he has succeeded\nin his political career. As one of\nthe fathers of confederation and Sir\nJohn A. Macdonald's successor, he\nwas for many years in the ascendant, and probably did us well in\nthe recent contest as any of his followers would have done, though his\negotism and Czar-like uutocrucy induced many old-time Conservatives\nlo secede from his party.\n\"Sir Charles is not in any sense\nan orator, although he speaks with\nforce and impresses an audience\nwith his determination. It is as a\nstump-speaker that he is at his besl.\nIn 1887 he was appointed one of\nHer Majesty's plenipotentiaries to\nthe Fisheries' Conference aft Washington, and it was in recognition of\nthe services there rendered and his\nsubsequent success ih carrying the\nbill for the ratification of the treaty\nthrough the Canadian House of\nCommons that he was created a\nbaronet.\"\n \u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\t\nThe story goes that a deputy returning officer at Winnipeg took to\nhis booth in his coat pocket 200\nballots marked in advance for the\nConservative candidate, as a guarantee of good faith, an indubitable\nproof of industry, and a convincing\nevidence of loyalty to the party.\n ***\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\t\nIt is announoed that C. P. Huntington, of the Southern Pacific Rail-\nCompany, has bought a share in ihe\nOregon Railway and Navigation\nCompany, which has just been\nturned over by the Federal receivers\nto a newly organized company.\n^fe\nMINING BROKER\nw\nI WAST\n20 MEN\nTO JOIN ME IN A\nining Deal\nCOST\n$100 Each Only\nPAYABLE\n$25 Down\n25 in 1 Month\n25 in 2 Months\n25 in 3 Months\nI would do my best to\nmake this a big success.\nOall and see me.\nTHOMAS KITCHIN,\nSEND YOUR CHILDREN TO US.\nIf you do, it'll make a great difference\nwith the youngsters and a still greater\ndirTerentte with you. They'll be better\nsbuil than tboy possibly could be elsewhere nnd ut a considerably less cost.\nWhen you can save monev by buying\nbetter goods, youv'e struck a good imitation of a bonanza. That's what you'll\nalways lind in our stock\u00E2\u0080\u0094the best \"juvenile footwear in Niuiuimo. You can't\nbeat either our gooits or prices, You\nmight tis well try to beat a drum with a\nfeather.\nORR & RENDELL.\nThe Most Complete Stock\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094OF\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nGents'\nFurnishings\nIN THE CITY, AT\nJas. McGregor's\nVictoria Crescent.\nBroken Bicycles\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094SHOULD BE\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRepaired in Good Shape\nto avoid danger of accidents.\nRepairing Bikes a Specialty\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094AT\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nR. J. WENBOEFS.\nSee the HYSLOP.\nRevier House\nSKINNER STREET,\nMRS. JAS, HAWKING, (late of the\nTemperance House) desires to express Iter thanks to the public for\nformer patronage, and now begs to\nstiitii that the Revier House has\nbeen comfortably arranged for the\naccommodation of boarders, steady\nor transient. Single or double rooms\nwith hot or cold water baths, and\nelectric light in each room. Everything strictly Brst-class and charges\nmoderate. Remember the house, a\nhalf-minute's walk from the old\nstand mirth.\nPIONEER\nCarbonating and Bottling\nWORKS.\nMITCHELL & HUMMING, Proprietors.\nManufacturers of lemonade, Ginger Ale, Sar-\nsaparllla, Cillers, Kte.\nTRY OUR GINGER BEER.\nAll Orders Promptly Attended To.\nTelephone 20. p. o. Box 80.\nNotice to Ladies.\nI AM AGENT for Nanaimo and Dis-\ntrii-ts for thc New and Perfect Carter's\nTailors' System. This system is up to\ndate; a perfect ladies' system; is without a rival and easy to learn; is noted\nfor its graceful lines and elegant forms;\nit is not an experiment but a development, lean also teach how to use this\nsystem, and also all kinds of Dressmaking executed in first-class style. Prices\nto suit the times. Address,\nMargaret M. Macdonald,\nNo. 09 Haliburton Street,\nD. S. Macdonald's Store.\nTHE BEST \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nis the CHEAPEST\nRE-OPENING\nThe Globe Hotel\nFRONT STREET,\nHas been renovated und re-furnished,\nand is now conducted as a lirst-class\nhotel.\nMb. Albert Rauoh can bo found us\nmixologist,\nSuperior accommodation is provided\nfor the public.\nThe Nanaimo Bakery Excels\nSMAKT &~TH0RNE\u00C2\u00BB,\nThe Popular Bakers.\n4\rlii)gtoi) H\u00C2\u00B0teL\nMR. J. A. THOMPSON\nSaving completed the erection 'if the Arlington\nHotel at NANOOSK HAY, this handsome nml\ncommodious hotel is now prepared to receive\numl comfortably entertain travelers and others.\nTHE CUISINE\nIk presided over by Mrs, Thompson, nml the\nTable d'Hote constantly provided with all the\ndeiw-iicirs nf the Reason. Combined with the\nelegant furnished apartments, the visitor finds\nthe surroundings of the most pleasant description.\nPeople who Appreciate \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPURE DRUGS\nHave thelrpresorlptlons dispensed at\nPIMBURTS DRUG STORE.\nTholr Prlcei me Right. Telephone .1.\nFor a Cool Drink\n{ ObAMPAQMB Cidkii\n) Soiia Watbr\nMil.lt Al.i:\nIISAI'.Mtll.l.A\nAsk tor -:\nLawrences I jjj\nEUREKA SODA WORKS,\n.MllllilliirtiircriifTi.iiitii'rtltH'c Ilritilts, ByrurjifAo,\nDelivered free to nil purl* of city mul vicinity.\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" I'miiipt attention paltl toRlilbptngordon,\nTelephone8*4. P.O.Box70. nanaimo.\nICE CREAM\nWill be in season after\nSunday, and you should\nnut fail to net the richest and best flavored, for\nwhich you must call at\nExcelsior Bakery.\n\"CRITERION\"\nRestaurant and Chop House\nCommercial Street.\nOysters in every stylo.\nMeals, 25c. and upwards.\nGood Beds, 25c. and upwards.\nSpring Chicken always on hand.\nTry Pkilpott's Tomato Catsup\n25c. and 50c. per Bottle.\nWe Never Sleep. Open Day and Night.\nCity Market\nHEMANS & WAMSLEY\nWholesale and Retail Batchers\nCOMMERCIAL STREET\nT. O. Box 227 Telephone 7-8\nEISH AND GAME.\nMarket, Bastion Street.\nSteamers and Shippin*? miiiplicil on short notice\nat Wholer-nlc Prlren.\nlirstciasM Accommodation. Fire-proof building\nTerms: $1.00 Per Day and Upwards.\nThe Doon Hotel,\nJAS. BENNETT, Proprietor.\nCommercial St., Nanainio, B. C.\nJ IMS'l' V ALU HI IN\nTHOTOS\n()uban Cigar Factory.\nOur Cigars are made of the Choicest Havana\nTobaoooa. Our famous\nCuban Blossom \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>\nBlack Diamond\nArc caller! for everywhere, anil are auperlor to\nnny imported ciirar. Maile by Union Labor.\nM. J. BOOTH, Wharf Street.\nC. C. McKENZIE,\nLand Agent and Conveyancer,\nAND ACCOUNTANT.\nOFFICE*. FRONT 8TREET, NANAIMO.\nTown Lot. ami Farms for Hale. Money to Loan\nou MortiiHiic at low rates,\nAgent for the United Fire Insurance Company\nul Muni hislrr, Kimlmnl.\nJOS. M. BROWN, Watchmaker.\nof-^atofte. Demagnetized simrtNotice\nBy SPECIAL MACHINERY on the Promliei.\nJohnston's Block, Nanaimo.\nAT BROOKS', 50 ymom&W\nFlue nml Complicated Watohea and Clock!\nCarefully Cleaned and Repaired\nFine CYCLOM KTF.llS, for Bicycles, tn Stock.\nCollNKR Council AND CltAPKL StIIKETB. Excursion to This Province by\nEastern Business Men.\n\"he New Minister of Public Works\nPlaying: Havoc With Political\nPets of the Late Regime.\nDeath of John Clarke.\nIpttawa, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Confirmation of.the\nsport that Sir Donuld Smith will re-\nliin the high coiuiuissioncrship was revived here to-day. Hon. J. I. Tarte\ns present at the conference which Sir\n'.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Anald held with the premier lust even-\niig. Your correspondent received his\n\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0it'ormutioii officially this u irning, the\nlifonuuut laying emphasis ou the state-\niieut that the arrangement was just for\nlie present.\nThe question of doing away with the\nIrintiug bureau has not even been euu-\nJereil up to the present time.\n'Dominion Inspector of Insurance Fitz-\nI'ruUl unticipates nu serious results to\n'nerlcnn Insurance companies doiuK\ni'jslnes8 in Cunnda from the possinle\n**'.'.option of a free silver policy in the\nlutes. It is believed the American\nlotupunics will take steps to assure po.\u00C2\u00BB-\n[>y holders in the Dominion that their\n\"olieies will be puid in lawful funds of\nI' -uiada.\nSir Chillies Tupper, Bart., lias left for\ni.'oronto. He will consult with the\nliuity leaders there regarding tbe bye-\n^lcctiou campaign iu Ontario.\nThe C. P. It. commenced work yesterday ou the Vaudreitil and Ottawa\n\"ine.\nDr. Selwyn. ex-director of the geolo-\ni icnl survey, who has just returned from\n[ltritisli Columbia, is enthusiastic over\n[the mineral prospects of tluit province\nSir Mackenzie Bowell, who was a\n\"^iissengcr on the steamship i.ucnuin,\nocoetled direct to his home in Belle-\n| ille. He is in excellent health.\nThe appointment of Mr. Bechnrd to\nBile senate is- gazetted.\n. Toronto, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094John Clarke, Lib-\nJ'.al member-elect for North Grey, died\nl.t his home near Oweu Sound yester-\nIIny. He was a man of magnificent\nphysique, and his death wus altogether\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0lluoked-for.\nWinnipeg, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Free Press\nI ays: \"Mr. Joseph Martin had lengthy\nInterviews with Premier Greenway and\ntion, Clifford Sifton yesterday at he\n\"jvernment buildings. Some of Mr.\n.urtin's friends state thnt if he cau nr-\n1 Inge a settlement of the school question with the local government setisfac-\nory to Premier Laurier and his eiiliinct\nlie will be appointed miuister of the inferior.\"\nchurch nnd convent. Six hoiiseB were\nreduced to ashes, also a number ot\nbarns nnd outhouses with their contents\nThe Church of St. Nicholas had a narrow escape, also the convent.\nGuelph, July 28.--Joseph Rmbree, 'n\njail at this town charged with criminal\ndeduction, strangled himself during tbe\nnight.\nMontreal. fuly 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094C. A. ltoblllard\nbus been appointed acting superinten-\ndeut of the Ottawa division of the Uau-\nadiau Pacific, to replace H. B. Spencer,\nresigned. Mr. Robillard was formerly\nchief dispatcher nt Ottawa.\nHalifax. July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mate Braiu and\ncrew of the bark Herbert Fullei have\nb\"en taken to Boston, wher? the investigation of 'he murders of the captain\nand the others will he continued.\nKingston, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Five of the township farmers united nnd swept awav\nthe toll gates of the third concession,\nbetween Cntaruqul and Perth, wnicc\nthey claimed were unjust.\nWinnipeg, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Five toll gait\nhouses in Essex county have been burned A widow in charge was giveu 24\nhours to get out. and she did so.\nCohonrg, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Lewis Taylor,\ncharged with attempting to murder his\nwife, bus surrendered, nfter hiding in\nthe woods four days without food.\nToronto, July 28,-Thc Globe's Ottawa correspondent says there are lu\n..e new house of commons 03 lawyers,\ni'd farmers, 2(1 merchants, 21 physic-\nLuis, 19 gentlemen, 12 manufacturers,\nJO journalists, 0 mill owners. 3 contractors, 3 real estate meu, 2 surveyors,\n|1 veterinary surgeon, 1 township clerk,\ndistillers. 1 financial agent, 1 insur-\ntence ma nager, 1 banker, 1 ship owner,\n[t rancher, 1 oil refiner. 1 print r. 1 ilvil\nengineer. The printing bureau will not\nabolished. The government Is credited with many intentions. They were\nven said to be considering the Pacific\nIcnhle scheme, n matter that is merely on\npaper, Sir Mackenzie Bowell bus re-\n! urni'd and his trip was a vain thing\nnless he went to get out of the goner-\n1*11 elections. The cleaning up of twenty\napartments, reformation of the tariff.\nnmigrtilion, extension of trade, development of the Northwest, redistribution\nlof constituencies, the subject of thc\n[franchise, reform of the senate, settle-\nInient of the school question\u00E2\u0080\u0094nre all\nnatters pressing for attention nud suftl-\n-ient in themselves to occupy the time\nf the government without the stnto-\nbnent thnt the ministry was busying it-\nfaolf with laying a cable under the Pn-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2illc ocean.\nQuebec, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cardinal Tascher-\nenu's condition changed for the worse\nyesterdny afternoon, his physicians being hastily summoned to his bedside.\nHis excessive weaknes renders his condition alarming. His eminence is suffering from ailments common to old uge,\nand his strength fails him entirely. The\ndoctors term the malady \"decrepitude.\"\nIt has been au open secret for some time\nthat he was suffering from both mental\nand physical decay. His helplessness\nand infirmities have weighed upon the\nvenerable prelate and his private physician says the remaining days of his life\nare numbered. Last night the cardinal\nwas a little better, but his pulse is very\nfeeble nnd unsettled.\nGenerally Approved.\nSpecial Committee Will Be Appointed\nto Investigate the Ailiiiinstra-\ntion of Rhodesia\u00E2\u0080\u0094Rhodes\nan Object of Scorn.\nOttawa, July 20.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hon. ,1. 1. Tarte\nleft for Montreal to-day. Before leaving he told your correspondent that 73\nemployes had been dismissed from the\ngovernmenl workshops nt Surel. Tuey\nnre dismissed on the report of the chief\nofficer of the department at Sorel, who\nreported that they had been taken on\nprincipally during the lasl election nml\nthere was no work for them. They\nwere cltioHy political friends of lies-\njardlus, who were engaged by the election coinmittee without nny authority\nfrom the department nt Ottnwn. There\nare in nil nbout 140 employees attached\nlo the department of public works for\nwhom there is actually nothing to do.\nThey will have to go. no matter wba*\ntheir political viows are. but he will act\non reports of his chief responsible olP-\ncers, who nre all Conservatives.\nChas. Ledne, paymaster for thc public works department in Ottawa river\nworks, wns notified to-dny that his services would not be lequired nfter the\n\"1st inst., us the position is abolished.\n(t was created some \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2(iirs ago to give\nLednc n job. It is a saving of 161,200\nper year. The work will be done now\nby .in accountant. Thne are eight other\nofficers of the department whose services wiil be dis-iensed wiil* at the end\nof the month.\nIf local men are satisfied Hon. W.\nPnterson will run in Nirth tirey.\n'llie only ii.inister In town to-day is\nSenator Scott.\nA party of 180 Auatrinns are en route\nfor the colony of their compatriots near\nl-liliiuiiit.iii. This eolci.y was established\na year ago, and is said to be doing well.\nAt present it numbers 000 people. The\nuowooihors possess a fair amount of\nin .ney for the purchase ot stock nujl\nImpli ments.\nMontreal. July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A special cable\nI'rom London sa.vs: \"Hon. Jos. Chniiiber-\n'ain has secured the sanction of the cob-\nlinet to appoint Canadian, South African\nInd Australasia judges to the judicial\nI committee of the privy council. The\nIf dim? chief justice is already appointed.\nFflie government here are waiting to\nl> receive Premier Lnnrier's nomination of\n, a Canadian judge. It is suggested that\njit would he fitting for Hon. Kdwnrd\nI Blake's service to the cause of Liberal-\nsra which Is now victorious, to be re-\nJcognizod by his selection,\nWinnipeg. July 28\u00E2\u0080\u0094Oscar Ilollinger,\n1 the IB year old son of Conductor Hol-\nllnger, who hnd his arm and leg cut off\n' by being run over with a train, died\nihis morning nt the general hospital.\nToronto, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The excursion tor\nmembers of the board of trade to British Columbia has been arranged, 'ille\nkdate Is August 10 nnd the fare will \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMOO to ltevelstoke and return. If n\nlarge number of business men take Hit*\n( cau'age of the opportunity tn insis'ct\nthe Brltslh Columbia gold fields, the\nfare will be reduced.\nHurry Syiuons, Q.C., of Calgary, M\ni here on his way home from u visit to\nEngland in connection with mining mat-\nters in Brltlfh Columbia: Mr. Symotis\ns.ns British capitalists arc beginning 10\ntake great Interest in the mines of British Columbia nnd In the Itniny Hiver\ndistrict. Mining developments nre likely\nto receive a boom in consequence.\nGeorge Foster wns found dead in bis\nroom, at a Shuter street boarding ho**\".-\non Sunday, and it wns proved thnt he\nhnd tnken morphine, presumably dell\nberately, as he had attempted to tnke\nhis life before. He was fonuely a\nnewspaper i.invasser, bttt was hopelessly consumptive, out of work aud Ind\nbeen veiy despondent lately.\nThe C.l'.R. h.ive arranged to open,to\nthe (Qu'Appclle, Long Lake & Saskatchewan railway from August for five\nyears. This is the Prince Albert line\nOwen Sound. July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fire Injured\nYniistoiic & Co.'s dry goods establishment to the extent of $8,000 on Sntur-\ndny.\nQuebec. July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A fire occurred a*\nSt Nicholas last night, which threnten\ned the whole village, Including the\nHalifax, July 211.\u00E2\u0080\u0094At the Conservative convention iu Kcntville Douglas ti.\nWodowortl was uomiiinted to oppose\nHon. Mr. Borden, the minister of militia.\nToronto. July 20.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The Globe says in\nreference to the statement by Tupper\nhere yesterdny, in his interview, thnt he\nwould huve swept the country if it hnd\nnot been for the school question: \"We\nmay remark that liefore the positions\nwere reversed the Conservatives took a\nvery different view of the responsibility of the lender of the opposition and\nwere nlways scolding Laurier because\nhe was uot sufficiently explicit in his declarations of his policy on the school\nquestion.\"\nOn Tapper's claiming as the Tory policy the Liberals' determination to develop the west, the (Jlola' says: \"The\nwisdom of certain nets of C nservntives\nrelating to the west is serioucly question\ned by the Liberals, and the best justifi-\neution of their criticism is found in the\nfuel Uml the problem of the rapid Settlement uf the west is still unsolved.\"\nThe (ilohe also says that J. D. Eil-\ngar, who, it Is commonly understood,\nlie elected Speaker when parliament\nmeets, left yesterday for a camping trip\nou the north shore of Lake Superior, lt\nis expected he will be nwny uutil the\nopening of the house.\nSir Oliver Mowat left Toronto this\nmorning to take up his resideiiee in\nMontreal. He travelled on the government car Cumberland, attached to\nthe Ottawa express.\nWhen Sir Charles Tupper arrived in\nToronto from Ottawa he travelled as\nan ordinary passenger ill the usual first\nclass coach, A little over n month ago\nSir Charles was rolling around the coun-\niry in the Cumberland, which, it happens, is named after Sir Charles' constituency in Nova Scotia.\nA representative of the Land Security company admitted to-dny thnt to\nncres of their land in the northwest part\nof the city has lieen bonded by n syndicate which is horning for rock salt.\nPresident Mackenzie, of the Toronto\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2treat railway, returned from England n\nfew days ngo and said today be hnd\nplans in progress, not only to get control\nof the Birmingham street railway system for a syndicate, but to buy lip nil\nthe street railways In Lon lon, England;\neutly unmoved when the verdict had\n| been reudeied, and Sir Edward Clarke\nasked the court for permission to move\n| for a new trial. The judges afterwards\ni retired for consultation, and (luring\ntheir absence Sir Edward Clarke said\nthat in view >f the verdict rendered the\ndefendants t- fused to instruct for a new\nSentence OI Transvaal Raiders j trial and expressed a desire to have the\ncase settled.\nLord Russell Baid the verdict was\ngiren on evidence which no reasonable\nman would be able to disregard. All\nthe defendants, he added, were men ut\nposition and intelligence, holding positions under the Queen, and their crime\nhud the gruvist consequences, including\ndeath to some and injury to others,\nwhile the future consequences of their\ncrime no one was yet able to forsee.\nContinuing, the Lord Chief Justice said\nIhat although they all took part in the\nraid the court must distinguish between\nthem in ibe punishment awarded tor\ntheir guilt. His Lordship then passed\nsentence upon the prisoners. Dr. Jameson was sentenced to fifteen months'\nImprisonment without labor. .Major Sir\nJohn \"tVillouirhliv was sentenced to ten\nmouths' imprisonment, and Capt. lleniy\nV. Coventry (son of Ihe Earl of Coventry), Col. B. Gray and Col. H. F. White\nwere sentenced to five mouths' imprison\nment.\nDr. Jnmeron, who had hitherto hung\ndown his head, looked up rigidly when\nfenterct had been passed, and ihe oilier\ndefendant-) looked hard at the\nChief Justice. Very seen after the sen-\nti nring formalities had men completed\nihe wardens of Hollow ay prison appeared and took up llifir position on each\nside of the prisoners. This was die\nbitterest moment nf ali for the raiders,\nas up to this time thev hud been treated\nwith the greatist courtesy, and had, in\nfact, been mule heroes of to a cerin'r.\nextent. But when the elbows of tha\nprison wardens touched ihose of tho\nrqlders there was a marked clie.nire lu\nthe demeanor of the latter. They seem\ned to realize, probably for tbe first time,\nHint the strong arm of lnw had knocked all the romance out of the Transvaal\nfiasco, and that they were convicts In\nthe eyes of the law and in the eyes ot\nscclfety, to say nothing of the military\nauthentic.-- who. it is believed, must now\ntake aC-lon looking to the depriving the\nprisoners of their commissions in the\nBritish army.\nThen was ena.'tf 1 the lust chapter in\nthe trial of Dr. \"Jim'' and his associates. The court wns ordered to oe\ncleared, the audience, whispering gloom\nlv, \"How severe,\" etc., filed slowly into\nthc streets, the prisoners were escorted\nto the Hollowny prison, and so ended\nthe trial of the Transvaal raiders.\nStrange to add, there wns absolutely no\ndemonstration in the court room wheu\nthe prisoners were taken away nor on\nthe outside of it when they were escorted to the jail. When hut a tew\nmon'hs ago Dr. Jameson nnd his troopers arrived in London as the heroes ot\nthe hour, -hey were loudly cheered m\nthe streets nnd everywhere ns men win\nhad fought gamely fcr their country.\nBut all this hnd changed. The revelations made nt Johannesburg after the\ncapture of the freebooters by the Boers\nand subsequent publications of the letters and telegrams at Pretoria, soon\nlowered Dr. Jameson and his friends in\nihe estimation of the public when it wns\nestablished beyond t-iiy reasonable\ndoubt that the Jameson expedition wis\nbadly organized, badly supplied with\nprovisions and ammunition, badly officered, badly led in every way, and badly\nwhipped, the tide turned herd againsl\nthe raiders. The friends of the prisoners mav consider that the sentences im\nposed nre severe, but military men admit thnt they were v< ry lucky in escsp\nmui't-umrtlnl and\nLondon, July 28\u00E2\u0080\u0094The curious speo-\ntacle is afforded here of the Chartered\nCompany's organs on on\" hand exaggerating the severity of the reported repulse of the English by the Matabeies\nill the Matoppe hills, and of the government press on the other hand trying to\nminimize the disaster,\nThe reason is not hard to conjecture.\nCecil Ithoiles finds the stormy rebellion\non the part of the natives carefully fostered by him in order to give an excuse\nfor his absence from England during\nJameson's trial, cannot be allayed\nlit easily as be expected. Certainly he\nhimself is such a grotesque failure as a\nJlllltary leader that he has already retired to comparative safety,\nBuluwayo now appeals for imperial\ntroops to finish the work of cruel subjection of tho unlives begun by him ns\na mere political] manoeuvre. lion.\nJoseph Chamberlain, on his part, is naturally anxious to avoid sending the imperial troops, and thus making the un-\ntion pay Rhodes' bill.\nHence the anomalous state nf affairs\nrefernsl to above. Signs are not, wanting\n. if the awakening of the public at large\nI *o a sense of the shame and disgrace\nI bestowed on the nation by the_ vanity\n| and sell'-seeking of this stock'jolilnug\n! adventurer, Rhodes, who, in addilion to\nthe disastrous scandals of the Jameson\nraid, is now forcing Great Britain into\na war linit is likely to cist more valuable lives and millions of money.\nThe Westn luster Unzelte expresses\nthe opinion that the jury is likely to con-\nviet Juiu'-o.i nnd his companions, i'he\nspeech of Sir Kdwnrd Clarke in .Inine-\nson's defence yesterday, is commented\nupon ns weak in the extreme. Continuing, tbe Gazette siys: \"Oratorical reference to his being a defender of worie.i\nand ehildren are absurd in view ol the\nivell-estnblirlied fact that the whole affair was a stock-jobbers' conspiracy. It\nis reported nn grotl authority that Clarke\nhin.self only hopes loi n disagreement\nof the jury.\"\nThe Westminster Gnsctte this afternoon says that during the debate on the\nhome office vote on Friday next. the\nhome secretary, Sir Matthew White\nRidley, will probably announce the tniti\ngallon of the sentences of the Irish political prisoners.\nAn Athens dispatch to the Daily News\nreferring to the threatened attack by\nTurks in Crete on Saturday upon the\nChristians, and Ibe lowering of fi.*..'\nbouts film the British ironclad Hood to\nland marines, snys Ihe boats were recalled because other foreign warship\",\npresent, failed to follow suit. The iJaiu*\nNews correspondent goes on to say;\n\"Private information reaches me llu.\n:he Insurgents, in a strong .force, hnve\napproached within cannon shot of tne\nReliino and engaged the Turks succesj\nfiil'v. the inhabitants watching the hat\n'If from the house-lops. The Ellg'lsh\nincn-of-war witnessed the fighting and\ncheered the insurgents. The 'lurks were j i,nr being tried by\nherd pressed, ni.d have sent to Ciuien j shot by Ihe Boers.\nlitlc.nl service to his country by the\nstrong, severe and masterful line he took\nwith the case.\"\nThe privy council has dismissed the\nappeal from the judgment of the supreme court of Canada of December 9.\n1805, ulliriuiiig a decisiou of Mr. Judge\nBui'bidgc iu the case\ners against the Queei\nbrought un action in the court of exche\nquer of Canada by petition of right to\nrecover from the Dominion government\nthe sum uf $231,806, which they claimed to be due on two contracts for the\nconstruction of sections 0 aud 15 of the\nIntercolonial rnihvn\nArrival and Departure of Hails\nNANAIMO POSTOFFICE.\nE. & N. RAILWAY.\nCLOSE. DUE\nDaily ex. Huu\nof Boss and oth- Wellington, Northfield and a.m. a.m.\nThe appellants i East Wellington 11.25 8.50\nVictoria,Southern States and\nplaces along line of E.& N. Dailyex.Sun.\nRailway 8.26 11.60\nBY STEAMER.\nVANCOUVER SOUTH.\nThe appellants I British and foreign, Eastern\nthose contracts, which were entered into |\n\"ii 1860, .Messrs. Bertrand & Co. coven-\nKri.\nP.M.\n3.1)0\nTllCB.\nSalt Bprlnglsland and Gab- p.m. p.m.\nriolu Island 8 20 3.HO\nBY STAi-*!;* Tues, Moll.\nDI MAliL. Kr) Thur\nAllicrni, Parksville, French p m. p m.\nCreek and Errington 12 80 6.00\nFrl. Thnr.\nNanoose Bay 12.30 6.00\nV. M. A. M.\nDeparture Bay, daily ex. Sun 12.45 10.30\nCedar (South), Saturday .. 2.00 1100\nJ. H. PLEACE,\nt,,r reinforceuiciils.'\nThe correspondent also sa.vs of the\noutbreak in Macedonia: \"Macedonian\ninsurgents are said to be everywhere re-\neeived with open arms by the inhabitants, mniiy of whom hnve joined the in\nsuriients. The Creek government has\narrested several officers of l'rikkiihi alio\nLarissa garrisons for abetting thc insurgents in Macedonia, but no government will be able long to resist tbe ,\u00C2\u00BBut>-\nlie enthusiasm, which, as regards Macedonia, Is n hundred times stronger\n(linn that regarding Crete.\"\nZltltch, July 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The riots, which\nhicko out on Saturday, arisng from t:.i\nkibiiiL* of Swiss by Italians, were renewed yesterday evinlng and continual\nnil night tone*. An Infuriated crowd at-\nI tacked the Italian quarter and commit*\n| ted serious excesses. The rioters were\nfinally nverpov. ei ed by the police nml\nmilitary after 70 men hud been arrested.\nTin* disturbance was finally oiielled,\nConstantinople, July 2S.\u00E2\u0080\u0094It is rumor\nisl that the Turkish government conten,\nplates an i-isue of paper money.\nLondon. July 20.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The nltendance nt\nfhe trial of Dr. Jameson and his associates was never so great as yesterday. The opening part of Lord Russell's summing np. however, and his two\nhours recapitulation of ihe evidence.\nwas bores inie. and even Dr. Jninesou.\nprobably the most interested of nil pre-\nThe sentences imposed upon Dr.\nJameson nnd his companions were very\ngenerally discussed in tlte lobbies of par-\nliaitient lust night. Continry to the feeling manifested by the fuir spectators\nand the lympnthizing fricuds in the\ncourt rorni to-dny, the sentences wor*\nlighter than expected by people in parliament. It is recognised, however, that\nthe sentences nre more serious for the\nmilitary prisoners than the mere term\nfixed for their imprisonment, since it is\nexpected that tiny will be cashiered.\nIn commenting upon the sentence\npassed upon Dr. Jameson the Graphic\napproves the verdict,\nTne Daily Telegraph coniiders that th..\ncourt has found n medium between in-\ntlulgenee and excessive rigor.\nThe Times says \"The conclusion will\ncommend itself to the general judgment\nuf the country.\"\nLoudon, July 80.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Dr. Jameson and\nhis fellow prisoners has lieen made firs-:\nclass misdemeanants, which allows them\nto hnve their meals from outside llollo-\nwny jail, to dress in their own clothes,\nto lune 'heir menial work dune by the\notlier prisoners, nnd to have a small allowance of brer or wine.\n(If the future action with regard to\nCeeil Ithoiles, the Tunes snys: \"Mr\nllawkslee, solicitor for the British\nChartered South Africa Company, writ-\nsent, indulged In u series of cat-imps. 118 us to-day that Cecil Rhodes is pre-\nare the representatives of the late John I Provinces, Eastern States, Daily ex.Sun.\nRoss, of Quebec, who became iu 1875,' Viiiicouveraud other places P.M. P.M.\nthe assignees of the contractors, Messrs. ] un Mainland of B.C. 6.30 5.00\nJ. B. Bertrand & Co., of all their right comox iioutk.\nand claim under the contract,. By | Comox, Union, Union Bay,\nKandwocli,('ourtcnuy,Ura!i-Tuee.\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E , , ... ., thuin, I'liiilieiini, Hornby p M\nSn ot- Julv'T'isV? tor \u00C2\u00ABn'Vso7!! ISland -U\"' 1Je'\"\"a\" L\"\"nd 8'20\nUnd section 13 by July 1, 1S72, ' fori VIOTOBIA BOOTH.\n$368,620. Salt Spring Island, Burgoyne \"-\"H\nThe contractors failed to complete the Bay, Kull'oril llurlior.North\nsections by the time stipulated, and In\n1803 the intercolonial railway commissioners look the works Into their own '\nhands and eoinpleted them for the gov !\nIeminent. In 1S80 .Mr. !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'. Shnnloy, C.l\nIE., was appointed chief engineer of the\nI Intercolonial railway for the purpose of\ninvestigating and reporting on al' unsettled claims in connection with the line.\nIn July, 1881, Mr. Shanley issued a re- '\nport in favor of the lute .Mr. Ross, the :\nassignee of the original contractors, for i\n.$231.8(1(1 in respect of the work done\non the two sections, und to recover this i\nsum tiie present proceedings were tiik- |\nen. The crown denied thut Mr. Shan-\nley's eertilieatc or report was contemplated in the contract, nnd alleged that.\neven if it were, it was inoperative, never having been approved by the minister\nof railways. They further allege thai .\nMr. Ross' claim was subsequently to '\nthe report, referred to three commission- '\ners, who thoroughly Investigated the\nmatter, and who. reported that there\nwas nothing due to the contractors.\nMr. Justice Burhldge, on the authority\nof the case of \"The Queen vs. McGree-\nvy,\" which arose upon a contract in the\nsame works and involved a similar report or certificate of Mr. Shanley, decided in favor of thc crown. This decision was upheld by the supreme court,\nthe chief justice dissenting. From\nthese judgments the present appeal was\ninstituted.\nKILLED BY INDIANS.\nLimn, Peru\u00E2\u0080\u0094(Via Galveston, Texas)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nJuly 30.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A man named Cooper, an American citizen, has been lost in the forest\nof Cnrabnyn. Two Germans, members\nof his party, who escaped, arrived at\nSan Domingo. The remaining four, said\nto be gold-seekers, have been killed by\nIndians. It is said that the Snn Domingo mine has just been purchased by\nAmerican parties and that it is producing immensely.\nA Fail Assortment at the Lowest Market Rates\nJOB WORK.\nPromptly Attended to.\nAU kinds of\nTin and Sheet-Iron Work.\nVictoria Crescent, Nanaimo.\nI\nBakery and\nEestaurant.\nTELE\nPeople's Choice.\nInvites Inspection and Comparison\naB to Quality and Price.\nTHE BEST BREAD IN CITY,\nAwarded First Prize at the Agricultural Show.\nBEST TWO-BIT MEAL IN THE CITY\nBastion Street,opp.TelegraphOffic.e\nP. ROWBOTTOM, Prop.\nENDORSED BY\nTHE DISTRICT,\nTHE PROVINCE\nand THE NATION!\noniee Tel. :10. p. O. Box 16. Residence Tel. 101.\nM. J. HILBERT & CO.\nSUCCESSORS TO\nJOHN HILBERT\nFuneral Director and Embalme;\nGraduate of tiio Oriental, the Eureka,\ntlie New York and Clark's\nSchool! of Embalming.\n1, 3 nnd 5 Bastion St., Nanaimo\nSCOTCH BAKERY,\nVICTOII1A CRKSCKNT.\nWinnipeg, July 29\u00E2\u0080\u0094Three election\nprotests were filed her to-day against\nthe return of the Dominion members-\nelect for Winnipeg, Mnnpiette nnd Mnc-\ndonnhl, Hugh John Macdonald, Dr.\nRoche and Nat. Boyd. Each petition\ncontains the usual formal allegations of\ngiving money to voters, having teams,\nsupplying liquor, etc., to voters.\nIt puys to read our advertisements.\nwhile the other defendant! were dozinir\nat Units. Besides, Sir lllcll.ud Webster and his associates; were clearly\nwearied and lolled about, and Sir Kdwnrd Clarke alone showed any signs ol\nncrvonsne.is. lie 'rnwncd frequent!} at\nLord Russell's emphasis ngninst tile\nprisoner, As for tbe jury, composed\nwith two exceptions of elderly men.\nthere was no doubt that they were bored. The ladles, of whim tliere win a\ngreat Dumber in ll'.* court, fanned them,\nselves wearily while trying tn ciiteti\nglimpses of the defendants, The latter, while the jury was out, retired to\nthe ten room, where they held n roeep-\ntion of their lady friends and relatives.\nall of whom had high hopes of tbo to*\nqlllttal of the prisoners.\nThe jury after having retired at\nnlmnt 4:30 returned at TclM and were\nhastily summoned to tnke their places\nThe judges came in live minutes later\nand the jurymen gave ai. ndirnialive nn\nswer to all questions which hail been\npropounded to them by the Chief .In-\ntlee. but Ihey added a riib'r to the clfe\"t\nthat the disturbances at Johannesburg\nwere piovoentlve. Lord Russell then\ndincted that Ihoir answers were equi-\nvnlent to n verdict of guilty, but the\nfotrmnn said that they were not unanimous upon that point. Thereupon His\nLordship repented that the answers ol\nthe jurymen to Ihe questions propound\ned were equlvclant to n verdict of guilfr\nuimiiiHt ill th.> defendants.\nThe Jury then consulted together fo'\nabout three minutes, and afterwards\nrendered a verdict of guilty. Dr. .Inine-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BA on nnd his co-defendiints were nppnr-\nThe electors of Vancouver District, by a\nplurality of nearly\n.\npared to surrender for trial whenever\nj the government requires it. This ns-\nIsliraiico will not cause surprise, since\nI Mr. Rhodes practically has no option ill\nthe matter. But it is doubtful whether\nthe enlistment act, even ns expounded\nI iy Baron Russell, the lord chief justice\n' nud presiding judge, could bo success-\nI fully invoked to compel Mr. Rhodes to\n'share his friends' punishment.\"\nThe lobby correspondent of the Chronicle says of Ille sentences: \"Among the\nmembers of the house of commons there\nis a great variety of opinions, varying\nfrom disappointment at the mildness to\nIndignation at tho severity of the sentences. Mr. Chamberlain Is understood to have been rather surprised at\nthe severity of the sentences. As Dr.\nJameson was leaving the court room\nmany of the crowd tried to shake his\nband and shouted: 'Ond bless you, sir.'\"\nThe Chronicle also had an Interview\nwith Dr. Jameson himself, ill which\nthat gentleman snys he was surprised\nat the leniency of the sentence nfter\nBaron Russell's summing up. He said,\nfurther, that he ami bis friends had all\ndecided to return to Africa ns soon ns\ntheir sentences had expired.\nIn nn editorial the Chronicle says:\n\"The sentences arc merciful. At length\nthe raid Is reduced to Its proper proper- j\ntions. We are glad to lie able to an- |\nRoutine thnt Mr. Chamberlain hns de- \\nfinitely promised to sit upon the special |\ncommittee to investigate Ibe ndniinistra- ]UStneSS Of itS VOrdiCt iS\ntion of Rhodesia, bll* he desires that a \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nperfectly Impartial chairman shall be\nappointed.\"\nAn editorial In the Daily News snys:\n\"Baron Russell has rendered u high po-\n200!\nHave indorsed the principles and policy of\niii\nNOTICE is hereby given that Edwin\nMatthews has been admitted a partner\nIn the above business. In future the\nbusiness will be carried on by the undersigned under the style anil name of\nVVilson & Matthews, who will assume\nall liabilities mul collect all debts due\nthe said business, nud we trust that by\ncareful attention to the needs of our\ncustomers, to merit u continuance uf the\npatronage so liberally bestowed in the\npast. 1*\n,Ii:iiii.mk Wilson,\nEdwin Matthews,\nXiiniiinio, 1!. C., April 7, 1890.\nalways in BTOCK-\n6\nMs1\nGROCERIES,\nMINERS' CAPS,\nUNDERWEAR,\nLAMPS, Etc. etc.\nTAXIDERMIST DEPARTMENT ,\nHums and Animals Bel up in a thorough workmanship manner.\nOn Hand\u00E2\u0080\u0094Four line Peers' Heads,\nwhich will lie sold for price of setting\nthem up. Also a fine case of Birds,\nSEWING MACHINE. NEEilLES OF iii HINDS.\nd. s. Mcdonald.\nlill Haliburton Street, Nanainio.\nAs against all other papers and influences of\nthe District, and the\nI ratified by the Frovince\n; and Nation at large.\n(Commercial Hotel.\nCotnor Commercial nnd Bastion Sis.\nThi* long-ostabltshed Hotel i* oomforUbly\nlittoii up with superior Mcommoda*\ntion* for travolen and others.\nNonebutthoboBl brands or wine*, Liquors\nAlos and Cigars dispensed al the bar.\nT, O'OONNHL, Prop. THE CITY AND PllOVINCE.\nAnti-Cliincsc meeting\nWednesday evening next\nAt the Nanainio Opera House.\n(.iouil speakers will deliver addresses,\nThere were recorded in Nanainio during July 2i births, 2 marriages and H\ndeaths.\nMiss Catharine Thomas bus been appointed teacher ol the South Cedar pub-\nlie school,\n.1. li'.. li. Tagart returned yesterday\nfrom his raucli near Comox, after an absence of two months,\nSUNDAY SERVICES,\nIs never done, and it is especially wearing\nand wearisome to those whose blood is\nNotice of Dissolution.\nparticularly to them. Mrs\n, render a solo, entitled, loo Late, Ye\nChe annual meeting of the Fruit Grow- _ ,, , ' . ,, ' ,, ,, .,,\n, ,. . . , . , Cannot Enter Now. Mrs. Hull will\ners and Dairyinens Association will be\npresidi\nheld at Agassi/. Ann. 8.\n.Messrs. Ilampson and South of Vancouver have been chosen its delegates to\nattend tho anti-Mongolian meeting at\nNanaimo.\nProf. Kiiberlsiin, head of the dairy department iu connection with the Dominion experimental farms, ia on his way lo\nthe coast.\nM. A. Priestley, Supt.\nl'KKKIIYTl'IIIAN Clirill'll.\nPreaching at 11 it. in, and 7 p, n\nMorning subject, \"Perfect Peace;'' evei\nIng, \"Music in thu Sanctuary,\" Tl\nfollowing service of soil-* will be ren\ndereil:\nAnthem, \"Oh that my load of sin\nwere gone\" (E. 0. Kxeell)\nlike Rood's Sarsaparilla. Por the troubles\nPeculiar to Women at, change of season,\nclimate or lilo, or resulting from hard\nwork, nervousness, and Impure blood,\nthousands havo [ound relief and cure in\nSarsaparilla\nChoir The Ouo True Dlooil 1'iiiil'u-r. $H six for S5.\nThe partnership heretofore existing\nbetween Wm. Crease! and Wm. Cochin*!\nunder the linn name of OreBsel & Cocking Is this day dissolved by mutual eon*\nBent, Win. Coul i ig retiring, The busi-\nNotice to .Ladies.\n..,, ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E, vifoman'8\nNinth Sunday after Trinity\u00E2\u0080\u0094XO a.m.,\nSunday school; 11 u. in., Matins, Holy\nConiniunioi) and sermon\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The wisdom\nof this world and the wisdom that com-1 *. *.-.. . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2- ,lrssuin ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E. ,,lllt.lill\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,l ,,. \\ \u00E2\u0080\u009E,. .-,, ,-l.\neth from above;\" 7 p. m\u00E2\u0080\u009E Evensong and impure and uii.it properly to tone, Sus- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 w,|(j wi|, Rggume \u00E2\u0080\u009EbW,1u^ .u,(1 t0 vvhu,\u00E2\u0080\u009E J\nshort address-the Lord's Prayer con- ^i^Sdtoue.^ K^\&SE% all outstanding accounU must be paid,\ntinned. I this condition of the blood that women \\ m. I iiksski,.\n... ,. ,. \u00E2\u0080\u009E . I are run down, \\ >i, Lockimi.\n*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 , _, _,' , , \u00E2\u0080\u009E Nanaimo, July 25,1898.\nOn Sunday evening tho Goapel tern- Tirod, Wea,;, fOorvot'3,\nperance meeting will b9 addressed by' Thun because of tho work Ibiolf. Every\nBev, VV. Hicks. Young men are espec- ; physician says so, and that tho only rem*\niullv invited, as the address will be more edy -s in building up by taking a good\nPollard will nerve tonic, blood purifier and vitalize!\n! Hymn 58, \"All hall the power of\nAtthoGrund Lodge, Sons of St. George,! Jesus' name\" Congregation\nwhich met in San Francisco on Tuesday, Su'.0' '!}, know that my Redeemer\n, , I,;, ,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,,. , liveth (Handel) Mrs. Davison\nJohn Hilbert ol this city was elected Sol0j ..The' Staro-^ethleliein\" (Ste-\nGrand Messenger. . phen Adaim).., Mr. .I. P..Jones\nJl. J3ate, J. P., rendered his decision Anthem, \"Oh, how lovely is Zion\"\nin the Morrell case this inorniiig, lining ! ,, *,Ex,'ie.11) ;; \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 v \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u00A2,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0':; - \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 'Choir\n.i,,,., , ..\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ... . , , Solo, Ave Maria (Pietro Mascagni)\nthe defendant !f75 and the price of the ! %I rs_ w g_ greene\nlicense for selling liquor without a li- Duet, \"OSaiutaris\" (Mil'lard\") ... .\ncense at the Tea (Ianlens. Mrs. Davison and Miss Hurt\nThe body of the late Horatio Hilton H-\"\"m\" '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'4 Congregation\nwas broughtoveron the Louise onThurs-1 The I!ev' A' P' M*'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' 0* Toronto will\nday and taken t\u00E2\u0080\u009E the resilience of Mrs. I Preacl* at tlie evening service.\nMeakin, daughter of deceased, on Milton BT, ai.uax's oiltmon.\nStreet. The funeral took place thisafter- Ninth Sunday after Trinity\u00E2\u0080\u00948 a. in,,\nnon, under the auspices of Black Ilia- Holy Communion! II a. m., Matins.\nliioiiil Lodge, No. 5,1. 0, 0. P., of whicli sermon and Holy Communion; 2:.'!0 p,\ndeceased was a member, j in., Sunday school; 7 p, in., Evensong\nPrepared only byC. I. Hood &Co., Lowell, Mass.\nu i, r-ii-ii are tho ouly pills to take\nflOOd S PUIS with Hood's Sarsaparilla.\nNE W A I) VERT1SEMENTS.\nI A.M AGENT for Nunui and Districts for the New and Perfect Curler's\nTailors'System. This system Is up lo\ndale; u perfect ladies' system ; is without a rival und easy to learn; is noli\"!\nfor its graceful lines and elegant forms;\nit is not an experiment bul a development, 1 can also teach how lo use this\nsystem, uud also all kinds of Dressmaking executed in lirst-,'lass Btyle, Prices\nto suit lhe limes. Address,\nMargaret M. Macdonald,\nNo. ill) Ilulibui-iiin Street,\nD. S. Jlticiliinalil's Store.\nDuring duly there were buteight an\nund sen\nPreacher, Kev. F. S. Ste\nin the city polico court, live of these I venson. The offertories both morning\nbeing for drunkenness and two for as- and evening will hein aid of the choir\nBaillt, Thlre were six provincial cases '\"\"'I.\nus follows: Drunk and disorderly, 1;| WAIA+CB STMSBT METHODIST CltUBOH.\nvagrancy, 1; enticing from home, I; vio-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 **ev- T' \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"' Pastor, Services at\nhit ion of Game Act, 1; starling bush lire, *' ''\"'' ' P< \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Sacrament of the Lord's\nI ; selling liquor without a license, 1. I Supper in connection with the morning\nANTI-CHINESE\nMEETING\nWill lie held in the. ,\nNanaimo Opera House\nWednesday, Aug. 5,180B\nArliijgtoi^ Hotel.\nMR. J. A. THOMPSON\nllavin-r oompletod tho erection of the Arlington\nliuii'l tit NANOOSE BAY, this handsome nnd\ncommodious hotel is now prepared to receivo\nand comfortably entertain travelers and otliers.\nTIIK CUISINE\nis presided over by Mrs. Thompson, and the\nTftblod'Hote constantly provided with all the\ndelicacies ol the season. Combined with thc\nelegant furnished apartments, the visitor finds\nthe surroundings of tho most pleasant description.\nAt 7:80 P. M.\nThe question to bo discussed being one\n\" CRITERION\"\nRestaurant and Ciiop House\nCommercial Stuui-t.\nOystors in every style.\nYOURS\nIF your guess is nearest to the actual weight of the Coal\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand your choice of a Lady's or Gent's Wheel.\nOwing to pay-day coming cm Aug. 15, instead of Aug. 8, as\nwe anticipated, we are POSTPONING the weighing of\nthe Coal until\nMonday, Aug.24, at 7:30 p.m., at Our Store.\nWe regrel changing tiio dale, but on pay-day we would be\nloo busy to attend to this matter properly, and to'compensate you for the short delay from Aug. lst to the 24th\nwe will give a ticket for every dollar's worth purchased.\n$ 1 purchased, 1 ticket,\nHi\n10\n1 guess\n5 guesses\n10 \" etc.\nThis is for Dry Goods, Millinery or Gents' Furnishings in\neither of our three stores. We slake our reputation that\nno one knows the weight of the coal, and Messrs. Shaw\nand McKenzic will see that every one is fairly treated.\nENSON & CO.'S\nGreat Gash Dry OooJs & fllon's Furnishings Store\nCommercial St., Nanaimo, 1?. C.\nThe Rev. D. A. M cRae, of St. Andrew's service, Sunday school and Bible class 0f paramount importance to the future Meals, 25c, and upwards.\nPresbyterian Ohuruli, this citv, has ae--at 2:'ilJ P> \"'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0''-'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' '*\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 welfare and prosperity of the citizens of \n ,'., , ... , ,\n. ,, i nr ., \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u009E, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ,., ', \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2- \u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 , .. .,' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 - i, *.- i Good Beds. 25c. and upwards.\nceptedaeallfrom the Third Presbyterian ,,..,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i.-v,,,,,.!. Nanaimo and the Province ol British . ,.\nChurch al Los Angeles, California, and Foreign coal shipments for July were Columbia in general, it is urgently re- Spring Chicken always on hai\nwill leave here in aboul two weeks time, i us follows: ! quested that the meeting be numerously\nbo as to assume his new duties on Sept. i nv tkk new vaxoouvbr company, attended and that every Interest in the\nTons. : city hu represented.\nlst. Sir. McUaeorHcintcd at this church j Datb. Namr mi, Dkhtinatioi*,\nfor several months during his recent 1 Str Tyee, Port Townsend\t\nvisit to Southern California. 2 *lr Pioneer, Port Townsend...\n\ .,,;,: , ;.: ; i .- ., d StI' I I'll VOKO, 1 'ol I Tow liseml. .\nA petition Is In circulation requesting j 4 Str Peter Jebsen, Los Angeles,\nthe Mayor to call a meeting of the Imsi-j 6 Str Willapa, Port Towsend...\nness men and property holders for the 0 Uk Oregon, San Francisco\t\npurpose of considering the besl steps tol \" Bt,'Sea Lion, Port Townsend .\nl.e taken to provide increased lire protection fur the business portion of the\ncity. Among the suggestions is the\n; 7 Str\n.s Ilk l-'aiivhilil, Sun Francisco..,\n8 Str Willapa, Port Townsend...\n8 Str Wanderer, Port Townsend.\nU Str Tyee, Port Townsend.\n80\n::.r)\niio\n4,8\n7(1\n2,278\nThe meeting will he addressed by\nMainland and local speakers.\n50 j Lower gallery reserved for ladies.\nJ. II. DAVISON, Mayor.\nTry Philpott's Tomato Catsup\n25c. and 50c. per Bottle.\n2,11111\n2 I1\nCORPORATION\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094OK Till!\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nerection of suitable fire walls, the pro- }J gtr Sea Lion, Port Townsend .. 84 \CW\J (W MAMA IMO P f\nPeHylienefltted to be' taxed for their j? l^^^^JT;/. ^\\AU UF LN A IN AIlVlUj I). I.\nA LY-LAW\nWe Never Sleep. Open Dag and Sight.\nconstruction\nA inei ting\ntural Society was held Thursday evening,\nwheu it was decided to hold the annual\nshow in the Park Pavillion on Friday\nand Saturday, Sept. 18th and 10th, Mr\n10 Str Wanderer, Port Townsend,\nNanaimo Agric.ul-', l!l Str Willapa, Port Townsend\n2-1 Sir Peter Jebsen, San Francisco 4,(io4\n24 Sir Willapa, .luiiouu L'l\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2iii Str Holyoka, Port Townsend .. S7\nt L'.i Sp Khvell, San Francisco 2,880\n1 2.1 Str llolvoke, Pun Townsend... .'io\nw. ll. \i ::. on, secretary, was appointed ii;! ^r f^'1'\"\"]' '''\"'t ;i'\"\u00C2\u00AB-nseii,l 20\n80 sir City oi Everett, Lowusend. 8,000\nto collect subscriptions, donations and\nspecial prizes for tin* show. The completion of the prize list was laid over till\nthe next meeting, which will be held In\nu few da vs.\nTotal 2\nPROM WELLINGTON.\n4 Str Alki, Port Townsend\t\n10 Sh .1. ('. Potter San Francisco.\n10 Sb (ilory Seas, San Francisco.\n11 lig Courtney Ford, Unga Island\nTO INCREASE THE RATES TO BE\nLEVIED FOR PAYMENT OF INTEREST AND SINKING FUNDS ON\nCERTAIN DEBENTURES OF THE\nCORPORATION OF THE CITY OF\nNANAIMO.\nCity Market\n_ ^\nHEMANS & WAMSLEY\nWholesale and Retail Batchers\nCOMMERCIAL STREET\nP. 0. Box 227 Telephone 7-8\nkroixj NoW ()i\n.To the End of August\n:>sii}g.-()lit Ljii^es\u00E2\u0080\u0094^-\nMust be the Order of the Day.\n^THHIS MEANS\u00E2\u0080\u0094-a^EX\ni Exceptional Opportunities in Many Lines\nTO-DAY WE BEGIN TO OFFER -:-\nLawns, Prints, Flannelettes, Muslins,\nCham brays, Qirghams, and all Summer Goods at a 10 per cent, reduction\nto clear\n160\n,01(1\nQubaji Cigar Factory, j SUMMER DRESS GOODS\nOur Cigars are made ol the Choicest Llnvann\nTobaeeoB. Our famous\nCuban Blossom *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\nBlack Diamond\nWill be Reduced to Very Low Prices.\nUi sir Progressist,Sun Francisco\n2d Sir Signal, Asliii-hi \t\n25 Ilk Leon, San Francisco ....\n2\") Str Pioneer, Port Townsend .\n29 Str Wullu Walla, Seattle ....\nTotal\t\nPROM UNION.\n4 Sir City nl' Toiieka, Victoria.\nIH Str Venture, San Francisco .\nI.S Str Mineiila, San l-'raiicisco .\n2o Str Progressist, Vancouver ..\n2f> str Transit, Seattle \t\nRECAPITULATION\nSporting Summary.\nThe C.W.A. provincial nice! takes I i1 Str AngeleBi Port TowrTaenil\nplaeeatVancouverduringcarnival week. lj \"\"' \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"''' U \":hl' >''11\"'*\nAt the new cricket grounds this afternoon, elevens chosen respectively by Mr,\n8. M. Robins and Mr. .1. Pawson contended for supremacy, resulting in an\neasy victory for the former,\nChin-Chin Oorbett, the man with the\nlong tongue and the short supply of\nsand, has gone into training at San Francisco for his second gu with Sharkey,\nthc sailur.wlio hud the temerity to handle\nthe human phonograph rather roughly n\nshort time ago,\nThe lind shoot under the auspices of\nthe Wellington (inn Club for lhe cup\ntrophy presented by Dr. Eberts and won\nby himself last year, took place at the\niluli grounds \"ii Wednesday. Mr. \V.\nWilgrass headed the list with a seme ,,i\n63 points out oi a possible 100, Mr, G.\nHolland being Beeond with 01 points,\nThe lust, practice shunt will he held nn\nAug, gth,\nSay* the Ottawa Free Prrssi The winners iif the championship lacrosse series\nin the Rasl an- to be invited to Vancouver during carnival week there. They\nwill ! H'cred ii 1,000 and free transportation Combined Manltobu and combined British Columbia and the champion clnh uf each Province will play\nagainst ihem, Should they go, the\nchampionship of the world will be decided on the Vancouver lacrosse field,\n42\nl.'id\nWhereas, on the 22nd dav nf August,\n'42,) 18112, certain hy-laws were passed hy the\n'..,,., municipal Council of the said city for\non 'be reduction of the special rates im-\n,.{l(, posed by the various loan by-laws, and\nJ,,., to whicli Sis Honor tho Uentenant-Gov-\n''\" crnur in Council was pleased tu grant\nhis approval on I he01 Inlay of Sept,, [802 i\nAtld whereas since the passage uf the\nj,\".! said various Rate Reduction by-laws\n , the value 61 the laleuhle property w ilhin\n7., . .,. the limits of the said cily has decreased,\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '' . and in order to provide the sum required\nI by tbe various loan by-laws to be raised\n200 annually for llie payment of interest and\n2,01(1 the creation of a sinking fund for the\n8,800 redemption of the said debentures it is\n1,I2.'> fuund necessary, in consequence ofthe! \t\n600 Bald decrease iu the rateable property, to nit r I IHI! P rini/ il>V II\n2d Str Rapid Transit, Roche Harbor 2M Increase the rates iu the Bald by-laws; n.llAKL IV IllUll.Nrji.\n25 Str Mincola, Sail Fruueiueo .., 8,300 And whereas authority Is niven in ' .\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u0094 sections rs ami 7-i of i'he Municipal The Popular Bakers\nlotal 11,200 ClauBeaAct, 1808, for the passage of this\nby-law\nAre callod for evorywliore, mul ur,- superior tb , \\nany Importod cigar. Mink' by Union Labor.\nM..I. BOOTH, Wharf Street.\nTHE BEST -=-\nis the CHEAPEST\nThe Nanaimo Bakery Excels :\n!17\"'.':i'l ami save money hore\ncount, instead of a chance for a bi\nmoney made\u00E2\u0080\u0094al the\nby getting our cosh disco, ftc.\u00E2\u0080\u0094money saved is\nE k\u00C2\u00A3s H IStei-1 EB\ntor\nl.'T>V^^*^,^'^a^^\\u00C2\u00A3^-^',&'4^'^''&^^'%^'t^*^-%^VV%'%%'%^\ne\nNanaimo \t\nWellington\nUnion\t\nGrand total\nis MM 26072 Tl\"'rr'\"'r '\"' \" '\"'\"'''''' ,;\" \"\"' Municipal,] f 1 P / 1 I ) 1,1 i \\\n8,823 11,230\nfi\n1. The \"Rate Reiliii'tinnliv.law, 1802\nAwarded\nHighest Honors\u00E2\u0080\u0094World's Fair.\n^ CREAM\nBAKING\nMOST PERFECT MADE.\nA pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Frei\nfrom Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant\n40 Years the Standard,\n10 (ilo .pi no and the \" Sehuola Bate Reduction liy-\n_\u00C2\u00BB,^. ' law, 1802,\" and lhe\" Fire Hall and lly-\ndrantKate Reduction By-law, 1802,\" are\nPetitions have been Died RgalnBl the hereby repealed,\neleeliuns uf Prior uud Kurle nf'Vicluria, 2, The rate to he levied (nr the year\nMclnnes, Nanailiin; Maxwell, Vanemi- .ls''Mi '\"'' payinn iniereslanil sinking fund .\n,,,,,.,,,,.. ,, . Iii respect ol iheileiiciiiuresIssued under\nve-; and Bostock, Yale-Cariboo, Brl- ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E. nf,,horiiy \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 lll(. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bastion Street\nbery and corruption is oh urged in all Urldge Loan By-law, 18811,\" shall bu five-\ncases. tenths uf one mill in the ilullur. .\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ^\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB l-'or paying interest and sluicing fund\nAmong the appointments In the Brl- In respect ofthe debentures issued un ier Foi* S. Cnn! \"Drinlr\n, authority of the \"Streets Improvement I \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*-\u00C2\u00BB* ** \et\J Ul JL/1 i. 21 z\.\nWill be in Beason after\nSunday, and yuu Bhould\nnot fail in gol the richest and best flavored, for\nw 11 ii-l 1 yuu must call al.\nExcelsior Bakery.\nlicycles,\ni.isti Columbia Cassette is thai uf Hun.\nI\"\nLoan liy-luw, l.stio,\" the rate Bhall be two\nr Oiiampaqnr Oman\n1 SullA Watbr\nForbes (.1. Vernon, agent-general of Br!, mills and nine-tenths of one mill in the : Ask foi'\ntish Columbia, as representative of the dollar, |t *\t\nProvince on the governing body uf the '. I'or paying Interest and Sinking fund' LaWreilCe'S (SABsfpABiii v\n. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 1 1 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2, , in respect ul lhe dehentures issued under ; v BABBA1 Aini.l.A\nLmperiai institute, au.horlty of the \"Fire Hall ami Hydrant EUBEKA SODA Works,\n,*** . , , Loan By-law, 1R02,\" the rateshall be one MftnnfaeturorolTompor loDrlnkn.Svrupi,*\nIn pursuance of instructions from the mill and three-twentletliB of one mill lu \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \t\nowners, the disabled collier Progressist l'11-' dollar.\nleft yesterday morning in tow of the tug : . 1'\"1\"' l'\u00C2\u00BByiiii* interest and Blllklng fund\n,,,.,, . ,,, 111 respect ul I he dehentures issued under\nLome, for Esquimau, where she will authority of the \"Erection of Public\nundergo complete repair, She will pro- Schools' Loan lly-luw, 1802,\" the rale\nDollvero'1 free tn nil 'purlB uf city nnil virinlly\nllillll pi .\nTolOpllOllO -i-l. I\". 0, He\n\u00C2\u00A3a*jr* i*i.tm 1.1 ait,.nii,in pnid toBliipplui*orders.\n'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ix 711. Nanaimo.\nALL KINDS OF REPAIRS\nTo Blcyclos done on our premises at the shortest possible notice.\nMu. CocitiNa being a thorough practical bicycle hand, will be\npleased to furnish all Information gratis, ami nil work\ndune by Ihis firm willhc guaranteed to he lirst-class.\nWM. CRESSEL,\nNext to Sloan & Scott's Old Stand.\nP. S\u00E2\u0080\u0094A lurun oiiiisif;iiiiieiit of bicycle sundries just arriv-\nfroni the east.\n!-%.-%^%^%%^%^%^%^^V^V%%%'V%^%^%-V%'%%^^%%'%r<)\nImbly be 111 the duck 15 or 20 days,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n^1J\nNOTICE.\nTT IS HEREBY NOTIFIED that\n'- His Honour the Administrator In\nCouncil has hi\nlor 11\ne purp,\nen pleased to direct that,\nof llie \" Placer Mining\nAcl, l.'lll,''\"nnd the \"Mineral Act, 1800,\"\nTexada Island he transferred from tiie\nNew Westminster Milling Recording District lu the Nanaimo Milling Recording\nDistrict, JAMES I'.AKKK, -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\nProvlnclnlS vtnry mid Mllllntar of Mines.1 \ |,,R, I\nshall he one mill und three-twentieths\nof one mill in (be dollar,\nFor paying interest nnd sinking fund\nin respect ofthe debentures issued under\nauthority of the \" Commercial Street\nFilling liy-luw, 1 ill,\" the rate shall he\nseveiiloeii-twentieths uf one mill in the\ndollar.\n8, This By-law may be cited for all\npurposes as the \" l.naii Rates liv-law,\n1880.\"\nPassed hv the Municipal Council un\nthe 8th day uf June. 1890,\nAHirineii hv the Municipal Council on\nthe 22nd day of June, 1800,\nApproved by His Honor tha Lieutenant-! invcrnur in Council ou the 27th day\nof July, ISIIIi.\nc. c. Mckenzie,\nLand Agent and Conveyancer,\nAND ACCOUNTANT.\nOFFICE! KHONT STKKUT, NANAIMO.\nTown 1.1,ts mid t'tiritis lor Sale Monoy to Loan\non Mnrigiitii' ut low tuii-ii.\nAgent for lho fnlti'il v\w liisnr Company\nnf Manchester, ISiiRlftiid.\nHAVE YOUR\nShirts, Collars and Cuffs\n^-=\u00E2\u0080\u0094 1 dON E J JY Tl IE -ex\nJOS. I, BROWN, Watchmaker. j ioiKHT Sk'iUll Lailliclry\nAll K lulls I. . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I It I > \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\nI'lliiviM 1 ai. BltCKtlTAIIY'8 (jrrit'B,\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Will July, 18110,\nJ, 11. DAVISON, Mayor.\n-~*~ Auasi Thompson, c\ m, c,\n^^LDomagnotizertsiiortNotiM\nIty BPKCIAI, Mai lilNKKV on lho I'minlaoa,\nPino nml Compllrntod Watobea and Clnclti\nOarefnlly Cleaned and Repaired\nFine CYCLOM KTKH8, fur Blcydeg, In Stock,\nCOBNKB ClIUIlCII A.S'll ClIAl'KI. SlBBBTS.\nkW\ni By so doing you will PATRONIZE WHITE LABOR\nI And help to GET RID OF THE CHINESE^\nDye Works in connection. \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094t\nP, O. llux 95. I). M, STEWART, Froprletor."@en . "Titled \"The Nanaimo Mail\" from 1896-02-15 to 1896-05-09

Titled \"The Nanaimo Semi-Weekly Mail\" from 1896-05-16 to 1896-12-29."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Nanaimo (B.C.)"@en . "Nanaimo"@en . "The_Nanaimo_Mail_1896-08-01"@en . "10.14288/1.0082456"@en . "English"@en . "49.1638890"@en . "-123.9380560"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Nanaimo, B.C. : Mail Publishing Company"@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 . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Nanaimo Semi-Weekly Mail"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .