"4d6d3d31-0aaf-4521-89b3-85cc7e77d320"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "[The Nanaimo Mail]"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "2015-12-01"@en . "1896-09-01"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/nanamail/items/1.0082593/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " n\nBy the test of public opinion 5\nand found \"all right.\"\nSecond Year\nAnd .increased success of the\npeople's paper, the\nNanaimo Mail.25rftmo,u\"\n,f*\u00C2\u00BB/\*s ,*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -\u00E2\u0080\u009E-\\n' \u00C2\u00BB .-V\,V*A/ *S s**e y*\nPrinting\nIs our business, und tiie superiority of our work coin-\nmends itself, while as toprieeB\nIt Is Profitable\nL\nTo deal with us. All classes\nof work fur all classes uf eustu-\nmers is our specialty.\nVOL. II.-NO. 20.\nNANAIMO, BRITISH COLUMBIA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1896.\nWHOLE NO. 79.\nSow is the Time\nTO KILL\nALL INSECT PESTS\nInfesting Trees, Sb.r.ubs,\nFlowers nntl Vegetables.\no o o o o o:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nYou want something Unit will do tho business\neffectually, yet will not injure tbe most\ndelicate flower or plant.\nThe SAN JOSE TREE WASH\nDocs tbo trick. Try a tin.\nWe also have in stock \"Whale Oil .Snap, used\nby all Fruit Growers.\nWe have a small slock of Fruit Jars\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pints, Quarts and\nHalf Gallons.\nDelta and Duncan's Creamery Butter and choice Manitoba\nCreamery and selected Dairy Butler in 5, 10, 20 aud\no'O lb. tubs. Prices away down.\nSterilized Cream from the Delta Creamery, very choice, in\nPint Jars.\nWe have a full lino of the best Groceries at the Bottom\nPrices. Quality Guaranteed.\nWe have just opened out a large consignment of Boots and\nShoes. Prices arc right,\nt>V\"niT!i\\njioinls iii British Columbia. Eton. Mr. senate, lie Intimated tbut he hoped to\nDuvics snid tbut the. Iiriiisb Columbia secure the co-operation of the present\nLiberal members had been pressing these senate in trying to make tlic* house nc-\nHii.N'T LOSE THE OPPORTUNITY.\nIf ynu haven't hud unfortunate experiences u-it'i shoes you are to ba oon-\nui'iiiiilnii'il. I'crhaps you cannot tell\nthe right side ol leather from the wrong\nside, but Unit's no reason why vou\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^_^^^_^^^_ loiibln'l not what you pay for to the lust\n~ , , j n 1-11 n x tl '-I'lit's win-lb. When you can buy a pair\nWholesale and Retail Butchers ,tahoe* immJmfAknow\mrtat\nuuvivuuiv uu<* itv.u.1 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB tu expucl from them and ynu won't be\ndisappointed, for we tell you the exact\nliiilli and nothing but the truth.\nCOMMERCIAL STREET\nP, O.Uox 32? Telephone 7-8\nORR&RENDELL.\n(Montreal Witness Deport.)\nOttawa, Aug, 25.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The real business\nof parliament begun yesterday, 'lhere\nwas unusual public Interest In tbe de\nbate on the address. Tbe galleries were\ncrowded. Tbe 'Hoor of the bouse wus\nwell tilled and the new faces were so\nmany tbut a Btranger wandered on ibe\nfloor among tbe members und around\nthe mace with the speaker sitting in awful grandeur in the chair, without the\nsergcant-iit-ui-nis diking notice of the\nintrusion.\nMr. Mclnnes, the member for Vancouver district, one of the youngest, if\nyot the youngest member in the house.\nW8S entrusted with the task of milking\nthe motion, The mover of su.-h a motion is generally regarded us the spokes\nman of the bouse, but iu this case the\nspeech from tho throne contained so\nvery little nud the programme of the\nsession being confined to the supplies,\ntii.* utterances of the mover were devoid of that importance which usually j\nattaches to them. His speech did not j\nmeet with universal approval even from |\nbis own side, lie mude llie mistake of\nconfining bis remarks to tbe province I\nfrom which be hailed. Nevertheless, he\nmade a vigorous speech, fairly well de- j\nlivcred, mil made some nil her good\npoints, nml nsiile from one rather unfortunate i xpresslon, might claim ta\nhave fairly well discharged Ids duty. '\ntie took his selection us mover us a\ncompliment to Hritish Columbia and as\nan earnest of wbut ibe governmenl Intended to do for that western cuiiul ry. u\ncountry thnt hnd endured hardships under the Conservative policy, which had\nut one time been in the interests of tlic I\ngreat west, but Which of lute yenrs hnd\nfallen awuy from ils high Ideals. He\npraised the resources of British Columbia, mineral, forest ami fisheries nml\nurged the government to estnbllsh a\nmint there where the precious metals\nwere found ia abundance. He alluded to\ntbo suggestion ibui a department of\nmines should be established nnd found\nin it a clianucl for t! ul ranee Into the\ncabinet of a representative from thai\nprovince. He went on to urge the\nrights of the province to cabinet representation in uny event, which was 1\nrather peculiar line for Hie mover .if\ntbe address lu tnke. lie expressed the\nhope that lie house would frown on the\nImportation of the hordes \"f Chinese\ncoolies, but did not dwell on Hint subject. He pronounced the opportunities\nnnd advantages nf this country in be\nenormous, He went on to look nl the\nmatter philosophically mul look the deluge of applications received by every\nmember from men of culture un I education and ability for miserable positions\nin tbo public service ns nu index of tbe\nposition tbe Conservative policy bn,!\nbrought the country into. This was\ngreeted with laughter from the Opposition. The evil of monopoly was u theme\nupon which be grew eloquent nn.l\ncharged Ibe lute government with having aggravated it by giving nwny our\nheritage of land in the West, nnd snid\nthat they hnd been taught tlmt even if\nthey bud the right in rule, they bud in.\nrigid to ruin, lie olio.I the reluctance\nof the Governmenl to resign after defeat as nn exhibition \"f lust of power.\nWhether it waa constitutional or net\nit appeared to him to be must indecent,\nlie defined Liberalism us meaning licit\nevery man w.is entitled to equal treatment nt the hands of ibe state. This\nwas true democracy. 'We wear,' he\nsaid, \"neither red shirts nor daggers,\nbut we see a condition of tioriety Hint\nwas becoming slniincil. nml if those\nwho were suffering from enforced poverty to-dny were mil relieved, that relief will be exacted iu llie streets.\"\nThis was pretty radical talk for llie\nhouse of commons, nnl wns greeted\nwith \"Oh, ob,\" from the opposition. The\npeople were entitled tn receive riu'hts\nwhich were founded in justice quite ns\nmuch ns others to receive rights purchased by dollurs. Tonehlng en tbe\nHeboid question l*e exprcsed gratification\nthat Hie ndininislrution wns hound In\nsettle the matter, nnd conciliation wns\nIbe only method, He wool nn: \"Thai\nsettlement when Bnaly reached will te\nia accordance with Hie Liberal prlnclp.\nles of provincial rights, in harmony with\nprogressive modern thought, und will\nnot iu nny wuy violate tin- principle of\nself-govei-Mi-e'iit in this country,' This\nwas tbe only really significant litter,\nmice of the mover, being evidently inspired by the government and gives Ibe\nkeynote to the bnsis nf settlement recently negotiated at ottnwn. He made\na political attack upon tbe late government for their conduct In regard to (his\nquestion and diluted upon lhe iniquity\nof tbe Conservatives in willing lo disrupt the country for the sake of retaining olliee nud milking political capital\nout of the school question. He pointed\nto the campaign in North Qrey ns con- j\nducted by the Conservatives nt the present moment, nml characterized it in -in\nepigram to be the ungodly use nf godly\nInfluences. He evoked cheers by alluding to the tendency of tbe Conservatives\nIn malign a great province which they '\ncould nnt. deceive nnd lind failed to conquer, Their cry now wns French doni j\nbullion. He declared that the Liberals ;\nhad lieen successful because they 1-nd |\nthe support of llie younir element nf lhe j\ncountry, and dosed with u peroration\nexpressing confidence in the new ndminl- .\nstration,\nMr. Lomletlx delivered nu eloquent!\nnml charming speech in seconding t},c\nmotion. ' '\"''\nOttawa, Ann. .11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094In th> bouse to-day j\nMr. Trior asked the government if it\nwas the Intention to erect lighthouses j\nand fog alarms nt six or seven different\nworks on the attention uf the government, nml there wus also a memorial\nI from Mr. Teuiplemun nnd Dr. Milne on\nthese matters; when tbe supplementary\nestimates are brought down the heart\nof Mr. Prior would, be thought, be gladdened in regard to some of these works.\nIll answer to other questions of Col.\nPrior, Hon. Mr, Davics said the government wus looking for sites on Hie\nFraser and Skeena fur lighthouses.\nFrench Canadians resident in Worcester, United' States, have sent a committee to Ottawa lo ask Hon. Mr.\nLaurier to attend a banquet to lie given amend the railway\niu bis behalf there. He 1ms accepted,\nbut the dttto is not yet lixed.\nIn the bouse to-dny Hon. Mr\nsnid il was the intention of Hi\nmeal to tnke a plebesclte us ti\ntion,\nThe premier states that nothing definite bus been settled with regard to his\nvisit to Kngland.\nMr. Maxwell interviewed the premier\nnnd Mr. Tarte nnd secured a definite\npromise of $10,000 for u drill bull in\nVancouver. Mr. Davles also promised ier explained Hint u\nto give immediate orders for the erection of u lighthouse nt the entrance to\nthe Van.-Oliver Narrows.\nOne hundred nnd thirty-six acres of\nland, originally held hy Andrew Glider\ndonk under timber lease, hnve been added ti, tlte clieliulis Indian reserve.\nAiilny Morrison's maiden speech has\nattracted considerable attention. II\nwas :i most creditable effort.\nLord ltussell of Kl\nnrrived ut S o'clock o\nend were met nt Hie station by\none of Lord Aberdeen's aides wilh enr-\nringes v.ud driven lo Government House.\nThere is n lrtrge influx of riflemen\nfrom nil parts this afternoon,\n -\u00E2\u0099\u00A6*-,*- - \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nOttawa, Aug. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The late government wns paying $0 per hour I'M'\ndredges, being slmrt of the number required. Notwithstanding lids they gave\na dredge to the Montreal Cotton Co.. for\nto work nt Valloyfleld, for nothing, This\nwns how the monopolists stood iu villi\nTupper nml company, lt bus now been\nstopped.\n'llie figures fnr llie Manitoba .'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2elHll.v\ntaken recently, hnve nil reached the Dominion statistician here. They shew the\npopulation tn lie 103,425, un Increase i-f\n8-1,785 in ten years. The result of Hie\ncensus will be Hint the provinci v ill\nget over $32,000 more of a subsidy.\nPremier Laurier is being strongly\ninfill in visit England during Hie parliamentary receas, und will probably do\nsn with Sir Itichard Cnrtwright when\nIhe latter tues over to attend Hie Pacific cable conference,\nll is asserted Hint during (be Noith\n',rcy nnd Qupcu's-Sluibury ontnpi.itcns\nllu- Conservatives were guilty nf the\nmost open corrttpllon, botli in promises\nen,! actual hoodie, end that Hie Nuttll\nOrey campaign wns nf inch a charucrjr\nthat Mr. McLaughlin might fairly be\nexpeeti'd to decline to take the sent if\nelected. Hero u perfect orgy wns entered upou. 'llie riding wus over-run\nwitli heelers, chief among them being\nrecently discharged ofllclnls, Never before has tin.re been nu election in Canada in which tho electors hnve been so\nsorely beset bv llu- peculiar Tupper influences whicli\ntheir IndopendcJ\nceplulile to tbe whole country. The inference drawn from this remark is Hint\nbefore long u measure will be introduced\nto reform the senate.\nLord ltussell of Killowen will be entertained ut dinner by Hie government\nnn Monday night. All the privy councillors and iegoJ gentlemen of the bouse\nWill be invited.\nThe Toronto Trades and Lnlnu council petition fur uu Increase ul' tbe cupi-\ntntiuii tax on Chinese lo $500, bus been\npresented.\nMr. (Jibsun gives notice of a bill to\nt by providing Dint\nlue and materials supplied iu\nHit construction o( u railway in Canada,\nwhether it be steam or electric, shall be\ntt first lieu on the company.\nAbout 80 memlieis uf parliament were\npresent iu tlte railway room when Mr.\nPotter of London, unfolded his abattoir\nscheme to Hon. Messrs. Laurier, Fisher,\nDobell and oilier members of tbe government, Mr. Cluiqin tie rend loners\nfrom English members uf parliament\ntestifying in Porter's bona fides. Por-\nllbsiil.v nf $125,000\nwns usked, for tins sum $1,000,000\nwould be spent iii buildings, willi a capacity of -.mm tons of perishable goods\npel week, u special line of 14-knut\nsteamers to be put un tn carry the goods\nto market, the sum of $250,000 to be\ndeposited with Hie government ns n\nguarantee. Messrs. McMillan, Lister.\nOliver. Oarglll, Morrison, Soniervilie,\nTalbot and others strongly opp sod ihe\nwen nnd pnrty project, Lister showing tbut the coin-\nSntiirdn.v after- puny could put up buildings for about\nLaurier\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 govern-\npro hlbl-\n$4000 a year, tbe balance going into the\ncompany's pocket. Premier Laurier\nsaid Hie grent problem uf to-duy wns\nhow to best develop tbe meal market\nin Kngland. The government bud that\nunder consideration. With regard tn\nPorter's scheme tin* government would\nbe careful. He offered no opinion as to\nits merits to-day.\nMnclenn, of York, and Larlviere, of\nProvencher, bud n passage-of-arms oier\nthe Manitoba seiiuol questien in 'ihe\nConservative caucus, Maclean remarked tlmt tbe putty bad nothing more to\ndo with Hie question, il wns in the hands\nof the Liberal party. Larivlere objected. He wanted it understood Hun remedial legislation would become a plank\nin Hie platform later on. if necessary.\nTbe subject wus abandoned after a few\nminutes' discussion.\nMr. Morrison bad an interview with\nHon. Mr. Tarte nnd went thorougbls\nInto Ibe question of the Fraser river\nconservation wilh liim.\nMr. Maxwell bud nn interview with\nLaurier mi Hip subject uf Chinese tax,\nnnd will put ii question on Ibe order paper respecting the government's Intentions in this mailer.\nTlic correspondence which took pln.e\nbetween Lord Aberdeen and Ids late\nministers a few days before the Tupper\nministry resigned bus been presented to\nparliament.\nThe Governor-General contended Hint\nns the Tupper ministry wns formed\nwhen nn parliament existed, its acts\nvvre iii an unusual degree provisional.\nThe fmt that the government failed to\nsecure support at the polls in ids judgment Increased the limitations of the\nsituation. lie lays it down ns a prin-\nnght lo undermine ctple tlmt a government Bhould avoid nil\nTo crown this out- nets which mny embarrass a succeed-\nrngcotts work thrents were added to ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,, government. Cm- this und other rea-\nnpi-ii mid flagrant bribes. sons |,e withholds ids consent to the np*\nIlm debate on the undress wns con- polntmonts uf senators, judges nml pub-\nelnded Inst uiglit, nnd Hie nd Ires adopt. ,;,. offiolnls generally. With regard Io\ned wilho.it division. Sir Charles Tupper senators, be points nut that in a bouse\nmule n very good speech, from bi\nstandpoint. ._ 'I'he government, being\nanxious to g.i ou with business, nn\nspeakers were pm up iu reply.\nof 78 members there nre only five Liberals, mul that if the Tupper government bud appointed mure of their\nfriends it might have led to friction be\nlli.' selection of Sir Charles Tupper iwoon the two branches nf parliament.\nns lender nl Hie opposition was the enly ,\s to the judicial appointments His Ex-\npossible one under the circumstan cs. cellency contends Hint the current .loin nppolnt anyone else would have hurt duction tluit the judges would be in sym-\nthe pnrty badly. It is nol thought tbut p.,tliv politically witli the government\nSir Charles Tupper will remain h\nvery long, as it is believed it is bis Intention to iv.urn to England ami spend\nthe remainder of bis yenrs.\nClnrko Wallace uml Ross Robertson\ndeclined in attend tbe Conservative caucus. Invitations wire sent to ev ry\nPatron and Independent, bul none went.\nHon, Mr. HI,ilr mid 1). C. Fraser havi\nnrriv\nid'-v appointing them is not unnatural,\nSir Cbiiiles Tupper. in a lengthy memorandum replies in Lord Aberdeen's communication, lie cites Mn.v, Tn.ld and\nother constitutional authorities tn show\nthat the defeated govern ment continued\nin full possession of its official authorities end functions ns lung us it retained\nibe seals uf olliee. He defends tile\nid, nn.l wire accorded n warm re- juijBes from the charge uf partisanship,\ncaption\nIn the house to-dny Hie speaker\nnounced Hint be bud issued bis will\nfor the writ fur Saskatchewan.\nDavin introduced a bill in nine,id\nX.W.T. rcprescntntioii act. lb\nintrodtt.\nwns tbe\nus\n: limit\nUr.\nl In*\nsuid it\nI Inst\npoiuts the san.e\n< bill, which was\nund read .1 Bi'o-\nmd snys tbe governor's information on\nIbis point is exceedingly untrustworthy.\nIn ('nun.In, ns iu Hiiglmul, Ibe judges\nnre neither Liberals nor Conservatives.\nHe reproves Lord Aberdeen fnr seeking\ninformation directly through Hie clerk\nof lhe privy council Instead of through\nHie premier or minister in charge nf\nHint department. In conclusion be\nsnys: \"Under the ltritisli constitutional\nsystem, which Canada has ibe hnppinoss\ntn enjoy, the Queen's representative,\nlike Her Mnjesty, is llie accepted held\nnf the country, removed from ihe arena\ni.i political controversy, however fierce\nHie conflict nf pnrlies may be. and iu my\njudgment no more fatal mistake could\nbe made than any Interposition in the\nmanagement nf pul lie affairs, which\nwould cause the Governor-Genera) to be\nIdentified wilh either ono pnrty or tbe\nother.\" Holding those views. Sir\nOhnrics Tupper snid no recourse was left\nto him Hum to lender tbe resignations\nof himself and bis colleagues.\nAt the annual meeting of the press\ngallery to-dny, W. Mackenzie, president,\nin the chair, Hie following ollicers were\nelected: President, .1. A. Phillips, Mon-\njtrenl Gazette! vice-president, Ceo. Simp\nMontreal, Aug. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The members nf\nHie Monti I bar nt a meeting this\nmorning approved uf lhe proposed forri.-\nuli.n of n Canadian Hni- Association\nun'- empowered Hie council to net as a\ncon.mittee to mnke arrangements with\nibe other provinces mid sections lor a\ngeueral meeting of Canadian barristers.\nAccording in pueent arrangements it\nwill be impossible fur I.i Hung I.Minug\ntu visit Montreal. He is due to sail\nfrom Vancouver by the Empress if\nChina mi the 1 lib prox., jnst giving him\nlime for a st.qi over of a few hours iu\nToronto.\nMr. Grondln, of the Northwest, wn-.\nbus been in the hospital lure for scire\ntime, is worse and his condition is critical.\nWinnipeg, &.ng. us.\u00E2\u0080\u0094.Mr. .!. 15. Ferguson, one of the city's most widel* ka-.-wn\ncitizens bus Ii ft for Russia nd in \".he\nKootenay mining district, .nnd lu- Intends tu mnke tbut district ins future .\nhome.\nAc Edmonton despatch says: \"Alex. t\nHarper died m ibe hospital this moriling/\nfrom injuries received on Saturday\nwhile returning to town with a youug\nlady. Tbe horse bulled going dowi the\nbill tu Mill Creek nnd Harper um' the\nlady were thrown nut. The lady iicnv-\nr-red mid fuund Harper unconscious. Me\nwns tnken to tbe hospial but never recovered consciousness.\nP.iukcmmi Mcl.end. of Reglnn, fell\nfrom a r.I'.R. freight train und was\nf*. rii usly injured.\nToronto, Aug. 31.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A Rosland, B.C.,\nspecial Iu the World snys: The dif-\nficiilly of Hie coul supply for mining\npm-puses in this district bus been solved by the discovery nf immense deposits\nnf coal midway between Rosslnnd and\nllie coast. The location bus been kept\nsecret by the discoverers pending Hie\nresult of their application fur a grant\nTaeoma capitalists have just bought out\nthe Lord Rosebery group on Bed Mountain. For the three claims they hnve\npaid $18,000. P.ig strikes are reported\nfrom the Young America and Rniny\nDuy claims, In tbe Le Roi thev havo\nstruck quartz which assays $700 in gold\nto the tun.\nEUROPEAN NEWS.\nsessinu nnd wus on nil\nns Huu. Joseph Martin'\nilltl'odll 1 Inst session\nund lime.\n> \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\nOttawa, Aug. 20, Tbe estimates for\nthe current fiscal year have lieen brought\ndown, lt bud been officially announced\nHint the government would accept the\nestimates prepared by Hon. Mr. Poster, nnd Hie Fielding series sliows this\niu lie the case approximately, A comparison uf the two sets Bhow llie incenses in pensions to be $4500; superannuation, $5000; subsidies lu provinces\n!*::.\",(M-. redemption of debt, $500,000, for\ndebentures fulling due on December 1.\nThere ure dcereuses under the ben,lings\nof public works tn tile amount of $S0.-\n000. Tb\" Fraser river vole was Increased from $10,000 to $25,000. The\nVictoria postofllco appropriation, $100,-\n000, stands. ... . ,_^^^__\nThe following changes are announced [son, Toronto Globe: secretary, A. Oil-j\niii connection with Hie 5th ltritisli Co- ver, L.i Mlnerve, The executive com-\nlumbin regiment. Provisional Second mitte is ns follows: Atkinson, Ulobo;\nLieutenant John A. Forin re- Mncleod, Citizen! Mackenzie, Herald;\ntires. Tu be second lieutenant provi- and Wnllls, Mai] nnd Empire.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0tonally Kenneth Bitrnel vice Godden, A. n. Provnml, MP., of Glasgow,\nretired. who is advocating Hie Oblgnecto rail-\nMr. Mclnnes is to inquire if tbe guv- way scheme, met the cabinet to-dny nud i\neminent nre ewure that Chief Justlce presented bis case to the ministers, He\nDavie was engaged In canvassing during |also laid before llie council a pamphlet\nhsltory of ibe whole ;\ntbe last election! if su, dues tbo government intend lo Inquire into the matter.\nSir Oliver Mowat mndo mi important speech in the semile. He referred\nnt some length to lhe constitution of\nthe upper bouse, nnd stated Hull at lhe\nQuebec conference Hon. Win. McDou-\ngnll und himself were the only two re-1 *-* ,,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u009E.;,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.. i-...\npresentalives who favored an elective made a Q. C\ni\ncontaining lb.\nscheme. ^[\nMessrs. Macdonald nnd Tupper. of\nWinnipeg, hnve applied fur incorporation fur tbe Columbia Mining ('\".. o:\nCanada, with (be bond olliee nt Winnipeg,\nFilzpntriek bus been\nLondon, Aug. 20.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Politically, the past\nweek hns been tbe liveliest in a long\ntime. 'I be bombardment ot tbe palace m\nthe suits n of Zanzibar, the rioting in\nand about Constantinople, the settlement of the trouble in Rhodesia, the\nbeginning of the Czar's tour of Jilurope\nand the advance of the Hritish expedition to the Nile, huve provided columns\nof interesting news daily. The Zanzibar incident ami the Constantinople\nmiusnercs came up like a couple of\ntornadoes. The Britain press is unanimous in expressing the opinion that the\nattack upon the Ottoman bunk has\ndone Immeasurable hurm to the Armenian cause, and news ol fresh massacres\nnf Armenians in the provinces us reprisals is hourly expected. Tbo Liberal\nnewspapers, however, express the gravest il,milts al be genuineness of tbo\nbank affair. Tiiey believe it was gut up\nby agents.\nThe Spectator snys to-day; \"The official account ascribing Hie affair lu Hie\nArmenian agitators is stamped in every\nWay :is u fnlseli 1. nud lhere is ter.\ntnin proof Hint il is a tissue uf lies ill\nHint Hie assailants uf Hie bunk, after\ntheir capture, were removed ou board\nSir Kilwurd Vincent's yacht. This is\nnol the way the siillun deals with rebels\ncaught redhnnded. If these prisoners\nreally revolted against Hu- sultan they\nwould nut have lived ten minutes after\ntholr surrender, uml tlic irresistible con-\ncluslon is iluit the men were secretly\nacting under palace orders, nnd Hint the\nriot was prompted in order in afford an\nexcuse for another massacre.\"\nThe Westminster Gazette publishes a\nletter appealing to the English mocy\nlenders to treat Hie American farmers\nin Hie smne spirit us the English biiid-\nloids treat their tenants in lime of -igri-\ncullurr.1 depression, nnd declares for\nsubstantial reductions nf Hie pr.sent\nrates of interest both in their own interest mul in Hie interests of internu-\ntiut nl harmony.\n('nnstniiiinni.ie. Aug. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The riots\nwhich yesterday cm sod so much excitement through Constantinople are apparently at nn end. The leaders\nmob which attacked the officer\nOttoman bunk nu.l the lobaci\nenle surrendered to Governor Vim en*-,\nof the Ottoman bank, nnd will be ex-\npolled from Turkey, The official account nf the troubles attributes Hie\nriots in un organized effort nn the part\nof the e .iiirnl committee nf Armenian\nrevolutionists to stir up a revolution.\nBerlin, Aug. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A dispatch in the\nsnys there wns u general fusiii.le :in<]\nmassacre, At Hie conclusion of the\nriots many bondred dead bodies\nwere lying nt Psamathia, nt\nIbe bend uf the Sleinbuul bridge. A\nTurkish mob, armed with knives rail\nsticks, luvnded the quarters of the Armenians, attacked Armenian houses and\ntossed Hi.* butchered victims oni of the\nwindows. The police and mililin Stood\nidly hy when wagon binds uf human\nbodies were lying scattered in nil dire.'.\nlions.\nPhillpopolls, Aug. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Travelers who\nhave arrive-! here from Constantinople\nsay tbut the stale of anarchy continues\nat. the Turkish capital mid Hint the\nnumber nf persons maasucred in the\nstreets readies inio the thousands.\nConstantinople, Aug. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The inini-\nsler of police hns appointed n commission consisting of eight Christians mid\nMussulmans tu enquire Into tbe revolutionary rioting which occurred here.\nLondon. Aug. ft!.\u00E2\u0080\u0094A dispatch to the\nStandard from Berlin snvs: it is announced from Vienna Hint Hie Czar and\nHmperor Francis .Tosenb nnd the statesmen who attended the recent political\nconference held there hnve nrrived at an\nagreement which will probably settle the\niVrmenlan (rouble without a disturbance\nuf the existing Turkish frentier. Prince\nLobnnof is reported lo have snid \"Wc\nhave enough to do with oor own Armenians and dei.'I want to have their number Increased.\"\nof the\nof the\nsyndi-\n-..-J? fJ-Tfi-i\ne* em\nThe Single Tax Idea.\nWe publish the following extract\nfrom a letter appearing in the Snn\nFrancisco Call, of Aug. 21st, by Geo.\n\Y. Loehr on the Single Tax question:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTo the ordinary thinker it niusl\nstand to reason that the more a\nfiling be taxed the more tendency\nthere is to jjjspourage it. The natural tendency of everything, animal\nand vegetable, is to grow in perfect\nfreedom. Tin's is a divine law of\nthe Creator and an unanswerable\nargument. By nulling an iron\npand around a young tree you retard its progress. It is a woll-\nJuiown fact that the Chinese women\nretard the development of their feet\nby pompressjon, Even the human\npi ind, that grand faculty that distinguishes us from tht* animal and\nmakes the nearest approach to our\nJJJ ulcer, develops in a ratio to the\namount of education it receives.\nTherefore it follows that in freedom,\nand iu freedom only, can anything\ndevelop and attain its highest perfection. The prosperity of any\npeople is measured by llieir inlelli-\ngence and their means and facilities\npi production. Therefore, to tax or\nfine that which tends to prosperity\nis to discourage production, and to\ndiscourage production is lo lower\nwages and to increase the price of\nCommodities and the necessaries of\nlife.\nThis is the policy the world hns\nbeen following since time immemorial, and the only reason to-day\nthat political economy is being\ngiven the attention that it is is he-\ncause we have gone tp thn end of\nour rope, and if wc don't retrace our\nsteps, we will bang ourselves.\n<\'e stand on the brink of .uncivilized world; the next step westward takes us to the pagan world\nthat wc ran away from thousands\nof yeare ago. Surely no one can be\nso foolish as lo think that this world\ncould not support a larger population than it at present has.\nT\"ip cry of' pyerproduction js\nsometimes raised, and yet we see\nhundreds, aye, thousands, of people\nVthose hunger and wants are not\nappeased, 'there must be some inconsistency here. Surely lhere can\nlie no overproduction when people\nhave not enough food to eat and\nenough clothes lo wear. 1 should\nrather call it underconsumption.\nWe have now come to that point\nin our investigation where we must\nseek llie reason why, in a country\nof such large area, with a nominal\npopulation, and ground able to produce nearly everything the world\ndesires, men are to-day sicking for\nsomething to do in order to earn\ntheir daily bread, and not finding\nit; and when they do, rcceivingsuch\nwages us wil! hardly support themselves, to say nothing of theiryvives\nnnd families.\nA great fault of the human family today, lA-hep starting out on reform measures, is to battle with effects anil nee-\nled the priuiury causes of the evil.\nWhat mini, be lie ibe most uneducated\ntiller of the soil, would start out to eradicate weeds by culling llieni oil' at the\nsurface uf the ground, would be not dig\ndown and remove the ru,ils; mid yel ;Ol\nthe great reformer parties, temperance\npeople and labor organizations, are all\nlighting effects, all claiming to be right,\nwhile the \"ignis I'aluus\" is luring tlieni\non to their own destruction,\nWhat then is tbe primary cause of the\nevil that is today filling jails and our in\nsane asylums, making prostitutes of women and placing u premium bn drunkenness and suicide, while the products ol\nindustry are taxed lu their utmost lo\nkeep up this damnable retrograde movement of our civilization? Are these tbe\nresults of man's development in freedom, or are they the results \"t present\nconditions over which be has, or thinks\nhe has no control? Cannot this entire\nbrood oi evils be laid at ibe door of poverty uud want, the result of bad laws?\nAnything, therefore, that nil! better man6 condition will cortainly\nlessen crime, Bui-hastate of affaire is\nwhat the single tux \"ill bring about,\nlt bus already been bIiowii that\ntaxing a thing bus u tendency lu\ndiscourago it, hence we are going to stop\nlaxitig Industry and production, because\nthese are the mainstays \"i existence,\nand to discourage them Is to sny ilm uc\nhave no right to thai which nature decreed should be ours, but our entiie\nrevenue, for all community rurposes, we\npropose to take from land values created\nby reason of the presence of the com-\nnihility,\nTills will la* a direct tux on hind values ns u location, The reason we claim\nthis io in' no tux is Huu the sum required by the community must be equal to\nthe value Which they give lu bind by\nreason ol llieir preecence and industry,\nlly thus letting the laud values furnish\nthe entire revenue iis before shown, ive\nnaturally tend to dlscouragu laud speculation, whicli bus been llie curs.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ol mankind in all ages, the worst of nil gambles, It \"ill also have the effect of\nthrowing thousands of acres of good bind\nut present held mil of use for speculative\npurposes on lhe market at the annual\nrental value, according to iis location,\nfor \"lien by taxation yuu destroy speculative Value in l-iiid no one will bold bind\nexcept for iis besl use, in doing which\nhe must employ labor nun use materials)\nbotli of which \"ill assist in solving the\nlabor problem.\n; Regarding the wages of labor I would\nsay this, ihat llie natural' tendency of\npian is tu work for himself in preference\nto working lor some one else. Willi ibe\nlun.I open to production, nml every man\nable und Killing to apply his lahpr to\nnatural opportunities, labor would, as a\nconsequence, become scarce, Capital,\nunable to corner land, would bu compelled to employ labor in the production\nof those IIllngS which supply man's\nwants, al. \"in c becoming a benclit tu Im-\ntiiniiil. instead of u curse, anil labor be-\n\".Tiling scarce on account of natural op.\nportunitlos being open lo all, labor\nwould at once lix the price of wages, instead of capital, us under present conditions. Here then you have the solution ul the labor problem by the true and\nonly science of political economy.\nGambling.\nREV. HUGH PRICE HUGHES, M.A\nIt is very gratifying that so much\npublic attention is now being directed togambling. It wasonce nn\nalmost exclusively arisfopratio vice,\nbut within the last quarter of a\ncentury it lias pervaded the entire\ncommunity.\nIf wc are to judge an evil from its\nfruits th.ere can be no question that\ngambling is full of the gravest peril.\nIt is supremely dangerous because\nil is so easy to form the habit of\ngambling. The opportunities are\nso numerous and it can begin on so\nsinali a scale as to be scarcely perceptible, Moreover, even our religious teachers are so ignorant and\ninfatuated upon the subject Ihat\nsome of thom are disposed to regirt'd\ngambling as not nn evil in iiself,\nbut that it becomes one when the\ngambler risks more than he can\nconveniently afford to lose.\nUntil we clearly understand the\nessential wickedness of gambling\nwc can never take a firm stand\nagainst it. li is a singular fact\nthat the only moral teacher who\nhas as yet given us anything like a\nscientific description of theessential\nevil of gambling is Mr. Herbert\nSpencer, who points out that all\ngambling is to be condemned as\nanti-social, on the twofold ground\nthat it invariably means gain without merit and gain through another's loss. The secret charm of\ngambling indeed consists in the\nprospect of getting money without\ndeserving it, The coarsest spirit of\nmanimouisni underlies every form\nof gambling, The love of money is\nthe root of all evil, and the main\nperil of gambling arises from the\nfact that t mt dreaded passion for\nmoney is found in nearly every\nhuman heart and there is no apparent way of getting it so easily as\nby indulging in some form of\ngambling.\nEvery possible temptation and\nfacility is provided by a certain\nclass of brokers, antl young fools\nare tempted to believe that by run-\nninga little risk ihey iu.;v suddenly\nbecome possessed of great wealth,\nUndoubtedly this turns out to be\ncorrect sometimes. They purchase\nstock or shares, and through some\naccident the value of the property\nrise-: in the market, and they are\nable to sell out to great advantage,\nBut ill-gained wealth has a great\nhabit of taking wings to itself ami\nHying away. Easily won is easily\nlost, and once money has been obtained in Ihis dishonest fashion the\ntemptation to try again is almost\nirresistible, and as a general rule\nihe ultimate issue is degeneracy\nand ruin. Xo vicious habit c:,u-es\nsuch rapid mora) degeneration as\ngnu,I.line. \n ihe serious concerns\nof life quickly lose their interest.\nThe gambler lives in a condition of\nunnatural and morbid excitability,\nreal happiness becomes impossible,\nand the disease soon assumes tho\nform of moral mania. Temptations\nto gamble are .presented in almost\nevery column nf the public press\nami ut every corner of the street.\nThe riiniilicaliiins of this vile system\nextend lo the humblest scenes of\nlife.\nWe shall never succeed in eradicating this vice until we prove how\ndishonest and how contemptible il\nis. There is no really honorable\nway of obtaining money except by\nihe sweat of our brow; by honest,\nhard, intellectual or physical work.\nThe man who gels monev without\nmerit ami without effort [a a thief,\nliving upon the toil of others, n disgrace to himself and a pest tn society whoever lis is. The Apostle\nPaul said that be who will nol work\nshall not eat; and Carlisle waB quite\nright in declaring thai the human\nrace consisted of only two classes,\nworkers and thieves.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\t\nVancouver Carnival.\nWe pul lisli below u brief programme\nnf ibe carnival which is being held in\nVancouver Ibis week. (Irent crowds unexpected from far und near, ami everything points to a successful issue:\nMonday\u00E2\u0080\u00940:80 a, m., yacht races; 10,\ngrand trades proeuBBlon; 11, cricket,\nOregon vs. Vancouver: .\", p.m., lacrosse,\nVuiieiiiivcr vs Westminster,\nTuesday\u00E2\u0080\u0094 .Ninth pacific Association\nAinuleiirl lursinen regatta ; 2 p. in., Vail-\ncouvor Jockey Club race meeting; ll u.\nin., cricket, Oregon vs. Vancouver,\nWednesday- II a. in., military and\nnaval ri-vi.-u ; N. I'. A. A. regalia concluded; I p. m,, crluket, Fifth Regiment\nvs. Vancouver; '_' p.m., second duy of\njockey club nn el.\nThursduy\u00E2\u0080\u0094Caledonian spoils nil duy.\nII n. in., log-chopping contest; 11:80\nrod.-drilling contest; 13, cricket. Vancouver vs. Nuvy.\nFriday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Fishermen's Railing and rowing races. .'! n, in., lacrosse, Yieturin vs.\n\"inner of Monday's game; evening,\nHoys' Brigade concert In Market Hull.\nSaturday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Excursion of M. & M. !..\nI'. \. I'loni Nniiuiiiio. I'rnvinciiii cbnni-\nliliilidlilp wheelmen's meet;. Illuminations and fireworks in the evening.\n \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\t\nA meeting of delegates of the Reading\nRoom committee of the V. M. 0, A. will\nbe held nn Thursday evening ut K ;8(l.\nAll are urgently requested to be present-\nMB. McINiN'ES' SPEECH.\nThe following criticism from a Conservative standpoint wu reprint from\nthe Montreal Daily Star, of Aug. 25th.\nOur \"buy\" member, us he bus been\ntermed, has already gained a reputation\nus un aggressive and fearless exponent\nof the principles whicli he pledged himself to support, anil his constituents may\nexpect great things in the future fruiji\nthe \"fresh\" young mail whose utterances Sir Chas. Tupperdesuribes aseratiu;\nRoutine proceedings and questions being ills-\nposedof, ihoSpoakei cut lei l tfio orders ot the day,\nilie consideration of the speech from tho throne\numl Uu- address In reply tlieroio.\nTh.. order Huuil in the inline ul tin, louder or\nihe House, and Mr. Laurlor turned in his sent\nnml nodded in Mr. .Meluness, who oooupled h\n'cm iu the centre uf Ille ClOVornillOM slilcuf the\nHouse. The young inoniber lur Vauoouvor ruse\nund proceeded to move the address Lu reply tu\nllio speech ol His Excellency.\nMr. Mel lines may he called the boy member,\nlie eeriuiuiv Iookb young, nnil ilie Conservative\nside ul me ihniio li flu Iiiiii rather \" fresh.\"\nIii criticising lho spooeli sir Charles Tupper\ncalled it en-title, it certainly wasuggresiiiv.q\niiiiU unlike tin. maiden efforts ol now nml youug\nmembers, li sinu-k sinilnhi mu m his opponents. Mr. Mi-limes oortlllllly duos unt luck\nootirago; ho mny luck tasle nml parliamentary\ndiscretion! that eomes of exporleuce. Pressed\nin n black f ii io k cunt uml wiin beardless laco ho\ni-t.u..l behind his dosk,sooinluly quite at homo\nThore was no trace nf nervousness, nnd he.\nspnke lliionlly nml in ringing tones. Al tho out.\nsol ho referred tho honor done die Puclflo province by the selection of iis youugOBl member\nto move lho address, Then he tola of the grievances of llrlltsli Columbia, sho hnd nut. iven\nproperly treated by lho bile Government. Mor\ncontribution ui luxes wus heavy, the return in\ntho form of public exjienuitiire was small, if\nihe prot im e innl made progress ii was because\nuf the enterprise nf her people miliar llinn nny |\nassistance rocolvod from lho Federal authorities.\nDuring the last livo .vara lhe province lind\ncontributed to llie Federal treasury two millions of dollursa yonr, whilo all loiu'thov innl received from the stltflti treasury (1 ,'JOU.OOO. 'flic\npoople uf Hritish Columbia pnid in tuxes throe\ntimes in muoh per head as the poople uf uny\nother province\nThon Mr. Mclnnes waxed eloquent nvcr the\nresoarcosof llrlilsh Columbia, hor boundless\nforests, lie. rivers looming with llsh. her feriilo\nlands, her rich deposits ofooal, uml her hills\numl mountains nohoyi bod with silver mul\ngold, uut with nil this the Conservative nnrlv\nlui.l tiogloclod ihe u iry, uud one thing ho\nInsisted upon, and thul wus ihe restriction of\nChinese Immigration, of oourse thero wm\nnothing In the speech from tho throne about\nthe Chinese, but Mollltlos brought lho mailer\nupas his own policy, respoolTiig which the\nlinuso will hour more iii ii funne day,\nThe youthful member did mn think lho Cnn-\nmliuii .Vest Innl o ahead fust enough, and he\nreferred lo lho prophecies ol Tupper; and called\nliim lho \"Ureal siren her.\" Thespeakei wwxatl\nvein nt in bis denunciations ef monopolies\nmul ihe Iniquities uf ihe protective system,.\nI.nml. undo nml transportation wore nil In thu\nhands or monopolies, hut tl... peoplo were determined upon redross, lie wns nn Sueiulist:\nmuiliil he weiirn red sliiil; hut Ilo believed il\nwrongs were uol redressed In the halls ot the\nlegislature relipi weulil ho enactsd i.i llie\nstreets.\nI'he Opposition laughed but this did nm dis-\nconcert tbe youug member frmu Vaacouvor.\nlie kepi rii'ii'-un uml llnallv i died the speech\nfrom tiie throne, lie wn- pleased m learn thai\nihe set I question wns to bo settled, It hnd\nbeon brought Into polities lo the Conservatives\nin innl fnitii lur Hie purpose ol diverting attention from tholr corruption mul from the fatluje\nul lho protoetlvo system,\nIn. elusion 1 ssurod the House thnt lho\nUovernmeiil hud liiscnnltdeneoi ho approved\nof tho speech of his pxrolloaov, und then ho\nmined thut un address he passed by the House.\nCabinet Factory\nGEO. W. ROBINSON,\nCabinet Maker.\nHavinc had many years' experience\nI In the bust ; am prupa.ri.il to execute all\n' classes of \vork,\nF ii ru it ure of All Kinds Repaired.\nOLD METHODIST CHURCH,\nClinpul Street, Nanaimo.\nA TUIAL ORDER SOIi]C{Tl;.r..\nWhen ynu want n delicious disli of IceOreum,\ncall at NoKENZIE'S,\nnil WCTORIA CkEBCENT,\nSTRAWBERRY,\nLEMON,\nPINEAPPLE\nami VAMI.I.A\nAlways on hand.\nI\nAi'lin^toi) fjQt^l\nMR. .1. A. THOMPSON\nSaving completed lhe ereotlon nf the Arlington\nHotel nt NANQOSB HAV, this hundsomo and.\n, oommodlous hotol is now prepared to receive\nnml ouiufnrtnl.ly eutorluln Iruvelois i.uil olhors.\nTIIK CUISINE\nIs presided ovoi by Mrs. Thompson, nnd lho\nTallind'Uoto constantly provided with nil ibe\ndollcarlos ol lho season. Comhlpod wilh lho\nologanl furuishcii apartments, the visitor finds,\nLhe surroundings ol tbo must ploasant dosorlp-\nPeople who Appreciate- \u00E2\u0080\u0094>\nPUEE DRUGS\ntfavo Uiolrprosoriplloni dtsponied \u00C2\u00ABt\nPIMBURY'S DRUG STORE.\nTholr t'rtcoi mi- Right.\nTolophono :i.\nFISH AND GAME.\nMarket, Bastion Street.\nsli'iinicrfiiiiiil Shipping lllppllod on short notice\nnt Wholenalo Prices.\nFlint i lui-!*. Acriiinnici.iiitimi. Kiro-proof building\nTer rs: $1.00 Per Day and Upwards.\nThe Doon Hotel,\nJAS. IIKNNUTT, Proprietor.\nCnniineri'in! St., Nanaimo, B, C.\nLodge Notices.\nInkrrmitn Lodge, No,K^,S;nt,iofSt,\nGorge.\u00E2\u0080\u0094li.-j'iilur weekly meeting In held\niii lliliiert's lliill, Wharf street, on Sat-\niiiiiAV overling ut 8 o'ulouk. Visiting\nlirothrou cordially Invited to attend,\nFred, Wagstaff, Sec.\n#^\nMINING BROKER\n1WAHT\n20 MEN\nTO JOIN ME IN A\nMining 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.\nCall and see me.\nTHOMAS KITCHIN,\nThe Most Complete Stock\n-OF-\nGents'\nFurnishings\no\nIN TIIE CITY, AT\nJas. McGregor's\nVictoria Crescent.\nPIONEER\nCarbonating and Bottling\n\"WORKS,\nMITCHELL & ItUstMiMn, Proprietors.\nManufacturers nf Lemonade, Ginger Al.., Sar,\nsiiiiiiriiiii, ciders, Etc,\nTHY OUR GINGER BEER.\nAll Orders Promptly Attended To,\nTelephone 20. p, Q, n\u00E2\u0080\u009Ex ,M\nNotice to Ladies,\nI AM Adl'.NT fur Nunaimo and Dis-\ntrlnta fur tlm New mul Perfect Carter's\nminis System. This system is up to\nclato; a i.erfeiit ladles' system ; is \vitli-\nputa rival nml easy to learn; is noted\ntot'its graceful lines and elegant forms!\nu is not an experiment hut a development, I nan also tench how to use this\nsystem, and also all kinds of Dressmaking executed in first-class style. Prices\ntusuit the times. Address,\nMargaret 31. Macdonald,\nNo. fill llalihiii-tuii .Street,\nD. S. Mai'iliiiiiilil'g j-itore.\n\"CRITERION\"\nRestaurant and Chop House\nCo.MMHIll'I.II, KtIIKKT.\nOysters in every style.\nMeals, 25c. nnd upwards,\n(Idiiil iieds, 25c, ami upwards.\nSpring Ojiicjtep always ou hand,\nTry PJiilnotit's Tomato Catsup\nU5c. ami .V.l.'. per llultle.\nWe Never Steep. Open Day and Sight.\nJohnston's Block, Nanaimo.\nTHE BEST --\nis the CHEAPEST\nThe Nanaimo Bakery Excels\nSMABT i THOKNEfc\nThe Popular Bakers,\nCuban Cigar Factory,\nour Olgnnaro n-adoof [ho Choicest Havana\nTobaccos, Our famous\nCuban B}ossom \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\nBlack Diamond\nAro called for ovorywlioro, ami aro suporlor to,\nuny liii|intii'il oigar. Mado by Uiilqu Labor,\nM. .1. BOOTH, Wharf Street.\nc. c Mckenzie,\nLand Agent and Conveyancer,\nAMi ACCOUNTANT.\nOITICKl ntoyi' STREBT, NANAIMO.\nTown Lola ami Farms for. Sato, Honey to Loan\nnn Mortgage al low rales.\nAgent for the United fire tnsiiranoo Company\n01 MantllOBtor, Kn^hnul.\nJOS. 1. BROWN, Watchmaker,\nof Wa& Demagnetized shortNotioe\niiy SPECIAL .M.u-iiixiiUY on tlm Premises,\nFine nml Complicated Watches and clocks\nCarefully Cleaned ami Repaired\nFine OVI'LOJI KTUKS, for Bfoyelei, In Stork.\nCollM-lt OlttntOII AMI OlIAPKl, S'I'IIKKTH.\nForaQoolDrink\nA8li fOl' **\"- ( fllAMI'AONEOlOKK\nLawrence's !&!\u00C2\u00A3\nPUKEKA SODA WOUKS,\nManuIactuwrofTompotfttice DrInki,ByniDi-Ao,\nDpUyorecl freo to oil parti .\u00C2\u00BBr city aha vicinity,'\nSitT' I'toiii*'! iiih'iiti.m I'tiid t7,500 a year, tho work to be! wa noticed a communication over\n|mpleted according to estimate in the signature of\nout three years\u00E2\u0080\u0094that is to say\nI'out five years. Nothing probably\nExplanation Extraordinary-\nIn Saturday evening's Free Press\nthe Rev\nGunton purporting to be\nplfinnti.>n of his stand on\nW\nan exilic re-\nluld show the contemptibly weak cent police scandal in this city, but\nId time-serving nature of the in reality, a plea on behalf of Con-\nlirner-Eberts combination than stable Thompson. We have no\nfe fact that they countenanced or\nhaps had not the manhood to\nFsjst this unprecedented grasping\ndesire to be harsh in our criticism,\nbut we must say that the communication referred to, coining from the\npower by one man to alter, con- pen of a clergyman is indeed extra-\nnse, vary and in some cases en- ordinary.\nrge the existing law of the Pro- He says, \"that he is satisfied that\nnee. We have heard of the In-, Constable Thompson can clear liim-\nlutes of Justinian and the code self when the trial comes off,\" and\nipoleon, but both these codes j adds, \"Will'they'not wait until he\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2re the combined work of the best is condemned by his proper judges\n,vyers of the period and country | before passing judgment? Will the\npublic not wait until they at least\nhear the evidence?\"\nWe are not aware that \"thoy\" or\ni which they respectively belonged.\nlur own Canadian Criminal Code\nlas bused on the work of Imperial\nbmmissioners and submitted to\nlery judge and leading counsel in\numdii for suggestion and approval.\nlit the I nst it u les of Davie apparent-\nare to be Hie so)e and undivided\njirk of pavie without consultation\nIth or assistance or ad vice from any\nBier legal light of the Province.\nlint Mr. Davie under proper re-\nraint and in conjunction with\n1'ier lawyers Could render valuable\ndistance in the consolidation of\nIe statutes no one will deny. But\nthe pul\nhave passed judgment\non Mr. Thompson, but it they did\nthey would be guilty only of the\nsame indiscretion which the reverend gentleman admits to, with tiiis\nslight difference, that Mr. Gunton\naccuses \"they\" and the public of\nbringing in a verdict of guilty,\nwhile his own is .me of acquital.\nWe hold that il is equally wrong\nfor the public or the Kev. W. .',\nGunton to pass judgment in the ab\nsence of evidence, lint why is the\nl.it it is not safe to trust him evidence that would establish the1\nJjne with such work was well innocence or guilt of Constable\nlo'.vn by the insolent though in- Thompson not before the publio?\nt-cct iniei'fercnce which lie at- We believe Constable Thompson\nJnpted wilh the divorce law of the wholly responsible for ihis, there-\nn-ini'e, ami which came lo light fore on himself lays the blame for\nen the first part of his work was the very unenviable position which\nng reviewed at the last BS3sion bo Qnds himself in before tlm public,\n[tiie Legislature. Now, as (he! Ho has -through his apparently\njwllington Enterprise says, Pre- pnid advocate, Commissioner Simpler Turner promised at lhe last son\u00E2\u0080\u0094taken advantnge of every po*-\n1'ro Mono Publico Taken to Task.\nEditor Mail:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Although it is\nfrequently slated that the unexpected habitually happens, let me\nassure you that \"Pro Bono Pub-\nlico's\" letter in last Tuesday's issue\nof ihe Free Press only serves to confirm the correctness of my expectations, which were to the effect that\n1 no sooner would the train bearing\nI the Rev. I). A. McRae from Nanai-\nI mo be well under way than some\ncowardly, tagless and mangy cur\nwould be heard yelping after his\nheels. Those who have resided in\nthis city for a number of years will\nj not have failed to observe that when\ni lhe editor of the Free Press lacks\nthe courage (and such occasions\nare not rare) to express an honest\nopinion on a publio question\u00E2\u0080\u0094such\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 as the recent police inquiry\u00E2\u0080\u0094he in-\nI variably presses into his service the\nscurrilous pen of his trusty henchmen \"Qualioum Tom'' or \"Pro Bono\nPublico.\" lt will be remembered\nthat in the early part of the year,\nwhen an effort was being made to\nj remove (.'unstable Thompson irom\nj the police force, \"Qualicum Tom.\"\nassisted the frail and foot-sore old\nman to the foot-lights, and lent him\nhis support at ihe commencement\nof his (the editor's) crafty and\nspiteful crusade against Mayor\nDavison, through the medium of\nhis paper, meantime holding up to\nthe public gaze as a paragon of virtue and integrity, Ihat same Con-\nstablu Thompson, who, at the present juncture, rests under the disgraceful charge of being an habitue\nof Fraser street brothels and of\ndrinking intoxicating liquors therein, for which money was paid in his\npresence contrary to law.\nIt would be qiiito in order now,\nMr. Editor, for the Free Press to follow your laudable example, and\npublicly point out to the mild-\nmannercd Constable Thompson,\nthat if he is innocent nf the charges\npreferred against him, his first duly\nlo lhe public, himself, find the religious body of which he is said to\nbe a prominent member, is to call\nI for an immediate and thorough investigation; but if guilty of the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2barges, he should lose no time in\nlivesting himself of the blue cloth\nind brass billions generously pro-\nman, and no longer llie fool he was\nin the early part of the present year.\nI doubt it. The transmutation is\naltogether too sudden to be genuine,\nas the following quotation from his\nletter will preve: \"The majority of\nthe Council have proved themselves\nutterly incapacle of governing the\ncity, and have made such a disgraceful mess of things generally\nthat we will be only too glad to\nprofit by this year's experience.\"\nThe public did not fail to notice\nj that he did not instance a solitary\nease wherein lhe city had been misgoverned, nor could he truthfully\ni do so, even were he as wise as he\nwould have us believe. So\nabove unsubstantiated allegation\nwill only serve lo convince the ever\nwary public (hat tbe fool of January was slill a fool in June, and\nthat he has at the present time\nadded knavery to his folly.\n\"Pro Bono\" took Mr. McRae\ntask for blaming Mr. Quenne\nE. & N. BAIIAVAY.\nj Wellington, Northfield\nEast Wellington\niriie'inv. Such charges are ultogethei\ntoo serious to admit of any un: \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 in\ndelay, but if Air. Johnston's word cnu\nhe reliod upon, I am glad that lie freely i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nexpressed his entire willingness to pro-1 Victoria,Southern Stutesuni\neeed with the case in eifihl weeks' time, j places along line of E. & X\nmul also that he had not the slightest I Hallway\t\ndesire to shield nu unworthy member of\nthe police force.\nFree Lance.\n \"\u00E2\u0099\u00A6*-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094 -\nCLOSE. DDE,\nDally ox. Sun,\nA.M. A.M.\n11.25 8.60\nAnti-Mongolian.\nCommenting on the Anti - Chinese\nmeeting held In Vlutroiaon Friday evening last, the Evening Times says:\nl.iist evening's meeting undoubtedly\npronounced the opinion ol the majority\nin Vietorin when it approved the pt-li-\ntiuns to Parliament asking for further\nrestrictions on Asiatic, immigration. It\nllie '9 reasonable to expect that these peti-\ntions will be largely signed here, und\nthat the sentiment of the publio will\nthus be emphatically made known to\nthe legislators at Ottawa. The latter can\nhardly refuse the request for restriction\nif it is joined In by the large majority of\nthe people of this province, who have\nevery right to ask for so reasonable a\nto measure of self-protection. The people\n. I | the other provinces have no practical\n to tell them the ex tout of the\nI Was Mayor in 1895, for the Un-1 evil which threatens-, therefore the\nlimited license which was given to greater is the need for an earnest and\nimmorality whilst he was chairman emphatic expression of opinion from\nI of the Board ef Police Commission-1 Brlti8h. Columbia. The steps necessary\ners. Now I should like to know\nwhere the blame should lie if not\non the broad shoulders of the burly\nbutcher for the disgraceful state of\naffairs in the city at that time?\nWas he not lhe man who was\nmainly instrumental in appointing\nCrossan to the position of Chief of\nPolice? Certainly he was, and such\n.being the case it was his duty as\nthe people's representative to ini-\nI press upon (he mind of his colleague Mr. Simpson the urgent necessity of compelling the police to\nrigidly enforce lhe by-laws of the\ncity, but contrary to this the public well remember that during his\nterm of office a very numerously\nsigned petition having for its object\nthe betterment of the city's moral\nstatus, was submitted to the Council\nby the Kev. I). A. McRae and other\npaomiiient citizens.\nThe petition was read and Mr.\nMcRae in rising to make a few explanatory remarks was insultingly\nordered lo '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 sit down \" \" sit down \"\nby the chairman, Mr. Quennell,\nand had not the present mayor,\ntoon an alderman, demanded for\nMr. MoRae or any other person\npresenting a petition, a citizen's\nright of Free Speech, Ilie Reverend\ngentleman would not have been\nallowed to speak. However the\npot: i ui was referred to the I'ulice\nComniistsoners (the Board thei\nSI'S\na\ntoward this are not simple; lill that is\nneeded is to give every facility for the\nattachment of signatures to the petitions\nund doubtlesB the citizens will give their\nattention to the mutter.\nAlberni Notes.\nGeorge Smith has finished the survey\nfor the tramway and road to Alberni\nfrom the mouth of .Mineral Creek. Mr.\ndoing has just finished the survey of the\nl.iist Chance, part of the Quadra company's properly. Mr. Brown sent down\nsome fine quartz from Mr. Kithet's\nclaim.\nOn the Yellowstone rich quartz has\nbeen struck hi the Alberni tunnel. The\nAce of .Spades still continues to improve\nand shows up a line ledge.\nGeorge Brown and George A. Kirk are\napplying for a crown grant on the Mission I.ink and Champion claims. Over\nHill men are working iu the vicinity of\nMineral Creek.\nThe new hotel at Mineral Creek is\ncrowded.\nThe Quadra arrived here Saturday.\nTexada Island.\nSaturday Mr. William Blewitt, superintendent ot the Van Anda mine, and F,\nMi-Crady returned from Texada island\nhy the Joan. Mr, Blewitt brought down\nsome of the ore thut has been taken from\nthe drift which is being run from the\nbottom of the Van Anda shaft, and inag-\niiili.-cnt ore it is. It is peacock copper\nore very rich in gold, the precious metal\nshowing in patches that ure distinctly\nvisible Io the nuked eye and need no\nclass to discover, The ore is exactly\nsimilar to the samples thut have assayed\nhigh up in llie thousands and prove beyond the shadow of doubt the immense\nDaily ex.Sun.\n8.20 11.50\nBY STEAMER.\nVAXCOCVEB MU7JC\nBritish and foreign, EttBtern\nProvinces, Eastern States, i*\u00C2\u00ABil-,*ex.8uti.\nVancouveruiul other places p.m. p.m.\noo Mainland of B.C. G.3U 6.03\nCOMOX KOUTK.\nComox, Union, Union Bay,\nSandwock,Gourtenay,Gran-Tue>. Frl\ntham, Qualicum, Hornby cm. p.m.\nIsland and Den man Island 8.20 3.00\nVICTORIA ROCTK.\nSalt Spring Island, Burgoyne \"\"ty Tue\u00C2\u00BB\nliny, Kill for. I Uarbor.North\nSaltSpriiiglslaiidundGttb- p.m. p.m.\nriolu Island 8 20 3.30\nHY STAUK Tuas. Mon.\n131 SIAIjU prj Thur\nAlberni, Parksville, French p.m. p.m.\nCreek and Errington 12 30 6.00\nKit Thur.\nISanoose Bay 12.30 0.00\nP. M A. M.\nDeparture Buy, daily ex. Sun 12.45 10.30\nCedar (South), Saturday .. 2.00 1100\nJ. H. PLEACE,\nit\nA Full Assortment at the Lowest Market Ratea\nJOB WORK.\nPromptly Attended to.\nI ini'iiiieil -mil ' '''''''\"ess of Ibe gOlddeposits in lhe mine.\nvutnnui anu|T)ie (h.ia is now in 80me t,VPIlty_,*ve\nfeel with tin\nconsisted of Me\nSimpson) weth a strong recom-1 f00t with the rich pay streak eighteen\nmendation from the Council that Inuhes wide and the vein averaging over\nthe prayer oi\" the petitioners be j twofeot In whlth. Besides this ini ex-\ngranted, but line lo their usual ens\nner promised\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2imi to hand over the work to\nIroe commissioners, lie has not\nI ne so. Is he still so much under\nthumb of his former master\nill he dare not divide thai $7,500?\nrid must the people of this pro-\nfnee submit as meekly :i:id tamely\n'the Ttiriier-JOherts combination\nthe man who practically ap-\nJ.iuied himself and appropriated\nIs own salary for the work. Our\naders perhaps do not known that\n'was iiki'oiii: Mr. Davie was sworn\nas Chief Justice of the Province\nI id while his Influence was still\nramount in the Government of [Won would he, similarly situated,\nIhioh he was the head that act as Constable Thompson did?\nwas appointed sole and only j-H*\"- would he expect \"they\" and the\nrmmissioner at *T,500 a year\u00E2\u0080\u0094as publio generally to look upon him\nIross uiul outrageous an abuse of \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 as an immaculate martyrofprivate\n^o power entrusted to him by tho persecution?\n[iple us could well be imagined. J We may be included in Mr. Gtm-\nipne knew better (ban Mr. Davie ton.\"* indefinite \"they\", who have\nflint the ethics of ihe profession already passed judgment on Mr.\n'd the Invariable prudice require Thompson, If so, we m iy be par-\nsible technical objection as a means\nto burke investigation and suppress\nthe evidence against him. He\nknew that bis accuser, the Rev. D.\nA. MoRae, was ou the eve of departure fur his home in California,\nyet he denied Mr McRae the opportunity of proving his charges before lea vini,'. Charles Head, lhe\nEnglish novelist, selected as a title\nfor one of his works, \"Put yourself\nin his place,\" a motto we would recommend lhe Kev. W. A. Gunton\nto adopt in the Thompson case, and\nthen seriously ask himself the ques-\nj ceedingly rich streak of ore conies in on\n,, .. , I one side of the drift, and it is intended\ntorn Messrs. Quennelland Simpson t0 erosscut this drift to exploit this\nnun im the members of the police | uttei.)v ig|lored (he wigheg of the Urealc. Flft9en lm,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.e \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 e.nploved\nlorce by the citizens, who naturally , ueop|e aud .|1(ji|. representatives. on the Van And,., and several more \"rre\nexpect that SUCll Uniform shall bei .\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2.,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E Bono\" states that the Pu.leo t0 '\"' l'\"t Ul \u00C2\u00BB'ork ut once. Arrainre-\nwoi-ii on our streets only by men j Magistrate did quite right not to count-lm'nts wil1 also be made to erect hoisting\nwhose character entitles them to the enanea any illugality on the Mayor's m , n\u00C2\u00A3 to facilitate development.\npart while sitting on [the Hoard, I was j \u00C2\u00AB'*>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2, ll,e shaft which is now seventy\npresent tlmt evening and am r.mly to | !''ot, deep will be sunk twenty feet\nlurthiT and another drift run to the right\nAll kinds of\nTin and Sheet-Iron Work.\nVictoria Crescent, Nanaimo.\nBakery and\nRestaurant,\nInvites Inspection and Comparison\nas to Quality and Price.\nTHE BEST BREAD IN CITY,\nAwarded First Prize at the Agricultural Show.\nBKST TWO-BIT MEAL IN THE CITY\nBastion Street, opp. Telegraph Office\nF. KOWBOTTOM, Prop.\ntallest confidence of ihe people,\nOne can easily understand the\n\"old man's\" clam-like silence on all\nmailers pertaining to the \"police\ninquiry\" when one considers the\nbond of sympathy existing between\nhimself, lhe accused, and the little\ntyrant of Nnnaimo's little court.\n1 can also readily imagine tbe editor of the Kree I'ress, perched on\nhis accustomed seat- astride of tbe\ntopmost rail of the fence\u00E2\u0080\u0094waiting,\nus of old, lo see which way the\nwill jump\nprove ihat nothing illegal was attempted by .Mayor llavison, Mr. Simpson and\n.Mr. Johnson however carried lhe motion\nto pottpone the investigation in an il-\nlejiiil manner as the resolution passed at\nu prelims meeting of the Board topio-\neee.l wiih the investigation immediately\nbad never been res,-iii.lt.I,\n\" I'm Bono \" exhibits his ignorance\nbecause lie knows how- when lie avers\nMr. bimpsoii would be held responsible\nlor un Irregularity of the Board owing to\nllie fact ol him being a lawyer.\n. . I'm Bonn taxes you with handling thy\ni.i,-, , [truth verv carelessly, Mr, Editor, but\n, but 1 fail to see how any j \u00E2\u0080\u009E |,en )lt. sulU.a Umt ,-|R. Board Wlls ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\nof I he vein.\nOn the Lome lale claim, a mile and a\nhull' away, Mr. Johnson is doing development work, tlte ore being free milling\nand highly promising. Mr. Haper is\ndown 2o feet on the Victoria, another\npromising free milling claim, and the\nore looks very well there nlsn.\nMr. Mel'rady baought down some fine\nsamples of ore with him, and altogether\nthe outlook at Texada is highly satisfactory.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Colonist.\nTHE CITY AND PROVINCE.\nman possessing one lingering, la- la liinous in their decision to exclude th\nlent spark of lhe principles bv public Irom thu meeting and that Mayor I\nwhioh a genuine journalist is gen\"- ' 1)',vU\"1.1 lli'1 \"\",' \"\"'*-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2',' 'st'\"\"S opposition ,\n.. ll.... V, \u00E2\u0080\u009E l ii i i* i i il\" Bu*'h decision, let me ullirm thai\nerally gauged, could publish such a Mayor Davison before ascending the\nletter us that, written in oondemmi- I stairs lending to the Council chambers,\ntion of Mr. McRae und the methods ! remarked to me that it was his intention\nie adopted in brinuina about the llPM-wtWe'to i.ftve the uquelins In the Y.\nsenile to i\n,, ,,,, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 , ,, . . ,, .\i..'.A. Hull, uu l|iu ground floor of the\ninquiry into the uclion of Crossan building, that the public might be a,-\nand Ihompson. ll was penned by Icunimodnte.l and in conversation wilh\n\"Pro Bono Publico\" immediately\t\non the latter knowing for a cer-\nAn entertainment will begiven by Mrs\nWorthlngton at the Methodist Church\nWallace St., on Friday evening, 4th\ninst. at 8 o'clock. \"The Story of Reuben Heath\" exemplified by steroptiean\nviews is the subject to be presented.\nThe well known ability of Mrs. Worthlngton as an elocutionist should druw* a\nOffloe Tel. 80. P.O. Box 16. Residence Tel. 101.\nM. J. HILBERT & CO.\nSUCCESSORS TO\nJOHN HILBERT\nFuneral Director and Embalmer\nGraduate of the Oriental, the Eureka,\nthe New Vork and Clark's\nSchools of Embalming.\n1, 3 and 5 Bastion St., Nanaimo\nSCOTCH BAKERY,\nVICTORIA CRESCENT.\nlike ihu Kev. Mr, Gunton wo\nour judgment in reserve until\nany important alteration or\nlilicalion of existing laiv. Such\nirk is never entrusted to one\nInn. And for this reason even if\ni could assume that he were\nIrivy tu his own appointment his\ni-nduct is open to severeoondemna-1 Constable Thompson should at once\nnn. The work is certainly badly \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2em**11** an Investigation ofthe\n.'eded, but lot ithe done according oharges made against him, or else\nprecedent and practice. A com- j retire from the police force.\nIssioncomposed of two judges and\nI'.ree leading counsel should be able\nli coinplote the work easily in two\ni'jars and their work would be revived with moro conlidence and\nSpecial to Our Readers.\nFor the balance of this year we\nwill send any subscriber, in or out\nof the city, the Sk.mi-W'kkki.y Mah\nlltisfaction by the people generally and Toronto W'ee'ily Globe for 85o.\nInau that of the Chief Justice, even i'he (.lobe may be hud along with\nTiiough he were to labor ten yeursltlio Mail from now till the end ol\nf,t $7,500 ayear, 18 7 for Hfd). The Mail will bi\nincreased to seven-column paper in\ntwo weeks, and the(ilobe is increasing in size, commencing Sept. 1st,\nII The proposal before tbo Victoria t-> 16 pages per iseue, so subscriber!\nity council to re-divide (he oi y will get the worth of their ttionty.\n^lto four wards with two aldermen Commencing this week, we publish\nl.'och instead of three wards with _ the Mail on Tuesday and Friday,\nThe Ward System.\n|ll|\" lo llielr iiiiallerinile ilclcriniiiiitii 11\nlo have ii closed incutlug he was unable\nro lloiio Publico,\" in the beginning of his laments over the\nerror he claims to have committed lout a license. In ibis connection 1 am\nlast January in assisting to eleot [ reliably Informed that Mr Simpson, win\nnew blood into the City Council\nliiin after the meeting lie referred me to| ''\"V*' audience.\ntheinlnutus which prove that the motion The Nanainio delegates to the W. C.\nto ux.-Iu.Il* the public was curried by T. U. convention, to be held In West*\nSimpson nn.l Johnson only, (lu the minster commencing Tuesday morning\nfree I'ress report the names of those at 10 o'clock In the Presbyterian church,\nvoting for the motion were with- were M-esdauies Hall, Lister, Priestly\nto convey the idea that the and Bryant. Theyieft by the Louise on\nwas iiiiauinioiis) and that ov*! Monday morning,\n' held\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 vote\nlainty that the Kev, I). A. MoRae\nhad left Nanainio for his future\nhome in California, The letter in\n, , question was intended to discredil\n(loiud for taking this opportunity Alr, McRaound that the writer and\nto deny ihe mild insinuation.. Un- publisher are contemptible cravens,\nhold is evidenced by the fact that thev ! l,J \"arry out his Intention of hulding the\nwe metaphorically stabbed their would- IT,'!!.'.8 L\" }*l\u00C2\u00B0 '','\"\"'.j,i',\";, rT' '\"sl\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' , .... \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 , I , , | m in li nm 11 \"I Pro llonos letter uharues\nnot Ihear the evidence. But we hav. *-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \"hen l-ayim,' .,\u00E2\u0080\u009E..,, K.\u00E2\u0080\u009E. Ulli , lmuu,, \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\n., , , the city wherein he has labored so government ot tim city m heart because\nsaid, and again repeat, thai faithfully during the past sU.yeara. '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 p nut huve the suioon keupers\nBono Publico.\" in the be- \"Polled1'for selling liquor during pro-1 question, said he had nothing tn say.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 iiblted \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E>, ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009Ef for permitting the; T||(, Danub a,.flved t Vii.toHn g\nl.rasei' street houses .to sell I r with- ;,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,. morn|ng ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,.., Bomewhat protrftot.\ned trio down. She reports that the upper\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0eiiaoiy iniorn.e,, inai ur Dimpsou, win,, . , \u00E2\u0080\u009E. , . exceptionally\nici-nis to haven decided aversion to is-1 ,i,\u00E2\u0080\u009E, ,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E*.,, i,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E. , i,;\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ... \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,,! i..,\,\nuiug summonses iu certain cases, true.\nIn lhe provincial police court yesterdny morning, Mr. M. Bate, presiding\nJustice, gavo his decision in the Hodgson case, nnd committed the prisoner to\nstand Ills trial at the next assizes. Mr.\nBate snid this course was rendered necessary oh inj; lo ihe nature of some of the\nHodgson, iii reply to lhe usual\nquestion the truth of that statement. The man who can publicly\ndefend the unwarrantable action of\nJ. II. Simpson, who tried to burke\ninquiry into the actions of the police, the man who is eager and willing to [lose as a champion of tyranny, a .nil seeks to conceal from the\npublic the fact that the liquor law\nand the Sunday observance by-law\nnave been frequently and flagrantly\nviolated] the man who endeavors\nto make martyrs out of publio officials, who have as yet offered no\ndefence to the charges which have\nbrought ignominy upon their names\ncould NHVKR have been in the most\ninfaiilismal degree instrumental in\nelecting Mayor Davison or one of.\nlo Ins usual custom, would not grant a\nwarrant for the last named ott'euce,\nPro llono's pen in this his last paragraph once more advertises the empty-\nnuss of hlshead, Hoes he not know thai\nLhe only effectual way lo remedy an existing evil Is to carefully diagnose the\n.use, Iiml out where the fault lies, uud\nstrike there, sir, Instead of bungling in\nthe manner suggested by Pro Hone. Mr\nMcRae being fully convinced that the\npolice were very largely responsible for\nthe license given to Immorality and violation of the law in the city,' laid his\ncharge iigaiiiBt Crossan and Thompson\nand ciune before the Hoard fully urmed\nwith proofs, witnesses and all necessary\nevidence lo substantiate every charge,\nand ulso lo prove that Crossan und\nThompson uol only connived ul the in-\nfrnetion of the law, but were numbered\niiinoiii!: its habitual transgressors.\nIt is most unlortuiile that Mr. John-\n11y weather this sunim >r,anda number\nof bnsih ilresare raging, Sawmills which\nare driven by water-power have come to\na complete standstill, and nre finis unable to complete orders for boxes for the\ncanneries, The Danube brought down\nKill bales of furs, valued at $50,000. The\nfollowing is a list of shipping from the\ndifferent canneries: Inverness, 860 cases;\nNorth Pacific, L'OOO; H. A. Pilcco, 11000;\nCarlisle Co., 8000; Balmoral, 111 cases;\nall from Skecnu river. From Rivers Inlet,\u00E2\u0080\u0094Aberdeen, 680cases; Nam 11 Harbor,\n1350; (loud Hope, 1100; R. T. O. Co.,\n5400; also -J000 empty tins for thc Fraser\nriver.\nHy a recent decision of the Supreme\nOotirt of the Creek Nation at\nPerry, O.T\u00E2\u0080\u009E 1700 negroes have been\nStricken from the roll of citizenship of\nthe Nation on the ground that, the ae-\nlion of the Indian Council in admitting\nthe negroes to tribal relations wns un-\nCollSlitllUolltll.\nBread,\nCakes,\nPastry,\netc.\nAU Materials used in connection with the above\nguaranteed to be first-\nclass.\nWILSON & MATTHEWS,\nProprietors.\nALWAYS IN STOCK-\n6\nGROCERIES,\nMINERS' CAPS,\nUNDERWEAR,\nLAMPS, Etc. etc.\nTAXIDERMIST DEPARTMENT ,\nItiiins and Animals set up in a thorough workmanship manner.\nOn Hand\u00E2\u0080\u0094Four fine Peers' Heads,\nwhich will be sold for price of setting\nthem up, Also a fine ease of Birds.\nSEWIIB MACHINE NEEDLES If HI HIM.\nD. S. MoDONALD.\n6)1 Haliburton Street, Nanaimo.\nCommercial Hotel,\nOarncr Commercial nnd Bastion Stt,\nThin long'Mtftblllhed Hotel In eomfnrtfthly\nfitted up witli Riiperior accommodations for travelers and others.\nI\n,,.. ....\nli?.';.\n'-**\u00C2\u00AB,'\nV l(,>\n5 1.\nT. O'COjNjNKL, Prop, TIJBKEY AND ARMENIA.\nMUNICIPAL CU'tiM OIL.\nAt the regular meeting of tiie Council\non Monday evening there were present\nbirth I\" four children, three girls and\n_____ 11 boy. The largest weighs seven\n, ,,.. , , \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E , . nouuils, llie smallest, five. The total\njRenejfal.pf Disturbances Throughout 's.eight ,,_ tlie qutt_tette is 24 pounds,\nAsia Minor. bll nre healthy and will probably live.\nMrs Stickles bus given bii-lh io live ,, ,, .,, .,.., \,\n I . i- ...i ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.i,.s Mayor Davison, Aid. Wilson. Mor\t\nnller elul,li'cn, two ut iviiuni are twins, i - '\nLondon, Aug. 111.-A ibsimteli to the Toronto, Aug. UU.\u00E2\u0080\u0094lt Is expected In Planta, Westwood, JJartell Bradley, and\nrust from Constantinople snvs: .Mem- \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,.;.,, quarter that Premier Laurier Foreman. The minutes of the previous\nburs of'the Anne,,...,, revolutionary sp- w\u00E2\u0080\u009E, visil ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E., lnt, hl lk.Ut[KV, tr , , Objection was taken\npieties throw a bomb on thepremises ol (,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,ly in Noyemberi wllon Hou. j0sepb by AldfMorton to tho Hording of motion\nthe Credit Lyonnnis and tobacco sj mil- chnu,bc_inlll ,viu ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E. back from bis pri- reVinting of Bioyole By-law, claiming.\nMe 92 Saturday night. The amount ,..,,,, visil to llis wl_a .,;\u00E2\u0080\u009E, relatives at U)& tlle motion was put mul carried\npf damage is not feported. m.,1, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u009E, Mess. u.iii the sume should he printed in li. 0.\nA dispatch to the Daily News from . Gazette and Daily Free 1-f-css whicli bad\nConstantinople -lives \u00E2\u0080\u009E personal inter- iJ01!don, Aug. 20.-The Birmingham not been (,ttrried out, and suid By-lu*.\nview with Frauk Barker, w'ho was lc.ft ^ M,, oiiamlioi-lalu-a organ, aj1\" (,ad been published in the Mull. Gin\nin i.li.ee \u00C2\u00BBf Sir Edgar \ lucent i.s liostuge ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,, that UoUi j__. Chiiinberlaiii <,, k \u00E2\u0096\u00A0_\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E',\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E explain-.il that he ha\nduring the negotiations between Arrue \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 bfls s|l,,iillly arranged to return in time \u00E2\u0080\u009E|1,k,|.st\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009Ell )mt u,,.1,,,,,,!,,,, w,ls,|,ai tin\n|an toders in the Ottoman tank rani, ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,, ihm. *,*,,,,,,,, Laurier at the , |(| |n. ui,|i,l\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,| ;\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,,,, _,. C.\nand Turkish officials, lhe dispatch.says ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.;\u00E2\u0080\u009E, 0\u00C2\u00A3 the empire. Gazette and a newspaper circulated ii\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Mr Frank Barker stated the innders ... thecity. After considerable disi-irsslon,\nfold tiun. they Intended to se ze the Torol,t0) Aug. 21). -Au Ottawa special , ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ,., ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E hv AM, vvi|gun *,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,,.\nCrtdlt Llonnais clBccis and eMode n to the Star says: Tbe suitomi-nt which Westwood and 'Braillev It was finally\nbomb there. It was part ol thoi plan *_ou, *,,,.. Scott, secretary of state, made decided to amend the \"minutes lo re, .1\nIn raid tho Volvoldn police sinli.ni nf \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E lhr aemte yesterday, in Bpeaking in ut*.,., mai1 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nthe snme ti Bombs were to be ex- , jxnnitoba Bchool question lets the Tlia'niiniites wero then udoolod as\nPi 'I at the police sfitlot. sliu.ilt.iii. ri, ou) o|. \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E. b ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E. thoroughl;.' .,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,! ,, \"'\"l '\neolisly wilh lho attack upon Gredit M \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E_,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.t tn \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.. _\u00E2\u0080\u00A2,,,__,.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,._ nnd settle-\nIn never done, nnd it b especinlly wearing\nand wear! lonie to tlioso whose blood'Is\ninipura nnd unfit properly to tone, sus-\ntnin, nnd renew tho wasting ot nerve,\nmuscle tind Uiitue. It is moi'ii becnuse of\nthis conditiou of the blood that women\naro run down,\nTired, Weak, Nej-vous,\nThan because of the work itself. Every\nphysician snys so, nnd 1 bnt tho only remedy is in building up by tuklng* h good\nnerve tonic, blood purifier aud vitallzer\nlike Hood's Sarsaparilla. For t hoi roubles\nPecitliar lo Woman nt change of season,\nclimate or life, or resulting from linrd\nwork, nervousness, and impure blood,\nthousands have found relief nnd euro In\n, '''.',, wilh respect to iis charuclir mil setll\nLyiiiiiinise. However, the me im.Ien t A, , ,.1M u b1ioh1i1 sll,|sfy il\nfor the attack on lho Credit Lyonna s of MllIlitobll ,,,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E coercion is ns\nnl Ooustiiiil plu Innl nothing to do rln)Wl .\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E Amw mM \u00E2\u0080\u009E,,,, ,,,.,, ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E, ii,,,s\nwith the killing nl Armenians. i\nl-l.l ITIOXS l\n COMMUNIOAT10XB,\nCom in ii n icii ion from the l.ieenicd\n..I llie City asking thai ihe\niieu'd as ii floor n.-iil mul thai the lines Vlutimllt..\n, of neltleiuenl ivll aluioBl entirely sat- license be reduced from J to ifAW i er\njimlis consisted entirely ol the lowest .,,.,,.hP,.v ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,;\u00E2\u0080\u009E. majority, annum, was submitted anil referred r\nclasses In C'onstiintlncplu and siibiirlm, When so stalwart n chainplou of tin' l'\u00C2\u00BB pro'ier or order of business i\nLazziironl, the Kiireti nnd men who . ...... ,;.'., ' ..hurch and state in hibsioii.\nwork along the wharves nf the city. It t)l[\"rJanndliin Biintisl npproves the pro- Aid. \Veslu I, on behalf ofthn fiirsl\nis now estimated thai over l.i per- setllemenl lt is safe lo predict estate, applied for permission to erect a\n\"'\">\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\"\" killed. Mam tl lias been J, w|1| h_ |it|||i objPt,lloII mis(,d by scaffold on Vb-toriu Crescent forthepur-\njcovered with cvoliiiuiii ny plnonitls, ;., 1{< i\u00E2\u0080\u009E n\u00E2\u0080\u009E. nose of repairing tho front of the Orlcn-\nf repairing thu front of the Orlcii\ntal Hotel. I'erinission granted inidei\nthe usual conditions.\nCi il lei- mi subsidy to Union SS.\nl'n. reported rucoiiiinendlng thai llu\n... . , . . i , ,. any quarter, savu the extremists in li\nevidently posted by he \oung tirkey ^ l\nparty. Serious .rouble la expected on Mr g ,)0 ,g \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E, IHg)| U(,\nMonday, tho anniversary of the sultan s ^ ,,,,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.,.,. ,,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,. ,,;Uliv,. ln .|\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\noi-nssnm. cabinet, frankly admitted thai remedial\nA dispatch m Hie Standard from ,,....,.. ...\u00E2\u0080\u009E' unworknble and linpos- amouiit bo reduced to if25,l)0U,. instead ol\n\u00C2\u00AB***\" ^\u00C2\u00BB the S, Isl, governmenl ' \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\" '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ;' , '\u00C2\u00BB , |\"J: ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E;'\u00C2\u00BB,', 7^. ,S0,OU0, au I that the time for re-pay-\nbus a ov the conduct ..I I aptnin- . .. di.tricts w|,or,,: inanl be made 80 vein-, instead ol 2\nGeneral Weyler ami Lis Issuance of the * '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' ,,'';''\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.,,,,,, !|, . I veins, lnic.es on the itebinitunB to b.\n_ _ i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i \u00E2\u0080\u00A2. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 11 . .i r /i,,i. , IMI 1H M111 l.l I I1 PI I i!\"> iuiaiu ii 11' i .ii tiin\nnrl.-.-s prohibit ng Hie people ol t uim ' ' ' ,,,,,,...,, ,,,. ,,j ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nin.l foreigners resKle.,1 In Cuba from *\u00C2\u00BB'<\"' eaunol s,,ei k 1 ,,sli e l.i- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nhaving any Intercourse with foreigners >*\":>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> be per. \" \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' ''\n, ., ,, , , , ,. ,.,,,., \u00E2\u0080\u009E,_,. ti,_ hi,,. .,i,.,.i,lv been things nre running in the house the ses-\naeenseil of excesses have n lj ,,, , t d\n'U'\T\t t i \", Th. ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,, snbleet All conceivable questions can be brougli. ?f .2S,\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB on ash.pvaluetlat .IW.UOUaiii\nBerlin. Aug. M -1 be main s bject ^ ^ \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E hnsured in fnvor ol tbe im rt0'agec, woul\nItUSBinU .' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ... , i. ..inn sr,'in II v in siii-n a ease, even\nper cent instead ol (J per cent, line\nmaking u levy 1 2-1-ltlO ol n mill on tin\ndollar, ll ie com milieu uIbo submiltedii\nil raft of the ugreemeiit with the company.\nAid. Bradley asked ll the City would\nhave any claim un the hoiil by virtue ol\nihe mortgage after the expiration of the\nlive years, as she might be sent to Chili,\nPeru or Hong Kong, or smne other pari\nof thc world.\nAid. Planta replied thai the mortgage\nif!, 25,000 \"ii a ship valuetlat lj 00,000 mul\nfor . iseiissinn between the Rusainu , ,\n. . , . . . ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u009E;,.. i,,.: , i \u00E2\u0080\u009E ( onservat ves have many rags to chew\nminister of foreign affairs, I'rince no- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,,,. \u00E2\u0080\u009Ei\n, ,.,.,, , , ,, i>,.:,,. ii,,i it mn.v be taken for grnnreii\ntwen the oiar ,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:,,,,,,,,,' William ^aue th enth-e ^ot^bejo^\n,l,e correspoudent of tbe Associated \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ^ \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nI'ress is Informed, will be the east ,,\nCrfeXrAetugT^'nte^ \u00C2\u00AB lections. It was made P f^!,;\n. ' i, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i c ,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ;. clenr by tho govern in enl thnt no nur,\"\nbetween Kussi.i hikI Ucrmaiiy is pro- , \u00C2\u00AB . . , . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,\n... i .. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .... i \u00C2\u00ABi,,, i',.;,.,,. wnnld be biiowii ontoinifl who nnnitMpr-\nbab\e, ana it Is esueeteu tnat i nno , . ,, , ,, . , _* ,\nt i mn , i ,,.iii i\u00E2\u0080\u009E 11( j-1,,.,. od n theelectotia beyond voting nnl\nijobunon Uostovskv will nrrive t iin-T- .... ,. r t i.\n\"| ;\"\" ft -f \u00E2\u0080\u0094 * ^C^5S7S? J3-S \"\u00C2\u00BB\n>u&\".:,\";;';';:,;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB , ..\u00C2\u00AB* \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB ^.\"- \"t\u00E2\u0080\u009E8\u00C2\u00B0tf'r-v!\"^\n, r , i ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E. ,, i- ..ii,, ^i government omceils. bul ns lwo wrongs\n^ Xg\u00C2\u00B0annd0t enni '\u00E2\u0080\u009E , ou Tbu^ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -,_ -\u00C2\u00AB* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00C2\u00AB**\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ^SST\nday. when .1 Inrmlng news of lhe;\"*'\" P\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00BB\" h ' '\" \u00C2\u00BB\"'h \"'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\";'\"11'-\nuprising in Constnntlnople was received, .i\"*\"*\"\"? ,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 , , . ,,, .\nPrice Hohenlohe wns comniunlcate.l London, Aug. 20.-A dispatch to the\nwifli on his estate. The opinion prevails < hroulele from Koine says a private le \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nin diplomatic circles here thai lhe East- ter jus. received from Constau iiiople\niw-js if=t,vH;:f ^fS'So^\nConstantinople, Aug. Lin. Brent nn- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2? \u00C2\u00BB \"~ h l\".AH\"\"s '\" '\neasines prevails among British rt si. effed that severe fsbting has been\n' , . ' .,, ,11 ,r ii, going on ngn list Seliuos nnd near In-t-\ndents ui villages on the shores of le \u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Th\u00C2\u00AB , , thl ,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,;:,.,, tic.\nBosphorus,\narsapanlja\nTh\" line True Blood Purifier. Ill six for tb.\nPrepareilnnly l.yd. I. Uooil&Co,, Lowell, Mass.\n, i^.|< are the only pills In take\nnOOCI S PUIS withIIooU'bBursttiiarllla,\nArm\nhi\njought r-fuv\nIt is feared Hint tl>.\nt'.vein tho Cretans and the Turks\nunknown, but it is known thai ninny\nwounded\nilii rs have In ell brought\nhouses will be attacked. Michael H. r\nben British charge d'alTaires, has ord- .\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,, \u00E2\u0080\u009E\nercd the British guiirdshlp Dryid to re- A ,t_.^|l:l,_\u00E2\u0096\u00A0, ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E the Telegraph froi\nmove iiiini hes des r ns urotrctlon, I ... ... . '.... . .... .. ., , ,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ,.,\nback to Ileraklion,\niu good security in such a ease, even ii\nthe bout should he lost,\nIl was finally decided that the matter\nhe referred back to the i imitt.ee, to\nhave power to add to their number, and\nreport next council meeting, Alls.\nMorton, Martell and Bradley so appointed,\nBEPOUTS.\nHon.I Foreman's report for the past\nweek was read ami on motion recefvou\numl Hied.\nAid Planta, on behalf of tho committee appointed to arrange to semi exhibits, if possible, to the Agricultural\nand Horticultural bIioh- al Vancouver,\nreported verbally thai owing in ihe latent-SB and uncertainty of Lho show the |\n, oniuiittcu had decided to drop the mutter.\nAid. Morion reported verbally on behalf of the lire ui.ulcus, recoil,mending\niiml two an,'.'linn n.s be madu iu iiic\nmail, at C-iimituwn. Uecc nmuiidntioii\nadopted,\nBY-LAWS.\n.Moved by Aid. Wilson, seconded by\nAid. Morto'n, tluit the Tax Sale By-law\nbe now itttiruietl, corpornle seal attached\nnnl thai the same bu published ill lhe\nI',. ('. Bundle ami lhe free I'ress. Carried.\nAid. McDonald asked permission to\nintroduce a by-luw to boi\nflriitii O'ljViin Innl no limits to wear,\nSo lie eiiin',- to Niiiiiiliiui in buy liliii ii piilri\n\"I'll linve one pulrof thick and one pnlrof Hun,\nif 1 run Iiml Whttllold's,\" says Iirinn n'l.yiiii.\nlie li.mleil llie stores nil along tiio niillli rnale,\nSnys he: 'The right ono I've not vol found out.\nI unlit W liillielii -I'll buy inil}- from liim,\nI'm- lie sells the i lienpest,\" snys Brian III.vim.\nlie stepped n littlo west of Allien street:\nHe snw wiliHielil's sign\u00E2\u0080\u0094sure 'twas a (rent;\nIto opened tho door ami Uoorgo Blood within\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I've found It nl lasl,\" snys Drian o'l.yiiii.\n'.Ve showed In in our cull l.niils. kill ami cowhide,\nllie ones we priltse mosl- no senilis nl lhe shle.\nWe've iiiinisef nil kinds li i Quebec aud Morlln,\n\"Sure you'vo boots fnr the million,\" snys Iirinn\nO'L'yim. [na truli;\nIlo 1 .-In liiin Ills boots, Which \"f ..'se were\nHe i.ni.l ilnwn llis money, for wo sell only for\n'l'n (lie pul.lie le-siivs: \"lie not tnken in, [cash,\nbuy only from Wliitlielil.\" says Brian O'Lynn\n\"If there's n leak in tho too or si.leaf ynnr shoe.\nJH8l in|<.- ii io Whitfield, Hint's all yon need do:\nHe will pea It or patch jnst while yon nre ill,\nA lei .in argo seems like nothing,\" snys Iirinn\nll'l.Mill.\nVVHITIIELD, the Shoe Man,\nYicToiiiA CilKSOKNT, Nanaimo.\n4Ton,e Again-\nV___e)%^%*%^%^%%^%%%%\nWe are back to the old stand, agaij\nbut are\nMINUS ANY OLD OR UNSEASONABLE LINES OF GOO?\nAs we either sold at auction\npacked and shipped these old-time1\nso you will see nothing but\nFRESH, NEW GOODS-\nSee our.\nS Millinery Departmen\nIt's up to date..\nSTEVENSON & CO.'S\nGreat Cash Dry Goods & Men's Furnishings SW\nCommercial St., Nanaimo, B \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\n{ESo,\nLadies ami Children's Sewing done\nneatly. Trices reasonable, Address\nMRS. Dio VILBISS,\n102 Nicol Street.\nMrs. A. Baldwin.\nOlTers her services to the Ladles of Nanaimo ns an EXPERIENCED NUH8E,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.iin, has had large experience In and\nth rough the Northwest Territories. Address\nNURSE HAt.mVIN,\n80 Nicol Street.\nBARItlSTKnS.\nmove families desiring |irol ction. I . ;\\u00E2\u0080\u009E''!S^'! ,'i', !'''!\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,,','. .'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"'!';\", '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' ,,i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i'er introdnue a by-luw to borrow ifa.OllO to DARKER & POTO llnmstors ana Solicitors\n^ British vessel In port mny he re- fe^SS*' Dr iilrsJli U,o iVar- establish n tire ularn, syste.,, und Im- \u00C2\u00BB -' y\u00C2\u00ABM \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\"*-*\t\nQUisltlon I ease of lleee-sil.v. There U , \u00C2\u00A3 *-, pnc ontBi \u00E2\u0080\u009E iM ,.,..\u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E Ill nine I\"\"*'1' *!lt *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\"'\u00C2\u00AB depttrtlllBlll, l.eques. ., ,. ^ ,, Ti \u00E2\u0080\u009E,. \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E, s_l|_|,\u00E2\u0080\u009Er, R00ra 11\nalso much anxiety In tbe suburbs, where t0 st pet(,,.sbm.gi w,,i|\u00E2\u0080\u009E the Cr.nr will Brallt' _ ''' *\"\"\" M'\"'k'\nmany Europeans have Ar ulnn ser* ,. . ,.is ionmpv .,;,,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.. '|'|\u00E2\u0080\u009E. i-/. ir, NKW hosi.N'KSS. ii, inniis ,v McINXES, llarrlsters, llooin 0\n- .rope\t\nvaiits. The Allien,in eolliire at ITie-ar ^'^'siatelirwili'aei'oinp'iny'ilie'l Varo.a I The potilion reine hotel license was\nami the Bible house at Stnmhnul nr\u00C2\u00BB on |h(, ,.,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.., |nnrnCy as far as Kelt, then taken up. Un uioti be mutter\nguarded by tn s. United States Mini- Tllry 1(,MV1, un gnturday in..rain-'. was referred to it coinmittee lor report\nster Terrell visited ll.ssar to ascertain A dlftpnfc|] ,,.,.,.iv|lll ,>,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E Unnstnnti- und Aid. Morton, Wilson, and Bradley\nIf the Aii.ericans were sale. I lie elu i |lop]e BOyB tho BHlt(ln |ms ^aneiioncl the ! \u00E2\u0080\u009E,.|e appointed as a committed\nof police oi llissar told lemll that srll, ,,, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ,,,,. ll0Wrn, for \u00E2\u0080\u009E settleincii! AM. Morton asked permission for the\nmeasures Innl In en tnken to preserve or ,lf ,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E, ,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2,.,,,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E uuestioll\nder. Tin- Gnlnta ipinrter is rjiueter. A\"\n1 The W'esliiii.istei- Gazette tins alter\n! . .ion says the Bank of England is be\nare. seen in the streets. 'Hare was n B*nu*ng ,,, r,,,.| ,],,, _,,|,i withdrawals\nfresh panic yesterday, owing to n lonili!,.\nbeing tin-own while soldiers wero\nml has therefore redui ed the prl E\nuse ni the public park .... Sept. 18 and\nIII for tin- purpose of the Nanaimo A^i i-\ncullure iiml Horticultural Society to\nIn.l.l their exhibit ion, and further asking\nfor a nian to be sen. to lix the l'nik.\nMcINNKS & McINXES, llarrlsters, Boom u,\nJohnston I'.loek, Coimiiereiill street,\nY'ARWOOD 4 ViiI'Ml. llnrrlslers rner of\nt'ollllliorctttl nml lliislion streets.\nBOTANIST.\n'Ii HARDY, liotnnlc Drumrisl, Wlnllold Cros-\n1. COIlt. '1'iy llniily's I'ile llilltlne.it.\nDENTISTS.\nbeing thrown while soldiers wor, re- , nB]cs .Ul,| rnised the price of bar goM, Keqnusts gruulod.\nturning from Sola mill;. Nobody was njt*, ,] |,j,.,., ,,,- |\u00E2\u0080\u009Edueiug shippers to \\,\, Bradley drew altenlion to tho\nhurt. The Immli thrower was arrested. _,*_,, eagles, The papi r meiilioned a Ids i need of u railing near the ll. ( . Cannery\nAlthough several Arineiii.in districts **,\u00E2\u0080\u009E* it |_ probable, however, Hint the Co.'s building, and thu matter was ru-\nwere the scene on Thursdny evening olii.ank will be forced to further raise tho f0.red to tbe Street com mittee for action.\nnv'sacres .... I plllnge. the city Is one tor ,.,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0;,.,. 0f |mr ,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,,:,i |n order to mnintniii Aid. Westwood .new attention to tin\nnnl tlo> ait| t\".riti's now Onnenr ilet< :\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u \,\u00E2\u0080\u009E, tl,,, ,,,,,,- ..,.:,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,. fnrlfier stales tt i,.1 ul.l..,...ilba '..I.,, I.,.],i I,, ,-,.,. nir\nI ivl;, mason', fii'iitist Extracting a>speeinlty\n1' (insnail lllliii'iiilliiinistereil.\nOlliee, llilil-I'ello.v's Block, Nnlliiiinn.\n| - I \" - \" i*\u00C2\u00AB .'... ,.-'.' -\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ......-.-- .\|ll# 11 I Ol II llllll lill,, II linvill-l'ill U'I u\u00C2\u00BB.--\nthe nuthoritlns now appear deter- :.. |m| the newspaper further slates II \u00E2\u0080\u009Eeu(| ;,| uhlewuiks being kepi In repair\nmined to maintain ordtr. | is not likely that enough aold wil! he in vurious portioni of the city.\nScores of ilea,I have lieen thrown Into withdrawn by the United States to 'I'he Council t1' ,i adjourned until l.o.tt\nthe sea in order to save the trouble of cause a rise In the hank's rale of ills- Monday evening nt 7:B0 p. ni,\nburying the bodies. count, with gold nl tile present ligtirc. I . n .\nThe British charge d'affaires has re. n is further stated that ii la prohnni\n('. E, Stevenson o. l'n. have just va-\ntne i.i-nisii ennrge nairnires nus ve-.n is iininei' Btnreil in-n n in proinioi- ; _' !\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.. Slevensoii ei Co. Huvo jnst. vn-\nfused the request of tbe sultan tn with- the bank will permit n further with- entud il Id stttnil of Sloan ,v Scott,\nBaying he ennnot do so eitil the .lis- drawn! of seven or even ten millions be- ; luiviiijf disposed of the old stock by nuc.\norders arc thorouihly quelled. fere Inltlng protective inensnros. tion; and having hud their heatii|Uui'.\nOf tin' Armenians who seized the <>\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 quarters enhirged und Improved, un\ntoniini bank, five were killed I five Montreal, Aug 211.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Joseph Bandronn, now displaying uolliing but tresli, np-to-\nwounded. They had nil i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 from about no years old. is seriously ill hero. lUlU, kuu,|b the millinery department\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0oiin..eil. I hey pa,I ell ( .' Iron snout on years om. is seriously in iicrc. _tut0 unoils, the millinery Heparin.e\nhrnnil. Fifteen Biirvlvnrs hnve been He retnrned lately from British Uolum* heiiig especially attruutive,\nent to Marseilles, British ami French hia where ho Innl made a fortune in _ ' -\u00C2\u00BB.<_\nThe riuliiare was guarded all uiglit the mines, ami Intended to visil Lis ge),[uu8 Accidilil to Ml'. E. QlIOllllC'.\nIon,; hy the British giinrdslilp Imogena relntlvefl If lie could iiml them. I'hcy K Uuunnell wits tho victim of a r.NTKKNATIoNAI, HOTKI^PETER WEIOLE\nend two Turkish giinhoatn. are suppored to live In the neighborhood ^ , h hall-pas, t uml l l'''\".\"'\"'\"\"'- Victoriailresoont.\nIt is rtlll Imnosslhle to nive the ,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2,\u00E2\u0080\u009E,, nf St. Hynclntho. I'l c old ma stln* .,,,.,,., \u00E2\u0080\u009E...,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E u,,,.rnu0\u00E2\u0080\u009E ' Mu was \t\n\i* .1. CURRY, n. I.. s.,(lrucn\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I . class a elk t:llillnlUee,l.\nBlock, lirst\nDRUOQISTS.\nIIARMACV. il.i\n. . i. Viet,, in . resi:\nill family re. Ipos n Bpociulty.\ni iRESCEXT I'HARMACV. IIai.i. A Sikiiiman,\nt pri.prielors, VlctorluCrcsuont. Dispeaslng\nI*. ImVi III.I., ATKINS, WATSON CO., I.liniieil.\n-ll Modioli] Hull, corner . oiniiierehtl innl 11ns-\ntioii sireets. Telephouo l-Q-0.\nDYE WORKS.\nVAN llllll liYK WIllfKS. - llyelnn, Cleniilii'!\n.1 mul Ituplltl'lllg II Xlool street.\nI'. I'll vlil.roN. Mnnilirer.\nFISH MARKET.\n(' MARSH, Wholesale Dealer in risli and\ni*. .anile, iin.-iioiistroot, Naniiimo.\n , .; o'clock vesterduv uliertioou, lie u\nnumber of victims of the rioting. Tn the atey refusej medical assistance, driving a*horso uUuched lo a buy rak.\nstreet between Do mhugooho nnd To I'orontn Aim. 211. I' Is understood .,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.., .V. .,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.., i,..,...,,,,. i,-,..ii,.us ami\npanzo it resembled \u00E2\u0080\u009E field of |,\u00E2\u0080\u009Ettle. <\" he likely thai between K00 and -mo \" .', ''' ;l \ lS'1 \. ,'. , | \"., ,\nKi\u00E2\u0080\u009Ey noli,, w-c-e counted there. Tbe '-\"iie,, Stales scientists will attend .he \u00C2\u00AB> Wu^fon, hi, ...i.MiiaiiJn,.,,,,,,\nI'otlS f Armenians in varlou, n\u00E2\u0080\u009Enr. meeting of ho British Assoelnt on fo ,,,,^,1, ,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E, fmuUlro 0f\ntern have-on nlllaeed and Galntn and he Ailvnnt mt of Hciit ee, to he held |eg and broken collar bone; also\nI'era are rTeeimlerl by the mllltnir. <',,- Here In Aitg-ist next. I He ga rn \u00C2\u00ABJ , , , , ,\nairy patrols are to be seen hi nil lhe I'roililsrs to be the grentesl ..I tne kind .' XUl ,;'\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,.,.. u. \u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009EM sin,m. ,v,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\nstrne-s: th- slums , 1\u00E2\u0080\u009Ej..i I few ceer |.. 11 |, All erica d , /, ,8\npeople venture ont. In addition lhere A nrgo nnmljer of dulegntcs In '- ,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E-,....,., ,.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E',..,,,,,. '\ne-\" rtunnrs of disturli.inces ,-n Koninl.o '.ngellcau Synod are en ruiitc to \Mn- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 J^_\n^f Ar fans -cfle ,, -L\u00C2\u00BB^&W;a{^^\nm-u-nem, lint \"- nnthnrltl'*s are een- tn\" ve-'tci-dny. Awarded\no.im-i r,,i. ,.,,r,\u00E2\u0080\u009Eiin\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E i',\u00E2\u0080\u009E M\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\u00E2\u0080\u009E i\u00E2\u0080\u009E \u00E2\u0080\u009E.... Tho (Jliihp aiinoitncoB the nppoinlirent \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB.\n\"ottntr-r*I an,rattaek Innocent ner- \"r \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\" 'T' ''\"' D\u00C2\u00B0vl*' member of North Highest Honors-World's Fair,\nsons, end the police nnd twer, (1 v,,.-. ;s ,',,iOT, .,, ,i,,, i,.,, it,,,, w .\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB.\nhismH fnrTielng passive oMnoker. To- J';.,.':'1.'.\"\"' '\" \"'\" \"\"'\"'' \"f Provin*-lll\u00C2\u00AB\ndi.v i..,,...ve.. several croups of Turks **''''\" '^'\nwere dlBprmert, - \"* * *\n_. , ., Yeknhtnnn. Aug, 21'.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The entire cub*\nV,'..\u00E2\u0080\u009Ei \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u009E. OS -Ti\u00E2\u0080\u009E. Pnarii'i ml**'- -..,., , ... , \, ,. <*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u009E Knmi\u00E2\u0080\u009E |\u00E2\u0080\u009E,s\nSter ... (',. ,\u00E2\u0080\u009El nil.. \u00E2\u0080\u009E.,]\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E,,\u00E2\u0080\u009E..,\u00E2\u0080\u009E ,|\u00E2\u0080\u009E. ii))])rr] notltt|_ p,.,,,,,],.,. ,|'|\u00E2\u0080\u009E.\nMnwillrning l'!l'..| host's n' A r\u00E2\u0080\u009E,e.,l..,s t.,.\fi., \u00E2\u0080\u009E,.\u00E2\u0080\u009E,.,, \u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E .iccollnt of I 11 i D'f!*t\"l \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n''\"\"! ' '\"'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094 t'\"' drugged their of enlrloii r\n1,^-lte; Hr..i.\"ti t'... .''i.,,..i,i r!''*!\nIt'll is llnifi theirr-'iitc-.-! and best nerve\nBi\nPOfiii\nMOST PERFECT MADE.\nnre Grape Cream of Tartar I'ovvder. I\nn Ammonia, Alum or any other aduitei\n40 Years the Standard.\nIN SI ll A NCt: AND FINANCIAL AG KNT\nWnl.l'i:. I'lnnnelnl nml liisiirnnee Agont,\n' .Inllllnloll llloeli.\nII MAI. RST ATE\u00E2\u0080\u0094I.NHII It ANCE.\n|j'..III:m.\N A IIAItllY, Ileal Ksliilu llrnkers.\nI llni.1 lon sl reel.\nPAINTING, PAPER-HANGING.\n1 NASII. House nn.l Blgn 1'niiiler, Piiner-'\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 I'llntilier. etc. I-orner of Alherl innl Mil.n.\nslreels. P. II. hox 'Jlls.\nBEOOND-HAND STORE.\n0 TAYLOR, I Ier in nil kinds nf Xew nnd\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Secnnl linn,I Furniture, innl I'miey Arll-\ni'!i.^' 11 every rtosorinlioli.\nNext to Qitannoll'8 Commercial Streot.\nMILK INSPECTION.\nTested by the Curtis-Babcock\nMilk-Tester.\nWm Supplied by\n.IniiicH Ma shall ,\n1\'n-|in I.nnl.\n^^. Cal ci lev .\nJ . etiindlo\t\nil. ll Cnlverloy .\nA . Haines ...'...\n.1. Oalverl\nPercentage of\nButter Fat.\nin\nf\d\nf-.2\nf,1\n4.4\n4.0\n4.0\nStokesei NTalpass 8.8\nl.'oiir. E. .McKkciinii:, Md).,\nllenltbOilicer.\nNaniiimo, B.C., Aug. 20,181*6.\nroil] NoW O^\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0<^=s\u00E2\u0080\u0094.To the End of \v%u\\nMust be the Order of the Dal\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0(5-TpHIS MEANS.\nV 1 Exceptional Opportunities in Many Liiw\nTO-DAY WE BEGIN TO OFFER -:-\nLawns, Prints, Flannelettes, Muslin]\nChambrays, Girghams, and all SunJ\nmer Goods at a 10 per cent, reductic\nto clear.\nSUMMER DRESS GOODS -:-\nWill be Reduced to Very Low Price\\n. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'-;\u00C2\u00BB$\u00E2\u0080\u00A2?'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\t\n'J^Gnll und save money here by getting our cash dij\ncount, instead of n chance for a bike, etc.\u00E2\u0080\u0094money saved\nmoney made\u00E2\u0080\u0094at the\ni.P.S. Sf "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_1896-09-01"@en . "10.14288/1.0082593"@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 .