@prefix ns0: . @prefix edm: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dc: . @prefix skos: . @prefix geo: . ns0:identifierAIP "7e9fec05-d948-4f4e-9667-4aff3fc926e2"@en ; edm:dataProvider "CONTENTdm"@en ; dcterms:issued "2016-05-12"@en, "1885-10-10"@en ; edm:aggregatedCHO "https://oc-uat.library.ubc.ca/collections/pmgazette/items/1.0311692/source.json"@en ; dc:format "application/pdf"@en ; skos:note """ -THE- gijt.f^Miig fedie, rDin-uutn EVERY SATURDAY. sr suttcmrrioN by post, m TWO DOLLARS PER ANNUM INVAK1AHLT IN AlrVAMT.. \\|1 cotnmunicatious addressed to ,, *S». BL ILOOrAJ-T, Port Moody. 0, te ths (.imbdian Otfiee, Now Westmtn- iter, »U1 reoeive prompt atteutiuif! ,_-__e_-'__FW*l|fl-»*»»-i *» ' *~— alette. VOL. 2. POKT MOODT, B. C, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1885. NO. U PASSAGES FiUJM THE J. .A.. CLARKE PORT MOODY. R-fkAI. JE8TAT OFHP--CLAEKE WOODS k TURNER, UNO SURVEYORS Roal Estate Agents, toveyancers &- ccountants. How-rc*_i .of bis JOT extol I tic r ORT MOODY LOTS FOR SAL: MONEY TO LOAN.., _ itSJIaUMBU ST., NEW WESTMINSTER WJUQIAS &DEGHT0... ' Sallies + Harness-inakers Every Aitiole In their Line Always in StocJ. THE TRADE Front St SUPPlflED. YALE B. < ■ - « C D. Kim, B. X. Ilasn RAND BROS., f Real Estate Brokers, OOJ-VE-WtKOEHr., ■HUBiNC'l.) AGKNTB, tie, flltT BO0J>T PHOPBBTV A HP-ft*. At/TV. 0alujna.aSt..Ou ..mire Pi.Bt..ffl.:., ^Hfir iVstmiHamiu. fl. C- Port Moody SHINGLE MILL DOITT FORGET TO 00 TO THE POM Moody Shingle Mill, where tho host ,,(f .'v.iii','1-*! cun be hud at the lowest prices, wholeinle or rutin.. 1. A Hupply kept eotiitai.tly on hand. JOHN B. TIFFIN. BRITISH COLUMBIA D1M.Y OF A LATE I'lIVSIUAN rtiuuud.) jfcstice to the virtues Kio wife, or sufficiently rying, ennobling iievo- re of her slUicted bus- nly joy was to uiinistor to t whatever tost ol feeling at sll hours, in all aea hear with bis infinite, incon hims.peiversities, and provoca is, to air.-ct delight when ht was de- hted; lo soothe and comfort him ler all his imaginary grievances, whole thoughts, when absent from . wore aii.oibed in devising schemes for hi ggg She wonld lisjen to no . cessation from her .anxious la "pBfsuasions, noinduci.'ments, coold draw her even tm a tuomenr ftom thn- diosry scene of her husband's hutnilia- liini J degradation. Hail, woman, esalted amongst thyaeil Eulogy wonld but tarnish snd obscure tl*e honor tbat is thy duel . "All, however, was unavailing; tiie otihappy snffer'e. sxhibited no symptom of mental convjli'sconce; on tiie other hand, bis dirlusions beca-ttr.*-* more numerous add obstinatethari pvi-> He (gemed to be total Ij unconsoiohs or i iftine's bning his wife; j|£ treated .her, and spoke of her, as, ah amiable oom [runiou, and even made hethisconfidant. ■Amongst other vagaries, lrV**»omniuni- cateil to hor a loiio^ttf^: about his attachment tn ii you!ig'-"|irl he had (recti about the premisos, and earnestly asked her opinion in what way he could most successfully make her an offer! ' Ile addressed her, one morning, as Queen, receiving her with* the most obsequious obeisances. He persisted in tbis lia'lucinatiop with singular pertinacity. All poor l.ady Anne's little familiarities and endearments were thenceforth at sn end; for lie seemed so abashejl by lier presence, that.no efforts of aoaoWensioi. sufficed tb reassure hspFand she rajas compelled to suppoit a demeanor consistent with the station his heels, returned. I never can forget that dreadful evening,! Sir Henry rushed out of the house, sprung at one bound over a high fenoe, and sped aoross a field, amidst tbe almost imp-r vious gloom of evening, with step* such •a those-of tha monster of Fiankenstein. His keeper, with all his efforts, could not gam upon him, and sometimes alto MUM-AY STRUCT, FO_R,T MOODT. TanMentorgh Bros. Koep conititiitly on hand a firat-cUsa atoek of IMZZE-A-TS VEGETABLES! &0TEL8, SHIPS AND PRIVATE FAMILIES SUPPLIER ON SHORT NOTICE. FALES & CO. Tf YOU WANT THE VALUE OF YOUR ■*• money go to Fales * Co. for FURNITURE, BEDDING, jt,. BEDROOM SETS, WALL PAPER, PICTURES, CROCKERY, Hardware, Croceries, ""•V GOODS, BOOTS It SH'TES, rtoxn^ - CABINET-WORK, UPHOLSTERING. PAINTINII, Ac. UNDERTAKING A SPECIALTY. which his crazed imagination assigned her. His grest delight was, to be sent on her royal erranlMkr about the house and grounds! rjUwouiil lnr.rly ever be prevailed upon Jo sit, at least at ease, in her presence; and was witb difficulty induced to cat at the same table. The •irony I haveafcen-io her eyek on these occasions! Compelled to humor hi* delusions, she wore splendid dresses an J jewels, and dismisaed him on every occasion by coldly extending her hand, which he would kiss with an air of reverent loyally I lie believed himself to have been elevated tu the rank of a general officer, und itim'sted on being provided with a miliinrv band, to play before his windows every evening after dinner. Ile invited me, one oav, in lhe Queen's name, to dinner ill his apartments, some time after this delusion hmt manifested itself. Il was a soft. September evening, and the country roundabout wasevery where bronzed with the touch uf nuiumn. During dinner, Sir Henry treated his larly with nil the profound respect and ceremony due to royalty, and I of course, waa obliged to assume a similar deportment; while she, poor soul was compelled lo recievo with condescending urbanity attentions, every one of which smote her In-art as an additional evidence of the inveteracy of her hus- bano's malady. I observed her narrowly. There was no tear in her eye— no flurry of manner—no sighing*; hers was the dtep silent anguish of a breaking heart! Shortly after dinner had been re» moved, we drew our chairs—Lady Anne in the cenire, seated on a sort of throne, specially provirled for her by the baronet - in a circle round the ample bow-window that overlooked the most sequestered part of the groundscnnnecl- ed with the establiahitirnt, as well as a sweep of line scenery in the distance In a bower, a little to our right, was place.! Sir Henry's band, who were playing, very affectingl*. various pieces of hrillant military music. liy my direction privately given befotehand, they suddenly glided from a bold march, inlo a concert on French horns. Oh how ex- quisito was that soft melanchly wailing melody I Tb" hour—tlie deepening gloom of evening—tbe circumstances— the persons—were all in mournful keep ing with the music, to which we were listening in su! due I silence. Lady Anne's tears stole faBt down her cheeks, while her eyes were fixed with aad earn cslness upon her huaband, «ho sat in a low chair, a little on her left hand, hia chin lesting on the palm of his hand, gazing »tth a melancholy air on tbe larkening scenery without. Occasionally I heard Lady Anne struggle to subdue a sob, but unsuccessfully. Another and another, and another forced its way—and I trembled lest her excitement should assume a more violent form. I saw her, almost unconsciously, lay her hand upon that of the baronet, and clasp it with convulsive energy. So she held ii for some moments,' when the madman B'owly turned round.looki.ig her full in the face; his countenance underwent a ghastly change, and fixing on her an eve of demoniac expression, he slowly rose in his seat, seeming, to my disturbed fancy, an evil spirit called up by the witchery of musio, and Bprung out of the room. Lady Anne, with a faint groan, fell at lull length upon the floor; her sister, shrieking wildly, rove to raise her in vain; I hurried after the madman, but, finding his keeper HTM At get ber lost sight of bin, for miles, and at lentil found overtaking tfce fugitive, come up within a van madman t«rncd round struck bis jjursuer a blow tb Irimto tht ground scrambled m\\> into.; »t od itear, ttoffr ♦*'(•?• be,**** jir :MJttrrific manner; ... r-r^-^-Gijnd amongst tits brandies, . Iiji-vy body foiling through them ir (eury lay stunned and bleeding* upon tht ground, fortunately the AglftAte keeper had called out loudly for assistance ds he ran along and his voice attracted one or two of the men whom I had despatched after him, and between the three Sir Henry was brought home again, to all appearance dead. An eminent surgeon in the neighborhood waa summoned in to hia assistance, for I could not quit the chamber of Lady Anne—she was totally insensible.having fallen into a succession of swoons since the moment cf Sir l.enry's departure, Lady Julia was in an adjoining rooni shrieking in violent hvsterics; and, in short, it seemed not impossible that she might lose ber reason, and Sir Henry and Lady Anne their lives. 'Tis a small matter to mention at such a.crisis as tbis, bot I recollect it forcibly arrested my attention at the time—the band of musicians, unaware of the catastrophe that had occurred, according to their.orders, continued playing the musio that had been attended witb suoh disastrous consequences; and as Lady Anne's bedchamber happened to be in that part of tbe building nearest to tlie sp it where tbe band was stationed-, we continued t<} hear the sad wailing of the bugles and horns without, till it occurred to Mrs. V—tb send.and silence Ihcm. This little incidental circumstance—the.sudd-'n mysterious seiiure of Sir Henry, the shrieks of Lady Julia, tbe s«oons of Lady Anne—all combined, completely bewildered me. It seemed to be a dream. I cannot—I need not—dwell upo ihe immediate consequences of that sa' night. Suffice it to say, Sir. Henry was found lo have received severe but not fatal injury, which, however, was skilfully and successfully treated, but he lay in a state of comparative stupor for near a week, at which period his mental malady losumed its wildest form, and rendered necessary the severest treatment. As for Lidy Anne, her stale became eminently alarming, and as soon as some of the more dangerous symptoms had subsided, we determined on removing her at all hazirds, from her present proximity to Sir Henry, to — Hall, trusting to the goo! effects of a total change of scene and of faces. She had not strength enough to oppose our measures, but suffered herself to be con- ducierl from S.nnerlield without an effort at complaint. I trembled to see an decisional vacancy in the expression of her eve, was il impossible that her husband's malady might prove at lenglh contagious. Many weeks passed over her befo c Lady Anne exhibited the slightest signs uf amendment. Her shocks had been too numerous and severe—her anxieties and agonies loo o ntinued —lo warrant reasonable hopes of her u liuiute recovery. At length however, the lapse of friendly time, potent, in a«su iging the sorrows of mankind, the incessant and most affectionate ur.-nn..ii'. of her iniiu. i..ir. rul;.live., were rewarded by seeing an impiove- meiit, slight though it waa. The presence of ber little boy powerfully engaged her attention. She would have l,iin lying beside her on the bed for hours together; she spoke little to him sleeping or waking, but her e*e was ever fixed upon his little featurw, and when she was asleep, her fingers Vou Id unconsiously wreathe themselves among his flaxen curls. About Sir Henry she made litile or no inquiry; and when she dii we of course put the best face possible upon matters. Her frequent efforts to see and converse with him bad proved woefully and unitromly unsuo cessful; and she seemed henceforth lo give up the idea of all interference with despair. But the original, the direful occasion of all ibis domestic calamity, must not be overlooked. The contest respecting the title and estates of Sir Henry went on as rapidly as the nature of lhe case would peiniit. The new claimant was, 1 think as I hinted before, a man of low station; be had been, I believe, sort of slavedriver, or factotum on a planter's estate in one of the West India islands; and it was whispered that a rich Jew had been persuaded into sueh con tidence in the man's prospects, as to advance him, from lime to time, on his personal security, the considerable supplies necessary to prosecute his claims with effect. There was very many matters of most essential consequence lhat no one could throw light upon but the unfortunate baronet himself; and his solicitor had consequently, in the hope of Sir Heniy's recovery, succeeded in interposing innumerable obstacles, with the view, as well as wearing out his opponents, as affording every chance for the restoration of his client's sanity! , It was, I found, generall),- understood in the family, that the solicitor's expectation, ol success in the !aw_uil were far from sanguine; i,,, that be b.lieved the new claimant lo be ihe bona fide heir lo tbe title, but was in the hands of those who would r nsack the world lor evidence—and, when it was wanting, mah it. Every imaginable source of delay, however— salvatinn to tbe one paty, destruction to the other—was at length closed up; ihe case was completed on . both sides add set down for trial. Cons'derable expectation wu excit in the pu'. vTiinal hjdy—and that between husband and wife—over whom was Irmiiln inp«-d- ing thecbauoe, if not prubably, ol a total ruin' Oh, Providence—mysterious be and awful in thy dispensations among the children of men!—who shall en quirx into thy purposes, who question their wisdom or beneficence* Who •*--■ uul Pru-td.n. ■ Ailk* lo ffjitl It glTM -ad wk_u . ed paragraphs hint* th. siMkyand such di- .rfur- and it waa itileprmliiig u sa . ■ mtm\\j4mL.iAst, Metify onoo or t< came again calm r -- of .lis last dreradft bodily health wi., o.,. , ■•&. .*. w delusions took possMnon of him. He was at one time composing a history of the whole world; at another, writing a memoir of every memlier that had- ever sot in the House of Commons, to* gether with several otlier magnificent undertakings. All, however, at length gave way to "The Pedigree, a Tale of Real Life," which consisted of a rambling, exaggerated account of his own lawsuit. It was occasioned by his happening, unfortunately, to cast his eyo upon the following Jittle paragraph in his newspapers, which chanced to have been most stupidly overlooked by the person who had been engaged for no other purpose tban to read over the paper beforehand, and prevent any such allusions from meeting the eye of the sufferer: "Sir Henry Harleigh, Bart. — Thia unfortunate gentleman continues still greatly indisposed. We understand that little hope is entertained of his ultimate recovery. The result, therefore, of the approaching trial of 'Doe on the demise of Higgs v. Harleigh,' will signify but little tothe person principally interested.' From the* moment of his reading rhese lines, he fell into a state of profound melancholy, which was, however, somewhat relieved by the task by which he' had occupied hi nisclf, of recording his own misfortunes. He had resumed his former drew .of green baize, as well as the intolerible peacock's feather. Wb^tr otifckl have conferred iob.»r^-roai___j_0t«pon. or suggested this preposterous penchant, I kno* not, except the interest he bad formerly taken in a corps of riflemen, who were stationed near a house he had occupied ill the country. He continued quiet and Inoffensive, His keeper'! office was little else than a sinecure, till Sir Henry suddenly set him about making two copies of every page he himself omposed. I remember calling upon hirn one morning about this tim-, anrl finding him pacing about his chamber in u very melancholy mood. He welcomed me with more than hit usual cordiality; and dismissing his attendant, sairl, "Doctor did you ever hear me speak in Parliament!' 1 told him I had not "Then you shali hoar mo now; and tell me candidly what sort of an advocate you think I should havi' made, for 1 have serious thoughts of turning my attention to the bar. I'll suppose myself addressing the jury on my own case, and you must represent the .jury. Now I" He drew a chair and table towards a corner of the room—mounted on it, having thrown a cloak over his should "rs, and commenced. Shall I be believed when I declare that -as far as iny judgment goes—I listened on that occasion, for nearly an hour, to an oratorl He spoke of course, in the third person; and stuted iu a simple and most feeling manner, his birth, educarion, foituii", family, marriage—his Parlii.. uientury career—inshort, his happiness, prosperity, his pride. Then he represented tim contemptuous indifference with which he treated the first com niuuications concerning the attack meditated upon his title and property, ns well as the consternation with whioh he subsequently discovered the formidable character of the claiinset up against him. He begged me—the jury—to put myself in his place; to fancy his feelings; and proceeded to draw a mast erly sketch of the facts of the case. He drew a lively picture of the secret misery he bad endured—his agony lest his wife should hear of the disastrous intelligence—his sleepless nights and harassing days—the horrid apprehension of his adversary's triumph-the prospect of his own degradation—his wife—his child's beggary—till I pro test he brought tears into my eyes. But, alas! at this point of his history, he mentioned his prodigious discovery of the mode of turning tallow into wax, and dashed oft' into an extravagant enumeration of the advantages of the speculation! Then, before me, stood confessed-THE madman—violent and frantic in his gestures, haranguing trie, in my own person, on the immense and incalculable wealth that would reward the projector; and had I not risen to go, he would probably have continued in the same strain for the remainder of the day! I had proposed calling that evenittg on Lady Anne—but I gave up the idea. The image of her insane husband wou d be too fresh in iny mind. I felt I could not bear to see her, and 'hinh of him. Whit a lot was mine — thus alteinative visits between the diseased in mind; And the diseased in ■He fnia My heart misgives me, however, thtyt the reader will complain of being detain.*! so long amongst these scene* of em.,,.,„,,,,in, misery—1 would I had ifihtlorent eUfcracier to pre- ■lim! Let-toe therefore draw my »ive to a close, hy transcrib extracts from the later en- iy journal, it}K Jhstemtee- *, M—rytklm [ey appointed for the trial of rtent cause which was to i- proprietorship of the title ' possessiens of Sir Henry Harleigh. ich interest waa excited, and the court crowded at an early hour. Four of the most distinguished counsel at the bar had taken their seats, each with his ponderous load of papers and liooks before him, in the interest of Sir Henry, and three in that of his opponent. A special jury was sworn; the judge took his seat; the cause was called on; the witnesses were summoned. The plautifi's junior counsel rose to open the pleadings—after having paused for some time for the arrival of hia client's attorney, who, while he was speaking, at length mode his appearance, excessively pale an i agitated, Bnd hurriedly Whispered to his leading counsel. The plantiff had been found dead in his bed that morning -having been carried thither in a state of brutat intoxication the preceding night, from a tavern-dinner with his attorney and witnesses. He died single, and there of course was an end of the whole matter that had been attended with such direful conseqt'-r.ees to Sir Henry and his lady. But of what avail is the now established security of his title, rank,, and fortune to their unhappy owner?—an outcast from society — from home —from family—from the wife of his bosom —even from himself? What signifies the splendid intelligence to Lady Anne—perishing under the pressure of her misfortunes? Will it n >t a thousand-fold aggravate the agonies she is enduring? _ It has been thought proper to intrust to me the difficult task of communicating the news to both parties, if 1 think it advisable tbat it should be done, at all. What am I to do?—What may be the consequence of the secret's slipping out suddenly from any of those around Lady Annul About the baronet I had a little apprehension; I felt satisfied that he could not comprehend it—that whether he bud lost or won the suit was a matter of equal moment to himl As I bad a patient to visit this morning, whose residence wus near Soinerfie'd, I determined to take that opportunity of trying the effect of the t,l igbttoc on Sir Henry. It was about two o'clock when I called, and found him sitting by the fin;, reading one of Shakespeare's plays. I gradually |...| his thoughts into a suitable train, and then told liim briefly and pointedly, and accurately, bis own his tory, up to tho latest incid-nt nf ull — but as of a third person, and that a iiobleiiriii. He listened to the whole with profound interest. "God bless me!" he exclaimed, with a thoughtful air, us I concluded—"I surely mu -t havt either heard or read of this story liefore !—Vou don't mean to suy that this is fact? —That it has hn; polled lately?'' "Indeed I do, Sir Henry,'' I replied, looking al him earnestly. "And are the parties living?—Lord and Lady—?" "Itoth of them—at this moment and not ten miles from whore we are now sitting!" "Indeed!' he replied, musingly— "that's unfortunate!'' "Unfortunate, Sir Henry?" I echoed with astonishment. "Very—for mv purpose. What do you suppose 1 have been thinking of all this while?' he replied wiih a smile. What a subject it would be for a tragedy!—But, of course, since the parties are living, it would never do! - Still, I cannot help thinking that something might be made of it! One might disguise and alter the facts." ' Tt is a tragedy of very real life!" 1 exclaimed, with a deep sigh. "Ind'ed, it is!" he replied, echoing my sigh—"it shows that the fact ofien transcends all fiction— does it not? Now, if this had been n plot of a tale or novel, people would have said—'how improbable! how unnatural!" "Ay, indeed they would. Sir Henry," said I, unable to keep the tears from my eyes. " 'lit affecting," he replied, his eyes glistening with emotion, adding after a moment's pause, in a somewhat tremulous tone—"Now which of the two do you most pity, doctor, Lord or Lady Mary—?" "Both. 1 scarce know which most." "How did they boar the news, by the way, do you know?" he incruired, with a sudden interest. "I believe Lady Mary—is in too dangerous circumstances to be told of it. They say she is dying." "Poor creature! what a melancholy fate! Aud she is young and beautiful, you sop?" PIONEER STORE (.I'KKN STKEET, POKT MOODY. 9. B, BRANT, Proprietor. &R1NG STOCK Just Received ! rPHK 0_._T__R8.GNEi. rt_.paet.ully j„. * forma tbs citir-eiu of Port Moody and vicinity thi-, b< bu jtut r*.slv_d a Urge »„'! varied KMortraait of --nrrmhls rjRY GOODSi geoc erie's, Boots and Shoe.*. Ready-made Sk hnr Hftving bought the shove ■ I am prepared to oell CASH PKK Vegetables anil Mte IN SEASON. **%• A CALL RESPKCTFULLY SOLICITEO Contractor & Builder. 2B. KILBY. MURRAY STREET, PORT MOODY. ESTIMATES by Mr il, or othcrwiie, turn- ialred on the shortest netice. CjTT BRKWERY. R. RIESTERER, HAVING PURCHARBD THE ABOVK '!*t-lili.liui.u.. in now supplyiiij: in.iiiy customers in the city with a lir*t-.!tu>- ••uslitj of Lager Beer, Which he furnishes in Kegs and Buttles at Victoria prices. Tho Beer will be left at the houses of -r patrons free of charge. Orders left with COON, THE DRl'Gl.IST will be attended to at the aame rates, Try the "Mainland"' Cigar, The Best MADI. or Havana Tobacco. ' W_M\\ TIET'T-ElSr rnoraiEToR of The Mainland Factory, OolttnfUi Str«et New Westminster, Employ! only whit- labor, nn.l having re. ceii'eil every ciicourai.eni.-iit. sine. Opening Iris factory, bega ■ oontinuanea of the public patri.nage. New Barber Shop. BROWN, THE BARBER, IS THK l'i -rr Barbei on tbe Mainland, and begs to Inform Ihe publli that ho Iiuh estiiblislrc.l his (hop Km Doob id •nn: PwiOmcE. ■ riii.-l.H-tii.n goaran. teed. je(j HAVE YOU READ AN CILLE DE MONIES One Summer" .. BT THE CKIlKKT. ■TUM OUT ANH SELLING LIKE Wil.I) KIKE. 'rills VOLUME Is POUNDED ON1 ■ fsctH louii.Tning an inland village of this Provinru anrl its unique iuliahitants. The work lias all tlio fascination of fktiou. Don't rest till you read it. PRICE, SI.OO. SOLD HY OUR AGENTS ONLY. dPlOlSTES-Ht-B BOOT & SHOE STORE! QUEEN STREET, PORT MOODY, B. O. THE UNDERSIGNED, successor to the late W. C. White, is now thoroughly established at the Terminus, and, having devoted bis life to his trade, is prepared td supply the public with the best work in hi. line to bo had in the province. LOUIS TROMMER. riiACTlUAL WATCHMAKER. WATCHES, CLOCKS, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, 4c, 1-ARKFl'LI.Y REPAIRED. Firsl-chiss WdrtiUiiisYit fiaranteed *, Coi.tMriA St., Ki Wj' mem Cbe flort 5llnobij ©jjtttf. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1885. I i 2i; THE WEEK'S NEWS. HOME. At the Agricultural Dinner on Friday nij'ht last week, the lion. John Kibsou was denounced by his colleague, M.*. Jas. Orr, M.P.P., who informed the audience that tbe Provincial Secretary had not discharged his duty. This announcement was received with a Htorni of applause by the assembled guests - nearly all farmers who reside in New Westminster district Not one vontured to say a word iu defence of tin-('mil Harbor land-grabber. Straws show the way the wind blows, and thia little incident proves that one selfish politician is—played out. On Tuesday His Excellency the Uoverhor General arrived here and received two deputations of citisens; they bresented him with the addresses published ou another page, and he was well pleased by the enthusiastic display of loyalty to Her Majesty. He will visit us again on bis way to the east, and, all our .people will meetyhim at the terminus and wish him God ipeed. A correspondent who writes from Lytton, says: "The farmers all over the upper country are alarmed by the high rates charged on the railroad for freight; and the majority have decided to do no threshing this fall; but the minority have resolved to build a large storehouse at Yale, and to take their wheat over the old road on sleighs to that point, and from thence old Father Fraser will take it to maiket. The r-now road and the river will be the rivals of steam. Mr. Allison, a gold commissioner of Similkameen, is in Victoria, and Bays: "The mines are rich, but it is too late for adventurers without money to go there this fall. He is confident that next year will witness a mining boom not less exciting and important than that which was witnessed in the famous palmy days of Carib"». He describes the district as "an Eldorado that will yield fortunes for a few and disappointments for many." The dangerous bar near Ladner's Landing in tho Fraser will be removed by the dredger. It is rumored that this work will be executed without delay, but an improvement in the approach to the Royal City will not be executed with despatch by the officials who reside at Victoria. Every one of them believes New Westminster to be ft rival that deserves to perish. And it may perish if the citizens continue to sleep with their eyes open. The scene at Yale on Saturday last beggars description. A thousand white men lately employed on the railroad rushed out of the cars and into the saloons. In two hours the streets were full of lunatics; they roared and Wived and; attempted to force their way into private houses. Twelve liun- di'nl Chinese arrived by the same train and went into the woods and cocked their rice. It is amusing to see the difference between Pagans and Christians. With surprise we learn that "work on the island railway progresses rapidly." But when the road shall have linen completed, what will they do with It ? It will not be used to carry coal, and there is nothing more on the island that may be exported. An excursion train every Sunday from Victoria to Nanaimo will be very interesting, but the millions taken from the public purse to provido this luxury for the citizens of the Capital are not evidence of wisdom or prudence The- island railroad is a huge illustration of the knavery that is practised by "statesmen" ou this continent. UNITED STATES. The people of Seattle are divided in lo two parties. The working men have warned tho Chinese to leave the rity on or Wore tho 1st pro*..; but the defenders of law and order say "there shell bu no violence," and have been sworn in as special constables, and are ready to keep tho peace with arms in their hands. As Sir Lucius O'Triggor says—it is a very pretty quarrel as it stands. Attacked by the whites at Green river, in Wyoming Territory, early in nVptember, tin, Chines,, set fire to their houses and fled. They returned on Tuesday last and commenced to work us miners in the ruins. In a few hours one of them panned out 16000, and several others picked up the coined nuggets they had concealed. These facts are verified on oath by the Rev. Mr. Therloway, the Congregational minister. The presence of mind displayed on this occasion was very useful to the Pagans in a Christian land. At Los AngeleB, on Monday, Chas. Miles, County Recorder, was up be fore the Grand Jury, charged with stealing $11,842 from the' public purse. He is a County Recorder. The indictments were found, and he was imprisoned; but, he gave security for $2,000, and was released, and now he may go with $9000 gained. Justice is cheap enough at Los Angeles. The New York "World" gives a pen and ink sketch of Mr. Ferdinand Ward in jail. He looks liko an aristocratic thief seated at his piano. His suite of rooms arc splendid, and be pays for them. A rich man in jail may have anything he wants in this free coun try. Men less guilty under the same roof are half-starved and treated like dogs, while he drinks his Rhenish wine and smokes the best HavannahB." A free country is a fine thing for a rich man. And to be- sure everyone knows Colonna (the latter nee Miss Eva Mac- kay) arrived in Paris on Monday on a visit to her aunt. The dinner given by Mrs. Mackay astonished the old nobility. Tbe table was transformed for its help to a greater power in ravaging and desolating the homes of a people with which it has no quarrel, p-rhaps not even a grudge; it may be, into a bed of roses, with just margin Jon the part of tbe great powers, enough left for the plates and glasses. The flowers were all half-blown, and of a delicate pink. Light was supplied by wax candles, and each of them seemed to glow from the heart of a rose." Republican simplicity is very interesting, In this free country we have slaves and kings, but they art- called by o'her namew. The "Oregonian," referring to the proceedings at Seattle, says: "Tliow who warned the Chinese to leave and threatened them with butchery if they did not, are men of no note or character. It is said that the Mayor of Tacoma presided. It Is a shame to Tacoma that she should have chos-n such a man to be her Mayor. Suppose theso Chinese do not go; will this Mayor of Tacoma and his fellow ruffians carry out their implied threat of Wholesale butchery f The responsible citizens of Seattle and Tacoma owe it to themselves and to their cities to call counter meetings at once and con demn their ruffianly conduct with its suggestions bf violence and Borror. f? The responsible citizens have taken the hint, and the result is, they are ih arms and ready to defend the Chinese. John Wilmot was married to Nancy Charlton, at Portland, on Monday. John resides in Clarke County, Washington Territory, and is 75 years old. Nancy is a Portland belle, aged 65. John is a brave old man, and Nancy a blushing bride. Happy, happy, happy pair. None but the brave deserveB the fair. UNITED KINGDOM. The Conservatives have resolved to dissolve Parliament on the 7th Decern ber. Great preparations are being made by both parties, and the general impression is, that a vast majority of the newly enfranchised millions of Great Britain will give their votes to the Conservatives The workingmen of England are proud of her supremacy, and believe ihat il cannot be maintained by the peace at- any-price policy. This feeling is appar ent in every part of ihe country, and therefore lhe resu't of the approaching contest is not doub.ful. My Lord of Salisbury is lhe coming man, and in the spring of next year he will marshall the might of England and be ready to take a hand in the great game of war which is inevitable. The extravagant demand of Parnell in Ireland will increase the Conservative power in Great Britain, but it is quite possible that the Irish will be permitted to rule themselves in a local parliament, and send representatives to lhe Imperial Parliament. The Irish in Ireland are proud of the Empire, and if the land question were finally settled, ihey would be as loyal as the Scotch. A special correspondent of ihe Lor. don Times, writing from Berlin on the 6 inst, says: "I'nnce Bismarck has this day written a friendly letter to the Pope, thanking him in the name ol Germany for the interest his Holiness has taken in settling the dispute with Spain The agreement will be officially announced in a day or two. The "Mark Lane Express." in a review of the British grain trade, says: heavy gales of wind have prevailed with rain in the sou h of England, and snow in the north of Scotland, and consequently a material ponion of the har ves! remains outstanding." Hy relegram to London, dated Constantinople, Oct. 5th, we learn that great activity prevails at the I uikish war office; that troops are rapidly arriving and quickly despatched to Tripoli and Salonica. A despatch to the "Daily News" says eight thousand Russians have crossed the Danube into Bulgaria, and have reached Koumania by special train ai n _fht." The eagles aregathcring round the sick man, and he is doomed. Mr. Chamberlain, at Glasgow, last week, pulled in his tadical horns and proved himself to be a master of the an ihat enables a man to sway the multitude. He described the toilsome life of a poor man, and then sa d, ■ there is something rotien in the system that leaves a man like this nothing in view at the close of life but the poor house." Afler describing the Conservatives is oppressors of the poor, he appealed to the audience for support, and quoted Burns:— 0, let us not like snarlln' tykes. In wranglin' be divided; 'Till slap comes in an unco' loon, And wi' a rung decide it. H e was loudly applauded, fle proved very clearly lhat he knows something of human nature, and the art of apply ing soft-solder; he also proved that the radical or communis ic party in England is very insignificant. The Earl of Devon has invited his Irish tenants to take advantage of the Land Purchase Act and become absolute owners in fee of their holdings, and the tenants in reply say. "We pre fer to remain as tenants to your Grace, antl if all the landlords were like your lordship, Ireland would be contented and loyal. THE APPROACHING STORM. There is a strange, but ominous, silence prevailing throughout Europe at this moment. It reminds one of the dead calm that precedes the most terrible storms in the tropics Every power has its own particular game to play, its own particular aim to achieve: he it the retrieval of lost territory filched from it nt a time when it was unable to defend itself, or when its weakness the acquirement of territory or seaports, or a position from which it may dominate or menace the adjoining territories or commerce of a rival. The game, whatever its object, must I* played, but with the smallest possible risk of loss. Thus, each 0110 wishes the other to commence the melee, hoping he can strike when tho antagonist he chooses is at a disadvantage. Them appears to lie some agreement c ircted with the Kaiser- bund, that ('ermany and Austria are to hold aloof, while Kussiu, by means of her Bulgarian allies, is to open the way to Constantinople. What the recompense to Germany and Austria is to be, is very difficult to say, and we feel sorely puzzled to comprehend the problem. There cannot be the shadow- of a doubt that if Russia secures Oonstanti nople, she Imcomes the arbiter of Europe Germany ana* Austria ar(B p-H' fectly aware of that fact, but they may have some understanding in relation to other provinces of Turkey, and the absorption of Albania, Macedonia, or even Roumania and Servia, although these last are highly improbable. As to Bosnia and the Herzegovina, they virtually belong to Austria, notwith standing the pretended protectorate only; so that their annexation would be no bribe to Austria. Still the capture of Gonsantinople by the Russians, whatever may be the bargain, would destroy tho influence of Germany and Austria combined, and would, in the words of Napoleon the Great, muko the world Cossack. Now, this is simply out of the question, so that we must try to solve the riddle in some other way. May it not be that Bismarck is trying to force the hands of Russia and France, and luring them on to their destruction 1 This is possible, because they would in this way be compelled to declare themselves, and he could by this means attack them as it suited his convenience, If there is any secret alliance between these two powers, they would require to play their respective parts, and the forces of the two German powers could then be directed in the way best calculated to strike at the weakest points. We note that a strong British fleet has been ordered to the Mediterranean, whether as a precautionary measure, or to watch the course of events and lie ready to enter the Dardanelles, if required, is a matter that will be better understood by- andbye. What part of the play England will perforin is yet uncertain; but that there is some under standing with Germany and Austria, we have no reason to doubt. A strong fleet of French won vessels have proceeded to the Mediterranean, osten sibly to perform some evolutionary ex ercises; but they may be found acting in a more serious business, when least expected. It would not be surprising to find the Italian fleet had been got ready to exercise also, and their evolutions might bring them near the Eng lish vessels. There are at present som disturbances on the Island of Crete: they might look in there to protect Italian subjeots. The Russian fleet is at this moment concentrating at Sebastc- pol, and all tbo approaches tn that great fortress are being fortified with the most feverish haste. Why such precautions are being adopted, when Russia is at Peace with all the world, it is hard to say; but such is the fact. At Batouin, war material is Ik.ing accuinu luted in vast quantities, although there is no apparent cause for it. Koumania is beginning to quake. She has some sense of impending danger, and appeals to the powers to allow her to remain neutral; but this, it is quite evident, is out of the question. In the event of hostilities, she will be used as Russia thinks fit, and her people will be forced into the Russian ranks. Some day, Roumania will be a great battlefield and she will be torn and desolated be cause she hupp ns to be placed between the great contending powers. Bulga ria will suffer in the same way, but she has by her r.cent action, deprived her-elf of any sympathy. Mr. Gladstone will never be able to make any more capital out of Bulgarinn atrocities. There is perhaps no part, of the world of vhich tbe map will undergo so great a transformation as amongst these Balkan States, when the coming struggle is over, and it will require very clever nianeeVering on the part of these little States to preserve their autonomy: it will depend on whether or not they c.st in their lot with the winning side that Liberty loves to live in a republic _ , ""*"-* "J ,, , __ 1 _ j aa'T poverty rendered resistance im where "smart men" are legislators and f ,*7 ' , , l-ankers. Oh I yes; liberty loves good P08Slble; or it may be the desire to ob- seciety and the almighty dollar. j *»in a portion of a. neighbor's lands, The Prince and Princess di Galatio which it hope* to receive am a reward Many forget that the hair and scalp need cleansing on well as the bands and feet. Extensive use of Ayers Hair Vigor lias proven that it is the best cleansing agent for the hair—tbat it pre vents as well ns removes dandruff, cools and soni'.he*. the scalp, and stimulates the hair to renewed growth and beauty. POLITICAL FEELINGS. It is very unfortunate that many people are unable to distinguish be tween political antagonism and personal animosity. The individual, with the true politician, is entirely lost sight of; he looks only at the public acts and manners of the man who has the temerity to assume the power, knowledge, and ability of a legislator. It is needless to say that men mistake their missions: a man who would make a very good baker or dealer in peanuts ii carried away by his vanity to offer himself for public honors, and by sheer impudence, a voluble tongue, and the fact that he is free from scruples of conscience—hence, a useful tool in ihe hands of schemers—is thrust into a position for which be is wholly unfit; therefore, a misfortune for the commonwealth. The real duty of a journalist uMo expose such men, to hold them up toaAAm public scorn and contempt in oCT' that they may lie cast aside to rpalcii.roonn.for bettor men,- {luring their tenure of office they not only disgrace and degrade the public service, but they retard the progress of the country; by their corruption the people's property is wasted, the country impoverished, and excessive taxation becomes necessary. Industry is clogged and withers away under the influence of maladministration, and opportunities for the general welfare are lost,liecause, in the absence of confidence in a government, capital is driven away to seek safer and more stable institutions, in countries whore the people insist upon honest and patriotic administration. Men who vote for and support political adventurers are traitors to their country; they seek only their own paltry gains, no matter in what form, quite re gardless of the injury being done to their fellow 8ubjects,and look upon patriotism and honesty as mere by-words. There are some people of small minds in this Province, who believe that we are moved by personal spite or malice, in the exposure of the person we are in the habit of calling honest John. Such people arrive at their conclusions, because they are themselves spiteful and malicious; or because they are ignorant and do not comprehend the mischief inflicted on the country by the contin uance of honest John in office; or, from motives of self-interest, are sup porters of honest John. Wiih such people we have nothing in common, and therefore wo never give them the slightest consideration. Our occupa tion of journalist compels ub to place hon st John before the public in his true colors, and this we must do without any regard to what some people may thiuk or say. If we did otherwise we should bo particeps criminis witb honest John, and a base imposition and disgrace to the honorable profession of journalism. We would ask any right- thinking man if he conceives the celebrity above named, worthy of his respect, when we know that with the most heartless hypocrisy, he made religion subservient to politics; when he 1 urns our excellent system of free education into a political machine; when ho teaches temperance and prohibition, vying with the most reputed temperance lecturers in his extravagant and ridiculous illustrations of the horrors of drunkenness, in one locality, and is a party, at the same time, to drunkenness in its mest horrible phases in another? Who assists at thn passing of bills in the Legislative Assembly to give away our public lands to aliens; depriving those who conn, to aid us in the development of the country, of homesteads, our lal-o: ._ and artisans of employment, and our merchants of trade! Who connives at the gift of pqkiic property to a railway company, liqPuse they promise to make an extension of their line by which his own property will become valuable; and spends the people's taxes to pay settlers to give up their holdings, in order that they may be handed over to the railway company, that, by their crushing mo nopoly, appear likely to squeeze the life-blood out of this country! Who, with unblushing effrontery, goes from settlement to settlement, making statements which he knows are untrue, be cause he thinks that, he can impose upon ignorant but well-meaning farm ers and settlers, who will be simple enough to vote for this unprincipled adventurer at the next election? It very often happens, however, that such a bane as honest John, creates his own antidote. Men of his character are rarely possessed of brains, and finding that saying a great deal suits the popular taste, very often say too much Honest John promised roads, schools, bridges, and a great deal more to the settlers, and they have heen looking anxiously forward to the performance; but, alas! the promises of honest John are like employment under his government, they are "political," and only intended to Be used that way. The Gov. ernment are at their wits' end to keep the administrative machine going rounrl, even in the slovenly, slip-shod way that accords with their untutored ideas; and the settlers must wait till we get a new adrrrinistratian, before they can hope for any help, or redress for their gnevanres. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Is SD anodyne expectorant, of. great curst lvr power. It leds lhe throat awl luncil. throwing off diseased matter, and, nt the srime time, alia;n the irritation wbleh ctUMa tbe abnormal action of these orpin.. A. I!. I'eniiii.-, Atchison. Kan. ..write.: "1 hit. used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, for lliroat ami Inn:; difficult ic, wiih marked Mirre-i. it effected s completo euro st ri Ibne wlien 1 lia.l itmaat llrH.Mll III of recovery. I coo. slder It ao luvaluablc remedy for mi disease, of IYi character." Irs Eno, Tale. Kv., writes: ••! here u« ,1 Ayer's Cherry rector-', -1..1 Zuil llut it 8TRENGTHEN3 the system, sllayanll tendencies tocoirjli, promoter, natural and rt-frc-hiiirr fcl.rcp, snd most effectually • In . * llio Qrojrett ot scou^'hor r«>M. I would not bo «1:1;- out it for many tlnrn |*| value." J. II. Cashing, Browruvllle, Texan, wrllcs: " I havo u«ed AVer's ('.-.iny TVr-tnral with moit satisfactory rcsiil'.. It run d tim tt a terrible rarking . <>u -It wlil.-h tho prescriptions of several | !iy«|eh,i'» f 1II-1I to reach. It li tiro mo.t aAstlrs r imily 1 have ever used." IM,, an! r. Curil., Itullaml. Vt., writes! "Foryam 1 na. In a decline. I had WEAK LUNCS, :i.i I mi.:, r-.l from ttioiirhltU nnd fat-.rrl.. Kyotu < 'lirrry lYetursI restored n» to In *..; ■!., iv.nl I he p- l.i.n, ft.fii I'-h.' nu-.*, n>...-...rnf.v. ly . l-orou**. In cate ot a siiil-b n raid, I thnyi resort to the Pee*. tOfil| mul fjnil rptodj relief.*' Dr. J. I'r-iii ]t I(rownctr.iiim]flphln, IV, write* - "Twenty trott n^-o, being tbeu in ottht pTMttei n. n physician, I obtained the f.-rmu!a of AfttH Cherry IVi-toml, and Ihavfl-oftm prmrrtbwl that mi_.Hiyu.tii :-^;l:I^•^n;r^*u!t».', r:tK!'Ai.ri> iy VB. J. C. AVKB & <'C, L0W*U, Mann., IJ. 8. A. For Palo (•; i !l Pru^fUU. A Frkscii Vabwin.—At a UU meeting of tbe French Association at Grenoble, WU de Mortillet read a paper on tertiary mai, before tbe anthropological section. The question, he aaid, waa not to know whether man already existed in tbe tertiary epoch as he existed at the present day. Animals varied from one geological stratum to another, and the higher the animals the greater waa the variation. It was to be inferred, therefore, that man would vary more rapidly than the other mammals. The problem was to discover in the tertiary period an ancestral form of man, a predecessor of the man of historical" times. M. de Mortillet affirmed that there were unquestionably in the tertiary strata objects which implied the existence of any intelligent being. These objects have, in fact, been found at two different stages of the teitiary epoch—in the lower tertiary at Thenay, and in the upper tertiary at Otta, in Portugal, and at Puy Courny, in Cantal. These objects proved that at these two distant epochs there existed in Europe animals acquainted with the use of lire and able more or less to cut stone. During the tertiary period, then, there lived animals less intelligent than existing apes. M. de Mortillet gives the names of anthropi- pitbeque, or ape man, to the species, which, he maintains, was an ancestral form of historic man, whose skeleton has not yet been discovered, bnt who has made himself known to us in the clearest manner by bis works A number of flints were exhibited from the strata in question which had lieen intentionally chipped and exposed to fire. The general opinion of the savant* assembled at Grenoble was that there can no longer be any doubt of the existence in the tertiary period of an ancestral form of man. tar For artistic monumental work apply to George Rudge. "V;'-*>nn*i Marble Works," Douglas Street* Victoria. The "Mainland Cigar" It the Best In the Dominion. PIONEER BOOT AM SHOE STORE Columbia Strut, New Westminster. Goods at Wholesale Prices _R/. t:ho_m:.a.s. F. CRAKE, WATCHMAKER —a»d— JEWELER, Opposite the Colonial Hotel r.fm.tlr M»n«_r»r of Ih. *»",>««■• ll-p.,1- m.Bl .t H.rmg. tt ..-man, M..i.lr-.l. HAVING RKVKREI) MY CONNKC tion with Mr. McNtiight.ii, I am prepared to do til kinds of FINE AND COMPLICATED fe^CtWatches! JEWELRY. ^^r^*y *c%ljr <•(., proprietors of the hntol known as the "Pacific House," is this day dissolved by mutual consent, and by the re tin-ment of Angus McLeod. All debtors owing the late firm will please make immediate payment to John R. Taylor, who is also solely liable for all legal demands against the late firm to date. john r. Taylor, ANGUS McLEOD. Port Moody, 8ept. 16, 1885. A. K. HOWSE, (Formerly Howse, Hill k Rickman) BEOS TO ANNOUNCE THAT HE will resume basinets u Sn, ueyor, Beal Egtate Broker, •nd (iiDvcjanier, On ud after the 21st inst. Office—Neit Caledonia Hotel, Mcwt-at Sr-tirr. Pom Moodt, B. C. — AMD DEAL IN — Everything used in Building; from the roof to the sills, in Cedar, White Pine, fir anil ftprw. Including KUSTH.', FLODRIN'li, SASllKSl JJOOKS, BLINDS, MO'.iI.IIlNi.**, SHARKS, PICK-CIS, LATH, ko. ■ AND Rough & Dressed Lumber| Of every kind. Our Lumber is more strictly grnil».rl lh.il any other manu.Hcnirfd in the I'rr.rin.i.l anil consequently our customers gr't Miiterrtfl value at ruling market prices. I'ort Moody people will Iwnefit tli<*iimr.|v**l by getting estimates from us before lanMir^l PIONEF.K LDMBER CO. (Umit«ll Mechanics' STOBBll Ll M.I1.IM Ull,. K. Hiliinil>i;i Sired, New fftttaiuttl II AVINO OPBNKDTHK ABOVE001| imxlious store u ith a line ■*->* k o Staple Dry Goods! The citizens of New Westminster ar. it.trswal to inspect ths same, and leant for ther»nl"l lhat with ^letter quality, they can '".'fl economy by purchasing from me. I I"' also, M full line of O-B-tTTS' FURNISHING MOfl Affording a good selection from th« w" FASHIONABLK STYLES. The Tailoring Business Is carried on, as usual, and a I'irtot f*| Guaranteed. S. TRAPP, MANMiK"- Stage Line ! FIRST-CLASS 8TAGE8 LEAVE POJ Moody at 8 o'clock, a.m., and I "^ p. m. Arrive at New Westminster *',. o'clock, a. 111., and 2:15 o'clock, p.m. New Westminster at 10 o'clock, a-rn-. o'clock, p.m. Arrive at Port Moody I o'clock, a.m., and 6:15 o'clock, p.m. Charges Moderate. HoBSKS TOR 8A_0- OB HlRK, AMD StaW.0 FUHNISHKD OH HlARONADLI TlR*8 AT THK WlSNlPilO STAB'S- P.OAHEY^ ri-oi'WF.n-1 <£jlt $ort Hoobn ©ojttte SATURDAY, OCTOHEtt 10, 1885 C. P. Railway Time Table. FOBT MOODT. Mil 'I t si' arriv ■ M-.n-Uyf. W'dueSir Henry Charles Keith, Petty-Fltimauru'e, Marquis of Lam- doiene, in the County of Some.met. Earl of WyC unhe, of Chipping Wycotnhe in the Coun ty of Bucks, Viscount Caine and Caln*Vme in the County of Wilts, and Lord Wyeaatht, Baron nf t.'hipping Wycombe, in tht OowUy of Bark*, in the Peertge of tht a Britain; Kir- of Kerry ani Earl cf Sh'lbourne, i'ittcovnt Clanmattrice und Fitzmaui int, Boron of K--rry, Liznatn, and Dnnkerron, in the Peerage nf Ireland, (lo»emor-ti*H< rat of Canada and Vice-Admiral of the name:— May it Plkahk Yocr Kxckllkngy: As loyal aud loving subjects of Hat M ijes- ty, th'i people of Port Mo -dy respectfully approach Your Excellency ou this the ore*- a on of Your Excellency's first vis^t to Krit* ith Columbia, to express our devotion and loyalty t'» her Majesty's Crown and Government, and our hourly wns. uud Your Kx'-ell-u.y uill not hare l,i .•! to observe that many of British Oo luiub a's great c i labnil lea lie dormant foi want of population and eapital; but this, we tiust, under the fostering care of your government, will s >on become a thin- of the ii.-1. Our m-iguificeiit forests and exhaust l.-n-i fisheries, our boUndllM mineral wealth, and our glorious natural ac inery and pecrlu»s cliiui'e. Mill attrat t h tli poimlation und capital, und give our cunmercial interests an Ittpetui th.ir shall |)lii..: ■ this Provinoe iu the • w * ii" I i nn ". among the in my that makeup oar wi ie I) -minion. Wt; trust that Your Excellency's sojourn sin digit us nay be productive of pleasure fri Your Excellency, and may result in butty benelit to the Province, by drawing ■-.user th bonds thnt unite us to the Dominion and (be Empire, und that Your Excellency m mt scenery nf your country, and 1 trust thut the opening of the great continental railway will be the means ol bringing a \\a t population as Mttlort, un I tii nisaii It of tourists to enjoy the pleasure ot gazing on the mi ehle-ta scenery of your liiglily-tavoied Province." B, J. Wade, Grand Master of the Od I Fellows, Manchester I'inly, then ste|>p d forward, and in behalf of the Sotie y, pre- Rented the following address:— To His Kxceltency the Atarqolt of Loaadowte, Earl of Ki'rrit, Knight vrand Oram of the mint diHtintjiiixhfl Ordt r nf St. Mirhwl and St,George, nodttoi'eriior-tJcneratof'Canada: M\\v ir Pj.kahs Yoik Bx(/klXlMOYl - We, the olticerx au I uumilierBof the Cana- 'I ni Order of Odd IMh»WA, Mnuche*-ter Unity, a* ciiisenf of Put Moody and the «mrounding couotrv, approuch Your Excel- luiicy with feelmgs of loyalty and love, and we bag to tender you, ai th*■ represt-ututi.. of onr gracious i,' m-n, .. he* ty w lu mi* to tho terminus .t nur ureal railroad. It will unit the eastern mid Hcst-ru Provinces of 'ii ■ I'.-iinon-ii nnd render in re intiiuite I be coiincxtoii of tin-C-tiiudiau |*eoph*. And we trust it wilt Meure for ns the pleasure ol k'M-fj you bert* again. As chips ot the old block; aa children of Ui« Coiled Kingdom of liie.it Britain and "nluutl, Wt atsurn you of our loyalty and lovo| «ud we hope you may continue to rep- resent worthily our gracious Queen. His Exc dteacy replied in a most happy v.'.imer. thanking Mr. Wade and the so ciety he represented, for thu hearty welcome tendered to him, ss tho representitive ->f Her Maje ty, and for the sentiments of love and loyalty expressed in the address. It had been his fortune on several former oc casiona whilst in the Dominion of Canada, to hsve been favored with addresses of welcome from the Society of Oddfellows, and it did him much pleasure to m-et them at this time as loyal suejects of Her Majesty in the Western Province of British Columbia, which is on the eve of being united by the '"anadian Pacific Railway with her sister Provinces of the Dominion, the event of w'iich will be most sure to cement more closely the tie that binds one to another the whole people of Canada. Ball at the Kloin.—An impromptu ball Was given at the Elgin H-, by prominent citizens Tuesda.y evening in honor of Mr. M. *« Haney. the General Superintendent and Manager of the Western Division of the C. «'• K. There were present aliout 40 couple, who heartily participate I in the mazes of the d'ineo, for which excellent music was furnished by an orchestra comprised of Messrs. Darey, Walsh and Gibbous. Much credit ii due Col. Scott for the efficient service he ren.k-red as chief manager of the occasion. At the cl se of thu supper, which by-the- way, was superb, highly complimentary toasts were offered Mr. Haney, to which he responded in h happy address. Takin* all oi all, the affair was considered a grand success. Laat Sabbath wu a beautiful day. Bernce* were held as usual at the school holding. Several of our friends were here from the Royal City to take recreation hoat- ^g. 4c. Sam'l Conners to.-k several of our P^Me to New WesUm'mter on an extra «*«ge beaded by a pair of his beat stetda Tie railway employees on the Onderdonk contract who mere recently discharged, were "Hptidoffon Woonotdoy. CORRESPONDENCE PROM ORAHITR CKEKK. We bad a very hard trip in getting here. We wart tine.- days Boottag from Port Moodt to Mr.,,,-, -u which phoi we pack, d up and »t-rt*-p|. Tne ba -♦* did not lik- toe looks of thin;.*., and ian.- I "..n.-," aud the way po-s, tin em-., pkOha. sl.pn.N. snd axes tl* *A iround, was a ten..r to tin- nit *.■■-. Hov-cv. r, wi- fc ji.ii kt-il .-ind moth with h.-tter succe«, getting about fewolvi mils (|m flrsl day. M Hsni LohOUOi lioO, Wrbster, Au-'i:.. Jas, MiiM-riy and tin* WtiUtr, OOntpOOtd our potty, \\\\'v bad ■+■*'»* i w . otfjot* ta era mm tho II..p.* Ifoaotaio, an I wa had bol aa di '■ oi bl i r. the -ipj. fr ll . ..- h.,. w, ■mum,I ut Oraattfl Cu-.-k M the lltliot August. i v, iV mon m m-1 wai from Port Moody oi \\r.t. U .iioiu-l.i, haw li'' Ms Kelly and MeK-th 'he iimt night on urnvtl. 'MiH enek is ull cl-uined from lhe on.nth t . tho forks, a distance of frmr nnlri. OOOM eluims are paying voiy well, bnt high wutut gf .uud f..r the live of us. The way that uieii wort riding ami runalng aaoa siybt tt) nee. Tun Pogoe trareUdall nlghl with a fire brand in his hind, and got tlnie theifxt morning. The must of them cam- back in a tew fl >ys. The ground tbere is d ep to b-'dnj.-K and h ir I to Brofpoot, There are mily two ptitle*- there n.w, and they intend to sec the bottom liefore they leave. The Blndlkamten river was awry hi^h when we crossed. Proridoni ur-* very S'-ai*'-". There has been no bacon, butt- r or sugar in ramp for two w.-eks. licef is ten eeuts pat ponud, and biipplv not regal \\r, Pour UoODT. MONSTROSITY ! There is a great deal of dissatisfaction iu this city on ueouttt of the estraordioary course pursued by his excellency the ■_*.■■■ -rn or-gonttal in pfiwing by our very door without ealling. I'lie people of the fcoyal ('ity are not by any meant thin -skinned, hut tlu-y cannot help regarding his excellency's action as a wlight, however otherwise it may have been intended. His excellency would haw met with a most hearty iraloonu if he had seen lit to visit this city in the natuial way, but if he should even now return to Ml Ol we wet it ia i'l the recaption w.ll I- ■ very mu .h lacking in enthusiasm.—Colombian, Mlt. Kl*lTUK, AM) I'.VKl'.VimhV Kl.-iK: — Hold your breath. Here is a pretty pieee of busi atel Lot us try to rollout upon what we mu b consider. A great practical philosopher-one Sir John ralstaff. to wil -onoi profoundly gave utterance thai:— "Then il nothing bnt roguery to he found in villainous man." And, according to the "( olniuhiau" uew-jiaper of the 7th inst., here is proof oositivc of the KallitaHim ethical theory, Now, who. looking without prejudice ii tni man. would even think that the M,u«|Ui ot Lanedowm was such a villain as, aooording to tht "Columbian." it see uis thtt he is. The "Columbian' painfully learni that Mis Be- celiency, representing Her Majesty foi the nonce, iu making an excursion throngh tins Province, has—thu wretch! not ptined through a place called Nkw Wmtmin.^i i i:; and, in consequence, the "Columbian11 in elfect threatens "battle, and murder, and sudden death" tothe unfortunate Marquis, it he ever dam, by any miaobaoooi to poki his viceregal nose New VVustniinsterwaidt again. Bless us! May the Most Noble M.lmjui never run the risk. What has the unfortunate Vieeioy don ! In the course of an exourilon throug'i li ll ish Coin mbi.i, he ha*;—in idvc .teniU', per* hvps—passed by a plaoi called New Weil minster. Thii Province is a large country, and life ii abort, and tbe viceroy*! term of Lord Laiii'lowuc only extendi over year*, and there arc m.inv other obtCUre S(K»ts winch His BxOoUeOCy might iind it -;t great bore to visit, if not a difficulty to findj therefore, why aliould New Weittnin te pipe its little eye I.cmu io tin Kiipri■-«-n! itlvi of Her Majesty did not smile upon it in pa wing 7 Oh, go 'way ! 1 believe it is said that {Englishmen are a little loose on the subject of geography I rappoU) beoauae they havi- so much Land they forget whore some of It is. Probably it was thus that Lord Laii-dowue forgot, it lu- I'vcr knee.-, that there wu* auoh a place a- New Westininster. «• en although it is ilwayi pu'iipou-ily Btloking upon Itsell th gr.tiiit'iis and ramningle-a title of''Royal i ity." The citiz-iiB had better be done with IBOfa tomfoolery| and they had hilti-r, too. abandon the idea of oruebiog Her N ■■ icsty's icpr^entafiveb e nae oc ha- raitted to hest-.w tbe momentary light oi his conn t.nauce upon New Weatminater, |i is ao.usiu.., too, thia threat of tho "Columbian " As we are all paid off on tin- railway, and have nothing to da just now. I feel grate'nl that the "Colombian" has given u< noun thing tn laugh at. Port Moo |y, o. i 7, 1-.^.;. Navvy, ALDKIl OROVK LKITKH It Is now but one year ifnea the first sot* tiers hen- omnmrased t> mtdtt tlnir Ira pro* entente daring woloh short spooe <>t lime many really good hou- i hi ereated, and >tiii building U going forward. This location is one nf tlie be«t in the country f ,r a \\ ill ige, at least on tho s mth «ido ol the Fraser liver. \\\\ •• Oft o'\\ • n milessmrh of Wsinn.-k fttfttfon on C. 1'. K . and nine mllai n-utii oi Lyndeu, W. T. The settl»rs in \\V. T. sav that the Oitrernmeal of B. C. will not yrant a charter for a r *«d to connect thorn with the C P. H.; so thoy have to get along by uomi moans or other, and this is the only road on the south side of the river which will give them olooi 000* nection with the cast. We fail to see why Wu sliould be deprived of such reasonable claims. Our mails arrive and depart every "AMI HCMBCU" FLOORED. The public meeting held here on the 29th ult. to eaaaidar the reaaatioa of tha Qatar*. uor-Oeuer-il, haa baim made the subject of adwrse criticism in last Satuiday'a Coluut- Waa, by a eorre*|j'.iident over the son d» t "Anti Humbug." The public would be led tbt-n-by to infer that Poit Mood, i- own.d and epofBfc \\ r-gtiill.»s ol the ni-ii oi int i. -t o| th paopK by i riag, ntheialee haaera m the •■pii-gn-h. L«a| Tin*. •■>•!■, i h ioii.I. nt loeln tu place the gen- (i I |."-iii_' il .* I',.. o ua*a*ubl Ii^itt, hy ! tho aaa uraatablaimBfoeol m that tht reeep i '• aamittM appidated t-< t..k«* i tho '••»■.. iu n '" a ral's \\t-it aihltraiily h*. -.initcl the js.w. i 11 act for aad In behalf <.f the p■■■.pi- ■ r, t.. .-inpin*, "j| «i Hambog'i 'vii t » rda, r n "eolf elenliiil i maitCM men;" while tbe "hole tmoi ol the matter is, as fair and full aa eawaanoo r inspection and the great bulk of hi? employee discharged, large numbers are constantly arriving from the front, and we consequently meet with many familiar faces in our rambles about the terminus. A man was reported to have been found lying d— d— on tho railway track last Saturday night near the Queen 8. crossing, and was rescued from hia perilous berth by a good Samaritan. Mr. Onderdonk is having his surplus railway tie* that are scattered along the line, gathered up ami neatly piled at the 0. P. R. wharf. Dr. M. Heslop was over from the Royal City this week on busiuees, and we are glad to learn that be is doing well. I in* .rnor-Oeiieral m u beoomfau his expected arrival in Part MH' An eepneei a of i praferaaoe for c i tain gentle men to act on the committee wss arrivehort artiole, being oiiili I by the itatementa in the viotoru napere, laid that tin- dtataaoe from Bnrrard inlet to Nona!mo was only thirteen and a half mil. s, and tliat the paMOge by a railway f -rryboat could he made iu uu hour. It also rated, 'hat the haibor of Beqttlmalt « ■!•* lip tter tban tbat nf Port Moody! A correspondent replies as follows:— Portland, Oct. 2, iss:,. Bo. OuKimsiAN-The article in your is»ue of to-day is calculated to mi-dead in some Important facte, viz.: The dletance from tiie entrance to Burrard Inlet to hTaniamo is thirty-one miles, whieh could he scarcely j.ci formed in one hour's itoa-ming. It is v.-ry doubtful if the railway i-yn liirite have ever made tht ititement that it wee their in eutioii to ortablieh n forty t> convey fi.nj. acroM the straits of Georgia, inasmuch us uo precedent has ever been estab- llshed f vernmant work ' i l'"tt kloodj haa tbe tennlaai now. and fl will iei|iiire tin expeii-llture of lOVei ii ml liOOl tO remove it' w Inch the *ytill hai nol ■-'<( anl the Dominion I km er ut hai no "se for, nusinuch ss Port \\i ■ i |i tiie offli Ial t. mlnai ^i Mm Uoi eminent. It may possibly answer some un known purpose t< keep the mutter in nub* peneeead aheyaooe, bat Port >l-ody will retain the tornrioni until eoaian ■ Bl accumulate!, rendering an exteaeioa iii-<''<4sary. Wakuk'K, Thk TauRorommm. An InaMdoM la- struuiciit for aeoertaintag the dlflhaoei of [ble and inaeeessible | nintAjii'otu tin Obwrver and from each other Mflpbecn invented by Dr. Luigi Ccrebot-ini, a professor of the L'niversity of Verona. This apparatus OOniiltl mainly of a pair of telescopes mounted on a stand and fixed on a tripod for use. The telescopes are both brought to bear on the object, and a reading is then taken from a graduated scale on the instrument, which compared with a nt of printed tables gives the distance. Uy this means the inventor obviates the necessity for the base line, which has hitherto had to be laid down in these operations, and he dispenses with all trigonometrical calculations. Distances can be measured between far off objects, and by means of a sheet of paper fixed on a drawing-board a rough plan of the country under measurement can be sketched. In the same way the distances of ships at sea or of moving objects on land can be determined. The apparatus appeal's to be well adapted for laud surveying, and partic ularly for military purposes. In fact, it is stated to have been already adopted in the German army in the latter connection, and it is about to lie tried by the authorities of our War Department. A practical trial has been made with this instrument on the Thames Kmbunkment, when its varied usefulness was demonstrated. A peculiar virtne in AyersSarsapiirilla Uthal while it cleanses and purifies the blood from nil corruptijna and impurities, and thereby roots out disease, it builds np and invigorates tho whole system and makes one yonng again. Servia is negotiating with Komnelia nnd Greece, with the view of taking 00nmon action auainst the extension of Bulgarian dominion. King Milan of Mies Jennie Smith, of Victoria, is a guest Servia will go t.» Nissa Immediately to of ber niece, Miss Murray, of Port Moody. . aasume the chief command of the nrrnv. _ -1-- lien. Popovitch,the Kina'aC'tnefof Man. Dr. Quinn, the dentist, boa been sojourn-! with 25,000 troops, ii ready to croie ttie Miss Eckstein left lost Monday morning to attend the ladies' department of Columbia College, New Westminster. ng at tha Elgin this *eek. frorvfier. WASHINGTON LETTER. (Frw oor regular conwpond ot j WtitttsnmToo\\ D. C, S-pt. 2."-, M89. As the ttflM f*>r the -t»nenibb"g of (loogrm approaches, tbe probable l-^islation aud the action al the Senate on the app untments of tiie Pre-nleut are the t pie- ol ono r nine thai at the clubs, itlxnit HowanoMOt ro*, and tiie places where politi. i oe congregate tOOWVa news and shad<-w naming eveejte It leaeie to Ik- the Bsad inU-nttou i>f the P | oi.j rite "i th gaaeti iu raja ft tht nomia i turn ..i H B Tiehenn. HUitartn M lioa, m eaea aa H laawta ia exi ntio: -.sion, ou tin groead that he is aol sligihti la oOee He Att.pM.cy -li.-iM-ral hell tint tin- tu t that Pn-Hid. ut Andrew Job'* u pOfdaaed Mr. loahaaa raawvad all pnlitaiel dleabiljt:ei and m.idfc him the MaM M .itt\\ otli | lhe J;-pnbli,_in Itanaturi wih hold that the Cmistitutiniial Amend t of J.*.;;i mo] up n.-w le.piireiuents for otlier bohlers. It •ail that no -.ne who ever In Id otli. e iiud'-t the have been intended by Seeu-tary Bndioott to be the nature of a general order to urmy ollicers for their future guidance. lien Sheridan, it is said, is determined to resist this as far as it is in his power to do so, and it is unite likely that tiie President will lie called upon to settle the question. In this event it is understood that the President will take sides with .Secretary Kndieott. Oen. Hose.-rans, has declined the im it -ition of the Ohio Democrats, who wuuted him to take part in the present campaign. As soon as President Cleveland return. I from lus raoattnn (Jen. Boeeorani called upon him to ask if puhlic oflieers were allowed to take part iu political campaign!. It understood that President Cleveland Bet his foot down and forbade any such proceeding on the part of any one holding office under his Administration. The ni>iet interesting event of tho week has lieen the resignation of Mr. Baton th ( bief ot the Civil Service Commission. Ther i* much speculation us to wdio will be np pointed in his place. Dis believed that tli Other two Co n in is ioners, Messrs. Tlioma and Gregory will be called upon to resign nnd that before Congress envenes the board will be compos-d wholly of new men. The President*! letter on the civil eervice was generally discussed by politician! yesterday. It wns regarded ea leaving n doubt now as to the policy the Pre* dent desires to pursue. There are of course tome Item orotic members nf CongrOM who will ii us upheaval of a Christian population ignlnei Mohammedan opnrewlon and in the interest of union wi.h their Bulgarian brethren. The real Intention! of the greet pOWetl will be revealed by their i.-lusal or consent to allow Turkey tompprettthe outbreak in Kouuielia, Whioh thi is quite us well able to accomplish as nhe was to put down tie- Servian locomotion. The Porte will lose uo time In applying a lonobetooi to the sincerity nf the other sign ersofthi. Berlin treaty by demanding their ■Mftloa 'd the enforcement of the rights i lied upou Turkey by tbat Internment. Tbeesiltcaei "I Turkey, considered an a Kuropean power, is uum'stulckbly at st ike. A glance at the m>p w ill ibow that the parti t alBalgaria and the MVOttoM of its nth.tii lection into a new princi|iality Bndei distinct rcliti'.ns to the Sultan was mniended to I^ird Heacnimtielil by -tr.iti _n f-a-oim of the gravest character. It assured to (.Vm-.t.intu..plo s rampart on the north and sate mrans of oommnnicati.n with Maivdonia and Albania. Kiisleni Komnelia was created for the express purpose nf giving the Porte command of the Ualkaui, which have proved for the last hundred years the principal harrier against Muscovite aggression. With the Balkan passes in tho bands of Bulgarian soldiers, oftdcnd as they nre by Russian volunteers, Adrianople would lie at the mercy of a sudden forward movement by a Russian expeditionary column, which, once intrenched in the old Ottoman capital, would cut otl" the Sultan from his western provinces, and block the march of an Austrian force to his assistance in the event of the Vienna Government's deciding to interpose. It was well understood by the Turks that the treaty wrung from them at San Stefano left them strategically helpless, and rendered their retention even of a foochold in Europe impracticable. Should Abdul Hatned fail to make the most strenuous endeavors to keep the control of the Balkans, he will be certain to provoke an outburst of popular resentment like that which cost Abdul Aziz his throne and his life. Not only must he insist on his ri^htto quell by force the Rou- melian revolt, and thus preserve the means of defence that the Berlin Congress gave him, but he must act with thentmost promptitude, if he would prevent the flume of insurrection from involving the whole Balkan peninsula. The Servian rebellion proved that you cannot let a fire get under way in any quarter of southeastern Europe without setting the whole region between the. Danube and the .-Egean in aMaze. Already the Servian army has been mobilized, and King Milan will find mpossible to long repress the excitement of his subjects and their passionate desire for extension southward. In Macedonia eruptive forces are so active that protracted hesitation on the part of Turkey, or the semblance of reluctance on the part of the great powers to sanction Ottoman coercion, would produce sn explosion. Now let us see what the more or 'ess explicit utterances ot the semi official press amc-jat to- Thw MortSoy Pott expresses __—*, what is no doubt the sincere wish of Lord j ii.g comprised 40.000 persons, but was quiet Salisbury to restore the statu* into, either by , and orderly. The police were deployed in -■iThtJi./ing the P..rte to enforce its authority small groups, and keep themselves hidden or by restraining Prince Alexander by con- as much as possible, oo as not to inflame the p ert-d seti n on the oart of the Christian | mob. The Socialists firat aaaenibled at' powem. fli- PotdUrlf QmrotpaoOM "*-, iu an j Limebouse Yard. The selection pif this plot irtfole llljeil to have went tad from St. was in plain defiance of the orders of tb< Petersburg, declares tM Prince Alexander j police and the Home Secretary, but tbe was aware that be had no support tu elpeot Socialists did no more thap assemble tbere. from Baool i. But dp-e* this mean that the I snd thin adjourned aud moved in procession ,r tm detenfi ed to remain un impassi 0-1 tue-de-.tructfinof tin* Bulgarian militia and of their Russian oflfawi at the hands of Turkish reteraaet Somlar pro- I I * " made by Alataaxtar II. as tha out- break oi taaHervum revolL but his hand was presi-nM-, foreed bj th-- Peaelavieparty, ii mc have a eariaaahr luggi-stive "tit*'in nt by tbe Fi' tti'lrrttlatt, m\\\\>\\ tpaah far thi Vietim Foreign Oliice. This I u* id proCaeaei to raanra the eoti n -■! Prinoe Alexander HI vl platlmi -d int* *rua tion-d 11« which Rarope aajwoi approia, ll *>i_.oiti. ..nt'v ad.I-i, "it entails a ■ ii-ru, tion ..I the "ralanne of i»o*er and of the national (mliticul fnrees of the Balkan peiuiiMilu." Are we to infer that the iufrne lion of treaty riylit** would be viewed with more Mar^tbiO at Vienna provided Austria were at ldierty t*. redreai the disturbed bul- MM ta I push forward from Novi Bazar to Boloaiea I It will Im- notiaed that as yet Prince Bis- marek is silent. When he speaks we I hall know whetli i tlo-ie is an inflexible deter- iniua'toti on the p,-rt of the .entrul pOWOfO to stiAe the iiihurre-.-tion J'.ut should his I it WOUld m ,ui indioatioo of a I let tht drly tfitrt i, itad thai b'iug *UKii iu*1 H tat cxpuioioi, ot the lurks fre.n Europe- A I'V". T0RP8D0 BXPRRIMKVT8Al I'll: CAPK. \\\\ hilst the nation is partially roused to the fact ot the insufficiency of our ships and other naval units, such as torpedo l>oats, for the performance of the tasks which will, in all probability, be assigned them in the event of war, any experiments ou the subject of gun ft, torpedo will, if reasonably earned out, assist the conception of what will be tine economy in naval linunce. An experiment intimately ooonected with one of the queetioni involved was made tome weeki ago in l*'ulse Bey, near Simon's Bay, by the Raleigh. In order to form au estimate of the damage likely to be sustained by a torpedo buat iu the endeavor to attack a fully prt pared ship attempting to get safely out to sea, a second-class torpedo-boat was repreaented in facsimile by a canvas-covered frame surmounting a raft uud anchored in the hay, tdx miles from the anchorage. The night being dark was extremely favorable to the suppo.--.ed attack. The ship having made all ready at if for real warfare (the heavy gnm being double-loaded with case shot and battering charge*-, and in addition to the machine guns, the hammock nettings l>eiug manned by riflemen with ten rounds of ball- oartridge apiece), left the anchorage, and Using her electric light soon searched out the target, but not liefot e a false alarm had caused the whole tire from from the starboard tide to he delivered at what appeared to be the ou«line of the target, but which turned out to be the afterglow, left on the surface when the li_'ln has beeu playing on the water and h is been suddenly extinguished, and which Here took a definite shape. The lirst glimpse of the target waa in the circle of ligflt forme I by tbe further extremity of tiie electric beam, und though small, at 500 yards was exceedingly blight aud distinct. All the heavy guim were arranged 10 that if tired together, the shot would cover a compact ring on the water, with a radius of 800 yards,— their extreme r&ngC when laid horizontal. —and at the "ooate firing/1 was sounded when the target, was still at 000 yards distant their nhot fell short, while the result waa found to be one hit from a N'ordenfelt bullet. Tin re is little doubt, however, that had the target been brought within raime of the onte-ehot, she could hardly have lived through the tremendous hail which would hav- been poured into her. The following wrinkles appeared to have been gained: —1. Smoke illuminated by the li^lit ob-cures the objci t*. more than u'niHumiliated smoke. *_'. Lo 'k-out arraugemonte should be regulat i*d, io ai to obviate the possibility of such f dse alarmi as thi one mentioned] for in- stones , by arranging them in pair*, they would _oiiii the benelit of consultation, while nil should be in direct cnrniumn. ation with tbe commanding officer. *J. Men should be well cautioned beforehand to keep cool a I a llected -t the out let. A second ex- iteriment wai tarried ontthe'foltowiugutgbt, with the diireieniTth.it Inttetd of tin ship being manned uid anne I,there were III men itetioned each side at the main deck ports with riflee, and they were not warned us to dfetai the ttrget wonld pan. The target waeaotually paeaed ai 200 yards, and hit In twelve places by Nordeufelt bntleti. The sights on thi ntles were cleirly vitible, owing to the light being above them. All on lioanl nre tantfled is to the Dee nf these experiment! in gi\\ ing both officer* tnd men an insight Into tnequeotiono(goo ft torpedo. —Ai'myund A'*m GateUe, LATE NK'As ITEMS, Marshal Serrano is dangerously ill. The munieipii) authortaoi - I Hadm havi extended the right of sufTni^.- to women. The rni ki-sii ioeeet In ths ton dayt1 flght* ingat Derahova ware AN men. The albanlun leal l.ooo killed. It is said that Count Kalnnky, the Aattrlan Premier and Foreign Minister, will soon resign, and that be will Ui mooaadad by t ouut Andrsss\\. Thirty "inooiilighter*-" made a raid upon farms belonging to the estate of Sir Henry I i.eiov.iu. iu Kerry, and made the tenants swear that they would withhold their rents unleiw they were granted a redaction of 30 pei cent. The tenants of the Herbert Ken- inure tetato, In Killarney, headed hy Orieeti, visited the proprietor, and demanded a reduction of 30 per oentt In rents. The demand was refused, und the tenants withdrew, declining to pay their rents. Recent investigations by a committee of the Nntional League have resulted in tire discovery that a number of persons have been unjustly persecuted by the present system of lmycotting, by outsiders giving damaging inform-ition against neighbors through private spit^. The Leaguers propose to restrict boycotting to offenders against the League. The Kildysart league, at a special meeting recently, resolved to boycott Felix McCarthy, Resident Magistrate of Belfast, and Mrs. Morgan O'Connol, a niece of the Liberator, tor refusing to reduce rents 25 per cent. Meetings have been held in Cork to form loyalist defensive and protective unions in opposition tothe National League. The great Socialist demonstration ie a thing of the past, and many men in London breathe more freely iu consequence. A great load is off the minds of the London officials, from the Home Secretary down to the privates of the police force. The programme of the Socialists was carried out to a sufficient extent to vindicate what they claim as their rights, and the police made just enough display of force to prevent instead of provoking disorder. There was a spirit of compromise on both sides, and, although each party mustered in great force, tne compromise was effective, and peace prevailed. AU the available police force of London, including reserves from every precinct in tho metropolitan district, was secretly assembled ot Scotland Yard. Messengers were sent every half hour from tbe scene of the parade .-.ml the meetings to the police central office. All day long there was a singular absence of soldiers in the street*-, and this fact led to a to a strip of watte laud along the docks, where tin- formal meeting was held and the -ni* In- ib live.,-,| A special place was allotted to the re|-orters, wbo were present in large nund-fr* in expectation of a not. On tin way tn th.- doafcl the proer_sni"«. The s|>eeches delivered st the meeting were not very inflammatory, Some of the speakers denounced the authorities for attempting to stifle free xpeech, and a resolution denouncing the police was udopted. There was much en*, tloi-i.i-in, but, on the whole, tbe assemblage wan a* orderly as any meeting of e-jual size ever held in London. Lord Iloseberry, iu a speech at Relgate, said thst iu addition to the plsnki of Mr. l.ladstone's manifesto, the Liberal programme included the acquisition of land by tenants, free education and colonial federals rd rUwii-cry thus, nadoaMealjf with the senctH-*. of Mr (..ad--tone, recog** litres and adopts the salient features of Mr. Chau berlaiu'n programme. The financier who wuisaid to be a dwaultar and -n thee i oot *t » bomei Strickland, the manager in Ireland tor the West of Kngland Life and Fire Aisurance Company. He haa written to friends saying that he has been ruiued by heavy hisses on the Stock Ex- ehange, and that he will not return to Ireland. Cardinal Manning has issued a circular, which was read in all the churches and chapels of the diocese, calling attention to the Pope's encyclical letter setting apart October as a solemn month of prayer. The subjects mentioned in the letter as requiring the prayers of the faithful for their removal are the recent attacks upon the power and dignity of the Church, and the cholera pestilence in Spain and Italy, all of which, the I'p-pe says, may be taken as signs of the times. The cholera has appeared at Nice, France, and eight de*itbs from the disease have already occurred there. The officials, however, assert positively that there is no cholera in the city, fearing that an acknowledgment ot the presence of the scourge will hav.. a ruinous effect on business. Tte confirming of the lentence recently parsed on the Socialist Van Ommeren, at Amsterdam, by the higher court, to which the case had lieen appealed, created a riot, dflring which a large number of persons were more or less neriously injured. The disorder was renewed in the evening, when thousands paraded the streets singing socialistic airs. The police were content with simply watching the procession. A detputch from Utrera, in Spain, says that an attempt to collect taxes created a riot there. A mob, mostly composed of womeu, stoned the j.xdice and attempted to set fire to the excise otlices, but the opportune arrival of the military prevented their designs being carried out. The Czar continues greatly irritated over the RottmeUan revolution and lias summoned a council to consider the situation. Among those who have been summoned are M. de Ciers, the HttHsian Foreign Minister, Oen, Ignatieff, and PrinOO -Dondoukoff-Kor-sakoff, the author of the Bul_-anun Constitution. M. de Ciers was ordered to meet the C#ar aft Copenhagen, and another despatch was sent to him to hasten his movements. Ccn. Igna tieff and Prince IhindoukafF-KorsMkoff, wbo are in central Asia, have been directed to proceed to St. lVtersbn.g to await tbe return of the Czar to the capital. These preparations have a somewhat ominous appearance, hut the feeling in all tfie capitals of Kurope is still optimistic, and no one seriously expects war as an immediate result of the noumeUan incident. Prince Bismarck being opposed to a formal conference of the powers on the Roumelian question, Lord Salisbury ha.- agreed that the nope of the proposed meeting-of Ambassadors at Constantinople be limited to an exchange of views on the question at iteme, without any formal voting, and without tho drawing up of any protocols. Lord Salisbury has instructed the British Ministers at Belgrade, Bucharest, and Athens tn urge the respective Ouvernmttti to which they are accredited to refrain from action in connec- ti'-n with the Uo .melian revolution. M. Waddington, in an interview with Lord Salisbury, said thut If, de 1'reycinet, the l-ii-ncli (foreign Minister, would co-operate in limiting the revolution to K'oumeiia, Lord Salisbury, Mr. i dad-done, the Puke of Argyll, and Mr. W. K. Poratn have re* elved telegram! from ftoqmeliani entreat Ing tin-Mi t. ici'p'^nir.e the uniou of Kouuielia, in i Bulgaria. Tbe Kin.: of Roumania, in receiving Ahmed 23a, the new Turkish Minister, ox* I rcK.-c.i th. moat amicable tentimantita irardiTurkey He said he hoped fore peaceful tettiemenl ol existing dimbnltiei, nnd tha: tin* Sultan's reign would he a long and prosperous one. Prince Alexander has ordered tbi eiv.il and military tUthorittei on the frontiers of Uul garia ami Macedonia to mnintaiu order in then respective districts. Ths populace on Iwith sides if tlie PnlkaiTn are very enthusiastic over the union between Bulgaria and Koumelia. and numbers of men have offered to enter the volunteer service in support of the union. The ladies arc forming a Ked Cross nociety, and making other preparations for the care nf the sick ami wounded soldiers in the event of hostilities l«ing begun. Warlike preparations are being made with unabated zeal. Agitation in favor of Macedonia is stringently forbidden, and offenders are tried by court martial. The military authorities have taken possession of the railways throughout Servia, and the ordinary travel has been stopped. In addition to the reserves 60,000 of thf? landwtfhr have been called out for active ffervice. All the powers have agreed that thtf Rou'nelian Conference shall be held at Pera. Senia's circular to the powers states thut the recent events in Bulgaria threaten Servian interests,and as a aafe- guardshe asks fchesupport of tHe powers. At ,i meeting of stadents in Belgrade! lately, those present decided to volunteer for service in the army. The 6rsb and second classes of reserves have been ordered to be formed into an army corps. A Bulgarian revolutionary committee' has been discovered at Adrinople. Font arrests have been made. While all the powers have noticed the Porte that they denounce therecent Bulgarian action It Is believed that it will certainly be confirmed as un fait aceompli, provided Prince Alexander continues to pay the regular tribnte to Torkey. "Viceroy" aud "Provost" 'Whisky.— The purest and best Irish and Scotch Whis- kya imported. The only wbiskys bottled under the superintendence of Her Majesty'* t Customs, and guaranteed genuine according- report, which is probably true, that they , to Act of Parliament, (38 and 39 Vic. cap-^ were kept in theirbitracks, to be iu readiness 63). E Browx th Co., Importers, New* for the expected fray. The Socialist mi-iet*' We-.tminster. fl I1 ill,: ll..I r: Ol , i i.. JSweet i. trie Inwa or tin- otjookeg .Ity, Suct-t ma tin- in",ling hour. Whan UM llir-t. of lilt- Ulglrt have fieri away Auil tin. brnls are tinging carols gay, Ami ilre Aowitwee gen, tire tttwete. But srAeetarr fnr art- tire hour, of eve, Wii-n I... ....nt lirrhlb it. Wdsioil, Anrl 1 Hit'..II in t).< I'll.- » itll (irru-\\ ii-vr, An.l fron hi, ll—lillng lip. re. ■ Her j. r ...iifesMuu. Bb, row. tl. il I" ' I"-" »ill \\eei for aye. fine l>ll--.f;ll tire .itnr,ti..ll' 1 . !■■ ."It! tin- Ur al.ay ind Mm .tar. foot Aewe in a knowing way A ■ a |a . r ■ .1 iti.ri. DD1IM HIK ■wnmoM. TOO W.'ll'l I. friir, tli. H trl.l ia W.i^lit, Ami joy attain, it. noou; l.ifo'. sky i. tin.Iieil with rosy light Dating tire lii.llt'.vintMni. Til. il' I..ail. .,'ertl.iU' wiih ti'llilo, lit -. Tlri-y lull nn I I 00 rrrnl .p ...n, An.l .-a.ll li.-w 'lay .Iihii, li.lt to llles., Ilnnus* tlie lioneynio..!). \\,i oloud obnon, the .iinnliine bright) For lite i-s in iu .Inn.-; Tin- »t. alt ll I". r..!rr. bhl'llit light, Dwlog th. li..ii..tvii....iii '.'-.ll of the other never tire-, Tlrrir foll'l liertrtt, Iwrlt in tnnt", lie splits 111 r wo.nl nn.I light, tile tire. During tbo honeymoon. 1'uir honeymoon, why should it VMM, ' ' ' weee so ..ion? Why . led life remain ' Irtjiuymooll. >i-!if Kven'/nij Qau/le ■ hall, .Villi he lockod an AJoni.; 1 gut, .'iinl in n trio, .My fuurl heart his alone is; I tliinlr, na him I view, Ile ll ral) ot nil men is. if:In-. 1 think no mora. T!i..n'rt lb, curiae, Olawn tennis. Wo meet, to ploy n game, il.; ill tennis attire is; 1 now nee iu that shape There no eurve to ailiuire is— Hirr stalwart form is gone, And lie like a plucked hen is. 0, thou hirst been tr arise 01 my anguish, lnwu tenuis! Full soon the rnriiil.-n forth will go Through autumn fields to roam, To gather parti-colored leaves An.l bear them to her home. Hour after hour she'll pick them up, L'ntil she weary grows, Anrl in In r baek there comes a creak, Ami v,'iird-nipporl is ber nose, Then she the leaves will press between The pages of some bin.k, An.l at them,from that time henceforth, Will never tako a look. At the .illicc of tho Arlige of Verona there a;.;, ai.l lhe other day au aged lady, still 1'nbu.t rr.,,1 gay, who olfeiotl to recite at per forinnnee. proposed to be given in favor of actors, I'userviog a benefit night for her- Hell. .She was Rosalinda Carus formerly an aotlOM well known lo Verona through her r'aret-r, and lately on account of her von- arable age. She was born on Aug. '21, 1 7S5, iiii.l has therefore just completed her one li.iu.lrclth year. She is still able to read Without spectacles. All the savings she hns licitri able to accumulate during Bixty years on thu stage had been devoured by tile troubles she had gone through, principally by the burning of the Monte de Pieta, ami tire ii.uu'liiti..iiis whieh occurred a few yeuis n go. After a visit to aomcof the Alaska glaciers, Mr. Thorrras Meehau states that beneath the .Muir glacier, said to be four hundred milts 1 iug, rlpwa a rapid torrent, which ho estimates to I,.. one I.in.dr. .1 feet wide and four feet in average depth, and which runs summer rnnl winter without interruption. At it- r i initiation the glacier hangs over the Mia ..Jul gives off icebergs. Mr. Median remarks tliat the great ice sheets havo their l.ikci, rapids, waterfalls, hills, and valleys; that their waterways change their courses at times through the melting, and tbat m.-l ting proceeds freely iu the suns ray's but not iu the allude. In n lecture at tlie meeting of llio liriiUii Medioal Association, Dr Roberta pointed out tlie current error thut wine, kid digestion. "Wines," lie said, ' in- lriliit the action nf saliva to a marked extent, and bave u retarding effect on peptic digestion.'1 Ho thought offer- Voicing wines were the least injurious, ami that wines taken with table water, did not embarrass salivary action. Di.. lilled spirits taken in moderation were found tn promote digestion very distinct. A relic of tlio great forests which once fovererl the sniilli of Sweden was re- -ently ring out ofa bog ul Kinnoverl in tho sbaiio of u bout six fuot in diameter, hollowed out of a log. Tho tree fron: which it was obtiiin.nl must have beeu tv.onty feet in clroaa.fersr.oe. Tin. wood, which wus blue in color, was veiy hard, ami the limit ho heavy Unit two bui lucks could not move it. Alter a sovoro illnoru au K.ngli.liinau shrived ..ll his whl.ker. and otherwise die galled himself. He then went to his doe- tor auiUaidhu wns u brutlutrof the sick mm, win,, bu asserted, was now de.-l. He thus ..Itl.inii .1 a . . i-lilieutar of his n'.n di'iith, had his own decease registered, drew the burial money from his lodge, amidct.imped. The Practical P/utoorapherotgaeekl that hi t In:,- days of convenient photographing appliances, those who visit in au otlir-inl capacity scenes of murder, wreck, or riot should apply tho camera before anything is disturbed, as the evidence thtt,gamed,being incontrovertible, might possess incalculable vrvlne. A cheese dealer states that much of the so-called Knglish cheese is made iu this country and shipped to Knglanrl, whence it is returned,enhanced in value by the sea voyage. Soinetimos oheoses areshipped backward anrl forward two or three times, each voyage ad ding to the richness of their flavor Prize fighters evidently have not yet learned the most effectual methods of re duciug their weight. The Britisli Medical Journal tells of a fat pig which was buried Hurler the chalk cliffs of Dover for 108 days It weighed 100 pounds when immured, and when dug out turned tire scale at -Opt.unds. It thus lost 130 pounds in 106 days, aud came out a very lean pig. According to the Lancet the recent visit tb America of Dr. Keith, who came to perform a surgical operation,is the first instance since the Declaration of Independence of an American having summoned medical aid from the old country. Monsieur Piugat is considered the artistic dressmaker in Paris fashionable circles. Worth now playing second scissors. A Madrid engineer is at work on a project for tunneling from the maiulaud, under P Gibraltar and dynamiting the English garrison out of Spain. The refusal by" a teetotal tailor to make clothes for rumselltrB is a new cause for temperance discussion in London. The head of tlie Roman Catholic missions in China report, that ten thousand native convert, have been massacred within ten years. Five white missionaries have been lost. Prince Leopold, only son of the late Prihce Frederick Charles of Germany, has started ou a long tour in the East. The possession of f4,000,000 enables him to do as be i.leases. Tire Kiitperor nf liuewiatravela in rail- rna'i isrs that t.ln-e belmigi-d t-. Na- poleon III., but tbey here oeem gieatly improved and are aaid to be tbe lineM in the world. Th,- ill feeling in Franco toward Kng- Ir.llil i- indicated bv the fact that oue issue .if ii leading 'Pari* daily journal iiiiiaincil live articles abusing the Britons virulently. I'ntf. A. I.aii'lriiark, 'lir.itor of tlie Norwegian Saberiaa, haa studied ihe capability i I ealinoa toja np waterfalls. II.- has MM a ajli.ioii jump sixteen i,. perpendicularly in tne Drama River, _U Hawjeeod where ten great masts huve been pi iced icroa, tberlvei |.,r lie Mud, • I Iln- llal.lls nl salmnll, an that exact ineaaureu,eut. may be ef- l.-.-r.-l. lire Antlnipdngical ('..ngri'ss which iasi.m In lie In-lit ut Rome will have a en,nnis feutiui- in a cmloetinn nl' 7r*r skulls n -.hurt notice, aud in first ulua order. Cai.lh Soi.ii:iti:i>. Laundry Opposite C. P. It., near Queen Street, jnftl NOTICE S HEREBY IUVEN THAT T. 11. Spring in only half owner of the Clarke MOW ftt Port Moody, as I own the other' hnlf: and rraid T. 11. Spring hns no authority to sell said scow. ALFRED WILLIAMS. KOTICB. IvroTKJi-: is -^ all person. M'-REBY (JIVKN THAT rnon. arc forbidden to pureliunii Eton any perrron or persons any lot, p.rt or interest in that eertnin seow now owned run! occupied hy the undersifzuorl und family, and lying iu thu writer, of I'ort Moody. T. B. "SPRING. i'ort Moody, It. C, April 17tb, 1885. PARTNFJISHIP. rllAVK TAKKN ANOI'S MiLKOD int.. priitiior.hip in the business carried nn ut the I'aeilie Hotel, Clarke Street, I'ort Moody. 'I'he firm name iu future will be Taylor A M.-la-.r.l. JOHN R. TA\\ LOB, .lrin„_.-,th, 188.-,. E. K. SARG.SON, BOOK andjnj. PEINTER MiKknzik Strkkt, N. \\V. HAVING TAKKN TEMPORARY possession of the TBLMQRAPH Olfii-e, pending tbe republication of that Journal, If now prepared tu HU all orders for BOOK & JOB PRINTING! CIRCULARS, LF.TTERHEADS. BILLHEADS, PROGRAMMES, DODGERS, CARDS, Etc. Prices according to style of work required All work executed at ihurt notice and in first-class style. US-Call and skr Samples or Work. (ESTABLISHED 1862.) Fred. OENKAAL DEALER IN Eichhoff . DEALER IN GROCERIES Provisions, Dry G-oods CLOTHING, BOOTS & SHOIS, <$"C.i &c. Of First-Glass Quality, The Winnipeg: House Cor. (FollMEUI.y CALLED THE TllE llKI.MOMill 11.111.1.) Clarke and Kyle Sts., • Port Moody, B. '"¥ 'PHIS HOUSE, JUST COMPLETED, IS THREE STORIES IN " height, iii hard fhiinhed throughout; has a bar well stocked at all ith a good selection of the choicest i__st.es, 3__-i:q,tto:r,s <&- cic_3-_a_:r,s. The'Gentlemen's Sitting Room is a model of neatness and comfort, where will be found, for the use of guests, tho Canadian, American and local newspapers. The Ladies Parlor is elegantly furnished. The Dining Room is large and handsome, and the tables will always bo supplied with the BEST IN THE MARKET. The House has the capacity for the accommodation of 5'J guests, having over 20 rooms furnished with First-Class Spring Beds and Bedding, and lias a commanding view of the beautiful harbor. The House will be conducted on first class principles at Moderate Rateb. Open for Guests on and after IDth May. Patrons may rely on receiving every possible attention from the proprietor and his attendants. U?. CABEY, Proprietor PACIFIC HOTEL, Clarke Street Port Moody, B.C. ■JO-EUnT D5L. TAYLOB, -P-RC-P-EH-ETOI-iS "'HE PROPRIETOR OF THIS HOTEL WISHES TO INFORM his old friends and the general public that he is prepared to furnish guests witli FIRbT-CLASS ACCOMMODATION. and desires a liberal share of the patronage of the traveling public. PORT MOODY MARKET. Pioneer Market of Port Moody. imilal'N.W.!: AND KK.TAIIa DEALERS IN FRESH ANI) SALT WATER fish:, Vegetables, Fruit, Butter, Eggs, Poultry, &c. General --hlpDlng and Commission Merchants. Orders from the Interior .'rom-Hl* Attended to. C.S. WINDSOR & CO. •arREMEMBEl. THE STAND—Two Don™ Weet of tlie Caleilonia Hot.l. Moderate Rates- Comer of Front Tnd Begbie SfeetS, ^koltost^l DOMINION SAWMILL CO., Ltaited riICX_:-_5_._R,X. STEEBT, IDTIEW WESTMI1TSTEB, B. C. rpo PERSONS WISHING TO BUILD, tlio Company are now |ire|,rircd to off., .'it'triiil iiiiliicciiit..iil. in Lumber ami Mutorial of nil kiniln, including, Doors, Sash, Mouldings and Finish OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. The (; |iiuiy »i»h to Arete npu.iul altinilirin t„ their .took of HOME-MADE FURNITURE! Tl.i- ll. |.ailment ll I'mnlui.tii! (iii the most ini'iruvinl pritioi'il... All the latest ile«i(;i!» uiu pr.irlmnal in tire ohoiirtrst material. BEDROOM SUITES A SPECIALTY! 1'AI.I.I'R (,'HllKONIKR.S A SIDEBOARDS (l.iiecn Anne Style), FOLDING CHAIRS EXTENSION TABLES, ft.;., ftu. vlslf pons about to Furnish Hotels are strongly recommended ne Mill, as special prices are accepted for large purchases. R. B. CALEDONIA HOTEL, PORT MOODY B. C. KELLY, ~^~ ~-^~ ~- Proprietor. THE PEOPRIETOE OF THE ABOVE HOTEL takes pleasure in annomiciiig that the House is now completed with every convenience for the traveling public. THE TABLES are well supplied with every article in season, and THE BAB is provided With a well- selected Stock of XjIQ,TJO*-R, & OIGARS. THE BEDS are well aired, and the Stabling is extensive and the best of Feed always ready for Horses. It may be well to remind visitors that this Hotel is within a few minutes walk of tho Kailway Wharf and Station, and just at the terminus of the new road. Guests mny depend on receiving every attention and a hearty welcome from the undersigned, whose long experience is a guarantee of everything being comfortable and satisfactory. J. T. SCOTT, Manages. CITY BAKERY, Next door to Coon's, CLARKE STREET, - - PORT MOODY. ■FRESH _B*R,E-A.ID NKW WESTMINSTEI.. hand, uiim JAMBS KJM-ULE, l'rop. For Sale or Exchange. A FIRST-CLASS FRENCH 4-HORSE Wn- n, in good order. Also, a yoke of large, w.Il-broken Oxen, with Yoke and Chains. Will be sold a bargain, for CASH, or will he exchanged for good Milch Cows. Apply to T. J. ROGUE, Port Moody; Or to THIS OFFICE. This Great Household Medicine ranks among the lead ing necessaries of Life. These famous Pills purify rhe HI.OO and act mott pouerfully, yet soothing!. on ihe LIVE-R STOMACH, KIDNEYS and BOWELS, gi'ing tone, enemy, an vino, io tin-M grail MaIN SPRINGS 0 I.I)' i_. Thi*. ar.. i a.ii-ruiitl v ri a .rij.'it.l. a < nwer failing r. nif.y in all eeeo, wti.t, ll. oooitltoilon, Irinii wliHteTi-r cuus,*, h,» Ce 'roine inrparr''.! nr werrli'-ned, I hey are tiun 'li'lfiilly i lliraiaoiih in all H.lineltt- iiicilcil, o Krm.lrt nl nil agon; and »► u GENK1IA H'AMILV MKliK:i.\\K, „i. um>urpi,..ed. Its searching and Healing Properties tre known throughout the World hor llie cow ul BAU LEGS, Had lire,. MWounds,Sores and Ulcers li i« nn rnf.illible tttoeaj, Il rffet-iualli; nil, 1mA nn the r.eck .rid irl rat, hb mill imo in. m .1 dues Ml li IHKIMT, llmuebilra, lo ■:■ Ciughif. .ud ovon AMIISIA. >'«r Ul.aduli Wt lilljlr-, Abs,e««», I'll,.. I rsln „n, flOUT RHEUMATISM. hid iiwj kind Of SKIN 1H8E*-E, ii h ■♦.....,■ itt-en known iu in I, li< .'il h in,I ''Hiin.i'iir are ''i-i.i.lHci. r 588 OXFUltD RTHKE' rNIlll- iiidiir- .od by nil v mlor, or Hi .1 ii liniLglliilll ib. Mvlllird »B l.l.willl ilinir in or 11--1 II r, niOBI • i. \\ nr... n;a llin Trad* Murks r.f tirrw Uedldin - «. ■visl'ieri iii OnaWia, Hen,.,, in, uir briiofllronr tb. Briil.li Powtolon. a .in «. p the Ari.irriotu (.'ouiiier rii. fn- mi, . >r piinieculod. l*JT PnrcbrtKC'S "bolllii 'noli In ib- I in ■ h" I'ma mul llmra. II tb. ail.rr. ,► i . :13,'Ulord •triTt, Li.ii.lon. il.ry .rr nor P. S. HAMILTON, HAI.IIIHTEK-AT-I.AW, NllTAUY PlBI.K, .Slll.lirlTORANU AlTOIISKlf, REAL BCTATI AllKNT AND COSVKVANOEK, 3r__\\_.rr«._7- __tro«t, . . Fort -Wtociy BUII.OINU LOTS FOR SALE Of every suction of Port Moinly. Ala, Suburban Lota, by the Aere, iinrii.ihnl.il adjacent to thu l'oit Moody surveyedT. -tit". Land, for sale on the Nnrth aide of, having wntnr fronteg. on, Port ,Mo,«l* Harlior, liiioly aituaturl aud ,•.<•,•, .In.,:'. valualilu. Alio, Farm I,audi nf .up.ri.ir nnalit' nirl on favornblir trrni., in Now We.tniii.-tt Di.triut. Cnrofully prupniwl Maps and Plain' " illbitud, anrl the fullu.t iril.n unti.ti rBTnl*f ed. at Mr. Hamilton's unHiT 'ARECHAxNCB To Brickmaker s, Woolen Manufacturers and others. 1 J ts L dw PORT MOODY BUSINESS DIRECTOR!' Annand, Geo. - Akmsthonu k Burr, Brett, James, Coon, C. E., Clarke, J. A., Fales k Co., Grant, D. B., Hamilton, P. i Hksi.ov, M., Inslet, Wm., Kilbt, E., Kkliv, R. B., Lanois, H. E., Mennie, A., MintcHilt, —, Nelson, F. F., TlfFIN, J. B., VanVolkenbnrgh Bros. Trommer, Locib Wise, Job., ON BOWKN ISLAND, ONE QF TH» most beautiful spots in the Provinc* there are inexhaustible bed. of clay, wai arlapted for the manufacture of brick. There is plenty of water power to driv mill, and any ijuantity of fuel to born tl*1 bricks. For a Woolen Mill the Islmnl » well arlapted; the streams are" copnr* throughout the year, and there ia plenty ■ M*!t power to drive machinery. The harbor ij excellent and land-locked, so tbat no win! has any effect on shipping lying in tbe lr*f bor. For particulars apply at m22 THIS OFFICE. il Propr. Pacific Ho«*J Lumber Merchant* BaM Druggist and Telephr* - - - RealE.t*.*B-T' - OenT. Mdi Barrister * Real Kaiali . . . M. I . - Propr. Elgin Houa ' Contractt Propr. Caledonian Hottl - - - M. D J, Lumber Ag»* .eei Groceries * CrnekerJ n j, London Hon*. jlrt< Shingle Manufactorf jr - Meat MaHet Shoe Star* Stage Tnet*m"""@en, "Published by P.S. Hamilton from 1833-12-22 to 1884-03-08; by L.A. McLerie from 1884-03-15 to 1884-11-15; by F.B. Logan from 1885-05-02 to 1886-07-28; by J.K. Suter from 1886-09-04 to 1886-09-25; by A.R. House from 1886-09-25 to 1886-11-13; and by an unidentified party thereafter."@en ; edm:hasType "Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:spatial "Port Moody (B.C.)"@en ; dcterms:identifier "Port_Moody_Gazette_1885-10-10"@en ; edm:isShownAt "10.14288/1.0311692"@en ; dcterms:language "English"@en ; geo:lat "49.282222"@en ; geo:long "-122.829444"@en ; edm:provider "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en ; dcterms:publisher "Port Moody, B.C. : F.B. Logan"@en ; dcterms:rights "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 ; dcterms:isPartOf "BC Historical Newspapers"@en ; dcterms:source "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en ; dcterms:title "Port Moody Gazette"@en ; dcterms:type "Text"@en ; dcterms:description ""@en .