Robert determined to utilize his ser- culty, and soon had reason to feel | t} E ids when Pr vengeance was ripe. at his ease. ' ite te veh ee rewone Eten wont ne os fom piviae pics oe : ae ~~ not recognize him, for he to give his wife formed the trap es-- 2 y ° retreat where he could collect himself On Aimy, and cer eee Walks Bl aed he ae age tek (OE Hees for the terrible task that he ing on him, and never did the no self, and he had contrived to make his was | Monsieur de Pancorvo y ti a) t r t se che hous aean eda Fey whee os ve attention to the footmans face | yetim draw up her own death sen- use a ontmartre, which luck- | ass 3 ¢ ig baseee stot Sate a Six months passed thus. Robert oor, elmple Mary, after hay ing L 2S in Paris, in , queer look once or twice. Robert was dying with impatience, but he could not help smiling at this I believe he'd have got rid of me in the end. He thought, perhaps, that a recognized his client with some diffi- culty, but the details which Robert gave him finally satisfied him of his identity. the neighborhood or the club ; every night he went to the deserted { r which made her Pigs secure. Robert understood all. The day on which Diego had pus- Bession of these fata! lines he had naty s Morar arnt I wasnt worth while killing, and that and bring him news, and John Slough, | lain in wait f a ank ie A Pee: of Trish shiccacgparone sic hunger would despatch aie, {Or one Robert told him that he had just | too, sometimes paid a visit te Mont- the Seine, vee raat peat Wee nee addy, more at his ease, continue night when I was asleep he left the | C9™® home from the Antilles, where | mar re, 'The loneliness of the place | joved to wander at night. There, pro- imperturbably : house and did not return. Hé had | 28 business would compel him to| is well adapted for mystery, and no fiting by Morgan's lessons, he had " Bankers' came, too, and had pri- settled everything with his bankers AES Some further stay, and that as | one ever discovered these nocturnal | hidden himself--crouching like a wild vate Interviews, and at last they took | #2 had taken ship for Constantino- | 2® only proposed to stop a short time | intery iews. ' t--under the willows, and wi ate 3, as 2) p The other servants had been | 2 France, he wished, for economy's! Towards the end of the summer the | one bound, the bound of a tiger, he "away the gold; but Morgan told me paid and dismissed, but I hadn't a | 8#€e. to live in his old house, in what- | Irishman brought Robert some infor- | had dashed his victim into the water. that there were papers for me, ands sou. The owner of the place came werd state it might be. : | mation Which seemed favorable t This poor copy-book, full of childish tHAt as long Ae E-lived t khould paver | the same day to turn me out, and I he notary warned him that he his plaus. Diego appeared to be ecrawls, made the murderer's deed want for whiskey, ronst beef and po- thought myself lucky to be-leit my tivery, for 1. sold it to buy something would find it in a very ruinous condi- tion, no repairs having been under- taken since his departure; and then plain ; these forgotten pages in Ellen's possession cried for Vengeance, and, tatoes ' to ent. I thought at'first of injorm. tuin members of the club and observe | beneath these infantile sentences, Robert's face put on a severe ex- ing against the villain Diego, but then | }82 him over the keys, and on a/| their habits. @ had special. in- | Robert saw biood in every line. Ellen pression, and Paddy hastened to get back to his tale. I thought that' might find myself mixed up in it too, and that it was - asoaiees reary autumn day Robert took his | way to Montmartre. Structions to find out by what way they reached home at night, was right; the proof was complete. After this discovery Robert passe ( best to keep quiet. For nearly a It was not without deep emotion few days afterwards a member | the night thinking of the dead; he in- "Morgan and Diego," said the' month now poor Paddy hhs been sleep- | that he looked upon the spot which | Was stoppea and robbed after playing | voked their beloved spirits, beseeching Irishman, "seemed to get on ing in the open air in these rags that | bad such dear and such Pyinful asso- | Cards at the club. He was one of | them to inspire and sustain him in the very well together, but I knew there | was something in the wind, for I'd seen Diego giving his uncle a very At the end of about two moiiths it seemed ail our business with the bankers was set- tled, for they told me that we should s00n be leaving for London, and I was ¢lad enough to leave this infernal country. In the meantime we went for you see, and living on melons and | spring water. If hehad not met you, | master, he would have died, and as long as he lives ful to you as a dog. Robert had listened with profound emotion to this terrible story. The information which a providentia! he will _be as faith- | and solitude had done their work. The garden, left to itself, had become over-run with undergrowth. | The Worm-eaten gates seemed ready | to fall to pieces, and the house threat- | ened to become a ruin. Before crossing the threshold Robert St 1 all his courage. A supersti- | chance had put him in p ; Would enable him to discover Diego ; 'and Paddy, although he had -not as | yet entire confidence in him, might be of great assistance in the pursuit . ' tious dread caused him to stop at the} beginning of the terrace, where she | whom he had loved so well had died in his arms, He fancied that the spir- those whom Paddy had been told to watch, and Robert did not doubt for a moment that he had been attacked and plundered by Diego. It was cer- tain that he must tbe very much em- barrassed, to have recourse to such a proceeding, and it was pretty safe to prophesy that he would not draw the line there. Robert determined to watch him more closely and catch him | in whe very act He had soon made himself acquaint- ed with this system of night attacks. coming struggle. When day broke he had formed a resolution. It was necessary to-act without the loss of a single day, and when Robert once more found himself in the ter- Tible position of having to send to the galleys or the scaffold this man whom he had called his brother, once more he hesitated. In this room, peo- pled by the spirits of the dead, and full of memorials of those whom he was about to avenge, a voice called upon him to be the executioner as he had been the judge, and Robert deter- a drive round about every day. £8at which he was about to engage in. | itS Of Ellén-and George were flitting | Monsieur de Pancorvo took notice * qe net sate s on the box by the coachman, sud I Having madeup his mind to attach | @bout under the tall trees. He called | every evening of the pliyers who won, | Mined to challenge Diego, in order to i looked very fine in my livery. One day my minasters wanted to go and see that mountain that throws out fire, and him to himself, Robert gave him some money and told him to come to him hext day at a hotel of which he gave Te to them in a low voice, and in the murmur of the leaves shaken by the | autumn wind, he believed he heard their voices. and as he had been informed by Paddy "as to their habits, it was easy 'jor him to go and lay wait for them at kill him or perish by his hand. ohn was surprised at his master's scruples; but he was-sdevoted heart and soul to him and did not argue the which is, for certain, a blow-hole of him the address. was certain : ' the corner of some deserted street. la sti hell, I was frightened to go near it; | that he wouid not fail to keep the ap- | He entered. Nothing was changed: | There the mode of attack which he | @estion. To be Continue.) but they would neve leave me at pointment, and he did not wish him to | Ellen's bed-room remained as it had jhad learnt from Morgan served at | FAO BE MOMM ONE, home alone, and I had to go. We! know about his boat. been on the day of her death, and | Once to throw down and throttle the i ial ' was 'here that he would live sur- | $100 REWARD $100. had driven as fur as the village they' The time had come for giving up the | Robert burst into tears on recogniz- | unfortunate victim, who found that | \ call Portici, and there they hired 'life of fisherman, and returning to | Mg her marriage chest, the chest of | he had been robbed without seeing The readers of this paper will te horses and guides to clamber up this. his Proper sphere, and Robert took | Which she had given him the key | his assailants tace. | pleased to 'learn that there is at cursed furnace, They wanted to go | measures first of all in placing, the | When she bade him farewell. This | About this time an event happened | jeast one dreaded disease that science and see the river of fire which comes | trensura in safety, John, whom he | Was the home that he wanted; it | Which had a great deal of influence has been able to cure in all its stages, | i fown from the top of the mountain. Was an evil wish had told of his meeting with Paddy, | quarters on the second floor, and he | on the result of this story had not recognized, in a foctman's liv- |} and that fe Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Hall's Catarrh Cure taken inter- Look, master, you can see it from took upon himself to land the gold, | rounded by remembrances of the past, |} Among the members of the club was | Cure is the only positive cure known here." And he pointed to a large red bag by bag, and to bring it to shim | hopes of _ vengeance, He soon con- | the generous man who had given | to the medical fraternity. Catarrh spot which flamed in the darkness on! pt the Villa Combi, where he took up | ¢luded, with John's help, the neces | Robert five hundred francs' aiter his | being a constitutional disease, re- the side of Vesuvius, 5 ttedive hig quarters the next day. "A fort- | Sary arrangements. He took up his | conviction in Provence, long before. He | quires a constitutional treatment. . oO eirs, } | continued Paddy, "and I told them fer this fortune to land, and Robert | Set apart Elien's bed-room to pray | ery, the mysterious. prisoner of Cape nally, acting directiy upon the blood that the devil didn't like people to go immediately converted it into a let- jin, and allow his grief to give force {Camarat, but the latter had not for- | and mucous surfaces of the system, and look at him yoo ciose. We went | ter of credit issued by the firm of | to_his resolve, . ieh | FOUten his benefactor, and was eager- | thereby destroying the foundation of up as far as the horses would carry Rothschild, of Naples, on all their | He collected there everything which | ly desirous of paying his debt of grat- | the disease, and giving the -patient us; but as we got nearer tie fire the } well had been his wife's, as as itude. An opportunity presented it- strength by building up the constitu- poor brutes begun to snort and jib £0 | that Paddy had.spoken the truth, and | mournful relic he brought from the | self only too soon, and in quite a dif- | tion and aasisting nature in doing its that we had to get off. We leit them | that Diego had really gone to Con- | Sorelle--the diver's costume, in| which ferent manner from whit he had work. The proprietors have go much 'n charge of the guides, who told us| «tantinople. js Jeorge had died. He hung it | wiened | faith in its curative powers, that not to go on, and I started on foot Morgan's tragic death had created | against' a black curtain, upright as | "One night Robert had a suspicion | they offer One Hundred Dollars for with my masters. We walked on black a great sensation at Naples; but no | he had seen it in the cabin of the | that Diego was intendins to attaek | any case that it falls Send stones that were hardly cold, and I | one suspected that It was the result | Avenger. If it had ever been possible | j.4, benefactor, whom ehance had fay- | for Hat of testimonials. would have given a guinea to 8top) ot a erime. and people had attributed | for Robert to forget the crime and | grog at play. He wished to save him| Address, F Cheney & Co, To- vut Morgan toid me 1 was a coward, | nis triend's abrupt 'departure to the | his vengeance, these dismal remains | and could not, and this powerlessness | ledo, O. and he never rested till he got right grief which such a terrible nageldent | 0 his son would have recalled them | to protect him gave rise to serious | Sold by druggists, 75e. to the edge of the lava, as they call | pag caused him. Robert tog the | to his mind. . reflection. Re asked himself! whether | ip ilies the river of fire. lt was running along, six feet below us, slowly, slowly, with Irishman into his service, for happi- John Slough went to live g assy, where he took lodgings, and in order | he t had the right to allow' a villain { CLEVER SPINSTERS. 2 ness amt a comfortable home had . : A deen netp crime upon crime. when it . a% sound like a furnace, and thick mada yp reformed character of him; |%® €Xplain his solitaringss he gave only depentiad on fim to have him ar- | Tt oceisionally cheers the unmiar- smoke that blinded us. It was like but he charged John Slouch to keep | himself out as a foreigner. WAS | vostad. Did his vow of vengeanee re- | Tied Women to see What her unmar dough in a baking pan, or like the . P keep Paddy as his servant until z ried sisters are doing. In literature forge in the his eye on him, for he was Still fearful t the time when he could be profitably | | began to doubt it quire that he'shonld be sil ~*? Robert t n- ij molten ore which they of his drunken siti f ; 'd abont | the list of the unwed is long. - -- . ne , , propensities. Armed | ¢ seria and he | d abou z= " = eeisece every oS, : furnaces at Tynemouth, ; There Wasi this at every point for commencing | a de ea the search for in-|f0r some means .o make 1 end of ha Nora ve matte ih Jean nothing interesting in it; but my : pig pursuit after his son's murderer. fi ee n oat teaae Ps little diffi. | Diego. Inge regs haga sath ts 2 ara inasters seemed to take u delight in: poparg embarked with Slouch and | ormation, ¢ or eatin, Sieean 'o|. In order to hand him over to the | Sarah rne Jewett, Mary Wi ns, etaring at this devil's mud. They had Paddy on the French steamboat | CUty in obtaining some. Diego, once | law it was necessary to have proofs, | Grace Denis LiteMfield, Edna Lyall sone right to the edge, and Morgan st 7 Tanloe and Pam, | believing .himself safe, was not the | = te AaaNeee stoq | and dozens more, v etch ¢ > Ealeh ran between Naples and Tur- | man to keep in the background, and | for the scoundrels position protected | wold me to go and fetch a bottle of v an I ' ' him against any acensation which 5 - rum from One of the guides' wallets, at the end of a week Robert knew his | A GREAT INVESTMENT. : i he On arriving nt Constantinople the | >, ' mn ahi P is | Could not be fully justified. The time | He wanted to drink the devil's health | tirst news he heard Was the departure irfende nthe tune had "arrived ~~ nt | had long passed .for proceedings to! 'The Gold Stock Trading Company ab the door of bis kitchen. This Was of Diego. He had left Pera three i lise Paddy's services His conduct| be taken against him for the murder | of 35 and 27 Broadway, New York, his own expression, master, aad it days before to travel overland to | had been irreproachable and Robert | Of Thomas Disney, arid on this count | whose advertisement appears in didn't bring hii luck. t didn't te Egypt, accompanied by a Frenchman, | had no Jonger any doubte--asto--his ; the assnssin was certain of impunity. | this issue, is highly recommended by wo be told twice, and I started bac whom he had--met-at the Tlotel @ fidelity. = | "eorges death and that of Morgan} the Financial Record, one of the lead- as fast-as I could; but I hadn't gone Angleterre It was hardly possible | It wass ' shot sent | Were, for the lack of proof to the | ine ote ors { the United ven y r 2 a cry--oh! ' 2 t was settled that he should present of y hg monetary organs o 1e Unitec pease yards Ww peti meee ol ery ge ae for Robert to follow him on his Jour- | himself poorly clad, before Diego.-who | contrary, accidents, and Robert was States, It says, "The conservative my i Pee A ~ or -- + oa ney across Asin Minor an Syria, | woul e sure to receive him, if only unnble to furnish that proof. management and high character of De ag the orb kk a " Pix I wa with an escort, and in company with a | to question him. The story which he} But there was one death which was ; the directorate invite the cordial More Ett be bg li \boecore I ran | Sthanger. thonght "it best to] was to tell had been agreed upon in| recent enough for the law to call! support.of all investors desiring safe , A . er, d awni im ¢ es fa. ac on plgheue . Japles | Dier t : ; 4 : 4 ' Sheath buck to hi and looked. Ab! master, it him at Alexandria advance, He had travelled from Naples | Diezo. to account ind large returns for small capital. if 1 lived g hundred never fopget what lseaw. Morgan was standing up to his 'knees in the lava, which was gradually mounting upto nis-thighs." Hé had fallen upright, as if he hud jumped in feet first. You would have thought it was a soul trom) purgatory in the flames, such as ,; Months in Egypt, Robert But his revenge was doomed to be once more deferred. After staying two 2 learnt tivo_traveHers-hat embarked at Rey- routh, in order to-retnrn~ rect to France, and that one of himself Monsieur de Pancorvo. It was the new name that them enlled |} Diego to Paris, begging _on the way; he was | dying of hunger#ind begged Diego to} ing, take him into--his-service again: 6] Was not to complain-of-his-abandon- | ment at the palace of Chiaia, and | was, above all, to make no allusions | to a dangerous past. Robert the felt certain that 80- | |} called Pancorvo would attribute this | "If ever,' Helen had said before dv- "if ever the monster who-kitted my father and my sister _were----to threnten the life. of my son. let him euffer the punishment of his crimes. The. proofs are there, in my marriage | chest. George was dead, alas! and often had his father asked God's pardon for They announce a 15 per _cont,--beaus for last month. AN UNLUCKY STAR. They looked upon the gems of night, so clear, 80 bright, so far. " My love," said he, " will constant be As yonder steady star." me 6€es in the images in our huts in| had chosen. Robert did not hesitate; | a: , ile , mani aeaiiagiee ree : oe. | But even as he spoke there came Ireland. £ Was uttering shrieks | he left immediately for Marseilles. On | forgetfulness to Irish heedlessness,,and j the culpable weakness which had pr To both a sudden jar-- made my hair stand oa end, and his face was convulsed like that f a lost soul. it was not for long. rom the burniug mud there came a jong jet of flame, which enveloped landing he found that the Beyrouth steamer had come into port a week before. Diego had evidently made his way to Paris, and-it-was-there none that that he would have no suspicion. He | even went 60 far as to hope that, as | & measure of precaution, and in order not to lose sight of the man who knew some of his secrets, Diego would | take Paddy into his service. | | vented him from making use of this final weapon. But the time for re- grets had passed, and that for fustice had come. last "Robert opened this chest, which recalled to him tir | That speck of ight had dropped 'from sight-- It was a shooting star! DON'T FORGET : q : , . happy days of his youth. Trem- | ory 1-33 Rol ras ¢ertain o seorve ppy j b, . Morgan up-to-his "head, "and auen he} Kobert was certain of discovering Things turned out precisely as Rob-| bling, he touched these relics That to remove corns, warts, bunions fell like a tree. His feet, burnt to | him. ; ' an 8; rts, bunion - » . } ert had foreseen. Paddy underwent a past, which had vanished without fin a few days, all that is required is the bone, could not bear him any He was then about to find himself | Seerence nares He answered hold Lenk : 3 | long Cross-questioning. © answered hope of return. to apply the old and well-tested corn 'onger. He fell flat, then appeared, face to face with the enemy whom | qj questions with that air of sim-| The chest contained Ellen's wedding cure--Putnam's Painless Corn Ex- OP emOk pea, Bo more. Only a puff | he had been pursuing for so long; | plicity that the Irish knew 60 well wreath, her mother's Tible, a lock of | tractor. Safe, sure, Hiinless, Putnam's of smoke rose from the place he had but In Proportion as his vengeance ap- how to assume, and finally Diego en- +eorge's hair, and finally some papers Corn Extractor makes no sore spots | just left, as when one throws a hand- | proached he was the more anxious | a ed him. rown yellow with nage, the sincular aril + . acts auickiv + a « {ul of powder on the fire. that it should be sure and overwhelm- " Hobert had thus intelligencé from | appea rance of which coned Robert ae onto Ta eats cae pone Robert listened, mute with horror,/ing. He had thought at first of | the heart of the enemy's country, and | considerable surprise. It a ian sano tles aR to the terrible story which Paddy re-} fighting Diego, after having thrown he had not long to wait for news | long manuscript book, similar to those TERRIBLE SHOCK la in his calmest tone. God had, | all his crimes 'In his teeth; but to die Diego had organized his manner of! used in schools. On certain pares A TERRIBLE SHOCK. then, performed half his vengeance,| in a duel was not a sufficlent expia- life in such a way as to defy betrayal. | were: tracedstn a firm and regular; "Trilby,"' said the Laird, as he put and the infamous Morgan had per-| tion for the crimes of the past. The His household consisted of two ser- | handwriting ct ome. disiointed sen-j on his Saloshes, "why are a tight ished by the hand of his accomplice, | scaffold would not be too much for @/ vants whom he had brought from the | tences and senarate words. An inex- | pair of rubbers like Little Billee ?" for Robert did mot doubt that he had veen pushed into the abyss, Without noticing his emotion, the monster who was a four-fold assassin. Robert determined that the public ex- ecutioner should punish George's mur- } Levant, and who knew not a word! | Of any language but Arabic--a very convenient method of providing } nerienced hand had endeavored to copy | them on the opposite page. t was*what they enll in schoot a Trilby said she didn't know. "Because," replied the Laird, "they feet." Trist : : draw your misaman continued : derer. He determined to seize Diego | against the eifects of unguarded con- copy-book, and it seemed as if the nd Trilby lifted up her voice and LOOK you, master, when it was all over I thought my last hour was come, for Diego's face was terrible. He glaréd-ut mé with the eyes of Wild beast, as if he would have thrown red-handed in some act yf c drag him to justice. Robert was certain that the wretch would not halt in the path of crime, and that he would hurry: to meet his rime, and | culb to which he had managed to gain | Inborionsty copied out in eeveral dif- lived very of his versation. He home, passing most little at} time at a admittance, and had no _ intimate! friends, but he kept up a grand ap- | pupil who had used it was nof very oractised, for the same phrases were | ferent places. On the third leanf four lines, writ- | the ills of women: T A wept. Constipation causes more than half Karl's Clover Root ea au pleasant cure for Constipa- is me in the fire aa well, for I didn't teli doom. He resolved to dog him until pearance out of doors, and certainly ten In indea eharacters attracted | tion. you 60, but I'm certain he pushed Mor- | the day when he could surprise him in spent 4 great deal of money. | Robert's. "attention and : caused ' : san in, I set off to run towards the | the act. He settled upon his plans | "his was exactly what Robert had his 'Teas tn lump : into AN IMPRESSIONIST. " °, ne ailing | with < and ach took a pe ' Pn Bie cae ee +5 . ; ; : ; ' the } horses, but I heard some one calling with John, and they each took a part | Wished. He knew well that the wretch | pj, mouth Ne had recognized | If I were an artist I would paint her me, and when I turned round I saw | in the hunt after the murderer. would soon come to the end of the! pjegots wri and had read these face ie - ow i =} f «* © £ t : > H -- . 7 big . a . pate 1 ' 5 : Diego looking just as usual.-* What a Time and grief had so altered Robert | money he had taken from the Avenger, | words which after six yenrs, still re-} Just as I saw it last nicht: misitortune,' he said quietly, 'and how right you were, my poor Paddy, to was unrecognizable, and he » & natural facil- thay he |} and that he Would endeavor to obtain | more by means of some fresh crime. | mained graven on his memory. "IT ask God's forgiveness for taking | Its perfect contour I would trace, With its delicate pink and white. : ssessed, inoreo vell us not to come here. Come, let's ity for changing his expression, anc Robert waited, sure that punishment!) my own life. | But ah!~--What artist could paint her ni back to the guides. You oh igel how even his features. He could watch} would come at its own time, but he| Myty ody will be fonnd in the Seine. ace ot Ape he Mt didn't --. Diego the more easily that the latter was desérous of keeping a closer | - "I "wish to be buried in the white As she painted At last night. ju can ely me to explain, thought he was dead. It only re-;} watch gn Diego, and he set.to work ; dress which I wore on my wedding o~ - Sana! had understood only too well, and/ mained for him to-adopt . costume | to look/ for some Place which would | gq, 7 aaa ae _-- YEP Resp rem: + Was too frightened of nim to con- and a fess hich woul it | ist in Gailv e act witl i "tT : of TH POWER OF ELECTRICITY: eas mth: 7 : t a profession which would permit j put high in daily contacf with him, |» Phey were the exnct terms of the i . : tradict him The guides said at him to approach his victim without | Withows risk of being recognized. It | ratay 'fetter in which Mary had toid| By this ageney Nerviline is made to ones that they had w arped us, and arousing his suspicions, was then that he had the idea of | of her suicide.' On. the following pages | penetrate to the most remote nerve that it was uo lault of theirs. » We Robert intended that Paddy Cassan | engaging himself as a footman at the the sentences were copied out many | --every bone, muscle and ligament fa made Our statement at Porticl. I} should dso have his part in the! club which Monsieur de Pancorvo tre times, in unformed letters at first, | made to feel its beneficent power, thought there would be an inquest, scheme, Diego probably thoucht the | quented. He had his beard shgyed off, | then "more correct, then finally leg-| Nerviline is a wonderful remedy, pleas: but in this country Of SaVUECS theres | frishman too degraded to have any | his hair cut short, changed the ex- | ible; and these characters had -been | ant to even the youngest child, yet so no coroner as there is with us, und | mistrust of him, and if he could man- pression of his face, and succeeded in | traced by Mary. T ast re AAS powerfully 'far reaching in its work the pocesta of the village didn't think | age to introduce himself into his honse | making himself unrecognisavie. He | missing. It had been cut out with a } that the most agonizing internal or fit to put himself out of the way. We|he would be advantageously situated oO pe | external pain yields as if by magic. went hack to Naples, where the news s00n spread, and I didn't feel com- fortable. I had too many secrets on my conscience. i treated, me lego well, to prevent me from talking, but for serving Robert's purpose. As for John, who was well known to Diego, it was important that lie should keep away the scene of action, and m carefully 'conceal his presence {n Paris." had little trouble in procuring a char- | acter and recommendations. Money | will buy anything in Paris, and Robert | had plenty, for he had hardly made | of his letter of credit. He gained | use admission to the club without diffi-| elapsed light was let nh upon the mysterious drama of Saint-Ouen. The vile wreteh,. Diego, had planned his infernal scheme with ; rae a ee ae iia The Pank of British North America has opened a branch at Russiand, b. C., the first bank in that important mining -camp: :