( THE WEST BHORE. WANAIKO, BRITISH COLUMBIA. THE ewmd largat city on Vancouver island is N I balma, eituaUxl about seventy mil up the east em .t from Victoria, md in the midst of one of the ricUl otl rrgki on the Pacific coast The city U. bot far thousand Inhabitants within lU limits, and tUrt are Duly u many more in that immediate vidbity. The dutrict baa a population of more than tight thousand. Nanaimo was formerly only a trading poat of the HoWs Ilay Company. That company prospected U o-l lo many localities on the ialand before it finally found the rich carboniferous strata that are do dwloH In the coal min around Nanaimo. Thii discovery u made in 18H and the firat abaft u sunk noar the sit of the present poatoflioe build ing. Now there are four collieries in operation, and the aggregalo output baa increuod from year to year, Ut aMn's pro lad Wing nnarly half a million tons, (be bulk of which waa export! The Nanaimo colliery consists of three minea, the KtplanvK or abaft No. 1, Wing aunk in the city near the )g of lh bay, under which the aeveral levels extend a lateral diatane of about threA-fourths of mile. Thla abaft waa ojwnM in 1HS1 It ia the deep. c aba in the dutrict, tix hundred and twenty-aix frt, but thre are atrata of good coal at a much greater depth, aa baa ln demonstrated by boring a rxctirg abaft over eleven bandied feet farther Into the tuwrla of the earth. The Bouthfleld, a abort distance aoolh of the Ktplanade, waa opened in 1883, and the No. 3 bear it waa opened in 17. Both are bow in anconMifal p;ration, and ahaft No. 4 ia being ojtmvL The North Wellington, alao belonging to tbia comny, ia now io proems of deielopment The output of the Nanaimo colliery lut year waa nearly two hundred and fifty-nine thouaand torn The Van Muter ll A Und Company, which owna theae inlnA b4da tbe f simple, mineral and surface, of thirty thre thousand text, a portion of which lion the eljilDlcg ialanda that are known to contain ooal The Wellington ci41iry, eii mil,- weat of Nanaimo, Lu rn in oj .oration twenty yeara, and ita coal lewellknotn In every market on the Pacific alope, Tbw mince rnuiit of lire pita now in operation aad a fourth Ja U l The Kut Wellington col! lirry la lire ttiU wrt of Nanaimo. It waa opened aUmt ail jrra a$o, and baa t.o shafts now being wnwUl, tbe coal Uicg of similar quality to that of tie Wfllitgtm. Tbe L'uk.n Colliery Company, com a wpitalU IttrrratAl in tbe Southern Pacific rail.ay and tie Wellington v.llicry, U laying out ex Irtalre w-wks in tie CWn a .trid, a few milea Dortbwratof Nataiaa PltivaUoti a b progrea, for building ft railway from the mines to the harbor on Union bay, where the largest ships may load at any stage of the tide at the longeBt wharf in the proy. ince. The prospecting done by the various ccmpa. oics shows the existence of inexhaustible supplies of coal both on Vancouver island and on the smaller islands near it, particularly on Gabriola island, di. rectly opposite Nanaimo. There are also indications of iron in some localities. On Texada island are ex. tensive iron mines now in operation. It is a very at. tractive field for engaging in minkg. Though in the center of a rich coal mining dis trict, Nanaimo is not merely a mining town. A vis itor might spend days in the city without discovering that it bad extensive coal interests, so unobtrusive are they. Yet when it is known that about two thousand men are employed in the mines of that vicinity, their importance becomes apparent. The town of Welling, ton, five miles beyond Nanaimo, has a population of about a thousand and is owned by the proprietors of the mines there. The Esquimalt & Nanaimo railroad extends from Victoria through Nanaimo to Welling, ton, which is its present terminus. This line is pro jected nearly a hundred miles farther up tbe coast The city of Nanaimo is located on a small bay known as Nanaimo harbor, which is entered by all kinds of marine craft, the course being so free that vessels sometimes sail in unassisted. Nearly all the shipments are made by water, the coal going to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland and the Sandwich islands, besides to British Columbia ports. A por tion of the harbor is now being improved by rock dredging to remove obstacles that restrict the move ment of large vessels near the docks when the tide if low. The town ocenpi s an uneven tract of land rising quite rapidly back from the water, the altitude in creasing until the summit of Mount Benson, nearly thirty-five hundred feet above the sea, is reached some ten or twelve miles to tbe westward. No regu lar plat waa made until a consideiable settlement had grown np there, which accounts, in part, for the ir regular streets, the lay of the land also conducing to the present arrangement A view of the harbor may be obtained from almost any point in the city. Tbe north and south ends of the town are higher than the middle, where the main business houses are situated, and the residence portion occupies the higher ground. During the past year a large amount of building has Wen done, and the outskirts of the city are rapidly being built up with neat and comfortable cottages, tht speak in no uncertain way of the prosperity that is enjoyed by the people. Even greater improve oenU are in prospect for this year. The business interests are experiencing a decided growth, and sfl