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Montreal weekly witness commercial review and family news paper
Fortement imprégné de sa mission chrétienne et défenseur du libéralisme économique, The Montreal Witness (1845-1938) est demeuré une entreprise familiale durant toute son existence. [...]
The Montreal Witness: Weekly Review and Family Newspaper voit le jour le 5 janvier 1846 à la suite d'un numéro prospectus paru le 15 décembre 1845. Le Witness, comme on se plaît à le nommer, est l'oeuvre du propriétaire, éditeur et fondateur John Dougall, né en 1808. Écossais d'origine, il émigre au Canada en 1826 et se marie en 1840 avec Élizabeth, fille aînée de la célèbre famille Redpath. Ce mariage lui permet sans doute de s'associer financièrement à cette famille et de tisser des liens avec la haute bourgeoisie anglophone de Montréal.

Le parcours littéraire et journalistique de John Dougall est étroitement lié aux mouvements évangéliques puisqu'il a été membre fondateur de la French Canadian Missionary Society, « organisme opposé aux catholiques et voué à évangéliser et convertir les Canadiens français au protestantisme » (DbC).

La fougue religieuse de l'éditeur a provoqué une réplique de la communauté anglophone catholique. C'est ce qui explique la naissance du journal True Witness and Catholic Chronicle en 1850. Le Witness suscite tellement de réactions que Mgr Ignace Bourget en interdira la lecture aux catholiques en 1875.

The Montreal Witness est demeuré tout au long de son existence une entreprise familiale. John Dougall, propriétaire et éditeur depuis 1845, cède l'entreprise à son fils aîné John Redpath Dougall en 1870 qui, à son tour, passe le flambeau à Frederick E. Dougall en 1934. Ce dernier sera propriétaire et éditeur jusqu'à la disparition du journal en 1938.

The Montreal Witness a connu différentes éditions (hebdomadaire, bihebdomadaire, trihebdomadaire) et plusieurs noms. Outre son appellation initiale, il paraît sous Montreal Weekly Witness: Commercial Review and Family Newspaper, Montreal Weekly Witness, Montreal Weekly Witness and Canadian Homestead, Montreal Witness and Canadian Homestead, Witness and Canadian Homestead ainsi que Witness.

En 1938, à la veille de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, les conditions économiques sont désastreuses et le nombre des abonnements diminue constamment. Malgré de vibrants appels aux lecteurs pour soutenir le journal, celui-ci doit cesser de paraître par manque de financement. Le dernier numéro, paru en mai 1938, comporte de nombreuses lettres d'appui et de remerciements. Ainsi se termine une aventure journalistique qui aura duré 93 années.

RÉFÉRENCES

Beaulieu, André, et Jean Hamelin. La presse québécoise des origines à nos jours, Québec, Presses de l'Université Laval, vol. I, 1973, p.147-150.

Snell, J. G. « Dougall, John », dans Dictionnaire biographique du Canada en ligne (DbC), Québec, Presses de l'Université Laval, 1982, vol. XI [www.biographi.ca].

The Montreal Witness: Weekly Review and Family Newspaper, vol. 1, 15 décembre 1845.

Witness, vol. 93, no 16, mai 1938.

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  • Montréal :Bibliothèque nationale du Québec,1972
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jeudi 2 août 1877
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Montreal weekly witness commercial review and family news paper, 1877-08-02, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" COMMERCIAL REVIEW ARD FAMILY NEWSPAPER.{ SUMMARY.THIRTY-SLOOND YKA& Mont Valerien, Paris, hisnged on the 37th uit.at Rossten, Ark, for the murder of bis wife, five years ago, Prammel confessed his guilt, Mes, Pavann, of New York city, went bath: ing at Coney Inland the 27th ult., aad while in the water bar bathing house was robbed of §1,- 100 worth of jewellery and diamonds.A.OU.SHiELUE, living near Bolivar, Tenn, was assaminated by hisatep-son, Alous Phillips, assisted by Wm.Burras last week.Phillips was arrested, but Burras escaped.Tue Pants Cour or Josrics ha declared it has no jurisdiction to try actions bronght against the Sab-Prefest of Epernay by the Fier Public, Temps or other jourasls, for prohibiting the street sale of such papers.News from Panama dated the 17th inst, says that the damage caused by the late eruption Over 1,500 head of cattle were destroyed.GaxERaL Grant, at a dinner with the President of the Federal Council of the Swiss Confederation in replying to a toast, said that he was glad to be in a republic on that side of the Atlantic, He spoke of the kindly feeling which American people entertained for the President of the Swiss Confederation, M, Staempfli, for the part they bad taken in the Geneva arbitration, Ex-K1xG ANADRUS was recently thrown from his carriage at Turin and injured, The Tine\u2019 Rome special speaks as though the accidwmt was very serious.It says the Prince was insensible for an hour, The physicians are in contiaual attendance.Hopes are entertained of saviug his life.The King of Italy was immediately notified by telegraph of the accident, Tux 8ax04¥ ok Navicarous\u2019 [401¥0s must be the scene of great political convalsions at pire- sent.The people apparently ardently desire to be connected with some great power, and perhaps they are a little undecided as to which vue.A short time ago they were reprerented as secking the British protectorate.But that report was denie | in the British House of Commons.Now it 14 stated by the Fiji Times that the American flag has been hoisted, and allegiance formally tendered to the Uited States.There in nothing at all improbable in bis story.The United States bas great influence at Samos, and even the half-rotten \u201c*Yantic\u201d* would be sufficient to command respect of the simple minded natives.The Fiji Lslacds are nearest to Samoa, and therefore the Fiji Times ought to be good authority, We wish the United States and Samos all prosperity in their new career, if the former accepts the favor offered.Tux Russia¥ ADVANCE into Roumelia is proceeding very irregularly, if there is any reliance to be [placed on the telegrams One reports stubborn fighting at Eski Sagh- ra, Bot fur south of the Balkans, and on the road which runs most directly south from where th~ Danube was crossed at Bistova.Further east in Roumelis, the Russian troops are reported much further south, at one point threatening the communications between Adrisnople and tbe capital, Suleiman Pasha is also reported to have been defeated in suck a quar.terthatheatonceretreated on Adrianople, Where the Jtussians bave advanced furthest is directly south of Shumla, the great intrenched camp north of the Balkans.The Rusian forces from this would seem to be very much scattered, and tn « more dangerous position than would be desired by a wise general.The defeat at Plevna loses none of its importance with further news There ie no doubt that the Russians received a severe check in that quarter, Monuosnou is again excited, more arrests for old murders having been made, The latest is that of one Burton, counsellor to the presiding bishop, or Brigham Young, unless the \u2018 prophet \" isa distinot and higher nffice.His crime is the murder, in 1862, of Morris, à second vrophet, who opposed Young.This arvest comes pretty near the present Mormon leaders, and as it is probable that they will no longer be deluded by the scape-goat ides, as in the case of Bisbop Lee, there may be at- tempta at trouble.It bas ben distinctly an- vounced now that there will be no compromise with any Mormon leaders, however high, eyen Brigham Young himself, All against whom sufficient evidence can be procured will be proceeded against, The New York Herald bas been diligently working up the matter, and if it can be trusted, which is » little doubtful, there {a rufficient evidence to convict Young.Only in case of proceedings against him ie an outbreak feared, but the present administration is not one likely to shrink from such a duty for fear of the consequences.Wealthy Mormons have been purchasing large tracts of land in Northern Mexico of late, and there is n chaim of Mormon settle ments all the way south from Utah to the border.Another Mormon hegira is therefore nob Improbable, and may not be à distant event, Rep marion is not confined to the Southern Bates now.That Northern Republican strong- fold, Minngeots, hes joined in it, or rather has confirmed a previous repudiation by a very large majority on a popular vats, State bonds were imued for the amistance of railroads years ago, but matters were mismansged, and the Beate «id not reap all the advantage which was expected.Bo the interset on the bonds was allowed to go unpaid, and flonliy in adopting some amendments to the State Constitution, it was provided that there should be no payment without & popular vote sanctioning it.The best people in Minnesota have naturally not been proud of this condition of matters, and have been steadily working to secure a recognition hy the State of ite just obligations, Religious synods and oonferences have been passing resolutions and in other ways trying to work up à right popular feeling.\u2018I'he moral clement was a0 tar macosesfal me to control the towna and the Legislatare.The latter took the necessary stepn, and a law providing [or the debt was submitted ! 10 the popnlar vote.Hut the farmem voted it down by a large majority.Minnesota is o comparatively newly settled State, aod there is a large foreign element in the population, which may party account for this.As the Btate becomes richer, and the people mote generally eduoated and intelligent, à different sourse may be looked for.\u2018Tre Rion How, Genes Wann Howe, First Lord of We Admiralty, ivdead.He was of an nld county family of that equirearchy which, in England, looks down upon earle Bevan SouvItau were killed om the 28th ult., by the accidental explosion of a shell at Fort ALstar TRANMEL, à negro preacher, was of a decade or so, only respacting those of long descent.He was emphatically à representative of this class, even in his intellectoal and administrative powers, fur he was not a man of surpass.ingability.In regard to stature be might have | Leen a soa of Amak, being very tall and off | D outre Rare pret to the Cabinet, but it was generally ascribed to his uncompromising support of the then Mr.Disraeli.Hs followed his leader wherever he went, and his leader rewarded him beyond his deserts, At first he was made Chan: cellor of the Exchequer, but he was not even a Conservative success in that high position, although not very much is expected from à Conservative Government in the way of brilliant fi- asnclal management.In the present administration he has been the Becretary of Navy or First Lord of the Admiralty, and his department have besn wore criticised than other parts of the Gevernment, The criticism was net always fair or just, for the department could only in an indirect way be held responsible for the loss of the \u2018\u2019 Vanguard,\" and such acei- [dents austhat-énthe ** Thandie\u201d The ciné lian 8.cretary could hardly be Leld responsible at all, for he must necossarily be guided by his assistant naval experts in such matters as naval regulations, 8till he, as the head of department, had to bear the Lrunt of the criticiem, and because of bis known mediocre ability may have been subjected to more of it than he otherwise would have been, For some time past he has been reported to be ill, aud even dangerously vo ; his death is therefore not à matter fur great surprise, Hour Rvuæss ts Tue Parrise PARLIAMENT have been much divided as to what todo in view of their ill success in obtaining support for their favorite scheme of government fur Ireland.The wisest of them, Mesers.Butt, Sullivan and others, were for continuing the orderly and l\u2019ar- Hamentary agitation after the manner of O'Con- nell, even if it had proved unsuccesafu] for the time.Another party were for a striking moral demonstration, by withdrawing entirely from theirseats inthe House, as some T'yrolese deputies to the Austrian Reichsrath did, not long ago.A third party were fur making themselves as disagreeable and obstructive to the business of the House as possible, No unanimity could be secured, and the last party have for some time been earrying out their plan.At a previous session they aignalired themselves by clearing the galleries when the Prince of Wales waa in attendance.This wastoo.auch for theloyal Commoners, and the power of any one member to clear the walleries was taken away, a majority vote of the House being now necessary.This session this party have been obstructing the business of the House, but the Commoners do not apparently so much regard the inconvenience to the country as they did the inconvenience to royalty, and the rules have not yet been changed to meet their case.Perhaps one reason for this may be that the country does not really care very much for legislation, while the Eastern Question is so absorbing a one ; and, any way, a Conservative House is not generally saxious to distinguish iteslf in this direction.The obstructionists are advancing past the stage of obstruction now, and have begun to render themselves so offensive that their presence in the House may no longer be tolerated.Mr, Parnell refused to withdraw some expression at the bidding of the Speaker, and was ordered to leave the House, He was then suspended for twodays If he is impeuitent when be comes back, he may be suspended altogether.he British Parliament and the Dritish people are quite determined not to grant Home Rule, and ull Parliamentary Home Rules who act sa Mr.Parnell has done will only injure themselves, without aiding the canse which they have at heart.THE RELatioNs Berwass Britain avo Res.814 are again becoming greatly strained, and if the party in Russian councils which isin favor of the occupation of Constantinople obtains the upper hand, there will almost certainly be war.Already Russian journals are furious against England, and Prince Gortachakoff is said to be gathering proof of acts on the part of England wlich may embarrass her.England's course, it is claimed, will free the Czar (rom the promises which be made at Livadia.The hest guarantee for the Car's fulfilment of his promises in a fear of wbat England may do if he does not.The Czar made a good many promises in reference to Khiva, which were broken almost assoon as made, It would be absurd to put much faith in Russian promises made ia Livadia if a Russian army of two hundred thousand men were south of the Balkans, in Roumelis, This is no doubt the real reason why the British fleet is sont to Bessika Hay, why Gallipoli is secured sa a British coaling station, aod why the garrison of Malta is to be reinforced by thirty thousand men, although it is quito possible, as matters are going now, that these troops may nover land at Malta, butthatthe position may beso much advanced by the time they arrive there that the rumor that the force is really for Gallipoli may prove correct, and the transports be ordered ou without stopping.If the Gortechakoff party, which is in favor of making peace on moderate terms, and without the occupation of Constan- sinople, prevails, an npen rupture may be avoid- od, but if the Rumisns are as successful in Bul.garis and Roumelis sa they now promise to be, it would be moet astonishing if moder ation prevailed.The British Government oould easily comuiit | the country {irrevo- enbly to war, and Parliament will probably soon be provogued, in lew than three weeks.Buch telegrams as are now coming from Russia sre not calculated to strengthen the pence feeling amonget the British people, nor are the outrages which it seems certain that Rua.sian irregular troops, Cosuacks, and others, are committing on inoffensive Turks.If the Rue- sians should meet with any check, which would give the modemsts party the upper hand, and confine the operations of the Mueco.vim army principally to Bulgaria, there would be very little danger of a conflict with Britain.But present appearances are ae if there might yet be nome fighting before Constantinople.Hostilitlon anos begun, thers is no saying where they would end.Tux Russian STRENOTH is now being put to the test in Europe, and the indications are not in favor of their being alle to oontinue the plan of the campalgn an begun.Both est and weat of the main crossing place at Bistove they are reported to have been repulsed.AtSilistriain the east, noe of the fortresses of the Quadrilateral, the attacking party haa probably been composed of the troops, which crossed urar Galats and marched south through the Dobeudecha.Li wea not $0 be expected that the Russians would stonos bad something to do with his elevation! heavy build.Perhaps Ma imposing appear: | ance and grest physical power may have It iva distinguishing characteristic of some men that while mild and ; enerous in their pri vale character and ready to forgive any personal offence, they are stern and unyielding ne adamant when any principle they hold dear is assailed.Such aman is the tev.John Borland, well known by reputation to the readers of the Wirsess, principally throuzh his untiring advocacy of the cause of the lnldians at Oka.He was born at Ripon, Yorkshire, England, 23rd September, 1509, of teventeen, and engaged in commercial pur suits.Five vears later he became à local preacher in the Methodist Connexion.Itev, John Carrall speaks of Lim at this time in \u201c* Cane and bis Contemporaries,\u201d as follows ; \u2014 \u2018\u201cas a suitable person fur the public min.\u2018istry of the Gospel.His greatest drawback ** for a time was a feeble voice ; but # voyage to '* Europe had a renovating effect upon his con.\u201c* atitution, and practice in speaking greatly in- * crested his vocal power, in so much that, \u201c with a very distinct enunciation and calm de- \u2018* livery, he became a very pleasing and effective * speaker,\u201d From his evident fitness for the ministry he was employed in its work, first at St, Armand, Caldwell's Manor and Dunham in 18336.In 183 he was ordaiped by the late Rev, John Raine in the old church in Montreal, which stood at the corner now occupied by the Medical Hsll, and began his ministerial labors on the New Ireland Circuit.He soon advanced to a first rank in the dietrict, and was honored by the best appointments in the connexion both in Upper and Lower Canada, as the following list testifies :\u2014St.Armand, New Ireland, Mellvurne, Montreal, Quebec, Melbonrne, Stanstead, Dunham, Quebec, Toronto West, Toronto East, Stanstead.Brantford, Montreal East, and St.Johns, Being nstaral.ly of an ardent temperament, he, in a number of instances, tovk a prominent part He cause te Quebec at the age \u201cHis deep, uniform piety, excellent gilte,.\u2018and gentlemaniy manners, pointed him out - THE REV.JOHN BORLAND.im controvery,-epeiially on the Universal.list, the Millerite and tue Renan Catholic ques- tives, Immeduately after the Gavazzi riota he addreud à series of letten to the Roman Catholics un the impropriety of their reat sub.reaviercy to their corgy.On a few kindred subjects be extended Lis remirks, and sa they i were Loth puinted and sharp \u2018hey prodused con- «iderable effect, For many sare he waged an unceasing warfare ay: inst the Millerite movement in the Eastern Townibipe, sod thereby wuined a reputation and infuence which wiil last long after be himself bas departed, Latter- Iv bie has battled, onl uotil a few months age, almost single-handed,on bebal of the Indians at Oks, against what he and masy others with him conside à the injustice nd crnelty of the Seminary of St, Eulpice towards thew.He bas lately been brought with more thas usual prominence before the public by his action in bringing the Rev, Mr.Roy before a comnittee of the ministers of Lis Church on à chagge of holding and disseminating ductrine» contrary to and subversive of those found in thelr standards.De.nouncisg with the invective of an ancient prophet when any matte of principle is involve, be, nevertheless, joesesses great kindlisers of heart, so that by thote who Ï kaow him best ba is highly esteemed as à friend.1 He now occupies the somewhat anomalous posi- { time vf à vopecamnuatatétaintever v£ ets Otraaun, and yet is the (\"hairmam of the French and Indian District of the Montreal Conference, as well as the General Superintendent of this work, which has greatly prospered under bis efficient aupervision.It is somewhat remarkable that «me #0 est:emed for his great purity of life, geoiality and «ven excessive bene- vnlence, should in controversy, whether against Romanists or iatiopalism, use a bitterness which weakens amgument.But, wvotwith- standing this, Mr.Borland's life has been ome of great usefulness and homm, and in bis present capacity his influence wili be long lasting and benchcial.these fortresses, but the repulse has à discouraging effect, and will lead both Rusian geverals and Russian soldiers to reflect on the danger of their position.The repulse or defeat at Plevna is a much more rerlous and sig: nificant affair, It has bern reported for a day or two, and the statement repeated with: out a contradiction from the Russians, Plevna 1s little more than twenty miles from Nikopolis, the last point scized by the Russians for safe bridge-bmlding.It is not forty miles from Sis.tava, where the present bridges are, and it is only Gity miles or so west of the road which leads south from Bistovs to the Balkans, If the Rumisns are already being defeated no near their lines of communication aa that, any decided Turkish mmo cess would jeopardize the whole of the forces which have crossed the Danube.The Turks are never prepared to give battle at first, 1t takes them a good deal of time for preparation after the actual necessity for fighting ie upon them.But Turkish troops ate now gathering In front of the Russians, who have crossed the Balkans.Although Rustohuk is bombarded, the great entrenched camp of Shumla, the greatest of the fortresses of the (Juadrilateral, le yet unaseailed, When all the Turkish forces are prepared to move the Îlumians .uay mest with ne signai defeat na they did 1x Armenia.There they marched with see ana confidence in al directions for o time.Thay were vigtorious everywhere, bardly ieeting with serious resist: sance.But when the Turks once began to fight in serious earnest the dispersed state of the Rumian armies led to dis nater sudden and complete, It ie contended in many quarters that the Turks are not sucoeses- fut in field manmuvres, that they can only fight well on the defensive, It in certain that they were successfal in Armenis in pretty much the same kind of fighting that has to be done ia Bul- garis and Roumelis.Binor the above was written, despatches have buen received reporting a terrible repulre of the Rursista at l'levna, their losses being very heavy.CANADIAN SUMMARY.A Cosvior, named Henry Monsghas, received thirty-nine lashes in the jail yard at Summerside, I\u2019, E.1, on the 34th ult.TRE Toran Masonite for the Dunkin Ry.law in West Lurbam, Ont, was reven hundred and eighty -thme.A Puisoxsn pamed Adan Chintz was taken with ebelers while his case was in progres recently at Aylmer, he djiog a short ime thare- after.AN Kxczes oF 44,000 tous of coal has been imported into Toronto from the brgioning of the year up to the present, over that for similar period of last year, Tne Hartyax Trmrenaxce Rarorw CLum, orgasized by Mr.Banks Mackensie, continues to meet Lightly, and je progressing, The memters tiow number upwards of one thomend, be able to accomplish very much in regard to A Youxa Man in Quebeo, formerly of the eee Eastern Townrhips, was so terrified by a thunder and lightning storm recently that he became à Tavibg mabiac, and is now confined in the Beau- port Lunatic Asylum, A Baurat MUEDES was committed near the villsge of Newingtos, Oi1t,, on the 18th uit.An old man named Patrick Welch had a quarrel with his wife, during which be picked up a club and struck her, killing her instantly, Tr Lake St.JORN CoLONI3ATT05 ROAD has been completed for twenty miles past Lake Jacques Cartier, and it ia intended to extend it #0 {ar this summer as to mect the section now being comstructed from Lake St, John south, Naws in Halifax from Newfoundland respect: Ing the shore fisheries 14 of s gloomy character ; no previous year, for at least filtewn seasons up to this date, bias shown su short a catch for the quantity and quality of the craft and fishermen employed.A Dissteaten Woxax named Mary Murphy, living is Duromer street, Toronto, cut her throat with a razcr où the 2Uth uit.wbile ie- toxicated.The wouwnd is à very serious ome, extending clear actoes the neck, sad it is extremely doubtful whether she will recover, Tra OrrawaBui100LTRUSTERS are debating the question of the establishment of a county model echool under the WeW whee propseed by the Minister of Education.It in likely that they will require the use of » building for the purpose, Dunne à Dirurs at té@bbrand Trunk depot, London, recentiy, betsreen two men,one named J.Tatnoad, à GER.Inbaste, was knocked duwn by his companion and brutglly beaten about the head with a large stone.His amallant cannot be found, A Bountap named avis, of Kingston, wns court mertialed teedatly for desertion from the School of iunttery.He deserted abont three years ago, and was last week captured in Corpwall, A man who deserted the other day haa not yet been caught.Ms, Henry AritsoN, a member of the local Legislature (cr Hants County, NA, has been missing since the day before the Bt.John fire, He left there hy train on the evening of the 19h June, it is sald for Rt John, and bis friends base been unable to find suy trace of him, Wuiræ Herry Gibbs, com of Hon.T, N.Gibbe, was drivisg $o the station at Ushaws, Cut, on the 27th uit his horse took frizht and capeised the luvegy, throwing out Mise Alice Jobb, danghter of Mr.James Iobb, of Toronts, breaking her log above the ankle, and slightly Leaking the other oocupants.A Shoortre Arrain has cocurred at Liverpool, N.8_ between (apt.Morte and Mr, Hemon, stipendiary magistrate, arislag out of à soandal with which the lntter named je connected ; Mr, Hemun reosired a revolver ball in the hip, aad Capt.Morise a wound in the hand from hia own platol pelsg off iu tne scufite, MONTREAL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1877.\u2018Tux CrryR£oinTaax of Toronto has caused the summosing of one Wm.McKende, of York street, to answer a charge of failing to reglter the death by small-pox of à child whu died at luis house on the 27th May last, and from whow two persons, ote living in Hcarboro and the otber tn Yorkville, caught the infection.Covsvasrnir Tex D'tLas Ditka of the Bask of British North America, Uitawa Breach, are in circulation in that city.The execution is ponr, especially the green tinting {n the body of the bill, which is much darker than in the genuine, A man named Martin bas been arrested in Hull charged with the offence, while in bis {house apparatus of a very suspicions character was found.Tus Crop Raronts from all parts of Ontario continue to be most cheering.Fall wheat is not ouly above the average in amount of yield, but da excellent in quality: spring wheat will probably be not much above an average crop, but other grains and roots promise exceedingly well.The Glnbe says there in a certain prospect of a crop vuch as we have not known for many years, Tue Max samed MesDomsld and Meares were drinking heavily in Port Albert, Ont, on the 26th uit, and at a late hour MacDonald left and Monrce suspecting something wrong went bome and ound MacDonald there, He attacked MacDonald with Lis fists, when MacDonald seized an axe aud cut Monroe over the head.MacDonald is now in Goderich gaol, and Mouroe is not expected to recover, Tux Franent CoxvIShiON eat on Monday last at the Legislative Council Chamber, Halifax.Its underatond they will ait four hours every day.The proceedings are kept private, Mears.Bradley avd Lumeden are the short-band reporters for the Commieaionezs.Mr.Dana is expected shortly from the United Stetes, to wrist counsel for that country, Turin Excæiresuies the Earl and Countese of Dufferin, avcompanied by Cul.and Mrs.Littleton, Capt.Hamilton and Mise Hamilton, Captaiv Smythe ond Lady Helen Blackwood, their Excellencies\u2019 donghter, left Ottawa for Manitoba by special train «nn the 30th uit.A detachment of the Governor-tiencrals Foot Guanis was present, as also Hono Messen, Mackenzie, Burpee ang Scott.Eismy Arxzi men wire recently sworn ia su special oonstables, in Haunteville, Unt., and started out, under command of Capt.Hunt, to effect the capture of four men named Pringle, who stole an ox from a neighboring farmer, and killed it in the woods, The Pringles are known as daring characters ; they are ann- es), and it 1æ expected that they will resist the officers.Two EcRGLANIES occurred in Quebec, cn the night of the 26th ult.Shipman's Ticket Utlice opposite the St.Louis Hotel, was entered by means of & window, and the whole office ransacked.All the drawers were forced open, excepting one, which contained a little change in money.The burglars found nothing to take awsy with them.The thieves also entered the stall cf Mr, Arel, butcher, Champlain Market, and abutracted 82.70 from s drawer, \u201c PROTEETANT ULYRANONTARES\" is a phrase that seems nt first right a contradiction in terms Dut that the phenomena exist here in Canada the public bas had several unpleasant reminders.It will be surprising to some to learn that they have got into the Quebec Cabinet.The Cana- edirn in giving asketch of the severa: members of Mr.DeBoucherville's Government atates that the Hon, Mr.Usker isa very devoted member of the Church of England, and if he was a Roman Catholic be would be am Ultramentane.The members of that Church will not feel fattered at the remark of the Canadien, A DiACO11CAL ATTMPT at train-wrecking was made om the (1.Railway at Benson's Cruasing, near New Liverpool, on the night of the 27th ult.It is said the switch Jock was broken, the switch mirplaced], and the signal- light eignifying that the track was all clear hoisted.The conse(uence was that the in-com- inglntercolonial teain, arriving about nine o'clock, ran off the track into a siding: the engine and tender becoming & complete wreck.The baggage car waa telescoped, and some of the second class cars werv damaged ; fortunately, no lives were lost, but the engineer and tireman were badly burt, snd & railway inspector from the Lower Provinces suffered severe bruises, A Drretatios composed of leading Catholic citizens waited upon His Lordship the Bishop of Ottawa, recently, to ask his advice on the to establish a Catholic Union in that city.His Lordship advised aguinet the establishment of sn Catholic l'nion in these excited times, but if at some future period the Catholic young men of the city wo desired he might give his permismion to the formation of a Unien ; not à secret union, but one Catholic in the true sense of the word.I'he deputation was afterwanis addressed by Mr, Tame to the same effect A large meeting was beld the same evening,but 20 far as is known nothing but à benevolent association was formed.Winttax Horn, of the firm of Had, tlope & Roberta, marble dealers, Hamilton, has tern arrested on à charge of embezzlement.He has been with the firm three years, Six months ago he was taken in aan partoer.Some six or eight weeks sgo he left fer England, and during hls absence Iurd & Roberts made an examination of the books, which resulted in the discovery of the discrepancies, On further examination it was found that for à considerable time embezzlement of funds belonging to the firm had been carried on hy Hope, On his arrival Lome last week he was met by his partners, win laid the cass before him.As the emlrexzlod money had been invested in real (state, ke consented to con vey the property to Hurd & Roberts.The caer will come up for examination ia the Iolice Court, Finegan, \u2014 About 2 o'clock on the moraing of the 30th ult., s Are broke out io Richer'sdry good store, Jul], near Ottaws, and almost at Lhe same moment Richer's block at the corner of Main and Church strecta was discovered to be on fire.The flames spread rapidly in both directions, and se a result the recond block, consisting of nome six Stores, were destroyed, while the dry gond store, with Hilliard's saloon, Lewin\u2019 jewellery shop, the post office and Foucks\u2019 dwelling and store on Main street, were destroyed, while on (\u2018hurch street two twnatory houses were burned and three small tenements torn down, The lose is about $12,000, The fire 1a supposed to be of in- oendiary origin.Tes Quzesc F'sovinctat.PoLic have for some lime been lying under the imputation of doing what they should not do; sow the Que- bee Mercury changes them with not doing what they should do.Certalnly both thelr sine of emission and commision are griev- ous sad herd to be lore.The one the Mercury refers to is the refusal to suslat & poor man in recovering property that bad been stolen frum him, He first applied tu the city police, who discovered where the stulen articles were, but had no power to institute a fuller search or make arrests, The Proviacisl Police were given the search warrant, obtained tie guidé, but refused to make avy arrests unless mubey Was forthcoming, and the poor man cannot obtain his guods until the guilty parties are convicted, Law is law in Quebec with à vengeance.Many felonies which come to the know: ledge of the city police down there are not inves.tizated, ns the Provincial Police pursue such a policy of vbatruction sa to Ceter the civic men from attending to anything of their beats, Virx CHARLEVOIX KLECTION CASE is again to &o ts the Supreme Court, It is not surprising bat this should be the case, This time Judge Routhicr apparently did mot even try the caso, but dismissed the petition with costs against Mr.Tremblay.The counter petition against Mr.Tremblay was sustained, This is too much {or human nature to endure, and Mr.Langevin will again have some experience before the last Court of Appesi, with Mu sir judges, and he may bave another touching story to tell to the Commons respecting the great expense of its prvceedinge aod the injnstios of its decision Laat scouion he did this on the vote for supplies.At the neut session ha can da Ît os tue bill for amending the election law, which Mr.Blake wil doubtless introduce almost as soon as Parliament meets, Judge Houthier may have ood cause for the decision wbich he has ziven, \u2014 we know nothing of the fiche of the case ; but the probabilitics are the other way.His decisions in such matters are exceedingly apt tu be reversed on appesl, and it will not Le surprising if this last one meets with the recer- sal which has been the fate of others.THE Fisaexy Couxisnios beld a shot session on Saturday and took some evidence, then adjourninz until Monday.\u2018'apt.Fortin, theex- Speaker of the Quebec Legislature, an.others- Br, Galt,not Sir Alexander, the Canadian Com misriuner, we presume, for une\u2014hare gone fur a cruise in the Goll on the Government sicanter \u201cDeuid\u201d t> prmeure necessary uvidence.The evidence, we suppore, must mot Le in support cË the Canadian niu cas, That onyht to Lave bxeu ready lung ago and probably bas been carefully prepared.It is likely to disprove assertions in the American reply by teotimony in rebuttal of what is there ue there will be no dixy position on the part of the British Commissioner to accept any slight compensation.Rather have nothing, andl a claim against the United States, than yield to any bullying policy which may have frightened the British High Commissioners of the Washington Treaty into foregoiug an award by the majority, and made it dependent on the United States Ce missioner.Canada can afford th without a little nioney, and it is time that the acceptance of humiliating treaties and arranve- ments with the United States was at an end.InporTaD Rownizs was the name given hy tha Prus Witssas to the country Orangemen who paraded in the streets on the occasion of Hackett's funeral.That they wers farm labor: era, who in general are a most respectable class of working men, was an especial cause of reproach Yet amongst these \u201cimported rowdien\u201d there was conduct, Nome «f them wore arrested or gave any cause for arrest, either goin: or coming.But some of the class which the True Witness is st present writioz for visited Buffalo from Toronto, and true tr their instincts aa tothe best and most fitting place for them, six ao conducted themselves that the Boffals jrolice authorities sent them to the penitentiary fn six months for disorderly conduct and resisting the peace officers.A little contrasting comment on the conduct of the ** Orange imported rowdies\u201d and these aix excursiunists, sbowinx the higher moral standing and greater self control of the latter would now be in order from the Tree Witness.The respectable Irish Re man Catholics of Toronto, it may be added, are nat proud of these, their discreditalile compatricts, and refuse to sizn petitions fre Lhe commutation of their sentence.Lut they are not the clase whom the True Witness speaks for.Jat those petitions be sent along to the Trur Witness, and it wiil make exertions amongst its friends.No doubt it was prejudice against their race aud creed, which led to the imprisonment of thewe much to-be pitied and deserving young men.Tuæ PRONISITION OF ALL l\u2019MPCESSIONS, religious, national or otherwise, except in celebration of national holidays, is the object far which a public meeting has been called in Ottawa, There is no probability of success atter.diog any efforts in thie direction, For one thing, the putting down of all processions, except three indicated, weuld be a very difficult and unsatisfactory business, No line is proposed.Where would Jit be drawn, At funerals, or torch light processions in honor of distinguished etatesmen, or only Crange funerals, of where * The simple truth is that people are not prepared to give up their right nf marching in procession.They pra.bably would not do so evem il à law to that cfect were enacted.A arty Processions Act failed to put down party processions in Ireland.What in proposed here is much more extensire, and would in fact be à serious Infringement on the liberty of the subject, It fs almost certain® that an law which would fairly mest Lhe case in the eyes of both negotiating parties, in refcrence to the Twelfth of July, can be eLacted ia tbe provinces.Orangemen in Ontarin wonld not give up their own displaye.Roman Catholice is Que- beu, especially the French-Canadians, might be willing to give up 8¢, Patrick's Day, but they would not yicld in regard to religious processions auch nethe Fête Dieu, Orangemen would notgiveup their legal right unless thentherewonki, The only practicable way fe to permit all processions aud see that all are protected againat mob violence, The legislation in the matter would hare to be in the Provincial Legislatures, for the right of procession ta wu civil one, and so with.fn provinolal jurisdiction.The only way in which the Dominion Parliament could prohibit proceralitas of any kind would be to make them criminal offences, and the absurdity of making it a crime to march in à street pro.oession need mot be pointed out, l'rocessiona will not be given up, hawever proper it msy be that they should, and the nai way la tn ace that the Jaw jo not ret at nought by any tool, whether a good-natured of & Llond-thisty ene.Fararimizs.\u2014 Regle 54, Hilaire, of Quebec, dropped desd on the S61b ult , while guing into atavern.Ho bad but recently been married.~\u2014A.W.Bowles, of 81.Catharines, Ont, 8g stated.We hepe that inthe conduct of the ; not a single case of druokenness or disorlerly | re Tthrit\u2014\u2014A young man, who Lad recently srrired in Levis, Que., from the old country, committed suicide in Lawlors hotel, where be had been boarding, by shouting bimeself ; cause, depondency at the lues cf à trunk cuntaining money or other valuables, \u2014\u2014A two-year-old son Willie Fitagerald, of St.Jubu, N.B., was drowned on the 25th uls,, by falling into a amall pool of water, near which he had Leen allowed 0 play.\u2014 The body of à youcg woman samed ldzzie Moore was found in the Canal at St.Catharines, Ont, où tbe 27th ult.It is supposed she fell into the canal accidentally.\u2014J.E.Couper, a sou of à Toronto varrister, was sinong those shot io the Chicago riots recently, \u2014\u2014 George Martel, of Lake of Two Mountains, aod employed Ly Batson & Currier, Ottawa, was drowned while bathing in the Uttaws on the 28th ult While tive men were digging a drain on toe 0th ult.in Strachan Avenue, Toroato, the earth caved in and ruotherd two ot them, injuring one of the others serivudy, and probably fatally, The names of the wen killed are: Charles D, Urowa, ward toremas, and T.W.Laughlin, laborer ; Deuny is the naine of the man badly injared.The moat singular thing in connection withthe accident is the fact that the ductr in ustendauce remembers an eaactly similar wcuranoe, by which two pea lost their lives où the same spot 21 Years ago.\u2014\u2014A middle-aged, respectably dressed man was found dead in a diteh nesr Griffith's dam, Loudon townahip, Ont, om Sonday evenios the 29th wt.When discovered by Mr, Smyth, of the Western Hotel, decented was lying on his face in two or three inches of water, and it is supposed that he went to the ditch to drink, whea he was seized with a fit, aud so fell forward on his face aud was leowoed.\u2014 William Ellis, 55 years of age, of the townrhip of Edwardshurg, Ont, com - witted suicide on the 50th ult, by cutting his throat with a razor.MONTREAL NEWS.Ostaws uvfeatel Montreal at cricket the 25th ult \u2014 Mr.E lerards, n contracter, was robled of F300 on the 2th ule.\u2014 À.18, Glass, the Molsons Dank embezzler, Les been let vut on bail, as be is ill.\" \u2014 Eli Petkins and Prof.Bell, of Bustos, ir ventr of the telephone, were fo town last week.Ruflanism is ati! rampant, and several dis.arac ful assault ani rows have taken place.\u2014- The new Irish daily paper will De ismued this noth.ite promoters aay.- Un the 27th ult.the dauzhier of 8 hook: Suder named Perranit fell out of & second story window and was killed.\u2014 À voung servant girl Levomiog infataste-l With à veyre, atole quantities of goals from her mistress in order to seb up hiousekee;iog with him.Both are in jail.- The firemen of Hudson, N.Y, will make an excursion to this city this month Toe mem bers of the Ontaris Press Association were ia town on the lat.\u2014 Several regimental rifle matches have been held during the prot week amd valuable prizes been a d.= On the 25th ult.à Miss Collins fall of a rwing at the Back River and broke ber thigh.Being allowed to lie toa long on the ground.she got congestion of the lungs and died on the 2 \u2014 On the #th uit.Baplin's large planing fa.tory in Duke street war burned ; loss 835,000 ; partially insured.Uonr nf th= Messre Esplin is an Urangeman.atid sunnicion las been aroused as tor heow the: five originated \u2014 The valuateer aessuit case end-d in Colur- Beatue aud Corporal Grifrey, of the the, being casd 820 and $1U for atanlting loare, the Catholic whom they met, dor Sergeant Man, of the Fifths, was fined 817.All the men were dismissed fro: their regi monts, Pears oF A Crack Rivir SAOT.\u2014C'autain E-daile, late of the old +5: d onthe 25h ul\u2019, at Lin father's residence in 1hirocher street.He tian been il for a long tim>, He wae an enthu- tiastic volunteer snd an expert rifle shot.IMsnasiyEst or The Vorrerezes.It is rmmared that a petit om ia bein: circulated by a certain Boman Catholic senator and other lead - ing Irish Catholics to «disband the Montreal volunteers.Lave Carte a¥p Super Exroutation.FEx-Ald.McShane has acain chartered four nf the Dominion line of steamers, beyinuing with the 88, ** Ontario,\u201d which sails on She 6th inst.ta carry cattle and sheep to Liverpor] fur the Liverpool market.The cattle, which are of the choicest grade uf steern, are being purchased in Chicagn.The 88, ** Memphis,\u201d which left here on Thursday took out for Liverpool and Tandon 163 head of caltle and 212 sheep, als» on his account.\u2014 Str JoRX A.MACDUBALD ON THE OaaN:?TRoURLES IN MONTREAL, \u2014A correspondent of the Kingston Baw, who had a conversation with Sir John A.Macdonald, says: \u2014I asked him his opinion of the recent Orange trouble in Montreal, and the probable course which would be taken providing legislation was invoked this winter.*\u2018I har ly think,\" said he, * that so ex treme a measure an prohibiting these parades will he adopted, You know that there was an wuld cusctmient abolishing street parses, which wan abolished as being too arbitrary for the times, Some may advocate its revival, bat | think that a majority will oppose it.Montreal inm centre where the two ruces and the two re ligions meet, and it is natural that tuere should be more feeling there than in almost any other part of this Dominion.Samebady may hring 117: thia matter thie winter, but the result will, believe, he nothing more than sme measure compelling city and town anthorities to take the wrentost precautions Lo prevent a clash in case parades are contemplates].The affair at Mont.tral in greatly to be regretted, and it ia to be hoped that no such occurrence will ever again bapien in these Provinces.\u201d THE PROVINCIAL COUNCIT, OF ARTA AND MaSL FACTUREA An Industrial Exhibition of the Council of Arta and Manufactures of the Io.vince nf Quebec will be held jointly with the Agricultursl Exhibition, in the City of Quebec, on the 18th, 19th, 20s, an 2lat of September text.The ananufsctarers of the Dominion and of other countries are invited to wend the pro duce of thelr industry for exhibition.Drizen ta the amount of about 84,000 are offered for the heat profactions.The prize list in divided into thirteen classes na follows: 1, Cabinet and other wood , au appliances, musical instruments, &o.; 2, carringen, alcizha and parts thereof, &e.; 3, machinery castioge, manufactures of metal town and fittingn, &c.; 4, building materials, potlery, tile, slates and slate manufactures, bint.fnes nssware, ke.; 8, architectnral, mechani :al and other drawings, traite anl other palot- nan, decorative palatings, japann ng.sculptare, satnary, engraving, Vithographe, pencils, materials nad in the foe arte, &¢ ; 8, paper, printing, book binding, manufactnres of Taper, &e.Feather, meaufactare of leather, rublwr goods, &c.: 8, oils, varnish, chemical manufactures and preparations, &c.; 9, geology aud natural his wry, Kc.; 10, Fonp, proceries, proviatone, tobacen, crackers, &c, ; 11, woollen, flax and cotton gooda, fishing tackloa, fur, wearing spparel &e.: 12, 1adirs\u2019 department ; 13, domestic manufactures.Competest indges will be appointed for the dif.frrent clanses and the prises awarded with the greatees impartiality.Arrangements bave been made with the princip ! rafiroad and navigation companies to reduce their rates of freight on articles intended for exhibition, and ali other meartiren have heen taken to promote the interest of the exhibition.The Hon, Mr.Laflamine stopped at the church done in Tachine, lmt Sabbath, of the close of the fridvum, to say to the el that be was a Catholic like them.sated Dim i he bad performed his a.o\\d and respested citizen, died suddesly ou the Minerve, THE MONTREAL WEEKLY WITNESS.Auvcusr 2, 1877 THE FORT.AVILER, AUTHOR VHE HY SARAH oF HUGUENOT FAMILY 4° CUAPTEE VIL\u2014 Continued.\u2019 Mire Grey reminded her sistir, ruthlessly, that they liad aver gone a uyh in hon time age : * why, where were u Jorg time ago: under a Canadian je was tou sul] nud delivs cature to walk alone, or ut rehuod at Kensington and ar Brighton, where gy paving certainly was not oue of the branches, Had Mattie forgotton that she had not beets whore tae or three sears home from weheol when she foal been lit to herself as to marry Hurry: Even at Pemberton, though the neighturhoed had Las se nice everybody knew whut a nice neighborbosd meatt\u2014and there had een Lines with prime somes sud blackherriss, in aildition to te well filled count Lousn within walking di of the town, and the barracks, still An not call to mind that there had been any opportunity for seypayi As for the other ditty, with the - and the hounds\u201d and \u201cRichard dear\u2019 and \u2018his Alive Brad\u201d Mattie might fev hereif \u2018Ali wud Marry \u2018Richanl' if lor incgination won li enough, but she could never suppose it ne sary to sud him for fargots hone, winle ho had But even brought hos regimental bugle to serve se a horn.Huny bol been talking when he came in santhoar deer, and antelopes men in the ance, which he aud Mr.Boovet Hill might have followed, if it had been the season, or they hud bran equipped as proper jungle sportamen.The urcou parrots and the Jeu- cocks were down in the plains, rise these might have std ut a pinch for » mavix aud merle\u2019 Bennet Hill put ju something about quails nud ortohius bein more to the purpose) he wreaning of the first would have beau in licu +f the whistling of the lust, went on Anne, not heeding the interruption.With regard to the parts that cubras aud alligators ought to have played in the representation of the scene Non Mattie mod uot look frightened, she should know that such reptiles, with the formidable array of benrs, leopards, Se owen much farther from human habitation, and be- Jongzedd to the hut low Janda with their dense veg tation, uot to the little hills witle their seattle red moliwas Un the whole.Mattie wight ample conselation from the fact that thouzl it was net a hun- rt ro romantic, it tendod more to security aud pesce of mind that a hwmdrtn compauy of people, amd even i helpless crow J of attendants, were taking advantage of \u201clittle Ninila,\u201d and not that Mattie aud Harry were Kevpiug tent there clone, findi rything for thy meelves, and + neounte heed - ed the goblin shape into which Ethert Band had been transformed.After all, that could not have oon half so bad as a royal Bonwal tiges, such on the genthinen had hated leagues an) Icague < awa Muttie shuddoped ut exposed himach to such fondly hope d that he would now be with the quilled porcupines and long.cranes he had brought into camp Intel Mr.Hil), whe was, us Bena Llandly cluted at the uenr pros turn to Kriabnu, his schools and his Tamul, and who was dreamily endeavoring to unter into therpirit of the hour, and to show hime lf social ut the last moment.logan to spesk of 8 song which had been much suing when he was at college.and which must have been written in honor of n namesake of the ladies.He was stopped in his hesitating reminiscences by an uncontrollable burst of laughter from Harry Trefaais, in which his wife joined merrily the next moment.\u201c You must excuse un.Mr.Hill, but it in too guod to have you of all people stumble upon poer Aunr'a pet aversion.Don\u2019t you soe how she is biting her lips © + No,\" exclained Mr.1lill in surg rise nod 2 littln consternation, **have I suid anythivy to offend, Miss Gry Lam very morry, there is murcly a mistake.The song mist bo old -farh- iuned.I thought rbody could recollect it ex ocopt myself.\u201d *« On the contrary.you might as weil shake a ted rag before a hull 2» whisper a stanza of it to Anne.But it is not vou whoare blume ; it in she who is very unfilial, for it is as x model ballad to his septical daughter, « How dare they chaff ue Mr.Hill,\" raid Anne, bending her brows: \u201cbut indeed it is such lamentable stuff, that gone-by fashionable song.A man sinus fhat his heart is breaking for n arirl who is braiding her hair fur \u2018another It always makes me ms ashnin- od of myw1f and of the whole world, that it ever should have Leun praised, and that pape will ist in ndmiriug it.\u201d + Will, T have forgotten the greater part of it mimitted Mr, Hill candidiy, \u201ctut 1 thought that it hail been considered rather pretty and pathetic.À mixture of pride and madaess, that was what John Newton called a broken heart, and à man need uot have pros ela/med the trinmph of three powers of evil wil Lim.Indeed.I caunat comprehend how he should have cried out that his heart wan breaking.under any circumstances.\u201d \u201cYou woull prefer a decent silence ; mi should 1.\u201d said Bennet.« But I think it was n hard asviog of John Newton's,\u2019 continued hin futher, \u201cand though the suffiring from disapprinted love ought not to go- happily manly wors\u2014the length of heart-birvuk, stall good, devoted men have felt it weutely.1 cannot but think that larry Martyn's while carecr in India was darkened, wrhaps hin life indirectly shortened, by Miss Irenfel'a refusal to come out to him.\u201d 46 Misn Gronfel!\u201d said Brunet, \u201cI wonder what she was like PE cannot conceive what could have been her grifts and #rraces\u2014 though I am bound to take them on credit to redeem her oluluracy.\u201d « A woman lias a perfect right to weigh conflicting claims, and to decide fur herself,\u201d mid Miss Urey, emphatically.The conversation dropped, but the subject recurred to Bennet Hill's mind as he la awake that night ataring at the stars through a hole in the canvas, \u2018omld there ever be a Mim Grenfel for him?What might she be like 7 Would she have fine ions of work?Would she be able to vex his soul and to mar his life, if, as it wan too probable, abe tuo should be ubdurate t CHAPTER VII.Upon the whole, both the sisters wero have ing a very good time of it.Mattio was wandering about and kitting down entranced ; she was only in despair becaure sho could not send home to the numerous mother colony of the any save the faintest, dimmenst aliadow of a skrtch of the glories of \u201clittle Simla.\u201d If she could but have dismissed her horror of the white ants\u2019 nest, of which besrs were so fon: and her fear leat wild pigs and jackals shoul neo into the ghaut\u2014 thou, gb everybody aid was utter nonsenso\u2014it would have been Paradise.Varey's loving ovr a horrible danser, and Anne war ready to admit her share in the wnjoyment, except when Bennet Hill interfered to take some of her offices upon himself, to Jesture her on rashnems, or to beg her to apare ler olf\u2014cvon in play.Sometimes, but rarely, Gace, two of a inde do net, males ou + strong compulsion, agree, she and Brnnet worked together for the good of the cominuni- iz He had eamed the reputation of bein handiest fellow at the station.Ho shea Minn Grey's incredulity one day, when he had supplied 8 missing rope by weaving the buggy (coarse gram) into a substitute, had con.Cocted a cooling drink of tamarinds and homey, aod had enlightened Anne with regani to's plant perfectly safe and ble for salad, which he eid nt \u201clittle Mimla + 30d be t, do not waste an hour, a minuto might be of Mrs.Bainbridge's mind.He had {stance out of a thousand of thelr wnselfiah ro.and the habitat nf whic , th che plant Toit of time that may be irredcemably Precioua to [actually forgotten that he himself had unce|gard; whilo these sepoys are mercly samples he discovered for her.* the souls of others, as well as to your own.thought her opinionatire and rather disagrees [of the gencral stock.Certainly one or two «Fon ought to have been « SE : « The questions turns, I take it,on what in| able.\u201d Bennet did no more than arrive at tho| whom saw as I came in did not look exactly the Bouth on felande ** She Initon bs spondingand whatinwasting,\"\u201d said Bennet.\u201cTt halting conrlurion, which disturbed him great.an 1 have been accustomed to sce them ; but n say to him in the sha > of a mild_ compliment.secs to me that there in danger of a failure [ly every time it crossed his mind (and that surly scowl, even from an onlinarily dissemb- pe iment, 4 oe on God's Providence, of impati- waa not unfrequently), that s woman, a girl ling Oriental, is one thing, and an overthrow when the two were gathering the salad material together.20 Âs a mntter of taste, and if the padro had all, it would ter for the purpose, and 1 believe that un cut- ; a ile reasoning\u2014 tulle us it was,\u201d finished meditatively, giving voice led here for a quarter of à centary.\u201d | intervention-\u2014 he said, \u201cI might have preferred ie Buts fer for Tere a ping narrowness AYO n rhirl « ultien, .for the climate is with a few ng ie: , bot tending to an unthankful rejection of the thou: aud-out savaye is a deal more accessi that.a learned, sophistical Hirahmin.\u201d t iy your life,\u201d she ssid in one of the sudden vospel.\" \u201cLanay do that hore,\u201d he answered; \u201cit is not impossible * and flou he asked her whether she did not think a life connted something ns well as 8 death * Mr.Hill, in spite of the restorative afforded by the chuuge of atmosphere, und nutwith- standing the twauty which combats À lis ter-of ad felt and lowsked fur the first few days like a fish out of the water, away from Krishuu Mirea and his wel ole, hin addresses snd his sermons.the was incapable of joining his son ad Cap! in Perf in their excursions le had long laid aside, if lie ever possened, the habits which would have ive him a relish for their present peinsuits, The culy sign of «ympathy dy lue displayed wus in the gleam of rec nd complacenes, that Miss Grey said ele detected iu ur Hl, every time Bennet returned with the bigger trophy of victims, Mr.Hull was nocensarity left suuch to the companicnship of tadies.Bennet could answer for their attention to his futher, aud kno w, besides, that Mr.Hill hud a decided liking, after a different fashion, for both sisters : still he was not without a fear that the «ldve man would he bored, And Bennet went the length of wishing that archery practice had becu admissible for grave divines and devoted missionaries, Bot tu say for busy sud camest your women.But after three or four daye there was so great au improvement in father's coudi- tien, Mr, Ton uot only submitted himecif so meekly to ciroumatances, but began to testify rmch an absolute omtentment with the circumstances, that his son, in the firat place, huortily congratulated himself on the success of his attempt to withdraw an hae vhed nan from his cngroming ca and in the srcond lerame decidedly saspivious of the rupidity and completeness of the cure.A little\u201d judicious watching apd counter dotting enabled Beunct ta come upon Mr.{ill and Mine Grey whon they hud imagined that they bed disposed of him und Harry Trofusis for the morning, and after Anne hal ratatdished her sister comfortaldy with her aliet and brushes ander her artist's uinbredla.The two conspirators were seated on camp wtowls iu a shady nook within car-hot, but out of sight of Mes.Trefusic.They had something Lefore them, which they made 4 futile effort to put in the bark-ground «on his approach, but which his tuitiated eyes immediately detected to be a pment sual grammar aus] dictionary in one, + My dear father,\u201d Benuet said, \u201ccould I have expected this from you © \u201cMy dear Benue,\u201d said ill, half apologeticalty, \u201cLw y x Miss Grey a rhott losses, us abe has 8 commendalde wis) to nequire Tamui.I thought, too, that it would be a small precaution azninst for wo tring or falling out of the way of speaking the language.Those eastern tongues are so forviam to us that we lave to be constantly on our guard wraiust losing the least particle of what we have gained with se much difficulty.Then 1 have always deeadal ing the bad habit of illeness which is «0 insidious in this country.\u201d There was such a comieal air of having been catght by his son, and such a confused deprecation in Mr.Hill's speech.that it was ton much even for Miss Grey, who bad her risible nerves generally under complete control.For the first time in any of her altercations with Bennet Hill, she broke into a little of yirlish laughter.clear and ringing, which ceased as abruptly se it had arisen, and by its cesantion enabled ber to speak.++ It was my blame,\u201d she announced boldly \u2014+] mean to know Tamul.Persian, and Hin- dontani, all three Why not + Why not, indeed, Mine Grey,\u201d said len net, full measure of the small fair wir} in whom spirit \u2014\u2014emod to it aver matter, and who was [rises to herself a course of study wli-h would meke many s fessor in the learned leisure of a cool and English University stand aghast.+ Why not, I repeat,\u201d raid Anne.\u201cif time and place be suitable #1 thought there war no epportanity like the prevent and Mr.Hill seemed rather to like helping me.\u201d + 1 daresay he did, as we all like what is not wood for ua.After every book that was not English, and especially every dictionary, and all paper, pens, and ink, had Leen strictly forbidden during the time of our stay at \u2018little Simla\u2019 I understood that there wan a compact between the whole set of us\u2014ha ing shut shop for a week\u2014not to talk or hin shop declared Bennet severely.\u201cAs fur what you observe, ir, of the importance of your presery.ing every atom of that knowledge in which Misa Grey is prepared to rival you.and of the danger picking up bad habits, I cao only say in return that if you luse your skill in the course of ten days, and in the mme bref space hegin to undo ail the old discipline, at your time of life, I am afraid that my faith in the ce of virtoe will be shaken.\u201d \u201c Tut to be scrions, Bennet.\u201d inte 1 Mr.THI wistfalls, looking up at his sob with his haggard, caruest face.I wan beginning te doubt whethee\u2014 considering how soleran my commission, and how binding its ohligations \u2014 1 wus warranted in taking à complets respite in order to rive myself up for a season to cu- joyment\u2014which, while not unlawful, is also not unworldly.If [had gone aside to fast and pray, like Marshman, it would have bern different.Aa it in, the condition of my classes, the doubtful mind of poor Krishuu Mirza, what they may be doing without me, what evil influence may not be oxercised over them in my absence, bave been, I confess, weighing heavily upon me.It wan a positive relief when Misa Grey asked me to afford her little assistance in her lnudable studies, Tt seemed to show that I conld be of somo use even in a desultory way, up here.\" ** My dear father,\u201d said Bennet gravely, \u201cit sounds sheer presumption in me to remind you of what, in the burden of your cares, you msy have been tempted to forget.But what aro all our schdmes and oxartions worth ¥ What trifies, light aa air, are they: at the best, that we should esteem them vital consequence to the work which went on ages before we! same into oxistence, and will go on, with ever.increasing power, long after ve aro gathered to our fathers?Ts it not bowing down to the drag and the net to treat mere meana with such lavish regard ?Can wn not leave the good work now, an we must leave it one day, to the great Worker who can and will, in Hin own good time and way, do it effectually F No doubt He condoscends to bid us work with Him, but he dora not make our wretched bungling attempts the limit and condition of all success.In the same way with Krishnu, can we not trust him for a week, n year, a lifetime, ay, or for an eternity, toa far better, kinder, and more potens friend than you or § can ever be to him?If that were not no, are we not of all men most miserable + Do you uot find a want of faith, a degree of ingratitude on our part, if we scruple to share in and d to the bounties which our Heavenly Father gives literally, and without upbraiding, to all his children bog, rate M THY get au \u2018gran e.Mill thoughtfully, vain inadvertently the old familiar form.of ad dress to the young man, even while ho wan implying the hility of his son's being in the right and 1f io the wrong, \u2018but mich was not the reasoning of my day : it was d profit of learning and the pes ence with (iod's ways, which are not as our wayn, of an unconsoious lapee in humility \u2014ne if nothing conld be done without oer feeblo Jushing those arguments too of cram t ehowered upou us, in a good deal of that old |and \u201cIf you had not Iecu able to du anything whly pubes which came aver her, \u201cyou might Till ; use Jaid it down there for tho caume of the |e added devoutly.to be in tent, from the Lord's reply to Murtha troubled about wun, I there, could even for Anne Grey.sense, love doea mot own presumption.tho mote royally wan, it might foolishly ask the leas in a lover| Oar men you me I call the sepoys yonra and and hnaband, an attained to that frank} and confidingly di Above all fact that ooting eccentrie, intolerable girl, and that others|cven on duty?That is onl \u2014ahe was no more than twenty-one years nf|e ser whether they or to lie unemployed for a searcr and dearer be would surely bave heard if she had.Benuet supposing that she wae still at Niraaghur the to his musings not same as he had left ber, on what fuoting would on hin father's wecount.they two be when they resumed their inter- ew meu, new minds,\u201d responded Mr.[course r He was aware that he could get on if in all our novelties we could only very well with her if be was coulent to be to to the mind that was in Him,\u201d he her vue of the clergymen aud missionaries ut Nirzaghur.He could eaxily imagine that then she would be com) ut, ubedient ; she could think for herself, but she would not louk upon hervelf as justified in i Christiunizing orgapization which he and his father did their best to represent.She would Le pleased to be put in the van, to Le us wood us à duaconces and an unpaid female teacher to them.Iu this light she might accept of his services when he proposed to ruliove his father as Ler tutor in Tawul or in Persian, if her indomituble enercy aud quick, bright intellect had carried het wo far, and she would defor to his superior knowledge, aud eousent tu be guided by his suthority.But would this be the ing of & shrew, or was Misa Grey à sbrew in plain old-world words: If +0, he cotsld not think that shrews were altogether objectionable, He supposed there would always Le men to whom ws, however repugnant at first, on nearer acquaintance would t greater sitractions than those offered hv their 1n6eker rirters it was à question of thc respective merits of fal.conn and doves, The npeculation had generally this end\u2014 wheu, where, and low, would he meet Mise Grey ayuin ¥ For some tims Lefore Bennet Hill started on Lis homeward joumey he was sensible that there were rumors afloat of restless excitement ome nearer Vill you pundon oss other suggestion, rail fi unct quickly, \u201cwill you speak tu ux in the rourse of the oie Sunday that we are when Ho told her that she was careful sod thiugs Mr.Hill's last thought would have been offence nt is son ; indleed he revoguised that the verse bore au application more pointed tu another than himaclf ; but he did not choose i st his homily in the course of the Suuday service ; iustes called upon him- wolf wind his companions to vonsider what sort of place was that Elin, and what kind of life was the period of rent passed round the well of the pulai-tres bythe Isruclitios on their first pause us they prepared to journey through the wilderness.Afterwards De usked Mattie to sing Heber's hymn, - 1 praised the sun, whose chariot rolled in wheels of amber and of gold ; 1 praised the moon.whose softer eye Glvamedaweetty through the suvorner sky Ae Ou Monday the little party which #0 soon wis toreturn to the burden and heat vf the day at Nirzaghur took their final evening droll among the pines, and sat for the last evening about the tent dour, the white linen suite of tho men, tor which they had changed their sporting costuau, aud the white guwns of % j ine (5 i among the native population, and di fao- Mrs.Trefusie nud' Mis Grey, looking pale and BORE \u2018 be + .shadowy in the presence of the rich rome red tion iu the great Pe army.But like mot I dwellers in a land threatenod with the horrors cr sunset, that was giving place to a in which the moon looked of silver, as she hung in a m blue to ud au inset, ustrous moonlight, of gold rather than vault rupidly changing is tint fro purple.; The ludies liad wen Kinging, and the music had brought the lithe figures and dusky tur Laned fares of the servants out of their sepoy\u2019s paul, to form a circle at, a respectful distance, around the central tent and its group.Mins Grey had becy singing with Mrs.Tre sis, the Inttér had not, of course, an instrumental ac.compuniment to fall lack upon, and she had not been accustomed to, sud could uot ut- of a social valsion, these premonitory symptoms Afile impression upon bin.Like others, hv wus lulled by habit.Familiar as he was with india, it scemed to tim that the peuple had always occupied and stirred themselves up at times with myster- nus portents sed yt predictions : these appeared vuly part of the ly-rooted suporsti- tion, so anciert, so full of sensuous faacina- tivo and of maal uud spiritual horrors, wo won- erful in its ower and stability, which vom.warded and wlored every portion of the false wicial systemand religion.Benuet was nut wiser than Lis fellows.If he heard any altho of the double journeys.fine girl, Beunet\u2014is still with them; but, for{to be blown from guns would be tas good for a mercy, and Mrs.Tyefunis are the only |them.\u201d ladies, except Mry.Ramsay, at {he station now Mrs.Gubbings, another widow and three| Bennet we sergeant.\u2019 wiven, post mouls! with their chil.hail the doctor, and thus was in a dren, make up list.1 hear thas the|see the strangest, saddost sight whic! doutor's sister han not returned from Csleatta, ever wil to which Mrs.Bainbridge weut to bring her [trom the different bungalows, hurrying to the | back.The two ladies were great friends, so Assembly Kooms.Although there wis no close « the doctor und the captain balved the expenses Yoa see, Hemnot, 1 by the sound of dro have taken to gossip while you were away,\u201d ring in the distance.es proceeded first from +uid his father with a fuint smile; then in vX-| the mesa-room, where the officers had been at- Juuation, \u201c| was making euqu fur the tacked, like so any others, at scattered snd idea of helpless women sharing the b 1 of our [fur removed stations, in # susuner that they position ayyruvates its distress feixhtfully.\u201d had half looked for, without daring to de \u201cThe persil will pass over, you may depend from their ordinary habits, and so betsy vir nt to the room door, thinking to posi he had ugporated.1 um prepared to find it wo.As) frin for Nirzaghur, it must be 8 more temporary whic panic.Buch panics are infections.n anything up here! Huve our men been refusing to ubey orders?Jlave they been in-|lepiunce, Then esch man, from the highest demonstration or tumult as yot ; we have been Hainsay, with her ayah multiplied to à scream- uiet up to thin day,\u201d auxwered Mr.Hillling half dozxen ustive women, loaded with 1 euch a heterogenevus heup of pitlows, faus, protested Bennet vheer-|and scent buttics as would be of little use in à fuliy, and with a litle flash of triumph.|xiege.Major Ramsay himself ur on the \u201cWhy, sir you are & force in yourself.You ltwostout-bearted wives of the soldiers, with have maintainrd \u2018excellent relations with the [their straggling children, and plaintive Mrs.people for mure than & mure vf years.You Gubbins, ith er fetberless little ones cling- are well known, and | um pervuaded that you ling to her limp skirts.Mrs, Trefuxis walked aro thoroughly liked and respected in the na- between ber husband and sister; she liad been tive town.My dear father, do you think that prepared for coming out to take au ordins her right pardon me\u2014to let distrust stroll about her grounds, with her lace shawl, y.#1 told you no,\u201d is altoget! rap your oo nce in the very people fer and a white umbrella to ber from the whom you have done aod are wi ling to 10 80 low beams of the sun; but Miss Ciroy'» hat much ©\u201d was untied, and she had evidently run back for lier sisters favorite chair, which she wus curring folded up like & cump-stool, Subalterns and commissioners* clerks (the old commissioner was abaent un one of Lis rounds) were hurrying from their quarters, lugiiug favorite auddics, silver tespots\u2014the contribu- .|tions of mothers or sisters to their outfita\u2014 photogra lie albums, tin canisters, case bot- les, wooden boxes, clearly unable in the extreme gravity of the situation, to resist crack \u201c Bennet,\u201d said his father quietly, * there was uot a tenth of the pupils st the school yesterday; there wes uot # single vue, not eren Krishuu, to-day.\u201d « Oh, that was what was to be expected,\u201d jnsisted Beunct.* As for Krishou, 1 have uo queation that he stayed away from prus l'rudeuve counts xo much with his rice.\u201d \u201cAud the major thinks no badly of our + continued Ar.Hill; © though be is tempt to sing alove, unless it were un easy familiar Lyuin or song for children.Captain Trefusis was the only one of the gentlemen who could sing, und Te had rauwht cold in his week's adventures, and found himself hrs.In default of other assistance Anne supported der sister ; und Bonet Hill accused her cu the battle of l'lusey ; if the phrase which Mr.Trvelyan oles us prevalent that your among the prasats of Bengal, \u201ceverything is to become ra.\u201d was over spoken in his ears : if he came truss the lunpock of salt und dough passed from house to house ua the flery lusion to the hundredth anniversary of the) feariess sort of un I\u2014that he is planning privately to have the whole of the Furness pathered, on the first sigual of the ato the old Awscinbly Rooms, nu the most feasitde place to hold out, for Ged knows how short a time.There are not choush trust worthy me d ing jokes atthe incougruity and absurdity of the appearance which they presented.Them\u2019 the sort of young gentlemen us will Isugh at their own funerals,\u201d commented Burry, standing behind Bennet.A red glow began to bum behind the fugitives, intensifying the gollen light of the spot of having hid her light under a bushel.He showed himself aggrieved by hin 1 ce quaintance with the neh contralto, whi crow of India.the tokens had no meaning fur him, engined as he was with the thouhits of the home's which he was rcturniog, and the career waich was just opening before him.He travelld northwards, with the murmurs of sedition wd rebeilion\u2014had he Lut been among the ivitiated, to wnize the hollow sound\u2014forning an jll-cmened under-vurrent ul aecompuuiment to the ordinary tulk of the sn musical merit was not far behind Mrs.Tre- fusis\u2019s pure soprano.* What does it matter \u201casked Miss Grey, varelessiy.Mattie sings for both of us: without partiality, she has a very agreeable woman's voies, While suine is like à fifth-rate man's.\u201d Accordingly Mattie had ll the choice of the country.le observe amore people où the sous.Anne sang just what her sister pleas.funds than when he had gene southwards Ta 1 several morth- before, but ax the travoile wire of the ordinary kind- coulis, ramel drivers, aoudras passing frum place to place\u2014 neither did the increase of ovement strike him particdarly, It was only when he drow near to Nirzaychur thut somebody spoke in his presence of the punishment of a handful of riotous sepers who had been disbanded for their insolemre and insubordination, aud be turned over 1 his miud whether that was an occurrence which had often happened before, and associated it by an almwt involuntary ed, theugh she laughed a little at the selection.Mattie had such a gentle weakness for bring dreadfully appropriate snd would try * When we went à yypeying « long time ago,\u201d and \"Twas merry, twas ory in the good green woul.\u201d CHAPTER T1II.Shortly after the return of the party from «little Simla,\u201d Bennet went down lv Caleutta for another term at Bishop's College, and in order to be ordained his venerable Lishop- that Bishop of Culeutta who had verned his sce from middle age Lo hoary airs, while he had worked hard nod prayed fervently during the years which had brought «0 many changes.It need hardly be mentioned that Bennet's thoughts during Lis absence, in the midst of hin studies and aspirations, often strayed to Nirzaghur, and that he was impatient tu return to his post there.How did it fare with hia father, Lift alone ta tha strain of mental and spiritual toil, which mest men would have judged had been wholly unrcmuncrative, and which was nowhere clse conducted with a heavier expenditure of strength aud spirit ?Was he keeping np his heart as he had pro- mixed : Could Bennet depend upon the as- surauces that Lie was not missed, even to the extinction of that revival of his father's hepon and energies on which Bennet was connting, brought in contact, as he had been, with the green ald age of Bishop Daniel Wilson à The son was building his hopes on à long course of joint work with his father in which the deep piety and tri«d experience of the one should supplement the eager prayer and efforts of the other.Then, under God, an earnest of that glory of sucoesa which must at Inst crown all trae missionary work might visit their station and gladden the heart of the faithful, wlf-distrustful disciple, before it cvased from all its laborm.Was Krishnu Mirza still halting between too opinions: Waa he ope of the men that waver, on whom St.James said there can come no blessing because, unstable ua water, he was incapable of excellivg So his futher wrote in dejretion of spirit where his favorite pupil was concerned.Or was there no inner clearing of vision going on, steadily, though slowly, broadening more aud more?Mr, Hill would have liailed it with a humility of joy full of pathos : but be might be preclud- ol from distinguishing, by the severity, above all, towards himself and the work with which he had to do, and the gloom that was in a measure natural to him, and by the incapacit fur any width of human aympathy whic Hennet was forced to recognize as among the causcs of Lis father's failure of succces ar a missionary.Bennet knew that Harry Trefusia and his wife were still at Nirzaghur, and that Mise Grey had not yet fulfilled her intention, early aunounced, of turniag her back on those broad contrasts in India which she had not been slow to stigmatize.nud which she could never cease to abhor (as if there were no sickening contrasts of wealth and rty, cultivation and barbarism, in Euglend).\u201cEither Mrs.Trefusin had not begun to do without her A sister, of Colonel (irey and his wife could still had only had tine to warn you to stay ia afford to spare the cleverost and most inde.Coleutta?yon with your young life and s fatigable of their daughters, to the necda of long course of cess before yon, as we the spncially beloved child of the family.[hed trusted\u2014but knows best.We are Harry Trefasis and his wife retained their in.shut into 8 corner here, Bennet, & score or two valuable loan, but how lung would the loan ]of Eoglishmen against thoussnds of Hindous last P Might not Bennet hear, by the next|%04 Musulmans whom we have made our ronil, that Mim Grey had at last made up her cocmics in tying to be their friends, as woll mind to trust Mattie to her attached husband {#9 in riding rough-shod over them.~The ins Might not a proper escort have been found at are visited on the cbildren, and, the exact moment, and Miss Grey be to sail |48 if that were not enough, we have our own with the \u201cHimmaleyeh\u201d or the \u201cLady Wel.shortcomings to answer for.But if yon hed lesley,\u201d #0 na to escape the mousoon P ouly remained in Calcutta\u2014not that it in not & Again, wan it altogether beyond possibility consolation, though I fear a very aclfish one, that Mixx Grey might have changed her mind © bave you here with me.\u201d and resolved to stay on in India,\u2014no longer \u201cMy desr father, do think any induce.with Mattio and Harry, indeed, but by cast- [ment of safety to myse! f would have kept me ing in her lot with some military or civil-ser- back in Calcutts, and Nirzaghur in jeopardy ¥ vico hero who had lately turned up at Nirsa.What have I done that you should judge 1 ghur P Bennet could not bring himeclf vo |could so fail you snd my other friendat 1 suppose that any of the fine and gallant fel- must have di your injunctions if yom ows, with all their faults, whom he had known had laid them upon me, aud posted here with me to think himself fit ter haste than I have employed,\u201d eried {e forgot that, in a certain net.\u201cBut T casmot think the position in He 80 Lad an you beliere it.Yon know you are n rited.When I left there « breath of disaffection.hich of expectation and feeling of discontent wl hich liv was mot without an impression prevai generally throughout the provinces.If it had not Leen for this suiden mental association, Bonnet was sure he would never have noticed an incident thut happened later.As he a ched Nirzaghur, on the moru- ing of Pe arrival be encountered rame repoyn belonging to the sections of the regiments which haftinen longest stationed there, with whom he was perfectly familiar, aud who, frum haviug seen him at one time constantly in company with their officers, had been in the custom of saluting him.They now passed not ouly without the slightest sign of greeting hin return, but, ne he fancied, they betrayed an amazing iuclination, though they were in the proud position of the Company's sepuys, to tramp wlong rudely, and coven to jostle the horses on which Bennet and his mer- vant had ridden the last stage of their journey.Rennet went straight to hia father\u2019s bun hour of his prescnce at the school, to which he was as regular in attendance as clock-work, in the verandah l«king out anxiously for the appearance of his non.\u201cMy dear fellow,* said ¢ elder man, hastening out to meet Bennet, grasping hin hand with a fervor remarkable in a shy, reacrved man, and at the same time gazing at the new.comer with the strongest mixture of yearning and reluctance, joy and regret, \u201cyou sre welcome home, of conrse.God be thanked for your nafety : but you have come tous in & strait.Unlooked-fur trouble is here before you, Bennet ; it would seum as if God were about to pour vut the vials of His wrath upon the land and all its occupants, English and native.News has come from Mecrut.There has been mutiny among the troops there, and horrible massacre, partial or complete.There is insurrection, smouldering or open, où crery side of ns.Cawnpore 14 threntened with n riege.Lucknow, Beuaree, and Allahabad will share the same fate if there ie no interposition on their behulF.Mare you not bcard\u2014have you not seen 1\" \u201cNothing, father, nothing,\u201d sssoverated Bennet, standing aghast as the terrible truth broke upon him.\u201cAh, well!\" repeated the teller of the monstrous tale, with the resignation horn of the despair which came soon to him, \u201cthe rosds were reparted unsafe to travel south.have been in apprehension en your account, though, &# you were \u20ac solitary man comin, north, you were lies likely to be ubereepted.But what Lave you come to, my dear lad, that fou might not happily have been spared if L 2 2 ost sight also of the grave consideration that [little apt to be jerous Annie Grey'a nature was not » word, ns ing only that a man had|mine inadvertently\u2014were the most attached rank, and be the more [fellown in the world to their officers.Don't isposed to cover hin| you remember how some of them stayed and imperfections with à mantle of full regard.waited on Baiubridge and carried him hack tn Bennet wan utterly oblivions the the camp when be waa seized with cholera on Mrs.Bainbridge called Mis Grey an [a sh \u2018on, and tho men were nnt « einglo in- va £ all discipline, with rapine and murder, are other 'snd infinitely heavier offences.And , must have latent treasures in store.-|now, father, tell mo quickly who are at the wero destined to bo called outstation.InTre*usis here?Han be his wife and sister with him in his bungalow\u201d who showed such capacities of love for à « comparison, with the curivusly aroused sense | galow, and found Mr.Hill, though it was the| wetting sun; ons of the bungalows was already ou fire.Bennet cloned his eyes for usecond, and saw the scene as he had often see it nt this hour.before the world awoke to its evening animation, so full of repose that it had seemed ulmont deserted.\u2018The different white bungs- lows had been like so many huge Swiss cottages shrouded in folinge, while the sweet seent of their fowers, und the subdued babble of their abounding family life, had risen cheerily on the evening air.Then the bugle call would sound a shrill assertion and defiance to the native town which lay in abject subjection at their feet.The next moneut, through the crowd of fugitives, Miss Gry pressed with wide-opened eyes, blanched cheek, and both hands held out to him.\u201cInit truer\u201d she said, \u201cHave they whot first the man who vuly thought of them all these years?What have we to expect?What ought we to look for at their hands 1\u201d Then, when xhe heard that Bennet was waiting to hear the doctor's report, and that he trusted his father would yet do well, she put forth ag eager petition.\u201cwill Io let me nurse him?Of course you will be there, but à woman is always wasted; any girl brought up in a large family like mine has had some experience of illness, though I adit T have not had hnapitalftrain- ing.\u201d she added.«I think he would like to have me,\u201d she went on simply ; \u201c we huve been great friends, aud he has been my indulgent, too indulgent tutor ever rince you left.\u201d She paused, and then ndded without any personal concious.noes, but with a passdon of pity for Bennet, causing the firm clear curven of her mouth, and the keen blue of her eyes to tremble and soften inexprossibly, © What a homecoming for you I\"! «We'll hopo for better times,\u201d said Bennet, prasping the hands ho had taken into Lis, \u201cand your rympathy dues mr good.\u201d (To be Continued.) fend the fort, amd it is comminded by rack, which are, na it happens, the fad ters of the enemy.\u201d \u201cI wonder #t the major,\u201d said Bennet quickly.\u201c1 must go to the club and sec iwhat has come over the members\u201d But when he looked at Lis watch he saw that i: wan too late to hoje.tre nee anybody at the, | lub, too late to go ont und make visits with any prospect of being reecived\u2014unless, in.\u2018od, in such nn extremity as his father indicated, and as he, half stunned.und brought up! from childhood with totally different propos.! aessious, Could not at onre take in.He saw, } also, that his father expoted him to take the refreshments whith were sot out to meet his \u2018supposed needs, and to remain and talk over: the situation.Me.Hill would bo mortified if] | his son di not gro through the forms of catinge und drinking, lying down and taking » bath, {for the short tine which remained of the forenoon, instead of setting forth in the heat, to have confirmation of the report made to him.Bennet relurtantly submitted to stay where the was, without attempting tn see and hear for himself, till later in the day, when ho {could control his impatience uo longer, and then his fath-r propoed to nccompany him to Captain Trefaxis's bangalow.As the two gentleman crusmed the open space between the bungalow- everything was | Quict, except that from smong the narrow | stres ts and huddied together bamboo sad mud 1 houses of the native tuwn ou the right thero [came a tinkle and clangor of the bls from i the pagoda of a temple, whi re again a feast {was being celebrated like that which had ; broken the stillness of the brooding hot air on the day when Mima Grey aud Mrs.Frofusis first came to the mins'on sch | Bennet aud his futher were just thon pass.\u2018fag the group of huge cyprosees before the As- lwerly Rooms.Tuking into account what he had recently heard of the new destination of {the building, Benuet turned Lis head to took ut it; nt the same instant there was au crac {rom a musket close at hund, and a sharp ex.clamation\u2014half cry.hslf groan-from Mr.Hill.B unet was just in time to entch hin father iu his arme, and save him from falling, while he rauzht one plimpse of ñ couple of |«puys, drawing buck vn the further side of j the trees from the recoymition of the unarmed men whom they were thus villainously {amaniling, Tennet could not «pare another | glance cr thought to them ; he b«d exclaimed, on tho clear perception of what had happened, Merciful Heavens, ait, you are hit!\" and his futber's only answer lud been to wink yet more heavily on bis son's shouller, «Hold up, dir, if you can: hold by mo ; we are close to the Ruoma,\u20141'll get you in ther,\u201d Bennet said, on the impulse of the moment, aking for the entrance into the Assembly i Rooms, and dragging hiv father with him.: As they reached the buililing, which had been orveted like an earlier residence, and was two.storied, with a portico and a flight of steps to |the door, another bullet whizzed passe them.| But the door was opencd on the instant by one vf the duzen English soldiers who were at Nir.!zaghur, and who had been on guard there all i \u2018 LETTERS FROM READERS, STREET TI'ROCE3SIONS - SHOULD THEY NUT BE ABANDONED?81r,- If nothing ore should arise {vm the paluful events of the Hackett murder than the passing of an act by the Legislature to suppres All street processions save such aa take place at funerals \u2014then an important end will have been reached.\u2018This is now as apparent to moderate end rational Roman Catholics as it is to Protestants, which fact ie shown by & number of communications from each party alike, in the public prints of the day.It is true such exiremiate as the editor of the True Witness, the manaters of the Nouveau Monde, and French papers, generally test their proj ch a measure, but the style influence on such a subject, as evidently they fed i writing puts them out of the line of any i a day, sent with a band of private acrvants, nest pero from whom suy good, in à mixed soi ; \u201c ciety like ours, onuld emanate.withful among the fsithleas, to occupy the tt is contended that to ve up the publie pro- cemsiun on the occasion of the Fite Dien would be a sirrender on the part of the Roman Cathn.lics of a Hight guaranteed hy the ** Treaty of Cession.* Dut an much might be said by Pro- testents in consenting to the Act pro) , Have they no rights griaranteed ta them by the constitution of the country which they would have to forego under such a circumstance?Assuredly they have, as have even the Orangemen, which for the ake of peace they have, in the Province of Quebec at least, 30 long left in But so far as the Fie Dieu Assembly Rooms, and receive those who might Lave to resort to them aa a last refuge.* Ah ! it has come at last: sorry it is his riverence that is winged.Captain Bainbridge was sure that he was at last night, though the rascal whom he caught wore that his gun had gone off by accident,\u201d maid the soldier; who was an 1 an, and who never theless took matters coolly, while the native servants broke into loud \u2018ntation.Den.net, with his hesd till swimming, and his heart rick with indignation, pain sad alarm for bis father's tion, had the wonnded on is conman carried into one of the rmalier rooma, and fermet we man Catbolic neighbors ale laid on the face, while of the The * Treaty of \" confers mo such right to staff at Barry's command went for the reyi- [them ae they have assumed fu their street proces- mental surgeon.sions on this oocasivn, Dy the treaty \u201cNo frighte of them, sir,\" said Barry, when Were allowed the free ex of their on, Bennet in hin distrem ex a scruple at 0 far as such did not interfere with the rights exposing the messengers : \u201cain't they black [of others.\u2018That {a the ides and substance the article, snd upthing more But mi pind ey conduct their processions on that fite 60 as not to Interfere with the rights of Sy snta?Do they not virtually, yen, actually, for the time, take full and absolute possession of the streets and thornughfares through which they pase with i$?Do they not, by thelr noise of munie, etc, inthe streets, and the ringing of bells from their churches, almost render it impossible for Protostants to worship with any propriete of feeliog in their churches?Do they imagine that they would be alla to bave such processions in Tondon, or any town in England, Ireland or Beutland } And ff not, why?Why, beoause such would be refered as an _unwarrantable interference with the rights of others.And if not allowed to hold such » peovession, and use of such à conaide fu any town of Kugland, Irelsed or Bootlan|, does not moh fact show how the ar- cattle, ton, though a better mrt than the pandies ?Color drawn to color : their hides will be #s long as anything is re.spacted, that you'll nee, ris.\u201d Mr.Hill had no far recovered that he was able to speak, and to show where he had been hit in the back with a shot, that deprived him ton at extent of the power of motion, thongh there was but the slightest dark red trickle from the round hole to curdle Bennet's blood, nod sppal the casily overcome aasin- tants who were helping the son to stanch the wound till the doctor rame.\u201cBure if he ain't bleeding in'ard or the backbano be net broke,\u201d said Berry, who was an elderly, tall, stont man, with 8 mound red face, and a small, very turned-up nose, which wonld infuse the oldest comic clement into every tragedy in which he was involved, [ticle fa the Treaty of Cession is to be inter: an he took it upon him to ounce upon the preted 7 The truth fa, 1°roteatants, because of symptoms, being the only authority til the & love of peace and «f tolerance, have shut their doctor's arrival, \u201cI don't think he is in a] yes to the aammptions of their Roë 10 Catholic very bad way.I were in the Sikh, sir, and I neighbora in this and other Instances ; but now ght to know.\" they are called to open them, and to let all Jar oy \u201c Tt atrikes ho i 8\u201d ; ties know that ly the articles of the trest: faint] Catching the pl by ar RL A rer tan et paint threted, ù the that I'm done for ; tet us be thankful for the man of reason snd common sense., fellow'n sake who fired the shot, as well aa for| limman Catholios-and rome ill-reasoning Pro mine,\u201d he ended almost cheorfull .showing |testants with them \u2014have endeavored to show the strange inconsintenny by which the moat |that in the Orange don there In an desponding men, expecially if they are men of insulting provocation not found in any other iro taith, will sometimen tise to the occasion, throw cession oh either Romauist or Prof t off their constitutinnnl apprehension and gloom, *neeres In.But ds this ceally o fact ?I think and not only wax valiant in fight, but hopeful not, And this I venture to say alth~ngh not an han a sister or brother, father or mother.\u201cYen, the Trefusises are allhere I mean the indemnifications and volacca freely If Miss Grey hind taken none of thone steps,! nsband and wife, and Mise Grey\u2014thnt in a n dimanter.Orangeman, nes a.afrairer iH, |, rocemions «Tum glad to bear you aay so, father,\u201d | cqloboaten vi {he Deteata arty: fod | said Bennet, putting à restraint u 0 himself.by tan Midd ver the fi lige Oh, the vile, cowardly dogs spluttered fn the interest of James of Ryland, Barry,in reference to the offcuders ; \u201cby jabers, what of tha8?Lio not the Americans celebiate, There was 8 general routo thom, ursuit, the movement was suftiviently explained the victory of the Boyne ?Most assured], ing shota beginning to|uut of it ta os Catholics share (hike with Protestants, 8 thing upon it,\u201d said Benuct resolutely.I hope|suspicions, and with them the slender procuu- Balen canny = the difficulties of other stations Have been ox- tions which they bad been able to take.The FRTtvels ei een rt ir ear prin Ae = proceeded next from the parade.ground, contradiction, that Roman Catholics have à one or two of the officers had rushed, in much richer, atteactive and elevating measure of Has there credulously, like Bennet, in a Inst vain hope to liberty, assemble sud bring back the men to their al jand persons, Bot exceptiog on the Vourth of July of each years, their trium .over There was a murmur of sound outalde, and inde hi da ple of h since e lo ac tion to forçet the fouds \u20ac nd think , which resulted in their pet na à people ?The Lunefite reault- to both countriee have long ds thea engendered, and to rejoice over the benefite which to and even to the wuld, have grown out of them.And should not such be the con: duct of Roman Catholics and Protestants over , for vo arisen of frasdom and cod government which it was neither in the eart or policy of James and his advisers to purpose, of even to dream of.In the benefits and lessings of Protestant rulo\u2014wherever such Le tabl and allowed fairly to work \u2014Roman of Protestants where under the Protestant rule, or principles than under those of thelr own faith, that of the Pope himself.soleut to their superior offivers: 1 au toler- to the lowest, when nothing else was left for| trust there will be an overwhelming influence ubly certain that is about tle wurst we have him to do, had looked to the weak, and striven brought te bear upon our legislatures to have to ex, ttle judicious firmness, com- [for those desrest to him, or fought for hie enacted, what intelligent and peace loving per bis d with fciendly remonstrance, will check |own hand.vin À rf sf LE that.\" Major Ramsay waa leaving Captain Bain- .pro- No, I cannot say thut there has been any bridge to bring Ta poor scared, {orkid Mrs, C7008 by whomssever got up sad desire: THE RED RIBBON REFURM.$18,\u20141 have not yet seem in your columns any account of the great reform which is guing on this side of the river through the organization known as the * Rod Ribbon Reform,\u201d and thinkiog that it might not be uninteresting to your readers, I here with give you a biief account: - The originator of the movement is Dr, Hen: .Reynolds, who graduated in his class (eecund, I think) st Harvard, cote.ed upon the successful practice of medi cine in the city of Baugor, Maine, and con.tinted in the exercise of his profession for twelve years, For the last three and à half years, he had Leen going down hill at à rapid rate, until he fost his practice, had the delirium tremens twice, and was in all respects à firat-êlans sot.But be had the common desire of the drunkard to reform, and had resorted to the usual expedients to break away from the degradiny habit; had heen before a Justice of the peace and sworn vif,\" ali to no purpose, and it was not till symp.tous of the dreaded delirium again appeared that he was ensbled to throw off the sc!f-im.posed yoke.In an agony of despair he threw himself u his knees and besought the Saviour he hadso long neglected to save him frum the terrible cup.1le then repaired to the hall where women were carrying on a crusade in a somewhat conservative manner, confining their efforts ty a daily public prayer-meeting, and enlisted their wymp.thies.Frow that day he has been a reformed van, Being anxious to de something in the wav of rescuing « thers, he hit upou the Red Ritbos movement, as a means oalculated to mske tem- wrance pointiar, and the resulta reached thus ar seen to justify his most sanguine exits.tions, Uonsidered :.- à public speaker, he is far from a success ; yet wherever he gues reform takes root and thriver, the gecret of his success Loing, I (bink, tbat\u2018\u2018th- fields are ripe for the har.vet,\u201d and are hat wilting for some one th take the fead.He tells the plain, simple story «fone who has lost reputation, money, credit, health and friends through strony rink: The motto of the onleris ** Dare todo Risht,\u201d ita badge is a red ribbon tied in the button- le.The pledge reads thus (printed in rod} \u2014 Reform Club-** We, the undersigned, fr our own sud the good of the age in which we live, hereby promise and en , by the help of Almighty God, to sbstein from buying.sell ing or using alcoholic or malt beverages, wine and cider included.\u201d All ruales, * from the age of vightesn t: the age of one hundred and ten,\u201d Dr.Reynolds said, are eligible to membership, and in this vile lage the Club adopted a by-law, allowing :ll to come in who were past the age of ten.Business meetings ave held once à week, to which all are invited, and on Sunday afternoon A perance meeting is mated do its whole duty, fur I am acquainted with ses- eral members of churches in good standing, said churches being of the most strict kind, who con- aider it no harm to take an occasional glass of beer or whiskey, anid who put into practice their theory.Indeed, it in notorious, that the pastor of a large and influential ()) church in this village not only takes his beer and wine, snd plays billiards, but calls to the bar and treats sume who have not yet attained to their majority.Tam glad to be able to state.however, that tmany are considering the maîter in its true light and have resolved to get out of the way, and use their influence to promote pot merely tem: perance but total abstinence.The young men go out into the country and organise clubs wherever it in convenient, and in our town started a temperance restaurant reading-room.Before closing, I ought to state that this or der was originally {tended to embrace reformed drunkards only, but so many wanted t> joi, claiming to be reformed meu, whose sins in this direstion had not been great, and many of the clergy wanted to participate, that it was resolved to admit everybody.The lation here is priocipally Osnadian, and in justice to yourselves, Memsrs.Editors, want to eay that your efforts to establish per- lodicals of sterling worth are highly appreciated by sa many as are aware of the acts.ours ti ; A, Lexington, Mick.SELECTIONS.\u2014 There was ones an eolipes of the sum, and Jock Laird avd Jean, his wife, were sitting al the fre thinklog the world was coming to an end, Says Jean, \"Jf we had only had the pig aud the twa bye seit, I wadne cared.\u201d \u2018Father, are thers aay boys le Perilame wy son.Why do you ask me that question ¥* \u2018* Because the papers said the other day that the members kicked Mr.Hrown's Bill eut of the House.\u2014 Here Is a prudent man, with sn eye bo contin.geaeles, who advertincain an English paper: \u2018 4Rin.< Bpeolal Challenge.\u2019 à magoifoent machiae, made te say order this spring, steel baoMbone, oyele henriage, Catier's patent break, very handsome, splendid eon\u2019 dition.Cost me 216; would accept handsome atarcatons to be erovied in Lower Norwosd Cemetery In exchange, or cash offers; short of cash ealy reaton.- 92034.\" \u2014 That discretion 19 the better part of valour is itaeirated by the following frem the Petrott Vosce: Aldermas Jacob has asserted $0 8 brother alderman thai he intended thresbi the News tegorter who attends thé mecting of council.Thot little job tue aldermas c ver.never do, for that reporter Inn pedesiriac of no mess qualities and when forced to 1 be has no couscientions scrapies againal resort: .Rampars, M.D, ug te that means of defonte.-John H.Tick ie experioncing the troubles thal environ tbe hapless heir to millions.Hethowed s Man Frunciece reporter the other day two huge bundles of letters.thirty new-found beirs, each of whom was able to prove himself of herself the next of king but would onmpromise on reasonable terms.Haif of them came from some je other half from people In the world, most of be ment unforte: whem are professions) beggar.AN aing to the it [same tune: \u201c Youowe me monep besause you have more lhan yon cas spend on yourself.\" Avcusr 2, 1817.THE MONTREAL WEEKLY WITNESS _\u2014> of the onest, and i and that i > of chants subee 2 - \u2018Blick ; is to ; \" r Cotemporary Press.|b iti hoetoun a we (Fribvne) do It a this polat wih! THE GREAT RAILWAY STRIKE.paras Tan eel Bickle tnt them, dont (al aes es Pry NS tend ie Lite vi ba had botfer bave noue ove had meine enmity ith thode wo ir em \u2014 interests, ad charging pistols at tae soldiers f Codage À vAersed the in the breast, pase slow boo any further.Hho sald, ee: am oinclde entinly Tih ve bave slready ot |g DIFVICULTY ON THE GREAT|, ruousss chargiag platols at ts dobar din front be.rating bis heart He Tell a corpee to the de THE QUEBEC GOVERNMENT AC- |you can bave your trape* He dared me te come lative interference\u2014we Sxcertlon\u2014that of \u2018eels WESTERN TIDED OVER.1 MEN WERE IMMEDIATELY BNROLLED.ly ony rocks, with which a number of the walk ° ESSORY TO FELONY! sboard, and sl did not want any mu uy wout |the Union only because wo believe that frost The thre i oo the Great West Loves laborers, whe, St al sed te arte soldiers wers hit, and Sergeant Beruard, of the \u2018The third fetality at this punt was the kill bark warran Uni ; toned ; ; team .; CsIMA ENCOURAGED AND THB CITIZEN ROBYA> 071 could ave bad him med ad.lt tion would be \" practical vation of | Railway bave ron y bes tided over by a|08 Wedaesday, buarded every but that arrived are Le Ri ade pe i es ide hie v ho salen The aL rRoTmTION.bot {merely anand him Lelie Jules oa evil, wad that the evil acd LE eco prs Sir UE Geral Buparatead om Thunder, sad wiacied dbedin bn thee onde glven for robe then began, Thre whe oe tail prea hie.head, scattriug hit braius are usbec Mercury.save the .© case was de: i vc! ent, an r.Domville, (ie | : iugls .and iatel f \"> cided in my tavor, im cost me $40 to aot administration of, sad du per respect for, tel agent, visited London last Wedneeday, been arrested.Business is generally suspended lowed by a8 et, se a we Tro thw subewalk, casauy intiattass ss Jesth A oase has revemtly been ventilated fn the !the goods,amung which were an anchor and chain of mon in office to] LT diately held @ conference with And the citizens are reporting for duty as front and od 2 > x q + .; THE ross and the facts sppear tobe ell fuabiiabed, I lent the yacht.\u2018l'he attacbment on Me.Wil.que fo the former, and of ail ood citizen to [2 [the delegates appointed by the men.Large [police in large numbers, The Mayor has lasued Fe ery Land lft of the brigade, tin, \" wIO COMPUSE THE RIOTERS.TH ative a strongest light Lie nto Lun claim followed.The trus history of the they should Tr Bare.thors than a match for the tyusbers of the tien Sot on duty remalue about * broclumation enjulolog poten, y attache a 03 driving in, the, fas, retreating Hh.1e ay Dé ie oniy too vient ai te varie .yacht is as fullows :- ou \"is o - the yard night pendiog nrgotiationd, ant \u2018The rioters at Chicago on F attacked all was nt this Li Le Pitt hi Fe > tien\u2019 e sympathie this Frais 3 mouailant role prog and |\" had the \u2018yacht nearly all In frame before |\u201d emt reset hat wa cagtiot ap.{1708 to hear the result.About four v'chick vext! reporters wh were making enquiries concerning ows thes arma rare Par bs strikers of a large proportion of the population of this beaten by wv aileats.The come ie.Gitlord Bad asythir oo go with her.Parties pea to var.Montreal.cutemporary the Teue UTR & deciddon was arrived st, the bast] the strikers.Many of the reporters displayed Hutchinson's battery and a cavaicy embety city are with thy trikers, The nusaber of rail mitted ia 8 felony of very highest de-| went back où tue, and y vf agreement being à reduction on the fol- great bravery.Numeroue arrests were ps ulonc excepted.Within ive minutes after the quad employees ongaed, io the slating bere has e ot exc 4 ; but af je out- ¥ then a good many Lelier- Wu, t t iutaininge th scription Jess than capital, and one in the 8Ub- [iuy in the yacht advanced money tw compl nes, for sunpott a ustutainlug Lie BILE wing scale: W ranging from $30 to) two ufficers brought iu twelve.Div pri h .\u201c plete |rensonable, and, as we believe, truly UC: ny scale: ers brought iu twelve.e firing ceased the mob was back again, but re Hk pression of which society has the greatest inter per Gifford's ch \" ve 1 y ss th to reduced two and s half ; set of the affair they were juined by thousends of i ord's character was not then known, views.Forgetting the obligations of « od Jer Po ht, duced five per cent.WoeEN PILED SHOT (ipod for» while from further saute w nm the laburert and mechanics ont vf employment aud The articles procured by the crime were # land being Vice-C: .r i g Vice-Cowmodore of the Royal Cans- hip, wxtinguishing for the wument the flau frous lusld i ide 1 i ni i , \u201c 2 i 5 ad teide Ll, ir houses aud hurled 10 = by th cl lasned 0 Tia arrangemeut is to wndure fur three oaths, | 10 ltsiue Sod outside a a urled [ing upon theta, Iwas the moet persistent pre Sr crie ee K the cr cases watch and chain, The injured person learns|dian Club be was madé trustes, Everybod ; i f wrrant.Not.I - erybody Christian charity in a whirlpool of sugry pas: 4 tH 3 Hevectiv : crimisately a 4 here te ete nt Not, got certiioates of stock sad In the epers wars sions, and bug wise cuunsele i| The Company stuck unt foe nix | oathe, and vedic, shoves sud mud, Wt 2S SLSR Tivatensut Pitié, [ver tam \u201crca beiies these.fe, various cocupations, who dicusond duilars yearly for police service, be Z stipulation that she was to be sold six months judgment to the winds, it © cries h his point seein z fault {a found with the Mayor's orders to avoid The beizad* re uined on the field of battle untili ave auficred reduction of wag 1 are I I ait b «ie after sho left Cobourg, whether be won he |*\" vip tho duge of war\u201d ia the follwing intlam- difference, \u201cLhe men arged Via thres months |; The L G clock, when they were ordered Ly General cred a reduction of wages 1 late, are In told he can have nei + Sarre \"the robb oF Queer\u2019s cup or not.Whatever she brouzbt wss matory language :\u2014 ought to bring better tines fur the Company.| Hine, | .relict fv that if the mob could bey, ose FUER JAE BEL 0d hoe, a juining a sullen teuper with their employers, sad with bin property mor à warrsat fo svrat (36 FEET to be delased an dividend vor sho Lrouhh was matory Iunguage wa aclections illus ThE crups woild be by that Lime 1b RE 0 wads to uderstand that mo bisuk carries wich is a building io which vas Sai tue capitalist genvraliv.They fuse hil {hey without paying for i, She eprived fe shown [1h Trominhon } re Boch ore he ed dus rue Wotngan artices dramits money ve ond Hoek, and they Wer bo be weds a that the trou |Borvud Brigade ee a an th eb the prope es ke In ere is able to the Domintun Bak of Canada, $1,700 ; Gifford, for the Last four ur five weeks: ** Wuiviag, for would be as well able at the eu of three months bave vers \" Tw uo erato : t roe VT wan thie retreat that was the grost mistake think is an attempt of the railroad men to right Dr TE wt il SH at rte ic lhe enh he od ply fl de leo a a ish we uty i eh Ht Smt Be Be ed the mine: ol , among stockholders.Her cost |() iu the si vi ich in they woul ho of nix woptha.NOT WITH THKIK HEST ALM immediately after tb been fired futo th » rave ferme ve ë sde au give & tirer ae waa about 815,000.She was my model entirely.be formally ene we! eich pe lat tho Company waived the puint.The nego: and direst effect, and the police will hereafter rat would probably ee ded at once, ment by [reckless and inflammatory talk.The eho to dive itt, those who can furnish the | belive Yay rhe can boat any rye yachts Thitted to ask whether the True Witness really in wie a lewssatiy, sod fo \u201carty \u201cpare no pire ven The sen of Chicago's local and the fmuense destruction of property thai dE acter of the riots is shown by ood 3 el Ivan could on me ath 7 sois ' un bl .| var now in the vicinit, Arch d after: bec: ted.\u201d 1 y Li : portées ne iad he: Te na time allowance, pul nade s mistake bn not carry.cata that to Peary de action of the secined {Linpoaed ty meet qe other ja a fair wd Haitend purent, four miles mony.The meb Phi laderphisns wpent the \"ig be fa tbe round.yolhe moh which weslled th Sth Hasluant, .: ng her rudder er aft, Uiffurd gets bier rowdy element iu Montreal?Or that the reasonable wanavr.eB) \u2018 an gathering early on Friday, but not in|bouse and adjoining depot wupperless, their com- % ou\" bo \u2018 ve, erty is recovered, but the culprits are leit st|away I don't know what be will do with her.He buri : real?Ur GI announced, and it was found that no further , ; \u2018 com lLut was à Miscellaneous assemblage of laburers A .burisl of the victim of a riot in that city, with ' great force, At noon it was reported that misery supplies being captured immediately ; - large Now, when stolen goods are found in & lac no right to refuse me admittance aboard as ail the paraphernalia and ffenoive diaplogs ig- trouble existed, there was great sense of relief] crowds wer pitberiog far out in Prince street, under their «yes within a huodred yards vf the Us crue ty oat ae Snel man's possesion it is presumption that be Ls|T am the third largest stockholder, and offered to ; : felt in the city, ae for several days there and copteuplated descent with the stuck yards round-b Is bout 7.50 8 v'clock mi ihe ie, od ts dy of the ots ara ae ont fo $1200 my ante ieee, Including Cleat wn Orne bros win jor [Pad Desh 8 ron wpb a a wel | Ki fared iwc oran on id be io fie b, the.care, Tos Soul the dace çeten EE en aan y .\u201c , î 4 | in praising the moderati nel ell Street north of the viaduct.Neue are running There were then in the round house inclssvre , _ den this rule there ars few exceptions, and the case im for wages.Out upon auch raving nouvease! Wiliorls|a2 the pacifis epirit exbibitel Uy the Leads of | ç ning nue Last night.Some were thieves and rowdies, and would we b od in silence th pacific spirit ex! y vf! on the Clinton and Jefferson route Junat où bt, {the two brigades with their Gatling guns A Te mention hat of Mr.Latter, Tan got one of Bt wiry tie, expromings depastusente _\u2014_ jas Jus J.White, raember vf the Chicago Diet LL fie Hiatebieon Artillery witly twos pieces.bas my wre wurkiogmen, usually well behivel stitutes & highly cri offence on the part INTCLERANCE IN MONTREAL.of our contemporary ; but when we see (and in THE CHICAGO RIOT, of Trade, was atrolling at Lowndale, a suburb.About midnight, cars filled with burning | pred (FRE 4 hart that 1m fus ofthe Provincial Police employed by the De- nother articly feel bowod to endeavor to frus- The mob which gathered on the South Sid an village, be arrested & suspicious character sud [eval and petroleum were run by the mol bor yelled o br i that most of the Souchervile ministration.The injuzed part (Toronto Glole.) trate) sn attempt wade to fasten even upon the Chicago.showed athe bravado fenrless Ep hail bim taken some distance, when the tranp|dowe tbe track aud agninst the rand-house, orge ag feted lines pel = rad the y : began to resist, and suddenly drew his revolver, 8 large building near the round house, which soir, Tost night hol evidently money enuugh Rickard Lavrier, spplied for his property.| It t1.cve be ome part of the Dominion ia which Archlishop vf this city esponsibility for the) g teed.Wh lice charg waa told fe ave où ; Save it on the convictions spirit of tolerance towasde Proteutantiatn, ever views enunciated by the True Witness, tis dos death Jot\u2019 not ons sed Fest INSTANTLY KILLED HIS CAPTOR was soon in flames The round-b o the party who cls it, or a the perion in, Ia te ke \u2018 aire aod, leat soncillatorr rely and e publie tete ee and prepared A another encounter at 16th! and then escaped.Tahar he dines pb re > oss possession it been, that ny, orm y ex) it surely is in the \u201c : I street, and the Halstead street Viaduct, \u201che \u2018I'here has beet i i siace Bet, , fri i i the wan the Provincial Police, in other words Province of Quebec.Not only den the Catholic conduct which, uder auy circumstances, would interchange vf rhots and shout 1 maoteeded.\u201crhe Thursls afternon., es is ie of moldiers of de buse belonidug to the r I Mere ors has ne ie the Provincial (Government, bad permitted to ea: population rejoico in the pomession of an enor; be essentially wrong, aud which, clecumutanced lice Leiug reinloroed, bioke Luto the nb | the riot t iu stated that the total number killed gonpaay.Aun belonging to the tution lout of their bands.The prejudics against the mous majority, but recent «vents in the capital I , | was nine ; only à few were wounded.The pre-|lauted by the riuters within one prudred yards Baltimore and Oblo among the working to bay whiskey.for they were ball druok.Some of the strikers affirm that they and their An we are, is not on WITH A LOUD VELL, cape.à .pe ., ; he Ontario we kuow of n° Catholics who sympa- î - Re i his affair took place in the city of Quebec, of ia Province, bus been ot nature to rebukke Lire with tbe violent Lod Tefen antory IPE Reinforcements of à new of police aad a $3UHUD \u2018taken was sufficient t) preserve the city of the rvund-house, and loaded to the maozzle clunaus, and to some extent surg de in the and the city police were the persons riginally any displays tant feeling.We can easily and inflan re squad police an from the violence of the mol ; ñ high alka of life, 1 hed 3nd red of the case, and_ who had discovered imagine that the determination bot to march où fried by tbe True Witness.Throughout the company of armed cavalry began a deadly an.e mot with cou linge and broken rails.That gun was 'Étiony fund of aymapathy ta Lat the besinning where the property was to be found,and it was so the Twelfth required t effort of seif-re.length an breadth of this Province the |slaught.Au exaggerated report said that twelve MICHIGAN CENTRAL has \u2018 ds iualeure Papers to the contrary Tt was currently elieved that the pulicy of the Company bas been to starve it meu in order to \u201cPwelth\u201d passed ouietly by, yet no Catholic were killed and a bundred and tifty wwanded.|is running all passenge i ie 2 had to atl # \u20ac persecution, \u201cnur felt himself The mob soon gathered again, Que gaux ran à | West.au a hi rase the fre foe.Vato J dead beside h when the gray moroîng dawn gavel up its ten per cent, dividende.There is po trailed at the heel of au Uranve sacendancy.Lassner a fo street, dad ie to be ready to yori with aul) force 8 soon pe race pt ci il ful Ssriamanblps of the they dust that this prejudice was the real basis of \u2014 a J escape, oI ms is certain that the Company's property|.A » Fi BALOCY the authreak, espe > vi This case, one of great and manifest hardship, apyesls might bave been, should have protected ORANGEMEN'S RIGHTS.ge windowe sod furniture several care The here will be protected from the ny frets cryuled on Marie belles als the ground in thele [09% ES I rate men Los sé as calls for some remarks.them against taunts and insults from all whopre-1 go Wi £ the 25th, af lishing econ regiment o unt Police, and the; CHICAGO, BUKLISGTON AND QUINCY Ne \u2026 endeavor or \u20ac re I At no time were ort, tr Qur system of administration in criminal jus- tend to spuak iu behalf of Catholic sentiment.ù he rue Witness of the 5th, [Ler pul bles regular veteran force uh bicago were un Abe, senger trains ag at nh inex be = ers u he round ue sinothered or tices peculiar to this Province, and any impor.Kight-minded persons of all persuasions will, the Act probibitiug the administering of uathein scene, The Governor then applisd for United passengur Lsins es feeighe traine OF Quiney sourched by smoke or fire, as ae been represent |OpINTONS OF THE AMERICAN PRESS tant change in it should be made in the most therefore, read with Geep regret such attacks as BIL: und pecret mucictien, says :\u2014\"* We bave States troope.In respons- tothe Governor's ap | Uf ak She nt a ve Fo yet run foul OD the oontrarse said Licutecant El- th en ry a publie manner ible, and mot by secret those which the Montreal True Witness makes rightr\u2014sulemn and sacred righte\u2014the Orange: plication, the United States troops in the city, ng.ake Shore an ichigan Southern ia|liutt, with a lauch, We like to have froze to {New York Herald) orders suddecly cominunicated to private per-|upon men who at all events were entitlad to th | IB hove as a body none, and yet we sre coully numbering 600, were placed a the disposal of the SERB bis ors through as vaunl.but frelghts death Atlaylight, however, we beçan tothink] We are not surprised that the complaints of waked fo surrender all we powacss to allay the Mayor.Sume cutting of tel ph wiresoccurrel | are stall on that lie, Un the Clicago, Kock about getting out.sud at 7 o'clock, after apikity {the train wen meet with so much sympathy sons.Under our system prosecution for feluny courtesy of silence.: ; ; i Pacifi : ; ; 4 \u2018 ted yjcourtesy lence, 4 e]biteer feuds which are growing up wound un, {on the Chicagoand North-Western Railroad, aud Tolan] aml Pacific business is resumed on every the two guns of Hutchinson's Battery and with from thei 1 , y has ever been conducted from beginning to end We hope the Catholics of this Praviace will the mol attempted to prevent the telegraph force, ach, and in evety department.The Chi.drawing our outposts the division left the round ines their Fri adn on be i \u20ac vind on information given by them to the Pro- atraint on the part vf Orangemen.The vincial Police, who are to receive all \u2018communi- fact thet they were largely influenced in yielding cations of this kind, in order to give them some- Ly appeals {from representative Catholics, how- thing to do besides bullying the Oka Indiuns, |ever mistakvn the policy which dictated those i .It is useless t: liment t = : ; at the publi amcen introduces just enough of the \u201cbravery;\u201d Tis ile to proeved, Hackett for bis Bever culisent to this lumiliation.There is, in| replacing them, All (cago and Forth: Western shibough all dis.House facteur.marching Ly fours iu cxltisn over the countey vow kuow what want is who \" ron 2 e \u201c| our opinion, a better way out of the difficu't, \u2018TGA MAK s have subsided, are only run-down Penostrect.ver k it before, sud Euglish system to diminish the expenses of ness docs, tu denounce the \u201cmanner\u201d of Mack.26 (BRE REUSE EU ovr the law wd) THE C1GAY SIAKERS ig on some branches, \"The Chicago, Al \u201cIt was en this march that we lost all the never knew it before.nen men he are Ln .; ck.If ive dispersed ta d 8t.Louis still i .vi i x wi .3 : the probibition of Urange parades.We hope of the city bave struck.[he police «lisp on and St.Louis still remains quiet, Ant |men who were killed or wounded daring our] wory of other men abso suffering, or cla , 0 : 1 t J that this wi We Babel the crowd'on Haletead streot, where fights co will not ve an li \u20ac il ata, rittalie, tthe che y of other men also auffering, or claiming to Erbin sll beet er enable bi do [man Le te eens homdrede of ll Saat hi will be dome, ml if the Ln there curred Thursday marvin, ani encre TL Rien tT sk ned se DE eus, Wo mes | ral date M a is Ce us 4 pe : 3} Tawa eee i Jdice patrolling that sec: | ; di in te 0 re] bout a ; .ct dE Eee net 9 ta ei petty he SL a a LE ey er ert ee da + th 3 tf .vere eports she iat the strike is ir.WAY! wi ; ; and part of this convenience to him and thew; on, but heing driven to bay is to be murdered in| 1 face of any disloyal opposition, from Orange- arte A Sénior but ps the gum bave tually over, all being quiet in Pittsburg and SE.Ce en and windows and hotse Hut we wih to © Ho ja time that we should all consider 3D.frum thei fricuda, ur, from auy misguided Lone with Bo a tman bas been Lévis, tratfic having heeu resumed, abd erery.ur puen returning the fire and inflicting justice in favor of crime, to throw another ett'a death as \u2018\u2018unfair and unmaply.\u201d Ifaman portion of expenses on private persons, and to| who interferes to protect a friend, man or wo- | the attenti.o of honest 4 upon na we march mi land respectable workicimen Lo au important wt lacome them to conuata {9 kiving warrants to pecls Who Know ot things ba a a Tanatics who may support them,\u201d i ki hi vu.istinetion which it d nothing about the cares.Is it mot monstrous wha ings have come to, and Low in future peo- uw ar .; i ith.h : * (hing working smoothly, while at uther pointajy; - ; : on | distinction which it dow that a man is compelled first to pay for justice, ple whose lives are worth anythiog to society Ie uses the following strong language = tahen bo he fis wh belts made preparations have been made to quell oy in siderably mare loss un theirs qallants than they ovetlouk, It is ou thing to aywpithic: with » and then to bave whole case taken out of canbe protected, Hackett had been to a chur \u201cThe (\u2018atholics of thin province want Home hots The last attempt to jail prisoners, several ho tx) ve at the shortest notice, Cunriderable jet goat a honee from which an vntrualy easy elke, an ty uid te prier rave © it > rouble may be expected among the cual miners| fire procecded with the Gatlings, the cp quite arraice aid à vers EE ase in Taw: his hands, and justice consequently frustrated, where nobedy needed to go who did not care to Rule cn this question of Orange parades.The on lo: in number, was successful 0: Ww the order of the Attorsey-General.Under hear, If the sermon were ever so intemperate C\u2018atholics of this province are the best judges of The pads ut at Haltead street, \u201cfat only of Dennsylvania and Indiana, several thou-: they wer 1 When we resched the United 1 Mr, Angers\u2019 system there is no kind of justice and obnoxious it was addressed to none but those their own affairs and they are unanimous in! wbich seemed to be the rallying point of the sand meü having struck for higher wages, | teres renal \u201cwr ui fumed dus je don Ty less actions.À whatever fur tbe ponr, In this very case we|Whw professed to be in rympathy with the their opposition to Orange displays.What av~ trikers aud mob.The pdice complained that | Owing w the enginehouse near Dan-lMajur Dutfinatn \u201c ore maudant, a b DF [sympathy of the have instanced, the men scem to have neglected preacher ; and if Hackett carried a lethal wea-|swers in New York, in Boston, or in Toronto, |they were ; mon, Da, having been fired by some dis- thay his i Fd Pa, pu i ive th \u201coh Y e if the train men wi all care About their booty, under the belief that pon, it must Le admitted that the warnings ho may not asswer bere.The Catholics of Mont SHOT AND STUSED DOWN euinsd strikers on Sunday ; the operatives topped Sony upon bin a piping Saat pg her tented themselves wil rv the znan they robbed could not find means to re- and his friends had received of possible outrage real are quite able to take care of (hemselves, |.that vicinity, as tlie rivters, whenever the mi- work and all work is now suspended, thus cute |, Lo ae contd bay ld the Arvenal, alusir- sentation of their grievances tu the public cover their spoils from their hands, Wo trust fully explained an act not otherwise commend.and uvre, they are determined to do it.They ob Pain peared tacked them in that localit tiog off all means of shipment of coal by the! pie\" tuated for defence, against all Pittabune ond to the stockbobders of the companies, Mr, Laurier will hring an action of damages able, Nor was the excitement to which Hack- are resolved to give the Orangemen a touch vf ned Dele, À Tümes reporter \u2014 Pennsylvania road, which was sending 50,000 From there, after leaving our wounded iu he they could Lave cariel the aympathy of the ayninst she Government which Las thus foully ett's death gave rise at all to be wondered at.that experieuce which the Ulster fanaticn infict.| ttacked on Halstead Ara an ao vaste à week to market, The mine engineers,| Arsenal, we marche her the bridge into try with them, awl undoubtedly, Ln abused justice, and morslly become accessury If the Orangemen did pass resolutions couched ed upon the Catholic people of Irgland, We want jn Oe c£ tbe police has been da | firemen snd pumpmen of the Delaware Hul-| Spa: bare, where we were kind! rented and PTE vould in euch case have been inclinvd after the fact in felony.The encours, etnent to in & defiant spirit, who can be astonished ?They peace Dut it hall not be af the escrfice o onaly wounded.TES Lille Packing oe mon Company also struck on Sunday, and the ives foal Te the villagers \u201ctes à march of t farce the railrout manag-re, ty come Wm crime, and Lhe withdrawal of protection from had sacrificed a gond deal to peace, and here was honor.The Catholics of this province are more any men att-mptet work Thursday morning, mies, like those of the Lackawanns Company.shout twcl-e miles we reached a place called tate le arrangement with their peop on nowbers of citizens, which will result from this the fruit of thelr onuoession\u2014a comrade murder.peculiarly circumatanced than are the Catholics Pot were driven off by the mul.815.000, 1° rapidly flooding.How the coal trade of Rewa's Grove, about five a'clack on Sunday after- this vantage eround they bave { rieited by order are something (rghtlal to contemplate | diy Stu Be SE LET oT ihe True] the ther part of the Dominion, of 148 0 morta of mest was spied in this tai | Lorrain will a, ected DF Shoe sack | moony aifrie there after 80 Sa ore, Etat, She de ot der tbe syaatby or be e an: if there no 0 quotil e warlike of the True the contivent of America.Here ave cer- roubles ma ue e fact tha - mi ; ç > , y that, quotiog ey cer ment.J Ty ty ed à mile further to à bill near Claremont.cf auy bomorabie or intelligent workingtuan any.in the interim, next winter (likely to be one un- Witness to resist \u2018Orange aggreesion,\u201d Ît con- tain rights guaranteed to them by the articles of oa ; ; .jawaons, which generally sends 150,000 tons .5 1 i i i : ä i 5 ; incipal object in Gen.Hancock goin ON, .\" where the command bivouscked, and remained i dum - hav.exampled for distress) will reduce this city and its tinues : This ie a declaration of * war to the capitulation, and which prove that according to | over + Doousylvanis Railroad to fins Tore New pou ent bone last eck.A otis\u201d they.were ordered by Adju eral Where, 1 iss Fatal bien they [have made.de Sand Latta yesterdby morning to retum te Phular alupdant evidence to show that the strike was environs to à condition more resembling that of knife;\u201d the issue of the well-meant efforie to pre- sulemn treaty.a treat which Catholics are A ; age in the banda of the Basbi vent trouble on the Twelfth; the upshot of now arked to abandon Tune n few ragued fuot.|Pürg was to ald £1; Government in protecting, uuleus the difficulties between the men and theie | deiphia.\u201d us ut Basis than of & community dwelling under the Mayor Beaudry's refusal ti do bis duty, \u2018This pads invaded our streets & short time ago, that workmen io rebu the .The Ca\u2019 | employers are speedily settled much trouble and w prearranged, and was to take place simultane.is \u201cEli ven (on Thursday decided that the courta re to issue | misery will result, vusly on most of the great lives Il the men jerly rtrike may \u2018luserve the comuinnity.We believe « struck work had con- 7 British standard, that is ned by the fect in the first in- they have a right to the fall exercise of wri stance to cumpel respact for law, And now ligion.bi Tralee fe mot Interfered | _ The Mow ork Horid gives full accomata ol bave been ver ee they proces, they wold wT Te 1 Tit [Eee one a np cn | renier ce ete ht ee PH Sek ble ee CNT ee De at et | ani he aie be gite UNITED STATES.Yims, or, at all eveuts, parte processions, pa 0 last prt 20 tliat Catholics \u2018it two fren to enforce the orders od the courts.This bring?| PITTSBURG RIOTERS.while workmen were leaving Choir factories and \u201cal approval.As it is they have set at defiance FAILURAS TOR THE FIRST HaLr or 1877.-Tux|get rid, as they fancy, of s ditficulty by depriv- tions) endorse it.the rioters in igect per vo te Fede { Inan interview with Bishop Taig, at the hastening to their homes, the large bell in the not vuly the laws, Lut the conservative inatipela BLOW RETURN OF YROSFEKITY.ing both parties of that which they regard nan J vernment, The Cabinet nirver | episcopal residence to-day, be regret very ity Hall tower rang forth the ominous num- [of the cruatry.ot bers, one\u2014 five \u2014 one, which eve resident of the (New York Witacss) natural night and privilege.Thinispot the tirst a WHOLE FOWER OF THE GOVEREMENT much that #> many men whom he recognized as 7 : time such a Roopoenl bas been made, and even THE RETURN OF THE BRITISH FLEET ehould sustain the inarshals ia case of necessity, | Catholics tock part in the riotous proceedings city knew to be, not an slam of fire, but call] The Baltimore horror has heen repested in acted upon, The attempt to carry it outin Cana.TU BESIKA BAY.THE GUVEBNOB OF MIVMIGAY lof yesterday.He had been out among them tr arma, The nob rush to the armories, where Pittsburg.Ten men killed by à + liey from the dn bowever failed, Where te et \"The (Le Temps, Paris, July R) fasted a proclamation warning il persons to-day, and had succeeded in prevailing on wany the volunteers bn d reat dificult 7 in cvllecting trips in the street! It would secm aa if these usual jubilations of à successful candidate for The ret f th ko lish ect th from violently A enting on hitericring with the ba retin be wrk ur be arin in | paot eight p.m., the preparations being compet em Ea to te election or the funeral cortege of an unpopular f the ada he aE aridunt] to e entranie roperty or business of others, and urging Citi | pulses.He yesterday begged and pleaded far ©, the order was given for Company 1 to leave copetituted authorities.Itisdepiorable that an citizen may be just na offensive to some people, Casse of the Da s evilou ty fred y to the] eus to unite in vigoroas measures for the pre- La inter ptiom of ths war an lage Stand.the armory, the police having been previously | such sacrifice of Life should have been pondered en i of the Orangemen to ons part - amaze m5 the anul q y the usin Army.gervation of peace and order, and calliog upon.jp, RENE locomotive, ei face blackened Botitied tu open the doors and then stand a de.necessary by the blind fury of an unressuniox the turn out on St.Patrick's Day to the other.threatened.by Ce Case onterpris its ners es anil the Mayor to organize a volunteer | wf) 8 Pll em the fire, while great The door wan only wide enough to anit of the hates £1, expecially dv viable that any such A procession per 1s not a bad or wrong thing that the modération vec hy nat a force.At Jackson the Michican Central stilcre Lo a ee Svopped from bis forehesl, he Passage of two men at ence, and at their appear | thir oid appen in thie.anil of vopulse in- assuring, as wo gather from the regular Quarterly but one of those cpen displays of feeling and lis not à sufficient guarantee, the neceasition of toute pomsemsion Of dopo t and yards od to asked, in God's name, thors belonging to hia |3nce A perfect shower of missiles fell upon them, teliigenceland free educaticn.Butif the ixuorant Circular firstismued, The failures for the United sentiment moet intimately associated with the war sometimes depriving those who are carrying A eo ike % Detrn a flock then amung the mob to to their homes.followed by the more dendly contents of revolvers an wu vicious shall learn pour ice for all that Staten for the first six months of three years are institutions of Me country.When people it on of fres will : and fi sendn a naval force to leave.\u2018 : eh ke on he Deed and Toleds He was frequently interrupted by cries of \u2018Why and other émall arme.The utmost confusion en- 1.rebel against the law of the land i- suicide.the atated as follows : rocesa\u201d with the knowledge that their tunes Besika Day to remind the victor that he cannot lines o the Chicago an a Southern at! cuminencetd this riot * to which he replied,\u201d We sued.The militia seemed paralyzed, but, te-| twenty two lives that have so far been Tost will Seo.of Failures.Liabtisin, OF DaAges will irritate some! y else, il in better, nush his advantages very far without encounter an end.are not here to indulge in crimination or re-|EMDOE their comporare: marched out into the have been well spent.Prt batfof 1877.4740 iabikisie.|i, is true, they shomld stay at home.No doubt log à foo more formidable than the Turk.Lord THE EBIB RAILWAY eatin oto condenn this party aad up.rect.As they formed in line the first rank (Boston Journal.) PE ao iNTG.4.000 fon.15 000 the dis lay on the\u2019 T welfth, 3 Falling ie doubt Beaconsfield\u2019 Cabinet thus shows that, in spite commenced to receive local and through western bald that.There doubtieas Juve been tacle un drew ap their figs and ue 8 deadly souer Our diapatchea from various points in Pena: Pa re ed at .ree tor thin mers 5 of the popular agitation raised syainst it by Mr.freight at all its stations in New York city on both sides.nly we all deplore that aay |e C08 HO 4 crowd temporarily in every |sylvanis snd Maryland leave no doubt that months of 1876 wers exceptionally large, and It is evident that the businees of the country» generally only, very slowly improves.The results of the first haif of the present Jour are by no means entirely satisfactory.Neither in extent or profitableness are there many vigna of improvement ; while in the recovery or stability of values, the indications are uncertain, and not un- frequently the tendency is still decidedly downward.eo statistics of failures, also, which are periodically furnished to the public by the Mercantile Agency of R.G.Dun & Co., ate not re.culls a story of conquest sod defeat better Gladstone, it has not deviated from the line| Thursday, it being th i lives have bee ficed.g the first in that respect to) lives have n sacri ; Any ols hav \\ forgotten.But nelther badges bor tunes which it had marked out for itself, Ita policy | raise a eg LA guueral order bas ao) A Voice\u201c What dil the Dbiladelphia direction.these vallrond rois Dave alreml bec oe hence it is inferred that, so far aa the number is ree ro, anybody.They may be re-|is, moreover, both intelligible and legitimate, It Doen issued by the company to ita agents, re- soldiers begin firing for, end wby did they kill THE MOB RALLY.iperty.and probably the tnost injurious to the concerned, the failures in the first six months of Ta t by good taste, but people must |at first demanded the status quo, with guarantees suming the sale of tickets to all pointe on the | innocent women and children ?.A few icoments\u2019 delay on the part of the (égérie of the cuuntry, that ever nc - 1877 are larger than for any, previous similar pe- udge for themselves whether they will conform far the Christians which should not in any way |main line and branches, a to western cities| Another\u2014\u2018* Where'a General D'earson : We eroopa eoabled the mob 7 tim w the ore among us in time of ey have riod.Tn Lh aggregate of Mabilitios » decline is to food tate or not.Who is to judge where infringe the territorial integrity of the country over such of its conn y lines as are at pre: Want to get hold of him be ee and cellars where they bad taken | meds qe which kr all discussion of noticeable, thouzh for the past quarter the aver- bibi tobedrawn?tis Impos ble to pro or the sovereignty of the Sultan.Subsequently, rent running passenger trains.Employees along Bishop Taig replied :\u2014\u201c I come before youl refuge, ard a second attack was made, not only their arigin erly Irrelevant now.Whether age indebtedness is more than maintained, as bi Er pat on ; what, o is to be in- awing tothe resistance of the Porte, the Koglish the line have gone to work with alacrity even at a a citizen at the request of citizens meeting in| 1\" hricks and stones, but with amerotie the strikers \u2018on the raifruads had valid grievances will bo seen by the following interesting table emt d with the function » f saying what pre Cabinet declared that it would not fight either [the reduced rate.At a meeting of the strikers at interest of law and order.I do not want 40,5, 010 rme This was repulsed, as had been the|nr not, when they became rioters they threw ous shall or shall not be 718 a |fcr nr againat Turkey, but Would for the future Albany, on Thursday evening, the speakers Le ot what ie past.lives that have been mac 11e en he bousee in the neighberbond were away their whule cause and forfeited all oxcury iret Quarter, Sbeurd attem; i b al $ RS.and to site ot One oo ete confine facil to ptectin British interests.and,| coUNSALLED PEACE AND NO LAWLESS ACTS.riiced, sad irons that has been destroyed pierced with bullets, and the windows for a|and all claim tur the sympathies of right minded $ Na et] amevst of AEM\u201d regurdleas of the opinl tons consequentiy, ven Russia resolved tonct alone, à guggestion vas ted that Mayor Banks .a Ditare ebatiered ; the street was strewn with men.They became violators of the law, and, Liabilities.LIAO esa of the opinions or sympathies of those it did not heaitate to mark out limits for her, presen ; y.you about ovneerns your welfare for the fu- \u201d 1 the dead snd del w hei invoked } ares ties.who engage in them.That is what we have d a à hind agreed to present the petition of citizens of gure,\u201d debris, and the dead aud woun ei] were left to the extent of their power, invoked anarcuy Re \u2018And now that the Ottoman territory is invaded, hd SPCR OEE E11 cod to reatore \u201cA Votoe\u2014t Go on, air.Well listen.AE on bid where they fell.All thiatime snd bloodshed, an Lirfied the whole community, the tronps bad moved but à few yards from the The terrible rapidity with which they betook coma to id befs late reduction, i i am ; ve Sale Biron ore be tn sed| The Dishop coutioted: oI am authorized armery and the crowd was constantly sugument: themselves to ipcomdiarism, to the wanton de.1 #417006 31.784 r long experience in Ontario, where {he English Government shuws its anxiety to do ; 8 23.034 lrotestants are in n majority ; that is the onl oi Tion| 8838074] 10010 |true course to take in Quebec, where the Cathe.fo things - prepare à peaceful Drea or Los raiiroad folks to give it favorable considera- | to sy to you that you will btain a redress of J y is | Second Quarter.lice are in à majority.may allow ber to treat and to maintain ie tion.Thin suggestion met the universal appro- your grievances i it is in the power of the ed by people hurrying to the spt in search of struction snd village of property on a fearful \u2014_\u2014 Bot-hendeé writers may fume and bluster, |own ascendancy in the Mediterranean in oase val of the meeting.Mitideus of Pittabune ta bring that result friends whom they feared might be in the scale, only shows that they have divested them- § Roof Amonet at STITT [a0 temporizing peopls may mildly deprecate.Rusia should threaten it by her pretenrions The mob attempted to fire freight cars on the [shout melec, news of which had reached all sections of elven of every character except that of the ene- * ral) {athe Ha bop that is what inevitably be the end of 1p her efforts to restore pence and th \u2018maintain Chics, Burl ad Quincy brack 0% A Vojer What hae Tom Scott got to say on 007 in an incredible short tin Afte; mies of the public peace.eee [| | this matter.It da quite certain that the sup: tho status quo as far ae possible, Kogland will Jhuredey night by burning some combuatibles about it ?leaving the Are eat soldiers marched (New York Tribune} 135 wae sans pression of processions carrying orange colors In {have with fer the Austro-Hungarian Empire, in one car.The employees put out tbe bre.Dishop\u2014The committee hasnot yet conferred Tht roan lod.by oe howling * ob.om iy One fact will be generally recognized, that \u201climo 6008007 23975 ane Province tim of those irresistible de- whoes interests in thin respect are identical with Citizens with the raiirond officiala, It intend to dr 40 24 ing at iors rect Ker rete again thie in nt a mach 8 rol of honest labor Accord] Sircular td green hers.But therein reason to fear th at even their UGCABDED EVRAT STARET sont a4 we have your assistance.can say to .: , against the tyranny of capital, as the ous ing to the Cf before ur, all the jor jy others.Both pastics woul 1 thes be , on the authority of the citisens whom I attacked.1% waa nearly nine oclock, andtbe lat isileness and vice which seize upon the oppor.fg int cfforta may prove powerless, Russia will |and store.you, hronged with le in th starting under the sense of an cqual wrong ; jo ; resen i streets were thro! with penple in the pur- ity of isturbance vf th 1 relatic both Told probable endeaves to hver-ride \u20ac silege the immensity of du ort ° bar had te ite série on the Delawars, Lackawsans on Tent va that Te Te vu th e at un arrondie the Len employer wd Cinyees th inwagurate agree to defy tbe law, and the law would hecome compeneation will be we pointed out from the|iranch of industry In Lack ry Valley.everything in their power to get you back FOUT tronps, au every moment or two a Hash of mus- 7; ok and aatechy.and make soemlen fo ler conditions seem to favor better times, yet there appear to be fatal harriers to their return.These conditions are briefly stated to be good pe, high prices therefor ; small itoporte.|, dead-letter, as it line elsewbere.If the J, bo, 3 itd \" = 4 $e fii 1 far ev: h 1 that \" ; id wages.(Applause and shouts, * That is all : , abundant\u2019 and cheap money ; à sited pojical en of Montreal, in view of the excite A ha tres gucnta Dave prove ne Danube The pine beld \u2018a meeting Ie Thursday, a\u201d We want \u201d « Be us à chance to live !\") Ector and the rattling of 8 volley added to the |p gon aginuos who undertake to represent the mise of another most abundant harvest, Hub ment thelr march would provoke, choose volun-| 4nd the Balkans from the Turkish rule, and ea hid that Dem prasent, die ve ution waa Rishop \u2014 Give us twenty-four hours to consult Wild tumult of e scene, interceta of laboring men without ever doing an Cironlar adds : tarily to foregn it, would exhioié a tablish in it virtually à Russian protectorate : |j «pted pat + hat thay wl ore return: yuh the railroad company, and for God's sake DEAPERATE FIOBTINC.honest day's work from year's end v2 year's end, \u201c The experience of the past does mot permit Me | conras of PA der.But if ther de to obtain the free passage of the Dos ng to worl sop these fires.Between Gay aud C'alvert, on Baltimore street, and in the second place, the vagabond class who the hope all this will bring around a pros- marching.language of such|phorua and the Dardanelles; sad to pre STARVATION WAuBS, t thia juncture the roar of flames became al- 14 \"(ht location all the ne per offices re embrace this opportunity for szcitemment an rie papers as the True Witness in the surest meava pase, the conquest of À for the ineers and pump bande most deafening, and the cries of the mob were in of inducing them to port in so doing\u2014they pans.by Ae: or hala Afmenia, for wae g Mice Ty drew their que Le da struck = keeping with \u2018the raging element, The crowd situsted, the roots actually, fought their mel [of these lines, have had their brief day of it.Tuet be protected, if ft takes very militinman ihe programme settled at Bt.Peterburg gan flooding.IF aljowred to \u2018become fonded, it stood and looked at the reverend gentleman, but ser dot ad D reached.not cease until] ucts great and sulden chullitions of excite- in C: a to protect them, and overawe those [on the day when war wae resolved npon.The will take à year to prepare them for work |2008 tiring of this thay started helter skelter to + depo roent and anger exhaust themselves of their own us or sathifactory trade.metbing more needed ; but what the true remedy ks none has yot discovered.Numerous explanations are, of course, at band ; and it is eloquently urged who would x Cl : provoke disorder, The heated Jigen) Indeed, make ret of thi burn more freight cars and renew the work of THE MARCH OF DEATH, force.Eran Shi wh SOB nT te ek NET aS BH BE tin ele hd, | lho th he pte pm op La Da li SE > hy 3 at Ma: enu- th 2 i th torial in.: mob'e hel ate spent last night in the tartli idencea nf the te fatalities of hope a tinal read, eut of relations .fact remains that fn the presence, of all favoriog break the Treaty of Paria Ane the o CANADA SOUTHERN at Claremont, io \"Allegheny county, hungry, last pi There in scarcely à whole pane of ing out of es least sixteen years of uunstneal oon dry refused to da his duty in the first instance, ty of Turkey.Nothing could be 3 And it may ha more difficult te grapple with the RT sd that Thue, whe Intends, strikers at Dotrolt upanimenaly rescinded their footsore, and eshausted from load of sleep, | glase ltt nth regiment Asmory, abd the ditions of social sad Duis life, We wire Och\u2019 Thy doubly welcomed beautiful landscapes of street in front is strewn with fragments of Wrons in supposing that with the alworption of n ; evil a year hence than it would have been ten |after the war, to luvite E to settle and resolutions ordering the strike ; v res a fred American Division wers thon resumed.\u2014\u2014The hig vicinity where the folks afforded them avery bricks, stones and ther missiles with which the our volunteer army into the ranks of citizens we days sgo ; hut sonner or later one \u2018muet be ratify ite resulla, considers it certain that Cer supreme an that is the law, which recounizes no any will be disposed to apport her claima, strike on the « =\" means In their power with which to recuperate soldiers had heen assailed aa they itor ut of the were dono with the war.We are only just wind.distinction of clase or Foukt but etes out even {Such la the position of affaire, and sch in the MICHIGAN CRY their enhsusted energies.\u2014N, ¥, Herald, July 2¢| doorway, Un ons corner ia à p-ol of coagulated ing up that great affair with what we may con.justice and protection .reason why the English (lovernment, while |aud branches ended at wx p.m.on Thursday, blood on the sidewalk.Thin in where Thomas filently hope is the last convulsion attending the \u2018take the sureties the strikers going to work with the assurance Ve Byrne, who, while conversing with a lady, srithing down Anto conditions nf prrmanence and conditions, depression reines values decline, aad business restric and unprofitable.J idging from the state of business ail this mot chargeable to the peculiar disabilities under which this country labos, Other ual with a oid basis, à low tariff, and not charge: able with either public or private extravagance, are suffering even to o greater extent than the \u2014 seeking rence, in preparing tr would ed by atbi- .+ .i ihe puccens af the Ytussiana may make ft {that their grievances be settled by ar THE ROUNDHOUSE BATTLE IN waa struck by a bullet in the side of his head flow growing prosperity.Thiain the comforting United Piston rit et din THE PRESS AND ONE ORANGE fa dtr tn peck, The Homiann are anpescling tration, THB APFRATS 18 BT, LOUIR PITTSBURG.and instantly illod, He ran tak no part fn feature of the present tin that i» offers an A .A 1) A , .8 a on ie mi ade of difficul unmilved in Q the Tialkans, and the English are apvresch nt (Philadelphia Times, July 2rd.) toe er Alter lraving this] problem of eventual release from the entailed enjoys.\u201d Co : RENEE A Sonetantinople.The day when the Rumians roux: THE \u201cCOUNIESS UF DUFFERIN.\" (Toronte Tribune, Remen Catholic.) An one way A another, afiould obtain liberty of ac irtkers and rougbe ou Thursday oot pled Ase TisutenantFames 1.Elliott,of the Washington point there ia no evidence of any volley having disnders of a great war and an inflated cur- The opinions quoted clrewhbore from the Ca armes Tom the Black Ren would probably alae taping work wherever they found it going ob.Gieayn, Acting Amistant Adjatant.Uenoral on fired until she military crossed the| rency.Ealightened intelligence has already, RISEN AGATE.tholfo prose nf the United Htates, on the recent be the ay on which Egypt would change mas- 1's\" lace number of ririkers held a meeting in the aid of Cdemeral K.Waliace Matthews, com- Baltimore street bri ge.Footy that point to with some difficulty, but with admirable philo - The New York papers nr thaton Fridey last, troubles in Montreal, are conspicnous for their [ters Finally, if the conquest of Armenis 8)iha forenoon, and adopted remolutions declaring manding the First Tirigade, Fimt Division, |the Carroliton Hotel there was an almnet con wophy, cast ob Ja books, charged aver ita lees er oi RE ep | mir mi te Dee ee Meet | Te rt VE Drag PR or vu de oi np mL Fe, ii ee feria\u201d was about to rail for Que supremacy of the law of the and.Fen onr .violence perpetrated during the present excites nr 8 hand tbr er to reachin ee eater BAL.\u20ac ford, Vice-Commo- 7 Terk not he fargotten that Cyprus lies opposite : cine, but grrapbio account of tho affray : - this part of th \u201c mend of Major Charles Gif ford, Vice-Commo- near neighbor, the Buffalo Una: which writes M pposite [pent ; they resolved to the anthoritien tn! clwe but ge hie oc of the fear cing to thie part [ihe march, All dh Bank.an the ship rb me Te bivtorar atraggion with Got of the Roval Canadian Yacht Club, she wea with the Orange oo anization ab active work Alexandretie, the peace and cnforoe Mayor's order again seized.Capt, Alex Cuthbert, her builder under ita very nen, Trek only so legs! means for (aroye Vrempa [Non Times] St.Petersburg, ing the saloons.Aboot a Tod formed serve his writs, read the Riot Act, \u2018at whi Syrie, 3 \u20ac Cute, §1 40 Peas, #1.15; Corn.#1.10.Bu 00.Hatter he 1 to 150: Hay i Futatoes, 10¢ pe bu.CHATHAM MARKETS.tApecial Televrarg to the Witness Un Meerrs Tickards & Co, I'roprictars l'ivuring Mi Tuvtoc, of CHATHAM, J 30 Liew! to RL 2ns dn.\u201d bare oT 0 £1.19) tu ».#1 30 to #1.35.Sama ald.1.25 tn $1.30, MORRISBULG MARKED Bp cindy vopurted for ha Witness by Les Lars ; ; Ler Froduee aot \u20acuuninin Berchanty, 7 Flour, per 100 a, § r hundred $1.70 to 1, per DLL, KG BU 1067; Corn, per bual ; P'utatues, new.por bushel 450 t3 \"ta 17e; Egge, He to 11 + # Bay hat 1h aversse ri to deH Laushels re\u201d tu JU; uate if oot stacked di.Harvesting lisa well vou-penced.NMa\u2014QUERRC \u2014 Weis of atiachm at 1 dusiag be just week against \u20ac Con Mt.Johns, PQ.LA.1 real; Joka Parker.trader, St.Naughton nnd Leveill, tu; Me honnesu var Lion & fu.vas must intert ft f the sender; LAN A1 M 7h i of Jahn Alla garda.the nie BUDGE by this .n At the 1 ith d'ancemsion, In jo) the 26th lastan:.t o! - Lands, ti.wite of Nr.Earrt Cou Jobin ¢' iret: 5 Trhisatant the we of a son.4 the 20 faa, the Site af Chas, Eaplin.miler it and cage Li.FISLAYRON.\u2014)n the 21st instant.at 524 Dombest.- sree?the wite of J, A.Fuularsou, of a danghter, ot lewd of cattle to soley for $410.and three opp Vv » utile ta another person for $100: 3.Tice 801d 1% | tea tree Ce th Ah Instant jects tol.Kean.of Quelec at $1200 each: Mr.| mon.: à dames foret an also Lought six ateers from Wu.Head for |jamtson ar E indger \u2018and M.Eto sold af ART SILESIAN démaentet Tg dpa lr on PER | MANX In tir itr.on the a .tu an.\"i : = ; ten Gi ira weit three trond tN Wie | eins dasa, uaniia No 5 Te Siar trom 30 12 EIU © 1.Hupper sold 7 catute ta IL.Beuallack ts : U do.tu J.Citroux fur : 2 tou.aod a number K.Parsons, of ason, MARRIED.L At Liverpool, Ens'ant Je tras Chueh, Rodaey ri, ; 4 Lu ath fecond dater of Me nt.JA Clarke, MA.Head Hasce tan.Out, tv Macgio B.roungest deoglter of de vilbnore of Huotingdon, Fo agir ot uta n.Cdr.\"or vill _- atngest dasehtar of À + Yatn.on the (th inst, atthe ressirnes «+ fathus, he 1 nn, Harklee c£ North Hate: 5 Mars June, daugutvrot J ct of Sher.Har Jane rot Jatnes lan, toraeris of Shier HARRISON 71 nt A 9 sin, br th 4, Agpisted br the Ree.1.Young, J.V of Mobtren); to Susan Erauces, only J.Byron Riles.Faq.LOU BARI the Menaialk, Birmingham, Wo Crossker, FANT w 10 Sarah Margaret second iaveliter ding.of Birmingham.ART ARNYER.= On the he he ee ud, of Torunt» t Cuarles Ilar- a ol *hoinet., be the Res, Dr, Gartner, brother x.Ml, Stewart.sinelph, \u20ac ' rat dangbter of William Gardner, H FL Lavon de Gonzagne, NED.ASKWITH.~ William Jahn Askwith, wha iepartel 1 - Jiiy, 1877.agent 17 rout 1 month wil 11 BALLEN.\u2014 Die! in tla city, om thie 24ch ine aged 23 vorrs dnnuzhicr of the late Merrl BORDEN \u2014 At Vankloek T1i1L, on the 231 inst, Isabelle Elisabeth, think danchter af tbe fale Juhu Ronlen, Ë 12 yours and 4 moothe.Though ronng in dir happy, and able to realise that she was * Ralcla\u2018the anus of Jeaun.\u201d COULIN,\u2014On 24h inst, Karak Anes, dnuzbter af J.MeDwaatt, Re ni loved wite of R.A.Coulin.Kaq., of Hochelagn.Also onthe 10th mut.R.A.Injen: sow of be store.tuontha and dre regret » large clecle of Treads ni rolatiree T Lachute, New York and Albanr papers please caps.DIXUX.\u20140a faturday.the ZR:h (nat.at Klidare, P.4 Kdwari, infant ace of Rev.Jee.Dizom, Restor of Mi.Jude's \u2019harch, Muntrrai.BXDALL Fy.restsa 27 years, 1 Prrtons, and be At Bellevue Cottaer.an the 29th Inst, J Kadalle, Kag.ellent non of Kubert Radalic.on.navel 32 years and six months, HENALEY.\u2014On Suday, 201h just.lsabella and Gwen.dolme, twin chitêres of CR Hemsley.aod 10 mr.HOPR.\u2014Un thie city.on the B3th fnst.Ch \"Es Drtavme wile of Wiliam 11 Tope area 36 megan JACKRON,.\u2014On Turedar, 241h fast.8 Plemonth Grove Reotiandatreel.weal Srully Jaze, whiow of ibe late évard Marriott Jachson.3.1%.Surgeon Major, Madras mr.KOBOLD.aug ~1n thie clty_ on the 27th int, Rablnn Ki tot of d.1.Rorbold, weed 10 mantle Ana £7 dors LYXCHL.\u2014On Priday morning, st 1.20 a\u2019 clock, Mary Xemp, 454 rears, wife or John L ton of Haat Vo serous Charen, © rach mouton uf Hast MATHRWAON \u2014In (his Fra , an Nataniar.Jaly 24th, lack, widam of the Inte James Larens Kan, aged OF poate.Lax MeCUATG.\u2014At d'ota ft, Patrick.on the 8th inal, Jensln Mct'uslg.aldol duaghicr of the Int \" ai eldeat dunghict ate\u2019 Petr Met unl, MCCTAIQ.At Cote 84 Patrick, on the 2910 nal.Leanin MoCuaig.Art daughier of the inte I Mor\" ai, ride ug! of tha iste I, Motuaug, MMANUR \u2014Jalr 24.after a shor! ingas, Joh Me 5 Tarmeriy met RAGS actor.of thin rig.CHARIS MCRKOWN.\u2014Ta thin cliy, om the 26h Instast, | infaut di gate of À.MoKrows, contractor.Lilien O'DOHRRTT.Al Rrockeille, Jul; = Louisa O\u2018Mokertr, agrd 64 prés Miro.Carhense PRARAON \u2014Inihbr oity an Tera by ry y day the 22nd inal, Nenry RAFFAN.\u2014On Saturday.the Ath instant, weed Fears, widow of toe late oom.h Ta leon.merly.RANKIN-=A( Wiaione, P., on the morning of the 16th, New hey sella nt from #7 to $0, and old hay at from afer a long and setiona Hiness, borne with Christie #8 to $1( per 100 handles of 17 Iba.to the bundle, Tt Tio Wil.in pd at $4 to 84 50 pro 100 bandics of 12 tha.mes péacatetly departed taie 10 meet * \"Fane on hefare.WORSE MARKET 31.Eile rot aii wager oud fo pert week, thers were shipped from thie Think of uf nln with Jogus, Happy Io kis lovisg smile.1 81.317.M0, of an average price of 9203.50 each KYMINGTON.Tied tn this WL on che 1h TRL.James horse; lao, fly fosr common Lorsea at an des SE pieces sen, in the TSG year of hin age, à native rice of $70.86 cach, We Raker.af Hodan, hes 2 Lanark recs In (he stable of the Ameri san Tlouee.which N.\u2014AL on the 2714 teat, AoE wi! be shipped tonicht.Last Thursday, 42 horees protracted lines.Ben) .Thom merchaat Tore ee Le ee Pere ment ad vu fre UE ere will ner cents tein wou: Tin {hg local market, very tile lo doing at à large enscoutse of sorrowing friesds.the asction Mrünire's hotee bascar, Ne.cn RNLEY.On the Zôth Inst, Lower Jackie Row, Craig street, Inst Pridar.five animals were old at re re lufast danger of Wm.oy, prices ranging from $12 to $70 each.red ars, 6 THE MONTREAL WEEKLY WITNESS, A = 1877.AucusT \u201cFamily Reading.OUR BABY-BOY.BY JULIA A.MATTHEWS.\u2018What is the charm of our baby-buy * He is not mure handsome than babies go ; Though his sunny head, and clear, brown «yes, Hia six little teeth in s pearly row, His ¢ lips and his dimples sweet, His velvet cheeks and his fair, white brow, \u2018Where roses und lilies softly bloom, Might plead our excuse if we thought him sw.Many a baby has golden curls, Many & baby has hazel-brown eyce, Where smiles aud coquetry coyly hide, And the merry spirit of mischief Lies.Many a babys Jubilant tones King out like the notes of & joyous bird : Filling with music each loving heart In the homes where their voices sweet are heant.Many a baby's woe, toddling foot Can traverse the varpet, and = allalons 1 While a victorious laugh aud shout Tell all that the perdous feat is done.Full inany a baby's rosy hands Turn backward aud forth in a sunbeam\u2019s ray: While th buby looks with shining eyes, Roberly watching their delicate play.Yet grandmu whispers, * Wonderful child And mother says, \u201c Never was baby sweet, 80 fuirand bright as this boy of mine, Frow his golden crown te his duncing feet.\u201d u uncles and aunties own his sway; imetimes papa, with superior smile, Looks on : yet the disnmest eye cap sce \u2018That his heart is bunting with pride the while.Thro what's the charm of this winwme child ¥ 1t is culy this, he's our baby-boy : Ours to have, to hold, and to vwu, God guve him tv us for our pride and joy.What if ten thousand babivs beside, Brighten the homes of the whole broad land?Our baby is still our prince aud king, Ruling willing vassals with royal hand.Oh, blessed birthright of tender luve ! \u2018That, whether in but, or cottage, vr hall, Welromes und blesses each And crowns the baby the monarch of all.Come weal, or come woe, 8 happy smile Uircets the step or voice of the babybay No grief so bitter, no pain #5 strony, That the baby can bring n° gleam of joy, \u2014Christian Weekly, THE CLAIMS OF CHURCHES ON PASTORS WIVES, IT MHS.REV.©.No important ie the ion of a pastor's wife, und wo Lonely is she connected with all the interests of the Chureb, that it becomes n Question of no ordinary significans hat claims bar the Church on her rervice wr, in other words, \u201cWhat may the Church ren.sonably xp ot of their minister's wife?\u201d While we have the charity to believe that many of our peuple are disposed to be conaide- rate in their claims or demands, yet it cannot be denied that there an: oth: rs, smd not à few perhaps, whi have an ideal or standard which they look to sce attained.nnd failing in this, they are disappointed.They think that she ought to ta but *dittle lower than the angels\u201d in point of exvellence.She must Le able to precide with digmity at the ludies\u2019 circles, tu the leader und inspirer of the ladies\u2019 prayer.meeting or mothers\u2019 meeting, «ually etficient in all benevolent associations, festivals, faire, etc., teacher in the Sabbath-schuol.and perhaps superintendent or assistant supeiinten.dent, à constant attendant on the prayer and class-meetingn, regundless of her heane duties; for is sbe not the minister's wife: and we expect her th be active.She must be always ready to look after the sick and needy in the parish, given to hospitality, ne ver forgetful to entertain strangers, such ns book agents, temperance lecturers, and the many other travelling brethren who neem to look upon a parsonage as n \u201cfriendly ion\u201d where angels are entertained unawares.We might also mention the evangelists, wha are engaged by the direction of the official board to assist the Church in their work, but whose entertainment is almost invariably left to the pastor's wife.Added tu this, she must look well tothe ways of her household ; her children should bo patterus of propriety, aud she must be a model of neatness, frugality and liberality.She should be au accomplished lady, to, ever in readiness to recive callers, and just as skilful and expert in the kitchen as she in graceful in the parior.In fact, there is nothing or useful but what is embodied in the ideal minister's wife.The following poetic advertisment must have been written by some one who understood the requirements nf the people : \u2014 il.HANAFORD \u201cWanteil\u2014a perfect lsds.Delicate, gentie, refined, With every beauty of person.And every endowment of mind : Fitted by early culture a To move in asblonable lite.nd shine a gow In the parlor ; Wantod\u2014a minister's wife\u2019 \u2018Wanted \u2014~a thorough-bred worker, Who well ta ber huuseholil taoks * \u2014 8hsll we soe our money wasted By extravagant (rish cooks '\u2014 Who cuts the daily ex With economy sharp as a knife.And washes anid scrubs lu tho Kitcien ; Wanted\u2014s minister wile! \u201cA very domestic person : To callers she mast nat be out It has such a bad Sppesrance For bor to be gadding about ; Only to visit the paruh very year of her life, And stiend the funerals and weddings: Wanted a minister's wife.\u201d What lady with a family to care for, would think she could call on nll the other ladies in the society twice, or even imce, inthe year?Yet it in expected of the pastor's wife, Not many yours since, when shout leaving the hone of one of our parishioners where we had been taking tea, my hostoss raid, \u201cCome again! ! don't thi you've been very neighborly.\u201d Well, perhaps not, as that was only the sccond eall in six months, while this sister had called at the parsonage but once, and that too not until after the pastor's wife had called on her.But says one, \u201cHas the Church no claim upon her services ** If they have made any agreement with her whereby the is to receive a compensation for her labons, the is by all means under obligation to meet the terms of that agreement : otherwise they have no legal claim u her any more than upon the wife of the physician, orof any other professional man.We believe, however, that there ia a higher sense in which the people have à claim on the minister's wife, yet it will to impossible to a down any mle that will be applicable to css.\u20ac cireumatatres of family, her own health, and the home demand upon her time and strength ali these muat be considered ; for we contend thet cvery womae's first duty is to her family, If, the parsot ure in too short to cover the expenses of a vmestir, it in ve evident that household caren and labora will ao o-cnpy the time and exhaust the strength of the wife and mother.that it will be imposible for her to Le very mctire in socicty matters.And here, we ap.prebend, is where {he people fail to exercise proper judgment in their demands.They remember that her Lome carn and duties, no leas then theirs, require time and labor.Having faithfully attended to these, whatever she can do beside should be done for the Church.Itinof no use for a minister's wife to says, \u201cI married my husband, and not the society.\u2019 However tenn this may be, she has amumed s responsible position, \u201cwhere one snistake may wreck unnumbered barks that follow in our wake * and she, not les than hoe bushand, should 11s an ensemple to the flock.\u2014Zien's Herald.GENTEEL BEGGING IN THE UNITED STATES, Mrs.Beeohor in the Christian l'uiou gives the following almost incredible list of requests received : \u2014 \u2018We are sorry to say of late begging soems to have los ita terrors, Tad ix bec: 2 alinout as common in our own independent country ws ** beyond the seas; why, we do uct stteupt to sy.Either > letter or in person petitions are ted that shock the feelings of every honest uoble mind.Then bold reuests often come from persons that oue can hardly iisagine could stoop so low.As a matter of curiosity we kept for a short timo a file of such singular productions, making a voncise uote on the back of cach sliowing the nature of the request.Weadd a few exumples, not selected, but just ss we turn down une after auuthice in the package : \u2018A widow wauts $1,500 to buy « farm out Wust, where sho cau live cexily.\u201d \u201cThree youny ladiea want money to go to the Centennial, enough to allow them to spend & weck geuteclly.\u201d * À manof unblemished charuetur wants $800 to buy 8 hearse and start us an undertaker.\u201d * A widow whose husband has been dead five years wants money to buy w handsome monument for his grave.\u201d * À young lady wants 8300 to buy a wedding dress.\u201d + A clergyman who hus laluored faithfully in Lin Muster's vineyard wishes tu begin to provide fur a comfortable old age, aud wants $3000 to buy « Westeru farm.The donor ix requested tu look to the Lord for payment.\u201d + A farmer wants $700 to buy a goud yoke of oxen and a stylish horse and buggy.\u201d * A young Lady wants 8 piano, und hopes Mr.\u2014- will be very particular tu seloct a fine toned instrument.\u201d \u201cA young man wants 3 watch, but would feel as to carry a silver owe.Will not Mr.\u2014\u2014send him a good gold watch ¥** * À lady wants a Brussels carpet.Her husband thinks three-ply good enough.She has eried all night about it, wheu soniething seem ed to say, ask Mr.\u2014 to give you a Brussels.He can do it, and sever feel it\u201d \u201c Young man wants to travel a year before settling down to work.Would ike $2,500 or $3.00.\" These are not extreme cases, Hardly a day passes without similar requests, made apparently without one thought of sume.A\u2019 young lady wanted a fine suit for u grand party.Her father refused to buy her one as rich\u201d as her heart desired: wo she bought it privately.When the bill was presented he refused to pay, and insisted that she should carn the moucy hersell, With the most piteous lameutations she begsMr.\u2014- -tu send her 8500, for ** you know, I should feel so ashamed and degraded to work for it!\u201d A young lady wishes us to send hier \u201ca lox of our partly worn, nice clothes,\u201d for she lives in the midst of girls who dress fashionably, and desires to lok as well as the lest, She goes on to entinerate some vf the articles she ope ally desires: a nice black sitk, a stylish cloak, a party suit of some light silk, n set of furs, pretty ribbuns, not much soiled, lives, gloves fine party hnndkerchiefs, several kinds of jewelry, such ax we «in spare \u201cand never feel it*- such things as will make her look stylish, She has a good faculty of altering over things, # no one could tell them frou new.She assures us she is very proud and wonldn't stoop to du a mean thing fur the world, but she lives so far from us no une will ever know where or how she obtained them, and surely she couldn't think of earning them by work! She is sure Gold will reward us if we send her a gould box of nice things hy cxpress\u2014aud pay the expressage ! Now all this may be amusing or ridiculous at the first glance, but the asuusement censes, and great sorrow comes in its place.when we re- fect how low, how lost to any self-respect, a :rvon must be who van stoop to such genteel wing.\u2018There in a great fault somewhere, and ty who indulge in all the absurdities of fashion and allow their daughters the same license will do well to reflect on the great shame a little and see if they lave not semethiug to answer for.An inordinate love for style\u2019 awd \u201c fashion\u201d grows rapidly and seems, when once it haa obtained the tumstery, an ineradicable as the love of strong drink und almost us destructive, Ammg all the reforms will not some of our goul apd earnest women begiu a crusade against this great evil of *\u201cGentecl Deg- pause + TBE VIFFERENCE BETWEEN DOING AND LEARNING.Prof.C.0.Thompson, in an address on the place of the Polyterhuic School in American education, says: The best account of the usefulness of manipulation ever given.is in Professor March's commencement address at the Worcester Free Institute, from which I shall venture to quote nt length : » = # The school-boy who repeats à passe, frum Webster or Bacon, Hoon not necessarily repeat in his own mind the thought of Webster or Bacon.One of Bacon's essays has been read by a school-boy as a composition of his own.e lad did not ser anything in it which he could not have written himscif.gpulation is the natural means of arresting this sublimation of the mind.It should be further remarked of the nature of language, that it lags far behind the progress of thought, The innumerable judgments on which city depends, are comparatively few of them expressed in the formal speech of artificial signs.The old furnsceman tells from the look of the bubbles when the charge of steel is becoming ready: but he has no name for that look.The engineer puts down brakes at 8 peculiar noise in the engine, as instinctively as the eyelids close when à fly approaches : hut he hasno name for the noise.A thousand nameless, wordless judgments of relations between objects and acta are all the time goin, on in the mind of the magacions man, All processes uf reasoning need sign, but original thinkirg and practical sagacity demand the tino of primary signs, in place the secondary rigna of language.Manipulation is necessary to make up the shortcomings of speech, \u201cIts most general use ia to keep the mind awake and alert.Lectures are apt to goin one ear and gut at the other en o printed ge passes lore the eye a A \u2018© set vurselves to think, but we brood, To dud without pen in hand, is to dream.In manipulation, thought passes into art.We usc our hands and eyes, we are kept busy adjusting and controlling material objects.\u201cThe manipulator store his with conceptions of tho senses, with information from the cyes, cars, nose, the finger-tipe, the muscien, and the meteors of science, those mag- ified senincr; without these firm roots, men are poor saplres things.; « Manipulation teaina the organs of perception: the eye of Herachel, the thumb of I'hidias.Chemiatry, botany, mechanica afford the most effectual gymnastlo of manipulation.Sir Garette is a goodly figure in the Morte d'Arthure, in that he hax \u2018the fairest and the largest hand that cverman saw.\" and nome one han characterized the Anglo-Saxons as the race with more nerves in their hands than there are in the heads of any other race.*! It given clear nnd distinct ideas.The complex | of modern science, to which the technical terma must guide tx, are the reanlt, for the most part, of wide generalisation.They are obscure and indefinite to every man until he has often applied them to real objects.\u201cThis process of minute attention veri- feution atrengthenathe:nemory.Once work.wi-onut in faster {n mind than Len times learned.The affertions of the nennen redouble the inoer memory.The recurrent force of muscular and nervous habit js added.A long verbal description often, in fact, belonga tn a movement t is comprehended in s ingle stroke of the eye, or other brief experience, which the memory holds without effort.\u201c But a greater advantage of manipulation in that it traina the judgment.The reduction of theory tn practice cannot be an exercise of mere memory.saga- | + And finally, the manipulator is in training to become an rir ely discorerer- 0, \"The jcal judgments responsible mon confirms that of the scholar so completely, that it is nbout to be impossible for à young en- ginecr, destitute of practice, to secure amploy- ment diferent from that which would be given to & novice.With this important suxi st command, the polytechnic schoo! unde: to train the mind for a special service,\u2014for the end is to secure disciplined faculties of thought behind the cunning fingers.lt is for this end mainly that all manipulation is serviveable.Hence the reasoning power muxt be strengthe by exercise in the mathematics: the habit of acute perception and accurate induction is required by study of the physical sciences; the imagination and taste are cultivated by many methuls the faculty of expression thrmugh practice in the living laugunges; and, ut Pet the student is made faruihar with the lows of matter and of forve, and the methods of working under these laws for the muterial prosperity of mankind.CESNOLA'S DISCOVERY OF THE BITE OF AN ANCIENT TEMPLE.Loug before the traditional period of the Trujun war, Cyprus had citivs and commerce.The Pharnician colony became Egyptian for à while after the fifteenth century u.c.Kurium had probubly been founded before the Exyp- tian conquest in L142 n.©.: henve the accumulation of the art of many centuries in the treaxuries of her temples.General Cemola found at Kurium only vast heaps of ruin.\u2018The city was built ou a bluff three hundred feet in perpendicular height on three sides.Tho rk of the Lluff was soft calcarvous stune, and around the city, in the siden of the bluff, he found a terrace 8 hundred fect wide, cut nud hollowed deep in the rock, ip the siden vf which were tombe.Among the ruins on the hill he identified the site of a temple, and hero saw that explorers befure him had mude excavations, aud abandoned them.He was induced to go deeper than they had, under the mosaic floor of the temple.At the depth of twenty fect he struck a dark geway, which penctrated till stopped y à low stone door.Bursting this, he found himself ut the entrance of a series of vaulted rooms in the rock.The rooms were full of tine earth which hal sifted through the rock walls.\u2018The explorer did not know where he was, but he was sanding ut the doorway which leads the student of art into the hitherto unknown fields of investigation among the early Gireeks and their Fhuenician and Egyptian predecessors, The general soon perceived that the room which he was 0 enter Was notu tomb.Commencing to remove the earth in the slow and careful manner which the ex.pericneed excavator always practices, he Les gan to find beautiful objects in gold lying in heaps on the floor of the vault, Then came the eviden © that he had opened the treasure chambers of the temple.Twenty five hundred years apo the diese in the temple were auddeniy alarmed by the rue of à Euoiegira anny over or through the lofty wall of Kui.jum.In the wild haste of the unexpected attack, they swept from altars and shrines, where they were exposed, the vitive offerings of generations of worshippers.hastened down the dark passage, and threw them, heaps on heays.into the treusury vault, cle the stone door, and doubtlens also clused the secret cn.trance to the passageway, The enemy came in, and hewed down the priests before the altars, or carried than away captive to Asia.None wus left who knew the secret of the vault.The temple was demvrated, robbed, destroyed, its walls and eolumnus hurled down in hideous ruin, and for twenty-five centuries the gold of tbe old Pheenician and Egyptian and Greek worshippers lay dark and unknown in the vaulted chamber.From the gold chamber a low doorway two fect seven inches high, upened into the next vault, which was the silver room.Iilack, corroded, unsightly as it is, this treasure was not less important than the gold.Fr ancient silver (bjects ure very rare, especially x and vases.There were piles of these vorroded into masses.But a considerable number were perfect, and are of the greatest archicological importance.From this room opened another low door into & third vault, in which were found objects in alabaster, terms cotta, ete.; and beyond this vault, and at right nngles with it, was a fourth room, which contained chjocts in bronze, many of which were in very fuir preservation.From thix ram A narrow passageway descended in the rock, which the general explored for 130 feet and then abandoned, because of the foul air and the difficulty of proceeding.\u2014 IW illinm C.Prime, in Harper's Magazine fer Anguat.CHRIST VERSUS \u201c TSMS {From an address hy the Rev.A.Mursell reported in the London Christian.| It is well that missionary work is not the work of a sect, but of the whole Church.It is common ground: it raises men above polemics, lifts them out of the chop-logie region vf controversy, boars them aloft above the acrimonious jangling of creeds, and bowers them in the creme oneness of a sublime and common hope\u2014cven the hope which perched like a bird on the swelling crest of tho Redeemer's mm er, \u201cThat they all may Le one, an thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, and that the world inay know that thou hast sent c With what an infinitely enhanced grandeur does the Church Sppoar among men as she shows herself united in such an object than amidst the turmoil of her party cries and the garrulity of conventions! Our very hearts are owed within us when wesce à com'unnity clubbing into a mob, ridiculous as à procession with candles; but they bound with & new hope when we sce the Church serried and fear- , terrible as an army with banners.While the walls of Zion are resounding with squab- bien about a surplice or a stole, it does not look an though sho had yet put on her beautiful ents and put off her forbidding ones.ut when we sec the weapons of her warfare turned against the armies of her aliens\u2014in riest-yoked Italy, in Moslem Turkey, or in cathen India, necking to win the world to Christ\u2014then we do seem to hear some hint of tho coming gratulation: * Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord in risen upon thee.\u201d While men are \u201ccxercised\u201d about the \u201c Fastrrn position\u201d\u2014as though Christ's kingdom was to come in the postures of a - tomime\u2014the mind is saddened at this straining at gnats and swallowing of camels; but when brave men turn cestward, and grow bronzed and fevered under flery suns, that they may hold up the lamp of truth among the nations, that they may hear and fear and tum unto God and live, hope Lives again within us.In many a church at home we are busy about ritual and form ; in many a church meeting, oonference, and committee, we are found listing hairn and exaggerating trifles ; but, oh! let us not swell molchills into mountains, till the mountains shake live Lebanon : let ua tiok bicker over trifles, while\u2014 * From many sn ancient river, From many a paimy plain, They call us to dalirer Their land from crret'e chain For surely, brethren, if the glory of the Lord ia not risen upon us, the burden of the Lord in laid upon us.Would that we felt that burden as some of our forefathers felt it ! It seca to me that if we preach our ims among the heathen wo make a great mistake, 11 the Baptist preaches Baptism, the Churchman Churchism, or the Wealeyan Wesleyan.ism, we shall dwnrf and degrade the giant and God-given task we seek to te.To preach Christ and only Christ, in the work we sll havo todo: and we may well leave the badges of our sects at home, and blazon the escutchcon of the naked Crom as the sole illumination of our heraldry.En shrines of Buddhs\u2014and leave the converts to the central truth to dimmer into sects, te shake down into Baptists, or Methodists, or what not; or, better still, to Ti tenchors a more excellent way by the names which are legion, in their devotion to the baa- ner which is Love, OPINIONS IN FAVOR OF ABSTINENCE DR.LIVIXUSTONS.\u201c1 have avted on the Principle of total sbatineuce from all aleoholio liquors during mure than twenty vers.My individual opinion is that the most severe or privations muy Le underguse without alcoholic stimulus, becanse those of us who have endured the most had nothing vle than water, and out always chough vf that.\u201d GENERAL SIR KICHARD DACRIE * Since 1 have been a teetotaler I have roue through great fatigue in hot climates.| have eruamesl the Atlantic, come here to the Crimes, beru «xpused to disease and some discomfort, and 1 have never been sick, or had even « short attack of diarrhea.1 ascribe this to water.But I am a temperate enter aloo.I never eat animal food were than vnce a day; no lunch but à piece of biscuit, | am also a very early man.All these things combined, enable me to du as much hard work at fifty-five us many men ten or fifteen years younger.What began with as an example, now continue, as 1 ronsider I am much better without wine, beer, cte., both in a religions and worldly point of view: and 1 shall continue as I am, please God, to my life's end.\u201d OLIVER GOLDSMITH.\u201c How far it may be cnjoincd in the Scriptures I will not take upon me to say; but this may be asserted, that if the utmost benefit to the individual and the most extensive benefit to society serve to mark any institution as to heaven, thisof abstinence may be among the foremost.\u201d GENERAL Bi ¥.¥.WILLIAME, THE HERO OF XARS.« I am irdebted to a gracious Providence for sreservation in very Ithy climates ; but Ï am satified that a resolution, carly formed und stesdily persevered in, never to take apiritucas liquors, has beet à means of my escupiag diseases by which multitudes have faller around me.Had not the Turkish arm; at Kars been literally * a coll water army,\u2019 am pursuaded they never would have performed the achievements which crowoed them with glory.\u201d RICHARD COBDEN.+ Nobody has more faith than 1 have in the truth of the teetotal doctrine, both in a physical and moral point of view.I have acted upon the principle that frrmented vad distilled drinks are useliss for sustaining strength, and the more work 1 have had tu do, themore 1 Lave resorted to the pump and teapot, As for the moral beuring of the question, it is ecarecly es exagyoration to say that all other reforms together would fail to confer us great blessing upon the masses na thut of weaning them from intosicating drinks.\u201d WILLIAN CURRATT, * Inthe midst of 1 society where wine or spirits are consider À of Little more value than water, I liave lived two years without either © nd with no other drink than water except when I found it convement t tnin milk.Net an hour's illness, not a headache for an hour, ut the small ailmint, not à restless night, not a drowsy morniug have 1 known during these two farnas yours of my life.\u201d HINTS TO BATHERS.There is little difficulty, either in wwn or country, in obtaining access to the water.We believe all our large towns are now supplied with swimminy baths, in which it is preferalde that the Loginuer shonid practice, rather than that he should seek an open stream for the purpose.The baths are usually attended by expericured permous, from whom lexsons tiiny bo obtatrdtæ 1f deaired, or whose help may be uscful in au emergency: and at such places the leames may also gain kindly hints and assdstunee from others who have recently experienced and are ready to sympathize with his difficulties.But if thebepinner is tho denizen of « rural lovality which is destitute of «auch an adrantage, he should exercise care in the selection «of a spot in which to practice.Let him, in the firat place.rhoose n stream the bottom of which slopes graduslly from the bank, and ascertain its precise dept at various distances.Let him be very careful to select a place which is free from weeds, either attached to the bottom and scarcely seen from the bauk, or floating freely on the surface.A clear stream, with a gravelly or sandy bottom, is by far the best.One with a muddy or rough and stony bottom should be avoided: and especially keep clear of water the bed of which ia full of deep and sudden lus Dathing on the seashore can only he practiced with safety when the beach inshelv.ing, aud ite general fratures, an to freedom from rocks, etc.are well known.The novice should select still weather only for the purpose, or the sudden coming in of & wave may take him off his legn and carry him helplomiy nut tosca, A terrible calamity occurred a few years ago in this way.seven youths out of cight who were bathing on the Hampahiro coast being swept awsy and drowned.The beet time for practising in in the morning, an hour or two after sunrise; but bathing or swimming on an empty stomach is not advisne ble.A crust of bread, with the addition of a cup of coffee if practicable, is all, however, that will be necessary.Bathing either shortly before or after a full meal is injurious, but the latter expecially so.Take a brisk walk befure you enter the water, that the body may be in a glow when you step in; then strip ua quickly aa pomible, end take your plunge while the blood is still coursing freely through the veins, When you have leamt to awim, you will be able to enter by diving; but un I have ou must walk into the water, and in thin ntter case you should dip the n; rt of the body in nd out again, otbermise the blood will be driven too much to the head.\u2014 From \u201cScimming\u2019 in \u201cCassali's Popular Educator.\u201d A Jur Jupox.-Samesel was a man of the strictest integrity.Whe Saul vas installed soversigu, Samuel retired from his office as Judge.But in doing so ho retired with a publio testimony to his honesty, integity, and thorough uprightness.He atood forth before the amembly at Gilgal, and maid, \u2018I have walked before you from my childhood untothis day ; witneas against me before the Lord, and fore His anointed : whose ox have I taken ¢ orwhose ass have I taken?or whom have I defrauded ?whom have I oppressed PF or of whose hand have I received & bribe to blind mine eyen therewith ¥ and I will restore it to you.\u201d \u201cThea the whole asserobily ed in one unanimous approval of hiaconduct.\u201cThou hast not defrauded un, DOF oppressed ua, neither haat thot taken ought of any mana hand.\u201d Yot again Samuel put it to them, lest any haste should have lod therm to affirm what might be subsequently guestioned, To make thelr utterances more solemn, ho said, * The Lord is witnoss against you, and His anointed in witnesa thin day, that yo have not found ought in my hand,\u201d At oore tho multitude lod-'¢ He ia witness.\u201d Thus, with an nntarnished reputation, Samuel laid down hin office.\u2014 From * The Quicer for July.\u2014 If thou dexire the happincen of thy child, teach him obedience und self-restraint, \u2014\u2014 A / Sinise L448 asd As thy days, so\u2019 { shall thy strength be fis Tate en Dauer.33: 25, 1 cummitted to prison.SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON.PAUL AND SILAS IN PRISON.August 12.\u2014 Acta, avi.22-34.« And at midaight Paul and Sas praged, and sang praises le God : and the ;ritonere Âcerd them.\u201c 1.How they came to sing.They wont to Europe for this purpose.So to speak, they were under appointment to up- pear in this jail.They had ude no caleuls- tion to go to Philippi ; but ta Spirit stopped their succevaful work iu Asia Lior in the midst.They were forbidden to preach the Word io the province of Asis.They ceasayed to go into Bithynia, but the Spirit suffered thems uot.A man, sen in 8 vision, culled them tu yo over into Macedonia.A y gathering that it wus the Lord's will, they touk ship and made a straight course to the port of Philippi.Yruwediutely the city was all stir through their fuithful labors.They were arrested, and drugged before the iu.furiated magistrates.\u2018The charge agaiust them wus that they disturbed the city, and were Jews.The constables, being commanded, tore their clothes from their backs, und cruelly beat them ; ufter which punishment they were ie juiler was strictly charyed tu kecp them safely, He thrust them into the inner prison, and put their feet in stocks, It was a natural thing that Paul and Silas should saffer imprisonment.Their doctrine was revolutionary ; it turned the world upside down.But we must luok deeper than natural causes, if we would understand the lives of the Bible Christisus, They were dirocted Ly the Spirit.He who had led them in\u2018o Eurupe, and to this vity, led them ulso to prison.He made for them their straight course.Here he had gathered tor them their first Macedonia congregation, He had mado an appointment for them to wing.It was thus that the uew was to be introduced into the western world.It might seem strange, reasoning upon natural grounds, that they should take without complaint, or explanation the beating with rods, which was a crime to inflict upon a Homan citizen.They wore freeborn Romans; yet they suf ord themselves, an Jows or slaves, to be acourged, imprisoned, put in the stocks.But to them it was of mngll consequence how much they ruffercd, so thoy might get into that inner prisou.Safety was uot the first thing iu their eyes.Their mission of ealvation was the first thing.We read of early Christians who suld themsclves into slavery that they might reach and convert noble pagans.This was their spirit.The Gospel wus to be ached in prisons.They saug because their Divine Leader, whose directions they implicitly followed, #0 commanded them.IL.Where they sang.We have glanced at the place.Let us examine it.Is was the inner prison of a Roman jail ; as sume interpret.the dungeon, s place of Lidden borrors.The jailer was harsh with them.lle strotehed their lucerated limbs, and forced them intn the stocks, Without food, in filth, darkeness, and pain, they lay down.It didnot seem à favorable place for religious services.The position in the stocks, probsliy on their backs, we should nut deem cligible for singing.For the singing of praises, hearty singing, it is safe to say that uo one would select it.\u2018The location of the audicmer, too, was unusual\u2014on the other side of à stone wall.But this was the placer selected for them, to be regarded in no way as a mistake or an accideutsl place.The arrangements wore not more expressly made in London or New York for Mr.Moody and his companion than were all the preparations of this now historic room.In this case the music was put in the pulpit.In first approaching an Yuropeun audience, it was 80 important that the place should be rightly chosen, and that everything should be favorable for purposes of musical effect.It is not meant that we can fully understand the divine plan ; but this, as ne thing, we can see, that it may be an advantage, sometimes, among enemies, to havo, ins of a hearing for our meesagy, an orcrhearing.How many men have been couverted by overhearing the Gospel ! TIL.When they sang.The time, again, was uot accidental We must not forget the condition of the missionaries.Their backs and limbs were torn and awollen with undressed wounds.This condition would only worse and worse, | Neverthelens, at midnight, Paul and Silas prayed and sang praises to God.The prisoners were axieep : the jailer'« family were in deep slumber.Why must they sug at midnight, so strange and unscasonable a time ¥ Why did not the Spirit suffer them the wretched comfort of & little rest: It may bo it would not do to wait until the morning, that this was their only opportunity.They only knew that the Holy Ghost bade them sing, and, as beat they could, they sang.IV.What they sang.Mr, Moody, with homely and graphio adaptation, a \u201c raul roused up Silas, as the clock was striking twelve, and cheerily cried, * Come, Bilas it is time to have the worship.\u2019 Yes, that sou was worship.As Luke des- eribes the service, they prayed and sang praises.Literally, \u201c praying they sang .* In scrordance with this language, \u2018we are uet to understand a formal service, first a prayer, then a hymn.Rather, beginning with prayer, they struck into the key of praise.Their prayer was a song ; their song was & prayer.It was ñ song, too, with a chorus.* And suddenly,\u201d as they sang, ** there was a t earthquake, so that the foundations the prison were ahsken, and immediately all the doors were opened, and cvery one\u2019s bonds were loosed.\u201d Once before, when the little church was gathercd in praise and prayer, the earth had quaked in assurance that the Almighty wan with them, was their God.However surprised the apostles may have boen at this sudden convulsion, they at once recognised in it the voice of God.They perceived, and all who heard also perceived, thot the whole wes one song upon ons great theme\u2014the glad tidings of groat joy to all people.V.The affect of the song.(bia ras mat od and immediate upon Ti who heard it.(1 prisoners.were listening, Sn what emction we may in conneive.They knew the horrors of that nner jail, and the brutality of the keeper.With what amazement, then, did they hear issuing thesce, penetrating the solid wall between, instead of groans and cries of sgony, shouts of praise, tuneful, jubilant, devout, which the singers therasefron were forgotten as they sang redeeming love.When Peter was in prisons and the angel came to him, the outer doors of the prison opened, leading towards the strect ; for that was a deliverance from the prisen.Hero ell the doors opened but noticeably the inner doors lending towards the dungeon : for this waa deliverance in the on, Though the doors awung wide, an tho teor fell from ankle and wrist, und ali might have cecapod, and the jailer eupposed they Tad |, not & man atirred.Ont of the dark.nem, Paul cried, \u201c We am all here.\" The convicts were chained with fetters more powerful than of steel.They were riv that song.Reloase for the body waa now a little thing fu comparison with the forgiveness of sin, if t' er night have that- the redemption of their souls.\u201cTurn you to the stronghold,\u201d they seemed to hear a voice calling; \u201c turn to the Hronghold, yo prisoners of hope.\" fopelom 20 Iaicly, they had conceived a wondering and glad expectation of mercy.Bo, inatoad turning to the outer doors, they eat with cyes intently fixed ng the door of {nner prison, the stronghold, something samr.ing them that they had heard oaly the begin.ving of the gracious message, that after the carthquake wonld come the still, small voice, Who can doubt that oconvorta then mete made among those listening, expectant men Daca smn ome my, ** Bat Frey were convicts P It is true ; but convicts are not the hardest class te ressh with the Gospel.by hardly knew heesclf.The beginning at the jail, was it anything to have aoked permission to go hore or these.more than & carrying out of the plan te | menoed at the river-side with Lydis and the women! The despised women of that dark day, the lowest clames of the city, were .reached fint.Fir the \" he neglected, the captives, in t| niuy tl them that were bound: ftorwards, classes which lay sbore these.Christ's way ever of doing his own work, and of working by Spirit in his church, is from below upwards.We shall not overlook the effect of the singing (2) upon Paul and Silss themselves.was using thew ; but ho did not forget Sir poor, bruised, famished Lodivs, and the strain put upon their faith und hope.He put the uw song into their mouths to cheer their own L.srts.The guapel-song always blesser the ain, @) he «feet upon the jailer.varrative, attention D turned principally to him and bis famaiy.The jailer had not hes the singing : but the a = t om, y à useful creature in itv when salt is uscd than without.He unes it as \u2014_ Thay for move hss » hundred years the|on the west by the street lead ndians jon bei way.Mr.Knapp describes it as the natural follows: A few days after netting out the sald defendants have always enjoyed it as yro- sidence of the Captain of the Indian Depart.pl with hate an, being therely fo INDIANS I5TENDAD TO EEF FIRE TO THE VILL \\GR, aanurer vf the sil, consuming on the surfacu| plante, and wheu they wre dump, either after à THE WHOLE MATTER SUBMIT- priotors of the said Fiof snd Scigniory of the Lake ment, on the south by another street, on the |the last object the Seminary Las assumed the |} they had frequently threatened before, When Sn a ae dr TRE a TO THB GOVRRNOR prin bm hr pt ht di jus Denain itn of un sos Blom tic, Pd Rav, Cie eat Pr A the 7 - alt own | ., quent ssid purchase = X 9 ut, Chief of \"rovinci > vonveying downwards the more woody of fin , und, wulkuyg among the rows, pruprietors, and that at bte time of the impedi- aforesaid, în their said qualities, \u201c their own, their second title a pe crea of lice of Quebec, whom 1 biased Che at Ste.fibres, which there molder and fertilize.They sprinkle a pinch of wal tre of each i i i perforate the earth in all directions, thus a Plant.When the pu nthe - w I re- GENERAL.lent vn the part of the plaintiffs, by name aud expense, aud that of their co religtonists and of from that expensive duty, because the circum Scholastique with some pli: uen, ac uaintiog ering it ble by ai à water, both i t the salti gro title (to wit: Louis Kaneneakenhiute, Josepli otlier friends of safd Mission from moneys on [stances had so much chan fed that it hud become bim with the rumors that I had heard.dering permeable by air water, both fn | peat the salting, und when the centre of the \u2014 Unasakenrat aad Jean Usenvakeorat, three |trusted Lo them for mid purpose, build a school.| unnecessary, At the eC the fot cones.\"ame evening Culupel Amyot replied Ly tele.ispennable tu vegetable life.According ta leaves begin tu form the head 1 apply suit à PHEMASENT DECISION ANMED FOR, chlofs of the Erujuois tribe of Indians, members Louse and chapel, wherela to obtain for them: |Hon Lu er in Lil the Tutiane of Tare |§78vl that bls man bad left, und that be could Mr.Darwin's mode of vxpression, thoy give |upuin, seatlering it over the lenves.After this of the Evangelical Methodist Miwion, and trus- selves aud their familics and children moral and Mountains were relied hon aa the vuuguard in uot come, I received this reply letweon cight à kind of under tillage to the land, performing 1 louk theta over eccusionally : and if 1 find toes for the said mission of the village of Uks) religious instruction, and to worship God accord: the protection of the colony, sud they Taved 211 nine o'clock at night.We weet to Set and Baigniary of in vo tho dictates uf their conscience, altlugh thelr ven and the safety of tuelr faille at] the, vi did also the \u201cpele in the the same below ground that tho spade dors) plants thut du not head well or app diseased, un NE : they pouse: above for the garden, aud the plow for arable J Cindle the wt over freely Phin will ssc TO HIS EXCELLENCY THE RIGHT (5, Lake of the Two Mountains aa pruprictors| they bubs right to have called upon the sl stuke the prise pt Tue copcesi 0.the Seruinary louse, without leaving any pron to watch.HONORABLE THE EARL OF DUF.| Animo Domino, fos more thun & hundred years, Eoclesisatics to have furnished thea therewith, paying the cost of removal, and the busting of I went to sleep, sod a little before four soil.It in in consequence chiefly of thelnllsuch plants.A { walt is sufficient ; opérations of worms thut fields which have for re adie Slate na fog \u201cthough FERIN.K.P, K.C, B., &., &c, GOV- and from that time above tlirty years more, in accordance with the terms imjased uj-n the 4 church and fortifications for their pros wective 4 lok I was uwukened by the report of a héen overspread with lime, burnt marl or cin.mre can be und with anfet \u2019 ERNOR-GENERAL OF THE DOMIN.\u201cThat according te the law which provides {said Kcclerisatice and the vbligations nasunied by benctits from the grant.proepectiv® cannon, D zot up and heard foutstepe beneath , d ' y ue \u201c als i MIN | for the abolition of the seixucurial tenure, in the them under the said grants, The Semin s 11 th © my window, White dering myself, I looked ary as well as the Jeeuits, Recollets through the window, and saw a certain nutber dors, become, in process vf time, covered by 8 5 op - +.10N OF CANADA, IN COUNCIL ke of \u2018I \u201cT i : vol ! xu Tres.\u2014o yt - Pra.3 : 3 NCEL.cg the\u201d! jo : Hi x .ey vied mul, Bete for tho support of] Viasiise Tusa Dioner\u201d oH ens auld Scheaiory of the Lake uf Abe di dani wore she peace Gd andl Hg Lo, OBE i ler La ih th vegetation.This revult, Chough usually atiri.ruudred forest trees in the lust ten years, and Le ee perty of the sald defen | Majesty, and iu the full and legal posession of |; La Nauvelle France, had crue bere with the {ny in au esaterly direction towards the summer.buted by fumners to the © working down\u2019 of en years, an ; ; ; Janta, en fi alleu roturier.\u201d tbe said school and place of } ; professed purpose of evangelizing the aboriginal 3, Having bastily dre these materials, in really due to the action of I have rarvly lost a tree, and most of them net The Memorial of the undersigned Iroquois aad 75,0 Jrane le lands not ted by the | where the wo) and place of wonbip, tle building tribes, od wut fur commercial or industrial pur ihe a ly, ream d mysel! 1 passed these materials, realy due Ve Mrmr, 1 the fll.Que of ie mao important rules Algonquin Indians residing in the Village of said eccleaiaatics in £0 Relgaicey of the lake religious ee icine pote: All the grante made Lu the veversd re ee reams the her bio caste of which the initial soil consists.|% Tit werved is, before taking up 8 tree.gpa, in the Seiguiory of the Lake of Tuco Moun- of the Two Mountalos, and \u201cbelonging to them |1y demolished and dvatroyed by the said |i us orders wero expressly mado for the ob-| were contiguous, At the same time [beard à fiers aro sbyiously produced by the digestive Hi it in wme manner, vo that you will know tains.and others, citizens of the City of Afont- 88 hercinulove stated exclusively and sbolutely, Ecclesiastice, and the materials thereof illecall ject uf evangelization and to enablo tem to For [oud knockicg af the gate of the yard.I went { A ; which i» the north ride, sv us tu be able tu re- .vi © ie à lot vf land 36 feet front by 45 feet in dep i removed and i 4 ter Christian civilization, as regarda the Dudian, [th : ; proceedinge of the worms, which take ito pe se um Lu ! 1 and cloerohere, in the Province of Qi ans ect y feet in depth, and sppropristed by them, through |and not fur the beneli thither, passing by the dor of the kitchen, and Noir intestinal canal « large quantity of tae set it in exartly the position iL grew iu the rea 3 wees, more or less, vituate at the Iroquois Village, in their representatives and sgents, on the 7th day France, ur the benefit of tbe emigrants from 1 found i the yard five vrsix Indiaus, two of soil in which they feed und burrow, aud then woods.This tony seum to many of no ÎmM- npapeCTFULLY SEFHEBENTS: the Mission of the Jake of the Two Mountains, of December 1875, aud that ever vince the said The first grant from the King of France, of whom were cutting the india-rubler hott, which reject in the form of the so-called casts.= In portance, but to those who know that there is 5 in the said Seigniory, fronting an the street [three Chiefs and their vo-religionista have been Avril 27th, tm oth Semis vf France, Hy which were adapted to the pump.The hose no ye Mr.Darwin Le aa the bark and wood of ull trees & radical That for à number of years past, difficultios which leads to the ancient residence of Captain deprived of the most effectual means of moral te Bo transfer othe i phare was placed upon à sall feuce which surnunded red with } has bee vered i ditierenre between the north und south sides, [of » very painful and dangerous nature bave ex- Ducharme, the rear being upon another street, and religious instruction, and ot worshipping Ged 1nd; brane hol the fluwer-plot in the yard, I said to then in manured with mari u covered in the| fee die being close rained and tough, is or Oka.be Ducharme, the rear being upon duties Hire | acording 10 the dictates of their consdeuée.Lécuad creat Sauit-aux-Revollet;\u201d while the! French, \u201c Vou act badly.course of 80 years with a bed of earth averag-{ ug \u201close rai kh [sted at the raid se of Oka, between the least aide tu house, one of which is| \u2018That the buildi ved © og, |técomd kraut of March 1st, 17:5, was asked fur] =u .; à à À oo while the south side in invariably more opened ; to a double > 7 building so destroyed cost $3,000, by th i be of little im ve.Oge will dere [a wn th oe disputes, 3« Ur memcialiste beg to * That the said Louis Kenensakenbiate where their own horses and eattle hai oe [nary a title to thin Reigniory, free from their j ; ui attack The s'holesile destruction ve kneading up 8 batch of bral when it shu.cats the nective cof cutive of the'Seminary use ee emt and Jean Osennakenrat did Customed to graze, and where the cattle of the obligation va keep up the Mision hick impliss- 782 A eal not ane awity an Seminary and of adjoining farmers were received mie ou Che SERIE but the person who attempted to strike me wit vasioned by grasshoppers, which have Intely [be dune, and the whale become sour au ad ale Todi not, laving complied with the said judgment, a i in thi i : devastated the Wont, in undoubtedly causal oy erbaps wasted.Things d- \u201cat 1 À Whe ceclerimatics of the Seminary contend writ of ejectment issuel from the said Su rior vb payment of pasturage fees to the Indians, and what is known ja this Province as the rig a the thiuninge out of the birds, such as grouse, Lithout forethought and wie anagem.\u201chat they are absolute pr jaiet-s of the Beign- Court the 6th of December, 181: orderiog the The Seminary recently removed a portion of the êe Rae ar rar frou the ee in rte a = prairie hens.«te, Which frod upon them.The à i i i {ry of the lake of Tv Mounta\u2018os, sad in a sheriff of the said District of Terrebonne to ject fence surrwinding the common, thereby an-| A he Urdinance (2 Viet, Chap.20) it any Methodist Iudian was at.tam inestiranble servi q i, show luck of skill and a discegurd «of true 0 0 ead by tir eral Tey ative, the said Louis Kanensskenhiste, Joseph Onaaa mexing a portion of the common, tu an which sought to make the Seminary absolute formed me that it any Methodist [udian was ar.HTeat anc je servire done to the farm-|economy that is 8 sin, because it leads t 4 primer with or Presentatives, Ane .\"| adjoining fi ied demi awners, and omitted the clauses in favor of the Fe! er, gardener, and florist by the birds is only | vante.\u201d wel priaduecd on the 2th of August, 1876, io 8 kesrat sud Jean Osennakenrat, \u2018without delay 8djoiniog farm occupied by the Seminary.|p iol never received the I yal ase : À de ! 5 y vante.; ; wit Tew pending in the Superior Court, Mont- and in accordance with the law, from the pre.The Indians locked upon this as the be.|LDdisas never fecrivie the by aAmscnt, oF waa 1 SHOULL LE KILLED Honk] a rth the | hia ie \u201cBut may there mot be à slavish dv tion to [real ut ler tha mamber 1310, they base their |roises hereinabove Tart described, and to place |Rinning of a system of spolistion \u201cwhich gonérmed Ly the Lmperial Parliament and never along with uy scrvanta.[ verily believe that fruit taken | A | ay ¢ nud one\u2019s work which may wpeil all the pleasurc fei htwup othe following wverments : - the movahles and chattels which Tight be Ju it, would gradually deprive them of an incontestable if the Semi invoke the long ill.the persons whom I found, and also the armed Yo the nantities of a coms Mr of doing it or cnjoying the results?\u201d asked.\u201cuy ne jetters patent mated at Quebec on outside sm to place the said ecclesisatics in pos: aud centenary right, and they removed the fence AREY ® pee ong hee India, who were piruceeding on Le east side of y 1 cf hey i! onsuint those promise ol Thi i o dl 3 ili destroy, The long permentod crow hus been deed.there may, and often is,\u201d I rephod the 17¢h ot October, 1717, y Philippe de Rtyaud, |*3E7) of the 7th cI\u2019 December the said trespass, for which ot then as fo er met by Act 2208 of the Civil Coe, which says : mere re with the found, by actual experience, to do far tuore|< Women are often 80 rumbared with care ax Marquis de apprentis then Garernor of Now sheriff execused the writ of ejectment Warrants «f arrent.Certain portions of this Ro one can Dreacribe azainat bis title, in tbis object of setting fire tn the buildings, and causing wood by the vast quantities of rubs and in.1 shut tee beauty and poetry of life entirely race and a sodapt Jue; {one of the defendants Tamed in the writ of eject.fence required repewal, and it was repaired with sense n° (ne can ace the nature of bis\u2019 çroat loss, and endangeriug the lives of those \u201cects he devours, than the little harm he dusffrom thelr every day, r-maum-pluce labors ter, France, and Finances, in the mad rent haviog given him the key of the building Miscent poles, an had \u201cbeen the recognized prac- | 7H Pian ho vise who were within the parsonage, namely, my inthe few grains of corn he pulls up.110 in| The bot abill will no mana; me ec Ne branes, in virtue of the power joint-l'echapel, #hich Wan on the land or piece of tice and custom for more than a hundred yours, The Seminacy having Ab all times invoked the own, that of Rev.Mr.Thibault, ani that of the EE TO nteude, 1\u2019.Jum: camera wud by ns nage te Dot too Ly isn them by Hie Majesty the 1XI28 graund, lie emptiod it, placed all the movables \u2018Tite constitutes the second act of trespasm, for SEATS of 1717, nnd 17S {confirmed ip 1718 and pervant, Francois Meller, ur to protect those cum , au 7 aise \u20ac trains and judg- [it France, the sax vernor nten- [PE chattela which it contained outside, and which nearly half of the wbole male population 1735 they are bound by their terms, notwithe who were setting fire to the buildings as before Journal.ment make la something more \u2018than [dant gave and ranted to the said ecclesias- : 1.cunts ; i : TON standing anv relaxation therefrom imposed upon placed the sail ecclesiastion in possession of the ¥2% to De sent to jail to await a trial which TEs Ter qisna rendered helplees Throagh ig: rated.ond witness war Desraorixe Praxt Iwswers.\u2014At this sea- drudgery.And then there will be bits, at |tios a piecs of land forming part of the said aid land and piece of 1, which have might be delayed indefinitely, 'I'hia is wh v y pi of ui ich they have gl lelayed indefinitely, in is what gave Bo d poret A : cab] rance and poverty, Fras ots MELLER, the servant in the employ wn of the year aphia and thrips are apt to be least, of leisure which can be heartily enjoy- Seiaphors «Eure Ponte ee Temovs hither since enjoyed peac , and without trouble, rise to the last turmoil, created by the actual and BG 8 2 Lee in the art of reading and writ: of the Semi Eu à PT a pet + \u201c0 e inary, who deposed : al pt in the very troublescine, and from the fact that many ed ; \u201cThat the aail ecclesiastica were thus re threatened arrests, and by the appearance at A .8 T groen-houses attached to villa residences are «One reason, I think,\u2019 I continued, \u201cwhy au Recollet, and which en under the pastoral placed in jumsessivn of a picce of land of which Oka uf 8 pome of armed Provincial Police, ing, or in sericulture, or other industrial PAF parsonage of Oka during the sight of the 1th of badly constructed, an effectual fumigation by many fail to use their faculties in this way is those last ia pet iy cen when pjoyed ior they had been illegally and unjustly deprived During the rising of the whole population, the Then bei pif ond a pretest for depiiviog Jupe, About 4 am, of the Lith of June lat 1 mieaan of tobarca smoke in the ordinary way [for the want of proper training while young.might pT ee tn the title WiLLnut the authority of law, and that they com Catholic parsonage and church were consumed \"Sup ppemortalits will nut «largo the Semi- wan awakened by the Brother of the Chr ting becomes somewhat difficult.My own house Mothers are to linble to direct their daughters of Fief and Seigu) with right of high, middle mitted no trespass.by res thing a far shows the band of an nary with the crime of having kept them par- Lloctiine, wh re Same 1 do not know, but, whois is a case in point The roof is xo loosely|to do just ro, instead of leaviug them à fair aud low justice, right of hunting and fishing, as That the sail Louis Kanersakenbiate ape DO be satisfactorily made re ook it, osely in their comparative etate »f ignorance.the only friar 5 the persona He told me to constructed that the smoke pssses away [margin in which to judge.and plan.and act well within an in front of the sid mission, upon Joseph Unacakenrat sod Jean Osrnmakenrat, | Aitempt sas mavle on the rt Of an So re + nop only paint to the unsatisfactory con tition | Se Rie a iat Kobe veut down through the openings before the insect pests] for themeclves, It is letter to let them try.the lake and river St.Lawrence, on condition voi having claimed the building which wan the progress of the fire.part uf anyone 8-45 | Wins at Oka, as a contrast to what existe | aban, vation enter by doer of D pitt x = ji i .the land question DoF materials of it, the : ï 1 i Pi ave destroyed.1 am therefore ed tn let à 30d to ev maby a few intakes, than to bare that they Bn moval of make the Bo 180) ies had tbe richt to demolith Uhe| That your memoriaiots fee natified in ssvert: een mener Te oa.To, sas, 1) heard Bim av ko Jr, Lucas ton plan of my own.a put sumo ** \" id ne the judgmen ing, from the facts above stated : \u2014 over cause, and that immediate and effective THE ISTHANS DESIRED TO SET THE PLACE UN FIRE.3 .i te KX Mission, and that th: Lould caure to be built said building and to remove the materials tu à noft soap and flowers of sulphur into four gul- while young.never expect (hat the older there, aire at their expe ue, a church,a Mone fort place where they would not be inconvenient, 1, That so far the only fact or document measures \u201chould be resorted to to remedy such I followed Breban into the kitchen, ai.iit was lons of soap-suds, mixing ail well together.housewives will be bepefited by advice upon \u201c .ti Pr : ! n : i \u2018 A Sy for the safety of the Indians accordirg to plans That the action of the plaintids (to wit:| which supports the position assumed hy the |a state of things, there that [ brand hitn speakiti: t+ Mr.Lacan, The next process in to turn the plants heels puch matters, but may not the youuger oea yy, jeimediately delivered hy the ire to ERA | ouis Kanrosakenhiate and others) fs, for the Seminary it in the ee parte judiguent sale Shh reference to the claims of the Oka Tn-|] returned into the yard and hard kno kings at npward and immerse their heads in the soapy |learr to use tho judiment in the provy Kitchen | the said Governor and Intendant, to be hy Feasens above wet forth, groundless and vexa- [at Ste, Beholastiquo without any trial of the diana toa place of worship, and schools for the the large gate of \u2018the vard, whith was chut solution ; but before doing thin, I [nee alas well as elsewhere: The Hows hold.them seen and approved, ead buildings to be tive, .conti ; | merite, and which the Indians alleze was ob.education f their families, irrespective of the [It was burst in ly the blows, and 1 saw an ular piece of stiff card with n hole half nn finiehrsl fn the space of two years.\"That the action waa instituted tmt with the tained by fraud, and that there is 8 tair pros: creed or religions tenets they may mdbere to, [several Indians, some armet with cars and inch in d-umeter, and n slit reachiug from the| Israxt's Foon ann Sueur.\u2014-Tn an aiticle ** That the said grant warrant was duly regis object of persecuting the aid ecclesiaaticn and {pect of having it so declared out memorialists represent that the Seminary [one with an axe, enter the yarl Thre were ential opening to the circumference uf the |.this topic in the Medical Iyer and Circu'ar, tered wt the Clive of the Provincial Registrar at to excite axzaiust them the jeslonsy and hatred !, That the titles under which the Seminary having assumed the functions of the Crown, as thirteen or fourteen.The one who had the card.This is then stretched mo as to aflew ir.Willimm Faussett claims to establich the Quebec, ia the Kegiater nf the Intendunt.of the Indian tribes which compose the said tis- claim sn absolute ownership of the Seigniory of regards these Indians, they are bound to deal | axe went up to the hose, which was union the the stem of the plant to bs surrounded, aud following lending principles: 1, That aliment That hy muvther prant warrant dated von of the Lake of the Two Mountains.Two Mountains, a far from establinhing their with them as the Crown is doing with other railing surroundipi the Bower plot in the yard, w KP ples: 1, September 20th.1748, the Maquis de Beau-| \u201cThe document just recited ie extenso then claire, actually destroy it And en this head the tri in different parta of the Dominion, The and cuit fut several pieces Afterwants | ly pressing the fingeraof the loft hand firmly should nlways be presented to the infant i y ; ei ; way .harnuie, then Governor of New France, and i memorialists represent : Government of Her Majesty would not sasure.]- sgainat it and do the, rics of the pot when the stomach in 8 perfectly fluid form.2.That 281 Julea Hocquart, Intendant of Justice, Police se dira of VE hove men morialinty FEpIRtent «an their title the ly meanre their carv and soliritude for the wel.dv that,\u201d and the Indian raisel Lin aso to strike he urn hay own, no mil ean fall read and farinaccous substances gencrally Lynd Finances nf the same country, granted to the ned y concession deeda nf 17th October, 1717, saul 26th fare of the Indians hy the religious bias of the the priest, but another Indian prevented him.pe © mixture.By gently moving the head have been proven by experience, and recently said ecclesiastica, with the same title as herein- \u201cThe Plaintiff's declarativn sets forth in part; September, 1733, The first of these deeds ex.|lattir; sud the Seminary have no right to mete of the plant backward aad forward in the so- by numernus post-mortem examinations, to be above the remainder of the said ory, which the Indians\u2019 pretearion aa follows : i presses in the following terms the motive and out life anid death to the Uka Indians, according N bject of the conceseinn to wit.to their rubmiseiveness to a creed they cannot lution, the leaves become cleansed of insecte, often indigestible, and to have ted directly to arant warrant was Tegal! istered af fice aid Ecclesiastics are the ntees i 3 % 3 , y ly reg it the of \u201cThat ocles: U senti, and, as à kind of soapy gloss clings to the infant mortality, \"auch substances had Letter |of the Venvincial Registrar in the Register of from the din ti the Seb où the ake of ccc De ere of rl Kom po \" em ert im vossible to obtain cs 0 3 § , er 3 ob The Indian was within striking Gistance of Mr.Imcan.Afterwards, Mr, Lacan entesut the kitchen aud I left and went in rear nf the stable, Before going behind the stable 1 percvived that the fire was in the hayloft.When 1left, the leavenafter they are dry, insects donot quiek-|be excludesl from infant fecdin 3.\" the [ntendaut.i A .\u2018 we.3.That|the Lf aut.| ; Two Mountains, which wasgranted to them for 4 ; > ; RB ty meen thom again.\u2014 The Garden.cow\u2019 ue goats mith, when jure, mod modif |, JUL 0 Bn | oe Tit Mission formerly de a etn he wvantas the dia I a might be on meh of the) abies = the gard, In yess of the A y K \u2018 n located at Sault-suRécollict, fn the Lainnd vf rij at the Sanlt au Ltecollet, in the Irland {ranch Wa the Seminary have only brought 8 1 MET MY BROTHER, l'aoragatixe PLaxre \u2014 Our lady friends will ax much as possible to resemble hrman roilk, Connesl bearing ivel be now preparing for their arden, nd a Tow will often fouud mufficient, v ithout any it and Mare Pi dite April Montreal, and th + one and the princi pal con} af Montreal, of which they are in e, directions coming from our own experience other help, to nourish the new-born infant.+ hat by the first of theae orders in Council of the 1 er.ar Pic ed on Without delay trageferred from the island, and tiona could be taken up, and having obtained an may not rome amiss.Any lady, with no more There is one other point, which, though only lanven yeurs were allowed the eoclesiastics in |the 27th April 1718 the King 14 France, and established upon lands at the north-west shore! cr parte judgment ly means above pointed out, trouble than is required to procure slips, can indirectly contected with infaut fecdion isoue |ploce of two years to erect the structures herein in the confirmation of the same by the Crown °f the Take of the Two Mountains, which mis.they sre atrenuously resisting all efforts So ob- readily raise all the young planta she may of paramount importance an rogarils the pre- [above mentioned.of Great Britain and Ireland, was tbe quain- «jou would be advantageous not only because of tain » jndiclal decision upon the merits, and re- desire, The preparation in as simple as thic: sent and future health of the individuel, viz.: |\" That by the second of the said orders in| tenance of the mission of the Lake of Two the conversion of the Indiana, who being further fuse to bring any action which might serve as a À sauver or sonp plate, parti rled with clean the neccasity of guanling against the hateful Council the King of France ted the said Mountains for the moral and religious instrac- from the city roule also be beyond the danger test case ; but inated thereof continually harass sand, and the water kept above the surface.practior nf covering the child'a face an it sleeps.protestation from opnstraction « stone fort ae tion of the Algonquin end Troquois Indians, as by rear wi id he hl on the aa iA je Dh.Pr nn A ; i i .hav! ome nsvless, lard PE = \" .Sct this in & sunny window and insert your| The mistaken kindnees and over-zealous atten works cu Teted.at that.period hy the wid appears by the charter of Lnourporation ted incursions of de Iroquois > Hime of var i Dever yet obtained a verdict sgeinst an Tndian pren! In of e cullings.An ordinery plant will root nearly tion of nurses, in excluding the pure ait of le isetaation in the said Setgniory of Che Lake of |Statates vf Lower Camads, chapter forty-two.prayiog piece land three and «half on any of these charges.na y as in a propagating bed, and may heaven from entering the lungs, in order to \" i wp ne + wislon a Your memorialists finally represent that to indo h then be transfer do call Ten Musa i That the said Vlaiutifs (bo wit : the three |jepgney front, commencing st ithe brook leave the pout Oka Indians deprived of all the a i be rid rea After y of ard against the effects of cold, will often be + .+ i ! But remember to let the ateme one Exhibited in tho soft, pale, flabby condition of LAL ae fu Cond Lis Indian Chicte aise mentioned) are part of the VE is into the: lance the Lalee of means secured to them by -[T put up I beard the report of a cannon fired in \u2018ume dry thoroughly on the cut surface before the infant's body.the third year of the reign of Her Majesty member of the me a + ain Two Mountains, and stretching thence up the tioned, to fight cat the rv thes direction of the gate near the wharf.T saw inserting.The verbenas may be put in as cut.Queen Victoris, Chap, 3 and entitled, * te 9 \u201cmembers of - ee.shore of the sald lake and the River St, Law.| rights\u2019 against a wealthy corporation ma the the gate the day after the fire and it was all The pink slips may be pulled, nob out, from the Granan Guse.\u2014Take one quart of sour th Incorporate the uclesiastion SE the Seminary their Zo-membn of thy mid tribes, whom they tence, with & depth of three leagues, with title Seminary, would bonarnel blackened oad a ashed.extremities of growing shoots.The bogoniss milk, one teaspoonful of sods, otic egg, turn iB og 4s \u201cHuipice ot Montreal, to confirm their title Toul the Senet Dec red to then both tnd | of Fief, &c., &c., to the offers w ich they make the duties of the Government and would enlist in] p, La \u201cFriar of the Chri heliotropes, ctor, may be inscrted at once.flour to make & stiff batter; firense your Pan; [4s she Fiet and Seigniory of the Lake of the Two the and charter abo em end.and +9 PAY ail the expenses of the removal of this support of the Indians most dangerous elements Brothers sch A, the name of hristian When potting ey pose ae oh earth have some water in a cup, your epoon in Mountains and $o the Fief and Selguiory of St.dé the tio femal be Roo er \" mission, &c., &c.to which giving ear, we, &c.,|of sympathy.| ] PR pe, eed 1 Them Vent at Oka, a the When potins ue small pote, and rick our thin water, then it 1 porn oop by Bulges bn tix Provisee and fr powers gra |\u201d Fund Freedom of worship being AR and grant, &c, Whreiore your: memorials burly and puri a L posed 1 have tive! at Oka [n the Peto dri nd do not nf ve doing so the batter will not stick to your spoon.ually extinguish the seigneurial dues and rights und imprescriptible right of all Her Majesty's As the second deed, the sane ble urgently pray that Your Ex ancre vor: og the oi Frise of the Christian Pletedrainess Ba th is A o larger Pi They arc aplendid.Bake in a hot oven.and\u2019 for other purposes,\u2019 the said ecoleaisatics [cubjects in avery part of the Dominion of does not axiet, but the plea \u2018of the eoclesisatics [ment do adopt such meaaurce ne wi Hrothers' schools, Un the tiftcenth of June Which the oroughly fll the po ie mme ere duiy Incorporated tander the name of \u2018 \u2018Phe Canada, the raid Æcriresetion are bound by the[abore, cites Supplies the deficiency by skating [the Oka Lndiane in the Bof their last, à Little before four o'elock in the morning, a ich they aro growing ire ty air, = Eculesiastics of the Seminary of 8t.Bulpice of conditions of the sail grant snd charter to that it took place nu méme titre que ci-deseus, affairs under # Government officer to prevent and about five minutes after 1 had risen and eep well pinched back, and when the time UESTIONS & ANSWE Montreal,\u2019 and that their rights and title to the provide the Indiane of the Lake nf Two Mount- meaning evidently for the same object.waste, aa in other Indian sattlements, At least comen for removal to the border you wil have QUES NSWERS.|ssid Seigniory of the Lake «f the Two Moun- ains and amongut them the sald Chiefs and their Your memorialists do not now undertake to P nding the legal peoceediogs now Before the a ndinns' cases ; il has \u2018 - ia planta which will cheer you to tend.Fruit Taine and to nlf and each of the es-[cnreliginniste, with the mesa of moral snd define what tion pet a de re taken tip at tbe expenee of the Crown, to he aingle suit hefore the Courts in which the ques: Bernard Meller, who said to me to go instantly to save his clothes and mine, which were in a room vf the parsonage.1 saved what T could of them, and placed them in the village for safety.when returned, all the buildinge Were on fire, and [ worked to save property from the fire.| did not know the Indians who en the yard.1 cannot say if 1 would recognize the man who tried tostrike Mr.Lacan with his axe, 1 Lelieve that the fire must have been ret then the window at the north of the hayloft.1 awakened the servant, named Francois Meller, I beard the report of & cannon fired towards the he near the wharf.1 went instantly te the itchen to mak Meller if he had heard the rw Recorder.uk tates, lands, rerezvationn, buildings, dwell-| religions instruction in accordance with their LOPIERED MILK.loge * tenements and herl Fituate in Views of what ja moral and religious irateuetion deeds are: At the time the first doe] was under such counsel as may be approved of by ° : port, and he told me that it was that of à re Tes aoge grange rrr 6 py ian Cano omnes 10 G0 Le tien 2d En a de sn re ie res en ve Ep iv thorourh work in destroyi that ouis.YOU Taper what ails my vow?Sho has the |S rer andl lent in w, te folly worabip the maid ndings choose to adopt or | elemio vente end'of Lu rue] And your raemorialista, as in duty douad, vit |\"8*, several Indians pase.Lhey were looking ri ng great nuis- TOF LGN 4a where there is plesty of un the same manner and w je same exclu- follow, sud that the principal means of prov! ding Ty, ed .eve towards the house, and proceeding to ja the ance, the inoh-worm, which destroyed our y niveness that the eoclealastion of the Béminaire|such moral and religious instruction are {he concession was not nor granted for the pray.side where the hay-loft was, T believed that benefit of the Heminary but for that of the In- these [ndians meant harm to Mr.Lacan, 1 beaver grass and bush ferd, also à good spring de 88.Bulpice du Fauba ie eu ind tree But the knglish sparrow, having creek ; she in milked regularly and malted well, Toe or the mina of re fa ont en in Le = ih onal nets dfann exclusively, as long aa they would remain destroying everything che.Twrf EE Field and Pro fe be In gon health, but her real ie pre with {te constitution, before of the raid Indiens and that the anid granta| there.(The deed contains a Lind of catatl in oo * pme time AS 10] na e ember, 17?, on t t + 1 \u2018| co) [aver of io Heminary, In case dian tri othe on + import them into pour rection hour or To after ing, conning me to lose naries, or eh of the two, ould or night have ary rly the lean pried should either migrate therefrom or become ex- e over foathered mongates yon have, even all the cream.Tt is perfectly sweet sud tastes beens ets dite bad the bs ht bo do & or could requirements of the wil Indians Ho vines.To ne - * pouls \" ¥ ght ha able to enjoy, make « 3 date A to the robins.Not even the quail can with- moi, ue of my pointe Ta can understand dispose of the maid rights and RA or any part [Ch hat Le A Lime the nid three cession deeds, ax well an at the present time, the bad rh rer Jr on choo ih I co ha Sor TE any Fr er | a et i coathcd 1 utiful avenucs © city of Drool - ** Tha e ol \u201council, 18 was ¥ fr le substitution, wi e rigl a o where the houses are on à large Tat of round.places rometimen cat poimmous plante which moreover ordained that the \u2018community of the struction at the han nf the Methodist, choreh thet quality, The Seminary, as appelée à la in villa style, the ridewalka breed snd well cannes their milk to thicken ve cnrdle & short gaclenisation 4 he Heminary of He Falvios of Church of and nr orcanization ally substibatian, have > right whatever, \u2018except that trees.on ci r a at vi red mi bee ced the marly bp time after milking.What ia rather singular were in reality, I thin omter mi Cound, vest.TT ne state, and became members of * 0 Linilel be sought, the Heminary holds simmer mornings were eed with a |i the above cane iv ita long continuance, as 5d with the said Se pony of the Take of the © That as members of the Methodist Church the tamed yk aa the Domir on Government variety of native songeters, caroling to the! cows do not generally continue to cat offennive Tr on vennsacnis, and Ine.|e said tros Chiefs and thelr tonte Los and are bound 6 deal with thelr warts sa delicious morning wir.Since the aggressive i nie noteven locks.A veterinary surgeon ritances whatever, fur the said gentlemen scclo- AN entitle] to claim from the sald Ecclesiastics the Government are dealing with theirs, that in, Prooent = { 1rowa were colonized half the exquinitencas qe thin city, to whom the case wan referred visatica of the Seminary of 8%.Bulpioe of Mont.the maintenance of schools and of & place of to turn the whole forome and productions of the Justio of the Peace, ot Nature hanfied.Now one hears only harsh, says th cine cow should be removed to other real and thelr miccemnom, them tn have, possess, worship.Helgniory to the benefit of the Indians, includ: Rev.Jeax Francors Tac, priest of the twittering notoa and sees short, homely, stocky $27\" (ha hold and enjoy aa the true and legal proprietors \u201cThat the sald three Chiefs, aa Trustees for Ing the mince ot questies if any exist, the pro- Semi of 8t, Bnlpdoe of Montreol, deposed : birds.If you have any swe of beauty an pasture where she could not get her * favorites and possewors of these and of all each part their raid co-religionista, and \u2018Tor tke sald Mis.noe of the forest without waste, the income ite- For nearly four years 1 have heen in charge of appropriateness, don\u2019t engraît the ¥inglish weeds'\u201d ; also that the fellowing dose be given snd jrortion of these, for the sole use and advan.|slon, on the 16th of Augoat, 1872, by deed of rived from pasture, the conatitnted rente of all |the property of the Beminary at the Lake of rrows on your veighborhood.\u201d -N.Volos hor i tar of the ecclesinstion of the said Seminary |sale from Dame Catherine Kanakwelssta, ex.ornceded lande, teprewenting the Beigniorial cons Two Mountains, In the afternoon of the 14th Trim rue aa de | Epl PE a \"a .\u2026, common .ciausns inte e .mond le, #1 nai a .Barr yon Oassaon.\u2014A new Jersey gander ginger, | drachm, molames, 1 pint water, 3 |°Pder je Council, he Cents of To Mountains, scquired a lot| 3rd.The reasous given by the Seminary to] collect, ame to tell me that about twenty five| den and in case of fire, I saw ten Tudians artoed et, in The Frust Reserder, considers salt noces.\u2019 , .: + 5'That since the said order In Council, before |of land Troe portion \u2018of the obtain the grantare Voth moral and strategical.cr thirty Tudians, some armed with guns, bad with hatcbetn cutting these hose.Mosawhlle sry to the development of cabbage, cepecially pinte.and yot, the raid ecclesiaation have always en- village of Uka, in the Reigniory {the Lake! §1.The Indians would be removed from a focus passed Tin \u2018house.proceeding towards vil: the Ramen bad posession of the Bayloft, tan to his room to warn him.1 met him coming out of his room, and 1 said to him, SIRE INDIAYS ARK COMING,\" and be replied, '* Yon, 1 have just seen them am\u201d He saked me if the doors of the house were well locked ; T replies, \u2018Yes, except the kitchen door, hn which passed Francols, or vant, who is doing his work.\u201d Mr, Lacan then went ont of the house to gn into the yard and 1 returned to my mom, looked thrmgh the blinds and saw Mr.l.acen and five I in TUE FIRE INVESTIGATION AT OK A0 When our reporter took the evidence given at the Uka investigation over a week , It was with the understanding that it would not be ublinhed till the investigation had been brought 5 anfend.On Mondey, without leave from Tudge Coumnol, the (Jazette published à xynopaia of the evidence, which it obtained from the clerk's official notes, Hin Honor, therefore, ab.aolvea us from our ise, and we publish the evidence of the rat witness, Ora, Monday, July 16, 1877.Counsot, Feq., sitting as the diane, \u201cou do an evil thing.\u201d 1 saw one of the Indians walk up to Mr.Lacan and, an axe six or eight laches above his head, say, © Go sway or 1 aball kill you.\" This was spoken in French, Ome of the other Indians, a young man, placed his hand on the other's shoulder, and teaking in Troquoia in à whisper motioned to him to withdraw, and also made a rign to Mr.Lacan to etter the house, In the was a tet of hose fn three lengths, wach forty feet, and it was upon the railing surrow the flower plot.It was used to water the UE TRE PTY nce 8 a fHE MONTREAL WEEKLY WITNESS.AucusT 2, 1877.and 7 could soc thous from my window.Among Heu pass in front of my house guiog to Mr.{the man gob wounded.\u2018The man ie the carri Cross-Exau1nkD : \u2014T did mot ses the wounded of ail sums which have been jraid to the con \u2014 the Indians in the yard T eos guiced four a Paseut's boues, 1 stopped sud fi aut go out told me he had been ahot, and that he thougbt man fire, or have anything in his hands at all.tractors vi the said rail GA en \u2018secount of their Advertisements.Ad rtise Ihave known for à long time.The first was [Hil alter they had paused, While was be was going to die.1 heard the wounded man cz For God's sake contracts.The required returns were eubmit- Vo ments.Lazare Agueranté, who was cutting the hue, |i sy yard l'aaw men watching, and when (signed) Joux Mompiaies.[donot kill me.\u201d I did nt McAllister say ted, but owing to delays sud arvurs in printing, Sm \u2014- -\u2014 and who sttempted to strike Mr.Lacan with au 1 bad returned tu my house and gone vpou the TWO FRISONEBS ILENTIVIRD, a thiog.A lot of voloss in the crowd sald, wers nut prow ven tu the public.How.BAND = are, and Louis Tharahaive, Xavier Karount: [gallery the M Johnson, wife of Robert Campbell, Wh, you not rua him luto the canal 1 {ever the co returns are uw fa hand, and INSTUUMENTS.D* BULLER, alias Decaire, and Antoine Aroniaghaté.CHIEE OF THE INDIANS, made the following deposition :\u2014 &.bia He Mcallister olasp his hands below we giro the oficial cu wv The last three were armed with guns.I did] Jos: Onesskenrat, came tu me aoû said, \u2018Mr 1 live oa the voraer of St, Etienne and Canal together and aay, T have shot him at last,\" or statement of amounts paid to the Con ractars of the FUENCH AND OCULIST AND AURIST not immediately reeoguics the man who vad [[ebrun, T want the canon,\u201d ur will you give streets, in tbe City of Montreal, I was at my wards to that sect + A No, Tdidnot.Ÿ em! Queboe, Montreal, Uttawa and Oc: ti atel Rail.BROLUSH.© cutting the bose with Aguerauté.Two or three lune the cannon ™ The cannon ts which be al- [house on the evening of the 16th {ust I heard sure ne not it when be was ahead of ed De asooutt of thelr coutracle to 14t Decom: Dost value at low.HE MONTREAL GENERAL MOSPITAL.ys later I recollected that it was Mathias tol shots on St.' .est pay lag prices Akeirare who was cutting the hose with Ague rante.because the fire was gaîniog upon and Bir.Thibault, ene of the priests: was yet asleep, and (WEST TO AWAKRE HIN, I was saving effects at the back of the house, and, therefore, did put see if there were Dudiaus ocllected at the front or not.The fire navet have the window of th.Shayloft, which ix usually open.All the buildiuga were burnt in n the evening of the 14th, I heard it rumored that the Indians intended, during the following night, to set fire 1 { the Canadians.When Mr, Lacan heard these rumors, and that à band of armed Indians, oitubering twenty five, had been seen a short distance from ge, he requested Colonel Amvot by tule- graph to come and protect him, but the Cutunel replied that same evening that Lis men bad left taken by two or two and a half hours.to the church and all the houses of vil and that Mr.Lacan eught again to APPLY TO TUE GOVERNMENT AT QU There were in the parsons; and myself, Considering the rapidit: th it blr.1h which the contlasration spread, THEW STONES LVER IT.man who Was shot to strike him,and saw a tall- Lad not been awakened Ly Mr.Lacsa and n A few went lower down, and got unr man take hold of that man\u2019s arm to prevent his life would have been in danger, 1 have not} the fe ard cme or two were on the edie him from striking, The crowd then gathered any doubt that the tire was the of the They came down, and immediately round, and the mers, Patrick McAllister and WUEK + F ONE 1H MORE INCFNILARIES.It would have been vasy toset the I did not ree the Indiaas go out of the , that evening Messrs, lacs and Thibault, the servant man, luded had been in the cellar of my house since my arrival, more than three yeas ago.It was of brass, and measured three feet in length, with & bore three inches in diameter.1 replied, \u201c1 30 not object to giving up the cannon, It ia not mine,\u201d Then the Chief said, \u201cIt Is urs.\u201d The Chief aml I entered the house together, and within 1 found two men who spoke to the Chief in the Indian tongue, They went to the door of the cellar, They went down and thea came up with the cannon, aud all three went out with it.I but the door behind them ant went to bed.At the door 1 saw two men who had guas or sticks.I was awakened afterwards by the re port of a cannon, and at 4.10 1 was told that the Seminary buildings were on fire.| have known Chief José fur three years, and | ain sure that be is the man who spoke to me on the gallery, ALEXANDHE CARBIEME depsel \u2014 On the morning of the 15th of June I was at home in the village.A few minutes before four o'clock 1 heard à cannon tired, the sound of which awoke me and 1 went outside.T raw thirty or furty persons, who spake the Tndisn tongue, entering the gate of the Seminary property.One com: menced to strike the gate leading to the yard with an axe or club, and others | after 1 saw flaines spreading from the edge upwards, I saw the yard gate burst in, and saw a few of the Land enter the vord, d the rest and eaw some men firing Etienne street that evening,about twenty minutes to elgbt.I wan sitting at my window facing St, Étienne street at the above hour.snd 1 sawa crowd running through a lane ints St Patrick street.This lane is opposite my bose va the other side of the strvel, and ruus through a field on the canal bank.There Were two men in front of the crowd that came through the lane, and [ now identify one of those mon as the prisoner now present by the name of Patrick McAllister, and ÿ saw bin fire the first shot, Michael Kyau, the prisoner mow present, was one of the two nen in front of the crowd coming through this lane, aud he fired the second shot.The two shots were fired immediately in succession by both the prisoners mentioned, to wit, Patrick McAllister aud Michael Ryan.As the shots were tired, 1 saw a mau coming rou the corner of Canal bank and St.Etienne street quite slowly.He seemed to be frightened to come round the corner.When the first shot was fired, the man sat down on à stove, raying he was wounded, and for God's sake not to kill him.Michael Ryan fired at the said man as there was nobody else toshoot at, The crowd was coming up the lane, when gathered round, and 11 or 15 shots were fired I then saw a man approach the ris Michael Liyan had hold of the nan that was shot by the artus\u2014 Mc Allister onthe left side and Ryan un the right side ; they were sporting him.the crowd, because there | saw hi ly, and he could not have clasped bs him utioct th without ny secing and hearing him, I eens veitively that McAllister \u201cad on a round dark at, a grey coat and dark pants, Mongar Caxrsrry, laborer, father of the before mentioned witaeas, conld not swear to any of the prisoners ae Jerson he saw op the evening of the 16th, Could not recognize any one in the through?A, 1 don\u2019t belicve they could.The wen who fired did not say anything, in fact, because it was à fut distance away ; they were about one h ndred feet from the window, Q.Un your solemn oath, were not these wen who fired too faraway from your house for anyone to be able to swear to and identify the positively?A.IE you were acqualated with the people or knew them, yon could tell them right off.My wife and liter both told we at the time that it was MeAllbter nod M2, Ryan that fired, and said they knew them.In re-examination by Mr, (GREEXSHIELDS, witness stated that he was excited at the time, but that his wife end daughter were much cooler than he was, GEoRik ALFRED posed; I live st No, Wellington street.now the prisoners Patrick Fitzpatrick and crowd, Cash quid by the Commissioners for \u2018 Cross exaunined ~The wounded man was too oe averlug Incurred resis te ar away from my howe for anybody in it to Du 4 hear what pas said by hiw, Tooly 22 = $13,306 0d 1}.Would you e any ome on oath who by Li would state that they heard what the wounded eats pad on thelr man said from the window you were looking| stock.200 101010000000 15.040 O6 K.laborer, aged 18, de ©: LOK.T.M'UKKEYY, COKTEACTON, KiST BRCII M.Cush paid by Lhe North Shore Rallwsy Company.being the sum of tutals on each ecoLtract\u2019 GS64.4 Ris 18.\u2018This amount fs composcd of B143.paid tu the Korth shore Railway Cutspany by Lie Curpors- tion of the City of Quebec, on account of their sab wrplion of $1.000,000.sad $211,480.13 paid by Provincial Government on aceouat of loan au thortsed by 37 Viet, Chap.¥, Rect.15.Sundry accounts due by North shore Railway Company, and pahl by tbe Commissioners uvder clause 4 1st of é for engineering Incarred clion of said Act 38 V paid to the contrac Cowmisstoners .l\u2019aid for arbiteaiion end other cx- penses inenrred for purchssc of \u201cwuce hap.20,937 BS 1.646.784 12 night of way.ce 2.4930 Vy Pald salary and expenses of fuspector of rolling stock.598 75 Total .- B 0300 00 DUNCAS MACDONALD, COSTHACTOR, WEST SECTION.\u2018ash paid by tbe Northerz Colonixa- Mon Railway Company.\u2018lhls amount Le composed of §- 900 paid to the Nortbern Uolonisa- $793 452 U3 Heal far clevular.OLMAN'S STOMACH AND LIVER A cure (or Fever and Agus.Dumb Ague Intermittent Fever.ludigrea Aide, Periodical and Life.ation, Liver Cough (of Meurt Disease (uot uv for Feoale Weaknesses.Bl tremitios and Partial Farulva w du that this is our of the ches) worl 1t in the purest, the sul~st anil able, The claim bs \u20ac.\u20ac.DEZOUCHE, ames street, Manircel.1'ain in Shoulders sad .Kiduey 1 ale, [Harrlurs, Cold 1t {a also » preventive of Yellow For.weamouls, fmall-Pox, Rearlet Fevor à at and Minsmathe Dis: vases that arr des oui poison.TO MALARIAL AND BILIOUS PATIENTH PAD, .Remittent and Conse ptio: INétoulti 1 remedion in the Ihe most remnrk- Wesidounss, 1351 St.Catherine st.Ofiios hours, 3 W 8 p.m.Your NAMF.Printed on 40 Mixed Cards fo no 1 mike, Have dats Woiarod Hard Pes.Maro! e ate Gramte, Key, Damas, Photo, Kubossed, Im ue, 30e.3 Filétarion Cais, 0c 90 belgie of Birds: bot Ee or Non Bos AEA JAMES BAYLIS & SON, IMPORTERS OF CARPETS, OIL CLOTHN, &o, Marlug vow received the greater part of thir Rpring Stock of BRUSBELR, TAIEATRY, KIDDERMINSTER, Two and Throo-ply, and DUTCH CARPETS, are prepared to show one of Lhe brst sasortments Lo be found in the city st moderato prices, and wonkd invite the attention of purchasere to the same.Juste 10 Harp, a Case of LACK CURTAINS usw and handsome patterns ; CURTAIN MATERIALA, FURNITURE COVERING, CORNICES BTAIE RODS, ke., ke, io great variety.FLOSE OIL CLOTHS in all qualities that are wade.at all prices.THE CARPRY WAREHOUSE.439 axp 461 KOTHE DAME STHELT CA FRONT IE THE QUEEN'S LAUNDRY BAR.Vas, by Sta real merits, secured tor aol he reputation of Leis Jue of the most cromomical peiation of FAMILY HOAPS through the hayloft window, which \" ?l'atrick McAlister, Ihave known them for tion Railway Company on account of \u201cafcely apes to \"nt: ft la self.Introdueed i A been remcheal li means © .started teen nd the bolding, mue of the M they proached my uate I id tomy hey ulout & year.I aa tho distarbance which took loan suthorised by 57 Vic.ua.2.Seiden.hut hey Fl ra ; * .Ee or om la CUARATRED PERFECTLY of a shave from the avs of accompli [some It was then 430.© did not rec ant Ek and iv him v: T went Vlace on St, Etivane on.on the lath inst.T wan Corporation of the City of Monies! wrt Chalivage mordioal noience bu equal this Feber, Nu sc the ee ee tu sub any Æthe haud.It \u201cLa that || La css à drink, an Eh Tap the canal bask at theend of $t.Éticune st.LCR secount of their subseription of Sovuni, breause in uizery nine cases oùt uf a Lundred à © otbor articles of Toa! work, TILK QUEENS conter {hat it habit ot be ed Le va tingtie the Larne oT ten, bot Lenni pot Meet | v2 détua street and tok old of, 8 for vid [did ut see the shooting, and heard no chota §] 600,000, single Pues to work.We hace found ery ToS LLY BAT bie been 50 liner hated to bare , \u2019 ?; fA 4 \"CE HUE Ei was in the crowd by the aim, and Isic, fi \" twe oc sun nai contrat chronte + bound cases exhausted the drat Pad deceived the publle, Hames, identify them.1 was an arpent and a hall fra | ho want n drink ; a 1 heard Mu Atlister onder Bred re a age cu 6 saw 8 Amcuni paid on account ar contrac pad ad to get antes Unt Grae wee rare.\u201cWilh The propriciors therefore respectfully request thet son- Joseus l'exitrani, carpeuter, of ha, the Lavioft at the tie.; : the wounded man to give up what Le had in ble] areet, I fiat raw lim sitting ou a stone.This 56.dated 16th May, 17 00 00 De i at omar ed our cape, ore | rota thla popular family requisite, uk oscil: 1 avy been drought wp in tia, VictoutsE Batisower, wife of Savant [fread Hesaid he was too weal, but that it) 0500, on the canal, à little outside of St.Amount by iba Frovicid wor Lure wlion pou bare buushi the frat package, Lou nist QUEEN'S 'NDRY BAR.now all the people who dwell t is Medesnyant, deposed ; 1 w.s iu ny botise oi the gras in the left Lrvaat, and that they could take Fri L fes \\ \u2018| erument to the Jueques Cartier take bottle aftr butlle or Lux after box at vour OWR Fek luth à\" RTAGH ; cree ; ; = | \u2019 an.> iticnne st , slut ten fot from the canal where I 57 148 90 jet dw itn the almost positive vectatute of M1 « AGS HEAD\u201d for Trade Mark, and Lake 00 both French and Troqueis.On the it of the morning of the Lith of Tune, sid was awske (it out themselves, McAllister took sometlbiog C00 0g; Elliott, the wounded man, had 8 2 .57 cure.and with tie almost positive coctatoty of WSs oer.1ith of June last I was warned by u Catuotie Ta- when | heard the report of a cannon, My hus-| out : E could sve tie colors, sud they tore it up; h kof bis heal had on Paid the Montreat, 0); t .Jour syaicm Ul bouts iauie to be drs aded La the tou dian fee Led Robe oie it and dt ree vei sd pend th ed the mo dat wa monde ta Bla | Bb Sl wi Le on ire Paiements a ele : 0 TEST PRIZE something would Lappen during the night and |dour, hot as it was tw early lie went to ick Jd then he was put into a carrisge.ie dy.J Er AB vl Chan.1.031 21] THE PAD CONT BUT $3.30 AND 83.30.OVER ALL COMPETITORK | Te TE ea oan abe A nin.When | heard tho report nf Er cart FETES a re Be wa Patrick street, A0 pas St Etloune be, namely, en rom Paid sundry seeouats du by tbe À magie af caren tn a This places the ben- THE CANADIAN ORGANN?mained awake nearly the whole nizht, asd alent I got up and saw it through my window pointed : him in the crowd, but 1 iulie's wills you cannot secw en place on FAI 4dr pore.C'olunization a each of all.A AS Na: Ehret wince eines tare Indiau tcstnen prosing |aUthe church tear the ate cle to the wharf.® John Liyav, I saw Lim in the \u20ac put list, Etienne at, and T could not have seen any Railway Compas 20000, W11.207 es] Cunmliaons free ut pa Of, ; (Smith Organ (\u2018o., Brome, FQ.) » pevitis tw 3 Wotnen Plasing AL clidreh tear She gal eto the wharb dg\" see him fire any shots, or dell gn Nhat might bave takes place on St.| > ete aliesr OÙ ROTRE DAME STHRET, MONTREAL.Notrefthatanding the fact that the leading orçan makers 4 Cash puid to contractor by Kaltves v towards the church and Daring » aise in the Close to the tan, 1 saw Cler Ruriewayou anything, 1 am very well acquainted id Fron et, ontil after T arrive; ab the corner.todas io orn y Tegel TB MOLD WIOLERALE BY of Canada wer laneviy and » cinlly represented at tho same direction, went out of my hove, sad and Mathew hatayanics then saw that the .\" vn them fo me six or 4x, w the woun rs the » ; ; a , - : .n recent Australian Ex lon (n Kyduey.à couple of ordi.Fenced within 230 feet «4 the buiplimg which Seminary Inking we on ire.1 saw Indians Eee i, Mut MATER CAS the tro prisoners | Par D Li aiue, Tia arte any ie ire ea ua ER ÉD vaut rime Flo trou th mibecrient rarocebas bave tubes 10° sa tint set on fire, whew 1 heard the rein of coming away from the fire, Amoug there NoAllnter and Michael Ryan, tire, Isbould ray ers the tall.I sawtwo young men go upasd Paid ror arbitration wud wiher ex ALL LIVE RETAIL DEUGGINTS KKKP CHEM, FIRST PRIZE OVER ALL COMPETITORS.tepped behind t 1 maw four brook L BAW LHIED J SEV ONESAKEXRAT, they were at the distance about fifteen yards |, tone and put him into n car.Pensez ln vacchuse of Cty gu | THSS Es WHAT MOLMAN'S LIVER PAD] Mr.ames Brawn.Assistant Commissioner, writes from Ts rans moti he and fat eee 1+ father, whe name Ido not kuow,and Pierre from wy window, at which 1 was standing { U0 St.Patrick street.\u2018l'he names of these p.54 for nalues mod expensos Ue a = = In DOING: Kyduer, under date of 2nd May : Ua oe he Lariat hey crneut tha] Phere, father of one of the prisoners, When I was duwn'on the street, Twas quite close (5000 en were Patrick Jlonnelly and| spector of rolling stock 121 50 tend the Following Testimontalns {are auch plessure lu [uforming yor that your or road dt Chom y > Octave Branavt deposed = 1 have leen three [to the wounded man, and I am gite positive Thomas Butler.Donnelly meides on Cal-| aid for portion of rent imputed to Mutual Lite Jusurunee Cn.gins fuk the foi price at the Kehioi mL Cortldaates, , ; years aeatom of the church, Lie tot kiow the that it was the said Michael Lyan and Patrick) borne street.I du not know Datler's address.Kopineering Iiepartment for office ian 5 \u2019 Te wil be ween by vile that the GOT LION THE +FNCE McAllister that fired st the mau, and supported on St.James street, Montreal.GsD 54 these Instruments, an being br far Une best tea tured and then upon the poof of the hayloft, while the Ir mods wie are Protestants, lecauée they do not corse to my church, On the worning of the fins to walk when he was woutded, and put ki I was wome two or three fect away from the wonnded man when he was taken off the stone.Toul.lu the Imsniot, Le fi tlx eustained br the impartial Judges 1 followed them until Le was pat into the car s 8ttbe Rrdaer Rxbibhion.oo EPH GouLp, rinze, 1 rwear pusitively I saw nobody I knew in the cabs, ; Me CUKRAN, Cunse] for the prisonere, cross other two remained below.Oue of the two wha 15th of June T'was up and saw a cannon placed woth Lave been fronbled «hihi novere draper Grand total of parments .$4.442, ot up had a bottle containing sore Hoi which {at the front sate of the Seminary, and a few terne rena : RY .he cmpticd upon the roof, and the other set it on misutes alter Twas etill Lukin when T heard questioned the deporent as follows, ; .[there except Batler and Dunnely.Tam well The return in very voluminous, givin es or ds tie or ea rT Rubi eam 0 real.due 11.3837, SINE Samoan.fire with & match.fn ab ut five minttes the |the sound of the esploion of the cannon.When did you give information shout this| i, yainted with that neighborhood.Thin oc | oo the minutes of meetings held by the Com.Troublesome that ©onuly eat uth ing witht erent nulls ret an om Fre Te two Indiens down Among tie sow I œrubl pot tell wh set 1] matter, and to whom?A, The next night after (Ul took place after eight o'clock.© have] 080 Lie and of all corresprmdence which las 1 oh el Fomaght he.Fad dn taken off.There wore abut fifty-five «r sixty Indinna it Lappened, and to a man wh lives fa BY 39088 pot wpaken th anyone about\u201d the evidence I was [taken place.little or no Paith da 1: bat, {am apy ft ban, © Foust PRIZE.\u2014 CENTENNIAL lwlieve, Autirely cured after wearing it (wentr.vigin Aaya: a0 that | ean vice more eat anything without Teeting ary fll effect, It ia worn without any (convenieate, aml canot be too sicungly meommended.Yours truly.(signed) API AREINE bacoise, Py.Joue 12,1 MAN LIVER PAD OL SriRuRY,\u2014| the nndemigned.having bees troubind weumber of years back, bi to give in this case since I have been subpanacd.1 do nt know where one Campleil, a witness in this case, lives, 1 never tall anylody I saw inning to end?va : the «hooting and kuew all abont it.I work 2.Dio you swear positively that it was nob for à livioy onthecunal.My brotherin-law, the young wan John Ryan that took the reza-} Wu Kuowles, is à policeman.1 spoke to fin out of the man's breast?A.Te waa nt Jobin pip abant the shorting.Hr sic melt Dknew J line.Q.Do I understand you to swear that you of the shouting affray from be- \u2018 - about the ca: If there were any Engtishruen present I did not ree thea, They were all Indians whom 1 had before seen.TMEY WERR ALL FROTÉSTANIS, Lecause if they had been Catholics FE woull haie recognized them.1 ran to the Seminary Ly a short road to warn Father Lacan, and when I EXUTBITION.\u2014Irou Raïllu Works, i aad Oruamenta) 1204 - - SPECIAL NOTICES.OvER-EXEGTION, either of body or mind, pre- duces debility snl disease, The usual reniedy is to take sume stimulant, the effect of which isthe same as giving à tired horse the whip instead of Keud tof cuts and prices, IL R.IVES & CO.Queen firect, Montreal was ten or saw the whole twelve feet high, they were in the hay: loft between twenty-five and thirty persons were factor the building.From this grap I adden.yrau a (VRE OF INEBRTATES, HOWL.« told him that 1 kuew FIRE-BALL.THROWY, : » tyan.[any of the fellows, an ot v ! 4 i ; T got there 1 heard a noise on the other side of a ve to derstanil you to swear that at, po ; .| Sate, The true way isto fortify the system with difareut prescriptions from eminent phi sicinns, fur «Ir ich (ll nts the Laslett, The hay tool fire fence seven fect high, AI in the crosed about a Are we tt et es id runing | ne ad came (They wore |b ent bonis like the Peruvisg Byra, (a i vaisine och perergiite ict aout gar musth] AI who ace extorton fram emesis se ot bana ole ol av co .St.: à \\pisesstrenzth au:l vigor ice (hen | du feel à gross the caunen appeared to be armed with either fr a few articles vf fuod fore, protoxide of iron), wi I got np on the fence and looked to the whole sy loukint! the master.When the wounded men was sit- FAD, and en ba are lasitel to send for Prospectus af The Voitr! clic, nn away up the canal lask with his head 1?did mut see gio en the stone there was a crowd around him.men who \u2018were npon the rf, One is Xavier A.No, I ter.guns or axes, Karountadsi liar Decaire, ani the thet lover.Thirty fect away [saw ube man climbing lack totcasda the rc i time the shots Line es the stone dhere vas à ar à pr Which 1 did not re tos Temperance Home.The sretens adopted lias worked a francois Anaharanté, At length the whole of [ap to the hayloft window.Three or four were | 50 FEE AOL FT ep at what they were! nn St, Etienne street towarduitbe wounded man.signed) NP ROBERT, mlrabir, and resul.s are most eaveucuging.the band of Indisns started in the direc: tion of the yarni gate.which they hroke down with ones.Among those wha lroke down the gate were Navier Karountadsi alias Decaire, and Francois Anabarent and Lazare Ameranté, who struck the sate with shoving him up, While I waa looking one of the Indians picked up a at me, and I jumpel Town The atone struck the fence.to the Seminary building and lacan.The latter went out Monthly fee.$10.Address Advertisements.mr LR CUF ABOTA] HERE! firing.apd I saw the man drop down on the They went thrmngh the crowd and prevented a stone ¥ Ly \"fellow from kicking him, exclaiming at the same Q.lid you see the wounded man fire À.\u2018 time, No, he did not ire à «hot in tuy presence; he Le FOR GOD'S SAKE RAVE METCY ON HIN.\" had nothing in his hands at all.He might| (rroes.examined by Mr.J.J.CrrRax, Q.C.\u2014 sone to throw from the fence.I then went poke t> Sfr.ke to the Farx WANTED.VERYBODY LOOK Sawrar, lu order ta let bin patrons see some of hic j'enmansh CAPT.JAMES W.BRERETON, Manausn United Temperance Rome, Poist St.Charler, near Montreal fore they purchase bis Text-Book of Busi price Sic.innkes the following offer.good Ag ce fi the bridge until i he af all; 1 will swenr that the cleus an axe.Then several entered the vard, and [| Tatiana, There were 20 of theo fo the yard have fired finm the time he left a I did not nee the row atall: a for only 30 day: will wend, paid, en sir cu ] UT .7 i e d boo ; ; ; Ÿ Me wilt se + ¥ \u2014 eer sent be ce | vor fe 1 do mo | emi ener Sh pal to Dnt EE SEL IT VIO (pe cond mn ESUET HILBALER i Cr rah | TED.arm i ht poser, wii or SSPE PR Ee IR NOTICE, \u2014 A Female Teacher what tonk placein the the persons whom [ have named are the oneswho net the hayloft on tire, namely, Navier Karoun- tadsi fins Decaire, and Francois Anaharante.Lazare Agueranté [have known fean my routh, and T cannot have made a mistake about and stamp, if this advirtiscment fs sant therewith.The retail price of above wonld be double this price.Send at ance and get the bust.Address Di.J.B.NAWYER.Dox 118, Carp, Ont.MAIN MBA \u2014 Good Lands froin into the house.Mr.Lacan spoke to them and said that they had COME LIKE RRIGASDS Befure I entered issuing from the commencing tn Wanted immediately, for No.1 Achoal of Munci- pallty Ko.3 of Granville Co., Argeatowil.Salary 914 Be mMonih, and must kave « Diploma from the Board of Ex- aminces, Montreal, Board convenleat tn the school.An.plication to be made to JAMES REID, Avors P.O, Yue.cH EAI TYP.rail socess of Montres! : good 1aud aad butldings : for a beneroleat object: state lowest price and pertico- lam te T.W.BOX 1419, NUNTRRAL.WILLIAM EWAN & BON when the regalia was taken out of his breast?A.1 wan shout four feet from Lim, 42.Will you swear that a revolver was not taken out of his breast at eatne time the colors were A.[ could nut see.The parcel waa taken all out together frum the left side, and The man who was ahsut to commit thet acthad no cnat on, but was 1.his vest and shirt elesvon.1 did not nes any of the other prisoners around natal.When [Art Fi the wounded nan some thirty ar forty persons were around bim, ful.lowed the wounded man up until he waa placed 10 BREAK EVEMTIUNS, the house emoke was bavloft, aud Hames were When Mr.Lacan im.ar, .ds at, 5 va spoke tu the Ind ii of the latter said in|l saw po revolver.in a carriage.I am rot relate to any of the .for may po] Tutos in YOUNG.Mavisabe Tuesnav, Julv, 17th.French, * You will see what will become of you| Re-esamined\u2014 When T eay that I saw tbe |prisoners,nor sm! in aoy way interented.T sawa (Late Muir, Ewan k Ca), Land ater, 57 Culirorne atreet, Toronto.TWO THOUMAND POUNDS OF SECOND The depositions today were made in presence [and your church shortly,\u201d At that tite old] whole shooting affair 1 mean all the shooting young man kick the wand man, hut he was WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, dd - bos \u2014- | N 5 °T i x Agueranté, father of the chief, was cutting the | that toak place from the time hie two men camo ot any of the prisoners.Corner Ne.Joseph nnd Me.Mears atroets GENTS.THE MOST W ON- HAND TYPE of the prisoners F sis Xavier Karountadsi, a\u2019ias Decaire, anid Francoin Xavier Analarante The hme was nsesl fo out of the lane, and at which time the man was} Îtecxamiceld by Mr.Gasæssnreuns.\u2014Joho IIS he wold In ann or more lots.but noi Ins thas Lin) hose into small lengths, DERFUL eud [anteur-setiing article at the present k i i i MONTREAL.ls the MAGIC PEN: writes with i ire i cot um tcis, the garden, wing attached to à punip.At the shot.1 .Ryan was formerly a companion of mine.; Hime th ; | » en PLL on i Hé time vf the five it vas Bangiog | ou ha fence.JOHANNA Cui tixa, spinster, deposed : 1 live Forex RYAN, one of the prisoners, was sworn, itis Bwas, Seu.Jaume Ewax.ph ee a ee re ete to pre ot Vee a a Ti acting ma interpreter.| \"| Tt might have been ued npn the tire.Tat-jon Columbls street i She cit by Montel, at and feposed fam 14 years of age, and rede Anew in.mnths perdez.Now it rout time.bout deiar, Det) ae are fn fair ee Loctes Decaire, wife of Thomas Satacara, de- tempted to enter the sacristy, but No.Hi, work al .Are NE] at 30 +t, Patrick of .ave heard that Sm \u2014 wend sour order io ruses ! i i College street.On the 16th tok place on the night of the 16th inst.1 ae fd > pe I » Ç \u201c qu 191.25 per pair, securely packed, so that he type wil; pose: 1 was bevcht up in the villas of Oka 1 Was CAUGIT DV THE ISDIANS, Powder Factory in Ree nk I row piscs 4 NotI EOI\" CO.PARTNERSIII MONTREAL NOVELTY CO.Be at during ann man Nae Tan remember the burning of tha church, parom- (4, 1.eat me, dragged me about thirty fect, and instant, between seven and cigut 0 clock, wan] wag pot present at it.I was swimming in the 208 AT.JANES ATREKT ng pme ple im cwal hexideSt_ Etienne st.,and while so engaged heard shots fired, I ran towards the Welliagton Uridge after the Britons had gone past with their flag\u2014the Union Jack \u2014straight up Wel.pressions will be forwardeé on application by ; JOHN DOLGALI dc SON.Proprietors Witxuss Office, Montreal, je back gallery nf our house sewing.faces our vard, but I heanl I got up and went to our front ei towards the bridge and saw a ritting on th This back gallery some shots fired.age and other buildings.1 du not remember © on.Dox 1120.the date, but T know that it was in the month of June last, and I helleve it was about the did all sorts of things to ne.did not recognize any une of the persons wii beat me.ey did not attempt to hurt me ranch, hecanse they had NOTICE in hereby given that I hate this day sdmitved tay son.middle of June, at about four o'clock in the WO PEC ME me with their finta.I windows.1 looked ¢ A dou with the free rs to St Patrick JAMES EWAN, 3LE SOCIETY morning, that the fire commenced, {was ot the cnterol the kitchen, but again came nut.When ow ye ak M then Lenrd some one say, er Po neue Etienne * 1 ein 24 a Partact in ty business, which bas heretofore been B\" LES iT pe .of th .1 a ati i ; \u2018ot HOSFOZONE.corner ot tbe, en ee AeA | Leame out the chief's father wan Mill cutting IT went earned on onder the name sud firm ot Waa.Ewan & Son.MERTINGS, 1877, P I ran up the lane and went awimming alone, from my own \u201cIt is the Hritons coming home.\u201d home alone, Did not go awa line.1% 1% baer of Wellington street, but they had snd will be coatinned under the same Maine.the hose, The Indians were then in directi \u2018 : kh 4 All who enfer from weakness, f h - port i ne doer ond me he ri Antoine Arminnkehté vas a short distance passed before I arrived.The last part of the dior, 1 heard nothing of the shooting until the WILLIAM EWAN, Sear.\\unlvermary Meetings of Branch Bible Kosietics.al arising, will find à few doses 01 ORATOR Mane When I gut about cio scre from the stable I ping a en in font of procession vod ore an on ek aint next day, ainder of Darinet's evidence was to Montreal, lot August, IN which public addressen on week dare and sermons on Te a Marilee of aod a Jaeranaes the 1 i @ remainder ' = = nas pateral pemmone tlorow atmer in the gate, jim, 1 thea saw two men come down off Ci SE l'atricle street and the bank the effect that, he had driven three men up to Bandays, will be given by (he Ber, James Grees, of the ppetite wondeefully.Adaptod for dolicuio persons © and I saw à man the roof of the haylott.They cried \u201cAll ihe, ben I went to Wellington Bridge, where they got ont.Dv NDAS Montreal Auxillary Bible Society, and the Miaistoes of the dL ALL DRUGGISTS of the canal.gn howe, but on THROWING INTO THE HATLOFT A BUSDLE 0 rigk.all right.\u201d 1 saw no pervon get up en the roof, d I conld not pass the| Yous Huwpnsiks, who had been in the cab, \u2019 AN IN Gospel In the different localities, according to the onder.Arpir To Je 1, Le AMBRONS Dee the fre van throurn into the haylofe, T| Leatold that they Lud got ap, but [was away.lee SF dhe Paticle street.The crews] denied that he or bia companions bad fired of WESLEVAN INSTITUTE date and tme given below.All src rewpectfally invited COT BRUG STORE MONTREAL saw emoke ignuinæ therefrom.When the tire When the hia a Joa fired Ter pear ft a rior ran into the lane at the back of the bose, taken part in the row.\u2018This evidence was taken WILL BE RE-OPENED FOR CLASAKA to attend.ONDON.UMRS.GREATLEYS was thrown into the hayloft, there were ten or NAT a alias \u201cle Hedeau,\u201d and Xavier ant I waited at the corner of St.Pat [with sume reservations.ON WEDNESDAY, 13TH AUGUST.Hast Fernbam, Sunde wat 12, 10 a.m.J Christies Boarding House ls highly recommended mors persons in front.but I did not count them.Karawayou, While the Indians were beating iy street until they bad all gone home.I \u2014_ Eambam Center, Su _ for comfort, economy, and being convenient to all parts.IXTINIDATION OP WITNESSES BY À MOI\u2014TOLICE 7, ug convenient io all parts A .me I was given a blow on the ribs that hurt me A the d ate; Brighsm, Annday, A 7 p.m, ard Aenea emi they fo Ave aye.© was nok afeid went \u2018home snl sab down co Wht dore | OL ro rover rence voue, | dent 1e Po te compra mer bt WER nn deri a ETRE Tet STH Pan, Upper are.b ke it or not.I saw four guing into \u2014 1 oe evening.While sitting there I saw a] Mrs, Campbell and her daughter, who identi: (irl and beslthy location, comtortaile rooms.good | Danville, Monday, August Ta pm, .Londos, Eagles the yard and I saw black po 4 Yeaing aria gO up Bt.Patrick street rapidly, and | fied McAllister and Ryan as two whe fired upon careful moral ai isles, (Choice of studies ae rome Kingocy balls Taredey.August 4 Lr ph Le et eme Tel THE ELLIOTT SHOOTING | 7h% Shee or four minntes returned with a (the unfortunate man Elliott as be vas being raat sader olden teacher fof commrrlal Vile on | (Acton Yale if sdnesdal fed 22 Tap OSDON AND LANCASHIRE many Indians In ras of the buildings with guns CASE.wounded man in it.1 saw the aide of his neck chased by a howling mob, appear to be special fof mutrioulation In our universities, and for the profes: fLacalle, Monday, August 27.Tig p.m L * \u201c 4 4 Tefore the fire occurred I never heard it sai ce bleeding.The crowd that rushed into our lane objects of the vindictive hatred of the scoun- [san of Law and Medictar.Clarencorile, Tamar, \"August 3 174 oo LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY that the place would be fired, 1 heard that if | \u201cVIDEN ITN ESSE Bleeding vie Young Britons ; they had gone on drels who made the disturbance near Welling.Por Cukntans Soni | mda Avert apm .ue gave tertimony against any of the incenddiarien 1 EVIDENCE OF WITNESSES to the Point, I know Michael Kyan and John ton Bridge on due of ht of the 16th, Abeut nine or Bev Ia ee rion Now Losdon, Fridsy, Aug Heal Ofoe for Cassda\u2014 would suffer, but TWO OF 1118 ASSAILANTS INKXTIZIED, Ryan, tae Pe ry Tre he ald Ee Cm buse nent the corner of SEE PENDAE.tors of Local papers please pablish soc seeing MOLSONS BANK CHAMBYRS, NO FEUBON THARATEXED ME, The enquiry foto the shooting of Mr.Williaw 2h Yor, The next day when T went to the|St Ebienne and St, Patrick streets, and] =: - rt ° rr Will please address the agoat to places Montreal.I swear positivele that [ know ne nerson who Elliott, on the night of the 16th, at Point St livre 1 was naked if I had seen the row at the threw missiles at and threatened to burn St MMER MUSIC BOOKS.ostresl.The only Company oferisg AI the adrantages of à set fire ta the loft, or who brake the gate, or Charles, wan commenced on the 23rd, and con-l'Point, I raid 1 saw the whole of it as i: took |ber house.The frightened wor teel- JAMES GREEN.nine tinued during the week.place opposite our howse; but that 1 knew fing that life aod property were in da \u20140\u2014 Travelling Agent, M.A.DA Home (astitution with the Security of a British Office.who were present with guns.When [ got home I eaw the roof of the bayloft on fire.Whilst mnt her daughter to Chabeillez Square Folios Mr.ELLIoTT, the wounded man, deposed that |p thing about the man except seeing a lot of tien Eallvea Conventions this nummer by unig all or send far documents expressive of particular.h ! the prisoners Patrick McAllister and Michael Station, who informed Sergeant Hilton of the y J te Shrek eo Lined in remoting yan were, to the best of hia belief, two of bia |™F 1, Gauransy., spinster, deposed i= 1 rrsble aisturhance, and asked that Sergsant Richard-| IN CAMP AND REVIVAL MEETINGS, RANTFORD WILLIAM ROBERTSON, André waa present when the fire a act.She nt OC through their counsel, Mr.with my father, Richard Cam ll, ihe coract mue pote ae dome, pad that officer, MRA VAN COTT'B PRAISE BUOK.\u2014lis sapreiending B Manager for Cavada was the only person spoke to, and she tr 1 si so Se lof Etns am .Pal 3 eal.; * title es one of Whe best and brightest colle: roux , COLLEGE.tod .me to run rar, Mis.Andre belongn to the Carran.ceoms-examined Mr.Elliott as follows: |was at home at 6.30 ym.of the ith inst.At) ous attack was intended, called out the relief Cm ar oi Ve PE PS SE.YOUNG LADIES COLL heats wan pores che Dominica Libeea! 11 ().-1a it not a fact that, rwing ta the excitement of the occasion in question, yon are unable positively to idenfify any person who may bave taken in the assault?men from Nos, 1, 8, 7, 9, and 10 stations, numbering 28.With this force be drove to Mr.Campbell's bouse, but by that time the gang had dispersed, and the fw persona standing about about 7.40 or 7.45 pon.that day 1 was sitting at window and saw a lot of men coming opposite our window, leading l'he fret man coming up this Irornois tribe, Fautotré PoxsPir, wife of André Alexandre, depnaed : T was brought up at Oka; I was at BRANTFORD, ONTARIO.\u2014\u2014\u2014 REV.WILLIAM COCHRANE, D.1., PRsstoRsT.IN TEMPERANCE MEETINGS, MRE.VAX COTT'S BOOK {which !s altos tempersnce book).or the o trough à lane the end of the point before the time of the fire.1 waa then alone, of me whose name is Louisa.1 saw several Indiana going round the church and cther build ings along the shore.Home had none with axes, It wan then light.say if the men were Indians or pot ax they There waa a woman in front ans, but 1 saw 1 cannot ment, but 1 rather identify the two liyans.mean 1 ty them more eT # shot ?\u2014Did you fire any ?fred one sfter I was shot, M.Mr.ELLIOTT\u2014UÉ course there was an excite- ly than I do A.\u2014Yes; 1 revolver was & five-ahooter, and 1 never got it back since it was from an open field.lane was nt three yarda head of | the rowed and the said int man was Patrick bic ri al a bebind whom was Michael Ryan.1 aaw Patrick McAllister fire at a tall, slim man.This man was at the corner of Etna street and the Canal bank, This shot was fired when they ame ont at end of the lane.were pencrably He left a guard over the house during tbe night, and all Nr who in command de ler pile in ie, who IN COMA the absence of Chief Penton, found Tait with Bergeant Richardson for turning out so many men, alleging that there was not sufficient rea AOLL'S TRMPRRAXCR GLKK BOOK, Trice 400.Wide awako lemperanés songs, IN SUNDAY ROHGOL CONVENTIONS, ANTNTNG RIVRN, by H.R & W.0.Porkine Price 330.GOOD NEWA, by R.M.Mcintosh.Prive 380.Two beokn REF.A.P.KEXP, LL Di, PAINCIFAL.with a [oll sind of compatest Teachers and Governesss.The College will re-open 08 THURSIIAY, Rept.Gib.Karly appliostion to secure reoms 1s Reommry.Tha sew prieurs DISVASB.Diabetes, Droper, Cravel, Culeutes.Gent, Etsametim.Dyspepsia, Dissass of the Liver, Kidneys, Bindder ani Prostrate Glasd, Orgaale Debllity sad Chronic Afhotions, ented by the mee of the RICHELIEL RENAL MINRRAL SPRING WERR DISGUISED AND DID NOT SPEAK.taken from me.| After McAllister arene the individual fired [son to do mises Sergeant Hynes and trol whioh osanot L excolled for beauty.calendar may de had on application lo the Priseipal or to WATER.I saw these men throw stones at the window of JONN RYAN'S DEPOSITION, : at sank down rather heavily on & stone, [bad À the spot à few minutes before the | (M MCHOOL TEACHERS\u2019 CONVENTIONS, WILLIAM SANDERSON, (Natarv's W .the hay-loft.Then they took a pole to open it, Joux Rrax, being eyorn deposed 1 roside at and then Michel Ryan fired at the man: |leged disturbance commenced, and all waa) oo CLEC ony Karmal Sebsois), by Secretary.ature's Apocitto Remedy) For sale In Quebes by Meomrs.Musson & Moleed: (a 40 8¢, Patrick street, in amet, and that Sergeants Glyon and L'Ecuyer, after which they all amsembled together.One l'in the afternom of the 10th day of Jul Before Michael Ryan fired I heard the man ©, verset.000: or 80 por dos.Brantfont, Ont, Jais 901.1877.wan separa .y int, \u201c Y do notkill me.\u201d The|of tbe Point St.Charles station, had ample - + .Ottaws, Christie & Co.; in famiites, Mestre.Garland & april He ro cn ei I attended the Junera! of Thomas Lett Hackett, G00 den Gods Makes ring he man whe force to quell any disturbance She also com- GRAMMAR BONE EE ee Fa hide Rutherford, and (s Montes! by J.Goulden, J.B.Tresiddtr.A rat ie he Crew oo the apt Lon, soto A er ee wal wr geet, of the ipo 0, IRRRMERR SU he hmiartin van [HE BEST AND FINEST.Peittvmmse La mage out i , then w : .| \u2019 ort i .3 ., VND LA Tad not sev i She ate of the yard wan broken funeral.Tish the Oddfellows\u2019 a 1 hme, Po what hey fred with, Tt was ss mall wes ; PR ar dla not warnant it However giibec book matted.pon free, for otal pric.TWENTY.FITE FANCY CARDS, otre Dame awn or ot, There were many pean: there.c i nur re.SPA made à report.could aes tne Cos.Aber i : .OLIVER DITSON & CO, Boston.XO TWO ALIKR.WITH NAME, 10.post-pald.- lent ont of ray house at $ Am.because I heard |! company with 8 uk of nthers gning to cur re the crowd came up, I saw a man with 1 juatitied in sting be did.Called from his * NANSAL CARD C0, Nas.KT.Roz 80.50 FINE CARDS, DAMASK, of & cannon ; t recognize none of spective homes.A few feet We are crossiog the a large atone in hand, towards ©.H.Ditevn & Ce.J.K Diteon & Coy lingtan street bridge I noticed a large crowd 8° \u201crminate defonceless women rte Rep Reo with name on, ie, ;1 di s the pris A aa ashing, ut T did {threatening to ex 8 ~ dt T rar # « Ci tle, 3 x fe Diana, he en 1 did Len fete mu livin, they commence de not Le him etre bin Tdi, mot vie that rm y ad a rare dore Ce] Masai, een aie.OELLONS CONPOUND SYRUR pénis.ESS i % rt , J A » e truth, -, \u201c Neel > + \u201d ATRRLAE PRATIAT, ale ol Fim Bal [shots À eromed ota the w ejington ridge ae ee troy rere Tn the Towed.1 to os oo fence, and net knowing whas opposition he New York, Fhilateiphie.ahiged to whbirym from the Pipi on seront Cine HESTERS CURE! lette, depored :\u20141 was at home nt the far an the corner of $i.Patrick and Wellington pose T would have noticed them coming through might meet with at that late hour, in & retired NE x ow ton, and are now preaching again.Being an many marvellous recovers trom Asthma, Brom.time of the fire, and was awakened in |PifiE: knew that the people were oxcited, and lthe lane If they had in the crowd, |\u2018marter of the city, and vhere not long before 5 TYROVINCIAL EXHIBITION Séoofienl nai rona Into, 11 nuerte à diroet Tnfinanne 08 1Bé chits Qué C'atarrh, (hat bare remulied from the use of the morning by the report of acnbnon.I got ot having nd | od turned bume by tut the reason why 1 noticed them, as J man hud, been pear} Jaurdrred hile Teacesh) x or yan Berrans aysiem, and shrongh lt imviçoraios Ike body.5 Chrgiarin Core™ date In placina if ahead of il rome.and od tulow, and & cn A bec host nine Walking by, he hu oll the available - .n Da oe ra tom to the understood, belonging to the procession, tuo.re \"vence.1 hy another man \"try force at his command, and no doubt ft appear.GRICULTURAL AND ARTA ANNOCIATE WARM FOR SALE, Comprising = try nde have bons Ni rants per or QUAY going towards the church.ning; two of them got away, and the other [tu \u2018atrike tie qrounded Tao with A ik, [ance aided considerably in thormughly scattering A CULTURAL AR ON) Haat 1g #0.4 ant aouth 1g No.3, on 4th Conoemsion and medical mex are prononneat 1 andere] : ; man, heed bul 3 cut 2 the bead fom Fe an rented.1 tw we men take Be toi, or oxTARIO.hy Toa ait M or air | RST RT Oe ke BAW TO INDIANA DRAMOINT A CaNNON [atome Frugeelt racelved a blow on the shoalder [the said man by the arm, but I did not notice THE MACKWIT RNGUIRT TO BK HELD AT LONDON tion.dP Ges aoe res Poin dt Chene Station, À miles CARTER © Co.Sho Caganohetivre su.Montreal, placed on wheels, The two were Xavier Garie- & mone.5 ; MY [who they were, an quite à crwd was around .Fa era ADDI fo JOMBPIE KRLLY, Avoca £.0.Q.[2 \" waynu and Mathias \"le Hedennt alive Catagni- hace, coat and vost, an a rare one him at the time.They brought him past aur pile sue a reward ives pat eo to or the re ST of my ¢ 0 fain ro , and a certain - stimule e tives any apecial exertions ror moan, MO \u2018NG WOMEN, TR ome re Wer torch Mr Faire aie ie hat Me run par fu ol pa, dno | nore the arden Y ITS hor] STIL TO 90TH SEFTEMANR, (N97.|p efter pou nS tenes nia.118 CLUB RATES FOR THE \u2019 rangemra and all tm coats ex .nt t, the Coroner announ + ï Ny \u2019 hk Tor at ork fom here he cue fall hein, C00 TT Lt od ot comme he Backed frtntion; $1090 TOE NS pli nesexvozn x oe ons Kyaw, \u2019, an the Looal Government had nficially notified Entries ment de made with the Ascretarz at Toronto on \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014-\u2014- \u2014- = = \u201c ha were going towards the church Fore armed JOUN NOMPHRIKS' PEPONITION.ee tiaht taking the ribbon up: peer him go thet effect.BT tint.be heradt Dufore or bafore tas undemnentionsd dates, vit.AF EITERIECRD Sunol TRAME rer) are, when nent In One nédress, aa follows :\u20141 copy, DU.Knock down the gate end nome pied over tho| Jos Hourtnius, agent for the Ottawa [notsee any more aa 1 did \u2018not go on tntho xtrect the Pollos Mogistrate in the nunal way.Tho| iomes, Cattie, Sharp.Bwive, Posliry, Agriou tursl tm.wants a inhi tne dachiute, D0 [10 sopiee, 93.80; 30 oupies, 08: 30 copies.911.80.fence.1 did not see the prisonee Xavier Deanlee, 1lotel, sworn, said : \u2014On the evening of the 16th My mother wan looking out at another window.cunteel for the friends of Hackett will do so.ptemente, on et batere Saturday, August S810, A RRPRRTERCRN AOROOI TRALTTRK (Kiemeatay) .2 doper, #22: 1,000 copies, 200.nent first saw the Indiana, it wan ms ht day of July lostan 1 he vin along it, a the time of the firing it ras nite Tight.\u201d CECE Sr.Tela no end ra, ror paterian sey.wanla a wination, Alien RL Yachute, P.O JOMN POUGALL @ SON, poy, lor me torrongnire Lhem.even Patrick af - re net, who acts aa ve known e prisoners McAllister .| ns ane reuerally, vefore + û J Ay 1a a, P.> 2 lo known them before.Tha cannon was lets.in| carter for Dumaine, Had seen a lot of men Ryan for about four years to see them on the THE RAILWAY Ne IBSIONERS OP! tomber 101, IRF ANTI, Far the Lands Model Bohol.& Teac\u2019 + hold.Pysiezse, the street, and I saw the Tudium nhout ten runing and heard some thirty or forty shots street, snd 1 alao know J.Kyan, but did not .Hertienitarai Protects, Lalor Work, Vie are, &e., on WW lun Hodel Rohan Miplame {ram th Mocs Rormai Montreal, o'clock, opposite their Soap ab about three fired.\u2018e Mopped tbe said carriage, looking at see him do suything.The \"an 1 saw with the STATEMENT OF 167 TP TO FIRST DB or before Batorday, Raptember Ath.tobe A Srp S200 per anu, or asic less spr to mp ere Bo td sa\" ee ay pe eee pan cn | me Man Mann TEnste, masnn, deprecd : je je cal and some person 4 a e eorsion e Pro oan of the os oaîtaral en N 3 Ld 3 le printed and po ~ Rave resided 88 Oka for inore than there years, the door, and & than got into the carringe.1| BUFLOTED.ON THE WALLINGTON naibon.TuaglloQire na adress was |réseated from, the! Horticulture! Societies and Wookenior fnatten throng | TTI00 ceptor mons prose coming 8 tows Mos 88,56 65d 57 81.Bons remture prset, bs Joms During tbe night of the 14th of June last 1 wae |thonght the man was wounded, and we drove He had a grey shirt on at the time.Our house Leglolative Amembly, aking for Soglas of all owt the Province.shop rposed, Be.cas find comfortable Beard ai Vayeatt & Born Gomposod of Jens foruats, of with my family is my bones, At about Vor, 30 off aa (ast as possible to the American House [is about forty feet from where the Aring took documents fn regard to the Justo, trea], JOHN R.CRAIG, re pe cer Jc rr Now Yerkyand Joux Hpparn Netfats ant J.Dam, whem about to goous, being unwell, 1 saw Had no conversation with the orowd as to how place, Ottawa & Oocidental Railway, also a stotement Beerotary Agriesianit end Aria Assseiation ke yo.hanaass, of Movie! TETE "]
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