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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 30 août 1877
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Montreal weekly witness commercial review and family news paper, 1877-08-30, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" COMMERCIAL REVIEW AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER._ Taare Tai.A MONTREAL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1877.} MONTAKAL WEIKLY W.TAESL, 01,16 POIT-P Lip SUMMARY.| Tux TE ab of the Stamorishire Tus Mixisa Couravim of the Scramton collieries 7 procalss.section bave now paid the miners for July, The A Company has been formed le Minnesota D., L & W, KR.Compeay paid $18,000 instead to establish railway communication with Mani | of $100,000, which the miners would bare re toba.ceived had they nut struck and lost several dsys, Fagnxaika Cavill swam across the English It is estimated the miners of the D., L.& W., Channel from Cape Gris Nez to Dover cn the Delaware & Hudson and Vennsylvania Coal night of the 20th inst.Company would have received in September for Tux Haaviger Rana ie lorty years bave work in August, $350,000, which is lost by theses seriously damaged the crops in Scotland during through the strike.To this may be added 800,- the past week.000 from smaller operators, making a total loss Gin Gmawr ha sont word to Garibaldi that be $0 the mea of $300,000, This tells upon the should be glad to visit Csprems during the business men of thisregion as well as the miners.liomal commimion to 8x a permanent rels-| A Max from of any ons, believing that | bounds, who went down purl \" + ' for the acca tes [aloe Pere gold and sheer, aad pre In Obawa recently swelring in a pool of blood, tbe whale neighborhood Fal conspired sgaisst|sivn.After a run of er, after a drag.inst.\u2014 À farmer named James Black of fa a very great aberration, Indeed, sud ns in bewa ck = pa i te her ta poison der.during which the bounds kept.the scent remark: Maïpecque, P.E L, was drowned voovatly while wise Ly-law requires à tœu-thirde majority Pi burping wo na Del a Meanas, who attacked the on.Mr.Blake {ably well, à fox, which had been lot out of à batuing.\u2014Ex-alderman Ale] Wileuck ul To.tas affirmation af any resolation, the TY th an trea bar ag in the corridor of the Ions of Cumumons bag, was scented, when an exciting chats took punto, was ac.ideotally poisened last week by have been pretty umanimons 14 aeons easier to Maodomald will = aa last aration, because be would not listen to place, resulting in the capturing of pour Rey: taking #y poison In mistake for medicius,\u2014 believe hat the report ls wrong tan that the will recor his alleged claim upon the {iuvernment lor uard The brush was presented to Gen.Selby Charles Wood, aged 23 esaployed in the factor ave vate sach an abeurd recom: In me Fass forse of Losdo, laads in Manitoulin Ialands, has been beard from [Bmyth asd the mask +; Lisut.Col.Btraage, of Mevara, Hamack, Wood & Co., Queber.pd mesdatlon.Gold and silver ace commodities Ont, on the 24th inst, eldorly mao, named |ngain, Ha writes to Detective \"Neil, Ottawa, re: President of the Club.During the chase sine iuwediate!y killed by beooming wotasgled in à produced and cossurmed like wheat \u2018and cora.Drummond, shot his wilp Elizabeth, caning her minding that oficial that the time for an appeal very good jumping occurred, but there ware also |atrap and carried around the shafsiog several They bave been adopted ne standards of (14 à couple of days der ser 4 .in bia case bas expired, aud says unless the Gor- some very bad spile.times, \u2014-James I, Clarke, a music teacher, re- vais, simply Because they bave been mors about money mates It is supposed the sroor-(ienaral makes Hon.Mr.Mackenzie come| THREE Yzausago à gentleman residiug on sidiog in Yorkville Toronto, dropped dead at trustwortby and reliable as wach than any other round wl prove fatal nd was taken domn with the two million dollars clalined, be [the Aylmer rusd, Ottawa, went up the the breakfust table où tbe 27th inst.\u2014 Napo- eommoditisa which could bacolned.For a long ly sad convey fo the county jail.make it hot for therm.He soys be is not |river to Lake Nipissing on a fishing expedition leon Julien, s well-known Quebec merchant died tis those two great standards maintained a Awsnicas Twisves vhited the stores of |§0ing to teifls with the matter say longer, as be with some friends.Whilst out on the lake one [suddenly In that city om tbe Z7th Lost.from close relative valus, although steadily receding the principal jeweldp in Quebec lately, hae seen Her Majesty the Queen, who agreosiday a slorm overtook them, and they were |apoplexy.\u2019 Piggot, Willism H.Gilder, comprising the team and re- Ont., wan choked to death by a crust om the 24th servés.autumn.GXumBAL BHERIDAX tranmmits to Washingtons , wi Paton from the Chissse fn Cube, com-|(élegram from Geaeral Ord, enclosing sue from i hae gral vale ae porches bar ranch Se en ane ee M .; ubliged to put fata shore 5 be wiad or such a pina, ~Murdoch MeAulay's bakery st New- iaining of the cruelty of the Spanish planters, Geners] Bemavelis, stating that tho Mezican Bataral commodities.But latterly it began to a naine , pole mn \u201c ja MAtBmoxiaL Evast took |f pale that they could not venture out for ington, Ont, was burned on the 24th imt., to ! commander 34 Camargo wae informed by the |be evident that their relative value wae lis.S098 Sauces a v place in Ottawa lstaly, the parties to which some time, and, in the abeence of anything else yer wish quantity of 8 ill has reached England.; Duquet's store, and of them was arvestod, [move La respectable cires The to do, the around peter wish & quantity four and tensile for .tog of commander of the Texas Stato volunteers that ble to fluctuation, and gold Loing the most pry .marriage , they went \" on à prospecting Wur.carrying on he business.\u2014A fire hroke Tun FazepomoË the City Cork has beon ex- voitabl dard, L pl but the other managed away, had been publicly announced through the preus They came across à voin of something that look- cat on the morning of the 21th irst., abt two he has been ordered by the Goversment of ded te Justice Bhea, of the New York |g, 0, iminale wh found, even acing though on Mexican soil, in case they are not Farsen VixET has been removed from his promptly delivered up.The Mexican comman- pastorate in Vineland, N.J., because of the der replied he should obey his erders tross the rouble ever the iatermant of Maggioli's body.Mexican Gevmmment.Owl's oslers vahibl* A Baux of magnitude has been discovered 135 his crossing om trails after any sort of raklers ferred from place to eoveral nations A Miss Parseason Tomato sloped with a to take place at Ft.Patrick's Church, ed like Lesd, and, knocking a piece off with an | ro re adopted fsa tant, er young man whoo seme at present wikuown, but the father of the bride changed bis mind [axe, brought it home.Nothing further was d'lchs fe Pare Ont.voter sue coinage being eatisely subsidiary.This, with a from ber mother's honsitt Urulokehar k street, during the day and determined to forbid the |done in the matter until s few weeks ago, npery Joss $15,000 lavured in the Gore Murent Increase in the production of silver, by the early cn the morning of Zk tout.The couple Procsediogs.Ho drove up to the church, which when the Ayloser rosd gentleman thought be cu) for $2,000, Hartford, 82,000, Waterloo ee a Nevada of very rich tmiaae, deeronsed Worv marvied fo the Jr, after which they wan lightod up, but locked.In company with {would have the specimen analysed, Ho sent it | Mutal 1,000; Ballard & Boat, furaiture store, a ve otatiects 0 #ol0, by lncrasa.departed on the Gu Tn to Niagara Le Lullcainald, Lv ors wabtnd bu put à us |bn Protoners Diamgmnenny 6 Donontoy murd wean om mam oon, Miser bn 8 Beat, urn ure vas\u201d miles sastwand of Espirito Sants, Dradl, di- wbere there are Maziean troops to arrest and img ie abundances, as compared with that of guld.Falls aud Boflda mary stop to the procesdings, while the bride moh surprised $0 learn that it yielded an 62° layer port of stock saved ; E.qv\u2019 batcher ly tn tho course of vessels from Ttio Janeiro.purvus cutlaws.Urd added that If the State This provesemphatically thet thess two standards DiALEEs say there are probably 80,000 nd bridagroom had niet sipped dows othe troedisary percssiege of whver.da moon de St ad one vont FEE boul at $3,500, y i om Church street, and were |this information as obtained, the lucky mau * PI ef mr | a ri mr rm ir Bl | SH BBL and we do not suppose that that bring admitted, than last year's imports when 4&1 in.There by train for the United States on thelr weddiog oveded fn striking the same spot, where be bas of insurance ; It.Sallivan's blacksmith thop, loss the most violent eilver man in the United States [is a no ble barrenness Of wuels shout trip.A large crowd had gathered at 8t.Pst: purchased the mining right on four hondred $100, no insurance ; old Pasis Hour mills, owned would contend that silver was the best standard {the docks ia the hath rat present, which must rick's Church and were badly wid.Pore.Fo fst vite sated that hat mil- 27; Witla not rons or nee to slort.Although my oy dein be taken as an evidence of business cnewhere.A Yousa re Lav pening ber omar and will shortly proceed to unearth the tote Low will foot up to 550,00.The fire ol e double standard, wil .\\ \u2018a snmmer vacation » grecation Con- dden treasure.in the ouse 6 e tsnoery, s so make it more cesy fur other > ations Rires Lo pa + vent, Sorel, Que, was found missing cn the) ATTENTION has been drawn to the fact apte dr orme a Aa Lait habit of to discard it and adopt the single ome| ;g tudent able { morning of the 220d fmst., under very strange|that thers has been more than mere ap- match on the foor.\u2014About nine p the Le CL This tbe United States did|Seoured the Ontario of the town, They have) circumstances.At fret à torn shawl mas db athy in reference bo ie ce ene June | are à ariel Gr broke out in Hombaugh'e some years ago, when, as now, there were Du nt fur the fiest time ou the wil inst served hanging from the «pen window of ber|to wreck a train on the North Shore Rail planing mill and sash factors wi Peterbora, Ont.specle paymenta\u2014an act which many Ameri| Efforte are being made to fill other commanien| TO: OB the second story.On ber room being way.On the 23rd inst, anuther 106$ diabolical factory ot Wanda: nica od ni ally destroy cans are now seeking to reverse, when there in| with merchants amd mechanics, with everypros- forced open, the young lady was found missing, {scheme was laid to smash a ballast train on the ing tlie whole.An old woollen mill anis O7 definite prospect of resumption.Nu congress, \u2019 and on ber toilet-table a lctter addressed to the same live, with about thirty people on board.W- Faint was also burned, The parties will be no international commission, nor all the con- Lady Superioress in her own handwriting, During the previous night some mmalicious heavy loecte.being uly partially juan = greases and legislative bodies in the whole world, advising ber of her determination to take away wretches cut all but through the timbers of five Western, 8.000; Owens, in \u201cthe Hand and could fix à relative value for gold and silver.her life by drowning, and that she had vood|or six trestles supporting the portion of the line Hand, 800 : Rombaugh, In the Merchants ard That must be decided by tha supply of and de- reasons to do to, The miming indy was found d h, No devi i ivi \u2018 fr a, dr co ae Cm ar AL a ii a ci ; ; miles of const, landed and visited fishermen at skiff by herself.The wholo affair has been kept The Goon» Faire or THE Fourn in ita mc-{ over forty different fishing stations, and obtained = near Post Neuf, which cn wees a rav ine furty- Mechanics\u2019, 31,000.five feet deep.À habitant aux idemtally discover- TE , _ oh the deed before the train passed over inthe M C3 TREAL NLWS.mornisg, and signalled the engineer to stop, thus \u2014_ + Ç A - | very secret 60 far.avoiding a terrible calamity, as the weight of \u2014\u2014 Sturyess, the bankrupt milk merch: oxphance of ee ro wd = Paro about 100 afidarits from leading merchants, lich.Tyee SiLvan MEDALS to he presented to the two men would have caused it to give way, It endeavoring to get out of jail.-Confes wldi vad nor Toxtmaster ermen and © standard-Learers in Montreal, ani to the leader tua remaricable fact that at the present moment | Adelard Labelle haa been badly stabl-=1 by oa in erate soldier, now | Tue Barrist Coxvestios of the Maritime) £ the Ottawa Young Brito hand, bare ban |Strikos men's minds very \\iridly, that two | bis father julaw, Levesrue, Gener, a weech in Vermont a fow dam sgn Provinces opened in Wolfville, N.S.on Saturdsy ; © boy ae of ou river.he ery recently Governor Wade Hamptor ex-| about two hundred delegates were t, ro prepared.tach re Ny Su der\u201d pressed similar opinions.There is po reas to presenting three hundtd and AS eburches, Te of A e words oS doulit the earnestness sad rincerity of thew ut\"| and 37,000 members.Rev.George A or, | je Im presen ty e lea no terances.An unprejudiced consideration ofthe| of 5¢ John, was chosen President.The reports the band bas » bucls and te months ago à solemn curse was uttered by ig a ey ak men have been United States constitution with its divisons ; of the * Protestant Boys\u201d en the ome side, of power tetween the Federal and the State represented are of an « ging nature.The and the words \u2018\u2019Hackett memoria) ; Protestants Father Wynn, from the pulpit of St.Patrick's \u2014Pasie, the allepe.| lunatic, haa been exainine 4 Church, against the North Shore Lailway, itacars, and ordered back to the asylum.their wheels, the rails, the platform, the ground \u2014 8.J, Meany has not been vected, nor \u201cVen they stand ou, snd everything connected with (nominated, te represented Clare Co, Iréané, in ¢ a them.This occurred just after the announce: the British Parliament.ot cloth { Governments almost inevitably forces the cen.next meeting will be bold at Fredericton, of Ottawa to Mr, James Brewer, leader of the {ment of a pde-nie over the line, proposed by the pon A man arrested.while stealing Ca be fo] re hen sho Union waa first formed, js].PEcreT Turouts from fhe Magdalen Iviands|, Y, 1, band, 16th July, 177,\" on tbe other, | Emerald Independent Bet Band, which bad in\" nothing tv eat for two days.was as à lesgue or federation, and not mss m.| 7 Halifax state that the weather for the |The medal tobe presented toMr.Birch, the stan.come the displeasure of the fathers.The Que-| __ Phillinye Pinnsoaneailt, 13, 8 clerk iu the tion.The United States had no power to levy pat fortnight was very ebormy, causing much dard bearer, bas à Union Jack on one side, and |bec Mercury expresses Do vurprite that this (se, Henri lust-Uttige k under arrest on a charge an army.The Central Government has only the damsge to hay and grain crops.The ood (afr, Hugh Hinds\u2019 medal the banger of Lodge course was, by some of the most ignorant and of stealing registered letters.d'in painting tb right of calling on the Stats Goreramente for and mackerel faberies were good on the!No, 227, the one carried on that day.They debased of the people, mistsken as à Warrant to |, = Toussaint Buteay, cogaae in painting the ; ä i interior of Victoria Eridge, was killed hy the troops when theyare wanted.The States havethe leshoregrounds About twenty sailof American will be presented at a publie meeting, the date upset and pillage the trains under the idea that yr oY ork train on the 25ed.sole power of raising militis, and if a number of nackerel men bave beer in Pleasil Bay, and re- of which aas not yet been determined upon.they were deprived of the divine protection, and __ À rumor that Father Chiniquy was going the large and wealthy states, like New York aoû P°E the inabore faberies good.Loup Derrrair made an sloquent reply to tho [Even orer ma a apoil to the destroyer.bok to tbe Church of Home, is poritively de- Pennsylvania, were of ons mind, they could Tae Quenes ConromTion bas negotisted address presented by the Mennonitesin Manitoba.Panis GREED hus been à vrent deal beard vf med the 23th, th faite easily organize » revolution, the provisions fr |* loan in Eegand through Messrs.Rem: Hg said : They would not be called upon to stain of late, copecially In ronnection with the potato pontiog Club agd ie Grand Tr uk fo Ch an organization being at their dis-| man, Gosdon & Co.te the amount of 435,-| their hada with Lurass blood, bat be invited |bug.it being much recommended for sprinkling very wuccereful catheringe.poral.There can be little doubt that, a 000 sterling at 95 net, the proceeds to bo placed {lem to join the C'avadians against the brute over the leaves, to keep away the dostroving in- _The robbery of silks and gloves from Bs etmocrts claimed before tue civid st the disposal of the Carporation in the London ree of nature, act in à war of annibilation, but sect.[tmay be safe encugh in connection with Claxton & Co's.atore, has dwindled down to à wc although the founders of the comtitaticn & County Bask, ond va the receipt of the o virancing the standard of civilisation west.| potstoes, fon ib fs vo the tops, but the tubers, very rmall i the tots lms being under Td oot, make specific provisions for secersiun, bonds.The ameust = \u2018borrowed.i £0 pay 507 ward, In the name of the Queen be weicomed which bave 0 be eaten, but its osd that even U0 oo po) Fuien after putting in they organized a system which practically gave the paving of streets, Fire Department, and re- them to Manitoba, adding, * You are as weloome with them, there is a danger of the ground be- © CCl hed week of camp life, were reviewed that power to the States.Before the nuestion mewal of debentures.to our affections ato our lands, cur libertieaand coming ro impregnated that the roots are unfit Ly Major-General Nmytbe, oa the 35th, and had to be decided, however, several geners-| THE QUEBEC City Paxss is much exercised our freedom.\u201d The address waa listened to with for food.Some people uve not been satin- highly oomplimented.i ; tions had passed away, and the national [over the prevalence there of typhoid fever.the greatest interest, the entire crowd of about fied with wing the Pris gren on pots The firemen of Hodson, ¥.¥., receive a fesling in the United Status had become It ia reported that nesly 00 cases of this dis-| 1,000 removing their bats every now and then toes, but tried it on their cabbages and Re and robesquemtls a can vient very strong.This national feeling swept ease exist in town, one physician alove having|in token of approbation, many men, A well as|caulifowers.The result was quite marked of the Montreal Fire Brigade.aside the apirit of the constitution, as if it| thirty-five, In some instances reven oF eight women, being affected to tears.The entire Men: [8 3 recent dinner party in Ottawa A - \u2014 Several nttempta to put business men into had not been, and when the Southern States members of one family are sufferers by it.Symp-| nonite population of the Province is now eeti- number of the guests, pebips those who bad insolvency bare rovalted in their taking [oor seceded armies were raised which overcame the toms of geatric fever are also reported, The mated at about 6,500.not been accustomed to take Paris green with ine Jor pete The ar be A in armies gathered by the seceding States to op- faver has also made its appearance in Charles-| yz Awre-Doxkixrss' Procession in po | their caulifiower, became quite rick, and A the Baylis Drummond case, in which Me.1}rum- pose them.The question of secession was decid- bourg and New Liverpool.ronto is regarded by all respectable citizens as medical man had to te tent for.The illness is mond Js sueing ir, Baylis for $100,000 data: Day the wae.The national feeling in the| Tux Unimmp Sratss Breauss \u201cSTEED oneof the most disgracefuland bumiisting rer not spoken of aaif it were an7thing very serious, MT United States is too strong for any such action.wx1L\u201d bas arrived at Halifax, N.8., from| which has ever taken place in that city.It wes The Southern leaders have never sdmittted Salem, Masa, and will be employed for several almost entirely composed of the luwest rowdy that they were wrong in going to war, They weeks in drodgiog the harbor, Bedford Basin, element, whose conducs aloog the route was could not be expected to do so.But it may be|and the adjacent const under direction of Pro-| such ss to disenst all decent people, Brewers\u2019 readily believed that they bave no desire fessor Baird, of the Smithsonian Institute, who waggons loaded with casks formed a consider- to try and euforos their political doctrines |is in Halifex with bis family.A wharf baë| able part of the procession, and two or three im- again, This was made clear during the|boen secured for their accommodation, and mense puncheors were elevated on trucks, Sev- late Presidential straggle.The Northern gle room for microscopie and other examina eral men on waggons ostentatiously drank Democrats might bluster and talk of fighting, tions.linuor from bottles, and frequently drunken fel- Tia Finer Bars of new cotton was received at volunteers crom they will not be aided by him, Mowphis, Teun, on the Zl.from Colfax and that the talk about 23,000 State troops waa County, Mim.It was claased good middling, calculated to stop the effurts of Mexicans to weight 600 pounds.extradite outlaws, \u2018rE ARBITRATOR settled the dispute over the re- Accounts PRON THE 1WDIAN FaMixg DiaraicTs duction of wages between the Northumberland toLondon are still bad, Slight rain fell in Madras coal owners and their cperatives in favor of the last week, In Bumbay thare is no sufficiency of lather.rain, except in Carnaro district.There has been Ch Ll rain in Berar or Central Iadis.Reports ur ut harbourg eee, from Bengal, Aum, Oude and the Northwest lique © Vice Thiers © and the singing of the Provinces are fairly good.From the Punjsub Marseillaise.\u201d accounts are bad.The Madras famine must last Sxaious Esta vacus are reported, August till January, and if the October raïns fail, $ QUAK , \u201ci .ee ei Toe it rt AST it Fine pret i en; it fs supposed Ly and Itajpootans, the Government will cartail : expenditure.The Madras famine has cost ER, Tue PaovipracE TooL Couraxy Marie 000,000 sterling, and costs £500 per month.A be rs A nain rem Tombnr 1 1 or! sove tional taxation, From y it is re- the contract for the manufacture of arms with] ported that rain fell in Khandeish, Deccan, fall force.Guzerst and Gattywar, Prospects are better.Tug Dererr-Mavon of Evreux has been removed for telling Marshal MacMahon, on the pect of success.Hoy.I.Foarin bas arrived at Halfax from the Magdalen Islands Since leamg Quebec on July 28th to obtain informatien for the Canadian embers of the Fisher Tue Wan 1x Asia Mixon does not promise latter's recent visit, that the people of Nor- my po eee The rks reczaia oe mandy wero attached to the Republic, and de- the of ve, and are apparent y Anite able to ired the nt crisis to terminate : muiotain thelr positions, for in a recent Lathe press \u2019 to the Humians ot so badly frighten- Orrictat Inronmatios in Washington, from [ed that although they were able to hold Pais, announces that the great Exhibition their ground they had everything all ready for a buildings are approaching completion, and that retreat.A few days ago a despatch stated that the foreign commissioners are entering POS both the Russians and the Turks bad with- the possession of their places.drawn forces from Asia for the European cou- Tux Srzauenee \u2018Cry or HopsRt,\u201d running dict, but it does mot seem probable, what- botwean Sydsey and Tasmanis, foundered July ever the Turks may bave done, that the Husaians 24th.The crew were saved.The steamer be- [di2 vo.The Turks having command of the tooged to William Sumner, the unfortunate Black Sea, can easily transfer their troops from owner of the lost \u201cYara Yara.\u201d the seat of war in Asia to that in Europe, Lut Tax N.Y, Tixes announces that Capt.Eads, the Rusians would have to bring back their engineer of theBt, Lauiabridge, ha made elaborate troops by such a round-sbout sod difficult way plana for an iron bridge over the Bosphorus, oon that they would banily think of it, while fighting necting Pers in Europeen Constantinople with 73% actually going on in Asia, ae it bas been.the Asfaticehore.The Herald states $25,000, Besides, all the other segeste have bees of rein- 000 would be the cost.forcementa to the Russian armies in Armeais, Tus UCTLOOK is now desperate in Guzerat and sad not of drafts npoa.them, fur the European Kattywar, and seriously threatening in Central India, Rajpootans, the Punjeub and Burmab, Tax Equal Narues or Ts PFrontinc in the latter in consequence of heavy exports of Bulgaria may be judged by the nature of some rain.The Council of Bombay is determined |of the despatches from correspondents at the to construct or extend several railways as relief vat of war, People get tired of mere accounts work.of hard fighting, and want something definite Da, W.F.Corea, living near Charleston: about the results or prospects.An equal con- © flict does not suit them.Correspondents are W.Va, has been arrested for poisoning his © ; .ite, \u201cShe.was His third wife, both the former Lniom® to antialy te croise 2 thers having died suddenly under suspicious cireum- ing n s i i and stances, [It is now supposed he poisoned them.battles, they draw on the imagination, : gravely write about the Turks having an ides The bodies will be Pc Sooper pad ®1 of driving the Russians back across the Danuts, Cr oa : tn rack : tb and of the Russians, now on the defensive in , account of the a on tbe most pl clearing Bulgaria of the Tarks b German Consul, Eisenstuk, at Leon, in hie iving then south of Se Balkans Both private character, demands of Nicaragua thirty these deliverances occur in less than twelve thoussnd dollars indemnity, and a salute to the pe, and they sre about equally valuable.Itie German fiag, threatening otherwise to send a gonply impossible for the Russians to drive the squadron and army to enforce the demands.The urks south of the Balkans, when three of matter je now before the United States and lthe great Turkish fortresses are as yet England.entirely untouched, and there in complete con- Jonas Brarcuronp, in the United States Dis- trol of a railway to bring up provisions and sup- trict Court at New York, gave an important de- plies from the Black Sea.If the Rumians are cislow recently against the ship \u2018 Niagars,\" driven back across the Danube, it will be from for carrying bags of salt and sreenic on the same the failure of their supplies, and mat by voyage.The salt became impregnated with ar- the Turkish arms.The Russians yet hold weuic, and was poisonous and unfit for use, The Shipks Pass, but they seem to bave been Court decides that the owners of the vessel are very near losing it.In fact it appears a responsible, if the Turks and Rumisns are both o- M.Rousrn's Oucan, the Ordre, published eupying it, for Russian attacke upon Turkish recently an euloglum of him, This self praise, Positions are reported in connection with the with Rouber\u2019s departure for Chiselburst before battles there.the 15th instant, the anniversary of the late Em: PpgeinexT MacMaHON seemed d * prepared for peror'a fête, which has always bitherto been oele- very severe measures, and matters looked rather but still such an incident was not an altogether & iim.Another cargo of thorn Em agreeable feature in à festive zathering.Those ing in enjoying the privileges of » gar len and they are CuLLEGE OF PHARMACY.\u2014-At a meting [the a much larger projartion of the population in Board of the Montreal College ot Pharmacy the Ottawa than in Monteal, oucht to keep « fallowing profeuees rr Srpointed for the ses o Octo .JS.separate patch of caulifiowss on which they do Edwards, Pb.T, D.C.L., lecturer on Pharma- not sprinkle Paris green for use as linner parties, fentical Chemistry.| Te Reed, M.D.CM ill be: : ecturer on Materia ies, Toxicol T£ they do not, it will become necomar, for diners Pharmacy, and Joseph Bemrose, Eur Phar ec hare he it pepe Whatever reelataace on board, wea buried in Quebec last week revels.By the character of that proc with the vegetables before they vemtur to! Morzs or RécorErt.John McCulloch, the P vern-| Lit naval honors, À firing party com anti-Dunkinites confessed that they regard thelr| arteke, thus making questions not for cos unfortunate young man in the General Hospital ments, there was none to the Federal authorities.ç i on: triumph for whiske; = * nocidental posed of sailore preceded the body, which victory y 88 8 1 7 science, but for stomach's sake.who lentaliv shot himself in the leg a few The present generation of Southerners are grow.was placed on à qua carriage and draped and drunkenness.v \u2026 Toke since and bas not Lees expe to live, dog up under the influence of the supremacy of the, [yy \"op (pion Jack.Hors wees dispensed MoV Ennon who with astaflof geological sur- THE AsTi-DURRINITE 170m Toronto is| has remewhat improv tn cmdition, and al: Foderal power.Thote who came through the w ith, the sailors dragging the carriage to the| veyors hasbeen exploring in the vicinity of White not & matter for any excessive astonishment.Hoe act ve 2 be of dang ger, | ther ht th hat civil war had it impressed on then in the stroog\u201d |.emetery with hand lines.The splendid baad Fiah Lake, Pemechangs sud St.Mary's Lakes, oo It would have been much wore surprising if the days to come, his recovery may expected.wt way.Whatever difficulties are in store for of the ship accompanied the faneral cortine.the Upper iatineau, reports that he hasdiscorered by-law bad been adopted, notwithstanding the Iowitisu \u2014 \u2018\u2018GOIRG\u201d FOR A ProrentANT the United States, and they are likely to of the Ottaws School M an immense mountain of pure crystalline phos- confident anticipations of success amongst the Mitksor.\u2014 About, i orclock.Fi ridey evening, 8 re = gain bo troubled with ant Committee a amection a\" phate of lime, showing on the surlace hundreds Dutkinites, which were so prominent in oung wan wh drives 8 milk waggon for Re.vil war for the old i .° and probably the sisht of à Fomach pamp may Monz Sares vou ST.Jous,\u2014It is creditable have materially assisted the yrocess of recovery © to Montreal to see that it is so well patronized but the Southerners soon gave them to under- ; lows mingled such b os \u201c Hold the Fort \u201d : .A Mauxs belonging to H.M.flag ship mingled such hymna ola ._| out, who are not accustomed to Paria gwen at ical i stand that if they wiahed to fight they would! Bellerophon,\u201d who was accidentally killed aud Safein the Arme of Jesus, with their home, to sak if it bas been in conte Von macoution] C'herolst and senior bell scholar, \" rrine, and who is well known to of Protes- of thousands of tons that will yield an average our Toronto telegrams.In \u2018Toronto, and [gant principles, was sev pon at the ener of brated by a gathering of Bonapartiste at Chisel- parmi i ng, when a day or two since it was an.rublic Schools\u2019 Trustees, was held recent ; hurst, strengthens the report that the Prinos pounced;that the ad i to Publis had 5 of 90 per cent.He says the two great phosphate in every city lke Toronto, there are |Seigneurs and Bonaventure strecta by a rowd à cod that thers was determination pro CANADIAN SUMMARY.deci.the pladng of teachers afterthe| 0014 Luani re res very large classes ould ted j his cart with big in bis Imperial sides with M.De Camaguac.secute DM, Gambetts for his speech at Lille, and ° todecide on s ® pede running up by the Lievres and Gatineau very | © who w have vo Te mith the onion on Tas H in Manitoba ogressing Tmmer vacation, A aumber of female teachers with \"isactory rend.having failed to obtain sscond-class certificates A at the receat Normal School examinations, it Tus Cost to the oliy of Toronto of taking the © their re ent vote on the Uunkin Ast amounts to $173, irre de © Te oe wien tims enormous ; he believes also that the Lake Tue Reuse of anotber victim of the fire! pone bat holders of second class certificates will Superior silver-beating rock runs across the in 8%, Jobs, N.B., have been found in the ruine ba employed.head watersof the Gatineau.This would corro- ot n g reggery.Ix TræTononso Goun Minima Courant Cass, borate the statements frequently made by To Tw Oranmmo of the Quebec Parliament Mr, Andrew Bobertsn was recalled and cross: dina regarding the discovery of silver in this will, it ls general; derstood, take place about the 13th Otaober #8 5 {examined as to some details by Dr.MoMichael, Tux Paxaettation or l'aizes to the me: ° for the prosecution, after which counsel for re\" | of} competitors at the matches of the Pro- Since the appointment of the Government's spective interests addressed the Court, and the vincial Rifie ; | vins Association was made lately at the Gas Inspector for \u2018Toronto the illuminating acting magistrates pave their decision.They triil abéd Halifax, by Sir A.T.Galk.The Minis: power of the gas farnished has improved by said they had come to the conclusion that the de- : : one.third t te, M Jobo R and W.K.Mur- ter of Militia and several leading citizons were Tau Caors in the Bsguenay district promise a Fay, were entirely innocent, and that if they et Lowrie wade prpercutiving A ect charges contained in the plaintiff's suit for separa- Lille speech but \"what it was entirely proper and magniforst yield, and are being barvested in had any doubt they would give the proseca-| \"oils aie AT.Galt addressed the volusteers, tion sgaisat the Marquis, which the court re- even neosssary in the interests of the country for geod order.At Lake Bt John the hay|tion the bemefit of it.but they had no doubt.highly complimenting thee.He stated that i$ cently held pot proved.him to say.It now appears asif tbe former des: crop has been specially heavy, sad well mved.The case was, therefore, dismiesed.had been said it was not safe to leave the main- Tan Euzorions for members of Councile-Gens.| patob vas \u20ac mistake.Gambetta himéelf has aa A Puo mivent Reat Estate Agknt in Ottawa Ma, Tusarox, ho recently opposed Hon.Mr.|tenance of law and order in the Dominion en- ral will bs held in She beginslog of Novembez.524 received no notice of his prosecution, and it says property bes decreased in value during the! Anglin for Gloucester, N.B., having applied to| tirely to volunteers.Ho thought that wherever \u2018À special session of the Councils will be ardered Is stated that wnly the first pape which pub- past year from 20 to 33) per cent.During the{ Bishop Rogers for leave 30 protest the election où the English fisg flcated, those under it, be they at the end of that month, so that they can liabed his speech, the Republique Francaise, Le to year he han sold $170,500 worth of property at|the ground of undue clerical influence, Abe citizens, soldiers or reuiars, were to be trusted appoction among the arrondissements tho direct bo the subject of the pente attentions of the reduced rater.Bishop, after enquiry and consoltation with the |to defond it.The milla, «vst Ack two thou- taxes for 1878, which the new Chamber of De- French Government.As the Republique Fran-| Ancramvor Lrncu of Toronto says the report Apostolic Delegate, refused Mr.Turgeon his|sand miles away, were doing duty and bringing paties will thon bare had time to vote.This cris fs Gambetta's own paper, 18 4e very probe\u201d of bis resignation is premature ; that he bas not authority, stating shat there bad been ne undue credit on themselves and their companions, Sie wanownosment indicates there fs no idea of hle that the report that he personally was to be voy resigned the Bes.His Grace, bowever, interference by priests in WJ election either Alexander vas frequently applauded, attempting & second dissolution, which the prosecuted arose from a decision of the French dons not explicitiy my \u2018that he is not resigning.from the pulpit or in thele slesionl capesity.| Tux Furr Lunt with the now hounda received against any law curtuliog or prohibiting pin\u2019 The lad objected to the ather taki the liquor traffic, almost by fnatinet, - not natural anwarranted liberties, and Slapped Bien on the instinct, but instinct soquired through the babi.cheek, upon which the rmwdy struck the boy a i .in the face with the fist In which h tual nse of intoxicating liquor, creating an un severe blow A à of à score re held the stone.natural craviog for it and deadening all right rougha quiekly gathered around, and Mr.Meln moral ideas.Then thers in the purchamble toah, carter, o Bonaventure street, who wa clam ; the anti-Dunkinites raîsed à fund of sixty paselng a the time, fan to Lhe Tours Jan or seventy theusand dollars for these, and polioemen bela Sent for they arrested the fit went cerriages to bring them up to the Fender, one Toaie Bastien, Th, and bin brother polls.The Duokinites relied mercly upon the Napoleon, whom, with gross diffienity, they i .placed in Meclntosh's snd conveyed to right feelings of those who, knowing the tremen.the ation, h hr back : Duris dous evils arising from the liquor trafic, were |, ei brok tones posting it down.Their thrown Trois she.crow.Next ae her organization consisted in a call upon their voters were fined 82.30, and compelled to pay damages bo nitond and vote on a certain day.No tens of n $110 each.thousands of dollars for any purchasable ele-| A Monvwent 10 Hacrrrr.\u2014 There is on ex ment and no carriages.The liquor eallers hibition in Dawson's window the ketch plan of a proposed grand monument memory oe Sabing Lpersily (or he bes Prof dna Taoras ob lo en re Ji rowne_ arc oret, successful for the time.The earnestness with about 85,000, While elegant ani airy in design, which they fought proved their own belief in {t seems substantial sad imposing, and is to by thelr danger, and, notwithstanding weak organi.wy richly ornamented, & tobe fest bl h, sation, the Duckinites polled nearly three fonrtbs who takes à great interest in the mopnment : of the number of votes that were gives against \u201cft ts the intention of the aubecribera to them.1f charscter were to count for anything, petition the Lig C'ouneil to have the monn- wa fancy that the liquor sellers would havegiven mont erected La Thess a the up without a struggle.They have secured à re- show strangers that the citizens will not be spite, but it Is only a respite.It will not be ruled by ft ana and out throats.fe oid e Ce very consoling ta them that they bave to fut land Corparation mot elng ready to protect the rivers appear to meet, about 150 miles north of Ottawa, at this mountain, and the phosphate is thrown up to such an extent that the show is Tug ArrorsTusxt of the following Royal Cor.that ail the newspapers which published it, pso- mission te examine the extradition law and bably every Republican newspaper in France, treaties Ja announced in London : \u2014Chief-Justice were to be prosscuted also.At fint it ap- 8ir Alexander Cockburn, Lords Selborne and peared as if it might be a violation of the Blackburn, Bire Richard Baggsllay, William law which was contempisted, as it protect Brett and John Rose, aod Momrs.Russell |deputies in their utiersnos ; but the Cham- Qurney and MoUallogh Torrence, Bim William ber of Deputies has been dimclved, and, Vernon Harconrt and James Fitz-James Bee.humorer really & deputy, for he ls \u2018certain phen, to be reelected, M.Gambetta is now not legally one, Put none the lees would the pro- Abeuima Parrt bas brought suit in Paris for secution of him be an indication of a design to uullity of marriage against the Marquis de [resort to very extreme measures, for he is the Ceux, alleging that the marrisge is null and real bead of the Republican party, which would void, because the priest who performed the cere: deeply resent any such action against him as the mony in England had no license from the Arch- one proposed for his speech at Lille, Especially babop.The writ repeats in bitter terms the would this be #5, as there was nothing in the Senate wuld refuse to saction, and which Cabinet to prosecute it \u2018The De Broglie Gov- | \"Tnu Quenté Govanmener are going to levy a| The prisste had confined te voting on + lade, Queber, 0 hard in what ia probably thelr grestest sircog: same.\u201d Fh of the monument Attracts would throw the collection of taxes ont of the ernment have gone to great lengths fa prlitica) duty of 15 per cent.on the fees of registrars of both sides ta the exercise of hts ne pri by Mr.CT a.So hold in the great Province of Ontario, neralgtere ht monn of hla stone.e w ve two hutiremsts, year.persecution, attacking newspapers snd dismissing mayors axd other municipal ofticers for political Tus Burien Rirts Teax arrived in Now eM.Gam York on Betray, aud were welcomed In| Seon but the prosecu the harbor by the committees of the Na.world be a very great step In advance, tional Rifle Association and distinçuished gentie- Tns Unita Braves NaTioraL Boam or Vemen, Practices began on Tuesday.The Trav, although generally « most somaible body visiting party consist of Lieut.-Col.Bir Heary bos its little nad great aberrations, like other Halford, Captain of the team, Lieut.-Col, C.|iastivations snd people, If the telographie re- Lennox Peel, Lieut.-Ool Penton, G, Grant Po.|port Is correc, they have pass A Tee0- torkin, H.8 W.Evans, B.8.Greenhill, Wm.pration recommending Congress to take ateps Righy, J.K, Milaer, À.P.Humpèrer, F.Tao seuure the appoistment of a intense all registration divisions of the Province re vate citivens simply.and thirty gentlemen well mounted assembled or in the renewal of bypotheos, the same À Youxa Woman, Bamed Coulter, % school abide back of the Englaesrs\u201d tam.Levis, where Ce ie mov paid hy regietrars of Quebec and |juache fu the Sth owosssion of Thurlow, |the throw.off book place.Amongst those who Montreal.ha durisa the past week, has been bereft took part in ihe sport wis Major.General Bir Ix 4 Dauskss Row oa motion 14 of the wow of toasom, haz been brought to Belleville for safe Selby Bmyth and his aide-de.camp, Major H.canal at Thorold, Unt, » man named Mangini beeping.It appears the uvfortunate girl Bmyth, Lieutemant-Colonel Strange and other stabbed another man named Dipire vrith à larté was à teacher with Miss Curlett, who poison: [officers of tbe \u201c B\u201d Battery, besides à large dirk huife, inflicting beet Lun nasty gushes ed herself reoently, and since the sad calamity number of gestlemen from the Quebec side of the about the bask, breagd and face, sod nearly oul- Miss Coulter has taken the matter so mush bo river, The hounds were hunted, in obi ting his noes off, Mangia ww arvested and heart that bor ronson has bese unsested.For hele first throw-off vn the District of Quebeo, by remasdes by Mayer Palmer.sevens] dags the has utterly refused to vat orl W.Drysdale, Mizteman of ibe Montreal Fararmza.\u2014A young wan named John Mc: deeply recessed 1, with a figure and sn open Pherson, while carrying & bundle of wood at AT Te (hu.inscription, * Thomas Lett Cardigan, P.LK.I., stumbled and fell on a stump, Hackelt, shot in Victorls ' uste, and shore» raed injuries Chat cansed bin death, | S017, 20d PORE ice an 0 shat, TAR old couple named Harvey, residiag ot 117 feet high, ra a canopy and eros, Fort George, Nisgars, were burned to death on On ench side will be polished granite columns.the night of the 22ad inst, by their house taking \u2014 fee.It ia supposed that they were intonionted _ »4 the time \u2014 Willies Gregg, of 88.Jobo, Ont, Orapee Leder dns N.B.fall dead recently, 14 is supposed from ex Hackett murder and sends five dollars for haustion.\u2014\u2014Cotherine Cohs, of Hamilton, monument.LH ode 2 THE MONTREAL WEEKLY WITNESS, Avaust 80, 1577 = me = = = = \u2014 = ; urred the night that Hugh Bublere went [hope.\u2018The thful wife und nether had] his sitting posture he entergfl the his|as the wealthy Quakes daughtar.Though lions of pounds of tobacco, ia smoking which THE (RESADE OF NOR h YU waddlo Pexzy ond ge to the tavern, in\u2019 search of fie father, when, secs tbe remomels reaper ax he entered the |idict son running uway fro him as be children, they had played fagether aud met Fmperor asd Empress act the f vi : oan : ?a Yen, du,\" waid the girls.with plausible words aud a seeming anxiety threshold cé her toime: vho had talcen bis hand proached, as though afrabl.Going into the uently in maturer yhars iy social circle such habits and Jemptations and (example, va MAN STANLY: Hugh took a lantern aud weat to get thetreparding the young man's exposure to theland calmly and pracefully gous with Lim into | kitchen where his posr ack wife was sitting st ohurch the social line of demarcation nes feat ot ers nu 0,000 in ba le wy out of the + aud in 6 few motets midnight storm, the tavern-keeper srevailed the + valley of the shadow of death,\" without making baskets for the maintenance of her |Letween the Barnaby und Bobbers families in la po - ut of th table ud i * When he od pot him to take strony drink, Mark his crafty | fearing, for she kiow that tho Prince vf Pease children, Phil demanded of her the price of | was very great aud it became greater every pérmapeatiy residing Le of the Sein wd there the Louse wis in darkuess, and {mode of administering the poison | Disguise had sont the meses \u201c My luaup fs immed bottle.! ; timo Hose had returned with fresh beauty.lat home, thus discourses of its cou : ; Bridegroom,\u201d she had] *O Phil, you know cannot give yous cout; from the fashionable bosrding-school at vacs-| gn ab w=\" The wine wine shore said his wife! tiontime.The ionocentand joyful companivn- [the colleges and chapels ia France\u201d hh OR, THE VUNKIN ACT IN TURNIPHAM BY ARTHUR W.MUORE Teall ime before he he Li md wep ded i the wuiversully apprecist- [and 1 go to mec it win i Loue time before hee could make Gh ryrup en lmon,\u2014the fie tof the said to her hustaid.But he, pour man, be- {indeed I can\u2019t, ~dua\u2019t ask toe,\u201d i en ho : indow Ww hrown [ed » ' A 3 i CHAPTEE 1 imate hear a was ah a demon lwandy softened and rendered [held darknesy unl despair.Me understood trasulously, ; ship of childhood guve place to theconvention.ftory, morals, politics, jurisprudence and liters.ate ta - \u2018 co asked yout Bobbers, sweetly palatable.Init to le wondered at) her not.His heart, untatored in advenity,| \u201cGive me u quarter ur I'll pull the house [al \u201cdecorum of youn ladyhood snd in the fature, in ériquifous furme, ave all tauglt iy pates the dat! fees .\u201c h Bobbers :* enquinstthe voice {that Hugh Bubbers never to his dying day [rebelled wildly against the divine about your cars! 1 koow you have it! I know transition Hugh took place among the or-| these volleges and chapels, where professors .{ ing su or at the forgut how splewlid it was P That ever ufter- which paralysed \u2018ho even tenue of his prosper- Miss Ly gave you five dollars the other |dinary throng of respectful admirers, little evil continually deliver these loons, sud where Bett, I tnt pi \u201c Y «replied Hugh, wards in lis daily nvocalions when fati ous career.The deuth-bluw reudarod him for quy-and lun wants querter.Du you heart |drvaming that he, of ail men iu the world, [Lyons are sung nightly to the demon of demur- * Tid the favors sf Lie \u2018lier left fur home more thu|overvaies bém his thougbts few back to that lu time oblivious of the parting blosiog his A quarter, or I'l kill somebody! I'l} Ul\u20141'll reigned supreme iu the heart of the beautiful alization.Tu thew bauuts of the poor thelt iy dark ns pit-h, cried the tae o beds yea ban Hold on, FH be down in afvuchantiug draught, that uectarous fluid [wife lud left tin- Lis motherlew fofant.[well the pig! TI get rid 0° the cow © cried Rose Barnaby ; aid so iu conrse of time it taught as the morality of property i falsehcud as astion as the tre bourse sgo.ni .; 5 \u201d A the morality of apeeci «0h Pr Chet nd ves Bn men which thrilled the palate sud went the life] Not until she mmw up to be an intercating Phi! Doran.came about that Hugh fell in love with some ; : ie th the ark mt Hh ' i indow «domed, sd set the dont of the | blond bounding through his youthful veins prateler did his art dissavee the rich treasure AR, but the cow is already morticured.If une clac, and that smomeosn else was poor Mary josie of the peel: ft vin tbe One shun the Yoo Sandy wonall sight lt hts Hedtavern was opened by the landlord.that Heaven had blessed hin with in Lis dar- that twenty dullars is mot sou paid, old Suod- Loran, whea be too was beautiful if not 8ol (he middle class man who disputes his fare, Bad leon « jos ine him 1 vus\" tull es| Father's not come home vot, or hadn't CHALTER I.linge child.Butte interrenine rene oo Ke rly hor sway,\u201d replied the wife [rich and rnfined us Rose Beruuly.Tetris the mine-shop the workman is taught te fh Fe a hi y eel whe ft said fie cutere \"Qu .5, (lis wife's aud his el f .{ jontan med.mire the man who stabs pe Joint Bk ba po nts He - \u201c Fick\u201d wid Huh, as be cutered the) quater Barnaby win the wealthiest man in 1 4urity, when to outlines « the departec| * Who cures fur old Suodgras bt Ill; (Te de Contonmed It is in the wine-sbop the doom is Tecmo jai wan hte - ps + cried the Ludiond in [the township of \u2018furuiphame.Mow be came [ane began todawr in Rose Barnabr, haddenden- |sell the cow to-day! I'll drive her to Box.pre of the employer who lowera the pr of the em vu vont ose cs wat who be: He was alt] the staid wppelation of \u201cQuaker,\u201d no vue à the nubler elements of bia nature.Instead (ton! Give me a quarter, Tsay, or I'll shuke ployed.The wine-shops breed a pliysical kuew, further than that it wus rurmiisd Lis of buwiux in xutmistion to his bereavement [the light out o' you! Do you hear + À quar.LETTERS FROM READERS, |atwosphere of malaria, and a moral pestilen cal ee ee tie nd sec the Christan's movor faliog sua lar! Jen ! à quarter bolo the house tum: = can Te prove a 1 winded minions, He w \u2018 4 Jation, he endeavored to glean comfort from jb) own on yer!\u201d said the wusu hus.rr rN \u2018 | b hy AT Wits Lomi of the \u201cYorkshire yeoman type, and had cmi- the wine cup asd convivial company, aud |band, HON.MR MACKENZIE AND PROHI- gousrellor, but drink is a worse.So much fx but fus SALLE Tle nat by Kratedto Canada ui nearly aie with bis futher |irifed on with + hardened heart und 8 com-| 0 Pil cried the wife, guttiog up trom .Mr.Dickens fn \u201cHousehold Worde™ and pleue pad eid Who purchased eight hundrid acres of tbe crt plaiving upirit t.bis soul's unrest.Aud selber seat aud walking towan the door, \u201c T| Sim, \u2014Me, Mackenzie in Lis speech seems to xtract from the author of the work just quoted him oud drafts te tow it bles abit his \u2019 farm sud timber Jand in Turuipham, wed time hin i tervals of calm aobristy di-|have only half a dollar left, aud I wantidl it |be troubled about \u201cillegal sale,\u201d He states fram, conbensking aa it doss the terrible evils and Joge ar hee stopped 03 pated ten to gain hind , Juin bert + thought, the hn ç eut ft of drink ax on the vecasie to the old man's asme, and it seemed to fall [41] of hem, similar bereavements or other the exes and they would Lave to face the respon.nor waste a sou in smoking, Their bats are y FT ES a 2 rite hi # mar ir nk as on Fon Note was Buturally upon the son whou lu was lit alone [entastrephes to bean, ouly addedtohisown| .I oo \u2018 enter i ' i ler to make up the deficit caused Ly anch a|meney iu the bat at was formeriy a + vinhe a * « \u2018 prmneriy Ba rt LL it rs Thies Large me ther cane.macht bes amd tht went on partaking of his father's character in |trasttil enthusiana of the bereuved puet who! collection of old boxes, pots aud pans, uncover.| 1% 8 thin\" True, it is na dunbt necessary to Demcarly, dirty village, is uow à thriving sud beautiful little town,\u201d .wihed about bis rss ke à décent, snsilde tout more than two hours couldn't have supped wt muy place, tinued the landlord, « whom U through ied to his The And so, Sandy Pobbers t the auuw on the highroal farm, witunted rome Awe mie» y auow fall test, wuel the wind ~ tion from xl dire tite at one, sweeping Cond ee nu dit not wom I Pr.his pore 1 + Lil tet how called in nt Dan Humphrey's, vert had been te rise Biss along with a number low oe i.won things, Quaker Barnaby dittercd + ry [jug of hardening his heart aginst the dis- uJ \" \u201cvntaini bout tao! keep up the revenue, but Me, Mackenzie ought i much in one owential point sobriety.He lpg ation of Heaven.took comfort and at even Sor fs btu de cuntainiuxg ubout twO 4 have stated iu all fairness that the passage] Now Mr Editor, my experience here an: o; 5 (hat be ov he ad supposed tr be none the | ; ; » ; - Pa .ppd wo y i .the working classes watrants me i believing: thy J wetae, but alk the heh for, what foo dud {inherited Bis father's volioh fur a lass of Hi- [ride saw in epivit bis loved vues, Phil reached his haud forward, carcfully Ey Le ratty ii such \u2018ranformations ot character vwoull be Grau Lt anything should have befalhn thin VHC Motel not the roma disor | - Eoter at the ep n dunt took thun out aud deposited then in the {of the expenses of collection\u2014no small item Wrought, as above «lutailed, wherever drinking meade] of à customer, où This tie very fis [10 5860 Lut this latter failing was not ube \u201cFhe telaved, the true-hearted several pockets of his cat; then shaking his that with the enforcement of the law fully | Prevails, by the same remedy of total abstinence ta.tine «his Being a just perliaps crop VOTE able for yeurs after he had Inid his parcut Lume 10 visit HC OBOE OTE, fist at the idiot girl and making signs wysteri- three fourths of the crime would reste, and fiom sluoholic drinks and the little less blursing Snedine bis ope tow titty, and that on a very tend in the a Mciuge ac ustumed to oo fut i wus to the uninitiated, he sid.with it a corsespandine decrease the + xhenses and blinding, polsoulng trbacen.Is, ; ; it us ee ad 1 cating drizks upon bis father's tale from his .« 1'll burn your tou; if you tell! Mind of the as mini stration of justice in expenses \u2014 - ent by hv x Ne a hyje érlient ro ollection, ud wer luving been, And wait them the Beiug Leaute us se ALY tome + ee ire of jails, central prisons and penitentiaries ENC E CATION revert he Tundra ele ae be [broth face to face with the evils that rise Who site my routh was given.> Chick, vjncy soot tome,\u201d responded the girl, | 3 lore w would be cffected, which woul] HOW TO ENCOURAGE A NATIONAL A ; preven ve Lundlorl 8 only solve at Br 5h e ase, Quaker Barnaby mide no en Morr than ail ibirge else 1 lose me, With parting thacst, the fatt x pi | Materielly Tersen the amonnt to Le raised Ly FEELING.decent puede 1 by au noi ut was the brandy bottle 1 tu shicld himself from their pow: td is now à saiat 1 heaven.ith a parting thieat, the father returned 4 direct taxation,\u201d or lv à further indirect tax 5 Will you allo tènes à FN ute ie 1 .« .a the kitchen and afte vo 5 2 .Sin.& arbitrary statu We a lilt into the bar-room aud paver to = hi | im en, in ah o to the kitchs d after getting th arte | goods now bearing a duty ; or, if necessary, Sir.Will \u2018you allow we a few Lies in y ue to-nizht Lavi à yuic tri Tellers to take somethings.Me ve le a A wl Pr lly ny t od : from lis wife.rauntered off cautionsly (for | borrow the moue for une, two or three years, PAPEF.Now that the Iles, Father Dowd has Wye most.Only think what + ; nt ee \" ac Loge nt Ob, :t +1 deptessed curl tonels, fear of damaging his precious fright) to the; by which time the matter would right itself.|sjoken,andon some vital points quite mistakenly, Your father\u2019s all debt, il war.ater ely Al my fears are laid arid Farmer's lest tavern.\"It would be far better to ** face the responsibil: yet let vu in his ows words ** have an honorable aud.mn takes Take sanethinge.Don't way moo ita] fr t Fh we i a | re 5 Tor y the a t th ma 1 [hav hagaln, Now it woukl le 8 Inre-back [Was 101 Doran.-ho presumed owner of the pre- ®ill try.The doetor aid T should eat eggs,\u201d .I bave no doubt he delivered a speech when he Lak) of our adopted country.Read ite history walked op to the high footpath.and when ig [Bow bal fiden during the nicht that a i emfiraving his knees with his [raid Mary.| was here, strongly in favor of it.\u201d ITow unfair for the last century, its rise and progress, extent unsteady now : eemchow or other, the stopping fora rest at the schoolhouse ube had numbed lin fret, and he mutterod to m= {24 self, \u201cGld Sandy, vou begin to food sour vats.\u201d : ; 0 dl, © road, tin mis x ; x 1 prema lo al © a ttes à noble à more help.not pay.Than toom APN work of destruction an en gn Glad sunny ©: h Hie fi © : going {ak rnough to rack and ruin.Ita mot in threo different directions : being twelve ture, and while his wife lived.he atoud f the live stock began to dwindle A Jorse ws \u2018That's doar Mins Baroaby,\u201d cried Mary, lon.Already since his advent to power an pe Le ee ren .i .gan 3 , - A pai inkling feet, evoryune whe can take care of himself like niles to the market towact Blagkham, and fire tore the world, if not à vod.hoatood forth sold, and there was & spree after it.Then .and in à moment more the bright and bcauti- [average of about six thynend pouls per Phot of busy winkiine fee nd gladness pour father.He ina moderate drinker.He dent of EE Eee Lo here rat magnitude, at Irast, a very bright one, [cow went, aad there an another apres, and 60 fui form of Koso Barnaby entered the apart.|year bave been added to the Grunkard'a| Uneliitie pet.for whom ae jet we when to atop.wan à deal of travel on fhe Toads that passed|ffia brief married life had bocmone aiuinter.9h until there was nothing left but the bare ment.Full of life, roxy and smiling, her sud.grave, snd with another year to run before The Toners ever free from sadness.4* Oh.yes, father knows when to stop.Île |thé tavern, and as the cowutry in this section rupted joy.As his garners were filled with ground and farm-bulldings.Then these were den presence scemed to fill the sick chamber |Beneral election, it is safe to calculate the los Cneweits Magarin.bw.likes hit of fun sometimes, but I never saw ¥8% considered the very best in Canada, mont h rt d flnall this t the ith sunshine, and to inspiro the forl in.of about 30,000 souls in all through the liquor \u2014 We heard a speaker of some pretensions In à » + im real tipay ; but still, somehow, T wish he of the farmets were well-to-do.harvest (roarurees mo was his hoart with love Mo! yan y everything went tha torn C0 fresh h om traffic tn the Dominion, If we put each person publie meeting say, Such examples should rate , ; , when he had carried to his homo | OU , and for years past he had been T810 with fresh hope, as worth the moderate sum of $1,000 we will 7 \u201c ples 8 oer would wo fe ave.à loss in lite of 830,000,000 in vey a, us to new effort,\u201d Lo.\u201cNerve us\u201d was what be t aver to the other side, and de.The influence for evil which this man Bac; j : * How kind vf you to come, Miss Basnaby !\u201d i for temperance,\u201d \u2014aaid the non thought- wiclded amon the rurronnding farmers en object of hag pod oly y on oe poi rr fe A \u201cton the beds ly.| ; very great\u2014far greater than ordinary ob-lford_ the ivy © to th on hia farm mortgage.But the worst in not and kissed her.js tod with the Ii sure to gives skewy men a reputation for shallow he How anxious the minister wan that day server would suppose.It wan not only in the a the fervor Te Eon yy ak.ih et told.Thil Doran became a perfect brute, «I have brought you nome grapes, dear $256,000.000 to 2500 000,000.white the Go and sham acquirements than the ae of weeds of when.be man here, for father to sign the japparcatly harmleas custom of taking friendly young life seemed sheltered from the stormy From beinga kind-hearted and plensant-spokon Mary, and am going to stay with you this |ernmentof the Dominion will derive an income Which he only guemos at the mosping by their sound.amily in food, nnd pay the interest cticd Mary as Kose wont up to the bedside (and it in safe to put the lose from all other meant \u2014ezacily the opposite thing.Nothlag ls more oung wife clung to her weal + Dunakin petition\" cried Ellen Bobbers, the a together, and fraternizing from time i said she ) , ts : , Ticiseitarles of carth the stalwart h man, he became an unfecling and abusive Morning, \"a ecnted herscif at/from excise of abaut $30,000,000 in the five |A contemporary reports s man addressing s Bat ; 2.of the two raters.£ time in a peighbor! way that the farmer ho stood eo het 8 oy bulwark of ushand wretch, spending most of hy time at the |the bodxide.Wo years, It is a great national sin to sacrifice |day-achool as saying.\u201c1 have been ort for the { a ed the ee father a ie fui [90 strength.Yer, Quaker port was tavern, from wbieh he would return daily to \"0, mother,\u201d cried Mary, «In eut ue the pryulation and about 890, extinction of the chu.\u201d Lie menat cxtwmson.An wevered: 1 ih , a , H strong, healthy, rich, handsome ; his wife was his home like an infuriated demon.mort ca, new there are grapes.am a à pe : ambitions young candidate weed this phrase in one ere Mt A the nourht ho was guing to sign, cliticnl matters, might som Innocent Re cung.beant ful, accomplished and true to| And now, as we write, thirty years after his fond of grapes ; thoy are what I have been ono.ha bic il ot soon blotted out of hie trial sermons: \" I am now gelog to sliminste 20 ; y im, and what is more she wan Christian, | father's death, ho site a lazy, bloated, siullom, longing for ; they will quench my thirst.\u201d * {tbe doctrine i \" \u201cRequete when he minier [fn mean, ra ri Faro He pond nées car onn er oe nc, gui cay ike ent por uv 4h do ont ry SLL |G ot see vr arn ti te i * example father wonld net to the [hard-working farmer who stopped to water faila to the lot of man.One thing he Tacked, clouded intellect at the great sunflowers that [cious fruit, while Mrs.Doran took away thes peopleand a nation.¥ owss,&o., BiLua FLINT.[ont the doctrine I\" askod a descon sftor the sermon i tray and left the two girls alone, pi ' ee .ress, ni ut farmer Joyce soon knock- his horses on his way to and from the market Tomar Thich onrerted all hip worldly = Forms bo proc him with cir gaudy and brazen owe Barnaby and ary Doran were nearly Batlerite, seb August 1877.\u201c 1 dunt, was the reply.que igh liberty, and oe ad town would ineariably take a glass, but nel.withont religlous faith.He stimd to hie gun being sober.A tear of such a calamity over.of the rame age, and in verly life, long before WHAT THE WINE SHOP DOE tonte Se douter a Tout Teen de it À every man-had to his gla it he wanted it ment it was swallowed, ing dink \u201cane strength.one day in the nidst of sunshine [coming him must havo caused him to suddenly Rose went to boarding-school, a strong ate i Es.ent\" : ; on or's day, Wl wera shout out! Blinkey! O Blinkey ! tachment had sprung up between the two Sin,\u2014Beeiog the rioking Jo the Hiates has 7 Fo ead pasts Tt, i Ter tn er | Min, Lo et ah de rae dr |The mers min, Men oT mont \u201cPopr in | wei ie mother.powers of intellect would be orer-balanned [throngh the open window: when birds wero] At Bnd of hin hoarse voice a grotesque Sffection hy n most touchtag incident of their men in a har-room, my memory was turned to \u201c¢tpound.\u201d Some oeple never mes word of (we woot, erie ugh.of and hin ideas of life's duties and rerponaibili- carolling their merrieat, -rhen hin hopes and Sgurghppearcd at the door of the house.À lives.That which would have beou the means |*omething I bad resd from Dickens\u2019 ** House: |aylisbics if they san nds word of six oliables thet Stern ait ne cu anne, after which Men.[tics exaggerated ; hin conversation with hia spirits exulted na they ind mover doe befor youth with hardly any forehead, an enormous |of destroyinithe friendship of most women, in hold Words, regarding ouna as educator, wil express the meaning sa well, lt you will use \"Aster hor pam a rene went Toning nompanions would be distorted by &(ae he held to his heart.for the first time hia| mouth, whom sill seemed to 50 40.8 poiut at this case brought to light the noblest qualitien ee a a a foe ne arc Lom wide be sure you Kane thelr free meaning front $00¥ the house, and looked ant.| He would be ( inated with the jovial rath, triumph of love, hia nevrborn child, there came [the top, and who was ucarly naked, came of the human heart.of the Dunkinites, I have thought that aa you su Mat ahort wordeatoihe best.One pliable of Sexon 19 hamd \\ R : beiter than ten cf Latin te the ordinary h .\u201cha 1 dirknoss confronted him, tot » the tren, and wo home ta the stern duties El eho merry hos Som tbe une * on anh.baby bo wealth » ae oct eee sen vi om fay 2e IM Th, yous permimion / r'osaoLarioR Fou ration.And a § really 9 Aha gloges, 0 footstep lo wit! idons concerning human visible mensenger of death.Bring black jack, you labber, or I'll boo.whose love half the young men of Turnipham pending, withthe prayer that the quotation mayf ime that 1 shall recover 1 asked a patient of his a eng.Ke went into the room again, happiness, and with an ever.recurring desire boo your ugly hoon of £ù shouted Phil, strove to obtain, was hersell deeply ii Jove novurags the firm and convict some wavering dooter.* Infallibly * answered the man of medicine, Em Ce Fr gir |S Ue col S| pepe nH FL MA be ERR Bt 0 ar | SEER EOL RE le he pelt pn Be oked into hin young master's eyes with à [ized the Farmer's Rest wero the characters He regen th bear sé Poin at « breath treated into the house and retnrmed in & mo.|grown ap from infascy, when she and the WANE C8 SUPER RC Sond fog di! There, look at the statistics of you.case yeu wil trv oigoubled and aumécue look.The ok on the [of many of the \u201cworthy Tumiphsm \u201covni Ai dou alge between.\u201d hy had otherwise a bottle ke Ho! pene tee tho hop braides Tone, Caféa, via.Over al Frauce Suda re nd me a Ne ue le a pra Ve red Dons ab tva.his Life farmers imperoepdilily mmdermined.a The Reapet came a\u2019 gathered the flower of The mas matched it, and as there wan not Hugh Bobbers hed never dreamed of love 16 Wo arunkery, Yo 100 pereons of fn hr thane Tasntisted manner.© phot} ~~ n ae Defore,\u201d said Hugh.\u201c8.mut have sce rh instance evil infin: Quaker Barnaby's hove.His happy home be.[very much in it, drained the contents and |hin-childhoed sem) ip with Rose ; he |în order among the fifteen direct canses of pau.@redth person with this disoras that 1 have bed meting ve 8tao y can be recorded than ov.me demuinte, and he moursed as one without placed the bottle ble bosom.Rising from had never dared te Mis aapications vo high |perisws.To this we have to adil early Hee tlie core.und the drat sinety eine ore ol dnd\u201d \u2019 ananas a Auuusr 30, 1877.~ Cotemporary Press.THR ANTONELLI WILL CASE, The litigation over the will of the late Cardi.ss] Antonelli continues to be the subject vf en: grossing iuterest in Itome.The plaintiff is the ¥iountess Lawbertini, who, as our readers know, claims to be the daughter of the Cardinal by » young foreign lady- said to bean Englishwotuan for whom he formed an altachment.No doubt appears to be ex in any quarter as tu ber paternity, and the line of defence adopted does nut ountent the puiat, Indeed the fact 6: notorious that it would be unwise to waste ener- give io an attempt to disprove it.\u201cThe scandal in Rowe,\u201d writes sn intelligent correspondent uuder date of July 25, \u201cdoes nut consist so much ip the fact of a Cardinal in Antunelll's position having bad one or more children, asin the action which has brought all the intinate details con- neuted with the affair before the public.\u201d An- tonelli, it is added, was tu al! intents and pur- à layman, filling one vf those civil depart- mants of an ecclesiastical temporal goverpment, to qualify for which it was ne to assume INUIAN AGAIN APPEAKED UPON THE BCSXE, the ecclesinatical babit.He accel early in| He had apparently got over his passion, and life tbe ob ns which were nec to bis|seemed vonsideratly frizhtened at the cunse- advancement, but regarded them ss only matters of form.Soon after the birth of the child she was put under the care of a woinan named dpntoinetia Marconi and afterward passed as her daughter.The Cardinal manifested always the deepest affection for the child, and his couduct toward her, while it constitutes the strongest ent of the plaintiff as being à virtual recognition of the relationship between thew, is also deeply in: teresting from the evidence it givesof the Cardi nals warm and tender sympathies Megularly afternoon the woman iu whose care the \u201cel cils was placed was required to place hersell with her charge at the window, so that the Cardinal, when he drove past, could see the child and salute it.When he weut out to walk An- toinstta was info so that she might meet bie with the child, whom he kissed and petted.The little Loreta having met with an accident at the age of tive, tbe Cardinal sent re reatedly to enquire for her, with all a father\u2019s sl icitude.He made ample provision for ever: whic the child needed.Immediately slter ber birth Le entrusted the sum of 22,000 scudi\u2014over §24,- v00\u2014to Antoinetts to be invested for her, and later, a sum amounting to more than three times an mach was set apart for the same purpose, The woman, it is said, traded remorselosely Mpou the Cardinal's affection for the child, obisining large sums of money for herwelf in the child's name, Many letters are extant and offered in evidence, relating to these transactions ; oue in particular, in which she threatens to \u201cdo some: thing disagreeable\u201d if her demands are not complied with, \u2018Among the points which the plaintiff seeks to establish are that she was often taken to the Va- tian to ses the Canlinal ; that the latter himself sail that she was not the daughter of the Mar- cni woman ; and tbat the Cardinal.in 1572, made her à present of $4000.In 1872 also the Marconi woman died ; andthe Cardinal, relieved «f her extortions, set about providing for his daughter, When Count T.ambertini proposed marriage, the Cardinal favored his suit and «ave the newly married couple 820,000, He alo furnished house for them and allowed them an annual income of $20,000.Other like facts are adduced to show the Cardinal's attachment for his daughter, and his intention to provide for her.Tue plaiotiff conteste the will on the groun: that it ia not the last which the Cardinal made, an that its defects are such that it cannot stand in law.She further demands the production of 2 realed paper mentioned in the will, which has net yet been forthcoming, believing that it contains the Cardinal's bequests to her.If the plaintiff carries her case the will fails, and the entire property, estimated at about 85, 40,000, comen into her possession.Should the defendants carry the case, even then the plaintiff will be entitled to at least one-third, unless it can be shown that she is a \u2018\u2019sacreliginus\u201d child\u2014 a 1 uestion which turns on the distinction between a priest and a deacon.The most inguished advocates have been engaged on both sides, and the litigation ia likely to be costly and prolonged.The case is a very singular one, in all its aspects, and the reputation of the deceased Cardinal as the moat trnsted adviser of the Pope, coupled Sith the bigh responsibilities of his position, give to the whole tale of mystery and intrigue a more than «ordinary interest.PROTECTION IN CANADA.(ur evmmerce with Canada is very large, al though we lay heavy duties upon Canadian manufactures and produce, whilst Canada la; lizht duties on American manufactures and little or no duty on American produce.This great discrepancy long been a source of annoyance 1 Canadians, and every effort has been made by them to restore in some shape the former 5 y.neity treaty, which was beneficial to both countries.Failing in this object, there an Moon and apparently growing party in Cansmls whi favors retaliatory duties, not probably to anything like the extent of the American tariff, bat nmch higher than at present.The arguments put forth in favor of this change of pulicy are ly similar to those of protectionists here.ey are briefly as follows : I.We should protect and foster domestic manufactures, 2.It is exceedingly important to raise up à home market for our agricultural produce, and also for our own manufactures, 3.We should deal with those who will deal with us vn «qual terms : The reasons in favor of low duties are : 1.It in of primary importance that the people pet all they need aa Cheap aa possible, 2, Tt is unjust to tax the country generally to tupport manufacturers or any particular class or classes.A, High tariff means all kinds of smuggling and revenue frauds, and very serious fluctuations en heavy tax je ut Importations, , en à heavy tax is put upon im it discourages and probably gradually diminishes the revenue from that source, though all the time the country is paying the enchanced price to the manufacturers.% Instead of raising à Canadian-Chinese wall against thet of America, & continuance ofher low tarif and low prices will render Canada far more prosperous than 207 retaliatory policy.These last arguments have prevailed hitherto with the great majority of the people of Canada, or at all events with their representatives in Parliament, but some\u2014perhaps many\u2014are (hanging over to the Protectionist aide as a matter, think, of simple justice, They ree no b violent aad turbulent spi À being the case, it is no \u2018wonder that intemperance this rough jortsge +f hall a mile be had Lo convey his woundad sid helpless brother.br siden the canoe, afterw paddle full 1hirt; found himself in \u2018 y miles.He ANOTHER DILEMMA, too.le feared that if be first took the canne across, and then came back for his brother, the Indian would etep In and take it away, making alt his labor in vain ; and it would Ls just as bad if he commenced with his brother and left the canoe.ut as the possesion of the latter was of vital moment, he resolved on TAKING BOTH AT ONCE, taking one a short distance and then returning for the other In this wnanner, and, as may supposes, with numerous delays and *\u2018rests\u201d, he managed to convey his mournful burden to the head of the portage.The spectacle of this youn fellow, wha, we believe, is somewhat crippled in one of his lower limbs, struggling to convey to a Place vË ruccor à Lrotber add perhaps to the death, in the lune woods and far from all civilized halitation, is certainly a touching one and sufficient to excite the sympathy of the most hardened.Un arriving at the head the cuences of his rash \u2018act.He, bowever, wouls not let them take his cance, but voluntesred to nesist, and did actually sesist the younger brother to convey their own canoe up to the lake.Here the wounded (mau was embarked, and the two Lrothers started on their toilsome journey to the settlement, which was not reached till between two apd three o'clock the following morning.\u2018The nearest doctor some thirty miles away was then sent for.On his arrival he examined the wound, and discovered that the thigh bone was very badly shattered, and believed it would bave to be amputated.He refused to perform the o tion alone, so tbat another surgeon liad to be rent for to Parry Sound, 70 miles distant.When our informant saw thegvouuded man \u2014four days sfter the ac cident \u2014the second doctor had not mizived, and the patient was still in a most precarious and painful condition.Bome attempt has bean made to arrest Kees, who is notorious un the Upper Ottawa for his t.He bs same Indian who was arrested some years since for shooting and wounding a man inthe District of Niplaaing, for which offence he was conveyed to Pembroke and sentenced to two years\u2019 imprison ment in the Provincial Penitentiary, \u2014 Pembroke Ubserver, Any.17, INTEMPERANCE IN SCOTLAND.A correspondent of the New York Witness writes from (Glasgow, Ear S18: [am glad to inform you that my Weekly Wirsans comes regularly.I only wish we had such « paper in this great city of Glasgow, to take the stand you take an temper ance, etc.Is it not a strange thing that, so far as 1 know, there is not a religions weekly or daily paper in land to give general reliious news ke the WiThEss ?THE BRITISH PRESS.There is no paper that professes to give reports of the daily prayer meetings, or the Salibath- school leasuns, or weekly sermons of soy kind, and as for temperance, about once a your is all they touch upon the subject, and even then, withsuch as the Glasgow Herald, it ie only to pour ridicule on any public demonstration in its favor.This a are as they are hers, in a terrible condition, calli § for a Jlayal Commission to see what can be done to stem the tide of wickeiness in our large cities.THE PULIT ON TEMPERANCE.The most Ianientable of all this state of thicgs in that while the press is unwilling to give lieed to making society better, the pulpit keeps silence, and on the lisuor-traffc neems to let things take their own drift downwards, This is the \u201cGlasgow Fair\u201d time, and I suppose you know something about this anoual let- ting-loose of the multitudes that labor in the factoriea hers, How few seem to know how to spend either time or money.The grest cry for n long time on behalf of the working-classes here was for shorter hours and more money for their hard labor, but when these two things were achieved, while a few became greatly benefited by them, the majority did not know how to use the one or spend the other ; the result has heen that in many cases the real blessings have been turned into a curse, and it is freely conceded that short bours and high wages have led many very scon into habits of the worst kind.GLASGOW PAIR, Atauch à time asthe \u201cFair,\u201d the social stream breaks from its wonted channel and every one seems adrift in the general flood.The streets are almost impassable with the crowds of men, women, and children, bent on having a ood time,\u201d Some are hurrying to take a day down the water, some making for the depots to go and see distant friends, but the mass confine themselves to the city limits, and spending a balf day with friends they may hai pren to mest, These are subjected to the dreadful temptations of the ubiquitous dram shop that flares op at every commer, often one on each corner of the same strect.As there are many strangers in town at wuch times, meeting friends they have not seen for years, no matter what street or place these meetings occur, as it is impossible to get out of sight of the whiskey shops, and as many streets smell with it from one end to the other, thou.sanda are thus drawn, and drift into such places to treat and be till the streets of Glas- cow present scenes of dissipation such as are far to be seen in any heathen ur Christian INCREDIBLE, UNFAITHFULNESS OF THE WATCHNEX.Now there is a pulpit power in this great Bible land, that if it were properly used, would soon change the aspect of things with regard to the drinking customs of the people here, But before the \u201cfair\u201d no one hears any words of warning to Jd or young about the danger that lies before em at such times.Although it is very true that many young men, an women, take their first step to ruin at such times.Nor after such times do we hear the sins spoken of that have been committed.Perhaps the pulpit is silent becanse there are so many in the churches that indulge in mch things, and members that keep whiskey shops themnelves.These bring in the church close the minister's mouth.Day after day, for a week or two, at this time, the péroets of the great city are shocking to hold.a large red facings and silver buttons, be- and ou a young Colonel went forth on his THE MONTREAL WEEKLY WITNH5o where a | nme or land is leased there d warrant that it shall be reasonably This rule, as to real prope for example, à lund with it\u2014 is sustained by numerous English and American cases ; but an excel tion bas been twade in England in rrajæct tu fur- ished lodgings und bovses.Au lurd Abinger 4, **A man who lets à ready furnish.rely does so under the implied condition ur obligation that the house is in à fit state fred.\u201d The Exchequer division ap- the Countess of Winchel- and the plaintiff failed to recover any cision by Chiel- Justice Shaw, uf Le Marséchasetts, was cited by Baron Huddleston ground that id nu implie fit far habitation of vecupation, applicable Ty \u2014 a8, house and long ago ss od house su to be inhabl proved this doctrine in sea's CASE, rent, À de in his op'nion in favor of the defendant.DIVISION OF FARMS the eusstrons În- ity with which she paid off for the lute war, demnity claimed by Prussi and also the readiness wil so full of vitality * is to be found in the subdivision of |roperty.When the estates of the cruwn, of the nobility and of the Church were ull confiwated by the Convention anid sold off to pay the expenses of the war Europe forced upon France, the foundation was Inid for » strong nation.\u201cThe faruw then purchased by the people bave since Leen divided among their children atel sub divided among their grandchildren till the share of each is very nnall.la this Way almost everybody, except the workingmen of cities, ia owoer of a small piece of land, and he tries to wake the most out of that be can for his support.Tt is the sguregate of the numnbers, means aud pa- triotiem of these small Jand holders that en France so rich and strong, and the French so intensely patriotic Cireutiefauces over which America las no control are forcing upon us the consideration of subdividon of tarme.Hitherto most of the [une folks have youe off Weat to get new, large fur nothing, or® un aor Bo ong - ey can do thia the old, partially worn ou farcis will remain undivided.It Ÿ now, however, acknowledged on sil bands that the good land is uearly all taken up, aod can only be bad for full market prices.The natural alternative is to utilize If, present farms to the uttermuet, instead of 160 acres cultivated by one family, there were four families cultivating i0 wcres each, several consequences would follow.The same land would sudain nearly four times the population, The produce of the ground would, gen y epeaking, be greatly increased, though there might not be quite so much ta export, \u2018here would be far gre ater facilities for social intercourse, and far more menus for sustaining churches and schools and keeping good roads.Small farms bighly cultiva would produce much more in proportion than large onve poorly cultivated, and in this way family intimacy ani! the affection of families nay be kept up by neighborhood, instead of being Lroken up by the scattering of their wembers all over the Union.Anuther advantage of the subdivision of land is that mechanics or laborers who are thrown ont of employment would find it much easier to purchase vr rent and manage & atoall farm than a large one.ow far this subdivision might Le carried would depend on circumstances, Near a city ten acres cultivated as n market garden woull fully occupy a family, and it is to be Loped that many farms near cities will be subdivided in this way, and sold or rented to parties willing to en- yage iu raising fruit, vegetables and poultry for market, Let some philanthropist divide a farm by god f-nces into ten acre lots, build a cottage ane stable on each, nl sell the lots on ten years credit, on the following plan : Suppose the land were worth, at present cash prices, $100 po acre, and that tbe buildings and tences came to $1,000 for each lot.Now add ten years\" interest ataix per cent, and the whole cost would be 83,200, payable in ten annual instal ments of $320 a year, or £30 a quarter.Of courte this would be secured on the lot till paid.The proprietor would thus yet the cash value of his lands and buildings and nearly 12 per cent.interest on his money, and the poor family would get an immediate start in life.The philanthropist might give annual premiums for the lot best cultivated and for the finest flower.plot in front of the house, and for the finest floc of poultry \u2014letting the owners of the lots decide the prizes themselves.Population might thus be greatly increased througliut he couutry, and expecially in the neigh orhoed 2 cities, pré markets be ve more a ly supplied tl at present.r.Lan lis, of V Taiand, is the pioneer of such a svatern an this, and wherever it is carried out the Vineland regulation of no dram-shops shuld be adopted.How many estates, which are now rather 8 burden than a help to their proprietary, might thus be made to support à larpe, thrifty, virtuous, and comfortable population \u2014 N.Y.itness.AN ENGLISH SWINDLER ARRESTED AS A RUSSIAN 8PY, Varna, Friday, July 27.\u2014I alluded, in à previous letter, to à young Eng: and at the moment of writing I thought either that lie was actually shot or that his remaining hours were very few.Mr.Reade, the English Consul, heasing about it, hurried off to Shumla, sad succeeded in saving his life.He bad been caught making for the Russian Lines, with plans and very compromising letters in his pockets.I will not mention names, out of respect for his family.His career in the Orient began only lately, With another young philanthropist, he came ont wil a complete ambulance for the wounded and $1,- 000, On arriving at Constantinople he spent the money and 20ld the am A is gan and ended his career with the sick and wounded, Afterward he managed toget hold of anfartillery uniform, with which he stratted about Constantinople until netted by Colonel Lennox, who immediately stripped him of that Then some one charged him with ob- under false pretences.He was convicted, and afterward released by prostitute, with whom he lived until the formation of that band of adventurers, the Polish Legion, le represented himself to the chief of that band as the nephew of the Earl of\u2014\u2014, and offsred $1,000 in promise toward the fand.The bait was awal- lowed immediately, and he was created Colonel.The number of men at that time exceeded ten bv one or two, The Lancer uniform, blue wit r dashing France bas astonished the world by the facil which popular loans are taken up: by the people.Why ix France \u2018e rather think the answer * judgment.was ordered, of the hall Tour hours out of the twesby-four.We kept, employed about two hundred Met onthe 1b wk lyn side and three Lpadred is New York, There was danger lu going down the Calmoos, especial lyto Strangers aud beginnem, Îf sent down too quickly, Lave seen the blood fluw from the men's noses, their eyes red Lulged out as if ready t) start from their sockets, awl the poor boys suffering territly.We tried to be careful, and, until they became accwtomed tu the work, lowered the men very slowly; yet nearly every day some «ne or more would be overcome.be sensation when golog duwn was like shutting a man up in a cheese-box and turning à full head of steam on him.First thew wass ditheulty in beeathing ; then à «queer, usm! rtable forliog in the ears, which extended to the brain.Au the steum was turned on more snd more it sers \"ed as if the brain wust hurd and the top of the [Lead Hy off.This would continu until vue brad reached the futt\u2026un of the Shaft and paced the airlock, Then it would graduslly wear off and the man be again omparatively cau- fortable, \u201cI'he symptoms of calesm disease were nut showu until the wen had bolelvl their tavke come up from the button Ax soon as they came to the surface and ft a bremh of frenhs air, they would show if they had been touched, Sum would fall instantly, likestricken bullucks, and liv inscnsible.Generally, though, those affected when they resshed the\u2019 top would bo taken seasick and reteh violently, Then, as that passed off, paralysis won't gradually set in.It was noticed, ton, that the paralysis was always in the legs aud feet an! never in the upper parts of à man's Lady.We did all we could fur them, bad & reg Lonpital in the yard and doctors always is atteufance and & man once toucned we neverlet go down again.* When the Brooklyn caigon was on fire, stayed down for sisteen hows.That was tou much for mie, That night [wan barely able to drag myself hom=, | had esoellent medical advice, but, beyond giving temporary reliel from pañ, the doctors could do me Bo good.| feel that it is slowly growing wome and that some doy 1 shall be wholly nsless, If L sit down, it in both dificult aod painful tévise ; ati when I get up, I have to stand still {[o- 4 moment or two before I can welk, [can rale my legs but very little, but cannot so much aspit on my own shoes and stockings.Uceasionally L'aave violent twinges, which keep me home for tw.ur three daye.It feelsthen as if some one was Irageing the very marrow out ol my bones with + hook.1 am satisticd that there is 1.cure, snd xuimply keep myself under the inifienes of mephine are ta be con lucted in the interests .ot omeonant We ity wishes, The wishes and In tervata vf the citizens, as citizens, it iv Lis duty to consider, and not what church they belon to.We must all take vur stand row, an at this point.These pretensions Jt ne: cessary tu weet on the threshold aud to oppres them uietly, but firmly.We taust have no terrorism here\u2014no blondy strifes.1 feel ashamed even to be compelled tu say so much in this direction - to utter these comion- places regarding the principles of tuleration and religious liberty, but it seems as il we had not a few amongst us who needed to Le remladed of these things Let us mot transplant to our vie- gin soil THE AVIL TEMPEUS OF OLDER LAXDS, whatever eloe we import Un the contrary, ad here a:b religions are ejually tolerated in eyes of the law, wi let then in pr.ackuowledue the right of all rm t» worship Lond aceordiog to their own views of duty, re- metering that every man lal give an avecunt sf himself unty God, ce learn to PROVINCIAL RIFLE TION MEETING.The aunud meting anl witches of this Association © cuvencef on the 21,6 andended TUE on the 2 b.The members of the Council met on Tlat inet., when à father acrimionious discussion touk plac: over the cases of Sergeants Wilson and Wyune, of the Montreal Garrison Artillery Lieut.i ul.Fletetnr, D.A.U., was called to the chair.Cuisnel FLETCHER said that the meeting was called fur the nuipose of again taking into con- tration he cases of Sergeants ion ; the Secretary, Lieut Col.Lacon, was |S, 30; iougl undered \u2018to read the minutes of last \u2018meeting.aE M courge yuna and Colonel McKay took steong ground toat the men be once more admitted as tuembers of the Association, basing his argument on the report like, 27 ; 8 of the court of irguicy, which est in Montreal, and nleo on the report of Major General G, Sel- Ly Smythe.Captain Boy taen said tit was the report of men who had po feeling against these pien, He moved in amendment, seconded by Hon Lieut.-Col, Arme Fat Pie Asuxlation sees no reason for changing the decision come te Baird, 30 : J.27; PH upon the report of their comtuittee {in whom 3; Baird, 30 Pre lions, 27; Pre.they have every contidence) fu the matter of Mesers, Wynne and Wilson, The Chairman thea pus the amendment \u2014 which resulted fo 31 for Capt, Boyd's amend the [4 ASSOCIA.5 sing tesou house Kenet.Lace Pet.lone Prt.Taruba: Prt, Kony Vowmis, 49 Whitman, Bweet, 43 ; FeSueur, Baxter, 48; 47 ; Lieut.Lieut.Bed.Pte Collert, fable ot rar le oat: i zehin watch unler .on corpe he represents.Sbe fuilowing are the win QM.Nera, Fes Prt.HM.Belcher.sgt.McAdam .5, Muthews füru BaTTALtON \u2014 Lieut.Derric ; sr Barrauiog.\u2014 ut.Norris, 38 : Capt.S0rd BATTALION.\u2014 Pte.GGTH BATTALION \u2014Capt.F Slat Batra sud their scores iv full: vor w.Team.om.4 IXDAVIDUAL l'AILES.; Lieut.McNichu ergt.Fismette, A6.1.44 Total, Pte.West- Lieut.dy ; Lieut, Vaughan, Seryt, Mergt.Call 29.Total, 20: Sergt.McKean, 39; Sergt.or Morgan, 12.l'otal, HR, J.Dryeon, \u2018Maj \u2018Pre.Mills, is, Topwinte, 425 Sergt.Major Dessve! 14 tal Wright, 37.Tota), and, 35; , 35; Beryt.Robichaud.Me.\u2014 Lieut.this meeti rd do, #7 each 24, 8 prizes.Tun each range, ve (3) Capt.Sulfe, Bind Capt Ia Be.Ca 3 ERTS A Laney er + all comers; rites options), small \u20ac Snicers ; rangés, 0 yards for aud sande for small bores; punter of rounds, 10; entrance, 75e for Sniders and raall bores 1st prise, $30; Zod, $30; Jed, ; 4th, 81 : \"th, $l; % prices, 67 each; 5 prizer, $3 each, aud 5 prizes, $4 each.Mr A Bell Jar.a LC I Gibson 2ud 47 Lieutenant Adam.ra 47 Mr.fr -.468 Private Peddie, Sth .46 Captain Audersoy.Gib.45 Mr GM ute.Tth 43 Nergeaot Holthy, \u201clb.45 Sergeant Edwnrde UE.45 Captain Lalide, 1A.44 Sergrant Bb.Mitchell 1118 43 n LR, bab.43 Campbell, 1910 43 amiraon, 14th.43 3 fason.15th .43 Serpent Maqur Saucier.16th 43 Captain McRengie 17th.43 r Cotton, 38th.41 Surgeon Harrie hth.41 ign Vaughan atk oo - 41 COMPETITION X\u2014KMALL BORE CHAMPIONGHIP.Open to all ee 3rd, £20; 4th 50 thee prizes, « Lote Kese, Poof WW.L._ no Ritles, any.Range, 1,000 yards, 2.Fergt.Steuhouse, ¥.of W 55 , fiftecn.3.Corp.l'owies Gb Furiiiers.531 CRE LL Lu es The following teams also competed : et Surgeon Haris 5 Thee Bivens Parrain.\u2014Sergt, Coppine, FETE Bale 48 495 Cure.Copping, $31 Borst Shan, 46 Foret om T8 Lieut.Mason, 44 ; Serçt.E.Coutu, 41.Total, Capt.Thomax ee) 213.5e ori Pusiciems.\u2014Corp.Turgeon, 25; Pte.50 477 Sergt.Wika, Be ae 43 ; Corp.Puwles, 53.Total, 210, He 18 hun BATTALION.\u2014Uapt.olfe, 44; Lieut.sp, (i.B.Putte.: : 57 The following ie a completed list of the win: ness in COMPETITION XI, \u2014CONSOLITION MATH Open to all 1).10 ou, cach $3, Seller rifle, Government patters ; , 200 and 500 yards ; number of rounds at position any.leas.5th Li.Thorturn.6th Yas.t.Sally, VAI until the attack passes over.\" ment and Sacaiust : the or ii tien atl Coes me] = p ste, Shepherd, Joliette he Toreeae any Chat Budror six have died with qu asainat the original tion was [at Cottiosham, 16; Serct, J.Seale, IEE Loomis, Bde 43 from the disense.He thinks that one-thi + | decision of the Major General be ty |Ciordom, #6 Major Lucas, 27, Tubal.fie Kenna, be W + all the men employed were disabled.Le Montreal Field Battery (Col COMPETITION V\u2014THE H\\THE MATGIL i » Montreal Garrison Artillery (Cal, ; An 188 ftstles (+ ranch), Sth Open to all members, as ip Competitis - a A WOMAN SHOT WILE ASLEEP IN| Crawford, withdraw from the Assciation.First prize, $20; eocond, 815; third, PL 37 HER BED.ACO Me Fach ran, Ta -Col.D'Or mnens, fourth, 810; Bith, #756, Five pion So] 5 .The general fecling cn the range, amor gnt the ç à Ce ze a a ro ol 3 NO CLUE TO THE NUADEREK, a ef (nail hase done richt ja Lits.Range, 400 garde : number PIS \"5 Yesterday morning about theee o'clock, Mrs.[the matter of Wynne and Wilkin, Colonel (orp.Powles, 6th Fas.36 Smith, wife of Mr.Smith, house carpenter, re- \u201crawfurd, of the Sib Royals.it is aduritted, act.Jr A.Well TRC .br] siding at Walen, was shot Ly some unknown [ed all through in the most honorable manne N : 36 person while sicepiog in a bud iu the lower part and creat regret is expressed that he was cane |» LE of the house, Her hurband and a chill about |pelud, under the adverse vote, to withdraw as ten months old were in bed with berxt the time, {from the meeti 4s but received no injuries.The bulkt tok effect f fwhatie frit to heamont $3 in the abdomen, Her husband says the AC, Fraser, MUG, ue 36 window must bave been raised and the jin gun the range | 4 Melbui 43 shot fired from the outside.Captain Adams i tin accordance à Jol 33 J_P., proceeded to the house «oon after the affair nebte : i 3 took piace, and questivned the victim in orler to Morera, 2 3 ascertain whether she bad any ides whn commit.Holthy.MGA, 18 3 tod the lewd, but she did not appear to Lave any, | M 3 Mitchell.1h Bart Le ia 33 and had no deposition to make.She lingered 3 \\Wynne and |eapt, Te or | ol ee uutil about five o'clock last evening when death er that the then of Lieut 1 bo : 4 put an end to her sufferings.A niyrtem ex-|the Montreal Garrison illery du not take any | Corp.simeox.Sul For the tet aggregate scores fn noatches 3,9 aminathon is pow heing Bell.No arrests have part the matches pow wing i at the Quebec| py ; ; pas qe 1 oat [20 10 whl wore open for roall bores, 8203 teen made Up 0 the time of going t> press.\u2014 Provincial Rifle Association at this meeting, and he Asociation match was met ein be Het Leen d, Cornwall Frecholder, Avg.21th.that the Lrigare of Montreal (iarrison Artillery °\u201cDIOR i PS etal will withdraw from the Amoiation ' OSTARIO TO THE FRE.yng Vie VA Ade Tee (signed), Essy Kay, .At A ope .> 6 + + Le.-Col,, Coin'd; GLA.The conquerors, in the Asso on match, Ne Kingston.as VALEDICTORY OF THE NEW YORK] |e was accuimpanied by the following : as will Le seen, are feom the sister 1ro.valuable prize was taken by DAILY WITNESS.1 fee} most thaokful this day that I have been sermitted t) minister through the £uily Witness or upwards of six years, to an average of about 8,000 families.V the Moody and Sankey meetings were going oa here, the circulation ran up to over 20,000, and since that it has averaged probakly 14,000.The whole aumber of copies of the Daily isstied has been, I believe, upwards of fourteen millions, the object uf each and all being to promote every good cause and oppose evil in every form.Notwithstanding all the shortcomings of which I hava often Leen painfully conacious, I cannot doubt that the Lord has accepted this very costly offering snd be stowed his blessing upon it.I have get mich and precious help to carry it on, fur all which 1 am exseedingly thankful Several excellent fiiends of the Witnesr have from time to time intimated that a Daily was too heavy a business for our capital, sad now we have practically realized the accuracy of their Had, however, the Inox dull time closed à few months sooner, or we had got help to go on a few weeks\u2019 longer, the Daily might have been established permanently.I need not ray how painfal ft isto give up my most fondly cherished hope of rablishing a Daily Witness with à large circulation, and at some more provitions time, when the Lord stirs up some of his wealthy servants to aid such à work, the effort may he most gladly resumed.Joux DncaaLt.\u2014 THE BURNING QUESTION OF THE DAY, Rev, Mr.CANFBELL in à sermnn delivered in St.Gabriel Street Preabyterian Church on Sunday said : 1 find that the burning question of the day here is, Shall the right 0 liberty of speech and liberty of assembly In this nineteenth centory, and in thia free country, be violated, and shall not men all cry ont against it in right- sous indignation?Ihave been lately in France, and on a future occasion I shall probably advert at greater length to what I heard and saw in that country.Une of the grievances under which the people of that {air land labor, that im: mediately arrests the attention of & Briton, is the exacting watchfulness with which the French rulers the press, and the fear which they entertain of popular meetings, Et would be intolerable to us not to dare to complain, if we felt injured or by those who, for the time being, were placed in a Dodition of authority over us.Here we are under no such restraint from those put at the helm of atfairs by the will people 3 nelther are we willinyg that à mob MosTural, Zlet August, 177, To xerst Major Pendleton, M.6.1 am instructed hy 1he Colonel ommandiog 10 order FOU tu return your uniform at ouce iato sicre.FT.C.Gogbos Captain sud Acting Adjutant.Mr.Pendleton is an old and eihcient volunteer, snd in conseuuence of his experience was, at the commencement of the meeting hired by the Association to keep the register.On receipt of the letter, he submitted it to Cal, Fletcher, who instructed Pendleton to continue to act as registrar.The tolloming are the notes in he mont im portant matches :\u2014 COMPETITION 1 -TUE QUEBEC VOLUNTEER CHAMPION MATCH.to all Lane fide volunteers in the Pr cup, value 230, Gov, Open 3 vince of Quebec\u2014Iat prize, General's silver medal, value £25, and n cash %30; und, $20; snl, $15: 4th, $l 0; th, prizes, cach $10, #10 ; 10 prizes, each ' , ; prizes, each 81, $20 ; in all, twenty- five prizes.der rifle, Government pattern.Ranges, > and 600 yards Number of rounds at each range, à vu sde 4243400 AQU pce, n 54554 543044 65355 a A iia a STE an 2558 85 4457 à * A626 à a252 63 Gr 85345 1245056 \u201cTA : 3aBu N 2404 I $5410 88 \u201c+ 22253 53 TM.Keres Wil oon, 6h Fuel: lems.Die bate Fool 4 Sergnt Capping, Three Teme 3434 ant Riddle, d.A .th 4 3 Alat.5465435 ofW 34545 Bin 1 the Vics of so, G COM WayGES Ottawa KR dacons 1 h fateal The indi Sorat.DM ol ieorge Pre.fu Sergeant.) Soret, T.Mi Pte.Otirad: Capt, ser \u20ac Ww Little, tA'al, de Ensign Cotl Pie.Birsron vince of Ontario, th= Victoria Rifle Club of [ainilton making the aplendid score of 1x0 at the two ranges, taking first prize : T TLC firat team, second prize, with 170 and the first team of the Prince of Wales Hifles take fourth prize with 159 points.Victorias, Hamilton, pois Sth Battalio! - SJrd Bettalion.Rergt.Vaughan.V.Lirat-Colonel Gibeos.McKean, wih Rat Vet.Surgeon Hain \"te, Ivinson, Pte.Wardell, .Anderson.t.Duncan, 4th Rat Balfour.=th Bait .Pie.fmrie, P.W.1.COMPETITION V11\u2014THÆ STANDING WATCH.Upen to all members, ss in competition 2 : lot prize, $25: 2nd prise, $20; 3nd prize $15: 4th ize, 810; 5th prize, $3.50 5 prizes, each £5, 0 prizes, each as in competition 2 : Range, 200 yards ; number of rounds, 7; en: trance, Fôc.sunner Farrar, MGA 8 Et A'ol, Gibaon, 13th onto the city come third with It PETITION OR ASSOCIATION MATCH = | LS.#00 AKI» GUO YARIS ; 1 HOU Life Association - ion.vidual prizes are : VK.3th Batali Mtohell 1 Lieut.Maron, 3nd R.I Mitchel ticholl PW WR T.R r, ¥ TRE.$1, Si0-in all, 20 prizes position, standing.Ratt.lion, A Naitery.tinghem, 1st Batt .Sith Batt scores made hy the Wimbledon candi \"since hin visit to America.7 and rain, the attendance of visitors interested in | the shooting fur the Albert 7 be with the new Ifenry match rifle 3, of Hamilton, with a scare of of Turaate, being second, with THE WIMBLEDON COMPETITION, The following is the order of the ten Lighest ates.from which it will be seen that Montrealers carry of the creates honors, 1.erst.Ride pt.Thomas, Hits ret.Wardill, ret, Malthe, MG A.rit.Edwards, R.cut, Capving Three Itivers B wie Koss Jaf W, McKenzie, ! apt, Boyd, 5411 Uattalion.MOVITTIE 4 NEW METHOD oF SHOOTIN.A correspondent writes as follows regarding the style of tiring which the well-kaown Scottish marksman, McVittie, of Dumfries, has adopted ** In spite of wind vrize Tirst stage was constant at rach of the liring-printe, and especial- Jy at the WW yards range.Here Private Mc- Vittie, 7th Dumfries, who ultimately proved the winner, attracted curious attention by shooting especially designed fe the back praition, Only two of these the ttt, whic strangely -shapel weapons ve yet come to Winibleds Lying on Lis back with bis head i 5 and drawing up his a his left arm twneath and firmly held fit over the right shoulder.His pull-vif was taken, f course, from the forward trigrer, which is nine inches in front of the ordinary ope, and acts back upon the lock by a siwple piece of added mechanism.Mr.MeVitties previous scores at the two shorter ranges had been made with an Tugram.sufficed to gain him the This, st the 1 yards, highest the ible seore af 3% ; and his abandons ment of so trusty an arm for the new tack- 5 shooter apeaks eloquently for his faith in the Iatter.\u201d \u2014 FATAL SHOOTING AFFRAY IN BROMPTON.DRINK THE CAUSE, Our Fastern Townships exchanges give ace counts of a horrible case +f homicide, alleged to be in self-defence.which took piace near Windsor Mills, P.Q., on Wednesday morning last.The Victim wan a man named Itubert Colby, wood- mrveyor and explorer, employed by Mr, Clark, of Brompton Palle, who, on Tuesday evening, went to the house of William H.Jackman, w Perhaps, ss Scotland had to send the great adventurous mission.Varna was the scene of eut \u201c .rw 53 ad sai 1 Capt.Baillie, 47th Batt h H x Rec eee Er ot nt ar WEEN nan meets || Ed Eee Atl Canadi 43 1.3 or 40 keep the church pure from unregenerate mem- .hy x = + am nol od upon either to give an opi-j A tert , 1 ., ee per din the (hu dora bers and on this account those smong whom he happened to be coming NY and he procured his pion upon the merits or demerits of that asso-| Open to all members of the Poof Q.R.A, Pre Rene 20 at vr iz with Jackman, Clark returned the h pre M they ak, \u201cshotld we receive American labored starved him, mo America may ou Reo passage on the strength of his uniform.Being ciation which bas been transpianted from Ire- whether hy direct contribution or theaugh ath} 1500 07 fanning, 30K.45 amin a rd heb given some dinner b coal 'an® wheat free when a heavy duty is levied vend over funda to the faithful minister here who 8 stravger, he ot the vommander to accompany |land to America, 1 am not sutliciently familiar liatel associations, 1st prize, 815; Vet.-Sor.Harti 5 Mrs, Tacksun, attem it a criminal assanit on ours?\u201d dares to proclaim upon the house-top the silence him to Reschid Pusha\u2019 house (Prince Hassan with its constitution or history to entitle me tr do, 815: 4th 14 44 re her.while her stand whe in said ff we had a reciprocity tresty with Canada and nin of the church, in holding in her commun- bad not then arrived.) To Reschid Praha, com- [say whether it was a [desirable thing that it prises, each &5, $25: 10 de, | a be in feeble health, wan \\ying down in auother and Mexico there would be an extraordinary ex- ion those who cause the Prope to stumble by mander of the Egyptian forces, he introduced ghould, with so much else of tradition that |20 prizes ; Snider rifle ; Government pattern | Tne.Shacy 3 en = 2 De Ine man being called to her amistance, tension of our business immediately.And why | reason of strong drink, It is » fact that many himself aa a school chum of \u2018Prince Hassan.has been carried into the new world from the range, #00 yards ; number of rounds, 7 ; 177 Pie Metiifiemy, bt orn 54 pooch doves loaded and ordered Cally out not with these near nelghbors sa weli as with the here know that if a minister was to fearlemly as- The youn soi-disant offer, etat 23, bas 8 very old, find a place song us.Lint of this Tam [entries ae againat 140 last year, The followlog 1018 COPIER Sr ve 34 po de ae ordered in.\u201d The Sandwich Irlande ?-N.F, W'itrces, asi] the enemy a he sheltera himself in the church RénHeman y bearing, and Reechid was ooly too |permaded : that matters have resched a fight [were the winners and their scores : \u2014 Sorel, Matos, VV a4 of the thon, he ho then my pew, he would be considered very rash, and it fad to receive the achoolmate of his Prince.The na pass when women shall mot be permitted, Corpl.Peddie.VV 1 3440800 ret, tolihy, 3 8 atter ro ; 5 hd n, whe thon del Hat might cost him bis ecclesiastical head before very IuuoT was reat, and rooms wece offered him.He unmolested, to wear ribbons of any color they Curpl.Ervin san.3 43 554455 shot him thrangh the neck, llipg him Ins y.SHOOTINU ON THE NIPISSINU, long.next enquired if thers were any Englishmen in choose on the streets of Montreal, or trim their Lieut.Norns, Ab Batt.555554 33) \"The winner of the Lieut.-Governor's Medal Coroner tor Ad | el id an no aes! : be, me ne * , & the great Pan.Presbyterian Council held in Varna, and I was pointed out.To Hnd me, of hats with fowers of any bne that pleases them, | Becut.Holthy, MUA.nn 3 5 3 z $ a for the bigheet ag te scores in matches 1, 3 afternoan, je result of whic pi or?) js ct Intelligence bas reached ua from the Upper Edinburgh, which 1 attended for elcht days, the S00, he needed an aide de camp, and the Pasha on any day of the year.\u201d It ia childish to main.erg, Jictard, Sih It} 4844804 A] andG was Corporat Finlayson, of the Montreal death by a shot from a gun wlifully fred by Ottawa (hat a man named Alfred Wright was| temperance subject came \u2018up for à very small gate bim one vf his own, So I made bis aonuain- [tain that any man is insulted by the color of [AT one se IF of W 430828 AL Garrison Artillery.Score, 22,24, 19; total, G5, William {1 Jackman.be residiog fo N shot by an fndian on Chaudiere Portage, \u2018rench place in the minds and discussions of that t|tance, He ba come to confide In me, His another man's necktie, They must be re, MG A 24 RS405 50) The following in believed to be à correct list 0 Colby's wife fa said to residing fn New River, just below the foot of Lake Nipissing, on body, and it was truly a grand meeting the MONEY was gone, stolen from him somewhere, VERT TRIN-SKISNED, itehen.5545443 BO ates a \u2018matches 1, 2, 5 6 and 7 : Hampshire State.the morning of the 8th inst.Tt appears that beet mindn of the Presbyterian Church.À gene- and he did not like to ask hia hosts, the p- CA Lo Campbell.MRC 3054300 RN ART a 1&0 eh : \u2014 Wright, who keeps a small stor twelve miles ral feeli a to provail that next to tie: tian, for any.I found myself bound to relieve fndeed, or have & very vivid imagination, who Pie.Tearse.Sth Royals 4452555 30 AGGRROATES.; ; on Ve bar lp BS off cher Se lf rt ERG BE el A mb i RE EB EER | ro yd rnp raed window sashes temporarily of in the shanty that nothing grest is attempted.played the same trick on the Pasha and bi aide nf e pula , Pit, Wilson, Lot 1°.of | 3 4 55 44 Zn |l'etp Finlareon.MG ALD yt ennuinyed by Mr.Villeneuve, sculptor, of one Keeno, an Indian, al the foot of Chandiers deramp.A voyage to Rustcbuk was bis next | in the person of females, should have been so Lie\" Nl (iit Bart.3 4 à 35 D 5 99 Bert Holtby, MU A wor km tla; 7 Mr.7 ; ortage were passi THE ROOT OF THE EVIL, ced wantonly violated.The matter of processions, Prat.Pa ont T Sorgt Perry, MG A at St, Romuald, Tevix Co, P.Q.while turning Portage.| Wei bt anda broth ve and pl The real trouble in all thio is the fact that all Tp And here, red oe be with \u201cmr and banners, is another thing, 84 it Bergh, X.Conte.Three Riven 335454 g0|semt Mnibews, vi ahlock of wood in à lathe, was struck in the thelr way_up \u2018called at the Indian's his for the the people use liquor of some kind as a bever- | ing ntterly ou of funds, the thought occurred to may be quite reasonably ohjected to on the score sargt.Niven, Sth Royals.5>451354 20 prie Roar.I oi face by a portion of it, which |roke and flew off sashes, The Indian was not at home, so the: we i and will not bd if uo The Poot man ate try his hand with the Ruesians.\u2014 Correspondent o Ts disturbing rablic orler sad ron Re da MA ed RC.1 ë i 5 5 5 i an LB af i HH in plecoss the How criehing hisakull He died saahes e gi at io an e man bis N° Y, Times.horoughlares, and so trenching upon the 478 \u2018otporal Oopplog, T terwi d age Soe tee vs and conveyed them over the the wine at the family table, \" Thin Ia true of many of individual citizens, But if objection be taken Le.Ivinson.Tat of W 4854034 9) Cap IPRS a5 22 20 26 28 23 282) MILLIONNAIRER\u2014While the newspapers are canoë over, tbe ministers, elders, and members of the churo THE \" CAISSON DISEASE,\u201d D ein around, {\u20ac mrirt be of universal applica- conprTITION Mo, 2, OR CETY ATAKES\u2014 RAXaE 000) Sergi Fiwanis, Vice NO 26 24 91 29 IA 142 [doing their utmost to magnify the colomal for- , ; here ; hence the deep silence on the subject.\u201c tion.No fons of any kind, religions or VANDE.-SEVER NOUNIS Pole Tumbali lof W221.09 24 47 25 57 17 142 tunes of millionnaires in Son and New INDIAN CAME ALOKG Wat, C.McDovaaLt.Several lives have been lost and many persona national, should he allowed, oe all should be al: The result waa as follows © ; Y ork, the rich men of other American cition es- ina towering passion at them for taking the ee have had their health ruined in the construction lowed, provided they are conducted nan orderly e rest * voint COMPETITION VI1I\u2014BTRANGERS\u2019 ATAKES cape notice, Although nothing is mare certain LSS EE i ponrave ppoon.[oie ie Ft ie Bre, Go at i le he ST PUS) open ll coment oan, 3, ad.2 Se nu ann ait 8 n .$20; y Ay refused, wi orenpan the Indian threat.| In à sanitary t of view, the following de- been pda re, Ÿ rere, : ough Equal right must be onceded ani in rd, 8 ; Le ais sn 50310 prires, each Ta Shri ree chiefly in Boston, Philadelphia ted to shoot the elder Wright, The latter did | ajon ts bibiy important : * everything has boon done for hima medical a free State.And I feel called upon to protest bl 430; 8 doy ui Tree or Snlders: rises.and Chicagn, While David 8.Brown, of Ihils not pay any attention to the threat ; but the In- \u201cmy, Dowager Countess of Winchelses, throngh skill can suggest, he bas obtained no relief.The [with all my might against the langu t es créiomal 00 bores a Bniders at 200 delphi [fred his name never appeared in pring dans waa not a0 idle one, for he almost |p or agent, to rent a furn \u201chouse a malady Inknown sa the\u2018 caisson disease.\u201d The [to bave been used by a member of our City bores re ber of yards, seven (7) ; entrance, | 8 rich men.hut at his death his fortune ap instantly fired at the cider Wright, the dl Wilton Crescent for three months, duriug the foreman who when he began work in 1870 waa Council during the past werk who, in remarks iw 1 Number ee fon D , ven at four muillima, Bo it wan with Richard entering bis right thigh, caning à terrible wound.| j \u2018oncon neason.Before signing the ent an unusually strong ani Fealtoy man and who of much violence, spoke of ontresl an 8 Cath.| [te Ss or small bores, \u2018 rite aD: Wool.In Uhiladelphis journalists do mot He thes attempted $0 shoot the younger brother fe ha enquirles made fn to tbe drainage, ban been dinalled the disease, gives the fol: ollo city, meaning thereby Roman Catholle, Tue; Kennedy.26 Beret 19 Mitchell 13th Bait, Jette rife 33 make free with the names of 1.Gillingham alan, but the Intter and the answer was that the Tandlord believed lowing description the caleson work : leave tn ask that gentleman what he means McKenele, héta ze ar Nos Fork Sater Fell, Asa Packer, A.f, Drexel, Pratt McKean, GOT HOLD OF HIS GUN, the drains to be in perfect order.Accordingly| ** The Brooklyn calsson waa 178 leet long by hee, be lis it 8 Catholic RORY he thioke cape « pit Ke 2 Mr Joseph Mance, V Reming and otberTmillicanaicen.| But vheasver Ay and managed in the scuffle to discharge the re-| she came from the country with her servants, 104 wide, and wa sunk it to a depth of 4 feet.fa a city that exist mete'y ° Capt.Mudge, PWR 28] Private Campbell, Vics, Sokler.great rolit enterprine is Le undertak > ai barrel, atter which the Indian ran into horses and baggage, to take on, but per-| The New York caisson vas 183 103, aud 78 Interests of ite Roman Cathollo inhabitants, JP CRD ayy LA Monney, 1Hth Îtatt ages men are among the leaders with their great sul adniog pr À a il je, she de.74 beg to emnre him that he is ralstakes.hat Te Private Ron, Prince of Wales, Metfond actiptions, The coal, Iron, petrolenm, es the woods on being threatened with a revolver ceiving an unpleasant smeil in the house, she de feet deep.The hours of work were regulsted Gunner, J.Very.M.A herd faith Batt, Medford a aed nr nn of banded by the wounded mas to his brother.clined to oseupy it, and left at once.An ox-|according to the distance below the surface.MONTREAL 18 A CANADIAN CITY, Corp.Dewtall, Nib u Sir rare anton a tate rai ro = many « ring opers \u201col The position the two men now found themselves amination by the health officer showed that the [The farther down the more compressed the air and belongs 40 the Beitish Empire, and fie not erst x Hd Mlipornl Pralngron, MR A, Phila lob = roared fm ort wa terrible one.The place where the drainage waa exceedingly defective, and the |and the greater the difficulty in breathing.At|to be characterized hy the line religions [porté Martine fib.Me.Johneon.O.R.6, Moi tord ; ee nods sad bar .shooting occurred was full thirty miles from Countess therenpon notified the landlord that she [a depth of forty-two fect there was & pressure views of any portion of ita citizeos, Heln » | ; 11, T.RC, Righ heen used herality.1d not i the house at all.The drai COMPETITION IV \u2014 THE BATTALION MATCH.Ile, 47th, Meifried assonger allways have vitated into South fliver Settlement, the meareet point at would not gain ise » draics of sixteen pounds to the equare inch.Thers alderman, not in virtue of his being a Roman Tali LE A Ts begins 0 look 86 which they could look for assistance and tn were repaired and the house was offered to her |the men could work aight honia out of the Catholic, but because he in & citizen, and, san Tn be com for by five officers, non-com- ro VR de ands, now low tbe reach this a Bait a mils in length had to in » wholesome condition, seme weeks later, but twenty-four.AS a depth of forty-nine fee member of our Council, it he understood hie missioned officers and men of any volunteer re: & He YW steam railroads would ame cours, portage eng: Harkom, Prince of be cromed.Their own canoe being too large for she declined to take it.A suit waa then brought there waa a pressure of eighteen , and duties aright, be should be neither Protestant giment in the Provincn of Quebec, having all: [CX Balfour, 8th Batt, Solder The coal mines are being pol by power Wright to carry over alone, he resolved for the whole vont of 430guinean.There ad the bottom of the New York caleson, seventy- nor Roman Catholic, No man » right to| ated with the I.of Q.Tt.A, 1 , silver Mr.4.Little, T.R.C, Metferd.fui corporations, an manufactures have pre- © n smaller one belon 45 the Indian, vas à verdiot in favor of the Countess, which eight fost, there wae & re of thirty-four {any town or city In our land that It is a {cup value 850, and cash 025\"; 2nd do, 838 ; rd Private 3.Bhaw, Néth Ratt Soid duced à whole brood of millionnalres.\u2014 Germen- The task before him was à most tue.Over the landlord sought to have eet aside om the|pounds.\u2018Here we only wed the men ta work Roms \u20ac fLtholic one\u2014~ta the sense that ite affairs do, $15.Highest individual score, $13, Sud !Cspt Thomas, 84th, Raider.town Tulegraph, 4 THE MONTREAL WEEKLY WITNESS Aucust 30, 1877.a \u2014 WEEKLY WITNESS.ADVERTISING RATES: Tew conta per line cach insertion.Births, - - - \u201cSe per insertion.Marriages, - - 30e » Deuthe - - - 2ôc \u201c .t year, $3.30 per line, CORAL |G months $3.00 Ratea.i - Bmsonihe, 91.23 (UTR or Lab TYPE double the abave ro - Cuntrarts payable quarterly in alvasee.MR.CHAPLEAU AT ST.LIN.The Quebec Government and some of its frivmls soem to feel very uneasy at present in regard to the Protestant minority of this Fro.vince, The unanimous demonstration by the Iatter in favor of civil rights and civil law, however much the violation uf both might be coun.trnsuced by those who are the masters of the present Ministers, who made them and could unmake them, seems to have ode 8 profound Impression, as it was caleulated todo, Although it was only à fow days since Mr, Langevin had devoted himself tu reassuring the Protestants of Baie Bt.Paul, the Mon Mr.d'hapleau thought Ît necessary tu reamure those of St.Lio.He intimated that Boron i+ the nimlmun BEmISF of Tae trv Fie aS | advertise uct W takin, the Quebre Government was not ve of party VEkK CTE or of politier, Tut of progress, There was à TRIWEEKLY WITSECaume reer rat cum ne ensure of truth in thie+ Tue Conservative versus party, althoush powinally io power in this DAILY WITEEAS lov per ams Best sanerion and 3 ( provinee, is met really so, Behind it, and i in full control of public affaire, ie tbe Ro \u2014\u2014\u2014 man hierarchy.\u2018This makes the second asser- 2 .tion, that the Government is not one of politics, MOILLK TO SULCRIBERS.Whoa ov wttog]| Bot et, It is one of religion, or rather ec- be parcicular to give the correct l'uat-Ofice address with the Province, and not the name ef your residence, county, or township, as is Frequently done, which prevents the receiving of the puliiation until the correct address In forwarding remits dao are cer the letter, or procure à Post- Ofice order ua nil casca we prefer the laitsr, Aux ben ohtacued, as it protects the seuder and oursetres),schic can be had at the following rates: §1 to §4.we and §U to §19, Se.Ion stampa are sent to ake wp! remittance, the only denon names chal are of Prectical wae ars 1 cent, 2 cents, and 3 centaof the Dopinion of Canada, D zen chancig Address frum one Pat-0fice to another st ua as meccasary to quvé tie old If this is vot done the change eanmot be wade, thereby Address oll liters a/lrsu as ill as the meu.ease distppointmont.somornlg suds piptions : Juhn 7 gall Son, TF1 14, Montreal.\u2014\u2014\u2014emts Au; soarned ait pain AY Eh Witness, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, INT, Wansiy, - Laat himseif McThon, hood «of Cornwall, wan avvassing the Coanty Argenteuil for subscriptions to the Nonttiex MESSENGER at 40 cv ats per annum, stating that owing t) the enlargement cf th- paper the price Such ie not the case, aniwe warn the publis against him.and would be oh léger tu any vne giving information of his where was increased.abouts All persons are requested asusual 1 to pay money t+ thome they do not know, unle: bearin : direct authority foun ue, \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 HOMES FOR OUR l'OUK.The aestivn of finding homes in the bush fur s fo the WIA NLSS, or publisseon, te persons re RROD, unless such pore the clearest author week & man of melon height.witb u \u2018arge, dark moustache, au: ca\u2019liog 1, à farmer from the neighbor.clenjssticism,\u2014s very different thing, for the trae pelizion in the Rowan Catholic Church bas to exist In spite of the ecclesinsticimn, and has rather à hard time doing so.Al ter getting through with what the Cov.ernment was not, the Provincial Secretary procesded to stat: what ft was It was the Government of progress, This fo undoubtedly true, but in more ways than one.l'rugress has certainly leon wade in the construction of railways, à very proper theme for » railway celelration, an-l also in the heaping up of debt, whisk fe not wo pleasant a matter for enusidera- tion.Tho last was the inevitable accompani- went of the first, and our present purpose is not at prusent to complainof it.The progress of which we do complain most decidedly is that in matters where the Roman Catholic Church makes any claim.The education of our Frenchl'anndian fellow-citizens bas been hauded over to the b.Lops.What the result of theit efforts hitherto hasbeen we know, [lense ignorance amongst the Tench population as a whole, This progress it therefore, backwards, and, however prowl of ¢ Mp, Chaplean may be, we van assure him that tu Protestant minority are not at all #0, and woul very gladly see the progress in the other direction.They woul! much rejoice at measures fe vmviling avt ensuring better means of instr ictios an enlightenment for all in the province.Anotlor feature «f the progress of Quebre is exces lingy distastelul to the | minotièy.It i¢ the efa-ment of the do that, and had given te the minority, those of anntherrelizion, all the liberty which they desired.The Quebes tiovernment bas undoubt: edly given, or rather left à lance measure of lih- erty ta the l'eutratans minority.Not all they desired, howe.er, for they wished to be free frum the extra taxation which has to be imposed in consequence of the exemption of quasi religious institutions, especially those engaged in trade.They have wren left them at A ¢ s of N * a | over the land, There was aa exception to thin | doubtless, in the Dutch settlers of Now York, but these were first cousins to the English, both in religion and laaçuage, snd were settled along the lines of myst active trafic.In contrast to them the (iermans of Pennsylvania have precerved their mationality, lasguage and manners ss completely as our owa Ger man countrymen of Berlin or Lunenburg- By whatever reason it is to be accounted for, mo stranger can fail to observe and no patsiot avold grieving uver the isolation of different tribes and races of men all over our provioves, and cven in our citioa, We may take ss an example the neighborhood vf Halifax which is in this an epitomo of the whole of Nova Scotia.Within a few miles of that capital we find of scttlement of Acsdisne almost as unsophisticated as thonçh they bad just cromed the sea, and bsen two hundred years on the way; a village of Ger mans still speaking snd thinking in Ger man, however much they may prefer very Lad English; ap African colony all Llack called Africsville ; settlements of Gaelic speaking Highlanders sottlements of Micmacsin wiywams, besides gatherings of all the other factors of our people.At least such was the condition of things not very wany years ago, and such we presun.e it instill.It is out of a conglomerate like this that we are required to make a single people, We say required, for there is no escaplog the task, These people are established on the soil, and on it they will remain, and if they are to be happy they niust be united ; and if they are ta be united they must bo free.Every individual must enjoy the largest liberty to think, say and do an he likes sc long as he does not interfere with others, and must consequently exercise the largest forbearance toward others in thinking, saying and duing ss they like, All being on an absolutely equal footing before the law, there is no middle course between this and absolnte tyranny, under which people would agree so long as repressed Ly pure terror, and ne longer.\u2018Fois latter alternative need not be considered, as no person or class could enforce, and no class would submit to it.We cau, therefore, only appeal to all persons and clanses to devate themselves to the task of working out this problem in the Jizht of the gospel of love, and un-ler the guidance of Christian charity.\u2014_\u2014 1 OUR I'EOPLE.| The redization of pational life in Canada br! obstructed by the intense national distinctions i which alrealy exist.Just as tbe roan who hears his own tongue or sees his own flag with indiff «rence at home is deeply stirred by serving the fag t+ which he owes allegiance flying in » foreign port, and by hearing his native tongue spoken where long he has heard! nothine but a fureisn language, so any race of people who have crossed the sea have » atrong peculiar senthuentsl attachment to whatever recala their home.Distinction | are the more hugged the more vague they be! come, and grievances are the more jealously} nursed the nearer they are to death\u2014nay, often! Jorg after they are dead, The French of | Cansda are more French than the French of France.The lsiter have changed much in twa! hundred years ; the former have changed little, | Lower Canada, which was once new France, is now old France, preserving tuuch more nf what | France once waa than France prescrves Lorself, France, however, bas not left Canada untouch- ; el, even hy her revolutions,if we may judge from | the universal adoption by the French-Canadian people of the tri-color flag of the revolution.This flag is probably now valued rather as an emblem of distinction between the French-Ca- | friendly terms with Protestants,\u2014at least wehave never heard of the Jrit World being brought under the ban.We wish never to see the day when nationality will be & stronger influence than religion, or when allegiance to country will stand above allegiance to God, but one grows in- Jigmant when one soes the mad ravings of univer: sal hatred and lawlessness preached in the name either vf religion or patonality.There le to be an Irish Catholic payer started here, Everything thet makes pecple read or think more is so far good.LI the mission of the new paper is to make good Irishmeninto good Canadians, we bid it All hail ! If its mission is to keep up dividing lines and to cultivate roots of bitterness among the people, we wish it a short career.We have not space here to discuss the other dis: tiections which exist among our people.They differ from those just mrntioned in the fact that they have no tendency to deepen, and will, pro- Dbably, dissppear with time, Our own duty, and that of all patriots, fs to promotes in every way the spread of ksowledge and scriptural truth, \u2014\u2014 THE FAMINE IN INDIA.The second year of imine, which it is now almost certain is to setile down on Bouthera India, will be the greatest visitation of this kind since the country fell usder British rule.It will cast ail previous calasities of the same nature entirely in the shade, sad the more detailod the knowledge concerning it, the more impossible does it seem for either the british or Indian Govern\u201d ments or both to do very much to avert ita nstural effects, Tord Balisbury, the Secretary for Iadia, in speaking of the nater quite recently, broadly hinted that a second gear of the famine would come, and that it jet bt be impossible to avert \u201ca terrible mortality.\" Such words from one in the position a Lord Salisbury have a terrible meaning, Hews not an alarmist, and he was simply preparing the Dritish poople for the truth which would have to come out sooner or later.Tho district over which the famine extends is roishly said be as large as seven Eng- lands.I is sparsely Ynhalited, but still the people ae supposed to nuinber twenty millions.There à only one railway und not one large navigable river to serve as a means of communi.catior with the interior.What woull one railway 5e for that purjose inac untry as large as seva Englands, Tramspuitation to any other pat of the country thao that along the const arl the railway would have to be by ox: rts, but one of the fire: «ffects of the famine was to destroy the fod for the oxen, and how much uxen could do in the way of transports tion nf food, when they had to carry their own, can vasily be guessed.Not very much, if indeed anything, and they could not Le utilized for food after having arrived in the interior, for religious reason Another dificulty in dealing with this famino is that it is apparantly Dot Jricticable to give the distribution into the hands of other than Fnzlish officials, nad there are nut 8 rutficient number of thew fitted for the werk by a koowlelge of the native language Almost the only practicable form of relief seems to be the establishment of large relief centres along the coasts au! the railway, Wag- j gon roads are few, and cannot In «tilized.An effort to send food tn the villages in the interior would probably be little more than work thrown away, Une officer can overlook the diateibution of relief to à large number if they are gathered together, while be would be utterly power'ess is connection with à syrtem of sending relief to the famine-stricken people ut their homes.The calamity to be overcome now is a very different one, in its circumstances, from the famine in Bengal some years ago, There the district affected was small and thickly peopled, and the joct to Sts, being overcome with them ae often as twios a day.Twe years ago she united ber sell with the Church of the Latter Day Saints, waa baptised socording to the Mormes rite in the Thames, and has uot been troubled with fits ainos, One brother Harvey, while sawing lamber in a machine shop, lost two of his fingers ; these were restored, and he was soon at work again.Other miracles ave reported of a similar nature.One sister, not from Loadon, however, declares that she was cured of \u2018a paleiod feeling in all one side of her (my) body\u201d ia a miraculous manner by ome of the elders, Those examples show that thers is to be lively competition in this field, and that Quebec la not to have the monopoly of mira: cles in the Dominion.- TUE LUNATIC ASYLUM CASE.A case of rather more than usnal interest nas been before our (\u201csuris uf late, It involved one of the most important points which can come before a judge, namely,as to how far the personal liberty of the subject can be infringed upon when there is conflicting evidence as to his mental state, and during the subsequent investigation another point of much gravity was touched upon : Could » lunatic be confined on a simple order of a member of tbe Government, and without the wal formal warrant of commitment?As re: zards the detention of an unfortunate fellow- being in an asylum, owing to alleged insanity, there is generally quite sufticient evidence forthcoming as to the existence of lunacy; Lut in the case of Francols Pavie we find that his friends are divided in opinion ss to his unsoundness of mind.However, granted thet he is dangerous at times, there can be no excuse tor the illegal manner in which hs was seized and cast iato the asylum.Whea the Judge asked the Rev.Sister Therose, the Lady Superior of the longue Pointe Asylum, for the warrant of the Provincial Gav- ernment, upon which alone a lunatic can Le prevented from enjoying Lis person al freedom, she confidently asserted that she could produce it, but after careful search she could find nothing but an order from Hon.Mr, Chapleau, the Proviucial Secretary, informing ker that she could detain Mr.Pavie a¢ a regular patient.This high-handed proceed: ing took place on the 47th of April, 1876 ;s0 for over sixteen months had this alleged unfortunate sufferer from dizease been confined against his will, on the mere dictum of a Miaister of the Crown! If men can be imprisoned thus, none of uusare safe, The very basis of civil liberty reste in the freedom of the subject, and which is further guaranteed to him by the provisionsof the writof habeasrorpus.The law provides every facility for the operation of this writ, and hed,es out many formalities which in other legal pro- codure are necessary, Ion.Mr.Chapleau, by a stroke of the pen, illegally confined Mr, Pavie for over a year; no legal warrant conld be presented to the Court, and accordingly the fudge at once directel that Mr.Pavie be liberated.Two questions may be asked here.Want induced Hon.Mr.Chaplean to request Pavis's detention in a lunatic asylum?Why it he was justly detained was not 8 warrant issued in the usual way?The public should ear from their Provincial Secretary in this matter.| \u2014 | THE OKA INDIANS.Tws months ago the Federal Government promised an immediste settlement of the Oka difficulties.We regret that so long a time has been permitted to pass without any obvious re.sultsin the matter.In the mesatime the Indians have been dependent on the gencrosity of friends, and repented complaints are received of their destitute coadition.The winter season fa approaching, and it is evident that same definite voring such changes as would greatly increase Russlan lafluenos in Europe, if not indeed actually give her some very desirable territory, because vf the better government which would be obtained for European Turkey, the Spectator has a right to advocate the acquisition of Fgypt by Britain for the same reasous, It is not penbable that it ia the misgovernmentof Egyptalone which sttracta the Spectator to it, Many other countries are misgoverned, but the acquisition of them is not advocated.\u2018The military reason comes first.India could be defended without Egypt.That bas been done before, and could be done agsin.But Ib could be much more easily and readily defended with Egypt, and thus bas the control of the shortened route by water.The reason which the Speclator most inalsts upon is the humane ope.It' may mot be absolute ly necessary that England should acquire Egypt for military ressons, bat it is necessary that no other great Furvopean power should be allowed to possess ft.Has thon the British Government or the British nation the right to say that Egypt shall be denied the advantages ofa humane European government which it so much needs?Have they the moral right to determine that the Egyptiau people shall be ground down under such taxation as mukes life sburden to them ?Have they a right to decide that the Upper Valley of the Nile shall Le a hunting-ground with men for tbe game?The Spectator holds that Britain must either undertake the better government of Egypt herself, or must not prevent other European nations which might feel 30 inclined frum doing so.We have simply given the arguments that are urged in favor of this action without any opinion upon them.WHEAL DOWN-BREAD UF, There is a feeling growing against the bakers.When were there hard times that the poor bak.ors did uot come in for à share of the blame?We suppose bakers are just as honest and kindly men ax other people, buyin; as cheap and selling as dear as they can.Indeed, it is said they make combinations to keep u, the prices of bread, just as working men of various kinds do to keep up the price of labor, It is oly to a certain extent that such combinations can affect the question, and in the case of bakers, we should suppose, to « very limited extent indeed.Yet it remains a fact that the Montreal bakers make very bad bread and sell it very dear.The Iirown bread sold in Montreal is wretched food to turn goud four into, aud the price, we are told, is aix cents higher here than in Toronto.LITERARY REVIEW.NEW MAGAZINES, Appleton's Journal contains three illustrated articles\u2014one on * Charles River,\u201d another on \u201c Tyrol and the Tyrolese,\u201d and the third on \u201cEton College.\u201d The writer of this last thus describes the work of à collegian :\u2014 * He desires to have the prestige in after-life of having been educated nt Eton.For the gratification of his wishes in this respect his parents per the respectable annual average sum of one hundred and seventy five pound, or about sight hundred and weventy-five dollars gold, of which about one hundred and twenty pounds or aix hundred dollars, goes for board and tuition, He boards with one of the college masters, and Fe it said, well; he bas a small study and se; leepiog-apartment is 1180 ; a tutor msoiets him in his work.and he lias about as much schooling of the good, old: fashioned sort as an undsrgraduste at Harvard or Oxford.Indeed, the Etonian, as far as no schooling goes, fares luxuriously, Every Tuesday, aura and Saturday with him\u2019ia à half holiday, every saint day à whole holiday.He into\u2019 first school,\u2019 ao called, on the dava which are not 50 small a capital, the large fortune amazsed by Mme.* Bhe has De one i no accomplish udy rem: ber fast-increasing prives hee uf this resource.ven to the public, will have the «ffoct of a shower of cayenme; but her magnum opus, which di on will probably forbid ves- Ing the light, is entitled Jiialegues of the Dead, the cons being laid in Hades, where ber father and Jerome re hearse her etory.Her wit ie still incisive, her conversation replete with interest, her memory retaining minutely every incident and figure of the wondrous divrams that bas unrolled before her eyes close upon a bundred years, Her birth was nearly coeval with that of our republic, many of w fathers she knew, She wept ma the tidings of Marie Antoinette's tragedy reached our shores ; she was s woman when Washington died ; Jefferson was her friend ; La Fayette has held her hand ; and ber name Le im- perisbably associated with one \u2018\u2018who kept the world at bay, whose game was empires, whose stakes were A Hurpers is as usual rich in illustrated articles, among which one on the Domestic aad Ar tistic Life of Titian is of special importance.\u201c A Snow Btorm on Mount Shasta\u201d gives an account of a darlog ascent of the northern extremity of the Sierra Nevada, whicb clad in perpetual ang rises \u2018 in solitary grandeur from a lightly sculptured lava plain, snd maintains a far more impressive and commanding individual: ity than any other mountain within the limits of California.\u201d It ie thus compared with its rival Mount Whitney, which has the advantage in actual height.I'he elevation of the higbest point of Mount Shasta, as determined by the State Geological Survey, i» in round num 14,440 feet above mean tide, \u2018That of Mount Whitney, computed from fewer and perbare less relinble observations, ie about 14,800 feet.But inasmuch ss the aver.elevation of the common plas out of which ta rises is only about 4; foet above the sea, while the actual base of Mount Whitney lies at an elevation of 11,000 feet, the individual stature of the former is nearly two and a half tirues that of the latter ; and while the circum ference of Mount Shasta around the base i« nearly seventy miles, that of Whitney is lesa than tive.Au illustrated article on Prince Edward Island ives the following sage opinions of the people: Of the people, so far ss observation goes, L can a favorably.Among them ar many descendants of loyalists of our Revolution, who are generally more upposed to the United States than others, The feding toward our country is apparently friendly, and, until quite rec.ntly, the desire for a reciprocity treuty wae very strong.But underneath is, I am con: , an under-current strongly English, notwithstanding that the le ave really more like Yankees than Englishmen in their habits and language.There just difference enough between their ships, their buuses, their vehicles or agricultural tools, their papers and their colloquial diction, for a ul rver to pute that he is not ia the United States : but often the difference is near jy imperceptible, It is in their value of time that I discos «red the greatost dissimilarity.The phrase \u2018 Time is money\u201d is certainly not true on Prince Edward Island, however true it may be with na.No one ison haud when he should be ; everything is done with a leisure that would impiy longevity rivalling that of Methuselah.Punctuality in the hours of meals at the hotels is a thing not dreamed of, resultio in great waste of time and cold food, \u2018Nor did i see any cvidence anywhere or in the character of ary one thet indicated that the word bas any meaning on Prince Edward Island.This taking life eany is a very delightful thivg under some circumstances, ct it will not doin this age and in the Western world, in the wholesale manner in which it ie practised on that beautiful island, for those who desire to rise in the world.And herein seems to bo partly the reason why the Dritish Provinces of North America have not progressed as rapidly as their neighbors south of the Great Lakes.It seems fortunate for the reputation of General Giant as à gentleman, that he bad not while in Eugland the advantage of the editorial advice given in this monthly, for the editor remarks : euratarving prrple touk defnite forma day ortwn | bactisua and tho other clomonte of our populs umunicatinns waregood.Here it in very dif-} ; c \u201c2 If a prince gives à dinner in bonor of an un agin 1 Jeputation of workingmen who waited un liberty to onçaniss Orauce proessions, and tion, whom they have been in the habit of speak ferent.Iiut even in lengal the necessary Corts action must be taken without delay to provide holiday, for | A ee Det en titled guest, he is Lound to honor lun chiefly, Mr, Mac tr ask far help in that directi march throuzh the streets or anywhere they |jng cf as strangers and foreigners, than as for ita] to ert the = sed for their wants.Religions fends or party quar- 193 an 41e moon ; break h til and he invites the company merely to help him 3 3 \u201c oH cree 1m, 0 There i nl sainat such t \" T \" avert the calamity caused an enormous expen- tels, 8 such vire no interf ce on the 11 a, and 17 nova : « bresk here occurs uo! render the bonnr.1f, therefore, it be true that but wire +imewbat balked by the complications Messe.There ino Law asainsl suc demonstra- gignifi ;ance in representing any sympathy with diture, and the expenditure necemary now in| a G req eren: part [ip mm, to 45 p.m, when be is io school again ; (he Prince of Wales gave a dinner especially to of nur Confederation system.They wanted to tims.What the minority hasta complain of inl ghe revolution, Such sympathy was :lonbt- Southern India\u2014nut ifthe calamity istobeavert- of w Governmeat, but when a powerful religious and, finally, he setalin master voce more from General Grant, and permitted the greater that the Government (ses not secure them the lesa pretty general at ome time, but it has corporation take, #8 it were, the law into their 515 p.m.to 6.of the company to precede him to tbe table, between these times he spends in leaming ; to become an English gentleman of course he nut match odd momenta for school aration and reading with his tutor ; but_in the main the education at Eton resolves ita-lf into one of Jrarning to become s gentleman.And Yo Pise tonians to possess t! Frost quality the forty eight learned craduates of Oxford and Cambridge employed as college-masters dy very little, and the bays themselves very much.\u201cIt is fair to sasume, T think, that boating end cricketing in some mysterious way have somethinz to do with making boys gentlemen at Eton.At any rate, eminence in either of these gives great advantage at the coliege, and 1 may ati that the only youth pointed cut to me at Et: n as worthy of special notice was © the captain of the hoats.\u201d Nearly all the time paca.ed oat of school is spent in wing skilled in po to Ontario, bat the Dominion Government bad no lands except in the West, The single question presented is this: There are, say, five thousand idle men in the city, or à population +f twenty thousand who have reached the end of their wears of living.Ope family in every six, who must be in some way dependent oa the rest for support through the coming winter.For the mere coat of warming them for the winter they could be placed cn free-grant farms.After being helped all winter in town, according to the wr.dinary method of supplies of ficewood and soups, they will be no better, hut much worse off in rind, Indy and estate than they are now, while at the same cost in the other way they would be ed, that is inpossible\u2014but if what can be done is General Grant should quietly have left the house, and all the more if, as is constantly rai, eti ustte and forms are real things to European ety.One uf the most important social problems of the day is the question of the proper treatment of criminals snd the best means to prevent crime.Dr.Harris, tbe secretary of the Prison Association of New York, says \u2018\u2018 the prevention of crime requires the same comprehetsive knowledge and treatment of the sanitary and physiological, the domestic and social, the educational, industrial an religious interests of the commun people as must be applied to prevent diseases and their entailmont.\u201d This knowledge own hands, and administer it for thz persecution of the warda of the Government, such a use of the laws should be questioned by these guardians of the Indians.It is much to be regretted that while the successful policy of the Dominion Government in their treatment of the uncivilized Indiana on the Western Prairies meets with such general approbation, their neglect of the civilized and christianized ** savages\u201d of Oka, should have left them to suffer during eight long years, The wronged, who can obtain no redress for the wrongs they have received by means nf the laws or the Government which are Lound to protect them and their rights, are naturally inclined to liberty which it bas left them, hat while responsible for the administration of justice, and the preservation of the public peace, permits bands of armed turfisne ta tara out and fill the streets fur the purpose of munlering wuch of the Protestants ar choose to excise their legal rights.In view of auch n ence to secure their rights after full warning, Me.Chaplean might well ray, * notwithstanding the deplorable occur- + ponces ia Montreal luxe than two months ago,\u201d in his awerlion that bis Government wished to give the minority fair play, We are afraid that the minority will continue sceptical in regard t tha conluct of the Quebes Uov- completely passed away in the reaction of Ultra: done, would be many times more.Une estimate montanism, so that the thousands of Frenchmen | claimed to be moderate is twenty millions ater- who sought our shores after the late French ling.Such an expenditure it iv said would stop war, expecting hereto find a welcome from and | the progress, not of Southern Inlia alone, but to mingle with a kindred perple, were repulsed |of the whole of Inds for five years, Public wn coldly that little ia now left £3 us of what | works, education al other mist important might have «= en fa he 8 large and © asble ads notters woul l bav ti be left in abeyance Aiea to population but a few vile dregs of for that jerlol, al only the barest ad- comumnistic pauperism, So long as France turn?ministration sttempted.Even with such towards us hier Uliramontane side our French: expenditure, the metality would he great.Canadiana are French to the backbone; but in | Large numbers of pecile gathered in camps for pretence of the prest anti-Catholic France, the aske of food and water, on short ratios, and French-Cana-iians are uo longer French but Ca- | exposed to the influences of such a climate as nadisne, As such they must be stu lied as a ne.that of India, could net be expected to resist the placed in circumstances of permancat Indepen ence and public nsefuine-s by the ne proves, 1 rendered more helpless in character and no gain to the commonwealth at large, while, by the nther, they would he the ere many years, would be leeding our cunmerre and adding to the wealth of our country.1t haa heen abunlautly proved that {ir the pro.Landers of new commnnitios which, sent the country has in it enough of all arts people except of snl as can open new land, an the only way to make use of surplus population is at this work.The Canada Pacific should be hurried on, Multitndes have darivg the summer turned back from Winnipeg when they discover: od the remoteness of the lands they were going to The most attractive lands at present are those still obtainable in the Muskoka District.But to colonize these means pluck, enter prise and labor of no ordiuary sort, an involves organization, thet the strong ma help the weak, and that all may be protected from dishonesty nn the part of such as mizht obtain help in this way without fulfilling their obligations.This latter might be entirely pre.vated by a anclety getting conten! of the ands, but even if many of the persons so helpsl did leave their lands and sell oat their improvements, the advantage bo the comntey would be vastly creater than by any system of pour relief within cities, and certainly to be preterred to the panperizing system of our House of Industry.Whatever government all is usually given by say of our governments to emigration, Whatever money iv usually spent by charitable organizations for the poor abould largrly be de- ficoted into this chansal ot placing the pnor where they can help themacives Moreover, whatever is to be «lone in this direction should Every day's de- Jay is not only a positive loss of means, but in.areases the difficulty of accomplishment, bestden which it may safely be assumed that what are called the hard times will not be over until this work ls scoomplished.Owing to the jointatimulas ef war and protection all sorts of employment became inthe States extremely remunerstive, and large numbers of mea found ready employment in supplying the rapid expsoslon of de.should now be turned to colonization.by all means be done quickly, mand caused by the growth of the country an the rein of the war, but all was abaoffN an usastoral.The production, aided hy constantly Improving machinery, was soon double what was seeded, aad what but ruin could follow With all this, being near neighbors, we have had #0 sympathise, We flonriahed when our neigh.hore flourished, and now we decay when they decay.There ia no remedy bus the Increase of and the removal of a large part of our diy populations to the culture of land, The nooner [8 Is set about therefore the Letter, both for the thrift and the pesce of the country.ernment towarls ths Protestant minority in this Province, however much protestation Mr.Chazleau may make.Deeds speak londer than worls Vie words are only mockery when the only accompaniment is criminal nevligence of the meatires which only will be satisfactory and prove the words ts be sincere.Mr, De Dincherville and Mr.Angers and others may add their verbal assurances to those of Mr, Langevin and Mr, Chapleau, but the Protestant minority will not he satisfied with them.Nothing can be satisfactory but the most searching investigation into all the circumstances attending the mob atrocity on the twelfth of July last, and the most vigorons mesures to render the recurrence of mich outrages as then took place impossible.They would, of a n \u2014 BABEL.There never was a time when so many questioning prevailed all over thin continent with regard to the fature as now, Is the Republican experiment of the United States à failure, or are the vices of the blood, which have lately proved eruptive, such as can be cured by time and tonics?Is immigration from Europe, and what bids fair 10 be befors loug still move serious, im migration from Aris, joined with the unfruitful- ness of the American race, going to form à population of & character for which a constitution, devised by and for God fearing and educated Anglo-Saxons, Is entirely unsuitable?The danger from Furopean immigration wonld probably already have reached its worst paint were the original race increasing sa of old, and if it had no Asiatic problem to deal with, But while the Chinese are invading from the Pacific, the sons of the foreigner are multiplying at » rate with which the offapring of the native English race cannot, or at least dues not, compete.That e mixture of Teutons, Slavs and negroes, Celis and Chinese carnnt carry on the Republic ne now constituted does nnt need to be ;roved.Similarly the question je being turned over among ourselves whether we are in à position to meet cortain dangers that serio to threaten, We have before us the task of developing out of many and very discordant elemefits & nation.Are the circumstances for developing brotherhood within, sad friendliness with neighboring peoples better, se are they as good as those of the United States?Our powers of absorp Hon are, ws are told, not eo good as those of nur neighbor, Many of the facts which appear to prove this way give rive to falla clous argumenta, hut there in some remnant of truth in the saying.The United States had the advantage of having » homogeneous mes, large and eingulacly influential, to begin with.No solid messes of persons speaking different languages, and guided by omtendiag religions, have vexed their problem, New elements have d y à d + cossary element in the future Canadian people, | snd perkaps, owing to their fecundity and ut-! tachment to the land, they bave a certain right to their claim of being above all others (he children apd heirs of the soil They are as yo à solid mass, whose seclusion from ail outai-le infinences has been aa jealously preserved aa was that of Israel of old.There was socially tore commnrity between the English and French fifty years ago than there is today.There was last century far less contrariety between Gallican Catholicism an: English and even Sentech l'rotestantiom than there is now.At that time, whatever the difference of their traditions, the three systems reached Canada simply sn three comparatively lifeless forms of natinnal ecclesinticinm, Since then Gallicanism has changed into Romanism and Protestant formalism hes changed intn evangelicaliam, giving birth on ith sides to nggression, the aggressiona of Romaniem taking form in the building np of an overshadowing and ali-abeorbing ecclesiastical system, and those of Protestantism in « multitude of agencies for urging personal religion on all men, Ib is evident that la spite of proximity the two peoples Yrought up under influences no diverse must continue te diverge until one influence or the other fails through its own weakness.Protestantism is weak when destitute of intelligence and vital piety.Rome, on the contrary, is weak in the presence of these, and is in consequence ever af war with the diffusion of knowledge, and vouch.sates instruction only to such as will accept it dogmatically, and defend it sa they receive it without enquiry.The next great solid element of our people is the Irish Catholic.We are sorry that it is necessary to fatroduce creed as wall as nationality,-\u2014hut the attachment of the Irish Catholic to his countrymen generally ceases with his co.re- liglonists, The Irish and Freuch bave no natural liking for each other, but by s careful education of common hatreds they are now befog fanght to swear mutusl attachment in common opposition to nearer kindred of another faith, Owlvg to the similarity of language 14 ia impossible to keep the Irish marres in the same indi£erent ignor ance that has been as sucessful withthe French, Intellectual trod surrounds them in abundauce, and unless they can be kept from it they are in danger of being no longer a separate people.Rathera press filled with hatred of all men than feendom to read what other people read.À specimen of this la tv be found in the Friek World ot New York.No paragraph appears ia thet aper which is not Blled with envy, wrath, malice, and all unched.tablenems, lommnnism, repudistion, contempt of aîl anthority, rebéilion, are the itaple of ite teachings.There are all ideas hateful to Rome, come iv gradually, aad have spread more or less but mot so hateful, it would seem, ne being on disease which would be certain to cone, Ibis estimated that the inortality before thin second year of the famine is over will be four millions out of a population of twenty wil- lions, indeed \u201ca terrible mortality.\u201d Notwithstanding donbta as to whether it is just that such a large expenditure shanll be fn- curred for one section of India nt the expense of the rest, it is manifest that what can be done to mitigate the starvation and suffering must he dove.A Christian Government crnnot allow ita subjects to dis by millions without tremendous exertions on their behalf, however inade.«uate these may be, Only by facing their responsibilities, and giving Indias very much wiser and mote beneficent ile than itcould get in any other way, can the British nation bave any moral right to retain its Jadisa Empire which it values mo highly.\u2014_\u2014-\u2014 THE AGE OF MIRACLES.While a large number of our reading population find their principal intervet in Eastern matters or in social troubles on thls continent, mir acalous occurrences sre being daily recorded which scarcely meet with a passing neties.An age of miracles seems in short to have been ushered fn upot us, yet nobody la particular appears to be excited about the matter or to take even ordinary interest in It, although we certainly do hear of » pilgrimage from St, Hyacinthe to a shrine below Quebec.That this want of general is: terest is due to the fact that the miracles have hitherto been confined to the credulous faithful in & remote jrart of the province will, perhaps, explain the apathy of the publio in the past; but this resson cannot be urged hereafter, as now from other places come reports of events quite ns tmiracnious ss any sald to have transpired in the nelgbborhsod of Quebec.Ontario, jealous of any pre-eminence on the part of this Province, i00of course the competitor, and theie Mormon pupnistion have brongbt about this digression in their favor, In fact had they bad no Mormons the probability is they would bave had mo miracles.In one thing, too, these miracles are entitled to greater consideration than those of this Province.Theirs are performed ju à community compossd chiefly of unbelievers ; enrs in à Incality ncoupled by a population in mo case very critical, sud who dare nod be soeptioal il they would.In ome respect, however, the miracles are Mmilar, only believers being the subject of them in either case J.ondon the Tosa ia the fortunate posseator of the Cntario shrine, where fits, measles, aies and other ills that flesh In hele to are enred under the direction of elders, and with the assistance of the water of the Thames.Use of the members of the Mormmm community, Mister Cembridge, bad in earlier years bea an usbeliever, and sa such was sub themsolven aseume the office of the executors of laws of their own conception, The Protestant prees of Montreal, which was forced after personal aud close observation of facts to acknow- Jedge the justnees of the bitter complaints made by the Protestant Indisns, have been saked, virtually, to pass summary judgment upon the fourteen prisoners now in jail at Ste.Scholas- tique, and to find them guilty of a heinous crime.For one, We decline todo ao until they will have hind their trial, We admit the possi: bility, and even the probalility, of nome of those awaiting their trial on the charge of burning the Seminary's property, as having been to some extent guilty of connection with that unfortunate affair, However, à man is held to be innocent until proved gulity.The converted Oka Indians bave enjoyed the sympathy of the Protestants of Canada.Li they are guilty, ss a baud, of a united and organized attempt to destroy the valuable property of the Beminary, such as they are accused of, or if any of them are guilty of such à crime, they deserve and must receive full punishment.At the same time, however, many good Christians, who have enjoyed greater privileges of enlightenment, may wonder that they 20 long endured persecotion without any attempt at retaliation ; and here we see tbat we may learn a lemon even [rom thos who may be considered our inferiors.Dut, we agua demand on behalf of the Indiany, and on behalf of oppressed Protestantism in this Province of Quebec, that there he no more delay than is absolutely necessary in dealing with the important matter of definitely settling the affairs of the Protestant Oka Indians ones for all.Let the promises given in this matter be fulfilled without farther delay, \u2014 THE ACQUISITION OF EGYPT.It might naturally be supposed that it would be from a Conservative source that would come the strongest demands for the acquisition of Egypt, for it is that politioal party in England which has always been imperial in {ts tenden.cles and desirous of extending the British dominion.Tut lé fe not ew, The loudest ory for the auvezalion or prolectersts of the Valley of thy Nils, comes from an unmistakably Radical source, the London Spee: tetor.The Spectator in demanding this course with reference to Egypt ls entirely consistent with ita general policy in regard to the Eastern Question.Tt has been one of the foremost in ita denumciations of \u2018Turkish administration, whether in Europe or Asis, and it has enp- ported Ramis in making wae on Tarkey because nf the misgovernment and Mr.Gled- stone iv his seooû extreme opeechin in regard to what should be dome, Having been friendly t» Roscia, notæithetanding tbe wteady and rapid these accomplishments; snd, assuming one of the qualities of an Fnglish gentleman to be courage, then 1 mean to affine that Etomians in the aggregate possess that most excellent virtue in consideralile degree, They must not boat on the river until they can swim, anil learning to swim means the expenditure of a large amount of boyish courage, To attain ection, too, in ericket\u2014to attain at ivast to the bonor of heiug a member of the Eton \u2018\u2019eleven\u201d\u2014it is necessary to he well endowed with the like good «puality.1 ahall class honor with courage as being strong in the breasts of young litonians, and with a certain manliness aflied to it, and a strong sense of independence with this, And herein, 1 think, lies most of the virtue of the English public.school system, that it teaches boys to be cour: ageous, honorable, manly and independent; and the majority of Etonisns that I bave ever met with have n certainly endowed with these attractive «qualities.Other noteworthy articles in this number are entitled: * Famous Automata,\u201d and * Charles Kingsley and His School,\u201d by E.L.Burliughame.In \u2018\u201c Gwen- doles\u201d Mr.Wirt Bikes traces the name of George Elliot's heroine to * Gwenlian,\u201d and Rives a dramatic sketch of sn early Welsh heraine of that name.Lippincott's Magazine opens with an entertain.who make their home among the mountains of Algeria, and who are oradually coming under the fn 3¢nces of civilization, Misdirected energy will, under a strong, pa: tient sud progressive government, directed into more useful channels, The most turbulent will beonme sensible of the necessity of eating.The lander of cg and caves iv nocessarily meagre and p: ous.The braves muat go to market.For success at that place of ged resort they must carry something to sell in order to be able to buy, and they must behave themselves in \"change hours.On the latter point the French and the peaceab! natives insist with increasing unanimity.It is imposaille to fancy a pentium who restricts himself to the occupation of fighting, hogies from those at whose expenss he pursues it, hiv eekly supply of provisions, and marching home with In dias, or strings of chops and cutlets, festooned from hi spear or garlanded around hin gallant throw, dnch Is the drift of the times.Mankind {« banded against brigandage.Never was an auclent and honorable profession so radly under the weather everywhere.When ft flares upinto momen lite in Sicily or Attica the news papers neise hold of the event, a repotter in promptly on the spot, and the bandit chief in interviewed as conlly as though he had merely shot his wife, bought a legislature or effected n triamphant corner (a mens pork.Kuch depress tng influences cannot but wear down the robleat ng.Sicily ts tamed, and Clirosnsin, the Asiatic Kabylia, nearly no, A paper on Madame Patterson Donaparte contains many anecdutes aau'extracte fromietters and diatios, which throw new light on theeareer of that remarkable woman, of whom Talleyrand raid, \u201cBi clic etait reéne ater quelle grâce elle rigeraû.\u201d The paper concludes an foliows :\u2014 Blnoe her withdrawal from Europeu \"ile Mme, Bonapatte has livest seclacled fon arciety.Raltissore\u2019s shrewdest banker saya that be kiows growth of its empire ln Central Asie, and fa.* ne man capable of creating legitimately, with ing account of the ** Kabyles,\u201d & curious people of the physical, mental and social circumstances under which criminals are nurtured, cannat, it jo evident, be gained without careful investiga: tion and comparison of a great number of cases, extending over several generations, The study in, in the nature of things, not n pleasant one, anid anyone who devotes himself to the develop: ment as a science of the \u2018natural history of criminals\u201d deserves the warmest thanks of all social reformers.The volume now before ue is a study of this kind, It is entitled The Jukes, which in a pseudonyme used to protect from aspersion worthy members of the family therein studied.\u2018The bistory of this family, de- scenrled from one known to newspaper readers ns\u2018 Margaret the Mother of Criminals,\u201d is followed out through six generations, including seven hundred and nine persons, charts being given which show the training, character and position of each person.Mr.Dugdale, who has made these valuable researches, is a member of the Executive Committee of the Prison feo: clation of Now York, His enquiries have been made under the official appointment of that As- ocistion, and the results carefully verified, no that the reader may be assured of thelr correct.aess.Mr.Dugdale conclndes his history of this family by making & financisl estimate in detail of the loss to the community caused by such » amily, summing up with the remark: \u201cOver a million and a quarter dollars of lomtu 7% years, caused by & tingle family, without reckoning the cash paid for whiskey, or taki into account the entsliment of pauperism an crime of the survivors in su ing generations, and the incurable disease, idincy, and insanity rowing out of thin debsuchery, end reaching wriher than we can calculate.\u201d It la getting to be time to ask, do our courts, our laws, our sim- houses and our jails deal with the question pre sented i\u201d The latter part of this volume given the result of an investigation into the history of Btate prison convicts, the statistion being obisined by careful personal yuestivning of the orimioale, and tabulated for reference and comparison, Mr, Dugdale shows that ** the two great factors in à well balazced Life are a healthy body, properly developed, and & enund and broad judgment, resulting in a well fashioned and powerful will,\u2019 and adde that \u201cthe asme methods which will secure the advantages of thees for the gemeral community will alae be efficacious when applied to the rectification nf nobslanced liven.\u201d Ie conallers that the first onndition of rocial and moral regeneration is publio health ; the second in am education whioh will organise she habit of industry ao that it will heoome not oaly of esny performance but ao essentially necessary activity of the waking hours, \u201chat she Industria! traliing here a ivovated must not be the arbitrary imposition of o fore mal task.Work fa not sn education in its propre sense, nuloss it anlista the putting forth of the puwers of body and mind simultaneously sad cheerfully to sscompiish & predetermined er: ici Li AA Nr August 30, 1877.THE MONTREAL WEEKLY WITNESS 5 \u2014 quit, For this the * team system\u2019 of iv.Mrs.Brew.used to fervently repeat the group the best cal qualities of the great) Belsl als y 6ud never took ces: Dowsld MeKivunu Oranrevtilo: d Ada: BOOTS AND Saons.\u2014 Le men ; ; dustry for chil and youths, wl is almost worda of one her famous poems : Toon of the oo pat into this fullorbed a dons and.a dacs were made by % 8 London.Hubert Fonbe, founder.Bt.Catharines; alr, per a ders fur ay pol rr dat pri orbs ret , tre ue salve nd ms ls aa aduca.Above (he star ideal the consciences vf the tnartyre and pro- Ééleir for the purpose of sonveylax undue ado KELitgre & Coty.Luxersoil.Cater are tally wp to lat res Lave mot 11 10 Ge jae don: } 178\" Sions! blander, and not industrial train Prioked by the inst peak of ssuw ts and apostles.Having built up the vantages to Lis wife Her: ls ths way Mr.Thoms Urititi su towel changed y upto last year.Krices Lave but] ve hy strained houes.12c per a; in comb.sense.Ît dun not produce b My Italy is there.\u201d loftient zones of human nature sccording to| His Hoxon seid that the Intermediary Mlle.vont 1a \u201cToronto, depossd that he did business + 1 | materially shuce last reports, aiibough, with e rogar.Ho to Uo eur Tadustry because it fails to employ the|Anl ao our America is with the Father of|the scientific method, he would mot di-|Puitras is cumin dy of the petitioner.anor ell bow mac be heen competition which uw esists, 8 little con- ss.1 times).$2.73 co; Indian mest, Land as the fraction of a trade it Spirits.Sein.Lirowning would often repeat the verge from the stern demands of science At the trial It was ami tbat no money Was ' muek gode À ackd during Lusivres ; cession is being made bo large dealers.#1 40 du ; tzrnke fo ad crachrd wheat, $3 do | mire soon becmace a purely automatic opers- words of an oid English post : Len Std put ints the lower ones of mans passed, Mlle, Poitran seid she did not receive can't say If 1 10id $120,000 worth of goods duituë yy oynch¥paciish Sole, No.111.4.@ 2dig [bey 63 Sido, ru.das rau beds, par ton that requires no attention, the mind is left » Altbona the day seems very long nature the very bent growth they had overseen.[any fur the eod, but seid she was tv Lu the past (wo years; never Wuew, excepl Ly geess| do do \"No.ZB A.21 a 2 : \u2014_\u2014 free to Fove over tie Tout of vive aud At inst tbe bell riugetb for oven-soug.After Isaieh and 1 alo, seer the prophots and buarded in the house aad it dis not appear for work, how 1 stood.ae | never hal ruliatile balances Yo.1 Ordinary ees \u201c WHOLESALE PRICES emes sc wbicl purpose of ir Ringeth,\u201d ob id * with wlody PPvstles, « vor the Cinenrs an! Napoleons, after [how lung, but ber story aa to the cons deration [sheet can\u2019t account for the defelt of $R.U00 re i v : « T \" A el the roformatory tu obliterate by training.that Prodigal ot meet hey sil wanted rd hry Ku ond Houtltons bave Leen put into | varies from that of the petitioner, who ls exam ported Ly tise secountant sugaged to essmine my \u201c bar in » Tl he four re es at bak EE re Further, Mr.Dugdalo insists upon the 1m-| go hence In peace, .there was no doubt af 16 ; and © upper range, ie could bear to be put foto ined ana witness.Mdune.Belair bad no teats {books ; have mado some oforttofud oat the caus: Jutfald Sole No.vid ts vunthin iealy eo bo pec sihoueh the bt No.2 +\u201c 4 1.virlgh shipment are \u201c \u201d here in { in the lower, su adviiug basilar streaxth, such of ber own, and whatever she bias ut he pre- [the amount represented | bed, of te \u201cfamily system\" for relormato: hers were three things from vécu Ll Sd\u201d Ne, Te wld\u201d nly lve er en from hor hosbas The Cour de {lows ie 1s G5 mn od IF ay we emia .rive, so that dispositions and temperaments record, The inui \u2019 steeds to the riders to put the best growth of Cossation resifirmed this pelciple only lust |fecount acorn must he mistaken.b vazed Upper, light aed wedivm.to lmout .: | which shall healthfully react upon each otber |persuslon of ee ae ja rat vien ve etre\u201d bavitar facultirs beneath the bast xrowth| March: J.I, 1817 a radio was [mh mor Eran ee ae rc (raie Leur la toa cases waiting fr fall coude Prelxau am quatesl slightly omer: grain tunduge Is off«riag «L rom 4a 940 Us 50 per gr.bover ven ta Liverpout 23d Glesgow.and at from Da Vd tu Gs for early for ur Ne.Jemiock Sluugdter Xo.1 0\u201c ot the coronal.It is good for à man to plaluly made to withdraw from the estate vi ça si i wand shlptuent may be placed loguthor od ihe conricts [poux 1xto TUE SEA OF WRATH 4x1 FEMS |bave emied fi the Lowes half of bin face if lc [tbe msolvent movables which Belomsol Le for 85V0 which abe ual uit of th rings Mosk ad S00 bri eects, 113 bards Market quist themselves become fostrumen or each otlier's we shall leave ourscives Lohind vurselves ut the [bas a hurricane in the upper half, He repeated [it.The deeds were male iu the faualy by |thisformed partof capital at the commencemunt Ushi (27 todd mai.en To [but study, Ruperts haira, $4 86 40, Fara, regeucration.bottom vf the ses, sud be taken int the life the classic falile nf Ulyraes, who to prevent hin [Ite members, and cannot \"tend, Petition re-|of business: it wes really not capital but brrrowed do (1% 0268 Bs).\u201c \u201c #50 tu fie, Fancy.4 ; xpneu .| 3 boat on the surface of the eternal ocesn and be sell being lured by the enchantiog song of the jected.money: bad suaccouut aysinst one Me Milles, Ningare : Bhossraie Liviags.Extra, 65 70 ta 6575: KU $5.45, Pascy, and otler Poems, ia » little olume LY |gaved.We are in existence, and while we con-{syreus, stuffed bis ears with wax and bound him- - he becawe Susalvent, aud [ubtained seyoras cuts post- rag Kobe $60 to à Canadian at present rwsidevt is New York, tinue to be in existence, we cannot flee (rom our- sell to the wast of his craft as he sailed Ly Pr L'eo ue psd, Yor ht en.volt ut sin 1 reste oho has dedicated his work to the Countess of et Phe vans\u201d and.\u201c cannot \u201d of the|thrir island.In that way he weut by safe- COMMERCIAL.ra ald but not ses ot ! Bree 1) We mh ta WALDO, Salrs\u2014-200 Doubl Dufferin.* Pasco\u201d Is Cuban tale of love and Word wre the Smuts aad ao a nt our ly, but he rather vante 4 land, ad item in the merchandise account of the leer of #-|! 6.20 fe Patra, 4 10 da, $ 00 > existence ; they are -ruck of the e and [was not ut peace, The ancients sal t -_ 000 odd about be andise debitor to Dilfs ** pay- un ! Spring Extra teauiver #5 HU Faoey ® patsioklam, corerlsg some Sty pages.The hero of sieuce, You can mever be divorced [run when Crphous went by that bland, be Witsaa Opmica, Mowtesal, Augint hie \"dr * Rebull Ts redone uur ions\u2014Banlcan has ben No a qu ae 901 dica in warring against Spais, and bis desth is your conscience ; the Supreme Power dows not |being a great muslelan, set up better music| \u2014 Urcontacks bought at 3% ® V0 dis.Awericas not me\" font pat ats sk keeper, Last » the senson here \u201c pre d NA doit; even tur] LH an ae torn Hy vues 9 ; i ; o : : codes Suan , thus deploted by the author :- allow you tobe severed from it, We are tostay than that of the ayreus, sad went by disdaislog iver bought et 5 @ 00 diss Lrilih do ut @ et a ak Bul on baed sud Tran\u2014The Pre rn: fe toe.per Tue [ews K3e¢ ro es a8 ove of wolves the prey each one with him or berself, The Governmen the sorcerer's shore.The man o morality 18| 00 dis.Saal do at 10 00 dis tuerefure (t fs inexplicable to m8 1 § fancy my In ok pas.\u2014 There are « few Japaus selling, aud scme Jib Unto.receipts 3 400 bushels; tu Ste per Fall twenty sabres kept at ba) ; of the Universe ie ot elective.The wupreme Ulysses bound to the nas, could prudence 7 2 .Keeper stuck the item in merdy bo ba'unce Le pur enquiry for fine (revus.The taarket ju New Vork 32 Joa.EE oneendlo oot by foal.pourpre are mot man naged by die counting of taking hi pat Lust, but he rather wants bb.towns 8 Co.Brokers [quel ble awn eus pate lacing à ance VUE th these Kunde fo rather weaker, motseithstond | per punis © Tee fu 11 fed stained from mavy a streaming cu\u2019.onde and the lack of tongu-a ; but, on the can to go date it.Orpheus ia the man © religion ; 2481.Jamesat, dveatand single entry book keeping.but my ko ow: og wiichfihe ioest grades are relatively d b A CAE TE There Pasco, foremoni in the fray.brary, we must obey and ascertain meekly the be goes by emteuted No morality can give .ee does nut exteud far eusugh to expats that than pet Aconrding ti The Laat reports Fenn Japan DEEE ; do wll Hattled the foe defiantly.\u20ac Mons of or our souls by finding out |Us peace.When a man ilesires to do what Le FINANCIAL C00 carry.prices were ever peal hibee This weiner was in Per 100 de dE our unalterable environment.I an mot open- [cannot du there is a collision among bis fa-| qu .arn y n tt likely to be walotahe ie exports wrre about Prarls 1.50 fd 0 Bus tue fast cUling con (0 and side ing the Jsille this evening, but | sm appealing culties, and be in mot barmonized with Tuere las bees Bu change Mel -¢ uf disconst of BUSINESS TROUBLES.Jong ot here than for the corresponding Fuki its, Tt fn Hd wa Had Tapped bla fe, and bi prod cry to your self-evidence.The Ilible everywhire iis iromment.We, therefore, know uci- of saterest 12 thls market during the week, although = Metin.MeNath, Mandi & Co, of Torunto uve have the effect Se ioe aio probe ETB, POF Mater un Tru re EE Hroke lo à (Asp of aguay ! ° Le ee ell-evidemt truth, Itisjeutifivally that no mere morality In this as compared with fast week the market Is perhaps [*Hisurd, ave the cect of reatruc Ibe Bee [Ler | od ann, early foriant wit vant to asp ng iq ppes! 3 y ; y do uot ater recent quotations, which Lirerpuol wud filasgow, Tues on thar viotin loomed tbey pressti.true that when you die you drop the bady, but [reise of prudential self-control, tere coul sel- |tride firmer.The goueral anticipation $v that we shiutl \u2014 Messrs.Chauvin & Ferland, of Torents, cham.tré, however, nominal.Auction mates fn New York] w .Back sigpestiug Ub deen Soy at le de ply tn pre Te we, LE on a Soi the wna racer by tira bière ere lag, aviiEL GATILE MARKED Aug.7 From wolch wprose n JcTUlIOAr, pore, Soldier lat, ul Bie limba om the ld of batt Ligion i the sense fi love of what livres And pit bo nc meiderabie demand for nes for moviug| - À demand of amigntest bas boen wale upon vn The New York mark , et 4 Petits Charte Far distant beard, now Pasco stood.comes hers crippled ?He ie here individually (hate of wast Gul bates fn nesessry ba out ig crops.One of the feataresof Ue week bus been Arthur Dansercau, publisher of be Mineee.by ror w York market 10 mewn de Toe arnivale of live stot wn Rent LE Defiant stitl \u2014 still upsubdued, just the same.Neither in this nor the next harmonization with our enviromoent.bles laue fall Ms.V Marte §* | by Jeua {cheap bat prices In Lrituin and Hed ure well work were smaller Than à \u20ac sate woh preys, lat Wale oun, him en or Sa We world can we ee a betlves, Lam on gion is tue obedience of Adlight, uni the tall va Trade betray En inca.an fast quote the fabs oF was Chics | hoof tin Ilia foes fnst closad.\u2018Ths torrents strife rm scientific ground when Tsay that there are not of slovichuess, When x wun has har HRD.vita T \u2014 «aus The market Jo in a werk and womewhat J tp Peey dons gorge be beard.and know Br Be rt svcae Troma criruel vem, |monized uli lls faculties with Bas ar lire of our basta, and the fast that vhs PARKER'S CLERK.demoralized condition, Fricet OF 1 the dew ine hat airtvalpwere 110 bed of ete dre eo du Not agit het seen where nope could tras God and our record.Consequently, these three rise bina learned to love what Und loves, [will lowe very lide.if egrtaing.shows that A VOICE KRUM THR USL fully discouated ler Shieh will pu doaht lo cattle and bogs two waxed Trudy wt vl For Dating'n foot à refuge pluge* things form our unalterabls environment here the he is Tike some of those majestio representa: [the hard times have taught (WA hy severe lesson the Mose\u201d Hazcttine writes from Golidball, ve 1 = of lust to boiders.Yellows, Nye to Uc rloed of 1 bien w Then the first fear his bosom knew and hereafter.Just here it may be said that 1|tions of full ore b hriman nature which Michoe! [uecessity of pursuing a strictly cns-r e fatiey | vetiugatatemeutereceutly pu bed i re contra.d.T0r to 10% dinn bag: anim caro ad +; Catt o'er bis face a pallid hae.au pascing tuto conjecture, but all [ak bn to Le Anges has given ne ; one which Invalece lite ti Le chocvet 13 mnaues of alding Parke pee dite regret | orm with Ney York, te pier of nee the and \u2018As there now wivgling, curdliog stood true to the ectentifie method.You say that) Je theo deel tes peal of the mew birth.|S S00 discounted nt from G to\u201d c- ; © # Parker in bis swintliog operations.| raisins be duwer Lavers iy been offered ot $313 pe a Pari tie bit Dut starting draps of sweat and bicod\u2014 law is universal ; well, then, if I can measure a The conscience, fn the absence of expintion | C0 § pere-nt, and Me uays that 1e freiht agvat at Lontieuok had de Tor large lots, nnd bids have been iavited of rt eu less \"eee, Chehteen eatlonds af cable fur One gladec \u201cyuick rought tr for-kept pass Var de univers vel Ce raw thie wh de cir | forehoted ini ut, aul wo tie 4 CARED, |g deniratte a from 7 bo 8 lane short duce donna 1s epnd goods in He sams way Lo diforeat parties for Saleretun due to dha, Chere hae ben wales ot ES Anis appli © Aart is sons he Fe ef rat Soin, cle from theure.Any three points determice the changeable, the nee es omenuent waa 971 uppraved cullateraly are procurable nt um § 107 jovera year ; Last he was dd to request Varker to heat pe from se 1e fa d Shah ou arket to A challenge to the ar f Span * direction of a curve.dhe Jas of gration relentificully Jute Hot the Jeceity of [rer ecut, and time loans un stocks frond ts per het the bills of lading, which ind always been |! Whe Lew crop.Nothing of ott MH fe turned and down Lhe canon leaped.and those affecting Jight, proved true here, their harmon zation with their wile environ: feent tulactory.and that if Parker failed tao his or Ts ngain de Brits) uta.two Stith grasped the tag su bravely ket must prove cally true at the North Star.We ment, In the abeence nf 1 deli r and of expia- {timeline was unt ta bine Ife wisn states that he bom bo Wlate, of furn:e wil Bo nobly boru 1a life \u201ctars meet .are sure of thi« because we are sure of the uni- tion, man forbodes pusishenent ; even alter we 3: never made a ese ul a car of aur for (ash, and rr FTA à To death 't should be his winuing abet.versality of natural Jaw, This is one of the are reformed human pature in the datux man- Pa teat te.Latter bad Le bi of Ja ting, which Le k Pepper.ize ta The Of the other poems, which are various as to]publimeat joiote of view of natural scieuce, ner.This is the great natural operatiun « f cane | ETS ot weet ae tran Trou Fleur Lg Ctores, 4De to 8 æncrit, the following is à specimen : Que earth, although an atom io immensity, le science.The past will perpetually produes ug LOL WÉS.she camplatunot the fav of thy Ly which 8 oan Nae, Af ! immensity itself in ita revelations of truth.If forcing unless God's band as w reroen be lit thaty 47 00; may ba ke lune o tare lie for unbfrashed Hope.what art thon Lo me ¥ > K 3 4 47 U0; may pt do juil Bio œuathe Letore Le bina A vapor fame tht warms not 1 know what siataral laws are on this earth I down between us aud it.From mere reason LH W001 u tial wich says that better mes than he have Let sie to ve.' ! Those oft deceised by thee, haves Hght ti walk rixht out on their ascertained cangot prove that such a screen h (id.| ousotiduteg 375 nail.Sat ae s Beer ude pte WY Thy vais iluston charme not curve, shd sa t in worlds outaide of this|ed forme, Hrvelation says Basque dates Run \u2014 i nme el Monter va dem ve The darkuess of despair those laws prevail Now the moral law is just been made.That key turns in the Jock of [Muok ot 15500 | X FENSIVE FAILURE.EI DO Bl TS es Vitis Motel yy here tr Thy changeful boats lllame por aa much natural low as the physical law.human nature ; that fits the wanleof this foreld fau, Ja Le Balas | ; ; Mh wath wate at tue Iuelt Heure : 1 amies Serie to om (bere ot.You believe that all natural law ie a ing.He illustrated this feeling by Shakespeare's vast.Towsvtips.! », pur Eat Nd pa ; Lon the orrors they cons a unit and universal, so [ say it I can representation of Lady Macbeth, sechiez vaisiv Ques Bank.Las vecb à deraur of snd enment wis gale gen Din deal, 63 50 to $1 7 ut a ) \u201c oo neh « per Ln the 1s FLO an Wh dot feat dd, Br nef 02 san aden ert fi Serpent and Siva Worship is the tite ct a determive Aa of be moral law here, to wash from hee hands the inuagh ary stain 4 i ave a tte walk on it right awa; of the murdered Dunstan, \u2018The dope pamphlet containing Leto PADS repriuted from | ta the heavens and do 80 with cleutific RY tot question of modern philosophy is J w te wah The Journal uf the Anthrupol:gical Institute tainty One Lord drew illustrations of moral Tady Macheth's red right hand, Her baniis of Great Britain aud Ireland.\u201d One of the es: principles the rungs of which iv swept h red ; whe would like to wash it; but she \u201cannet, 73 Mr.Cletor Hudn.wholeanle grocer, for fi , bandred dollars by tue Bauque Nationale, and |* \u2018atest au leur sftermacds Me.Mudon wade au \u2018 +5 Fail Wheat, per hid 1.00 10 91.0.7: Barter, Ave Whe tn Bide Ode Be to ut hours à day, à very large average ve (is not only 9 \u2018Misaipiated man but à dizay-pated second-claas on the ground that he (fil not enter aavrd before the fain : anch deserre credit, aud will [yeci) amoriedt.stick.They» n of frnit 1s unchanged.LONDON MARKETS.be continued thronah forty five years, man.He is not a fair specimen of human ature, bia entire farm aa under cultivation by him.1biires he ample repaid for their energy and fore.nel mane plants nnd peaches nee daanged by Ihe) gpg) Tube rzam In the Witness from A.M.Item Men would only have 133,000 working hours.Nuw I will not take him to find out haw this human An Mr, Hubert Vannier, of Sanit-anx-Recollets hi, \u2014 Wondstook Review.ing.Oth.PrrRoLErN.~Thers has heen & very good demand PR ies re den Yow the Nagas.Produce and (Communion Merohonts ifn), with & good ToxpOY.Ont.Aung.27.- White Fall Wheat.per the fires of all certainties ja the surety that in machine may be made to operate harmonionaly, tack fiest prize in a former year, the prize now Naw Ixsouvexta-Quente. ve a.Sly ome oe.own fragmentery growth, He bad à right to lothere to Belair for 81.64; but thet Br.Stesty, Pembroke: lav! der, St.Usthar: to luduet sales wie, De to 10¢ do; geese, 7c te de : tub butter.Ted be 9107 Botley [For the Wrræuss.MY SUNG, I dreamed a sony, Lovely and sweet, yet neither loud nor |Log, But every beauty Shining in the mom, And sparkling forth in jew bd nish, Aun liogering in the soft, sheer Ligh: Of radiant uoentile, Shone throughout my son A ran bright ne Lady, Arn merry tos witha, with guip, ard prok, Aud sudden turn 1 almost lost the them.Till unawares it strayed from out A maze of chord, and swift about, With happy modilation- Told nv again its story.I loved my wong * I listened for its voice so long, so lotr That when it came rotdd belie vee \u201cTwns mine aloue, red to take Such teoasure, best too Tate 1 wake \"Tu find it vauished Oh lloved my sons | Why did it » hauge: Mis.You tis) workmeu to lay brick, be you shall net tube a full hand yourself on yar own work\u201d they have said, aud 1s they da wy © suppose I cvuld + Ly andar tion of varpenti 1s +3 to the ay! may Lave four approntic int nm more: Whose buses is toll him bow many apprentices de lull have?do these comtanation.give for ja etoss Vi What reason |; elements that are correct : but there in them vertain seeds of utter destruction i sus in trades unions, comune, et 3 iberty of the individual- and the ! liberty of the individual i» the ene vital thing.The liberty of the individual is destroyed where men are not allowed to wo when they please, where they us lo as they pleine, for whom they y and fer what they please.Whereit is attempted to brine ull workers to one scale-\u2014skilful and unskhil- ful workers, long workers and short workers good workers aud poor workers; where i tempted to regiment labor, and make it « matter of mathematical calewlation, the thing is preposterous, .The combinations have also done vivlenee tar the rights of employers aud the rights of vapitalists, Men talk as though to be au: employer aux @ -iu aeñinet bumauity, and ax geht the greatest trewson 8 man could com- was t have vapital.As if capital war | MUN BY HENRY WARD BEECHIR.Paur I.\u2014Jurr 29.TUE STRIKE AND I1§ LENSUNS.\u201cAnd Paul ssid, Fat Acts sxit, 2%, | I was free lorv.'\u2014 Freedom has been the aspiration of «ur race from the beginning.The history of th humun rave has been & history of futile endeavors vu the part of men to obtain large liberty in consonance with the strength of government.How to reconcile the power of the communwealth with individual power\u2014 this las been the problem.It hus been sulved by the Anglo-Saxon race more nearly than by any other ; but it is not perfectly aulved yet.\u2018Arc the workiugmen tbe world oppressed Ia the great under-mass of men throughout the world in à condition of oppression ?Yes, undoubtedly, by governments, by rich men, and by the wlucated claves.Are the great, toiling multitudes of the world oppressed by governments, by rich men, al hy the educated peole of socicty because they want to oppress them © No.\u201cIt is beeause it mua be su.Only in the household is it possible for strength and knowledge and power uot to oppress ignorance and weakness and help.losemess.In the family the father and the mother are so related to their helpless nud ignorant children that the power which they.have ia, as it were, imputed to those children, | passed vver to them: but the administration of affuirs on the great seule throughout the; world is auch that when men are ignorant « and weuk and r they cannot help lwing| oppressed.\u201cThe destruction of the poor i their poverty ; © the destruction of the| iyrnorant is their ignorance : the destroction of the weak is their weakness and that, tou, by a grent natural law.No being against being, or little wing against much being, must always kick the beam, The volume of power that in in any clas must have scope and operation.Now, it i+ wrong to my that a {on ects unjustly when it weights down half ai tou.lt dues not acl unjustly : it cannot help itself, whether it will or won't.i \u2018The working population of Eurupe is largely iguaorant- that is the trouble ; aud therefore they are largely kept under.They are lacking in personal development.They are lacking in tho art of developiug weaith, They are laching in the art of self-government.They are lacking in the generation of idea, They are lacking in the power of controlling civil organizations, They are emall at the waist, and smaller yet in the head.And they reap the natural fruits of inferivrity, vot because mon want to oppress them, but because it is the parure order of th the greater should surpass the many things that are the result of the ignorance and of the want of influence on government of the great working mass in Europe which would not take place if they bad a just position.We pathise with European laborors in their efforts to right themselves.In their demand for education we stand by them.In their demand for icipation in the mauage- ment of public affairs we stand by them.In a large dividend of the wealth which is in ri created by theirlabor we atand by them.We are on the side of work and of the workingmen in Europe.We think them to te much wronged and grest sufferers.But in mont respects themethod of rescuo which has been proposed for their release is unwise, unnatural and im) ble.While, therefore, we believe that they are unjustly dealt with, and while we are in sympathy with thelr axpirations and their determinations to rise to nl manhood and & fulior development of social and domestic life, we abhor the modes and theories that thus far have been devised for the ascomplish- ment of rach & pu We abhor them breause they are cruel to the workingmen, and because every time they are Ard off they are more destructive ab the breech than at the muzrle, and damage the very men for whose benefit thoy were Prepared.The workingmen of Europe, whethorlendors or followers, are not fit be teachers of Americans in the matter of political economy and institnted liberty, We have nothing to learn in these respects from Furope.We have auch to learn from Enrope in music: we have much to learn from Furope in art: we have much to learn from Europe in regard to certain elements of ment ; we have much to learn from Ea In profcasional matters: but when it comes to the doctrine of human rights and the organization of lo.dividnal liberty into a commonwealth we have nothing to learn from Europe sad much to teach them.Thorefore the importation into America of Furopean emimarics and Euro.n theories and F methods for the relic! of labor I look upon ae an importation of abominations.The theory of these emisearien ings that hi There are nnything but work condensed | As if capital wana thing but that which every man prides imeelt on having\u2014 namely, productive labor! tlie man who earnn Uy his Labor oncugh to support his family through the we ik and has ive dollars over on Saturday tin a apitalist.That surplus inoney is capital, It is the product of Libor, aud repres nts labor.And a man who holds in his hands (bat which i in m representation of labor in large amounts in, no more reully a capitalist than n toiling man who works day by day to accumulate property.Trades unions and brotherhouds, ent iho according to European patterns, under the\u2019 flea of affording protection to working men, bring in a petty despotimn and destroy liberty.In the name of work and of working! men protest against the theories of German socialists an upposed tu our American theories «of government.We have found cut what they never found wut, how to organize a\u2019 commonwealth with the greatest amount of liberty : and we do not propose » poto nchos to imjuactio aldle German thec \u201c 1 protest, toa, aginst the political erenoms | of French cominunes, in the name of labor amd of the laboring men.Communian is dead] poison to the workingmen of the world beeanse it is a contradiction of natural law, and of the industrisl economy of the globe.We will give citizenship to forcigners, but we will give no citizenship to foreign theres of] this kind.We will Le genercua to the men, but we will sink their philosophies in the depth of the sea.Now.what are American views ns distinguished from these fordgn views to Fest, government protects men in their rights: and God gave them their rights: goverment did ot confer any of these rights upon them.veroment did pot give me my body Jt did unt give my eye, nor my CAF, normy hand, nor my voice.Government did not give me the whale of those composite dements which sa to constitute my being.Government Las given me no right to liberty.Gol grave nr my right to liberty when he gave ae myself : ancl the business of government is to see to it that nobody takes it away from me unjustly \u2014| that is all.\u201d Every individual man is himself; a whole commonweaith of various power: and men stand in crowds and millions in the community.each one being soverdign to a certain extent: and all that government lias à right ta du is to aay ta them, **You shall exer- ciee your powers without damage to one another.You shall not employ your rights so on to destroy any other man's rights: and we will nee to it that you comply with this mle\u201d Beyund that government hasno function.All the variety of things that government docs are to carry ont that protecting palier: and secure to every man the liberty that God gave to *, m.Scooudly, the American idea fecogmizen no classes.We hear about \u201cthe laboring classes.\u201d In commun parlance that phrase answers very well; hut men are coming to feel that labor forma a class which has rights aan clase.No, not one.There ia no human being on this continent that has rights as 8 member of any clam.1 have no rights because 1 belong to a profcanional class.You have no rights because you belumg to the clas of lawyers.You haveno rightaberause you belong to the class of merchants, Before the law wo all have fundamental rights because we are citizens\u2014not because wo belong to the upper or the lower class in the community.There is, therefore.to be no working cluss ar aycd against & rich class.We nre common citizens, having the same liberty one na another, and the same tights one aa another: and he who clamifies men and secks to antag- nize them is an enemy of his country and of hin kind.Thirdly, it is the American doctrine that every man is to have the full ownership of himself: that he is to have every opportunity to develop himeelf : that he is to have a right to the exetrise of his powers and to the enjoy: ment of whatever lie produces -and that without any regard to classification.and without regard to any condition except such as he cau by hin own exertions place himself in, high, low, or middle.That liberty in hin right : and it is a right which no man lias any business to interfere with.It is not to be touched by government, nor iait to be touched hy combined industry.Ît ie na adioua for à hrotherhond to say ton man, \u201cYou shall not do so and so, yon shall not work more than eight or ten hours n day, tid you shail not work except for such and auch prices,\u2019 as it wonld be for a man born with @ crows of iron on his head to say the sane things, Oppression is not leas odious bee oawe it in demorratie.TJ would rather be awallowed by ane anaconda than be bitten by five hundred little vipers! Fourthly, it is an American doctrine thnt every man must stand on his own level.He han 8 right to any position in wealth or honor which he legitimately earnv\u2014snd conversely.| 51 lation of the Liberty f the ad contractor \u201cWe done me 5, workmen in our w wud ting | \"are, shall we resort to this au ourselves against hr going to liv \u201cve net du what it is + the other hand have i va good thine | we carn it faiely or 1.2.0 They say, =i necessary.\u2019 Nee has been the plus of! tyrants since the world dean: and it isa\" much the theory of 1ehod-carrying tyrant us of the tyrant on the throne, with a wept in hin hand.Human : ture is the same the\u2019 world over.Sixthly, their relitive productive power sui rank men ; not before the civil law forall nen there are slike and + al, but in the red of! political cconvmy of publi sentiment., Now, à man coe into thy market and vo! say to him, \u201cWhat have sou to sell?\u201d ws lands,\u201d he says.is in them thing but streugth.\u201d For that he paid a small smount it may boa shilling or fourteen vents an hour.Another man conu «utothe siarket.© What cam youdor \u201cHeme dirt.\u201d An ex sr an tax will beat nan vinge dirt : and if you wll mere musde wah jus vmoueh intel- ligeuce to enable y use it.you must ee poet te be paid ace ingly.| Another man com - into the market.What ' have you in your hand Somes kill.\" ! \u201cWhat is skill i rain: n you have | rome brains as well os muscle = 1 have; snd Teun do skilful work.\u201d Te can go up.und take highs was, and command more respect.The wi ¢ nman go with the san.Hood that is in lui Liood that is in him.Another man « has his hands to «+ jute the market, and! J.\"What have you in them :* \u201cThave sre powrrand gre i enor and great skill.\" He stands stilt hizgher - Arawsstill bipher wages 1 Das rarer fru hixlabor and more them, Itisthe amountof mentality whi-h ut into their work list determine» thir place, their wages and tl hoor; and there are runs for iis which | ie deeper than the spevulations of aur politionl ermemiste.Such is the Amori doctrine.Therefore, men wha bring less manhood ine | to the market cught, in spite of all the ins theories which have come fromabroad.the lowest wages: anda in whe bring the mest | mauhood into the markt ought, by a volese tind edict, to have the hizhest place.the most honors and the largest remunerations, rine! they have the causes of them in thom selves, Well, -n, what borsaen of the doctrines of political scummy wh « held by our modern theorista?One says \u201cA man's d is determine by the Ament «of work which Ie puts into anything.\" 1< ity Why, then» schoolboy, dull a3 lead.that copies i son.tof Jolin Mit ing pro ity pearly all day tod it, nud doinz it in wret hed chirgraphy, d serves mens than Jobin Milton did, whe» it off in half an hot This would be true the value vf à thing i< determined hy th amount of work that i< put intn it.ne soberly declare {hot it is.Is mot qu lit work unything?Int ot kind of work anythi la not the faruity from which work sprities anything: Ts not the wan anything Tah a machine, and ie the same philos phy to be applied to him that ix applied to marlin.© \u2018Another man tells pou that it is the cost of production.and not the amonnt of work, that determines value.1 leg your pardon, thecost is diminishesl nrvonding to the skill that is applied.A skilful man works quicker than anybody else.It woulil cost me tomake 8 box ~-anything like a god box\u2014te hold .about & hundred and fifty dollars.In the riod that 1 was knocking it together, and Famking it together in à ver that amounted to knorking it 10 pieces half the time, 1 could earn a hundred and fy dollars by lecturing | and are you going to t ll me that the value of that box is determined by its coat, when # carpenter's apprentice would bave built itata tenth part of the exp se in time aud of lanor + Are you going to tll me that 1 smght to have à larger amount for making that box than that boy Because I was à bungler and he was not © That would be a premium en ignorance, on à lack of skill, on non-productiveness.Tri theory is worthy of ite origin.Jt came from the womb of communism, Aunther man rag» it bs the law of supply and demand that determines the value of things.No; this law comes in more or less with ita modifying influence: but the great law, the real law, which delermines the value of the services of men and of the products which they produce, is that of mind.The value of theme things depends upon the kind and the quantit the mind that is put into them.He that employs common mental powers in his work takes common wages, He that employs superior powers of miad his work takes higher wages.He whohsatalonts that every- hady nceds and stands pre-eminent, like some dintinguiehed barrister at the bar, or like some wonderful artist at canvas, because he puts into his work more miud, of a better quality, thao anybody else, sole the highest price for his labor.You nin) not like ét: jou «y not think itto be right: but it is th: ine arrangement, and yt might ax well tit and not gramble, The real law, the «tual underlying vrineiph, is, that the value of men's work, and ot té productscf their work, fa to be determined by the amount of mind and the quality of mind which enter into them : and it Ia this that overthrown the nonsensical schemes of European theorista that distur men's minds aml fil them with lies.I say that à man in to be held to be just that fn \\in- American \u2014namely, that it is the duty which he is as a cauee ; and you sre to ascer- \u201cabout ae sensible as the attempt in the pr Xt will he, deat ud uot with the anil.\u2019 fi :KLY WITNESS.the comparatively rude way of admivistering great natural principles, workingmen are subject to mauy petty injustioon or informalities of justice, aud tbut while they do honestly and rightfully spire to higher places and higher thines\u2014it goes to show that while these things are wo.the way to remedy them in not by the way of the grogshop, wor by the way of the caucus, poe by ths way of com.Livations, but Ly the way of the school, by the way ofxelf-deuist, by the way of more work or better work, by the way of more refinement, 8 nobler ambition, snd a truer rasnbood, \u2018That in the roa out of the comparative iuferionty in which labor stands.: Meu that will make themselves more mauly will be in demand and will go up; for they have the derrer of God behind then.Meu that will uot make the muelves more manly will wot wo up.It in the decree of God that stands nysiuat them aud resists them.And they who by any artificial us wre raid up abuse their normal position must go Lack, first or last, when the exigencies come, Tu time sronperity, when all things are lowing brisk- y ou, false combinations may sein to suc Tut when adversity coraes, sud sll art helps ure broken down, and natural Low takes its course, then you will find Chat those wen who have the leust manhood will sink to the bottom and that thos: who have the must mun.hod will rise to the top.The mau who has æreat power vf thouzht, jreut power of industry, geveat power of application, great power in combiugtion, great power in execution, and sreat power in the control of ow ten, i< à natural leud-r.The largest man nmeons men will stand highest for the van resson list a lave toe stands bigher thay a sual tree.The larges tree stands higher Liane it on high rand the largest mun stands highest Lawns Lae on highest.One man rises above unother because he has superior qualifications that the other has not and this ind Lela.this pufilug discontent ints the faneu that are low, that are sa at ure not industrious © this sitompt blow with hunger should he forget to be x man: and if, far from thet he bas course foud, nud hough to wustain the needsof the body, toslink and moan Lecause he hus not the better things of life?It is better thut he should have these things if he can; but if he cannot, which is the manly way for Lim to mect his wisfortune © 1 aud lust Sunday sight, Ty to-night, and 1 shall say to the end of my life that when & msn is redured in circumustancer, awl ho goes down toward poverty, be should we to it thot while he loss his dune, hin furniture, his books, and everything elee, he doer not lose hâtiself, Bunkruptey never hurts a san till it begins to nttact hiv manhood That in baukenptey itidoost whi h destroys marhood ju men.That the kind of bauk.ruptey which 1 deplore, and cpasdut woh 1 wart all working wen, UH hard times work tour, und grumble 0 vd to go down te extremity, be i.I do seat way that 8 dollar addy in enough to support a workingnann: but Todo sav that it i= to support a man\u2014that is to say, if it gives him bread tlest uw man should eat broad alone forever; Lut he is going through an expori .lie ia going through ition: and itis a mere question of how he will ry himself during the .bold tint a mun should be obs thing that is superior.and tut whatever his circumstances may be.whether he is in wrath or poverty.wbetior he is in peril or security, whether le in at Lome or abreud, whether he is popular or hated and detested, he should be his own monarch, and and supreme in the administration of lie thorghts and feelings.No man should suffer the outward world, or intrusise public oonti- ment, 1o shake hins from his tira contre in Line If.Stand: and having done all, stand, Do not crawl.Do not sucak.Do not grumble.Be men.nud best adverdit: Tetter than vou lores prosperity.Thank God that the momentary nugiti wiih threatened us his inthe Disioe pre mably about bave met that work eight hours rec sof fife mn hours\u201d work, anda loa paid us if they wer strong mun piticr human nature, to obliterat sents that come from nidmethe r, or from father her nitalilistin tions that Jom! Polis.po with the the.! ory that it was his provioee to brit wheat and rye and barley to one and the Bane scale, atol that it was a corrupt market that ge ditferent pi for each: Wi if he ehou! the principle that all grains sinatd 1! alike, net only, but that chatf should be nd in ti +satne category: Tew cui 4 «Hurt te il >: labur-market to lump men together, + vquislice then, hizh awd low, strony sud kill] snd unskill-d, 2nd make then cutting down all natural prcceses of rande-; ing.1-1 me say ote word mere on the subje* of the living of workingmen.1 have held lide dotsg that it was the privilege nad fevery young man to begin life with of organizing the kingdom of the Lome kd 1 leave always aaseht, aml 1 hold] fot more strongly that is the ht avd privilege and duty; very uly ti support the animal Chat is in hine but to support Lis fovulties.Luxure may be rither thve| \u201cne op the other of tw Linds.The ; luxury that feeds and pampers the Tuody t is ecrrupt luxury.But there da a Tu author sort, And 1 not only advoca detend, but T ei asa duty, the feedi ancl the feeding of vanomy.Men talle alvnzt plain living aud hizh thinking.You tiever saw a nation that lived plain \u20ac and thewrht Ligh.A man in a community that i rich, srl bas its accumulations, its! institut i ite publications, its i pements \u2014 he being peo cap live plain and think high, leew be Las Liv dividend of that state which is th it of riches: but no community can le ciilizd % through ficher, You cannot civilizet Tf a heathen nation ure visited by a and they do not begin to plow aud v1 will come to usthing in their: canay re Whent, but it wiil t at chat, lé educate community, will he by the power of wealth, Ie is 1 doveloping the realm of matter that Go develops the realm of mind in man.\\Vorkit.- is education, audthe organization «6 the fruit of weak moral and seathetie oh v1] hell that a workingman should be 1 aly dd: and JU believe the time is when a buy willbe sent te se if he rte lee à fureur as he is now sent t if b ninister.And why shonld wen adurated for the farms, for the Trine afor 1 rons The at rally larze, especially rairrehoonts and | laboring nets soldiers, wal making tp 8 very misorllaneeus cm Tn bis mtdrescen Mr.Needham vives nf great fitna for the work; bis h days, ner is strong and in distinctly heard th the building : his language is clear, for and free from ati tochuivalition, while iro deliv ery, though uensliy calin, earnest and deliver ate, he frequently becomes rlounent, Tlie matter, tu, gives great prominence to Christ, and keep the Great Shephert ever hefore the minds of his Cou Te ion.The relation of anecd tea ta, perhaps, Mr, Needham's forte ; for he atonc- engrorses the attention of bis hearers, the in cidents which relate to hin former work having à special interest.The chair incladea some of the best vuices in town, and the saging fs + cellent.But il we except the more touching parts of Mr, Needhiam's disconees, nn gx thon of the services (uals the effect of Mr, Cath\u2019 singing.Aesociated with Menara.and Sankey in their ruetlngs in liritain he seems to have caught sone of the latter's power in song, and this reaches the hearts of the congregation mare \u201cunter than either the presching or the pra: ing, Berides the main meeting fm the Rink, Mr.Needham condueta à prayee meeting for Yusiness men in Argyle Hall, where als» Mm Needham gives Bible reading fur women aly.Me.Thomas Needliam, brother of the cvange- list, holds revival services in the North End Mimion.The firt week's wirk wan devoted more particularly to the awakening of Chridtians, and thie was in the end accomplished, though rather tanlily.Bint among non.professors, livtle ban been done.The attendance st the « muiry rom hes generally been shont thirty.« far, though it has gone as high wa fifty ne sisty, tat the number of conversions has bowm cum) arstive 1y small, On the 27th inst, n change will take :lace in the management of tha CRVEXIXG CITIARU\u201d Thin paper wan stacted in 1963, ne the weekly, hy Messrs, Willism Garvie and FM.NM: onal: Afterwards it was changed to 8 tei.weakly, and pamed wholly into the han of Mr, McDonald, About 1867 Ît become à daily pap-r ant soon acquiced the largest vécculetin, sud became the heat journal in the provinor remaining two years, during which Me.Me Phonak continned ta edit it, were the m.mt pw perous in ita existence : hut on the appmnta: 4 of that gentleman to the office of onllector of he customs, the Citizen wan sold out to Mr.K.&.Sharp, of 88.Johns But after thew motte waession, Me, Sharp will out to the (Arizra Priiening Company.\u201d who made the paies \u20ac tri weekly, until 1374, when it wan again tent sandeily.In -Jaouary 1877, Be.Holm Me he of the Keen Caranéete rid tantght the paper, bagan and hr, alee ont t natil the present Range tn pnhlish ff On snd .Anguet 27h, the Pp ai will tw the new obo, 11 We are him to pureue?Not if a men were dying of the Muscovite.Not very much importance problishod ttle of The Citizen and Evening Chronic e 8 - - LEGAL INTELLIGENCE, THE OKA AFFAIRA petition was presented on the 25th befure Mr Fotios Monk in Chambers Ly Mr.biobi «doux, of the finn of Doutre & lo .on bebalf of Juee Ouasskenrat, d'hief of the roquois tnbe of the Lake of Two Mountains, now detain fn the comuun juil of Ste.Scholastique on thoes charges of arwon, ug for the joue of} a writ of Aabeas corp \u2018This petition all (we | four reasons why the prisomer should be di, charged : First, because the warrant of com: mitment fs not directed to the proper officer : secund, lecaune it dors not set forth the dowi- cile of (he justice who mixned the warrant; thirdly, because the justice of the peas who ited the warrant Lever reset, and dos not ouw reside, in the District of \u2018Terre.buane, where the emjuiry in the case againet the petitioner was carried on and where the commitment was vigned : fourth, because the sald Justice of the Peace never took the oath required by law to qualify Lim as such, | Mr.Roustoux for the petitioner eaid: First that theutticer now in charge of the prisuner hud no authority to detain hin as Lie was not the officer to whom the warrant of commit: ment ia directed.The warrant of commitment wan directed to the keeper of the commen jail at Ste.Schoinatique, whilst according to the 32-38 Vie, 30 Chap, 246 Sec, aud to form T, to which that section refers, it should have been directed to the keeper of the common jail of the District of Terrebonne, the keeper of no other ail but thin one having the right to detain the primer, Second : that the warrant of commitment did not state where the domicile of the strate was situated, as required by Form T., above mentioned.\u2018The reason of this revuircment was obvious, ae the prisoner was entitled to ascertain, inorder to identify bim, where lived the Justice of the Peace \u201cwho committed kim, in case his authority was questioned, as it was at present, third: Because Judge Cournal, who acted in the preliminary investigation im the present case, aod who signed the warrant of commitment vever resided in the District of Terrebonne, ss required by the Consolidated Statutes of Canada, Chap.\u201d 100 and Bection 1, which says in substance that Justices of the l\u2019eace shali be chosen amongst competent per: sons resident in the districts for which they were appointed, That Mr.C'uursol never resided, an he could vhuw vy affidavits, in the District of Terrebonne.Fourth -That Mr.Coursol was not a Juatice of the Peace for the District of Terre.bonne, baving vever taken the oath required by the 3rd section of chapter 100 of the Consolidated Statutes of Canada, which says that no person shall act ar justice vf the peace before he baye en it before some Justice of tho Peace fur the district or county where.10 said justice ivtends to act.r.Cour, sol, upon his being appointed justice of the peace for the District of Terre ; never took the oath apove referred to, as must Le concluded from the fact that the certiticate of such oath laving been taken, had never been deposited with the Clerk of the Peace for the District of l'errebonne.Mr, Coursol was bound by section 4 of the same chapter to deposit immediately in the bands «f the said clerk a crrtificate showing he had becn sworn as a Jus- Hoe of the Peace, He liad fever depumited such à cestiticate, and therefore he had a right to con: clude tha\u2019.no such oath bad ever been taken.To establish that no certificate had ever been deposited according to law ; he produced alonz with the petition a certit.oate fram Me.J.RB.Berthelot, Clerk of the Pence for the District of Terre: bonne.The atlidavit of Mr.N.0.Green was also annexed tu the petition establishing that Mr.\u20ac \u2018ureol never had à domicile in the District of d'errebonne, and corroboratiog Mr.lerthelot's certificate.Mr.Îtobidaux in conclusion asked that in view of these facts the prisoner be Lreusbst vdefore lis Honor and be dische Mr, CARTER ruse à said that he appeared for Mr.Justice Counsel.Mr.Rosiboty objected, stating that bis petition had been served up wm the Attorney-tien- eral, and that Mr.Cours) bad nothing tu ssy in the case.Mr.Justice Mosk said that he would fint hear Mr.St.Pierre, who represented the Crown, Mr.57, P1eerE arcued in answer to the first point that it waa not necessary that the commitment should be addressed to the keeper of the common gaol for the District of Terrebonne, but that it was sufficient that it should be addressed to the keeper of the common gaol at Ste, Bcho- Imstique, ae the common gaol of the District of Terrebonne was situated at Ste, Scholastique, which was the chef liew, Ou the second point, he said that the Form T did not require that the domivile of the Justice of the Peace should be tated.Mr, CARTER ose to discura the other two points in which Judge Coursol's jurisdiction wan attacked.In to the third point he said it was not u that Mr, Course] should ever have resided in the District of Terre: bonne.Although the authority quoted from Paley, on Summary Convictions, pr, 18, whe him self quoted Dalton, was in point, it wan evident from the same Paley's quotation of Hawkins that a jostice of the peacs might perform ministerial acts, but Dot coercive or judicial acts, while his abode was outside of the district or crunty for which be was cominissioncid.On the nec point he raid that it was not denied that Judge Coumol held 8 commission as justica of the jreace for the District of \u2018Terrebonne, and that that was sufficient to Warrant the commitment issued by him.He yuoted Barnwall and Alderson, page 266, to show that a justice of the peace, in the same condition ns Judge l'uursol was said to be in the present cane, could act legally, and that the only result of omitting to deposit the certificate of the oath of yualification would be to vender Judge Coursol liable to a foe of $100, but that his acts under auch circumstances would not be null, and, moreover, petitioner did not prove that the Judge had not taken the oath.A register of the office of the Clerk of the Peace was now produced to show that the oath required by law had beeu taken by Judge Cour- nol, and it was examined by the counsel inter- His Hoxon tow called npon Mr.Merthelot, Clerk of the Peace for the District of Terrebonne, who was present, to expldin in regarni to his certificate.Mr, BEATHELOT said that in 1867 be had a deputy who wss not now attached to hia office, and that Judge Coursol's certificate of qualifying oath might have been deposited with him thout his (Mr, Berthelot's) knowledge.Mr, Rontoux replied more particularly to Mr, Carter's arguments.In order that the petitioner should be detained in jail, be should) ave been sent there by an officer properly appoin or legally exercising his rowan do Courant had never been legally ajpointed for the District of Terrebonne as he was not a resident of said district at the time of his appointment, aa required by section 1 of chapter 100 Consolidated Statutes of Canada, and even if he had » resident of said district atthe time of hia appointment, an be was not a resident theee now he coull not legally exercise hin authority ae such justice of the peace, He referred to Dalton as already cited.Alluding to Hawkins, as quoted by \u2018Mr.¢\u2018arter, ho smerted that that authority was in his favor, insamnch xa according to lfawkine à justice of the \u2018waa empowered to perform only ministerial acts whilst living out of the county for which he was appointed, but not judicial or coercive acts, \u2018What was the actof signing 8 commitinent ?Waa there a more coercive act?and if a justice of the Peace acoording to Mr.Carter onuld not perform a onercive act wbllat having his abode ont of the county for which he was appointed, how ould Le cite Hawkins ia his favor, to juatify Mr, Coursol, who never lived In the District of Terrebonne.Ilow could he then say that bis having performed the roercive act ing the commitment against the prisoner vas legal?In anawer to Mr.Carter on the last point \u2018he continued that Mr, Coursol hating never been sworn aa à Justice of the Peace for the District of Terrebonne, he was not a magistrate for that district.Mr.Justice Mork asked the learned counsel 1 be had not seen the reyiner, Mr.Rominoux sald that he had, and that it hed an argtiment jo his favor.What did the register show?That Judge Coursnl had been sworn before Mr.Schiller aa an officer dedimus potestatem : and what did the law re- uire?tion 3rd of Chapter 100 of (onsolf.Btatutes of Canada enacted that no person should not as a justice of peace before he taken an oath, the form of which was given in the statute, before some justioe of the peace for the district or county where the justice of the Free» so appointed hirm to exercise his authority.register nced showed that the osih uired law.As to th of .Garver that He wa Tor ta pets Là prove that Mr.Cowrvol bad mever taken the osth by law hb fil the gromd presence now produced, bot could bave po mrengih anywey, as the petitioner could not prove h the Jaw would fix upou hün the obligation of dug round the District of Terrebonne and enquiring of every Justice of the 'eace who was sich in 1869, and seking him if perchance Me Coured had tot taken the vsth before him at that time.The petitioner had done what be was bound to do, aud the vertifcate of the Jus | tice of the l'eace for tLe District of Terrehonoe waa enough tu justify Lis pretention that Judge Coursol never took the oath required by law.Mr.Canter said that alsce bai been nt the bar he bad not listened to 8 120ie abwurd ameut.ve Mouthocx You never listened bo your wolf Mr, CARTE tepeated his first arguuients snl said that Mr.Consol having been sworn before #5 officer per dedimus pre atent, it Was equiva lent ti his having been n befure à Justice of the Peace for the District of Terrebonne.What was the difference between an ofticor per decdimun purtiatatem apd a justice of the pra?Could the learned lawyer tell that Me, Rotinotx ruse to tell hi, when Mr, Cauten said that he was belug iuter- rupted, kr.TER went on tu show that an cificer per dedunus poteatatem bad authority to act as a justice of the peace, Mr.Carter aluo state that Judge Coursol was resdy to make an atfidavit that he had taken the oath, ; Judge (ovmsut.remarked that the register produced contained the oath of allegiance which was taken after he had been swoin as & Justico of the Pence.His Howos said that be would give his deoi- sion où \u2019l'uesday at leven v'eluck.WAIT REFUSED.Un the 28th His Honor Judge Monk deliver: ed ju\u2019gment upon the application ou behalf uf Chief Joseph Uneaakenrat, of the Oka Indians, for à petition vf haboss corpus, presented by Mr.Robiduux, and opposed Ly Mr.St.Pierre, and on behalf of the Acting Magistrate, Judge Coursol, by Br.LL.Carter, QC.\u2018I'he first point urged was that the writ of vommitment was addressed to all or any of the constituted or other peace officers in the District of Terrebonne, and to the keeper of the common jail af the Parish of Ste.Schulastique, in said District of Terre- boune, jnutesd of being addressed to the keeper of the commun jail uf the Instrict of Terrebonne, His Honor stated that he did not exactly un derstand what olijection was meant to be by this first point.The writ of commitment was clearly addressed to the proper pemon, t) wit the keeper of the commun jail in the District of Terrebunue, sail keeper residing at Ste.Scho- lastique, His Honor next took up Tbefourth point, which was to the effect that no accusation had been Lreuzht against the petitioner on the 10th of August inst., by the wit nesses mentioned in the said writ of commitment, His Houor declared that having nothing before him but the writ of commitment itself, hie could not judge of the correctness or incorrectness of the date just mentioned, but even were this date correctly stated, he saw nothing incorrect in the procedure followed by the Magistrate, whose duty it was to commit the party against whem the charge was tnale the moment that charce wax substantiated Ly proof, and the voluntary examination haviag been duly made The point urged second in the jxtition was that the writ of commitment did not »Low the residence of the committing magistrate, C.J, Conraol, His Monor said that ther- was nth ing in the law toeamnpel the magistrate to reside in the district for which he had been ap pointed, in matters of this kind and that Le would not consider himself justited in annullioy the procevilings of the Magistrate, whose appointment for the district wan admitted hy all to laver been made because he did not Lajpen to reside there.Hia Honor then referved to the \u2018Third point ia the petition, which ix a« follows : ** Because the said Charles J.Course] has never had, an'l has not now, any domicile in the Diatrict of Terrebonne.point he considered snalagous to the second, and dismissed it on the same grounds, There was an additional point raised at the argument, which was in fact the principal one, and which His Honor said had been ably argued en both aides.It wan to the effect that d'udge Courmol had not piven before any of the justices of the peace of Terrebonne the affidavit of qualification required by Section i$ of Chap.100 of the Consolidated Statutes of Canada, but His Honor hell that the Chapter in question had been repealed by Act of Parliament in 1865 {29 Vic j,which provided that such an oath might given before a Commissioner authorized to ad- winister such an oath by (ower per dedimus pro: testatem.In the present instance it was proved that much an oath given by the Registrar of the (\u2018ourt in the hands of Mr.Schiller, His Honor accordingly refused to issue the writ.\u2018Wo are informed that the oath referred to an taken by Judge Coursol is for the district of Montreal, and not Terrebonne, SUDDEN DEATH.YOUN; WOMAN SUPPOSED TO MAVE USED POIAON TO CURE TOOTHACHE WITH FATAL RESCLT, A About one o'clock Tuesday morning, a young woman named Emily Burns, aced 24, was brought to the (General Hospital, apparently muffering great pain, It is stated that she had been for several days sulfering from a gum bail, and had obtained a prescription from a doctor for medicine, which de purchased and used on Friday lsat, Dr.A.H, Davin, of 42 Beaver all Ter race, stated to our reporter that he waa called to visit the girl about one o'clock Monday afternoon, and found her vomiting.Her symptoms he presumed to be those of an attack of cholera, and after prescribing evme simple remedies, left.He was again called at about 11.30 p.m., when be foun Miss Jlurna' condition more serious, and immediately advised that she should be sent tw the Hospital, without, however, changing his opinfon as to the nature of her illness.Her cheek wan swollen, and he was told that she had pieroad the gum boil with a knitting needle, After being brought to the Hospital, she suffered intensely, ber ntoms aroused sus.icions with \u201cher medi attendants that she ad been poisoned, which were intensified by her sudden demise at Sa.m.It is rumored that the medicine the had been using contained aconite, It ia learned that the unfortunate young woman was employed as table-maid at Mr.Jesse Joneph'e, and that ahe was of very respectable character and connections.Her parents are in Ireland, and she haa an uncle fo Morrisburg, Ontario, THE INQUERT.Dar preroner Beld an {aquest the ith.Ir.Davin dey : On reaching Mer, Joseph's bo bt vem soriveais de le waste vom i waa cover od with a ool perapiratin, which 1 attributed to excemsive vomiting ; she complained of pain at the pit of the stomach, Witness proceeded to stats that he thought it was a case of Cans- dian cholera, and treated it accordingly, but did not give any medicine, thinking it was » light case.At 11,15 \u2018p.m.was called up to go again, ae she was very ill ; then fonnd that the treatment recommended had check! the vomiting, hut disrrhirs had set in; she complained of great pain at the lower part of (be alxtomen.tnens then described his treatment, ænc a8 deceased Legged him to give her 8 lit tie brandy, be gave her a spoonful with two of water, Bhe took the latter voraciously, which caused witness to ask her if vhe liked « and was accustomed to drinking it, sad she replied, \u2018\u2019 When I can get it\u201d During all this time Father Singer, a clergyman of the St Patrick's Church, was present ; he asked witness it he thought decensed was in danger, so that it would be necemary to give her the extreme uection that night, and witness replied in the negative ; Father Hinger requested wit- nese to leave the room for a few minutes, Fitness A dome stairs and told Mn.sep] pat ougl to je lonpital at onoe, as it looked to him very f- ei and an she complained of pain in the back and from (he appearance of her face, he feared {t might be smallpox.Father Hinger came = = PeT down immediately and said the girl WOULD NOT SPAAK T0 HIM ; vitnens then went ap and permaded ber to goto the Hospital, and while a cab was telegraphed for, to remove her thither, witness and Father Singer left tbe house together, Had no iden the id in the state I have now discovered her so be.Dr, CLivR deposed : On Brat examining de- ocean] when she was bronght #0 the Hi little before one a.m.Tuesday thought she was in avery peculiar position; could not get any rat.of her [lines fafaci from thoes who cam win ; abe was ia o state of ocollapme, ber limbs very pulse very weak, and ber breath g rapid, and she waa very ; she said she not taken anything to | the ital 7 UE \u201cneyative and an ib woe tit to be suppused Lhat| make her aick ; gave har stimulants and applied heat to her extremition ; failed to bn if anythiog La account fur the state ahe was iu ; she said she hal a bottle of stuff for her gum -boil, which 1 Hüderstemd she had rubbed on her gum Haw her again abut three o'clock ; all the time she had Leen very restless, arying for drink, and complainiog of great pain in the pit of the\u2018 stotuach; Ending some vomit matter on her clothes of a peculiar smell, together with the sulferivgs of which she had complained, led Le tu BELIEVE 98H86 H413 UKEN l'UIOSKL Liy a substance which would have the effect of producivg su-h symptoms ; suspected sconite, because it, when applied to the gums, might affect them us hers seamed to have boen affected ; when usked ngain she said she had taken vo.thing, but bad used the preparation for her gum- Ll complaine very wuch of pnits in the stuach, and begged of me > fur God's sake to pump her stomach out,\u201d which increased my suspicions ; continued the same treatment of using stimulants and applying heat tthe ex- trvinities, aud gave her n duss of morpl for Der restlessness ; she died at Give «'clock this morning.Dr.CLINE reported the result of THE FOST-MOBTEM EXAMINATION, made by him and De, David, as follows: We examined all the organs of the budy, and found nu «pparent natural cause for death in acy of them, We found a fortus of five or six weeks age.1 find no positive evidence of poison ; the of did not indicate that puison had been taken.There are a great many vegetable poisons which, given in very small portions, act npea the nervous system principally, asd cf which ne traces coud be found after death, Aconite is a very deadly poison ; it ia said à drachm of the tincture, which is the form in which it is used, lu sutticient to canse death, The bottle produced contains four drachma.Acouite is used as sn exteronl application.i After a number of other witnesses bad been examine), the jury returned a verdict of ** death from acute nervous prostration.\u201d 2; A well-known provision merchant of this city is accused of seducing Miss Burns, \u2014 \u2014 - THE HACKETT MURDER.THR QUINX CASE\u2014 FRESH EVIDEKCE On the 26th before Mr.Deszoycrs, Maria Warss, wile of John Caldwell, wa cross-examined as follows : 1).Are you the wife of John Colville, called Caldwell, in your deposition in chief?Ans, Iam, Q.With whom did you go out vn the morning of the 12th of July?A.I went out with wy husband.1 left my boarding louse at JU «clock or a few winutes after.weat tirst to St.James street on the French Square.1 was with my husband all the time, 1 returned to my hoarding house with roy husband at about neon 1 was on Victoria Square at atxrut 3 pm.I had not known Quinn previous to the 12th cf July, Q.Then you did not recognize Quinn an the man wha shot Hackett on the 12th of July > A.Not until IT went to board at Quinn's, 1 waa alone on Victoria Square on the 12th of July, 1 kaow a fawily of the name of Vonsebei-lt, baæket maker, 1 boarded with that faniily on the 12th, 1 positively «wear that wax not in Vonscheidts house on the 19th of July last, at 3 p.m.with my husband ver any memlar of the Von-cheidt fatuily.1 was not there until five o'clock, 1 was away from the house from two until three.I was walking un the street from tw until ive o'clock, 1 am rot living with my husband mow, J have nut lived with my husband since the day following Hackett's funeral.1 swear positively no person spoke to me about the evidence 1 could sive in this case.1 spoke to a detective in Leary 's office in Bleury street first [donot know his name, but I would know him if 1 ehould nee him, I spoke to lim vn the 11th of August, and be told me to meet him at the on the following Monday morning, no talk between us about a .did not know that there aay, I heard that there was a reward for the fimt time four ot five days after.I know Bridget 1{ughes, wife of Calixte Berthiasume, & witness in this case.I did not go to her house and apeak to her on the day I gave ny deposition of arewand, nor ark ber to give evidence in this case, Q.Who were the pernons present, as well as Mary Leonard, at your hoarding house, 111 St.Urbain street, when you state that Quinn ac.knowledyed that he had shot Ilackett?A.Several men, strangers to me.Mr.Donald son was not there.1 neither saw the girl from whose breast I uaid (Quinn vnatched the Urance lily before that day nor since that day.1 do not know ber name, Une of Quinn's frienda told Quinn in his own house that the reason be was discharged by MuCrudden was because he had snatched a lily from the breast of a girl on the 12th.Last week I boarded at the ** Home of the Friendless.\u201d After leaviog Quinn's I went, to Dorchester street, and thence tn St.Constant street, to which latter place I was taken by the detective whom I bad met in Bleury street.I paid my bard in Dorchester street, but it haa not yet been paid at 8t.Con.stantetrect.swear poritively that no person offered or proposed ta ray my board at St, Constant street.now work at a laundry for my living.The shouting of Hackett took place at about nm.I told the matron at the Home on Saturday that I was sorry I had had anything to do with the case, I am positive that I never said to Bridget Hughes that | was aorey for having given evidence against Qui never told Quinn that I would punisl him for putting me out of my boarding-houce.Q.\u2014Where did you stand when the aboot.in.of Hackett tock place ly Guinn ae you al- leçe?A.Opposite Dunn's store, on Vi équare ; 1 was standing near the nideswalk o ppo- site Dunn's store, I was about three yards Trot the atepe going up to Dunn's store, saws crowd of people there.Quinn had on a dark coat ag far as conld see.I wan coming down Radegonde street when I saw Quinn snatch the lily from a woman about five or ten minutes before the shooting.I have heen in the in the common jail twice, and three times in the police station for protection, No person spoko tome about a reward for the appreben- ons of the person who shot Hackett.I first heard that there was a rewanl on the 17th of August at the Ontario Police Station.I left Quinn's hoarding house of my own accor.Af Leonard, a boarder, was not present at the time uinn said he would shoot me aa be had shot Hackett, (Mary McCrudden and Mary Ann Parker, whose depositions are given above, now entered the room where witness was making her deposition.Witness was asked if she could recognize either of them as the on from whom tinn rnatchod the lily on the 12th of July, She aaid she conld not.) 1 was never accased of perjury before any court of justice, e depositions of Mr, McCrudden and his daughter were taken, both denying that Quinn had ever snatched a lily from her breast, as sworn to by the first fi 6 witness, \u2014\u2014 SOREL NEWS, (From the Pilot, 23rd.) ATTEMPTRD SUICIDE Un Friday laa Mr.J.J, O.Fortier, merchant of Bt, David, attempted to commit suicide with a revolver, The first shot be tired behind his ear and the second one from under his chi: the ball passing throngh the mouth, nose, an right eye, lodging iteelt in the flesh and bone above the cye.It did not penetrate ennugh into \u2018brain to cause death and thera arc good kopes of the young man's recovery.The reasons for commiting this mad act are attributed to temporary mental aberration, DINAPPRARANCE OF À GIRL PROM A CONVENT, A [rung American girl came to the convent to spend the remainder her holidays, She was of romantic disposition, and often strange words wonld encape her lips, ay morning, her bed was fonad vacant, but her clothes were lying in her room, Bhe must have left in her night dress and shawl, bareheaded and bare-f .A letter addremed to the Sisters and one to her mother were tound on her bad.These letters, written fa à firm head, mentioned of suffering in the life of the young girl, and spoke of à secret ahe could not divulge.Tt was her intention, she anid, to take polson, and for fear the n would not be efficient, she would throw hernelf into the river, With this clue it wan essay to conjecture that the ynang girl had left her apartment after midnight, and nolseiemiy reached the gallery on the mteide of the convent.From the gallery she allowed herself to drop down with the aid of her thaw, soms torn pleces of which were found on D the afternoon yusterday and this morn.fo ple were employed diving into the St, pe opposite We ponvent, t withont mocens, All sorts of stories circulated, (ne was that the yonng girl had escaped with ma: who ith Der red re rioue oon: had, on the \u2018venise prorions, con- ocooted their plan of and {nstead of throwleg hervelf in the Bo.pn t.Lawrence, ne her let- irposely led to believe, nhe threw hervelf in MONTREAL WEERLY WITNESS, \u2014 the art vf aaother St, Lawrence, who was no other than her fover, The rumor went to say that the runaway coupde took the buat to Mont: | real and that ber lover had secured proper clathiug for ber bufory she left the convent.\u2018The Gu ette J: Sore! publishes a lengthy stor: about the recovery of the young fogitive, who did net away undressed, but disguised iu oll Jothea so that she passed as a beggar.It alan states that she was excend- fugly weak when found by tbe Chief of Police and bis sssistauts at Livivre du Loup, on \u2018l'hure- dav, and would harily cutiverse at all, but ill svuwed that she bal taken poison, The Gazette saerts that mental aberration was the cause of the girl's steam, exploits, and that she wen still, ou Saturday, in an alarmi { serious excitement, She wus 5 in the care of the Chief of Police, roother, wil was then veus awaitiog the arcival of early excected ANOTHER ATOUY, Information received from another and very reliable source tends t> throw suspicion upon this usatter.Variou- and cœntradictn y reasons have been given for the girl having left the on: vent, sud it having Ire ascertained that she was a Protestant, two Protestant ladies went tr the padice ufficer in whose charge she was, for peruiwion to see her, and render her ord wairtance in their power, which wax pefused, aml not the most politely either.irl stated tu à geotleman, who so ed an interview with her, that she had ents nearly all her life, although her parents, who Jive in New York, are Methodists.She declared she woul! HATHER DIY THAN KETURN YO A COXVENT, She ie vuid t 1 be abont sixteen years old, snd persons who have seen ber bave detected no sigus of insanity, SPECIAL NOTICES.Tie Quistton a1 rLxn.\u2014 Those emisent men Dr.Jas.lark, Physician to Queen Mt id [hr Hugh Tage ue at consumption can be cured.\u201cVie.star new this when he discovered his pw widely-known Balsam of Wild Cherry.ard experience kar proved the cor rectuess of hic «piston.fe.and 81 à battle, large bottles.ouch the cheaper._-_ \u2014 Neticreif lirtas, sacrriages an: datés Lindt i scart ably be criosend wit) (0 WANE 1.Lcidresy of 1% sender; wherrise ne mtioe cat talon fh \u2014\u2014 BIRTHS, 22ud, the wife of Thomas the 20th imet.daughter.on the 2th AMPFELL\u2014AL Laclins, ou Mond the wife of Kev.Alex.Campbeli, of COUMRANE\u2014 At \u201cWoodside,\u201d Newark, isstaut, Mrs, A, M.Cochrane, of a son.COOPER.\u2014On the 41h sentant, at No.LU l'uoper street, itgws, the wife of R, W, Cooper, of a daughter.TMNT At_Belletille, Cnr.on the 19th inet, the wite of W.T.Cuiuming, of u sot.he 20th August, the wife of 7 (still boru), SCOTT \u2014ln thie ltr, on the 23h August, the wile of W ling Feat.of a dagghter.MARRIED, \u2014NeGIBRON, \u2014 At Emerson, Manitoba, on actant ab the tiride'a residence.by the AW.Edwards.Mr Hugh Carwlchse | to Miss Sanit Metibbon, bot of Eur CANMICHAFL \" 16: lue late Duncan .MARTIN\u2014TONALUSON.To thin cx, on he 220d Aug, tw the Rev, Mr, Middletor, Mr,\u201d Siubert Martis to Hies Kueass Ponatison, MINTOCSHAW.\u2014On tbe 24h Instant, br fes, Charles ftordlet, ir, We.Miato, of Toronie.tn Mis Angie Khaw, of Monte Net ARTSKY\u2014MANN.\u2014Ou the 16th inst, at Kt Marre Church.Martel: by the Rev.Mr.Dalton, Afa: F.McCartney.of Montreal.to Fanny, third daughter #1.of Marbolw.l'eterboro, Kaglaud.LRKINE.\u2014A* Clitist Chorch Cathedral, petant, by the Res.£.Fhihip l'umoulin, rector d Martins, John M.fr Loughlin, son of the Rev.A.J.Orla weumbent of Narth Gower, Get.to Sarah M.nogiter of Marces l'erkius.Esq.formerly of Kt.J LB.TEWART.\u2014At Crgemmouat Farm, Os.ihe restilence of (he bride's father.by her, Aretuhald Robertson, late of For- Reotlind, 10 Mary, daughter of Alexander Flewart, Eng.VIED.DOWNHAM, \u2014(9n the 3h August.Klien Fllgan, heleveet wits of ticorge Downham, Iste Kerpesst Army Hospital Corps, Londonderry paper.pleane cops.DAG, \u2014On Monday, the 20th inst, Marr Naker, wile of Mr.Wittiam Dagg.FITCH.\u2014 At Maverbill, Mans, August 13th at the semi.- of her sow.Krnozs Cottage, Mars, widow of the Isic Mr.George +ich, of this city, GILLESIIE, \u2014Tn shie cr, où the 2ird tuer, Ma mate nf Robert Gliiwple and daughter of Trge.aged 23 10ary.Ninsachuseita papers will plossc copy.; GIBSON.\u2014Drowned while bethiag, on the 21st Anger.William 3.I.Gibson, son of the late James iihson.aged 11 pears aud 10 months.F,\u2014On the 201k inet, Hattie.danghier of the lake rt D, Gerrie, acod 16 years and G months.Teme, dwar GRAST.\u2014Suddenly.of heart disease, at hia residence.South Brun leurarry Co, Ont.Alexander fitant aged MO po \u2014At (laspé Hanlo, while bathing.en the 18th men tionldes.Kaq., drugiciet.KUTCHINA, \u2014 Op Ancut 14th, Maude Mar, lofant Ganglter of J.M.Hucehinn ages 7 months and\u2019 days.HINCKK\u2014At the residence of her brother, Sir Francis Hincka, 418 St, Antoine at, agrd 65, his belave-t sister GOULLES.[I Anne, on t chili of the late Her.Thomas Thx Hien.L111, Profesor of tal auguages in the Royel Beifast Institution.PLLER.\u2014In this eitr, nn the 23nl astant.Charlier, be I'wed son of Frank Keller, aged 11 months and 4 days.MUINL\u2014At the Manes, South Goorgetows.cn the 20th Instant, Louisa Nicolson Mulr, youngest davxhier of the Rev, J, \u20acC, Mulr, 1.1, MUNAD.\u2014AS Point AL Charles, 08 the 21st inst, Violet Maude, aged 1 vearand 3 monthe, eldest danghter of Joba scab, 0TH.Dea rabbed ns of our treasure.\u2018Acid sageis have ber box, Where no shade of pain or sorrow Cotaes ta cload our darting'a brow.O'BRIRN.\u2014IR this city, on the 24th Instant.Pairick Miageralé, eldest son of William O'Brirn, aged 21 years, AINCERNER\u2014In this city, on the ZHth inet, aged 23 rears, ame Marie Alexandrine Heva C'ournol, beloved wife of Dnmase Stucennes, Kaq., sad second deuehler et \u20ac, J.C'oursol, Kaq., QU, Judge of Sessions.AMITH.~On the 131b int, at Howi-k, Que, Mr, James Smith, aged 64 years'and 10 months, patve of Kétuvergb, Meolsd.WATKINS.In this efty.on the 2itud Lns*., John Hesry, Infant som of Ba.John Watkies.WILROX.At Ilincbiabrooke, Countr of Hoatingdes.Que.on Nanda aftrrmoon, Ang.11h, 1877, Catberine.widow of the late James Wilson, Kr.aged 50 years.Advertisements.V TE DERIRE THE SERVICES OF ATEW LIVE AGENTS-Naie or Femalo\u2014 In rach Towa ar\u2019 Cousty fn l'anaie We hare ony articles of every-day use, and of aur awn make, New an fmportant inteutivhs and discoveries.To the right parties wn Tin wre on gr Foi IC 2 5] tesD Dual: sens ï ju \" 3 TERY a BROTKA, Madison vieeet, Chicago.IH.WW INDSOR NURSERIES, FRUIT TREEM AT WHOLESALE PRICES.The attention of persons intending to plant Fruit Trees thin Fall (which in preferable Lo \" ng plaoting).1m calied taonr Immense sock, which In [a ner va Nine bets wa than an, retofore rai at our Nurse.Bien, oomprising all.the beni aad bardiest, varieties w t me.rnd RE others dy joinine soprider king 800 to 1,1H0) tracy het woon them to one address, wonld get them al the juwest whale prices, freah dug and ane to grow, waving the large profis of dealers and middle men.For cnan delirared et Nurserics, we offer Sand.Apples, to & ft, outre, #10 p.100, 090 1,000 en 7 Tec Rio 070\" * 4tob ft, je 4e 1: a tr FD 106,800\" cher rarioriraof Fra Trees, Vines, mall Preis, or aapequal Trees, Roses, Kvergreenn, he.ot - FA or porsitie manner anû de- orders asked In the beat livered ta forwarder free, charging only cost of boxes and packing matarial.Descriptive d'a talogues sent frre to ail Appiicants, MEA DOUGALL.Windenr, eat.Anguat 88, 1 A \" greet EEKLY WITNESS is one of the best advertising mediums In the Dominten Tt cironlaies 94,000 copies among tho most rater prising prope of Canada, JROPERTY FOR SALE, in the Town of Terrebonne, Sompridag vue acre land, planted with fruit trrex, Eweiling-house, wi ater born : stable: the laad ress Dons (OU to the river; good boating: Afleen minwi AIX from the pro; depot; à rare chance for any one wantag a country residence.Ari to TAN ROBERTRON, Terrebonne, P.Q.wd the ve of CHESTER'S CURE WILL a tnmandy m anently vy Try it and be convinced of its ef, {of tha kidaer for about w year, and it Advertisements.Fic] NOTE TO CONTRACTORS.SKALKD TENDERS addressed t.th endirred © Tender for Fost ofior, Ae.will bo recived at tals oflee unl] MON ber (prov.at Noon, tor the o tie abuse buibiiog.Plans, Specitication.ke, van be seen ut the Lachiae © ice, Montreal, sad {Custom House, Kt Joki .DAY NEXT, the inst.where forms of Teader, ke., and all Becroazy infor: wallon cas de oblained, Ko Teuder wilt he considered union made strictly mu novordauce witk the printed forms, sud\u2014in the case of firur-\u2014auupt here are utlached the netral sigoxture, we ipation ant place of moldezce of veh wember of the same.\u2018The Tomivrs to bave the actanl alguatures of 1wo solvent pervons, residents in tbe Dowiuion, sad #illiog to bocome surctics 1or the due performance of the coulrse\u2019.! j an and ut this ofles, on and after Mt \u2018This Beparigieut does uc?bud lel! to secept the lowest or may Toller.Br order, F.BRAUN, Recretars, Preraarer Ny or Pestic Won, SUTTat 6, 17h Aux, 1577.+ OLMAN STOMACH AND LIVER PAD, À cure fur Ferer and Ague, amd Ague, Kemsttent and lotermitent Fever, ludigretioo, Pain In Xhoulders and Side, Periodical and Lite tong Sick fesdache, Rheumatism, Liver Cor {often (ken for Conswmption), Heart lisease (not orgunie), Kidoey Difscultirs, Female Weakaesses, Billous Colic, IHarrhes, Cola Ex.wemities and Partial Paralysis, Tt is also & preventive of Yellow Fever, JHphihe umunis, Rmall-l'ox, Mearlet Fever eud nil Maieria! and Mlssmatic ia: eases that are deselapedd in blood poison.THIS IR WHAT HOLMAN'S LIVER lAD In DOING: NG Herd the Following Testimeninis ¢ Union Mutual Life Tusurasce Co.} At.Francuin Xavier street, oteeal, July 25th, 1877.MOT.MAN LIVER FAR COMPANY : UFSTLRUE el it muy duty to give vou the result of the Nolan L Pad whieh lo ght of soz about a month age, 1 hate been trol wh and indigration, secoimmanie 1 ah severe dve, in Tain in testan nuilr became au froublesune Chat 1 oould eat nothing without great soffer- lag.| hat tried mont of the fe ar remedies of the day tut with enty temporary relief, 1 bought the Fad with Tittle or no Faith in 18: but, 1 at Enppy to sas, It bas.| believe, entirely cured me after wearing if twenty «ight Abet § enn une more eal anything withoat feeling + Mtattests.lt in wora without any inconvenlence, and CaGEOt be tres strongly recommended Yours truly (arsbedt HARRINGTON, ver 12, 1877 the undersigned, having been trouble! raprj#la for n number of years back.have tried ferent prescrijitlons fron eminent phy
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