; i OPP he 8 tae sis Maca IM = al aE: *> ce tt LLL Te CORA Epas — Continued from first page. awakened the dermant consciences of rulers, and we find them drawing nearer to the Pope—Russia, Germany and Eng- land are again resuming diplomatic rela- tions of a more or less pronounced charac- ter ; for they reeognize in the Pope and the Catholic Church the one great moral! power which is ever assailed, but is ever the victor; and which alone can save society. The classic ground of controversiaiists ol Mr. Osborne’s.¢catibre is Spain. Here they revel in a wealth of abuse and misrepres¢ n- tation. But Mr. Osborne is satisned with abuse : he must also be prota We know that there aresome who think pro fanity . good substitute for ability but we had not thought they were to be found in the ranks of the promoters of morality. We are undeceived. Here is what Mr. Osborne is rep i as saying : “*Spain is not yet ready for the Bible, and does not want it: she is wing to sit in darkness as far as reu s con cerned. The w have theii ry Sunday morning in the Parish | und the men bave their bull-fight on the same day.” We give the profanity the benefit of italics. We do not think it is precisely original ; we have an idea that we read it before. Hence ita ‘“ smartness’ is some what diminished in our regard. Had Mr. Osborne modified the first tence in this way: Spain is not yet ready for a Bible which ber people believe to be muhisat a and does not want such 4 one; she is wil ing to sit in darkness so far as my pecuiiar form of religion is concerned, would quite agree with him, and we would prayer thatshe might long continu we aca a same admirable dispositions. For the} sample of Christian charity which Mr. Osborne has given us in his speech, leads us to desire that no one may ever be im- bued with its spirit. We ask our feilow- countrymen what they think of s] the most solemn service of Roman Catho- lies as a ‘‘ show.” Who in Charlottet excepting Mr. Osborne, would Catholics attending a show on mornings at St. Dunstan's Cathedral ! Yet itis in every particular, words, |: ceremonies, precisely the same service as that which is held in Spain. Catholics, as Mr. Osborne surely knows, consider the Mass the highest and most holy act of religious worship which can be paid to God. Is it, then, worthy of a Christian, of a gentleman, of a man of self-respect, to speak of it asashow/’ But we can safely leave this sly offensive, . eaking ol wi Wh, aK Sunday 7% wguage, or: —* and altogether unprovoked language, to be | dealt with by the good feeling of the com- munity. Mr. Osborne insinuates that Catholics do not value the Bible. We are quite confident that in every household in Spain, when its members can read, there is a Bible in the popular language. It is the same in Italy and France. Moreover, in their prayer books they have the Gospels and Epistles of each Sunday | Feast Day, and they read these books at the show on Sunday mornings at the Parish Church. an eiit One feels it a degrading task to have to| meet worn-out objections, and to re-state facts known toevery man of average ability. Mr. Osborne's sole reason for saying that Spain is willing to sit in darkness, as far as religion is concerned, is because the people will not abandon the Catholic Faith. © They are intensely Catholic, and hence their crime in the eyes of so many. If to be well instructed ia the Catholic Faith, is to be in darkness, then the majerity of Spaniards are hopelessly in the dark; other- wise they walk in the light, and Mr. | Osborne it is who is groping and stumbling in @ religious twilight. Let us hope that like so many of the noblest intellects in England and America, he may yet find his way to the full and perfect light in which the soul of the Spanish peasant rejoices and waxes glad. Anyone whose misfortune it has been to be obliged to read the publications which mirror the views of such men as Mr. Osborne, and who has had no antidote, has a@ most grotesque idea of Spain, Italy and all Catholic countries. Many Catholics, owing to their surroundings, are much in the same condition. We have been asked more than once to defend, or explain, the state of some of these countries. Our answer is, that they require neither expla nation nor defence, more than other nations. It is our knowledge of them which requires refurbishing. We have heard well educated Italians speaking of the English as clever commercial barbarians, devoid ef arts and literature. The reader will exclaim, monstrous; not one whit more monstrous than Mr. Osborne’s idea of Spain. Both ideas are the offspring of ignorance, and were nursed in an atmos- phere which excluded ali proper knowledge of the domestic history of other countries. The public history of nations is, generally, well known ; but there is no knowledge so rare as that of their demestic history. The popular notion in any nation, regarding another which differs from it in language, is @ most disparaging one. What idea of France was prevalent in England until our own day? Everyone now laughs at it, because relations have become more inti- mate, and very many have acquired a knowledge of the French language, and have touched the literary and scientific treasures of the country. Mr. Osborne’s idea of Spain is an outgrowth of the lower strata of the popular one. A lengthened stay in that country, or a knowledge of its language, which would unlock its literary wealth, or a diligent perusal of truthful works, and truthful newspapers, could alone eradicate such an idea. Woe will, however, place a few facts before our readers, which will serve to show, if they a v choose to use their reason, the groundless. | ness of sc many charges often made against Spain. : Let us compare Engiand and England has -produced no theol gian worthy of being named in the same “day with Vasquez and Suarez; she has produced no philosopher equal to Balmez; no novel- ist superior to Cervantes; no poet of greater merit than Calderon; no painter fit to carry the colors to Murillo. Tho glory of the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge is not brightor than that of Salamanca The navigators of Encland s ' to those of Bpain: gland must give place those cf England. The kiny 8 of Spain wer as brave on the field Se ee eccacil, ss Enugland’s greatest (and wngland’s greatest kings were of the same religions as Spain’ the Palace of the Hsenrial, and the numer. ous gorgeous Cathedrals, bear witness to Spain's superiority over Eagland, In all the high and noble walks of lif, the poor s.) In Architecture in the | of 7" in the Parish Churches | Spanish Spain. | the Spanish merch: a; ! Ah m ants | were as enterprising and as successful as | » and as able in the! TEE DAL npposed te be buried in | | Spaniard, who is | vither leads er marches cimmertan darkness side by side with the sors of Albion. Let it not be said that there are exceptions | 2 , Great men are ciways eXceptions. But | pring from a barren soll, lofty trees do not hey ounded by dwarfs ; nor are ever sur | neither a migl ty minds produced by an | uncultured race, nor are their contempories | ever pig If Spain jas leaders in all} tne arts a sclences, ber gene ral culture | mu be equ rt least, to that of Knyiand This is a simple argument based on the | relation between cause and -effect. Tt is lquite sufficient to refute the silly charge] ‘about darkness, etc a In the beginning of this century, Spain was for years the battle ground of Europe. Her she was breken, impoverishe d and plunged into difticalties. Then arose, and | partly thre foreign intrigues, the wars | of the ** Spanish Succession. ‘These Wars, | ‘ ster 5 as they we in commercial | point of ¥iew are yet one or tne best vin- } tions of thé Spanish character. They CALIONS OL tit | i a an effe of the strong conscientious con- | ns of the people. Each party believed, and believes yet, lis Prince to be the legitt- mate beir tothe Throne. There is an error | -'of judgment, but no error of heart. Be- ‘lieving their Prince to be legitimate, they | cannot cons li ntiously de sert him. Eng- i ‘land might exile her king and welcome his | | ungrateful daughter and rebel son-in-law ; lor she might lop off the head of her king tic Froteetor ; but the aud bow to a desp people Lo ’ ; 1 icaads wi iSpanish conscience ie fight for him whom they believe to be legi- | ‘timate. We must regret the occasion for | these wars; but we cannot withheld our; jadmiration of conscientious convictions, aled with bleod, in a part of that Latin whose ‘‘ peculiarity,’ Mr. Osborne | ** 18 absence of conscience. last few years Spain has en She has a king who the streets, bare- taper, a procession | Bishops occupy | What are the | | race, has said . t ed internal quie tlowed lately through ieaded, an‘ carrying a of the Blessed Sacrament. their place in the Senate. Y Or ee + “ta hoe iresults? The public credit of the country | is rising; commerce is fast reviving | flourishing ; the recognition ot Spain as one of the Great Powers is talked of ; life and property are as secure as in any country ; morality and public order j}are conspicuous. These are the facts con- cerning Spain, and they prove the un- dying power of the Catholic religion to | purify and rebuild ; to promote social hap- |piness, and to diffuse the light of true | knowledge. Mr. Osborne speaks as though bull-fight- ng were an occurrence of every Sunday ; n point of fact they are very rare. The miy ble objection to them must be }on the acore of cruelty to animals. We are fnot to judge of cruelty by the size of the janimal, but by the amount of pain in- |flicted. Hence a bull-fight which lasts |twenty minutes or half an hour, must inflict immeasurably less pain than a | fox, or hare hunt which worries, for hours, ' a timid, sensitive animal. Ina moral point | of view, a-bull-fight is superior to a horse race, or to an uncharitable speech. If we could only convince ourselves that our own special weakness is no more excusable than our neighbors’ we would be spared a world of back-biting. Bull-fights aud Sunday sound gloriously damnabie, but they are seldom verified together ; and when verified, only prove that some Spaniards prefer to spend a por- tion of the Sunday in a manner of amuse- ment less sinful than thousands in all Eng- lish speaking communities, who trrn gin |dens into an arena of battle, with their wives, or companions, for victims, instead of tough-hided bulls. neala ars sencaia are i | ' Ff i! ; ¢ possi ' | C. O'Brien. Indian River, April, 1882. a ae athe a ony oane a Church Directary, Charlottctown,. St. Paui’s (Caurcu or ENGLAND) —Queen Square— Morning and Evening Serv ce every Sunday at 11 a. m. and7 p.m Sunday School at 24 p. m. Rev..David FitzGerald, Rector; Rev. Alfred Osborne Curate. Sr. Perer’s,(Cuurncu or ENGLAND)—Rochford Square. —Sunday Services—sa.m.,lla.m. and 7 p.m. Daily Services—Matins—9 a. m, Evensong—5 p.m., except Friday evenings, at 7.30. p.m. Rev. George W. Hodgson, Priest Incumbent, Rev. R. D. Bambrick Assistant Curate. DuNsTAN’S CATHEDRAL. — Low Mass every Sunday at8a.m. High Mass at 10. a. m.; Vespersat 3 p. m. Mass at 7. 30a. m. throughout the week. Rev. A. McGillivray, Pastor. First Mernopist Cuurcu—-Prince Street — Service and Sermon everySunday at 10.30 a m, and 6.30 p.m. Sunday School at 2 “p.m. Week Day Services—Tuesday and Thursdays at 7.30 p.m. Rev. H. P Cowperthwaite, A, M., Pastor. Seconp Mrruopist CourcH— Prince Street, — Service and Sermon every Sunday at 10.30 a. m. and 6.30 p.m. Sunday School at 2 p.m. Week day service on Wednesday evening. Rev. William Tippett, Pastor. St. St. James’ Cnurcn (PREseyrertas)—Pownal Street.—-Service and Sermon every Sun- day atlla.m. and64p. m. Sabbath School and Bible classes at 2:30 p, m. Veekly Service in the Lecture Hall on Wednesday evenings,at-7:45 p.m, Rev. Kenneth McLennan, Pastor. Zion Crercu ( PRESBYTERIAN )—Richmond Street.—Service and Sermon'every Sun day at ll a. m. and 64 p.m. Sunday School at 24 p.m. Rev. John McL. Mc- Leod, Pastor. | Pressyrerran Caurcu—Prince Street.—Rev. Dr. Murray, Pastor—Hours of Service, 1] o'clock, a. m., 6.30p.m. Sunday Schoo! at ?.30 Pp. ii. | Baprist Caurcu—cor, Prince and Fitzroy sts —Services aud Sermon every Sunday at li a.m. and 6.30 o’glock -p. m; Sun- | day School at 2.30 p.m. Week day. ser- vices—-Monday at 7.30 p.m.; and Friday atSp.m. Rev. D. G. MeDonald, Pastor, | Binu.® Curisrians—Prince Street.—Service and Sermon every Suaday morning at 10.36 a.m. and 6.30 p.m. Sunday School at 2 p-m. Rev. John Harris, Pastor. | PRAYER MEETING in Y. M. C. A. every Sun- day afternoon at 4 o'clock. ; | Discre.es oF Curist meet in New Church House, every Sunday at 10.30 a. m. and 6.30 p.m, Elders presiding. 'to withheld his advice. ito try further. | rather | Now, furrermore to the point. Ly HA THE WAR-TRAIL! } j COAPTER LXXUL TRANSLATING THE *‘ SIGN.” This discovery brought us to a halt. A consultation ensued, in which all took part ; but as usual the others listened to ‘the opinions of the prairie-meu, and especially to that of Rube. The old trapper was inclined to sulk fer some time, and acted as if he meant Nothing ‘* huf- him more than to have his word or his skill called in question, I have known him to be ‘Sout of sorts” for days, from having his wooderaft doubted by some ove whom he deemed less skilled than ed ”” contradicted, ‘himself; and indeed there were few of ‘his kind whose knowledge of the wilder- ness was at all comparable with his, He was not always in the right, but gener- ally where his instincts failed, it was idte y li: the present case, the man who had thoughtiessly doubted him was one of the ‘ greenest” of the party, ‘but this verdancy only aggravated the matter in the eyes of old Rube. ‘‘ Sich a fellur as you,” he said, giving a last dig to the offending ranger—* sich a fellur as yeu oughter get yur head shet up; thet ur tongue o’ yourn keeps & gwine like a bull’s tail in fly-time. Wagh!”’ As the man made no reply to this rough remonstrance, Rube’s ‘* dander” soon smoothed down, and once more getting coel, he turned his attention to the business of the hour. That there had been Indians epon the ground was now an ascertained fact ; the peculiar shoeing of the horses rendered ii, indubiiable. Mexican horses, if shod at all, would have had a shoeing of iron —at least on their fore feet. Wild muse tangs would have had the hoof naked; while the tracks of Texan or American horses could have been easily told, either irom the peculiar shoeing or the superior size of their hoots. The horses that had galloped over that ground were neither wild, Texan, nor Mexican: Indian they must have been. Although the one track first examined might have settled the point, it was a fact of too much importance to be left under the slightest doubt. The presence of Indians meant the presence of enemies —foes dire and deadly ; and it was with something more than feelings of mere curiosity that my companions scrutinized the sign. ‘The ashes were blown out from several others, and these carefully studied. Additional facts were bxought to light by those Champollions of the prairie— Rube and Garey. Whoever rode the horses, had been’ going in a gallop. They had not ridden long in one course; but here and there had turned and struck off in new directions. There had been e score or so of them: No two had been galloping together ; their tracks had been couverged or crossed one another—now zizagging, now running in right lines, or sweeping in curves and circles over the plain. All this knowledge the trackers had obtained in less than ten minutes, simply by riding rouad the place. Not to dis- turb them in their diagnosis, the rest of us halted upon the spot awhere the new tracks had been first observed, and there awaited the result of their scrutiny, In ten minutes’ time both came back to us; they had read the sign to their satisfaction, aud needed no further light. That sign had disclosed to them one fact ef more significance than all the rest. Of course, we all knew that the Indian horsemen had _ gone over the ground before the grass had been burnt; but how long before? We had no difficulty im making out that it was upon that same day, and since the rising of the sun—these were trifles easily ascertained; but at what hour had they passed? Late, or early? With the steed, before, or after him? About this point [ was most anxious, but Thad not the slightest idea that it could be decided by the ‘‘sign.” To my astouishment, those cunning hunters returned to tel) me, not only the very hour at which the steed had passed the spot, but also that the Indian horsemen had been riding after him! Clairvoy- ance could scarcely have gone farther. The old trapper had grown expletive, more than was his wont. It was no longer a matter of tracking the white steed. Indians were near. Caution |had become necessary, aud neither the company uor counsel of the humblest was to be scorned. We might soon | stand in need of the strength even of the weakest in our party. Freely, then, the trackers communi- cated their discoveries, in answer to my interrogations. “ The white hoss,” said Rube, ‘‘ must ‘a been byur ’bout four hours ago, kal- kerlatin’ the rate at which he wur a gwine, aud kalkerlatin’ how fur he hed ter kum. He haint’a stopped nowhur; an’ ’ceptin i’ the thicket, he hez gallipt the rest o’ the way—thet’s clur. Wal, we knows the distance, thurfor we knows the time—thet’s clur too; an’ four hour's ‘bout the mark, 1 reck’u—preehaps a little Jess, an alser preehaps a little more. Them To Lobster Pac kers| oe SALE,— 171 Ingots Tin, 33 Pigs Lead, 4 PEAKE BROS, & CO, March 7,’82—3aw niggurs hez been eyther clost arter ’im, in view o’ the critter, or fellerin’ ’im on the trail—the one or the t’other—an’ which ‘taint possible to tell wi’ this hyur sign, no-how-cum-somever. But thet they wur arter ’im me an’ Bill’s made out clur as mud—thet we sartintly bez.” ‘“‘ How have you ascertained that they were after?’ TO BE CONTINUED, é, cea Remedy claims. T erate r 6 Eoin o Reh ne TRADES EXAMINER, APRIL 15, gS. REEOMATISN, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Soro Throat, Swall- ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, Genera! 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MIXED, MIXED. | » 3.00pm) Dp 2.30pm Royalty Jci ** 8.38 ‘*|' 3.23 *' ** 253 ** N Wiltsh’e ** 9.29 ‘*] * 415 “* Huuter k’r; * 9.45 ‘| ** 430 “| Bradalba’e | *£10.23 ‘| ** 5.08 ** Co’ty Line.| *°10.33 ** ; ** 5.18 **) Freetown | ‘10.48 **; ** 5.33 “| Kensingt’n! ‘‘11.10 ‘| ‘* 5.55 Summ’ side Arlt.45 ** Ar 6.30 7 Dp 1.45p Wellingt’n, ‘* 2.37 * Post Hill..j ** 3.22 ** | O’Leary...| ‘‘ 4.44 * Bloomtield | ‘* 5.08 ** Alberten..} ‘* 5.48 * Tignich,..,Ar 6.45 * + Royalty Jc ' Dp 2.53p York Z.:: i | “3a 7 Bedford. . . ' en ae * . ’ Ar 4.05 ** Mt. Stew’t | Dp 4.15 * Cardigan .. “< 6.33 * Jeorget’n., ‘Ar 6.00 * Mt. Stew’t omc Dp 4, 15pm Morell.... © 4.35 % St. Peter’s. ** 5.25 ** Bear River "415 Souris .... jAr 7.00 ** TRAINS INWARD. STATIONS. | MIXED, MIXED, MIXED, Sh’town ../ Ar 5.30pm! Arl1. 15am} Arl).45am Royalty Jc Dp 5.07 ‘* | Dp10.52 ‘* |Dp11.22 ‘4 W Wiltsh’e| “* 4.15 ‘| «10.00 «! 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