sta insane elt San: sect te 6a tame memati iti Ee we - MISCELLANEOUS. PAAR ALRARRRRAR RI Rm | i appalling. VIEWS OF THE CATHOLIC CLERGY. FAMINE IN SWeDEN.—The news trom Sweden Three hundred theusand of ber people are on the verge of starvation. An eloquent letter, addressed te Mr. Seward by W. W. Themas, jr., of Portland, bas been published in We wake the following exteact frou the Philadelphia Press :— From the London Times, Dec. 16 : On Saturday, Dec. 14, a meeting of the Liverpool county magistrates was held to take ‘into consideration the subject of the proposed Fenian procession to occur on the morrow, "Rev. Canon Fisher attended on behalf of the R youn Catholic clergy, and briefly addressed the. Bench, assuring them that himself and bis eoueagues some of our American exehanges “ Three hundred thousand hard-worked, patient Swedes ar starving to Notland. ‘Their crops for three years have been bad; last year they were an utter failure; and now even their miserable bread, made of scraw aud bark of Crees, bas given very anxious to assist the/ out. J hey sit in their cheerless huts and die private advices trom Scandinavia represents were dwigistrates in every possible way to preserve) My the public peace. He also assured them that the Cathobe cle rgy, as a ody, had no sym pathy with the murderers of Sergeant Brett, | and that they recarded the murder, apart from! A Jerseyman shot himself the other day, and P political considerations, as a most serious| the coroner returned a verdict of suicide, add- crime. He also handed to the bench, to be | ing that he “ himeelf voluntarily, and of milice ‘udéd by them as thoy mightseem fit, the follow: | aforetbought, did kill and murder.” Tng proclamation : | : **To the Irish portion of our beloved flock | in the divcese of Liverpoo!. Dear children in| tilver and gold arises vet so much frow their Jesus Christ, we addressed our flock in the! searcity iv the earth, as the difficulty of extract- “borough of Liverpool a few days ago, and we | Dr. J. — them solemn na) and an authoritative | C. Ayer, the well knows chemist of Maesachu- command that they should abstain from join-| ing or taking any part in the proposed pro céstion tomorrow, As we have at heart your temporal and eternal interests we repeat the Injunction We have already given, and we com. | account.” A re UNLOCKING THE Rocks —‘The great cost ot ing them from their stony combinations, setts, has cut this gordian knot. After having merited and received the gratitude of balf man- kind, by his remedies that cure their diseases, he is now winning the other half, by opening for AO CAE RTS A A RE CI sh EIS Ee this calamity as worse eveu than the published | LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. FROM EUROPE. | Loxpox, Sunday, Jan. 5th.—The Council at Berne has instructed the Swiss Consul at Mexico to express the sympathy of Switzerland 'with the Liberal Government now inaugurated in Mexico... ..A Spanish imperial decree has been issued for reorganizing the Courts of Law | in Cuba... . .The subject of the sale of the three Danish West India Islands to the United States | will be submitted to the Council at Copenhagen on Weduesday.....A great popular Banquet was given in Naples Friday evening in honor | of Baron Ratazzi.....The British Government jis in receipt of information relative to the jmovements of Fenians. Public excitement | has by no means abated. Saturday’s des- | patches from Cork state that a body of Fenians |last night surreptitiously entered the magazine jin that city, and, unchallenged, carried away more than half a ton of blasting powder. | There is no clue to the perpetrators of this ‘bold act. The people stand aghast at the daring of the Fenians.....The clergy of the |city of Limerick have affixed their siguatures to a document, declaring there can be no per- |manent peace in Ireland unless it is treated like Hungary. M. Menebrea, the Prime Minister of Italy, has given publicity to a uamber of private letters, proving that Baron Ratazzi was fully apprised of the recent movernent of Gen. Garibaldi against Rome and favoured it; that mand you by the authority which we hold from God, and in virtue of our sacred office, that either in the borough of Liverpool, nor in its aeighborhood, nor in any part of the county subject te our jurisdiction, do you hold any them an easy road to the exhaustless treasures of the hills. He has discovered and published a chemical process, which renders, at little cust, the | hardest rocks and ores friable like chalk, so that ‘he also lent the insurgents his valuable in- fluence and assistance... ..The Turkish Envoy at Vienna will start for London immediately to ask the protection of the English Government against the intrigues of Russia. MEXICO. Havana, Jan. 5.-—Steamer Danube won Vera Cruz brings Telegarms [from the capita of Mexico to Dec. 31st. By orders from Gen. erfiero Diaz, commanding the Department, | who had arrived at Vera Cruz, 4 steamer with fifteen hundred troops unde | has sailed from that port for ! press the rebellion in that Peninsula. | Millan replaced General Alateore in command at Vera Cruz during the latter's absence. The | Mexican Treasury is reported as empty. — The J lee gias, as Minister of the i resignation of a Treasury, has been accepted by Juarez; other r 4 ] , s i changes reported in the Cabinet recently are doubtful.....Guld 353. imine FROM CANADA. Orrawa, Jan. 7.—It is understood that tenders will be immediately invited tor new six per cent. Canadian Dominion Stock. The loan will remain open about three weeks. Orrawa, Jan. 10.—The military sentinels have been trebled during the past few days ut the Parliament and other public buildings. CORRESPONDENCE. OOOO OOO OOO ere To THe Evirok OF THE EXAMINER. Sir— As you are devoting a considerable part of your valuable paper to the subject of road making, 1 think it the duty of every person interested in | good reads, who feels himself capable of forming a correct idea on the subject, to come forward | sy General Alatoore, Yucatan, to sup: | General | / Se ae nana nn Teustiog that ase ‘oak trespassed tuo much oD | birth; and from tive to seven precious years . greater eMfiction thea the mode your valuable space, of our lives in youth, re still dedicated aa giving education to the higher classes Jor no. Tremain yours. &e, study of the learned languages, as if all their thing. The fact was that it degraded education; THOMAS CLAY, original importance remained. ’ there was something in human nature theg Commissioner of Highways, Avain, “It is erroneous to say that Grecke : : s ; District No. 6, King’s County. | nq Latin are indispensably necessary to enuble made them always value that which cost them | Dundas, Jan. 13, [s6x. a boy to understand his own language. Phis something.” ~—e-> In this sentiment we perfect i must be the case only where no adequate pains ial ante Giakineds ant auieal a PUBLIC MELTING AT CRAPAUD. | have been bestowed by teachers to convey | g " ifully the meaning of English expressious. Colonel Sykes, M. P., who, onthe same ocea. | Pursuant to public notice, a large and) Ajj words are mere arbitrary sounds, and, in sion, with reference to the same question, said; | influental meeting took place in the new Liall ju itself, a sound invented by an Bnglishmais 18 | 4, He desiderated a system of national schools in at Crapaud on New Year's Day, for the as capable of being reudered intelligible 7 ai which all classes of society could receive |purpose of taking into consideration the | per definition, a8 one first suggested - ne ithut education which would be useful to ‘necessary improvement in Crapaud Harbor, ora Roman, A great proportion of the ao >i them. Those schools should be supported hy and more especially for deeiding upon 4) which compose the English language, - _ local rates and not by particular endowments, suitable site from whieh to extend a public! jved from the Saxon ; yet few persons Huns a i. would say further that children ought to be wharf, The meeting was largely repre-| knowledge of that language necessary for the obliged to go to school, and that local author> . - ‘ . = yp " : r a . . . sented from Lots 28, 29, 30, and 67. The! due understanding of their uative tongue.” | io. oy ould be responsible for thelr attendanee.” undersigned having been called to the chair, The following quotation from a satirical ; ae os _ a “ny “ View of a Classical School,” which we have VOLUNTEERS. i matter, in whieh Messr. EK. Locke, D. MeQuar | rie, Wm. and Richard Lea, Ww. Dawson) tet with in that very instructive pablication, and others took a prominent part. D. Cam-! eytitled “Chamber's Edinburgh Journal, | eron, Eeq., one of the Representatives of the| very convincingly, we think, sets forth the | ee eae ava in aa folly of the undue, and almost exclusive, extent | following resulutions were ubaniwousiy adop-| to which classical education is carried in the ted, viz :— Ist. Moved by Mr. E. Locke, seconded by Mr. Alex. McKay— Parts of the Ist and 2nd Artillery Compam- ies, and of the Victoria, Prince of Wales and Irish Infantry Companies, assembled ir uniform, and all armed with the rifle, for their periodi- cal exercise, in Battallion, at the Drill Shed, iwlic sc . ’ England :— . . peplic eghoay © Sngin® ‘on Monday evening, the 13th instant, under “If an enlightened being from et : :o., ae | sphere, with a mind totally unaffected by our) that indetatizable disciplinarian, the Inspecting | Whereas the dredzing of Crapaud Harbor} historical partialities, were, to step in pronest Field Otticer. The assemblage was gratifying | : F : ; > : > s ; iy _ . “ye *- ‘having failed to give the facilities to shipping | us, and examine the education given to the |i, number, military appearance and soldierly that were anticipated ; and the present con-| highest youth, im the first country of the world, dition uf the Harbor being such as to admit} at an age the most improved in its annals, efficiency. About 180 men, of all ranks, par of only a small class of schooners loading at: what would be his first feeling on observing | aded, so far as space permitted, in a variety of the wharfs, thereby subjecting the country | the perpetual cecupation of the pupils, with | battallion movements, which were effected with to serious loss and inconvenience, and retard-| Greek and Latin? meeting or joinin any procession. You have i been always wont to listen to our words and to} obey our commands. Do not send sorrow to} the precious metals are loosened from their con- | Lonpoy, Jan. 7, 1868.—Lord Stanley, Se- finement, and easily gathered. Mines too poor to | cretary for Foreign Affairs, acting upon the us at a time when we are about to celebrate | pay, may be worked at profit now, and the yield | remonstrances of the Sublime Porte, has ye the great Feast of Peace, aud to commemorate | ef rich mines is largely increased, while the cost pared oan areas ase the mer ° . . . ° » . . . ¥ ms ss ‘ ay "eee the wonders of God's love to us all. Pray | of extracting the wetals from the ore, is dimiuish- [eer of rue 2 ‘St Seerenes fr ” God bless you and keep you in his peace. led. Mishec ic nareat achive st iain caine | ports wre received at & t. Petersburg from “ ALEX. GOSS CS. Sane SS EPeOs Her omem, ~ | Siberia of the discovery of rich aud extensive " 6 Bishop of ls wai kind, or cure their diseases. But we are inferwed | zold deposits on the Amoor River. The natives Yesterd — P si t our celebrated countryman adheres to the latter, | were flocking to the gold regions by thousands. y . . . $ - gta ee ee utter from }as his speciality and chief ambition.— Buffalo |>° great was the excitement, that troops had the Right Rev. Dr. Cornthwaite, Roman Ca- | | been sent by the Government of the district to Sentinel. i Q a \Eieraca’ order and guard the mines. Desper- ate and bloody conflicts have taken place be- ltween the natives and soldiers.. ...Consols 92. 1}U. S.5 20's 72. Markets unchanged. tholic Bishop of Beverley, was read at morn: | = ing mass iu all the Roman Catholic chape!s | UNITED STATES. in Leeds: and assist you in the matter. ling the general trade and progress of the But perhaps my proffered help will not be ac | community, theretore, differ from you in some very important points. |Our trade, and place Crapaud in a position to In the first place, then, you seem to think that to the poorness of the material of which they are) jpnto an arm of the Basin, a distance of 400 nade, and that nothing but importing stone from | yards, where a sufficient depth of water can Nova Scotia will remedy the evil. allow me te differ from you, for until the present steamer and general shipping. 2nd. Moved by Mr. Donald McQuarrie, : a. unscientific system eonnected with road making | -. : seconded by Mr. Francis Malone— is abandoned, and the best use is made of the ma- terial which we have in abundance, it will perhaps | Resolved, That, taking into consideration Horninte Arrairn — Murder of a Girl to obtain a Life Insurancee—A horrible affair} FLorexce, Jan. 6.—The organization of the | took place inthe village of Canaan, Hudson | Italian Ministry has been completed by Gen. | County, New York, two weeks ago. A tene- | Menebrea, and the new Cabinet is announced | tent house in the village was partly destroyed |'. he as follows :—Gen. Menebrea, President | by fire, a girl of twelve years of age burned to | ot Ministerial Council and Ministers of Foreign | feel bound in the sight of God to conde mn, and death. From some suspicious circumstances, | Affairs; Cordova, Minister of the Interior: | which the autheritites of the town have deemed | the reputed father and mother of the Digny, Minister of Finance ; Reals, Minister of) it necessary te prohibit, and if need be, to) child—a Mr. and Mrs. Brown—who had War ; Fillippo, Minister of Justice ; Brozila, | prevent, | lately arrived and were staying temporarily in | Minister of Public Instruction ; Cantoll, Minis-| * Hus the time come at length when vou will! the place. were arrested on a charge of arson |ter of Public Works; Rabotti, Minister of| refuse to listen to the counsels and warnings of| and murder, in setting fire to the house and | Marine. your chief pastor? Has the voice of the! causing the death of the child, but they were| Coprgyuacen, Jan. 6.—The debate in the | eburch through hiv lips jost its power and / discharged by the coroner's jury. It “Serixcriei.p Hovse, Lirtie Woopnot sr, | Ler Dec. 14, 1867. ‘Dean Caitpren 1x Jesvs Carist—You age invited, we hear it with anxiety and sadness, tw jolm in a procession which we, us your bishop, be good economy to go to the great expense of | Nova Scotia stone. If, under the preseut system, | the very great and serious losses sustained by our roads were to remain good during the whole! this vast community in the absence of the season, it would certainly be an astouishment to | Decessary accommodation for a large class of | ceptable when you come to understand that J) order to meet the growing requirements nd But in thia|be obtained for the accommodation of a| no people on the earth.’ | Most certainly he would). wdiness and precision, and especially the exclaim, ‘Ah! these languages must be very Resolced, That in} important in after-life, sinee so much time is ex- pened in acquiring them, The power to talk them must be the great means to honour and compete with its sister ports, it 18 necessary | success in the world. ‘There must be some ; to construct a Bridge connecting Victoria] great nation with whom you have commercial the wretched condition of our roads is all owing | with Sandy Point, and thence extend a wharf] intercourse, that speak these tongues! + No, would be the reply ; ‘these languages are dis- used at the present day; they are spoken by ‘Endeed ! then, these tongues must contain immense stores of use- ful knowledge, accessible ouly by learning them.’ ‘Nou; all the knowledge they contain | are of little or no value at this day, and, at all events, may be readily got at by transiaticns. | the embarrassments to our trade, resulting Besides, it is the poetry of these languaegs that ‘from the ineflicent state of our Harbor, and! i. iy ogy exclusively attended to as school. must, at least, be of a very high order—must be full of fine morality, and inspire into the all, But so far from being surprised that the roads | ships; and being also compelled to pay 8) vouns mind sueh pure religious sentiments as here do not wear well, I only feel astonished that they do so well. grave attention of the Executive Government Let us look for a moment at the many causes | in our belialf, and also that an application be) ya siories of a most licentious character.’ |made to the General Legivlature of this Island for a special grant in favor of the improvements mentioned in the first Reso- lution. which combine to keep our roads in their present bad condition. Let us begin with the time at which the work is done, not early in the spring } i | | heavy export tax to which vo other port in) jj) permanently improve the character, aud so this Island is subject, we earnestly solicit the! po nerit society at large.” * No; the poetry alluded to is filled with idolatrous absurdities, | This clever critique is quite sufiicient, we ithink, to convince all but the most prejudiced minds of the great folly of making the classical It trans-| Rigsdad on the proposed sale of the West! when the soil is soft and wet, but in the dry time manual and platoon exercises—particularly the mauual, in which a practiced eye could aot discover # fault. While adhering to the prin§ ciple ef honor to whom honor is due, and which we cheerfully aecerd to oar Volunteers, we would not have them to entertain the opinion of having gained perfection, and therefore relax from drill; this would be a fatal error for veterans, and espeeially so for newly made soldiers, and destructive of efficiency, which cam only be preserved by constant and attentive drill, The military knowledge which the Volun- . . oe | . : | * Poetry ! all this time spent upon poetry - It] teers have aequired, and have developed in practice—the familiar general use of the rifle m field mov>ments and |steadiness in the ranks, imparted by an able /system of training (still required to be proses cuted) to intelligent, vigorous men, imbued with good fighting qualities, has already placed at the disposal of the Government a reliable force at hand, and ready to meet an emergency. and eannon—skill | | influence? Are Catholics seriously proposing | pired, however, that the parents had a life po-|India Island of St. Thomas to the United | to celebrate the approach of Christinas, the of summer wher the soil for at least a foot deep seconded by Mr. James Gorman— 3d. Moved by Mr. Charles Harrington, | Janguages and literature the principal study in And we are warranted in expressing the opi- 4 , icy of $5,000 on the deceased, in the Travel-| States was adjourned to a future day. No| festival of the Prince of Peace, by an act which | ler's Accidental Company of Hartford. It was | decisive vote has been taken on the subject... . - all in authority—spiritual aud temporal — | a three months’ policy, taken out from the time | Consols 925, 5 20's 725; markets unchanged. | condemn and forbid as likely to lead to| the family took up their residence in Canaan, | Se. Doxurxco, Jan. 6.—The . conteation and strife? : | and had only twelve days to ran when the insured | Government in fled ts Suske teleoil: ‘We cannot, we do not, so judze you, dear} lost her life. The parents applied to the com- | has been proclaimed President and the capital | loose stuff piled on the eld road, the ruts and hol- | is quite dry and dusty, just about the time when the farmer is summer-fallowing his field to pulver- — ize the soil. In rounding up the road at this time Dominican | e ul Baez | of year, there is some ten or twelve inches of dry | WILLIAM INMAN. public-school education; but, if still stronger nion, that man for man upon the fented field, the Resolved, That the proceedings of this Volunteers would prove ihemselyes to be ne meeting be forwarded to one of the Charlotte- | ‘ : Ys. town papers for publication, with a re quest | isto be feund in the report of the Royal Com-| mean foe. | that the othere will please copy. | missioners empowered to report concerning In conneetion with the military movement, | ‘+the system and course of studies ’’ pursued in| we are induced to remark, that the Drill Shed evidence illustrative of the faci, be required, it children in Jesus Christ. We feel assured that you will listen to our words, and that you | cumstances aroused the suspicions of the officers ‘will Gbey our commands. "| that all was not right. They caused the body “You will absent yourselves from the pro- : } jected procession, and you will take no part or| stituted, when marks of violence were plainly thare in it. You will return quickly and quiet-| traced on the back of the child’s head. An ly to your homes after the morning services, | officer of the company immediately proceeded and either by participation nor as spectators! to Canaan, and made a thorough examination to be disinterred, and an examination was in- | pany for the amount of the policy, when cir-| was blockaded by his brother for 5 days. It| tows of which. nat being levelled in proper shine. | was expected that Cairal would soon announce | his abdication. Baez was at Caraco, and his | : : ; : : ; | arrival at Porto Plato was daily expected. jthe rain which may fall on it.—in the rute of) } Loxpow, Wednesday, Jan'y 8.—Nearly : : ‘the journals of this city have editorial comments | this loose earth. Now, sv long as the dry season | this morning on the subject of the resolution | lasts, this will do pretty well; but when tbe first | MIS-DIRECTION OF EDUCATION. | were imbued with a strong prejudice in favour recently adopted by the House of Commons on | fall rain comes, this mass of loose earth becomes e | Nearly the whole of these Commisssioners hav- Che GOxaniner, NLL. are ready to act as dishes to catch avd hold all | ing had their youthful educational training in NOR PRN PR ren et Charlottetown, January 20,1868. | all /course there will be some two or three feet of one or another of these public sehools, it is ai } but reasonable to suppose that. their minds each of the great Public Schools of Eugland. | has been faulted by some for ite large dimen- | sions, as opposed to our small requirements. | But this opinion. has received its quietus by un- | controversadle experience, which has demour | Strated the inadequacy of the Shed to the ex- loadiee of the massed men, and even its ingué | give encouragement to an act which may oceca- sion much harm, and can produce no possible good. of the premises where the disaster occurred, and the developments served to strengthen the suspicion that foul play hed been used, and the question of citizenship. the British claims and the acceptance of the The abatement of | saturated with water, and then begins the work of ‘of their general system of classical training | ficieney for company drill, that is for sreré than Of paramount importance as the question of | and yet so difficult have they found it to with. | one full company at the same time. This is w ] | oP] "} , » mene : “ As you shall obey our commands, we bless! that Mr. and Mrs. Brown had been guilty of American view as expressed in you, aud commend you and yours to Ged, that! the terrible crime. The officer telegraphed to He may have you always in his good keeping. Connecticut, where the suspected parties were *“ ROBERT, Bis op of Beverley” | re-arrested, and brought back to Hudson. Fur- Trerltead undoing what the road maker did oily some thirty | grate Education is, by almostevery man in the | stand the evidence of facts. that even whilst ' . , 3 befor avelling » bas | . . . ' ee Johnson's message are argued with agains) Oey Toye eee, si = = wa community, admitied to be, yet, having, to | declaring “ that they are of opinion that the : ity. despatche aris state that | F ery i rough qu i. ; EEE a unanimity... ..Despatches from Paris state that | to endure the misery of wallowing through 1mu¢ |} certain extent, had it under discussion in our ithe cities of Toulon and Amiens have both! the remaining three months of the season. By | classical languages and literature should eon- grave deficiency in this eowntry, wherein for a Jarge portion of the year, the climate necessi- tates the drill to be conducted under cover, elected opposition candidates for the COFPS | travelling through this mire great ruts get formed, Telegrams sent from differe sarta of tha) ther investigation left no doubt of the guilt of} S Ri ; : ’ g ym difierent parts of the - | legislatiff.. ... The long and animated discussion | last two numbers, in again making it, although in another light, the subject of our editorial | tinue to hold, as they do now, the principal place in public-school education,” the particn- — ee Biackwoos’s Epixevrcn Macazine for kingdom yesterday, announce that no attempt was made to form the intended processions. — <—>- - Dreapret. Merper ar Montrear.—At the parties. When the body of the child was | found in the closet, after the fire, the closet door was found locked, and it was discovered that the child had been wrapped up in com- in Prussian Chamber of Deputies growing out | | and high ridges at the sides of those ruts work up; of the arrest of Herr Tursten, a member of the | 20d then, when spring comes, we lave to endure . ; . . . | | Prussian diet, for words spoken in debate, | another misery, viz: that of getting our bones; * December, and the Nortm Britisn Review for the same month, have been received during ‘‘Linda Tressel,’’ lremarks this week, we are not without mis- | lars of their own Report give a direct negative givings that some of our readers may be of) to the conclusion on that head, at which they “The week . | opinion that we have already pursued it quite the past bustible materials, in order that she might half-past eight on Thursday evening, George | . ; surely be burned to death—if she was not dead Wilson, a reduced Lance Se: geant ot the 100th ‘terminated with « decided victory for the! almost rattled out of our skins in getting along ‘arrived. According to their Report, the edu- Royal Canadian Regiment, shot a Lance Corporal of the same regiment, named James Campbell, killing him intstantly. The murder took place in one of the rooms of the Victoria Barracks, and appears to have been committed while the parties were under the influence of liquor. Campbell was shot in the back, the ball passing entirely through the body and burying itself in the wall. Wilson was quite cool and collected when arrested, and voluntarily heid out his bands for the handcuffs. : _ =_- THe Empress Cartorra —“ The news from Brussels," says the France, “ia that the condi. | tion of the Empress Carlotta continues to improve. She goes out every day, when the weather per- mits, fora long drive or waik. She visite their Majesties regularly twice a week at Bruseels, and the rest of her time is divided between music and painting, for which latter art she has a great aptitude The Queen, her sister-in-law, docs not allow a day to pass without going te see her, and she receives trequent visits trom the King and the Count and Countess de Flandre.” _—- <> — Tse Evroreaxn Geain Trape.—The en- ermous exportation of grain from Hungary continues without diminution. A letter from Pesth, dated 28th ult., says the steamers and great ships of the Danube take advantage of the last days which remain to take their cargoes up the river, and the railways are even more busy. The grain all yoes to Bodenbach, which is tke great centre from which it is sent on to France, Hamburg and England. The demand seems to increase rather than diminish. : —_— “oe e-hCUltC Feanrur Ixenpations 1x Manitita.—The overland China mail gives the following news from Manilla:—‘The British ship Stuart Wort ley wus totally lost off Manilla, on Sept. 20. All hands saved. Fearful inundations have oceurred at Manilla. Over 10,000 Indians have been drowned. The Spanish mail steamer Malesnia, from Hong Kony to Manilla, has been missing for 21 days. totally lost. Two earthquales took place at Manilla, on October 4th. No loss of life or dainage to buildings.” ; eid —minecs Baertat Meeper.—On Saturday night last an affray oceured in a tavern at Kennetcook, between two men named Miller and Lee. which resulted in the death of the latter. They were playing cards, and quarrelled over the “game, when Miller got up, went into another room, and returning with a gun, aimed it deliberatly at Lee, and shot himdead. We believe Miller has been arrested.— J/alifaz Reporter, Jan. 9. Al Anadalige i An English army officer wr tes from Abyssinia te bis friends at howe thet campaigning in the It is feared she is| already from the effects of laudanum. woman has made a full statement of her connec- tion with the affair. She was not at the house where the child was killed, but at a hotel, when the fire occurred, and says that before the | |} house was burned her husband told her she could go to the hotel, and he would meet her there. The hotel was about two miles distant. He then did the business, the firing | of the building and what followed. The } : linn 2 Pedeouete.’” # lan! ah ates: | aes ‘i el : ; ' aa sicliihal i me : , ; : : Chureh—Her State and Prospects Nina, iberal party. A series of resolutions taking! over those rute and lumpa which do not get level-|far enough, Others, however,—and We | cation obtained in these schools, in which ‘the ne vee ni bis 7 | ground in favor of freedom of speech and the! , “Sir Charles Wood’s Administration of Indian jinviolability of the members of the diet were | adopted by a majority of 30. ‘claims that the ministry, as now as reconstruct. | roads only benefits us about one mouth of the year. ed, will be supported by a working majority of 35 members in the House of Deputies, when |the National Parliament reassembles on the | llth inst. } | Lexpox, Jan. 9th—Ev’g.—Mr. Piggott, the She admits | Editor of the Dublin Irishman, whose arrest | i | led down until past the middle of the summer, so Gen. Menebrea| that all the money expended in patching up our! It has been argued that the greater part of the | bad reade iv the tall is in consequence of this bigh | rounding-up system ; that it all washes away when the fall rains come; but I contend it is uot so, | and, as proof of my position, 1 will ask, why |that tke child was not Brown's, but was ob-| Was noted yesterday, is charged with eight| does not all the road get washedaway ? Simplv | tained in Dayton, Ohio. an article, fall of sorrows and complaints, pitiful to read, and more pitiful te coutemplate. says :— | In no part of the country is industry at so low an ebb, capital so uoremunerative in ite invest- meots, and their jeint products so peorly paid | for aa here in New England at the present time | The speciaiities of our skilled labour, which were fence a source of wealth to the capitalist and l now a drng in the market, and refuse to go into consumption at any price. They are relatively | much cheaper than the agricultural products of | of the Middle States. Not only are our manutae- | tories closed, or running on short time, and our mechanics and laboring men by thousands thrown out of employment, but our commercial classes are suffering immense losses from the stagnation of trade and shrinkage in merchandize values. The latter are obliged to “ carry” net only the products of New England commerce and industry, j but also, toa great extent, those of every other jsection of the country. Hence, upon their | shoulders the depreeiation in prices principally | fails. And the situation with ue is rendered stil! | more severe and trying, from the fect that eur | foreign commerce and itedependent interests con- | tinue ina depressed condition. In tact, the noble | race of importing and shipping merchants, once the pride and boast of our New England seaports,whose ships ploughed the waters of every sea, and pour- ed into our markets the wealth of every elime, are pow, alas, falling inte comparative decay. |Our mercantile marine, swept from the ocean | | during the late war, involving a loss of millions of | capital vet shared in by any other section of the country, shows no signs ef recovery from the blow. The high eest of labour, and the unfriend ly policy of the Government in imposing @ tax ou tonnage aud discriminating against shipbuilding materials, have prevented au attempt to repair | that heavy loss. Our shipyards ali along the coast, once resonent with the lively chorus of the axe and hammer, are silent and solitary as our graveyards. The Canadian reciprocity treaty, | which once brought a large and profitable trade te our seaboard warkets—including cheap lumber for shipbuilding—bas been suicidally abrogated, gave profitable employment to the people, are | the West and South, or the raw matertal products | | seditious libels uttered last year. }the son of the Chief Justice of Treland.... buying arms there for the Brotherhood, were | brought up at Bow Street to-day for examina- |the prisoners were sent to Birmingham for | trial for treason and felony. The van contain- jing the prisoners in its transit to and from Eow | Street, was guarded by a strong escort of mili- jtary and several platoons of police all under arms and with drawn cutlasses. These extra- ordinary precautions were deemed necessary, )as the authorities had received information of ja threatened rescue. There was no disturbance | whatever.....Count Bismarck addressed a large Conservative meeting in Berlin last )evening on political affairs in Europe, in the course of which he said that war with France |this year was a phantom, and urged his hearers to dismiss all fears on the subject. | Loypox, Jar. 9th.—The Times to-day says | the English Troops are still at Senate; no sick- | ness ; the natives are friendly. Paris, Jan. 9th.—The new Cabinet at | Portugal favours the collection of taxes. The | taxes are odious to the people to such an extent |as to cause the resignation for the previous ' Cabinet. Viewxa, Jan. 9th.—Despatches have been re- | ceived to-day which state that the Austrian | frigate Novara, Admiral Tetgethoff, with the ; remains of Maximilian on board, bas arrived jat the Island of Corfu on the way to Triest. | Gold (N. Y.) 137}. Desir, Jan. 10.—Facts which have come to the knowledge of the authorities here which | jlead to the belief that the leader of the rising at Tallaghart last spring was not killed as was reported. A man named Lannon, a prominent Fenian, was arrested here to day on the charge of high treason, and it 18 confidently asserted that he is the person who organized and directed the| insurrection on that occasion. His examina-| tion will soon take place, when the evidence | in possession of the Government will be brought Piggott is| because the old work has been packed down while | -| wet, and the heat of summer has baked it, and Under the head of * A Gioomy Picture of New | Messrs. Burke, Casey, Shaw and Millavry, i : i ~ | England,” the Boston Commercial Bulletin has | ete arrested at Birmingham on the charge of | } j It ition. Bail was offered, but not accepted, and | | | | | | consequently it is epabled to resist the combined | action vt both rain and wheels, Let the work be | done early in the epring, while the frost is coming | out, aud while poor people are looking for a job) to earn something wherewith to get themselves | seed, and then we shall have the good of the work } the whole summer through ; yes, and through the! the general well-being, to exalt the material falt, too, for the roade then being thoroughly packed aad backed, will be quite capable of resist- ing the action, of not only the fall rains, but of all the carting which may pass over them. But still, 1 am ready to admit that there are | certain sections of the reads, where the soil of the | road-side will not do, and even bere I do not see | any necessity for bringing stone from the Main. | land, for our own Island stone when properly laid down is quite all-sufficient. It is no argument | to say that our Island stone will not do because it has not done bitherto ; just look at the utter dis- regard of all common sense evidence in repairing our roads with stone, and then tell we if a fair trial] has been made or not. Let us select tor example any section of the road between Char- lottetown and Georgetown, which has bid defiance to the earthing up system in consequence of the overseer lays on the top of what will be in the | fall and spring a pertect quagmire—about one | tier deep of large round field stones, and fille up | the space between them with small oves, and | then walks away and thinks he has built a road. | But as soon as the springs from below has made | { the whole mase underneath the stone wet enough, | the first heavily laden wheel which has to. pass | } } would gladly believe the majority of them,— will, we trust, very willingly bear with us whilst, upon most important grounds, we pursue it a little further. They, to whose countenance we thus look for indulgence in our attempt to discharge what, in these times of extension of popular privileges and power, we believe to be an especial duty ef a free and patriotic newspaper press—the endeavouring to stimulate enquiries concerning the machinery, systems, and details | of his own country, unacquainted with any | of popular education—are men, who, as Mr. | modern language but bis own, ane | . . | so imperfectly as to be hardly competent (0! sary for us to say one word in their favor. Gladstone has most forcibly and elegantly ex pressed it, rejoice to improve produce, to multiply the sources of thought ;' and who, as opportunity offers, | to perceive that ‘the orthography, or the rules ¢ » . . ° | . . > » > + tendency of the age is to develop intelligence, | able to doa simple sum, or to stumble through | | cay : . ; ae 7 and moral condition of the people, and to put) and no taste for reading and observation, his | | faith in the enlargement of the dominion of | classical languages and literature’? are “ the guag | principal branch of study, invested with a | recognized aud traditional importance, to which Affairs,” The Conversion of England,’” *» Cornelius O'Dowd,” and five other papers, are the contents of Blackwood. “ Relations .# Heathenism and Judaism with Christianity,’” “ Modern Provencal Poems,’’ “Ralph Waldo = If a youth after four or five years at sehooi, | Emerson,” 7 The Natural a Morals,” ales it at nineteen, usable to construe an | r The Milan ayanm of Europe, " Pepe leasy bit of Latin or Greek without the help of | lation,’ + Italy in 1867,” “The Secial Sores a dictionary, or to write Latin grammaticially | of Britain,’’ form the bill of fare of the North sh Review. She character of these period- 1 with that | ieals is so well established that it is not neces- ithe principal weight is assigned and the largest | . ? | share of time and attention given,” too frequent- ly amounts to no more than this: almost ignorant of geography and the history Briti |write English correctly, as respects either The present is a good time to subscribe for the f syntax, scarcely | : sister ’ "s fi de American Keprints of the British Magazines. an easy propostiion of Euclid, a total strange: ae ; : — i ho ee hich govern the physical world, Tae New Domrmion Monruty for Janu- and to its structure, with an uncultivated mind, | ary, from the Printing House of John Dougall a : hte her oe.) & Son, Montreal, has again come te hand, ac- intellee education must cer y 2 ° : haga ee _ failure though there may be ng | companied by the Dominion Almanac for 1868. co Le « a . 7 d Die i ‘ : fault to find with his principles, character or| The leading paper is the conclusion of “ Pather will ever be found willing and prepared to| manners. We by no means intend to represent! Mathew and his Work,” by the Hon. Thos. labour, to the utmost of their ability, for the| this as the type of the ordinary product of | i | English publie school education ; but, speaking ; | both from the evidence we have received, and | probable we will transfer to the columns of the enlargement of this glorious domain in our midst; and which, we fee! certain, they are D’Aarcy McGee. Atsome future time it is i . : | ° . . | from opportunities of observation open to all, | Examiner the whole of this admirable article. fully aware can be accomplished by no other| we must say that it 1s much more Common). other articles in this number, so far as we means than the instrumentality of State schools, in which all classes of society may receive that education which will be useful to them in their | !imits, several grades and various pursuits in life. Under this presumed intelligent sanction, we ja fe . : tional | to make in this article. If they be givenina shall, therefore, now resume our educa enquiries ; but before doing so, we deem it) } than it ought to be.”’ ...,|have had time to read them, are well written Close as we now are upon our usual editorial : : The Monthly is presented to we shall, in conclusion, endeavour to | ' , | subscribers at the moderate price of $1 a year, postage one cent per copy, additional. We advise our friends to subscribe for it. By John and interesting. condense into the smallest compass possible w additional remarks which we are anxious itt ———_—- rather dogmatical style, it is because we are| Prorecrion axp Free Trape. right to apprize our readers that, in continuing | fully persuaded of their truth and importance 5) yaclean, Montreal.—This is the title of a pam> them, we shall not be so anxious to lay before | and, we hesitate not to say that our rulers— | phlet of 79 octavo pages, which we have lutely rj ] a of , i ar , 4 ! . % ‘ . : . _ a ‘ Lene? 1) 2} eit} ‘ | . my ip springy wature of the locality. Here we tind the | the many original views and observations of our | “ hom, with all our respect for their position and | received. The first paragraph of the work own, as to press upon their notice those of! *P24° 7 a. Ile ar i . » ° abilities, we cannot suppose to be fully conver! will explain its object better than any- authorities of high standing, to whom, upon | sant in what practically relates to the business | thing we might say about it: —“ The present questions of public momeut, even the very wisest and most experienced in our Community | would deem it no mental abasement to defer. We have headed this article ‘* Mis-direction of Education.’ | goes right to the bottom; and forces the stones | deavour to deal with such ‘ misdirection’ in I We shall not, however, en- | | | apart, another and another cart follows until all | all its phases; but limit our cousideratien of it of education — were they, with the ailowed | circumstances of the ‘New Nationality,” or necessity of a reform in our public-school sys-| pominion of Canada, call for an early practi- tem in view, to bestow a thoughtful perusal | (2) solution, in our own case, of the great upon them, they could not fail, we think, to question which, for want of any more accurate observe the great importance of the suggestions and accepted designation, is commonly alluded involved in them. to as that between Protection and Free Trade. To such youth as are, by wealthy parents, To place before the public some portions of the stones are wedged together in little heaps to one particular, namely, the erroneous prac- | intended for the higher walks of professional | the general argument in favor of encouraging with great ruts and holes between them. jtice which now too geuerally obtains in our | life, and to such as are born to the inheritance | Home Industry, also arguments having @ This is no false picture but the truth, and no-| public schools. of allowing, or rather compel- of independent fortunes, and whose attainments, | demivious of Theodore is not so pleasant. The! aud the raw products of Canada and the mari- thermometer geta upte Hw deg. regularly ; | tine procinces, which were sent here to exchange sleepers in the tente, roused by hissing noises, | for our West India goods and home mauutactures, find snakes under their beds; and when the nen | now pass by us to other markets. j to light. This is a gress assembled to-day... ..Slight earthquake pat on their beets they find scerpions ia vecupa tien. Wistar's BaLsam of Wiip CHEeRRY.—Thie medicine is “a combination aud a form indeed," | for bealing and curing all the iils which afflict us in the shape of coughe, colds aud inflammation of the tbreat, lasge and chest. —_-- New York now has a city telegraph with forty stations. There are to be one hundred stations in all, and when in full operation a message can be sent to any part of the city in fifteen miuutes and for twenty cents. wn odliminn oo i « . The Mexican Gen. Marquez recently employ- ed a bricklayer to make a s:cret chamber in one of his honses, ane the man has not since been seen. They say that Marquez hilled him tu save the secret. : sidiiiidcnes > , By taking Persons’ Purgative Pills, the body is wivigerated with new life, bealth and regular-| ity, the diver and heart will be assisted and, strengthened to discharge their fuuctions, aud the bowels regulated. oe — | Buenos Ayres has projected arailroad across the Andes to Valparaiso, and requests Chili to @o-operate in constructing it. The route is said to be practicable. Facts Worth Knowing —Johneon’s Ano-| dyne Liniment is superior to any other Liniment | or Pain Kilier in the world. It is equally effi. cacious, whether taken internally, or applied ex-) ee oe cure cough of bearseticss, in-. uenza, Ww ing congh or crouy, and is excel- lent for all lung anmplalete. ” | repeated stabs io the skull with a chisel. | the unwise sometines learn, FROM THE STATES. New York, Jan. 6.—Both Houses of Con- faint picture of the eastern situation, and of what | shocks were felt in Macon, Depuyster, Lisbon, | New England bes been called to suffer on account of the war aud its consequenees, Necro BARBARISM IN HAYTIL—A_ special | telegram to the N.Y Herald confirms the report | ; vg lo | -than borrow the | | publicity was given, scarcely a day has passed | surface ot the roads, while the water is allowed | C@MMOt 40 better than borrow the language 0 of the murder of General Leon Moutes, in the dungeon at Cape, Haytien. The original report was bad enough; but, bad as it wae it left use in } { | comparative ignerance of the actual facte of the | case. The details as we new have horrible in the extreme. Kept without tood for four days, dosed with poison, smothered to the extent to which the available strength could swother him, be is only deprived of life at last by This, bowever,was not all. The brether of the murdered man, whe bad in the meantime been captured, was chained down to the bloody bed on which thes are | this deed of wickdness bad been perpetrated. | The only relieving feature in this barbaric picture is the announced fact that the parents of the ; brothers Montes have been driven to desperation, Itie to be borne in mind that this barbarity hae been accowplished by officials’ command. What is the leston?) Do we requireto siate it! Were it not for the especial bevetit of our New England philanthropists we should be ashained te do so. This is a specigaen ef vegre civilization, this is What the negro can do when Jett to govern himeelf; thisis an ilustration before hand of what ie to be expected from negre supremacy in the South. A word to the wise ts pot lost. Even God save the South from such master.@!—New York Herald. Tur Barter Crors.—A Detroit paper draws | attention to the yrowing scarcity of barley in the American market, and the unusually high | venience. prices which it commands in consequence. The crop of barley throughout Canada and the } | | Hervellon, and other little towns in Northern New York, on 3ist ult.....A letter from St. | Lawrence county says that since the recent | earthquake shock in that vicinity, to which | when similar shocks, ou u smaller scale, have not been felt, | Gatvestox, January 6.—Information has! been received here that ail the business portion | of Indianola was destroyed by fire on the 3rd, inet. Loss $100,000. No insurance. The| Custom House and fifty other buildings were | destioyed. The fire is supposed to have been | the work of an incendiary. Guess Faris, N. Y., January 6,—Informa-| tion has been received of the sudden sinking of Recluse Island, near Bolton, Lake George, | which was owned by Mr. R. Watles, of New| York. It occurred about 5 o'clock this after. | noon, accompanied by a tumultuous upheaving | of the lake. The Island and the cottage have | disappeared, and soundings on its recent site bave been found at about 85 feet. New Yor, Jan. 8.—A fire in Chicago yes- terday destroyed the Young Men's Christian | Association building. Loss $300,000.... A city of Mexico letter of Dec. 17, states that) ‘every device has been put in operation to raise | money, the first great need of the Government. | |A Manicipal Tax Law has just been issued} |which it is estimated will produce some three | millions of revenue... ..An Excise law comes) in to help also, putting a tax on every con-| Private carriages must pay $60 per year ; public conveyances $120 to $180 ; pawn- | } where inthe country, at least, have I seen stone applied in any other way ; and because our Island stone wen't do managed thus, they won't do at all. | A very sensible conclusion, certainly. Why, if apne bearing with reference to these Pro- vinees, and to expose a few prominent Free individual tastes or capacities, or consideration ‘highest and most comprehensive character, @| Tyade fallacies, is the object of the present of what knowlecge will be of most service to | Clasvical Education is, perhaps, justly deemed pamphlet.” . . ' ° ° oe ling boys, without any proper regard to their| to suit their condition, ought to be of the -—_-+ | them in their future pursuits in the world, to| indispensable, but, in almost every other in- - Nova Scotia stone were laid down after this) | Tue sub-marine ae : k }enter upon what is called “a classical course | sfance, whatever time is devoted to the study of fashion, it would break our horses legs and cut | | obsolete languages is positively misapplied. | of education.” bs lead ‘neh aes > . 7” o ar ao: "go » mer r The most talented of our District Teachers, | to Jearn, again imjure by icebergs grounding Cable between Cape Tor- imentine and Cape Traverse is, we are sorry our cart wheels to pieces in a single fall. In condemning this erroneons practice, we | T cannot see any use in Macadamizing the ¢| with each from thirty to forty pupils, or more, }on it; consequently we have had no telegrams j ' , Rika Crit { . co al! the intermediate azes between childhood | direct to this Office during the past week. to remain underncath; without a thorough system | r. George Combe, when, in one o 11S ; of and adolesence, under their care, are unequal | bl ¢ all the duti “tl ‘269 A London paper of the 7th says :—-“* A Nova ; sat; ; , Se tee | » discharge Of aii the Guties wilh respectto) . ; . : vy useless; and with a thorough syetem of drainage | phical Association, speaking of the mis-direction | to the dis 2 seit cae ot i . | Scotia six per cent. loan for £225,000 at par ; | 9s ; : : ms ic n education, (“the ianguages”’ entire- | C ° our own Island stune, and early spring work will, | of time and talent in this direction, he says :—| common . a i 8 Z "| was announced on the Sth by Messrs. Baring 5 ie i peel . | J } ‘ — y it of the question he perlorman OL) i . as I have already said, be all-eufficient. | “JT request you particularly to observe, that ly le ; a ~ aoe ny oT Brothers & Co, but intimated in the course of Che systems which I would recommend is this: | 1 do not deucusce the aucient languages and which is required of them under our present | fternoon that the entire amount hed ab | ‘ : : : ‘ ‘i 1 ailernoon a ic | classical literature on their own account, or| public-school regulations ; and they can searce- ly in th r hile the 1 : | desire to see them cast into utter oblivion. I} Corty She apting, anette lend toenct, ond let admit them to be refined studies, and think} all wet places, where possible, be thoroughly i that there are individuals who, heaving a vatura) | cal routine. of drainage, Macadamizing will be worse than | Lectures, delivered to the Edinburgh Philoso- Let all the levelling and rounding up be done ready been taken.” - ~~ =_-+- 0s ‘ ' Education, it ought to be remark-| A new Catholic Church was opened at Meri- drained, and where draining would cost too much, ) turn for them, jearn them easily, and enjoy/ed, is the leading out, the unfolding, the} gomishe on Christmas Eve. A little over let the centre of the road be dug out, say from ohare fe i orien ae een training of all the human faculties under such twelve mouths ago, the site was selected by the eae ae a a cae oon eet ‘is solely os practice of rendering aoe the | au instrumentality and with a view to such | Bishop of Arichat, ond now there stands on it |) Main substance of the education bestowed on! ends as the capaciiy of each individual, his | a building of purely Gothic order of arehitec- well brokea up, and leave it so; never cever young men Who have no taste or talent for! : stone with mud. ‘The draining ehould be done} them, and whose pursuits in life will not render ee , : ital ° something after this "itor Begin at iene knowledge ot ther a valuable scquishion.” | ney ens ¥ ere “ — ean itt cu The co" * re a of place low enough, and cut into the centre of the - Farther, as long as the present institutions | must be beneficial both to the indidviual and ) be aS Sr A eee tr? road, and follow along the saine to the end of the of society exist, some knowledge of Greek and} society. It cannot be accomplished, however, | ly attempt anything beyond a sort of mechani- | position in society, opportunities and prospects, | ture, of the dimensions of 52 ft by 32, and 18 1 . | Latin is indispensable to young men who mean! by mere training in movements and evolutions, | of aye diocese, ) regen reed bbe, Forty _ The drains hould be at least three feet | he : . a tae J 5 , 1008, | dent Catholic families of Meriyonushe. : _ | to pursue medicine, or law, as a profession. deep, and the saine width at the top, narrowing | : 4 hatte een foot at the bott Th gli | *¢ There was a time when Greek and Latin, ow oO abo one ebo é » | . . : ee om. Aten DN" as the treasure-houses of knowledge, weve just- : : : ity with stenes, none larger than a man’s fist, and | ly held in the highest estimation; but a. cation; and, in such circumstances, it is finish off the tep with tne stuff (2. e, sinall stones | : and gravel). Road drains need not be covered with earth, as there is no plowing over them. wet part. | | with whatever precision they may be pectorm- | $$ Pend The Legislature of New Branswick is sum- el. Mere precision and order are not edu- ts noi moned to meet for the “despatch of business change of circumstances has clearly altered: improbable that there should be anything which | 00 the 13th Febuary. aj -elativ alne an im “te ate ye r 44% - -a_- their re he e ‘led: and eee aa i are be r deserves the name ot mental and moral training. ;}now no knowledye reiating to the physica : <— : . . 5 5 J y i Tene. 8 ete ‘ » i aaiaitle P . 2 » frost. One idea more, and I am done, in parts where) and moral world contained in these langauges, | Our Free-Sehool System is that of State en-| the citizens of Ottawa were badly frost-bitten the spring freshete are lable to cui away the) | $200 donated by the generous hearted bishep Corp Wearner at Ortawa.—Several of i —ae--- United States seems to have been considerably A fashionable lady wrote to a friend that she | lighter than in former years, and the greater had been to hear Dickens rend Davié Copper-| part of the barley in the West bas already been fu:l and Bob Soyer. She must have been aj brought up and shipped to the Eastern markets. descendant of the worthy woman who.asw Mrs.| Barley is now worth $3 to $3 29 per bush. in Kemble io “ Katherine of Oregon” Detroit. (some Americuas, brokers from $480 down, according to their} pebeinattinasad Mails ab Cee sidds chen ig | Which does not exist clearly expressed in Eng- | dowments:; and we would here draw attention e ss ere . : | Ce ’ te th “ outs a ° r “yo . av, oe ° ° oer cece $100; gambling saloons, Si be made wide enuagh fur the winter ae ‘lish; and there is no mode of feeling or of! for what was said respecting such endowments, S48 "eC 7 oe a4 po “¢ i } ov heeryvier 5 2 oe ies neo *} cs ee 6 ice Fische ee well $480, Xe. de... -Father | ppig will cause the water in the spring to take thought subservient ao che practice! eT ef at the late meeting of the British Association, ischer, the well known confidant and confessor | gy ht ‘ has at in| tiie, that may not be as forcibly and elegantly Maximili , | the right course, as the snow always goes firat in =) , ) BMes | hela Dundee, by Dr. Stoddard, a member of of Maximilian, has at last been set at liberty, | the road broken by the horses und sleighs, and, clothed in our native language as in them |" ee . jthrough the intercession of friends, including if this was dove at the sides instead of in the ceu-/ Human institutions and practices, however, |the Royal Commission to which we have above | tre, I am confident it wouldeffect the desired end, | often long survive the causes that gave them alluded. ‘+He did uot,” he said “know by the intense cold experienced on the 2008 ult, It is feared, says the Times, that more than one will be disfigured for life. ere The pressman in the Citizen office, Halifax, | Mr. John MeDonald, bad two of his fingers } taken off by the press on Friday night. laoreet mentale HBSS oe ee IN ee. tr ms