Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

York Herald, 7 Dec 1860, p. 2

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(v‘v»‘>qh 4.’ .’...~~ ,. .. . .. «'ihglf'.*.‘*_‘7v"fil'|§"73"" T‘jfl , rr-r-A c r. .5:":".‘.;;"u~.:i-"‘> _. .‘Q‘TNM-.‘ M._:.,L._.._ an . 31-“, ...V..-._,, , put «it . .m ~-'-: v.4... after her survey of the deep sea route. The North Atlantic Cable result is not yet known. , (gr‘uuigit Shem. Antiwar. or _.‘_:‘.:_;.__.:m THE CANADIAN. l .t ~.- ' , ' PORTLAND, Dec. 5. The Canada arrived 'at 4 20 P. M. She left Liverpool at 1.30 P. M. of 22nd, and Quecnstoivn'23‘rd. Z V GREAT BRITAIN. _ The Prince of Wales has resumed his" studies at Oxford, and was received there 'A with much rejoicing.) LoNnon'DnnnY, Nov. 23. AL‘Dispatch from Naples, on Thursday, says Francis II. had burst a blood vessel _ yesterday. .A steamer arrived from Gaeta for medi~ cal assistance. . . The Queén; mother and children had -lelt for Civitta Vecchia. A h’linisterial'change in England was expected. ‘ gg'l‘be board of Trade have commenced an inquiry into the burning of the steamâ€" ship Connaught. _ The Empress Eugene was expected to return. to France by the 10th Dec. The steamship Vlgo arrived at Queens- ton on Friday morning. FRANCE. ThePi-ohibition against the exportation of corn had been abolished. g It was stated that negotiations for the cession of Venetia had commenced. ( The Empress (if-Austria arrived at Ply- mouth on Egrftlzifigzmorniiig, and was re- ‘ceivggd witlra‘plbOyal . salute. -. She was visited by the Port Admiral and ofiicials. She was expected to sail for Maderia in the evening. ' There was considerable eifcitement in Londonâ€"on the let caused by --a report: that the Emperor’NapoleOH h'ad quietly ai‘rived in England, and would reach Lon- don thatafternoon. .. The railway stations wér‘e’be‘sieged, but'it turned out to have been a hoax. 'The financial situation underwent an im- portant'chan'ge on the 21st, arrangements havi'iig been consumated‘ by which the Bank of lingland lends two millions sterling in gold, to the Bank of Fran'ce‘on security of a deposit in silver to an equal amount. The arrangements caused great buoyance in the funds and an advance in consuls, from 1{to gper- cent. . ‘ A, j i The Times city article “hopes the ar-, rangeinentwvill terminate prevailing unâ€" ceftaintics in the money market and tend_._. to pp early reductiOn of Bank rate of dis; count. , . ?;’-I._‘lie- Daily News says, Opinions are generally in favor of the measure, butit cautions thepublic against being too sap-, guine, and shows that as the drain is going onlfroin both countries this relief may be , purchased at ultimate cost and increase - Aurora Waking up; future difficulty. , ' , Strayed.â€"â€"’l'wo White Steers. The Herald‘s city article also regards -- 7 ~71 ' ~~ « . 7 ~ -- r ‘ tlze.‘measure as oxily palliative. ‘ ' NW “AdVItisemnts. VVorms.â€"â€"McKenzie. . VCheapcrthau overuT-VV. H. Martin. 1‘ioticmâ€"jBenjamin Hurd. BUSINESS Neutronâ€"This week we have commenced, to mail our apcrs with the address printed on them. .0180 the amount of indebtedâ€" nessof ‘cach‘ jm" subscription. The “figures before signify the last number “paid for, and those after the name signify the amount due. We hope our friends will attend to this and rcmil forlhwith.â€"â€" When the figures are changed, and none appear at the end, it will be an acknowledgement 'of settlementâ€"~fl very desirable result. There was no ' gold withdrawn from the" Bankon the 21st. In the discount market there was ten- dency to greater ease. Good bills taken at a reduction from Bank minimum. De- mand at Bank moderate” FRANCE. It is rumored that Count Morney in going to Home on a special mission with an autograph letter from the Emperor.â€" It is also stated that Bersigna contem- plates retiring from the London Embassy to he succeeded by walewski. ' ' ITALY' The position of affairs is unchanged add no new movement is reported. , » The clergy of the Neapolitan provinces ‘ were called to pay their homage to Victor if" i" m E navel. . . RFCIIMOND’HILL.DEC. i, ‘he cardinal archbishop 'of Naples was r L} . ‘ ’fâ€"-~ -â€" â€"â€" abOut to return to his See. Profanity- and the ‘ True_ “pica-5' rumored "that .a new Sardanian Witness.’ loan li’ad‘,_hee,n1 asked, but it‘was contra-‘ dicteil' ' , ' _ i ' ' ' ‘ The Dowager Queen of Naples, with the young Princes had arri'v'ed'at Rome. 'il‘hc French were about to occupy 'l‘eris‘ :n'cina. The Queen of Spain presented a hfllthfilVOl‘d to Gen. Goyou. It is report- -ed «that: Goyon declared he would not de- liverathe material belonging to the Dour- bon {tr-oops who took refuge in the Roman states-either to Francis Il.vvor \fictor‘75Ein- manuel. I were, however, v-..) "(on antenna 4 7, 1860, \Vn» reproduce in another column an article from the "rue Witness on, “Where are the Missionaries iwantc.cl..”.,1 It is written in reply to a communication which appeared in the fVitncss on “Profane and v,ulgai;,¢Language.” With much that the True Witness says on the subject, we thoroughly agreeâ€"e 'Our own home population is too much neglected, and as a natural sequence, vice and immorality abound;iindecd we verily believe that many of us, within a stone- throw of our very doors, can find men and. women as ignorant and degraded as can be found in the most heathen land under Heaven. Mere babes in years are often old in vicc;'and our criminal statis- tics reveal the fearful fact that our most hardened criminals sel- dom exceed the age of twenty; whilst many are the nea-rly'con- stant habitants of our gaols ere Negotiations ‘progressiiigou the subject. The Scige‘ of Gaeta continued. The thatferies of Cappaccini and Santa Agota thatl‘ been placed in a positiOn definitely to ireduce the place. The Piedmontese bom- barded the suburbs on the 12th The Neapolitan troops continued to fight re. “lately; but the defection ofstaff officers Was increasing. Col. l’ianelli had surrendered the bat- "!talion of ChaSseurs to the :Piedmontese, without further resistance. "7 Explanations are said to have been ask- ‘ed from Piedmont by France whether it .is by its sanction that Garibaldi signifies :his Intention to attack Venetia in the rspripgg .. _â€" p _: they reach the age of fourteen; '5' lie‘tplane'ttinhut-ced to Garibaldi is to ahd' fit sp‘ea];s.,i1.1 ._j{01~ :11“, genius 'UfJ ‘iand on the Dalmatian coast, get into Montenegro, raise thqpcpulation in order to compel the Austrians do ‘keep a cotisr- .derable force on tliat.sidc,mhile the Fred: .montese are busy before .Veenetia. Sardinia claims to have.disarmcd sixteen thousand Neapolitanan stile Papal terriâ€" itory; but commisioned ithe French and the nineteénth century, vwhich raises. annually millions of dollars to convert the Brahmans of India and the Cannabals of the South Sea Islands, and yet has failed to stem the torrent of crime and igno- rance at home. ‘ So far then we _ i N a t A .. H. ., . I :Sardnnan Officers were (O'SGfiffiC all ques- dgme Wllh llm “‘6 "fitness ’“VVC. :tions arising from the .entgy .ef Bourbon say to the Protestants of England, troops into liotuarrterritony. the United States and Canada. i' k convert, the Catholics, Infidels and Heathens, the world over, if you can; but take care that, whilst “ compas'sing Sea and, land to make one proselyte ” within, ye are not whited scpulchres. . But‘though admitting all this, we cannot agree, with the True Witness, who’ attributes all the moral turpi- tude to Protestantism and our Common Schools. ~The facts, as quoted from,the.Wztrzcss, we will Cronstradt stopped. not deny, as a similar articleap- AUSTRIA. pearcd in. our columns some time .. , fsrncc, written by the sump gentle- } “(film lotterfasPij-ag 0an guampteedrmbm ‘ man, whose veiacity is undoubted. - . l ‘ ./ y- 0 » I , . ) éfiggifnjlgr” seem-1:1 grilles; :ggujumi: It Is not the,_fact, thcrcfoie, that we “ if i a dispute; ll 15 the deductions which tfieac‘tionary movement‘s were at wor and it is stated that live Neapolitan pro- vinces were in a state of siege. On account of these movements the anti- AnneXationist province, Alvazzi, had part- ly risen in insurrection. "f '. 1 , ' Z . The Piedmontese had occupied ftcnaâ€" cini; but Cardinal Apt-onelli pro-tested and Gen. Gyon had intimated to. them that' _lhcy‘rnast evacuate. ' 41 Advices from St. Petersburg report the river full of ice, and the navigatiOn to > J *r» :* .n. ..__._....... a--.“ .mu-_....... "tr-'9; ‘zwi':>3.x,;-r>:- J'p'is' P ' v. - v ‘4 ‘ .7-"-â€"‘ ‘ '1 u ‘15-: i“. McClintock, has returned to Portsmouth the Catholic Victor Emanuel, Nil-i polcon, Garibaldi and Cavour, as blood thirsty cut-throats, and laud- ing the tyrannical ijg of Naples; LATEST VIA LONDONDEitfiY, yet the parties denounced as, so- educated, rememce‘r, strictly in the Catholic Faith! But again, often has the True lVilncss given status-- tics cndeavoring to prove that in Protestant communities . crime‘ abounds more than in those which are Catholic; but he very conveni- ently ignores the fact. that in these countries there are more Catholics habitauts of our gaols,in proportion than there are Protestants. This fact the Criminal Statistics of nearly every Protestant country will prove. ‘ riority of Catholic teaching as a preventative of crime. 1'VVe now come to the charge against our “Common Schools.” The '1'. ue fVili.tcss says that "this “ (swearing) is a pretty fair ope-ci- “men ofthat class,which our Com- ‘tmon Schools iconssantly vomit “ forth upon society. It is to these, “ to infidel education, that must be “ attributed the‘ contempt for God ‘° and law, which eminently cha- “ ractcrise the youth of the preSent “day, 8:0.” ' The question is,is the turpitudc of our youth to be traced to our Common Schools? We un- liesitatingly say it is not; for we confess to be ardent admirers of our schools. \Ve believe that in no country in the world is there a bet- ter system of education The best of morality is taught therein; and many who would otherwise have been ignorant, have learned to read and write and thin-k. To call such a blessing,a curse to society is clear evidence of a disordered mind.â€" Stern facts too are against the True fVitness. It is not the educated, as a rule, that fill our jails; it is those who cannot read and write at all, or at best but imperfectly. It is these that fill our prisons, and cause _. nsnecessary for the security of Germany. the Witness attempts to draw.â€"â€" 19313“- E-vcry crime that is comm?“Cd 1” a The. Bombay mail oflOOtOber 22nd liaslPl‘OLGSlant community, is by this reached England. champion of the Catholic Cliprch i atteibuted to the teachings of Pro- testantism. Notdong since an har- dened wretch was hung. who be- lieved in no future, and forsooth this Writer. naserted that it was all owing to Protestantism. But that argument Will out both ways.â€" For, we would ask. are there no crimes committed inCatholic comâ€" munities? If so, according to the logic of the True Witness, his reli, gion is the cause ofit. Look at the ' tearfulfiseenes'that have been, and. are even now. being enacted in ~lta.l‘y.~ ‘Who are the actors in these fearful dramas ‘0'f__blOod_? ‘ Why. ters at: Vienna and, Berlin aret to. change- Ualho“¢~‘-â€"§lkfll‘£ MCm'bel‘S‘Of' this :p'laces. ' ‘ ' “Holy. Religion.” An‘d‘tl'ie‘fli‘ue ' The British steamer Bulldog, Captain Witness every week is denoupcmg' The volunteer, .movement- was making satisfactory progress at Bombay. There are vague rumors of the probable early reduction of 25 per cent, onithe duties ‘on, cotton goods and yams. ' The Asaa arrived at Liverpool in.the afternOOii of the '19th, and the Boruss.a, atz‘lSduthamptori, on the‘ morning ol‘the 1.8m. ' The result of 'the Presidential. contest wasicommented on by the English press- with satisfaction. ' -'l‘he ISmpres: Eugene arrived in Scot- Thnd, and is temporarily sojourningat Edin- burgh preparatory tovisiting the Duke of, Hamilton. » , isiahnounccd that the English minis» l i out will involve the Township 111 however, that it will teach the rate- cvery lover of his country to mourn. It is not because our Common Schools are too numerous that Crime inc‘reascs.- Crime is preva- lent because there is a large class that our schools do not reach, who grow up withOut any education at all. Thus,th we want is notthe destructiOn of our noble school sys- tem, but its extension. VVe' want to. find out some method whereby these, poor outcast children can be brought within the pale of civiliza- tion. V .It would be an untold benefit to society could we bring the chil- drentfof our criminals:unwary from the seencs of vice and immorality, by which from their infancy they are surrounded,» and place them where they could get a good Com- mon School education. RelatiVe to the txvo cases given by the True fVianss, we know that one of these boys receives no very good ex- ample at home, so far as swear- ing is concernedâ€"«thus, in his case, at least, we can discover why he swears. Therefore we must have much better reasons against our Common Schools ere we con- sent to have them destroyed. >94 Vaughan Council. WE hope all our readers who re- side in Vaughan will peruse the Council minutes, as it will be seen from a resolution. proposed by Mr. Jeffery, and seconded by Mr. Arnold, that wideâ€"spread dissatis- faction, exists relative to the late survey; and a Special meeting will be called by the Reeve in a few days, to hear all complaints that may be made as to the manner in which the Surveyor has performed his duties, and we hope that any who feel themselves aggrieved will attend that meeting, of which due notice will be given. But we would recommend all to read attentively the act which has been passed, ere they weary the Council with their complaints; for if Mr. Dennis has surveyed according to the act, and fulfilled his centract,the Council can do nothing in the, matter. The act is passed, andthc contract was ac- cepted, and the work has been done, and unless it can be shown that he has not fulfilled his con- tract, the Council will not have power to remedy any evils. The fact is the people of Vaughan have only themselves to blame. They entered too liastily and stupidly into the business altogether, and the re- sult is that they have paid $2000 in hard cash for a survey, that to carry endless litigation. We hope, payers a lesson for the future; and as the time is at hand when they will have to select Councilmen for another year, we hope they wiil se- lect men who will be more careful how they spend their hard cash.â€"-â€" The rate-payers of \Vard N0. 2 are stirring; and this evening (Friday) will "meet of Maple to nominate a man to serve them. There are three gentlemen named as contes- tants for the honors, namely,â€"â€"W. Devlin, Esq, E. Sheppard and W. Cook, Esqr’s. 'VVe hope that'the friends of I each gentleman \Vf ll turn out andcom_e.to: some. ami- cable aijrangyglrnts.’ In. the other i > T'?‘ 5.1": sir-t. . -. v: at. x u rift» ,"r.....';.rr._ :4 desperately wickedare all Cat-ho- contest, ' lics, audvedu-cated ones tooâ€"and So much then for the supe-l wards, weflbelieve there will be opposition, but we have not. yet learned positively who will be the rival candidates. in Markham in some of the wards there will be a of which more in next issue. ‘i V"< * THE NAUGHTY PRACTICE or 'THROWING S'rOan.â€"--Never did the proverb about the precautions ne- cessary to: be taken by those who live in glass lieuscs~,,receivc a more striking illustrationthan recently in, the case of Eta-exchange of shots be- tween the.- heavy artillery of our two metropolitan . Cotemporarie‘s, the Globe and the Leader. The Globe insinuates indirectly, that the pro- prietor of the Leader has made an assignment of all his property to his nephew or son, (of course for dis- honest purposes.) This statement the editor of the Leader is author- ised‘flatly to deny, but gently hints that a list ‘of undischarged judg: ments lie against another gentle- iuan,whom he could name,amounto ing to $58,887.01. We presume the Globe is satisfied. , ,VAUGLITLNTCOUNCIL. THE Vaughan Council met at the Town Hall on‘ Monday, December 3rd, 1860. All the members pre- sent. The Clerk ’read the minutes of the last meeting, which approved; Bv-law No._,118, appointing Re.â€" turning Oflicers to hold the ensumg Municipal Elections. was read a first time; the Council resolved itself into a Committee of the Wholeâ€"Mr. Bridgford in the chair. By-law read a second time. , The Committee rose and re- portcd the By-law as amended, which was then reads. third time and passed Mr. BROWN moved. seconded by Mr. ARNOLD, that the Treasurer be, and he is hereby authorised to pay the following accounts, viz. : were u l! lu ‘v 2. John Noble. 49 25 3, David Troycr,. . . . . . 24 00 “ John Ston‘g.. . . . . . . .. . 12 0t) 5, David’Steel,..,.,..... 2 50 ‘ Richard Jeffery. . . .... 2 50 John Quin, for maintenance of an infirm oldman,..... ..... .... James Kyle, for maintenance of a de- serted child for 11 weeks, . . . . . . . . . 13 15 â€"-Carried. Mr. JEFFBRYV moved, seconded by Mr, ARNOLD, that the Reeve be requested to call a special meeting of the Council, on" receipt ofthe Surveyor’sr repOrt of the Township survey, to giVe those persons to 0‘ 00 ‘0 500 orrv o done byjthe survey (from incorrect information given to the Survey- 01's) an opportunity of laying their grievances before the Council, in order to have the same removed. Upon putting this resolution to the vote, the yeas‘ wereâ€"Messrs. Jeffery and Arnold ; and the Days, Mcssrs. Bridgford and Brown, upon which the. Reeve declared the resolution lost. The Council then adjourned to the last Monday in December. .4 MARKan Co‘Un'CiLnâ€"The Mark- ham Council meets at Size’s hotel, Unionvilte, on Saturday the‘ 15th instant. From the Spirit of the Age. It is matter of astonishment to every one how the traffic over this road has increased; and as it would be much greater Still were the ne- cessary facilities afforded, we take the liberty of giving a few..hints upon the subject. It is well known that the Northern has had,duringthe past season',more work than itcould do; cargo after cargo has arrived at Co'llingwood, for which there was no storage,'norisufficient hands or rolling stock to take ‘it away with~ out much less of time and conse- quent inconvenience, delay, annoy- ance, and loss to the owners: freight has thci‘chre either been left exposed to the weather, on the Colâ€" lingwood wharf, or vessels kept there for many days awaitlng their turn to be relieved of their loads; and we have it from good authority, that if there had been storage room, a sufficiency of freight would be now lying at Collingwood to keep the road employed steadilv allwin- 4‘1.-’v nv ‘F’nffi'u- . t. ,most, rigid economy and satisfac- Stion to the public. : ing road: in the province, and it‘ is a pity that sufficient facilities are not _,thzi't"thcy have frequently passed In Word No. 1. Robert Gordon,......$ll 45. whom injustice may have beetr- "W‘JTJ “' -':‘ 'i' H Z«» .Jr. ‘ "21195,. y‘ltf. , 23.135311, ~ an? .».~ .v .frfiu‘ "v-_;:. Viv}. n. _ i. “‘ " 7.1. m the. English bondhOld’ers, to shew 'pérfécted 'bfasphemy, and [M ‘raiised' thon‘rthat it is their own interest to blazekgualftllsm u“nest to the dignity of a erect sufficient store-houses to meet science ;. we'uld it not be wOrth the~while the pressing “ramsIOf the traffic.“ offlthe‘Christian Missionary to make an It cannot be a mane, of very heavy effort to counteract their influences! expenseâ€"~twenty ortl‘tirWthousand Ono“ Pom the" .we' for one?! fil'd dollars .wouj-d d0 it a” ,y and it ourselves completely in accord Witt-i the would be safer for the bondholders Montreal letnessâ€"â€"on a matter of fact, t bro 0 a e, r.‘ immp $1,] n risk viz-â€"the fearful extent to which beastly O 'l g ' y d b . ’b a and profane language obtains amongst the consequences so serious to them- ‘ rising generation. From the selVeS- Under the management 0f little children scarce able to lisp a prayer, MTâ€" Gram, lhe mad- llas assumed a you hear ,prOceeding oaths, blasphemics, condition of prosperity truly “’On- and turpitudes at which» old convicts in (Iel‘ful in so. short a Space of time ;. Botany Bay a few years ago would have évei‘y shilling it can earn he makes shuddered.â€"Likc spitting, swearing is out of it, and it is worked with the In fact, lie has Continent. »By his potvcrs of blasphemy, raised it from astute ofabsolute bankru NC to be the most )romis- . . . . . l y l American sorl; his oaths and his saliva flow from. his lips “with equal facility and with: the same inexhaustible fecundityâ€" . and to the Christian and to thefigentleinan both are ineffirbly'disgusting. \Vhy peo- ple should begin to spit and swear earlier in America than lie-rope! why they should spit and swear more emphatically in the New \Vorld than in. the Old? are ques- tions which we cannot undertake to solve. But if hard pressed for an hypotheseis we ~ should, of course, suggest the “ Common Schools” as a full and satisfactory solu- tion of the difficulty in so far as swearing is concerned. . V afforded to enable him to work out his problem to complete SUCCESS.’-f \Ve haVe been told by American captains bound for Collingwood, fleets of twenty and thirty vessels loaded to the gunwale with grain, going by- the' other route, which fwould have come by this one'i-f the requisite storage had existed at Col- lingiyood. ‘- The bondholders are risking, perhaps in ignorance, their capita*l,arrd bye-and-bye will he say ing the Canadian people degeived them- ,We have therefore deemed it our duty to: speak in time; let them take warning. This Winter shOul‘d not be suffered to pass’tvitbâ€" out ample accommodation being provided, or no man can say'the' amount ofinjury which will have been done to the Northern Railway yo in its competition for the trade of 1861. C if lfl ST MAS D A Yâ€"TI-IE OF FER,- TO l’tl ES. , [From- tlia Ecclesiastical Gauette Extra.) TORONTO, November 26,1860. To the Churchwardens of each Church throughout the Diocese. GENTLEMENrâ€"fVVlHle forWardin-g to u a resolution passed unanimously at the last meeting oi tbe‘Synod of this Diocese and- with which 1 heartily cancer, [desire to call your special attention to its bear- ' ing. It is intended that the entire sum \VHERE ARE T11]; MISSION. collected at the offertory on Christmas ‘ ' ARIES \‘VANTED 2 Day, in each year in nllChttrches, Chapels, and Stations in the Diocese,shall be given From the Montreal True Witness. ing on the absurdity and injurious effects and? respect for their Pastor. i=|’|-’€Spcctive of Protestant Missions to Romanists, and Cl and M addition to his ordinary salary South Sea Islanders; and in the columns 0r Stipend- V of our cotcmporary we find at last an answer identical in suastancc- with that Eregallon "l" BXCI'Cl-‘e it becoming ll-bCP- suggested in the TRUE VVI’I‘NESS. It is ality on the approaching Christmas festi- ed masses growing up around us that the and. fum'l‘l)’ Wthli “19 30850“ suggests- efforts of the modern Christian. Mission- ary should be displayed. This truth the atnding a donation in kind t0 Contribut- ' IVilncss at last recognises ;â€" ' ing through the offertory it will be perfectly Witness of the 5th instant,â€"â€"‘5iiotwitli- [lu’tio'fl- standing its enlightenment, vice and im. nant. their itCIIODS, to pride themselves in the the congregation» for “Well you 30‘ as apptlaf‘ionidff'fas't young men, and grey Cllurchwerden. , _ _, . . hairs are guilty of acts foul enough to Iremain, Dear Sirpyourstrttly, mantra nation: blush. Heralds of the I JOHN TORONTO Cross are sent to the remotest corners of i the earth to search out and to save, whilst at home, at any. time, and on the shortest notice, any number of veritable lieathens ma ' be con :reaated that would tax the r. .a ' uniled efforfis of a balf'a-doun Mission- lonONTO’ “lumday’ June 14" éaries.” . It Was moved by the Hon. J. Hillyard Then why not, we ask, concentrate your "Cameron, Q.C., D.C.L., seconded by \V. Missionary energies upon 'the mass of B. Simpson, Esq”, ‘ ' putrcseent domestic heathenism, i stead of SYNOD OF THE DIOC'ESE OFifl‘ORONTO. EIGHTH SESSION. l’apists to deny their faith 'f You know, the Diocese, on Christmas Day every you dare not. tandem vcrbzs, deny that year shall be devoted to the sole use of the Roman Catholic Church enjoins in her the Incumbent of the Church in which- the ’ creeds all that any of you assert as neâ€" offcrtory is made". cessary to be believed for salvation; you must admit that the Roman Catholic if he believns and practices all that his Church teaches and commands may be saved; and you know that the cant phrases about the ‘ Man of Sin,’ the ‘ mystery ofi/ziguily.’ and the ‘ mystic Baby/on," as applied to the Pope, I’opery, and the Roman Catho- #0 Church, are but evangelical common- “places, used to round a paragraph at Exe- ter Hall, but void of meaning, and defying any close critical examination. Why then not leave l’apists undisturbed until such tune at least as you shall have done some- thing towards converting the ‘ veritable heathens’ of the Protestant world, and correcting the abuses of which you give the following hideous but faithful picture under the caption “ PROFANE AND VUL- Gxn LANGUAGEiltâ€"fâ€" “ To such a degree has the prevalence of this vice attained, that many children are adepts in the practice before they have (Signed) JOHN TORONTO. ‘1 \Vb'ieb we attest, STEPHEN LET‘T, L.L.D., JAMES BoanL, M.D., Secretaries. TIIE PRESIDENTS MESSAGE ' VszmNGTON, Dec. 4th. 7 The President’s message Is now being read in Congress. The President reviews the history of the anti-slavery mouemcnt, and says all that is necessary to accom- plish the object of peace isifor the slave- holding States to he let alone, and allowed to manage their own domestic institutions in their own way. The mere election Of dissolution of the Union.. The antece’ dents of the President elect are calcula-i mouths of ' almost an American institution; which the youngest children rapidly acquire on this . as readily as by his talents for whittling ' may’you recognise a geiw.,5.9u v of the , This is a question we l‘ravo repeatedly directly to the Incumbent of the Church a at t the M '.l Vi' .‘ v ' ‘ - as a free-will off iii-r aid a token. of OH. . . . ll 0 O'mm H “2655' “he” “m” e l” l l H" =North in the cxrsting exigency, was made amongst our home heathen, amongst the "ill: and 50 enable lllél" clergyman t0 Pl‘o' ’ [horouohlv delnoralxzed and dc ~11 11‘ v " .- vide those additional comforts for himself ' . t .. D ‘ ’ L '5 lamz ‘miore National volunteers, a- light horse ‘ i O l 4 2 b (‘7'. i s Should any willing parishoner prefer ireg'mem’ 1900 “pong’mymg that u" “ in this age”â€"so says a writer in the in accordance with the“ spirit of the» reso- a _ You will be kind enough to cause this . morality seem to a great degree predomiâ€" communication, to be circulated as exten- ‘ 'J‘housands orf‘our youth seem, by sively as may be among, the members of . ' ‘ . . ,lineate its features in detail. That the offertory of the respective 1 frittering them away in efforts to induce congregations of the Church, throughout ' any man to office is not a just cause. for a ' reached their teens. The meeting of two or three boys in the streets is the signai for commencement, aml our ears are pollu- ted with oathsta'nd profanity which make us shudder. Avfew, weeks ago the sons of a Minisier and a ,Magistrate met, a few miles North of Toronto, to see which could outswear the other (the surrounding youngsters we presume were umpires).”â€"â€"- Monlreal :l’Vitncss,'5th inst. Most properly the writer refrains from divulging the name of the Minister whose son was one of the parties to this blasphe- ming match; but if the truth were fully made known, we would lay a wager that fed to excite fears in South Carolina, but is thequestion of contingent danger suffi- cient to justify the destruction of the Gov- ernment. Ile reviews the acts Of differ- lent Northern States in the passage of personal'liberty bills and pronounces them unconstitutiOnal. ' He says that it should not be presumed In advance that the Preâ€" sident elect will fail to enforce the fugi- tive slave law, as this would be unjust and contrary to Christian charity. Let us wait for the overt act. He then declares against the right of‘Secession, and says to admit it, the Union might be broken into fragments in less than . two weeks. If e ‘wise flow through this channel,may locked, up. in: thisundertaking. A representation ofithese facts should the leading men in: Collingwood” "and, other parts of the country, to the wcrthy man is an uncompromising fee of Popery, and an earnest supporter Of ‘ ltlissions to the Romanists,’â€"-so intent upon the latter object as to have no time to spare for the conversion of his hopeful son, his own flesh and blood. For the same reason,'piobably, our modern philan- thropists give no heed to the signs of the times, of which our cotemporary gives the following as a specimen :â€" "‘ Two young men meet, and he' who crowds the greatest number of oaths in the shOrtest sentence is considered a pretty fair specimen of Young America.” And, we may addâ€"~21 pretty fair speci- men of that class which our ‘ Common Schools} whether in Canada or in the United States incessantly vomit forth upon society. It is to these, to infidel educa- tion, that must be attributed the disregard the centetnpt wfor God and law which emi- nently characterizethe youth of 'the pre- sent; day. ‘ Out of the mouths of babes fer. But an immense trade has boon lost to the line from the fact that this accommodation was wanting.â€" Now, Such being the case, are not the English bondholders standing in their own light by neglecting to provide it? Is there nOt danger that a tradc,or at. all events a large portion of it, which would other- be diverted permanently into oth- ers? ‘Vc think fhere isâ€"â€"ind'eed, we know there is,for we have heard the captains of American vessels say‘ so ;‘ and surely something should be done to avert so serious a calamity from those whose money bcimadc by. the Board, and also by quotes the language of Jackson and Madi- son: Secession is altogether founded on an interference not in. the constitutionâ€"â€" the Union was designed to be perpetual. He then quotes the constitution in supâ€" port of this view. _ The framers of the" coiistitution never intended to plant in its bosom seeds for its own destruction. They ‘- were not guilty of the absurdity'of pro- viding for its own dissolution. The right of resistance against tyranny and op- pression cannot be denied. This right is asserted in the declaration of independence but seceSsion is not either more nor less than revolution. He speaks of the affairs of South Carolina. He does not appre- hend that an attempt will he made to seize the fort, but if in this he is mistaken, the, Officers have orders to act strictly on the' defensive. Let the responsibility rest on the heads of those who provoke the con- test. He invokes his "countrymen to pause before attempting to destroy the fits.’ rte argues, that Congress can do! much to restore peace by proposing and recommending an amend-intent to the co n- stitution for remedying the existing evils. The Very coarse he recommends is to ha ve an explanatory clause or amendment of the slavery question : First, expressly re- cognizing the right of property iii-clayey in States where slavery now or may here- after exist. Secondly, the duty of pro- feeling such rights in all the coming ter- ritories until the latter are admitted as States in the union; thirdly, a like we‘- cognition‘. "‘ ' _.___...¢ SOUTHERN INTELLIG aNCE‘. McLuhan-Vince, Dec. 1., In the flow.) to day, Mr. spraybmy} of Caloosa‘, moved to amend the ref-Ilia? tory bill as follows :‘ , ‘ Ard whereas a- compact broken by one party is no longer binding politically, soci~ ally, legally or morally upon the other" parties to it; " And whereas, in the Opinion of the General Assembled of Georgia, the Staten “ enumerated in this bill haw: grossly viola:r I ted the compact of the Union by,.refnsing.;_z.. to deliver up fugitive slaves ;. Be it enacted that. the State Of Georgia; ‘ " withdraw its confederated faith' front all the States which interpose obstacles to the‘. recovery of Our rights under the Constiv . tution. ' And it is hereby further enacted andldev clared that all the officers of this State,» civil or military, who have taken the'oatlv to support the Constitution of the Unitedi States are relieved and absolved from thq . obligations of such oath in all cases in the: - courts of this State where the States who refuse our constitutional rights are parties- V or otherwise concerned. , ., Mr. «Sprayb-erryh amendment was, 10st,. v ayes 36â€"n-ays 89. " The retaliatory'hrll then passed the House. ‘ l\’liLLEDCf£VILLI§, Ga., Dec. 4. In the House today. the preamble and resolutions proposing a conference of the: Southern States at Atlanta, on the 20th, of February, to counsel and advise as to the mode and manner of resistance to- the? the special order for to-m‘orrow. The preamble and resolutions fake strong 1 trust {pm me “mums” of and, con. grounds in favor of having all sectional- questions finally settled, and. objects to separate action. Governor Gist has received a letter from Major Lee, commanding the Balti- reginrent aas unanimously resolved to sup- port with: their lives, any State or States- in secession from the “cursed-dengue. and tendering their services in the event of coereion. - .10th B. Go~ucn._.â€"â€"â€"'l‘he Rochester Express thus speaksof this eminent Ora: ’ y . ‘33 if)” T'"‘)“" _ r ' I: To sketch the tenor of one'of Gong‘w_ passronatc speeches is as hopeless an effort,“ as to trace the. path of a t'empcSt on the waters. \Ve realize the grand effect in' the lifting and: lashing Of the, waves, but we cannot- follow the soccessive impres- sions which wrouglit‘lhe' foam and the surge, and- heaped- the billows up so high. And it is almost as difficult to desoribe one of those speeches as a whole, as to de- Commenci- ing with a splendid vindication of the christian consistency of total abstinence as a principle of tempera-nee reform, the lecturer launched out upon a wild career of argument, illustration, narrative,anecv dote and eloquent appeal, of which no- conception can be given. Leaping from; _, oint to point of his topic, now portraying. he bestia-lizing effect of drunkenness npon. :upon the individual drunkard, now summing up the hideous enormity of its curse upon the w0ild, now represunting the insidious ‘growth of the vice until it reached its mas- tery, now crushing with overpowering weight of the logic of experience the arguâ€" ments of the moderate drinker, now pac- sionately abjuring young men to shun the temptations of the destroyer and now Thundering in- the ears of the Christian world his demand for universal aid in over- coming the great dragon vice, he seemed to grow more and more passionately Vip- spired‘ wrth eloquence as he proceeded, un- til the words of his peroration were fairly electric in their thrilling power. The greater part of his illustrations, which constituted- more of the speech than'ab- stt‘flct arguments. were drawn from his own experience in the field of temperance. effort, and therefore possessed the greater‘h vi-vidness and striking power. He spoke about two hours, and held the audience almost breathlessly enchained to the last sentence of the speech. ‘ ,t j v . .v ¢~ The Chatham Planet says» that on Saturday last an extraordinary fall of' sncw took place on the line of the Great Wés‘t- ern Railway, in the vicinity of Longwood Station. So deep was the snow that'the daily express was unable to make headway through it, until despatches were sent to London for two additional locomotives. III/1th the three engines the train was after much difficulty, enabled to proceed. It arrived, however, at Chatham at: about 4. o’clock Sunday morning, although, due here at a few minutes past '7 p. m.' the prev vious evening. The snow, we are told fell to the depth of three feet. At Chaitham there was no sign of snow to be seen. f' Official information just received from Utah represents the Saints in higlrglee over the prospects of disunion and Mor- ,mon claims to have prophesied the present con- dition Brigham Youhg independence. of things; that the Lord would overthrow the dfiSpOllel‘S and deliver'ihis chosen people. ' There was-a rumor. in London that“ do- mestic difficulties caused, the Emprbss Eiugenic’s journey to Scotland, and the gossips even said she left unbekno‘wnflto Louis, and with the idea of procuring a divorce for him i The cockneys say no lady would have taken a cab,Wh¢:n she and :ucklings these Gammon schools have union which has conferred so many bene-. might 11a" bad 3 Selllcel “ flirt, s

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