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Ottawa Times (1865), 9 Aug 1875, p. 2

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i8 +4 #% NO OLD ADVERTiSEMENT® INS®RTED IN Ti Pic Nic Postponed â€"Bank Street { Authorised Discount.â€"J. Johnson. uTTaWA, MONDAY, aPGUST 4 ltes The attention of our read rected to the importint introduced intorthe Collegi and the Nationa as Uttawa is concerne able liberality of the 1 who are &1 x High s suaded ralicn® This a ~chool temdance of qualihed pupiis WNOn NC ~chool apens alter the summer holidays, Many of pur citisens, who have alway* taken the doepest interest in the progress of higher education, contend that Je serving bays have in the past been pracâ€" tically exoluded from the Collegiate Instiâ€" tute on account of the fees. A fair opportunity is now afforded of testing in the most satisfactory manner how much of trath there is in the contention ; aud we have little hesitation in expressing our belief that in the immediate future the attendance at the Schooi will be doubled, as the result of its doors being thrown open freely to all pupils who of course come up to the required standard. There are in our midst many parents alive to the great benefits of a thorough education for tmeir children; and now that such is placed within their reach they will doubt less axail themselves of the opportunity, by doing which they wil} demonstrate a> once the success which the promoters of free education anticipated. The second change to which we direct attention is, that girls are in future to be admitted to the School. In the ricket)} wretched building in which the School exercises were conducted in the past, the admission of girls was simply an impossiâ€" bility ; now everything which can temd to their convenience and comfort, and the proper se, aration of the sexes has been prominemtly kept in view im the internal construction of the new building. We are informed on the very best authority, that at the several examinations held in this city, for the admission of Public school pupils to the Collegiate Institute, a very large number of girls passed most creditâ€" wbly. All who psssed such examinationâ€" successfully, are now eligible for admission to the Collegiate Institute, and we hope to see many of them making this privilege available. In other cities large numbers of girls are taking a tull High School course,. Toronto, ter example, has more than ons hundred girls in her Collegiate Institute, fitting themselves for teaching, or merely receivimg a superior English education without haviug any special professional object in view. tand in Deeming, the subject of grave impor‘â€" ance io the retepayers of the city, who in future will have to provide the funds necessary for the efficient maintenance of the School, we gladly through our colâ€" umus call the attention of ail interested to these changes and sincerely hope that the cew arrangement will materially aid in raising still further the alre dy high and well earned educational status of the Uttawa Collegiate Institute. ow Advertisements The coming into effect of the Insolvent: Act passed by Parliament at its last Ses sion imposes upon the Government tho appointment at an early day of Official Assignees, The new Act becomes law on the first proximo, and one of its chiel provisions is that an Oilicial Assigneee or Ufficial Assignees, or Joimnt Ufficial Asâ€" signee shall be appointed in and fof every County. We believe it to be toler=‘y well known that the gentlemen who pire to the appointment ‘have done Lue share. It needs not be feared that the Government will be at a loss for candiâ€" dates. Of course our remark in this respect is not made from any local knowâ€" ledge, mor is it intended to convey any personal â€" reference whatever, but is founded merely uponâ€" the assumption that â€" Government â€" appointments, _ of which it is known months in advance that they must be made, never go a begging In this, as in the crdinary cases of vacancy in public eflices, the difticuity will asâ€" suredly be not to fiad gentlemen abunâ€" dantly able and withal willing to serve the public, but to make a selection trom the many eligible candidates who will have thoir claims vigorously backed up by political and other influences * tes, should not pa ialhty to the extent 0 his anomaly has beer ire th THE INSOLVENT ACT AND THK APPUOINTMENT OF OFFIC!IAL ASSIGNEES. The Act, as has been seen, provides for the appointment of an Assigneo, or Asâ€" signees, or Joint Assignee, 1t is probable that at the outset (although in this maiter we do uot write -'nh_(,u_thcitn one apâ€" pointment for each county will be made. If such will be the case, and so long as no further appointments are made, the diffiâ€" qulties we are about to anticipate will Andrew‘s Societyâ€"D. C. Robertson i harmon nalOu ot oTTaWa COLLEGTAT & INSsTITUT E. on the other, alous that t 13 C il pet Selhoos â€" i ise H I‘tu he way of any w vreat advantace â€"8t. Patrick‘s Literary As t Laonsâ€"Auai lu Lrik at lis h lia ite Instit increased at is when the @siale vish to lantl y 1°% 5 >miule ux be High ch itY efl not ariSe which estate had come into his hands, bis resiâ€" dence, place of business, and the nuture othis trade or business, the amsunt of liabilities and assets, the amount of diviâ€" dend or composition, with & variety of other particalars. _ This register will be apen to the inspection of the public withâ€" in office hoars at the office of the Official Assignee. ‘lhe Assignee who may be appointed by the creditors, and to whom, t appointed, the Official Assignee must smrender the estate, is required to preâ€" pare this register, and when the proceedâ€" ng is closed _lt)‘ the distribution of the »state and the discharge of the |psolvent, lhe shall deposit such register in the oftice ot the Oiticial Asstngee, That of course is all clear sailing, since there is only one real object, t atatistios. 1 Assisgnee is i shewing t nsolvencies #i there, however, bae iwo or *more nfraal â€" Assignees, as the law providesl ucis imay be, and it at ance beconres & uestion of interest, with whoum, A. B. or \, shall the p'l‘-‘“\: roâ€"istor be found ? iJ has an office, and it will be the in: mq=t of each to precure all the buginess osgible. Each will be bound to keep & evister of the Inso|vents who have gone hrough his hands. _And when the public cumire to make the register available, huwee or more search»s may have to be malo instead ot one. _ The preliminary mo cedings in «all gases will be taken by he @ilicial Assizgnee, ‘Then, in many case~, the Creditors will appoint their »yn Assignee. The result must be that paut of the reco:d of any given insolvency v.li be with the OtHcial Assignee, A, while ie Assignee who â€" has _ had _ the wmurmling up of the estate may deposit the other part of the record with Official Assignee B, far as we are able to see, the purposes of & public register and the The following appointments appear in the official Gazette of Saturday :â€" .Jolin W. Burke, of Ingonish, N. S., has beea ap;{:inted receiver of wreck, vice S. C. Campbell, who has moved from the limit«. o o week in that " of the _ G. B. Hadley, of Port .\(ulinve, N. S., has been appointed Port Warden for said port. 0j The Bili decreeing the divorce of W. J Peterson, of Guelph, from his wife, pu-ed last session, and reserved for Her Majesty‘s held by law is $90,048.23. The balance at the credit of depositors in the Governâ€" ment Savings Banks on May 31st last, was #4,121,169 66. Mr. MacCabe, | Normal Sehool, has a } Milit _ Authorized discount on American in voices 11 per cent. The schedule of fees to be collected under the new act respecting weights and measures is published. Notice is given that _ application will be made at the next session of Parlia ment for an act to incorporate "the Midâ€" land Bank of Canadh," head oftice at Rowmanville. â€" t Notice is given.that by an order of His Excellency the Governor General in Counc l bearing date the 19th May 1875, the Tarit® of 'l‘ffih on Dominion canals was amended and mo lified as follows, viz : _ 1. Bricks, clay, sand, cement and water lime to be added to class 3 instead of lecision, has been mssented to, and the livorce made legal. class 4 2. Under head of Standard for estimatâ€" ing weights all reference to the bushel to be omitted in respect of grains. 2000 lbs avoirdup is (or 20 centals) to constitfute the ton weight. The ~haughraun was presented at this place of amusement on Saturday night, to the largest and most feshionable auâ€" dience which has greeted this oo:::rnny since their return to Ottaws. ‘This closed the two weeks‘ engagement of the troupe, i «1 its many friends were present. to show their appreciation of &e eftorts made to amuse them during their stay. It is unnecessary to describe the plot of the play, as it was offered to the public here several times at the previous visit of Mr. McDPowell and his talented comâ€" bination. Each part was: sustained with credit, every member receiving a perfect ovation of applause, which was deservedly merited. The only thing to be regretted is that the wuke scene ehould have been omitted, to the disapmmt of every one present,. At the c of the rul‘om- anee Mr. MeDowell in response to loud and continued calls made his appearance and thanked the audience for the |liberal p&tr\uufo rccorded him, aud also for the uniformly kind treatment extended to the members, both on and off the stage. lie purposes, he said, returning to New York to, form and roorgnar:mtm comâ€" pany, and, hoped that he would meet with as warm a reception on his return here in the Fal!. Several of the memâ€" bers of the troupe leave in the course of a day or so to fullill engagements.for the ensuiug theatrical season in the United Staies. A Marine girl left her clothing in an open b“llll:“hid her:;lf,nfidh:“:n‘::r parents were crying # y o lad d Lace Thoy mouly Saey ns slighes i c :fln-t;uh,nhonppcu'ddud said she ha Notes in circulation for the week are t at $10,830,234,21. _ The excess of ccie over the amount required to be ld by law is $90,048.23. The balance vi@W MacCabe, Principal of the new al School, has. avrived in the city, ollowing from the Presbyterian Witâ€" { Nova Scotia, speaks of his succcess at Province:â€"* Mr. J. A. MacCabe, he Normal School, has been appoint: ‘rincipal|of a new school at Ottawa. e ftccepll the new situation his lGss be severely felt, as he is a universal purite at Tiurg, at the school, an 4 he i host of admirers among the teachâ€" of the Province, who in times past a sat under hi~ in<tiuction." nel Powell, Adjutant General of , returned to the city on Saturday g alter an absence of a couple of in the west, The Colonel looks he better of his outing. We THE CANADA GAZETTE GoWwAaN‘s OPERA DuUSE. acainst hi CIRUULATION AND SPECIR he WELIGHTS ANI the Aot are DIYVORCE DECREE. , what ap the event ol the DE ntention of the Act rosume to _ beo _ t« rosunic NOTICES An exe€ ‘official, wo MEASU RES ) be eilectually 20 m alyont whose tien . of be the vency O‘Connell â€" Gentennial of not RELIGIOUS SERVIEE Concert and Banquet, Speeches, &c., &c. It is much to bo regretted that unfayâ€" orable weather should have interrupted the sports projected on a scale of granâ€" deur never before equalled hexe, which were gxed to take lflafe on Friday last, the centennial of the birthday of the illustrious _ Daniel ~ ©‘Connell. It is now â€" more â€" thin â€" six _ weeks _ since the Irishmen of this city began to hold their meetings, collect subr scriptions, â€" and make the â€" necessary arrangements to have the celobrat‘on here a Atting homage to him so justly styled the Father of his Country,in keeping with their high position amongst the other nationalities of the Dominion, and worthy to hold a prominent place in the multiâ€" tudiuous tributes to his memory, which were on that day offered by Irishmen and their descendents all over the world. On the grounds at the Toot of Elsin street, and on the Major‘s Hill every preparat ion bad been made for entortaining the thous ands expected to bo present. ef.eshment booths, stands, and dancing â€" plaormns had been erected ; bands were there, as well as famous athletes brought to the city specially for the occasion ; balloon ascension, orations, ind a pyrotechnie dis play had beenrgrovul\ul for, but all to no purpose. Hardly had the day‘s sport begun when a drenching rain, i geonuine Kerpeudicular down pour, set in which wd the effect of at once driving the more gaily attired and fairer of tho sox preci p tately off" the grounds. ‘Their sterner compunions engrossed in the â€" gamos, the _ music, and the _ sights, and ciinging : to _ a _ fond _ but _ vain hope that fair wearher might evontually prevail, remained, availing themselves ol such scant ghelter as they could lind, of manfully braving rain and wind ; but the elements had the best oi it n the un The Day‘s Amusements. p tately off the grounds,. ‘Their sterner compunions engrossed in the . gamos, the _ music, â€" and _ the _ sights, and ciinging : to _ a _ fond _ but _ vain hope that fair wearher might evontually prevail, remained, availiny thomselves of such scant ghelter as they could lind, or manfully braving rain and wind ; but the elements had the best oi it m the un equal contest, and summaiily put Lo rout even the most ardent of the male pleasure seekers, land, put an end to the sporis, During _ the morniny the _ woather was sultry, with an easterly wind, and large crowds in holiday attire might be seen wending [their way to St. Patrick‘s Church and the Cathedral, where the day‘s pn;co;d'l;é; wore very 'Appmprinl.ely opened with services, of which the follow. ing is a complete report :â€"â€"â€" THE SERVICE ATO ME CATHEDRAL. An immense conregation assembled at the Cathedral to wituess the grand cereâ€" monies. After Mass was celebrated the Rev. Dr. O‘Reilly delivered a Sermon, which for depth of thought and elegance of diction we have seldom heard equalled. Yesterday was the auniversary of a scene in my lifeâ€"time never to be forgotten; exactly twentyâ€"eight years ago 1 was in the crowd that followed the deceasedâ€" though immortal literator, to Glasnevin Cemetery. â€" Whilst I wept for an individ~ ual lossâ€"for O‘Connell was a friend of our familyâ€"I little dreamt that in the evolu« tions and vicissitudes of time that I should bave come from missionuy labots in the wilds of South America, to stand toâ€"day in t:e Cathedral of th s city and before the enlightened L»eople of the Capita] of Canada to preach the Centenâ€" nial panegyric of Ireland‘s Liberator, It bas been my honourable lot to adâ€" dress large audiences in this country on Science and Archcelogy and topics of local interest, (but this is the first time I have been associated with the cause of my country;) thou:gtl:"king de th of thought and fire of ad proudly do | appreâ€" ciate the honour of representing the exiled children of Ireland, in echoing from the heart of this vast continent the theme of praise that occupies the atten tion of so many millions toâ€"day. _ The church commemorates in her liturgy the memories of the departed who were great before God ; our enthusiasm or ferâ€" vour as we gather around their altars varies with our appreciation of their ment or our hope olP Saeir intercession, but to â€"day, without the declaration of sanc‘ity from the infallible See, without the motive of intercession, I ln‘aold a nation that claims tne lymgtt.hiea of the world, kneeling around the sltars of christianity to com memorate the memory of her Liberator. The cathedral doors are thown open, the great amd learned of the land come in holiday attire, the mujestic organ I»onll rorth its soul stirring chords, and the priest standing at the altar, that dazsles with gold and light, chants as on great festivals the mass of thanksgiving, surely we would be struck with moral blindness if we did not recognize in this celebration that Ireland is not only in power in the land but her cause is sacred. wl My bordLRov. Fathers, and dearly beâ€" loved brethren, theâ€"religious principle that animates us in this celebration is fi::nudo, the gratitude of a nation that s down in humble recognition of that Providence that through The instrumenâ€" tality of O‘Connell removed the bars from the closed church dsore of Ireland, and led a people bleeding in the thraldom of persecution to the consolations of a free sanctuary. n ens ‘There are names em lazoned on the aunal : of civil greatnessâ€"ol men who, in a brilliant career of military uiunqr»h, in creased the wealth and influence of their country; but the sun of their glory has lovg since set beneath the horizon of time, leaving the records of their fame to the dull mu‘:lo that adorns the public squares of their native cities, or to the students who lose to pore over the mouldy tomes of the history of the past ; the _ Wellingtons, ;the Nulpoleon-, the Sobieskis, and heroes of revoâ€" lution and political tri:::f)h. whose names are written in bl on pages saturated with the tears of the widows and the orrlun, pale into the insignificance of stars that twinkle in the sunlight when contrasted with the ever green memories of the immortal Liberator o% Ireland, whose name calls forth from millions of the Irish race, and their sympathisers in every land under the sun, a hyron of naâ€" tional congratulation asd religious joy. _ Ireland has invited to her venerable capital the exiled children of her bosom, scattered by w&rmm"al destiny to rule the new world, that have sprung up a‘ her. antipodes ; in the pomp and -;Songour of a pational festival, before a galaxy of learned pnhtfi anml with the thunderâ€" ing eloquence of her most gifted ohildrux‘; she pmolnh po:.b.t;;: thesion ullo the -glrl | and the polic t won the emancipaâ€" tion o f her fzith. Like the unduh&i of an earthquake, whose central shock has been felt in the British Isles,the celeâ€" bration of. this Centennial, springâ€" ing from our reverence to the eterâ€" nal â€" laws ‘b:‘f justice spreads â€" with wave gathers itical . force In its transit over mfim of the earth ; it rollsâ€" through the cities of Eu: rope and shakes to their foundations thrones of anncu who still persecute the Cl in hy / Lare: Nen (Bitlnte: dud my We A 4 dearly aand brethren, in this beautiful Canada of ours, so rloh,mdognthem;i' tu ts stupendous devslopments of neturt in s.nod, the. greatâ€"spirit that terrified the ritish Senate into *justice,; and: tore in shre:ls its penal edicts against the Church of God, we identify ourselves with a nation that rejoices in its successful efforts to shake off the thraildom of s hundred yearsâ€"to greet in the A*D SERMONS, THE TIMES l at anco of her hopes the sunrise of her liberty bursting through t.he‘ Ldp{k 'cloud-’ that heret her future, LPOT PWTTCCT It is said the Irish hbarp can breatho the tones of joy or sorrow as '.lmg are folt by the operator. . Varied and chequerad tho tune of our national sentiment as rung out toâ€"day in the writings and u‘:oohes of _ the â€" enthusiastic «ons of Erin ; from a thousand platforms thare come to us the echo of a mighty reâ€" ttainâ€"that like the giant rivers around us at one time sigh in the gentle ripple of a current then from the majestic flow of deep waters rush by in the thunder of their rapids. Which of the ohpldl of our deep waters rush by in the thunder of their rapids. â€" Which of the chords of our national harp shall wo sweep in praise of the immortal Liberator? â€" Shall we catch up the sight of ‘t.he‘ filnigyanf wl:‘q l%o}n across the bleak Atlantio to his Erin mavoutneen, and weep in futile tears over the destinies that have separated us from the land of our fathers ? Shall we strike the thundering chords of the martial strain, and launching forth the pent up feelings of our national indignatio 1 quaff in fancy the bloody cup of revenge and tho unchristian foeling of retaliation on the oppressors of our country ?â€" Shall we enhance the praige of our hero by telling, My Lord, Rev. Father and dear breth ern, where rocks are known to be in the undercurrent of the stream a prudent piâ€" lot must steer the bark. St John has got on his sacred escutcheon, the eagle that soars mloft to the sun, intimating the sublimity of thought with which he commenced his gospel ; we too will soar on the eagle wings of fancy to the sun of another cen tury and contéomplate to the lprrobatlon of every class and every party what it is destined to shine on in the ultimate triâ€" umphs of the spitit, and the policy of the immortal O‘Comnell. _ _ ' as on beads, each link of the galling chain of penal enactment which he with glant hand tore from the shackled form of Krin? _ _ 0 0_ __ 8 fs ‘The dealiags of Qod towards men scem to have changed. ‘ In the reve led history of the pravidence of Giod over the cradle of humanity we ave struck at the visible ind intimate alliance that existed between tho Creator and the croature. â€" Thea was the God of their armies ; his angels were scen fighting in the battle field Ijlinlt the enemies of his people ; pondering over the catasvrophe of the Red se, the prolonged day of Jostun, the tragedy of ® llulufcmes", the burning or Sodom and tho Nlaughter of Sennacherib, w6 miss the rule of terror from the dispensations of the new covenant ; the thunders of indignation aro silent; the arrows of vengeance are quivemf ; no angels fight our battles; no prophets are sent to smite with a rod of iron. Providence sleeps like the Saviour on the bark ; the storm of persecution rages around. ‘his church and his people, one crushed under a woight of human sorrow to the last moment of endurance when he hoars ‘the expiring ory of his perishing children, ind commands the calm â€" For three cen:â€" turies the Christians of the early church wept and prayed_from the orypths of the eternal city but not until their enemies had raised monuments to commemorate their aunihilation did LHe send a libera tor »:ith the triumphant forces of the ‘Lavbarum thundsriag dowa tho sides of tho Alpe. ‘Through a teng dark night of thige _ centuries ~ of _ persecution â€" Ireâ€" land _ wept _ over | her _ rifled _ saneâ€" tuaries â€" hor â€" blighted _ hopes â€" when through a fissure in tii~ heavens that seemed to be made of bronze, there came the murmur of pity. " The ory of ‘the children of Israel ascended unto me, I have seen the affiictions their omolm pressors heap upon them." As the umph of Constantine gave civil and reâ€" ligious liberty to the persecuted Christians 1 o‘gold, so the great Emancipation connecâ€" ted ‘with the name ol this day‘s celobraâ€" ‘fion was the providence of Grd giving relief to the suttering children of Ireland. country to her rightful position ammong the nat®mus of the earth. Then our religion was held anathe ua : to profess it was to be an outlaw ; to obtain the franchises and enoluments of the State it was not only necess ry to deny the consoling dogmas of the Catholic Church, but it was required to curse them: with oath on the'-wrfi (Gospel as damnibleé and idolatrous. * T Jew that crucified our Saviour; the Mussulman that swore by the coffin of Mahomet, and biasphemers, like Voltaire and Proudhon,were to give us a new â€"fangled religion for our Christianity, a Koran for our Biblo. Deprived of education, of property, of freedom, Ireland writhed in the agony of degralation under the tyranny that overshadowed her. ___ _ . . . _ Our heart has bled over the jpicture of Ireland‘s misfortunes, when Q‘Counell was sent as another Moses to lift our prostrate ~ At length her hour cartie;, ~not that‘she shook off, ‘like another Sampson, the bonds of the harlot, but liberty cane like the gentle heat of the sunrise that dufi: the mhu:nf:? morass.â€" â€" So gréat the trium emangipation . i r*nd that history has cast it into fli'o’fio‘{nuii of the supernatural.‘ To the energy, ,the perseverance and the eloquernce of one man is attributed the most marvellous v‘ctory on record. . * Refore Q‘Connell," v‘cto record. . .# Refore Q‘ all," says rc:i?lnn in his Sfiqg‘:'fm:fi " were arrayed political interests, the supremacyjof property, national .Mlplth‘y. the oppo;ffion ol' crowned nyd:y‘.l::l;, and the bittereligious acrimony of a selfâ€", interested heresy that was rooted in the aoil for three hundred years, mistress of the lands, of the funds, of the navy;Of the: army, of the Parliament ; in fine, against him were arrayed all the power of wealth, of error and o* hell. Before this leviathan force of evil there stood a private indiâ€" vidual, poor-â€"wizhout'i;mpocpâ€"bdong- ing to a nation of ‘slaves and ‘a tramâ€" led people; an individual whom even !:il own people ‘ raccused of rashness and madness, whom some tgunted with amhition, others with fanaticism, scoffed at, threatened, yet that -in{:.m, that simple citizen, strong only in his eloquence and sustained by bis religion, shook to .ts foundation the throne of the persecutor and wrested from them the emancipation of their Catholic subjects." ‘That colossal power,that sway od the destinies of nations, on whose flag the sun never sets, which puled the armies and controlled the comâ€" merce of the warld was conquered by O‘Connell. â€" At the commeacemsnt of this century the victorious leader of the French armies i ad mapped out the world like another Aleumior for his conquest. His puq:n tions for the invasion of the British Is:es were vast and comprebensiveâ€"never before and paâ€"hngs never again shal be disâ€" played such an array of military &wor and genius, yet from a rock in the South: ern Atlantic there comes the sigh of blastâ€" ed ambition, and the exiled emperor asks the trees in the grove of Longwood the‘ cause of his downfall.â€"" W#s it fate or was it Ney." _ History, my Lord, Reverand Fathers, and dear brethern, history pro:laimn the ltartllr'lgl oo(?‘ u:hu without a campaign 0/ without one armed follower, O‘Connell trinmphed where Napoleon faiiod; by the power ‘of his eloquencé and the eternal .justice of his â€"cause he established for fly"eu- a speâ€" cies of dictatorship in the affairs of Engâ€" laud. With all her wealth, her armies and her invincible navy she quailed un: der the look and voice of Ireland‘s horo. Never was the British throne more huwmâ€" bied than when U‘Connell stood over its imbecile monarch, in 1823, and made him sign the Act of Emancipation. ‘The kmf. must have felt hims~If but a puppet in tho forse of circumstances when he ‘#"x‘f"nr«“"“““- ing i'fn“""‘,t..a..“ oo Te elli 18â€" Sn ‘ am dean of Windsor." Doubtless this was one of those startlingâ€"events which the prophet of old said would not be believed when related when related to posterity,â€"Opus est in diebus nostris quod nemo, cna'c: narrabitur‘‘«=( Hobocue). sert "It was a great, a stupendons fl", writes a oontel:rnq historian, to. h. ve. awakened a w nationt mz dw ds if dead,to have braved the f â€" ds if dead,to have braved the greatest chief â€" tain of the greatest erapire E the : world, toâ€" have â€"conquered tie national the political and the religious prejudices of the soiemn pledge given or inaplied passing of &unhn. nor the m:‘-“d. Enf'umn' ; to have % noipa ":&’“ Catholies of Ireland, whose ge:h.-r &h‘o fears of thao;lo’?innnt party urin a nor the solenn pledge given or naptedâ€"atthe heretofore shrouded the horizon of OTrawA, MONDAY, AUGUST 9, is75 degt the maxims of toleration, nor the appeals of the most enlightened men, nor the eloâ€" uence of Gratton and of Plunket, nor 3\9 claims of humanity, nor even the licy of selfâ€"protection could wrest from F:)glnnd ; to have acquired in the British Senate, on hostile fimund, and in the deâ€" clino of life, an influence like that which he was accustomed to wield over his own millions : to have turned out of one ministry and kept in another; to have made, proud and untameable members of the nobility, stagger and writhe, and like the barbed shafts of an eloquence cradled amongst the wilds of Kerrx â€"all contribute to render the career of O‘Conue!l the most extraordinary, and his trimmph (withâ€" out parallel in the annals of time." By what means did O‘Connell effect these trimphs ? Must it not have been a supernatural power that enabled him to leyy countless multitudes in peaceful insurrection, heaving like the bosom of the deep under the storms of human pasâ€" sions, checked and guided like a frightâ€" ened steed struggling against the reins to plunge hgad}oyg into de-t.rqct.ion t f ~ The principles of U‘Connell were based upon the Catholic teaching, therefore their triumph over every oppositionâ€" therefore their recognition by the Church to dayâ€"therefore the certainty of their triumph in the futu e. _ . j The sons of Brutus, the votaries of revolution that tp!:eal to arms for redrâ€" ss violate the laws of the Church that imâ€" poses the obflg;:tion of passive resistance. | Sodition, whether it fails or trinmaphs; is‘ nlw-iyl c lamitous ; if it triumphs it comâ€" monly changes not evils but persons ; the parts are played by new actors but., the drama of oppression goes on = the slave becomes the tyrant and the tyrant the “ slave. â€" But woae to the people when such . an effort is a failure ; the wounded pride 1 of tyranuy : has no men:{; distrust : clianges to hatred and hatred into fury ; fetters increase in weight, chains are multiplied, despotism more cruel and ter«eoufioa more. pitiless. * But . the Jatholic Church in counsellingsubmission to authority does not mean we are to crouch down like a slave to bite the dust and â€" be contented ;. but. to _ persecution we â€" miust oppose spiritual weapons, constancy,, meekness, patience and prayerâ€"arms whoise success is as certain as they are percelul and ‘divine, We vanquish ths persecutor easier by giving our biood than . h& shod; ding his, the martyr in his grave is more l toffible to the. tyrant than the .rebel. . who meets him in arins on the battlé field. _/ The sublime doctrine of Christianity~â€" ghe doctrine which is alorie i‘a’?; and | pruâ€" dent was seized by O)‘Commeli, prociaimed in his : addresses, embodied, in the faota and events of his career. It was the Labarum of his triumpb. . In the cities of Waterford, Limerick and Dublin and on the hill of Tara, where nearly a million and a half ofhis countrymen hal assem. bled he appealed to the principles of peaceful agimiot; * Men of Ireland," he said, " he who violutes the,:laws betrays his try ; he who encourages you to ist exposes you to porish, Your op: P desire nothing so much as to see you in armsâ€"to hear you utter . seditions crie® against the Governtient ‘in ‘order & they may have new pretexts to oppress you still more ; the day. in which, Irelgnd shall haye recourse t> ‘Forto she will lose all hm.of recovering ‘her lib= »rty." Doub the great tribuas had been schooled in the 'Snology of terrible te ; themol the French= revoluâ€" tion had chilled his heart; the sigh of miaery rolled around the fortress wa!ls of Donai and 8t. Omers, and these thrilling memogries _ were daom:al into crim». son â€"glow by the e of his own country in â€" 1798, _ He â€"saw . the flower and strength of the land rush with the madness of unguided rmotuq to the mouths of the Enfi: canon ; smokingmlm&ulbattlo fields that were S:rrnod to gravgyards, told their tale of wrge : =* â€"drear darksd ue n‘ght, _ And (ar away th h he darkness flugsâ€"its wild and Jurl + 1i bt, 3 € Ho thai vrave ngqr:l bri f and i stce, did with hops ilum®, "â€" T With ‘:‘ 8 ?no graud and glori ons flash 4 century nom, | Bat lhn'u(h t was b:ief and sudden sauk in dark an i hu:a-r DWHly s . . 4 its glary beacons« gulil t ie joth to libo:ty and . lignt. | ; M % Fathers . and . Dear Brothirbh =o blution: hasâ€"failed in Ireâ€" Brethren â€"Revolution: hasfailed in Ireâ€"â€" land. From ?elgnon that . we, read on the bloody page of ‘our country‘s defeat we sympaithise with the misâ€" guided patriotd who would/¢voke ! the‘ :_p'u-it of ‘98 h":lm ::o. crimson tom:,‘: or no sqon ;the ; ingâ€"epiti O‘Comnelt &qd« away m fhmlfi when a few desperate tpfn applied the t::ich to the pentâ€"u, f?te ings og mfioul‘ indignation; & g ‘udt for the ihifles m‘%'fm':%uw% Ts ",am” historian â€" would h:ive‘ to ‘di) ‘pof in ink of blood ta record the horrors of ‘48. Alas ! ‘to our misfortune it must be sai there ate #till |the Tt'lvq)unz isgui f)‘triouwhow d not list hy esson thundm_'fififi the of ‘98 m 48 wbbh ‘:M‘om‘ t plunz a hopeless . to the unegh contes! 6/ of arnis, who & spite of the "triumph of the spirit of O‘Connell in his ~pesceful demand for justice to Ireland, in spite of the warning rung from the felon‘s cell of As when a blaze burt sudden forth on some English p ; in spite of the anatheomas and excomm of. the Catholic ferelytion stt Neveboccgn (Bek Afuined revolution | invoke â€" on the woes of Mput. We m in symâ€" pathy for the loyers of our oonnliwho would erroncously ally themselves to the spirit that has begotten the Initernational and the Oom.fine-tho spirit that in this wizw the blood of D‘Arcy My Lord, Rev, Fathers and Dear Brethren.â€"It will he the palicy . of O‘Conneall, . identified r:ilth the Catholic principle} «( ; aigitation an not ga x:‘olfic.)? ols %.*n ‘that shall gain the _ @manci -&ifié of Ireâ€"| Il.nld d-“th? u:nost cuuldl t bt:f her poli of the present da; come the prophet o?gef mt\in‘{hi?bgbndenco. "l;he pfi‘win‘ eye ?me oirmam&rul lilbeu-. r a clou: m and saw as .indcuiil; gn the eventualities offiincj the brilliant star of our national indepenâ€" dence nearly to its zenith in the blue lkfy of Ireland, There was a scene in the life of O‘Connell ‘that bears with prophetic, significance to the triumph he anticipated, and ou the politics of the. Home Rule; avitation ; ‘we quote from the hazy remin: | iscences of childhood a fact we witnessed over 30 years ago in the dear old capital of Ireland. In their chagrin at disapâ€" pointment _ and bitter. joalousy at the triumph of the Catholic cause, the political enemies of O‘Connell accused him of sedition ; they resorted to dishonorable and unjust means to carry a conviction ; under the sacred names of ‘law and jusâ€" tice they brought perjured witnesses beâ€" fors a packed jury, and instead of judges they plased on the bench accomplices of narbour,‘ up "runs a fag: is whito aud roaty and on it Aanld dut in boid prom:â€" fi:.n:ogn words "Sentence reversed." Tt Mm"lnrdn{A ‘d:ul‘: burst aAsg uman beings, and rolls over waters a doat their injustice,. ‘They found a sentence on a supposition of guilt. O‘Gonnell, whoby. wuvm&hilb::.nd ?rlshmpingdhh fm was t of Pom ‘ have fired seven millio!:x.n’ of I:fidaud Irishmen into robellion, was cast..into prison for sedition. ‘The injustice_of ” sentence was Fnilpuble, ahn;l the House Lords annulled" jt, ., Un the 4 anlu h on which the people oi lnm fin ished a Novena to the Mother o'o&m undertaken at _tbomglult,flf} A hi-oll,nfludohh in was deâ€" cided favour of the Liberator. Lord Denman in m-ul to © the . senâ€" tence said, "If such practioes ‘as have ‘Conmell‘s fate.. On speeds the good ening congratulation to the messongers | ; of their joyâ€"the canon booms & greefil‘lfi J to the people of Dublin and over the Hill | 1 of Howth and across the Wicklow mounâ€" | ; Aag from the mastâ€"head, plants it in front | « ‘of his engine and darts tgrwurd, swift as | the wi-n&,l roclaiming in his course |â€" O‘Connell \i&hfi."l‘fi that night"and | . all the next day the joyous tidings were | lsnnounood, till the winged messenger of’ joy had reached every village and hanilet B in the hngI and a nation bowed down , with a. mighty weight of sorrow, rose up to thank, God she could clasp ‘fih to her bosom her noblest son. The Liberator enâ€" tered Dublin in an ovation the most enâ€" thusiastic ever given to the idol of the plo;flo. He . was seated in a triumâ€" | Eu car, followed by the Lord Mayor, in is robes of office, and the civic authoriâ€" ties, the guilds .. and all, the .poogl‘- of > Ireland : ~who : ..could â€" possibly reach Dublin in , time _ to . partiâ€", 3n ismeg sppions ihe maeers onl | n arriving ite c slock of thoxmeu building the noble figure of the liberator arose and amidst the deafening shouts that shook thge city m!_t,hmr!ifmu towards ‘the Senate of the Ireland of the past, prociaimâ€" ing â€" in ‘Eropbeoy, . that. . they, would return to their original destiniation. My Lord, Rev. Fathers and Dear Brethern. The triumph of O‘Connell is moving on to this grand consummationt.‘ Méasare by \ measure is wrested from the English Parâ€" liament for the relief of Ireland. â€" Without the shedding of ‘blood the emuncipation was cartied ; the same spirit of pesceful ngihtion and .exg;ezl to the eternal laws 0 d’usfio&.‘a!’fl the church bill, the land bill and many important ; oiti of ounr civil rights ; the old Mlm bigotry that for so many:centuries: rained death anit.l destruction ovr:n:urb hsm country is torn to pieces, * by plank;, until in the cllmpsnd Ofe umzuu we shall seo it cast in the‘ miserable fragâ€" ments of a wreck on the shores of regen: ~| erated Ireland. â€" ‘? look towardsâ€"&â€"land | both old and new‘! writes the venerable Newman, some forty yoars ago, "old in its .\ Christianity, young in its promise of the | future ; a nation which received grace beâ€" | fore the Saxon came to Britain and which | has never questioned it, a church which comprehends in its history the rise and fall of Csnt.erbu‘:ly and York, which Auâ€" | .mne and Paulinus found and Pole and ‘ r left behind them ; 1 contemplate 4 ;Foople which has had a: long night and l have an, inevitable day..... 1. am â€"| turning my eyes . towards a hundred *\ years to come, and 1 dimly see the | Ireland I am gazing become*‘the road of | passage and union and the centre ‘of the | world." â€" Then>will come tho:noon of ‘ | Iroland‘s rising sun, then: the -or" old ‘ | abbeys whose crumbling iyyâ€"clal ruins ‘ | stand in silent majesty, as the sad memâ€" orials of bygone glor‘{, will lift their iieads in splendout an ms}hlfl‘dcnoe as of old, the lamp‘ of science will burn again in their venerable sanctuaries, and the nations of the earth shallâ€"look as in the days, and benpath in the grand hall, the Bk:lil, the B\lrkr‘ucui Grattous uf a ;ifcthilq.gofnmtion 'J. is i‘:}:enit_ the spirit eir fathers and, 1 0, sloquatice foF ind wad of m.k:"ad and over that assétbly=â€"willâ€" reign an Proside the spirit of hin whose markle bust of green silk with the goldan harp of Erin -hm:t over the ohf houses oli! Parliaâ€" ment in the venerable capital of other ages of faith to the, Jland, of saints and scholars. The day must come when a flag crowned by the symbolic Goddess of Libâ€" erty, shall look down on thdSquker'l chsirâ€"the immortal Liberator of Ireland. But m{ Lord, Reverend Father and dearly beloved, we deal in prophecy, a cloud passes over our visionâ€"a sunset of crimsonâ€"aâ€"amightâ€"ofâ€" bloodâ€"a nation â€"in. ‘;ho uuo;o of dh-olutinn",uf: ukv“ful retri ‘bution for a career justice ! B.t;lou and ‘Rome were mighty capitals in the history of the past, numbering three millions c:f inhabitâ€" and . Cl the red ‘»*:;‘,!1..3.';?2;‘ For one sente 0 tion . was written at mmMJW ofâ€" tire in the hall of the sagreligious feast; for the jl"‘og{busion Qui potest :af»m!, capiat. ot % F s a%m&m'.y‘f widress. i is constituents.in.the capital of rggthnd, "But during seven centuries we have used th@ sword #§gai¥¥t the Irish, we have made experiment of famine, we ‘résorted to every art â€"ofâ€"Draconian laws ; we have tried ruthless extermination, not to trampleâ€"down: or extinguish=~ bated. r but to root out every vestige of them W P] se y F ed? We not been . g irpate or even wh:ka ‘them. my% tually increased after all our persecution of them, . from two. to five, from:, five to seven, from seven"to mine millions, and they are gathering around us like a delâ€" wub ihay are bave bng ow borders appeâ€" rently t oi mp our inst fiom,’if not to :‘nrwmg‘ohlblm +Â¥ am not ignorant of history. I have historyâ€"it will ‘be the maiden Erin, the lym:)"l of my,mm-. the ‘personifi¢ation of Christian forgi # with one foot on ficfi orm of Britannia willâ€" sheath" her sword and bid her enemy livg, rise and repent, * studied hisf in that . aci 1A toulees" "by * "Héapadny W o hid for _ this _ fact .. a . .. satisfac e ons er the « ( St.. ‘s Church a Bome;p&m.lg&hiflwt-nw. the mg% that is . emblazoned mund':‘lh M ‘art "Peter‘and on ‘this of helt ¢ ‘prevail tl-lbonoon.l.fi 1 solve the om‘oluhh O‘Cannell . on "one octusicn tiefore the British Parliament terrifying: them into “j!.fi““fi-‘;”l':i‘: ® mndoh;o of ‘these fleet {:ln the | Britigh bwm met. &.m flfi across the Atiautic of the maddened m of oxn:"‘:ho will expiato in one~nigh ‘of "woé théinâ€" justice of three,centumies.?»= ».,. . _ e ooo e ce o c onl inigumne pouls ieb teremighrer was n 06 had "gathered its sablé: duriciess sroudd e j :areâ€"men who this voey diy in the hhine of the immortal poptici hitd Srotifiont I ain hS thate repeated in the h-ux- «of Q‘Connell to mean rovonte rétatiation in oceans .of blood, but. from this OPI-I' of sacred truth we deprecate in this feeling the .lt:.':?? of &&w;:muq Of the new law, " I say to you love your ecnemies, do good to them that hate and pray fot thou that"Perveogte Mb pabamdinte you. @ of been decrebd, when = the ‘glare >of ! petioâ€" loun .pu.h;une&mfi.:wv whon the Liood of the ciuiens thall us assembl:d in this ch which was magâ€" poevabe=nm s ooR mforyâ€"it will -boz maiden Erin, the mt,oon-“ Jon with . g y and torsionnon en P Ein tans" wiigh iIndiana in: the gats lery ; and the music was render@d by the choir 0f Btâ€" Church under the direction ‘of Mills. High Mass commenced at 10 o‘clock, the Rev. Father McGinnis being Liberator, pandering to the feclings of the um and the seditious, will interpret on inck haast in rnrrcnabee bur tor amop the dark hour of its trouble ; but lo! when the sack and plundéer of London skall have An L most accambhi+d iw this ahnush which was masâ€" when the green â€" "3 shall float from the tower to the scorn ie fallen, who ua for p{z.nm theé of thelv t eniit tion, then there will be presented o the the waords * Justice to Treland," nois, deacon and subâ€"defibon‘respectively, Heaven forfend such a catastrophe to 8T. PATRICK‘S CHURCH. and the Rev. Fether Pallier, Assistant Priest. After the first Gospel of the Mas® the Rev. Father Stenio;,uf. P. ofAlma;otr, ascondedâ€". the pulpit made the folâ€" Towing eloquent uépwoounua proper to the occasion, which was listened to throughâ€" out with the profoundest attention by the vast assembiy, among whom were many of the leading Protestants of the city :â€" " Let us now praise men of great reâ€" nown, and ou: fathers in their generation . .. . . Let the people show forth their wisdom and the Church declare their praise." â€"Eoc. 44. e My dearly beloved brethren in Chr'u:l the Church of G8d is particularly in inculcating upon the minds of her chilâ€" dreén the necessity of true veneration for the memory of every child who, whilst in her ranks here on earth, bore arms with honor ‘and fought her cause in true spirit and good faith. She asks her children to show forth their appreciation for the sanctity and wisdom of creatures now trinmphant, and the united expression of this appreciation is wuat the Church most admirably callsâ€"praise..â€" Singularly attracâ€". tive is the love of this wisdom, magnifiâ€" cently grand is the effect of this praise. At one time children units, their very exâ€" :‘:.rior being symb:ll‘igcof flls::'-x?uritydthoil" rts, with ) C m ing éy'e:,m:'hag mmpgmuda;wjmm dom of the Zoly Unes. . At. another.time ‘the princes ‘of the Church assembl in the sanctuary, and by very right which they hold from on high, prociaim in the presence . of t.ln‘gmu God . and; of HMis world, that some father of theâ€"pastâ€"orâ€"of their generation in life was faithful, in death was happy, hence in eternity is blest. Whilst at times the peoples of many nations, united in. their man‘ . give "fAitting expression to the 1oob:r y wfig\i they are actuated,â€"Teelifigs of respoct, of love, for some one great. man or. other, who, when in life, was virtuons and in death was full of peace. ‘Thus it is toâ€"day. To«lay the hearts of mill}olu are warmed up as they praise a man of. . j u? ds'y‘th\?:y 'nu‘:: upon tgé %‘5’3&& of gratitude,.that Jove which somes: from God and opéning out their hearts the streams of t«hufiuln.; from â€"each indiâ€" vidual, rushing down the bank of timeof voou of respect upo C C eock iedrneane océan 1y 18 DG new ark of roln‘g:‘:o cradle; of Daniel O‘Connell .‘The Liberator was born on the 6th of Aufiufl.. 1775,. He .came from a family which claimed to be of royal deâ€" scent ; | the . pure ; blood. ;jof. theâ€"â€"Celt was flowing through .his veins. His earlior y ars were pc-l:: beneath the anxious geze and the directing ‘hand of an lrish ghother,. When he was thirteen‘ years of age, the odious laws which conâ€" demued the education of: Gatholie: childâ€" ren had been so far removed, that a clasâ€" sical school was opened near ‘Cork and thither (‘Conne!l repaired ‘neath the shades.of ; that Shouse, the. slentier tree shades,of ; !»Mt‘houfi tno’ which was yot to burst mm exâ€" ubsrance, which was yet to shelter, not only the men of Ireland, but. of many. other lands as well, from oppression, was nursed, and strengtbened, and sustained â€" till it acquired sufficient strength to be transplanted to a greater garden of learn ing, to the College of St. Omers. From St. Oms he proceeded to Donai, once movre frout the latter to the former house, aud from St. Omers the French revolution rgrove him to England. In the year 1793 he profession of the law was thrown 0pen to ‘Catholics,,. O‘Connell embraced. the profession and in five years afterwards he was called to the bar. In the year ltfii he made his first public speech, when he had concluded, men said that God had given to Ireland and to the world, a gre«t man! He was one of Ihehhfin:., :lho.'u & Wll M “1*‘ 10 20, the pn?m;o!‘ a‘&uu\wo.le, whio:lm those whom it effected made death inâ€" deed "right bitter, ‘but which, for meft of honour.and.worth, made life warse. .41 is} not my intention to preach for ma an historical panegyric of the great Liberator. 1 donot intend to dwell upon these facts 0r, cignrhneu ingooguoctioz:;.iihd::& which bear upon their very a F for our .dmix;)n. I will speak of him as a Christian; as one who loved his ~God,. consequently who loved his felloyâ€"man, who spent his life in the service of truth‘s cause, who was great and wise in his g:ieufion. Therefore it is that we give 'mmrindivkluwmmuh that&he Gburch mmhwm giving this respect, which unity of feeling .she calls praise. kmn is, that » we speak of him to day, because the Sancie fi'oda:lh us ‘he is worthy 1 because the ives of great men remind us we can make our Hives a benefit in the great cause of n ipanemak m in life we have done our we, oan give assurance m 'llok we leave behind, that w6 have béenâ€"weighed mhhmflmmmd God,'-’:ahnnotw ' There can be but:little.doubt.in the mind of any one that the nations most loved w are those which are â€"most tried. is the case. ‘Take up the hi of any one of these countries ever faithful tot.hofeol};rppm-ifl-flv own. Look into itical career as . + gbmdumhoow{wi&mm hoduhntnooivédifl'{:'wfllfind that, if "to the latiter she proved faithful as regards the former, she had her sad and sorry trials. Of mfl countries upon which the light of mout.lserhpomommflondm Aor that faith than did Ireland. She reâ€" ooindi.til.i#o‘guriq, for hundreds of years she guarded it with a jealous care! would ~â€"weaken â€" the ical : energy of: the oinmnm' their every ?;jtdlhovmuoninuth‘hna eel that they were veriest slaves ! And, what was this system?â€"How was it inâ€" duced? _ By ~whit‘ â€"means made practicable? â€" My friends, the fron hand So fond was #he of it, that it ibecame ; her and au affficted nation, © Yes! there entered into the minds ofluhm:;:“o:: migs &, 8 determination, -.lqp_o_womy cultivate their zeal for of the law was, b t down * the defenceless form ?f“‘hpow wuk'mcrh. fiesh; a code of law was framed, the conâ€" caption of which was beyond a Nero, and the denunciatinn of which comes, now a days, in its fiercest form from the sternest ‘opponents ‘of ‘Catholicism. A code which Rosl entate, by which Tt could uce be hald real estate, by which it could not be inmtorhfm,n_oodowhbhhdhia md the â€" starving out. of a race, the ucing to abject ignorance the mind of a ustion, .once the Jsle of learning, the thus for pity, a race of men, who were accustumed to stand upon the hill tops and thus so praised their Christ ; %Mtom.mvuhy m s of. their awful no longer oto;ifnnkh- thom e stream of liberty of conscience, ver which very portals ven coming, flowing down _ to earth ! m.mwfi eode of laws could: not: exist â€"and be i force without having dire effects: ‘When O‘Connell came upon the ncn}hdn strength of his manhood, clad the were A of slavery. What is it that enobles man, religiqns intolerance, for ion, but from very passion, hm'mn ;‘n&'l.tbo lives ‘of ‘men and ~the life ons <~should be used, weapons < that them ; the Creator and the creature had been interfered with, hence millions of thirsty souls stqod by the waters of God‘s thirsty souls stqod by the waters Ol rad‘s .. ... beomuse right botwoentmartud . | :un mfimn% > i ©4" . From siavery es feeling of lrvfll;'fluom: efi (t s shame. ve you ever known a man who _ â€" was once swl_)y dldnh.wh‘ a man who D( F * t 5 ho iihe tG spost hk ons ho averee for him to run one who from love shown him by his God, in Hhm foe oo bigen: miu i beags :I.!gzyouovqknownon’noh-_;‘h'_ln far reduced that when (he presents himâ€" 4 | self, :his very appearance : deciases. his.... Amticed the toar is hile eye, th’::br in. his cheek, the lip to quiver in arch agony _ of Mubhmhm&m Of the cause of so great a change? in i she possess the things of earth, her libâ€" wp'::-:ono, mu"&“’m" ioe of the sciences were denied her they were deprived of that which in truth was dear to the sons of Patrick, recom«> letters, the men of the isle of "lsira were covered with shame beonuse the days of their gtory had vanishei; thus uu‘yfelt that from slavery, poverty and their inevitable result Mbw?. selfâ€"and that "'W hoi on hick melsad ~o bager ds When the Liberator ooked . out, from the watch tower of his ius, t thfl A e mmabks toiatin mt covered the land, a sorry indeed. in looking upon his country and hor strength well spent. The the nation seemed to have ceased to beak, her le:oum:‘-g-.f.n-w‘u‘ peop ng from a drea offiy&,mhm the law, they were disunited /! ‘Yes, they 3" divided because in their sickness ere was no power of. because in their troubles ofn:w h:d been no leave ‘for ioh O‘Conmell felt that he had« form. Ged must have ed himg. . The great Liberator took unté him endowed with new vigor to fight the battle»s of life l.nd':aon:::i with adverse fortung, _ oofl:om whose {rn we celebrate 40â€" o Ammeniiegnr o ""'“"‘"""‘"0 teousness j v5te God hied fiveh hi tatedl® strange power, so would he use these y self the children of Ireland, with kin<ly words he soothed their uid / embg ies hoi. petn‘ / Foayl ingdlinmo; he root C ing"uhmo; he should mhm & the Thinds of the and bo%id. O‘C&:‘?ln;m h that which he required could be plige:=as e Atprnald._> @ it, he showed it to their P «4 that true appreciation forâ€"victory m" the: mare comprehensive as is . its sp ition clear from blood hfiw. was lmmfl.ul m{nd was oi ressoning ; two combined Jaim â€" the shodding of a single drop of blood, ** is that he gained much through its inâ€" fAuence. mmr} to the This Molganitof paace thore wat & arond. % . ‘.\ * "“; gone by were so prolific, they beheld with it came mort that which had cost other nations the of thousands and other men “m ©‘Counell hea now he mi for success. th a ~* dbmi:‘!h xpu fate he t t&ma’fi‘nm-.# countrymen, he closed the Ireland‘s perscoutot.: What was too much, that gaze h‘r wik humuo-,itmm%a â€" that long determined of 3 told as much as could ‘a volley muskets of .nmdh ° slaves, that look justice, thats ) â€" Boll Saibed Sotici® Snatopies.. 0e . M.:m"hh.- ‘z hss un inon mm Steateret mired, the day bhad at arrived {> when the crown of rw..‘mm wafted through the mercy the English,channel in upon the Irish const , t id m hinin. OGmie Umantony Cns reon it quiotiy to his besoft Hmntn t mictel nen inkeiiy / much mercy, so much favour, so much love! â€" My brethren, now a days wesare = prnopottirgre. .0 we w94 “““JOGQHE'-W.W.-:-*. shape; in his mor word for the distrassed. 4+ uudui?.vu, had ?‘::d g i:?l?:: MM M !fll'h-.-w»r-.‘ to cruelty in any lory of God or for the mere advanceâ€" nt .w@m:.uwunt&““ o ie mm r -nd'uh::nflquh',-*b' :ughggfiut}mm_in”l In ‘the ure in the church has freed seven '% and Tor the cause of God, be anted ":-aa‘ intbt.h?:‘fdu dhb‘omd? was a pure practical Catholic, he was no theoretical Catholic as are many no#â€" aâ€"ilays, even ::ou in 4igh podbh,. hence bound ve t.umnbmaf}mm for all that he had. If he was a Liberator it hb dod. * im rspict "apd in frpthy is *# 4 Q‘Commell was :a 6&&; W mflhyfint&nflwmaflnm for the distressed.,; His mind,. eduâ€" believed in moral j had freedom but in part! In ‘the %“Wm“'fimm buivtifianintcnsscattaliit stebsiciciatsmddl --‘wu too much, that had Mxtmm%um“! long determined of 5 as much as could ‘a volley en s, that look m â€"p4 gnant stare defied voutempt. Om " > mnindnfl@n,l-n- T [Continned on Fourth PageJ aticngistnited the ce id Taild & fustb io h uon mt a whe ind shown Irokadle / o much favour, so much ut nore ie we e o He & » ¢¢ T# C the west of 1# estimaited Of ‘the Hon. so without dog to the title of a the part 0‘ ited were « upon the weeks wil up to the oornecsea Put 1t was 13 ~It ©N Ar #t at of

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