l/Ti, r QLERY! (liiNil MILL Nvebgoi,m6. Ntt, OP. 13's, Durham. I the that. MIt 8 “NJ but .u' 1; 1.15 RINGS _ -L Lockets. m -L.‘ .r- --:t;J Lockets. Baal! 1A1 l e American 31's Gold and Mndei% M (was, mu... ehohradtortue, _ no, I’M/r. Sea tdt wt Complaint; all» fun. and " con- ' to cthren teeth- be found equally adults or children. All "mm URN a 00., k‘nds Prompt], Fork WM a Cu... dV, ma tubal; 3;.“ nuns; [Du-:3 DYE RINGS ll 31'. S0t m“- to we... 'l'oe MI. will“ u New fat M us when by th. “sold In 0351’“. ', not less “an In. , B,uttsim and ha ttate 11m tho will!“ l-y hing Jluc’uabm chu- i, m ":4... " Proprietor. rs, Toronto :3 Weeds a. u- ar (to. can of fully "on. he an, wink bosom many to“ "Wu-- J 96 ' u uttnias than can In†in. ' out. bond: n average io ear, "7. Vol Wiht In and M " n: mi... utoiy can. 1-. Man. i AY y “each IX u I!“ nt "riro A, use - - mic. It"? pill. M10 an ju. mum, gu “I. . Ho mind mt. hill HIM BN- tuub lead Mull WI.- all! ath W“ " ob ©-taotl.r on hind at the POST OFFICE, Burilter, Bolieitor in Chancery & Insolvency, Hoary Public. "tbm.--Morttt Broulwny, (hungovillo, oppcnte Pmm’ Hardware Shop. Barrister, Attormtst-Ltw, Solicitor in' Ch-ncery. Conveyancu, a, Poalett St. Owen Sound. fm 87 Provincial [and Surveyor. Civil Engineer, ttttalt Land Agent, (\mveymcur, "a.. mldk. In nnd Lite lmmnm-e, Manny. Loan and (Io-non! Again. Main Sued, Dun-lam. Farms For Sale ! f/log',',",;,.'?.."; Solicitor in Notary ublic, 1J-aneer,ke, roaiduture-- Dundalk. BARRISTERS Ind Attorneys-It Law, mumm- in Chance", ae., Own: Sound and nnmmm. "may“: "no. in “mum Buit0- ing ~an "an Thund-y. ALFRED FROST. T. D. COWPER, County (1mm Aching. yl In. " 33. Ind M, in 3rd Con. B. D.R. 01,13}. 90 new“ ouch ; Illa Lot W. in 8th 0-. Proton. Tenn: May. Apply to HECTOR Mc1.NNFS, .43 Dnndnlk P. D. than] good I uh of land for "hr-improved and unimproved-- , At from $5 to 020 per acre, u Proton. Melancthon. Osproy. and Col. lingwood. Turms (may. J. J. MIDDLETON. Ta: 0an Flu: human and Mann Lou Anna in the Towns". Juno 21, l877. if OS. MCARDLE, Tho but Companies it? y" Province repro- (Tonvc-anu-or, Farm and Village Lou " Bale, â€Bu-inert done strictly private Residence and Midas HOPEVILLE, Co. ott Grey, Advertisements, except when accompanied 1, written instructions to the contmy. an hunted tustil furbuldeu, end t.hargrd " reg- ular ram. 3. TOWNSEND. week: " " the ~13oniiemcnt not iii; and 8 lines. ll Ordinary notice. of birth, murky», (Icahn. and all kind: of local news, inserted In. ot chirp. nu. sub-d... Arur.'.T.T.T.T.TY. no Quai- colI-n, par y-r............., " Bullock-u. " “WNW,†Do. I‘l-ollth".. ............N Do, thrvemontlr............ l5 Canal advertisement. (“tinged fl at... Per no. tor the tirat inertia, and 2 eta. per line for cub "bssiututtiumtrtiou ~brevier men- In. â€union! aaut bums- unis, on. inch - Ind under, per you, .'. . . . .. ' 4 Two Inch“ or " line. Nrmraraul mount. 7 ml - _ t - I g TERMtV.--tt.oo per your in Advance, uh.†tf not paid within two months. 13 BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Durham, - - Ont. Marriage Certificates and Licenses, Atthe IMiee, (huh-us Strut, Upper Town, Mr. P. WHITTLE! [Eve ry Wh nrsday, Do You Wgnt Money. 2 smum. REAL mum Nir'diT 'r" Bog- to inform the inhabitants of Dun-hm t vicinity that he in: all hand 'd for ale . line stock a “THE REVIEW†band-1k Dee. " It?†"TRA, y Minus, Ae., ulvertiud three FROST & COWPER, ARRISTERS and Apogeysllt lyt, D. McDONELL, ARRISTER, ATTORNEY, kc. ottue I --u mu Town. Draurn, on. " . " Commissioner in the Queen's Bench, DUNIIALK. Prim, only 82.11). GEORGE RUTHERFORD. RATES OP ADVERTISING. MAITLAN " MCCARTHY For Sale Cheap. Asz no moponod .ch (mobs. NFECTIoNERY, “Mons. _ ORANGES. FRESH OYSTERS. PU“ APPLE CIDER. J. W. FROST, LL. B, ISAAC TRAYNOB, JAMES LAMON, J. J. MIDDLETON, lunar. Credit: Chancorv. (Mice and rm of every description. ()URTEA It 35 cents and 50 can“ on a Crud recommends itself. Muna’ we Hats In mus variety. GREAT bargain: in Fur CAPS. A gn-at choice of - service-aide kind. GRUCERIES a AhluyW.uup, NVistt c-l' (fronds? “(INTER SIIAW'LS, BLANKETS, FLANNELS --.wtstto, my, scarlet and fancy. HASTIE Winch»; at 8 cts., superior to anything over offered at the same price. Dress Goods in great variety. As usual we have Who} best "ock of Would cull the attention of the public 01 Dnndalk, and surrounding country. t ' the fact that ho keeps eoustantly on hand a largo Stock of WATCHES, CLOCKS, and JEWELLERY, of the but material, good finioh, and at prices asflow as_nny "theFtauiahtaent in the cunnty. Those in need of such articles would do well to call and inspect my atom which he sells " Toronto prices. Engage, ment and Wedding Rings B spceiahtr Goods to select from lent on application. y30 E. D. WILCOX. "fiiriTir-uirrrktry inu,1Groiith. Pulpit-Thursday following Mount Forest. ituirnoee-ritte.mth. of Febrgary, A8151, srGFiifouseasd weanemy Jn and: month. 1‘ _ . CUT TEES AND SLEIGHS, n Coats, I'es Jackets. ()verconts, Puts Ihsrhtun--'rmsday before Mount Forest. Mcant Forest-Third W'ednesdoy in cull ii7ilifioiriiiiJiutp of Februnl'y. 'Ante. Jane, August, Ochre! and Decem r. Ptimrose--WednmuUy pleading the inlh Fair. "me o-ilu-IU 2nd Thtmsdytin each month. Trmovor--MonGy bet, re Durham. rrnndaik--'Nesday before Orangeville. Guelph-Fire' Wednesday in each month. Iarrirton--Friday before the Guelph Fair. mastoersthtryt before Guelph. Emru-'ru day before Gael h. Donwhttr--Monday below Elixirs Fair. tuGatoecrretiu. _Pnluoo Will. the -L; Ina; Guelph. - 1urlia-Firtrt Thursday in each month. Brampton --Fimt Thursday in Macaw. _ . w A 132‘. = -= ....J.n. Carriage Works. Cutters! Cutters 1 Durham, rub. 187 in qua-HIV and price to suit everyono . s,sss,gii* , 'ggi nut JAN 1; Ill-Ill-lf,.....!.,'.., , .___ " n 'mg, *u' Iliaiilcli,..ril.,lisl,l,rl.l.l,,l, " .-liiiiiab . -------.-.---, q . lllllRli!llltth' - Iii-Cllr.,,;..,;,'.?,,..,!.:,:?',.!,.. 'c-ta. 275:5;72? . ‘ r) 2lilrrq (Ill-ii-iii-ii'.'::'::')":""."?, “ .. †i'i"d.5, _ '-Tri, Blliiiri" . (ll-l-Birgit,!,!"",!'." nt- , tiliglilillt!hllB!ll IV?" , ‘_ f "lrl , a 7 , , L’ - s. L !,llLiltlllll!lii" cs, . ‘ "G - , l In? 33, _-ii"i'i1"ji'i'sf)'s2iscit '\' L 'ii," [i't'llirttiil'i, "iii,;) Durhlln, Feb. Nth, 1878. Vol. I. No. . D. VVILCOX, MONTHLY CATTLE FAIRS‘. Are selling the balance of their Great bargains in Ladies, Furs, lb: & GRANT? ])l TIIIIAIX " at greatiy reduced priees CANADIAN TWEEDS A LARGE STOCK OF BOOTS & SHOES, It. MCFARLANE MARKDALE. C LUTHING and Veais. AT THE ;7 S. HASTIE & GRANT. I. yd y-l The death of the aged Roman Poutiit, which has been long expected, has taken place at last, in the eighty-filth year of his age and the t'ui1ty-firtit of his poutitiettte. He has been so long the victim of disease _ that his longevity is more surprising than ( on early death would have been. In spite of the eevere chronic "cetion and the acute direm from which he suffered, he lived to an age attained by very few of his predecessors. while be occupied the Papal chair for a. period eousidctab1y longer than the longest pontNeial regime ofthe two hundred and fifty-five which prceeeded his own. The length of his life was, no doubt, due partly to tho tendency tn hmgovity manifested by the family of which he was a member, partly to the ab- "envious life he lei, and partly to the gen- iulity of his temperament. Pius was mere- ly his itoatifieial title, his real name being Giovanni Maria Maetni Ferrctti. He was a member of a noble Italian family, and was intended for a military career, but chose an ecclesiastical one instead. Ilia life, previous to his elevation to the Papal chair, wan comparatively uneventful. Ile wne a devoted Worker in the pastoral 1fGre, and soon attracted the utteutionl of Pius 1UI., who sent him to the then? nrvwlpcutablr,htaAl Government of Chili on i a mLsson, the duties of which were di -‘ chm-god so)tatioiUetorily that Leo X11.,tho i successor of Pius VII., promoted him 11‘ once to the position of administrator in one of the important secs of tho Church. After spendiug.some time in the capacity of Papal Nancie at Naples during the cholera visitation of Itro'0, he was by Gregory XVI., created in 1810 Archbishop of Imolu, in the Romagnn. This- district like too many others under Papal jurisdic- t'on at that time, was In pt in n. spirit of perturbation by political mvwmnenh, but tho tact and zeal of the Archbidxoy m‘or- eauioalli.Cicultiur, and enabled him to restore tranquility to the disvdrce!vd band. ity. His eminent hunk-cs: were reunu'ilcd by the title 'rfcardiuel, and shortly uttfr» wards by his unanimous election to the chair of St. Peter, which haul been ren- dered Vncnht by the death of Gregor: . XVI. on the first ofJ inc, 1816. ': No Pope ever acecnded the Ihsprl throne with brighter prospects or e botte, opportunity of inaugurating successfully B truly liberal policy, both political and ec- slesisatieal. The grant ruvolut1vnary wave which culminated a few months later was ropidly rieiug, and no country in Europe felt its operation sooner or Stvutl the need of its bcnesfleisl and purifying ineuuuec than Italy did. Between the little king- dom of Sardinia on the north-west and tho kingdom of tho Two Sicilian on the south-east lay thn States of the Church, over which the Popes had exercised almost uninturupted temporal sovereignty for more than n thousand years. The mis. government of these ecclesiastical States is one of tho darkest stains; on the higtory of the 1'ayvey, and at the time when Car. dinal rcectti nssuxued 1'outsticial control it ii 'dtticuit to say whether his domain or that of the infamous Rumba, hip- neighbor, would have borne " the palm for anarchy, oppression, and outrages of 3 every deseription. Personally popular, [ assuming the triple tiara with more than i the ordinary amount of prestige in his tit. DURHAM, Cm. Grey, FEBRUARY 14, 1878. $1 per year in Advance. vor, and elected to his high othee at the most favorable juncture for guiding and controlling tho revellticnary movement, he might, had he so eh men, have affected such rpm-mu as would have won him an hnnuuml plruro aurmgst political rulers, and in all prlahility have given a new lense “Nile to the temporal sovereignty. Had Pius: IX. been sugarious enough to trunply with the rensunaltle ileumnds of his sulrjeets fur the reform of abuses the work of Italian tmificativn might have been ind fiuitcly postponed. But the cp- portunity passed never to return. The first few months of his regime were not without promise of better things, bat his short-lived liberalism, which awoke the utmost entliminsm amongst the peo- ple and raised him to a. high pitch of popu- larity,soott give place to a rsurt'onary, policy. Like those Liberals in otherlnnds, who were converted into bitter Conserva- tives by the excesses of the French Revo- l lutionnry party more than half a century" baton, be shrunk from tho attempt to guide: movement he probably did not comprehend. ind which he thencofur- ward vainly and unwisely strove to stem. The immediate result of the revolution of 1818 was the “will Count Bond, his detostod advisor, and his own oxygl. Iion from the city, by up infuriated popu- beo. Ho fhrd in alanine. pad found lm in Guts, I tuteiiiaitbn,whrnee bobbin“ innocuoul (lectu- agttinqt tho WU, when“ hia dint: with w.uu§m v . _lttithi I meietittgtst-mmtontToodwtistdthrod Wotan, Doug Sunni, ot Weatmimtdr, gamed the following “a... whiv. tome nuwooo were “an: by (moo the WIN-u- ot gunman "Bay well in good, but do well in better, Do well mun: the spirit. any well is the In“: hay well in goodly, and help: to please; But do wull in godly and tives the world one. Nay well In niluuca sometimes bound; Do well ll him on evury grnund; Shy Wull lun- frGuubs--aurut, hem, some that. ; Do well is w-Iwmu anywhere: My my well runny to Bud‘s Word clone; But tor luck of do well it ottou have. H my well and do well wow boutnl in one film". Thou ml was; nluuu, all mum won, and gotten were gum. BAY WELL AND DO WELU (From the Globe.) Pius IX. 'iijijirEf" _ -- I The temporal Dover of the Holy Bu never recovered from the shock it then sus- !tained. In spitelofthe {epic-dour of the i Pope‘s return to his newly conquered do, main, the weakness of his government was I notorious, end in 1860 the King of Sardin- l in. forcibly deprived him of I considerable i amount ‘of his territory, and would tut. doul'tedly have taken itial1 but for the pro- tection afforded by the presence of French troops. From this time the temporal sov- ’ersignty was virtually " on and, but as ’ the result of the famous Convention of September. Iti0 t, between Italy and i France the Pope we. left with n shodnw of _ authority over the city and vicinity for six iyears longer. When the FranturPrtuuan l war broke out in 1870 the French Empe- l rorwns compelled to withdraw his: troops _ from Itome.’ w hich was quietlt.taken pos- ses-i m of by Victor Emmenuel, who to- stoml it to its nneient position as the capital of Italy. The territorial sovereign- ty of the Pope was thus nominally as well [is really terminated, the only spot left un- Llcr his control being the Ystiean. This loss of a sovereignty. the acquisition and long retention of which by a succession of cee'aricsties form one of the most striking phenomena of history, makes the regime of Pius IX. one of the most remarkable in tho long list of Papal reigns. None are at all cmupnrnhlo to it except those of Gregory VIL, who laid broad and deep the {oundutiuns on which his successors erect. ed the imposing superstructure, and of i Innocent 111., under whom the temporal powur"rcaehcrl its culminating point, and} who both laid down tho dogma and acted I up: n it, that the Pope “was appointed over; notions and kings; to tear up, and pull I down, and scatter, and build, and plant." [he temporal power hadzits origin in the gift of the Exorchate of Revenue by Pepin of France to Pope Stephen IL, and the i acknowledgement by? the some ‘mmmrch of the right of Wis Holiness to bestow upon him the crown of France. These events took place in the your 752, :50 that the temporal ssioyrraitpVlatsted more then eleven centuries. That it is ever likely to be nrcsta'olishctl few now believe, although one of the mout'noted cue,lor,iastietu acts of lits IX. was the hold osserhon of the " vinely conferred right to c mtrol nations u, pcrti"ter, governors as Well as governor], in this connection it is In t uninteresting. to compare the two celebrated and oft. amptccl anJngcs in which two great Isis. unions how Jeft on record their views as to the future of the Cutholic Church. His years, before the accession of Pius IX. to the Papal throne Macaulay penned his ta. I mans sketch, of which the following in a, 'rr ginont V-- l “Thu prank t _ yell lrmcts am but if yesterday when computed with the line of the Supreme 1'outifiU. T hut lino we trace huh in no unbroken series trout the Pope who crowned Napoleon in the nineteenth cantury to the Pope who crowned l‘upiu in the eighth; and far beyond Pepin the nu- . gust slyntsstr extends till it is lost in the twilight of fable. Tho Pnpncy remains, not in decay. not a more antique, but full of life and youthful vigor. Tho Catholic Church is still sending foith to tho farthest ends of tho w it“ missionaries as zealous as those who lamlci in Kent with Augustin, and still Cantu Ming hostilo kings with the sume Spirit with which she confronted At. tillu. The number ot her child: on is great- er than in my f: mar I139. tl-' * * The members of' her communion are certainly not fewer tom a hundred and twenty mil. lions, and it will be difiioult to show that all the cther Christian sects united amount to n hundred and t 1enty millions. Nor Jo we see any sign which indicates that the term of her long dominion is approach- ing. She saw the commencement of all the Governments and of all the ccclesiasti. cal establishments that now exist in the world; and we feel no assurance that she is not destined to see the end of them all. She was great and respected before the Saxon had set foot on Britain, bemre the Frank hid passed the Rhine, when Gree. inn infhumee still iloug%Ud in Antioch, when idols were still worshiped in the temple of Macao. And she may still ex- ist in undiniiuished vigour whetvgomo traveller from New Zealand shall.’ ii: the midst of a vast solitude, take his stand on a. broken arch of London Bridge to sketch the ruin of St. Paul's." A quarter of a century earlier a more judicial as well as judicious historian, Hal- lam, had thus summed up the conclusions at which he had arrived after an exhaust- ive study of medimmk ecclesiastical his. tory c--. nearly . you and athaif he romninod in exile. untiLhe was rutond by the dd of a lunch "my,whioh took Borne the: a brave defence of tho city by mtivo troom uudcr Garibaldi. The most famous as well as important eee1oiGstitad acts of the'reign of Pius IX. Were the contemporaneous publication of "his eucyclicnl Letter and Syllabus of Er. rors in 1864, and the promulgation of the y dogma of Papal Infullibility by the Ecu. menical Council which assembled in the Vatican in 1869. These. with the formal definition by the Pope of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception in 1854, were the actl alluded to by Mr. Gladstone in the celebrated sentence in which he spoke of Rome as having “substituted for the proud bout of camper tandem. a. policy oi violence and clmnge of faith." having "rebarnishod and paraded new every rusty tool she was fondly thought to have disused," hav- ing adopted such a position that "no one can become her convert without renounc- ing his moral and mental freedom and placing his civil loyalty and duty at the mercy of another," and having“equnily repudiated modern thought and ancient history." The controversy which grew out of this vigorous assault is too recent to cull I for nlcngthened reference here, us also are _ ithe unpleasant rehtions which daring the Ilast few years have eulisistcd between l [Prussia and the Pope. The well known! ,Fulk laws having been enforced with al irigour which may fairly do described ns' 'umparing. it was not surprising or un.l ‘nuturnl that the Pope shoul] retaliate by cmdcmuing the laws against the Church and declaring them null and void, after i first writing to the Emperor of Germnny A [ letter complaining of the treatment his lspiritunl subjects were compelled to sub- mit to. I TORONTO The fert‘nnl Chanda: of Pint, IS. min to h: as tho world knows, without re- proach. His genial disposition, nihbility. and Met ambled him to win a Inn-go meas- ure of yupularity with the gamer-.1 public, While ho unqucxtionnlzly stood high in t'r.v affections " all who beluugvd to tV Church of which Lu was tho head. Ilia ecclesiastical policy has for many your; been ulttaunontane, but probably mt tlute :0 than that of any other occupant of the thrme would have been under the same 'eireumstanees. It is difiieult to lay how much ct this policy may have originatrd with himself, and how much may have been suggested by his Id\iser3. It was Dr. Newman who said in his reply to Mr. Gladstone: "The Rock of St. Peter on its summit enjoy: a. pure md urea. cunei- lero, but were is a great deal of Roman malaria at the foot of it." Mr. T. II. McCimkey wad M. one time a'; wealthy hotel-keeper. whose um etlto for l strong drink reduced him from opulence to l the most abject poverty, and whose natur- l ally line intellect. up to June last. eppazzr- I ed to be hopelessly destroyed. Under the I iMuenee of tho Rina meetings in T Tonto l he becamo reclaimed, and was speedily e- l lectwl to tho responcible position of Vice- Pnssideut of the Rim Club. It soon he- mme nppnront that his talents peculiarly titted him for the temperance platform, and this “as amply corroborated at a. series of moetings ho conducted during his Erst campaign in F.uwnurrket suns weeks ago. In that place over one half of the popula- tion (including most of the drinking class) signed the pledge. Since then he has vis- ited Bradford, Aurora, Mount Albert, Schombcrg. and Mouton], ht all " Much places the some gratifying result. have followed. In Bradford over one hundred hard drinkers were reclaimed, Since he commenced, the signatures to the pledge l cord havo averaged 120 per night. Mr. _ McConhcy is tut an on tar in the gancrnll j tureeptcdiou of the term, but his tlttatMlut. l ling, off-hand manner. his intense enrneat- j now, his pathetic appeals. and his graphic 1 delineation of his own thrilling experience I are amid to he irresistible, In Mumford l,. [ 000 signed the pledge. [ ____._. ._------- Cos-mat.--)) said thit cor. porations had neither souls to be sued IMP, bodies to he kicked, and he might have ad- ded-mor bowels of Companion tobe mav- ed, had he {been fumiliu with the corporation of the riflege of Well. and. The Telegraph seye ,-"Tho Wel- land Council ordered to be advertised end sold, bed, bedding and cook stove belong- ing to the widow of the late village Trau- nrer. The old My he: been eoMned to herbelbeing veryeged and inilmt. She 1ariuthehedMtUtimeit-H, Ind attendants were even ordered to te- move her. Fifty five eente were only mlized. Thiehoppelud in I Cttgutain com‘lbe qthtrtitm d which} mom will be Inn-Sum. not ought to ex- oito um: isrdigrtation or slum. A stltn, oompnhonlivo “My of eereusiastitm1 bir. tory, not in such mp- nnd fragmonil u the ordinary patina- af our ephemenl literature obtmde upon us. is perhaps the best antidote to extravagant apprehensions. Those who know what Rome has once been are bust able to npprociute what she is ; those who have seen the thumb.“ in the hands at the Gregories and the In. nocents will hardly be intimidated at the sallien of decrepitude, the impotent. dart of Priam amid the crackling ruins t f Troy." [majority in fivcr of the repeal Act in Lento: Ind Adding. 63.0000: “.000 surplus.†-trtttt yet pounded; The Rev. Dr. Hell. of the Fifth Avenue Pro-hybri- Gntreh. - York. premixed last Subbed: s powerful sermon tom the “It in Intel: “Seek ye at. Lord while m my be found." He spoke at length ofthe danger and cslemity of not seeking the Lord " one. If there were not danger, he said. why the urgency of the claim taut m be sought, Ind why mblcssiugs joined to the seeking if they are not oppnred to cehmitiel following neglect? The extent‘ of these culmitieshu been ruiouly eati- ‘ mated by mankind. But few hnvo anLted l their eternal character when they have candidly examined their Bibles upon tli, awful subject. Just now this theme in the subject of\|ome puldie discussion. This kind of diiiiussion is good when not frivo. lous. The Dildo gains from reverent dis. 1cussion of such topics. Ventilation of its ‘doctrines is good when accompanied by a devout spirit. The speaker would not con- sider it of enough importance as yet for formal notice by him were he not uezpuint- ed with human nature. Young people hear. iug the safeguard doctrines of the Bible thus loosely attacked are tempted to shake " the restraints cf mortdity. Dr. Hull could picture to himself some young boyof l is congregation, when had manor women too, face him with term tetiou, niidhe stag- gers before its always mighty force. If he hes begun to doubt the truth of the Mate ment with regard to the peualty attached to sin. and his fuithis not strong enough to resist the tauptation, he sadly falls, and perhaps cums not tc reuwn bvtore it is t it) late even to repent. This tottstitutes the mportnnee of the subject. The public prints have represented that two or three American ministers, (one of whom had no quired undue prominence by impeuchnu ut for heresy. and one English divine, whose rtutements tire the m we, prominent lneenuse uttered in St. l'uul's have given up n. helioi in this (ternul future puuishrnunt. Bear in mind that meh statements are often unduly eulnured, and thrrofure should be accepted with due allowance f ' exaggera- trm. But, lifter all. tho remarks quoted must actually have been mule more or Icas fully. And so two rewind“ will here be in place: . First, no one of these men ir posstsged of such scholarship in theology -* science as truly as any in the secular fulti--tss would entitle him to be hatched to with such weight as the prominence given his “Moments might have indicated This does not exec-pt Canon Farrah It i, one thing to be a popular writvr on the olwgiml suljccta and quite ancthcw to be a popular plea-hr rd 1le! bar, Ind nuutL-rr L; he at leuruid lawyer. This pupulnr Canon qur declares, for example. that it is simply I tairrtttbsuent to render the word "gohenms" by 'tbell." But (In very best scholars my that in tl.e time of our Lord he word In uuiversts1ly used to siguify a place of future and firm? puniahnwnt. Of Course Incl: n Lsihtits word cnuld pumibl)’ be used fuaruivttir the, u when we Ihonld In, that . mm had a dozen hells in hid own balm. But, secondly. not one of these men use uttered an artiouhw sound as to what hell or the do in: of the impenitont. according to the Bible, really Lonny augment of the positive teaching of the Bible on this point. They have indeed negatively made _ disclaimers from pictures cf hell drawn by Milton, Dante and (when; bat this is be. side the veal question at i.sue, What we wish to know in, what the Bible moms to convey by its pictures of the x 111 who and the torment of the lost ascending forever from the bottomless pit. It is easy for any man to produce I mall-tie picture of hell. and h purchso a cheap but not enviable m to iety ‘by refuting it', but it is quite another thing l to {we tho "stemenu-the awful Mate. manta of the word of Gal and succeed in expllining them away. --------_ _ ----- ' There are said to be nbout five hundred million roundu in Turkish lands hold in England They are held by speealuors and gamblers. A steady-gain“ gammy like Canadians at 104 pm cont. takis time to push on the market, but Turks of. l tcrcil ct M [a ce1.t.,ro like hot who. simply became they om r a huge margin on which to build castles in the air. Peo. plo “ho buy u the]: m Lfty-fire would be quite us well prepared br sou it go down to ten per taut. as to see it advance t, put, and have no business quarrclliug with theiz fortune should it so tam out. Still less business lass the nation lo go to wur tor the proue'tion of those wlto have when I sueh wild this. No wonder the upwapa- _ pen ot England that hailed the hope of peace “are publicly burnod on the St "; Exchange. Thom brokers and gambling clients In largely the promoters of the war feeling in England. Between two and "hnte hundred mi0iotu; is an ttwfultgmount to scam tho Ions ci. I'unaruti's u. dinomrires, Ae., to" is all very fine; "r'uat Show poop]: an interested ia, his; I Shyblk. is to hue this bond. It is time. malignant the seats atuas mono,- ', alumni-och! be annulled. England luau. Map-.11“ "atlr be and a. itil of than not M "c- I‘ W Wit-m. gold. Imitation sixty minim at United Shad we! the reply. “J- Gunman bonds hnuboon Mal-nod hom I'Br.ttl' added the I Btu-asd0eem-ithNtttoiaat dupe ,' I Bttt't been in the any magma. anything the can†of so titmsehrrnhnuttrd. It won‘t Dr. Bait on Canon Fax-var. It in “and that, u . result of the silver “Your candor ntnniahu m!" "id the judge. "I thought it would" "rphud the lad, “seeing how many big 'um, dun m in the same Luminous and in Ilium“ to own it E" In the would no" 00111me “My morning u. Coleman. employed by W. H. Tanner. lumbcmmu. wu with his not: working on a very large skidwny. when the logs gnu way. many of than passing over him. The son. who Help“! uuhun. m: for help, and had 113- Minor removal in a few minutes. but ho died befall an arrival of the Oxriliu. doctor. who VIII " o gee telegmptsod for. Household Rem A IN nrrostud t -r the“. when taken In- t we the magistrate and um what his or. cupation was. frankly wavered. “St-ding." proposed restoration of the Scottish hier- archy. that on interdirt will he demanded from the Supreme Civil C, an of Seminal. The tax-payers of North Wanda. I. grinning for railway ant-um 'hrortgh “at district. either by will of u lin- from Saba: through to Mad. or In. Waterloo to Dru-tun. oia Elam. to Mount Forest, to strike . point on “a Georgian Bay. The Convener of the Ola-gov I‘ve-I'M has telegraphed to tho Pope, mhcive to tht and that the la rigidly 'rntorerd, A dosntch from Winnipeg to tho Public Works Department stat†that the track in luid mt! the-engine is running thy-0v. miles west of that place. Tuck-hm it going on at tho rate of one mile 1 day. but] it is expectrd that lg next month eighty miles, will limo bevn put down. Bitten. Ward, l Co. have rmuuvod their 1"radqunr tera from Selkirk to Winnipeg, now“ the nilwny betwoen the two phoni- in open- tion. Tho discovery of two plumb! on. of the twelfth magmatic a Tout ' M. an the 29th ult..md the other, of the “I“: magnitude, at Clinton. N. Y., on a. CI: iast.--U announced. Tho report " Mr, Hughes, who was - p. iutod to investigate the frauds in tho teachers tmuuinatiour, shown that (I ela- didntes nLtuim-d the papers pronoun tout. examinations, through an employer in the “nice of Humor. “one & Co. The Minis. tor of Education has declmd tho eeetif. icntos of those when null and void. but they are permitted to prom! tho-Ia!"- "sin for examination in July In“. Th "pa-urn and dim. attending this in. "sitio" in a pretty seven “at“! upon the guilty parties, and we think M more is little danger of my on. Main n- "rliug lo such dishouonbh -to - curc cortTsestos. A mother min. he: mu. font-you“ nearly “hep in her chair. Ilka] it. bl not better go to bed. ou, now: " only shut my eye: to hoop the “It out." An asylum for woman] “no I. Tientiiu, Chint. bu ' burned. agrd over two mound person: In W to have perished in the tinmea. gr, of "ditty mm." and ran-lib “We wnnt him to “dot-and in. he - play ll that pant." Mr. Alfred Wright, who III In!“ in the Keno-Wright .tsottting ably M summon is back again at Co!†All looks about as well u ever. Inning I lit. tle Inmnncss. Mr. Wright hnd I very nu- ruw mozzpc for his life, and Inn “300'.“ much quicker than anyone Impacted. Tho Indinn is Mill " large. and mm! likely to remain so, so fur as my «mm to “Rollin are cvncurm d. The right way to do it would l,etooftcr n rcward-ir "o-ar 1111-: rapture. Thero- Gre plonty " m who mum lye {mud fur the jnl: under that. (rircvairctaneos. It ir .e.nntfslomt to think Hind nolcss Hum thrsr cxportions In“. Hon. In“: In“ III "e-d tr - elunnlion in Radium. The Power: have declined 00 0*“ the protest of the Veda“ W h - oeenion of king Embed. The Governor-General my: D ot. tlwn on Tueedev we... not.†by one of President Hayl‘ can. ( Never mm! you my hello '.. here it. This will an you than In, (“momma and come '-Hitt'as. It in proposed to mtmftd the A!†pel Pelece at Quebec in . I'll “d the 1hrtropoliun tue “‘06:“ all faile mum's railwn)‘ pnlicym ’0' pm evasion was formed, Ind Yaw Ind tum-pare: ei, -. paraded the Qty.“ W Iref,,re the Pnrl.vauent Build.“ that]... pr: comiuuihts burnt the Att nay-Gonna] in army. The Ira-weeding: an“ a slight some iuuidc the buildings, and thi Guru-u- ment polite “we statiumd a the doom to trevrtd tho inxrcss of intrude“. One or tro windows I." broken, and wd then "thinned their I" ir,?)it?,,iii'c':l, men of "It" Battery and F tnottntod his!“ - mtud nut to â€serve yrder, but their m m not required. .. A diactiguisiuul politianu Com the meat dislrhth thanked to give I r/letMlid Aio- to some of his, party friends. In MIR " make Earl, that everything 'hentighrod b] beat quality, he went to In!“ _itliil ma mam cm . with. at ' ' DOC?! ROI A Wanton) pcpor “in†I a†1trhLrrsotziiriiii'iLiLU a Mott A‘eopporhulhubu-Wi laws of the country wilt ha a. Itirosettw Hum three c ».¢. f), It? A l/ U ‘u