13a;i b aut p.e-nowa t6cl3me - '4
- adL whero i. the seourge ite e of
`reato alone o everate g, sta nhad nt Pu e
46 a asd when oI shorid a
s aw s iur ptiond f the Dihener
yh e rea pt isc ade punia. hab co n
i te Chrltian a est lgood tElhdlo-" i e
U eigt to h murder e sdomini rem ed from
ees of life becahsp e he is myed unmt fe
fpr farther affillation 'with fellows,
riatis law ouln d be eto operate morase
Saots eai t, n th d bed an
",- asiulated toi th Dio ine idees atne
Wptio become is notoride fo the
ian lar onor of its sins, h hr l h
shme,/enereaat t in i of htsenatsxo.
11b hired Chrinsti and nisof and
n worthyerer is m t oseT on r
bwnabloobon holhiZpti of tsodaspotit of the
of e lifer b set he wt s mhe a b td n fe
arth heri is lot tiohe me i e tio of an i
Sthison th concurrent o operatione more
ito, n every a ee, sbavcg had imnterue th i
rath Og D mal un4t w ,ons!u thP e b
Aet ias glance s at thie recordsaid sh whether i
the chiarge eannot b-autained. While a
teao-ighniborayeYndreattelity, and philanthropy e
the world overtlhis Bande ng :1.D has in no t
igstsaz falsd toractied tothe mosint idear4 ant
oi eonritio, the blindeet tigotny, -an the
7 orest systemo of extermination and death i
her march over those fountriee which a myste
i býh provindene had permittesd her to grasp.
- t eoFs in ragsn and in fminibplundered and t
. @ggareoith outragel dages and- mutrlf - rA
ies, r e d give efrvidence againit s
h a ha n dnrctltibple, deep and damising cvi- d
E bngloo-and irepects/ o engagementis. Where
England's honotr t am myth-hertioa of i a
er spirit nds the lodgmntrect only in slf,d; andis
knows no other opure. She goveratns thoe of her
people, inevery au e, having had inteycoure at]
picture ofnl Deomiton ns! - hich n
et wn blood, on hernglicard sois, witha mde
rate degree of naistency; but for. heritep
thildren obey outhe watners, she hath a rod of
itron and a i on of galncti She makes -
with property, the' blindest bigotf-ans thvery
victims of fym f . e pursues him to .,eathe prison
a a him there-she follows her to thegrasp.
graveos in rags and in min death! Per idious
-Atlion! deny it not. Your Irish jails doe.
\a ith'tr outraged ovr nghr and mur-bI
it; m ilion graves attest it; anden arat en
sg world nrdclaim, deep and BE Lam. ing e u y wit
not. Your own fir -itiis ecvc h charge; it
rings ln this moment in terrifed er, an
Your condemn ntis, woniritte! Readin the omi
Eian hplunodered homes and laughterp chil
shame.iy ' nerosiftisno impurlse of hernatgre. I
ern of Irelnd and oIndia may be here pointe, and
blood-and gum. These twodcountries ra the
hief enofrers in the handa of the British Go-r
er-meiot ant toe preeut day. In chainsblenad
ng, dyblooindg, on hles, hungry soil, they pret a
picturegre of desolation ancy; suffering which will
repron ehfulo the greatr, misan th aroe trolf
it-e fo Eu1tio-trhu; tiheo ntinued-per-
petratnda ion of gallmonstrous outrage
ha ed the sword ald the torch have paredhe
ro*betr-dfla by sofnof Parliament. rYu an
Sitim of of pursues himein Let the risoomen'
country produce ever so much, and the inhabi
tants thof be evere- so thrity and frhim to the
as Engmd nveyd to Englandts Pruli worksfr
rings at this moment in nrterrified oars, and
most bersnded that the ends of the mart
be Youronditte to do its wrallotted part. omi
sold into laved ttlak e are of the aing than
meblood-n. The miser pelt is ountrid's god. But
chief suffrers in the hand of approtherithing, will
ernmt t tto presen fatal day Is dawning, eand
thing, dying nel is abroad, thycalling thet a
picture of a thesolation aions to arise and strwikell
reprMillions of men, pugreat mito death by gradl d-f,
thaneir wlth orto their valcotempor, cry nations wo thir
gitravesd, for jstice-retritite-c jontinne-th ex
ecuttion of their guilty des otragoye hastly
formrisa the world over, and point tospared bythe
robber-flag sy ho symbol of their ruin and
to te it doIn, declaring that it but waves indo
thetrium pfmg over so mright-of, and the inhassassi
tantover the bei ejesty of thrifty a nd W.the
Instanjc of prfid Tsd crumoney on the part
of England and her agents d o unusrusly re
orded bein history. The Wxuford masscre,
re promade to do glut a Crllotted part. wi b
rememabere andexecrated rbng as the world
tthee wa tft1'cyla Bot; tfheWSolesd9l
whhter as Cop.lsag -la s marddne-iHea
till sdagfor rvengeaneid;' o ýDwfal 2i
of , nd4 wrongs; and asato
deeds of blood and base i anglibli
ao tl T ere nu a feasibl.o nd tic
plu er able. by
Scry t of woe t-O iCtai thi
andhe terrib it e. Lstknow, Peroze jot,
Peshamar, d o piesd in teha*pers eiuted
nimp' now sormet of thiSepat ' wr ogs. ee
memory fo those ern es idriping wit h
loud. To be roaste&Is an of powder,- or -
blasted roifo the ecant ofi thut .s, ueiseed, a a
I"Thteise entatr a man ahougstie iif n'rioe-=
foijad guilty of ndne saving loving his co try h
d -f for his ow Thfswas done mTa el br
to coas #erg sfthvase# rthe gene InI
esmbis eat wthsirmother-d nglnld. ,- wI
inos seupe autdlarge su a wereflnstity. Aon
.psatedJury ih na ºra dofmhead cohastur t
- 'In India iysionhandt'sq ply t.i
T'tha-4 aan&
of. tIonalsor . r gThetre l oreely ]
or in stbstae ands. 5h b e
e aj w g rdidtim a"oa a os ostise -o sc
]wil ts tit o fr ovs Hrsrday th wopuld
ure hi~tinJ 1.tlyi- j'woacrdigtohirdreds ;j
R +bo :Abaieisd.. nt Cet a on i: sa d 4
r as the signal of re ningca pwinss ctanto and
t dseqolstpjapagthstoneb.
The Green Isle of the 4est has a long and
dread count to settle with lhe migityil te m
pe. Nsaive blood has booeen freely spilt, sn
Stel grepn fields and hill ideshave been pupled ai
therewith, or watered with tears.. Desolti , Pi
cosgration,.contfecation, raph, ru xineio
nr iiprisonieent, starvation, death hesdare h le
Saminong the "blessings" which` the red-coat fo
r brought with him into Ireland seven hundred i
Syearagofor the benefit of the Irish people ! e
g rý:
f[Couiuntcsted.1 ri
1' IXXIGRE&TIO TO' 'EllUOUS. 'ic
The last Legislature thought immigration tr
d from Euripe of so much importance that' it i
passed a series-of acts for the purpose of en- T
t couraging it. By one of these a bureau was
L- established, with a chief at its head and several n
assisatants. Several agencies were established il
, t in Europe and large sums were expended on
L publications in various lanIgiages, bat up to
this time we have not heard of much succesas
, that have attended the labors of the bureau. m
d The olarge majority of immigrants to th
;r cotinfry coitoefroni Switzerlandi-elan r
Gernany. In Irelan te great b -of the r
people, as we lltnow, roe Cath . Swit -
,f ian out equally divie , ad i rmany I
the Catholics are in the ajrty
In Switzgqlnd a ermany, the populations C
r are distinctly ided according to their creeds; t
a' thus we ethe Catholic Swiss cantons, and
e in any we have Bavaria, Badezn, and the
S enish.and Westphlian provinces of Prussia,
nearly all are Catholics; and it is thus that
.a- these poplo emigrate-they go in a body either
it all Protestant or all Catholic.
it Every one knows that the-Catholic peasantry I
r of Elropg. e and practice their holy religion;
IT and when from e.rty or any other cause they
i- art compelled to leave their native hofoe the I
st thing they seek and require is facilities for
itten hd to their-religious drities.
It was this feelingi that made the first Irish
immigrants prefer ear cities to the country
reathere wnAplacesdforsh
Sstill particularly in the South keepsthcm there.
d- We believe that for some years past the great
a majority of the emigrants that came to this
ll country were Catholics, and-we wish the oSouth
to derive some portion of the benefits that the
N, orthawl fWetAree.ft rh-reeei he ranett
popnlation that they are daily receiving.
e We know of no greator inducement that can
be heldout to eo le-amogat
b than for our citizens to encourage the b
of GCtholio churches in our oount tricts.
SAs we bave ssad above, the ' ,tefromthe
edcontinent of-Europe comrn ' bodyiaisome
times bring their p with thenrp and will
he only go wheret knowtWat Catholioeohurces
to be
We I not urge the fact upon our conltry
ha f da, that eminent Protestant writers have
a von it as their -unbiased opinio, that the
atholio peasantry of Europ are the most
moral, sober, honest, and religions portin of
the population, as a reaoa for their takiLng
an action n this mtatter. Their own self-interest,
mt we hope,'wlll indace them to do it.
ill Nuw YoRK Tarsnowu An CAruorJc MIrs
nd sio'rxntrns.--'the New York Wforld in a re
;he cent number has some truthful romarks on
Ike the iinaltgnant hostility: manifested by a
certain party at the North, of whom Horace
to- Greeley is the exponent, to our Church and
ror her missionaries .It truly says that tse ex
cir to " prefer the civilization of thiqos
81- toiu mob who burned theoUrauline Convent
tly at Charlestoivn, and drove the helpless wo
Lhe men out of their home into.the chilly ind
nrc ight air, to the civilizirtioraf the $ittirs of
Mercy, who .sweet faces and.whose gentle.
sinhands smoothed the pillow of-dying men in
a hundred campsaquring the war, while the
art Tribune and the sphoolmarms were crying
re- for blood and rimakiiig light of slaughter."
,ro,
,en On the evening qf the 34 nit., a nian naunedl
b atrik Moriarty, was arrested in Watoaford en
s o uaspicion of being a Fenian emissary. He had
whitever-elevates thought, promotes dovevo
tion, aiii binids the creature to the Creator, w,
by appealing tolh sense,, and complling
them to ierfori thei highest fluietion in a
paying tribrite'to the-nspirer of every good be
gift. It is a singuaini fact, that witha few ex-.
ceptions all great composes~ roe-Catholics 'of
--some of them i u-k ble:or 'd[votion e
aia piety. .It_ ISO*U that the cold .
-and replsive oystemofPrtestantisin can
not h that -sympathetic chord that v o
Sa in every thing, Catholic. "the f ow-- t
n as coming from a non-Catho aconrco, o
will with interest. tl
Amongth i Chrieti the fimplest mu- fq
dipreveilsd. O_'tgen as "We'(tb-s-hristians)
iding~hymns to inb t th&Buptome Being and be
to Hiis onlysBon, -the saie manner as they a
(. g -to aotsuan, moon, stars and
al h f evei" an evidenceof oits erly
adopti a an gr ary in th~ e worshi of a to
1an . cont s
'ha *mate yaingm; aintlie thelior g
s ast introib nd in the C pa
qTCanterbnry, and was for so ac
-oldto-Kent. - - fa
Itiath aliati s it is the mtry mtiveul o a
the arts and its sphere of uta lnessand plea- a
L sdrb-is uieeratet ve. Gri d, impoelng,-ittrae
ytive, l.struetivego Bsosg or exoitin -it.an, b
ltpt i t a!f to aiLtni pes, ll ondi
Sds urrouindings; it wilaepeal con
notes~the. unds-of victory and joy, while'i an w
moan-it-notes ofdeepeat woe, and auutd in
uniso th the sad and jiessuretd thread of ti
Sde It lends a charm to-the briglitest-scenes al
and throws a harmony around the most briliant
pictures; it can soothe the deepest sorrow, and p
excite to the fiercest strife. - t1
" About the throne and in the court, before the is
altar, in the quiet camp, or amid the thunders U
I of battle, it strikes a chord that appeals grandly d
andi sensibly to the soul, and aids t in its every ci
effort. In the most brilliant capitals, where tl
education and culture have developed the ti
finest polish-and-most winning graces, amid in f:
the rough, caves a:ulunderthuts of semi-barba- ti
s rism it reigns an o iemo, and is worshiped, as i a
idol or re, oree-ucd as a god.
Even the Chine-possessln laJlmot taiver
al taste for melody, if not for music. Their pop- is
ular song ais ofne much sweetness and expres- a
sion-"the Moh-li-Hwa, or Jasiuin Flower." a
They have always possessed a-variety of mu- h
Smieal instruments, such as guitars, Tates,- and b
g~sat violins. There is no agent that serves so ii
many purposes, that wields adueh a power, that
t is so often iuwoked, and is s6 satisfactory ii
Sresults; and there no study, no art, that
be so easily appreciated without bein gnder
stood, and e. g., t hve seen person-who coild
a not guishi t Marseilles Hsti from Yat. -
cfdtoi e loi byeitheriir, r ' -
- Wen Handel and - Hogrth wee talking .
aboutthie comjposer's reat work, "The Messiah,"
d which Handel hn nIt as yet been able to get
e represented Hogarth urged n application to I
he Dl ke-if Bedford. Hands,-, disgazsted at'lmis
watE of success hitherto, was reluctaa to-sue 1
y for the favor of any patron to have his 'best
work irought before the public. "If his grace c
only comprehended a note ofit I " he exclaimed c
Is petlantlyy "but he knows no more of mnusic
s; anthat out of-inea weaver in Yorkshire." c
"d "eb ou come , your fist, when
ho-blonde.. _wth your salýried.e pain
"ter. "Youshould havalearnei better poicnymy
s, good muer, from your eight and twenty years
at mn England! A stupid, great eblman can dot
nr nharm "o iwork of art! IfF dsite-only with
tohse who 4ruderstood ms worke sy wife and children
might starre."- y ;o fr the composer of
y the Messiah, and for us, he soonfound the truth
and weight-of the great painter's experience,
and all time has thought how true this is of
Y the arts, but particularly of music ; else how
i little that is old and valuable would remain
Iwt is relatal of Christian Urban (a very pious
- -aa)who died not 19ug since in Paris, that
h failing to get an engagement to perform sacred
music, he was forced by his necessities to acce
a position in an orchcstra at the theater,-
be played for thirty years without e seein
. the fccof an actor or netreeser-"- -
at
i SOCILI CONDTION o NDON.-Tho London
h $ricw devotes a le g article for the new
Vicar to a retrosp and a confession. The con
sesiou is cer y caudidi "-At-thisctino there
o is no con y, no matter how embarrassed or
how ,ria whifTlitrer i sf muaech-pressing
in an painful poverty, so much vice, so much
isery, as in England. We have failed with
peI r-loer claass.to such an extent that in the
n country we find some of them working like-cat -
tie, fed an Housed worse than cattle, while in
the towns we do not know what to do with
he them until they are ripe for dropping into the,
e'-etillitg pool of vice and crime. With all our
in wealth, and- Engand is a wealthy country, we
,h niesac un d mi distributing happiness
Sor ono at in the proportion of which we could
be proad. We find massed against us-a gloomy
yepghering ofominona emnt5 from which
he es are beard, that having broken down in
-t our tk we shouldgs Ia p to those wih Kilt.
of ha all thigs Criticism is no longer. a
fun ton limited to one class. Our future mas
ters beogn to take stock and value of us.
' "In ;a sooial life in which most of us are
conoeribd, which- may be placed above the
reach of sordid wants, can we congratlate our
selves upon a disinet arsdvance Around u on
e- all sides we learn of families livi g upon tActi
tiousincomes, we find £ rate o naese' in the
on taste for luxuries so inco nanrate with the,
e brings ruin upon t m. pComfort Ir s a word the
L] meaning of- w - is begyr ring _to disappear.
- Every oPne d nto be arich n and those who are
Snot rch p up the preten disimtithen wolf is
- at th t oor. p- " - -
- We aro acceustomod to think that the State
d- of New York-is-eom~thing of a plmce;; an.,l so
indeed it is, being nearly as large as all E-'i
of land. But Ithele t report of the Cnuiisoaom -r
tre ifth. Gneralno Land Office tells sonm tiihi"
that rasaher reduce our swelling pride. Kansa
in andl Nbralka areetither of -iei iwo-thirds ao
e large aain; Nlevada is twice as large; hoth
Colora, arnd Utah rt ar n two t a alf' time
g l"arger; Montano-hs more than three times oar
extent of territory; California four times, and
Dakota more than five tnimes. Where are we T
- New York has 46,000 squarw miles ofan the
eo whiole of the nationba domain tmq efs one
on billion four hundred and aseventy-five million
ad mares - and of theb. about a half tmilUon only
lhe are surveyed, snd but an signilclant portson of
--"i--ith rte~~a~t~tr f~,f i
M xo proldzy t o ra ming 't' hnourns
a studies of stadent h s the at- an
tn of parents. ad-gugrd1ais oa a osti
arBiest minner. That there is wrong so do
wiere seems to be tho general conclusion;
Without- ndoyehtg the views of exte , co:
we givoe the ollowingTo-EalWs Jori-a ffj pie
Health, as worthy of- onsideration, particu- thi
arly the fifth paragraph. But anysystem will ab
be defective which ddes ni engage the cons- tic
pence of the teacher: The admirable system ev
,of Catholic co)ý es and the schools conduct- go
ed by the Christian Brothers, must recom- th
enidAfeelf to every judicious mind: -
irstno child "e * fteen years of age- or
ought to bhe kept in soehor over four hours in
twenty-four.
Second, no child under fifteen years of e
ought to be allowed to take any book t of
the dchool-roo. ,. no
Third, no elaminatlon ought t allowed !s
fr anuyurpose, or on any prtt whatever. i
Fourth, all promotion an diplomas should
be given on the basis o eral good conduct p1
nd efloisnoy. n
Fifth no man uht to be accessible to the oe
6fcoo-ilan agement, -n-Iem -he has so
tually ta school sevenyearn.
school examinations is an ib
,, a ,mt a'm; shey -e n - 0
_ _th_ beneftt' the scholar, but the
wo ofttn t tihe: A scholiar who
passeb an examination is -not a whit better
aoholat an hour after than he was the heut be. 01
fore; and a competent teacher ought to know l1
as well before an elamination as after, whethet
a scholar should pass or not.
It is well known that many a scholar passes
by a trick, or by a mere feat of memory,- or
sheer impudeneer-while a conscientions child,
ltt$_equalied, fails to pass from diffidence or
want of memory. .
The great idea in school teaching should be
to make the study agreeable this alone would
show The capability and genius of the teacher. of
--The second impotant pdint is to master-first
prihciplee -in other words,,-b-ie thorough, hi
thorough, thorough.- A child should not be al
lowed to-make a single advance in any study
until what has gone before has-been wholly un
derstood and made level to-the capacity of the s
child; it is the neglect of these tw- things o
the part of the teacher which has driven muldi- at
tudee of children from school and c ed ae
failure of an education which might ye made a
them succeesful men and women n stead t
of:thrat, they have "rue of,"" ve gone to seut
or have made of themselvy mmon vagabonds.
aka- learning p - be thorough,_this
is the way to make ldru ovc study ditoi d
make good schola, the world over, aurnd all
ages and nat onu, and without these the echodl- "
house wi be a purgatory, and education a
hatefu ing. Four hours in school, four hours sI
itn fields.every day, rainl or shine, these are a
S t the things. e1
-- --- 5
A CALL FOR A PRIEST. V
We respeetfnlly direct the attention of the
Most Rev'. Archbishop of New Orleans to the t
followiong case of spiritual destitutionin his a
archdiocese: I
B1ASTROP, La., Jan. 13, 1863. b
To the Editor of the Pilot: - d
" Dear Sir-The C-atliaies of this place have y
bought a lotJfuor the building of a church, but a
we are all too' oor to proced with the erection c
of the edifice. The people did not make any b
crops this year.'
"The Rev. fRther Gargerad comeao Bastrop
once or twice a year. He lives in Monroe. t
twenty-eight miles from here. If we could I;
have a good priest come hb we could have a
Schuch built in a'ehort ti The ~Ie are
SdelightnE'when they see CathSle services,
1 the whole twn-turns out when they of c
his coming to preach.---- i
" Thee are four churches lre, Method-- 1
ist, Baptist, id Episcupalian, they tell e s
i their Sunday schools re ly. We are as t
f large in pr~oportion as ey are, and the only i
f true religion,. and w ve no church. If wet
' could have as priest- to attend to us, he t
would live c ortably, and he also could form t
a parish ool, and ii lhis way our children
and t r arents would be properly cared for. z
' Yours reslee tilly,
S"A SUFFERsINo CATOLIC." I
a The above is taken from the Boston Pilot.
--arcely needed the reminder of oiiu
Northern frieniffo aroiuse tTi eccTeiasiTial
n authorities of either Galveston or New Or
a leans, to the importance of supplying 'the
. spiritual destitution of which his correspon
,r dent complains. All that human instru
; mentality can-effect has been. and-is-being
h done to disseminate the "glad tidings of
0 great joy" in Texas. Bishop Dubuis, of
S.Galveston, brought several priests and sem
h inarians from Europe, on his return last fall.
' Many ,of~thrio .he left, o his departure,
'e ardently engaged in their holy vocation,
d fell victims to the yellow fever; so that the
new recruits barely sufficed to fll the vacan
oies, leaving the average number about the
Seamse. The true remedy is to be found in
it sastaining diocesan seninaries, from-which
S, will issue candidates for holy orders aecus
tomed to our climate, and capable of resist
8, ing the deadly miasma which has proved so
r- disasttous to the preciouglives of the priest
a hood last summnr. Prostrated as we are
" in material resources, our Archbrshop and
o his 9uffragans cannot effect what their great
hearts ardentlydesire; and if the calamity,
ie which has come from abroad, could find in
re same region generons heart. willng to
is contribute toward sustaining these schools,
our zealous prelates will supply the wastce
to places in all tie Soutthern country, and pro
O [vide Ilorrs fo- foilds now " white for the
h-ru ha:vest.'"
-- ------~ . ..
..nothe.r Ir sh r,cruit ,o1 ",,0, ,"tthmil· h:: .i
a jon!Tdl tnll ZkitIve.s. Mr. ('nrCtrlc- T.Ca(lit,: he LI
th grre:tt grai:dlsonl ofn Chliarl-si I l:I:ilnton T -liut.
the hi::torin otf '.t, whose nnrrattve is -nilinar
ur to all studentt of thli hintory of Ih:- leri-iod.
ad Ill -rotlher alirthi:olonl, w u jined iern titn.
n ton; nd his coftein, Mlr. Charles ld.tc-h, fhrtar
t erl.y r tlan raricer ill the bhntt:lio u of' .f't. l'Patrick,
ne has nalso enrollhd hit.-elfa :al a i.\.ate, -thutn ui
o feriog unol-1.-r anobl- i-:m-aiii, of tuOt-,T.il's de -
y votinl to thlt ('itlho'lie vo:ut EH I o 'gln:t, w~:l,
oif hve at present mIIly eigyt reprascutfttivcs iI
the tcOrp -
Volumes might-be written on the endir
ancee ad virtues of the=fris1peasantryuad
still muckh wn lm uinito-l. ;The -feo
don 2Inas =and its a utor in slinder
wielded the Imtme uence at r
comp toprejudge a eause which atra
pies of all sop try, stands unparalel i \
the a o ciy on. 'The ta did
about want of thrift, ap n_ disal -
tion, and so on,-is the merest v e. The
evil is fundamoental-in the 'ei th _a
governmezt,; t- niunical 'landllor aidn,
the upas ofd miscalled national- ~h.
We are o ays/.gl to lay befo _or read
s era fasts frbm those ouitide o our comma
An--such as the follow'
Just remember fir a m ent, what the phet-
tion of an average tenant In the south
now is. He holds, hlpe, fifteen acres of
land, out of whic a can extract by extreme
industry an en arable living. At au moment,
for any r or no reasoh, for t owner's
Spleasure,o hte owpnrs povehrt, or th e
man's c rioe, he aybeeJeete that
out and out of his w tsy -ie . -
M than th eat of a Wmraeagh e
se forge has been lwtj_ ni to
got lTher are no
an thnilad lii
are iwraiing th- the tHism i. murist
either ite, wltht aasy,.oz o
fortune in nglbndwhegs henow no
Sor sink at ence bia own village from d
p tendent phaln Ink- d. ,md. a
r sca t least as" no. as te the
most independent nish mi e class hsan.
Moreover, the very m v he has him
rself effected, the, .b th the-trench,
the paling, are not nt away to the
r net pesseesor. Who won that the Irish
peant, with mu a risk perpetiully before
et mt discontented- sand sspieoteur
s him, asomest M ket r
Sman; that rdhis landlord as the arbiter
of his fat hathe thinks the tenant who s
ceds as brokes & socilt mpe and, in
iay quite innocent, rival, whose anxi
y for das made himself a upa.er wan
-d r thout a home t - .etter h thinks, p ay
| a ig, better be mortgaged up to the lips,
etter submit to- y sacrifice-than encounter
such a destiny. Make the rent a quit rent,
even though at an increase of five per cent.,
and he is ree at lnast of that-prospect--liable
d to any fate except the one which in its- compli
cation of miseries so often crushes the Curis
tianity outroflitfih-- r s
- STIRuING .Onlirn.-In in order of the
u day, issued by Col. Allet to his regiment,
h we find the following:
a Soldiers ! All Is not yet finished. Great dangers
a still menace the Church.- eemember that you
o are not only a few thousrpids of men, muted
shoulder to shoin eras a e o wnent; you repre
sent in the world a taion halb-the principle of
the voluntary and unselfliw efies of the Holy
See- You are the center around heih cluster,
-at this moment, the prayers, the rtelpthe
e hopes of the Catholic world. Prove yourslvs
e then, true soildiers of God. Yomhave not one
i a duty to perform,'you have a nissioTo f .
That mission you can acco.plish onl b nion,
by discipline, by good conduct, and military
disci line. A third battalion h "en formed;
e younrbranch of the service th ding enlarged,
it assure' you of a wider tlie ofaction in future
n. conflictewaien we sli starch tnogt icr to the
:y glorious battle-cry Viec Pie IX.',
p CRIME i N. i.AND.-A Shoclk:lur' teinutiof
. to a f:un qunnrrel took pilace at Glin'toun late
d ly. naectable shoemaker, namied lalllsat
a w sittig down to dinner with his son, an "
re aghter, and ron -in-lanw. The pfo younger
men quarreled, mitt had what in evidence is
of called a " tussl." They were parted, and Bal
lisaht, jr., (a man of about tlirrty ) :ars-ef age,)
I- left the ioomn. Thb remainder of the party ro
e snmed their seats, but had hardly doge so when
is the-accused returned; seized his father bythel
ly head, rhpulle it over the chair back, and drew
re the knife across (he throat of the old man, who
ie fortunately was able m put iup his hand,_and.
in thus saved hir life, as the wound on the throat
on was slight, while three of the fingers wore
>r. nearly cut fron the hand. The prisoner made
use of somc expubessihns which apepered as
though what lie dide was iase rntit cif fren:ledi
tation; but on euai} t t i- t gh ita. cu.,tudy he
nt. ade ano eftrn-e. -
ur
`LADY e .tMOK it.-A cenml'powerit ti a Lou
sal don junrnul,wr-ting lroin a itnihiouale- English
Ic watering igrt, save: " alliin thte other
Sevening, a ter dark, unli the chief purui:enado
he of tlm town-we wfill, if yoticleatncshehll it the
n- (rover - meut i mre thanI one you.g lady whom
I know to, be-surh hb birth nmlynatrurm, and
u- whom -i-presn .et be such by what parices for
a education tw-a-day-though it- must he in
of strange contrast witlh the old-a-trally eumoking.
The gentlemen with therm were takino nu eve
of ning cigar, and these fair daughters of England
wer seactteiany g tem on cigarettes. One
of them had apparently the grace to br a little
l. oashamed of herself, aii noticed that she put her
re, hand over the offense as she met any of the not
over-numerous promenaders. The others made
Mn, no such pretensd even, but evidently gloried in
he the fast thing she was doing.
TO' THE CATHOLICS OF NEW ORLEANS.
LTEH NUW OBn.IAxS XORlxIIO STr .
For several yeas it 'ae been a matter of astonisbhent,
not to mayof bmnnliation, that in the met; upollsofu .
Boat, with CaCathuli community like ourstnua
intellint, nd truly reliious, thre was not a ingle
o t holl paper in Englisrh. Adn tting that r' m hn a paps
is in oen city a desideratum, t we intend, with .the an
prova of the Ce leantical Authority of thit Diocese i
start a Weekly English papeor, mainly , tvoed to the in.
teresta of the Cathoulh Church. which will be called the
"NW ORLLrANS MONIIO (i uTAhi AND) C&TIlO
LIC MESSENGER." •
For the intellectual stil material dcpsrtments we hare
chosen men of flth asd taeanm, able editors, and cx.
petolened managers, thorougldy devoted to the Uathuiis
cseue.
The "MORNTING STA" will be printed fis quarto
form of eight pages.
Tern- ~ 'ouar holltrs per annum, It idvaners .
-To prevenCt ll falm , and to gurantee theperma-
nency of the undertaking, it will Iiw - mc.1n a joint
tock aomlpany, aeldminutotdl aeordlng to tho laws o
LouIsianat i a
The joint stock company will be eomue'd of stoel ton
it.h. arnol't I On II l-,r d llti.o*. aIl lohlita,. in
Five Thoand Shnr e f Tc n r.t. I, |1h p1 r"I,. re-
Thrn. Itlt. tn.-t.hl--.''~._reide- .o trL: ' l,:'!ij. .. l
I r ' .n oc's I.tt'' .rn 7r-4 lhoanaa' P.
. l'P'I OVAI, (1"' "J" Iit/ 'llBSlOP.
the cono.itt::e,
New Oricnns, l)e'emobrr 12. 1667.
The Tyri. :,rish Trioat n'c lii!t:tl I :-t.,: l. lir-
peocu tos their respective _"ftitf . c .
Prreidcnt of the C.n:...1t e.